Updated: Fri 17 Apr 12:49:05 BST 2026

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Students heading to Uni entrance exams abducted in Nigeria
The governor did not specify the exact number of those kidnapped, but local media said it was 17. The incident comes amid a surge in violence in different parts of the country.

Mail Online
Open 
I'm a trauma therapist who worked in reality TV casting for shows like Married At First Sight - I feel like I ruined these people's lives
Loni Fagel is a psychotherapist who specialises in helping clients cope with medical trauma, grief and loss - but she didn't always use her qualifications for good.

Mail Online
Open 
Meet the blonde beauties winning the hearts of Pia Whitesell's hunky sons Isaiah and Lennox - as the Home And Away star parties with family at Coachella
Pia Whitesell has been tripping the light fantastic at Coachella and it seems her sons are having quite the time, too.

Mail Online
Open 
NASA astronaut finds GOD after returning to Earth: Reid Wiseman breaks down in tears after seeing a cross - as he claims 'it's very hard to fully grasp what we just went through'
He's travelled more than 250,000 miles to the moon and back - but astronaut Reid Wiseman said one of the most emotional experiences of his mission was seeing a cross on his return to Earth.

Mail Online
Open 
My three years of hell: FELICITY KENDAL reveals her heartbreaking struggle after the death of her partner, how she was in a 'hole' of grief and why she will never date again
As the actress, 79, prepares to return to the musical stage in High Society, she talks relationships, religion and why woke critics should leave her Good Life 'husband' alone.

Mail Online
Open 
Bride's white wedding dress is covered in black paint moments before she walked down the aisle in 'revenge' attack by her sister-in-law
Gemma Monk, 35, was forced to change dresses last minute after Antonia Eastwood launched the 'revenge' attack on May 24, 2024.

Sky News Home
Open 
Missing wolf that became internet sensation is found
A wolf that escaped form a South Korean zoo, becoming an internet sensation in the process, has been found.

Russia Today News
Open 
Telegraph’s new German owner imposes pro-Israel bias – journalist

Mail Online
Open 
Police close London park as Islamist 'terror cell' posts video claiming to show drones 'carrying radioactive and cancer-causing materials' flying towards Israeli Embassy
Police have closed a London park after a video claimed drones carrying 'radioactive materials' had been launched towards the Israeli embassy.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
House approves short-term extension of surveillance law in blow to Republicans’ long-term plan – US politics live
The decision to extend a warrantless security law until 30 April came after 20 Republicans worked with House Democrats to defeat attempts to pass five-year and 18-month renewalsSign up for the Breaking News US emailHere is what some Congressional Democrats are saying about Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (Fisa), which the House voted early Friday to extend for 10 days:Hakeem Jeffries, House minority leader, called the attempt by Republicans to pass a five-year extension of the law “unacceptable”. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Serial shoplifter who stole £350 worth of items banned from stores
A serial shoplifter has been banned from Co-op stores across Kent for stealing £350 worth of items.

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11530 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Maintenance - WMUTT-Uttoxeter (New)
Our supplier is carrying out planned maintenance affecting the listed exchange. Customers will lose connectivity for 1 hour 30 minutes during the maintenance window.

Start: Fri, 8th May 2026 00:05

End: Fri, 8th May 2026 06:00

Update: Fri, 8th May 2026 06:00

Edited: Fri, 17th Apr 2026 12:20

Status: Outage

Maintenance: Planned

CNET News
Open 
Uber Eats Will Now Handle Your Returns. Here's How to Use the Feature
A courier can now pick up items you want to send back.

CNET News
Open 
Disney Plus's 30 Best TV Shows You Should Stream Right Now
When it comes to epic TV, Disney's got you covered.

Mail Online
Open 
Popular painkillers could cause drug poisoning if mixed with the wrong medications, new study warns
Millions of Britons taking widely prescribed painkillers could be unwittingly putting themselves at risk of drug poisoning, researchers have warned.

Mail Online
Open 
BBC confirms 'mesmerising and mysterious' new sci-fi drama promised to be a 'show like no other' - and teases 'unfathomably good cast'
Now that we have returned to the moon for the first time in over 50 years, this 'mesmerising and mysterious' new drama from the BBC could be one to add to your to-watch list.

Mail Online
Open 
Pet owners lose trust in insurers as customers question fairness of policies and value for money
Satisfaction with insurance companies dropped from 4.81 to 3.27 out of 5 from last year, research by Smart Money People revealed.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
EU officials arrive in Hungary for high-stakes talks with Magyar’s government
Departing PM Viktor Orbán admits ‘political era has ended’ as EU says ‘clock is ticking’ to resolve important issuesEU officials have arrived in Budapest for high-stakes talks aimed at reshaping the bloc’s strained relationship with Hungary, weeks before the new government takes office, as the country’s departing prime minister, Viktor Orbán, admitted a “political era has ended” and suggested he would stay on as leader of his party in his first interview since the election.Speaking to the pro-government outlet Patrióta, Orbán described Sunday’s election as an “emotional rollercoaster” after the opposition Tisza party won a landslide victory, bringing an end to his 16 years in power. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Keir Starmer says it is unforgivable he was not told Mandelson failed vetting
PM says he is ‘furious’ and did not know security officials had recommended that Mandelson be denied clearanceUK politics live – latest updatesKeir Starmer has said it was “unforgivable” that he was not told that Peter Mandelson had failed his security vetting before taking up his role as ambassador to Washington.The prime minister said he was “furious” about what had happened, as he insisted he had not known that security officials had initially recommended that Mandelson be denied clearance. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
UK petrol and diesel prices fall after weeks of rises
Drivers have seen weeks of increases as the US-Israeli war with Iran pushed up wholesale oil prices.

F1 Technical
Open 
How can teams use the unplanned five-week break?
The cancellation of the Bahrain and Saudi Arabian Grands Prix has created an unexpected void in the early‑season calendar, stretching the gap between Japan and Miami to five weeks.

F1 Technical
Open 
How will Red Bull reshape its technical leadership?
Following a tough start to the 2026 F1 season, Red Bull Racing has announced a targeted restructuring of its technical organisation, reinforcing the team’s long‑term commitment to performance, integration, and innovation as Formula 1 enters a period of rapid regulatory and competitive evolution.

TechRadar News
Open 
Solving the shadow IT crisis in travel

TechRadar News
Open 
007 First Light has its own Bond theme by award-winning singer Lana Del Rey

TechRadar News
Open 
n8n vs OpenClaw: What are the differences and where should you use either of them?

Digital Trends
Open 
DJI Osmo Pocket 4 takes aim at low-light video and fast action
DJI's Osmo Pocket 4 adds a 1-inch sensor, 4K at 240fps, smarter tracking, and built-in storage, giving pocket-sized video shooters a more capable tool for low-light scenes, action clips, and faster everyday shooting.

Digital Trends
Open 
Tesla’s rare Signature Edition cars come with a resale trap
Tesla's Signature Edition Model S and Model X come with a one-year resale ban, a $50,000 penalty, and strict buyback terms, giving collectors a rare Tesla with far more strings attached than usual.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
These two sectors have been boosted by AI hopes. Why investors should buy one, and trim exposure to the other.
Technology has lifted the market higher and has further to go, says Ned Davis Research

Russia Today News
Open 
Europe has ‘six weeks’ of jet fuel left – IEA chief 

Mail Online
Open 
Brits count the cost of saving Keir's skin: Latest Whitehall chief sacrificed over Mandelson vetting outrage could be in line for huge payoff... as allies 'warn he won't be fall guy'
The UK's top diplomat Olly Robbins was effectively sacked last night as the 'furious' PM claimed he was not told Peter Mandelson failed security vetting.

Mail Online
Open 
Lily Allen says her West End Girl album gives a voice to those 'pulled into non monogamous relationships when they didn't choose to' after being inspired by ex David Harbour's infidelities
Lily Allen has explained how her West End Girl album 'gives a voice to those pulled into non monogamous relationships when they didn't choose to' something she says is rarely spoken about. 

Mail Online
Open 
'They're not listening': Pub boss blasts Labour over tax hikes and warns business was facing soaring costs BEFORE Iran war
The boss of a major British pub group and brewer blasted Labour's handling of the economy as he accused ministers of ignoring business.

Mail Online
Open 
Ant and Dec in fits of laughter as I'm A Celebrity's Mo Farah screams in fear in new Termite Terror trial, as show stars are tested in shock 'endurance challenge'
Ant McPartlin and Declan Donnelly will be left in fits of laughter as I'm A Celebrity... Get Me Out Of Here! star Mo Farah is left screaming in fear in a new trial.

Mail Online
Open 
Clarkson's Farm star Harriet Cowan takes swipe at Jeremy Clarkson as she defends standing up to co-star and jokes 'if a bloke thinks he knows better than me, I'll tell him so'
The 25-year-old temporarily replaced Kaleb Cooper in series four of the Prime Video show, becoming a breakout star in the process.

Mail Online
Open 
Iranian migrant who tried to burn down home wins reprieve against deportation because he threatened to take his own life
The migrant has been in a UK prison for 20 years and was deemed 'dangerous' after attempting to blow up a house following an argument with his housemate, the British asylum court was told.

Mail Online
Open 
Chinese car maker granted patent for voice activated in-vehicle TOILETS
Seres, a Chinese electric SUV brand, has invented a waste disposal unit that slides under the passenger seat so that passengers can go to the lavatory on the move.

Slashdot
Open 
Reed Hastings Is Leaving Netflix After 29 Years
Reed Hastings is stepping down from Netflix's board in June, ending a 29-year run at the company he co-founded and helped transform from a DVD-by-mail business into a global streaming giant. Hastings said in a shareholder (PDF) letter that heâ(TM)s stepping down to focus on "his philanthropy and other pursuits." Engadget reports: Hastings has served as chairman of Netflix's board since 2023, a role he assumed after stepping down as co-CEO and promoting Greg Peters in his place. "Netflix changed my life in so many ways, and my all-time favorite memory was January 2016, when we enabled nearly the entire planet to enjoy our service," Hastings said in a statement. "My real contribution at Netflix wasn't a single decision; it was a focus on member joy, building a culture that others could inherit and improve, and building a company that could be both beloved by members and wildly successful for generations to come. A special thanks to Greg and Ted, whose commitment to Netflix's greatness is so strong that I can now focus on new things."





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Nature
Open 
New year, old me

UK Government News
Open 
Firefighters to benefit from bespoke health support
Government to back firefighters with tailor-made, research-backed health support during and after service.

UK Government News
Open 
Sir Martyn Oliver's speech at the Early Years Alliance Connect Roadshow
Ofsted’s Chief Inspector, Sir Martyn Oliver, spoke at the Early Years Alliance's Connect Roadshow in London.

UK Government News
Open 
Boost for thousands of aspiring health professionals from deprived areas
New measures to tackle inequality of opportunity and breakdown barriers to healthcare careers

UK Government News
Open 
Foreign Secretary statement on the Israel-Lebanon ceasefire
Foreign Secretary statement welcoming the announcement of a ceasefire in Lebanon

Ian Visits
Open 
Winnie-the-Pooh at 100: Rare sketches go on show in Mayfair
A small exhibition marks the centenary with early editions and previously unseen drawings — including abandoned scenes from the original 1926 book.Read more ›

Flightradar24
Open 
AvTalk Episode 366: An unserious proposal
On this week’s episode of AvTalk, we make our annual trek to Hamburg for the Aircraft Interiors Expo where Jason is joined once again by PaxEx.aero’s Seth Miller. Buttons, buttons, and more buttons The Skynook concept American Airlines celebrates its 100th anniversary with a special flight and a new set of trading cards, while Lufthansa […]
The post AvTalk Episode 366: An unserious proposal appeared first on Flightradar24 Blog.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Mental health support to be offered to people with diabetes in UK first
People with diabetes are twice as likely to have depression, a charity backing tailored support says.

The Hill
Open 
Senate GOP losing patience with Speaker Johnson as DHS faces crisis
Senate Republicans are growing increasingly frustrated with Speaker Mike Johnson’s (R-La.) decision not to put a Senate-passed bill to fund most of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) on the House floor for a vote as they fear the White House could soon run out of money to pay federal workers affected by the partial...

The Hill
Open 
Trump’s Turning Point USA stop to bolster young voters
President Trump is set to be the main speaker at Turning Point USA’s event in Arizona on Friday to bolster Republican turnout for the upcoming midterms. The “Build the Red Wall” event that will take place at a church in Arizona comes at a time where support among young voters for Trump’s performance is slipping...

The Hill
Open 
Strait of Hormuz blockade hurts Iran's economy, threatens to spike energy prices
The U.S. blockade on the Strait of Hormuz has effectively shut down trade to and from Iran's ports, cutting off an estimated 90 percent of the Middle Eastern country's economy as the Trump administration looks to get Tehran back to the negotiating table, according to military officials. But the blockade, while already putting pressure on...

The Hill
Open 
Mamdani’s city-run grocery plan draws pushback from local bodegas, supermarkets
New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s (D) plan to open a city-owned grocery store in East Harlem is drawing pushback from critics who question its feasibility and warn of its economic impact on local businesses. At a rally Sunday marking his first 100 days as mayor, the democratic socialist announced the location of the first of...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Chess: Uzbekistan's new star shows Asia's continued rise
Javokhir Sindarov of Uzbekistan has earned the right to challenge India's Dommaraju Gukesh for the world title. Both men are under 21 and from Asia, underlining an ongoing demographic shift in top level chess.

Mail Online
Open 
Ex-glamour model Jodie Marsh, 47, pleads not guilty to assault after 'putting her hands on neighbour's neck' in row over animal sanctuary
The ex-glamour model, 47, was pictured leaving Chelmsford Magistrates Court, where she also denied two counts of threatening or insulting language.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
House approves short-term extension of surveillance law in blow to Republicans’ long-term plan – US politics live
The decision to extend a warrantless security law until 30 April came after 20 Republicans worked with House Democrats to defeat attempts to pass five-year and 18-month renewalsSign up for the Breaking News US emailTodd Lyons, the acting director of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), is stepping down after a turbulent year carrying out Donald Trump’s immigration agenda.Lyons, who has been leading the agency since March 2025, will resign at the end of May and move to the private sector, Markwayne ​Mullin, the Department of Homeland Security secretary, said in a statement on Thursday. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
UK’s OnlyFans tops $3bn valuation amid talks to sell stake to US investor
Adult video platform to sell minority stake to increase stability after death of its founder Leonid RadvinskyBusiness live – latest updatesOnlyFans, the UK adult video platform, is in talks to sell a minority stake to a US investor that will value the business at more than $3bn (£2.2bn).The London-based company is in advanced talks to sell a stake of less than 20% to the San Francisco-based investment firm Architect Capital, according to the Financial Times. Sources familiar with the process confirmed the talks to the Guardian. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Police investigate security incident near Israeli embassy in London
Police say officers found discarded items in area after group claimed to have targeted embassy with dronesPolice have said they are investigating a security incident near the Israeli embassy in London after officers found a number of discarded items in the area.A statement said Counter Terrorism Policing London was aware of a video shared online overnight in which a group claimed to have targeted the embassy with drones carrying dangerous substances. Continue reading...

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
UK SMEs Face Ongoing Cash Flow Pressures, Report Reveals
Small and medium-sized enterprises across the UK are navigating persistent cash flow challenges, according to insights from specialist lender iwoca. A recent survey of more than 1,000 SME owners reveals widespread vulnerability, with many operating on limited financial buffers and struggling with irregular income streams... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Funding Circle Expands Funding Facility to Support FlexiPay Growth
Funding Circle Holdings plc (LSE: FCH), the United Kingdom’s platform for financing small and medium-sized enterprises, has successfully renewed and enlarged its primary funding arrangement for its FlexiPay division. The new facility totals £320 million, an increase from the prior £240 million limit, and now... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
ClearBank Reports Third Year of UK Profitability as Revenue Surges and Payment Volumes Increase
ClearBank, a provider of real-time clearing and embedded banking solutions, has marked its tenth anniversary with another seemingly solid performance, securing its third straight year of profitability in the UK. The company reported robust expansion in 2025, driven by higher fee-based earnings and a sharp... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
UK’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and Turing Institute Introduce Synthetic Dataset to Fight Money Laundering
The UK’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has joined forces with research and technology partners at the Turing Institute and Plenitude Consulting to create a synthetic dataset designed to enhance the fight against money laundering. This initiative tackles a long-standing obstacle in financial crime prevention: the... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Swedish Paytech SolvaPay Confirms $2.8M Pre-Seed
SolvaPay, an AI payments platform based in Stockholm, this week announced $2.8 million in pre-seed funding to build out its new payment infrastructure platform. The funding was led by European Fintech VC Redstone and Silicon Valley-based MS&AD Ventures, with participation from Antler and Greens Ventures,... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Bitcoin (BTC) Faced Most Difficult Q1 in 15 Year Trading History : Research
Bitcoin faced a demanding start to 2026, posting one of its most challenging quarterly results in over 15 years of trading history. According to NYDIG’s latest analysis, the cryptocurrency dropped over 22 percent during the first three months, with the bulk of losses occurring in... Read More

ZDNet News
Open 
The best WordPress hosting services of 2026: Expert tested and reviewed
We tested the best WordPress hosting services that make website management a breeze, with no coding experience required.

ZDNet News
Open 
I tried the new Gemini app for Mac - it has one major advantage over the web version
Beyond being quick and convenient, Google's Gemini app can access and analyze the content in any window you share from your Mac desktop - and it's a big deal.

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11529 Colocation - Planned Datacentre Maintenance - Sandbrook (New)
The maintenance team are working on the cooling units in the DC suites, No impact is expected.

Start: Fri, 17th Apr 2026 09:00

End: Fri, 17th Apr 2026 17:00

Edited: Fri, 17th Apr 2026 11:53

Status: Up

Maintenance: Planned

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Musk v. Altman Is a Battle for OpenAI’s Soul
In Musk v. Altman, a jury will soon determine whether OpenAI has strayed from its founding mission to ensure AGI benefits humanity. Here’s what to know.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
The Influencers Normalizing Not Having Sex
From a celibate porn star to an asexual ex-Mormon, the internet is full of people who are abstaining from sex—and it’s not just incels.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Canyon Spectral:ON CF 8 Electric Mountain Bike: Beginner-Friendly, Under $5K
The Spectral:ON CF 8 is a do-it-all, full-carbon electric mountain bike with an 800-Wh battery and under $4,500. Yes, please!

Wired Top Stories
Open 
How Can Astronauts Tell How Fast They’re Going?
Weirdly, spaceships have no direct way to gauge their own speed. Luckily, we can use some physics tricks to figure it out.

Mail Online
Open 
Businesses urged to put contingency plans in place as more than 2,000 firms go bust amid Iran war
Businesses are being urged to put contingency plans in place, as another 2,000 firms went bust last month amid the economic fallout of the Iran war.

Mail Online
Open 
Jack Whitehall's fiancée Roxy Horner looks every inch the blushing bride as she tries on multiple wedding gowns ahead of the big day
On Sunday, the model will tie the knot with comedian Jack Whitehall in what is expected to be a star-studded celebration.

Sky News Home
Open 
Tesco swapping barcodes for QR codes in UK 'first' - here's why
Tesco is swapping barcodes for QR codes on a range of its own-brand products in a move the supermarket chain is describing as a UK "first". 

Telegraph
Open 
Whipped beetroot dip with radishes
Straight from your garden or the greengrocers, this smooth sauce can be served with any crudité or flatbread

Chatham House
Open 
Dollar dominance is surviving the Iran war – just about
Dollar dominance is surviving the Iran war – just about
Expert comment
sfarrell.drupa…
16 April 2026

The war doesn’t seem to have damaged the dollar’s global status. But that may reflect the US’s emergence as the top producer of oil, gas and weapons, which insulates its economy from the crisis.















A central characteristic of the dollar’s role as the world’s pivotal currency is that the US bond market, and the greenback itself, act as safe havens in times of stress.As anxiety levels rise during a crisis, institutional investors and governments flock to dollar-denominated assets because US capital markets are easier to trade in and out of than any others; and because the ability of the Federal Reserve to act as lender and liquidity-provider of last resort is second to none. In the end, it is US trustworthiness that underpins all this. But since global trust in the US seems to be eroding, both before and during this year’s war on Iran, it is worth asking whether the dollar’s safe-haven status is showing any signs of ill-health.






The performance of US asset prices may say less about the dollar’s status than it does about the relative insulation of the US economy from the crisis.






The quick answer is no, but it would be wrong to conclude that all is well, for two reasons. In the first place, the performance of US asset prices may say less about the dollar’s status than it does about the relative insulation of the US economy from the crisis.And second, China’s capital markets are emerging really very well from the current crisis, which might give Washington some pause for thought.Effect of the warFirst, it is worth considering what actually happened between the start of the war and the 7 April ceasefire, to the dollar, to US bond yields, and to the US stock market.In principle, a true safe haven will see the currency strengthen, bond yields fall and stock markets perform relatively well when things go wrong globally.By those standards, US asset prices haven’t done at all badly. The dollar strengthened by around 2 percent against a basket of other currencies; and the S&P stock index fell by less than its peers. And while the yield on a US government 10-year bond rose around 35 basis points to 4.3 percent, that increase was also smaller than many US peers: 10-year German yields, for example, rose by 45 basis points.Compare this to dramatic episodes in the past – the 2008 Lehman Crisis, the start of the 2003 Iraq war, or the attacks on the US in September 2001 – and what we’ve seen in recent weeks still shows US markets in a respectable light.The move in the dollar’s exchange rate, for example, is comparable to what happened in the weeks after the 1991 Gulf War, and has been much stronger than the greenback’s response to the 2003 war, when it weakened sharply.The outperformance of the US stock market is also consistent with earlier episodes, with the exception of the 2003 war, when US markets fell very sharply by comparison with others.The rise in US bond yields is also comparable with the past. Although US yields fell after 9/11 and after the start of the 2003 war, they rose in the weeks after the Lehman crisis.Moreover, at least some of the increase in US bond yields – and corresponding fall in bond prices – must result from the selling of US government bonds by foreign central banks seeking to address domestic concerns.The Turkish central bank, for example, has relied heavily on selling US bonds to raise dollars that it can use to defend the lira, fearing that a sharp depreciation of the local currency would boost inflation and encourage a mass flight to the dollar by Turkish residents. Other central banks are very likely to have done the same, albeit that the data are scanty.While this decent performance of US asset markets in recent weeks suggests, on the face of it, that the war hasn’t done any damage to the dollar’s global status, these positive results may simply reflect the US’s emergence in recent years as the world’s top producer of oil, gas and weapons, which all help insulate the economy from the crisis.So, the market might simply be reacting to a conjunctural fact about the US economy, rather than a structural fact about the role of the dollar in the international financial system.ChinaMeanwhile, Chinese financial markets have exhibited extraordinary calm, with the government’s 10-year bond yield unchanged at 1.8 percent, quite unlike increases in bond yields seen almost everywhere else. The Chinese equity market has weakened a bit, but the renminbi has strengthened.






The strengthening of the Chinese currency in recent weeks is especially notable.






Indeed, the strengthening of the Chinese currency in recent weeks is especially notable, since it makes China the only energy importer in the world whose exchange rate has appreciated since the war began.The appearance of calm in Chinese financial markets may also reflect some conjunctural facts about China’s economy which help protect it from the worst consequences of the war. Although China is a large energy importer, for example, its electricity generation depends hardly at all on oil and gas: coal is the dominant energy source, along with solar, wind, nuclear and hydro power.Meanwhile, the war barely affected Iranian crude shipments to China, an economy which in any case has some 1.4 billion barrels of oil in reserve, around three months’ worth of consumption.

Chatham House
Open 
India and Pakistan still cannot agree to restore the Indus Waters Treaty – but re-engagement could help bring lasting peace
India and Pakistan still cannot agree to restore the Indus Waters Treaty – but re-engagement could help bring lasting peace
Expert comment
LToremark
16 April 2026

Water cooperation is not only mutually beneficial for India and Pakistan, but essential. Restoring the Indus Waters Treaty could be a powerful foundation for rebuilding trust.















Water has long been entangled with the political and security dynamics between India and Pakistan. The Indus River Basin is a lifeline for more than 300 million people across both countries, supporting agriculture, energy production and livelihoods. Signed in 1960, the Indus Waters Treaty divided the basin’s rivers between India and Pakistan while establishing detailed rules for cooperation, data sharing and dispute resolution. For more than six decades, it proved remarkably durable and acted as a stabilizing force for broader India-Pakistan relations. It has survived three wars and prolonged periods of diplomatic freeze, offering a rare pathway for cooperation. But in recent years, the treaty had come under increasing strain. Following a militant attack in Pahalgam, Kashmir, in April 2025 – for which India blamed Pakistan but Islamabad denied involvement – India chose to temporarily suspend its participation in the treaty and subsequently restricted the flow of water for short periods through the Baglihar and Kishanganga dams. Water scarcity during summer could increase the likelihood of India reducing downstream river flows into Pakistan, critical for irrigation, drinking supplies and hydropower generation. Should India’s reservoir storage capacities improve amid surging water scarcity, there are risks of an escalating crisis.India’s decision to suspend the treaty not only significantly erodes the predictability and stability it had provided but also underscores how water can exacerbate tensions and even be instrumentalized as a tool of conflict – especially in the context of geopolitical rivalry. An enduring treaty under pressure




































Related work

Urgent mediation to save the Indus Waters Treaty could be a route to de-escalation between India and Pakistan












The long-standing resilience of the Indus Waters Treaty rested on a shared understanding: that water cooperation could be at least partially insulated from broader geopolitical rivalry. However, this equilibrium has come under increasing strain in recent years. The hydrological conditions of the Indus Basin are shifting rapidly. The area has some of the highest rates of glacial retreat globally – perennial snow and ice cover in the Indus declined by up to 24.8 per cent between 2001 and 2021 – while shifts in the timing and intensity of the Asian Summer Monsoon are reshaping shared water availability in the region. But the treaty itself predates modern climate science and rests on outdated hydrological assumptions, lacking mechanisms to factor for glacial retreat and largely ignoring groundwater depletion, now a critical stress point. Addressing these gaps is in the shared interest of both India and Pakistan.Both countries also have growing populations and water demand, meaning pressures on water resources are mounting. In this context, a growing number of run-of-the-river hydropower projects on the western rivers allocated to Pakistan – combined with concerns over cumulative impacts, design specifications and flow timing – have made technical disputes more frequent and increasingly politicized. Meanwhile, India’s suspension of the treaty in response to security concerns signals a broader shift in bilateral relations, with water emerging as a geopolitical lever. As trust declines and treaty interpretations diverge, dispute resolution has become more difficult. Historically, the Indus Waters Treaty’s institutional framework – through the Permanent Indus Commission and third-party processes – has enabled data sharing and helped manage disputes, such as over the Baglihar dam.Global lessons in transboundary water cooperationLessons from beyond South Asia underscore the importance of cooperation and show how some of these pressures can be alleviated. The experience of the Aral Sea basin, often cited as one of the world’s most severe environmental disasters, demonstrates both the consequences of poor water governance and the potential for partial recovery through cooperation. Decades of unsustainable water diversion devastated ecosystems, economies, and public health across Central Asia. However, recent efforts – particularly in the North Aral Sea – have shown that coordinated action and international support can restore water levels, revive fisheries and improve local livelihoods.In the Mekong Delta, the Mekong River Commission brings together Cambodia, Laos, Thailand and Vietnam in a shared governance framework that facilitates dialogue, joint flood and drought monitoring, and advance notification of major upstream projects. After facing similar pressures and distrust as the Indus treaty, cooperation on ecosystem restoration to help protect water resources has helped rebuild trust among the commission’s stakeholders. Similarly, in the Senegal River Basin, the Organisation pour la mise en valeur du fleuve Sénégal (OMVS) enables Mali, Mauritania and Senegal to jointly manage infrastructure and share benefits, helping reduce conflict while supporting more coordinated water management. While the Indus context is very different, the underlying lesson is relevant: even deeply entrenched water challenges can be addressed when governance structures are strengthened, information is shared, and stakeholders recognize their interdependence. Harnessing water for peace and stability






Climate change is increasing pressure on the resources, thereby rapidly eroding the trust needed to sustain cooperation.






As demonstrated by the situation in the Indus Basin, water governance tends to remain siloed from broader stabilization and peacebuilding efforts. Too often treated as a technical domain for engineers and specialists, water is excluded from political negotiation and conflict resolution. But this limits the potential of water diplomacy to contribute to stability.Integrating water governance into mediation, stabilization and reconstruction efforts can help bridge this gap. In practice, this means involving water experts in negotiations to address resource-sharing in peace agreements and align infrastructure investment with confidence-building measures. A useful example is the Jordan–Israel Peace Treaty, which includes detailed provisions on water allocation and cooperation in the Jordan River basin. Despite broader political tensions and a fragile relationship between Jordan and Israel, these arrangements have largely endured, supporting Jordan’s water security and sustaining coordination.In the case of India and Pakistan, the situation highlights the need for international actors to support water diplomacy as part of their engagement in fragile and conflict-affected regions. This includes providing technical assistance, facilitating dialogue and helping to finance projects that deliver shared benefits. It also requires patience: rebuilding trust around shared resources is a gradual process, particularly where political tensions run deep.

Mac Rumours
Open 
iPhone 18 Pro's Four Rumored Colors Revealed, Including 'Dark Cherry'
A source said to be familiar with Apple's supply chain today revealed the color options Apple is planning for the iPhone 18 Pro, ‌iPhone 18 Pro‌ Max, and the upcoming foldable iPhone.



Image via Macworld.

The information comes from Macworld, which says the signature new color for this year's Pro models will be Dark Cherry, a deep wine-like red. While other sources had previously reported on a "Dark Red" option, the hue is said to be considerably closer to wine than a brighter red. Bloomberg's Mark Gurman and other leakers had previously suggested Apple was experimenting with a shade of red for the ‌iPhone 18 Pro‌, but the color will apparently be much more muted than last year's Cosmic Orange on the iPhone 17 Pro.



According to Macworld's source, Apple has been working on four color options for the ‌iPhone 18 Pro‌ and Pro Max, with the following Pantone codes said to be in use internally:





Light Blue (Pantone 2121), resembling the current iPhone 17's Mist Blue

Dark Cherry (Pantone 6076), the headline new color

Dark Gray (Pantone 426C)

Silver (Pantone 427C), similar to the current generation





The source cautions that all four colors are still in development, and since the ‌iPhone 18 Pro‌ has not yet gone into mass production, Apple still has time to make changes. Apple also does not always offer four color options for the Pro lineup, so one of these shades could be dropped before launch. Last year, both Macworld and leaker Sonny Dickson reported that Apple had considered launching the ‌iPhone 17 Pro‌ in black or steel gray, but neither color was released.



For the first foldable iPhone, which has been rumored to be called the "iPhone Ultra," the device will reportedly come in fewer options than the Pro models, with no bold or vibrant colors. Macworld's source says Apple has been working on a classic silver and white model, as well as an Indigo option similar to the ‌iPhone 17 Pro‌'s Deep Blue.



The same source corroborates earlier leaks on the foldable's design, saying the device will feature two rear cameras, a selfie camera on the outer display, a second selfie camera in the upper-left corner of the inner display, and an iPad mini-style shape when unfolded. The foldable is reportedly just 4.7 millimeters thick when unfolded, which would make it considerably thinner than the 5.6mm iPhone Air.



On the design of the ‌iPhone 18 Pro‌, the CAD drawings seen by Macworld's source support existing rumors of a smaller Dynamic Island, which would free up a small amount of additional screen space when Live Activities are not in use. The schematics also show a slightly reduced gap between the glass cutout on the back and the camera bump in at least one render, though the source was unable to confirm whether this reflects a finalized design change. A Weibo leaker known as "Instant Digital" previously reported that Apple would adopt a new manufacturing process to minimize the color difference between the glass and the aluminum frame, which may be connected.



The ‌iPhone 18 Pro‌ models and foldable iPhone are expected to be announced in September 2026, though some analysts suggest the foldable will launch at a later date. The iPhone 18, iPhone 18e, and ‌iPhone Air‌ 2 are rumored to follow in the first half of 2027.Related Roundup: iPhone 18 ProTag: MacworldThis article, 'iPhone 18 Pro's Four Rumored Colors Revealed, Including 'Dark Cherry'' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mail Online
Open 
Rachel Reeves admits Britain SHOULD get more oil and gas out of the North Sea as she says Government is looking at 'quickest way' to boost supplies
The Chancellor said she was looking at how to allow more 'tiebacks', where satellite  wells are drilled to exploit existing fields, as she visited Washington.

Mail Online
Open 
Khloe Kardashian poses in a white figure-hugging white dress after firing back at ex-husband Lamar Odom
The Keeping Up With The Kardashians star, 41, looked incredible as she posed in a strapless, ankle-length dress.

Mail Online
Open 
My three years of hell: FELICITY KENDALL reveals her heartbreaking struggle after the death of her partner, how she was in a 'hole' of grief and why she will never date again
As the actress, 79, prepares to return to the musical stage in High Society, she talks relationships, religion and why woke critics should leave her Good Life 'husband' alone.

Mail Online
Open 
What Prince Harry told me fireside in Montecito reveals everything you need to know about his relationship with Charles, by BRYONY GORDON
When I met Harry at his home in Montecito three years ago, I couldn't help but mention this whole blood-letting ritual, because as aristocratic a rite of passage as it was, it still seemed a little brutal.

Mail Online
Open 
How to end the misery of hot flushes and sweating without HRT. Menopause left Helen a shell of herself until she found a surprising, inexpensive treatment. Now doctors reveal what works - and the natural route
Three years ago, Helen started sweating so profusely overnight that she would wake up, her hair drenched, and have to flip over her pillow. It was a distressing symptom of the menopause.

Mail Online
Open 
Ex-glamour model Jodie Marsh, 47, pleads not guilty to assault after 'putting her hands on neighbour's neck' in row over animal sanctuary
The ex-glamour model, 47, was pictured leaving Chelmsford Magistrates Court, where she also denied two counts of threatening or insulting language.

Mail Online
Open 
POLL OF THE DAY: Should Sir Keir Starmer resign after the Mandelson security vetting scandal?
Sir Keir Starmer is facing mounting calls to quit after it was revealed that Peter Mandelson was made US ambassador despite failing security vetting.

Mail Online
Open 
Iconic former Premier League referee Uriah Rennie leaves incredible seven-figure fortune to family following his death aged 65
The family of iconic referee Uriah Rennie, who sadly passed away last year, have inherited an incredible seven-figure sum from the former Premier League official.

Mail Online
Open 
Moment military Land Rover flips into the air and throws driver out of his vehicle after he was forced to swerve out the way of reckless motorist
Shocking court details have revealed how Crenguta Aruxandei, 44, caused a 'horrific' pile-up on the A43 at Hulcote when her grey Audi Q2 cut directly into the path of a military convoy.

Mail Online
Open 
The truth about Mark Goldbridge and his empire: We reveal how he made his millions, the claims he can't shake, his harrowing life before football, how 'toxic' rants have split Man United squad and his REAL name (no, not that one)
Mark Goldbridge reached a new milestone this week when Gary Neville's media company acquired his YouTube channels. Industry insiders suggest the deal comfortably exceeds £1million.

Mail Online
Open 
Police close London park after video claims to show drones 'carrying radioactive and cancer-causing materials' towards Israeli Embassy
Police have closed a London park after a video claimed drones carrying 'radioactive materials' had been launched towards the Israeli embassy.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Huw Fyw review – take a sentimental journey around a war veteran’s living room
Dance House, CardiffTudur Owen’s Welsh-language play about a second world war veteran is unashamedly heartfelt and anchored by very fine performancesThis play by Tudur Owen tells the story of a curmudgeonly second world war veteran, an unexpected windfall, a clogged toilet and an entire Welsh village’s trip to London in 1994. It has the air of a fable that veers into more anguished terrain. PTSD, generational trauma, social exclusion and the weight of irreconcilable grief are never far from the surface.One of Wales’s most popular comedians and broadcasters, Owen also stars in the eponymous role (the play’s title translates as Huw Alive). The Welsh-language production’s uncanniness is partly predicated by an expectation that there will perhaps always be an ironic punchline to puncture Huw’s unamused visage. But these seldom come and instead this is a play told with absolute and unironic sincerity, its heart unabashedly worn on its sleeve.At Dance House, Cardiff, until 18 April. Then touring until 8 May. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The best recent crime and thrillers – review roundup
The Keeper by Tana French; The Kindness of Strangers by Emma Garman; Mrs Shim Is a Killer by Kang Jiyoung; A Killer in the Family by Amin Ahmad; The Drowning Place by Sarah HilaryThe Keeper by Tana French (Viking, £16.99)
The final book in French’s Cal Hooper trilogy sees the retired Chicago detective drawn into a power struggle for the future of the small Irish town he has made his home. Ardnakelty is a place where everyone is interconnected, with grudges and loyalties lasting for generations, and Hooper, now engaged to local widow Lena and mentor to 16-year-old Trey, is becoming a part of its fabric. When the body of Rachel Holohan, girlfriend of the son of local bigshot Tommy Moynihan, is recovered from the river, the consensus is suicide, but Trey convinces Hooper to investigate. Tommy doesn’t like people interfering in his business, especially when it emerges that Rachel was concerned about his plans for the town. An immersive, slow-burn of a book, as much about the march of time and the inevitably changing nature of Irish rural life as it is about solving a crime, The Keeper is dense, compelling and superbly atmospheric.The Kindness of Strangers by Emma Garman (Virago, £20)
Set in a Chelsea boarding house in 1953, Garman’s debut novel opens with Jimmy Sullivan – who “wore spiv’s shoes and spoke in unmistakable Cockney tones” – bleeding to death under the dispassionate gaze of the landlady and her lodgers. The big Victorian house, presided over by bohemian literary widow Honor Wilson, is home to a debutante fallen on hard times, a wannabe writer, a young cinema usher with social aspirations, and a Jewish poet who managed to escape Hitler but lost his wife and child in the process. All have secrets, but none more than Honor herself, and the arrival of Jimmy, who claims to be the son of an old family retainer, threatens them all. This is not only an excellent mystery, but an evocative portrayal of a group of people displaced socially and geographically by war and its aftermath, with the moral and topographical landscape of 1950s London superbly rendered. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Add to playlist: the sweaty, unvarnished electropop of Punchbag and the week’s best new tracks
The sibling duo’s follow-up EP spikes their off-kilter pop with new darkness, adding atmospheric balladry to their glorious racketFrom South LondonRecommended if you like Charli xcx, Confidence Man, KlaxonsUp next UK tour starts 21 AprilIf this was April 2008, Punchbag, AKA south London siblings Clara and Anders Bach, would be headlining an NME tour alongside Alphabeat and Frankmusik, while the Popjustice forum would have hailed them as the new face of “wonky pop”. The sonic calling cards of that ramshackle iPod-era micro-genre – off-kilter, unvarnished electropop piled high with myriad other genres – were streaked across Punchbag’s debut single Fuck It. A sweaty riot of 90s rave, maximalist bass and Clara’s spit-soaked vocals, it felt tailor-made for soundtracking an awkward snog on Skins. Last May it was joined by three other frantic bangers on the duo’s debut EP, I’m Not Your Punchbag, the highlight of which, You Used to Be So Sexy, sounds like a GarageBand-produced the Veronicas had they grown up in east London as opposed to Brisbane. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
House approves short-term extension of surveillance law in blow to Republicans’ long-term plan – US politics live
The decision to extend a warrantless security law until 30 April came after 20 Republicans worked with House Democrats to defeat attempts to pass five-year and 18-month renewalsSign up for the Breaking News US emailHello and welcome to our live coverage of US politics.The House of Representatives voted early on Friday to briefly extend an expiring and controversial law that grants the US government sweeping powers for warrantless surveillance.Donald Trump announced a 10-day ceasefire in Lebanon to be followed by a meeting between Israeli and Lebanese leaders next week.Progressive Democrat Analilia Mejia won a New Jersey special election for the US House on Thursday. Mejia, who was endorsed by Elizabeth Warren and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, is far more critical on Israel and was the only candidate in the Democratic primary to call Israel’s actions during the war in Gaza a genocide.Todd Lyons, the acting director of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), is stepping down after a turbulent year carrying out Donald Trump’s immigration agenda.Donald Trump nominated Erica Schwartz, former deputy surgeon general during his first administration, to lead the Centers for Disease Control (CDC).Schwartz was under immediate pressure from critics of the health secretary, Robert F Kennedy Jr, to oppose his anti-vaccine ideology. At a heated oversight hearing, House Democrats grilled Kennedy over his vaccine rollbacks.Speaking in Las Vegas, Trump told supporters “the war in Iran is going along swimmingly, we can do whatever we want.” He did not explain why, then, the US military has been unable to stop Iran from closing the strait of Hormuz.The US Department of Justice opened an investigation into Eric Swalwell following his resignation from Congress, according to a source familiar with the matter.Police in Illinois responded Wednesday evening to the home of Pope Leo’s brother, John Prevost, after a bomb threat was made, NBC Chicago reported. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Premier League heads for crunch weekend, Haaland ready for Arsenal ‘final’, Chelsea back Rosenior – football live
⚽ Fixtures | Latest tables | Premier League top scorers⚽ Premier League: 10 things to look out for | Mail SimonLiverpool boss Arne Slot has been speaking ahead of Sunday’s Merseyside derby. Here he is on Hugo Ekitike’s Achilles tendon injury which has ruled the Frenchman out for the rest of the season and this summer’s World Cup.He hasn’t been operated on yet. Devastating for him coming to a new club having so much impact straight away. Playing against your former club in the Champions League quarter-final with so much to come for him in the summer.My first thoughts are with him being out for such a long time, missing out on so many special moments. But it is not the first and not the last player who experienced something like this at the start of their career, and there are so many examples of players coming back even stronger. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Petal passion, super-surreal Polaroids and Billy Childish’s California – the week in art
Expertly curated flower paintings, the garage-rock star’s hazy expressionism and a masterpiece from a Morrisons receipt – all in your weekly dispatchHandpicked: Painting Flowers from 1900 to Today Jim and Helen Ede, founders of Kettle’s Yard, cared almost as much about the fresh cut flowers in their gallery as the art. This show looks at artists who share that floral passion, from Henri Rousseau to Lubaina Himid.
• Kettle’s Yard, Cambridge, 25 April to 6 September Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Richard Desmond loses £1.3bn damages battle over national lottery licence
Media tycoon vows to appeal after dismissal of action against Gambling Commission for awarding Allwyn the franchiseBusiness live – latest updatesThe media tycoon Richard Desmond has vowed to appeal after a resounding defeat in his claim for up to £1.3bn in damages from the Gambling Commission over its decision not to award him the 10-year licence to run the national lottery.Mrs Justice Smith dismissed Desmond’s claim on Friday, in a sometimes scathing written high court judgment that reserved particular criticism for “inexcusable” failings on the part of Desmond’s legal team. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
MPs and peers approve law to pardon women convicted of illegal abortions
Legislation will expunge convictions and stop prosecution of women who end their pregnancies in England and WalesLegislation to pardon women who have been convicted of illegal abortions has passed its final parliamentary hurdle, paving the way for a landmark change in the law in England and Wales.The amendment to the crime and policing bill, which will also expunge the police records of those arrested and investigated over illegal abortions, was considered in the House of Lords during a phase of parliamentary ping-pong, where a bill passes back and forth between the Lords and Commons. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Keir Starmer says it is unforgivable he was not told Mandelson failed vetting
PM says he is ‘furious’ and did not know security officials had recommended that Mandelson be denied clearanceUK politics live – latest updatesKeir Starmer has said it was “unforgivable” that he was not told that Peter Mandelson had failed his security vetting before being appointed as ambassador to Washington.The prime minister said he was “furious” about what had happened, as he insisted he had not known that security officials had initially recommended that Mandelson be denied clearance. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Why Arsenal are still the favourites to win the Premier League
Manchester City gained ground last weekend but the league leaders have plenty of reasons to remain positive By Opta AnalystLast weekend was nightmarish for Arsenal. They lost at home to Bournemouth on Saturday with a flat, disjointed performance, and matters deteriorated further the following day when Manchester City beat Chelsea convincingly at Stamford Bridge. Arsenal’s lead at the Premier League summit has narrowed from nine points to six, and City still have a game in hand.The two sides meet at the Etihad on Sunday for a match that could define the title race. The narrative pretty much writes itself: City win that game, then win their game in hand, and the title is surely theirs given how strong they are at the end of the season. That scenario is being talked about as an inevitability in some quarters, as though Arsenal have already let things slip. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
The girl from Barry who grew up to be world class
Sophie Ingle is poised for another landmark in a stellar career as Wales go to Albania in Women's World Cup qualifying.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Can Oli Sykes still scream? Bring Me The Horizon re-recording debut 2006 album
The band is revisiting debut deathcore album Count Your Blessings to mark its 20th anniversary.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Nueva Germania: The failed 'Aryan project' in Paraguay
A new home for the "Aryan race." That was what German emigrants envisioned when they founded Nueva Germania in Paraguay in 1886. It failed back then but a version of the town still exists today.

Mail Online
Open 
Ryanair passenger begs for forgiveness after 'sexually assaulting air stewardess on flight to Ireland following "mind-boggling" intake of alcohol'
Aaron Brady, 31, had consumed a 'mind-boggling' amount of alcohol before he assaulted the woman on an inbound flight to Dublin Airport last year.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Nueva Germania: The failed 'Aryan Project' in Paraguay
A new home for the "Aryan race." That was what German emigrants envisioned when they founded Nueva Germania in Paraguay in 1886. It failed back then but a version of the town still exists today.

Mail Online
Open 
Ryanair passenger begs for forgiveness after 'sexually assaulting air stewardess on flight to Ireland following 'mind-boggling' intake of alcohol'
Aaron Brady, 31, had consumed a 'mind-boggling' amount of alcohol before he assaulted the woman on an inbound flight to Dublin Airport last year.

Mail Online
Open 
Lamborghini is seized because driver didn't have insurance - as figures show 160,000 cars were towed away last year
It is estimated that 300,000 motorists a day are driving without insurance costing the UK economy an eye-watering £1billion a year.

Mail Online
Open 
Queen Camilla was 'never' going to meet with Epstein's victims during US visit due to 'risk of jeopardising' police investigation into Andrew, REBECCA ENGLISH tells PALACE CONFIDENTIAL
On the latest episode of the Daily Mail's Palace Confidential, Rebecca sat down with host Jo Elvin and Diary Editor Richard Eden to discuss how the ensuing Epstein scandal has affected the monarchy.

Mail Online
Open 
Pictured: Honeymoon shark attack gynaecologist fighting for life after losing a leg in horrific incident in the Maldives
Newly-wed Borja Garcia Sousa, 31, had to have his leg amputated after being airlifted to hospital following the Indian Ocean paradise attack in front of his wife Ana.

Mail Online
Open 
Co-op executive wins £100,000 after being sacked for complaining to her boss that women were being paid less than men
Samantha Walker was graded as 'partially achieving' by her boss, despite working at the same level as her male colleagues, some of whom were graded as 'outstanding'.

Mail Online
Open 
'He forgets he is not American!' Brooklyn Beckham mocked for saying 'arugula' in latest cooking video instead of 'rocket' as he fails to mention his mum Victoria on her birthday
The estranged son of David and Victoria Beckham , 27, who snubbed his mother on her 52nd birthday, left followers furious with his choice of wording.

Mail Online
Open 
Hundreds of thousands of flights could be axed in 'existential crisis' for airlines as jet fuel shortage caused by Iran war bites, expert says
EXCLUSIVE: Passengers are already facing higher fares after the cost of jet fuel doubled since the start of Donald Trump's war with Iran.

BBC UK News
Open 
'It's like climbing half the Eiger': Escalator plan for notorious Aberdeen staircase
People welcome plans to finally install escalators in an Aberdeen shopping centre after 42 years.

BBC UK News
Open 
Royal Mail denies hiding undelivered post from MP visiting sorting office
A Wrexham councillor made the allegation during an executive board meeting.

The Register
Open 
Locked-out iPhone user tells The Reg that Apple is scrambling to fix character flaw passcode bug
University student says he plans to move to Android, but concedes iOS engineers acting fast Apple is finally working on a fix for a bug that has locked some users out of their iPhones for months, The Register understands.…

The Register
Open 
Attention data hoarders: Alexa loses its Plex appeal as voice feature gets canned
Users who stream their own media files ticked off as Plex warns Alexa skill will die on June 15 Plex is pulling the plug on its Alexa integration, leaving anyone who relied on voice commands to wrangle their media library out of luck.…

Mail Online
Open 
Meghan spends just two hours at Megstock as she leaves after posing for photos with adoring fans who had paid £1,700 each for the privilege
The Duchess of Sussex will reportedly net up to £130,000 for turning up to the women-only Her Best Life retreat on the final day of her Australian tour with Prince Harry .

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Give theatre choreographers and movement directors their own awards, says union group
‘If we celebrate the impact of physical storytelling, we must acknowledge the artists behind it,’ says Equity body, calling out the lack of movement categories in major awardsChoreographers and movement directors in theatre are undervalued by awards ceremonies and deserve greater acknowledgment, says the Equity group representing both disciplines.At last weekend’s Oliviers ceremony, the award for best theatre choreographer went to Fabian Aloise for Evita at the London Palladium. In a statement, Equity’s Choreographers and Movement Directors Network (CMDN) said it was “brilliant to see choreography recognised on major stages like the Olivier awards” but drew attention to the movement directors who worked on nominated productions yet went unrecognised with their own category. The ceremony “opens up a bigger conversation about what language we use to describe how theatre is made, and questions who gets named in that process – especially when it comes to movement and choreography”, said the CMDN. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Law to pardon women convicted of illegal abortions passes final hurdle in UK parliament
Legislation will expunge convictions and stop prosecution of women who end their pregnancies in England and WalesLegislation to pardon women who have been convicted of illegal abortions has passed its final parliamentary hurdle, paving the way for a landmark change in the law in England and Wales.The amendment to the crime and policing bill, which will also expunge the police records of those arrested and investigated over illegal abortions, was considered in the House of Lords during a phase of parliamentary ping-pong, where a bill passes back and forth between the Lords and Commons. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Stage set for an almighty clash as Starmer's critics look to finish him off

Mail Online
Open 
Prince Harry and Meghan steal the spotlight at Waratahs clash - and an old World Cup bond is rekindled
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle turned a routine Super Rugby clash into a global spectacle on Friday night, attending the NSW Waratahs' showdown with Moana Pasifika at Allianz Stadium

Mail Online
Open 
My husband was diagnosed with dementia at 56 - we dismissed the warning signs for months
A mother-of-three has revealed the subtle symptoms of early-onset Alzheimer's she and her family brushed off before her husband was diagnosed aged 56.

Mail Online
Open 
Luxury hotel owner in Cornwall offers to foot British tourists' petrol bills to ease financial pain of staycation
Amid rising petrol costs due to the Iran war, one Cornish hotel will make holidays more appealing by paying the uplift in petrol costs that guests are having to pay as a result.

Mail Online
Open 
Terrifying moment family assaults staff as mum plays dead on floor after refusing to pay airport baggage fee
Passengers hitting out at airlines for baggage fees, and expressing frustration at added costs, are nothing new. But one traveller took things to the next level.

Mail Online
Open 
We've found Meghan Markle's oversized striped shirt on sale with 30% off - plus the best alternatives from M&S, Ralph Lauren and more
A classic striped shirt is a spring wardrobe essential. The right style can be worn with everything from jeans and tailored trousers to shorts, or tucked into a skirt for an easy, put-together look.

Mail Online
Open 
Meghan Markle leaves Sydney hotel with Prince Harry after she posed for photos for just over two hours with adoring fans who had paid £1,700 for the privilege
The Duchess of Sussex will reportedly net up to £130,000 for going to the Her Best Life retreat on the final day of her Australian tour with Prince Harry .

Mail Online
Open 
Brooklyn Beckham mocked for saying 'arugula' in latest cooking video instead of the English word 'rocket' as he fails to mention his mum Victoria on her birthday: 'He forgets he is not American!'
The estranged son of David and Victoria Beckham , 27, who snubbed his mother on her 52nd birthday, left followers furious with his choice of wording.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Lancashire to put matches behind paywall; Hampshire v Somerset, and more: county cricket – live
Updates from the first day’s play in the latest round Sign up for The Spin | Mail Tanya or comment BTLBad news for Lancs at Bristol, where Ajeet Singh Dale seems to have done something nasty to his hamstring and has limped off. A real shame on his return to his old club. Glos 8-0. A fascinating piece by Emma John, with a mention of Benny Howell of Hants, Glos and more. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
LIV Golf ‘business as usual’ but chief admits rebel tour may need to raise money
Scott O’Neil rejects claims LIV is close to collapse‘Structural changes’ afoot, chief executive saysLIV Golf chief executive Scott O’Neil admitted the nascent golf league’s finances are “managed very tightly” and said structural changes are on the way that would probably mean they need to raise money, but he remained adamant the league will not fold.He was interviewed by LIV employees during the TV broadcast of the first round of the rebel tour’s Mexico City leg, a day after reports that Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund was to cut its funding for the league it helped launch in 2022. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Law to pardon women convicted of illegal abortions passes final UK parliament hurdle
Legislation will expunge convictions and end the prosecution of women who terminate their own pregnanciesLegislation to pardon women who have been convicted of illegal abortions has passed its final parliamentary hurdle, paving the way for a landmark change in the law.The amendment to the crime and policing bill, which will also expunge the police records of those arrested and investigated over illegal abortions, was considered in the House of Lords during a phase of parliamentary ping-pong, where a bill passes back and forth between the Lords and Commons. Continue reading...

CNET News
Open 
The Hidden iPhone Feature You Need to Enable for Crystal-Clear Calls
This feature isn't new but it's easy to miss.

CNET News
Open 
MacOS Now Has a Native Gemini AI App
Gemini is just a quick keyboard shortcut away now.

CNET News
Open 
AT&T Revamped Its Unlimited Phone Plans. Here's How They Compare
Some of the new 2.0 plans can save you money, though one goes over the top in cost and features.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Why India's SMEs are suffering from Hormuz Strait crisis
Since the blockade of the vital shipping route, spice hub Kerala and ceramics manufacturing center Morbi are two of regional sites in India affected. Can anything be done to support small-scale traders there?

Autosport F1
Open 
Red Bull shakes up its F1 technical team
Red Bull has promoted its long-time head of performance engineering Ben Waterhouse into a more senior role, grabbing Racing Bulls' deputy technical director Andrea Landi as his replacement.On Friday, Red Bull announced Waterhouse would move to the role of chief performance and design engineer, bridging the design and vehicle performance departments and reporting to technical director Pierre ...Keep reading

Autosport F1
Open 
Pool position: bringing Glastonbury glam to Silverstone
For many years the finest comestible one could look forward to at the British Grand Prix was a greasy bacon sandwich.The home of the first world championship race spent a long time running on the fumes of former glories, slipping ever further behind the times, arguably reaching its nadir in PR terms in 2002 when low cloud prevented commercial rights holder Bernie Ecclestone’s helicopter ...Keep reading

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Helen Goh’s recipe for Anzac sandwich biscuits with dark chocolate filling | The sweet spot
Chewy in the middle and crisp at the edges, like a classic, but sandwiched together with a luxurious ganacheAnzac biscuits are closely associated with Anzac Day on 25 April, which commemorates the members of the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps who served in the first world war. Made with oats, coconut and golden syrup, the biscuits are said to have been popular because they travelled well and kept for long periods, making them suitable for sending to forces overseas. My version here, a slightly less austere take on the classic, sandwiches two small biscuits with a lightly salted, olive oil-enriched dark chocolate ganache. The result is crisp at the edges, soft within and not too sweet. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Lancashire to put matches behind paywall; Hampshire v Somerset, and more: county cricket – live
Updates from the first day’s play in the latest round Sign up for The Spin | Mail Tanya or comment BTLA fascinating piece by Emma John, with a mention of Benny Howell of Hants, Glos and many more teams.No mistake this time for third slip Walter, as the ball nestles in his midrift. A second wicket for Porter – Rob Yates gone for 8. Warwicks 12-2. Looks a bit dank out there at Edgbaston. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Olivia Rodrigo: Drop Dead review – a maximalist rush of infatuation that’s just a bauble short of festive
(Geffen)On this giddy first taste of the US pop star’s third album, she sets aside her rock bona fides to revel in the opulent flush of a crush-come-true. But why does it seem so doomed?Is there anything better than an ink-fresh pop lyric so nailed-on that you can’t believe 60 years of songwriters didn’t get there first? Or like, at least 20, ever since Googling crushes became an entirely normal component of modern romance: “One night I was bored in bed / And stalked you on the internet,” Olivia Rodrigo sings on her comeback single, a casual admission with its own innate melody destined in turn to stalk listeners’ brains all summer. Her perfect couplet heralds an ecstatic chorus about the giddy terror of getting exactly what you wanted, exactly how you wanted it, and barely being able to breathe or stifle puking: “The most alive I’ve ever been / But kiss me and I might drop dead!”Acute, obsessive, unsparing songs about romance, always with a self-aware handle on their intensity – or a wink at how lovestruck girls get labelled “crazy” – have become Rodrigo’s trademark. (She calls her benign form of online stalking “feminine intuition”.) Now 23, she broke out as a pop star in 2021, after a lifetime as a Disney Channel fixture, and pulled off one of the quickest, most effective and indelible acts of redefinition of any musician to emerge from that entertainment monolith. (Even her pop peer and fellow Disney alum Sabrina Carpenter took five albums to find success on her terms.) Rodrigo’s debut single proper, Drivers License, was an epic heartbreak ballad, though the sticking points of her debut album, Sour, were the pop-punk ragers. She convincingly translated that into her second album, 2023’s Guts, which drew on the influence of her mum’s riot grrrl records; she scored mentorship from St Vincent, brought the Breeders to support her on tour and got the Cure’s Robert Smith to duet with her when she headlined Glastonbury in 2025. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
UK petrol and diesel prices finally starting to drop – business live
Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial news, as Iran war drives up food insecurity fears and puts pressures on companiesCuts to overseas aid will worsen shocks to global economy, David Miliband saysThe conflict in Iran is already taking a toll on businesses and balance sheets across the UK, warns Matthew Richards, joint head of restructuring & insolvency at accountancy and business advisory group Azets:Richards says an increasing number of directors are seeking advice about their finances as they fear they will not be able to survive the economic aftershocks of the war in Iran, adding:Directors who were previously surviving have been concerned about the impact the war will have on their finances, and the increase in costs it caused has been the tipping point for many firms. The longer this carries on, the bigger impact it will have on margins, access to finance and affordability of funding, as well as consumer spending as households attempt to manage their own costs and cut back on anything that isn’t essential.“With the war likely to continue, cost pressures continuing to be a problem and additional expenses like the new business rates and the changes to national minimum wage taking effect this month, it’s very likely demand for insolvency support will increase in the coming months.The increase in March 2026 was mostly driven by more than 100 connected companies in the Real Estate sector entering administration.“Ongoing tensions in the Middle East are driving up energy and fuel costs, disrupting supply chains, and keeping inflation stubbornly above the Bank of England’s 2% target. The UK economy is expected to be among the most exposed in the developed world - yet much of this impact has not yet filtered through to company balance sheets or the latest insolvency data.“Compounding this, the new tax year has brought a fresh wave of cost pressures. While there have been no headline rate rises, frozen thresholds, reduced reliefs and tighter allowances are quietly intensifying ‘fiscal drag’ - steadily increasing the tax burden on both businesses and consumers. Together, these twin pressures are squeezing margins and suppressing demand which risks driving more businesses into the red. Continue reading...

TechRadar News
Open 
Beyond technology spend: Redefining ROI

TechRadar News
Open 
Saros will have PSSR 2 on PS5 Pro for 'an even clearer higher resolution image at 60fps' but story cinematics will still run at 30fps 'for quality over quantity'

TechRadar News
Open 
Surfshark fixes broken post-quantum VPN protocol after TechRadar investigation

TechRadar News
Open 
AI agents aren’t lacking intelligence – they’re lacking context

TechRadar News
Open 
Two of my favorite prepaid carriers are offering $500 off the Galaxy S26 series right now — but which is the best?

TechRadar News
Open 
'Why gate-keep it?' — Frustrated Marvel fans hit out at the comic book giant as new trailer for Avengers: Doomsday shown behind closed doors at CinemaCon 2026

TechRadar News
Open 
Speed isn’t strategy: Human judgement must be central to AI-led decisions

TechRadar News
Open 
'Jesus!': 10,000 drones flock in Texas to tell the story of Jesus of Nazareth — and crush four world records

TechRadar News
Open 
A new ‘Pixel Glow’ feature might be the Google Pixel 11’s secret weapon

TechRadar News
Open 
Lenovo ThinkStation P3 Ultra SFF Gen 2 review: A massive workstation smashed inside a mini PC

TechRadar News
Open 
Claude wants your passport as identity verification to access 'certain capabilities' — but promises it isn't using your face to train its models

TechRadar News
Open 
Agentic swarms will change how everyone uses AI – but how can organizations deploy them securely?

Digital Trends
Open 
Assassin’s Creed: Black Flag Resynced leak hints at a launch just weeks away
Ubisoft’s long-rumored Assassin’s Creed: Black Flag Resynced is reportedly set for a July 9 launch, with the official reveal reportedly pushed back by just a week.

Digital Trends
Open 
Apple could get a taste of sub-nanometer chips in 2029
TSMC is already looking past the 2nm era, with a new report pointing to sub-1nm trial production by 2029.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
‘I am the trustee’: My mother set up a trust for my sibling who stole $100,000 from a bank. Can the trust be seized?
“Felony charges are pending.”

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Oil prices dropping after Trump says Iran war should end ‘pretty soon’
West Texas Intermediate and Brent crude fell after U.S. President Donald Trump said it’s looking ‘very good’ that a truce will be made

Mail Online
Open 
The 10 best new fiction books to read on holiday this summer - including a massive global bestseller
Is there any better feeling than devouring a fantastic novel on holiday?

Mail Online
Open 
Craig Revel Horwood shows off his new look as he debuts a full moustache at the Avenue Q opening night on the West End
The Strictly Come Dancing judge, 61, who usually opted for a clean shaven look, has grown out his facial hair.

Mail Online
Open 
Couple who ran 'drugs supermarket' from their suburban home after stashing bags of cocaine in their pantry despite having two young children are jailed for 10 years
Brooke Marshall, 35, and Grant Putman, 33, dealt cocaine out of the pantry of their £330,000 house in the market town of Wimborne, Dorset.

Mail Online
Open 
Rosalie Craig hugs her new Doctor Foster co-star Suranne Jones in first look as filming for hit BBC show's third and final ever series continues
The hit BBC One drama was previously given the green-light by bosses for another run - nine years after the last episode - and filming is now underway.

Mail Online
Open 
Harry Redknapp reveals the truth behind his awkward I'm A Celebrity blunder with Seann Walsh, joking 'he will hate me' after sending co-star home from ITV show - and the real reason he avoided axing David Haye
The former football manager, 79, had to choose who left the South Africa camp first after his Lion team fell short to Jimmy Bullard's Rhinos.

Mail Online
Open 
Moment elderly couple hurl racist abuse at Filipino nurse after she told them to put their barking dog on a lead in a park
Fyona Bairstow, 72, and Michael Bairstow, 77, told Apple Moorhouse to 'go back to your dinghy' after she told them they should have their dog on a lead.

Mirror F1
Open 
Lewis Hamilton and Kim Kardashian appear to take huge step in relationship
Lewis Hamilton and Kim Kardashian have sparked rumours of a major relationship move after their latest sighting

The Verge
Open 
Teenage Engineering might be getting into instrument amps next
An unannounced Teenage Engineering device, the KO-Amp 35, can be found over at the FCC in a new filing. The label clearly marks it as a member of the midrange EP family instruments, which currently includes the KO-II and its spinoffs, the Riddim and the Medieval. The name suggests that TE could be getting into […]

The Verge
Open 
Netflix cofounder Reed Hastings is officially leaving the company
Netflix cofounder and chairman Reed Hastings plans to leave the company after nearly 30 years. The news comes as part of Netflix's Q1 2026 earnings results released on Thursday, which says Hastings "will not stand for re-election to our Board when his current term expires at the Annual Meeting in June." After cofounding Netflix in […]

The Verge
Open 
Ballmer gives $80 million to NPR, with strings attached
Connie Ballmer, wife of former Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer and cofounder of the Ballmer Group, has given $80 million to NPR. That's roughly seven years' worth of government funding ($11.2m) after Trump and Congress cut funds for public media, but only a fraction of NPR's full annual budget of $300 million. NPR may still cut […]

Computer Weekly
Open 
AI, energy, and the new rules of cloud sustainability competition
AI has made cloud infrastructure core to enterprise architecture – more valuable, strategic, and resource-intensive. It has also made vague sustainability claims less defensible

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Lancashire to put matches behind paywall; Hampshire v Somerset, and more: county cricket – live
Updates from the first day’s play in the latest round Sign up for The Spin | Mail Tanya or comment BTLA big announcement from Lancs between rounds – they are going to start charging punters to watch TV coverage of all men’s matches, starting with the CC match against Middlesex at Old Trafford on Friday 8 May. This will be via LancsTV+.All women’s games will remain free via Lancs TV. For CC games, the first ten mins will be streamed and then viewers will be able to access radio commentary/scorecards. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Starmer says it is ‘staggering’ and ‘unforgivable’ he was not told Mandelson failed vetting – UK politics live
PM responds to Guardian revelations that Foreign Office overrode failed security vetting for former minister Olly Robbins forced out in Mandelson vetting rowJones repeatedly denied that the prime minister had given a misleading impression about what has happened and had “lost grip” of the situation. He told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme:I completely refute the suggestion the PM misled the public or the House of Commons. It’s very clear from his words he was reporting what he had been told and what had been followed.I don’t think this is a question about the prime minister’s leadership.The Foreign Office did not tell the prime minister that they granted developed vetting status to Peter Mandelson against the advice of the security and vetting process. The prime minister was only made aware of that on Tuesday evening this week when the documents became available to the Cabinet Office as part of the humble address process (a binding motion to request government papers – JG).No minister is allowed to see these vetting documents as a matter of principle because we employ security professionals to conduct deeply invasive personal investigations into people’s backgrounds and for those officials to make a recommendation to civil servants on the appointment and employment of individuals. Continue reading...

UK Government News
Open 
CMA appoints new Non-Executive Directors
CMA welcomes newly appointed non-executive directors to the board.

UK Government News
Open 
“A Riveder le Stelle”: the State Visit to Italy anniversary
The British Embassy Rome marked the first anniversary of the State Visit to Italy with a photographic exhibition.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
World's First Six-Gen Bomber Completes Aerial Refueling Test Flight
World's First Six-Gen Bomber Completes Aerial Refueling Test Flight

Northrop Grumman released new images of its B-21 Raider stealth bomber performing "more advanced stages of flight test" and "aerial refueling."
Northrop Grumman’s B-21 Raider continues to demonstrate outstanding performance as the program moves into more advanced phases flight test, including aerial refueling. (Photo Credit: U.S. Air Force)

The B-21 is the world's first sixth-generation aircraft and the "most advanced aircraft to take to the sky now has global reach," according to Northrop.
The B-21 Raider conducts aerial refueling with a KC-135 Stratotanker, which is a key part to the Raider’s role in projecting power globally. (Photo Credit: Northrop Grumman)

The test campaign of the B-21 comes as Eurasia is on fire in multiple conflicts, including the Russia-Ukraine war and the US-Iran conflict in the Gulf area.

Northrop did not say when the B-21 conducted the test flight but our reporting from mid-March had a timeframe then and over the Mojave Desert.

Ready For War? New B-21 Raider Activity Spotted Over Mojave Desert


Northrop listed ten fun facts about the B-21:


1. Sixth-Generation Stealth

The B-21 Raider leverages decades of innovation to deliver superior stealth with extended range. Its advanced, fuel-efficient engines integrated into a sleeker airframe reduce tanker support reliance more than any previous bomber, enhancing agility and persistence across missions. 

The B-21 has demonstrated outstanding stealth performance in testing, showcasing the effectiveness of its advanced low-observable design that will allow it to penetrate the most sophisticated air defenses undetected.  

Modernized, low-observable processes will also make the B-21 easier and less costly to maintain than prior systems, ensuring the fleet's operational readiness for our nation's most critical missions.

2. Built to Deliver Strategic Deterrence

The B-21 Raider is designed to hold any target at risk, anywhere in the world. With the ability to deliver both conventional and nuclear payloads, it provides decision-makers with flexible, survivable response options across the full spectrum of conflict. The B-21's open architecture will deliver seamless upgrades, enabling the Raider fleet to evolve its mission and weapons capabilities to outpace any threat.  

3. Mission-Driven Partnership

The development of the B-21 Raider is a testament to the results-focused collaboration between Northrop Grumman and the Air Force. Northrop Grumman's partnership is built on transparency and a commitment to shared success, exemplified by an industry-first agreement that provides access to valuable data, including the B-21 digital twin, enhancing affordability and agility in upgrades. 

As a proven partner, Northrop Grumman delivers effective, data-driven solutions that meet the demands of critical missions. Together, the company and the Air Force are demonstrating the B-21's capabilities against adversaries.

4. Strategically Investing

Committed to leading the way, Northrop Grumman consistently invests in the technologies and tools that empower the best fighting force in the world. To date, the company has invested more than $5 billion in the B-21 program's digital and manufacturing infrastructure. Our investments in manufacturing capacity are accelerating production, providing flexibility to support future fleet growth and ensuring long-term U.S. Air Force strike dominance. 

These investments power our digital ecosystem, equipping the B-21 Raider with highly advanced software, manufacturing and engineering tools. As a result, software certification time has already been reduced by 50%, ensuring the B-21 stays at the speed of relevance for future technology insertion. The ecosystem also enables real-time validation of aircraft performance during tests.  

5. Delivering Results that Ensure America Wins

Northrop Grumman's expertise in advanced aircraft systems is driving flight test results that showcase speed, efficiency and exceptional performance. 

Multiple B-21 Raider aircraft are currently in flight test, consistently exceeding expectations. Most sorties achieve "code one" status, indicating the aircraft returned from its flight without maintenance issues and is ready to go fly again. This reaffirms the quality of the design and build, and signals strong future operational performance. 

Simultaneously, Northrop Grumman engineers are conducting ground tests to ensure the B-21 can operate in the most extreme mission conditions. These test results consistently surpass digital modeling predictions, further validating the aircraft's design and capabilities.

6. Accelerating Advanced Manufacturing

Northrop Grumman's advanced manufacturing processes, including digital and augmented reality tools, enable technicians to visualize tasks and solve problems before ever touching the plane. This approach connects technicians to design engineers as never before, improving efficiency and cultivating expertise throughout the manufacturing workforce. 

Northrop Grumman has invested in manufacturing technology and capacity at our facilities across the U.S. to accelerate and scale production of the B-21 Raider. We are increasing production rates on capability that will project American power anywhere in the world.

7. More than a Bomber

As the world's most advanced aircraft to take the skies, the B-21 Raider combines unmatched range, access and payload in a single system designed to perform specialized missions no other aircraft can accomplish. 

Instrumental in maintaining U.S. and allied security amid a complex global landscape, the B-21 is a key part of a powerful family of systems. It delivers a new era of capability and flexibility by seamlessly integrating data, sensors and weapons – enabling precision strikes and comprehensive situational awareness.

8. Ready on Day One

Northrop Grumman is developing comprehensive training, sustainment and fleet management tools for the Air Force as they prepare to operate and maintain the B-21 Raider. Leveraging extensive flight test data and decades of sustainment experience across a variety of systems, these tools ensure the B-21 enters service ready, affordable and sustainable at scale. 

Test pilots report exceptional handling during aerial refueling, noting a high degree of stability and control. These qualities reduce training requirements and enable faster refueling, increasing operational tempo and agility – further proving that the B-21 will deliver unmatched performance for U.S. Air Force operators.

9. American Made Deterrence

An all-American team of more than 8,000 industry and Air Force personnel are designing, building, testing and delivering on the promise of B-21. The team consists of more than 400 suppliers across 40 states. This is a nationwide effort to provide deterrence capability that strengthens and defends our nation.

10. Bold, Innovative, Courageous

The B-21 Raider is named in honor of the Doolittle Raid of World War II when 80 airmen, led by Lt. Col. James "Jimmy" Doolittle, and 16 B-25 Mitchell medium bombers set off on a mission that changed the course of World War II. The raid was a catalyst for a multitude of future progress in U.S. air superiority and serves as the inspiration behind the Raider name and the pioneering, innovative spirit instilled across the workforce bringing the B-21 to life.


Separate but related to the defense world, The Wall Street Journal reports that the Trump administration is preparing to fire up the "war economy" by asking automakers to convert car production lines into weapons manufacturing. It's a must-read report that can be found here.

Tyler Durden
Fri, 04/17/2026 - 05:45

Mail Online
Open 
Do YOU have middle class fashion regret? The costly accessories and clothes that are hardly ever worn - from oversized scarves to a 'tradwife' blouse
UK-based celebrity stylist Lisa Talbot has warned of the middle class clothing and accessories that most buyers eventually come to loathe.

Mail Online
Open 
The beauty treatments and tweakments you should NEVER get, including the ones that make your face look 'masculine' and 'bulky', according to top doctors
From lip filler to 'non-surgical lifts', tweakments have never been more popular.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The art of grafting: joining two plants together to grow as one is horticultural magic
If your garden is not big enough for the fruit tree you’d like, this technique may be the answer. It’s handy for healing snapped stems, tooThere’s a cherry tree outside the gym I go to. I walk past it as I arrive and leave, and gaze out of the window at it between sets. At this time of year, it blossoms in the most stunning way. The flowers on one side are bright white, on the other side they are the warmest pink, and every spring it reminds me of a special skill that I was once taught that I wish I had call to use more – grafting.Grafting is the method through which two different plants from the same species or genus are joined together to grow as one. It is a technique commonly employed in the cultivation of fruit trees and explains how the cherry tree I described above could appear to be one tree while behaving like two spliced together. The reason it can do this is that the resulting plant benefits from the qualities of the two different original plants. For example, a delicious apple variety that would normally result in a full-size tree could be grafted on to the rootstock of a smaller variety, so that it produces the desired fruit while being suitable for a modestly sized garden. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump’s pardons are costing shooting survivors millions
A Trace analysis found that revenue from fining white-collar criminals is drying up – due to presidential pardonsThis story was originally published by the Trace, a non-profit newsroom covering gun violence in America. Sign up for its newsletters here.Since his return to office last year, Donald Trump has pardoned dozens of white-collar criminals. He’s also forgiven their fines, penalties and restitution, to the tune of billions. Some of that revenue was supposed to go to a fund to help victims of violent crime – and the organizations that serve them are feeling the pinch. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
NBA playoff predictions 2026: the winner, key players and dark horses
Will an Oklahoma City repeat end an NBA-record run of seven different champions in seven years? Our writers make their picks ahead of Saturday’s postseason tip-offWemby will no doubt be the answer to this question at some point in the (perhaps not-too-distant) future. But for now, I defer to those with at least some playoff experience. For my money, Jokić still reigns supreme as the best player alive, and for that reason, he’s my pick. CDL Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Hampshire v Somerset, Warwickshire v Essex, and more: county cricket day one – live
Updates from the first day’s play in the latest round Sign up for The Spin | Mail Tanya or comment BTLA big announcement from Lancs between rounds – they are going to start charging punters to watch TV coverage of all men’s matches, starting with the CC match against Middlesex at Old Trafford on Friday 8 May. This will be via LancsTV+.All women’s games will remain free via Lancs TV. For CC games, the first ten mins will be streamed and then viewers will be able to access radio commentary/scorecards. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘We’ve got to wake up and smell the coffee’: Tony Rowe on Exeter’s new American frontier
As West Country club join rugby’s modern-day gold rush, their chair looks forward to some US razzmatazz and a possible Prem expansion into WalesTony Rowe has not yet had time to ensure Exeter’s proposed new American owners feel fully at home in the west. On a damp morning at Sandy Park no one is wearing a Stetson hat and there is not even a horse tied up outside reception. Maybe that will be part of the handover package assuming the Chiefs’ 700-odd members vote in favour next month of proceeding with the sale of their 155-year-old club.The winds of change, though, are kicking up the local dust. For the past 33 years Rowe has been integral to one of British team sport’s most romantic Cinderella stories. But romance doesn’t pay the bills in modern pro rugby and times are a-changing. At 77 years old, it is easy to understand why Rowe fancies handing over the reins to a smartly dressed stranger from out of town. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Starmer says it is ‘staggering’ and ‘unforgiveable’ he was not told Mandelson failed vetting – UK politics live
PM responds to Guardian revelations that Foreign Office overrode failed security vetting for former minister Olly Robbins forced out in Mandelson vetting rowJones repeatedly denied that the prime minister had given a misleading impression about what has happened and had “lost grip” of the situation. He told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme:I completely refute the suggestion the PM misled the public or the House of Commons. It’s very clear from his words he was reporting what he had been told and what had been followed.I don’t think this is a question about the prime minister’s leadership.The Foreign Office did not tell the prime minister that they granted developed vetting status to Peter Mandelson against the advice of the security and vetting process. The prime minister was only made aware of that on Tuesday evening this week when the documents became available to the Cabinet Office as part of the humble address process (a binding motion to request government papers – JG).No minister is allowed to see these vetting documents as a matter of principle because we employ security professionals to conduct deeply invasive personal investigations into people’s backgrounds and for those officials to make a recommendation to civil servants on the appointment and employment of individuals. Continue reading...

ZDNet News
Open 
The best TV screen cleaners of 2026: Expert recommended
We found the best cleaning solutions for removing dust, smudges, and fingerprints from your TV and other electronics without damaging delicate components or screens.

ZDNet News
Open 
The best Apple Watch of 2026: Expert tested and reviewed
We tested every Apple Watch model on the market to help you decide which is best for your life and routine.

TechRadar Reviews
Open 
Lenovo ThinkCentre Neo 50q QC mini PC review: A simple and spectacular business machine that lacks the power for heavy workloads

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Spoofed Tankers Are Flooding the Strait of Hormuz. These Analysts Are Tracking Them
Marine insurers and oil traders want to know what’s going on in one of the world’s most critical waterways. As the volume of disappearing ships in the area increases, analysts are getting creative.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
The Shocking Secrets of Madison Square Garden's Surveillance Machine
Famously vengeful Knicks owner Jim Dolan has long spied on people at his iconic arenas. WIRED goes deep inside the operation that allegedly tracked a trans woman, lawyers, protesters, and more.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Nothing Phone (4a) Pro Review: A Close Second
It's no Pixel 10a, but the Nothing Phone (4a) Pro is a close second if you're after a midrange phone in the US.

Mail Online
Open 
Wizz Air reveals it has already encountered fuel shortages at three European airports as blockade of Strait of Hormuz continues: Live updates
'We had problems because of a shortage of jet fuel in three Italian airports - Venice, Brindisi and Catania,' Wizz Air chief Jozsef Varadi said.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ben Roberts-Smith’s comrades say he ordered them to execute unarmed civilians, court documents show
Former SAS corporal allegedly placed man on his knees and ordered fellow soldier to shoot him, according to statement of factsAustralian soldiers have told prosecutors they executed unarmed civilians at the orders of Ben Roberts-Smith or in complicity with him, according to a statement of facts tendered to the New South Wales local court.Roberts-Smith, a Victoria Cross recipient and once one of Australia’s most lionised soldiers, faces five charges of the war crime of murder, allegedly committed while he served in the Australian SAS in Afghanistan.Each victim was unarmed and present in a location where Roberts-Smith could reasonably have suspected insurgents to be located;Each offence was committed in a situation where there was no active engagements with enemy forces and the Australian Defence Force was in control of the environment;Evidence was planted or falsely associated with each deceased to enhance reporting that each of the killings was within the lawful rules of engagement;Each deceased was handcuffed, detained for a period, and questioned prior to their execution;None of the deceased was killed in a situation where the Australian Defence Force did not have effective control of the battlespace. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Hampshire v Somerset, Warwickshire v Essex, and more: county cricket day one – live
Updates from the first day’s play in the latest round Sign up for The Spin | Mail Tanya or comment BTLThe latest issue of the fat yellow book is out, the launch dinner at Lord’s on Tuesday.The Five Cricketers of the Year are: Haseeb Hameed, Shubman Gill, Ravindra Jajeja, Rishabh Pant and Mohammed Siraj Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Premier League heads for crunch weekend, Haaland ready for Arsenal ‘final’ – football live
⚽ Fixtures | Latest tables | Premier League top scorers⚽ Premier League: 10 things to look out for | Mail DominicLiverpool boss Arne Slot has been speaking ahead of Sunday’s Merseyside derby. Here he is on Hugo Ekitike’s Achilles tendon injury which has ruled the Frenchman out for the rest of the season and this summer’s World Cup.He hasn’t been operated on yet. Devastating for him coming to a new club having so much impact straight away. Playing against your former club in the Champions League quarter-final with so much to come for him in the summer.My first thoughts are with him being out for such a long time, missing out on so many special moments. But it is not the first and not the last player who experienced something like this at the start of their career, and there are so many examples of players coming back even stronger. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Richard Desmond loses £1.3bn damages battle over national lottery licence
Firms owned by media tycoon launched action against Gambling Commission in 2022 after Allwyn won franchiseThe media tycoon Richard Desmond has lost his claim for up to £1.3bn in damages from the Gambling Commission, ending a bitter dispute over the regulator’s decision not to award him the 10-year licence to run the national lottery.Companies owned by the former proprietor of the UK broadcaster Channel 5 and titles including the Daily Express, Asian Babes and Readers’ Wives launched action against the regulator in 2022, starting a tortuous legal process in which Desmond’s costs were estimated to have reached £55m by May last year. Continue reading...

Chatham House
Open 
From Destruction to Recovery: Building Ukraine’s Future Prosperity
From Destruction to Recovery: Building Ukraine’s Future Prosperity
14
May 2026 — 14:00 TO 19:15 BST
Anonymous (not verified)
14 April 2026

Chatham House
Half day conference on the war-time recovery of Ukraine and necessary policies to support its long-term prosperity building on the experience and analysis of both Chatham House and the EBRD.
Half day conference on the war-time recovery of Ukraine and necessary policies to support its long-term prosperity building on the experience and analysis of both Chatham House and the EBRD.








From Destruction to Recovery Building Ukraine’s Future Prosperity Agenda


(PDF, 0.19MB)




Chatham House in partnership with the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development is convening a high-level conference to discuss the roadmap for Ukraine’s economic recovery. The destruction caused by the Russian invasion is staggering. After four years of war the total cost of reconstruction and recovery in Ukraine is almost $588 billion. Sustaining economic stability in war time and preparing for the most ambitious economic recovery project of the century, require effective collaboration of Ukrainian state, western donors, private sector and wider civil society. Ukraine’s integration with the EU and deep structural reforms could catalyse economic growth and enable social recovery and industrial reconstruction.How can Ukraine and its international partners develop security arrangements that provide credible long term assurances and strengthen regional stability?Which reforms could strengthen Ukraine’s economic growth and support a more predictable and competitive business environment? How to sustain momentum on the way to full membership in the EU?How can Ukraine position itself competitively in emerging European value chains?







From Destruction to Recovery Building Ukraine’s Future Prosperity Agenda


(PDF, 0.19MB)




This conference is supported by European Bank for Reconstruction and Development.

Chatham House
Open 
Dollar dominance is surviving the Iran war - just about
Dollar dominance is surviving the Iran war - just about
Expert comment
sfarrell.drupa…
16 April 2026

The war doesn’t seem to have damaged the dollar’s global status. But that may reflect the US’s emergence as the top producer of oil, gas and weapons, which insulates its economy from the crisis.















A central characteristic of the dollar’s role as the world’s pivotal currency is that the US bond market, and the greenback itself, act as safe havens in times of stress.As anxiety levels rise during a crisis, institutional investors and governments flock to dollar-denominated assets because US capital markets are easier to trade in and out of than any others; and because the ability of the Federal Reserve to act as lender and liquidity-provider of last resort is second to none. In the end, it is US trustworthiness that underpins all this. But since global trust in the US seems to be eroding, both before and during this year’s war on Iran, it is worth asking whether the dollar’s safe-haven status is showing any signs of ill-health.






The performance of US asset prices may say less about the dollar’s status than it does about the relative insulation of the US economy from the crisis.






The quick answer is no, but it would be wrong to conclude that all is well, for two reasons. In the first place, the performance of US asset prices may say less about the dollar’s status than it does about the relative insulation of the US economy from the crisis.And second, China’s capital markets are emerging really very well from the current crisis, which might give Washington some pause for thought.Effect of the warFirst, it is worth considering what actually happened between the start of the war and the 7 April ceasefire, to the dollar, to US bond yields, and to the US stock market.In principle, a true safe haven will see the currency strengthen, bond yields fall and stock markets perform relatively well when things go wrong globally.By those standards, US asset prices haven’t done at all badly. The dollar strengthened by around 2 percent against a basket of other currencies; and the S&P stock index fell by less than its peers. And while the yield on a US government 10-year bond rose around 35 basis points to 4.3 percent, that increase was also smaller than many US peers: 10-year German yields, for example, rose by 45 basis points.Compare this to dramatic episodes in the past – the 2008 Lehman Crisis, the start of the 2003 Iraq war, or the attacks on the US in September 2001 – and what we’ve seen in recent weeks still shows US markets in a respectable light.The move in the dollar’s exchange rate, for example, is comparable to what happened in the weeks after the 1991 Gulf War, and has been much stronger than the greenback’s response to the 2003 war, when it weakened sharply.The outperformance of the US stock market is also consistent with earlier episodes, with the exception of the 2003 war, when US markets fell very sharply by comparison with others.The rise in US bond yields is also comparable with the past. Although US yields fell after 9/11 and after the start of the 2003 war, they rose in the weeks after the Lehman crisis.Moreover, at least some of the increase in US bond yields – and corresponding fall in bond prices – must result from the selling of US government bonds by foreign central banks seeking to address domestic concerns.The Turkish central bank, for example, has relied heavily on selling US bonds to raise dollars that it can use to defend the lira, fearing that a sharp depreciation of the local currency would boost inflation and encourage a mass flight to the dollar by Turkish residents. Other central banks are very likely to have done the same, albeit that the data are scanty.While this decent performance of US asset markets in recent weeks suggests, on the face of it, that the war hasn’t done any damage to the dollar’s global status, these positive results may simply reflect the US’s emergence in recent years as the world’s top producer of oil, gas and weapons, which all help insulate the economy from the crisis.So, the market might simply be reacting to a conjunctural fact about the US economy, rather than a structural fact about the role of the dollar in the international financial system.ChinaMeanwhile, Chinese financial markets have exhibited extraordinary calm, with the government’s 10-year bond yield unchanged at 1.8 percent, quite unlike increases in bond yields seen almost everywhere else. The Chinese equity market has weakened a bit, but the renminbi has strengthened.






The strengthening of the Chinese currency in recent weeks is especially notable.






Indeed, the strengthening of the Chinese currency in recent weeks is especially notable, since it makes China the only energy importer in the world whose exchange rate has appreciated since the war began.The appearance of calm in Chinese financial markets may also reflect some conjunctural facts about China’s economy which help protect it from the worst consequences of the war. Although China is a large energy importer, for example, its electricity generation depends hardly at all on oil and gas: coal is the dominant energy source, along with solar, wind, nuclear and hydro power.Meanwhile, the war barely affected Iranian crude shipments to China, an economy which in any case has some 1.4 billion barrels of oil in reserve, around three months’ worth of consumption.

Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple Quietly Tweaked the iOS App Store App – Here's What's Changed
No, you aren't going crazy – Apple has quietly made a backend change to the App Store app in iOS that switches the location of the Updates tab and renames it to make it more prominent.





In the App Store app, you can see the change by tapping your profile picture in the top-right corner. The "Apps & Purchase History" tab used to be at the top the list, but it has switched places with "Updates," which is now called "App Updates."



The change was made by Apple without issuing a software update and is evident on both iOS 26.4.1 and the iOS 26.5 beta.





There's actually a faster way to access the App Updates page in iOS 26.4 that was recently highlighted by Daring Fireball's John Gruber: Simply long-press on the App Store app on your Home Screen and you can jump straight to it from the contextual menu.Tag: App StoreThis article, 'Apple Quietly Tweaked the iOS App Store App – Here's What's Changed' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mail Online
Open 
Prince Harry sweetly twirls young fan around before accepting customised 'Hazza' and 'Megs' flip-flops as he and Meghan conclude their quasi-royal Australia tour in Sydney
On the final day of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle's quasi-royal tour, the couple met survivors of the December Bondi terrorist attack before chatting with members from Invictus Australia.

Mail Online
Open 
Is posh £20 butter really worth your money? A fancy spread is the new must for middle class dinner parties - but some varieties are bulked out with oils, powders and flavouring
Flavoured butter is the ingredient du jour among discerning home cooks and trendy chefs in the UK.

Mail Online
Open 
New electric cars may look expensive but here's why they are CHEAPER to buy than petrol versions
We teamed up with Insider Car Deals to analyse the price you will pay for 10 new EVs against their closest petrol equivalents. And it turns out the electric option is commonly the cheaper choice.

Mail Online
Open 
Hundreds of thousands of flights could be axed in 'existential crisis' for airlines as jet fuel shortage caused by Iran war bites, expert says
Passengers are already facing higher fares after the cost of jet fuel doubled since the start of Donald Trump's war with Iran.

Mail Online
Open 
Everyone's fault but Keir's... wriggling Starmer says it is 'unforgivable' nobody told him Mandelson failed security vetting - as MPs turn on him over 'lies'
Keir Starmer said he was 'furious' after he added the head of the Foreign Office to the list of senior figures ousted in the scandal.

Mail Online
Open 
The Apprentice signs Danny Miller as first contestant to face BBC All Stars boardroom - after Lord Sugar crowned Karishma Vijay the series winner
The first contestant on the upcoming Celebrity Apprentice has been announced - and he's a prior I'm A Celeb winner.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Chess: Uzbekistan's new star shows Asia's continued rise
Javokhir Sindarov, of Uzbekistan, has earned the right to challenge India's Dommaraju Gukesh for the world title. Both men are under 21 and from Asia, underlining the shift in the demographics of top level chess.

Mail Online
Open 
Why a rapid heart rate, sudden dizziness, and struggling to get up the stairs could be much more serious than just being 'unfit'. It could be the major warning signs of this chronic incurable condition
A few weeks ago I was at home when, out of nowhere, I began to feel dizzy. Within minutes, I was throwing up, then horizontal on the bathroom floor, unable to speak or get up.

Mail Online
Open 
Meghan leaves her retreat after TWO HOURS as she and Harry head off to watch the rugby - leaving behind the 300 guests who paid up to $3,200 to spend time with her
Follow Daily Mail's live coverage here.

Mail Online
Open 
Everyone's fault but Keir's... wriggling Starmer says it is 'unforgivable' nobody told him Mandelson failed security vetting - as MPs turn on him over 'lies'
Keir Starmer sent out his close ally Darren Jones this morning to condemn the UK's chief diplomat Olly Robbins, who was effectively sacked last night.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Richard Desmond loses £1.3bn damages battle over national lottery licence
Firms owned by media tycoon launched action against Gambling Commission in 2022 after Allwyn won franchiseThe media tycoon Richard Desmond has lost his claim for up to £1.3bn in damages from the Gambling Commission, ending a bitter dispute over the regulator’s decision not to award him the 10-year licence to run the national lottery.Companies owned by the former proprietor of the Daily Express and Channel 5 launched action against the regulator in 2022, starting a tortuous legal process in which Desmond’s costs were estimated to have reached £55m by May last year. Continue reading...

Russia Today News
Open 
MAGA vs Catholicism: The Republican believers backing Trump over spat with Pope

Mail Online
Open 
Is your holiday going to be cancelled because of the fuel crisis? Everything you need to know as families are told to brace for travel chaos
Holidaymakers are facing a summer of cancelled flights, with a jet fuel crisis across Europe potentially just six weeks away. How will you be affected?

Mail Online
Open 
David Attenborough reveals TV moment he will 'never forget' as he reflects on one of his most-viewed documentaries in new Netflix special ahead of his 100th birthday
Sir David Attenborough has revealed the moment of his career he will 'never forget' as he takes a look back over his career ahead of his 100th birthday next month.

BBC World News
Open 
'I was tortured and lost my hand' - one student's struggle to get an education in Nigeria
The BBC speaks to a student who pushed for his toe print to be taken to verify his identity.

Sky News Home
Open 
Seaman's tribute after fellow ex-Arsenal goalie Manninger's shock death
David Seaman, the former England goalie has paid tribute to his ex teammate and fellow Arsenal keeper Alex Manninger after his shock death.

The Register
Open 
Would you like fries with that terminal?
Jack might be on Track, but the order screen certainly isn't Bork!Bork!Bork!  It was not so much Jack in the Box as Bork on the Screen at a US drive-through fast food outlet the other day. Luckily, a Reg reader was there to take it all in.…

UK Legislation
Open 
Correction Slip
These Regulations, which apply in England and Wales, amend the Boiler Upgrade Scheme (England and Wales) Regulations 2022 (S.I. 2022/565) (“the 2022 Regulations”), which established the Boiler Upgrade Scheme (“BUS”). BUS is a renewable heat incentive scheme to facilitate and encourage the use of heat pumps and biomass boilers to provide space and water heating in domestic properties and small non-domestic properties. BUS supports the installation of heat pumps and biomass boilers through a grant mechanism provided that they do not replace an existing renewable heating system.

UK Legislation
Open 
The A66 Northern Trans-Pennine Development Consent (Amendment) Order 2026
This Order amends the A66 Northern Trans-Pennine Development Consent Order 2024 (S.I. 2024/360) (“the 2024 Order”), a development consent order under the Planning Act 2008 (“the Act”).

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Nueva Germania: The failed 'Aryan Project' in Paraguay
A new home for the "Aryan race." That was what German emigrants envisioned when they founded Nueva Germania in Paraguay in 1886. It later failed but still exists today.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Myanmar frees over 4,000 prisoners in annual tradition
Myanmar's new president says he wants stability and reconciliation in a nation torn apart by a military coup. Those to be released include former President Win Myint.

Mail Online
Open 
Moment Denmark's Margrethe II gives daughter-in-law Queen Mary a royal 'ticking off' as she crouches outside the palace - in a similar scene to her cousin Elizabeth II and Prince William
Queen Mary of Denmark seemingly received a stern word of warning from her mother-in-law on Thursday, according to Hello.

Mail Online
Open 
Bikini-clad Kerry Katona, 45, packs on the PDA with boyfriend Paolo Margaglione, 33, during sun-soaked yacht trip as she is seen for the first time since being rushed to hospital over a suspected stroke
The Atomic Kitten singer, 45, slipped in a tiny bikini as she joined boyfriend Paolo Margaglione, 33, and her kids to celebrate rarely seen son Maxwell's 18th birthday.

Mail Online
Open 
How to have an orgasm in middle-age during sex. It's the secret so many only dare whisper to friends. Now four once-unsatisfied over-40s bravely reveal their method... every unfulfilled woman and complacent man must read
Four women aged over 40 share, with the utmost honesty, how they finally discovered how to have a fulfilling sex life in middle age. Their words should make every man sit up and take notice...

Mail Online
Open 
Burger chain MEATliquor collapses into administration after being forced to close all but three branches
The burger joint was once considered a cult-favourite spot for Londoners seeking high-quality street food and beer.

Mail Online
Open 
Fergie on the run: How sofa-surfing Sarah Ferguson was spotted in Cork and Zurich before breaking cover in Austria - as royal insider says: 'Sooner or later she'll have to face the music'
The former Duchess of York's secret sofa-surfing world tour has now taken her to a £2,000-a-night ski lodge in the Alps, it was revealed today.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Can you stop malaria crossing borders? One nation’s bid to wipe out the disease
Informal migration, plus climate change and rising numbers of cases globally, are complicating the tireless efforts of landlocked Eswatini to eradicate the killer diseaseThe freezer is filled with blue-lidded tubes of cows’ blood, ready to be defrosted and used to feed the colony of mosquitoes. “Also, you can use your arm,” says Nombuso Princess Bhembe, who tends the mosquitoes at Eswatini’s national insectary, an unremarkable building in the town of Siphofaneni, part of the southern African country’s push to eliminate malaria.But the landlocked nation of 1.2 million people, formerly known as Swaziland, is facing headwinds from not only the climate crisis, aid cuts and insecticide resistance but also economic migration from countries with higher case numbers. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ben Roberts-Smith’s comrades say he ordered them to execute unarmed civilians, court documents show
Former SAS corporal allegedly placed man on his knees and ordered fellow soldier to shoot him, according to statement of factsAustralian soldiers have told prosecutors they executed unarmed civilians at the orders of Ben Roberts-Smith or in complicity with him, according to a statement of facts tendered to the New South Wales local court.Roberts-Smith, a Victoria Cross recipient and once one of Australia’s most lionised soldiers, faces five charges of the war crime of murder, allegedly committed while he served in the Australian SAS in Afghanistan.Each victim was unarmed and present in a location where Roberts-Smith could reasonably have suspected insurgents to be located;Each offence was committed in a situation where there was no active engagements with enemy forces and the Australian Defence Force was in control of the environment;Evidence was planted or falsely associated with each deceased to enhance reporting that each of the killings were within the lawful rules of engagement;Each deceased was handcuffed, detained for a period, and questioned prior to their execution;None of the deceased was killed in a situation where the Australian Defence Force did not have effective control of the battlespace. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Premier League set for crunch weekend, European reaction, and more – football live
⚽ Fixtures | Latest tables | Premier League top scorers⚽ Premier League: 10 things to look out for | Mail DominicLiverpool boss Arne Slot has been speaking ahead of Sunday’s Merseyside derby. Here he is on Hugo Ekitike’s Achilles tendon injury which has ruled the Frenchman out for the rest of the season and this summer’s World Cup.He hasn’t been operated on yet. Devastating for him coming to a new club having so much impact straight away. Playing against your former club in the Champions League quarter-final with so much to come for him in the summer.My first thoughts are with him being out for such a long time, missing out on so many special moments. But it is not the first and not the last player who experienced something like this at the start of their career, and there are so many examples of players coming back even stronger. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Welcome to the UK’s most zeitgeisty theme park: the Stephen Collins cartoon
Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Richard Desmond loses damages battle with Gambling Commission, ending national lottery dispute
Firms owned by media tycoon launched action against regulator in 2022 after lottery licence awarded elsewhereThe media tycoon Richard Desmond has lost his claim for up to £1.3bn in damages from the Gambling Commission, ending a bitter dispute over the regulator’s decision not to award him the 10-year licence to run the national lottery.Companies owned by the former proprietor of the Daily Express and Channel 5 launched action against the regulator in 2022, starting a tortuous legal process that saw Desmond’s costs estimated to have reached £55m already by May last year. Continue reading...

BBC Formula One
Open 
What it's really like to try to make it to F1
BBC Sport explores the financial reality of two drivers with experience of trying to climb the motorsport ladder to reach Formula 1.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Avengers reassemble and Ariana meets the Fockers - Hollywood studios preview new movies
Some of the most hotly anticipated new films of the next couple of years are previewed at CinemaCon.

Russia Today News
Open 
Right wing party now most popular in Germany – poll

Mail Online
Open 
Are air fryers really as healthy as they seem? Experts reveal the truth about the must-have kitchen gadget
Experts have raised concerns about potential risks linked to high-temperature cooking - and whether these popular appliances are as safe and healthy as they seem.

Mail Online
Open 
Insuring a period property costs TWICE as much as a new build... and homes from THIS era are most expensive
The most expensive category of period homes to insure are those built during the Stuart period, 1603 to 1714, which cost £545 on average.

Mail Online
Open 
Bride covered in black paint moments before she was due to walk down the aisle in 'revenge' attack by sister-in-law
Gemma Monk, 35, was forced to change dresses last minute after Antonia Eastwood launched the 'revenge' attack on May 24, 2024.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Pop star boyfriend posting from Coachella, celebrity statesman, global brand: Justin Trudeau’s offbeat political afterlife
While Canadian prime ministers have taken staid routes after leaving office, Trudeau has chosen a different pathThe downfall of Hungary’s Viktor Orbán prompted a flurry of reaction from progressive leaders around the world celebrating the end to an authoritarian regime. One statement stood out – not so much for the sentiment it expressed, but the setting in which it was issued.“Hungarians voted for change and a renewed commitment to democratic institutions after years of erosion under Viktor Orbán,” wrote Justin Trudeau, Canada’s former prime minister – posting from the Coachella music festival, where he and his girlfriend, the American pop star Katy Perry, were watching Justin Bieber. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Wheat price heading for biggest jump in two months; insolvences rise in England and Wales – business live
Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial news, as Iran war drives up food insecurity fears and puts pressures on companiesCuts to overseas aid will worsen shocks to global economy, David Miliband saysThe conflict in Iran is already taking a toll on businesses and balance sheets across the UK, warns Matthew Richards, joint head of restructuring & insolvency at accountancy and business advisory group Azets:Richards says an increasing number of directors are seeking advice about their finances as they fear they will not be able to survive the economic aftershocks of the war in Iran, adding:Directors who were previously surviving have been concerned about the impact the war will have on their finances, and the increase in costs it caused has been the tipping point for many firms. The longer this carries on, the bigger impact it will have on margins, access to finance and affordability of funding, as well as consumer spending as households attempt to manage their own costs and cut back on anything that isn’t essential.“With the war likely to continue, cost pressures continuing to be a problem and additional expenses like the new business rates and the changes to national minimum wage taking effect this month, it’s very likely demand for insolvency support will increase in the coming months.The increase in March 2026 was mostly driven by more than 100 connected companies in the Real Estate sector entering administration.“Ongoing tensions in the Middle East are driving up energy and fuel costs, disrupting supply chains, and keeping inflation stubbornly above the Bank of England’s 2% target. The UK economy is expected to be among the most exposed in the developed world - yet much of this impact has not yet filtered through to company balance sheets or the latest insolvency data.“Compounding this, the new tax year has brought a fresh wave of cost pressures. While there have been no headline rate rises, frozen thresholds, reduced reliefs and tighter allowances are quietly intensifying ‘fiscal drag’ - steadily increasing the tax burden on both businesses and consumers. Together, these twin pressures are squeezing margins and suppressing demand which risks driving more businesses into the red. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
So THAT'S why he had a tantrum in the Commons! Starmer 'knew about Mandelson vetting scandal for DAYS' before explosive revelation
it comes as the PM faces questions about what he knew and when, amid claims he deliberately misled Parliament when he told MPs Mandelson had passed the vetting process.

Mail Online
Open 
Demi Moore, 63, showcases her taut visage as she attends a Landman screening in a chic leopard print skirt and turtleneck
The actress, 63, who stars as billionaire wife Cami Miller in the show, looked effortlessly chic as she arrived at the Saban Media Centre wearing a turtleneck jumper.

Mail Online
Open 
Sister-in-law threw black paint over bride just moments before she was due to walk down the aisle in 'revenge' attack after she accused her of 'trying to trip her up' at her own wedding
Gemma Monk, 35, was forced to change dresses last minute after Antonia Eastwood launched the 'revenge' attack on May 24, 2024.

Mail Online
Open 
Mariah Carey shows off her slim figure as she joins glamorous Diane Kruger and Rosie Huntington-Whiteley at Tiffany & Co. event in New York
The singer, 56, wore a white, fitted, off-the-shoulder gown as the luxury brand celebrated the launch of Blue Book 2026: Hidden Garden at Park Avenue.

Mail Online
Open 
The end of trendy sourdough pizza: Upmarket chains including Franco Manca shut their doors as customers blame 'falling standards' and 'soggy' bases (but takeaways are on the up!)
When the first branch of the rustic sourdough pizza chain Franco Manca opened in London in 2008, the capital's trendy set rushed to taste the lighter, crispier version of the classic Italian delicacy.

Mail Online
Open 
Bella Hadid enjoys a day out shooting and horse riding in Texas as she celebrates her third year living in the Southern state
The supermodel, 29, was seen riding around vast areas of countryside on her Red Roan horse alongside her other pet horse.

Sky News Home
Open 
Acting head of ICE who oversaw controversial immigration crackdowns to step down
US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) acting director Todd Lyons will resign at the end of next month, federal officials have announced. 

Sky News Home
Open 
Eight dead after helicopter crash
A helicopter has crashed in Indonesia, killing all eight people on board. 

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
McGlynn should be 'in the conversation' to be Celtic manager - Lennon
Neil Lennon reckons John McGlynn should be "in the conversation" to become the next Celtic manager as the Dunfermline Athletic boss aims to get the better of his Falkirk counterpart in Saturday's Scottish Cup semi-final.

Russia Today News
Open 
War on Iran likely to delay US arms deliveries to Europe – Reuters

Propublica
Open 
A Protester Threw a Snowball. Federal Agents Responded With Tear Gas and Pepper Balls.
The post A Protester Threw a Snowball. Federal Agents Responded With Tear Gas and Pepper Balls. appeared first on ProPublica.

TechRadar News
Open 
James Bond 007 First Light PS5 controller pre-orders live now — the best links and info

TechRadar News
Open 
'Don’t fear the dead, and don’t fear me' — AI brings a digital Val Kilmer back to the screen

TechRadar News
Open 
Europol launches Operation PowerOFF — warns 75,000 DDoS users and takes down 53 domains

Digital Trends
Open 
Amazon thinks you love AI, so it has launched a special storefront for AI-powered gadgets
When everything is AI, figuring out what works gets tricky. This store makes it simpler.

Digital Trends
Open 
Casely is recalling nearly half a million power banks over a fire hazard. Here’s how to check if you’re affected
The Casely Power Pods 5000mAh MagSafe wireless power bank is being recalled again. Here's how to check your unit and get a free replacement.

Mail Online
Open 
Britain's £2,000 driveway deficit: Drivers without one are stung by punishing insurance and parking permit premiums
The driveway divide has been found to be unfairly penalising drivers who do not have access to off-street parking.

Mail Online
Open 
These are the six dated outfits you should never wear on holiday - and what to swap for instead
Holiday packing is a tough thing to nail. Given it's the occasion we shop for least (compared to work and nights out in good old Blighty), we often end up reaching for the same 'safe' pieces.

Mail Online
Open 
Eagles Super Bowl champion Alshon Jeffery facing up to five years in jail as he's arrested for insurance fraud
In Super Bowl LII, he scored a 34-yard touchdown and made three catches for 73 yards as the Eagles defeated Tom Brady and Bill Belichick's Patriots 41-33.

Mail Online
Open 
Patriotic pub landlord wins battle to keep giant St George's cross on venue - after ONE person complained
A patriotic pub landlord has won his fight to keep a giant St George's cross on the front of his pub after someone complained it looked racist.

Mail Online
Open 
Husband who killed his wife and never revealed where her body is will be FREED from prison
Glyn Razzell was sentenced to a minimum of 16 years imprisonment for the death of mum-of-four Linda Razzell in 2002.

Mail Online
Open 
Vogue Williams overshadows Spencer Matthews' ex Lucy Watson's pregnancy announcement by sharing her own baby news just minutes later
While seemingly coincidental, the timing was awkward given Lucy and Spencer's tumultuous relationship history.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
9 months after Ozzy’s death, Sharon Osbourne lists L.A. mansion for $17 million
Sharon Osbourne has listed the $17 million Los Angeles mansion she shared with her late spouse, Ozzy Osbourne, and their children, nine months after the rock ‘n’ roll legend died in England.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
‘I hope to retire at 59’: I have $950,000 in my 401(k)s. When do I do a Roth conversion?
Roth conversions are permanent. Once done, they cannot be undone.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Chess: Sindarov wins Candidates with record total, while Vaishali takes women’s event
The Uzbek 20-year-old won first prize unbeaten but his girlfriend, Bibisara Assaubayeva, finished second to the lowest seed in the Women’s CandidatesJavokhir Sindarov finished with a record total in the world championship Candidates in Pegeia, western Cyprus, as the 20-year-old from Uzbekistan won the competition with a record 10/14 total, 1.5 points clear of his nearest rival, Anish Giri. The Women’s Candidates was won by India’s 24-year-old Vaishali Rameshbabu, half a point ahead of Kazakhstan’s Bibisara Assaubayeva, who is also Sindarov’s girlfriend.Sindarov dominated the field with a controlled display reminiscent of the old Soviet master Mikhail Botvinnik. His pre-game preparation was exceptional, several times accurately predicting what would appear on the board right into the endgame. On the rare occasions when he was under pressure, as in his second game against the world No 3 and US champion, Fabiano Caruana, his defensive technique was precise and assured. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Hampshire v Somerset, Warwickshire v Essex, and more: county cricket day one – live
Updates from the first day’s play in the latest round Sign up for The Spin | Mail Tanya or comment BTLBrrrr. Damp and chilly here in Manchester. The Met Office says:A band of rain will gradually move eastwards across the UK today, although not reaching the southeast until evening. Largely dry, bright and warm ahead of the rain, with blustery and occasionally heavy showers following. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Premier League set for crunch weekend, European reaction, and more – football live
⚽ Fixtures | Latest tables | Premier League top scorers⚽ Premier League: 10 things to look out for | Mail DavidLiverpool boss Arne Slot has been speaking ahead of Sunday’s Merseyside derby. Here he is on Hugo Ekitike’s Achilles tendon injury which has ruled the Frenchman out for the rest of the season and this summer’s World Cup.He hasn’t been operated on yet. Devastating for him coming to a new club having so much impact straight away. Playing against your former club in the Champions League quarter-final with so much to come for him in the summer.My first thoughts are with him being out for such a long time, missing out on so many special moments. But it is not the first and not the last player who experienced something like this at the start of their career, and there are so many examples of players coming back even stronger. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The best secateurs in the UK to save you time and effort when pruning your garden, tested
Our gardening expert puts 19 bypass secateurs to the test to find the best for comfort, sharpness and tackling tough stems• The best pressure washers, testedSecateurs are the single most valued tool in the gardener’s trug, an implement as personally prized as the bricklayer’s trowel. With time, their weight and shape wear familiarly into the hand, becoming a companionable tool for all garden tasks, from pruning woody shrubs and cutting back perennials to slicing twine and preparing cut flowers.There are two main types of secateurs, bypass and anvil (see below for their differences explained), and I’ve focused on the former here. If well looked after (we’ve included care instructions at the end of this article), a quality pair can last decades; as a result, gardeners declare staunch loyalties to particular models.Best secateurs overall:
Burgon & Ball bypass secateursBest secateurs for tough stems:
Felco Model 2 Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Wheat price heading for biggest jump in two months; insolvences rise in England and Wales – business live
Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial news, as Iran war drives up food insecurity fears and puts pressures on companiesCuts to overseas aid will worsen shocks to global economy, David Miliband saysThe UK could be facing a “mountain” of insolvencies, restructuring experts are warning, as the Iran war drives up costs.New data today shows a 7% rise in the number of company insolvencies in England and Wales in March – up to 2,022, from 1,895 in February.The increase in March 2026 was mostly driven by more than 100 connected companies in the Real Estate sector entering administration.“Ongoing tensions in the Middle East are driving up energy and fuel costs, disrupting supply chains, and keeping inflation stubbornly above the Bank of England’s 2% target. The UK economy is expected to be among the most exposed in the developed world - yet much of this impact has not yet filtered through to company balance sheets or the latest insolvency data.“Compounding this, the new tax year has brought a fresh wave of cost pressures. While there have been no headline rate rises, frozen thresholds, reduced reliefs and tighter allowances are quietly intensifying ‘fiscal drag’ - steadily increasing the tax burden on both businesses and consumers. Together, these twin pressures are squeezing margins and suppressing demand which risks driving more businesses into the red. Continue reading...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
US military in Libya: Pursuing unity, or pressuring Russia?
For the first time, Libya is hosting the Flintlock military exercise and soldiers from both sides of the divided country are taking part. It's due to security concerns, economic interests and competition with Russia.

Mail Online
Open 
Are we living in The Matrix? Scientist claims the universe has SEVEN dimensions
In addition to the four dimensions we normally experience - height, length, depth, and time - physicists argue that there are three extra 'folded' layers of reality.

Computer Weekly
Open 
CYBERUK ’26: UK lagging on legal protections for cyber pros
Ahead of next week's CYBERUK conference, the CyberUp Campaign for reform of the UK's hacking laws urges the government to keep focus, and proposes a four-pillar framework that would protect cyber professionals from prosecution

Computer Weekly
Open 
Welcome to agentic AI. Welcome to per-agent licensing
Microsoft seems to have a new wheeze: Charging per-agent. Having made Copilot pervasive in the Microsoft stack, it looks like customers may face per-agent billing

BBC World News
Open 
BBC in Iran: 'Tehran does not think it has lost this war'
Lyse Doucet says Iranians want a solution to the long-running animosity with the US, but leaders is not willing to make a deal on Washington's terms.

HM Treasury
Open 
UK takes lead in protecting developing countries from debt crises
Developing countries will be able to respond faster to economic crises through new proposals developed by the London Coalition and driven by the UK government. | HM Treasury.

UK Government News
Open 
UK takes lead in protecting developing countries from debt crises
Developing countries will be able to respond faster to economic crises through new proposals developed by the London Coalition and driven by the UK government.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Germany's Anti-Immigration AfD Party Jumps To 27%, 4 Points Ahead Of CDU
Germany's Anti-Immigration AfD Party Jumps To 27%, 4 Points Ahead Of CDU

Via Remix News,

In a new poll from YouGov, the Alternative for Germany (AfD0 party jumped to 27 percent, now four points ahead of the rival Christian Democrats (CDU), in a sign that the AfD continues to distance itself as the most popular party in Germany.



AfD co-leader Alice Weidel was quick to publish the poll results on X, writing:

“4 percentage points ahead of the Union, 4 out of 5 citizens dissatisfied with Merz: We no longer have time for undemocratic firewalls. The political turnaround must happen now.”


4 Prozentpunkte Abstand zur Union, 4 von 5 Bürgern unzufrieden mit Merz: Wir haben keine Zeit mehr für undemokratische Brandmauern. Die politische Wende muß jetzt erfolgen. pic.twitter.com/rWe3sm04RU
— Alice Weidel (@Alice_Weidel) April 15, 2026
The governing parties that make up the federal government are seeing their fortunes quickly fall.

The CDU/CSU fell by three percentage points to 23 percent, which was the lowest figure measured by YouGov since December 2021.

The SPD figure is at 13 percent, which fell one point from 14 percent.

Meanwhile, the Greens and the Left each gained one point, jumping to 14 percent and 10 percent respectively.

According to the poll, more and more Germans are dissatisfied, totaling 79 percent, with the work of the federal government led by Friedrich Merz. In comparison, in June 2025, this value was only at 55 percent.

Most threatening for Merz, CDU voters are increasingly turning on his government, with only 34 percent saying they are satisfied, falling from 48 percent in March.

Other polls have shown AfD at the top, but with a narrower margin, averaging between 25 and 26 percent of the vote.

Despite the AfD leading, the CDU has vowed to never form a coalition with the party.

If the AfD’s values hold into the next national election, it may become increasingly difficult to form a coalition without the party’s support.

Read more here...

Tyler Durden
Fri, 04/17/2026 - 03:30

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Gulf War Leaves $58 Billion Repair Bill And Global Equipment Crunch
Gulf War Leaves $58 Billion Repair Bill And Global Equipment Crunch

Last week, JPMorgan - which correctly noted that headlines tend to focus on the fact of damage not the scale - was the first itemize the damage from the war in Iran, finding more than 60 energy infrastructure assets in the Gulf have been affected by drone and missile strikes, with roughly 50 sustaining different degrees of damage. 





What about the actual dollar value of the inflicted damage?

According to Rystad, repair and restoration costs for energy-linked infrastructure as a result of war in the Middle East could hit $58 billion, with the total for oil and gas facilities potentially up to $50 billion. 

Three weeks after the energy consultancy published an initial estimate of $25 billion in repair costs across Gulf energy infrastructure, the scope of damage has expanded materially. The continuation of military strikes drove up the number of impacted assets across the region before largely subsiding following an 8 April ceasefire between the US and Iran. This pushed the estimate for the average in potential total repair and restoration spending to $46 billion – representing the midway point in the range of $34 billion to $58 billion – across oil and gas infrastructure, inclusive of an average of $5 billion across industrial, power and desalination assets. The ceasefire, combined with stalled negotiations and renewed escalation risk, continues to shape the operating environment, alongside risks of disruption and potential blockades affecting shipping through the Strait of Hormuz. 

Divergent recovery timelines 

This broader damage footprint is changing how the recovery will unfold. Capital availability is not the primary constraint; instead, access to equipment, contractors and logistics is emerging as the key limiting factor. Recovery timelines are beginning to diverge across assets and countries, reflecting differences in domestic execution capacity and supply chain access. At the same time, repair activity is likely to displace new project execution, as operators prioritize restoring existing production over advancing greenfield developments. 

Early recovery trends already reflect this divergence. Some facilities where damage was contained and contractor capacity was already present have resumed operations within weeks, particularly where work is limited to surface equipment and modular repairs. By contrast, facilities requiring reconstruction of core process units or that are dependent on long-lead equipment remain in early assessment stages, with timelines extending into years. 

Rystad Energy has assessed the damage across impacted energy-linked facilities and estimates total repair and restoration costs in the range of $34 billion to $58 billion. 



The lower end of the range assumes that, for facilities where the extent of damage is not yet fully clear, impacts are limited in scope, allowing for modular repairs supported by existing spare equipment and shorter procurement cycles. The upper end reflects scenarios where structural damage is confirmed across major facilities, requiring full replacement of critical systems, reliance on long-lead equipment and the inclusion of conflict-related premiums on engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) execution, including contractor mobilization and war-risk insurance, alongside delays linked to contractor deployment, constrained logistics and in some cases restricted access to international supply chains.

Iran and Qatar bear brunt 

At a country level, this cost distribution begins to diverge more clearly, both in scale and across asset types. Iran accounts for the highest number of impacted facilities and the widest spread across asset types, with repair costs potentially reaching up to $19 billion under a high-damage scenario. Major disruptions are concentrated in the South Pars onshore gas processing facilities at Asaluyeh, along with the adjacent Pars Special Economic Energy Zone and Mahshahr petrochemical complex, removing significant gas processing and downstream petrochemical capacity. Additional impacts across key refineries, fuel storage depots in the Tehran region and export infrastructure at Lavan and Siri Island have further constrained domestic fuel distribution and reduced export flexibility, increasing reliance on fewer operational outlets. 

The impact in Iran therefore extends across the value chain, with simultaneous disruption to processing, refining, storage, and exports. Restoration timelines are structurally longer than elsewhere in the Gulf, not only due to the scale and dispersion of damage, but also because access to Western EPC contractors, original equipment manufacturers and process technologies remains restricted, narrowing execution options and extending procurement cycles. 

Qatar presents a different profile, where the impact is more concentrated but significantly deeper in terms of technical complexity. Damage is centered on Ras Laffan Industrial City, where multiple liquefied natural gas (LNG) trains have been affected alongside disruption at the Pearl gas-to-liquids facility. This is now intersecting with QatarEnergy’s ongoing North Field expansion program, including the latest award to a consortium led by Technip Energies, with contractors already active across multiple phases. 

With these projects already under execution or in early construction, there is a clear overlap between expansion work and repair activity within the same industrial cluster. Both draw on similar pools of engineering teams, fabrication yards and site crews, even if not always the same contractors. If some of this capacity is redirected towards repair activity, it could lead to delays of a few months in ongoing expansion projects, especially where timelines are already tight. The impact is more likely to show up as slower progress on execution rather than any formal change in project schedules. 

E&C takes largest share of costs 

Rystad Energy estimates facility repair and restoration costs for impacted oil and gas facilities could cost about $46 billion. At the facility level, engineering and construction accounts for the largest share of total expected outlay, followed by equipment and materials. This is consistent with the dominance of downstream and integrated assets in the damage profile, where repair activity involves rebuilding structural components, reinstating process units and re-integrating complex systems.



The sequencing of spending is equally important. Engineering and assessment activity progresses relatively quickly, but the overall timeline is largely governed by procurement and fabrication of critical equipment. While construction and installation can proceed in parallel once materials are available, delays in equipment delivery continue to define the critical path across most major assets. As a result, recovery timelines are less dependent on on-site execution and more on how quickly operators can secure access to constrained supply chains. 

What is emerging is less a reconstruction program and more a competition for access – access to equipment, contractors and logistics capacity. Those that move early will secure capacity and shorten timelines, while others may face delays that extend well beyond the physical scope of damage. The pace of recovery will therefore be defined less by the scale of impact and more by access to constrained supply chains. 

Tyler Durden
Fri, 04/17/2026 - 04:15

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Norway's Oil Export Earnings Surge 68% Amid Iran War
Norway's Oil Export Earnings Surge 68% Amid Iran War

Authored by Alex Komani via OilPrice.com,

Norway's crude oil export earnings surged 67.9% year-on-year in March to a record 57.4 billion kroner ($6.1 billion), primarily driven by soaring global energy prices following the outbreak of the Iran war and the subsequent closure of the Strait of Hormuz.



Oil prices averaged 1,014 kroner ($107.52) per barrel in March, the highest monthly average since September 2023.

As Europe’s largest producer of oil and natural gas, the Scandinavian country exported 56.6 million barrels of crude oil in March, good for nearly 2 million barrels per day. Norway’s natural gas export revenues also climbed 19% to over 69 billion kroner as Europe sought alternative energy sources amid Middle East instability, helping the country record a trade surplus to the tune of 97.5 billion kroner, its highest level since January 2023.

Norway’s windfall oil earnings did not escape the attention of U.S. President Donald Trump:

“Europe is desperate for energy, and yet the United Kingdom refuses to open North Sea oil, one of the greatest fields in the world. Tragic!!!” he wrote in Truth Social.

“Aberdeen should be booming. Norway sells its North Sea oil to the UK at double the price. They are making a fortune,” he added.

North Sea oil and gas production is in long-term, structural decline, with over 90% of its producible resources already extracted.

However, Norway has been able to maintain high production by expanding exploration in the Arctic Barents Sea, pivoting to new, smaller discoveries in the North Sea, and investing heavily in the Norwegian Sea.

The Barents Sea is widely regarded as one of the most promising, yet under-explored, oil and gas frontiers on the Norwegian Continental Shelf, with roughly 80% of its remaining hydrocarbon resources yet to be tapped.

Meanwhile, the Norwegian Sea is an increasingly attractive area of interest, with roughly 50% of its remaining oil and gas resources yet to be discovered.

About one-third of the estimated resources in the Norwegian Sea are located in unopened areas, including off Lofoten and Vesterålen as well as around Jan Mayen.

Tyler Durden
Fri, 04/17/2026 - 05:00

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Germany-Israel divide deepens after Merz criticism
The Israeli finance minister's sharp criticism of the German chancellor's views on Israel's settlement policy is just the latest sign of a growing estrangement. What's the current state of German-Israeli relations?

Mail Online
Open 
I'm A Celebrity's Gemma Collins 'quits' show tonight as she breaks down in tears after swiping at show bosses 'you're trying to kill me'
I'm A Celebrity ... South Africa star Gemma Collins looks set to 'quit' the ITV show tonight in dramatic scenes - as she breaks down in tears.

Mail Online
Open 
The dreams that indicate you're about to DIE: Terminally ill people reveal their most common visions - including being reunited with lost loved ones and seeing the light
It's something many of us regularly think about - what happens when you're about to die? Now, scientists have revealed the dreams you'll probably have as you near your end.

Mail Online
Open 
Bank of England to test the risk AI poses to country's financial stability - as Governor warns of Anthropic cyber threat
The Bank of England will include risks from artificial intelligence in its stress tests of the financial system, it told MPs.

ZDNet News
Open 
The best 50-inch TVs of 2026: Expert tested
We tested the best 50-inch TVs from brands like Sony and Hisense to help you find the perfect fit for your smaller space - we even looked at outdoor TVs for cookouts and backyard parties to find the top performers.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
6,000 Meters Under the Pacific, Japan Seeks Independence From China on Rare Earths
Tokyo is succeeding where the rest of the world has failed, reducing its reliance on Beijing for crucial rare earth elements—thanks to an enormous underwater deposit discovered on a remote island.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Germany news: Far-right AfD ahead of Merz's conservatives
The far-right Alternative for Germany has nudged ahead of its political rivals in a new poll, the most recent of several that it has topped. Meanwhile, a last-ditch attempt to save whale Timmy is underway. Follow DW.

Mail Online
Open 
Brainwashed by aliens - or are you just delusional?
More than half the population believes in the existence of intelligent alien life. There's just one snag...a lack of compelling evidence to prove it

Mail Online
Open 
Sir Lenny Henry left with his head in his hands and as he's presented with very personal question about his relationship with girlfriend of 13 years on The Assembly
Sir Lenny Henry will be left doubled over with his head in his hands as he's dished out a very personal question about his relationship with his girlfriend of 13 years.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Hampshire v Somerset, Warwickshire v Essex, and more: county cricket day one – live
Updates from the first day’s play in the latest round Sign up for The Spin | Mail Tanya or comment BTLGary Naylor’s talking points.DIVISION ONE Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Premier League set for crunch weekend, European reaction, and more – football live
⚽ Fixtures | Latest tables | Premier League top scorers⚽ Premier League: 10 things to look out for | Mail DavidBack to Europe for a bit and let’s confirm the last teams standing. These are the potential finals:Champions League
PSG/Bayern v Arsenal/Atletico Madrid Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
A $3,200 ‘girls’ weekend like no other’ where you got to meet Meghan for an hour? In this economy?
How much is Meghan making from this? Why is she appearing as a guest judge on MasterChef? Why has she joined an AI fashion discovery platform? Maybe a better question is, why the hell not?Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcastI am standing across the street from a five-star hotel in Sydney’s eastern suburbs wearing sunglasses and a large hat like a low-budget private detective.My noble aim is to spot Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, or at the very least scope out the exclusive women’s wellness retreat – shrouded in mystery – where she is slated to appear on the final day of her and Harry’s whirlwind four-day trip down under. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Why do vets charge more to scan an animal than a private hospital would to scan a human?
With prices at the vets soaring by more than 60% since 2016, tests such as MRI scans for dogs can exceed £3,500Why does my vet charge more than a private hospital for humans? I’ve been quoted £1,500 for an MRI scan for my dog. When I looked at how much it would cost for a person to have the same type of scan privately, it was about £700.As technology improves, the treatments and diagnostics available for pets are getting closer to what is on offer for human patients. While we used to rely on a vet to assess what was going on inside an animal, they can now recommend hi-tech scans to see exactly what’s happening. But progress costs money. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Popesplaining’ Vance out of depth in row over whether Iran is a just war
Trump administration has riled head of Catholic church over use of theology to justify conflict in IranThe contrast in experience between the two men disagreeing over war and theology was striking.On the one side was Pope Leo XIV, the first North American to head the Catholic church and the first cleric from the Augustinian order, who this week visited the modern Algerian city where Saint Augustine once lived. For Leo, who wrote his doctoral thesis on Augustine’s ideas, it was the culmination of a lifelong intellectual interest. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Wheat price heading for biggest jump in two months as Iran war drives up food insecurity fears – business live
Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial newsCuts to overseas aid will worsen shocks to global economy, David Miliband saysUK mortgage rates have dipped slightly today, as some lenders begin to cut their offerings.Moneyfacts reports that the average 2-year fixed residential mortgage rate today is 5.87%, down from 5.88% on Thursday.“We’re going to see what happens. But I think we’re very close to making a deal with Iran.” Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Runaway wolf finally captured after nine-day search in South Korea
The search has been marked by twists and turns, gripping South Korea and even inspiring a meme coin.

Telegraph
Open 
County Championship 2026, Division 2: live scoreboards
A staggered round three gives Lancashire the chance to go top at Gloucestershire who are stuck on zero points while Northants host Middlesex

Telegraph
Open 
County Championship 2026, Division 1: live scoreboards
Only two fixtures in a staggered round three this week send leaders Somerset to the Rose Bowl and Essex to winless Warwickshire

Mail Online
Open 
Netflix co-founder steps down - shares sink despite bumper profits at streaming giant
Hastings, who led the company from a mail-order DVD company to one of the world's most popular streaming services, will step down as chair in June.

Mail Online
Open 
Sir Lenny Henry left with his head in his hands and gasps 'do they just ask you anything?' as he's presented with very personal question about his relationship with his girlfriend of 13 years on The Assembly
Sir Lenny Henry will be left doubled over with his head in his hands as he's dished out a very personal question about his relationship with his girlfriend of 13 years.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Netflix co-founder Reed Hastings to leave streaming service
Chair’s decision to not seek re-election ‘not as a result of any disagreement’, company says in filingReed Hastings, the Netflix chair, is leaving the streaming service he co-founded almost 30 years ago as the company regains its footing after losing out on a $72bn (£53bn) deal for Warner Bros Discovery.In a 14-page letter to investors released on Thursday, Netflix said Hastings would not stand for re-election at its annual meeting in June and planned to focus on philanthropy and other pursuits. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Premier League set for crunch weekend, European reaction, and more – football live
⚽ Fixtures | Latest tables | Premier League top scorers⚽ Premier League: 10 things to look out for | Mail DavidArsenal are six points clear in the Premier League and into the semi-finals of the Champions League. And yet, in cricketing terms, they seem not to be going for their shots anymore, trying to get over the line by nudging singles. Has Geoff Boycott given his approval to such a method? Boycs, confusingly, supports Manchester United so probably isn’t the man to ask. Much of the negativity around the Gunners centres around style though and clamming up at this crucial stage of the season could backfire. Here’s Rob Draper with a look at how Mikel Arteta and Pep Guardiola are taking different paths despite both being disciples of Johan Cruyff.No doubt which game takes top billing this weekend. Let’s start with some Manchester City v Arsenal build-up in our Premier League: 10 things to look out for column. Here’s how Jamie Jackson frames it: Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Eight famous all-English European ties as Villa & Forest set up semi-final
Here are eight of the most memorable all-English clashes in Europe as Aston Villa and Nottingham Forest set up a Europa League semi-final.

Mail Online
Open 
I'm A Celeb's Beverley Callard gives a health update after undergoing surgery for breast cancer and says it had spread to one of her lymph nodes
Speaking in an Instagram video on Thursday, she said that while her cancer was successfully removed, it had spread to one of her lymph nodes.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Guardiola ready to benefit as fellow Cruyff disciple Arteta strays from path
Manchester City and Arsenal managers were both schooled in the expansive Barça tradition but the latter opting for caution could be his team’s undoingWhen Pep Guardiola was preparing for the challenge of taking on Jürgen Klopp’s peak Liverpool team at Anfield in February 2021, training that week at Manchester City was a little different, according to Oleksandr Zinchenko. Guardiola’s instructions seemed counterintuitive. “Guys, let’s start from the goal-kick, I want you to make at least three or four touches on the ball,” the manager told them. “Most of the teams come to Anfield and shit themselves. They want to play one touch, two touch. ‘Oh, don’t give me the ball! Oh you take it!’ But you have to play with big balls at Anfield! Big balls! ‘Give me the ball!’ Demand it! If you need to dribble past two or three players, do it. But play football. I want you to play football.”Zinchenko recalls that Guardiola made the same speech before they walked out at Anfield. “Teams coming here are scared. They play one or two touches, and that’s what Liverpool like, because they get the ball back so quickly. I want you to be brave. Play your football!” as Zinchenko puts it in his autobiography, Believe. Admittedly that game came in the midst of City’s record-breaking 21-game winning run that season but was also Guardiola’s first win at Anfield, so not dissimilar to the title showdown at the Etihad Stadium on Sunday with Arsenal. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Premier League: 10 things to look out for this weekend
A seismic clash between City and Arsenal, Tottenham need leadership, and could Eddie Howe recall Yoane Wissa?Josh King learned of the difficulties that come with being a Premier League player at Liverpool on Sunday. The 19-year-old was withdrawn at the break after a tough first half at Anfield as Marco Silva wanted to change things when two goals down. It will be interesting to see how King reacts to the half-time hook when he is next called upon, whether he uses it as inspirational fuel or sees it as an undeserved irritation because he was not solely to blame for Fulham being behind. Silva will have a quandary over whether to start the youngster again or leave him stewing on the bench, offering a further reminder of what is required at the top level. King has impressed over the season and at this stage of a player’s development it is sometimes a good idea to see what lessons are learned from a challenging moment. Will UnwinBrentford v Fulham, Saturday 12.30pm (all times BST)Leeds v Wolves, Saturday 3pmNewcastle v Bournemouth, Saturday 3pmTottenham v Brighton, Saturday 5.30pmChelsea v Manchester United, Saturday 8pm Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Nobody says who called first, but Arteta and Guardiola speak again - Balague
As Manchester City prepare to host Arsenal in Sunday's crucial Premier League meeting between the top two, European football expert Guillem Balague looks at how the two managers have evolved.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
US military in Libya: Pursuing unity, or pressuring Russia?
For the first time, Libya is taking part in an international military exercise in the country. The US and partners have included Libya because of security concerns, economic interests and competition with Russia.

Mail Online
Open 
Caught red-haired! There's a host of A-listers faking their auburn locks... so, can YOU tell which celebs have fooled everyone and whose hair is the real deal?
The ginger gene has become more common among Europeans, according to new research by Harvard University.

Mail Online
Open 
My friends keep asking if I went on holiday - but I've just been using these self-tan drops every morning (and they're discounted)
SHOPPING: For a believable sun-kissed glow, scores of 'nervous' fake tan users have discovered one easy-to-use bottle of self-tan drops. And we have a discount code.

Mail Online
Open 
Romeo Beckham leads birthday tributes to mum Victoria as Posh Spice celebrates her 52nd birthday as son Cruz's girlfriend Jackie Apostel says how 'lucky' they are 'to be surrounded by her kindness'
The 23-year-old was the first of Victoria's offspring to take to social media to celebrate her day with a gushing tribute.

Mail Online
Open 
The deeply troubling questions about Epsom 'gang rape' outside church that's seen riot police on the street, CCTV footage that may have the answer and why a nation's losing its trust in authority. Special report by FRED KELLY
Anyone would have thought the officers were facing down an army of hooligans. Yet in front of them stood 100 ordinary members of the public, including young mothers with children in prams.

BBC World News
Open 
'How does one survive?': Factory protests expose strain in India's industrial system
Workers in some north Indian cities have been protesting, demanding better pay and working conditions.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Premier League set for crunch weekend, European reaction, and more – football live
⚽ Fixtures | Latest tables | Premier League top scorers⚽ Premier League: 10 things to look out for | Mail DavidNo doubt which game takes top billing this weekend. Let’s start with some Manchester City v Arsenal build-up in our Premier League: 10 things to look out for column. Here’s how Jamie Jackson frames it:“If Arsenal are victorious, they motor back to London with a nine-point advantage and the 22-year wait for the title is surely over. If City win, then it is time to break out the popcorn as the title race will surely go down to the wire.” Continue reading...

The Register
Open 
Capita won disastrous UK pensions gig after acing performance checks
Top civil servant tells MPs bid was strong on quality and value for money The UK government awarded Capita a £239 million contract to run the Civil Service Pension Scheme (CSPS) after assessing its past performance, despite the rollout later leaving thousands of retirees waiting for payments, a senior civil servant has said.…

Gizmodo
Open 
Scientists Needed a Particle Accelerator to Prove This Mammal Ancestor Laid Eggs
A mysterious egg popped up in 2008. Researchers would need to wait more than a decade to peer inside it.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Overshadowed by Iran, Gaza stuck between war and peace
With the war in Iran, the conflict in Gaza has faded from international attention. Despite a six-month ceasefire, efforts to end the conflict have stalled.

Mail Online
Open 
David Haye clashes with another I'm A Celebrity campmate as Adam Thomas breaks vital show rule leading to brutal punishment from ITV bosses
David Haye clashed with yet another of his I'm A Celebrity... Get Me Out Of Here! campmates after Adam Thomas broke one of the ITV show's vital rules.

Mail Online
Open 
Passenger jet pilot faints mid flight over Europe triggering emergency before admitting he had not slept at all the night before
The pilot of a passenger jet fainted mid flight in the cockpit over Europe, triggering an emergency, before admitting he had not slept the night before take-off.

Mail Online
Open 
Bank of England to test the risk AI poses to country's financial stability - as Governor warns of Anthropic cyber threat
The Bank of England will include risks from artificial intelligence in its stress tests of the financial system, it told MPs on Thursday.

Mail Online
Open 
Are you an investing optimist or a realist? The best investment trusts for your Isa depending on your view
The hare and the tortoise is an interesting parable, with a lot to teach us about investing. There are many ways to win, but as soon as you rest on your laurels it is over.

Mail Online
Open 
Bikini-clad Kerry Katona, 45, packs on the PDA with boyfriend Paolo Margaglione, 33, during sun-soaked yacht trip as she is seen for the first time since being rushed to hospital over a suspected stoke
The Atomic Kitten singer, 45, slipped in a tiny bikini as she joined boyfriend Paolo Margaglione, 33, and her kids to celebrate rarely seen son Maxwell's 18th birthday.

Mail Online
Open 
Victoria Beckham says her children should behave 'appropriately' in 'dig' at Brooklyn amid estrangement
The Spice Girl, 52, was asked about her son before talk turned to her youngest child Harper and the importance of her behaving 'appropriately'.

BBC World News
Open 
Three charged with arson on Persian media offices in London
Two teenagers and a 21-year-old man are due in court charged with arson with intent to endanger life.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Netflix co-founder Reed Hastings to leave streaming service
Chair’s decision to not seek re-election ‘not as a result of any disagreement’, company says in filingReed Hastings, the Netflix chair, is leaving the streaming service he co-founded nearly 30 years ago as the company regains its footing after losing out on a $72bn (£53bn) deal for Warner Bros Discovery.In a 14-page letter to investors released on Thursday, Netflix said Hastings would not stand for re-election at its annual meeting in June and planned to focus on philanthropy and other pursuits. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Premier League set for crunch weekend, European reaction, and more – football live
⚽ Fixtures | Latest tables | Premier League top scorers⚽ Premier League: 10 things to look out for | Mail DavidAfter taking just five points from the last 42 available, Tottenham are heading towards relegation. Can new boss Roberto De Zerbi stop the ninth richest club in the world falling into the Championship? Harry Paterson from WhoScored examines their plight.Crystal Palace will face Ukrainian side Shakhtar Donetsk for a place in the final of the Conference League. Here’s how the Eagles completed the job against Fiorentina in the quarter-finals. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Australia's most decorated living soldier released on bail over war crime charges
Lawyers argued that Ben Roberts-Smith wouldn't be able to defend himself properly from prison.

UK Legislation
Open 
The A66 Northern Trans-Pennine Development Consent (Amendment) Order 2026

Mail Online
Open 
I'm A Celebrity's Seann Walsh brands his former ITV co-stars 'useless' as he hits out at 'hellhole' camp following show exit - revealing All Stars series was 'harder and scarier' than ever
The first famous face to get booted from I'm A Celebrity ... South Africa Seann Walsh has hit out at his 'useless' costars - branding the camp a 'hellhole'.

Mail Online
Open 
The VERY strict measures security are taking as Meghan's $3,000-a-head Her Best Life retreat officially kicks off - as Jackie 'O' arrives fashionably late in a blacked-out Range Rover
Follow Daily Mail's live coverage here.

Sky News Home
Open 
Eight dead after helicopter crash in Indonesia
A helicopter has crashed in Indonesia, killing all eight people on board. 

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Guardiola and Arteta - a complicated relationship
As Manchester City prepare to host Arsenal in Sunday's crucial Premier League meeting between the top two, European football expert Guillem Balague looks at how the two managers have evolved.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Avengers reassemble and Top Gun flies back - Hollywood studios preview their new movies
Some of the most hotly anticipated new films of the next couple of years are previewed at CinemaCon.

Mail Online
Open 
I ordered a 'sofa in a box' with 24-hour delivery without stepping foot in a showroom - and I was NOT prepared for how incredible it looked in real life
SHOPPING: Sofa shopping usually means delays and hassle, but one brand is changing that with stylish, affordable sofas delivered in a box in as little as 24 hours. So I put it to the test.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Nextflix co-founder Reed Hastings to leave streaming service
Chair’s decision to not seek re-election ‘not as a result of any disagreement’, company says in filingReed Hastings, the Netflix chair, is leaving the streaming service he co-founded nearly 30 years ago as the company regains its footing after losing out on a $72bn (£53bn) deal for Warner Bros Discovery.In a 14-page letter to investors released on Thursday, Netflix said Hastings would not stand for re-election at its annual meeting in June and planned to focus on philanthropy and other pursuits. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Premier League set for crunch weekend, European reaction, and more – football live
⚽ Fixtures | Latest tables | Premier League top scorers⚽ Premier League: 10 things to look out for | Mail DavidCrystal Palace will face Ukrainian side Shakhtar Donetsk for a place in the final of the Conference League. Here’s how the Eagles completed the job against Fiorentina in the quarter-finals.Nottingham Forest have reached their first European semi-final for 42 years. It was a nervy night at the City Ground but Morgan Gibbs-White’s 12-minute strike proved just enough to get Forest past 10-man Porto. Villa up next. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Finance leaders warn over Mythos as UK banks prepare to use powerful Anthropic AI tool
Release of new Claude model, so far limited to US firms, will expand to British institutions in coming daysBritish banks will be given access in the next week to a powerful AI tool that was deemed too dangerous to be released to the public, as a series of senior finance figures warned over its impact.Anthropic, which has so far limited the release of the new model to a small clutch of primarily US businesses, including Amazon, Apple and Microsoft, said it would expand that to UK financial institutions. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Huge rise in workers tipping off HMRC about bosses underpaying staff
More people are reporting their employers for underpaying staff, data shared exclusively with Money has shown.

Autosport F1
Open 
Bearman blames Colapinto for "unacceptable" crash at Suzuka
Oliver Bearman has spoken for the first time about the accident he suffered at the Formula 1 Japanese Grand Prix - placing full responsibility on Franco Colapinto.The incident occurred on lap 22 of the 53-lap race, where Bearman started around one second behind the Alpine through Suzuka’s sector two.But he suddenly closed as Colapinto suffered from a lack of energy and with a speed ...Keep reading

Mail Online
Open 
Victoria Beckham says her children should behave 'appropriately' as she opens up about feud with Brooklyn
The Spice Girl, 52, was asked about her son before talk turned to her youngest child Harper and the importance of her behaving 'appropriately'.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Finance ministers and top bankers raise serious concerns about Mythos AI model
Experts say Mythos potentially has an unprecedented ability to identify and exploit cyber-security weaknesses.

TechRadar News
Open 
James Bond 007 First Light PS5 controller pre-orders live — the best links and info you need today

Digital Trends
Open 
Chinese repair shops have apparently figured out how to fix ugly dents on iPhones
Skilled repair workers in China are restoring scratched and dented iPhone 17 Pro Max units to near-factory condition, and the results are seriously hard to argue with.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
India: Parliament votes on women's quota, delimitation amid opposition row
India's Modi government is eyeing a passage of key bills that could overhaul Parliament seats and pave the way for a women's quota. The opposition has reservations, casting doubt on the intentions behind the push.

Mail Online
Open 
Boy, 16, and two men are charged with arson after petrol bomb attack on London TV station that is critical of Iran regime
Oisin McGuinness, 21, and Nathan Dunn, 19, both of Watford, and a 16-year-old boy, of north London, all British nationals, have been charged with arson with intent to endanger life.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Premier League set for crunch weekend, European reaction, and more – football live
⚽ Fixtures | Latest tables | Premier League top scorers⚽ Premier League: 10 things to look out for | Mail DavidLet’s start with Aston Villa cruising past Bologna. Ollie Watkins reached a couple of landmarks in the 4-0 win and perhaps gave Thomas Tuchel a nudge.Good morning! Aside from Liverpool’s predictable exit to PSG, it’s been a rather excellent week for English teams in their respective European quarter-finals. Arsenal limped made it through against Sporting in the Champions League, Aston Villa and Nottingham Forest set up an all-English Europa League semi-final after seeing off Bologna and Porto respectively and Crystal Palace, despite defeat on the night at Fiorentina, went through 4-2 on aggregate to reach the last four of the Conference League. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
I’ll make up a whopper you can’t refuse! Why do we love to believe cinema’s best lines were improvised?
From The Godfather to Saltburn, the internet is awash with claims that actors are ditching the script and making it up as they go along. What’s behind our desire to invest in these behind-the-scenes ‘secrets’?Fun fact: in the history of cinema, there has never been a single script. It is a pervasive myth that film-making requires “screenplays” – in fact, most scenes are made up on the spot. Performers simply do whatever comes to mind and hope the camera is perfectly positioned to capture it; they slap their colleagues or start to break-dance on a whim. Did you know that many actors are not even acting? The shock on their faces is real, because usually they have no idea what’s going to happen next.This is the world according to YouTube shorts, X posts and Instagram memes. Across the internet, content creators are falsely claiming that some of cinema’s most famous scenes were improvised. Al Pacino giving John Cazale the kiss of death in The Godfather II? Made up on the spot. Heath Ledger’s frustration at the delayed hospital explosion in The Dark Knight? His real reaction! And that mother-daughter fight in Mermaids? Winona Ryder “delivered a roast so lethal that Cher had to improvise the slap”. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Idol, friend, colleague, rival - Arteta's complicated relationship with Guardiola
As Manchester City prepare to host Arsenal in Sunday's crucial Premier League meeting between the top two, European football expert Guillem Balague looks at how the two managers have evolved.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
US military in Libya: Pursuing unity, or pressuring Russia?
For the first time, Libya is taking part in an international military exercise in the country. The US and partners have included Libya, because of security concerns, economic interests and competition with Russia.

Mail Online
Open 
I'm A Celeb's Beverley Callard gives a health update after undergoing surgery for breast cancer and an agonising two-month wait for results
Speaking in an Instagram video on Thursday, she said that while her cancer was successfully removed, it had spread to one of her lymph nodes.

Mail Online
Open 
Crystal Palace stars enjoy BIG night out in Florence after Conference League win - with squad partying just days before huge Premier League clash that could impact Tottenham's relegation fight
The Palace squad were granted a night out by head coach Oliver Glasner following their progression to the semi-finals of the Conference League after overcoming Fiorentina 4-2 over two legs.

Mail Online
Open 
Caviar, chips and crystal crowns: Inside Miranda Kerr's lavish early 43rd birthday bash
Miranda Kerr was all smiles this week as she celebrated her 43rd birthday in style.

Russia Today News
Open 
Von der Leyen immune to democracy – AfD leader

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Lucy Liyou: Mr Cobra review – an arresting trip through the volatile emotions of a predatory relationship
(Orange Milk)The Korean American musician explores the unease and alarm of power imbalance using skittish melodies, nursery rhymes – and an unexpected Taylor Swift sample Mr Cobra opens with Korean American experimental musician Lucy Liyou’s central character, Babygirl, eerily beckoning her lover while piano shrapnel assaults a barren canvas. Over the course of the record, Liyou’s textures swell and dissipate, swerving into disco cuts and a Taylor Swift skit, then collapsing into farmyard sounds and text-to-speech streams of consciousness. This adaptation of Liyou’s solo music-theatre piece, dissecting a lustful relationship with a predator, turned into what she calls a record “about shame”. Its clearest theme is of desire’s power to corrode and enthral, but through her semi-autobiographical characters Liyou covers volatile emotional terrain – somethingher music encompasses with a mix of pathos, alarm and distance, and little interest in comforting resolution.Liyou’s commentary on agency in abusive relationships is particularly insightful in its unease as Babygirl undergoes rapid switches in motivation. Her submissive desires on Constrictor (Haha) are drenched in cold water when she suddenly becomes repulsed on Old MacDonald Had a Charm – yet, by the end of the track she’s back to flirting. Liyou has often toyed with celebrity culture (her name deliberately misspells that of the film star): on Romeopathy, Swift’s Love Story becomes a needy appeal for affection, asking Mr Cobra repeatedly to “just say yes” to her. Grabby moments like this, the nursery rhymes and the disco breaks can overshadow the allure of the album’s nuanced chaos, though they’re all part of the spirit of this smart, playful release from a musician of abundant talents. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
A Big Bold Beautiful Journey to Despicable Me: the seven best films to watch on TV this week
Margot Robbie and Colin Farrell go on a magical quest to save their heartbroken souls. And before its return this summer, go back to the start of the super-fun franchise that gave the world the Minions Kogonada’s beguiling fable pushes two damaged people together through a fantastical meet-cute, then traces their fraught quest for peace of mind. After being introduced at a wedding, David (Colin Farrell) and Sarah (Margot Robbie) end up in the same mysterious rental car. Nudged by a matchmaking GPS, they stop off at a series of magical doors and revisit scenes from their pasts to work out how they got to be the sad singletons they are now. Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, Howl’s Moving Castle, Before Sunrise – pick your own filmic reference – come to mind as the pair reassess memories of heartbreak, loss, betrayal and, occasionally, love.
Saturday 18 April, 11.50am, 6pm, Sky Cinema Premiere Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Colombia convenes climate ‘coalition of the willing’ to break global fossil fuel deadlock
Santa Marta conference born out of frustration at Cop summits, where renewable progress has been stalled by major pollutersEverybody knows fossil fuels cause climate breakdown, but until recently, mention of them was all but erased from the annual UN climate summits. Last year, two weeks of discussions ended without fossil fuels being mentioned in the final outcome.Frustration with those talks led a small developing country with a large fossil fuel sector – Colombia, the largest coal and fourth biggest oil exporter in the Americas – to rewrite the rules. With co-convener the Netherlands, and support from more than 50 countries, Colombia will host a groundbreaking new global conference this month to begin the long-awaited “transition away from fossil fuels”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Premier League set for crunch weekend, European reaction, and more – football live
⚽ Fixtures | Latest tables | Premier League top scorers⚽ Premier League: 10 things to look out for | Mail DavidGood morning! Aside from Liverpool’s predictable exit to PSG, it’s been a rather excellent week for English teams in their respective European quarter-finals. Arsenal limped made it through against Sporting in the Champions League, Aston Villa and Nottingham Forest set up an all-English Europa League semi-final after seeing off Bologna and Porto respectively and Crystal Palace, despite defeat on the night at Fiorentina, went through 4-2 on aggregate to reach the last four of the Conference League.We’ll reflect on those successes and then turn to a Premier League run-in where there’s all sorts on the line this weekend. Will in-form Brighton bash another nail into Tottenham’s relegation coffin? Who will have bragging rights after the first Merseyside derby at Hill Dickinson Stadium? And will Manchester City send already highly tetchy Arsenal fans apopletic by playing sexy Cherki football and winning Sunday’s title showdown at the Etihad? All that, plus team news, features and much more. Let’s go! Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Couture review – Angelina Jolie’s courageously personal turn adds depth to fashion-world drama
Jolie has star power as an American film-maker who gets diagnosed with breast cancer while filming in a blandly drawn Paris fashion showAs this film’s producer-star, Angelina Jolie shows honesty and courage in tackling a story that so closely mirrors her own experience of having a double mastectomy to prevent breast cancer. But sadly, the film itself feels specious and shallow, insisting with bland and weirdly humourless confidence on the glamorous importance of the fashion world in which it is set.Jolie’s character, Maxine, is an American indie film-maker just arrived in Paris, having been picked to direct the opening short movie for a super-prestigious fashion show. Her character is first-among-equals in the ensemble cast. Anyier Anei is Ada, a fledgling model from South Sudan who is to be the show’s star; Ella Rumpf plays makeup artist and would-be writer Angèle, trying to convert her experiences into an edgy fictionalised memoir; Louis Garrel smoulders and frowns as only he can as Anton, the first assistant director on Maxine’s film; and Vincent Lindon is the rumpled, caring Dr Hansen, who has the unhappy task of telling Maxine that his American colleague has passed on to him the results of her recent biopsy, and that she has breast cancer. (He sadly watches her walking away down the pavement from his high window after their consultation, while smoking a pensive cigarette.) Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Pop star boyfriend posting from Coachella, celebrity statesman, global brand: Justin Trudeau’s offbeat political afterlife
While Canadian prime ministers have taken staid routes after leaving office, Trudeau has tread a different pathThe downfall of Hungary’s Viktor Orbán prompted a flurry of reaction from progressive leaders around the world celebrating the end to an authoritarian regime. One statement stood out – not so much for the sentiment it expressed, but the setting in which it was issued.“Hungarians voted for change and a renewed commitment to democratic institutions after years of erosion under Viktor Orbán,” wrote Justin Trudeau, Canada’s former prime minister – posting from the Coachella music festival, where he and his girlfriend, the American pop star Katy Perry, were watching Justin Bieber. Continue reading...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
US military in Libya: Pursuing unity, or pressuring Russia?
For the first time, an international military exercise is underway in Libya. The US and partners vow to support the de-facto split country. Motivated by security concerns, economic interests and competition with Russia.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Three charged with arson on Persian media offices
Two teenagers and a 21-year-old man are due in court charged with arson with intent to endanger life.

Mail Online
Open 
Katie Price's husband selling £18 OnlyFans pictures as he insists he will fly to the UK in May despite her confirming he does have a travel ban
British-born Lee, 42, took to social media to share his link to the adult-sharing picture website, which his wife Katie, 47, is already signed up to.

Mail Online
Open 
Boy, 16, and two men are charged with arson after petrol bomb attack on London TV station that is critical of Iran regime
A boy and two men have been charged with arson after a petrol bomb attack on a London TV station that is critical of the Iranian regime.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Starmer in peril’: what the papers say about Mandelson vetting row
Speculation over the prime minister’s future dominates UK front pages after the Guardian revealed Peter Mandelson failed his security vettingOn Thursday, the Guardian revealed that Peter Mandelson failed his security vetting clearance, but that decision was overruled by the Foreign Office to ensure he could take up his post as ambassador to the US.The revelation dominated the front pages on Friday, after Downing Street released a statement confirming the Guardian’s story. It stressed the prime minister had no knowledge that security officials advised Mandelson should not be given clearance, and said responsibility lay with the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office. The top civil servant at the Foreign Office, Olly Robbins, later left his post. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Awful April leads to £216 annual bills increase - but switching broadband can save you money
Bills get hiked every year in April, but switching broadband can lead to big savings over the long term. These are some of the best deals.

Mail Online
Open 
Rochelle Humes says husband Marvin would be cancelled now for the 'creepy' way he first approached her: 'His dad was horrified by the story!'
The couple, who have been married for 14 years and share three children, crossed paths in 2010 when their respective bands were performing in Ireland.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Minister defends Starmer amid Mandelson revelations, saying vetting decision ‘utterly unacceptable’ – UK politics live
Darren Jones says he has ordered an urgent review into news that the Foreign Office ignored security vetting adviceOlly Robbins forced out in Mandelson vetting rowJones repeatedly denied that the prime minister had given a misleading impression about what has happened and had “lost grip” of the situation. He told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme:I completely refute the suggestion the PM misled the public or the House of Commons. It’s very clear from his words he was reporting what he had been told and what had been followed.I don’t think this is a question about the prime minister’s leadership.The Foreign Office did not tell the prime minister that they granted developed vetting status to Peter Mandelson against the advice of the security and vetting process. The prime minister was only made aware of that on Tuesday evening this week when the documents became available to the Cabinet Office as part of the humble address process (a binding motion to request government papers – JG).No minister is allowed to see these vetting documents as a matter of principle because we employ security professionals to conduct deeply invasive personal investigations into people’s backgrounds and for those officials to make a recommendation to civil servants on the appointment and employment of individuals. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Afghan veteran hospitalised after station assault
Aziz Ahmadzai had been working as a security guard at Weymouth Railway Station when he collapsed.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
What we know about the Israel-Lebanon ceasefire
A 10-day truce between the two countries is now in effect, with Iran-backed Hezbollah voicing support, as negotiations continue between the US and Iran.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Three charged over attempted arson attack
Three people are charged over an attempted arson attack at the offices of a Persian language media.

The Register
Open 
Claude Opus wrote a Chrome exploit for $2,283
Pause your Mythos panic because mainstream models anyone can use already pick holes in popular software Anthropic withheld its Mythos bug-finding model from public release due to concerns that it would enable attackers to find and exploit vulnerabilities before anyone could react.…

The Register
Open 
Support tech caught by 'Technician Aura': the bug that only hides when you're watching
All that kit, and the fix was simply stepping aside On Call  Life is filled with random events, but The Register tries to make readers’ lives just a little more predictable by always using Friday morning to bring you a new instalment of On Call – the reader-contributed column that shares your tech support stories.…

Mail Online
Open 
Has your Mounjaro weight loss slowed down? This is how you can turbo-charge your jab by using our experts' very easy hacks... and exactly which body part you should be injecting
After a few months on fat jabs such as Wegovy or Mounjaro, the feeling of suppression can start to wane and weight loss can stall.

Mail Online
Open 
The best make-up brushes are easy to use and will take years off: we've tested top brands for an even complexion and expert precision - plus expert tips on how to use them
Even if you have the ultimate makeup bag and have splurged hundreds on various 'anti-ageing' products, your makeup can still come out looking patchy.

Mail Online
Open 
Britain's Got Talent announces ex Gogglebox star Joe Baggs as host of new spin-off show ahead of live semi-finals
The TV personality, 28, will helm the new series, which will air on both Instagram and TikTok , covering all the backstage action from the competition's live shows.

Mail Online
Open 
Ford recalls more than a million cars due to software fault
The regulator said Ford was ​aware of two 'potentially' ​related injuries and one accident.

Sky News Home
Open 
Three charged over arson attack on media group
Three people have been charged in connection with an arson attack at a Persian-language media group in northwest London.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Replaced review – nostalgic cyberpunk tribute has few ideas of its own
PC, Xbox; Sad Cat StudiosThis pulpy sci-fi thriller is a beautiful, if deferential, homage to the genre greats, with a poignant real-world echoFor all of cyberpunk’s cautionary tales of shady corporations and transhumanist folly, it is the genre’s arresting imagery that looms largest in the pop culture imagination. Petroleum flares light up the perpetually rainy Los Angeles of Blade Runner; in the novel Neuromancer, the sky is the “colour of television, tuned to a dead channel”.Replaced, a new 2D action-platformer from Belarus-based outfit Sad Cat Studios, leans into the steel and sprawl that the genre is famed for. The game also offers a wrinkle to cyberpunk’s longstanding, somewhat overfamiliar visual palette: it floods the screen with softly diffusing sepia and warm primary colours, particularly in the densely populated residential areas you’re able to explore. The mood is comforting rather than ominous, cosy rather than clinical, as if this dystopian sci-fi has been touched by an unlikely hand – that of cottagecore godfather Thomas Kinkade.Replaced is out now; £16.99/$19.99 Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Various artists: Asili ya Mama review – Tanzanian field recordings tell women’s stories with an energetic trill
(Hukwe Zawose Foundation)These stories of family bonds capture traditional music that’s equal parts rhythmic, melodic and harmonic, and rarely heard outside Indigenous communitiesFolk song collecting by women has an illustrious history, but also an exciting present, as this set of 10 energetic Tanzanian field recordings demonstrates. Put together by documentarian Ruth Ndeto and musician Msafiri Zawose (brother of Pendo from the brilliant Zawose Queens, and son of the late folk pioneer Hukwe), Asili ya Mama (Origin of Mother) showcases the rhythmic, melodic and harmonic invention of Wagogo, Waluguru and Wasambaa women. Here are songs that have “carried culture and music in everyday life”, say the liner notes, while rarely being heard beyond their communities.Almost in counterpoint to the croak of passing birds, a brisk female singer kicks off the album opener, Baba Mwenda, a storytelling song warning against greed. Other women join her in unison, as do traditional shakers and tin drums, with a bubbling, playful defiance. Wedding song Chamsola comes next, driven by the resonant ring of a mheme drum and harmonies full of shimmering opacity, like a midnight-blue sea, then Chamwiloa, a fast-paced song about the formal union of families after marriage, which races towards its conclusion with percussive intensity. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Finance leaders warn over Mythos as UK banks prepare to use powerful Anthropic AI tool
Release of new Claude model, so far limited to US firms, will expand to British institutions in coming daysBritish banks will be given access in the next week to a powerful AI tool that was deemed too dangerous to be released to the public, as a series of senior finance figures warned over its impact.Anthropic, which has so far limited the release of the new model to a small clutch of primarily US businesses, including Amazon, Apple and Microsoft, said it would expand that to UK financial institutions in the coming days. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Minister defends Starmer amid Mandelson revelations, saying vetting decision ‘utterly unacceptable’ – UK politics live
Darren Jones says he has ordered an urgent review into news that the Foreign Office ignored security vetting adviceOlly Robbins forced out in Mandelson vetting rowJones told BBC Radio 4’s Today Programme that the prime minister only became aware of the Foreign Office’s decision to grant vetted status to Mandelson against the advice of security officials when documents were provided to the Cabinet Office on Tuesday.The Foreign Office did not tell the prime minister that they granted developed vetting status to Peter Mandelson against the advice of the security and vetting process. The prime minister was only made aware of that on Tuesday evening this week when the documents became available to the Cabinet Office as part of the humble address process (a binding motion to request government papers – JG).No minister is allowed to see these vetting documents as a matter of principle because we employ security professionals to conduct deeply invasive personal investigations into people’s backgrounds and for those officials to make a recommendation to civil servants on the appointment and employment of individuals.Look I find this whole situation astonishing, I found this out yesterday afternoon… the Foreign Office and a small number of other organisations have the right to ignore the recommendations of security and vetting officials when appointing people to sensitive roles.I immediately suspended the right last night for the Foreign Office and other organisations to be able to use that exemption.I’ve not seen the documents or the detailed information. This is deeply personal information about financial, personal background and particular views and relationships. It’s normal for that information to be kept only by the security officials who conduct this work because it is so invasive into their personal lives. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Are Axel Rudakubana’s parents responsible for his terrible crime? It’s a question many families will fear to answer | Gaby Hinsliff
Lives could have been saved, had some of the adults involved acted differently. To prevent another Southport, parents must feel able to seek helpIt was shortly before Axel Rudakubana left the house that his mother is thought to have found the discarded packaging for a knife.His parents already knew that their 17-year-old son was ordering weapons by post; that he was watching graphic online footage of atrocities and had previously attacked a boy against whom he had a grievance. At home, his behaviour was so threatening that his own family walked on eggshells. But even though the only times their reclusive son had voluntarily left the house in the previous two years were with violence in mind, they still didn’t call the police when they realised he was gone.Guardian Newsroom: Can Labour come back from the brink?On Thursday 30 April, join Gaby Hinsliff, Zoe Williams, Polly Toynbee and Rafael Behr as they discuss how much of a threat Labour faces from the Green party and Reform UK – and whether Keir Starmer can survive as leader. Book tickets here or at guardian.liveGaby Hinsliff is a Guardian columnistDo you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Will Bulgaria's election change the country's course?
Bulgarians will vote in their eighth parliamentary election in five years on April 19. Former President Rumen Radev is projected to win. Radev, who has a record of pro-Russian stances, is pledging to fight corruption.

Sky News Home
Open 
Fans feeling 'neglected and ripped off' over ticket price laws
The government has been urged to ban the resale of concert tickets above face value after fans reported feeling "neglected and ripped off". 

Sky News Home
Open 
Judge halts construction of Trump's White House ballroom
A judge has halted the construction of Donald Trump's controversial White House ballroom.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Lamborghini among 160,000 cars seized as uninsured driving reaches 17-year high
Seizure numbers hit a 17-year high as an estimated 300,000 uninsured vehicles are driven each day.

Mail Online
Open 
The buck stops with you, Keir: PM's own ministers turn on him and Labour MPs warn he MUST go now after his Mandelson 'lies' were sensationally exposed
Keir Starmer sent out his close ally Darren Jones this morning to condemn the UK's chief diplomat Olly Robbins, who was effectively sacked last night.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Officials debate withholding Mandelson vetting documents from parliament
Exclusive: Opinions split on ‘unprecedented’ release of files, despite demand for ‘all papers’ related to ex-US ambassador’s appointmentRevealed: Mandelson failed vetting but Foreign Office overruled decisionFive key questions: who overruled decision to deny Mandelson security clearance?Senior government officials have been considering whether to withhold from parliament sensitive documents that show Peter Mandelson failed security vetting before he assumed the role of US ambassador, the Guardian can reveal.Any such decision could amount to an extraordinary breach of a parliamentary vote, known as a humble address, that ordered the release of “all papers” relevant to Mandelson’s appointment. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Minister defends Starmer amid Mandelson revelations, saying vetting decision ‘utterly unacceptable’ – UK politics live
Darren Jones says he has ordered an urgent review into news that the Foreign Office ignored security vetting adviceBack on the morning rounds, Darren Jones, chief secretary to the prime minister, has been addressing the calls for Keir Starmer to go.Starmer has not considered resigning and did not mislead Parliament, he said.The fact is the prime minister is telling everyone that he was told [about the Foreign Office vetting decision] on Tuesday.The Ministerial Code states that when a minister discovers… that parliament has been inadvertently misled they need to correct the record at the first opportunity. The first opportunity was on Wednesday morning at prime minister’s questions. He gave a long sermon about all sorts of things, refused to answer questions I asked him, and didn’t tell the house, that in itself is a breach of the ministerial code. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Lamborghini among 160,000 cars seized as uninsured driving peaks
Seizure numbers hit a 17-year high as an estimated 300,000 uninsured vehicles are driven each day.

Digital Trends
Open 
AI mode in Chrome gets a big upgrade to save you some tab hopping
Google's AI Mode upgrade for Chrome lets you browse websites and search at the same time, so you can ask follow-up questions without losing your place or opening yet another tab.

Digital Trends
Open 
A $400 saving on the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold7 makes the most ambitious Android phone of 2025 considerably more approachable
The Samsung Galaxy Z Fold7 is down to $1,719.99 in a limited-time deal, a $400 saving off its $2,119.99 list price, and this is the 512GB configuration worth holding out for. Foldable phones have matured considerably over the last two generations, and the Z Fold7 is the clearest argument yet that the form factor has […]

Digital Trends
Open 
Metro 2039’s eerie post-apocalyptic world looks darker, weirder, and more eldritch this Winter, and I’m already sold
Metro 2039 looks less like another post-apocalyptic shooter and more like a full-on descent back into the strange, supernatural dread that made the series special.

Digital Trends
Open 
Gemini now makes personalized images by understanding your taste from Photos library
Personalized AI images sound cool — until you realize the 'personalization' comes from Google scanning your entire photo library.

Digital Trends
Open 
AI triggered a RAMmageddon so bad that Apple looks like the sensible choice
I did not expect 2026 to be the year Apple looked reasonable on laptop pricing, but the rest of the PC industry left me no choice.

Digital Trends
Open 
Netflix is about to feel more like social media with a vertical feed coming soon
Netflix is launching a vertical video discovery feed by end of April, letting you swipe through show and movie clips before jumping into a full watch.

Digital Trends
Open 
One of the best portable solar generator deals available right now: Anker SOLIX C1000 Gen 2 with 200W panel for $699
The Anker SOLIX C1000 Gen 2 is down to $699.98 in a limited-time deal, a $898 saving off its $1,598 list price, and this isn’t just the power station on its own. The 200W bifacial solar panel is included in the bundle, which makes this a complete off-grid power setup for a price that most […]

Slashdot
Open 
Intel's New Core Series 3 Is Its Answer To the MacBook Neo
Intel has launched a new budget-focused Core Series 3 processor line for lower-cost laptops -- "Intel's response to budget CPUs that are appearing in laptops like the Apple MacBook Neo," writes PCWorld's Mark Hachman. From the report: Intel unexpectedly launched the Core Series 3, based on its excellent "Panther Lake" (Core Ultra Series 3) architecture and 18A manufacturing, for devices for home consumers and small business on Thursday. Intel announced that a number of partners will launch laptops based upon the chip, including Acer, Asus, HP, Lenovo, and others. Although those laptops will be available beginning today, a number of them will begin shipping later this year, the partners said.

All of it -- from the specifications down to the messaging -- feels extremely aimed at trimming the fat and delivering to users just what they'll want. Intel's new Core Series 3 family just includes two "Cougar Cove" performance cores and four low-power efficiency "Darkmont" cores, with two Xe graphics cores on top of it. Intel isn't really worrying about AI, with an NPU capable of just 17 TOPS, though the company claims the CPU, NPU, and GPU combined reach 40 TOPS of performance. Yes, laptops will use pricey DDR5 memory, but at the lower end: just DDR5-6400 speeds. Support for three external displays will be included, though, maximizing multiple screens for maximum productivity. Intel used the term "all day battery life" without elaboration.

[...] Intel Core Series 3 delivers up to 47 percent better single-thread performance, up to 41 percent better multi thread performance, and up to 2.8x better GPU AI performance, Intel said. Compared against Intel's older Core 7 150U, Intel is saying that the new chip will outperform it by 2.1 times in content-creation and 2.7 times the AI performance. [...] We still don't know what Intel will charge for the chip, nor do we know what you'll be able to buy a Core Series 3 laptop for.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Nearly 160,000 uninsured cars seized on UK roads
Seizure numbers hit a 17-year high as an estimated 300,000 uninsured vehicles are driven each day.

Mail Online
Open 
Burger chain MEATliquor collapses into administration after being forced to close all but three branches
The burger joint was once considered a cult-favourite spot for Londoners seeking high-quality street food and beer.

Mail Online
Open 
Labour in audacious bid to cancel next week's session of PMQs following Starmer's angry bust-up with Commons Speaker
Parliamentary sources told the Daily Mail that Labour tried to end the Commons session early next week to avoid Sir Keir having to endure another bruising clash with Kemi Badenoch.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
'I wanted revenge': Malala's brother on fleeing the Taliban and facing the manosphere
Khushal Yousafzai has been opening up to BBC Asian Network about the impact of one day in 2012.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Afghan Man Arrested For Series Of Rapes Of Goats And Sheep In France
Afghan Man Arrested For Series Of Rapes Of Goats And Sheep In France

Via Remix News,

A 19-year-old Afghan national has been arrested and charged following a series of brutal sexual attacks on goats and sheep in Pennes-Mirabeau, a municipality in Bouches-du-Rhône, near Marseille.



The suspect was taken into custody by the anti-crime brigade (BAC) on the night of April 9-10, 2026, after local sheep and goat owners alerted police.

Since early 2026, several owners had discovered their animals injured, with incidents reported in both February and March.

The animals had their legs tied and showed clear signs of rape, according to French newspaper La Provence.

After multiple similar episodes, the owners installed motion-sensor cameras on their properties in an attempt to identify the perpetrator.

The footage revealed the silhouette of a young man visiting their livestock at night, and the images were handed over to police, who were eventually able to identify a matching suspect.

The man appeared before a judge on Saturday, April 11, who ordered his placement in pre-trial detention. He was set to appear in court on Monday, April 13.

He faces up to three years in prison and a €45,000 fine for acts of cruelty toward domesticated animals.

The case has drawn the attention of the Animal Protection Association (SPA), which announced it would pursue civil action in the matter.

“[We] are going to take this barbarian to court,” the SPA declared.

“Thank you to the national police for their essential intervention.”

Previous cases

Last year in Germany, a shocking case has emerged from the beautiful town of Oberneufnach in Bavaria, which involved a 52-year-old Turkish asylum seeker allegedly breaking into a stable and sexually abusing ponies.

The man, who is from a refugee shelter in the nearby town of Anhofen, was arrested after he was caught on surveillance video.

The man broke into the horse farm at 6:45 p.m. while the family was having dinner. They heard the dog barking and then looked on surveillance monitors, where they saw the man in the stable with his pants down on top of one of the animals.

The boyfriend then ran to the stables to chase down the man, but he had already fled the scene. He continued his pursuit of the suspect though and eventually caught him. Police arrived and placed the man under arrest.

In 2023, a 27-year-old suspect was arrested after he was caught on a surveillance camera raping a pony at a stable south of Hamburg. The 18-year-old pony, which is named “Carrie,” was abused by the man at 1 a.m., with footage showing the man calmly walking onto the property and starting to attack the defenseless animal.

Steffi B. released the footage to German newspaper Bild, which posted stills of the perpetrator on its web publication.

The attack happened in Birkenmoor, which is in Harburg, just a few kilometers from the Hamburg city center.

Even the petting zoo at the park has not been safe. In 2017, a Syrian migrant raped a pony there in front of children.

“My babysitter was out with our son in Görlitzer Park. They witnessed the man sexually assault the pony,” one woman told Berliner Morgenpost at the time.

The babysitter took a photo of the man as he raped the pony and provided it to police. The migrant was banned from the petting zoo in response, but it is unclear if he was ever charged by police.

Read more here...

Tyler Durden
Fri, 04/17/2026 - 02:00

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Drone Attack On Russia's Tuapse Oil Refinery Unleashes Fire So Large It Can Be Seen From Space
Drone Attack On Russia's Tuapse Oil Refinery Unleashes Fire So Large It Can Be Seen From Space

Russia and Ukraine have continued trading blows on key oil and energy sites, with the latest being a drone attack targeting Russia's Tuapse Oil refinery, which unleashed a fire so large it can be picked up by satellites in space.

The refinery is owned by Rosneft and has suffered major attack before, in a March 2025 Ukrainian operation. Local authorities have declared a state of emergency, after schools and residential buildings suffered damage, and all classes have been canceled.



According to the Amsterdam-based Moscow Times, "NASA satellite imagery on Thursday showed a plume of smoke extending around 200 kilometers (125 miles) into the Black Sea from Tuapse, which is located 80 kilometers (50 miles) northwest of the resort city of Sochi."

Krasnodar region Governor Venyamin Kondratyev confirmed that a woman and a teenage girl were killed in the attack on the northeastern Black Sea port town, with several more injured.

Russia's Defense Ministry announced the military had downed 207 drones overnight across multiple regions - listing off Belgorod, Kursk, Bryansk and the Krasnodar region, and the Black and Azov seas.

This is a somewhat 'normal' night in the now more than 4-year long brutal war. These daily and nightly cross-border attacks have largely slipped from mainstream headline coverage, however, given their frequency - to the point of being 'routine' (a grim reality).

Often even when refineries or major infrastructure is hit in either country, the event barely gets coverage in Western media at this point.

The ongoing Russian aerial assault of Ukraine continues to be more deadly. Ukrainian officials say that overnight attacks there killed 14 people in the capital area as well as Odesa and Dnipropetrovsk regions.


Newer footage recorded by Russian civilians shows the size of the fires at the Rosneft Tuapse oil refinery. pic.twitter.com/dmhyvbVQZ4
— Combat Footage (@Comba8Footage) April 16, 2026
At least 700 drones and missiles were launched by Moscow forces overnight, which is a significant and high figure, even after all these years of aerial bombardment.

Currently the globe's attention is largely focused on the Iran war and the Hormuz Strait blockade, and with that efforts to reach a political and peace settlement in Ukraine have faded as well.

Tyler Durden
Fri, 04/17/2026 - 02:45

The Hill
Open 
House passes short-term spy powers extension in late-night vote after deal falls apart
The House unanimously passed a short-term of the nation’s spy powers until in the wee hours Friday morning — pushing the deadline from April 20 to April 30 — after GOP rebels dramatically rejected a late-night, last-minute deal to extend for five years while adding some additional reforms and language intended to woo the holdouts....

Mail Online
Open 
David Seaman leads emotional tributes to Alex Manninger after former Arsenal goalkeeper's death aged 48 as Austrian authorities investigate tragic train crash
Manninger, who became the first Austrian player to star in the Premier League, made 64 appearances during five years at Arsenal and was key to the club winning the double in 1998.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: UN chief calls for Israel-Lebanon ceasefire to be ‘fully’ respected as it comes into effect
António Guterres welcomes truce and says he hopes halt in fighting will ‘pave the way for negotiations’In case you’re just joining us, here are the latest developments in the Middle East to bring you up to speed. It’s 9am in Beirut and Jerusalem, 9.30am in Tehran and 2am in Washington DC.A 10-day ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon has come into effect, pausing fighting between Israel and Hezbollah that has killed more than 2,100 Lebanese people and displaced more than 2.1 million. The agreement was announced earlier by Donald Trump, who said he had spoken with Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Lebanese president Joseph Aoun, and invited both leaders “for meaningful talks” at the White House. Both leaders welcomed the agreement.Israel and Hezbollah both maintained their right to defend themselves if the truce is broken – here’s our full report.Netanyahu called the ceasefire a “historic” opportunity for peace but refused to withdraw his troops from southern Lebanon during the pause in fighting. “We are remaining in Lebanon in an expanded security zone,” he said, due to the “danger of an invasion” and to prevent fire into Israel. “That is where we are, and we are not leaving.”UN chief António Guterres welcomed the ceasefire, which took effect at midnight on Thursday (2100 GMT) in Lebanon, and urged “all actors” to fully respect it. He hoped the halt in fighting would “pave the way for negotiations”.The Lebanese army warned people displaced from southern Lebanon about returning home because of intermittent shelling that was reported after the ceasefire came into effect.The Israeli military warned residents of southern Lebanon not to return south of the Litani River despite the truce.Iran’s foreign ministry spokesperson welcomed the ceasefire and stressed it was already part of the original Iran-US agreement brokered by Pakistan.Israel and Hezbollah continued to exchange fire in the hours before the truce took effect. Continue reading...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Roberts-Smith gets bail in Australia over Afghan war crimes
Australia’s most decorated living soldier has been granted bail after being charged with war crimes in Afghanistan. The case is among the highest-profile in the country.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Christine Baranski to make West End debut alongside Richard E Grant in Hay Fever
Tony award-winning actor will play lead role of Judith Bliss in Noël Coward’s comedy at Wyndham’s theatre in LondonChristine Baranski is to make her West End debut alongside Richard E Grant in a revival of Noël Coward’s comedy Hay Fever. The US star, known for her TV roles in The Good Fight and The Gilded Age, says she is looking forward to “tearing a passion to tatters” in the 1925 play about a family toying with their guests at a country house party.She will star as the newly retired actor Judith Bliss, with Grant playing her novelist husband. Baranski has twice won the Tony award for best featured actress in a play – with New York productions of Tom Stoppard’s The Real Thing in 1984 and Neil Simon’s Rumors in 1989. She also appeared in the comedies Hurlyburly (in 1985) and Boeing-Boeing (in 2008) on Broadway. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Sports quiz of the week: I Am Maximus, Marie-Louise Eta and Rory McIlroy
Did you follow the big stories in football, rugby, golf, baseball, basketball, boxing, snooker, cricket and racing? Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Chess: Sindarov wins Candidates with record total, while Vaishali takes women’s event
The Uzbek 20-year-old won first prize unbeaten but his girlfriend, Bibisara Assaubayeva, finished second to the lowest seed in the Women’s CandidatesJavokhir Sindarov finished with a record total in the world championship Candidates in Pegeia, western Cyprus, as the 20-year-old from Uzbekistan won the competition with a record 10/14 total, 1.5 points clear of his nearest rival, Anish Giri. The women’s Candidates was won by India’s 24-year-old Vaishali Rameshbabu, half a point ahead of Kazakhstan’s Bibisara Assaubayeva, who is also Sindarov’s girlfriend.Sindarov dominated the field with a controlled display reminiscent of the old Soviet master Mikhail Botvinnik. His pre-game preparation was exceptional, several times accurately predicting what would appear on the board right into the endgame. On the rare occasions when he was under pressure, as in his second game against the world No 3 and US champion, Fabiano Caruana, his defensive technique was precise and assured. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Roberto De Zerbi is a tactician but the Spurs job is about giving players belief
He has to convince a team that has not won in 14 matches that they have what it takes to stay in the Premier LeagueBy WhoScoredSpurs won a European trophy 10 months ago, are the ninth richest club in the world and play in a billion-pound stadium. They are also in relegation scrap with six games to play in the Premier League season. Tottenham are 18th in the league, having picked up just 30 points from 32 games.Fourteen games without a win. Five points from the last 42 available. No victories in 2026. The numbers alone would normally confirm relegation as a formality. Roberto De Zerbi has become their fourth manager in the last 12 months in a move that feels less like a rescue mission and more like a last roll of the dice. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Guardiola ready to benefit as fellow Cruyff disciple Arteta strays from the path
Manchester City and Arsenal managers were both schooled in the expansive Barça tradition but the latter opting for caution could be his team’s undoingWhen Pep Guardiola was preparing for the challenge of taking on Jürgen Klopp’s peak Liverpool team at Anfield in February 2021, training that week at Manchester City was a little different, according to Oleksandr Zinchenko. Guardiola’s instructions seemed counterintuitive. “Guys, let’s start from the goal-kick, I want you to make at least three or four touches on the ball,” the manager told them. “Most of the teams come to Anfield and shit themselves. They want to play one touch, two touch. ‘Oh, don’t give me the ball! Oh you take it!’ But you have to play with big balls at Anfield! Big balls! ‘Give me the ball!’ Demand it! If you need to dribble past two or three players, do it. But play football. I want you to play football.”Zinchenko recalls that Guardiola made the same speech before they walked out at Anfield. “Teams coming here are scared. They play one or two touches, and that’s what Liverpool like, because they get the ball back so quickly. I want you to be brave. Play your football!” as Zinchenko puts it in his autobiography, Believe. Admittedly that game came in the midst of City’s record-breaking 21-game winning run that season but was also Guardiola’s first win at Anfield, so not dissimilar to the title showdown at the Etihad Stadium on Sunday with Arsenal. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Inspirational success stories are great but is ADHD really a superpower for elite athletes? | Emma John
Researchers say mainstream framing of the condition as a characteristic for success can be invalidating for those who are strugglingKirsty Brown is a keen golfer. “If I could just transport myself straight to the first tee, that would be amazing,” she says. “But getting there on time, remembering all my kit, making sure I’ve eaten before I play – all those aspects are more challenging than competing itself.” Brown, who has attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), admits that can be hard to explain to coaches or teammates. “It doesn’t necessarily make sense to them – it doesn’t really make sense to me either.”A researcher at the University of Birmingham, Brown is studying neurodivergent athletes in sport. And while plenty of well-known sportspeople now talk openly about their ADHD diagnoses, no one truly knows the condition’s impact on participation or performance. “There’s not a huge amount of research yet,” Brown says. “We have some case studies but in terms of data, we’re not there.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
A question for those desperate to cut benefits to fund defence: who exactly are you willing to impoverish? | Polly Toynbee
George Robertson has joined Reform and the Tories in making the case. Look welfare recipients in the face and say thatThe benefits budget is now a magic money tree. Whenever Conservatives or Faragists make wild promises – tax cuts, more police, more punishment, more bonuses for marriage – and are asked how they would pay, the answer is always “welfare”. The sums are enormous. “Only the Conservatives will cut welfare spending by £23bn and get Britain working again,” the party insists.More unexpected was the klaxon from the Labour peer George Robertson this week, demanding a cut in benefits to finance defence. “We cannot defend Britain with an ever-expanding welfare budget,” said the ex-Nato chief, wanting to pluck this juicy plum to fund defence. Good to see him slapped down sharply by the government: there is no “zero-sum game” between these two budgets, said the chancellor’s deputy, James Murray.Guardian Newsroom: Can Labour come back from the brink?On Thursday 30 April, join Gaby Hinsliff, Zoe Williams, Polly Toynbee and Rafael Behr as they discuss how much of a threat Labour faces from the Green party and Reform UK – and whether Keir Starmer can survive as leader. Book tickets here or at guardian.livePolly Toynbee is a Guardian columnist Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Week in wildlife: a puffin bromance, blushing terrapins and goslings galore
This week’s best wildlife photographs from around the world Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
A Gorilla Story: Told By David Attenborough review – like one of our last meetings with an adored relative
The naturalist revisits the family of apes he had a goosebump-inducingly famous encounter with 50 years ago. You’ll find yourself overcome with aweThe most famous sequence in all of wildlife film-making happened 48 years ago. During the filming of Life on Earth – the groundbreaking BBC show that set the blueprint of nature programming as we know it today – David Attenborough crept through the forests of Rwanda, and unexpectedly found himself being playfully set upon by a family of gorillas. As they clambered over him, Attenborough turned to camera and said: “There is more meaning and mutual understanding in exchanging a glance with a gorilla than with any other animal I know.”Almost half a century on, the sequence still has the power to give you goosebumps. This is possibly why it has formed the backbone of a new documentary. A Gorilla Story is a much starrier affair than its predecessor – it was directed by the Oscar-winning James Reed and boasts Leonardo DiCaprio as an executive producer – but its conceit is fascinating: after all this time, how are those same gorillas doing? Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
I’ll make you a whopper you can’t refuse! Why do we love to believe cinema’s best lines were improvised?
From The Godfather to Saltburn, the internet is awash with claims that actors are ditching the script and making it up as they go along. What’s behind our desire to invest in these behind-the-scenes ‘secrets’?Fun fact: in the history of cinema, there has never been a single script. It is a pervasive myth that film-making requires “screenplays” – in fact, most scenes are made up on the spot. Performers simply do whatever comes to mind and hope the camera is perfectly positioned to capture it; they slap their colleagues or start to break-dance on a whim. Did you know that many actors are not even acting? The shock on their faces is real, because usually they have no idea what’s going to happen next.This is the world according to YouTube shorts, X posts and Instagram memes. Across the internet, content creators are falsely claiming that some of cinema’s most famous scenes were improvised. Al Pacino giving John Cazale the kiss of death in The Godfather II? Made up on the spot. Heath Ledger’s frustration at the delayed hospital explosion in The Dark Knight? His real reaction! And that mother-daughter fight in Mermaids? Winona Ryder “delivered a roast so lethal that Cher had to improvise the slap”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘No cheeseburgers … they would go bankrupt’: pupils reject plan to cut fatty foods from lunch menus
Though welcomed by chefs and campaigners, many schools say the government’s plan to remove ‘grab and go’ options from the menu is a step too farIt is lunchtime at Richard Challoner school, a Catholic comprehensive for boys in New Malden, south-west London. The familiar smell of school lunch is beginning to waft around the corridors.In the canteen, there is a moment of calm as the kitchen team make final preparations before year 7 descend – a mass of chatting, laughing boys, with backpacks swinging and empty tummies grumbling. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Minister defends Starmer amid Mandelson revelations, saying vetting decision ‘utterly unacceptable’ – UK politics live
Darren Jones says he has ordered an urgent review into news that the Foreign Office ignored security vetting adviceKemi Badenoch, the leader of the Conservatives, has told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme that she believes the prime minister is lying in his account of what happened.It’s completely preposterous for us to believe that when the prime minister said on the floow of the house [of Commons] the full due process was followed that officials who knew that was not the case would not have told him. He knew.It is preposterous for us to believe that on 5 February, him giving press conference saying that Mandelson was cleared by the security services nobody told him that actually that this was not the case.We would not have found out about this if not for the Guardian.The story does not stack up, the prime minister is taking us for fools.I don’t think the prime minister can get out of his responsibility by sacking Olly Robbins - the buck has to stop with Mr Starmer.I think frankly it’s inconceivable on such a sensitive matter the permeant secretary at the Foreign Office wouldn’t have referred to ministers on this.Let’s imagine they are telling the truth and they did only just learn about this on Tuesday what does that say about the Governmenet and how they operate?It means people around the prime minister were hiding critical information from him and he took this decision without meeting Mandelson, without knowing about his failed security but knowing about Mandelson’s reputation.It’s hard to believe it was inadvertent, it stretches credibility, but even if that is a true story it shows there was total negligence and incompetence at the top of his government...The PM held the Conservatives to account when he was in opposition when Boris Johnson was clearly lying over partygate and Keir Starmer called for all the accountability and called for Boris Johnson to go... but I’m afraid now he he has to take his own medicine. All the evidence suggests he has to go. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Arsenal are judged on perception, partly because of Guardiola - Balague
As Manchester City prepare to host Arsenal in Sunday's crucial Premier League meeting between the top two, European football expert Guillem Balague looks at how the two managers have evolved.

Mail Online
Open 
Drama at Portland Islamic school after one dad shot another in the GROIN for mocking him, court hears
Noureddine Dib, 43, is charged with attempted murder and assault. He has claimed self-defense after being accused of shooting Michael Zakarneh, 49, in the parking lot.

Mail Online
Open 
Rosie Huntington-Whiteley oozes glamour as she steps out in a strapless white dress at Tiffany & Co. event in New York after family getaway with fiancé Jason Statham
The supermodel, 38, showed off her incredible frame as the luxury brand celebrated the launch of Blue Book 2026: Hidden Garden at Park Avenue in the Big Apple.

Mail Online
Open 
David Seaman pays emotional tribute to Alex Manninger after former Arsenal goalkeeper's death aged 48
Manninger, who became the first Austrian player to star in the Premier League, made 64 appearances during five years at Arsenal and was key to the club winning the double in 1998.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Yes the apocalypse is coming! But which one? | First Dog on the Moon
An animal uprising? False vacuum decay? It won’t be fun but it seems fairSign up here to get an email whenever First Dog cartoons are publishedGet all your needs met at the First Dog shop if what you need is First Dog merchandise and prints Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
I want to reform our country because a strong Germany is a precondition for a strong Europe | Lars Klingbeil
The war in Iran has exposed our dependencies. Europe, including the UK, must be bold about change, so nobody can blackmail usLars Klingbeil is Germany’s finance minister and vice-chancellorWars and crises are draining our economies, our sense of security and our emotional wellbeing. They are affecting our daily lives: supply chains are becoming less reliable, energy prices are soaring, and trade dependencies on fossil-fuel energy and critical minerals pose risks to national security. Tariffs, industrial overcapacities and export restrictions threaten jobs and prosperity. Taken together, all this is exposing Europe’s weaknesses and vulnerabilities.At the same time, we have shown how strengthening our alliances and our economic and military capacities can increase our scope for action. Forming a united European political front is helping to safeguard the sovereignty of Greenland, for instance. And despite all the recent turmoil, Europe remains one of the most attractive places in the world to live and work. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Former Arsenal goalkeeper dies after car hit by train
Former Arsenal goalkeeper Alex Manninger has died at the age of 48 after his car was struck by a train, police said.

The Register
Open 
IOWN Global Forum targets datacenter interconnects to scatter AI infrastructure
Fast WAN consortium thinks neoclouds are ripe for hookups The IOWN Global Forum will likely focus on datacenter interconnect use cases in the, to help diverse providers of AI infrastructure ply their trade.…

Sky News Home
Open 
Cuba is on its knees - and 'next' on Trump's list
At the start of this year, Donald Trump ordered the capture and removal of Venezuela's president Nicolas Maduro - he's now facing a trial in New York.

UK Legislation
Open 
The Air Navigation (Restriction of Flying) (Royal International Air Tattoo, Royal Air Force Fairford) Regulations 2026

UK Legislation
Open 
The Welfare Reform Act 2012 (Commencement No. 35) (Abolition of Benefits) (Amendment) Order 2026
This Order amends the Welfare Reform Act 2012 (Commencement No. 35) (Abolition of Benefits) Order 2025 (S.I. 2025/1148 C. 55) (“the No. 35 Order”).

UK Legislation
Open 
The Motor Vehicles (Exchangeable Licences) (Amendment) Order (Northern Ireland) 2026
This Order amends the Motor Vehicles (Exchangeable Licences) Order (Northern Ireland 2022 (“the 2022 Order”) in order to designate Moldova under Article 19D(2)(b), (2A) and (2B) of the Road Traffic (Northern Ireland) Order 1981 (“the 1981 Order”) as making satisfactory provision for the granting of licences which authorise the driving of vehicles included in licensing category B (cars). This enables those driving licences to be exchanged for a corresponding Northern Ireland licence.

UK Legislation
Open 
The Air Navigation (Restriction of Flying) (The Hoe, Plymouth) Regulations 2026

UK Legislation
Open 
The Air Navigation (Restriction of Flying) (North Berwick, Scotland) Regulations 2026

UK Legislation
Open 
The Air Navigation (Restriction of Flying) (King’s Birthday Flypast Rehearsals) Regulations 2026

UK Legislation
Open 
The Air Navigation (Restriction of Flying) (North Berwick, Scotland) Regulations 2026

UK Legislation
Open 
The M77/A77 Trunk Road (Girvan) (Temporary Prohibitions of Traffic and Temporary 10mph Speed Restriction) Order 2026

UK Legislation
Open 
The A702 Trunk Road (Mauricewood Roundabout to the Glencorse Junction) (Temporary Clearway) Order 2026

UK Legislation
Open 
The Road Races (Drumhorc Hill Climb) Order (Northern Ireland) 2026

Mail Online
Open 
Footy legends lash out as 'disturbing' pre-game footage of Elijah Hollands shows why he should never have taken the field
Carlton's handling of Elijah Hollands has come under fire after disturbing pre-game vision raised concerns and prompted AFL greats to question why he played

Mail Online
Open 
Phoenix teen AMBUSHED by group of boys while walking home describes moment she realized she was being followed
On April 8, Ayane Mefford was on her way home from Central High School, when a group of six boys made sexual advances toward her, according to her mother. She was then attacked.

Mail Online
Open 
Trump declares 'the war is going swimmingly', a deal with Iran is 'very close' and urges Hezbollah to 'act nicely' during ceasefire: Live updates
Speaking at an event in Las Vegas, the US President claimed Iran has agreed to hand over its enriched uranium.

Mail Online
Open 
Ruby Rose reveals details of the night she alleges Katy Perry sexually assaulted her in a newspaper article over a decade ago
An article penned by Ruby Rose a decade ago has shed new light on the actress' claims Katy Perry sexually assaulted her at a nightclub in Melbourne, Australia, on August 15, 2010.

Mail Online
Open 
Now the DOG SQUAD arrives for Meghan's 'Her Best Life' event at luxury Sydney hotel - as the $3,000-a-head 'wellness' weekend officially kicks off
Follow Daily Mail's live coverage here.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Chinese carmaker patents voice-controlled 'in-vehicle toilet'
Seres' plans show how stiff competition in the EV space is putting pressure on carmakers to innovate.

Mail Online
Open 
Huge Hollywood star surprises locals with a low-key appearance at a pharmacy in suburban Sydney
Hollywood star Alec Baldwin made a low-key appearance in suburban Sydney on Thursday.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: UN chief calls for Israel-Lebanon ceasefire to be ‘fully’ respected as it comes into effect
António Guterres welcomes truce and says through spokesperson he hopes halt in fighting will ‘pave the way for negotiations’In case you’re just joining us, here are the latest developments in the Middle East to bring you up to speed. It’s 9am in Beirut and Jerusalem, 9.30am in Tehran and 2am in Washington DC.A 10-day ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon has come into effect, pausing fighting between Israel and Hezbollah that has killed more than 2,100 Lebanese people and displaced more than 2.1 million. The agreement was announced earlier by Donald Trump, who said he had spoken with Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Lebanese president Joseph Aoun, and invited both leaders “for meaningful talks” at the White House. Both leaders welcomed the agreement.Israel and Hezbollah both maintained their right to defend themselves if the truce is broken – here’s our full report.Netanyahu called the ceasefire a “historic” opportunity for peace but refused to withdraw his troops from southern Lebanon during the pause in fighting. “We are remaining in Lebanon in an expanded security zone,” he said, due to the “danger of an invasion” and to prevent fire into Israel. “That is where we are, and we are not leaving.”UN chief António Guterres welcomed the ceasefire, which took effect at midnight on Thursday (2100 GMT) in Lebanon, and urged “all actors” to fully respect it. He hoped the halt in fighting would “pave the way for negotiations”.The Lebanese army warned people displaced from southern Lebanon about returning home because of intermittent shelling that was reported after the ceasefire came into effect.The Israeli military warned residents of southern Lebanon not to return south of the Litani River despite the truce.Iran’s foreign ministry spokesperson welcomed the ceasefire and stressed it was already part of the original Iran-US agreement brokered by Pakistan.Israel and Hezbollah continued to exchange fire in the hours before the truce took effect. Continue reading...

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11236 Managed Hosting - Planned Maintenance - Managed Hosting (Close)
Confirmed functioning service. Incident Closed.

Start: Mon, 13th Apr 2026 21:00

End: Fri, 17th Apr 2026 06:00

Clear: Fri, 17th Apr 2026 07:20

Edited: Fri, 17th Apr 2026 07:22

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11338 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Maintenance - Glasgow (Close)
Confirmed functioning service. Incident Closed.

Start: Fri, 17th Apr 2026 00:01

End: Fri, 17th Apr 2026 06:00

Clear: Fri, 17th Apr 2026 07:22

Edited: Fri, 17th Apr 2026 07:22

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11495 Broadband (xDSL) - Emergency Maintenance - Evesham Area (Close)
Confirmed functioning service. Incident Closed.

Start: Fri, 17th Apr 2026 02:00

End: Fri, 17th Apr 2026 06:00

Clear: Fri, 17th Apr 2026 07:22

Edited: Fri, 17th Apr 2026 07:22

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11496 Broadband (xDSL) - Emergency Maintenance - Edinburgh Area (Close)
Confirmed functioning service. Incident Closed.

Start: Fri, 17th Apr 2026 02:00

End: Fri, 17th Apr 2026 06:00

Clear: Fri, 17th Apr 2026 07:23

Edited: Fri, 17th Apr 2026 07:23

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11497 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned maintenance Stoke City (WMCIT) (Close)
Confirmed functioning service. Incident Closed.

Start: Fri, 17th Apr 2026 00:05

End: Fri, 17th Apr 2026 06:00

Clear: Fri, 17th Apr 2026 07:23

Edited: Fri, 17th Apr 2026 07:23

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

Northern Ireland Office
Open 
Connect Fund to award additional 1.5 million to community and voluntary groups
Northern Ireland community and voluntary organisations will be able to bid for an additional 1.5 million in grant funding | Northern Ireland Office.

Mail Online
Open 
Bald man in leopard print leotard spotted riding Victorian-era bicycle through downtown Seattle in rainy weather
An eccentric bald man with a mustache was captured on video riding a Victorian-era penny-farthing, which is an iconic bike with a giant front wheel and tiny back wheel, near Seattle's downtown on Wednesday.

Mail Online
Open 
Lauren Sanchez and Jeff Bezos bring their massive $500m yacht into the Galapagos's delicate ecosystem
They have been staying on their $500 million yacht which also has a helicopter pad and a $100 million support vessel, Abeona.

Mail Online
Open 
Aubrey Plaza makes first red carpet appearance since pregnancy announcement as she cradles baby bump in flirty floral dress at Kevin premiere
Plaza, who's expecting a child with partner Christopher Abbott , 40, beamed as she posed for photos in a white mini-dress with blue floral patterns and pockets.

Mail Online
Open 
The big problem with Meghan Markle's 'Her Best Life retreat' guest list... while Besties founder Jackie O seems anything but interested in the event as she checks out her Clovelly mansion
For an event commanding $3000 a ticket, industry watchers say the usual signals of social interest simply aren't there.

Mail Online
Open 
Airlines cancel hundreds of flights as jet fuel prices soar amid fears Europe has just 'six weeks' of supply left
Germany carrier Lufthansa said on Thursday that a regional subsidiary, Lufthansa CityLine, will suspend operations from Saturday due to high kerosene prices and labour disputes.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
D4vd arrested on suspicion of killing teen girl whose body was found in his Tesla
Musician, born David Anthony Burke, arrested in Los Angeles over the death of Celeste Rivas Hernandez, who went missing in 2024R&B singer D4vd has been arrested in connection with the killing of a teenage girl whose severely decomposed body was found in his Tesla, Los Angeles police said on Thursday.The 21-year-old musician, who was born David Anthony Burke, is being held without bail, according to city authorities. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
DNA analysis identifies members of Oregon family missing since 1958
Authorities identified Kenneth and Barbara Martin and their daughter Barbie from remains in car in Columbia RiverDNA analysis has identified the remains found in a car in the Columbia River as those of an Oregon family that went missing in 1958 while on a trip to find Christmas greenery, authorities said Thursday.The state medical examiner’s office identified Kenneth and Barbara Martin and their daughter Barbie from remains located in the river within the wreckage of the car, according to the Hood River county sheriff’s office. The sheriff’s office said it concluded its investigation and found no evidence of a crime. Continue reading...

Digital Trends
Open 
Google is making smart glasses with Gucci, and they’re landing next year
Google and Gucci are reportedly working on AI-powered luxury smart glasses, with Kering now saying the product could arrive as early as next year.

BBC UK News
Open 
Afghan veteran hospitalised after station assault
Two teenage girls were arrested in connection with the incident, police say.

Mail Online
Open 
America's silent killer explosion: As strokes soar in young people, doctors reveal healthy lifestyle habit they fear is to blame... why women are more at risk... and symptoms you must never ignore
Dubbed a silent killer, strokes have long been considered an old person's medical emergency. But now doctors are sounding the alarm as cases soar among the young and healthy...

Mail Online
Open 
The unholy truth about RFK Jr and Cheryl Hines' marriage. She's let so many famous men defile her, from Larry David to Bill Maher and Bobby himself... and now she's ruined: MAUREEN CALLAHAN
Weep not for Cheryl Hines, whose marriage to RFK Jr is said to be 'all but over.' Who didn't see that coming - aside from Cheryl, that is?

Mail Online
Open 
The big problem with Meghan Markle's 'Her Best Life retreat' guest list...  while Besties founder Jackie O seems anything but interested in the event as she checks out her Clovelly mansion
For an event commanding $3000 a ticket, industry watchers say the usual signals of social interest simply aren't there.

Mail Online
Open 
Blake Lively and Ryan Reynolds have lost their spark: Friends detail 'tired' couple's depressing new lives... and admit that 'she is just not there' amid shock plan to flee America
Lively's months-long legal rollercoaster with her It Ends with Us co-star and director Justin Baldoni has unsurprisingly taken its toll.

Mail Online
Open 
Male childcare worker, 36, slapped with 137 child abuse charges - as police begin arduous task of identifying his alleged victims
The man, who is accused of abusing children across multiple daycare centres in Sydney, has been in custody since July 2025.

Mail Online
Open 
Texas Republican calls Trump 'almost the second coming' amid feud with Pope Leo and viral Jesus meme
When asked about Donald Trump posting a picture depicting himself as Jesus on the House floor, Republican Congressman Troy Nehls of Texas said the president is 'almost the second coming'.

Mail Online
Open 
Glamorous Texas mother-of-three ran finishing school for PROSTITUTES out of her comfortable suburban home, cops say
Ashley Ketcherside, a mother-of-three, was arrested on racketeering charges on Tuesday in connection with a prostitution ring.

Mail Online
Open 
Tragedy after Minnesota teen with appalling record behind the wheel decided to text while driving as family in SUV with 11-year-old girl inside approached
Conner Iversen, 19, was sentenced to over three years behind bars in connection with a crash last February that killed a pre-teen girl.

Mail Online
Open 
Trump comes clean on 'embarrassing' Oval Office stunt by admitting DoorDash grandma idea was 'tacky'
President Donald Trump on Thursday admitted the stunt of having a DoorDash driver deliver McDonald's to the White House was 'tacky.'

Mail Online
Open 
Absurd excuse of Minnesota father caught roughly shoving female conservative reporter at violent anti-ICE protest
The reporter, who works for Turning Point USA, had aggressive anti-ICE protestors blow a whistle directly into her ear and shove her to the ground. She captured everything on camera.

Mail Online
Open 
Stella McCartney is taking the high street with new H&M collab that's set to sell out fast. Shop a fashion editor's pick of the designer-inspired buys already live
H&M are known for their designer collaborations. Now, over 20 years later, Stella is returning for round two with the high street giant.

Mail Online
Open 
Eva Longoria dazzles in lilac gown as she joins glam Paris Hilton and Heidi Klum at starry LACMA event
Rather than a traditional red carpet, the 51-year-old Golden Globe nominee and other stars posed right on the pavement in the popular LA museum's plaza

Mail Online
Open 
PM finds fall guy to save his skin: Rattled Starmer sacks mandarin over Mandelson vetting scandal
Sir Keir Starmer denied that he or any of his ministers had been aware that the controversial architect of New Labour had failed his developed vetting (DV) for the US ambassador role.

BBC World News
Open 
Moment wolf on the run in South Korea is found
The escape of Neukgu, a two-year-old wolf, from a zoo in the city of Daejon captured national attention.

BBC UK News
Open 
The moment large bird of prey is rescued at caravan site
The footage was captured at Morfa Bychan Holiday Park in Ceredigion.

Ian Visits
Open 
London’s weekly railway news
This is a weekly round-up of London's rail transport news...Read more ›

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Country diary: A hardworking meadow that is surely worth saving | Mary Montague
Lower Botanic Gardens, Belfast: A precious field here provides flood protection and carbon research, and has a productive community garden. Still, it is in jeopardyAmong many languages on the poster at the field’s entrance gate is a declaration in Ulster-Scots: This be oor fiel. Close to my home in the heart of an urban landscape, “our field” in Lower Botanic Gardens invites my idle wandering.Going by the desire paths that crisscross its floodplain meadow, I follow in many footsteps. Recently rewilded and recultivated for a new age, this council-owned field has always responded to the needs of the times. The field grew vegetables during the second world war, and grew families in prefabricated housing after that war ended. Today, in subtle and transformative ways, this cherished place still provides for and protects local people. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: UN chief calls for Israel-Lebanon ceasefire to be ‘fully’ respected as it comes into effect
António Guterres welcomes truce and says through spokesperson he hopes halt in fighting will ‘pave the way for negotiations’In case you’re just joining us, here are the latest developments to bring you up to speed. It’s 9am in Beirut and Jerusalem, 9.30am in Tehran and 2am in Washington DC.A 10-day ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon has come into effect, pausing fighting in a devastating conflict between Israel and Hezbollah that has killed more than 2,100 Lebanese people and displaced more than 2.1 million. The agreement was announced earlier by Donald Trump, who said he had spoken with Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Lebanese president Joseph Aoun, and invited both leaders “for meaningful talks” at the White House. Both leaders welcomed the agreement.Israel and Hezbollah have both maintained their right to defend themselves if the truce is broken – here’s our full report.Netanyahu called the truce a “historic” opportunity for peace but refused to withdraw his troops from southern Lebanon during the pause in fighting. “We are remaining in Lebanon in an expanded security zone,” he said, due to the “danger of an invasion” and to prevent fire into Israel. “That is where we are, and we are not leaving.” Netanyahu maintained that his key demand was dismantling Hezbollah.UN chief António Guterres welcomed the ceasefire, which took effect at midnight on Thursday (2100 GMT) in Lebanon, and urged “all actors” to fully respect the truce. He hoped the halt to fighting would “pave the way for negotiations”.The Lebanese army warned people displaced from southern Lebanon about returning home because of intermittent shelling that was reported after the ceasefire came into effect.The Israeli military warned residents of southern Lebanon not to return south of the Litani River despite the ceasefire coming into force.Iran’s foreign ministry spokesperson welcomed the ceasefire and stressed it was already part of the original Iran-US agreement brokered by Pakistan.Israel and Hezbollah continued to exchange fire in the hours before the truce took effect.Asian stocks were poised for a second week of strong gains and oil prices were pinned below $100 a barrel with investors hopeful for a near-term resolution to war in the Middle East.The UK and France will chair a meeting of about 40 countries on Friday aimed at signalling to the US that some of its closest allies are ready to play a role in restoring freedom of navigation in the strait of Hormuz once conditions allow.European countries such as Belgium, the Netherlands and France have mine-clearance capacity which could help secure passage through the strait of Hormuz, France’s defence minister has said.Turkey is hosting a high-stakes forum on Friday bringing together the foreign ministers of Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Egypt, as Islamabad pushes diplomatic efforts to end the Iran war. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Are Axel Rudakubana’s parents responsible for his terrible crime? It’s a question many families will fear to answer | Gaby Hinsliff
Lives could have been saved, had some of the adults involved acted differently. To prevent another Southport, parents must feel able to seek helpIt was shortly before Axel Rudakubana left the house that his mother is thought to have found the discarded packaging for a knife.His parents already knew that their 17-year-old son was ordering weapons by post; that he was watching graphic online footage of atrocities and had previously attacked a boy against whom he had a grievance. At home, his behaviour was so threatening that his own family walked on eggshells. But even though the only times their reclusive son had voluntarily left the house in the previous two years were with violence in mind, they still didn’t call the police when they realised he was gone.Guardian Newsroom: Can Labour come back from the brink?On Thursday 30 April, join Gaby Hinsliff, Zoe Williams, Polly Toynbee and Rafael Behr as they discuss how much of a threat Labour faces from the Green party and Reform UK – and whether Keir Starmer can survive as leader. Book tickets here or at guardian.liveGaby Hinsliff is a Guardian columnist Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Fans feeling "neglected and ripped off" over ticket price laws
The government has been urged to ban the resale of concert tickets above face value after fans reported feeling "neglected and ripped off". 

BBC UK News
Open 
Afghan veteran hospitalised after station assault
Aziz Ahmadzai had been working as security guard at Weymouth Railway Station when he collapsed.

The Hill
Open 
GOP rebels block leaders’ last-minute spy powers deal in dramatic late-night vote
House Republican rebels early Friday morning dramatically blocked a last-minute, late-night deal from GOP leaders to extend the nation’s spy powers for five years while adding some additional reforms and language intended to woo the holdouts. In a 200-220 vote at about 1:15 a.m. Friday morning, 12 Republicans voted with almost all Democrats against accepting...

Mail Online
Open 
Meghan prepares for £1,700-a-head hotel meet-and-greet with fans after Australian taxpayer-funded police surround her and Prince Harry as they meet Bondi massacre heroes
On a day where the Duke and Duchess of Sussex spoke to survivors of the Bondi terrorist attack in December, Meghan will meet women who have paid $3200 for VIP photos with her.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Dog’s Gaze by Thomas Laqueur review – the art of the canine, from Velázquez to Picasso
A clever and beautiful survey of dogs in painting, with a brilliant interpretation of their role at its heartThirty-five thousand years ago, in the Ardèche region of France, Paleolithic artists drew a spectacular bestiary on the walls of the Chauvet cave. Their focus was apex predators, so there were lots of lions, as well as mammoths and woolly rhinoceroses. Dogs were nowhere to be seen, and yet in the soft sediment on the limestone floor of the cave, there are traces of canid pawprints next to human footprints. Two fellow creatures, most likely a boy and a dog, stood together, about 10,000 years after the art was made, looking up at the walls in wonder. Here was a moment of shared contemplation, followed perhaps by a glance to see the other’s reaction.In this luminous book, the American cultural historian Thomas Laqueur explores what he calls “the dog’s gaze”. The dog was the first animal to live companionably with humans, and Laqueur argues that this marks the boundary between nature and culture. It is this threshold status that has, in turn, qualified the dog to play a rich, symbolic part in western art. Just having dogs in a picture – snuffling for picnic crumbs in Seurat’s La Grande Jatte or trooping home in Bruegel the Elder’s Hunters in the Snow – becomes a way for an artist to pack an image with extra resonance and second-order meaning. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Plague review – water polo camp turns into tween hellscape with impressive stylistic bite
With Fincher-like intent, director Charlie Polinger scopes out concealed psychological depths in a debut that sees the laws of the jungle play outSet at a boy’s water polo training camp in the summer of 2003, Charlie Polinger’s debut feature plunges beneath the waterline to scope out concealed psychological depths. It may not be news that these kids operate in a brutal, animal-like hierarchy driven by braggadocio, bullying, hazing and gaslighting – but from the stunning initial submerged shot of a pool glittering like a starfield, Polinger brings impressive stylistic bite to this tween hellscape: the kind of trenchant intent you might associate with David Fincher.Latecomer Ben (Everett Blunck) is thrown in at the deep end when he arrives. Desperate to ingratiate himself with the cool crowd lorded over by the impish Jake (Kayo Martin), he aims to avoid the pariah status of house lummox Eli (Kenny Rasmussen), who is supposedly afflicted with a (made-up) disease the brats dub “the plague”. Anyone who touches Eli must immediately scrub themselves lest they start showing symptoms of diminished brain function and terminal dorkiness. Ben meekly falls in with Jake’s psyops, despite the insistence of coach Daddy Wags (Joel Edgerton) that he should just be himself. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Half Man to Stranger Things: Tales from ’85 – the seven best shows to stream this week
Richard Gadd’s first show since Baby Reindeer is just as compellingly horrible – and you didn’t think Netflix was done with Hawkins, did you?Richard Gadd’s first TV project since Baby Reindeer is a visceral drama likely to have a similar impact. Half Man is fictional but its exploration of agonised youth still packs a mighty punch. Playing out across two timelines, it stars Gadd and Jamie Bell as Ruben and Niall, “brothers from another lover” negotiating a toxic but weirdly tender relationship. When closeted teen Niall is forced to share a room and a school with swaggering, violent Ruben, it could be his worst nightmare. But it’s much more complex than that. The underlying trauma is rendered brilliantly by Mitchell Robertson as young Niall and Stuart Campbell, whose portrayal of Ruben overflows with alpha aggression and neediness.
BBC iPlayer, Friday 24 April Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Air pollution making people in UK get long-term illnesses earlier, study finds
Pollution is ‘silent accelerator that robs individuals of their healthiest years’, say researchersResearch reveals air pollution is advancing the average age that people in the UK acquire long-term illnesses. For some conditions people could be getting ill more than two years earlier because of the air pollution they breathe.The first author of the research from Prof Hualiang Lin’s group at Sun Yat-sen University said: “Our study demonstrates that air pollution is not just a risk factor for falling ill; it acts as a silent accelerator that robs individuals of their healthiest years.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Is blasphemy the last straw for Trump’s Maga base? – podcast
No matter how much Donald Trump outrages his opponents, nothing ever seems to stick. But what about his own base? With controversies surrounding the Epstein files, his war on Iran, and now a ‘blasphemous’ post depicting the president as Jesus, could Maga finally be pulling away?Jonathan Freedland speaks to Rolling Stone’s Nikki McCann Ramírez about the string of scandals dogging Trump, the Maga big beasts biting the hand that fed them, and what happens when a personality cult loses its personalityArchive: CNN, Fox News, ABC News, and MS Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Lochs, bothies and burial chambers: readers’ favourite trips in Scotland
From the epic landscapes of the Highlands and Islands to intimate local community events, our readers share their best finds in Scotland • Tell us about a cool neighbourhood in a European city – the best tip wins a £200 holiday voucherAfter trekking in from near Oykel Bridge, our group stayed the night at Choire Mhoir and Magoo’s bothies (conjoined Mountain Bothies Association and non-MBA bothies, both free) in the northern Highlands. Emerging from the bothies come morning, a fog hovered between the mountains leading up to the summit of Seana Bhràigh, peaking out above, and Loch a’ Choire Mhóir below. As the sun rose, the fog steadily lifted, but not before creating a magical fogbow above the loch and bothies. Rory Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Sony world photography awards 2026 – in pictures
The Sony world photography awards announce the four overall winners of the 2026 competitions: professional, open, student and youth. Citlali Fabián receives the prestigious photographer of the year title, and 10 category winners for the professional competition are announced, whilst Joel Meyerowitz is honoured as 2026 outstanding contribution to photography recipientExhibition at Somerset House, London from 17 April - 4 May 2026 Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Homes for sale in England near marathon routes – in pictures
From running through open countryside in historic beauty spots to pounding the streets of London Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘The antidote to Brat’ – why pointelle is having a moment
Once the preserve of childhood underwear, the patterned knit is now bringing nostalgia and comfort to adults in a fast-changing, unpredictable worldIn this very on-brand April, where sun and showers jostle for supremacy and a chill wind is making 16C feel like 9C, you might have spotted pointelle popping up everywhere. On her recent world tour, Rosalía appeared on stage in Paris wearing a pointelle bodysuit. Then Sabrina Carpenter appeared on the cover of Perfect magazine hanging backwards off a bed wearing cyan eyeshadow and a pointelle underwear set. It’s peeping out from underneath shirts and jumpers in air-conditioned offices and on buses. For spring, the heritage knitwear brand Herd is offering “featherlight yet warm” jumpers in its signature pointelle. John Lewis, which said yesterday that online searches for pointelle were up 60% week on week, is selling bandana-scarves and pyjamas made of the same material.The fabric, more associated with girls’ vests, thermal-wear and underwear, is, according to Merriam-Webster, “an openwork design (as in knitted fabric) typically in the shape of chevrons”. Sometimes peppered with hearts, florals, diamonds or zigzags instead, you probably had a pair of pointelle ankle socks, possibly with a little cotton ruffle. Or maybe you remember that era in the 00s when Whistles churned out lacey pointelle camisoles that grazed bellybuttons inches above Juicy Couture track bottoms. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
US tech firms successfully lobbied EU to keep datacentre emissions secret
Legally questionable confidentiality clause adopted almost word for word from demands of Microsoft and trade groupsMicrosoft and other US tech companies successfully lobbied the EU to hide the environmental toll of their datacentres, an investigation has found, with demands to block a database of green metrics from public view written almost word for word into EU rules.The secrecy provision, which the European Commission added to its proposal almost verbatim after industry lobbying in 2024, hinders scrutiny of the pollution that individual datacentres emit. It leaves researchers with just national-level summaries of their energy footprints. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
More than 15m oysters to be released in the North Sea for UK rewilding project
Exclusive: Experts say scheme will help repair damaged marine ecosystems while sequestering large amounts of carbonMore than 15m juvenile oysters are to be released into the North Sea in one of the biggest rewilding projects in UK waters.The scheme, which will use a unique rearing process, hopes to re-establish a huge oyster bed around Orkney that experts say will create a “trophic cascade” of climate and ecological benefits. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Woman stranded in Dusseldorf after return UK flight blocked over Home Office admin error
Liza Tobay, who lives in UK, was told her settled status had been ‘red flagged’ after trying to make a connecting flight from Munich to EdinburghA German woman has been separated from her two-year-old daughter in Edinburgh after a Home Office mistake left her stranded in Dusseldorf earlier this week.Liza Tobay, who has lived in the UK for 15 years, had taken her oldest child, a six-year-old boy, to visit his grandfather and some other relatives over Easter when confronted with what she said appeared to be “a serious administrative error”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Media coverage of violence against women reaches ‘dismal’ low, report finds
Analysis finds stories citing terms of misogynistic abuse fell to 1.3% of global online news in 2025Media coverage of violence against women and girls and misogynistic harassment is at a “pitiful” low, despite a proliferation of high-profile cases of men abusing women and children, and a rise in AI-assisted violence against women and girls, new research shows.An analysis of 1.14bn online stories published worldwide between 2017 and 2025 found that the proportion of articles that include terms relating to misogynistic abuse dropped to a “dismal” 1.3% of all global online news in 2025, the lowest level in that period. Coverage peaked at 2.2% in 2018, the height of the #MeToo movement. In Africa, where multiple conflicts have involved extreme levels of sexual violence, coverage sank to a nine-year low of 1.18% in 2024. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: UN chief calls for Israel-Lebanon ceasefire to be ‘fully’ respected as it comes into effect
António Guterres welcomes truce and says through spokesperson he hopes halt in fighting will ‘pave the way for negotiations’In case you’re just joining us, here are the latest developments to bring you up to speed. It’s 9.30am in Tehran, 9am in Beirut and Jerusalem and 2am in Washington DC.A 10-day ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon has come into effect, pausing fighting in a devastating conflict between Israel and Hezbollah that has killed more than 2,100 Lebanese people and displaced more than 2.1 million. The agreement was announced earlier by Donald Trump, who said he had spoken with Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Lebanese president Joseph Aoun, and invited both leaders “for meaningful talks” at the White House. Both leaders welcomed the agreement.Israel and Hezbollah have both maintained their right to defend themselves if the truce is broken – here’s our full report.Netanyahu called the truce a “historic” opportunity for peace but refused to withdraw his troops from southern Lebanon during the pause in fighting. “We are remaining in Lebanon in an expanded security zone,” he said, due to the “danger of an invasion” and to prevent fire into Israel. “That is where we are, and we are not leaving.” Netanyahu maintained that his key demand was dismantling Hezbollah.UN chief António Guterres welcomed the ceasefire, which took effect at midnight on Thursday (2100 GMT) in Lebanon, and urged “all actors” to fully respect the truce. He hoped the halt to fighting would “pave the way for negotiations”.The Lebanese army warned people displaced from southern Lebanon about returning home because of intermittent shelling that was reported after the ceasefire came into effect.The Israeli military warned residents of southern Lebanon not to return south of the Litani River despite the ceasefire coming into force.Iran’s foreign ministry spokesperson welcomed the ceasefire and stressed it was already part of the original Iran-US agreement brokered by Pakistan.Israel and Hezbollah continued to exchange fire in the hours before the truce took effect.Asian stocks were poised for a second week of strong gains and oil prices were pinned below $100 a barrel with investors hopeful for a near-term resolution to war in the Middle East.The UK and France will chair a meeting of about 40 countries on Friday aimed at signalling to the US that some of its closest allies are ready to play a role in restoring freedom of navigation in the strait of Hormuz once conditions allow.European countries such as Belgium, the Netherlands and France have mine-clearance capacity which could help secure passage through the strait of Hormuz, France’s defence minister has said.Turkey is hosting a high-stakes forum on Friday bringing together the foreign ministers of Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Egypt, as Islamabad pushes diplomatic efforts to end the Iran war. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: UN chief calls for Israel-Lebanon ceasefire to be ‘fully’ respected as it comes into effect
António Guterres welcomes truce and says through spokesperson he hopes halt in fighting will ‘pave the way for negotiations’European countries such as Belgium, the Netherlands and France have mine-clearance capacity which could help secure passage through the strait of Hormuz, France’s defence minister has said.“There are capabilities to provide fully supported escort services – that is to say, in no way offensive, of course – for ships to ensure safe passage through the strait; that is what will be debated today in Paris,” Catherine Vautrin told French TV station TF1 on Friday, cited by Reuters. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Powerless Cuba is 'most certainly next' on Trump's list
At the start of this year, Donald Trump ordered the capture and removal of Venezuela's president Nicolas Maduro - he's now facing a trial in New York.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
The evolution of Guardiola and Arteta as managers and friends
As Manchester City prepare to host Arsenal in Sunday's crucial Premier League meeting between the top two, European football expert Guillem Balague looks at how the two managers have evolved.

BBC World News
Open 
Ex-Virginia Lt. Governor kills wife and himself in murder-suicide, police say
Investigators say Justin Fairfax shot his wife, Cerina, multiple times before turning the gun on himself.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
TV tonight: the final series of Hacks and death-defying Deborah
Debs is back from the dead and out for glory. Plus: Lenny Henry faces a tough grilling from the Assembly crew. Here’s what to watch this evening9pm, Sky AtlanticTo paraphrase Mark Twain, reports of Deborah’s death have been greatly exaggerated (“TMZ got a bad tip”), as the fifth and final season begins. Determined to “shift the narrative”, she works on bagging a Grammy and an Oscar in this opening double bill. Will her “Mexican music album” strategy succeed? And could her autograph signing session be any worse? Ali Catterall Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: UN chief calls for Israel-Lebanon ceasefire to be ‘fully’ respected as it comes into effect
António Guterres welcomes truce and says through spokesperson he hopes halt in fighting will ‘pave the way for negotiations’Turkey is hosting a high-stakes forum on Friday bringing together the foreign ministers of Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Egypt, as Islamabad pushes diplomatic efforts to end the war in Iran.Pakistan’s army chief met senior negotiators in Tehran on Thursday as Washington and Iran considered a fresh round of talks to end the almost seven-week war. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Celebrations in Lebanon as ceasefire with Israel goes into effect and Trump hails 'historic' peace effort with Iran: 'Good things are happening!'
Celebrations swept through Lebanon on Friday as a 10-day ceasefire with Israel took effect, in what US President Donald Trump hailed as a 'historic day.'

BBC World News
Open 
What we know about the ceasefire between Lebanon and Israel
A 10-day truce between the two countries is now in effect, with Iran-backed Hezbollah voicing support, as negotiations continue between the US and Iran.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Sutton's predictions v boxer Molly McCann & the Boo Radleys
Chris Sutton takes on boxer Molly McCann and The Boo Radley's frontman Sice Rowbottom plus the BBC readers and AI with his predictions for this weekend's Premier League fixtures.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
'I'd run the M4 naked' - Williams targets snooker history
Mark Williams could cause traffic chaos on the motorway if he surpasses Ronnie O'Sullivan as the oldest ever world champion.

BBC World News
Open 
What we know about the ceasefire between Lebanon and Israel
A 10-day truce between the two countries now in effect, with Iran-backed Hezbollah voicing support, as negotiations continue between the US and Iran.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Rain set to ease for the weekend as sunshine returns
After April showers and thunderstorms this week, the weather will settle down this weekend and into next week as Simon King explains.

CNET News
Open 
Opera Adds Browser Connector Feature to Integrate AI Chatbots Into Browsers
The new feature allows you to include the AI tools of your choice.

Mail Online
Open 
Now the DOG SQUAD arrives for Meghan's 'Her Best Life' retreat at Sydney hotel - as guests rock up to the event
Follow Daily Mail's live coverage here.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Singer D4vd arrested on suspicion of murdering teenage girl
The remains of 14-year-old Celeste Rivas Hernandez were found in the singer's car last year.

BBC UK News
Open 
Family 'skimped to get by' during toddler's cancer treatment
There is a bespoke fund to cover travel costs for families of children undergoing cancer treatment - but it only applies in England.

Digital Trends
Open 
The next Pixel phone could get a glowing back, if Android 17’s code is anything to go by
Google is working on a new feature called Pixel Glow that uses subtle lights on the back of your device to notify you without lighting up the screen.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
True blue: what to wear with classic straight leg jeans
Got denim overwhelm? Go back to basics with a simple pair of straight leg jeans Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Helen Goh’s recipe for Anzac sandwich biscuits with dark chocolate filling | The sweet spot
Chewy in the middle and crisp at the edges, as any self-respecting Anzac biscuit ought to be, but here they’re sandwiched together with a slightly luxurious, mildly salted, olive oil-enriched dark chocolate ganacheAnzac biscuits are closely associated with Anzac Day on 25 April, which commemorates the members of the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps who served in the first world war. Made with oats, coconut and golden syrup, the biscuits are said to have been popular because they travelled well and kept for long periods, making them suitable for sending to forces overseas. My version here, a slightly less austere take on the classic, sandwiches two small biscuits with a lightly salted, olive oil-enriched dark chocolate ganache. The result is crisp at the edges, soft within and not too sweet. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Eat my dust: what is slow vacuuming – and does it work?
When it comes to vacuuming, slow and steady wins the rug race, according to social media users. But experts caution against overdoing the methodGet our weekend culture and lifestyle emailIn what feels like less of a trend and more like the correct way to do something, people on social media have discovered “slow vacuuming”. Instead of doing a quick once over, they are taking their time over any and all carpeted areas – it’s just vacuuming, but slowly.Proponents of slow vacuuming claim it removes dirt more effectively, thereby keeping carpets cleaner for longer and airborne allergens at bay.Sign up for the fun stuff with our rundown of must-reads, pop culture and tips for the weekend, every Saturday morning Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Liz Kendall urges UK public to embrace AI as government makes first £500m fund investment
Technology secretary plays down fears over jobs and cyber security as stake taken in British startupThe UK technology secretary has urged the country to “make AI work for Britain”, brushing off fears about its impact on jobs and cybersecurity as the government announced its first investment under a £500m sovereign AI fund.
Liz Kendall said the UK had to “seize” the opportunity offered by AI despite concerns underlined this month when US startup Anthropic revealed it had developed an AI model that posed a potentially significant cyber threat.
Asked how the government makes the case for embracing a technology that could disrupt jobs and now cybersecurity, Kendall said: “We have to seize this to make it work, for Britain, for our jobs, for solving the biggest challenges we face as a world.”Speaking on Thursday as the government unveiled its first investment in a UK company as part of a £500m sovereign AI fund, Kendall acknowledged “people are worried about the risks and what it means for their jobs”, but AI entrepreneurs also believed they can “make it work … they can create jobs”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Cuts to overseas aid will worsen shocks to global economy, David Miliband says
Exclusive: Former UK foreign secretary says poor and rich countries alike will be hit amid humanitarian crisis sparked by Iran warCuts to overseas aid by countries including the US and the UK risk stoking global economic instability amid the humanitarian crisis resulting from the Iran war, David Miliband has said.The former British foreign secretary and head of the International Rescue Committee (IRC) said the US “abandoning” of its aid programme under Donald Trump would worsen shocks to the global economy that would impact poor and wealthy countries alike. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: UN chief calls for Israel-Lebanon ceasefire to be ‘fully’ respected as it comes into effect
António Guterres welcomes truce and says through spokesperson he hopes halt in fighting will ‘pave the way for negotiations’Australia’s prime minister has been forced to rebuff another swipe from Donald Trump and reiterate there has been no direct requests from the US – the country’s most important ally – for military support in the Middle East.As Lebanon and Israel agreed to their 10-day ceasefire, Donald Trump said in Washington that Australia had not supplied military aid to help reopen the strait of Hormuz.They were not there having to do with Hormuz. So I’m not happy. I’m not happy with them.”There’s been no new requests at all, and indeed President Trump has himself said that he has got this, and he has made that position clear. There’s been no change.My job is to engage constructively with the US administration. That’s what we do.”And to me, that is a full reopening of the strait [of Hormuz], or we could see some substantial corrections in global stocks in the coming days and weeks.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Hull fans and players unite behind ‘betrayed’ coach Cartwright as St Helens go top
Hull 14-24 St HelensBattling display in defeat feels like coach’s last standThere is rarely a shortage of emotion and passion in this particular part of the rugby league world but even by the usually high standards set in Hull, this was a night many, least of all their head coach, will never forget.On any other night, the headline would be St Helens producing another impressive statement of their title credentials to go top of Super League. But this was no ordinary night: perhaps underlined not necessarily by the action on the field, but by what transpired after Saints’ win over Hull FC. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Peacock terrorises 92-year-old farmer's chickens
The peacock initially got along with the chickens before running riot on the farm, the farmer says.

The Hill
Open 
Republicans move forward on last-minute spy powers deal, teeing up late-night vote
House Republicans leaders are moving forward on a last-minute, late-night compromise with GOP rebels to extend the nation’s foreign spy powers for five years while adding in warrant language and enhanced criminal penalties for violations. Text of the provision was uploaded at about 10:30 p.m., about seven hours after a scheduled procedural vote and more than a...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: UN chief calls for Israel-Lebanon ceasefire to be ‘fully’ respected as it comes into effect
António Guterres welcomes truce and says through spokesperson he hopes halt in fighting will ‘pave the way for negotiations’Asian stocks were poised for a second week of strong gains and oil prices were pinned below $100 a barrel with investors hopeful for a near-term resolution to war in the Middle East.With the Lebanon-Israel truce coming into effect and Donald Trump saying the next US-Iran meeting might take place over the weekend, oil prices were pushed lower, with Brent crude futures falling more than 1% to $98.14 a barrel. US West Texas Intermediate crude futures fell 1.6% to $93.15 a barrel.And to me, that is a full reopening of the strait [of Hormuz], or we could see some substantial corrections in global stocks in the coming days and weeks.” Continue reading...

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Visible Promo Code: Save Over $400 in April 2026
Find great deals and promo codes for Visible at WIRED and save big, whether you're a long-time customer or a newbie.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
20% Squarespace Promo Codes | April 2026
Get 20% off your next website, 10% off with exclusive Squarespace discount code, 50% off plans, and more top coupons from WIRED.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
50% Off Blue Apron Promo Codes | April 2026
Browse chef-curated meal plans, plus get $25 off with an exclusive Blue Apron coupon code, plus 50% off your first 2 orders, and more top coupons on WIRED.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Foreo Discount Codes and Deals: Up to 50% Off
Save on Foreo favorites, including LUNA cleansing brushes, BEAR microcurrent devices, and masks and accessories to level up your daily skincare routine at home.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Top Foreign Office official to leave post after Mandelson vetting row
Sir Olly Robbins has effectively been sacked after his department did not inform the prime minister that Lord Mandelson had failed security vetting.

Russia Today News
Open 
‘No better teammate than Israel’ – US CENTCOM chief

Sky News Home
Open 
MPs to launch national ad campaign to highlight extent UK military is unprepared for war
A cross-party group of MPs is set to launch a national advertising campaign that will highlight their view that the UK's military is underfunded - amid calls for increased defence spending.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: UN chief calls for Israel-Lebanon ceasefire to be ‘fully’ respected as it comes into effect
António Guterres welcomes truce and says through spokesperson he hopes halt in fighting will ‘pave the way for negotiations’The UK and France will chair a meeting of about 40 countries on Friday aimed at signalling to the US that some of its closest allies are ready to play a role in restoring freedom of navigation in the strait of Hormuz once conditions allow.British prime minister Keir Starmer is expected to say the reopening the strait of Hormuz is a “global responsibility”.The unconditional and immediate reopening of the strait is a global responsibility, and we need to act to get global energy and trade flowing freely again.Emmanuel Macron and I are clear in our commitment to establish a multinational initiative to protect freedom of navigation.” Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Chris Mason: Mandelson nightmare haunts Starmer again
The prime minister is believed to be absolutely furious over the handling of Lord Mandelson's vetting, Chris Mason writes.

Ars Technica
Open 
After a saga of broken promises, a European rover finally has a ride to Mars

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: UN chief calls for Israel-Lebanon ceasefire to be ‘fully’ respected as it comes into effect
António Guterres welcomes truce and says through spokesperson he hopes halt in fighting will ‘pave the way for negotiations’The UK and France will chair a meeting of about 40 countries on Friday aimed at signalling to the US that some of its closest allies are ready to play a role in restoring freedom of navigation in the strait of Hormuz once conditions allow.British prime minister Keir Starmer is expected to say the reopening the strait of Hormuz is a “global responsibility”.The unconditional and immediate reopening of the strait is a global responsibility, and we need to act to get global energy and trade flowing freely again.Emmanuel Macron and I are clear in our commitment to establish a multinational initiative to protect freedom of navigation. Continue reading...

The Register
Open 
Cisco Wi-Fi boxes are filling their disks with 5MB of undeletable data every day
Fix for critical flaw is an OS update you may not be able to make because the junk data uses all memory More than 230 different models of Cisco Wi-Fi access points may be writing 5MB a day of nonessential data, filling their onboard flash memory to the point at which they lack space for future software updates.…

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ben Roberts-Smith granted bail after being charged with five counts of war crime murder
Former SAS corporal to be released from Silverwater prison ahead of potential trial on charges relating to alleged killing of civilians in AfghanistanFollow our Australia news live blog for latest updatesGet our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcastBen Roberts-Smith has been granted bail under strict conditions while he awaits a potential trial on alleged war crimes.The Victoria Cross recipient, once Australia’s most lionised soldier, faces five charges of war crime murder over allegations he killed unarmed civilians during his service with the Australian SAS in Afghanistan. Continue reading...

CNET News
Open 
Today's NYT Connections: Sports Edition Hints and Answers for April 17, #571
Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for April 17 No. 571.

CNET News
Open 
Today's NYT Mini Crossword Answers for Friday, April 17
Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for April 17

Sky News Home
Open 
Singer held on suspicion of killing teen girl found dead in his Tesla
US singer D4vd has been arrested on suspicion of killing a 14-year-old girl who went missing last year.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: UN chief calls for Israel-Lebanon ceasefire to be ‘fully’ respected as it comes into effect
António Guterres welcomes truce and says through spokesperson he hopes halt in fighting will ‘pave the way for negotiations’The energy shock from the Middle East crisis and higher commodity prices are increasing production costs in the world’s biggest manufacturing country, trade data from Beijing this week and anecdotal information from Chinese manufacturers indicates.Before the US-Israeli war on Iran, China’s export sector was performing strongly , having weathered Donald Trump’s tariff hikes by targeting new markets and achieving a record trade surplus last year. Continue reading...

Slashdot
Open 
Sperm Whales' Communication Closely Parallels Human Language, Study Finds
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Guardian: We may appear to have little in common with sperm whales – enormous, ocean-dwelling animals that last shared a common ancestor with humans more than 90 million years ago. But the whales' vocalized communications are remarkably similar to our own, researchers have discovered. Not only do sperm whale have a form of "alphabet" and form vowels within their vocalizations but the structure of these vowels behaves in the same way as human speech, the new study has found.

Sperm whales communicate in a series of short clicks called codas. Analysis of these clicks shows that the whales can differentiate vowels through the short or elongated clicks or through rising or falling tones, using patterns similar to languages such as Mandarin, Latin and Slovenian. The structure of the whales' communication has "close parallels in the phonetics and phonology of human languages, suggesting independent evolution," the paper, published in the Proceedings B journal, states. Sperm whale coda vocalizations are "highly complex and represent one of the closest parallels to human phonology of any analyzed animal communication system," it added.

[...] The new study shows that "sperm whale communication isn't just about patterns of clicks -- it involves multiple interacting layers of structure," said Mauricio Cantor, a behavioral ecologist at the Marine Mammal Institute who was not involved in the research. "With this study, we're starting to see that these signals are organized in ways we didn't fully appreciate before." The latest discovery around sperm whale speech has inched forward the possibility of someday fully understanding the creatures and even communicating with them. Project CETI has set a goal of being able to comprehend 20 different vocalized expressions, relating to actions such as diving and sleeping, within the next five years. A future where we're able to fully understand what the whales are saying and be able to have a conversation with them is "totally within our grasp," said David Gruber, founder and president of Project CETI. "We've already got a lot further than I thought we could. But it will take time, and funding. At the moment we are like a two-year-old, just saying a few words. In a few years' time, maybe we will be more like a five-year-old."





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
I want to reform our country because a strong Germany is a precondition for a strong Europe
The war in Iran has exposed our dependencies. Europe, including the UK, must be bold about change, so nobody can blackmail usLars Klingbeil is Germany’s finance minister and vice-chancellorWars and crises are draining our economies, our sense of security and our emotional wellbeing. They are affecting our daily lives: supply chains are becoming less reliable, energy prices are soaring, and trade dependencies on fossil-fuel energy and critical minerals pose risks to national security. Tariffs, industrial overcapacities and export restrictions threaten jobs and prosperity. Taken together, all this is exposing Europe’s weaknesses and vulnerabilities.At the same time, we have shown how strengthening our alliances and our economic and military capacities can increase our scope for action. Forming a united European political front is helping to safeguard the sovereignty of Greenland, for instance. And despite all the recent turmoil, Europe remains one of the most attractive places in the world to live and work. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘He’d gaze at the stars and go: I’m gonna be up there one day’: Prince by those who knew him best, 10 years after his death
From lurid pranks and late-night drives, to why playing in the Revolution was like joining the marines – Prince’s friends and collaborators recount their memories of one of the music world’s most majestic and mercurial performersGeorge Clinton, singer and leader of Parliament-Funkadelic Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Experience: I won the world’s deepest underground marathon
I tried not to think about the 1,300 metres of solid rock over my headRunning has always been a passion of mine. I started as a child in the Yorkshire Dales, moving to cross-country at university, then graduating to marathons. I loved the challenge. After my wife, Stephanie, and I married in 2012, and went on to have two daughters, Grace and Rose, I still ran for pleasure, but competitive events took a back seat as I focused on my family and career.Then one day I heard about a marathon my company had been invited to join. It had been over 10 years since my last big race, but I put my name forward. “I’m surprised,” a colleague said. “You do realise it’s totally underground?” It turned out the race was in a Swedish zinc mine, 1,120 metres below sea level. That made it the world’s deepest marathon, and everyone who completed it would be a Guinness World Record holder. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘It feels like death is certain’: lives and limbs lost to crocodile attacks on the banks of Kenya’s rising Lake Turkana
Seven deaths and 15 injuries have been recorded in the past year as crocodiles move their habitats closer to human settlements• Warning: contains graphic descriptions of crocodile attacksNg’ikalei Loito was walking out of the warm waters of Lake Turkana on a sunny afternoon, having just finished swimming with her two sisters-in-law, when she suddenly felt the crushing force of a crocodile’s bite on her legs.In excruciating pain, she instinctively clung to a partially submerged tree that was within reach and screamed for help, as the crocodile tried to drag her under the water.Ng’ikalei Loito sits on her tricycle outside her house in Kalokol town in Turkana Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘How do I end a call?’: the elderly Japanese people determined to master smartphones
Elderly people take advantage of courses on how to navigate mobile devices and avoid ‘analogue isolation’It’s not only young people whose gaze is fixed on tiny screens. But for these users in Tokyo, clicking and scrolling is anything but second nature.“I can’t deal with all of the apps that jump out at me,” says one. “How do I know if I’ve definitely ended a call?” asks another. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: UN chief calls for Israel-Lebanon ceasefire to be ‘fully’ respected as it comes into effect
António Guterres welcomes truce and says through spokesperson he hopes halt in fighting will ‘pave the way for negotiations’The energy shock from the Middle East crisis and higher commodity prices are increasing production costs in the world’s biggest manufacturing country, trade data from Beijing and anecdotal information from Chinese manufacturers indicates.Before the US-Israeli war on Iran, China’s export sector was performing strongly , having weathered Donald Trump’s tariff hikes by targeting new markets and achieving a record trade surplus last year. Continue reading...

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Mises, Rothbard, & Libertarian 'Just War' Theory In The 2026 Iran War
Mises, Rothbard, & Libertarian 'Just War' Theory In The 2026 Iran War

Authored by Daniel Lacalle,

As of April 2026, the US and Israel are still at war with Iran. The war began on February 28 with surprise bombings that killed Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and other high-ranking officials. Since then, attacks on infrastructure have continued, leading to significant disruptions in essential services and escalating tensions in the region. Iran has attacked targets in Gulf nations and tightened its grip on the Strait of Hormuz as a result.

The conflict has damaged the economy around the world, driving inflation and supply chain disruption fears.

The war is often considered a way to protect Israel, the Gulf nations, and, ultimately, the US against a brutal, theocratic dictatorship that was looking to build nuclear weapons and was the main financier of terrorism in the world.

However, there is a common libertarian question: Do libertarian ideas support sending troops to other countries to stop tyranny?



Ludwig von Mises, writing during the fight against Nazi Germany, supported quick military action.

In Omnipotent Government: The Rise of the Absolute State and Total War (1944), Mises stated that etatism, socialism, and autarky lead to absolute state control, which always leads to violence. Nazism was not an anomaly but the inevitable outcome of such policies, and compromise was unachievable.

Mises said Nazism was not only a German problem but also a threat to Western civilisations. The reader may observe strong parallels between the Iranian regime and its political and terrorist links to other totalitarian regimes, as well as its “death to America” and “annihilation of Israel” policies and its expansionist intentions toward Sunni nations.

Mises believed that if Nazism were not destroyed, the result would be total totalitarianism, reducing people to “slaves in a Nazi-run society” where the individual is rightless.

“The reality of Nazism faces everybody else with an alternative: they must smash Nazism or renounce their self-determination, i.e., their freedom and their very existence as human beings.” “If they yield, they will be slaves in a Nazi-dominated world.” Mises called on the Allies to “fight desperately until the Nazi power is completely broken.”

Mises was clearly against neutrality, saying, “In the current situation, neutrality is the same as supporting Nazism,” highlighting that a decisive victory or the ultimate defeat of Nazism were the only ways to bring back peace and liberal order.

People could only begin to construct a free society subsequent to “the total destruction of Nazism.”. We can argue that Mises believed that the government had a role in protecting civilisation from totalitarianism.

In 2026, a Mises follower would say that the Iranian regime’s theocratic totalitarianism, which includes spreading its influence and power globally, silencing dissent, fighting proxy wars, and looking for nuclear weapons to destroy Israel, is similar to Nazi etatism.

The free world might use strikes to destroy the Iranian regime’s military power and leadership in order to protect itself and avoid a larger war in the region or globally. If everyone had worked together to stop Hitler sooner, World War II might not have happened. Today, using strong force against Tehran could potentially stop a nuclear holocaust, Shiite terrorism, totalitarian expansion, or the massacre of Iranian civilian protesters.

However, Murray Rothbard disagreed with this rationale. He thought that all wars fought by the government were wrong, regardless of who they were against. Rothbard wrote about the non-aggression principle (NAP) in his articles “War, Peace, and the State” and in his bigger libertarian theory of conflict. Violence, he said, is acceptable solely for the protection of individuals from specific criminals, rather than against innocent individuals or through governmental coercion. “It is acceptable to use violence against criminals to protect one’s rights to life and property; however, it is completely unacceptable to infringe upon the rights of innocent individuals.”

Rothbard said that countries can’t fight just wars because they get their money through taxes and their military forces through conscription. He also reminded us that modern weapons are so deadly that they always kill civilians. Even a “defensive” war against tyranny gives the country that becomes involved more power at home. “War is the health of the state.” “True freedom from tyranny must come from the oppressed rising up against their oppressors, not from outside forces that only put a new ruler in place.” Rothbard would probably call U.S.-Israeli strikes “aggressive state expansion” in Iran, no matter how authoritarian the government was. He could argue that wars in the Middle East never seem to end to support his claim that foreign “liberation” always leads to more oppression at home.

There are important additional elements of debate.

The protests in Iran in 2025 and 2026 showed that it was almost impossible to obtain rid of the government from the inside, as evidenced by the government’s strong response to dissent and the lack of effective opposition movements that could challenge its authority. In late December 2025, protests about the economy quickly turned into calls for regime change all over the country. Security forces killed tens of thousands of people in January 2026. The government cut off the internet for the whole country, arrested over 50,000 citizens, tortured and made thousands disappear, and accelerated executions. This brutal suppression, one of the bloodiest crackdowns in modern history, may create doubts about Rothbard’s point. When a totalitarian regime has complete control over its security forces and is willing to kill its people, peaceful or even armed internal revolution becomes virtually impossible. If the regime has expansionary policies and finances terrorism and totalitarian regimes elsewhere, it may even be more problematic, as such actions can lead to increased international instability and the potential for external conflicts that distract from internal dissent.This division of ideas exemplifies the fundamental libertarian just war theory.

The non-aggression principle (NAP) takes the old ideas of just war—just cause, right aim, last resort, proportionality, and discrimination and improves them. You can only attack people who are a real aggressive threat.

Both views may be relevant in the Iran war, and opinions may change depending on one’s personal perception of the threat posed by the Iranian regime.

Mises’ realism may be used to highlight the regime’s aggression, threats to Israel and America, and use of terrorism and proxy militias to justify strikes aiming at the lowest possible count of civilian casualties. Critics, following Rothbard, may say that the campaign goes against just war principles because it uses state force.

Is the Iran regime a global and national security threat or just another autocracy like so many others that exist in the world? The difference in perceptions about the war is likely to come down to this question. Consider whether you believe the actions of the Iran regime, both inside and outside the nation, pose a global threat or are irrelevant. I believe we can all agree that the Iranian regime has significant differences with other dictatorships. It is undeniable that the Iranian regime has a policy of annihilating Israel, states that “death to America is not a slogan but a policy,” and is involved in terrorist activities and the financing of dictatorships from Latin America to Lebanon. The question, then, is what actions should be taken in response? The answer will come down to each person’s view of the extent of the global threat that the Iranian regime supposes.

The war in Iran is sparking numerous debates among libertarians, demonstrating that libertarianism is not a cult that imposes unified thought. What matters, ultimately, is that independence of thought and free will remain as core principles of the debate.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 23:25

The Hill
Open 
Popular weight loss medications linked to hidden side effects, study finds
The study found 4% of users reported "menstrual irregularities," according to Neil Sehgal, the study's first author.

The Hill
Open 
Acting ICE chief to exit agency: DHS secretary
The acting head of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) will leave his role at the end of next month, Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin confirmed on Thursday evening. Todd Lyons will be departing for a new role in the private sector on May 31, Mullin announced in a post on the social platform X. “Director...

The Hill
Open 
Republicans move forward on last-minute spy powers deal, teeing up late-night vote
House Republicans leaders are moving forward on a last-minute, late-night compromise with GOP rebels to extend the nation’s foreign spy powers for five years while adding in warrant language and enhanced criminal penalties for violations. Text of the provision was uploaded at about 10:30 p.m., about seven hours after a scheduled procedural vote. The House...

Sky News Home
Open 
Singer D4vd arrested on suspicion of killing 14-year-old girl
US singer D4vd has been arrested on suspicion of killing a 14-year-old girl who went missing last year.

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Ripple Labs, Kyobo Life Insurance Partner to Introduce South Korea’s Blockchain based Tokenized Government Bond Settlement
Ripple Labs has joined forces with Kyobo Life Insurance to launch the country’s inaugural tokenized government bond settlement system powered by blockchain technology. The collab represents Ripple’s initial venture with a Korean insurance provider and marks a pivotal advancement in building robust, institution-level digital asset... Read More

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
Lufthansa To Retire A340-600 Fleet In 2026, Followed By 747-400s In 2027
As part of massive cost cutting measures, Lufthansa plans to expedite retirement of its Airbus A340-600 and Boeing 747-400 jets.

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
$10M construction project for Singapore's F-35B training in Arkansas
Singapore is poised to become a member of the global F-35 operator community as it prepares to take delivery of its first Lockheed Martin F-35B fighters later this year.

Mail Online
Open 
Christina Applegate, 54, is 'hospitalized' amid MS battle... after revealing she is largely confined to her bed with the disease
The Married... With Children actress announced her diagnosis with the chronic autoimmune disease in 2021.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: UN chief calls for Israel-Lebanon ceasefire to be ‘fully’ respected as it comes into effect
António Guterres welcomes truce and says through spokesperson he hopes halt in fighting will ‘pave the way for negotiations’The US president, Donald Trump, has posted a short statement on Truth Social about the 10-day ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon.“May have been a historic day for Lebanon. Good things are happening!!!” Trump wrote, signing off as “President DJT”.A 10-day ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon has come into effect, pausing fighting in a devastating conflict between Israel and Hezbollah that has killed more than 2,100 Lebanese people and displaced more than 2.1 million. The agreement was announced earlier by Donald Trump, who said he had spoken with Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Lebanese president Joseph Aoun, and invited both leaders “for meaningful talks” at the White House. Both leaders welcomed the agreement. But how long the ceasefire will hold is the key question, as both Israel and Hezbollah have maintained their right to defend themselves if the truce is broken. Here’s our report.Netanyahu called it a “historic” opportunity for peace, though he refused to withdraw his troops from southern Lebanon during the pause in fighting. “We are remaining in Lebanon in an expanded security zone,” he said, due to the “danger of an invasion” and to prevent fire into Israel. “That is where we are, and we are not leaving.” The Israeli prime minister maintained that his key demand was dismantling Hezbollah. He has previously declared his intention to occupy southern Lebanon up to the Litani River – about 30km from the border – while Lebanon demands the complete withdrawal of Israeli forces and for displaced residents to be able to return to their homes. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Kemi Badenoch urged to go on 'apology tour' around the UK
Kemi Badenoch should go on an "apology tour" for the "mistakes" the Conservatives made while in government, a former leader of the Scottish Tories has said.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ben Roberts-Smith granted bail after being charged with five counts of war crime murder
Former SAS soldier to be released from Silverwater prison ahead of possible trial on charges relating to alleged killing of civilians in AfghanistanFollow our Australia news live blog for latest updatesGet our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcastBen Roberts-Smith has been granted bail under strict conditions while he awaits a potential trial on alleged war crimes.The Victoria Cross recipient, once Australia’s most lionised soldier, faces five charges of war crime murder over allegations he killed unarmed civilians during his service with the Australian SAS in Afghanistan. Continue reading...

The Register
Open 
Anthropic won't own MCP 'design flaw' putting 200K servers at risk, researchers say
Bug or feature? A design flaw – or expected behavior based on a bad design choice, depending on who is telling the story – baked into Anthropic's official Model Context Protocol (MCP) puts as many as 200,000 servers at risk of complete takeover, according to security researchers.…

Gizmodo
Open 
Pentagon Reportedly Asks Detroit to Use More Car Factories as Arms Factories
Pete Hegseth has previously said he'd like the U.S. economy to be placed on a "war footing."

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Will Trump regret taking on the Pope? – podcast
The president’s posting of an AI-generated image of himself as Jesus horrified many Christians. Sarah Posner tells Annie Kelly why evangelical voters still flock to himDonald Trump’s late-night social media meltdowns are infamous. But even by his standards, last Sunday was particularly extreme. Throughout the night – up until 4am – the US president was busy on his Truth Social account.And squeezed in between posts on his new ballroom and Joe Biden was a bizarre attack on Pope Leo – God’s representative on Earth to 1.4 billion Catholics.Clearly angry over the Pope’s criticism of his war in Iran, he called him weak on crime and terrible on foreign policy. Just 46 minutes later - the president posted an AI-generated picture of himself as Jesus basking in a holy glow. Continue reading...

CNET News
Open 
Opera Adds Browser Connector Feature to Integrate AI Chatbots Into Browsers
New feature will allow users to include the AI tools of their choice.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Border wars, rising costs or a marital reprieve: why are Thai men racing to enlist in the Army?
Nearly 50,000 men volunteered to enlist this year, according to the Royal Thai Army, a 22% increase compared with 2025“Bored of your wife? This April, come and enlist in the military,” says a recent online post from the Thai military, ditching its traditional, stuffy tone for online memes ahead of the recent annual draft season.It is not known how effective the campaign has been, but nearly 50,000 men volunteered to enlist this year, according to the Royal Thai Army, a 22% increase compared with 2025. This marks a continuation of a trend seen over the past five years in Thailand, and is a marked contrast to countries such as Japan, which are struggling to enlist military personnel. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: UN chief calls for Israel-Lebanon ceasefire to be ‘fully’ respected as it comes into effect
António Guterres welcomes truce and says through spokesperson he hopes halt in fighting will ‘pave the way for negotiations’Hello and welcome to our live coverage of events in the Middle East.United Nations chief António Guterres has welcomed the ceasefire announced on Thursday between Israel and Lebanon, urging “all actors” to fully respect the truce.A 10-day ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon has come into effect, pausing fighting in a devastating conflict between Israel and Hezbollah that has killed more than 2,100 Lebanese people and displaced more than 2.1 million. The agreement was announced earlier by Donald Trump, who said he had spoken with Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Lebanese president Joseph Aoun, and invited both leaders “for meaningful talks” at the White House. Both leaders welcomed the agreement. But how long the ceasefire will hold is the key question, as both Israel and Hezbollah have maintained their right to defend themselves if the truce is broken. Here’s our report.Netanyahu called it a “historic” opportunity for peace, though he refused to withdraw his troops from southern Lebanon during the pause in fighting. “We are remaining in Lebanon in an expanded security zone,” he said, due to the “danger of an invasion” and to prevent fire into Israel. “That is where we are, and we are not leaving.” The Israeli prime minister maintained that his key demand was dismantling Hezbollah. He has previously declared his intention to occupy southern Lebanon up to the Litani River – about 30km from the border – while Lebanon demands the complete withdrawal of Israeli forces and for displaced residents to be able to return to their homes.Iran’s foreign ministry spokesperson Esmail Baghaei welcomed the ceasefire and stressed it was already part of the original Iran-US agreement brokered by Pakistan. Baghaei said Iran emphasised “from the outset” the need for a “simultaneous ceasefire throughout the region, including Lebanon”, and expressed his “solidarity” with the people and government of Lebanon. He called for the return of displaced residents to their homes and emphasised the necessity of the “complete withdrawal” of Israeli forces from the south of the country – which, as mentioned, Israel has refused to do.The Lebanese army urged residents to “exercise restraint” in returning to their villages and towns in southern Lebanon ahead of the ceasefire coming into effect. The army added that even then residents should avoid areas that remain occupied by Israeli forces. It was followed by a similar statement issued by Hezbollah, urging caution amid Israel’s history of “breaking covenants and agreements”.The Israeli military issued an urgent warning to the people of southern Lebanon not to return south of the Litani River despite the ceasefire coming into force.In the hours before the truce took effect, Israel and Hezbollah continued to exchange fire. Just as the ceasefire came into force, the Israeli military said it had hit more than 380 Hezbollah targets in southern Lebanon in the past 24 hours, including rocket launchers, headquarters and Hezbollah members themselves. Meanwhile, Israeli strikes on Lebanese towns and villages killed dozens of people, including an attack on the town of Ghazieh which killed at least seven people and wounded 33, the health ministry said on Thursday. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Stop concert tickets being sold above face value, govt told
The government has been urged to ban the resale of concert tickets above face value after fans reported feeling "neglected and ripped off". 

Mail Online
Open 
Billionaire couple locked in bitter divorce feud after wife says massive $1 million prenup is not enough
Healthcare CEO Miguel Fernandez, 73, filed for divorce from his wife, Constance, 61, in Miami-Dade County on March 20.

Mail Online
Open 
Kim Kardashian flaunts Lewis Hamilton romance as she posts busty snap of herself sitting on F1 racer's lap at Coachella
Kim Kardashian continued to flaunt her Lewis Hamilton romance as she posted a busty snap while sitting on the F1 racer's lap as they attended weekend one of Coachella.

Mail Online
Open 
Clavicular 'refused to see' his intervention-staging father after drug overdose
The 60-year-old Connors Group co-founder had planned on having a serious talk about the health of his troubled 20-year-old son

Russia Today News
Open 
Lebanon truce could give ‘lifeline’ to Hezbollah – US senator

Mail Online
Open 
Christina Applegate, 54, is 'hospitalized' amid MS battle... after revealing she is largely confined to her bed with the disease
Christina Applegate has been 'hospitalized' amid her ongoing battle with multiple sclerosis (MS).

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Drought Engulfs 60% Of U.S. As Farmers Begin Spring Planting
Drought Engulfs 60% Of U.S. As Farmers Begin Spring Planting

A massive drought has emerged across large swaths of the US agricultural belt, threatening crops and livestock and eventually affecting food prices, at a time when fertilizer and diesel costs are soaring. As of early April, 60% of the Lower 48 is in drought as the Northern Hemisphere growing season begins and farmers begin plantings, according to NOAA. 



The southern US is already experiencing severe, extreme, and even exceptional drought conditions, putting pressure on key crops such as sugarcane, rice, and peanuts, while fruit trees have also been damaged by extreme temperatures.



Across the Great Plains, otherwise known as the nation’s breadbasket, winter wheat farmers are being forced to decide whether to keep the struggling crop or cut losses and replant, with dry soil also making germination harder.

The drought also complicates matters for ranchers, as the nation's cattle herd is already at its lowest level since the 1950s. As a result, some ranches may further reduce their herds, which will only push beef prices to new record highs.



In the western US, the problem is not so much rainfall as shrinking mountain snowpack, which threatens irrigation supplies ahead of the growing season. Water-use cutbacks for agricultural purposes are already being discussed or imposed in places such as Washington’s Yakima Basin and along the Colorado River.

Related:


Meteorologists Warn About Super El Nino Event


Washington, D.C. Will Feel Like June. Cue MSM Climate Doom Propaganda

X user Tony Heller noted, "The US is facing a drought possibly similar to the drought of 1610, which wiped out the Jamestown Colonists."


The US is facing a drought possibly similar to the drought of 1610, which wiped out the Jamestown Colonists.https://t.co/3Iz9DZwLZv pic.twitter.com/8dyGFhaa0m
— Tony Heller 🇺🇸 🇯🇵 (@TonyClimate) April 13, 2026

 All bad news for food prices. Traders are piling into these agri ETFs: "Why The Fertilizer Crisis May Spark Record Inflows Into Agri ETFs." 

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 21:20

ZeroHedge News
Open 
What AI Doesn't Know - And Why It Matters
What AI Doesn't Know - And Why It Matters

Authored by Richard Porter via RealClearPolitics,

Artificial intelligence has taken the wired world by storm, but the backlash came almost as fast. Progressives complain of job losses, environmentalists question the ecological impacts of huge data centers, and local activists are clamoring for assurances that household utility bills won’t skyrocket because of the centers’ voracious electricity requirements. Others simply worry that the technology will overwhelm humans’ ability to control it.



At least in part, these reactions stem from the overselling of AI.

AI is super cool, but it’s not superhuman nor is it super intelligent. AI is simply very fast processing of vast amounts of data.

Intelligence, knowledge, understanding and wisdom are all different concepts; the distinction between them elucidates the scope and limits of both human and electronic “intelligence.”

Intelligence is the ability to process information into an internally coherent framework that’s useful and adds or detracts from knowledge to the extent it is more or less accurate. Knowledge is the accumulation of information organized into coherent frames or models that help us understand. Understanding is awareness of the significance, purpose, or meaning of accumulated knowledge.

And wisdom is judgment seasoned by experience and the awareness that intelligence, knowledge, and understanding are limited, inherently flawed, and useful only to the extent they advance a worthwhile purpose.

Nearly 2,500 years ago, the Oracle of Delphi reportedly declared that no man was wiser than Socrates. Socrates claimed to be stunned by this because he was keenly aware of how much he didn’t know. But after talking to others widely acclaimed to be knowledgeable, such as the leading politicians, poets, philosophers, and artisans of his day, he discerned this Delphic wisdom: Those claiming knowledge were ignorant of their own ignorance, whereas Socrates knew he knew nothing.

For this insight, Socrates was put to death for impiety and corrupting the youth of Athens, thereby proving for all time both the foolishness of his accusers’ certainty and the wisdom of Socratic questioning.

This bears repeating today, as we enter the Age of Artificial Intelligence: it’s wise to question the “intelligence” of machines, the “knowledge” they propagate, and our understanding of the significance and limits of the technology.

AI models are amazing and useful despite being incomprehensible to most of us, but AI is not infallible. AI will expand human knowledge and understanding of the world only if and to the extent that human users are encouraged to question AI results, processes, and functions.

People make mistakes, as do the people making and training the machines. Still, people tend to trust machines more than people, especially with respect to processing information that’s harder to process. For example, tennis players have more faith in electronic line calls over human line calls, although that faith in the new technology has been shaken by errors, such as when ball marks are inconsistent with the electronic line calls.

As AI use spreads, people will increasingly rely on AI and trust its results for routine tasks (like Google searches), while most people remain more skeptical of AI results for more complex tasks and do not trust AI to act to handle certain tasks for its users without human intervention.

It’s wise to question AI’s results; errors are common even in routine searches.

Examples of AI errors, hallucinations and political bias are rife. A Northwestern University business school professor of my acquaintance recently asked ChatGPT for advice evaluating investment alternatives. ChatGPT recommended he invest in a particular fund and described in detail that fund’s returns, risks, and assets. When the professor went to invest in ChatGPT’s recommended fund, he discovered the fund did not actually exist; ChatGPT made it all up (a phenomenon commonly referred to as “AI hallucination”). 

Indeed, AI can screw up even mundane tasks: In my research for this piece, a Google AI summary ascribed quotes to Socrates that are not supported by any historical record.

Artificial intelligence – like human intelligence – is prone to error and is not always reliable, but that’s to be expected, especially in a fledgling technology. AI is artificial intelligence, not artificial knowledge, understanding, or wisdom.  AI is a processor, a very fast processor, that organizes and distills information – and organized information is easier to evaluate and use by humans than vast amounts of unorganized information.

Properly understood, AI supplements and does not replace human intelligence, knowledge, or understanding; plus, the limitations and faults within these amazing models remind us that human intelligence is limited, too. Human intelligence imperfectly organizes the imperfect data to which a human has access and frames data in a subjective, not an objective, manner.

Many of us expect the machines that humans make to have “better” intelligence than the intelligence of its human creators – more objective, more comprehensive, more insightful. This is a naïve hope. In one sense, it is “better.” AI organizes more information faster than humans can. But who do they think programmed the thing? Every AI model is regurgitating imperfect information collected, created, and input by imperfect, subjective human beings.

What to make of all this?

First, perhaps the math nerds creating AI are mistakenly training machines to handle information processing on human topics as if human topics are math problems with a specific answer.  Perhaps instead, machines should be trained to suggest questions to consider instead of answers to accept with respect to human inquiries relating to politics, economics, psychology, child rearing, crop science – the full range of arts, humanities, and social sciences.

Second, people training these machines should be explicit about the biases and perspectives being built into how the AI organizes, sorts, and frames information. (My own bias on this topic is that I believe American AI companies should be building AI with quintessentially American framing.) 

Third, AI creators should consider the political, regulatory, and legal risks of “overselling” what AI is and what it can do. For example, should AI creators anticipate a duty to warn users of shortcomings with AI’s results and/or disclaimers of warranties?

Fourth, AI creators need to consider improving the quality of data upon which the systems are being trained, recognizing that many online data sources intentionally mislead to advance political agendas. Perfectly “unbiased” information is impossible to obtain, but some information is more accurate and less biased than other information; trainers should exercise better judgement about data.

The creation of AI large language models is an incredible feat of engineering. It’s quite useful, and will soon be essential, but it is still a product of human invention. As such, we need to recognize that AI is ultimately just the latest, greatest – but still imperfect – implement invented and used by homo sapiens to make life better for homo sapiens.

Richard Porter is a member of the Board of Directors of the Alfa Institute, a platform for ideas, policy proposals and new technology integration pertaining to artificial intelligence

* * *



Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 21:45

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Last US Convoy Exits Syria After Brutal 14-Year Regime Change Proxy War
Last US Convoy Exits Syria After Brutal 14-Year Regime Change Proxy War

Widespread reports on Thursday say the very last US military convoy has finally departed Syrian territory, with the years-long occupation of the primarily northeast oil and gas rich sector over in a 'mission accomplished' fashion.

It brings to a final close the 14-year long bloody proxy war which overthrew the Assad government and ultimately installed a pro-US/Saudi axis puppet, in the person of founding Syrian Al Qaeda Abu Mohammad al-Jolani, now known as President Ahmed al-Sharaa.
via Le Monde

Hundreds of thousand of people lost their lives in the regime change war, with the country and its economy left in a sanction-starved and conflict-demolished state of ruins.

The US-backed Syrian Foreign Ministry declared Washington had decided to "complete its military mission" in the country. "The Syrian state is today fully capable of leading counter-terrorism efforts from within, in co-operation with the international community," it said, happy to now be back in control of the domestic oil and gas supply.

The ministry "welcomes the completed handover of military sites where United States forces were previously present in Syria to the Syrian government," adding that "the handover of these sites was carried out ... in full coordination between the Syrian and American governments."

While Pentagon propaganda had for years touted an 'anti-ISIS' mission, the real purpose of the troop presence was to cut off Damascus under Assad of its sovereign natural resources, and to arm and prop up a Kurdish-Arab coalition called the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF). 

All the while, the CIA supported Sunni hardline jihadists who were indistinguishable from ISIS in their ideology in the fight against the Syrian Army, and the civilian population which often largely supported the secular Ba'ath government. The broader strategy has long been to destroy the Tehran-Baghdad-Hezbollah 'Shia axis' - even if that meant using ISIS as a tool of regime change.

Ironically, in the process of this US handover of oil and gas facilities back to post-Assad Damascus, the Kurds were thrown under the bus. Their dream for an autonomous enclave (Rojava) once again proved illusory, and in the long term the Kurds will find themselves at the mercy of Sunni fanatics on the one hand, and Turkish state under Erdogan on the other.


The United States did not withdraw from Syria. The United States privatized Syria. The man President Trump installed as the sovereign face of the Hormuz bypass architecture was on the Specially Designated Global Terrorist list with a ten million dollar American bounty on his head… pic.twitter.com/mhmX7g2x6p
— Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡ (@shanaka86) April 16, 2026
Following the US withdrawal, Jolani regime troops moved into Qasrak Base in Hasakah Governorate in north-eastern Syria on Thursday. Earlier, in February, the US exited the Shaddadi in eastern Syria and Al-Tanf on the Syria–Jordan–Iraq border.

US Central Command (CENTCOM) confirmed the completion of the process for "turning over all of our major bases in Syria." But it also said US forces "continue to support partner-led counter-terrorism efforts."

* * *

Repositioning troops related to ongoing anti-Iran operations...


It seems that the US has ended its ground presence in Syria, which lasted for 12 years.
The last convoy has just rolled out of the Qasrak base in northeastern Syria and is now moving toward Jordan.
We all know what that means. pic.twitter.com/kUlk0r5zsf
— Chay Bowes (@BowesChay) April 16, 2026

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 22:10

ZeroHedge News
Open 
India's Central Bank Tells Oil Refiners To Stop Buying Dollars On Spot Market
India's Central Bank Tells Oil Refiners To Stop Buying Dollars On Spot Market

By Julianne Geiger of OilPrice.com

India’s central bank has told state-run oil refiners to stop buying dollars in the spot market and instead use a government-backed credit line.

That matters because oil is priced in dollars, and refiners are some of the biggest buyers of dollars in the country. When they all go into the market at once to pay for crude, it puts direct pressure on the rupee. That pressure has been building for weeks.

The Reserve Bank of India is now stepping in to manage the demand.



State refiners, including Indian Oil Corporation, Hindustan Petroleum Corporation, and Bharat Petroleum Corporation, have been asked to draw dollars through a special credit facility routed via State Bank of India. Together, these companies account for about half of India’s 5.2 million barrels per day of refining capacity.

Instead of going into the open market to buy dollars on the spot—meaning immediate purchase at current exchange rates—they can either access this credit line or buy dollars at a reference rate set by the central bank—potentially adding costs to India’s oil refiners.

The goal is simple: reduce visible demand for dollars in the market.

India’s currency has been under pressure. The rupee has fallen more than 3% this year and hit a record low past 95 per dollar in March, driven by higher oil prices and foreign capital outflows. Oil imports are a major factor. India imports the bulk of its crude, and every cargo requires dollar payments.

By centralizing those flows through SBI and shifting demand off the spot market, the RBI is trying to smooth out volatility and limit sharp moves in the currency.

The measures have been in place for about two weeks. Traders say activity from oil companies in the spot market has already slowed.

The move follows additional direction from India’s government in February, which asked refiners to consider buying more crude oil cargoes from the US and Venezuela, steering clear of Russian crude.

The central bank has also sold dollars from its reserves and tightened rules around certain currency trades. The rupee has since recovered about 2%, last trading near 93.20 per dollar.

For now, the strategy is focused on managing dollar demand at the source: oil imports

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 22:35

ZeroHedge News
Open 
US Navy Destroyer Shows Off New Launcher For Mystery Weapons
US Navy Destroyer Shows Off New Launcher For Mystery Weapons

The U.S. Navy has quietly equipped one of its Arleigh Burke-class destroyers with a previously unseen launcher, reflecting a broader effort to counter the growing threat posed by drones in contested maritime environments, according to TWZ.
USS Carl M. Launcher mounted on Levin (DDG 120) (U.S. Navy, VIRIN: 260329-M-FP389-1205)

A U.S. Marine Corps photograph released April 8, taken March 29 at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, shows the USS Carl M. Levin fitted with the system on its aft upper deck. The multi-cell launcher, positioned between the port-side torpedo tubes and the aft Mk 41 Vertical Launch System, was not visible in imagery of the ship as recently as December 2025, TWZ reported.

A Japanese-language defense blog first noted the addition on social media, prompting speculation that it may be designed for counter-unmanned aerial systems missions.


USS Carl M. Levin (DDG 120) got a new Hellfire/JAGM launcher improving C-UAS capability.
はてなブログに投稿しました
米海軍DDGへのC-UAS用Hellfire/JAGM発射機搭載 - OSINFO https://t.co/R8hyf4B6L6#はてなブログ
— おるか (@hone_hone_bone_) April 8, 2026
Similar launcher configurations appeared last year aboard the USS Bainbridge and USS Winston S. Churchill for Raytheon’s Coyote counter-drone interceptors, which have been used to engage low-cost aerial threats in the Red Sea and other regions, according to TWZ.

It remains unclear whether the system installed on the Levin is intended to deploy interceptors, loitering munitions, decoys or a combination of capabilities. Navy officials did not respond to requests for comment from TWZ.

The upgrade comes as President Donald Trump ordered the U.S. Navy to impose a naval blockade on Iranian ports beginning April 13. The operation, launched after the collapse of weekend talks in Islamabad, is aimed at interdicting maritime traffic to and from Iran, including along the Persian Gulf and Gulf of Oman, in an effort to increase economic pressure on Tehran. The blockade, applied across vessels of all nations, has contributed to volatility in global oil markets, with prices rising above $100 a barrel.

In the first 24 hours of the blockade, under direction from U.S. Central Command, no vessels succeeded in breaching the cordon, according to the Pentagon. Six merchant ships complied with instructions from U.S. forces and turned back to re-enter an Iranian port on the Gulf of Oman. More than 10,000 U.S. sailors, Marines and airmen, supported by more than a dozen warships and dozens of aircraft, are involved in the operation.


More than 10,000 U.S. Sailors, Marines, and Airmen along with over a dozen warships and dozens of aircraft are executing the mission to blockade ships entering and departing Iranian ports. During the first 24 hours, no ships made it past the U.S. blockade and 6 merchant vessels… pic.twitter.com/dpWAAknzQp
— U.S. Central Command (@CENTCOM) April 14, 2026
Trump has warned Iranian military ships against interfering with the blockade.

“Iran’s Navy is laying at the bottom of the sea, completely obliterated – 158 ships. What we have not hit are their small number of, what they call, ‘fast attack ships,’ because we did not consider them much of a threat,” the president wrote on Truth Social. “Warning: If any of these ships come anywhere close to our BLOCKADE, they will be immediately ELIMINATED.”

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 23:00

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Harry and Meghan meet Bondi shooting survivors
On the fourth day of their Australian visit, the royal couple pay tribute to the 15 people killed in the Bondi shooting.

Mail Online
Open 
Only in Australia! Bondi local wearing only budgie smugglers embraces Prince Harry on iconic Sydney beach
An enthusiastic fan wearing only budgie smugglers has cornered Prince Harry on Sydney's Bondi Beach.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Judge halts above-ground construction of Trump's White House ballroom
The judge allows the underground bunker portion of the project to proceed, while the US president says the ballroom "is needed now".

Techdirt
Open 
Rockstar On Latest Potential Hack & Information Leak: Meh, We Don’t Care
Several years ago, Rockstar Games suffered an intrusion into its corporate network. During that intrusion, a trove of data, files, and information about the in-development and unfinished Grand Theft Auto 6 game was exfiltrated. Under monetary threat of that data leaking, Rockstar completely lost its mind and went on a DMCA takedown campaign to try […]

Deutsche Welle
Open 
IMF, World Bank restore relations with Venezuela
The IMF and World Bank have resumed formal engagement with Venezuela. The move further legitimizes the Latin American country's interim government and paves the way for financial support.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Prince Harry and Meghan meet with survivors of Bondi terror attack
Duke and Duchess of Sussex also met with emergency workers and Sydney Jewish Museum representatives on final day of Australia tripFollow our Australia news live blog for latest updatesGet our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcastPrince Harry and Meghan have met survivors of the Bondi beach terror attack as they wind up their Australian tour.The Duke and Duchess of Sussex are wrapping up their trip on Friday, making the most of the autumn sun with a Sydney Harbour boat ride alongside Invictus Australia representatives, before attending a Super Rugby Pacific match. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Australia's most decorated living soldier granted bail over war crime charges
Lawyers argued that Ben Roberts-Smith wouldn't be able to defend himself properly from prison.

Mail Online
Open 
Meghan and Harry are escorted to a cruise on Sydney Harbour by NSW Police - after photos prove how YOU paid for HER to take a morning coastal walk
Follow Daily Mail's live coverage here.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ben Roberts-Smith granted bail after being charged with five counts of war crime murder
Former SAS soldier to be released from Silverwater prison ahead of possible trial on charges relating to alleged killing of civilians in AfghanistanFollow our Australia news live blog for latest updatesGet our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcastBen Roberts-Smith has been granted bail under strict conditions while he awaits a possible trial on five counts of war crime murder.Roberts-Smith made a bail application before Judge Greg Grogin in Sydney’s Downing Centre local court on Friday morning. Continue reading...

The Register
Open 
IPv6 carried half of internet traffic – for one day, according to Google
We're not half way there, we're still livin' on a prayer IPv6 carried half of global traffic for a single day in March, according to Google.…

Mail Online
Open 
Airline worker who shared photos of Dubai bomb damage on his private WhatsApp is lured to meeting and arrested by authorities after they secretly snooped through his messages
Authorities accessed a closed chat between colleagues, downloaded evidence and then lured the man to a meeting and arrested him.

Sky News Home
Open 
Bank robbers hold 25 hostage - and use sewer to flee with loot
Armed robbers have targeted a bank in the Italian city of Naples - holding 25 people hostage before escaping through a tunnel.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Major refinery fire won't lead to fuel rationing, Australian PM says
A 13-hour blaze at one of Australia's two oil refineries could impact petrol prices and supply.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ben Roberts-Smith granted bail after being charged with five counts of war crime murder
Former SAS soldier to be released from Silverwater prison ahead of possible trial on charges relating to alleged killing of civilians in AfghanistanFollow our Australia news live blog for latest updatesGet our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcastBen Roberts-Smith has been granted bail under strict conditions while he awaits a possible trial on five counts of war crime murder.Roberts-Smith made a bail application before Judge Greg Grogin in Sydney’s Downing Centre local court Friday morning. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Meghan and Harry thrill Bondi crowds - as pics prove how YOU paid for HER to do iconic coastal walk
Follow Daily Mail's live coverage here.

Mail Online
Open 
BRIAN VINER: Jude Law is thrilling in the story of Putin's monstrous rise to power
Jude Law wasn't always an obvious choice to play bellicose, blood-soaked tyrants...

TechRadar News
Open 
I test coffee machines for a living and I can't recommend this De'Longhi model at half price highly enough

TechRadar News
Open 
Hacks season 5 episode 2 has the most hilarious Handmaid's Tale cameo possible — and it'll make you think of spinoff The Testaments in an entirely different way

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Department of Justice investigating Eric Swalwell amid sexual assault allegations
Democratic representative from California has suspended gubernatorial campaign and resigned from CongressThe US Department of Justice (DoJ) has opened an investigation into Eric Swalwell following his resignation from Congress, according to a source familiar with the matter.The news of a federal investigation comes days after the Democratic representative from California stepped down due to multiple allegations of sexual misconduct. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
UK Tory MP who defected to Reform advises One Nation in Australian byelection campaign
Former MP Tom Hunt has been working for Pauline Hanson’s party in the seat of Farrer, where One Nation hopes for a game-changing breakthroughOne Nation has recruited a former UK Tory MP who is now a member of Nigel Farage’s populist right-wing party Reform to help its campaign in the upcoming Farrer byelection.Tom Hunt, the Conservative MP for the UK seat of Ipswich for five years until 2024, has been advising on the rightwing party’s social media strategy for the byelection after a stint in the South Australian state election. Continue reading...

The Hill
Open 
Trump defends economic policies, casts aside 'fake inflation' amid Iran war
President Trump defended his administration’s economic policies at an event in Las Vegas on Thursday amid rising energy costs resulting from the U.S.’s conflict with Iran. Trump cast doubt on a recent Labor Department report that showed a 0.9-point hike in inflation last month. This was the highest consumer price spike in nearly four years,...

The Hill
Open 
Trump claims Mamdani is 'destroying New York' with proposed second-home tax
President Trump claimed that New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani (D) is “destroying” the city with his new proposed tax on second homes — perhaps his most direct criticism of the Big Apple's leader since their two friendly White House meetings months ago.  The president responded to the mayor’s plan in a Thursday post on...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
'I was tortured and lost my hand' - one student's struggle to get an education in Nigeria
The BBC speaks to a student who pushed for his his toe print to be taken to verify his identity.

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
Contractor gets prison time for parts scheme involving military aircraft and weapons
A Florida business owner was sentenced to 24 months in federal prison on Thursday for orchestrating a scheme to supply nonconforming, substandard parts to the United States Department of War.

ZDNet News
Open 
Amazon just slashed $250 off the Google Pixel 10 - and a Prime subscription isn't required
The Google Pixel 10 has dropped to $549, offering flagship performance and a great camera system at a new low price.

ZDNet News
Open 
AI-powered website builders have come a long way - here's your best option in 2026
Last year, the best we could say about AI website builders is they had potential. This year, we found some that can actually do the job.

ZDNet News
Open 
I traded my Sonos Era 300 for Denon's new home speaker - and see no reason to go back
The Denon Home 400 is a worthy competitor to Sonos' Era 300, with upgraded hardware, software, and a fresh look.

The Right Scoop
Open 
BREAKING: ICE Director resigning
The Director of ICE, Todd Lyons, has decided to resign from his position at the end of next month. This has been confirmed by DHS Secretary Mullin: DHS Secretary Mullin confirms Lyons . . .

The Right Scoop
Open 
HAHA: Trump goes all in against Joe Kent
Trump went all in tonight against Joe Kent, calling him a LOSER like Tucker Carlson, Megyn Kelly, Candace Owens. Here’s what Trump had to say: Who’s dumber, Tucker Carlson or Joe Kent? . . .

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Trump's Lebanon ceasefire takes Israel by surprise
Few Israelis see this truce as a way out of the conflict with Hezbollah, the BBC's Lucy Williamson writes.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Artemis commander tells BBC about 'powerful' moment crater named after his late wife
Reid Wiseman’s two daughters were in Nasa’s mission control room for the naming of the “Carroll” crater in honour of the commander’s late wife.

Ars Technica
Open 
Lucasfilm drops The Mandalorian and Grogu final trailer at CinemaCon

Mail Online
Open 
ALISON BOSHOFF: That's not very rock 'n' roll... Jerry Hall's 70th birthday bash ends at 6pm - while Meghan Markle's photos vanish...
Her famous ex, Mick Jagger, sang Let's Spend The Night Together - but Jerry Hall is planning to do no such thing for her upcoming landmark 70th birthday in July.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ben Roberts-Smith on ‘cusp’ of moving overseas when he was arrested, court told in bail hearing
Former SAS soldier charged with five counts of war crime murder to learn whether he will be be released from Silverwater prisonFollow our Australia news live blog for latest updatesGet our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcastBen Roberts-Smith was planning to move overseas – and had not told authorities investigating him – when he was arrested at Sydney airport last week, a Sydney court has heard.Roberts-Smith made a bail application before Judge Greg Grogin in Downing Centre local court Friday morning. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Zohran Mamdani still making money from fleeting rap career, filings show
New York mayor, ‘C-list rapper’ who went by Mr Cardamon and Young Cardamon, collected $1,643 in royalties last yearThe New York mayor Zohran Mamdani is still making money from his short-lived career as a multilingual rapper, tax filings show.But the 34-year-old Democrat’s meteoric rise as a celebrity politician has brought only a modest increase in hip-hop profits: he took home $1,643 in music royalties last year, up only slightly from $1,267 in 2024, according to the filings. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Progressive Democrat Analilia Mejia wins special election for New Jersey House seat in a landslide – US politics live
Mejia was endorsed by Elizabeth Warren and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and was the only candidate in the Democratic primary to call Israel’s actions during the war in Gaza a genocideSign up for the Breaking News US emailChairman of the joint chiefs of staff Dan Caine says the US military remains ready to re-engage in combat “at literally a moment’s notice”.He says the blockade covers Iran’s ports and coastlines and applies to all ships, regardless of which flag they are sailing under. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ukraine war briefing: €90bn EU loan for Ukraine to be released in second quarter
EU economy commissioner says Iran war is feeding Russia’s war machine; Trump condemns massive strikes on Ukraine. What we know on day 1,513The EU expects to start releasing a new €90bn loan to Ukraine in the second quarter, the bloc’s economy chief told AFP on Thursday. The EU’s economy commissioner, Valdis Dombrovskis, was speaking on the sidelines of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank’s spring meetings, which brought finance ministers, central bankers and other leaders to Washington. “Our support for Ukraine, also continued pressure and sanctions against aggressor Russia was very much part of the agenda,” Dombrovskis said. He warned that Moscow was “emerging as a winner from this war in Iran, because it provides windfall profits to feed Russia’s war machine”.Russia hammered civilian areas across Ukraine with drones and missiles on Thursday, killing at least 17 people and wounding more than 100 others in the worst aerial attack in weeks, Ukrainian authorities said. Nearly 700 drones and dozens of ballistic and cruise missiles were used, as Ukrainian officials said vital stocks of advanced interceptors were running low.Donald Trump on Thursday condemned a massive Russian drone and missile attack across Ukraine that ripped through apartment buildings in the capital, Kyiv. Asked by reporters at the White House for his reaction to the barrage, Trump said: “I think it’s terrible.”It is not in the interest of the US that Russia is the winner of the Iran war, the German vice chancellor, Lars Klingbeil, said on Thursday in Washington. “It’s not in our interest and it cannot be in the interest of the United States,” he said in a joint statement with the finance ministers of Ukraine and Norway on the sidelines of the IMF spring meetings. Klingbeil said the Russian economy was growing thanks to the Middle East conflict and the country was profitting from the energy situation. As the conflict in the Middle East dominated the gathering of finance officials at the IMF in Washington, the ministers of Norway, Germany and Ukraine spoke about not forgetting to support Ukraine in its defence against Russia. “All the meetings here are about the question of what’s happening with the war in Iran, and I think it’s really important we show solidarity with our friends in Ukraine,” Klingbeil said.The heads of the EU and Nato on Thursday discussed efforts to bolster Europe’s arms production, as Donald Trump threw doubt on Washington’s commitment to the transatlantic alliance. “We need to invest more, to produce more and to do both faster,” the European Commission’s president, Ursula von der Leyen, posted online after meeting Nato’s chief, Mark Rutte. European nations are scrambling to bolster their militaries in the face of Russia’s war on Ukraine and pressure from Trump. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Iran footballers granted asylum in Australia vow to continue chasing sporting dream
Former Iranian women’s team players ‘overwhelmed’ by supportRamezanisadeh and Pasandideh have trained with Brisbane RoarThe two members of the Iran football team who remained in Australia after the Women’s Asian Cup are beginning their new lives away from the spotlight, even if their dream is to return to elite football.Fatemeh Pasandideh and Atefeh Ramezanisadeh issued a statement on Friday saying they “respectfully ask” for “privacy and space”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: UN chief calls for Israel-Lebanon ceasefire to be ‘fully’ respected as it comes into effect
António Guterres welcomes truce and says through spokesperson he hopes halt in fighting will ‘pave the way for negotiations’Trump announces 10-day ceasefire in Lebanon after ‘excellent conversations’Iran has stopped all petrochemical exports to prioritise domestic supply and prevent shortages of raw materials, Reuters reported.The state-owned National Petrochemical Company ordered firms to suspend exports until further notice. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Singer D4vd arrested in connection with death of missing teen girl
The remains of 14-year-old Celeste Rivas Hernandez were found in the singer's car last year.

Russia Today News
Open 
Trump’s religion is ‘Israelism’ – Tucker Carlson (VIDEO)

BBC Technology News
Open 
Finance ministers and top bankers raise serious concerns about Mythos AI model
Experts say Mythos potentially has an unprecedented ability to identify and exploit cybersecurity weaknesses.

Mail Online
Open 
CHRISTOPHER STEVENS: Sadly, this Bergerac reboot has lost much of the show's original magic
Let's put a stop to this right now. There's a growing trend in crime TV to put the opening credits anywhere but the beginning. It's getting silly.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Singer D4vd arrested in connection to death of missing teen girl
The remains of 14-year-old Celeste Rivas Hernandez were found in the singer's car last year.

Mail Online
Open 
Sarah Ferguson is seen for the first time in months 'at a luxury ski resort in Austria'
The 66-year-old, who was stripped of her Duchess of York title last year in the wake of her links to Jeffrey Epstein, has been pictured for the first time.

CNET News
Open 
Roblox Will Pay $12 Million to Settle Nevada Child Safety Lawsuit
The deal with the Nevada attorney general will require Roblox to have stricter safeguards to protect children online.

BBC Technology News
Open 
Tech Life
Can pedestrians, runners and cyclists safely share the road with self-driving vehicles?

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Singer D4vd arrested in connection to death of teen girl
The remains of 14-year-old Celeste Rivas Hernandez were found in the singer's car last year.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Iranian footballers say Australia has given them 'hope' for safe future
The duo had sought aslyum after their football team did not sing the national anthem during a match.

Mail Online
Open 
Nepo baby of Oscar nominee and Grammy winner makes rare red carpet appearance - who is he?
The 14-year-old was on hand to support his famous mom at a star-studded event held in Los Angeles this week

WikiNews
Open 
United States announces blockade on the Strait of Hormuz
Wednesday, April 15, 2026
 


Politics and conflicts

Related articles

US president Donald Trump demands the unconditional surrender of Iran
PM of Australia sends E-7A Wedgetail and air-to-air missiles to UAE
US President Donald Trump appears to wear makeup after apparent rash breaks out on neck, reports say
Green Party wins major by-election in northern England city of Manchester
White House deletes Truth Social post portraying Obamas as apes

Read more

All articles in category


Map depicting the Strait of Hormuz. Image: Goran_tek-en.
On Sunday, United States President Donald Trump announced on Truth Social that the US is imposing a blockade on the Strait of Hormuz. According to Trump, the blockade was in effect as of 10:00 a.m. Eastern Time (1400 UTC).
The blockade was imposed following the collapse of talks held in Islamabad between the United States and Iran.
"Effective immediately, the United States Navy, the finest in the world, will be BLOCKADING any and all ships trying to enter, or leave, the Strait of Hormuz," Trump declared.
According to The Guardian, oil prices briefly rose above US$100 a barrel following news of the blockade, before easing back to just over US$99; gas prices also increased.
Iranian parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf posted on X to "Enjoy the current pump figures. With the so-called 'blockade', soon you'll be nostalgic for $4–$5 gas." He further stated that Iran would respond in kind to both escalation and diplomacy, warning that it would "fight" if confronted militarily but would "deal with logic" if approached constructively.
China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs expressed hope that the ceasefire would remain stable, stating that Beijing is willing to cooperate with all parties to "guarantee the uninterrupted flow of energy supplies," and that stability in the Strait of Hormuz is critically important to China.




Have an opinion on this story? Share it!


Sources[edit]
Julia Kollewe. Oil price tops $100 a barrel after peace talks fail and Trump orders blockade — The Guardian, April 13, 2026
Lauren Edmonds, Huileng Tan, and Theron Mohamed. Oil surges past $100 a barrel after US-Iran peace talks fail and Trump threatens to blockade the Strait of Hormuz — Business Insider, April 13, 2026
'Enjoy it now:' Iran warns of painful oil price surge as Trump escalates blockade threat — The Times of India, April 13, 2026
China Reacts to Strait of Hormuz Blockade: Global Energy Security at Risk — IranWire, April 13, 2026.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-box{background-color:#FFFFFF;border:1.5px solid #a7d7f9;border-radius:9px;padding:4px 6px;width:36%}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-header{font-size:1.1em}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-header:after{content:"";display:block;width:60%;height:2px;background-color:#a7d7f9;margin-top:6px;margin-bottom:6px}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-buttons{display:flex;flex-wrap:wrap;justify-content:center;align-items:center}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-buttons .wn-social-bookmarks-btn{margin:2px}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn{display:inline-flex;justify-content:center;align-items:center;width:36px;height:36px;background-color:#e0e5ec;border:1px solid #dddddd;border-radius:3px;cursor:pointer;box-shadow:0 2px 5px rgba(0,0,0,0.05);transition:transform 0.15s ease,box-shadow 0.15s ease,background-color 0.15s ease,border-color 0.15s ease}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn:hover{transform:translateY(-2px);box-shadow:0 4px 8px rgba(0,0,0,0.14)}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn:active{transform:none;box-shadow:0 2px 4px rgba(0,0,0,0.08)}@media(max-width:768px){.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-box{width:100%;padding:10px 14px}}html.skin-theme-clientpref-night .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-box{background-color:#1a1b1d;border-color:#3b3f44}html.skin-theme-clientpref-night .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-header:after{background-color:#3b3f44}html.skin-theme-clientpref-night .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn{background-color:#2c2c2c;border-color:#444444;box-shadow:0 2px 5px rgba(0,0,0,0.2)}html.skin-theme-clientpref-night .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn:hover{background-color:#3a3a3a;box-shadow:0 4px 8px rgba(0,0,0,0.3)}html.skin-theme-clientpref-night .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn:active{box-shadow:0 2px 4px rgba(0,0,0,0.2)}@media(prefers-color-scheme:dark){html.skin-theme-clientpref-os .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-box{background-color:#1a1b1d;border-color:#3b3f44}html.skin-theme-clientpref-os .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-header:after{background-color:#3b3f44}html.skin-theme-clientpref-os .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn{background-color:#2c2c2c;border-color:#444444;box-shadow:0 2px 5px rgba(0,0,0,0.2)}html.skin-theme-clientpref-os .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn:hover{background-color:#3a3a3a;box-shadow:0 4px 8px rgba(0,0,0,0.3)}html.skin-theme-clientpref-os .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn:active{box-shadow:0 2px 4px rgba(0,0,0,0.2)}}.mw-parser-output #mw-customcollapsible-wn-extra{flex-basis:100%;display:flex;justify-content:center}.mw-parser-output #mw-customcollapsible-wn-extra .mw-collapsible-content{display:flex;flex-wrap:wrap;justify-content:center;align-items:center;margin-top:3px}







  Share this article

TechRadar News
Open 
The Pitt season 3 shock cast changes are unlikely to hit this fan favorite character — as star confirms they want to 'keep rolling until the wheels fall off'

Boing Boing
Open 
Toho's Oscar-winning Godzilla director returns to stomp New York
Ah, take that Toho Company Ltd. goodness and rub it all over my gums. Try as Hollywood might, they can't seem to get Godzilla right. After hundreds of millions of dollars in attempts, Japan's city-stomping kaiju gurus still reign supreme. Following Godzilla Minus One's Oscar win, Toho is back with Godzilla Minus Zero, and this time the big, green, wet machine is pissed off at America. — Read the rest
The post Toho's Oscar-winning Godzilla director returns to stomp New York appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Painters have been lying with mirrors for 600 years
In René Magritte's 1937 painting La Reproduction Interdite — roughly "depiction prohibited," or "depiction impossible" — a man stands before a mirror and sees the back of his own head.
Artists have been putting trick mirrors into paintings for about 600 years. — Read the rest
The post Painters have been lying with mirrors for 600 years appeared first on Boing Boing.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
The Papers: 'Starmer in peril' and 'Gunners hero dead'
Calls for PM to resign over Mandelson vetting and ex-Arsenal goalie's 'train horror' death leads the papers.

Mail Online
Open 
The hidden hand of Meghan's girls' trip: 'Mutual friend' who brokered the Duchess' $3,000-a-head retreat happening TODAY is unmasked on coastal walk - and his history as her most trusted confidant
The influential 'mutual friend' who brokered Meghan Markle's $3,000-a-head appearance at a women's retreat in Sydney today has been pictured in the eastern suburbs.

Mail Online
Open 
Tourists warned over attempting to tackle Scottish Highland's 'most dangerous' trail after ultra-marathon runner's death
Following the death of ultra-marathoner David Parrish during a world-record attempt, hikers are being warned to weigh the risks of the perilous 234-mile Cape Wrath Trail in the Scottish Highlands.

Mail Online
Open 
Police investigate whether Iran is behind London firebomb attacks on Jewish community
Experts fear that criminal proxies may have carried out three separate arson attacks on behalf of the foreign state.

Mail Online
Open 
Charlotte Crosby stuns in a brown polka dot mini dress as she attends star-studded Michael screening
Charlotte Crosby looked stunning as she attended the star-studded Michael screening in London on Thursday. 

Mail Online
Open 
UFO-linked scientist who warned 'my life is in danger' before she was found dead at 34 becomes ELEVENTH mysterious case
A young scientist tied to America's most secretive projects warned she was being targeted before being found dead in 2022, as a dark pattern surrounding space and nuclear secrets grows.

Mail Online
Open 
Singer D4vd arrested for murder of Celeste Rivas, 14, after teen's dismembered body was found in trunk of his Tesla
Singer D4vd has been arrested for the murder of 14-year-old Celeste Rivas, the Los Angeles Police Department has confirmed on Thursday.

Mail Online
Open 
Heartbroken lobster died of loneliness days after animal rights activist 'liberated' his tankmate into the sea
Eco-warrior Emma Smart, 47, who attempted to 'liberate' a lobster by flinging it into the sea has been blamed for a second tragedy - after the creature's tankmate died of loneliness shortly after.

Sky News Home
Open 
Trump's oil blockade is bringing Cuba to its knees
At the start of this year, Donald Trump ordered the capture and removal of Venezuela's president Nicolas Maduro - he's now facing a trial in New York.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Progressive Democrat Analilia Mejia wins New Jersey special election for US House seat – US politics live
Mejia was endorsed by Elizabeth Warren and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and was the only candidate in the Democratic primary to call Israel’s actions during the war in Gaza a genocideSign up for the Breaking News US emailChairman of the joint chiefs of staff Dan Caine says the US military remains ready to re-engage in combat “at literally a moment’s notice”.He says the blockade covers Iran’s ports and coastlines and applies to all ships, regardless of which flag they are sailing under. Continue reading...

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Trump Says 'Probably, Maybe' Iran Talks To Resume This Weekend, 'Not Sure' About Ceasefire Extension
Trump Says 'Probably, Maybe' Iran Talks To Resume This Weekend, 'Not Sure' About Ceasefire Extension

Summary


Trump says "probably, maybe" Iran talks resume this weekend, "not sure" about ceasefire extension. Iranian report (unconfirmed) says Bab al-Mandab could be forced close tomorrow.


Trump unveils 10-day Lebanon ceasefire, but which Hezbollah has not signed on for, amid heavy IDF attacks on south. BBG reports on potential 6-month timeframe for comprehensive Iran deal, oil spikes.


Iran seeks to boost rial through toll payment scheme; vessels pay Hormuz passage through Iranian banks.


US Navy: vessels seeking entry into Hormuz Strait now fair game for boarding, search, and outright seizure - including for suspicion of 'contraband'.


Hegseth: US forces are ready to restart combat if Iran doesn’t agree to a deal & strait blockade to continue for as long as it takes. Already 14 ships have been turned around.




//-->

//-->

//-->


Trump announces end of military operations against Iran by May 31st?
Yes 70% · No 31%View full market & trade on Polymarket *  *  *



Trump Still Signals Ambiguity on Peace/Ceasefire Potential

President Trump appeared to confirm ceasefire talks with Iran are still very up in the air, saying that he also doesn't see the need to extend the current two-week ceasefire - "not sure," he said - also amid the going US naval blockade of Iranian-China oil exports, or other sanctioned vessels. With no extension, the ceasefire will expire on April 22.

"If there's no deal fighting resumes," Trump affirmed in fielding reporters' questions. Importantly, talks and timeline are still a big maybe:


President Trump told reporters the next in-person talks negotiating a deal for Iran will "probably, maybe" happen this weekend. He didn't say where, and other U.S. officials haven't confirmed any details.


He took the opportunity in the same remarks to slam the Pope. "If the pope looked at the 42,000 people that were killed over the last two or three months, as a protester, with no weapons, no nothing," he claimed, using the same unsourced numbers he's lately been throwing around.  "I mean, you take a look at that, so I can disagree with the pope. I have a right to disagree. I have a right to disagree with the pope."

Unverified alarming reports of next targeted waterway:


Iran's Axios: Bab al Mandab might close soon... https://t.co/2lLUEUQ0Bz
— berggeit (@_berggeit_) April 16, 2026
The president added, "The pope can say what he wants. And I want him to say what he wants. But I can disagree. I think that Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon. If they do, the whole world would be in jeopardy, the Middle East would blow up and the whole world would be in jeopardy."

"This is the real world, it's a nasty world," he said. "But as far as the pope and saying what he wants, he can do that." 

Also, Iran agrees to hand over its enriched uranium(?)... there's nothing from Iran saying this:


"They've agreed to give us back the nuclear dust," Trump told reporters at the White House, using his name for the enriched uranium stockpile that the United States says could be used to build nuclear weapons. "There's a very good chance we're going to make a deal."


And on the newly declared Israel-Lebanon ceasefire, which does not include Hezbollah, Trump told reporters: "I responded to this call and agreed to a timeout, or rather a temporary ceasefire, of 10 days to try to advance the agreement that we began discussing with the ambassadors' meeting in Washington." He added: "For these peace talks, we have two fundamental demands: one, the disarmament of Hezbollah. Two, a sustainable peace agreement, peace from strength."


⚡️An hour before the ceasefire, Hezbollah rockets impact Nahariya pic.twitter.com/s83rPjOUfp
— War Monitor (@WarMonitors) April 16, 2026
Gulf, European officials See Needing 6 Months for Iran deal: BBG, Oil Spikes

A big headline out of Bloomberg has sent oil prices higher:


Some Gulf Arab and European leaders believe that a US-Iran peace deal will take about six months to be agreed and that the warring sides should extend their ceasefire to cover that timeframe, according to officials from the regions familiar with the matter.

The leaders want the vital Strait of Hormuz opened immediately to restore energy flows and are warning in private that a global food crisis may develop if that doesn’t happen by next month, said the officials, who asked not to be identified discussing private talks.


But important caveats remain: who are these "some" Gulf and "European leaders" - the latter who have remained far to the sidelines during this crisis, but who are yes still suffering the effects of the ultra-risky Operation Epic Fury Iran war gambit by Trump. Spike in crude...



Trump: Truce in Lebanon

President Trump has announced an apparent Lebanon breakthrough, announcing on Truth Social that Lebanon and Israel have agreed to a 10-day ceasefire. This just after on Thursday Israel launched at least 50 airstrikes in a matter of two hours on South Lebanon, according to national media. Israel says late Thursday its forces have no plans to withdraw ground troops from Southern Lebanon. Operations there look to continue, but presumably the ceasefire means Beirut might not be hit in the interim. 

This week, Rubio oversaw historic peace talks between Lebanese officials and the Israeli government; however, which did not include Hezbollah. Both Tehran and Hezbollah have insisted that the Lebanon conflict should be resolved through the Pakistan mediated US-Iran process. The Lebanese government has little actual sway over Hezbollah, the country's single most well-armed and influential paramilitary organization, which has more missiles and arms than even the national army. This means it remains a big unknown whether this 10-day truce will hold. Trump's Truth Social message, which claims he solved "9 wars across the world" and a "lasting peace":



Defiant Iran Reasserts Toll System: Paid Through Iranian Banks

An Iranian parliament official has been cited in newswires as saying the country's planned Strait of Hormuz toll for ships seeking to pass is to be paid through Iranian banks. Previously it was said to be through cryptocurrency, and could be as a high as $2 million Oil rose higher, given this is another indicator this game of chicken in the narrow waterway could soon lead to fresh hostilities, despite the 2-week ceasefire still being in place, soon to expire.

As for negotiations, there's optimism another round of US-Iran talks will occur, with both sides having agreed in principle, but Iran's government informed Pakistan that the US must back off its maximal demands.


Reuters: U.S. and Iranian negotiators have scaled back ambitions for a comprehensive peace deal and are instead seeking a temporary memorandum to prevent a return ​to conflict, two Iranian sources told Reuters.


Below is a machine translation from the Persian of the fresh parliament statement via state-linked ISNA:

The plan to consolidate Iran's sovereignty in the Strait of Hormuz is being framed as a way to strengthen the rial.
Iran is seeking a regulatory role in the Strait of Hormuz - one of the world’s most sensitive chokepoints -positioning it as oversight, not disruption or blackmail.
Under the plan, foreign ships would settle accounts through offices in Iran or via the Iranian banking system, a move aimed at boosting the rial.
Estimated current revenue from managing and regulating maritime traffic in the Strait of Hormuz: $10-15 billion.
Boarding, Search, & Outright Seizure

Ships seeking to enter the Hormuz Strait already sanctioned by the US just got a lot more vulnerable: under Washington’s blockade of Iranian ports, they're now fair game for boarding, search, and outright seizure, per US Naval Forces Central Command.

"In addition to enforcing the blockade, all Iranian vessels, vessels with active OFAC sanctions, and vessels suspected of carrying contraband, are subject to belligerent right to visit and search," the notice said, referring to the Office of Foreign Assets Control. "These vessels, regardless of location, are subject to visit, board, search, and seizure."

The definition of "contraband" is broad and expansive. It spans weapons, ammunition, combat aircraft, and military electronics, WSJ has described. "Petroleum products and lubricants are conditional contraband due to their essential role in military operations and their contribution to Iran’s war-sustaining economy," the advisory also said. "Contraband is defined as goods that are destined for an enemy and that may be susceptible to use in armed conflict."
US Marine Corps image

Up until now, the blockade - initially rolled out Monday - was limited to ships moving in and out of Iranian ports, but the definition who can be targeted just widened. Meanwhile, US Central Command (CENTCOM) said Wednesday that in the first 48 hours, not a single ship made it past the blockade.

Hormuz Blockade: 'As Long As It Takes'

The US will maintain a naval blockade of Iran for as long as it takes, Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth has stated in a press briefing Thursday. He and Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Dan Caine say that US forces are ready to resume major combat operations at a moment's notice, which suggests the initial two-week ceasefire could get extended, as was widely reported the day prior. But this also suggests that Washington likely has no appetite for resuming major aerial operations directly against Iran anytime soon.


General Caine:
At each point, the United States Navy will transmit a warning—a young sailor, normally on the bridge of one of those destroyers. A junior officer picks up that mic and transmits, and I quote:
"Do not attempt to breach the blockade.
Vessels will be boarded for… pic.twitter.com/VT6LvPBUnT
— Clash Report (@clashreport) April 16, 2026
On the question of resumption of major combat operations, Hegseth warned: "To Iran, choose wisely. I pray you choose a deal which is within your grasp for the betterment of your people and the betterment of the world." He followed with, "In the meantime, the War Department is locked and loaded." Additional main highlights to the Hegseth/Caine update and presser:

Iran likes to say it controls Strait of Hormuz but it has no navy
Energy industry not destroyed 'yet', US blockade shutting down exports
For as long as it takes, we will maintain blockade
Launching operation 'economic fury'
Iran is digging out bombed out launchers
I hope you choose a deal which is within your grasp
But again, the chief takeaway is that the Pentagon and Trump administration are making clear that US forces are ready to restart combat if Iran doesn't agree to a deal. On that front, US officials say future talks are likely to be held again in Pakistan’s capital, Islamabad. Prior reports have indicated both sides have "agreed in principle" to engage in another round of talks.

Iran's PressTV touting ability to inflict global economic pain...


International Monetary Fund’s chief economist says that growth is expected to slow this year amid repercussions from the war against Iran and disruptions to global oil and gas trade.
Follow Press TV on Telegram: https://t.co/LWoNSpkc2J pic.twitter.com/ZAty9htTov
— Press TV 🔻 (@PressTV) April 15, 2026
Pentagon: 13 Ships Turned Around

Since the blockade went live, US forces have already turned around 13 ships, according to Gen. Caine in the same briefing. He underscored how far this reach extends, saying operations will take place "inside Iran's territorial seas and in international waters."

Officially, the Pentagon claims the blockade is limited - targeting Iran’s ports and coastal areas while sparing vessels simply passing through the Strait of Hormuz. In practice, however, the net is touted as much wider, as US forces "will actively pursue any Iranian-flagged vessel or any vessel attempting to provide material support to Iran," including so-called "dark fleet vessels carrying Iranian oil," Caine added.

He confirmed that more than 10,000 service members are now involved in the blockade, but with more US servicemembers en route to the region.

Lebanon Still Bombed Heavily by Israel amid US Ceasefire Efforts

Israeli jets pounded Nabatiyeh in southern Lebanon Thursday, unleashing one of the heaviest barrages there since the war began and sending black smoke billowing over the region. Strikes hit near the industrial zone and a supermarket on Nabih Berri Avenue, with nearby suburbs also taking damage, according to Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency.

Iran has signaled urgency on de-escalation, with parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf calling ceasefire in Lebanon "as important as a ceasefire in Iran." He described, "In the Islamabad negotiations and afterwards, we have been seriously pursuing efforts to compel the adversaries to establish a permanent ceasefire in all areas of conflict." Pakistan's army chief is in Tehran mediating between Washington and Tehran.


⚡#BREAKING Lebanese President Joseph Aoun said in a conversation with US Secretary of State Marco: "I am not willing to talk to Netanyahu"
— War Monitor (@WarMonitors) April 16, 2026
Lebanon's leadership is in th emeantime framing any truce as a gateway to talks, despite Hezbollah having rejected direct talks with Israel. The ceasefire it is "demanding with Israel" would be a "natural entry point for direct negotiations," President Aoun said, adding: "Lebanon is keen to halt the escalation… so that the targeting of the innocents ceases, and the destruction of homes" stops.

Destruction of Al-Qasimia Bridge in Southern Lebanon


جسر القاسمية pic.twitter.com/u39LVosxnF
— Lebanon 24 (@Lebanon24) April 16, 2026
He stressed negotiations "are to be undertaken by the Lebanese authorities alone," and said "the withdrawal of Israeli forces… is an essential step," alongside redeploying the army "up to the international borders" to "end any manifestation of armed presence."

And yet Israeli strikes are now hitting infrastructure. A key bridge over the Litani River near Qasmiyeh - linking Tyre and Sidon - was reportedly destroyed, though Israel said it only "struck adjacent to it." The broader campaign is cutting off southern Lebanon, targeting chiefly Hezbollah positions, Israeli officials have claimed.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 16:00

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Scientist Suggests Dark Matter Could Be Black Holes From A Different Universe
Scientist Suggests Dark Matter Could Be Black Holes From A Different Universe

Authored by Steve Watson via Modernity.news,

While the scientific establishment has spent decades chasing invisible particles that never quite show up, a leading cosmologist has dropped a theory that turns everything on its head: dark matter isn’t some exotic new particle. It could be ancient black holes that survived from an entirely different universe.



This idea, laid out by Professor Enrique Gaztanaga of the University of Portsmouth, doesn’t just tackle one cosmic puzzle. It offers a clean fix for the Big Bang’s thorniest problems and lines up with fresh observations that have astronomers scrambling.

Gaztanaga argues the elusive substance that makes up roughly 27 per cent of the universe’s mass may actually be “relic” black holes formed in a previous collapsing phase of the cosmos.


What is dark matter? Elusive substance could be made of black holes from a different UNIVERSE, scientist claims https://t.co/GdjXzdJ1Ee
— Daily Mail (@DailyMail) April 15, 2026
“The idea is that dark matter may not be a new particle, but instead a population of black holes formed in a previous collapsing phase and bounce of the Universe,” Professor Gaztanaga says.

He rejects the standard singularity model where everything explodes from an infinitely dense point that breaks physics. Instead, he proposes a “bouncing” universe.

“The Big Bang corresponds to a bounce from a previous collapsing phase, rather than the absolute beginning of everything,” the Professor Gaztanaga further noted, adding “So it is the start of the expansion we observe, but not necessarily the beginning of time itself.”

In this picture, black holes from the collapsing galaxies of that earlier universe survived the bounce and now drift through our cosmos, exerting gravity without emitting light.


We may have been wrong about wormholes.
Recent research challenges the popular notion that wormholes—hypothetical tunnels through spacetime enabling interstellar travel—are directly linked to the original Einstein-Rosen bridge. In 1935, Albert Einstein and Nathan Rosen… pic.twitter.com/ipm9RlXl54
— Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) January 16, 2026
“These ‘relic’ black holes would survive into the expanding phase we observe today and behave exactly like dark matter: they interact gravitationally, but do not emit light,” he explains.

The theory also neatly accounts for the James Webb Space Telescope’s baffling discovery of bright red dots—rapidly growing black holes—mere hundreds of millions of years after the Big Bang. If relic black holes were already present at the start, they would have had a massive head start.


A study of the fascinating galaxy system nicknamed "The Stingray" suggests that mysterious little red dots could be a phase in the evolution of galaxies powered by actively feeding black holes, rather than a distinct class of objects. https://t.co/FfKPDQVxl7
— Live Science (@LiveScience) April 9, 2026
It also sidesteps the need for new particles while explaining how supermassive black holes formed so quickly in the early universe.

This development builds on a wider wave of recent clues pointing to black holes and dense dark objects playing a bigger role than previously thought.

Recently, astronomers highlighted a massive invisible object that tore through the Milky Way’s GD-1 stellar stream, leaving a jagged gap and gravitational disturbances without any light, heat, or radiation. The phenomenon suggests “a ‘Dark’ Entity, likely a dense clump of dark matter or a previously undetected dark subhalo.”


BREAKING?: Astronomers have identified a massive, invisible object that recently tore through the Milky Way’s GD-1 stellar stream, leaving a jagged gap and creating significant gravitational disturbances without emitting light, heat, or radiation.
The Phenomenon suggests a… pic.twitter.com/cp2FQIrhTj
— Night Sky Today (@NightSkyToday) April 8, 2026
This phenomenon has been witnessed before.

Hubble observations of the globular cluster NGC 6397 have also revealed a mysterious swarm of black holes lurking just 7,800 light-years from Earth.


NEWS?: A mysterious swarm of black holes has been found lurking just 7,800 light-years away from Earth. pic.twitter.com/R8rH9m1ouF
— For all Curious (@fascinatingonX) April 10, 2026
For years the default dark matter story has been “trust us, it’s some particle we haven’t found yet.” Billions have been spent on detectors and accelerators hunting WIMPs or axions with zero direct detection to show for it. Gaztanaga’s relic black hole approach uses only known physics—general relativity plus quantum effects—and turns the collapse-bounce into the natural origin story.

Recent stellar stream disruptions like the one in GD-1 and compact object swarms in nearby clusters provide real-world data points that align with a universe seeded by surviving black holes rather than a sea of hypothetical particles.

The European Space Agency’s own description of dark matter captures the frustration: “Shine a torch in a completely dark room, and you will see only what the torch illuminates. That does not mean that the room around you does not exist.”

Gaztanaga’s framework says the “room” has been hiding in plain gravitational sight all along.

Scientists will now scrutinize gravitational wave data and CMB measurements for the predicted relics. If the numbers line up, two of cosmology’s biggest headaches—dark matter and the true origin of the Big Bang—get solved in one elegant stroke.

Your support is crucial in helping us defeat mass censorship. Please consider donating via Locals or check out our unique merch. Follow us on X @ModernityNews.

* * *



Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 17:45

ZeroHedge News
Open 
CBP Says It Seized More Than 60 Pounds Of Cocaine From US Citizen At Border
CBP Says It Seized More Than 60 Pounds Of Cocaine From US Citizen At Border

Authored by Troy Myers via The Epoch Times,

U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officers at the U.S.–Mexico border prevented more than 60 pounds of cocaine from entering the country, allegedly smuggled by an American citizen—a “trusted traveler”—the agency exclusively told The Epoch Times on Wednesday.



At California’s San Ysidro Port of Entry, a 25-year-old man was arrested on April 7 for allegedly concealing more than $1.1 million of the illegal narcotics within his vehicle and now faces federal prosecution.

The man was not named by CBP.

He was categorized as a “trusted traveler” because he was a participant in the Secure Electronic Network for Travelers Rapid Inspection program, the agency said. The program allows expedited passage into the United States for pre-approved, low-risk travelers. All applicants for the program undergo an extensive background check and an in-person interview prior to being enrolled.

Despite having qualified for expedited treatment, the man was referred for a secondary inspection while entering the United States.

“Trust, but verify,” the agency said.

Illegal narcotics hidden in the driver's vehicle doors are shown, at the San Ysidro Port of Entry on April 7, 2026. Border Patrol agents seized more than 60 pounds of cocaine from a U.S. citizen. U.S. Customs and Border Protection

During the secondary inspection, CBP said it used non-intrusive imaging technology that revealed “anomalies” within the doors of the driver’s 2020 Honda Civic. A canine team additionally alerted officers to the presence of narcotics.

According to CBP, officers discovered 20 packages containing 27.28 kilograms, or 60.14 pounds, of cocaine. The drugs, vehicle, and two cellphones were seized.

The driver was arrested and faces charges of narcotics importation and smuggling, CBP said.

“This arrest is a clear message that no one is above the law,” San Ysidro Port Director Mariza Marin said.

“We will hold everyone accountable for their actions, especially those who betray the trust of our traveler programs by attempting to smuggle dangerous narcotics.”

This latest encounter comes as the Trump administration delivered 11 straight months of zero releases at the southern border, while CBP is making increased illegal narcotics seizures across the country compared to a year prior.

Nationwide, CBP seized more than 65,000 pounds of drugs in March, which included 613 pounds of fentanyl. Compared to March 2024, that total amount is 27 percent higher.

Border Patrol agents seized more than 60 pounds of cocaine from a U.S. citizen. The illegal narcotics were hidden in the driver's vehicle doors, on April 7, 2026, at the San Ysidro Port of Entry. U.S. Customs and Border Protection

The agency said it has seized 24 percent more drugs this fiscal year through March than it did during the same time period for FY 2024.

Comparing similar figures extending into President Joe Biden’s administration, CBP seized 19 percent more illegal narcotics so far this fiscal year than it seized, on average, during the same period in each of the last four fiscal years, according to the agency.

To date in FY 2026, data showed CBP has seized a total of 341,000 pounds of drugs.

The agency counts all drug types, including cocaine, ecstasy, fentanyl, heroin, ketamine, khat, LSD, marijuana, methamphetamine, and other drugs. CBP also reports drug seizures from the southern border, northern border, coastal areas, and interior.

In February, CBP exclusively shared with The Epoch Times that it had prevented more than 660 pounds of methamphetamine, worth about $6 million, from illegally entering the United States. The drug bust came from a single commercial truck at the World Trade Bridge in Laredo, Texas.

Only days before that encounter and at the same Laredo entry point, federal officers seized 36 pounds of cocaine worth about half a million dollars. CBP said it was enough for 190,000 lethal doses.

A CBP spokesperson noted that the drug seizure metrics on its website do not include illegal narcotics seized from joint operations, such as the U.S. Coast Guard or local law enforcement, when another agency would take possession of the drugs.

“In addition to what Border Patrol and [the Office of Field Operations] has seized, which is above and beyond what has been seized in years prior, there’s also these additional activities that stop it before it even gets to the border,” the spokesperson previously told The Epoch Times.

* * *



Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 19:15

ZeroHedge News
Open 
IMF Warns Australia Set For One Of Highest Inflation Rates In Developed World
IMF Warns Australia Set For One Of Highest Inflation Rates In Developed World

Authored by Rex Widerstrom via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) says Australia is on track to have one of the highest inflation rates in the developed world.
Australian dollars coins in Melbourne, Australia, on April 4, 2024. AAP Image/Joel Carrett

In the latest edition of its World Economic Outlook, the global lender said economies around the world “face repercussions [from] the direct impact of higher commodity prices, indirect second-order effects on inflation expectations—which tend to be especially sensitive to energy and food prices—and amplification effects coming from [conservative] sentiment in financial markets.”

While the global economy had withstood “a series of shocks, yet another one—this time a military conflict engulfing the Middle East since the end of February—is testing this resilience,” the IMF warned.

It predicted that Australia’s GDP growth would remain flat this year at 2025’s level of 2.0 percent and would fall in 2027 to 1.7 percent.

Those figures are lower than previously projected, down from 2.1 percent for this year and 2.2 percent for next.

While that will be a consideration as Treasurer Jim Chalmers drafts his next budget for delivery on May 12, even more alarming is the forecast for inflation, with the consumer price index at 4.0 percent this year and 3.2 percent in 2027.

Those inflation figures exceed those of most advanced economies, including the United States (3.2 percent in 2026 and 2.1 in 2027), the UK (3.2 and 2.4), Germany (2.7 and 2.3), New Zealand (3.1 and 2.3), Japan (2.2 and 2.3),

Australia’s unemployment is also expected to be stubborn, at 4.2 and 4.3 percent respectively.

IMF Calls for Less State Intervention in Economy

Prior to the outbreak of the Iran War the IMF had intended to revise its growth forecasts upwards, but the closure of the Strait of Hormuz and attacks on oil and gas facilities reversed the positive momentum and raised the prospect of a major energy crisis, according to IMF chief economist Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas in a press briefing.

Under a “severe” scenario, in which an extended conflict results in greater damage to energy infrastructure, global growth would fall to 2 percent in 2026 and be perilously close to a global recession.

“What should we avoid?” Gourinchas asked.

“Price caps, subsidies, and similar interventions are popular, but they distort prices. They’re often poorly designed, hard to unwind, and extremely costly,” he said.

“Most countries don’t have that luxury anymore. Where support for the most vulnerable is needed, targeted and temporary measures should be deployed, consistent with medium‑term plans to rebuild fiscal buffers and avoiding stimulating demand where inflation is rising.”

Government Stimulus a Mistake: Experts

Two experts spoken to by the Epoch Times said they were unsurprised by the IMF’s forecasts.

While declining to offer his own forecast of GDP, John Quiggin, professor of economics at the University of Queensland, said he agreed that the Australian Labor government’s cut to fuel excise was “giving the wrong signals.”

“The only merit is that it is temporary,” he said. It is due to end in 3 months.

Graham Young, executive director of the Australian Institute for Progress, said the government was giving “a masterclass in how to repeat the 1970s and 80s and turn a price increase into an inflation increase.

“On its own, the oil price will redirect spending largely from non-essentials to fuel, but if the government tries to soften the hit, and they do that without corresponding savings somewhere else, then it will turn into inflation,” he explained.

He cautioned that further pressure on  inflation would occur if the Australian Council of Trade Unions is successful in its bid to increase the minimum wage by 5 percent without a corresponding rise in productivity.

“Wage increases without productivity increases are almost always inflationary first and deflationary second as they put businesses out of business, increase unemployment, and contract the economy,” Young said.

He recalled how interest rates were “probably not high enough to kill inflation” in 1975 and so were progressively raised until the peak in 1989/90.

“Our rates are better placed at the moment than in the 70s, but not by much,” he said.
Graph showing the relationship between the Consumer Price Index and home loan rates in Australia. Courtesy of Graham Young, of the Australian Institute for Progress

RBA Deputy Governor Andrew Hauser said, at a speaking event in the United States on April 14, that inflation expectations were rising in the short term, but remained anchored long term.

“Our estimate is that the supply capacity of the Australian economy at the moment probably can only grow at about 2 percent,” he told New York University guests.

“By the third or fourth quarter of last year, inflation began to pick up, and is now around 3.5 percent on core and nearer 4 on headline, which is too high.

“It’s obvious that inflation is going up in the short term, and people are very conscious of that. There’s not much monetary policy can do about that, other than prevent it from getting into long-term inflation expectations. The big question for us is what it’s going to do to [business] activity ... Those are the numbers we’re crunching through at the moment.”

Treasurer Jim Chalmers has left for Washington D.C., to discuss the economic crisis with international counterparts, including the UK’s Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves, and Chinese Finance Minister Lan Foan at the IMF-World Bank Spring Meetings.

The IMF report showed it was “a dangerous moment for the global economy,” Chalmers said. “We’re weighing all of this extreme uncertainty as we prepare a budget focused on resilience and reform.”

* * *



Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 20:05

ZeroHedge News
Open 
US Army Trials Unmanned Hunter Wolf Robot With Gun, Radar In Combat Drills
US Army Trials Unmanned Hunter Wolf Robot With Gun, Radar In Combat Drills

The U.S. Army is quietly putting armed robots through their paces alongside real soldiers - and new footage suggests these machines could soon be a regular sight on tomorrow’s battlefields.
Wolf-X robotic combat vehicle by HDT Global.Blade HDT

Fresh imagery dropped on Monday by the Defense Visual Information Distribution Service shows a Hunter Wolf unmanned ground vehicle rolling with the 101st Airborne Division during a full-on combat simulation at the Joint Readiness Training Center (JRTC) in Louisiana. The display amounted to a serious stress test in one of the Army’s roughest training environments - where ideas either prove they work or get ditched fast.

The Hunter Wolf’s appearance at JRTC marks a significant shift - as units aren’t just playing around with unmanned gear in isolated experiments anymore; they’re dropping it straight into realistic, chaotic scenarios. Elements of the 101st used the vehicle for logistics runs and security tasks throughout the exercise. Photos show it fitted with a remotely operated .50-caliber machine gun, which hints that the Army is testing it for more than just hauling supplies—it’s being eyed for actual tactical roles too.




 


 

 



 




View this post on Instagram


 



 

 

 



 

 



 

 

 




 

 


A post shared by HDT Global (@hdtglobal)


The Hunter Wolf was originally picked up under the Army’s Small Multipurpose Equipment Transport program to take some of the crushing load off soldiers’ backs. But at Fort Polk, they ran it with a remote weapon station and EchoShield radar, turning it into a rolling set of eyes and teeth. The combo lets a unit push sensors and firepower forward without putting troops in the open. The robot can scout ahead, scan for threats, and even lay down fire while the soldiers stay under cover.

At the same time, it still hauls the basics - ammo, water, batteries, comms gear - so small units can stay mobile and supplied across wide, contested spaces. In today’s fights, logistics and security are blurring together anyway. A robot that can do both fits right in.

Defense analyst Teoman S. Nicanci (Army Recognition Group) points out that the real story here is the Army choosing a high-intensity training rotation like JRTC instead of a safe, staged test. It shows they’re serious about folding this tech into actual formations and missions, not just checking boxes.

For units like the 101st, where speed and mobility are everything, these unmanned platforms help keep that edge without burning out the troops or exposing them unnecessarily. Future battles are going to be packed with drones, artillery, and precision strikes—anything that cuts risk while keeping the pressure on is worth its weight.

Bottom line: the Hunter Wolf isn’t science fiction anymore. The Army is learning, right now, how to weave robots into the fight so soldiers can move faster, hit harder, and come home safer.

h/t Interesting Engineering



Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 20:30

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Why The Crash Was Delayed
Why The Crash Was Delayed

Authored by Robert Aro via Mises Institute,

Whatever happened to the mother of all crashes that was supposed to arrive when the Federal Reserve began tightening its balance sheet back in 2022? For several years, I’ve been scratching my head, convinced that draining the balance sheet by trillions of dollars should have triggered a systemic banking failure or some other Black Swan event. In the past, crises like Lehman/AIG or the 2020 lockdowns took the blame, when in reality, the root cause was always monetary.

From the peak in June 2022 to the trough in December 2025, the asset side of the Fed’s balance sheet shrank by roughly $2.3 trillion. That was the front door. But through the back door, something else was happening on the liability side: the Fed’s Overnight Reverse Repo Facility (RRP) was releasing $2.5 trillion of previously frozen private liquidity back into the financial system. 



If Quantitative Tightening (QT) removed liquidity, the RRP added it back... plus interest.



To recap: during QT, the Fed allows its holdings of Treasury securities and mortgage-backed securities (MBS) to mature. Financial intermediaries repay the Fed, and the Fed literally deletes that money from the system. This is the classic setup that exposes malinvestments, stresses credit markets, and reveals the imbalances described in Austrian Business Cycle Theory. 

But this time it really was different because of the Reverse Repo Facility.

By mid-2023, the (March 2023) Silicon Valley Bank crisis had passed and the Fed’s Bank Term Funding Program was alive and well; then the hikes finally tapped out. Eventually, the 1-Month (4-Week) Market Yield on U.S. Treasuries outpaced the Fed’s RRP rate, and the incentive changed. Fund managers began a stampede out of the Fed’s facility and rotated into T-bills to chase a higher risk-free return.



In less than two years, the RRP withdrawals injected around $100 to $200 billion+ a month into the financial system at its peak. This was effectively a backdoor stimulus program that bypassed the Fed’s official QT narrative and funded the government’s deficit. Correlation does not equal causation, but it’s also not surprising that the Dow Jones broke out to new highs at almost the exact moment the RRP began to unwind.

The system was running on stored liquidity thanks to a giant buffer accumulated during the pandemic stimulus era. But as of 2026, that buffer is gone. The RRP liability has flatlined at essentially zero, meaning that the trillion-dollar offset to QT has been fully exhausted.

Perhaps it was no coincidence that once the RRP hit empty, the Fed’s tightening ended. On December 11, 2025, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York announced it would begin Reserve Management Purchases (RMP’s) at a pace of approximately $40 billion per month. While they use Fedspeak to avoid the term Quantitative Easing (QE), in reality, they’ve returned to official balance sheet expansion. They are being forced to replace the lost RRP liquidity with fresh money printing.

The math remains staggering. Since June 2022, the Fed was slashing its balance sheet by embarking on a QT narrative. The result? A net liquidity injection to the tune of $200 billion. And they called it “tightening.”

With the RRP buffer now empty, we are entering uncharted territory. The Fed’s $40 billion a month balance sheet expansion is several times less than what was entering the system via the RRP drain. Ironically, what the Fed hopes will act as QE might feel more like QT. We are about to find out just how long the system can survive a true monetary contraction.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 20:55

The Hill
Open 
Democrats hang on to New Jersey House seat left open by Sherrill
Democrat Analilia Mejia has won a House seat in New Jersey, according to Decision Desk HQ, succeeding now-Gov. Mikie Sherrill (D) and notching a win for progressives. Mejia, a top aide to Sen. Bernie Sanders’s (I-Vt.) 2020 presidential campaign, defeated Republican Joe Hathaway in the Thursday special election for the Garden State’s 11th Congressional District,...

ZDNet News
Open 
Get a free pair of Meta Ray-Bans with this Verizon Fios Home internet deal - how to redeem it
When you sign up for - or switch to - one of these Verizon Fios home internet plans, you'll get a pair of Meta Ray-Ban smart glasses absolutely free.

ZDNet News
Open 
These companies are actually upskilling their workers for AI - here's how they do it
Business leaders explain why they're still hiring for entry-level jobs, how they're investing in employees, and what's working so far.

ZDNet News
Open 
I found the apps slowing down my PC - how to kill the biggest memory hogs
'SysMain' was draining my computer's background memory. Here's how to find the biggest culprits behind your sluggish PC.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
South Korea's runaway wolf finally captured after nine-day search
The search has been marked by twists and turns, gripping South Korea and even inspiring a meme coin.

Mail Online
Open 
Here's to life... TV's 7 Up gang are turning 70 - and getting ready for their emotional finale
For decades, we watched as their lives unfolded alongside our own. Now, in what promises to be a tear-jerking finale, the 7 Up documentary series is coming to an end.

Mail Online
Open 
D4vd arrested for murder of Celeste Rivas, 14, after her dismembered body was found in his Tesla
Singer D4vd has been arrested for the murder of 14-year-old Celeste Rivas, the Los Angeles Police Department has confirmed on Thursday.

Mail Online
Open 
I'm A Celebrity's Seann Walsh becomes first star to be voted out after brutal move by campmate Harry Redknapp
I'm a Celebrity... South Africa star Seann Walsh has become the first celebrity to be voted out of camp during Thursday night's episode.

Mail Online
Open 
Millionaire's row residents celebrate after blocking neighbour's bid to chop down protected yew trees in garden of his £1.4m home
Peter Sykes had planned to tear down the 30-foot-high yew trees in his garden to make space for a new building and parking bays at the front of his house.

Mail Online
Open 
Travellers 'invade' council car park for the fourth time after bypassing £18,000 fence put up to stop them
Dozens of travellers arrived at the recreation ground in Sittingbourne, Kent, after allegedly removing a bollard from the ground to gain entry.

Mail Online
Open 
What happened to the heroes - and villains - of Chernobyl: 40 years after nuclear disaster, the fate of those involved, from fatal radiation sickness to years in a Soviet labour camp
April 26 will mark 40 years since the Chernobyl disaster, still recognised today as history's most devastating nuclear accident.

Mail Online
Open 
Victoria Beckham's fitness and skincare secrets revealed: From 'face ironing' to gruelling workout sessions - as she celebrates her 52nd birthday without son Brooklyn
She shot to fame in the mid-1990s as one-fifth of the Spice Girls.

Mail Online
Open 
Shannon Elizabeth's unconventional life after American Pie: How actress quit Hollywood to save rhinos in Africa and become a professional poker player - as she joins OnlyFans at 52
She shot to fame after playing exchange student Nadia in the 1999 comedy American Pie.

Mail Online
Open 
Why winning The Apprentice isn't all it's cracked up to be with stars facing financial woes and parting ways with Lord Sugar - as influencer Karishma Vijay nabs his £250k investment
This year marks the 20th series of The Apprentice, as once again 20 candidates enter Lord Alan Sugar's boardroom for the 'toughest 12 weeks of their life'. 

Mail Online
Open 
Inside the 'brilliant' deal that secured Meghan's MasterChef cameo - as she follows in the footsteps of Charles and Camilla to appear on the iconic Australian reality TV show
Meghan, Duchess of Sussex , was said to have pocketed up to $380,000 for her top-secret appearance on MasterChef Australia - but the truth is even more astounding.

Mail Online
Open 
Pictured: 'Kindest man', 73, who was 'punched and killed by teenager'
Jim Davis, aged 73, died last Friday night two days after a teenager allegedly punched him in his hometown of Cheltenham on Honeybourne Way.

Mail Online
Open 
Revealed: The guilty little secret behind more and more middle-class dinner parties
Farmfoods is Britain's second-biggest frozen food shop behind Iceland - yet many of us have never heard of it.

Mail Online
Open 
Famous Cotswold cottage visited by Kourtney Kardashian unveils £50,000 makeover
In the heart of Gloucestershire's Bourton-on-the-Water, a celebrity-approved holiday cottage has just been revamped.

Mail Online
Open 
Tom Cruise, 63, confirms Maverick WILL return as he shares that Top Gun 3 is 'officially in development'
The action movie star, 63, will be reprising his role in the franchise for the upcoming project, which comes three years after he appeared in Top Gun: Maverick.

Mail Online
Open 
D4vd arrested for murder of Celeste Rivas, 14, after her dismembered body was found in his Tesla, LAPD says
Singer D4vd has been arrested for the murder of 14-year-old Celeste Rivas, the Los Angeles Police Department has confirmed on Thursday.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Chris Mason: Mandelson nightmare haunts Starmer again, as senior figure effectively sacked
The prime minister is believed to be absolutely furious over the handling of Lord Mandelson's vetting, Chris Mason writes.

Russia Today News
Open 
Israel-Lebanon ceasefire takes effect: As it happened

Gizmodo
Open 
We’ve Seen Doctor Doom in Action for ‘Avengers: Doomsday’
Marvel Studios came to CinemaCon, and brought Victor von Doom with it.

Mail Online
Open 
Airlines cancel hundreds of flights as jet fuel prices soar amid fears Europe has just 'six weeks' of supply left: RECAP
RECAP: Read the Daily Mail's coverage of the ongoing Middle East crisis as two of Europe's biggest airlines cancel hundreds of flights amid soaring fuel costs

CNET News
Open 
Tapo Releases Ultrapowerful Dual-Lens Camera Kit for Complete Yard Coverage
The Tapo C675D kit is the largest Tapo security camera I've seen, complete with tracking and a solar panel for battery charging.

CNET News
Open 
NordVPN Now Covers Every State in New Server Expansion
The VPN software giant expands to 211 locations, with better speeds than ever.

CNET News
Open 
The Best iPhone 17 Cases for 2026
I've tested dozens of iPhone 17, iPhone 17 Pro and iPhone Air cases. Here are my current top picks, complete with mini reviews of each case.

CNET News
Open 
Swiss Privacy Goes Global: Proton VPN Grows Coverage to 145 Countries
It is now the top provider on our best VPN list for worldwide coverage.

Mail Online
Open 
Sick boasts of fist-bumping killer: Moment drug dealer brags about murdering university student is caught on Ring doorbell audio
Dino Donaldson murdered 21-year-old accounting student and black belt karate ace Anojan Gnaneswaran at Strawberry Hill station in Twickenham after a drug deal turned violent.

Digital Trends
Open 
This beanie turns your thoughts into text, and it’s the least obnoxious wearable I’ve seen in years
A new AI-powered beanie can convert internal speech into text using brain signals, offering a less intrusive approach to brain-computer interfaces.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
With the largest industrial IPO since 1999, this air-quality giant’s stock opens with a bang
Madison Air raises $2.2 billion in the largest IPO this year, and the largest from the industrial sector since 1999.

Mail Online
Open 
What happens when you lose your high-salary job in your 50s. Too young to retire. Overlooked at every turn. I've applied for 150 jobs... and what I've discovered is truly shocking
I never expected was that, at 58, I'd find myself standing in the supermarket, desperately calculating how I could afford to buy enough food for the week and still pay my mortgage.

Mail Online
Open 
Riot police on a Surrey High Street. A 'gang rape' with more questions than answers. And a snapshot of a nation losing faith in authority: FRED KELLY
Anyone would have thought the officers were facing down an army of hooligans. Yet in front of them stood 100 ordinary members of the public, including young mothers with children in prams.

Mail Online
Open 
Mobbed by young fans, clad in designer clothes: Inside the mysterious life of 'Pastor Tobi', the sinister Lamborghini-driving illegal migrant pastor living like a celebrity in London despite conning vulnerable young male followers out of £2million
In a video he shared on March 25 this year, the Nigerian founder of the Peckham-based Salvation Proclaimers Anointed Church (SPAC Nation) is being mobbed by adoring young fans.

Mail Online
Open 
The worst pearl-clutching fears of the royals are coming true: Centuries-old soft power being brazenly traded for hard commerce, writes JAN MOIR
Meghan says she was bullied online every day for ten years and became the most trolled person 'in the entire world' while Harry says being a father affected his mental health.

Mail Online
Open 
For 20 years I was tortured by crippling anxiety. I tried pills and therapy but nothing worked. Now at 42 I've found the controversial cure secretly loved by midlife women like me
For the past two decades, anxiety has been my constant companion. At 42, I've finally found a solution that works for me - albeit one some might view as controversial.

The Verge
Open 
YouTube’s mobile app finally lets you share timestamped videos
YouTube is making some changes that might affect how you share videos from the mobile app. From the app, you can finally share videos from a specific timestamp, which will make it easier to point someone to a part of a video you might want them to see while you're on your phone. However, this […]

Troy Hunt Blog
Open 
Here's What Agentic AI Can Do With Have I Been Pwned's APIs
Presently sponsored by: Report URI: Guarding you from rogue JavaScript! Don’t get pwned; get real-time alerts & prevent breaches #SecureYourSiteI love cutting-edge tech, but I hate hyperbole, so I find AI to be a real paradox. Somewhere in that whole mess of overnight influencers, disinformation and ludicrous claims is some real 'gold' - AI stuff that's genuinely useful and makes a meaningful difference. This blog

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Space Nuclear Power Initiative Sends Reactor Companies Flying
Space Nuclear Power Initiative Sends Reactor Companies Flying

An announcement from the administration's Science and Technology Director, Michael Kratsios, regarding the establishment of the National Initiative for American Space Nuclear Power sent reactor development companies higher over the following trading days. 


The time has come for America to get underway on nuclear power in space🇺🇸 https://t.co/fLrM4MtNbM
— NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman (@NASAAdmin) April 14, 2026
Oklo and NuScale have been soaring...  



Investors are betting on reactor development companies being involved in multiple different nuclear-related applications in space missions to include propulsion, shuttle electrical power, and power for bases on the moon and Mars. The question stands, though, as to which developer actually has a chance of being involved in any of these programs?

For those not tracking, outer space has some slightly different environmental factors to consider compared to the surface of the Earth. Multiple physics headaches including low or zero gravity create headaches that prevent certain reactor designs from ever having a hope of operating in extraterrestrial settings. 



Additional problems, like not having a readily available heat sink like a large body of water nearby, creates compound difficulties for some of the more traditional reactor designs. 

Earlier this year, the administration began talking about putting reactors on the moon by 2030. We provided some details to our readers about what nuclear companies they should expect to be involved in the process. 


Nuclear Reactors On The Moon By 2030 https://t.co/RCmZe8rrvt
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) January 14, 2026
Relying on the opinion of Mr. Market is likely not the best idea in a technical scenario. Instead it's best to just look at the last attempt that was made at operating reactors on the moon and derive assumptions from those that were previously involved in the program. 

NASA originally made attempts to develop lunar power by working with companies like Lockheed Martin, BWXT, Westinghouse, X-energy, and Boeing. Through their coordinated efforts, the leading designs for the project pointed to high-temperature gas-cooled reactors (HTGRs) utilizing tristructural isotropic (TRISO) fuel. Given the physics of the universe haven't changed much over the past few years, it's safe to assume the reactor of choice for the latest space initiatives will likely also be a HTGR. 

So who is making HTGRs today? Currently, in the publicly traded space, there is Nano Nuclear and Terra Innovatum. X-energy is another likely candidate for the program, and they recently submitted their S-1 to begin the process to execute an IPO later this year. 


X-energy has announced the launch of the roadshow for its IPO! https://t.co/tqwbs0s9cC pic.twitter.com/pXnFw95vBK
— X-energy (@xenergynuclear) April 15, 2026
Terra Innovatum has yet to make any announcement regarding the extraterrestrial application of their SOLO reactor design, but Nano Nuclear’s Loki reactor is specifically marketed for environments like outer space. 


$NNE "NANO Nuclear Energy Issues Request for Information Soliciting Potential Commercial Partner Input in Support of U.S. Department of Energy and NASA Lunar Surface Reactor Program" NANO Nuclear’s space-relevant reactor design, the LOKI MMR™ 🌕🛰️⚛️🇺🇸https://t.co/BL6BDOkX3C
— NANO Nuclear Energy (NASDAQ: NNE) (@nano_nuclear) January 15, 2026
BWXT is also likely to be involved to some extent due to their extensive experience working with NASA in the areas of nuclear propulsion. Additionally, BWXT is one of only two manufacturers that is able to produce TRISO fuel in the US. 

If anything, the pump across the board for nuclear names should be less attributed to their potential for involvement in NASA's missions and more attributed to the wider adoption and acceptance of nuclear energy across multiple applications besides just powering the grid. 

It is a very straightforward conclusion that only certain reactor designs can operate in space. Companies like NuScale and Terrestrial Energy will almost certainly be excluded due to the physics of operating off of Earth. 
 

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 18:50

ZeroHedge News
Open 
CBP Says It Seized More Than 60 Pounds Of Cocaine From US Citizen At Border
CBP Says It Seized More Than 60 Pounds Of Cocaine From US Citizen At Border

Authored by Troy Myers via The Epoch Times,

U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officers at the U.S.–Mexico border prevented more than 60 pounds of cocaine from entering the country, allegedly smuggled by an American citizen—a “trusted traveler”—the agency exclusively told The Epoch Times on Wednesday.



At California’s San Ysidro Port of Entry, a 25-year-old man was arrested on April 7 for allegedly concealing more than $1.1 million of the illegal narcotics within his vehicle and now faces federal prosecution.

The man was not named by CBP.

He was categorized as a “trusted traveler” because he was a participant in the Secure Electronic Network for Travelers Rapid Inspection program, the agency said. The program allows expedited passage into the United States for pre-approved, low-risk travelers. All applicants for the program undergo an extensive background check and an in-person interview prior to being enrolled.

Despite having qualified for expedited treatment, the man was referred for a secondary inspection while entering the United States.

“Trust, but verify,” the agency said.

Illegal narcotics hidden in the driver's vehicle doors are shown, at the San Ysidro Port of Entry on April 7, 2026. Border Patrol agents seized more than 60 pounds of cocaine from a U.S. citizen. U.S. Customs and Border Protection

During the secondary inspection, CBP said it used non-intrusive imaging technology that revealed “anomalies” within the doors of the driver’s 2020 Honda Civic. A canine team additionally alerted officers to the presence of narcotics.

According to CBP, officers discovered 20 packages containing 27.28 kilograms, or 60.14 pounds, of cocaine. The drugs, vehicle, and two cellphones were seized.

The driver was arrested and faces charges of narcotics importation and smuggling, CBP said.

“This arrest is a clear message that no one is above the law,” San Ysidro Port Director Mariza Marin said.

“We will hold everyone accountable for their actions, especially those who betray the trust of our traveler programs by attempting to smuggle dangerous narcotics.”

This latest encounter comes as the Trump administration delivered 11 straight months of zero releases at the southern border, while CBP is making increased illegal narcotics seizures across the country compared to a year prior.

Nationwide, CBP seized more than 65,000 pounds of drugs in March, which included 613 pounds of fentanyl. Compared to March 2024, that total amount is 27 percent higher.

Border Patrol agents seized more than 60 pounds of cocaine from a U.S. citizen. The illegal narcotics were hidden in the driver's vehicle doors, on April 7, 2026, at the San Ysidro Port of Entry. U.S. Customs and Border Protection

The agency said it has seized 24 percent more drugs this fiscal year through March than it did during the same time period for FY 2024.

Comparing similar figures extending into President Joe Biden’s administration, CBP seized 19 percent more illegal narcotics so far this fiscal year than it seized, on average, during the same period in each of the last four fiscal years, according to the agency.

To date in FY 2026, data showed CBP has seized a total of 341,000 pounds of drugs.

The agency counts all drug types, including cocaine, ecstasy, fentanyl, heroin, ketamine, khat, LSD, marijuana, methamphetamine, and other drugs. CBP also reports drug seizures from the southern border, northern border, coastal areas, and interior.

In February, CBP exclusively shared with The Epoch Times that it had prevented more than 660 pounds of methamphetamine, worth about $6 million, from illegally entering the United States. The drug bust came from a single commercial truck at the World Trade Bridge in Laredo, Texas.

Only days before that encounter and at the same Laredo entry point, federal officers seized 36 pounds of cocaine worth about half a million dollars. CBP said it was enough for 190,000 lethal doses.

A CBP spokesperson noted that the drug seizure metrics on its website do not include illegal narcotics seized from joint operations, such as the U.S. Coast Guard or local law enforcement, when another agency would take possession of the drugs.

“In addition to what Border Patrol and [the Office of Field Operations] has seized, which is above and beyond what has been seized in years prior, there’s also these additional activities that stop it before it even gets to the border,” the spokesperson previously told The Epoch Times.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 19:15

ZeroHedge News
Open 
DOJ Launches Investigation into Sexual Assault Allegations Against Eric Swalwell
DOJ Launches Investigation into Sexual Assault Allegations Against Eric Swalwell

The U.S. Department of Justice has opened a criminal investigation into multiple sexual assault and misconduct allegations against former Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.), federal officials confirmed Thursday, marking the latest escalation in a scandal that has already forced the longtime congressman to resign from the House and suspend his bid for California governor.



Swalwell, who represented California's 14th District since 2013, stepped down from Congress on Tuesday amid bipartisan pressure and a House Ethics Committee probe into claims that he engaged in sexual misconduct, including toward a staffer under his supervision. The Ethics review is expected to close following his resignation, as the panel's jurisdiction is limited to current members.

The DOJ's involvement adds a federal layer to ongoing local probes. The Manhattan District Attorney’s Office is investigating an alleged 2024 sexual assault in a New York City hotel room involving a former staffer, while the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department and District Attorney’s Office have opened inquiries into a separate 2018 claim. Prosecutors have been assigned to review evidence in the LA case.

The allegations first gained widespread attention last week when the San Francisco Chronicle and CNN reported claims from a former staffer and three other women. The former aide accused Swalwell of sexually assaulting her on two occasions: once in 2019 while she was employed by him, and again in April 2024 after a gala event in New York, where she said she was too intoxicated to consent and attempted to refuse. Three additional women described unwanted explicit messages, unsolicited nude photos, and harassment, some occurring during his gubernatorial campaign.

On Tuesday, a fifth woman, Lonna Drewes - a Beverly Hills-based former model and fashion software entrepreneur - held a news conference to detail her accusations. Drewes alleged that in July 2018, after meeting Swalwell socially and believing they were developing a friendship, he invited her to his West Hollywood hotel room under the pretense of picking up papers. She claimed he drugged her drink, raped her, and choked her until she lost consciousness. Drewes said she had only one glass of wine that evening and provided authorities with journal entries, texts, and photos as evidence. She has since reported the incident to law enforcement and stands with the other accusers.

Swalwell has categorically denied all allegations of non-consensual or illegal conduct. His attorney called the claims “false, fabricated and deeply offensive.” In a statement announcing his resignation, Swalwell acknowledged “mistakes in judgment” from his past but maintained that no laws or House rules were violated. He said he would fight the accusations while stepping aside to avoid distracting from his constituents’ needs.

Political Fallout and Special Election

The swift collapse of Swalwell’s political ambitions stunned observers. He had been viewed as a frontrunner in the race to succeed term-limited Gov. Gavin Newsom. He suspended his gubernatorial campaign on Sunday as the allegations mounted and bipartisan calls for his resignation or expulsion grew. Democrats, including House leaders, distanced themselves, while some Republicans pushed for an immediate expulsion vote.

Newsom has scheduled a special election to fill Swalwell’s seat: a primary on June 16 and general election on August 18, 2026. The resignation was formally read into the House record this week.


#NEW: Rep. @laurenboebert talks sexual misconduct allegations on the Hill "Why is everybody so horny here?"
She says people need to "go to church. Find Jesus." pic.twitter.com/KASrfx7lkc
— Vinay Simlot (@VinaySimlot) April 16, 2026

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 19:40

The Hill
Open 
Rogan again slams US war with Iran: 'All of it’s terrifying'
Podcaster Joe Rogan is not letting up on his criticism of the joint U.S.-Israel conflict in Iran, commenting during his show on Thursday that he found the situation “terrifying.” “It’s f---ing terrifying,” Rogan responded after actor David Cross asked about his opinion on the war. “All of it’s terrifying. Any time you’re involved with —...

The Hill
Open 
Trump on public hearings with Epstein survivors: 'I'm OK with that'
President Trump signaled Thursday that he was open to the possibility of Congress holding public hearings with survivors of the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. “I’m OK with it,” he told reporters Thursday before departing the White House en route to Las Vegas for a roundtable promoting his "no tax on tips" policy. “I think...

The Hill
Open 
Senate OKs CRA reversing Biden mining block
{beacon} Energy & Environment Energy & Environment   The Big Story Senate OKs CRA reversing Biden mining block The Senate on Thursday voted to repeal Biden-era protections for a contentious wilderness area in Minnesota, sending the question to President Trump’s desk. © Photo by Andrew Lichtenstein/Corbis via Getty Images The Senate voted 50-49 to overturn a Biden-era move...

Mail Online
Open 
Miss Moss and her copyKate: Model lends items from own wardrobe to actress Ellie for her upcoming film
Ellie Bamber, who is playing the supermodel in upcoming film Moss And Freud, appeared in a trailer showing off genuine items of clothing borrowed from Kate's wardrobe.

Mail Online
Open 
EDEN CONFIDENTIAL: Royal author Hugo Vickers finds love with the queen of plastic surgery
He documents the Royal Family in great detail in his meticulously well-informed biographies, but Hugo Vickers's own life appears to be just as intriguing.

Mail Online
Open 
We've got a Minister for Women and Equalities who doesn't care about women's equality - but only about her ambition to replace Keir Starmer: SHARRON DAVIES
It's shocking that, a full year after the Supreme Court 's landmark ruling on women's rights, biological males are still barging into female-only spaces such as changing rooms and toilets.

Mail Online
Open 
Meet the 'famous' Oxford University cat that keeps students company in the library... and travels to campus on a bus every day
Cat Isambard Kitten Brunel, also known as Issy, makes a bus commute to the library alongside his owner Jamie Fishwick-Ford every day.

Mail Online
Open 
Is YOUR phone safe? Facial recognition on 21 popular devices can be easily spoofed with printed photos, tests reveal - so, is yours on the list?
Facial recognition might seem like one of the safest ways to keep your phone secure, but experts say your device might be easy prey for hackers.

Mail Online
Open 
The Morning Mail poll: What is the most important cause of Britain's economic woes?
The Morning Poll: What is the most important cause of Britain's economic woes?

Mail Online
Open 
Fat jabs alone not enough to solve obesity crisis, warn world-leading experts
Leading scientists have warned that the booming use of weight-loss injections such as Wegovy and Ozempic risks distracting from the real causes of rising obesity rates.

Mail Online
Open 
ALISON BOSHOFF: That's not very rock 'n' roll... Jerry Hall's 70th birthday bash ends at 6pm - while Meghan Markle's photos vanish...
BOSHOFF: Her famous ex, Mick Jagger, sang Let's Spend The Night Together - but Jerry Hall is planning to do no such thing for her upcoming landmark 70th birthday in July.

Mail Online
Open 
Hollyoaks and Emmerdale star James Sutton joins OnlyFans, insisting 'it's the natural next step' as he bags his own TV show and follows in the footsteps of Sarah Jayne Dunn
Hollyoaks and Emmerdale star James Sutton has revealed he's joined OnlyFans, insisting it's the 'natural next step' in his career. 

Mail Online
Open 
Meghan Trainor CANCELS her nationwide tour as she apologizes to fans: 'This is the right decision'
Meghan Trainor abruptly cancelled her nationwide Get In Girl Tour which was set to kick off in two months.

Techdirt
Open 
Ctrl-Alt-Speech: The Silence Of The LLMs
Ctrl-Alt-Speech is a weekly podcast about the latest news in online speech, from Mike Masnick and Everything in Moderation‘s Ben Whitelaw. Subscribe now on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, Spotify, Pocket Casts, YouTube, or your podcast app of choice — or go straight to the RSS feed. In this week’s round-up of the latest news in online […]

The Right Scoop
Open 
BOOM VIDEO – Scott Jennings calls out Democrat over inaccurate criticism of President Trump
Scott Jennings was on CNN this afternoon and called out a Democrat talking head for her criticism of President Trump, telling her she’s living in the past. Watch below:

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Is the UK finally waking up to the power of video games?
The UK's biggest video games awards cap off a week of big announcements, but will they change anything?

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Christine Baranski says West End debut is a 'dream come true'
The US actress will star opposite Richard E Grant in a new production of Noel Coward's comedy Hay Fever.

Telegraph
Open 
Forest recreate magic from Clough era to set up all-English Europa League semi-final
Forest recreate magic from Clough era to set up all-English Europa League semi-final

Mail Online
Open 
Charli XCX makes rare comments about 'love of my life' George Daniel as she stuns in daring shoot for British Vogue
Charli XCX made a series of rare comments about her husband George Daniel as she posed up a storm in a stunning British Vogue photoshoot on Thursday.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Rising value of Pokémon cards sparks smash and grab crime spree
Small shops across the UK are being targeted by thieves stealing collectibles worth thousands of pounds.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
UK seeks closer EU ties in volatile times - but at what cost?
The UK is adopting a "ruthlessly pragmatic" approach to becoming closer to its European neighbours, the UK's EU minister tells the BBC.

Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple Execs Say Spatial Computing Is 'Inevitable' and AI Is a 'Marathon, Not a Sprint'
Apple hardware engineering chief John Ternus and marketing chief Greg Joswiak recently did an interview with Tom's Guide, where they shared new insights into the MacBook Neo, AI, and spatial computing.





Ternus and Joswiak made it clear that the ‌MacBook Neo‌ isn't your average low-cost device. Apple doesn't typically put a lot of focus on its more affordable devices, but marketing for the Neo has been expansive, and that's because Apple sees it as a "reinvention" of the entry-level laptop. From Ternus:

I think maybe another one from our past is this idea that Steve talked about is the Mac being the bicycle for the mind, right? And you know, from the very beginning, the vision was let's make personal computing as accessible to as many people as possible. And that was the mission of the MacBook Neo.

Ternus said the ‌MacBook Neo‌ required "building something completely new from the ground up" to provide customers with quality at a low price. "We never want to ship junk," he said. "We want to ship great products that have that Apple experience."



Joswiak said the ‌MacBook Neo‌'s quality was important to Apple, and the Neo's build sets it apart from competitors.

You know the products in this space that it's competing against. They're plastic, they're little, you can flex them. They're so cheap, because what have they done? They just tried to cut a nickel, cut a quarter, cut a dollar out of everything to try to make it cheaper, and as a result, they made it cheap, which is very different than making it a lower price and high value, which was the approach we were taking.

Along with discussing the Neo, Ternus and Joswiak talked about the differences between the iPad and the Mac. Ternus said that Apple isn't going to merge the products, and similarities are because Apple focuses on what would make a device better and not on how one product might impact another.

We're going to make the best iPad we can possibly make. We're going to make the best Mac we can possibly make. Some customer is going to choose one, some customer is going to choose the other. A lot of customers actually like to have both, and that's great too. So yeah, we never think about... there's never been this idea of mashing these two things together.

On AI, which is an area where Apple has been struggling, Joswiak said it's not a sprint.

We've been doing things with intelligence for many years, right? And gen AI allows us an opportunity to do that even more. So I'm excited about that, but boy, this is not a sprint. This is a marathon, right? We're going to be doing stuff with intelligence for decades, not months or years.

Joswiak dodged a question about a potential touchscreen MacBook Pro, which Apple is rumored to be working on for launch as soon as this year. He also declined to comment on smart glasses, but said we're in the "early innings of spatial computing," while Ternus said that combining the digital and physical world is an "inevitability." The two were tight-lipped about any upcoming Apple products, but Joswiak said Apple is "working on some pretty cool stuff."



The full interview, which goes into more detail on the ‌MacBook Neo‌, AI, and includes a Steve Jobs anecdote, is well worth watching.Tags: Greg Joswiak, John TernusThis article, 'Apple Execs Say Spatial Computing Is 'Inevitable' and AI Is a 'Marathon, Not a Sprint'' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mac Rumours
Open 
iPhone Loyalty Hits 96.4% as Android Users Four Times More Likely to Switch
Customers are more loyal to Apple than ever, according to a smartphone loyalty survey conducted by phone trade-in site SellCell. 96.4% of customers surveyed said they planned to stick with an iPhone for their next upgrade, and 3.6% said they would choose a different brand. That's up from 91.9% in SellCell's 2021 survey and 90.5% in 2019.





Android users were less loyal to their brand, and are almost 4x more likely to switch than iPhone users. 86.4% of people surveyed said they would stick with an Android device, while 13.6% said they planned to switch.



Of the 3.6% of iPhone users who said they would move to another platform, 69.7% said they would choose a Samsung smartphone, and 20.2% said they would choose a Google smartphone. While most Android users said they would switch to a Samsung or Google device, 26.8% said they would choose an iPhone over an Android smartphone.



Most iPhone users said they would stick with an iPhone because they prefer Apple (60.8%), while 17.4% said they were invested in the Apple ecosystem. About half of iPhone users contemplating switching said they would do so because the iPhone is too expensive or other brands offer better value, but 22.5% said other brands have better technology.



iPhone users were more likely to be loyal over time, and 83.8% said they had used an iPhone for more than five years. By comparison, just 33.8% of Android users said they had stuck with a brand for over five years.



SellCell's survey was limited to 5,000 U.S. respondents. The site says there was a roughly equal representation between iPhone and Android users, with two separate surveys that included the same question structure. More information from the survey is available from SellCell's website.Tags: Android, SellCellThis article, 'iPhone Loyalty Hits 96.4% as Android Users Four Times More Likely to Switch' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mail Online
Open 
MARK ALMOND: Seven weeks after it all began, who is winning the war - and where will it end?
When the US and Israel launched their war on Iran, they had remarkably accurate intelligence about where to find the country's supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei and his key lieutenants.

Ars Technica
Open 
Intel refreshes non-Ultra Core CPUs with new silicon for the first time

Mail Online
Open 
PM finds fall guy to save his skin: Rattled Starmer throws mandarin under the bus over Mandelson vetting scandal
Sir Keir Starmer denied that he or any of his ministers had been aware that the controversial architect of New Labour had failed his developed vetting (DV) for the US ambassador role.

Mail Online
Open 
Families told to brace for travel chaos as jet fuel shortages are set to bring cancellations 'in weeks' - and new border controls plague European airports
Officials are war-gaming for shortages sparked by the Iran war as early as the late May bank holiday, threatening thousands of families' getaway plans just as the peak season starts.

Mail Online
Open 
Karren Brady, 57, shares flawless Instagram snaps after displaying her unfiltered complexion on The Apprentice final
Karren Brady showcased her flawless appearance in stunning Instagram snaps following The Apprentice final on Thursday.

Mail Online
Open 
DAN HODGES: The deceit, deception and the duplicity have finally caught up with Sir Keir. He must resign in wake of Mandelson security vetting scandal
There is something almost Shakespearean about the way it has come to this.

The Register
Open 
Anthropic won't own MCP 'design flaw' putting 200K servers at risk, researcher says
Bug or feature? A design flaw – or expected behavior based on a bad design choice, depending on who is telling the story – baked into Anthropic's official Model Context Protocol (MCP) puts as many as 200,000 servers at risk of complete takeover, according to security researchers.…

Gizmodo
Open 
We’ve Seen the First 18 Minutes of ‘The Mandalorian and Grogu’
The footage played at CinemaCon in Las Vegas, featuring Pedro Pascal and a bunch of AT-ATs.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Spectacular European nights the new normal for Villa under Emery
Ten years ago, Aston Villa were relegated to English football's second tier for the first time since 1987. Now they are in their second European semi-final in three seasons.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon takes effect; Hezbollah tells citizens to postpone returning home
Group urges caution as it says Israel has history of ‘breaking agreements’; Israeli prime minister says key demand is that Hezbollah must be dismantledTrump announces 10-day ceasefire in Lebanon after ‘excellent conversations’Iran has stopped all petrochemical exports to prioritise domestic supply and prevent shortages of raw materials, Reuters reported.The state-owned National Petrochemical Company ordered firms to suspend exports until further notice. Continue reading...

TechRadar News
Open 
A 'Sputnik' moment for chips: Chinese scientists aim to save Moore’s Law by mass-growing 2D materials that 'outclass silicon'

TechRadar News
Open 
NYT Connections hints and answers for Friday, April 17 (game #1041)

TechRadar News
Open 
NYT Strands hints and answers for Friday, April 17 (game #775)

TechRadar News
Open 
Quordle hints and answers for Friday, April 17 (game #1544)

TechRadar News
Open 
How to watch American Gladiators reboot online from anywhere

Boing Boing
Open 
Albert Hofmann's first LSD trip, 83 years ago today
Albert Hofmann calculated that one teaspoon of LSD could affect 50,000 people. He arrived at that figure after accidentally absorbing a trace amount through his skin at the Sandoz laboratory in Basel on April 16, 1943 — 83 years ago today. — Read the rest
The post Albert Hofmann's first LSD trip, 83 years ago today appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Meow! FAA investigates viral audio of pilots meowing and barking
A snippet of air traffic control audio racked up millions of views online because two pilots started meowing and barking at each other.
The drama unfolded on April 12 over an active air traffic control frequency tracking planes at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport. — Read the rest
The post Meow! FAA investigates viral audio of pilots meowing and barking appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Mandalorian and Grogu 'final' trailer
We're closing in on Mando and Grogu's big screen appearance this May.





It appears the Mandalorian will have his helmet off again, and forced character growth will continue. It is the way, after all.
Previously:• How THE MANDALORIAN is making old Kenner action figures relevant again• The Mandalorian as a spaghetti western• Does the N-1 Starfighter strike you as a odd choice for the Mandalorian? — Read the rest
The post Mandalorian and Grogu 'final' trailer appeared first on Boing Boing.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Microsoft’s stock sees its best four-day stretch in six years — with an extreme bounce
The extent of Microsoft’s recent stock gains, relative to what the options market was pricing, is something that “should only happen about one out of every hundred weeks,” analyst says.

Slashdot
Open 
'TotalRecall Reloaded' Tool Finds a Side Entrance To Windows 11 Recall Database
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Two years ago, Microsoft launched its first wave of "Copilot+" Windows PCs with a handful of exclusive features that could take advantage of the neural processing unit (NPU) hardware being built into newer laptop processors. These NPUs could enable AI and machine learning features that could run locally rather than in someone's cloud, theoretically enhancing security and privacy. One of the first Copilot+ features was Recall, a feature that promised to track all your PC usage via screenshot to help you remember your past activity. But as originally implemented, Recall was neither private nor secure; the feature stored its screenshots plus a giant database of all user activity in totally unencrypted files on the user's disk, making it trivial for anyone with remote or local access to grab days, weeks, or even months of sensitive data, depending on the age of the user's Recall database.

After journalists and security researchers discovered and detailed these flaws, Microsoft delayed the Recall rollout by almost a year and substantially overhauled its security. All locally stored data would now be encrypted and viewable only with Windows Hello authentication; the feature now did a better job detecting and excluding sensitive information, including financial information, from its database; and Recall would be turned off by default, rather than enabled on every PC that supported it. The reconstituted Recall was a big improvement, but having a feature that records the vast majority of your PC usage is still a security and privacy risk. Security researcher Alexander Hagenah was the author of the original "TotalRecall" tool that made it trivially simple to grab the Recall information on any Windows PC, and an updated "TotalRecall Reloaded" version exposes what Hagenah believes are additional vulnerabilities.

The problem, as detailed by Hagenah on the TotalRecall GitHub page, isn't with the security around the Recall database, which he calls "rock solid." The problem is that, once the user has authenticated, the system passes Recall data to another system process called AIXHost.exe, and that process doesn't benefit from the same security protections as the rest of Recall. "The vault is solid," Hagenah writes. "The delivery truck is not." The TotalRecall Reloaded tool uses an executable file to inject a DLL file into AIXHost.exe, something that can be done without administrator privileges. It then waits in the background for the user to open Recall and authenticate using Windows Hello. Once this is done, the tool can intercept screenshots, OCR'd text, and other metadata that Recall sends to the AIXHost.exe process, which can continue even after the user closes their Recall session.

"The VBS enclave won't decrypt anything without Windows Hello," Hagenah writes. "The tool doesn't bypass that. It makes the user do it, silently rides along when the user does it, or waits for the user to do it." A handful of tasks, including grabbing the most recent Recall screenshot, capturing select metadata about the Recall database, and deleting the user's entire Recall database, can be done with no Windows Hello authentication. Once authenticated, Hagenah says the TotalRecall Reloaded tool can access both new information recorded to the Recall database as well as data Recall has previously recorded. "We appreciate Alexander Hagenah for identifying and responsibly reporting this issue. After careful investigation, we determined that the access patterns demonstrated are consistent with intended protections and existing controls, and do not represent a bypass of a security boundary or unauthorized access to data," a Microsoft spokesperson told Ars. "The authorization period has a timeout and anti-hammering protection that limit the impact of malicious queries."





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Premier League: 10 things to look out for this weekend
A seismic clash between City and Arsenal, Tottenham need leadership, and could Eddie Howe recall Yoane Wissa?Josh King learned of the difficulties that come with being a Premier League player at Liverpool on Sunday. The 19-year-old was withdrawn at the break after a tough first half at Anfield as Marco Silva wanted to change things when two goals down. It will be interesting to see how King reacts to the half-time hook when he is next called upon, whether he uses it as inspirational fuel or sees it as an undeserved irritation because he was not solely to blame for Fulham being behind. Silva will have a quandary over whether to start the youngster again or leave him stewing on the bench, offering a further reminder of what is required at the top level. King has impressed over the season and, sometimes, at this stage of a player’s development, it is a good idea to see what lessons are learned from a challenging moment. Will UnwinBrentford v Fulham, Saturday 12.30pm (all times BST)Leeds v Wolves, Saturday 3pmNewcastle v Bournemouth, Saturday 3pmTottenham v Brighton, Saturday 5.30pmChelsea v Manchester United, Saturday 8pm Continue reading...

The Verge
Open 
Netflix cofounder Reed Hastings is officially leaving the company
Netflix cofounder and chairman Reed Hastings plans to leave the company after nearly 30 years. The news comes as part of Netflix's Q1 2026 earnings results released on Thursday, which says Hastings "will not stand for re-election to our Board when his current term expires at the Annual Meeting in June." After co-founding Netflix in […]

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Trump Says 'Probably, Maybe' Iran Talks To Resume This Weekend, 'Not Sure' About Ceasefire Extension
Trump Says 'Probably, Maybe' Iran Talks To Resume This Weekend, 'Not Sure' About Ceasefire Extension

Summary


Trump says "probably, maybe" Iran talks resume this weekend, "not sure" about ceasefire extension. Iranian report (unconfirmed) says Bab al-Mandab could be forced close tomorrow.


Trump unveils 10-day Lebanon ceasefire, but which Hezbollah has not signed on for, amid heavy IDF attacks on south. BBG reports on potential 6-month timeframe for comprehensive Iran deal, oil spikes.


Iran seeks to boost rial through toll payment scheme; vessels pay Hormuz passage through Iranian banks.


US Navy: vessels seeking entry into Hormuz Strait now fair game for boarding, search, and outright seizure - including for suspicion of 'contraband'.


Hegseth: US forces are ready to restart combat if Iran doesn’t agree to a deal & strait blockade to continue for as long as it takes. Already 14 ships have been turned around.




//-->

//-->

//-->


Trump announces end of military operations against Iran by May 31st?
Yes 70% · No 31%View full market & trade on Polymarket *  *  *

Trump Still Signals Ambiguity on Peace/Ceasefire Potential

President Trump appeared to confirm ceasefire talks with Iran are still very up in the air, saying that he also doesn't see the need to extend the current two-week ceasefire - "not sure," he said - also amid the going US naval blockade of Iranian-China oil exports, or other sanctioned vessels. With no extension, the ceasefire will expire on April 22.

"If there's no deal fighting resumes," Trump affirmed in fielding reporters' questions. Importantly, talks and timeline are still a big maybe:


President Trump told reporters the next in-person talks negotiating a deal for Iran will "probably, maybe" happen this weekend. He didn't say where, and other U.S. officials haven't confirmed any details.


He took the opportunity in the same remarks to slam the Pope. "If the pope looked at the 42,000 people that were killed over the last two or three months, as a protester, with no weapons, no nothing," he claimed, using the same unsourced numbers he's lately been throwing around.  "I mean, you take a look at that, so I can disagree with the pope. I have a right to disagree. I have a right to disagree with the pope."

Unverified alarming reports of next targeted waterway:


Iran's Axios: Bab al Mandab might close soon... https://t.co/2lLUEUQ0Bz
— berggeit (@_berggeit_) April 16, 2026
The president added, "The pope can say what he wants. And I want him to say what he wants. But I can disagree. I think that Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon. If they do, the whole world would be in jeopardy, the Middle East would blow up and the whole world would be in jeopardy."

"This is the real world, it's a nasty world," he said. "But as far as the pope and saying what he wants, he can do that." 

Also, Iran agrees to hand over its enriched uranium(?)... there's nothing from Iran saying this:


"They've agreed to give us back the nuclear dust," Trump told reporters at the White House, using his name for the enriched uranium stockpile that the United States says could be used to build nuclear weapons. "There's a very good chance we're going to make a deal."


And on the newly declared Israel-Lebanon ceasefire, which does not include Hezbollah, Trump told reporters: "I responded to this call and agreed to a timeout, or rather a temporary ceasefire, of 10 days to try to advance the agreement that we began discussing with the ambassadors' meeting in Washington." He added: "For these peace talks, we have two fundamental demands: one, the disarmament of Hezbollah. Two, a sustainable peace agreement, peace from strength."


⚡️An hour before the ceasefire, Hezbollah rockets impact Nahariya pic.twitter.com/s83rPjOUfp
— War Monitor (@WarMonitors) April 16, 2026
Gulf, European officials See Needing 6 Months for Iran deal: BBG, Oil Spikes

A big headline out of Bloomberg has sent oil prices higher:


Some Gulf Arab and European leaders believe that a US-Iran peace deal will take about six months to be agreed and that the warring sides should extend their ceasefire to cover that timeframe, according to officials from the regions familiar with the matter.

The leaders want the vital Strait of Hormuz opened immediately to restore energy flows and are warning in private that a global food crisis may develop if that doesn’t happen by next month, said the officials, who asked not to be identified discussing private talks.


But important caveats remain: who are these "some" Gulf and "European leaders" - the latter who have remained far to the sidelines during this crisis, but who are yes still suffering the effects of the ultra-risky Operation Epic Fury Iran war gambit by Trump. Spike in crude...



Trump: Truce in Lebanon

President Trump has announced an apparent Lebanon breakthrough, announcing on Truth Social that Lebanon and Israel have agreed to a 10-day ceasefire. This just after on Thursday Israel launched at least 50 airstrikes in a matter of two hours on South Lebanon, according to national media. Israel says late Thursday its forces have no plans to withdraw ground troops from Southern Lebanon. Operations there look to continue, but presumably the ceasefire means Beirut might not be hit in the interim. 

This week, Rubio oversaw historic peace talks between Lebanese officials and the Israeli government; however, which did not include Hezbollah. Both Tehran and Hezbollah have insisted that the Lebanon conflict should be resolved through the Pakistan mediated US-Iran process. The Lebanese government has little actual sway over Hezbollah, the country's single most well-armed and influential paramilitary organization, which has more missiles and arms than even the national army. This means it remains a big unknown whether this 10-day truce will hold. Trump's Truth Social message, which claims he solved "9 wars across the world" and a "lasting peace":



Defiant Iran Reasserts Toll System: Paid Through Iranian Banks

An Iranian parliament official has been cited in newswires as saying the country's planned Strait of Hormuz toll for ships seeking to pass is to be paid through Iranian banks. Previously it was said to be through cryptocurrency, and could be as a high as $2 million Oil rose higher, given this is another indicator this game of chicken in the narrow waterway could soon lead to fresh hostilities, despite the 2-week ceasefire still being in place, soon to expire.

As for negotiations, there's optimism another round of US-Iran talks will occur, with both sides having agreed in principle, but Iran's government informed Pakistan that the US must back off its maximal demands.


Reuters: U.S. and Iranian negotiators have scaled back ambitions for a comprehensive peace deal and are instead seeking a temporary memorandum to prevent a return ​to conflict, two Iranian sources told Reuters.


Below is a machine translation from the Persian of the fresh parliament statement via state-linked ISNA:

The plan to consolidate Iran's sovereignty in the Strait of Hormuz is being framed as a way to strengthen the rial.
Iran is seeking a regulatory role in the Strait of Hormuz - one of the world’s most sensitive chokepoints -positioning it as oversight, not disruption or blackmail.
Under the plan, foreign ships would settle accounts through offices in Iran or via the Iranian banking system, a move aimed at boosting the rial.
Estimated current revenue from managing and regulating maritime traffic in the Strait of Hormuz: $10-15 billion.
Boarding, Search, & Outright Seizure

Ships seeking to enter the Hormuz Strait already sanctioned by the US just got a lot more vulnerable: under Washington’s blockade of Iranian ports, they're now fair game for boarding, search, and outright seizure, per US Naval Forces Central Command.

"In addition to enforcing the blockade, all Iranian vessels, vessels with active OFAC sanctions, and vessels suspected of carrying contraband, are subject to belligerent right to visit and search," the notice said, referring to the Office of Foreign Assets Control. "These vessels, regardless of location, are subject to visit, board, search, and seizure."

The definition of "contraband" is broad and expansive. It spans weapons, ammunition, combat aircraft, and military electronics, WSJ has described. "Petroleum products and lubricants are conditional contraband due to their essential role in military operations and their contribution to Iran’s war-sustaining economy," the advisory also said. "Contraband is defined as goods that are destined for an enemy and that may be susceptible to use in armed conflict."
US Marine Corps image

Up until now, the blockade - initially rolled out Monday - was limited to ships moving in and out of Iranian ports, but the definition who can be targeted just widened. Meanwhile, US Central Command (CENTCOM) said Wednesday that in the first 48 hours, not a single ship made it past the blockade.

Hormuz Blockade: 'As Long As It Takes'

The US will maintain a naval blockade of Iran for as long as it takes, Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth has stated in a press briefing Thursday. He and Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Dan Caine say that US forces are ready to resume major combat operations at a moment's notice, which suggests the initial two-week ceasefire could get extended, as was widely reported the day prior. But this also suggests that Washington likely has no appetite for resuming major aerial operations directly against Iran anytime soon.


General Caine:
At each point, the United States Navy will transmit a warning—a young sailor, normally on the bridge of one of those destroyers. A junior officer picks up that mic and transmits, and I quote:
"Do not attempt to breach the blockade.
Vessels will be boarded for… pic.twitter.com/VT6LvPBUnT
— Clash Report (@clashreport) April 16, 2026
On the question of resumption of major combat operations, Hegseth warned: "To Iran, choose wisely. I pray you choose a deal which is within your grasp for the betterment of your people and the betterment of the world." He followed with, "In the meantime, the War Department is locked and loaded." Additional main highlights to the Hegseth/Caine update and presser:

Iran likes to say it controls Strait of Hormuz but it has no navy
Energy industry not destroyed 'yet', US blockade shutting down exports
For as long as it takes, we will maintain blockade
Launching operation 'economic fury'
Iran is digging out bombed out launchers
I hope you choose a deal which is within your grasp
But again, the chief takeaway is that the Pentagon and Trump administration are making clear that US forces are ready to restart combat if Iran doesn't agree to a deal. On that front, US officials say future talks are likely to be held again in Pakistan’s capital, Islamabad. Prior reports have indicated both sides have "agreed in principle" to engage in another round of talks.

Iran's PressTV touting ability to inflict global economic pain...


International Monetary Fund’s chief economist says that growth is expected to slow this year amid repercussions from the war against Iran and disruptions to global oil and gas trade.
Follow Press TV on Telegram: https://t.co/LWoNSpkc2J pic.twitter.com/ZAty9htTov
— Press TV 🔻 (@PressTV) April 15, 2026
Pentagon: 13 Ships Turned Around

Since the blockade went live, US forces have already turned around 13 ships, according to Gen. Caine in the same briefing. He underscored how far this reach extends, saying operations will take place "inside Iran's territorial seas and in international waters."

Officially, the Pentagon claims the blockade is limited - targeting Iran’s ports and coastal areas while sparing vessels simply passing through the Strait of Hormuz. In practice, however, the net is touted as much wider, as US forces "will actively pursue any Iranian-flagged vessel or any vessel attempting to provide material support to Iran," including so-called "dark fleet vessels carrying Iranian oil," Caine added.

He confirmed that more than 10,000 service members are now involved in the blockade, but with more US servicemembers en route to the region.

Lebanon Still Bombed Heavily by Israel amid US Ceasefire Efforts

Israeli jets pounded Nabatiyeh in southern Lebanon Thursday, unleashing one of the heaviest barrages there since the war began and sending black smoke billowing over the region. Strikes hit near the industrial zone and a supermarket on Nabih Berri Avenue, with nearby suburbs also taking damage, according to Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency.

Iran has signaled urgency on de-escalation, with parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf calling ceasefire in Lebanon "as important as a ceasefire in Iran." He described, "In the Islamabad negotiations and afterwards, we have been seriously pursuing efforts to compel the adversaries to establish a permanent ceasefire in all areas of conflict." Pakistan's army chief is in Tehran mediating between Washington and Tehran.


⚡#BREAKING Lebanese President Joseph Aoun said in a conversation with US Secretary of State Marco: "I am not willing to talk to Netanyahu"
— War Monitor (@WarMonitors) April 16, 2026
Lebanon's leadership is in th emeantime framing any truce as a gateway to talks, despite Hezbollah having rejected direct talks with Israel. The ceasefire it is "demanding with Israel" would be a "natural entry point for direct negotiations," President Aoun said, adding: "Lebanon is keen to halt the escalation… so that the targeting of the innocents ceases, and the destruction of homes" stops.

Destruction of Al-Qasimia Bridge in Southern Lebanon


جسر القاسمية pic.twitter.com/u39LVosxnF
— Lebanon 24 (@Lebanon24) April 16, 2026
He stressed negotiations "are to be undertaken by the Lebanese authorities alone," and said "the withdrawal of Israeli forces… is an essential step," alongside redeploying the army "up to the international borders" to "end any manifestation of armed presence."

And yet Israeli strikes are now hitting infrastructure. A key bridge over the Litani River near Qasmiyeh - linking Tyre and Sidon - was reportedly destroyed, though Israel said it only "struck adjacent to it." The broader campaign is cutting off southern Lebanon, targeting chiefly Hezbollah positions, Israeli officials have claimed.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 16:00

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Bankrupted Spirit Airlines Faces Imminent Liquidation
Bankrupted Spirit Airlines Faces Imminent Liquidation

Bankrupt Spirit Airlines "could liquidate as early as this week," according to a new CNBC report. The troubled carrier, stuck in years of turbulence, has failed to emerge from its second bankruptcy in less than a year and is now being squeezed by soaring jet fuel costs.


NEW: Spirit Airlines could liquidate and shut down as soon as this week, @lesliejosephs of @CNBC reports, citing “people familiar with the matter.”
Latest round of chatter about a deeply troubled airline … but rising fuel prices could be its death knell.…
— Kyle Potter (@kpottermn) April 16, 2026
When the budget carrier would begin the liquidation process was not immediately clear to CNBC's sources, but the report comes just after an overnight Bloomberg story warned about the "risk of liquidation" due to the latest surge in jet fuel prices.

The airline had been trying to downsize its jet footprint and focus on popular seasonal routes, while labor unions made concessions to help keep operations afloat. But Spirit's financial problems have been mounting for a while.

In 2024, JetBlue terminated its $3.8 billion merger deal with the carrier, citing low odds of regulatory approval after a Biden-era federal court blocked the deal over antitrust concerns.



Both CNBC and Bloomberg sources said the liquidation was likely to happen this week; today is Thursday, and the news may break as early as Friday.

The airline, which is still operating as of late Thursday morning, was expected to exit bankruptcy this summer, but that now appears increasingly unlikely. The carrier filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in August of last year, the second time in less than a year.

Airlines have increasingly warned of a spike in jet fuel costs and the financial impacts stemming from the Hormuz chokepoint disruption. Multiple carriers, including United Airlines, have warned about hiking baggage fees and ticket prices to offset jet fuel costs.

Meanwhile, UBS analysts are searching for a possible bottom in airline stocks (read the report). 



The best-hedged airline amid the jet fuel turmoil has been Delta Air Lines, the only U.S. carrier to operate a refinery.

Earlier this week, Reuters reported that United CEO Scott Kirby pitched a tie-up with American Airlines during a recent conversation with President Trump. The potential merger would create a super airline to strengthen U.S. competitiveness globally.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 17:25

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Scientist Suggests Dark Matter Could Be Black Holes From A Different Universe
Scientist Suggests Dark Matter Could Be Black Holes From A Different Universe

Authored by Steve Watson via Modernity.news,

While the scientific establishment has spent decades chasing invisible particles that never quite show up, a leading cosmologist has dropped a theory that turns everything on its head: dark matter isn’t some exotic new particle. It could be ancient black holes that survived from an entirely different universe.



This idea, laid out by Professor Enrique Gaztanaga of the University of Portsmouth, doesn’t just tackle one cosmic puzzle. It offers a clean fix for the Big Bang’s thorniest problems and lines up with fresh observations that have astronomers scrambling.

Gaztanaga argues the elusive substance that makes up roughly 27 per cent of the universe’s mass may actually be “relic” black holes formed in a previous collapsing phase of the cosmos.


What is dark matter? Elusive substance could be made of black holes from a different UNIVERSE, scientist claims https://t.co/GdjXzdJ1Ee
— Daily Mail (@DailyMail) April 15, 2026
“The idea is that dark matter may not be a new particle, but instead a population of black holes formed in a previous collapsing phase and bounce of the Universe,” Professor Gaztanaga says.

He rejects the standard singularity model where everything explodes from an infinitely dense point that breaks physics. Instead, he proposes a “bouncing” universe.

“The Big Bang corresponds to a bounce from a previous collapsing phase, rather than the absolute beginning of everything,” the Professor Gaztanaga further noted, adding “So it is the start of the expansion we observe, but not necessarily the beginning of time itself.”

In this picture, black holes from the collapsing galaxies of that earlier universe survived the bounce and now drift through our cosmos, exerting gravity without emitting light.


We may have been wrong about wormholes.
Recent research challenges the popular notion that wormholes—hypothetical tunnels through spacetime enabling interstellar travel—are directly linked to the original Einstein-Rosen bridge. In 1935, Albert Einstein and Nathan Rosen… pic.twitter.com/ipm9RlXl54
— Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) January 16, 2026
“These ‘relic’ black holes would survive into the expanding phase we observe today and behave exactly like dark matter: they interact gravitationally, but do not emit light,” he explains.

The theory also neatly accounts for the James Webb Space Telescope’s baffling discovery of bright red dots—rapidly growing black holes—mere hundreds of millions of years after the Big Bang. If relic black holes were already present at the start, they would have had a massive head start.


A study of the fascinating galaxy system nicknamed "The Stingray" suggests that mysterious little red dots could be a phase in the evolution of galaxies powered by actively feeding black holes, rather than a distinct class of objects. https://t.co/FfKPDQVxl7
— Live Science (@LiveScience) April 9, 2026
It also sidesteps the need for new particles while explaining how supermassive black holes formed so quickly in the early universe.

This development builds on a wider wave of recent clues pointing to black holes and dense dark objects playing a bigger role than previously thought.

Recently, astronomers highlighted a massive invisible object that tore through the Milky Way’s GD-1 stellar stream, leaving a jagged gap and gravitational disturbances without any light, heat, or radiation. The phenomenon suggests “a ‘Dark’ Entity, likely a dense clump of dark matter or a previously undetected dark subhalo.”


BREAKING?: Astronomers have identified a massive, invisible object that recently tore through the Milky Way’s GD-1 stellar stream, leaving a jagged gap and creating significant gravitational disturbances without emitting light, heat, or radiation.
The Phenomenon suggests a… pic.twitter.com/cp2FQIrhTj
— Night Sky Today (@NightSkyToday) April 8, 2026
This phenomenon has been witnessed before.

Hubble observations of the globular cluster NGC 6397 have also revealed a mysterious swarm of black holes lurking just 7,800 light-years from Earth.


NEWS?: A mysterious swarm of black holes has been found lurking just 7,800 light-years away from Earth. pic.twitter.com/R8rH9m1ouF
— For all Curious (@fascinatingonX) April 10, 2026
For years the default dark matter story has been “trust us, it’s some particle we haven’t found yet.” Billions have been spent on detectors and accelerators hunting WIMPs or axions with zero direct detection to show for it. Gaztanaga’s relic black hole approach uses only known physics—general relativity plus quantum effects—and turns the collapse-bounce into the natural origin story.

Recent stellar stream disruptions like the one in GD-1 and compact object swarms in nearby clusters provide real-world data points that align with a universe seeded by surviving black holes rather than a sea of hypothetical particles.

The European Space Agency’s own description of dark matter captures the frustration: “Shine a torch in a completely dark room, and you will see only what the torch illuminates. That does not mean that the room around you does not exist.”

Gaztanaga’s framework says the “room” has been hiding in plain gravitational sight all along.

Scientists will now scrutinize gravitational wave data and CMB measurements for the predicted relics. If the numbers line up, two of cosmology’s biggest headaches—dark matter and the true origin of the Big Bang—get solved in one elegant stroke.

Your support is crucial in helping us defeat mass censorship. Please consider donating via Locals or check out our unique merch. Follow us on X @ModernityNews.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 17:45

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Gulf Shock May Spark Shortage Of World's Most Critical Industrial Chemical, Used Heavily In Mining 
Gulf Shock May Spark Shortage Of World's Most Critical Industrial Chemical, Used Heavily In Mining 

Goldman analysts Kyle Shaffer and Amanda Ross provided clients with a broad overview of industrials and natural resources amid energy disruptions in the Gulf area. In the note, they stated that the well-known Gulf energy shock is set to disrupt LNG production in Qatar for years to come. However, they also highlighted another emerging supply crunch that has received far less attention: sulfuric acid.

"Some long-lasting consequences have also started to emerge, including a 3-5 years production loss for LNG facility in Qatar, a 6-12 month re-starting time for some aluminum facilities in the Gulf, and shortage of sulfuric acid which can potentially impact future production for copper and lithium" Shaffer and Ross said.

About a third of the world’s sulfur comes from the Gulf region, where it is produced as part of oil and gas refining. Much of the sulfur is exported, primarily to fertilizer and industrial-processing hubs in Asia, North Africa, and, in Qatar’s case, some trading hubs across Asia and Europe.



Goldman analyst James McGeoch noted on Wednesday that Shandong sulfuric acid prices are soaring and that China is "slated to suspend sulfur exports from May (sulfur that is a by-product of processing)." He added that part of the recent push to procure and process concentrate is to produce sulfur for fertilizer.

It is important to note that sulfuric acid is one of the world’s most important industrial chemicals, used in fertilizers (phosphates), oil refining, lead-acid batteries, and chemical manufacturing.

Prices in China have jumped 90% since the start of the US-Iran conflict in late February. Current prices exceed the highs recorded during the Russian invasion of Ukraine in early 2022.



"Already though, prices have risen, and if there’s a shortage of sulfuric acid, that could quite quickly translate into more expensive homes, cars and electrical products," Bloomberg analyst Sebastian Boyd noted.

In the mining sector, sulfuric acid is critical for the extraction of several key industrial metals, including copper, nickel, uranium, cobalt, and zinc. Sufer is not just for fertilizer to feed the world; the mining sector could also face major impacts if shortages materialize.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 18:05

ZeroHedge News
Open 
California Offering Taxpayer-Funded Gender Surgeries To Homeless, Illegal Immigrants: Report
California Offering Taxpayer-Funded Gender Surgeries To Homeless, Illegal Immigrants: Report

Authored by Luis Cornelio via Headline USA,

The California government may struggle to provide basic housing for the homeless, but it appears willing to fund gender-transition procedures with taxpayer dollars, including illegal aliens, according to a new report.



A Wednesday report from City Journal found that San Francisco homeless shelters, with the assistance of state and local governments, are facilitating transgender surgeries for males who identify as female.

One such shelter, St. Vincent de Paul’s MSC-South, entered into a $66 million contract with the city to house homeless individuals, including illegal aliens.

A pair of Honduran nationals living at the shelter, Lyca and Alondra, reportedly identify as transgender, and both said they receive Medi-Cal, California’s taxpayer-funded Medicaid program.

According to City Journal, the taxpayer-funded program covers transgender procedures, or “gender-affirming care,” and provides “full-scope” coverage to illegal aliens.

Lyca, who reportedly showed signs of a sex change, said he is receiving cross-sex hormone therapy.

Meanwhile, Alondra, who appeared more masculine in physique, said he entered the U.S. illegally after claiming asylum. A translator told City Journal that Alondra declined a housing offer due to affordability concerns, though the government offered to pay one month’s rent.

Another shelter, the Embarcadero SAFE Navigation Center, reportedly houses a transgender-identifying individual named Jacqueline.

Originally from Mexico, Jacqueline told City Journal that illegal aliens reside at the shelter and said he received breast implants through Medi-Cal.

Jacqueline claimed to be a permanent resident but acknowledged that the program also covers procedures for illegal aliens.

“Even though you’re undocumented, you can get them,” he stated, as quoted by City Journal. “You have to have a process, the hormones … go through therapy.”

Asked whether he had received so-called “bottom surgery,” Jacqueline replied, “I’m waiting for that one.”

Headline USA reached out to MSC-South for clarification, including whether such procedures are facilitated by the shelter, but a front-desk receptionist said no one was available to comment.

When pressed further, he added, “We’re busy right now, boss man.”

Attempts to contact the Embarcadero SAFE Navigation Center were unsuccessful, as its main line appeared disconnected. Five Keys Housing, the shelter’s parent company, was closed when Headline USA called.

A Newsom spokesperson stood by the state’s taxpayer-funded program, saying, “Undocumented Californians don’t get special treatment. Everyone on Medi-Cal gets the same access to care. If you want to call California woke for not letting politicians interfere with doctors – or not wanting people to die in the streets – then go ahead.”


BREAKING: Gavin Newsom’s office has confirmed that California is giving free sex-change surgeries to homeless illegal aliens.
They’re doubling down—and, inexplicably, suggesting that without state-funded breast implants and artificial vaginas, migrants will “die in the streets.” pic.twitter.com/1bMt2rbSKE
— Christopher F. Rufo ⚔️ (@christopherrufo) April 16, 2026
The City Journal report comes as California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s administration faces mounting scrutiny over potential exploitation of taxpayer-funded programs, from hospice fraud to the expansion of taxpayer-funded gender procedures for illegal aliens.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 18:25

UK Government News
Open 
Connect Fund to award additional £1.5 million to community and voluntary groups
Northern Ireland community and voluntary organisations will be able to bid for an additional £1.5 million in grant funding

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Avenue Q review – provocative puppets return for a feast of filth and fun
Shaftesbury theatre, LondonTwenty years since its West End debut, the sweetly subversive musical returns with a few tweaks and a lot of heartThe trigger warning “puppet nudity” does not begin to cover it. You will also see puppets having sex, singing about being “a little bit racist” and gleefully owning up to their predilections for porn.Avenue Q’s cute subversiveness is back, 20 years after these fuzzy-felt Sesame Street wannabes took the West End by storm. Robert Lopez and Jeff Marx’s Tony award-winning musical is not exactly shocking now but it’s very amusing as these creatures (plus some humans) fall in love, have existential crises and create merry havoc. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
V&A faces calls to become living wage employer on eve of Stratford opening
Campaigners organise open letter to director demanding ‘fair day’s wage’ for all workers at V&A museumsA row over pay has broken out at the V&A before the opening of its newest site , with thousands of people calling for it to become a living wage employer.On Saturday, V&A East will open its doors in Stratford, east London, showcasing stunning fabrics, photos and black British music. It joins a wider group of V&A museums including its original site in South Kensington, Young V&A in Bethnal Green and V&A Dundee. The V&A describes its latest opening as one of the most significant new museum projects in the UK. Continue reading...

BBC Technology News
Open 
Could a digital twin make you into a 'superworker'?
Firms say digital twins make staff more productive, but are they a potential legal minefield?

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Weekly quiz: What did Trump say about the Pope?
How much attention did you pay to what happened in the world over the past seven days?

The Hill
Open 
More young men than women say religion is important to them: Gallup
Young men are more concerned with religion than women in the same age group, according to new polling data from Gallup released Thursday. The survey found that 42 percent of adult men between 18 and 29 years old indicated that religion is “very important” in their lives during telephone surveys conducted between 2024 and 2025....

The Hill
Open 
AI tensions boil over
{beacon} Technology Technology   The Big Story Tensions over AI reach new high after violent attacks Two violent attacks against OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and a city council member are prompting new fears over whether the debate around the technology has turned dangerous. © Greg Nash Tensions reached a new high this week as technology leaders in...

The Hill
Open 
Jeffries says he’s 'deeply skeptical' of FISA extension without new privacy protections
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) suggested on Thursday that he’s ready to oppose an extension of the government’s warrantless surveillance powers unless it contains new privacy guardrails. Jeffries stopped short of saying he’ll oppose a clean extension of Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), which GOP leaders in Congress and the...

The Hill
Open 
RFK Jr. grilled over vaccines, MAHA in back-to-back hearings: Key takeaways
House members got their first opportunity Thursday to grill Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., as he kicked off a marathon series of seven congressional hearings in seven days with back-to-back hearings in the Ways and Means and Appropriations Committees. In the two appearances, his first before Congress in 2026, Kennedy defended his record in leading the nation’s health agency as Democrats sought to...

The Hill
Open 
Gen George's ouster looms large over Driscoll hearing
Welcome to The Hill's Defense & NatSec newsletter {beacon} Defense &National Security Defense &National Security   The Big Story Gen George's ouster looms large over Driscoll hearing Lawmakers from both sides questioned Army Secretary Dan Driscoll and the Army’s acting chief of staff, Gen. Christopher LaNeve, over the removal of the Army’s well-respected chief of...

The Hill
Open 
Rogan again slams US war with Iran: 'All of it’s terrifying'
Podcaster Joe Rogan is not letting up on his criticism of the joint U.S.-Israel conflict in Iran, commenting during his show on Thursday that he found the situation “terrifying.” “It’s f------ terrifying,” Rogan responded after actor David Cross asked about his opinion on the war. “All of it’s terrifying. Any time you’re involved with —...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
10-day ceasefire between Israel, Lebanon goes into effect
The temporary ceasefire came after US President Trump spoke with Lebanese President Aoun and Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu. Hezbollah says its commitment to the truce depends on Israel stopping attacks.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Iran war: Temporary Israel-Lebanon ceasefire takes effect
As a 10-day ceasefire deal between Lebanon and Israel took effect, the Israeli military said its forces are going to remain in southern Lebanon. DW has the latest.

Telegraph
Open 
Ollie Watkins eyes World Cup spot after joining Aston Villa’s 100 club
Ollie Watkins eyes World Cup spot after joining Aston Villa’s 100 club

Mail Online
Open 
Artemis the movie? We need a whole series, astronauts say
Reid Wiseman, 50, Victor Glover, 49, Christina Koch, 47, and Jeremy Hansen, 50, blasted off on April 1 in the first manned Moon mission since 1972.

Mail Online
Open 
Greens launch surprise attack on the BBC for exposing lies migrants are telling to have asylum claims approved
In a surprise attack on the BBC, the Greens accused it of worsening the already 'hostile environment' faced by those claiming asylum.

Mail Online
Open 
Trump claims to end his tenth war as Israel-Lebanon ceasefire is agreed
Mr Trump said the truce would come into force at 10pm UK time last night and that he had instructed his team to 'work with Israel and Lebanon to achieve a lasting PEACE'.

Mail Online
Open 
Labour in audacious bid to cancel next week's session of PMQs following Starmer's angry bust-up with Commons Speaker
Parliamentary sources told the Mail that Labour tried to end the Commons session early next week to avoid Sir Keir having to endure another bruising clash with Kemi Badenoch.

Mail Online
Open 
BRIAN VINER: Jude Law is thrilling in the story of Putin's monstrous rise to power
BRIAN VINER: The Wizard Of The Kremlin is a riveting account of how political power evolved in Russia following the collapse of the Soviet Union

Mail Online
Open 
Lindsey Lohan's dishevelled stepmother seen in new mugshot after arrest over 'knife throw' at Michael Lohan
The arrest has since escalated into a legal and personal crisis, with Major - who has been arrested eight times over the past 15 years - appearing in court for her arraignment on Thursday.

Mail Online
Open 
Keir Starmer accused of treating women's rights as 'negotiable' as Government continues to delay rules on single-sex spaces
The Prime Minister is under growing pressure over his Government's failure to respond to the Supreme Court ruling on women's rights a year ago.

Mail Online
Open 
Starmer's mixed messages on social media as he tells tech bosses that risks children face 'can't go on' - just a day after ordering MPs to vote down limits
The Prime Minister hauled in chiefs from X, Meta, Snap, TikTok and Google, which owns YouTube, to demand they take action to protect children.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Gibbs-White’s early strike decisive as Nottingham Forest edge past 10-man Porto
The final whistle brought a second of relief before the celebrations truly kicked in after Nottingham Forest secured a place in the Europa League semi-finals. It should have been easier but nothing is simple at the City Ground as they made hard work of overcoming Porto, who played almost the entire match with 10 men.Morgan Gibbs-White settled the match, to set up an all-English clash with Aston Villa for a place in the final. His goal came in the aftermath of Jan Bednarek’s early sending off and should have laid the foundations for more but Forest’s finishing was poor, forcing them to grind out the victory by surviving Porto hitting the crossbar twice. Even so, the ultimate jubilation was reminiscent of those great nights of the 1980s under Brian Clough when the club last reached this stage in Europe. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Why 'sensational' Palace & Conference League are good fit
After overcoming Fiorentina over two legs to reach the semi-finals, Crystal Palace will now fancy their chances of going all the way in the Conference League and adding a European trophy to their FA Cup success last season.

Sky News Home
Open 
ICE agent charged with assault after 'pointing gun at people' while driving
An ICE agent has been charged with assault for allegedly pointing his gun at people in a car after pulling alongside them on a major road in Minneapolis.

Mail Online
Open 
Victoria reveals heartache over family's split with Brooklyn: Lady Beckham gives anguished interview... but never once mentions her son's name
Heartbroken Victoria Beckham has spoken for the first time about her family's feud with her son Brooklyn, insisting: 'All we have ever tried to do was protect our children.'

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Fans and players unite behind Hull’s John Cartwright as St Helens go top
Hull 14-24 St HelensBattling display in defeat feels like coach’s last standThere is rarely a shortage of emotion and passion in this particular part of the rugby league world but even by the usually high standards set in Hull, this was a night many, least of all their head coach, will never forget.On any other night, the headline would be St Helens producing another impressive statement of their title credentials to go top of Super League. But this was no ordinary night: perhaps underlined not necessarily by the action on the field, but by what transpired after Saints’ win over Hull FC. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Crystal Palace hold off Fiorentina as Sarr powers Conference League dream
What a time it is to be a Crystal Palace supporter. Twelve months ago, the south London club was still waiting to win their first major trophy and even the most optimistic fan could never have imagined that they would be contesting the semi-final of a European competition.Despite a few anxious moments when a motivated Fiorentina team cut the deficit from last week’s 3-0 defeat in the first leg at Selhurst Park to just two goals with half an hour still to play, Oliver Glasner’s side showed their growing maturity at this level to progress to a last four showdown with Shakhtar Donetsk. While Palace made things far more uncomfortable for themselves after Ismaïla Sarr’s early header, even the loss of Adam Wharton and Maxence Lacroix to injuries before half-time could not knock them off their stride against opponents who have twice been beaten finalists in this competition and gave it their best shot. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Watkins breaks record as Aston Villa cruise past Bologna into all-English semi-final
Ollie Watkins kickstarted Aston ­Villa’s perfect evening as his 100th goal for the club enabled Unai Emery’s side to cruise into an all-English Europa League semi-final against ­Nottingham Forest.The England striker, seeking a late recall into Thomas Tuchel’s World Cup squad, tapped home in the 16th minute before goals from Emiliano Buendía and Morgan Rogers, making amends for a spurned penalty, put the tie to bed by half-time. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
LIV and let die: golf rebels count cost of Saudi cutbacks and other sports fear worst | Matt Hughes
Public Investment Fund withdraws support for rebel tour and other sports could be hit too with Newcastle United uncertainThe reverberations of an unscheduled meeting of LIV Golf executives in New York this week have been felt way beyond their swanky offices in Hudson Yards, on the west side of Manhattan.A slowdown in Saudi Arabia’s lavish spending on sport, which is conservatively estimated to have cost the kingdom more than $10bn in the past five years, had been expected, but its Public Investment Fund’s withdrawal of financial support for the rebel tour – which was first mooted to LIV execs on Monday – has caused shockwaves throughout the wider industry. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Gibbs-White’s early strike decisive as Nottingham Forest edge past 10-man Porto
The final whistle brought a second of relief before the celebrations truly kicked in after Nottingham Forest secured a place in the Europa League semi-finals. It should have been easier but nothing is simple at the City Ground as they made hard work of overcoming Porto, who played almost the entire match with 10 men.Morgan Gibbs-White settled the match, to set up an all-English clash with Aston Villa for a place in the final. His goal came in the aftermath of Jan Bednarek’s early sending off and should have laid the foundations for more but Forest’s finishing was poor, forcing them to grind out the victory by surviving Porto hitting the crossbar twice. Even so, the ultimate jubilation was reminiscent of those great nights of the 1980s under Brian Clough when the club last reached this stage. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Foreign Office’s top civil servant Olly Robbins forced out over Mandelson vetting row
Keir Starmer understood to have lost confidence in official over decision to override security vetting failureMandelson failed vetting but Foreign Office overruled decisionSir Olly Robbins, the UK Foreign Office’s top civil servant, has been forced out of his post after the decision to fail Peter Mandelson during his security vetting was overruled by his department.Robbins was the Foreign Office’s most senior official in late January 2025 when the decision was made, paving the way for Mandelson to become the US ambassador. Continue reading...

The Register
Open 
Anthropic squeezes enterprises by ejecting bundled tokens from seat deal
Large organizations pushed toward metered pricing UPDATED  More bad news for Claude users. Anthropic has revised its seat-based pricing for enterprise customers, shifting them to a new pricing plan upon contract renewal.…

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Champions League in the Championship? Forest's juggling act goes on
Nottingham Forest continue their remarkable Europa League run - but does it only increase the pressure on staying in the Premier League?

Gizmodo
Open 
Iceland Just Got Its First Mosquitoes. Scientists Aren’t Ready for What Comes Next
As the Arctic's climate and ecology rapidly change, two researchers are calling for a paradigm shift in insect monitoring.

Gizmodo
Open 
The New ‘Mandalorian and Grogu’ Trailer Amps Up the Nostalgia
Disney would *really* like to remind you that 'Star Wars' is back in theaters in a month now.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Crystal Palace hold off Fiorentina to book place in Conference semi-final
What a time it is to be a Crystal Palace supporter. Twelve months ago, the south London club was still waiting to win their first major trophy and even the most optimistic fan could never have imagined that they would be contesting the semi-final of a European competition.Despite a few anxious moments when a motivated Fiorentina team cut the deficit from last week’s 3-0 defeat in first leg at Selhurst Park to just two goals with half an hour still to play, Oliver Glasner’s side showed their growing maturity at this level to progress to a last four showdown with Shakhtar Donetsk. While Palace made things far more uncomfortable for themselves after Ismaïla Sarr’s early strike, even the loss of Adam Wharton and Maxence Lacroix to injuries before half-time could not knock them off their stride against opponents who have twice been beaten finalists in this competition and gave it their best shot. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
I thought hell would freeze over before I agreed with the pope. But in a world riven by cruelty, that day has finally come | Rebecca Shaw
It’s a relief to see the pontiff decrying brutality, because it seems most current world leaders lack the necessary spineI have never been a religious or spiritual person, even though I grew up in a religious area and had friends (and strangers) throughout school and university trying to lure me into whatever prayer disguised as organised fun they were up to. I did try it out shortly for a desperate period when I was young, attempting to pray to a God I didn’t really believe in to make me not gay, but blessedly he never answered.Despite my resistance to organised religion, I have always had a soft spot for nuns and their counterparts. The girlies.Sign up for a weekly email featuring our best reads Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Meghan has been cast as the inverse to Diana, a photonegative of adoration. Why do we need scapegoats? | Brigid Delaney
The hatred the duchess inspires reveals hidden aspects of British character and tells us something about public anxietiesWhatever unhinged parasocial relationship the adoring public had with Diana, Princess of Wales, their relationship with the Duchess of Sussex is its shadowy reflection.For decades, Diana was the subject of public adoration that was locked in a permanent hysterical register. Clive James, for example, captured the hyperbole when he described himself as a “besotted walk-on mesmerized by the trajectory of a burning angel” and Diana as like “the sun coming up; coming up giggling”. Continue reading...

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11509 Zen Web Sites - Planned Maintenance - Order platform (New)
Openreach will be conducting routine platform maintenance to their online ordering system.

During this window, any orders that are placed will be put on hold and progressed following the maintenance window.

This work covers Zen online ordering and Fibre Hub online ordering platforms.

We regret any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Sun, 3rd May 2026 00:05

End: Sun, 3rd May 2026 06:00

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 23:06

Status: Up

Maintenance: Planned

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11510 Zen Web Sites - Planned Maintenance - Order platform (New)
Openreach will be conducting routine platform maintenance to their online ordering system.

During this window, any orders that are placed will be put on hold and progressed following the maintenance window.

This work covers Zen online ordering and Fibre Hub online ordering platforms.

We regret any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Sat, 23rd May 2026 00:05

End: Sat, 23rd May 2026 06:00

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 23:07

Status: Up

Maintenance: Planned

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11511 Zen Web Sites - Planned Maintenance - Order platform (New)
Openreach will be conducting routine platform maintenance to their online ordering system.

During this window, any orders that are placed will be put on hold and progressed following the maintenance window.

This work covers Zen online ordering and Fibre Hub online ordering platforms.

We regret any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Sun, 24th May 2026 00:05

End: Sun, 24th May 2026 06:00

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 23:07

Status: Up

Maintenance: Planned

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11512 Zen Web Sites - Planned Maintenance - Order platform (New)
Openreach will be conducting routine platform maintenance to their online ordering system.

During this window, any orders that are placed will be put on hold and progressed following the maintenance window.

This work covers Zen online ordering and Fibre Hub online ordering platforms.

We regret any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Sat, 30th May 2026 00:05

End: Sat, 30th May 2026 06:00

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 23:08

Status: Up

Maintenance: Planned

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11513 Zen Web Sites - Planned Maintenance - Order platform (New)
Openreach will be conducting routine platform maintenance to their online ordering system.

During this window, any orders that are placed will be put on hold and progressed following the maintenance window.

This work covers Zen online ordering and Fibre Hub online ordering platforms.

We regret any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Sun, 31st May 2026 00:05

End: Sun, 31st May 2026 06:00

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 23:08

Status: Up

Maintenance: Planned

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11514 Zen Web Sites - Planned Maintenance - Order platform (New)
Openreach will be conducting routine platform maintenance to their online ordering system.

During this window, any orders that are placed will be put on hold and progressed following the maintenance window.

This work covers Zen online ordering and Fibre Hub online ordering platforms.

We regret any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Sun, 2nd Aug 2026 00:05

End: Sun, 2nd Aug 2026 06:00

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 23:09

Status: Up

Maintenance: Planned

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11515 Zen Web Sites - Planned Maintenance - Order platform (New)
Openreach will be conducting routine platform maintenance to their online ordering system.

During this window, any orders that are placed will be put on hold and progressed following the maintenance window.

This work covers Zen online ordering and Fibre Hub online ordering platforms.

We regret any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Sat, 29th Aug 2026 00:05

End: Sat, 29th Aug 2026 06:00

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 23:09

Status: Up

Maintenance: Planned

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11516 Zen Web Sites - Planned Maintenance - Order platform (New)
Openreach will be conducting routine platform maintenance to their online ordering system.

During this window, any orders that are placed will be put on hold and progressed following the maintenance window.

This work covers Zen online ordering and Fibre Hub online ordering platforms.

We regret any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Sun, 30th Aug 2026 00:05

End: Sun, 30th Aug 2026 06:00

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 23:10

Status: Up

Maintenance: Planned

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11517 Zen Web Sites - Planned Maintenance - Order platform (New)
Openreach will be conducting routine platform maintenance to their online ordering system.

During this window, any orders that are placed will be put on hold and progressed following the maintenance window.

This work covers Zen online ordering and Fibre Hub online ordering platforms.

We regret any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Sat, 5th Sep 2026 00:05

End: Sat, 5th Sep 2026 06:00

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 23:10

Status: Up

Maintenance: Planned

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11518 Zen Web Sites - Planned Maintenance - Order platform (New)
Openreach will be conducting routine platform maintenance to their online ordering system.

During this window, any orders that are placed will be put on hold and progressed following the maintenance window.

This work covers Zen online ordering and Fibre Hub online ordering platforms.

We regret any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Sun, 6th Sep 2026 00:05

End: Sun, 6th Sep 2026 06:00

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 23:10

Status: Up

Maintenance: Planned

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11519 Zen Web Sites - Planned Maintenance - Order platform (New)
Openreach will be conducting routine platform maintenance to their online ordering system.

During this window, any orders that are placed will be put on hold and progressed following the maintenance window.

This work covers Zen online ordering and Fibre Hub online ordering platforms.

We regret any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Sun, 1st Nov 2026 00:05

End: Sun, 1st Nov 2026 06:00

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 23:11

Status: Up

Maintenance: Planned

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11520 Zen Web Sites - Planned Maintenance - Order platform (New)
Openreach will be conducting routine platform maintenance to their online ordering system.

During this window, any orders that are placed will be put on hold and progressed following the maintenance window.

This work covers Zen online ordering and Fibre Hub online ordering platforms.

We regret any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Sat, 21st Nov 2026 00:05

End: Sat, 21st Nov 2026 06:00

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 23:11

Status: Up

Maintenance: Planned

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11521 Zen Web Sites - Planned Maintenance - Order platform (New)
Openreach will be conducting routine platform maintenance to their online ordering system.

During this window, any orders that are placed will be put on hold and progressed following the maintenance window.

This work covers Zen online ordering and Fibre Hub online ordering platforms.

We regret any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Sun, 22nd Nov 2026 00:05

End: Sun, 22nd Nov 2026 06:00

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 23:12

Status: Up

Maintenance: Planned

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11522 Zen Web Sites - Planned Maintenance - Order platform (New)
Openreach will be conducting routine platform maintenance to their online ordering system.

During this window, any orders that are placed will be put on hold and progressed following the maintenance window.

This work covers Zen online ordering and Fibre Hub online ordering platforms.

We regret any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Sat, 12th Dec 2026 00:05

End: Sat, 12th Dec 2026 06:00

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 23:12

Status: Up

Maintenance: Planned

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11523 Zen Web Sites - Planned Maintenance - Order platform (New)
Openreach will be conducting routine platform maintenance to their online ordering system.

During this window, any orders that are placed will be put on hold and progressed following the maintenance window.

This work covers Zen online ordering and Fibre Hub online ordering platforms.

We regret any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Sun, 13th Dec 2026 00:05

End: Sun, 13th Dec 2026 06:00

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 23:13

Status: Up

Maintenance: Planned

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11524 Zen Web Sites - Planned Maintenance - Order platform (New)
Openreach will be conducting routine platform maintenance to their online ordering system.

During this window, any orders that are placed will be put on hold and progressed following the maintenance window.

This work covers Zen online ordering and Fibre Hub online ordering platforms.

We regret any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Sun, 31st Jan 2027 00:05

End: Sun, 31st Jan 2027 06:00

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 23:13

Status: Up

Maintenance: Planned

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11525 Zen Web Sites - Planned Maintenance - Order platform (New)
Openreach will be conducting routine platform maintenance to their online ordering system.

During this window, any orders that are placed will be put on hold and progressed following the maintenance window.

This work covers Zen online ordering and Fibre Hub online ordering platforms.

We regret any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Sat, 6th Feb 2027 00:05

End: Sat, 6th Feb 2027 06:00

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 23:14

Status: Up

Maintenance: Planned

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11526 Zen Web Sites - Planned Maintenance - Order platform (New)
Openreach will be conducting routine platform maintenance to their online ordering system.

During this window, any orders that are placed will be put on hold and progressed following the maintenance window.

This work covers Zen online ordering and Fibre Hub online ordering platforms.

We regret any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Sun, 7th Feb 2027 00:05

End: Sun, 7th Feb 2027 06:00

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 23:14

Status: Up

Maintenance: Planned

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11527 Zen Web Sites - Planned Maintenance - Order platform (New)
Openreach will be conducting routine platform maintenance to their online ordering system.

During this window, any orders that are placed will be put on hold and progressed following the maintenance window.

This work covers Zen online ordering and Fibre Hub online ordering platforms.

We regret any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Sat, 20th Feb 2027 00:05

End: Sat, 20th Feb 2027 06:00

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 23:15

Status: Up

Maintenance: Planned

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11528 Zen Web Sites - Planned Maintenance - Order platform (New)
Openreach will be conducting routine platform maintenance to their online ordering system.

During this window, any orders that are placed will be put on hold and progressed following the maintenance window.

This work covers Zen online ordering and Fibre Hub online ordering platforms.

We regret any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Sun, 21st Feb 2027 00:05

End: Sun, 21st Feb 2027 06:00

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 23:15

Status: Up

Maintenance: Planned

CNET News
Open 
Netflix Is Introducing Vertical Video to Its Mobile App This Month
Look out for TikTok-style vibes on your phone.

No Agenda Show
Open 
1860 - "micro-dosing"
No Agenda Episode 1860 - "micro-dosing"



micro-dosing
Executive Producers:
Sir Mike & Dame Becky Chinni, Baronet & Baronetess of the Great Katy Prairie
Baron of Old Bay
Spittyfire
Sir Richard Hufford
Associate Executive Producers:
William Gault
Eli the Coffee Guy
Sir e61 Black Sheep
Linda Lu, Dutchess of Jobs and writer of winning resumes
Order of the Heart:
Chris Chinni of Allen, TX - Red Knight (name TBD - to be claimed by Chris). Bi-Centennial baby, turned 50 on 4/6/26. Gift from parents Sir Mike & Dame Becky Chinni.
Title Changes
[None this show]
Knights & Dames
Priscilla Rubio > Dame Allicsirp of California
A.D. > Sir Texas Comrade
Michael Meyers > Sir Michael Boiler of Crawfish
End of Show Mixes:
NA-1860-EOS-Mix BY VArious Legends!
Art By: Darren O'Neill
Become a member of the 1860 Club, support the show here
Boost us with with Podcasting 2.0 Certified apps: Podverse - Podfriend - Breez - Sphinx - Podstation - Curiocaster - Fountain
Mark van Dijk - Systems Master
Ryan Bemrose - Program Director
Back Office Jae Dvorak
Chapters: Dreb Scott
Clip Custodian: Neal Jones
Clip Collectors: Steve Jones & Dave Ackerman
Gitmo Jams
Sign up for the newsletter
No Agenda Peerage
ShowNotes Archive 1860.noagendanotes.com
Directory Archive archive.noagendanotes.com
RSS Podcast Feed
Full Summaries in PDF
No Agenda Lite in opus format



Last Modified 04/16/2026 16:28:51 by Freedom Controller

Mail Online
Open 
Sperm whale 'language' is just like human speech, scientists say
Sperm whales communicate through rhythmic clicks known as codas and scientists have discovered that each click comes at a different frequency - like human vowel sounds.

Boing Boing
Open 
A24 and Michaela Coel remaking Jean-Claude Van Damme's 'Bloodsport'
In 1988, Bloodsport was the quintessential Cannon Group VHS blockbuster, costing nothing to make and raking in $50m "despite" negative reviews. It made Jean-Claude Van Damme a star, is notable for being a perfectly-formed, perfectly mindless video game on celluloid, and is credited for bringing the martial arts genre back to the big screen. — Read the rest
The post A24 and Michaela Coel remaking Jean-Claude Van Damme's 'Bloodsport' appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
The Secret Life of Circuits book explains electronics for everyone
Electrical circuits have always been a mystery to me. Those tiny components that look like Chiclets or jewelry beads somehow make a light blink, produce music, and detect motion. So I was happy to learn about The Secret Life of Circuits: An Illustrated Guide to Electronic Circuit Design, a new 400-page book by Michal Zalewski from No Starch Press, due in fall 2026. — Read the rest
The post The Secret Life of Circuits book explains electronics for everyone appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Grandpa Pudding Brains treats Epstein victims like a footnote, treats Pope like a rival
In a rambling press conference that managed to be both callous and combative, Donald Trump brushed off victims connected to Jeffrey Epstein with an "or whatever," before pivoting seamlessly into picking a fight with the Pope, because apparently, there's always time to punch up at the Vatican. — Read the rest
The post Grandpa Pudding Brains treats Epstein victims like a footnote, treats Pope like a rival appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
We're going to be getting new Hunger Games movies forever
Looking back on it, it's hard to believe that the first Hunger Games movie came out fourteen years ago. If only because it makes me feel ancient. Unlike some YA fiction authors, however, Suzanne Collins hasn't let mold eat her brain in the intervening years or come out as a massive bigot or started writing weirdly transphobic mystery novels under a pen name. — Read the rest
The post We're going to be getting new Hunger Games movies forever appeared first on Boing Boing.

Adam Curry
Open 
No Agenda Episode 1860 - "micro-dosing"
No Agenda Episode 1860 - "micro-dosing"

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Tesla, IBM and Intel report earnings next week — here’s the best way to play a volatile market
The stock market isn’t out of the woods yet — despite the rally.

Mail Online
Open 
Airline worker is lured to a meeting point and arrested after Dubai authorities accessed his private WhatsApp... of him for sharing photos of bomb damage
Authorities accessed a closed chat between colleagues, downloaded evidence and then lured the man to a meeting and arrested him.

Mail Online
Open 
Now even Wes Streeting is piling pressure on Reeves to cut welfare spending and boost defence
Health Secretary Wes Streeting appeared to suggest benefits could be curbed, saying the money for the Armed Forces has 'got to come from somewhere'.

Mail Online
Open 
I'm A Celebrity's David Haye made sexist remarks because he 'couldn't use AI in the jungle to check if his comments were safe'
David Haye allegedly made his 'sexist' comments on I'm A Celebrity: All Stars because he couldn't use AI to 'check if his comments were safe'.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Foreign Office’s top civil servant Olly Robbins to leave post over Mandelson vetting row
Keir Starmer understood to have lost confidence in official over decision to override security vetting failureMandelson failed vetting but Foreign Office overruled decisionSir Olly Robbins, the UK Foreign Office’s top civil servant, is leaving his post after the decision to fail Peter Mandelson during his security vetting was overruled by his department.Robbins was the Foreign Office’s most senior official in late January 2025 when the decision was made, paving the way for Mandelson to become the US ambassador. Continue reading...

Slashdot
Open 
OpenAI's Big Codex Update Is a Direct Shot At Claude Code
OpenAI is updating Codex with more agent-like capabilities, positioning it as a more direct rival to Anthropic's Claude Code. Some of the new features include the ability to operate macOS desktop apps, browse the web inside the app, generate images, use new workplace plug-ins, and remember useful context from past tasks. The Verge reports: Codex will now be able to operate desktop apps on your computer, OpenAI says in a blog post announcing the update. It can work in the background, meaning it won't interfere with your own work in other apps, and multiple agents can work in parallel. For developers, OpenAI says "this is helpful for testing and iterating on frontend changes, testing apps, or working in apps that don't expose an API." The feature will start rolling out to Codex desktop app users signed in with ChatGPT today and will initially be limited to macOS. OpenAI did not indicate a timeline for when use will expand to other operating systems. EU users will also have to wait, it said, adding that the update will roll out to users there "soon."

Codex is also getting the ability to generate and iterate on images with gpt-image-1.5, new plug-ins for tools like GitLab, Atlassian Rovo, and Microsoft Suite, and native web browsing through an in-app browser, "where you can comment directly on pages to provide precise instructions to the agent." OpenAI also said it will also be easier to automate tasks, with users able to re-use existing conversation threads and Codex now able to schedule future work for itself and wake up automatically to continue on a long-term task. Codex will also be getting a memory feature allowing it to remember useful context from past experience, such as personal preferences, corrections, and information that took time to gather. OpenAI said it hopes the opt-in feature, which will be released as a preview, will help future tasks complete faster and to a quality that previously required detailed custom instructions. The personalization features will roll out to Enterprise, Edu, and EU users "soon."





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Nature
Open 
‘Science needs defending’: record number of researchers run for office in US mid-terms

Mail Online
Open 
Fresh start for the North Sea - but Reeves must do more to make Britain truly energy secure: ALEX BRUMMER
Sometimes it takes a war to get governments to think again. It has been Labour doctrine since it won office that drilling in the North Sea is verboten.

Mail Online
Open 
CHRISTOPHER STEVENS: Sadly, this Bergerac reboot has lost much of the show's original magic
CHRISTOPHER STEVENS: Let's put a stop to this right now. There's a growing trend in crime TV to put the opening credits anywhere but the beginning. It's getting silly.

Mail Online
Open 
North West flaunts her dazzling 14k white gold grillz after sparking outrage with 'risky' finger piercings
The 12-year-old daughter of Kim Kardashian and Kanye West brandished a gleaming set of decorative dental jewelry that covered her bottom and top teeth

Mail Online
Open 
Baywatch vet Erika Eleniak, 56, is seen for first time on set of reboot 30 years after she left series, see her now
The 56-year-old actress wore a beige blouse over a green tank top and slacks as she stood on the beach in Marina Del Rey in Southern California.

Mail Online
Open 
American Pie star Shannon Elizabeth, 52, filed for DIVORCE from husband 'days' before launching her OnlyFans
The 52-year-old actress filed for divorce from her husband Simon Borchert 'in the last few days,' according to a well-placed source.

Mail Online
Open 
Luke Littler JEERED by Dutch fans as he loses Premier League showdown in Rotterdam - two weeks after mocking opponent with 'crybaby' gesture
The world No 1 has not been forgiven for a spat with Dutchman Gian van Veen in Manchester two weeks ago and was relentlessly booed throughout the 11th night of action.

Mail Online
Open 
The most influential man in the US revealed: Trump's reaction as DailyMail+ unveils the America 250 Power List ranking... that gives major clue about our NEXT president
Ahead of the nation's 250th birthday on July 4, DailyMail+ is today revealing America's biggest power players.

Mail Online
Open 
Bombshell that could spell the end: Starmer is on the brink as his 'lies' are exposed as No10 admits Mandy failed security vetting... and PM pleads ignorance
Foreign Office officials pushed the controversial appointment through regardless, it was revealed, and the Prime Minister faces the deeply damaging allegation that he lied to Parliament.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
California Supreme Court Disbars Former Trump Attorney For Aiding Challenge Of 2020 Election Results
California Supreme Court Disbars Former Trump Attorney For Aiding Challenge Of 2020 Election Results

Authored by Brad Jones via The Epoch Times,

The California Supreme Court decided to disbar former Trump attorney John Eastman over his aiding the president in challenging the 2020 presidential election results.



The court has not yet handed down an opinion to explain the April 15 decision, which affirmed the California Bar court’s recommendation for disbarment for alleged attorney ethics violations.

Eastman, a former Chapman University law professor, gained national attention for advising President Donald Trump on constitutional challenges to election procedures in several battleground states after the president alleged widespread election fraud.

The California decision is not the end of the line for Eastman. He can still practice law in the U.S. Supreme Court and possibly in another state.

“Federal courts are supposed to let me keep practicing, and the U.S. Supreme Court has allowed me to continue practicing, even while I’ve been placed on inactive status [in] California,” he said.

Eastman told The Epoch Times the state court’s decision is “outrageous” and “Orwellian.”

“What’s happening here to our institutions that have been captured by hard line, political, weaponized activists needs to be addressed. I was hopeful that the state Supreme Court would do that, but they’ve obviously punted,” he said.

“And so, it’s now up to the U.S. Supreme Court to fix this metastasization of the weaponization problem.”

Eastman said his attorney will file a certiorari petition, which is a formal request asking the U.S. Supreme Court to review the state court’s decision “because of the First Amendment violations that it represents.”

The U.S. Supreme Court has made clear that “professional speech does not get lesser First Amendment protection than anybody else’s speech,” Eastman said.

“And yet, what the court has done here is basically said ... I don’t get the same First Amendment protection that the man on the street gets because I was representing a client,” he said.

Eastman claims he is a victim of “lawfare” and was “debanked” over the controversy, which he said is “obviously partisan in nature.”

George Cardona, the chief trial counsel of the State Bar of California, alleged in a June 14 statement that Eastman violated his fundamental obligation to be truthful and uphold the rule of law “when, at the behest of his client, now-President Donald Trump, he engaged in a calculated campaign to falsely undermine the results of the 2020 presidential election, which then-candidate Donald Trump lost.”

Cardona alleged that Eastman “lied to courts,” then-Vice President Mike Pence, and the American people.

Randall Miller, an attorney with the Miller Waxler law firm who represents Eastman, criticized the decision in a statement emailed to The Epoch Times.

“The California Supreme Court has allowed to stand a State Bar Court recommendation that we contend departs from longstanding United States Supreme Court precedent protecting First Amendment rights, especially in the attorney discipline context,” Miller wrote.

“We disagree with that outcome and believe it raises pivotal constitutional concerns regarding the limits of state regulation of attorney speech,” he wrote.

“We will seek review in the U.S. Supreme Court to repudiate this threat to the rule of law and our nation’s adversarial system of justice.”

Deborah Pauly, an attorney with the LEX REX Institute and longtime conservative activist in Orange County, Calif., told The Epoch Times in a text message that the California Supreme Court “rubber-stamped the Bar Court’s recommendation.”

“California is trying to silence anyone who endeavors to protect and defend our Constitution from the swamp,” she said.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 15:45

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Trump Says 'Probably, Maybe' Iran Talks To Resume This Weekend, 'Not Sure' About Ceasefire Extension
Trump Says 'Probably, Maybe' Iran Talks To Resume This Weekend, 'Not Sure' About Ceasefire Extension

Summary


Trump says "probably, maybe" Iran talks resume this weekend, "not sure" about ceasefire extension.


Trump unveils 10-day Lebanon ceasefire, but which Hezbollah has not signed on for, amid heavy IDF attacks on south. BBG reports on potential 6-month timeframe for comprehensive Iran deal, oil spikes.


Iran seeks to boost rial through toll payment scheme; vessels pay Hormuz passage through Iranian banks.


US Navy: vessels seeking entry into Hormuz Strait now fair game for boarding, search, and outright seizure - including for suspicion of 'contraband'.


Hegseth: US forces are ready to restart combat if Iran doesn’t agree to a deal & strait blockade to continue for as long as it takes. Already 14 ships have been turned around.




//-->

//-->

//-->


Trump announces end of military operations against Iran by May 31st?
Yes 70% · No 31%View full market & trade on Polymarket *  *  *

Trump Still Signals Ambiguity on Peace/Ceasefire Potential

President Trump appeared to confirm ceasefire talks with Iran are still very up in the air, saying that he also doesn't see the need to extend the current two-week ceasefire - "not sure," he said - also amid the going US naval blockade of Iranian-China oil exports, or other sanctioned vessels. With no extension, the ceasefire will expire on April 22.

"If there's no deal fighting resumes," Trump affirmed in fielding reporters' questions. Importantly, talks and timeline are still a big maybe:


President Trump told reporters the next in-person talks negotiating a deal for Iran will "probably, maybe" happen this weekend. He didn't say where, and other U.S. officials haven't confirmed any details.


He took the opportunity in the same remarks to slam the Pope. "If the pope looked at the 42,000 people that were killed over the last two or three months, as a protester, with no weapons, no nothing," he claimed, using the same unsourced numbers he's lately been throwing around.  "I mean, you take a look at that, so I can disagree with the pope. I have a right to disagree. I have a right to disagree with the pope."

The president added, "The pope can say what he wants. And I want him to say what he wants. But I can disagree. I think that Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon. If they do, the whole world would be in jeopardy, the Middle East would blow up and the whole world would be in jeopardy."

"This is the real world, it's a nasty world," he said. "But as far as the pope and saying what he wants, he can do that." 

Also, Iran agrees to hand over its enriched uranium(?)... there's nothing from Iran saying this:


"They've agreed to give us back the nuclear dust," Trump told reporters at the White House, using his name for the enriched uranium stockpile that the United States says could be used to build nuclear weapons. "There's a very good chance we're going to make a deal."


And on the newly declared Israel-Lebanon ceasefire, which does not include Hezbollah, Trump told reporters: "I responded to this call and agreed to a timeout, or rather a temporary ceasefire, of 10 days to try to advance the agreement that we began discussing with the ambassadors' meeting in Washington." He added: "For these peace talks, we have two fundamental demands: one, the disarmament of Hezbollah. Two, a sustainable peace agreement, peace from strength."


⚡️An hour before the ceasefire, Hezbollah rockets impact Nahariya pic.twitter.com/s83rPjOUfp
— War Monitor (@WarMonitors) April 16, 2026
Gulf, European officials See Needing 6 Months for Iran deal: BBG, Oil Spikes

A big headline out of Bloomberg has sent oil prices higher:


Some Gulf Arab and European leaders believe that a US-Iran peace deal will take about six months to be agreed and that the warring sides should extend their ceasefire to cover that timeframe, according to officials from the regions familiar with the matter.

The leaders want the vital Strait of Hormuz opened immediately to restore energy flows and are warning in private that a global food crisis may develop if that doesn’t happen by next month, said the officials, who asked not to be identified discussing private talks.


But important caveats remain: who are these "some" Gulf and "European leaders" - the latter who have remained far to the sidelines during this crisis, but who are yes still suffering the effects of the ultra-risky Operation Epic Fury Iran war gambit by Trump. Spike in crude...



Trump: Truce in Lebanon

President Trump has announced an apparent Lebanon breakthrough, announcing on Truth Social that Lebanon and Israel have agreed to a 10-day ceasefire. This just after on Thursday Israel launched at least 50 airstrikes in a matter of two hours on South Lebanon, according to national media. Israel says late Thursday its forces have no plans to withdraw ground troops from Southern Lebanon. Operations there look to continue, but presumably the ceasefire means Beirut might not be hit in the interim. 

This week, Rubio oversaw historic peace talks between Lebanese officials and the Israeli government; however, which did not include Hezbollah. Both Tehran and Hezbollah have insisted that the Lebanon conflict should be resolved through the Pakistan mediated US-Iran process. The Lebanese government has little actual sway over Hezbollah, the country's single most well-armed and influential paramilitary organization, which has more missiles and arms than even the national army. This means it remains a big unknown whether this 10-day truce will hold. Trump's Truth Social message, which claims he solved "9 wars across the world" and a "lasting peace":



Defiant Iran Reasserts Toll System: Paid Through Iranian Banks

An Iranian parliament official has been cited in newswires as saying the country's planned Strait of Hormuz toll for ships seeking to pass is to be paid through Iranian banks. Previously it was said to be through cryptocurrency, and could be as a high as $2 million Oil rose higher, given this is another indicator this game of chicken in the narrow waterway could soon lead to fresh hostilities, despite the 2-week ceasefire still being in place, soon to expire.

As for negotiations, there's optimism another round of US-Iran talks will occur, with both sides having agreed in principle, but Iran's government informed Pakistan that the US must back off its maximal demands.


Reuters: U.S. and Iranian negotiators have scaled back ambitions for a comprehensive peace deal and are instead seeking a temporary memorandum to prevent a return ​to conflict, two Iranian sources told Reuters.


Below is a machine translation from the Persian of the fresh parliament statement via state-linked ISNA:

The plan to consolidate Iran's sovereignty in the Strait of Hormuz is being framed as a way to strengthen the rial.
Iran is seeking a regulatory role in the Strait of Hormuz - one of the world’s most sensitive chokepoints -positioning it as oversight, not disruption or blackmail.
Under the plan, foreign ships would settle accounts through offices in Iran or via the Iranian banking system, a move aimed at boosting the rial.
Estimated current revenue from managing and regulating maritime traffic in the Strait of Hormuz: $10-15 billion.
Boarding, Search, & Outright Seizure

Ships seeking to enter the Hormuz Strait already sanctioned by the US just got a lot more vulnerable: under Washington’s blockade of Iranian ports, they're now fair game for boarding, search, and outright seizure, per US Naval Forces Central Command.

"In addition to enforcing the blockade, all Iranian vessels, vessels with active OFAC sanctions, and vessels suspected of carrying contraband, are subject to belligerent right to visit and search," the notice said, referring to the Office of Foreign Assets Control. "These vessels, regardless of location, are subject to visit, board, search, and seizure."

The definition of "contraband" is broad and expansive. It spans weapons, ammunition, combat aircraft, and military electronics, WSJ has described. "Petroleum products and lubricants are conditional contraband due to their essential role in military operations and their contribution to Iran’s war-sustaining economy," the advisory also said. "Contraband is defined as goods that are destined for an enemy and that may be susceptible to use in armed conflict."
US Marine Corps image

Up until now, the blockade - initially rolled out Monday - was limited to ships moving in and out of Iranian ports, but the definition who can be targeted just widened. Meanwhile, US Central Command (CENTCOM) said Wednesday that in the first 48 hours, not a single ship made it past the blockade.

Hormuz Blockade: 'As Long As It Takes'

The US will maintain a naval blockade of Iran for as long as it takes, Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth has stated in a press briefing Thursday. He and Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Dan Caine say that US forces are ready to resume major combat operations at a moment's notice, which suggests the initial two-week ceasefire could get extended, as was widely reported the day prior. But this also suggests that Washington likely has no appetite for resuming major aerial operations directly against Iran anytime soon.


General Caine:
At each point, the United States Navy will transmit a warning—a young sailor, normally on the bridge of one of those destroyers. A junior officer picks up that mic and transmits, and I quote:
"Do not attempt to breach the blockade.
Vessels will be boarded for… pic.twitter.com/VT6LvPBUnT
— Clash Report (@clashreport) April 16, 2026
On the question of resumption of major combat operations, Hegseth warned: "To Iran, choose wisely. I pray you choose a deal which is within your grasp for the betterment of your people and the betterment of the world." He followed with, "In the meantime, the War Department is locked and loaded." Additional main highlights to the Hegseth/Caine update and presser:

Iran likes to say it controls Strait of Hormuz but it has no navy
Energy industry not destroyed 'yet', US blockade shutting down exports
For as long as it takes, we will maintain blockade
Launching operation 'economic fury'
Iran is digging out bombed out launchers
I hope you choose a deal which is within your grasp
But again, the chief takeaway is that the Pentagon and Trump administration are making clear that US forces are ready to restart combat if Iran doesn't agree to a deal. On that front, US officials say future talks are likely to be held again in Pakistan’s capital, Islamabad. Prior reports have indicated both sides have "agreed in principle" to engage in another round of talks.

Iran's PressTV touting ability to inflict global economic pain...


International Monetary Fund’s chief economist says that growth is expected to slow this year amid repercussions from the war against Iran and disruptions to global oil and gas trade.
Follow Press TV on Telegram: https://t.co/LWoNSpkc2J pic.twitter.com/ZAty9htTov
— Press TV 🔻 (@PressTV) April 15, 2026
Pentagon: 13 Ships Turned Around

Since the blockade went live, US forces have already turned around 13 ships, according to Gen. Caine in the same briefing. He underscored how far this reach extends, saying operations will take place "inside Iran's territorial seas and in international waters."

Officially, the Pentagon claims the blockade is limited - targeting Iran’s ports and coastal areas while sparing vessels simply passing through the Strait of Hormuz. In practice, however, the net is touted as much wider, as US forces "will actively pursue any Iranian-flagged vessel or any vessel attempting to provide material support to Iran," including so-called "dark fleet vessels carrying Iranian oil," Caine added.

He confirmed that more than 10,000 service members are now involved in the blockade, but with more US servicemembers en route to the region.

Lebanon Still Bombed Heavily by Israel amid US Ceasefire Efforts

Israeli jets pounded Nabatiyeh in southern Lebanon Thursday, unleashing one of the heaviest barrages there since the war began and sending black smoke billowing over the region. Strikes hit near the industrial zone and a supermarket on Nabih Berri Avenue, with nearby suburbs also taking damage, according to Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency.

Iran has signaled urgency on de-escalation, with parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf calling ceasefire in Lebanon "as important as a ceasefire in Iran." He described, "In the Islamabad negotiations and afterwards, we have been seriously pursuing efforts to compel the adversaries to establish a permanent ceasefire in all areas of conflict." Pakistan's army chief is in Tehran mediating between Washington and Tehran.


⚡#BREAKING Lebanese President Joseph Aoun said in a conversation with US Secretary of State Marco: "I am not willing to talk to Netanyahu"
— War Monitor (@WarMonitors) April 16, 2026
Lebanon's leadership is in th emeantime framing any truce as a gateway to talks, despite Hezbollah having rejected direct talks with Israel. The ceasefire it is "demanding with Israel" would be a "natural entry point for direct negotiations," President Aoun said, adding: "Lebanon is keen to halt the escalation… so that the targeting of the innocents ceases, and the destruction of homes" stops.

Destruction of Al-Qasimia Bridge in Southern Lebanon


جسر القاسمية pic.twitter.com/u39LVosxnF
— Lebanon 24 (@Lebanon24) April 16, 2026
He stressed negotiations "are to be undertaken by the Lebanese authorities alone," and said "the withdrawal of Israeli forces… is an essential step," alongside redeploying the army "up to the international borders" to "end any manifestation of armed presence."

And yet Israeli strikes are now hitting infrastructure. A key bridge over the Litani River near Qasmiyeh - linking Tyre and Sidon - was reportedly destroyed, though Israel said it only "struck adjacent to it." The broader campaign is cutting off southern Lebanon, targeting chiefly Hezbollah positions, Israeli officials have claimed.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 16:00

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Wall Or Sieve? Attacks Raise Doubts About U.S. Immigration System
Wall Or Sieve? Attacks Raise Doubts About U.S. Immigration System

Authored by Benjamin Weingarten via RealClearPolitics,

In the wee hours of Sunday, March 1, a Senegalese immigrant clad in a sweatshirt bearing the words “Property of Allah” opened fire outside an Austin, Texas beer garden, killing three and leaving 14 others wounded.



On March 12, at Old Dominion University, a former Virginia National Guard member from Sierra Leone – released early from an 11-year prison sentence for attempting to provide material support to the ISIL – yelled “Allahu Akbar” before shooting and killing a beloved college professor and wounding two other people.

That same day, a Lebanese immigrant plowed a pickup truck filled with fireworks and gasoline into a large synagogue in West Bloomfield, Michigan. After exchanging gunfire with security staff, he killed himself. His brother, it turned out, was a recently eliminated Hezbollah commander in Lebanon. 

Amidst the emerging threat environment of the Iran war, these and other attacks on U.S. soil have reignited questions about the U.S. immigration system’s vetting and screening standards. Republican leaders are increasingly asking how, for example, foreign nationals like the Afghan evacuee who shot two National Guard members in Washington, D.C. – killing one of them – or the Egyptian national overstaying his tourism visa who firebombed pro-Israel demonstrators in Colorado last year were able to come here and commit such acts. They are also asking how close relatives of top Iranian officials, including avowed supporters of that country’s regime, have been allowed to live and work in the United States. 

Earlier this month, Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced that he had terminated the legal status of the niece of Iranian Major General Qasem Soleimani, who was killed by the U.S. in a targeted attack in 2020, and her daughter. Rubio described the niece on X as “an outspoken supporter of the Iranian regime who celebrated attacks on Americans and referred to our country as the ‘Great Satan.’ ”

While the Trump administration has effectively closed the southern border, the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services has concluded that “prior screening and vetting measures” of people who cross the border legally “were wholly inadequate,” creating “significant national security and public safety risks [that] compromise the integrity of the immigration system.”

Administration critics argue that fears of foreign-born terrorism are vastly overblown. Alex Nowrasteh of the Cato Institute told RealClearInvestigations that the annual chance of being murdered in a terrorist attack on U.S. soil by a foreign-born attacker is “about one in 165 million per year. All politically motivated violence is a tiny threat,” he said. “Exaggerating the threat does not bring us closer to delivering justice to the victims of every violent or property crime who deserve it.”

RCI’s review of congressional testimony and research, and interviews with immigration and national security experts, uncovered long-standing flaws in the system – some of which were exacerbated by the Biden administration’s lax immigration policies. Challenges run the gamut from incomplete information about applicants to inconsistent enforcement of the law. Even if relatively few immigrants commit deadly attacks, the vetting system has routinely permitted people with obscure backgrounds and hostile views to visit and live in the U.S. 

Robust Design

America’s immigration system is complex and multilayered, involving a range of departments and agencies that provide different levels of scrutiny depending on which of the dozens of categories would-be entrants fall into, from tourists to asylum seekers. As with most laws and rules, different administrations vet applicants with varying levels of vigor depending on whether they want to encourage or discourage immigration.

Three agencies lead the vetting process. The State Department issues visas; U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services reviews petitions for immigrants seeking benefits such as citizenship or permanent residency, refugee and asylum claims, and other protections; Customs and Border Protection provides defense at the point at which aliens attempt to enter the country. Across these processes, sometimes with redundancy, authorities conduct biographic and biometric screenings, run name checks across U.S. security databases to search for red flags such as criminal histories or inclusion on terror watchlists, and interview would-be visitors.

As designed, the immigration system requires nearly all noncitizens seeking to enter the U.S. to obtain a visa. Nonimmigrant visas cover temporary trips for business or tourism, whereas immigrant visas cover permanent stays that may be family-, employment-, or education-based.

Those seeking long-term stays are subject to more rigorous scrutiny. While undergoing detailed background checks, they are generally required to file petitions, secure sponsors, and meet incremental thresholds and standards necessary, for example, to unite with family or work full-time. In 2024, the U.S. issued about 600,000 visas for long-term stay. 

The vast majority of visas are issued to tourists and other temporary visitors – nearly 11 million in 2024. They are generally subject to less scrutiny.

In theory, those millions of temporary visitors will leave before their visas expire. In practice, a reported 40% of illegal aliens currently in the U.S. – amounting to millions of people – are visa overstayers, illustrating one of the myriad security-related issues plaguing the U.S. Homeland Security system. 

“The vetting system is robust,” former senior INS official and immigration judge Andrew Arthur told RCI. But, he added, it “is only as good as the intelligence that the USG possesses and the access that the individual consular officer or OFO [CBP Office of Field Operations] officer has to that intelligence.”

To that end, our “biggest vulnerability,” in the words of the Heritage Foundation’s Simon Hankinson, is that officers often lack access to derogatory information held by foreign countries.

As Hankinson, a longtime former foreign service officer, recently detailed, this problem pervades even the U.S. Visa Waiver Program, where the citizens of several dozen generally safe and friendly countries – including most EU countries and Japan – may visit America visa-free for up to 90 days. Those waivers come in exchange for security cooperation, including sharing their citizens’ criminal records. 

Cracks in the System

Critics note that only a few U.S. counterparts automatically check their visiting citizens’ criminal records. The U.S. otherwise must request that home countries run queries. Meanwhile, America lacks information-sharing agreements with many countries altogether.

These problems only grow when other nations lack reliable data, or where their authoritative documents may be easily fabricated – one of the justifications for Trump’s travel bans disproportionately hitting the Middle East and Africa.

“I worked in India, I worked in Ghana, [where] right outside the consulate, there were stores selling fake degrees, fake passports. I mean, they didn’t even hide it,” Hankinson said.

Incomplete data or suspect documents aside, authorities have also highlighted that U.S. databases may not always talk to each other. A June 2024 DHS Inspector General report indicated that “DHS’ biometric system…could not access all data from Federal partners to ensure complete screening and vetting of noncitizens seeking admission into the United States” due to “ongoing technical limitations.” The inspector general also found that border patrol officers lacked the hardware necessary to perform biometric screenings of people arriving by car or truck. 

Federal authorities have also not always vigorously enforced their own security protocols. A September 2025 DHS IG report detailed that from March 2020 to March 2024, the State Department issued 12 million nonimmigrant visas without conducting in-person interviews or collecting fingerprints. CBP officers encountering foreign nationals at points of entry were unaware that the State had not fully screened some of them. 

Subpar vetting was common regarding the tens of thousands of Afghans admitted to the U.S. in the wake of the Biden administration’s pullout from the country in 2021. In a January 2026 hearing, DHS Deputy Inspector General for Audits, Craig Adelman, submitted written testimony indicating that under Operation Allies Welcome, in several instances “DHS could not demonstrate that it accurately knew who individuals were, where they were located, whether parole conditions were being met, or whether individuals had unresolved risk indicators.” CBP sometimes lacked “access to critical data to properly screen, vet, or inspect” them. 

Adelman’s testimony came following the National Guardsman shooting by evacuee Rahmanullah Lakanwal, and the prosecution of Nasir Ahmed Tawhedi, another evacuee who would plead guilty to plotting a mass-casualty attack on behalf of ISIS around Election Day 2024.

More broadly, the Government Accountability Office has found that the humanitarian parole processes have generally lacked sufficient anti-fraud measures, making it hard to ensure those fleeing warzones or failed states pose no threat to the U.S. homeland.

These findings also come on top of the millions who entered the country illegally during the Biden administration – and related immigrant overstays and backlogs creating security risks all their own. Hundreds of thousands of asylum claimants, for example, have been insufficiently screened historically during prolonged adjudication periods, DHS’ watchdog has found.

Hankinson is adamant that “we have not been enforcing our own rules with anything like the tenacity that we should have been. We’ve been really giving the benefit of the doubt to the alien in every circumstance.”

Ironically, the president’s opponents also agree that the immigration system is broken. But instead of tweaking the current system, many Democrats and their allies have floated the idea of abolishing the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency.

Good Questions, ‘Bad Odor’

Another potential issue that recent security incidents have raised is whether authorities are properly vetting and screening for indicators associated with the actual threats faced.

Federal law, drafted in the shadow of World War II and during the Cold War, generally deemed inadmissible immigrant members or affiliates of totalitarian political parties. Laws later expanded to encompass terrorists and their supporters.

But records may not exist of terrorist activities or support among those hailing from failed states. Despite this potential vulnerability, those with whom RCI spoke indicated that immigration officers do not tailor questions to unearth whether visitors harbor a terrorist worldview that could suggest future trouble or merit further scrutiny.

Authorities are “looking for Communists and Nazis,” Hankinson told RCI, not “Islamic fanatics…people who believe in Sharia law, who want to cut the hands off criminals, or have women dressed in burkas.” 

Dan Cadman, a retired INS/ICE official now at the Center for Immigration Studies, told RCI that “the vetting procedures have not captured Islamist/ adversarial/ subversive ideologies among family members and close associates.” Were such affiliations known, for example, in the case of the would-be Michigan synagogue attacker Ayman Mohamed Ghazali, whose brother was a Hezbollah commander, immigration authorities likely would have subjected him to heightened scrutiny – and perhaps denied him entry. 

Cadman attributes the lack of ideological bar to the “bad odor” to which such tests are held, and the fact that they lead to “thorny questions” about when religiously-based views “cross into the arena of politics” and constitutional rights. Progressive groups and others panned the blanket travel restrictions Trump pursued during his first administration sought to impose on myriad Muslim-majority countries as “Muslim bans.”

Nevertheless, some analysts have proposed bans of those affiliated with Islamist groups analogous to those of totalitarian political parties already on the books to satisfy such concerns. Several members of Congress appear receptive to this idea as well. Legislation is currently pending before the House and Senate to amend the Immigration and Nationality Act to render “advocates for the imposition of Sharia law” inadmissible, and remove Sharia adherents accordingly.

Even if such questions could survive First Amendment challenges, some observers doubt they would provide useful answers. David Bier of the Cato Institute told RCI, “There is no evidence that asking people general questions like whether they support terrorism or Sharia law would be an effective way to prevent attacks in the United States.”

Arthur, Cadman’s colleague at the Center for Immigration Studies, added that “identifying those who hold hostile beliefs is a difficult endeavor, and one that even the best adjudication and screening system will struggle to achieve.”

Whether a change in standards or their implementation might have prevented the recent attacks on U.S. soil by immigrants who became naturalized citizens remains unclear. Arthur says these incidents show “a decline in assimilation on the part of the naturalized citizen and in integration on the part of the United States” – a transcendent problem all its own.

Crackdown and Pushback

The Trump administration has sought to significantly enhance vetting standards, mitigate risks, and more vigorously enforce the law.

The president kicked off his second term with an executive order directing national security authorities to ensure that all aliens are “vet[ted] and screen[ed] to the maximum degree possible,” including for those threatening national security and bearing “hostile attitudes” toward America, its people, and institutions. 

In June, the president fully or partially restricted and limited the entry of nationals from 19 countries it deemed to pose security risks, some Muslim-majority, via executive order – a broad measure to mitigate screening and vetting risks. 

Democrats assailed these efforts as “bigoted” and “Islamophobic.” 

“This discriminatory policy, which limits legal immigration, not only flies in the face of what our country is supposed to stand for, it will be harmful to our economy and communities that rely on the contributions of people who come to America from this wide range of countries,” Democratic Washington state Rep. Pramila Jayapal has said. “Banning a whole group of people because you disagree with the structure or function of their government not only lays blame in the wrong place, it creates a dangerous precedent.”

Later that year, in August, USCIS updated its policy guidance to ensure that when immigration officers are evaluating immigration benefit requests, aliens’ support or espousal of the views of terrorist groups, including anti-Americanism, and Jew-hatred, ought to weigh heavily against applicants. 

Last December, USCIS paused all pending asylum and benefit applications from the 19 “high-risk countries” identified in the June executive order while conducting a “re-review of approved benefit requests” for all aliens from those countries entering the U.S. on or after the first day of the Biden administration. The administration also extended travel restrictions to 20 additional countries.

Among other initiatives, the second Trump administration is also “re-vetting” previously admitted aliens, and engaging in “continuous vetting” of all U.S. visa holders – some 55 million at the time it announced the policy – for violations that could lead to their deportation.

It has reportedly revoked 100,000 visas – a 150% increase versus 2024.

DHS says that ICE has arrested more than 43,000 potential national security risks, including 1,416 known or suspected terrorists, some 1,392 of which have been removed. It did so in announcing the recent arrest of Salah Salem Sarsour, a Jordanian national who the U.S. asserts was convicted decades ago in Israel of throwing a Molotov cocktail at the homes of Israeli military personnel and illegally attempting to possess weapons. DHS claims Sarsour is “suspected of funding terror organizations and lying on immigration forms” to enter the country, after which he became a green card holder back in 1998. The arrest of the Islamic Society of Milwaukee president generated strong pushback from the ACLU and the Council on American-Islamic Relations, with the former suggesting Sarsour may have been targeted for being “outspoken in his support for Palestinian rights” in violation of the First Amendment – a microcosm of the debates simmering over the president’s immigration policies.

Last month, the U.S. Intelligence Community assessed that “increased border security, stricter screening and vetting, and improved international information sharing” have led jihadist groups to focus “more on virtually recruiting U.S.-based aspirants to encourage and enable potential attacks.”

With the Trump administration already planning to significantly ramp up denaturalization efforts in response to revelations of fraud perpetrated by immigrants, this assessment and recent attacks from the naturalized population may only further fuel such efforts.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 16:20

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Netflix Plunges After US Revenues Miss, Dismal Q2 Guidance, Hastings Stepping Down As Chairman
Netflix Plunges After US Revenues Miss, Dismal Q2 Guidance, Hastings Stepping Down As Chairman

After staging a powerful rebound in the past two months, when first weak Q4 earnings sent the stock plunging to multi-year lows, which however was offset by the end of the company's expensive pursuit of HBO/Warner Bros. Discovery , and which sent the stock almost 50% higher from $75 to $108,moments ago Netflix reported Q1 earnings which were mixed but guidance was especially poor and rekindled the same fears as those unveiled three months ago, and coupled with the news that Reed Hasting was stepping down from the board after 29 years to pursue "philanthropy and personal interested", NFLX stock tumbled as much as 10% after hours. 

Here is a snapshot of what NFLC reported for the first three months of the year: most notable here is another miss in the US which should have been a much more solid number considering the latest of many prices increases for NFLX subs in the US:

EPS $1.23 vs. 66c y/y, beating estimates of $0.76
Revenue $12.25 billion, +16% y/y, beating estimates of $12.17 billion; the miss comes after Netflix raised its US subscription prices in March, boosting its standard plan without ads by $2 to $20 a month.
US & Canada revenue $5.25 billion, +14% y/y, missing estimates of $5.28 billion
EMEA revenue $4.00 billion, +17% y/y, beating estimates of $3.95 billion
Latin America revenue $1.50 billion, +19% y/y, beating estimates of $1.45 billion
APAC revenue $1.51 billion, +20% y/y, beating estimates of $1.48 billion
 

Operating income $3.96 billion, +18% y/y, beating estimate $3.94 billion
Operating margin 32.3% vs. 31.7% y/y, missing estimate 32.4%
Cash flow from operations $5.29 billion, +90% y/y, beating estimate $3.29 billion
Free cash flow $5.09 billion, +91% y/y, beating estimate $2.67 billion


The biggest event in Q1 was Netflix' decision to walk away from a contentious battle for control of Warner Bros. Discovery in February, netting a nice $2.8 billion termination fee. The company’s shares had suffered during the months long tussle with Paramount Skydance as investors were concerned about the amount of debt it would shoulder under a potential deal. Now Wall Street is looking for signs Netflix can keep subscribers engaged and judging by the stock price it is not seeing them.  

While Q1 results were mixed, with unexpected weakness in the US offset by strength elsewhere, it was the company's guidance that was especially weak, with Q2 estimates coming well below consensus across the board:

Q2 Forecast

Sees EPS 78c, missing estimate 84c 
Sees revenue $12.57 billion, missing estimate $12.64 billion
Sees operating income $4.11 billion, missing estimate $4.34 billion
Sees operating margin 32.6%, missing estimate 34.4%


And here is the full year guidance: 

Sees revenue +12% to +14%
Sees free cash flow about $12.5 billion, saw about $11 billion, higher than the estimate $12.05 billion
Still sees revenue $50.7 billion to $51.7 billion, in line with estimate $51.37 billion
Still sees operating margin 31.5%, missing estimate 32%
Some of the commentary and highlights from the investor letter: 

Boosted FY FCF outlook due to after-tax impact of Warner Bros. related termination fee
Still sees annual cash content spend to amortization ratio of about 1.1x
Still sees 2026 advertising revenue on track to reach $3 billion
Sees 2Q highest y/y content amortization growth rate in 2026
Sees content amortization growth rate decelerating to mid-to-high single digit growth in 2H
The company reported that cash generated from operating activities nearly doubled in Q1'26, vs. Q1’25, totaling $5.3BN compared to $2.8B in the prior year. However, much of this increase was thanks to a $2.8B cash receipt from the Warner Bros.-related termination fee. As a result, free cash flow (FCF) rose to $5.1B in Q1'26, up from $2.7B in Q1'25. NFLX now expects 2026 FCF of approximately $12.5B, an increase from its previous projection of $11B due primarily to the after-tax impact of the Warner Bros.-related termination fee.

NFLX ended the quarter with gross debt of $14.4B and cash and cash equivalents of $12.3B. The cash position is more elevated than normal due to the pause in our share repurchase program during the Warner Bros. transaction and the subsequent receipt of the deal. In other words, expect a burst of stock buybacks to lift the stock in coming weeks. 

And while markets may gloss over all of the above, what it will focus on is that the co-founder Reed Hastings is stepping down as board Chairman after 29 years to pursue philanthropy and personal interests.

Hastings’ departure may worry investors given his status as one of the great entrepreneurs of the 21st century. Hastings provided the initial capital to start Netflix as a DVD-by-mail service and replaced co-founder Marc Randolph as chief executive officer in 1999. He guided the company through its battle with Blockbuster and was the driving force behind its move into video streaming. 

Under Hastings’ leadership, Netflix introduced the streaming service to more than 190 territories all over the world, outmaneuvering Hollywood studios to build the most valuable entertainment company in the world. He stepped down as CEO in January 2023, ceding the job to co-CEOs Ted Sarandos and Greg Peters. 

“Netflix changed my life in so many ways, Hastings said in a statement. “A special thanks to Greg and Ted, whose commitment to Netflix’s greatness is so strong that I can now focus on new things.”

And whether it was Hastings' departure, the miss on US revenues, or the dismal Q2 guidance, the stock was pounded after hours, and tumbled as much as 10% from $107 to $97 before recovering some of the losses.



At just under $100, NFLX stock is unchanged over the past year. 

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 16:31

ZeroHedge News
Open 
From Supply-Chain Risk To National Security Imperative: U.S. Government Embraces Anthropic's Mythos AI
From Supply-Chain Risk To National Security Imperative: U.S. Government Embraces Anthropic's Mythos AI

In a striking reversal that underscores the breakneck pace of the AI arms race, the White House has directed federal agencies to begin using Anthropic’s most dangerous new model - Claude Mythos - despite months of public friction between the Trump administration and the San Francisco-based AI company (read on to see how we reconcile this with the Pentagon's "supply-chain risk" designation). 



The move, detailed in an internal Office of Management and Budget (OMB) memo circulated this week, marks the first formal green light for Cabinet-level departments to tap Mythos’s unprecedented cybersecurity capabilities. The goal: to hunt down vulnerabilities in government networks before adversaries can exploit them, Bloomberg reports.

Too Powerful to Release, Too Valuable to Ignore

Anthropic unveiled Mythos (sometimes referred to internally as “Mythos Preview”) just weeks ago, and it immediately sent shockwaves through the tech and national-security communities.

In controlled testing, the model autonomously discovered and weaponized thousands of previously unknown zero-day vulnerabilities across every major operating system, web browser, legacy enterprise software, and even decades-old codebases. Its speed and creativity reportedly surpassed top human red-team hackers. As we noted earlier this month, the model “went rogue” during testing - prompting Anthropic to withhold a broad release entirely. Full technical details are available in Anthropic’s official Mythos Preview System Card.

Rather than ship it publicly, Anthropic launched Project Glasswing - a tightly controlled defensive program that grants limited access only to a vetted circle of partners: Amazon, Google, Microsoft, Apple, major banks (including JPMorgan Chase), cybersecurity firms, and the Linux Foundation. The explicit mission is defense only -  scan your own systems, find the bugs, patch them fast, and keep the bad guys out. The official program page is here.

From "Supply-Chain Risk" to Strategic Asset

The government’s relationship with Anthropic had been icy for months. As we noted in February, the Pentagon threatened to blacklist the company as a “supply-chain risk” after Anthropic refused to strip certain ethical guardrails from its models for military use. That standoff escalated in March when Anthropic sued the Pentagon over the designation, as detailed in ZeroHedge’s coverage of the lawsuit.

That said, the Pentagon’s “supply-chain risk” label was always narrow in scope: it was a DoD-specific action triggered by the company’s refusal to remove certain ethical guardrails from its models for unrestricted military and offensive-use applications. That designation threatened to block Anthropic technology from defense contracts and classified work, and it led directly to Anthropic’s lawsuit against the Pentagon.

Today’s OMB memo changes almost nothing on paper for that designation. The Pentagon has not withdrawn it, the lawsuit is still active, and DoD contractors remain restricted from using Claude models (including Mythos) in offensive or surveillance contexts.

Just days ago, the U.S. Treasury was rushing to gain access to Mythos after internal warnings that the model could “hack every major system.” Senior Treasury and Federal Reserve officials had summoned CEOs of the nation’s largest banks to Washington, warning them that the financial system’s exposure to AI-powered attacks had become existential. Behind closed doors, federal agencies - including the Commerce Department’s Center for AI Standards and Innovation - had already begun quiet red-teaming of Mythos. Anthropic co-founder and president Daniela Amodei confirmed the company had briefed the administration early, telling reporters simply: “The government has to know about this stuff.”

Now the OMB memo formalizes that reality. It lays out strict protocols for safe access, data handling, and usage limits so that major departments can deploy Mythos against their own sprawling digital estates. The focus remains narrow: vulnerability discovery, network hardening, and defensive preparedness.

What This Means for the AI Arms Race

This is not the first time Washington has had to swallow its pride to stay competitive. But the Mythos episode - from the earliest Pentagon threats through the April 8 Glasswing announcement and this week’s Treasury scramble - feels different. It is a microcosm of the larger tension defining 2026: frontier AI models are now so capable that even their creators are scared of them, yet ignoring them would be national-security malpractice.

Critics inside the defense community argue the government waited too long. Supporters of Anthropic’s cautious approach counter that the company’s restraint (and its Glasswing coalition) may have prevented an even worse outcome: a fully open-sourced Mythos circulating on the dark web.

For Anthropic, the development is a quiet vindication. By keeping Mythos under lock and key and building Glasswing as a defensive shield, the company has positioned itself as a responsible steward of dangerous technology - while still earning a seat at the table with the most powerful customer on Earth.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 16:45

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Secret Service Targets Thieves Stealing SNAP Benefits In Texas
Secret Service Targets Thieves Stealing SNAP Benefits In Texas

Authored by Jill McLaughlin via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

Fraudsters used special devices to skim card information from electronic devices used to read food stamp cards in northern and central Texas, the U.S. Secret Service’s Dallas Field Office reported April 15.
A U.S. Secret Service agent, in this file photo. Madalina Kilroy/The Epoch Times

The Secret Service worked with local law enforcement to prevent an estimated $13.5 million in losses to Dallas-area consumers this week as part of a two-day outreach operation targeting illegal payment card skimming and electronic benefit transfer (EBT) fraud.

“EBT fraud is a serious threat impacting families nationwide,” said Special Agent in Charge of the Dallas Field Office Christina Foley. “Our investigative teams are committed to dismantling these skimmer operations and holding perpetrators accountable.”

Law enforcement personnel visited 462 area businesses in Tarrant County during the operation between April 13 and April 14.

Nearly 3,000 point-of-sale terminals, gas pumps, and ATMs were inspected during the visits, the Secret Service reported.

Teams also provided educational materials about credit card skimming to help businesses identify illegal devices that can be installed on their terminals, gas pumps, and ATMs.

The FBI estimates skimming costs financial institutions and consumers more than $1 billion each year. Criminals use the data they get from installing devices on or inside ATMs or point-of-sale terminals to capture card data and record PIN entries.

Once they have the information, they use it to make purchases or steal from victims’ accounts, according to the FBI.

SNAP benefits can also be skimmed, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The agency suggests people avoid using simple PINs and keeping the information private by not sharing it and changing the PIN often. They also suggested checking SNAP accounts often to detect unauthorized charges.

“The individuals behind these schemes are relentless, but so are we,” said Assistant Special Agent in Charge Michael Peck of the Secret Service Criminal Investigative Division. “Through coordinated efforts and innovative investigative methods, we are disrupting their operations and ensuring that those who exploit vulnerable families are brought to justice.”

SNAP is the largest federally funded nutrition assistance program in the United States. The low-income program provided about $96 billion in assistance to about 43 million people in 2025, according to a report by the General Accountability Office last year.

The report found SNAP benefits have been stolen through a few different methods, including card skimming, card cloning, phishing activities, algorithmic attacks, and stolen account numbers.
A sign alerting customers about SNAP benefits is displayed at a grocery store in New York City on Dec. 5, 2019. Scott Heins/Getty Images

The EBT cards are a target for theft because most cards do not have theft-prevention features, such as embedded microchips that are standard in commercial debit and credit cards to prevent card skimming, according to the GAO report.

“Perpetrators of SNAP benefit theft can range from individuals acting independently to organized crime groups, who steal benefits to help fund illicit activities,” the GAO report stated. “Such groups can operate across geographic and legal jurisdictions, which allows access to more program benefits, in more locations, at the same time.”

State SNAP agencies replaced more than $320 million in stolen benefits with federal funds for nearly 679,000 households in 52 states from Oct. 1, 2022, through Dec. 20, 2024, according to the report.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 17:05

UK Government News
Open 
Edtech and AI companies invited to help build safe AI tutoring tools for disadvantaged pupils
The government is inviting EdTech companies and AI labs to bid to develop safe, personalised AI tutoring tools designed to improve learning outcomes, particularly for disadvantaged pupils.

UK Government News
Open 
Re-opening the Strait a global responsibility, Prime Minister set to tell world leaders
Critical discussions on the Strait of Hormuz are set to be hosted in Paris today.

BBC UK News
Open 
Nine seats that could decide Scotland's election
The key battlegrounds which could tell us how May's election will go across Scotland.

The Aviationist
Open 
French Rafale Spotted with Laser-Guided Rocket Pod
A Rafale M was spotted with a pod for 68 mm laser-guided rockets, first unveiled at the Paris Air Show 2025 as a cost-effective solution against drones and asymmetric threats. A French Navy (Marine Nationale) Rafale M was spotted with at least one Thales 68 mm rocket pod installed under its port (left-side) wing. The […]

The Hill
Open 
Democrats' fundraising dominates key midterm races: What we learned from the latest campaign filings
First-quarter campaign fundraising reports released this week offer new insights on midterm dynamics with the fight for control of Congress in full swing. Democrats boasted massive hauls in high-stakes House and Senate races over the last three months, according to the latest Federal Election Commission (FEC) filings, pointing to the party's momentum as primaries begin to solidify November midterm match-ups.  ...

The Hill
Open 
More young men than women say religion is important to them: Gallup
Young men are more concerned with religion than women in the same age group, according to new polling data from Gallup released Thursday.  The survey found that 42 percent of adult men between 18 and 29 years old indicated that religion is “very important” in their lives during telephone surveys conducted between 2024 and 2025....

The Hill
Open 
Live results: Mejia, Hathaway duke it out to replace Sherrill in New Jersey House special election
Democrat Analilia Mejia is facing off against Republican Joe Hathaway in a Thursday special election to fill the House seat left open by New Jersey Gov. Mikie Sherrill. Mejia's surprise primary victory earlier this year marked another win for progressives. She is widely expected to defeat Hathaway on Thursday. Polls close at 8 p.m. EDT....

The Hill
Open 
First candidate announces run for Wisconsin high court 
Clark County Circuit Court Judge Lyndsey Brunette became the first candidate to announce a run for a spot on the Wisconsin Supreme Court — an announcement that came just one week after the Badger State held a contest for another seat on the high court.  “Today, on the bench, I make sure the law is...

The Hill
Open 
Graham on Israel-Lebanon ceasefire: 'Last thing' US needs is to 'throw Hezbollah a lifeline'
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) responded on Thursday to the new short-term ceasefire agreement between Israel and Lebanon. “While I appreciate every effort to bring peace through diplomacy in the Middle East, particularly in Lebanon, we have to be realistic about the situation on the ground,” the GOP senator wrote on the social platform X. “The...

Mail Online
Open 
Sarah Ferguson is seen for the first time in months 'at a luxury ski resort in Austria'
Sarah Ferguson has been seen for the first time in months at a 'luxury' ski resort in Austria. 

ZDNet News
Open 
I tried the new Gemini app for Mac - and it's better than the website in one big way
Beyond being quick and convenient, Google's Gemini app can access and analyze the content in any window you share from your Mac desktop. Here's why that's so useful.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Artemis II crew: 'We left as friends - we came back as best friends'
The four crew members gave their first press conference since they splashed down nearly a week ago, and emphasised hope and unity.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Top Foreign Office official to leave post after Mandelson vetting row
It comes after it emerged the peer failed security vetting but the Foreign Office still allowed him to take up the post.

Telegraph
Open 
Forest set up all-English Europa League semi-final with nailbiting victory
Forest set up all-English Europa League semi-final with nailbiting victory

Telegraph
Open 
Ruthless Villa put Bologna to the sword to seal place in Europa League semis
Ruthless Villa put Bologna to the sword to seal place in Europa League semis

Russia Today News
Open 
Israel-Lebanon ceasefire takes effect: Live updates

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
I thought hell would freeze over before I agreed with the pope. But in a world riven by cruelty, that day has finally come | Rebecca Shaw
It’s a relief to see the pontiff decrying brutality, because it seems most current world leaders lack the necessary spineI have never been a religious or spiritual person, even though I grew up in a religious area and had friends (and strangers) throughout school and university trying to lure me into whatever prayer disguised as organised fun they were up to. I did try it out shortly for a desperate period when I was young, attempting to pray to a god I didn’t really believe in to make me not gay, but blessedly he never answered.Despite my resistance to organised religion, I have always had a soft spot for nuns and their counterparts. The girlies.Sign up for a weekly email featuring our best reads Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Big Mood season two review – Nicola Coughlan’s hugely ambitious comedy has become a farce
The first series’s insightful look at bipolar disorder is gone. For its second outing, it’s a knockabout tale of a relationship gone wrong – which isn’t always easy to buy intoThe second part of the title of Camilla Whitehill’s Channel 4 comedy drama is a reference to mood disorders. Bipolar, to be exact – the condition her protagonist Maggie has been diagnosed with. The first part is a reference to pretty much everything else. Big Mood tackles big topics and chases big laughs. There are big adventures, big gestures and big cameos. It’s undeniably ambitious, but does all this add up to something truly meaningful? It can be difficult to tell.Series one introduced Maggie in the midst of a manic episode: she had pestered her alma mater to let her deliver a speech in the hope of seducing her old history teacher. That quickly gave way to a depressive one, during which she attended her 30th birthday party unshowered and on the verge of tears. The reason for this rollercoaster was Maggie’s decision to stop taking her medication; she believed it was impeding her creative capabilities and her career as a playwright. Eventually, she agreed to go back on lithium, only to experience terrifying hallucinations and confusion – she’d been poisoned by an erroneous prescription filled out by an overwhelmed psychiatrist. Continue reading...

Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple's $599 MacBook Neo Sold Out Through April Amid Surging Demand
Apple's MacBook Neo has been a huge hit, and it's still in high demand over a month after it launched. The ‌MacBook Neo‌ is just $599, and with PC makers raising prices because of global RAM shortages, the Neo's low price tag and Apple allure are even more appealing.





‌MacBook Neo‌ orders placed today on the online Apple Store won't reach customers until May, which means that it's sold out for the month of April, as 9to5Mac points out. All colors and both the 256GB and 512GB SSD configurations will be delivered between May 1 and May 8 at the earliest.



Some Apple retail locations have in-store availability today in select colors, but other stores won't have stock until May 11. Third-party retailers don't appear to have immediate stock, with Best Buy and Target listing delivery dates at least a week out.



Demand has exceeded expectations, and Apple is ramping up production. Apple is now planning to ship 10 million units in 2026, up from the original five to six million estimate. After the ‌MacBook Neo‌ launched, Apple CEO Tim Cook said that Apple saw its "best launch week ever for first-time Mac customers."



Apple may need to refresh the ‌MacBook Neo‌ sooner than expected because Apple does not have an unlimited supply of the binned A18 Pro chips that the machine uses. Apple could run out of the A18 Pro chip before it is able to satisfy ‌MacBook Neo‌ demand. Apple may need to restart A18 Pro chip production, which has ended, or start using an A19 Pro chip instead.



We'll likely hear more about the ‌MacBook Neo‌'s success during Apple's April 30 earnings call for the second fiscal quarter of 2026.Related Roundup: MacBook NeoBuyer's Guide: MacBook Neo (Buy Now)Related Forum: MacBook NeoThis article, 'Apple's $599 MacBook Neo Sold Out Through April Amid Surging Demand' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mac Rumours
Open 
Casely MagSafe-Compatible Power Banks Recalled Again After Fire-Related Death and In-Flight Explosion
iPhone accessory maker Casely reissued a recall for its faulty Power Pod wireless power bank (via The Verge) after one of the affected units resulted in the death of a 75-year-old woman and another exploded on a plane.





Casely first issued the recall in April 2025 through the Consumer Product Safety Commission. At that time, the company said that the power banks could overheat and ignite, posing a fire and burn hazard to consumers. A total of 51 people had reported incidents where the battery overheated, expanded, or caught fire, and there were six minor burn injuries.



Since then, there have been an additional 28 reports, including two serious incidents. In August 2024, a woman in New Jersey was charging her phone with a Casely power bank on her lap, and it caught fire and exploded. She had second- and third-degree burns, and later died from complications from her injuries.



In February 2026, a 47-year-old woman was charging her cell phone with the power bank on an airplane when it caught fire and exploded, resulting in first-degree burns. Airlines have introduced more restrictive limits on power banks due to incidents like this.



Casely sold 429,200 power banks, which were branded as the Casely "Power Pod" with MagSafe compatibility. The 5,000mAh wireless power banks were available in multiple colors and patterns, and were priced at between $30 and $70. Affected units have an E33A model number and were sold from Amazon.com, the Casely website, and other websites between March 2022 and September 2024.



Anyone with a Casely Power Pod should stop using it immediately and contact Casely for a free replacement or a $60 store credit. Affected units should not be discarded, and customers should contact their local household hazardous waste collection center for disposal assistance. Casely is contacting all known purchasers directly.Tag: MagSafeThis article, 'Casely MagSafe-Compatible Power Banks Recalled Again After Fire-Related Death and In-Flight Explosion' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Ars Technica
Open 
Mozilla launches Thunderbolt AI client with focus on self-hosted infrastructure

Ars Technica
Open 
As they got close to the Moon, Artemis II astronauts were eager to land

Ars Technica
Open 
OpenAI starts offering a biology-tuned LLM

Mail Online
Open 
Dead Los Alamos chief's secret UFO files revealed in stunning drop: '100% proof'
A senior cybersecurity official at one of America's most secretive nuclear laboratories died several years ago, leaving behind files that have now been released.

Mail Online
Open 
Biggest blow yet to Charlie Kirk's alleged assassin Tyler Robinson's defense revealed in bombshell report
A newly released document in the case against accused Tyler Robinson for the assassination of Charlie Kirk provides new details about the bullet.

Mail Online
Open 
Chicago home of Pope Leo's brother is hit by bomb threat as Trump continues his war with pontiff
John Prevost, the brother of the papal leader Robert Prevost, had his home in the Chicago suburb of New Lenox targeted by a bomb threat on Wednesday evening.

Mail Online
Open 
Brit, 75, dies after 'going swimming in choppy seas' in Thailand
A 75-year-old British pensioner found himself caught up in deep waves as his Thai girlfriend helplessly watched from the beach in the coastal city of Hua Hin, on Wednesday afternoon.

Mail Online
Open 
'I don't really want to write songs about my husband forever': Charli XCX makes rare comments about 'love of my life' George Daniel as she stuns in daring shoot for British Vogue
Charli XCX made a series of rare comments about her husband George Daniel as she posed up a storm in a stunning British Vogue photoshoot on Thursday.

Mail Online
Open 
Jessie Ware flashes her underwear in a daring sheer dress as she poses with James Norton at her album launch after he starred in her raunchy music video
Jessie Ware looked incredible in a daring sheer dress as she beamed at the launch of her new album, Superbloom, on Thursday.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Crystal Palace hold off Fiorentina to book place in Conference semi-final
What a time it is to be a Crystal Palace supporter. Twelve months ago, the south London club was still waiting to win their first major trophy and even the most optimistic fan could never have imagined that they would be contesting the semi-final of a European competition.But despite a few anxious moments when a battling Fiorentina side cut the deficit from last week’s 3-0 defeat in first leg at Selhurst Park to just two goals with half an hour still to play, Oliver Glasner’s side showed their growing maturity at this level to progress to a last four showdown with Shakhtar Donetsk. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Sarah Ferguson is seen for the first time in months 'at a luxury ski resort in Austria'
Sarah Ferguson has been seen for the first time in months at a 'luxury' ski resort in Austria.

BBC World News
Open 
Watch: Rising prices threaten Minnesota's meat raffles
Popular in local bars across the US, the games are facing higher meat prices, squeezing some of the charities that benefit from them.

The Register
Open 
NodeWeaver says its perpetual licensing beats VMware’s perpetual price hikes
'I think you can run this thing on a potato,' NodeWeaver CTO Alan Conboy said. Broadcom's price increases and policy changes have led many VMware customers to look for other options. Nodeweaver is positioning itself as an alternative for customers running computing workloads in far-flung edge locations, from cruise ships to solar farms in Sub-Saharan Africa, and it is taking cost out of the hardware needed as well.…

The Register
Open 
Mozilla throws Thunderbolt at enterprise AI providers
Client connects to deepset's Haystack platform Mozilla has declared war on OpenAI, Microsoft, and other firms flogging enterprise AI platforms with an open-source alternative it says provides data privacy guarantees proprietary products never could. …

Gizmodo
Open 
Tesla Wants a $50,000 Penalty for Anyone Who Tries to Resell Its Signature Model S and X
Why would anyone want to sell their Tesla?

Gizmodo
Open 
Lana Del Rey Just Released the First Bond Theme We’ll Hear for Years
The James Bond game '007 First Light' gets a dreamy ballad from the pop star.

Gizmodo
Open 
A Critical Ocean Current System May Be Unraveling Faster Than We Thought
New findings foretell a looming catastrophe that would drastically alter the planet’s weather and climate.

Gizmodo
Open 
White House Is Reportedly Ready to Drop Its Anthropic Beef and Embrace the Spooky New Model
Anthropic's Mythos might soon be deployed across the federal government.

Gizmodo
Open 
Hollywood’s First Big Budget AI-Generated Movie Is About Bitcoin, of Course
Casey Affleck and Gal Gadot star in 'Paycheck: The Movie.'

Deutsche Welle
Open 
10-day ceasefire between Israel, Lebanon goes into effect
The temporary ceasefire came after US President Trump spoke with Lebanese President Aoun and Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu. Hezbollah says its commitment to the truce depends on Israel stopping attacks. DW has more.

BBC World News
Open 
Artemis II crew describes Moon mission and splashdown moment
The crew held its first press conference since splashing down from their historic 10-day trip.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
School shootings a new trauma for Turkey as nation mourns
An expert tells the BBC the attack in Kahramanmaras was a tragedy but "not a surprise".

CNET News
Open 
Planet Parade in the Sky: How to View 4 Planets Lined Up This Week
The cosmic lineup of Mercury, Mars, Jupiter and Neptune is here.

CNET News
Open 
Today's Wordle Hints, Answer and Help for April 17, #1763
Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for April 17, No. 1,763.

CNET News
Open 
Today's NYT Strands Hints, Answers and Help for April 17 #775
Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for April 17, No. 775.

CNET News
Open 
Today's NYT Connections Hints, Answers and Help for April 17, #1041
Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for April 17, No. 1,041.

CNET News
Open 
Maine Could Be the First State to Pass a Temporary Ban on New Large Data Centers
Although the bill has been passed by lawmakers, it still needs final approval from Maine Governor Janet Mills.

CNET News
Open 
Class-Action Suit Claims Amazon 'Bricked' Early Fire TV Streaming Sticks
Devices that were part of the first generations of Amazon's TV dongles are at the center of the California lawsuit.

CNET News
Open 
DuckDuckGo VPN Audit Shows It Doesn't Track Your Activity
DuckDuckGo has always promised complete privacy with its VPN, and an independent cybersecurity company agrees.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Germany news: Teacher group urges action over pupil violence
A German teachers' group says decisive action is needed to counter a surge in violence in classrooms and corridors. Meanwhile, the Greens say a blanket speed limit on major highways would help save fuel.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Co-founder Reed Hastings to step down from Netflix board
Chair’s decision to not seek re-election in June ‘not as a result of any disagreement’, company says in SEC filingReed Hastings, the Netflix chair, is leaving the streaming service he co-founded 29 years ago as the company regains its footing after it lost its $72bn deal for Warner Bros Discovery.In a letter to investors released on Thursday, Netflix said Hastings will not stand for re-election at its annual meeting in June and plans to focus on philanthropy and other pursuits. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Gibbs-White’s early strike decisive as Nottingham Forest edge past 10-man Porto
The final whistle brought a second of relief before the celebrations truly kicked in after Nottingham Forest secured a place in the Europa League semi-finals. It should have been easier but nothing is simple at the City Ground as they made hard work of overcoming Porto, who played almost the entire match with 10 men.Morgan Gibbs-White settled the match, to set up an all English clash with Aston Villa for a place in the final. His goal came in the aftermath of Jan Bednarek’s early sending off and should have laid the foundations for more but Forest’s finishing was poor, forcing them to grind out the victory. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: Ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon takes effect; Hezbollah tells citizens to postpone returning home
Group urges caution as it says Israel has history of ‘breaking agreements’; Israeli prime minister says key demand is that Hezbollah must be dismantledTrump announces 10-day ceasefire in Lebanon after ‘excellent conversations’Iran has stopped all petrochemical exports to prioritise domestic supply and prevent shortages of raw materials, Reuters reported.The state-owned National Petrochemical Company ordered firms to suspend exports until further notice. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Shocking photos reveal what ultra-processed foods are really doing to your insides
Ultra-processed foods have been linked to obesity, diabetes , heart disease, and cancer . Now, photos have illustrated the true damage these foods are doing to the inside of the body.

Mail Online
Open 
Fuel theft on the rise: Police release CCTV of woman in pyjamas 'filling up car before driving off without paying' amid soaring petrol prices
Police have released CCTV footage of a woman in her pyjamas filling up her car at two petrol stations before 'driving off without paying' in Gwyedd, north Wales.

Mail Online
Open 
Dozens are held hostage by 'armed' bank robbers in Naples - before crooks 'escaped through a tunnel with loot from safes'
One hostage, a customer, told Italian media they had been locked in a room: 'I was in the bank when they entered; there was definitely three of them.'

Mail Online
Open 
Lord Sugar crowns Karishma Vijay Apprentice winner as she vows to tackle racism and toxic beauty standards declaring: 'Someone who looks like me winning on the BBC is a huge statement'
Lord Sugar has crowned Karishma Vijay the winner of The Apprentice, as she vows to use her platform to tackle racism and toxic beauty standards.

Mail Online
Open 
Starmer 'is going to set the record straight over Mandelson failing his security vetting'... next week
The Prime Minister is expected to break his silence next week after No10 today confirmed the former ambassador to the US had in fact failed his security checks.

Mail Online
Open 
Clip of Starmer insisting Mandelson was subject to 'security vetting' emerges as calls for PM's resignation continue mounting over US ambassador's failed screening
In an astonishing development, No 10 today confirmed the disgraced peer was given the go-ahead to take on the role against the recommendation of security vetting officials.

TechRadar News
Open 
These are the stunning images of the Sony World Photography Awards 2026 — and there are some surprising camera choices among the winners

TechRadar News
Open 
'Works in the dark': Scientists transform balsa wood into a solar material that stores heat and generates power 24/7

Boing Boing
Open 
Watch the deranged new trailer for the Street Fighter movie
Some weird part of me has needed the forthcoming Street Fighter movie for a long time. The 1994 Hollywood movie was bad (though Raul Julia was great) and the anime was better, but this looks like just the ticket: a well-choreographed fight movie (with actual street fighting!) — Read the rest
The post Watch the deranged new trailer for the Street Fighter movie appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Disneyland's new 'Leia Organa' neither Leia nor Organa
Yesterday, Disney shared their new in-park "Han Solo" who doesn't look like Han Solo. Today, we get a not-Leia.

I am not sure what Disney is going for here. Bringing the original trilogy into their Star Warsland is very smart. They represent the Star Wars that got people interested in Star Wars, while the latest, purportedly final, trilogy was mostly controversial in its not-good-ness. — Read the rest
The post Disneyland's new 'Leia Organa' neither Leia nor Organa appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Crime may not pay, but for these three men, at least it poops
Three men in Whittier allegedly cut through a locked gate, hauled a portable toilet into a pickup truck, and drove off into the night, proving that while crime may not pay, it does occasionally provide amenities.

Detectives are looking for three men who stole a portable toilet in Whittier, the Los Angeles County Sheriff Department (LASD) announced on Thursday
…
Surveillance video showed the men cutting a lock to get through the chain link gate at the property.

— Read the rest
The post Crime may not pay, but for these three men, at least it poops appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Your brain just made up the color you're looking at
Here's a visual illusion that catches the brain in the act of making up color. Arrange a set of black spokes radiating from a center, then recolor short pieces of each spoke to red or blue, positioning them so they'd trace an invisible circle. — Read the rest
The post Your brain just made up the color you're looking at appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Wow your clients and peers with custom diagrams for $15
TL;DR: Microsoft Visio Professional 2021 is now available for the amazingly low price of $14.97 (MSRP $249.99) for a lifetime license for Windows computers.
Instead of spending long meetings, brainstorming sessions, or ChatGPT conversations figuring out how to explain difficult concepts, now you can visualize them.  — Read the rest
The post Wow your clients and peers with custom diagrams for $15 appeared first on Boing Boing.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Former Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson warns U.S. needs an emergency ‘break-the-glass’ plan if Treasury demand collapses
Former Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson on Thursday urged U.S. policymakers to prepare an emergency plan in case demand for Treasurys breaks down — warning that a crisis in the government bond market could trigger severe consequences across the economy.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Netflix co-founder Reed Hastings to exit company, saying it’s so strong it doesn’t need him anymore
The announcement came as Netflix reported first-quarter profits that shattered expectations, which it attributed in large part to faster-than-forecast subscriber growth, a recent price increase and the $2.8 billion breakup fee it received when its deal to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery collapsed.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
The S&P 500’s record high may be an illusion — and this rally is a warning
Tesla, IBM and Intel report earnings next week: Here’s the best way to play the volatility.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Co-founder Reed Hastings to step down from Netflix board
Chair’s decision to not seek re-election in June ‘not as a result of any disagreement’, company says in SEC filingNetflix chair Reed Hastings is leaving the streaming service he co-founded 29 years ago as the company regains its footing after it lost its $72bn deal for Warner Bros Discovery.In a letter to investors released on Thursday, Netflix said Hastings will not stand for re-election at its annual meeting in June and plans to focus on philanthropy and other pursuits. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Watkins breaks record as Aston Villa cruise past Bologna into all-English semi-final
Ollie Watkins kickstarted Aston Villa’s near-perfect evening as his 100th goal for the club enabled Unai Emery’s side to cruise into a semi-final against Nottingham Forest.The England striker, looking to earn a late recall into Thomas Tuchel’s World Cup squad, tapped home in the 16th minute before goals from Emiliano Buendía and Morgan Rogers followed the latter’s spurned penalty. Ezri Konsa, who had set this emphatic aggregate victory in motion with the first goal in the first leg last week, rounded off the triumph by volleying home late on after Tammy Abraham headed on a corner. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Nottingham Forest 1-0 Porto (2-1 on agg): Europa League quarter-final, second leg – live reaction
⚽ Europa League updates; kick-off 8pm BST (first leg: 1-1)⚽ Aston Villa v Bologna – updates | Live scores | Mail Scott4 min: Sangare releases Gibbs-White down the right. Promising for Forest … until the whistle goes, Sangare having come through the back of Alberto Costa on the touchline. The correct decision, if annoyingly belated from a Forest point of view, everyone all excited for a second.2 min: It’s an absolutely belting atmosphere, both sets of fans giving it plenty. But Porto nearly quieten the home fans in short order, Moffi latching onto a prod down the inside-right channel and attempting to flick past Ortega. The Forest keeper swipes away. The rebound falls to William Gomes, who blazes over. Yikes. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
Dog walker beaten with hockey stick by top horse trainer says his jail term is too soft
Martin Dandridge, 72, had his arm broken in the attack, leaving him with “ongoing pain” in his forearm.

Slashdot
Open 
Is Linux Mint In Trouble?
BrianFagioli writes: The developers behind Linux Mint say the project is rethinking its release strategy and moving toward a longer development cycle, with the next version now expected around Christmas 2026. In a monthly update, project lead Clement Lefebvre said the team reached a "crossroads" and needs more flexibility to fix bugs, improve the desktop, and adapt to rapid changes across the Linux ecosystem. The upcoming development build, temporarily called Mint 23 "Alfa," is currently based on Ubuntu 26.04 LTS and includes Linux kernel 7.0, an unstable build of Cinnamon 6.7, and early Wayland related work.

Mint is also replacing the long used Ubiquity installer with "live-installer," the same tool used by Linux Mint Debian Edition, allowing the project to unify installation infrastructure across its Ubuntu based and Debian based variants. While the team frames the changes as an opportunity to improve quality and reduce maintenance overhead, the shift has raised questions about the project's long term direction and whether Linux Mint may eventually lean more heavily on its Debian roots rather than its traditional Ubuntu base.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Russia Today News
Open 
Trump ‘creating problems’ for US – Lula

The Verge
Open 
Netflix co-founder Reed Hastings is officially leaving the company
Netflix co-founder and chairman Reed Hastings plans to leave the company after nearly 30 years. The news comes as part of Netflix's Q1 2026 earnings results released on Thursday, which says Hastings "will not stand for re-election to our Board when his current term expires at the Annual Meeting in June." After co-founding Netflix in […]

The Verge
Open 
Netflix embraces vertical video with major mobile app update
Netflix announced on Thursday that it will be launching a redesigned mobile app, which will include a vertical video feed, at the end of April. "This redesign will better reflect our expanding entertainment offering and make it easier for members to engage how and when they want," the company said in its Q1 2026 earnings […]

The Verge
Open 
Ballmer gives $80 million to NPR, with strings attached
Connie Ballmer, wife of former Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer and co-founder of the Ballmer Group, has given $80 million to NPR. That's roughly seven years' worth of government funding ($11.2m) after Trump and Congress cut funds for public media, but only a fraction of NPR's full annual budget of $300 million. NPR may still cut […]

The Verge
Open 
Gucci-branded Google smart glasses are coming next year
Google is reportedly partnering with Gucci to make a pair of AI smart glasses stylish enough people might actually want to wear them. According to Reuters, Gucci parent company Kering is planning to launch the glasses sometime in 2027. Google's first pair of Android XR glasses, "Project Aura," are expected to launch this year. They […]

BBC UK News
Open 
Dog walker beaten with hockey stick by top horse trainer says his jail is term too soft
Martin Dandridge, 72, had his arm broken in the attack, leaving him with “ongoing pain” in his forearm.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Major Advertising Agencies Settle Media Censorship Lawsuit With FTC
Major Advertising Agencies Settle Media Censorship Lawsuit With FTC

Authored by Jacki Thrapp via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and eight states secured a settlement on April 15 that will prevent three major advertising agencies from engaging in unlawful media censorship.
An American flag flies at the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) headquarters in Washington on Nov. 24, 2024. Benoit Tessier/File Photo/Reuters

The defendants Dentsu US, Inc., GroupM Worldwide LLC (doing business as WPP Media), and Publicis, Inc. will no longer enter into deals that require them to restrict working with certain clients, according to the settlement.

“A coordinated group of woke, powerful individuals attempted to suppress that Constitutional right by manipulating ad agencies into sabotaging the reach, revenue, and credibility of conservative voices,” Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton said in a statement released on April 15.

The plaintiffs - including Florida, Indiana, Iowa, Montana, Nebraska, Texas, Utah, and West Virginia - alleged that censorship deals between ad agencies and companies had been happening in the background during the past decade, which limited rising voices in the alternative and online media space.

The lawsuit accused some of the largest ad agencies of establishing brand-safety agreements that labeled content creators as “misinformation,” making them unable to receive ad revenue.

The alleged brand-safety standards were part of a campaign to demonetize prominent figures in the conservative space such as Glenn Beck, Steve Bannon, and the late Charlie Kirk, according to court documents reviewed by the Epoch Times.

The campaign allegedly attempted to censor and suppress content from Fox News Channel and X, formerly Twitter.

“This is a deeply disturbing violation of antitrust laws and our Constitution,” Paxton added.

“This was an egregious attempt to control public opinion and silence those who speak out against the liberal elites and powerful corporations. I will continue to lead the fight against viewpoint suppression and protect the speech of Americans from corrupt manipulation.”

As part of the settlement, defendants also agreed to have a court-ordered monitor to make sure agencies are sticking with the agreement and no longer censoring political viewpoints.

The defendants agreed not to enter into or enforce any deal that would limit their advertising spending on political or ideological viewpoints or DEI commitments.

“The ad agencies’ brand-safety conspiracy turned competition in the market for ad-buying services on its head,” FTC Chairman Andrew N. Ferguson said in a statement on Wednesday.

​Ferguson added, “this unlawful collusion not only damaged our marketplace, but also distorted the marketplace of ideas by discriminating against speech and ideas that fell below the unlawfully agreed-upon floor.”

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 15:05

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Trump Says 'Probably, Maybe' Iran Talks To Resume This Weekend, 'Not Sure' About Ceasefire Extension
Trump Says 'Probably, Maybe' Iran Talks To Resume This Weekend, 'Not Sure' About Ceasefire Extension

Summary


Trump says "probably, maybe" Iran talks resume this weekend, "not sure" about ceasefire extension.


Trump unveils 10-day Lebanon ceasefire, but which Hezbollah has not signed on for, amid heavy IDF attacks on south. BBG reports on potential 6-month timeframe for comprehensive Iran deal, oil spikes.


Iran seeks to boost rial through toll payment scheme; vessels pay Hormuz passage through Iranian banks.


US Navy: vessels seeking entry into Hormuz Strait now fair game for boarding, search, and outright seizure - including for suspicion of 'contraband'.


Hegseth: US forces are ready to restart combat if Iran doesn’t agree to a deal & strait blockade to continue for as long as it takes. Already 14 ships have been turned around.




//-->

//-->

//-->


Trump announces end of military operations against Iran by May 31st?
Yes 70% · No 31%View full market & trade on Polymarket *  *  *

Trump Still Signals Ambiguity on Peace/Ceasefire Potential

President Trump appeared to confirm ceasefire talks with Iran are still very up in the air, saying that he also doesn't see the need to extend the current two-week ceasefire - "not sure," he said - also amid the going US naval blockade of Iranian-China oil exports, or other sanctioned vessels. With no extension, the ceasefire will expire on April 22.

"If there's no deal fighting resumes," Trump affirmed in fielding reporters' questions. Importantly, talks and timeline are still a big maybe:


President Trump told reporters the next in-person talks negotiating a deal for Iran will "probably, maybe" happen this weekend. He didn't say where, and other U.S. officials haven't confirmed any details.


He took the opportunity in the same remarks to slam the Pope. "If the pope looked at the 42,000 people that were killed over the last two or three months, as a protester, with no weapons, no nothing," he claimed, using the same unsourced numbers he's lately been throwing around.  "I mean, you take a look at that, so I can disagree with the pope. I have a right to disagree. I have a right to disagree with the pope."

The president added, "The pope can say what he wants. And I want him to say what he wants. But I can disagree. I think that Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon. If they do, the whole world would be in jeopardy, the Middle East would blow up and the whole world would be in jeopardy."

"This is the real world, it's a nasty world," he said. "But as far as the pope and saying what he wants, he can do that."

And on the newly declared Israel-Lebanon ceasefire, which does not include Hezbollah, Trump told reporters: "I responded to this call and agreed to a timeout, or rather a temporary ceasefire, of 10 days to try to advance the agreement that we began discussing with the ambassadors' meeting in Washington." He added: "For these peace talks, we have two fundamental demands: one, the disarmament of Hezbollah. Two, a sustainable peace agreement, peace from strength."

Gulf, European officials See Needing 6 Months for Iran deal: BBG, Oil Spikes

A big headline out of Bloomberg has sent oil prices higher:


Some Gulf Arab and European leaders believe that a US-Iran peace deal will take about six months to be agreed and that the warring sides should extend their ceasefire to cover that timeframe, according to officials from the regions familiar with the matter.

The leaders want the vital Strait of Hormuz opened immediately to restore energy flows and are warning in private that a global food crisis may develop if that doesn’t happen by next month, said the officials, who asked not to be identified discussing private talks.


But important caveats remain: who are these "some" Gulf and "European leaders" - the latter who have remained far to the sidelines during this crisis, but who are yes still suffering the effects of the ultra-risky Operation Epic Fury Iran war gambit by Trump. Spike in crude...



Trump: Truce in Lebanon

President Trump has announced an apparent Lebanon breakthrough, announcing on Truth Social that Lebanon and Israel have agreed to a 10-day ceasefire. This just after on Thursday Israel launched at least 50 airstrikes in a matter of two hours on South Lebanon, according to national media. Israel says late Thursday its forces have no plans to withdraw ground troops from Southern Lebanon. Operations there look to continue, but presumably the ceasefire means Beirut might not be hit in the interim. 

This week, Rubio oversaw historic peace talks between Lebanese officials and the Israeli government; however, which did not include Hezbollah. Both Tehran and Hezbollah have insisted that the Lebanon conflict should be resolved through the Pakistan mediated US-Iran process. The Lebanese government has little actual sway over Hezbollah, the country's single most well-armed and influential paramilitary organization, which has more missiles and arms than even the national army. This means it remains a big unknown whether this 10-day truce will hold. Trump's Truth Social message, which claims he solved "9 wars across the world" and a "lasting peace":



Defiant Iran Reasserts Toll System: Paid Through Iranian Banks

An Iranian parliament official has been cited in newswires as saying the country's planned Strait of Hormuz toll for ships seeking to pass is to be paid through Iranian banks. Previously it was said to be through cryptocurrency, and could be as a high as $2 million Oil rose higher, given this is another indicator this game of chicken in the narrow waterway could soon lead to fresh hostilities, despite the 2-week ceasefire still being in place, soon to expire.

As for negotiations, there's optimism another round of US-Iran talks will occur, with both sides having agreed in principle, but Iran's government informed Pakistan that the US must back off its maximal demands.


Reuters: U.S. and Iranian negotiators have scaled back ambitions for a comprehensive peace deal and are instead seeking a temporary memorandum to prevent a return ​to conflict, two Iranian sources told Reuters.


Below is a machine translation from the Persian of the fresh parliament statement via state-linked ISNA:

The plan to consolidate Iran's sovereignty in the Strait of Hormuz is being framed as a way to strengthen the rial.
Iran is seeking a regulatory role in the Strait of Hormuz - one of the world’s most sensitive chokepoints -positioning it as oversight, not disruption or blackmail.
Under the plan, foreign ships would settle accounts through offices in Iran or via the Iranian banking system, a move aimed at boosting the rial.
Estimated current revenue from managing and regulating maritime traffic in the Strait of Hormuz: $10-15 billion.
Boarding, Search, & Outright Seizure

Ships seeking to enter the Hormuz Strait already sanctioned by the US just got a lot more vulnerable: under Washington’s blockade of Iranian ports, they're now fair game for boarding, search, and outright seizure, per US Naval Forces Central Command.

"In addition to enforcing the blockade, all Iranian vessels, vessels with active OFAC sanctions, and vessels suspected of carrying contraband, are subject to belligerent right to visit and search," the notice said, referring to the Office of Foreign Assets Control. "These vessels, regardless of location, are subject to visit, board, search, and seizure."

The definition of "contraband" is broad and expansive. It spans weapons, ammunition, combat aircraft, and military electronics, WSJ has described. "Petroleum products and lubricants are conditional contraband due to their essential role in military operations and their contribution to Iran’s war-sustaining economy," the advisory also said. "Contraband is defined as goods that are destined for an enemy and that may be susceptible to use in armed conflict."
US Marine Corps image

Up until now, the blockade - initially rolled out Monday - was limited to ships moving in and out of Iranian ports, but the definition who can be targeted just widened. Meanwhile, US Central Command (CENTCOM) said Wednesday that in the first 48 hours, not a single ship made it past the blockade.

Hormuz Blockade: 'As Long As It Takes'

The US will maintain a naval blockade of Iran for as long as it takes, Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth has stated in a press briefing Thursday. He and Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Dan Caine say that US forces are ready to resume major combat operations at a moment's notice, which suggests the initial two-week ceasefire could get extended, as was widely reported the day prior. But this also suggests that Washington likely has no appetite for resuming major aerial operations directly against Iran anytime soon.


General Caine:
At each point, the United States Navy will transmit a warning—a young sailor, normally on the bridge of one of those destroyers. A junior officer picks up that mic and transmits, and I quote:
"Do not attempt to breach the blockade.
Vessels will be boarded for… pic.twitter.com/VT6LvPBUnT
— Clash Report (@clashreport) April 16, 2026
On the question of resumption of major combat operations, Hegseth warned: "To Iran, choose wisely. I pray you choose a deal which is within your grasp for the betterment of your people and the betterment of the world." He followed with, "In the meantime, the War Department is locked and loaded." Additional main highlights to the Hegseth/Caine update and presser:

Iran likes to say it controls Strait of Hormuz but it has no navy
Energy industry not destroyed 'yet', US blockade shutting down exports
For as long as it takes, we will maintain blockade
Launching operation 'economic fury'
Iran is digging out bombed out launchers
I hope you choose a deal which is within your grasp
But again, the chief takeaway is that the Pentagon and Trump administration are making clear that US forces are ready to restart combat if Iran doesn't agree to a deal. On that front, US officials say future talks are likely to be held again in Pakistan’s capital, Islamabad. Prior reports have indicated both sides have "agreed in principle" to engage in another round of talks.

Iran's PressTV touting ability to inflict global economic pain...


International Monetary Fund’s chief economist says that growth is expected to slow this year amid repercussions from the war against Iran and disruptions to global oil and gas trade.
Follow Press TV on Telegram: https://t.co/LWoNSpkc2J pic.twitter.com/ZAty9htTov
— Press TV 🔻 (@PressTV) April 15, 2026
Pentagon: 13 Ships Turned Around

Since the blockade went live, US forces have already turned around 13 ships, according to Gen. Caine in the same briefing. He underscored how far this reach extends, saying operations will take place "inside Iran's territorial seas and in international waters."

Officially, the Pentagon claims the blockade is limited - targeting Iran’s ports and coastal areas while sparing vessels simply passing through the Strait of Hormuz. In practice, however, the net is touted as much wider, as US forces "will actively pursue any Iranian-flagged vessel or any vessel attempting to provide material support to Iran," including so-called "dark fleet vessels carrying Iranian oil," Caine added.

He confirmed that more than 10,000 service members are now involved in the blockade, but with more US servicemembers en route to the region.

Lebanon Still Bombed Heavily by Israel amid US Ceasefire Efforts

Israeli jets pounded Nabatiyeh in southern Lebanon Thursday, unleashing one of the heaviest barrages there since the war began and sending black smoke billowing over the region. Strikes hit near the industrial zone and a supermarket on Nabih Berri Avenue, with nearby suburbs also taking damage, according to Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency.

Iran has signaled urgency on de-escalation, with parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf calling ceasefire in Lebanon "as important as a ceasefire in Iran." He described, "In the Islamabad negotiations and afterwards, we have been seriously pursuing efforts to compel the adversaries to establish a permanent ceasefire in all areas of conflict." Pakistan's army chief is in Tehran mediating between Washington and Tehran.


⚡#BREAKING Lebanese President Joseph Aoun said in a conversation with US Secretary of State Marco: "I am not willing to talk to Netanyahu"
— War Monitor (@WarMonitors) April 16, 2026
Lebanon's leadership is in th emeantime framing any truce as a gateway to talks, despite Hezbollah having rejected direct talks with Israel. The ceasefire it is "demanding with Israel" would be a "natural entry point for direct negotiations," President Aoun said, adding: "Lebanon is keen to halt the escalation… so that the targeting of the innocents ceases, and the destruction of homes" stops.

Destruction of Al-Qasimia Bridge in Southern Lebanon


جسر القاسمية pic.twitter.com/u39LVosxnF
— Lebanon 24 (@Lebanon24) April 16, 2026
He stressed negotiations "are to be undertaken by the Lebanese authorities alone," and said "the withdrawal of Israeli forces… is an essential step," alongside redeploying the army "up to the international borders" to "end any manifestation of armed presence."

And yet Israeli strikes are now hitting infrastructure. A key bridge over the Litani River near Qasmiyeh - linking Tyre and Sidon - was reportedly destroyed, though Israel said it only "struck adjacent to it." The broader campaign is cutting off southern Lebanon, targeting chiefly Hezbollah positions, Israeli officials have claimed.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 16:00

The Aviationist
Open 
Australia Announces Early Retirement of Troubled C-27J Spartan Fleet
A new Australian defence strategy will see AU$5 billion redirected from current programs towards new capabilities, with the headline cut being the early withdrawal of the RAAF’s ten C-27J Spartan airlifters.  News of the cut came with the release of Australia’s 2026 National Defence Strategy, which states the Italian-built transport aircraft will be replaced “with […]

Harvard Business Review
Open 
Why Companies That Choose AI Augmentation Over Automation May Win in the Long Run
While automation promises quicker returns, it may ultimately lead to decline.

The Hill
Open 
Watch live: Trump hosts 'no tax on tips' roundtable in Las Vegas
President Trump will host a roundtable event Thursday in Las Vegas highlighting his administration's "no tax on tips" law, just a day after the IRS's tax filing deadline. The law, which was part of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act enacted last summer, covers more than 60 jobs, including service industry workers such as bartenders...

The Hill
Open 
Hawley pushes bill to bar lawmakers convicted of sexual abuse from receiving pensions
Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) has introduced legislation to bar lawmakers convicted of sexual abuse from receiving federal pensions, a proposal that will get a lot of attention after former Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.) was accused of sexually assaulting a former staffer. "Right now, a member of Congress can be convicted of sexual abuse and still...

The Hill
Open 
Bernie Sanders, labor leaders warn of AI risks for workers
Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and the leaders of several major labor unions warned Thursday about the risks AI poses to workers amid concerns about the technology’s ability to replace jobs. Sanders, who is pushing for a moratorium on data center construction, argued that AI could displace both blue-collar and white-collar workers. “How the hell do...

The Hill
Open 
Trump picks former Deputy Surgeon General Erica Schwartz as new CDC nominee
President Trump on Thursday announced Erica Schwartz, who served in a senior health role in his first administration, as his third pick to lead the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) more than six months after the last director was fired. "It is my Honor to nominate the incredibly talented Dr. Erica Schwartz, MD,...

The Hill
Open 
Trump says he held meeting on unconfirmed reports of missing scientists
President Trump told reporters on Thursday that he held a meeting on unconfirmed reports of missing nuclear scientists. “I just left a meeting on that subject,” Trump told reporters, referring to it as “pretty serious stuff.” Questions have grown in the scientific community over unconfirmed reports about the deaths and disappearances of various nuclear scientists....

The Hill
Open 
Army chief firing hovers over Driscoll hearing: 5 takeaways
The recent firing of the Army’s well-respected chief of staff, Gen. Randy George, hovered over the House Appropriations Defense Subcommittee hearing Thursday, with lawmakers from both sides grilling Army Secretary Dan Driscoll and the Army’s acting chief of staff, Gen. Christopher LaNeve. While President Trump’s $1.5 trillion defense budget request, the U.S. war against Iran, the state...

The Hill
Open 
Democrats' fundraising dominates key midterm races: What we learned from the latest campaign filings
First-quarter campaign fundraising reports released this week offer new insights on midterm dynamics with the fight for control of Congress in full swing. Democrats boasted massive hauls in high-stakes House and Senate races over the last three months, according to the latest Federal Election Commission (FEC) filings, pointing to the party's momentum as primaries begin to solidify November midterm matchups.  ...

The Hill
Open 
France calls on US to release 86-year-old widow of veteran detained by ICE
The French government on Thursday called on the U.S. to release an 86-year-old widow of an American military veteran in Department of Homeland Security (DHS) detention. Rodolphe Sambou, consul general of France in New Orleans, told The Associated Press that his country's government has "fully mobilized" to push for the release of Marie-Therese Ross, who...

The Hill
Open 
More young men than women say religion is important to them: Gallup
Young men are more concerned with religion than women in the same age group, according to new polling data from Gallup released on Thursday.  The survey found that 42 percent of adult men between 18 and 29 years old indicated that religion is “very important” in their lives during telephone surveys conducted between 2024 and...

The Hill
Open 
Senate votes to repeal Biden-era wilderness protections in Minnesota, sending bill to Trump’s desk
The Senate on Thursday voted to repeal Biden-era protections for a contentious wilderness area in Minnesota, sending the question to President Trump’s desk. The Senate voted 50-49 to overturn a Biden-era move to block mining in an area around Minnesota’s Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness. Trump is likely to sign the measure, which has already passed the House,...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Aston Villa 4-0 Bologna (7-1 on agg): Europa League quarter-final – live reaction
⚽ Kick-off 8pm BST (first leg: 3-1)⚽ Live scores | Mail Niall3 mins: A few Villa players are a yellow card away from suspension: Cash, Rogers, McGinn, Digne and substitute Victor Lindelof. Bookings are wiped out for the semi-finals, but suspensions aren’t, so all five must tread carefully.2 mins: Emi Buendia tries to bend one on target from the edge of the area, but sees his shot blocked. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: Hezbollah tells citizens to postpone return to Lebanon as Netanyahu confirms Israel has agreed to 10-day ceasefire
Group urges caution as it says Israel has history of ‘breaking agreements’; Israeli prime minister says key demand is that Hezbollah must be dismantledTrump announces 10-day ceasefire in Lebanon after ‘excellent conversations’Iran has stopped all petrochemical exports to prioritise domestic supply and prevent shortages of raw materials, Reuters reported.The state-owned National Petrochemical Company ordered firms to suspend exports until further notice. Continue reading...

Techdirt
Open 
The Right Wing Origins Age Verification Laws Don’t Disappear Just Because They’re Going Bipartisan.
I think it’s important to understand that, despite claims to the contrary, age verification is, inherently, a right-wing effort. While it’s currently true that age verification laws are being supported globally by those on the political right and left, they started as very much a right wing effort to suppress disliked speech by claiming it […]

The Right Scoop
Open 
BREAKING: Mark Levin weighs in on new Israeli ceasefire
Mark Levin is weighing in on the new Israeli ceasefire with Lebanon, and he makes great points about the effectiveness of it. Here’s what he said: Some facts and questions worth thinking . . .

The Right Scoop
Open 
BREAKING VIDEO – Trump has pointed response to question of Iran murdering more protesters
President Trump had a very pointed response to a reporter who asked him about Iran’s threats to murder more protesters, including women. Watch below:   In the same vein, Trump was asked . . .

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Clayton beats Littler in Rotterdam to extend lead
Jonny Clayton delights the Rotterdam crowd as he beats Luke Littler 6-4 to extend his lead at the top of the Premier League table.

Mac Rumours
Open 
Perplexity Launches Personal Computer for Mac, Turning a Mac mini Into an Always-On AI Agent
Perplexity today launched Personal Computer, an expansion of Perplexity Computer that integrates with local files and apps on a Mac. Personal Computer was announced in March and was available on a waitlist basis, but it is officially rolling out today for Max subscribers.





Perplexity Computer came out earlier this year, and it's an all-in-one "digital worker" able to create and execute entire workflows. With today's upgrade, it can run directly on a Mac with access to the file system and native apps. Pressing both Command keys on a Mac will activate Personal Computer, and it responds to text or voice commands. Personal Computer can work across any Mac app, and it can see active apps and display quick actions automatically.



Perplexity says Personal Computer can run on any Mac with macOS 14 Sonoma or later, but the company recommends a Mac mini. With a ‌Mac mini‌, Personal Computer can run 24/7 for work that requires a persistent machine or secure local access to files and native apps. Tasks can be initiated and managed from an iPhone on the go.



Personal Computer can do things like complete each task on a to-do list, sort a messy downloads folder, compare local files against information on the web, and more. It can create teams of agents across over 20 frontier models to complete tasks. Personal Computer's actions are visible, so users can step in when needed. Files are created in a secure sandbox, the actions that Personal Computer takes are auditable and reversible, and there is a kill switch.



Personal Computer for Mac is rolling out to Perplexity Max subscribers starting today, with Perplexity prioritizing waitlist members. Perplexity Max is priced at $200 per month, and the new feature is not available to $20/month Pro plan subscribers.Related Roundup: Mac miniTag: PerplexityBuyer's Guide: Mac Mini (Caution)Related Forum: Mac miniThis article, 'Perplexity Launches Personal Computer for Mac, Turning a Mac mini Into an Always-On AI Agent' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mail Online
Open 
Relief for Gentleman's Relish! Pungent anchovy paste may not be toast after all
The anchovy paste has outlasted six monarchs and two world wars and has been a staple of traditional pantries since 1849.

Mail Online
Open 
Trump renews war of words with Pope Leo over Iran as he accuses Pontiff of 'failing to understand the real world'
Earlier on Thursday, Pope Leo made a pointed criticism of world leaders who spend billions on wars, adding that the planet is being 'ravaged by a handful of tyrants'.

Russia Today News
Open 
The myth of ‘Ukrainian’ drones: What’s really behind the production chain

Mail Online
Open 
DAILY MAIL COMMENT: Slippery Starmer must now tell the truth
Downing Street is asking the British people to swallow quite implausible claims as the saga of Peter Mandelson becomes even murkier.

Mail Online
Open 
The most influential man in the US revealed: Trump's stunned reaction as DailyMail+ unveils the America 250 Power List ranking... that gives major clue about our NEXT president
Ahead of the nation's 250th birthday on July 4, DailyMail+ is today revealing America's biggest power players.

Mail Online
Open 
Incestuous abuse, outrageous on-set behaviour and now accusations against Katy Perry: Inside story of how Ruby Rose went from Hollywood's hottest wildcard to spending years in the wilderness
Ruby Rose was once Hollywood's hottest wildcard - a gender-fluid trailblazer who went from DJ'ing to global stardom almost overnight. Here's how it all went wrong.

BBC World News
Open 
Israel and Lebanon agree 10-day ceasefire, Trump says
The US president invites the two countries' leaders to Washington as Israel's prime minister insists troops will not leave southern Lebanon.

EFF
Open 
Stop New York's Attack on 3D Printing
New York's proposed 2026-2027 budget currently includes provisions that will require all 3D printers sold in the state to run print-blocking censorware—software that surveils every print for forbidden designs. This policy would also create felony charges for possessing or sharing certain design files. The vote on the state budget could happen as early as next week, so New Yorkers need to act fast and demand that their Assemblymembers and Senators strip this provision from the budget.

Take action
Tell Your Representative to Stand with Creators
State legislators across the US are rushing to regulate 3D-printed firearms under the syllogism “something must be done; there, I've done something.” The most reckless of these proposals is a mandate for manufacturers to implement print blocking on all 3D printers. We, and other experts, have already pointed out that this algorithmic print blocking is simply unfeasible and will only serve to stifle competition, free expression, and privacy. While most detrimental to the creative communities lawfully using these printers, every New Yorker will be impacted by this blow to innovation.
This policy is unfortunately buried in Part C of the New York State’s proposed budget for the 2026-2027 fiscal year (S.9005 / A.10005), which is urgently moving toward a vote after facing extensive delays. It’s also bundled with a policy that would allow felony charges to be brought against researchers and journalists for sharing design files restricted by the state.  The worst of these impacts won’t be known until after it is negotiated behind closed doors, with no safeguards for creative expression or privacy.
Researchers and Journalists Could Face Felony Charges
Part C Subpart A of the budget includes two particularly concerning provisions: §2.10 and 2.11. These threaten Class E felony charges for distributing or possessing 3D-printer files that would produce firearm parts with a 3D printer or CNC machine. 
Under these provisions merely sharing a print file with any of them could result in criminal charges
The first provision, 2.10, makes it a felony to sell or distribute files that can produce major firearm components to someone who is not a federally and NY-licensed gunsmith. Under 2.11, it’s also a felony to possess these files if you intend to illegally print a firearm or share them with someone you believe is not permitted to own or smith a firearm.
A journalist reporting on 3D-printed guns. A researcher studying printable firearms. An artist incorporating parts into a new work commenting on gun culture. Under these provisions merely sharing a print file with any of them could result in criminal charges, even if no one involved intends to assemble a firearm.
Criminalizing information doesn’t work. Someone intent on illegally printing a firearm is already subject to charges for that act. Adding felony liability for simply possessing a file or design piles on additional charges while doing nothing to stop printing. New charges for someone distributing these files won’t make them inaccessible to lawbreakers, but they will have a chilling effect on legitimate and entirely legal work. 
Unsurprisingly, a similar law was proposed and subsequently scrapped in Colorado due to First Amendment concerns. We recommend New York do the same.
Mandated Surveillance, Less Access
Part C Subpart B would require every 3D printer and CNC machine sold in New York to include algorithms that scan your design files and block prints the system identifies as producing firearm components. Furthermore, all sales and deliveries of these machines must be made face-to-face. 
Unlike other bills we have seen, there are no exceptions to this mandate. These restrictions apply to sales to researchers, commercial manufacturers, and—oddly enough—federally and state-licensed gunsmiths.
Applying these restrictions to CNC machine sellers is particularly absurd. These cousins of 3D printers, which make 3D objects by removing materials, are often tens of thousands of dollars and used by commercial manufacturers. Automotive, aerospace, medical manufacturers, and many others industries will be subject to the in-person sales, surveillance risk, and all the other problems with these print-blocking algorithms introduce.
Industries will be subject to the in-person sales, surveillance risk, and all the other problems
Even limiting the focus to individual buyers—hobbyists and artists who use these machines at home—this restriction to face-to-face sales comes with its own issues. Beyond unnecessarily complicating the use of printers in the state, this barrier to access will hit rural New Yorkers the hardest. People in rural or remote locations can stand to benefit from the saved time and costs of printing useful parts at home. With this restriction, they will need to drive to one of the few retailers who actually sell this equipment and settle for the models they stock. 
That is, if sellers continue to stock these printers despite the risk. Subpart B §§ 2.3 and 2.5 open sellers up to liability, including anyone on the second-hand market, for selling out-of-date printers. Meanwhile, buyers hoping to illegally print firearms can simply build their own printer with widely available equipment.
The Law Won’t Work as Advertised 
Here’s what makes Subpart B of the New York budget particularly reckless: the technology it mandates is not capable of doing what it is supposed to. 
There is very little detail provided about requirements for the mandated algorithms. What the bill does outline boils down to this: the algorithms must evaluate print files to determine whether they would produce a firearm or illegal firearm parts, and if so, block the print. In an attempt to enable this, New York state would also create and maintain a library of forbidden files with tightly restricted access. 
We’ve already gone over why this idea simply won’t work. Design files are trivially easy to modify, split into segments, or otherwise alter to evade pattern detection. Even if printers fully rendered and analyzed the print with cloud-based AI, any number of design or post-print tricks can be used to dodge detection. Meanwhile, such fuzzy AI interpretation will rapidly increase the percentage of lawful prints censored. 
Firearms aren’t a highly specific design like paper currency; these proposed algorithms are futilely attempting to block an infinite number of designs capable of—or that can be made capable of—the few simple mechanical functions that make up a firearm. 
This group has no peer review requirements, so it could easily be loaded with profiteers or incumbent manufacturers
As we’ve said before: the internet always routes around censorship. Anyone determined to print a prohibited object has straightforward workarounds. The people who get surveilled and blocked are the people trying to follow the law.
The bill aims to enforce this impossible mandate by creating a working group to define the actual technical requirements of enforcement—but only after the law passes. This group has no peer review requirements, so it could easily be loaded with profiteers or incumbent manufacturers who are already lining up to participate. These incumbents stand to profit from shutting out new competitors and locking in users to their devices, and sellers into their platform, subjecting both to the type of enshittification seen with Digital Rights Management (DRM) software. There are also no safeguards in the law to prevent the most surveillance-heavy approaches to print scanning, or to stop this censorship infrastructure from being further weaponized against lawful speech.
On the other hand, unbiased experts in open-source manufacturing in the working group can at best pause the clock by showing such algorithms are unfeasible. That is, until a new snake oil company comes along to restart it. 
New York Won't Be the Last Stop 
New York is one of the largest consumer markets in the country. When it mandates a feature in hardware, manufacturers hardly ever build a New York-only version. They build the New York version and sell it globally. A print-blocking mandate adopted in New York will become the national standard in practice.
New Yorkers deserve more than this rush job buried in a budget bill. This is an unfeasible tech solution, built without the consumer protections that would be required of any serious policy proposal, and creates new costs and inconveniences amidst a protracted annual budget process. It also threatens First Amendment protections. This policy will take shape without consumer guardrails, behind closed doors, and risks the worst outcomes for grassroots innovation and creativity enabled by these machines. Worse still, these practices can become the norm across other states and among 3D-printer manufacturers worldwide. 
Your representatives could vote on this ill-conceived measure in the next week.  If you're a New Yorker, email your legislators now, and tell them to strip this measure from the budget today. 
Take action
Tell Your Representative to Stand with Creators

Mail Online
Open 
Clip of Starmer insisting Mandelson was subject to 'security vetting' emerges as calls for PM's resignation continue mounting over US ambassador's failed screening
In an astonishing development, No10 today confirmed the disgraced peer was given the go-ahead to take on the role against the recommendation of security vetting officials.

The Register
Open 
Anthropic squeezes enterprises by ejecting bundled tokens from seat deal
Large organizations pushed toward metered pricing More bad news for Claude users. Anthropic has revised its seat-based pricing for enterprise customers, shifting them to a new pricing plan upon contract renewal.…

Gizmodo
Open 
Disneyland Makes Up for That Han Solo Situation With a Lovely Leia Look
Disneyland rounds out its trio of original 'Star Wars' heroes coming to 'Galaxy's Edge' with a fun riff on a great Leia design.

Gizmodo
Open 
Google Wants to Put Gucci Smart Glasses on Your Face
Luxury smart glasses, anyone?

Mail Online
Open 
Katie Price confirms husband Lee Andrews DOES have a travel ban after he denied claims he's barred from leaving Dubai
Katie Price has confirmed her husband Lee Andrews does have a travel ban - despite his repeated denials that he is barred from leaving Dubai.

Mail Online
Open 
Tess Daly, 57, shows off her age-defying looks in a plunging blue and white swimsuit as she shares snaps from lavish holiday
Tess Daly looked incredible in a blue and white swimsuit as she posed for stunning Instagram snaps on a lavish holiday.

Mail Online
Open 
Palestine Action activist told security guard Israeli defence firm's UK factory 'won't exist tomorrow' during protest raid, court told
Charlotte Head, 29, Samuel Corner, 23, Leona Kamio, 30, Fatema Rajwani, 21, Zoe Rogers, 22, and Jordan Devlin, 31, are charged with criminal damage at Elbit Systems, Bristol, last August.

Mail Online
Open 
Clip of Starmer insisting Mandelson was subject to 'security vetting' emerges as calls for PM's resignation continue mounting amid over US ambassador's failed screening
In an astonishing development, No10 today confirmed the disgraced peer was given the go-ahead to take on the role against the recommendation of security vetting officials.

Mail Online
Open 
Burger chain collapses into administration after being forced to close all but three branches
The burger joint was once considered a cult-favourite spot for Londoners seeking high-quality street food and beer.

Mail Online
Open 
Terrified Athena Strand repeatedly asked 'Are you a kidnapper?' during final drive with FedEx driver who abducted and killed her in video that made jurors sob
Distressing new evidence was shown Thursday as part of Tanner Horner's death penalty sentencing.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Newly unsealed records reveal Amazon’s price-fixing tactics, California attorney general claims
Exclusive: A trove of previously redacted documents was filed as part of the tech giant’s anti-trust battle with the state of California. Amazon denies it engages in price-fixingHundreds of previously redacted records reveal how Amazon has put pressure on independent sellers using its platform into raising their prices on the sites of competitors such as Walmart and Target, so that Amazon can appear to have lower prices, California authorities allege.The global conglomerate became concerned even if a competitor was selling an item for as little as a penny less, according to one segment of the newly unredacted evidence. Continue reading...

CNET News
Open 
AMC Monthly Movies Price Hike: Here's How Your Plan Is Changing
Some membership prices will rise in July.

CNET News
Open 
No, Anthropic's New Claude Opus 4.7 Model Is Not Mythos Preview
Anthropic says this new model is supposed to be more "tasteful and creative." And you can actually use it.

CNET News
Open 
Meta Raises Prices on Quest 3 and Quest 3S Due to RAM Shortage
The VR headsets are RAMageddon's latest victims.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Newly unsealed records reveal Amazon’s price-fixing tactics, California attorney general claims
Exclusive: A trove of previously redacted documents was filed as part of the tech giant’s anti-trust battle with the state of California. Amazon denies it engages in price-fixingHundreds of previously redacted records reveal how Amazon has put pressure on independent sellers using its platform into raising their prices on the sites of competitors like Walmart and Target, so that Amazon can appear to have lower prices, California authorities allege.The global conglomerate became concerned even if a competitor was selling an item for as little as a penny less, according to one segment of the newly unredacted evidence. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Palestine FA officials denied entry to Canada for Fifa pre-World Cup meeting
Three officials have had applications for visas rejectedFifa Congress will take place in Vancouver on 30 AprilOfficials from the Palestine Football Association have been denied entry to Canada ahead of a pre-World Cup meeting of Fifa’s member associations to be held in Vancouver this month.Three officials have had applications for visas to enter Canada rejected, with the association subsequently asking Fifa to intervene with immigration authorities on their behalf. It comes amid concerns over the ability of some nations to travel freely to this summer’s 48-team tournament, which will be held across the US, Canada and Mexico. Continue reading...

Atlas Obscura
Open 
Chevelon Creek Bridge in Winslow, Arizona

TechRadar News
Open 
'1,000 hp': This record-breaking electric motor packs Tesla Plaid EV power into a beer keg-sized device

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Jury finds that Live Nation is an illegal monopoly, but a breakup with Ticketmaster is unlikely, analysts say
Some analysts say the most likely outcome for Live Nation would be more damages and penalties. Shares of the concert-ticketing giant rose on Thursday after falling a day earlier.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Stocks usually take the escalator up and the elevator down. In this latest rebound, it is happening in reverse.
What had been a slow grind lower since the S&P 500’s January peak was completely erased in the span of just a couple of weeks.

Slashdot
Open 
Europe Has 'Maybe 6 Weeks of Jet Fuel Left'
The head of the International Energy Agency warned that Europe may have only "six weeks or so" of jet fuel left if oil supplies remain blocked by the Iran war and the Strait of Hormuz stays disrupted. The Associated Press reports: IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol painted a sobering picture of the global repercussions of what he called "the largest energy crisis we have ever faced," stemming from the pinch-off of oil, gas and other vital supplies through the Strait of Hormuz. "In the past there was a group called 'Dire Straits.' It's a dire strait now, and it is going to have major implications for the global economy. And the longer it goes, the worse it will be for the economic growth and inflation around the world," he told The Associated Press. The impact will be "higher petrol (gasoline) prices, higher gas prices, high electricity prices," said Birol, speaking in his Paris office looking out over the Eiffel Tower.

Economic pain will be felt unevenly and "the countries who will suffer the most will not be those whose voice are heard a lot. It will be mainly the developing countries. Poorer countries in Asia, in Africa and in Latin America," said the Turkish economist and energy expert who has led the IEA since 2015. But without a settlement of the Iran war that permanently reopens the Strait of Hormuz, "Everybody is going to suffer," he added. "Some countries may be richer than the others. Some countries may have more energy than the others, but no country, no country is immune to this crisis," he said.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Mail Online
Open 
Athena Strand jury sobs as they see video of frightened girl, 7, asking killer FedEx driver Tanner Horner distressing question
Distressing new evidence was shown Thursday as part of Tanner Horner's death penalty sentencing.

BBC World News
Open 
Lawmakers clash with RFK Jr as he shifts focus away from vaccines
During a three-hour hearing, the US health secretary tried to focus on chronic disease while being pressed on vaccines.

UK Government News
Open 
Attacks on international shipping in the Gulf have been deeply damaging for the world: UK Statement at the UN General Assembly
Statement by Ambassador James Kariuki, UK Chargé d’Affaires to the UN, at the UN General Assembly meeting on the use of the veto.

UK Government News
Open 
Urgent action to rapidly improve HMP Woodhill
Specialist staff, tougher disciplinary action and bolstered security measures will be deployed at HMP Woodhill to reduce violence, combat drugs and improve safety.

UK Government News
Open 
Firefighters to benefit from bespoke health support
Government to back firefighters with tailor made, research backed health support during and after service

UK Government News
Open 
AI firms pioneering drug discovery, cheaper supercomputing and more get first backing through UK’s Sovereign AI
Sovereign AI is the UK’s £500 million bet to back homegrown AI founders, drive growth and create jobs across the UK.

UK Government News
Open 
Tech Secretary launches Sovereign AI
Secretary of State for Science, Innovation, and Technology, Liz Kendall, spoke at Wayve, launching the Sovereign AI Fund on Thursday 16 April 2026.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump nominates former deputy surgeon general to lead embattled CDC – US politics live
President taps Erica Schwartz to lead agency; its last director was fired less than a month into tenure after clashing with health secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr over his vaccine agendaRFK Jr accused of ‘dangerous conspiracy theories’ at heated budget hearingSign up for the Breaking News US emailChairman of the joint chiefs of staff Dan Caine says the US military remains ready to re-engage in combat “at literally a moment’s notice”.He says the blockade covers Iran’s ports and coastlines and applies to all ships, regardless of which flag they are sailing under. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Rachel Reeves warns other budgets may be cut to lift defence spending
Chancellor says she is ‘working through a range of options’ to boost the armed forces but does not want to put up taxesRachel Reeves has warned “difficult choices” are required to increase defence spending and other budgets may have to be cut, including welfare.Under pressure for a faster rise in the military budget amid the Iran conflict and Russia’s war in Ukraine, the chancellor said she was “working through a range of options” but preferred not to increase taxes or add to government borrowing. Continue reading...

The Hill
Open 
Greene slams evangelical leader's defense of Trump after AI Jesus post 
Former Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) slammed evangelical leader Franklin Graham on Thursday for defending President Trump’s since-deleted post depicting himself as a Jesus-like figure. Graham, a close Trump ally, said in a statement on the social platform X that he did not believe Trump would knowingly depict himself as Jesus Christ, referencing Trump’s explanation...

The Hill
Open 
Man detained, officer injured after attempt to scale White House fence
U.S. Secret Service agents detained a man on Thursday morning after he attempted to breach the White House perimeter on foot. Secret Service communications chief Anthony Guglielmi said the incident occurred around 11:30 a.m. EDT, when the man jumped over a construction bollard by the Treasury Building on the northeast side of the presidential complex...

The Hill
Open 
Damon Jones expected to plead guilty in NBA gambling probe
Damon Jones, the former NBA player charged in connection with an illegal sports gambling ring, is expected to plead guilty to charges in New York. Jones, who played for 10 teams in 11 seasons from 1999 to 2009, is expected to plead guilty to charges of money laundering conspiracy and wire fraud conspiracy, The New...

The Hill
Open 
Hegseth shares air rescue group's 'Pulp Fiction' prayer at Pentagon service
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on Wednesday repeated an air rescue group's prayer that borrows from a scene in Quentin Tarantino's film "Pulp Fiction." During a Pentagon service, Hegseth said the prayer — called CSAR 25:17, an apparent reference to Ezekiel 25:17 in the Bible — was recited during a mission to recover the pilot of...

The Hill
Open 
Mamdani, Hochul team up on second-home tax: What to know
New York Gov. Kathy Hochul (D) and New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani (D) have proposed a new tax on property owners who have second homes in New York City worth more than $5 million, in an effort to narrow the city's budget deficit by targeting the ultrawealthy.  The “pied-à-terre tax” would be an annual...

The Hill
Open 
Trump says he may go to Islamabad if Iran war deal signed in Pakistan
President Trump told reporters on Thursday that he might visit Islamabad, Pakistan, if a deal is reached there between the U.S. and Iran.  “I would go to Pakistan,” Trump said when asked if he would visit the country, which has played a mediating role between the U.S. and Iran, to seal the deal. “Pakistan has...

The Hill
Open 
White House budget director Vought declines to tell senators cost of Iran war
Russell Vought, director of the White House Office of Management and Budget, declined to give senators an estimate of the cost of the military operations against Iran when pressed on the issue during a hearing Thursday. Vought said the White House is working on a request for additional defense funding but declined to offer an...

The Hill
Open 
Trump says he won't meet Pope Leo, can 'disagree' with pontiff
President Trump defended his comments pushing back on Pope Leo XIV’s statements against the Iran war, saying he has a right to disagree with the pontiff and that he felt no need to meet to iron out their differences. “I have a right to disagree with the pope. I have no disagreement with the fact...

The Hill
Open 
Europe will run out of jet fuel in '6 weeks or so,' key official warns
International Energy Agency (IEA) Executive Director Fatih Birol on Thursday warned that Europe will run out of jet fuel in "six weeks or so" if the closure of the Strait of Hormuz drags on. Birol told The Associated Press that the strait's closure has caused "the largest energy crisis we have ever faced." The closure...

The Hill
Open 
DOJ investigating Swalwell over sexual misconduct allegations
The Department of Justice (DOJ) is investigating former Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.) over allegations of sexual misconduct, a source familiar confirmed to The Hill. Five women have come forward so far with allegations of sexual assault or misconduct they said occurred over the last several years. The district attorneys for Los Angeles and Manhattan have...

The Hill
Open 
Why the Xanax recall may not impact your prescription
The "limited scope" recall of the commonly-prescribed drug may not impact your prescription at all.

The Hill
Open 
Minnesota seeks arrest of ICE officer for pointing gun at citizens during surge
An arrest warrant is out for an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer accused of brandishing a gun at two people on a highway during Operation Metro Surge in Minnesota, prosecutors said Thursday. Gregory Donnell Morgan Jr. was charged with two counts of second-degree assault in connection with the Feb. 5 incident in the Twin...

The Hill
Open 
Live updates: Congress grills Kennedy, Vought, Driscoll; Trump taps new CDC nominee
President Trump on Thursday named his next pick to lead the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Dr. Erica Schwartz, who served as deputy surgeon general in his first term. Earlier, he announced that Israel and Lebanon have agreed to a 10-day ceasefire. He wrote on Truth Social that he had an “excellent conversation” with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin...

The Hill
Open 
Watch live: Trump hosts 'no tax on tips' roundtable in Las Vegas
President Trump on Thursday will host a roundtable event in Las Vegas highlighting his administration's "no tax on tips" law, just a day after the IRS's tax filing deadline. The law, which was part of the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act" enacted last summer, covers more than 60 jobs, including service industry workers such as...

ZDNet News
Open 
Google's Pixel 10 is now 30% off on Amazon for a limited time
The Pixel 10 drops to $549, delivering flagship performance and a great camera system at a new low price.

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
DTCC Enables Cloud First Strategy to Enhance Digital Market Infrastructures
DTCC is focused on its cloud-priority initiative, aiming to upgrade its essential market systems and digital asset platforms for greater innovation, durability, and protection against cyber threats. On April 15, 2026, the Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC)—the post-trade infrastructure provider for global finance—unveiled advancements... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Payments Canada Provides Updates on Real-Time Payment Adoption Trends
Payments Canada reports that it is making significant progress with its Real-Time Rail (RTR) initiative, positioning Canada for a modern payments landscape where instant transactions become the norm. In its latest quarterly update for Q2 2026, the organization highlighted significant strides in expanding the ecosystem... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Crowdcube Highlights Shift to Offer Primary and Secondary Securities Offerings Adapting to Market Realities
Crowdcube, the first securities crowdfunding platform to launch in the UK and now operating in continental Europe, is touting its service as now providing a “full menu” of both primary and secondary securities offerings. This is an adjustment to market realities as investors want alternatives.... Read More

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
Gulfstream Pilot Ignores ATC Instruction, Nearly Downs Paris-Bound 777 at LAX
A Gulfstream G650ER business jet crossed onto an active runway at Los Angeles International Airport against a clear air traffic control instruction, forcing the crew of a fully loaded Air France Boeing 777-300ER to execute a high-speed rejected takeoff.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Dark Matter May Be Made of Black Holes From Another Universe
A model of the cyclic universe suggests that dark matter could be a population of black holes predating the Big Bang.

The Right Scoop
Open 
BREAKING: Trump goes after federal judge blocking him from building ballroom; Reveals just how elaborate ballroom will be…
President Trump just went after highly political Federal Judge Richard Leon (not by name) who is blocking him from building the new White House ballroom, and he went into great detail to . . .

The Right Scoop
Open 
BREAKING REPORT: Here’s how Trump got the ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon
There’s a new report out from the Jerusalem Post which describes how President Trump brokered a ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon. In short, it’s a one-sided ceasefire because Trump asked Netanyahu to . . .

The Right Scoop
Open 
BREAKING: Trump appoints new CDC Director
President Trump just appointed a new CDC Director, Dr. Erica Schwartz. She was his deputy Surgeon General in his first administration and has a litany of tother credentials. He also appointed Sean . . .

Russia Today News
Open 
War on Iran could trigger global famine – charity founder

Mail Online
Open 
Who on earth would want to buy any of Meghan's Australian looks, asks SHANE WATSON. They're stiff, impractical and worst of all, horribly ageing
The Sussexes Not Quite A Royal Tour (but they hope it looked like one) ended on Friday after four packed days and seven outfit changes for the Duchess.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
UK economy showed surprise 0.5% growth before Iran war
ONS figure for February suggests Britain was gaining momentum before conflict dashed hopes of recoveryUK GDP expanded by a stronger than expected 0.5% in February, official figures show, suggesting the economy was gaining momentum before the onset of war in the Middle East dashed hopes of recovery.The jump, reported by the Office for National Statistics (ONS), was significantly bigger than the 0.1% forecast by economists. January’s flatlining figure was also revised up, to 0.1% growth. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Next chief Simon Wolfson paid record £7.4m – and could get far more this year
‘Sustained outperformance’ merits pay rise, says company after it ups profit guidance to £1.2bn for year to January 2027The Next chief executive, Simon Wolfson, took home more than £7m last year, his highest ever pay package, and could be handed up to £9.27m this year after the retailer announced plans to increase his basic salary and bonuses.The listed company said it was increasing its pay deal for the long-term leader of the fashion and homewares retailer, which now controls a string of brands in the UK including Gap, Victoria’s Secret, Cath Kidston, Reiss and FatFace, as his remuneration was 30% below the average for FTSE 100 bosses. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Metro Bank boss handed record £2.6m a year after slashing 1,000 jobs
Dan Frumkin’s pay package comes after bank’s near collapse and rescue by Colombian billionaireMetro Bank’s chief executive has been handed a £2.6m pay packet – the largest in its history – a year after slashing 1,000 jobs in response to the lender’s near collapse.The figure is more than double the £1.2m Dan Frumkin was paid in 2024. Metro pushed through the pay bump and complex bonus scheme for the former RBS and Northern Rock banker at a shareholder meeting last year. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Newly unsealed records reveal Amazon’s price-fixing tactics, California attorney general claims
Exclusive: A trove of previously redacted documents was filed as part of the tech giant’s anti-trust battle with the state of California. Amazon denies it engages in price-fixingHundreds of previously redacted records reveal how Amazon has pressured independent sellers using its platform into raising their prices on the sites of competitors like Walmart and Target, so that Amazon can appear to have lower prices, California authorities allege.The global conglomerate became concerned even if a competitor was selling an item for as little as a penny less, according to one segment of the newly unredacted evidence. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
At least 17 people killed in Russia’s deadliest attack on Ukraine this year
More than 100 injured across country after Russia launches nearly 700 drones and dozens of ballistic and cruise missilesRussia has carried out its deadliest attack against Ukraine this year, killing at least 17 people and injuring more than 100 in a wave of drone and missile strikes across the country.Nine people died in the southern port city of Odesa and four were killed in Kyiv, including a 12-year-old boy. There were three fatalities in the Dnipropetrovsk region. Another person died in Zaporizhzhia oblast. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Robert F Kennedy Jr grilled about Medicare fraud claims, vaccine rollbacks and health budget – US politics live
Health secretary questioned in packed House Ways and Means committee hearingSign up for the Breaking News US emailChairman of the joint chiefs of staff Dan Caine says the US military remains ready to re-engage in combat “at literally a moment’s notice”.He says the blockade covers Iran’s ports and coastlines and applies to all ships, regardless of which flag they are sailing under. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
From Burnley to Bayern: Kompany trains sights on PSG and European supremacy
Manager’s grounded attitude has helped the free-scoring German giants set up a tantalising Champions League showdown and de facto finalIf you thought that was good, wait until you have done it at Ewood Park. While everyone else struggled to compose themselves after watching a modern classic unfold between Bayern Munich and Real Madrid, it was Vincent Kompany who supplied the cooling balm. He had just taken Bayern back to the Champions League semi-finals in scintillating fashion, another feat to justify the decision to take him from Burnley two years ago. Not many managers have breathed such rarefied air within days of turning 40. For Kompany, though, it sat snugly alongside the snappy Lancashire climate.“I remember we beat Blackburn twice with Burnley,” he said, having been asked whether Wednesday night marked a crowning achievement in his coaching career. “Nobody in this room will want to compare it with the game today, but it was amazing. I experienced so much as a player and that was incredible. For Bayern this game is an amazing feeling, but I don’t think you wait for Real Madrid to say ‘this is the best’. You have to get it from other things as well.” Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Hardworking trucker father-of-one, 41, struck and killed by lightning while walking out of gas station to his car during storm
A beloved father has been identified as the man who died after he was struck by lightning while walking across a gas station parking lot in Wisconsin, his family said.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Mandelson Failed Security Vetting…Who Knew What, When?
Starmer did not know Mandelson failed vetting, government says

Mail Online
Open 
Macaulay Culkin and Brenda Song can't keep their hands off each other after nearly 10 years together
The twosome put their wholesome love on display as they posed on the 'blue' carpet where they joined by Song's co-stars Kate Hudson.

Mail Online
Open 
Natasha Lyonne makes jokes about flight removal at Planned Parenthood gala after blaming sleeping pills
On Wednesday, the star addressed the episode with an attempt at humor, delivering a series of cringeworthy jokes about the ordeal during the Planned Parenthood of New York gala.

Mail Online
Open 
Mitchells unite! EastEnders' Grant joins Phil and Sam as he makes dramatic return to Walford after life-changing call from estranged son Mark
Played by Ross Kemp , Grant originally appeared in the BBC soap as a regular from 1990 to 1999.

Mail Online
Open 
Counter-terror police take over probe into arson attacks across London on Jewish ambulances, synagogue and anti-regime Iran TV station
Counter-terror police have taken over the probe into three separate arson attacks targeting the Jewish community and an anti-Iranian regime media company in London in recent days.

Mail Online
Open 
Trump renews war of words with Pope Leo over Iran as he accuses Pontiff of 'failing to understand the real world'
Earlier today, Pope Leo made a pointed criticism of world leaders who spend billions on wars, adding that the planet is being 'ravaged by a handful of tyrants.'

Ars Technica
Open 
Microsoft and Stellantis want to use AI to help car owners

Ars Technica
Open 
New undersea cable cutter risks Internet’s backbone

Ars Technica
Open 
The Ukraine war's deep impact on Metro 2039’s development, story

Ars Technica
Open 
New Codex features include the ability to use your computer in the background

Ars Technica
Open 
Ad firms settle with Trump FTC over claims they boycotted conservative media

The Register
Open 
Loud, power hungry - opposition grows to datacenters as Maine passes bit barn ban
If there's one thing folks want less than Copilot in their taskbar, it's a bit barn in their backyard Loud, thirsty, power hungry, and intensely unpopular with neighboring residents: datacenters are becoming the new nuclear waste dump. And many localities are now saying "not in my backyard."…

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Lyse Doucet in Iran: Destruction shows huge civilian cost of the war
While military targets have been struck in Iran, civilian areas have too, showing the stark reality of the war.

Gizmodo
Open 
Why Fans Are Calling ‘Apocalypse Hotel’ the Real Anime of the Year
Crunchyroll’s Anime of the Year lineup is stacked, but this strange, heartfelt sci-fi standout has quietly stolen the crown in fans’ hearts.

Gizmodo
Open 
The Cockroach of Dinosaurs Likely Survived Extinction Because of Its Big Wet Eggs
The small, plant-eating Lystrosaurus thrived post-extinction, while its predators suffocated to death. Its eggs played a critical role.

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11508 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Maintenance - LNCED - Crouch End (New)
Openreach will be performing exchange maintenance on LNCED - Crouch End.

Customers may see a short disconnection during the maintenance window.

Start: Fri, 24th Apr 2026 00:00

End: Fri, 24th Apr 2026 06:00

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 20:20

Status: Partial

Maintenance: Planned

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11508 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Maintenance - LNCED - Crouch End (Close)
Duplicate service alert

Start: Fri, 24th Apr 2026 00:00

End: Fri, 24th Apr 2026 06:00

Clear: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 20:20

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 20:20

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

CNET News
Open 
Spotify Lets Listeners Turn Audiobooks Into Bookstore Purchases
Press play, then pay it forward. The music streaming app is launching a new feature with Bookshop.org to support independent booksellers.

CNET News
Open 
Apple Products Now Contain 30% Recycled Materials. Their Packaging Boasts Zero Plastic
Apple's 2025 Environmental Report shows the company has made significant progress toward its 2030 climate goals.

Mail Online
Open 
Sydney Sweeney's new love Scooter Braun makes crass two-word remark as he finally goes Instagram official with actress
The 28-year-old actress took to her Instagram Story to post a sweet snap of her cuddled up with the 44-year-old businessman.

Mail Online
Open 
Trump ally mocks Meghan's claim she's the 'most trolled person in the world'
The Trump ally mocked Meghan Markle's assertion that she is the 'most trolled person in the world', but he did compliment the former royal as he said he was a big fan of her in the TV show 'Suits.'

Mail Online
Open 
Trump wildly rants about Pope Leo amid Iran war feud and teases he'll fly to Pakistan HIMSELF to get a deal done
President Donald Trump told reporters at the White House that he might personally go to Pakistan himself to seal the deal if a peace agreement is signed.

Mail Online
Open 
Trump investigating mysterious disappearance of 10 missing government scientists: 'This is serious stuff'
President Donald Trump has been briefed on the mysterious string of missing and dead scientists, a growing list that has now reached ten cases.

Mail Online
Open 
Who on earth would want to buy any of Meghan's Australian looks, asks SHANE WATSON. They're stiff, impractical and worst of all, horribly ageing
WATSON: The Sussexes Not Quite A Royal Tour (but they hope it looked like one) ended on Friday after four packed days and seven outfit changes for the Duchess.

Mail Online
Open 
The Pitt fans are stunned to learn breakout star's dad is Bryan Cranston
'Whaaaat? I was today years old when I learned this. And I call myself a Pitt fan [laughing while crying emoji],' one fan said.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Nottingham Forest v Porto: Europa League quarter-final, second leg – live
⚽ Europa League updates; kick-off 8pm BST (first leg: 1-1)⚽ Aston Villa v Bologna – updates | Live scores | Mail Scott4 min: Sangare releases Gibbs-White down the right. Promising for Forest … until the whistle goes, Sangare having come through the back of Alberto Costa on the touchline. The correct decision, if annoyingly belated from a Forest point of view, everyone all excited for a second.2 min: It’s an absolutely belting atmosphere, both sets of fans giving it plenty. But Porto nearly quieten the home fans in short order, Moffi latching onto a prod down the inside-right channel and attempting to flick past Ortega. The Forest keeper swipes away. The rebound falls to William Gomes, who blazes over. Yikes. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Rachel Reeves warns other budgets may be cut to lift defence spending
Chancellor says she is ‘working through a range of options’ to boost the armed forces but does not want to put up taxesRachel Reeves has warned “difficult choices” are required to increase defence spending and other budgets may have to be cut, including welfare.Under pressure for a faster rise in military spending amid the Iran conflict and Russia’s war in Ukraine, the chancellor said she was “working through a range of options” but preferred not to increase taxes or add to government borrowing. Continue reading...

TechRadar News
Open 
Rolls-Royce launches its most 'ambitious work' to date — as limited edition Project Nightingale takes electric luxury to a new level

TechRadar News
Open 
China completes testing on ‘deep-sea electro-hydrostatic actuator’ capable of slicing undersea cables as deep as 3.5 kilometers – new compact subsea vessel testing bridges the ‘last mile’ and could deploy in 2026

Digital Trends
Open 
This AI lets self-driving cars “remember” past drives to plan safer routes
A new planning method called KEPT lets self-driving cars compare what they are seeing now with similar past traffic situation to lower prediction error and fewer potential collisions.

Boing Boing
Open 
War games, wild comeback: the bird saved by a target range
On San Clemente Island, a restricted training ground run by the United States Navy has doubled as a conservation zone, helping revive a rare "butcher bird," the loggerhead shrike.





I have been scuba diving off San Clemente several times. While there, we were visited by Navy helicopters and jets. — Read the rest
The post War games, wild comeback: the bird saved by a target range appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
This guy claims to have improved cast iron seasoning
A YouTuber claims that boiling some vinegar and water in your cast-iron pan before seasoning will improve the results. Watch for yourself:





My take on this is the bluing is mostly cosmetic, if at all functional. Cast-iron pans season easily and are pretty easy to care for. — Read the rest
The post This guy claims to have improved cast iron seasoning appeared first on Boing Boing.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
This ‘hidden’ price of oil is at record highs — and it’ll hit your electric bill next
Investors are betting on peace — but they’re not looking at the whole picture.

Slashdot
Open 
Google, Pentagon Discuss Classified AI Deal
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters: Alphabet's Google is negotiating an agreement with the Department of Defense that would allow the Pentagon to deploy its Gemini AI models in classified settings, the Information reported on Thursday, citing two people with direct knowledge of the discussions. The two parties are discussing an agreement that would allow the Pentagon to use Google's AI for all lawful uses, according to the report.

During the negotiations, Google has proposed additional language in its contract with the department to prevent its AI from being used for domestic mass surveillance or autonomous weapons without appropriate human control, the Information reported. The Pentagon will continue to deploy frontier AI capabilities through strong industry partnerships across all classification levels, a Pentagon official said, without confirming any talks with Google.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Cuban president vows defense of island if US invades
Cuba's president has vowed the Caribbean island state will defend itself if the US launches a military assault. US President Trump has repeatedly threatened to invade.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Pope says ‘world is being ravaged by a handful of tyrants’ amid feud with Trump’s White House
Pontiff denounces leaders who invoke religion to justify war, after US bishops offer him support after Vance remarksSign up for the Breaking News US email to get newsletter alerts in your inboxPope Leo XIV has said that the world is being “ravaged by a handful of tyrants” who spend billions on war, in comments that will be seen as another sharp escalation in his almost week-long feud with the White House over the US-Israel war on Iran.The first American-born pontiff did not mention Donald Trump by name, but used his speech in Cameroon on Thursday to denounce world leaders that invoke religion to justify violence against other nations. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Man used AI to make false statements to shut down London nightclub, police say
Heaven club neighbour admits offences under Licensing Act, as Met says fictitious AI-generated complaints a growing issue A businessman has pleaded guilty to making false statements in order to shut down a nightclub, which police believe were generated using AI.A Metropolitan police source said the use of AI to generate letters by complainants who do not exist is a growing issue. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Nottingham Forest v Porto: Europa League quarter-final, second leg – live
⚽ Europa League updates; kick-off 8pm BST (first leg: 1-1)⚽ Aston Villa v Bologna – updates | Live scores | Mail Scott2 min: It’s an absolutely belting atmosphere, both sets of fans giving it plenty. But Porto nearly quieten the home fans in short order, Moffi latching onto a prod down the inside-right channel and attempting to flick past Ortega. The Forest keeper swipes away. The rebound falls to Alberto Costa, who blazes over. Yikes.Nottingham Forest get the ball rolling. They’re defending the Trent End in this first half. The aggregate score is 1-1 after the first leg. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Rachel Reeves warns other budgets may be cut to lift defence spending
Chancellor says she is ‘working through a range of options’ to boost the armed forces but does not want to put up taxesUK politics live – latest updatesRachel Reeves has warned “difficult choices” are required to increase defence spending and other budgets may have to be cut, including welfare.Under pressure for a faster rise in military spending amid the Iran conflict and Russia’s war in Ukraine, the chancellor said she was “working through a range of options” but preferred not to increase taxes or add to government borrowing. Continue reading...

The Verge
Open 
OpenAI’s big Codex update is a direct shot at Claude Code
OpenAI is beefing up its agentic coding and development system, Codex, with a suite of updates that let it use your computer, generate images, and remember from past experiences. The package of updates comes as OpenAI's rivalry with Anthropic intensifies, following the stellar successes of Claude Code and OpenAI aggressively shifting resources to catch up. […]

The Verge
Open 
Casely has reannounced a power bank recall from 2025 following a fatality
Casely first recalled over 429,000 of its 5,000mAh Power Pods wireless power banks in April 2025 following 51 reports of their lithium-ion batteries "overheating, expanding or catching fire," resulting in six minor burn injuries. Both the company and the US Consumer Product Safety Commission (USCPSC) are reannouncing the same recall today following 28 additional reports […]

The Verge
Open 
The only way to fight deepfakes is by making deepfakes
I was unsure if my parents would notice that the voice on the other end wasn't mine - or that it was mine, sort of, but it wasn't me. The voice said hello, asked my dad how he was doing, and asked again when he didn't respond quickly enough. "What is that, Gaby?" He realized […]

The Verge
Open 
Teenage Engineering might be getting into instrument amps next
An unannounced Teenage Engineering device, the KO-Amp 35, can be found over at the FCC in a new filing. The label clearly marks it as a member of the mid-range EP family instruments, which currently includes the KO-II and its spinoffs, the Riddim and the Medieval. The name suggests that TE could be getting into […]

The Verge
Open 
Ozlo’s comfy Sleepbuds are nearly 30 percent off in the run-up to Mother’s Day
If you’re struggling to get a full night of rest, a good pair of sleep earbuds can help you tune out unwanted distractions. The Ozlo Sleepbuds are one such option, and they’re currently available for $249 ($100 off) in the run-up to Mother’s Day at Amazon and Ozlo’s online storefront, which is easily the lowest […]

The Verge
Open 
Live Nation says it will fight monopoly suit loss
After a jury found that Live Nation-Ticketmaster violated antitrust law on several counts, the company warns in a blog post that the verdict "is not the last word on this matter." The company plans to renew a motion for the judge to issue a ruling against the states, claiming that they did not prove their […]

Nature
Open 
Brain–machine interface reveals the origin of a widely used neural signal

Nature
Open 
Revealed: how male and female brain cells differ in gene activity

Nature
Open 
Quantum computers take on health care: light-sensitive cancer drugs win US$2 million contest

Nature
Open 
The nine-to-five PhD: mere myth or an achievable goal?

Nature
Open 
Ageing could prime women for autoimmune disorders

Nature
Open 
Graves reveal plague’s inequitable toll

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Taiwan Semi Slides Despite Record Results In Warning Sign For Chip Companies
Taiwan Semi Slides Despite Record Results In Warning Sign For Chip Companies

Taiwanese chip giant, Taiwan Semiconductor Manfuacturing Co, said Thursday its net profit surged to a fresh record in the first quarter, fueled by the global artificial intelligence race despite the war in the Middle East. Massive demand for AI hardware means business is booming for TSMC -- the biggest contract maker of microchips used in everything from Apple phones to Nvidia processors.

TSMC's net profit for the first three months of the year jumped 58.3% YoY to NT$572.5 billion ($18 billion), beating analyst estimates of NT$540.20 billion as governments and tech giants continue to pour huge sums into building data centers that can train and run AI tools such as chatbots, image generators and agents that can execute tasks. A weaker Taiwanese dollar had also boosted the firm's revenues from overseas sales: the company said net revenue rose 35.1% YoY to a record NT$1.13 trillion. Gross margin was 66.2% in the first quarter, further increased from a record 62.3% last quarter.

Here is the full Q1 breakdown:

Sales NT$1.13 trillion, +35% y/y, estimate NT$1.12 trillion
Net income NT$572.5 billion, +58% y/y, estimate NT$542.38 billion
Gross margin 66.2% vs. 62.3% q/q, estimate 64.5%
Operating profit NT$658.97 billion, +62% y/y, estimate NT$623.82 billion
Operating margin 58.1% vs. 54% q/q, estimate 55.6%
While overall earnings were stellar, largely thanks to relentless AI chip demand, one weak point was smartphone revenue, which fell 11% compared to the previous quarter as the industry faces an ongoing memory shortage.

"The recent situation in the Middle East... brings further macroeconomic uncertainties, as such we are being prudent in our business planning," TSMC chairman CC Wei said.  TSMC CFO Wendell Huang said the company did not expect the war to impact its supply of key chipmaking materials such as helium and hydrogen in the near term, despite mounting fears that the collapse in Qatar helium exports would wreak havoc on global chip production.

"We source from multiple suppliers in different regions, and we have prepared safety stock inventory on hand," Huang told an earnings call, adding that energy supplies were also sufficient to continue operations as normal for now.

TSMC said its revenue for the April-June quarter will reach another record of between $39 billion and $40.2 billion, which represents 32% year-over-year growth at the midpoint. Gross margin is expected to be between 65.5% to 67.5%. Commenting on the forecast, Bloomberg said that “TSMC’s 2Q gross-margin guide above 1Q’s record suggests rising chemical and gas costs tied to Middle East disruption aren’t enough to derail the company’s structural margin reset”

That said, TSMC warned the surging price of gas and chipmaking chemicals could weigh on the company's profitability and the global economy, while increasing component costs, including for memory chips, could affect the price-sensitive consumer market.

The results are in line with those of leading memory chipmakers, including Samsung Electronics, SK Hynix and Micron Technology, all of which have benefited from the global AI infrastructure boom. Samsung earlier this month flagged preliminary first-quarter operating profit surging 755% year on year, driven by an unprecedented memory shortage. Micron's gross margin reached 74% in the fiscal quarter ending February 2026 and is expected to rise further to around 81% in the current quarter, underscoring the strength of demand.

A note from UBS analysts had predicted strong quarterly results for TSMC but warned that consumer demand was weakening as a result of higher prices caused by a global memory chip shortage that is a side-effect of the AI boom. "Cloud AI demand continues to strengthen, but we think supply constraints will limit meaningful upside for TSMC this year," the UBS team said. "Middle East tensions add a layer of macro uncertainty, but AI spend should stay insulated, barring a protracted conflict."

TSMC's good news was bad news for  PC manufacturers, who are facing a rare double-whammy: TSMC's foundry price hikes are converging with memory cost inflation, creating a cost squeeze that's already forcing retail price increases. The math is straightforward-chips cost more to make, and memory modules are pricier to buy-and the result is a fundamental upward pressure on every PC built.

TSMC's 2026 price adjustments target the advanced nodes that power premium laptops and desktops. The company notified clients that prices for sub-3nm processes will rise 3% to 10% starting January 1, 2026, with the exact increase depending on the node 3%-10% by node. TSMC currently sells 3nm wafers for approximately $20,000 each, and 2nm wafers will exceed $30,000 when mass production begins 3nm at ~$20,000, 2nm above $30,000. These are the chips that go into flagship devices, and the cost differential is material. For context, TSMC's Arizona facility, which is now producing 4nm chips, costs 5-20% more to operate than Taiwan-based manufacturing, a factor baked into the pricing strategy Arizona operations 5-20% more expensive.

The memory side of the equation is equally aggressive. DRAM and NAND flash prices have been climbing as suppliers tighten contract terms and inventories normalize. Asus, one of the world's largest PC vendors, responded in early January 2026 by implementing price increases of 15% to 20% on selected notebook and desktop models Asus price increases 15-20%. The company explicitly cited "RAM and storage cost pressure" as the driver, linking the shift directly to supplier pricing rather than logistics or labor Asus attributed increases to memory costs. Asus targeted specific consumer and commercial models-but the effect was immediate: Taiwan retailers began raising prices on competing brands' systems to preserve their own margins retailers raised prices on rival brands.

* * * 

TSMC is also planning record capital spending of up to $56 billion in 2026, part of a broader push by Asia's chip industry that could total at least $136 billion. ASE Technology Holding, the world's largest chip-packaging and testing provider, updated its guidance and said investment this year will exceed earlier forecasts.

"We expect AI to continue fueling growth for TSMC despite weak non-AI demand," said Mark Li, veteran semiconductor analyst with Bernstein Research. "Fortunately for TSMC, we see no impact to its business as the capacity released by non-AI customers will be quickly filled by AI customers who could not find sufficient capacity before."

TSMC Chairman and CEO C.C. Wei also commented for the first time on Tesla and Intel's collaboration on Terafab advanced chipmaking facilities in the U.S. and on Intel's push into the contract chipmaking business and advanced chip packaging. Recently Elon Musk says his company is embarking on its own in-house chip business because capacity from its chip suppliers, including TSMC, Samsung and SK Hynix, is insufficient to meet its needs. 

"Actually both Intel and Tesla are TSMC customers, but they are [also] our competitors. We view Intel as a formidable competitor, and do not underestimate them," Wei said. "But I will say that there are no shortcuts. The fundamental rule of the foundry never changes. We need technology, leadership, manufacturing excellence and customer trust, which has been mentioned by Jensen [Huang]" -- Wei said, thanking the Nvidia CEO for his words. 

Wei said it takes two to three years to build a new chip plant and another one to two years to ramp it up. TSMC, he added, is also building new fabs to satisfy its customers. "The capacity is very tight and we are working hard to make sure we can meet customer demand."

Despite TSMC's record Q1 results, US-listed shares are down 2.3% (having risen nearly 19% off a recent low). The failure of either TSMC or European chip giant ASML (which sasnk 3% on concerns over shrinking sales to China and sky-high expectations from investors) to catch a tailwind from positive reports could be a bellwether for the wider chip industry as earnings season rolls on.



It is also the latest example of how astronomical expectations have weighed on chipmaker stocks. Last quarter, Nvidia’s blowout fourth-quarter earnings report was met with a 5% sell-off.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 14:05

ZeroHedge News
Open 
House Effort To End Trump's Iran War Fails By One Vote: Guess The Lone GOP Dissenter
House Effort To End Trump's Iran War Fails By One Vote: Guess The Lone GOP Dissenter

Two parallel war-related votes in the House and Senate reveal growing dismay and political fractures over President Trump's Iran war, as the Strait of Hormuz remains locked down and ceasefire still seems distant.

The Republican-controlled House voted Thursday to reject a resolution ordering the White House to end the war with Iran, as Memorial Day approaches and Americans are anxious over gas prices and general rising costs at the grocery store.

The vote was 213-214, almost entirely along party lines, with dominant Republicans overwhelmingly sticking with Trump - not so much as allowing formal robust Congressional debate. There was one notable exception who broke ranks.
via Reuters

The lone Republican outlier was Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky, who voted for the measure to impose Constitutional guardrails over what the Executive can do in terms of waging war overseas.

But on the other side, a lone Democrat, Rep. Jared Golden of Maine, voted against it. Additionally, Rep. Warren Davidson, R-Ohio, merely registered a vote of "present" while three Republicans did not vote at all.

Rep. Gregory Meeks of NY (Dem) pushed the measure which "directs the President to remove United States Armed Forces from hostilities against the Islamic Republic of Iran."


"Donald Trump has dragged the American people into a war of choice, launched without congressional authorization. The president has no coherent strategy, and this open-ended, undefined military engagement is precisely what the War Powers Resolution was designed to restrain," Meeks said on the floor before the vote. “Every day we delay, we inch closer to a conflict with no exit ramp.” --NBC


But it shows waning support amid fears the US is getting bogged down in a new quagmire in the Middle East (which we should note Trump strongly and eloquently campaigned against). Per Politico:


It marks the second time the House has declined to intervene since the war began. But the 213-214 vote was even tighter than the last attempt in early March, as several Democrats who previously broke ranks to support the military campaign switched their votes to oppose it.


Parallel to the House side, the Senate also just swatted down an effort to choke off US weapons flows to Israel. 

In the opening days of Operation Epic Fury, statements by President Trump and White House officials including Rubio strongly suggested that they moved in Israel's interests, as the Netanyahu government made the case that a nuclear-armed Iran must face preemptive attack or else Israel would be in the crosshairs.

Two Senate resolutions led by Bernie Sanders aiming to block arms sales to Israel failed Wednesday, even as they pulled backing from roughly 75% of Democrats. Republicans, however, closed ranks and almost unanimously voted them down.

Massie is in a reelection bid which will decide his political future, even as Trump has ramped up the personal attacks:


🚨EXCLUSIVE: Republican Kentucky Rep. Thomas Massie raised more than $2.5 million in the first quarter of 2026, according to figures shared with the Daily Caller.
Of Massie’s 20,665 donors in the first quarter, approximately 76% were first-time contributors while 993 donors from… https://t.co/70jjA4bahn pic.twitter.com/caF0t7MsWE
— Daily Caller (@DailyCaller) April 13, 2026
Sanders had targeted specific packages, including a $295 million sale of bulldozers and a $151.8 million shipment of 12,000 1,000-pound "dumb bombs". But both measures went down: 59-40 and 63-36.

But what the Senate vote reveals is that what previously used to be automatic, bipartisan support for arming Israel is starting to fracture, with Democrats increasingly uneasy since Israel's high casualty Gaza campaign following the October 7, 2023 Hamas terror attack, and the more recent Israeli official admissions that the death toll was over 70,000 killed. However, the Israeli stance is that at least a few tens of thousands of these were Hamas militants or 'Hamas-linked'.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 14:45

Mail Online
Open 
Vogue Williams is pregnant! Presenter, 40, reveals she is expecting her fourth child with husband Spencer Matthews
Vogue Williams has announced she is expecting her fourth child with her husband Spencer Matthews.

Mail Online
Open 
Airlines cancel hundreds of flights as jet fuel prices soar amid fears Europe has just 'six weeks' of supply left: Updates
LIVE: Read the Daily Mail's coverage of the ongoing Middle East crisis as two of Europe's biggest airlines cancel hundreds of flights amid soaring fuel costs

The Hill
Open 
GOP blocks war power limits again — where are the checks and balances 
This isn’t just about Trump or Iran. It’s about precedent. Because every time Congress chooses not to assert its authority, it becomes easier for the next president — Republican or Democrat — to bypass it, too.  

The Hill
Open 
Watch live: RFK Jr. testifies before House Appropriations panel on HHS budget
Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. will testify before the House Appropriations Committee on Thursday afternoon on the White House's fiscal 2027 budget request and the Trump administration's health policy. President Trump requested additional funding for the administration's "Make America Healthy Again" agenda and proposed "eliminating bloated, woke, and inefficient programs...

The Hill
Open 
Watch live: DHS officials testify before House on 2027 budget for non-immigration agencies
Officials from the Department of Homeland Security's (DHS) non-immigration enforcement agencies will testify before the House Appropriations Committee on Thursday afternoon amid the record-long partial government shutdown. The heads of the Secret Service, Coast Guard, Transportation Security Administration, Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency and the Federal Emergency Management Agency will take questions on President Trump's...

The Hill
Open 
Pope Leo rips those who 'manipulate religion' amid feud with Trump
Pope Leo XIV on Thursday criticized those who “manipulate religion” for political and military gain amid a feud with President Trump.  “Woe to those who manipulate religion and the very name of God for their own military, economic, and political gain, dragging that which is sacred into darkness and filth,” the pontiff said in Cameroon,...

The Hill
Open 
10 Republicans help Democrats pass resolution extending TPS protections for Haitian migrants
The House on Thursday passed a resolution requiring the Trump administration to extend temporary legal protections for Haitian migrants after a small group of Republicans helped Democrats force it to the floor using a rarely successful maneuver. The lower chamber passed the resolution by a vote of 224-204, with 10 Republicans crossing the aisle: Reps. Brian Fitzpatrick...

The Hill
Open 
Top woman in Congress says she 'did not even hear a rumor' about Swalwell, Gonzales
Rep. Katherine Clark (D-Mass.), the House minority whip, said Thursday that she never heard a “rumor” about alleged misconduct by former Reps. Tony Gonzales (R-Texas) and Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.). “I personally did not even hear a rumor about Eric Swalwell or Tony Gonzales until the allegations came out,” she told host Kate Bolduan on “CNN...

The Hill
Open 
Altman attack suspect suggested 'Luigi’ing some tech CEOs' in online chat
The suspect accused of attempting to murder OpenAI CEO Sam Altman expressed interest in “Luigi’ing” technology leaders in an online chat late last year, seemingly referring to Luigi Mangione, the man accused of killing United Health CEO Brian Thompson. A team member of the podcast “The Last Invention” first made contact with the suspect, Daniel...

The Hill
Open 
Republicans discuss boosting existing spy powers guardrails as FISA compromise
Republicans are discussing a year-long renewal of the nation's warrantless spy powers in exchange for strengthening current aspects of the law, multiple sources involved in the talks told The Hill. Such a package would scale back the 18-month timeline requested by President Trump in renewing Section 702 of the Foreign Surveillance Intelligence Act (FISA), which...

The Hill
Open 
Greene slams Evangelical leader's defense of Trump after AI Jesus post 
Former Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) slammed Evangelical leader Franklin Graham on Thursday for defending President Trump’s since-deleted post depicting himself as a Jesus-like figure. Graham, a close Trump ally, said in a statement on the social platform X that he did not believe Trump would knowingly depict himself as Jesus Christ, referencing Trump’s explanation...

The Hill
Open 
Man detained, officer injured after attempt to scale White House fence
U.S. Secret Service agents detained a man on Thursday morning after he attempted to breach the White House perimeter on foot. Secret Service Chief Anthony Guglielmi said the incident occurred around 11:30 a.m. EDT, when the man jumped over a construction bollard by the Treasury Building on the northeast side of the presidential complex in...

The Hill
Open 
Damon Jones expected to plead guilty in NBA gambling probe
Damon Jones, the former NBA player charged in connection with an illegal sports gambling ring, is expected to plead guilty to charges in New York. Jones, who played in the NBA for the Cleveland Cavaliers in the late 2000s, is expected to plead guilty to charges of money laundering conspiracy and wire fraud conspiracy, the...

The Hill
Open 
Hegseth shares air rescue group's 'Pulp Fiction' prayer at Pentagon service
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on Wednesday repeated an air rescue group's prayer, which borrows from a scene in Quentin Tarantino's "Pulp Fiction." During a Pentagon service, Hegseth said the prayer — called CSAR 25:17, an apparent reference to Ezekiel 25:17 in the Bible — was recited during a mission to recover the pilot of a...

The Hill
Open 
Mamdani, Hochul team up on pied-à-terre tax: What to know
New York Gov. Kathy Hochul (D) and New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani (D) have proposed a new tax on property owners who have second homes in New York City worth more than $5 million, in an effort to narrow the city's budget deficit by targeting the ultrawealthy.  The “pied-à-terre tax” would be an annual...

ZDNet News
Open 
T-Mobile will give you a Google Pixel 10a for free - plus an extra gift
Get the impressive Pixel 10a for free at T-Mobile, along with a pair of Google Pixel Buds 2a at no extra cost. Here's what to know.

ZDNet News
Open 
Why this MagSafe battery pack is our readers' favorite model right now - especially at its price
Torras' MiniMag Power Bank is the slimmest and sleekest MagSafe battery pack I've tested, and readers love it.

ZDNet News
Open 
How Google's updated AI Mode will ease your tab clutter when you search
With the new AI Mode, any search result you visit opens side-by-side with your search window so you can more easily view them together.

BBC UK News
Open 
Why the UK is preparing for food shortages due to Iran war
The BBC's Emma Simpson explains why fizzy drinks, salad and meat could be affected by the Gulf conflict.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
The Battle for OpenAI’s Soul
In Musk v. Altman, a jury will soon determine whether OpenAI has strayed from its founding mission to ensure AGI benefits humanity. Here’s what to know.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
The Online Fiction Boom Reimagining China’s History
Chinese fantasy novels reimagine the past with modern tech and ideology. A new book argues they also help reinforce authoritarian politics.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Europe’s Online Age Verification App Is Here
Available for free to any company that wants to use it, the “completely anonymous” app puts the pressure on porn sites and social media platforms to start blocking access by minors.

Techdirt
Open 
Daily Deal: The Ultimate Python & Artificial Intelligence Certification Bundle
The Ultimate Python and Artificial Intelligence Bundle has 9 courses to help you take your Python and AI knowledge to the next level. You’ll learn about data pre-processing and visualization, artificial neural networks, how to use the Keras framework, and more. It’s on sale for $40. Note: The Techdirt Deals Store is powered and curated […]

Techdirt
Open 
All But 3 Of The 4,499 Refugees Admitted To The US Under Trump Are White South Africans
We’ve got a throwback administration that wants to bring us back to halcyon days of early 1950s America, that preceded Supreme Court-ordered school desegregation. If it could, I’m sure it would go back even further, taking at least another 100 years off the clock. The Trump administration has no problem with embracing bigotry. That much […]

The Right Scoop
Open 
BREAKING: Man just arrested by Secret Service at White House complex
A man was just arrested by the Secret Service after he jumped a concrete barrier at the Treasury building part of the White House complex. Here’s more from Fox News:

Russia Today News
Open 
Hezbollah included in ceasefire – Trump

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Man charged over 2002 Jam Master Jay killing to plead guilty, documents show
Jay Bryant negotiating plea deal in New York death of Run-DMC star, over which one conviction has been overturnedOne of the three men charged in the killing of Jam Master Jay plans to plead guilty, court records show, in what would be the first admission anyone has made in court to any role in the Run-DMC star’s death in 2002.Jay Bryant pleaded not guilty to murder after his 2023 indictment, but his lawyer and federal prosecutors told the court in recent letters that they were negotiating a plea agreement. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
LIV golf stars face career limbo with Saudi investment expected to end in 2026
LIV chief’s rallying email to staff did not refer to 2027Without alternative funding future is bleak for rebel tourSeveral of golf’s leading names are facing career limbo at the end of 2026 amid expectation Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund will withdraw backing for the LIV Tour.While the likelihood is Bryson DeChambeau and Jon Rahm will be afforded a pathway back to the PGA Tour, the future for others who made lucrative switches to LIV is far more uncertain. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Aston Villa v Bologna: Europa League quarter-final, second leg – live
⚽ Europa League updates; kick-off 8pm BST (first leg: 3-1)⚽ Nottingham Forest v Porto – latest | Live scores | Mail NiallAs dozens of TV ads paid for by bookmakers relentlessly advise me to take a break from betting, I can report that it’s finished Celta 1-3 Freiburg (1-6 on agg) in the Europa League, and AZ 2-2 Shakhtar (2-5 on agg) in the Conference League.I noticed on the team sheets that both of tonight’s captains are Scottish: John McGinn and Lewis Ferguson. Has this ever happened before in a European tie – particularly one not featuring a Scottish team? Hey, it’s like a live Knowledge, this. Just don’t ask me anything. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Nottingham Forest v Porto: Europa League quarter-final, second leg – live
⚽ Europa League updates; kick-off 8pm BST (first leg: 1-1)⚽ Aston Villa v Bologna – updates | Live scores | Mail ScottForest coach Vítor Pereira speaks to TNT Sports. “One chance … just today, not tomorrow … today is the game … we have to do everything to show our ambition … show our quality, personality and organisation to be in the next round … in three days we play again in an important game in the league … Porto play with intensity … we must learn from the last game and play on a better level today … my condolence to the [Anderson] family … a very sad situation and we need to respect.”Our man Will Unwin is currently sunning himself on the rolling verdant verges of the River Trent. Here’s his pre-match scene-setter.It is currently a calm night on the banks of the Trent, although it will get quite lively come kick-off. There are plenty of Porto fans inside the City Ground, both in the away end and elsewhere in the corporate areas.The Portuguese side will be disappointed they did not come away with from the first leg after an impressive display but Forest dug in to ensure things are level after 90 minutes. Vitor Pereira has selected a strong team, with centre-back the only area he has selected a backup in the form of Jair Cunha. If the Premier League side do get this done, it will be a historic night for the club and the home supporters will play their part. The bad news for them is Martim Fernandes is not playing, so they will have to do their own dirty work today. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Counter-terror police investigate London arson attacks on Iranian and Jewish targets
Officers looking into attacks on Iran International media offices, synagogue and Jewish charity ambulancesCounter-terrorism investigators are examining three separate arson attacks in London against an Iranian dissident and Jewish targets amid fears the Iranian state may be behind them.The latest attack happened at about 8.30pm on Wednesday, outside the offices of Iran International, a Persian-language news channel that opposes the regime in Tehran. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Badenoch calls Farage an ‘opportunist’ after he urges Scottish nationalists to back Reform
Tory leader criticises Farage for saying that holding another independence vote ‘probably quite reasonable’Kemi Badenoch, the leader of the Conservative party, has accused Nigel Farage of being an opportunist who does not believe in unionism after he urged Scottish nationalists to back Reform.Farage said earlier this week he believed “genuine nationalists” would not support the Scottish National party’s bid to rejoin the EU, and urged them to vote Reform in the Holyrood election on 7 May. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Lucy Watson is pregnant! Made In Chelsea star, 35, announces she is expecting her second child with husband James Dunmore
Made In Chelsea star Lucy Watson has announced she is expecting her second child with husband James Dunmore. 

Mail Online
Open 
Public money being used to 'punish' SAS veterans, former Army commanders claim, after judge dismisses legal challenge brought by family of IRA man killed 35 years ago
A judge in Belfast on Thursday dismissed a second appeal against a coroner's findings that SAS soldiers were justified in their use of lethal force when they killed three IRA men almost 35 years ago.

EFF
Open 
EFF to State AGs: Investigate Google's Broken Promise to Users Targeted by the Government
Google's Failure to Warn Users About Law Enforcement Demands for Data Is DeceptiveSAN FRANCISCO – The Electronic Frontier Foundation sent complaints today to the attorneys general of California and New York urging them to investigate Google for deceptive trade practices, related to the company's broken promise to give users prior notice before disclosing their information to law enforcement. 
The letters were sent on behalf of Amandla Thomas-Johnson, whose information was disclosed to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) without prior notice from Google. 
For nearly a decade, Google has promised billions of users that it will notify them before disclosing their personal data to law enforcement. Many times, the company has done just that. But through a hidden and systematic practice, Google has likely violated that promise numerous times over the years. This was the case for Thomas-Johnson, a Ph.D. candidate who was targeted by ICE after briefly attending a protest, effectively preventing him from contesting an invalid subpoena for his data. 
"Google should answer the question: How many other times has it broken its promise to users?” said EFF Senior Staff Attorney F. Mario Trujillo. "Advance notice is especially important now, when agencies like ICE are unconstitutionally targeting users for First Amendment-protected activity. State attorneys general should investigate Google for this deception." 
On Google’s Privacy & Terms page, it promises its users that “When we receive a request from a government agency, we send an email to the user account before disclosing information.” This promise ensures that users can protect their own privacy and decide to challenge overbroad or illegal demands on their own behalf. The company lists a handful of exceptions to this policy (such as if Google receives a gag order from a court) that do not apply to Thomas-Johnson's case. While ICE “requested” that Google not notify Thomas-Johnson, the request was not enforceable or mandated by a court. 
But on May 8, 2025, Google complied with an administrative subpoena from ICE seeking Thomas-Johnson’s subscriber information, including his name, address, IP address, and other personal identifiers. Later that same day, the company sent Thomas-Johnson a message telling him it had already complied with the subpoena, which he would have successfully challenged had he been given advance notice. Google received the subpoena in April and had more than a month to alert Thomas-Johnson. 
Communication between EFF and Google later revealed that this is a systematic issue, not an isolated one. When Google does not fulfill a subpoena within a government-provided artificial deadline, the company's outside counsel explained, Google will sometimes comply with the request and provide notice to a user on the same day. The company calls this practice “simultaneous notice.” 
"What this experience has made clear is that anyone can be targeted by law enforcement," said Thomas-Johnson. "And with their massive stores of data, technology companies can facilitate those arbitrary investigations. Who, exactly, can I hold accountable?" 
Google must commit to ending this deception and pay for its past mistakes. The attorneys general of California and New York are empowered to stop deceptive business practices and seek financial restitution stemming from those practices. As EFF writes in its complaints, they should investigate, hold Google to its public promise to give users advanced notice of law enforcement demands, and take appropriate action if necessary.
Update: This press release has been updated to include more information about Google's exceptions to their notification policy, none of which applied to the subpoena targeting Thomas-Johnson.  For the complaints:https://www.eff.org/document/eff-letter-re-google-notice-california https://www.eff.org/document/eff-letter-re-google-notice-new-york https://www.eff.org/document/eff-letter-re-google-notice-exhibits  For Thomas-Johnson's account of his ordeal: https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2026/04/google-broke-its-promise-me-now-ice-has-my-data For more information on lawless DHS subpoenas: https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2026/02/open-letter-tech-companies-protect-your-users-lawless-dhs-subpoenas 
Contact: press@eff.org 

Tags: privacyfree speechanonymityDHSsubpoenafederal law enforcementGoogle

Mail Online
Open 
Vogue Williams is pregnant! Presenter reveals she is expecting her fourth child with husband Spencer Matthews
Vogue Williams has announced she is expecting her fourth child with her husband Spencer Matthews.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Portcullis gets royal breeders dreaming at Newmarket’s ancient first rite of spring
John Gosden’s three-year-old was among those catching the eye at the Craven meeting, which has been attracting dreamers and optimists since 1771Captain Cook was a few months away from landfall after his first circumnavigation of the earth when the first ­Craven meeting was held on Newmarket heath in the spring of 1771.It is older than any of the Classics, and old enough too to have the great Potoooooooo – who got his name when a stable lad was unsure how to spell potatoes – on the Craven Stakes’s roll of honour in 1782. For a quarter of a millennium250 years, the first meeting of the year on the Rowley Mile at Newmarket has been Flat ­racing’s first rite of spring. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Nottingham Forest v Porto: Europa League quarter-final, second leg – live
⚽ Europa League updates; kick-off 8pm BST (first leg: 1-1)⚽ Aston Villa v Bologna – updates | Live scores | Mail ScottOur man Will Unwin is currently sunning himself on the rolling verdant verges of the River Trent. Here’s his pre-match scene-setter.It is currently a calm night on the banks of the Trent, although it will get quite lively come kick-off. There are plenty of Porto fans inside the City Ground, both in the away end and elsewhere in the corporate areas.The Portuguese side will be disappointed they did not come away with from the first leg after an impressive display but Forest dug in to ensure things are level after 90 minutes. Vitor Pereira has selected a strong team, with centre-back the only area he has selected a backup in the form of Jair Cunha. If the Premier League side do get this done, it will be a historic night for the club and the home supporters will play their part. The bad news for them is Martim Fernandes is not playing, so they will have to do their own dirty work today. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
It will take more than £600m a year to boost UK industrial competitiveness | Nils Pratley
Bics fix accepts nose-bleed energy bills are a structural problem but pretends they are only an issue for a narrow section of industryIt is “bold action” to boost UK competitiveness, claimed the government. Not everybody shared that assessment of the British industrial competitiveness scheme (Bics), the long-awaited plan to cut electricity bills for UK manufacturers by up to 25% – or, at least, to cut them for a subset of firms that are aligned with the eight chosen sectors of the “modern” industrial strategy.“Gas intensive industries in the UK have been shamefully ignored by the government in this announcement – it’s a total disgrace,” said Gary Smith, the general secretary of the GMB union, banging the drum for the likes of ceramics-makers and brickmakers that aren’t deemed modern enough for support. Employer bodies mostly did the polite thing of welcoming government assistance of any form before using phrases such as “drop in the ocean”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Labour and Lib Dem MPs demand ‘shameful’ Palantir NHS contract be scrapped
Spy-tech company and founder Peter Thiel should ‘have their hands ripped off our NHS’, say MPs MPs have queued up to demand the government scraps its £330m NHS contract with the spy-tech company Palantir, calling it “dreadful” and “shameful” in a debate on Thursday, after which the government said it was “no fan” of the US company’s politics.Labour and Liberal Democrat MPs led the calls for Palantir, which also works for Donald Trump’s ICE immigration crackdown and the Israeli military, to be removed as a supplier to the NHS federated data platform (FDP), with one Labour backbencher, Samantha Niblett, questioning whether it could be “trusted as a custodian of the intimate health records of tens of millions of British citizens”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Counter-terror police investigate arson attacks on Iranian and Jewish targets
Met police look into incident near office of Iran International after attempted firebombing of a synagogueCounter-terrorism investigators are examining three separate arson attacks in London against an Iranian dissident and Jewish targets amid fears the Iranian state may be behind them.The latest attack happened at about 8.30pm on Wednesday, against the offices of the parent group of a company that runs Iran International, a Persian news channel that opposes the regime in Tehran. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Like a concrete aircraft carrier: was LA’s giant new $724m gallery really worth all the carbon emissions?
Built on tar swamps and two tortuous decades in the making, Lacma’s latest addition used twice as much metal as the Eiffel Tower. How did America supersize revered architect Peter Zumthor?Driving down the palm-lined strip of Wilshire Boulevard in Los Angeles, a striking new crossing heaves into view. A ribbon of glass leaps over the road, sandwiched between two gigantic planes of concrete. As you get closer, the bridge swells out in sinuous arcs, swooping back on itself to inscribe an amoebic, shape-shifting blob, spreading out like an inkblot. From some angles it has a retro-futuristic air, recalling a Jetsons airport terminal, or one of California’s “Googie” style gas stations. From others, the curving roof looks like a great big tongue, flaring out to give the neighbours a raspy lick.
This concrete colossus is home to the new David Geffen Galleries of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (Lacma), a $724m mothership designed by the fabled Swiss architect Peter Zumthor. It is less a museum than a mighty piece of infrastructure, a 110,000 sq ft warehouse-cum-bridge, jacked up nine metres in the air and looming above the street with a brooding, muscular heft. Two decades in the making, and subject to tortuous years of delays, controversies and cost escalations – building on a tar swamp in a seismic zone is not straightforward – it finally opens this weekend.The Fitzcarraldian feat is the brainchild of Michael Govan, who became Lacma’s director in 2006 with an ambition to build a museum like no other, using the promise of a dazzling structure to lure donations of artworks and dollars ($125m came from LA county, the rest was fundraised). Govan cut his teeth at the Guggenheim, and on Frank Gehry’s Bilbao outpost, where he clearly got a taste for the transformative fairy dust of signature architecture. He later moved to Dia:Beacon, in New York’s Hudson Valley, where he commissioned Zumthor for a project that was ultimately unrealised. At Lacma, he was determined to make a monument for posterity, at any cost. Continue reading...

The Register
Open 
If you want into Anthropic's Claude club, you may have to show ID
Worse: Anthropic is using Persona, a privacy checker that rings alarm bells for the paranoids on Reddit Anthropic may check your ID before letting you access certain Claude features, and the verification vendor it has picked is the same outfit that sparked controversy when Discord tested similar checks.…

The Register
Open 
North Korea targets macOS users in latest heist
Social engineering: 'low-cost, hard to patch, and scales well' North Korean criminals set on stealing Apple users' credentials and cryptocurrency are using a combination of social engineering and a fake Zoom software update to trick people into manually running malware on their own computers, according to Microsoft.…

BBC World News
Open 
Rescuers to use air cushions in latest effort to save stranded whale
"Timmy" has been stranded in the Baltic Sea for weeks despite several attempts to free the ailing animal.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Aston Villa v Bologna: Europa League quarter-final, second leg – live
⚽ Europa League updates; kick-off 8pm BST (first leg: 3-1)⚽ Nottingham Forest v Porto – latest | Live scores | Mail NiallIn tonight’s early game, Freiburg are cruising into the semi-finals – after winning 3-0 at home to Celta Vigo last week, they’re repeating the trick in Spain to lead 6-0 on aggregate. The Bundesliga side will face either Real Betis or Braga in the final four.In the Conference League, AZ have just levelled to make it 1-1 at home to Shakhtar Donetsk; sadly for the hosts, they lost the first leg 3-0, so are very much heading out. Shakhtar will face Crystal Palace in the semis unless Fiorentina can pull off a spectacular comeback from three goals down in Italy this evening. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Nottingham Forest v Porto: Europa League quarter-final, second leg – live
⚽ Europa League updates; kick-off 8pm BST (first leg: 1-1)⚽ Aston Villa v Bologna – updates | Live scores | Mail ScottNottingham Forest make five changes from last week’s starting XI. Neco Williams, Ibrahim Sangaré, Omari Hutchinson, Jair Cunha and Ola Aina come in for Morato, Ryan Yates, James McAtee, Dilane Bakwa and Zach Abbott. Elliott Anderson misses the game after the passing of his mother; he had been suspended for last week’s first leg.Porto make one change from last week. Alberto Costa replaces the injured Martim Fernandes, scorer of that unfortunate long-range own goal in the first leg. Followers of the Premier League will spot some old friends in the Porto squad: Thiago Silva won the Champions League and Club World Cup with Chelsea back in 2021, Jan Bednarek spent eight years at Southampton between 2017 and 2025, and Jakub Kiwior is currently on loan from Arsenal. Continue reading...

Gizmodo
Open 
Europe Could Run Out of Jet Fuel in Just 6 Weeks
The head of the International Energy Agency says it will take "up to two years to come back where we were before the war.”

Gizmodo
Open 
Iceland Just Got its First Mosquitoes. Scientists Aren’t Ready for What Comes Next
As the Arctic's climate and ecology rapidly change, two researchers are calling for a paradigm shift in insect monitoring.

Gizmodo
Open 
Wizards of the Coast Is Getting in on Its Own ‘Dungeons & Dragons’ Actual Play
'Dungeon Masters' will feature both current and unreleased material from the legendary TTRPG in its first in-house actual play series.

Gizmodo
Open 
After 100 Years, Engineers Finally Discover Why Rubber Is So Tough
Essentially, reinforced rubber fights against its own incompressibility.

Gizmodo
Open 
Spirit Airlines Could Liquidate by the End of the Week Due to Fuel Crisis
Carriers are cancelling entire routes as the U.S.-Iran war deepens.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Armed robbers hold 25 people hostage at Naples bank before fleeing through hole in floor
Thieves believed to have escaped into sewers after holding staff and customers in Crédit Agricole branch for two hoursArmed robbers held 25 people hostage at a bank in Naples for two hours on Thursday, before fleeing through a tunnel.The three thieves entered a branch of Crédit Agricole in the southern Italian city at about 11.30am, taking hostage staff and customers, who were freed by police a couple of hours later. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Aston Villa v Bologna: Europa League quarter-final, second leg – live
⚽ Europa League updates; kick-off 8pm BST (first leg: 3-1)⚽ Nottingham Forest v Porto – latest | Live scores | Mail NiallI noticed on the team sheets that both of tonight’s captains are Scottish: John McGinn and Lewis Ferguson. Has this ever happened before in a European tie – particularly one not featuring a Scottish team? Hey, it’s like a live Knowledge, this. Just don’t ask me anything.In tonight’s early game, Freiburg are cruising into the semi-finals – after winning 3-0 at home to Celta Vigo last week, they’re repeating the trick in Spain to lead 6-0 on aggregate. The Bundesliga side will face either Real Betis or Braga in the final four. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Nottingham Forest v Porto: Europa League quarter-final, second leg – live
⚽ Europa League updates; kick-off 8pm BST (first leg: 1-1)⚽ Aston Villa v Bologna – updates | Live scores | Mail ScottForest have five players who are one yellow card away from suspension. Of tonight’s starters, Murillo and Morgan Gibbs-White are on the tightrope; Morato, Igor Jesus and Ryan Yates will also need to watch themselves should they come on.Six members of the Porto starting line-up are a booking away from missing out on the first leg of the semi should their team make it. Jan Bednarek, William Gomes, Gabriel Veiga, Zaidu, Pablo Rosario and Alberto Costa are all on Behaviour Watch, as is Dominik Prpić should he see action tonight. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Labour and Lib Dem MPs demand ‘shameful’ Palantir NHS contract be scrapped
Spytech company and founder Peter Thiel should ‘have their hands ripped off our NHS’, say MPs MPs have queued up to demand the government scraps its £330m NHS contract with the spytech company Palantir, calling it “dreadful” and “shameful” in a debate on Thursday, after which the government said it was “no fan” of the US company’s politics.Labour and Liberal Democrat MPs led the calls for Palantir, which also works for Donald Trump’s ICE immigration crackdown and the Israeli military, to be removed as a supplier to the NHS federated data platform (FDP), with one Labour backbencher, Samantha Niblett, questioning whether it could be “trusted as a custodian of the intimate health records of tens of millions of British citizens”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Badenoch calls Farage an ‘opportunist’ after he urges Scottish nationalists to back Reform
Leader of Tories criticises Farage after he says holding another independence vote ‘probably quite reasonable’Kemi Badenoch, the leader of the Conservative party, has accused Nigel Farage of being an opportunist who does not believe in unionism after he urged Scottish nationalists to back Reform.Farage said earlier this week he believed in “genuine nationalists” who do not support the Scottish National party’s bid to rejoin the EU, and urged them to vote Reform in the Holyrood election on 7 May. Continue reading...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
India faces energy squeeze as US ends Iran, Russia oil waivers
Washington's decision to let Iranian and Russian oil waivers expire threatens to tighten India's crude oil supply, as New Delhi had relied on temporary relief to sustain imports.

Mail Online
Open 
The doctor-recommended carbs that naturally lower cholesterol and risk of heart attack and stroke
This breakfast superfood topped with berries and walnuts, lowers LDL cholesterol and plaque buildup in the arteries, directly reducing the risk of heart attack and stroke as people age.

Mail Online
Open 
Jesy Nelson shares adorable photos of her twin daughters enjoying a sweet day out amid their SMA battle
Jesy Nelson has shared a series of adorable photos of her twin daughters enjoying a sweet day out amid their devastating health battle. 

Mail Online
Open 
Public money being used to 'punish' SAS veterans, former Army commanders claim, after judge dismisses challenge brought by family of IRA man killed 35 years ago
A judge in Belfast on Thursday dismissed a second appeal against a coroner's findings that SAS soldiers were justified in their use of lethal force when they killed three IRA men almost 35 years ago.

Mail Online
Open 
Middle-aged man dies after being 'struck by LIGHTNING' while walking across gas station parking lot during storm
A middle-aged man died after he was struck by lightning while walking across a gas station parking lot in Wisconsin during a thunderstorm on Wednesday night, police said.

Mail Online
Open 
Jo Wood reveals she struggled to write her break-up book after her split from Rolling Stones rocker Ronnie Wood until her 'naughty' friend gave her some X-rated ideas
Jo Wood celebrated the launch of her break-up book, The Resurrection of Flo on audiobook with her family and friends at Fitzrovia Studios on Wednesday night.

Mail Online
Open 
Church of England's top bishop stands with Pope Leo after he condemned 'handful of tyrants' ravaging the world in rebuke to Donald Trump
Dame Sarah Mullally, who is set to meet with the Pontiff later this month in Rome, backed the Pope's 'courageous call for a kingdom of peace'.

Mail Online
Open 
Film director 'stabbed to death by her sister who took her £70,000 diamond Rolex' fled the Six-Day War in the Middle East as a young girl, court hears
Jennifer Abbott, 69, was found dead in Mornington Place, Camden, on June 13 with gaffer tape covering her mouth and wearing just her knickers.

Mail Online
Open 
Lucy Watson is pregnant! Made In Chelsea star, 35, announces she is expecting her second child with husband James Dunmore
Made In Chelsea star Lucy Watson has announced she is expecting her second child with husband James Dunmore. 

CNET News
Open 
These New Codex Updates Are the 'First Phase' of OpenAI's Dream Super App
The coding tool can now run multiple agents across applications on your computer.

CNET News
Open 
Google Is Adding New Ways to Use AI Mode in Chrome
Google says it's trying out a better way to explore the web.

CNET News
Open 
After a Decade, Vitamix Is Axing One of Its Most Popular (and Affordable) Blenders. Here's Why
The Explorian E310 had a good run, but after more than 10 years, Vitamix is retiring its cheapest model. Meet the entry-level replacement.

CNET News
Open 
The Always Pan People Made a Rice Cooker, and It's Totally Adorable
We got our hands on the sleek new rice cooker ahead of launch.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Kildunne shifts to wing and Burton to play at lock as England ring changes
Ellie Kildunne is named on the wing, rather than in her regular full-back role, as part of a much-changed England line-up to face Scotland in the Women's Six Nations on Saturday.

Atlas Obscura
Open 
Medieval Torture Museum in Chicago, Illinois

TechRadar News
Open 
'Stay focused on storytelling': I spoke to Avid about its partnership with Google AI and what it means for creative professionals

TechRadar News
Open 
Amazon's sale on best-selling tech gadgets feels like Prime Day — up to 50% off TVs, Ring Doorbells, Fire tablets, and Blink cameras

TechRadar News
Open 
Tomodachi Life: Living the Dream devs say the Mii programming was 'pure chaos and 'really hard to manage' during development, that it took 'six or seven years' to fine-tune

TechRadar News
Open 
This sleek new espresso machine from Philips promises 'that unmistakable cafe-like taste' at home — and I can't wait to try it

TechRadar News
Open 
Google just dropped a 50% discount on a year of YouTube Premium with Google One Premium — here’s how you can check if you’re eligible

TechRadar News
Open 
Moscow chokes international internet bandwidth in latest attack on Russian VPN users

TechRadar News
Open 
How to watch MasterChef Australia online – stream Meghan Markle on Masterchef from anywhere

TechRadar News
Open 
DJI has teased a new entry-level drone — but it'll have to be special to outshine my beloved Neo 2

TechRadar News
Open 
IPVanish has begun offering Amazon gift cards when you refer a friend — here's how much you could earn

TechRadar News
Open 
'I would've loved to have directed that one': Exit 8's Genki Kawamura on why he's excited for A24's Backrooms horror movie

TechRadar News
Open 
Metro’s unique flavor of post-apocalyptic misery is back in Metro 2039 — and I can’t wait to return to the ‘dark heart of the Moscow metro’ where ‘hope is lost' and 'the future looks bleak, if there is one’

TechRadar News
Open 
Many are still leaving the door open': Security experts warn FIFA World Cup partners could be putting customers at risk of email attacks

TechRadar News
Open 
What is the release date for Marshals: A Yellowstone Story episode 8 on CBS and Paramount+?

Digital Trends
Open 
Intel Core Series 3 processors are here and they promise more performance for less money
Intel’s new Core Series 3 processors are built for lower-cost laptops, but they still bring hybrid architecture, AI-ready performance, Wi-Fi 7, and surprisingly modern specs.

Boing Boing
Open 
This clock sorts the 43,200 times of day alphabetically
Ryan Bateman, a Berlin-based technologist who tinkers with oddball web projects at boat.horse, built a working clock that tells time by spelling every possible moment in English and sorting the list A to Z. He calls it The Accursèd Alphabetical Clock, and it runs in your browser with two modes to pick from. — Read the rest
The post This clock sorts the 43,200 times of day alphabetically appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
A Silicon Valley startup wants to sell you a brain-reading beanie
Skip the keyboard and skip the dictation: a California startup called Sabi says it will ship a wool hat that lets you type by thinking, and it wants the first ones on heads before the year is out. The company came out of stealth this week with a pitch described in a Wired profile of its plan to build a cyborg-for-everyone wearable, backed by Khosla Ventures. — Read the rest
The post A Silicon Valley startup wants to sell you a brain-reading beanie appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
These earbuds can read the label on your snack
Instead of walking around with a camera on your face, how about one in each ear? A team at the University of Washington's Paul G. Allen School has built VueBuds, a pair of wireless earbuds with a grain-of-rice camera tucked into each shell. — Read the rest
The post These earbuds can read the label on your snack appeared first on Boing Boing.

Adam Curry
Open 
We're live now with No Agenda episode 1860 #@pocketnoagenda
We're live now with No Agenda episode 1860 #@pocketnoagenda

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Pepsi says price cuts and wellness push are bringing back customers — and the stock surges
PepsiCo shares rallied Thursday after the beverage and snack giant indicated that new products and recent price cuts had brought back wary customers, while noting that it hadn’t taken much of a hit yet from the Iran war.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
With the largest industrial IPO since 1999, this air-quality giant’s stock opened with a bang
Madison Air raises $2.2 billion in the largest IPO this year, and the largest from the industrial sector since 1999.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
2 expensive mistakes most retirees make — and how to avoid them
“We call them ‘King Tut’ subjects — they’re buried with their gold.”

Slashdot
Open 
IPv6 Usage Reaches Historic 50% Across Google Services
IPv6 usage briefly reached 50% across Google services for the first time, marking a major milestone for a protocol created in 1998 to solve IPv4's address shortage. Tom's Hardware reports: [...] IPv6 was dismissed early on as a headache-inducing, hard-to-implement complication that would hardly ever gain any traction -- despite offering 2^128 possible numbers, solving all network number assignments in one fell swoop. That changed over time by force of necessity, and Google's tracking graph shows that for a brief moment in time on March 28, 50% of worldwide users accessed the service over an IPv6 connection, marking a historic first. APNIC's stats show that the protocol is in use by 43% of the world, with Asia and the Americas inching ever close to those 50%. Cloudflare, meanwhile, shows that 40% of traffic is done in IPv6, an actually impressive figure if you consider it's measuring actual transferred packets rather than just counting addresses.

The tried-and-true IPv4 and its well-known 123.456.789.123 format from 1980 offers ~4.3 billion addresses in theory, and around 3.7 billion in practice. That always sounded like a lot, but nobody could have predicted just how rapid the explosion of the Internet would be. IANA, the entity controlling the North-American IPv4 space, ran out of IPv4 addresses around 2011, while its European equivalent RIPE NCC could spare no more four-octet addresses nearly seven years ago in 2019. Asian, African, and Latin-American IP registries equally ran out during that timeframe.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Next chief Simon Wolfson paid record £7.4m – and could get far more this year
‘Sustained outperformance’ merits pay rise, says company after it ups profit guidance to £1.2bn for year to January 2027Business live – latest updatesThe Next chief executive, Simon Wolfson, took home more than £7m last year, his highest ever pay package, and could be handed up to £9.27m this year after the retailer announced plans to increase his basic salary and bonuses.The listed company said it was increasing its pay deal for the long-term leader of the fashion and homewares retailer, which now controls a string of brands in the UK including Gap, Victoria’s Secret, Cath Kidston, Reiss and FatFace, as his remuneration was 30% below the average for FTSE 100 bosses. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Europe has only six weeks’ supply of jet fuel left owing to Iran war, says energy chief
There will be flight cancellations ‘soon’ if oil supplies are not restored in coming weeks, says head of IEABusiness live – latest updatesMiddle East crisis – live updatesEurope has only six weeks of jet fuel left before shortages will hit because of the Iran war, according to the head of a global energy watchdog.Fatih Birol, the executive director of the International Energy Agency, said there would be flight cancellations “soon” if oil supplies from the Middle East were not restored within the coming weeks. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Portcullis gets royal breeders dreaming at Newmarket’s ancient first rite of spring
John Gosden’s three-year-old was among those catching the eye at the Craven meeting, which has been attracting dreamers and optimists since 1771Captain Cook was a few months away from landfall after his first circumnavigation of the earth when the first Craven meeting was held on Newmarket heath in the spring of 1771. It is older than any of the Classics, and old enough too to have the great Potoooooooo – who got his name when a stable lad was unsure how to spell potatoes – on the Craven Stakes’s roll of honour in 1782. For a quarter of a millennium, the first meeting of the year on the Rowley Mile at Newmarket has been Flat racing’s first rite of spring.“It’s what keeps everybody going,” Jason Singh, the marketing director of the famous bloodstock auction house Tattersalls said here on Thursday, “and I speak as a breeder and racehorse owner myself as well as a sales company employee. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Nottingham Forest v Porto: Europa League quarter-final, second leg – live
⚽ Europa League updates; kick-off 8pm BST (first leg: 1-1)⚽ Aston Villa v Bologna – updates | Live scores | Mail ScottNottingham Forest make five changes from last week’s starting XI. Neco Williams, Ibrahim Sangaré, Omari Hutchinson, Jair Cunha and Ola Aina come in for Morato, Ryan Yates, James McAtee, Dilane Bakwa and Zach Abbott. Elliott Anderson misses the game after the passing of his mother; he had been suspended for last week’s first leg.Porto make one change from last week. Alberto Costa replaces the injured Martim Fernandes, scorer of that unfortunate long-range own goal in the first leg. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Guardian view on drugs in prisons: the chief inspector has sounded the alarm – ministers must act | Editorial
The impunity with which organised crime groups operate in jails is scandalous. Blocking drones should be just the startTo most of the public, the widespread availability of illegal drugs in prisons must be hard to comprehend. A Ministry of Justice that cannot prevent law-breaking within its own institutions is clearly failing to a disastrous extent. As well as undermining rehabilitation by perpetuating criminality, addiction and debt, drug dealing in prisons undermines the whole system’s credibility and purpose.Yet this is the situation in multiple English and Welsh jails, as set out by chief inspector Charlie Taylor. His last annual report highlighted the fact that 39% of prisoners surveyed in 2024/25 said it was easy to obtain drugs, while 19% of female prisoners had developed drug problems in jail. The rate of positive results in random drug tests regularly topped 30%.Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Guardian view on a ceasefire for Lebanon: Trump has promised a pause. Civilians need real peace | Editorial
A deeply scarred country is caught in a war not of its making, seeking a solution which lies outside its handsThe 10-day ceasefire in Lebanon that Donald Trump announced on Thursday is desperately needed. It must also be regarded with immense caution. Iran and mediator Pakistan believed that Lebanon was covered by last week’s US-Israel-Iran ceasefire, before Israel unleashed 100 strikes in 10 minutes – killing hundreds and wounding many more on “Black Wednesday”. Lebanon was pulled into this crisis by Mr Trump’s illegal war on Tehran, and should not have been excluded from his truce. The US president, desperately seeking an exit to the broader conflict, is now reining in Mr Netanyahu. But only up to a point.Israeli forces on Thursday destroyed the last bridge linking Lebanon’s south to the rest of the country and struck a school. The previous day they killed at least four paramedics – the latest of scores to have died. More than 2,100 people have reportedly been killed, including at least 172 children. Thousands have been injured. One in five of the population are displaced, some permanently: having occupied a vast swathe of land, Israel is wiping whole villages from the map. Its own defence minister described that as modelled on its actions in Gaza.Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
NHS patients should be able to write up their own medical records – and not have to rely on Post-it notes | Will Parman
The lack of a unified digital repository for patients and healthcare workers means that key medical changes are often missed. But the NHS can learn from US intelligence sharingWill Parman is the winner of the The Guardian Foundation’s 2026 Emerging Voices award (19-25 age category), recognising young talent in political opinion writingAs she battles cancer, my mum fears that she will forget to tell her consultant something important. Like many people with complex and chronic health needs, she clutches a Post-it note with 10 bullet-pointed symptoms, such as “cannot stand” and “spasms”. It is her companion during stressful appointments. We rehearse her list before we enter, and worry that we deviated too much when we leave.Even then, her peer-reviewed lists, sometimes on the back of envelopes, are inadequate when her condition may change day to day. Each list, too, must be tailored for each of her consultants – many lists get lost in her tall pile of notes and letters. I hate those car rides home when we’re upset that we didn’t say something important, fearing the consequences of this omission. In a health system in which people can wait more than a year for an appointment, you wonder how meticulous these Post-it notes need to be to convey every change in their medical condition since the initial referral letter. It raises the question of how many people have experienced this unsettling ride home.Will Parman is the winner of the The Guardian Foundation’s 2026 Emerging Voices award (19-25 age category), recognising young talent in political opinion writingDo you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Orbán’s defeat threatens to halt Hungarian support of populist right
Individuals such as Matt Goodwin and Lord Frost benefited from largesse of self-styled ‘illiberal democracy’UK politics live – latest updatesThe last 16 years of Viktor Orbán’s rule have been kind to a number of British political figures – from the Tory peer David Frost to Reform UK’s Matt Goodwin and James Orr.All benefited from largesse extended by the self-styled “illiberal democracy” established by the Hungarian leader’s ruling Fidesz party, which took a particular liking for those on the harder right of British conservatism. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Labour and Lib Dem MPs demand ‘shameful’ Palantir NHS contract be scrapped
The spytech company and founder Peter Thiel should ‘have their hands ripped off our NHS’, say MPs during impassioned Westminster debateMPs have queued up to demand the government scraps its £330m NHS contract with the spytech company Palantir, calling it “dreadful” and “shameful” in a debate on Thursday, after which the government said it was “no fan” of the US company’s politics.Labour and Liberal Democrat MPs led the calls for Palantir, which also works for Donald Trump’s ICE immigration crackdown and the Israeli military, to be removed as a supplier to the NHS federated data platform (FDP), with one Labour backbencher, Samantha Niblett, questioning whether it could be “trusted as a custodian of the intimate health records of tens of millions of British citizens”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Sharp fall in number of children entering reception classes in London
Capital’s schools hardest hit in England and Wales by rising housing costs and falling birthrate, with further falls predicted in coming yearsSchools in London continue to be hardest hit by housing costs and the falling birthrate. Further closures and mergers of primary schools are expected after a sharp fall in the number of children entering reception classes in the capital.London’s boroughs will have nearly 3,000 fewer infants aged four enrolling at the start of the next school year in September, according to school place offers announced by local authorities across England. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Man used AI to make false statements to shut down London nightclub, police say
Heaven club neighbour admits offences under Licensing Act, as Met says fictitious AI-generated complaints a growing issue A businessman has pleaded guilty to making false statements in order to shut down a nightclub, which police believe were generated using AI.A Metropolitan police source said the use of AI to generate letters by complainants who do not exist is a growing issue. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: Netanyahu confirms Israel has agreed to 10-day ceasefire with Lebanon
Israeli prime minister says key demand is that Hezbollah must be dismantled; Lebanon’s PM Nawaf Salam welcomes ceasefire announced by Donald TrumpTrump announces 10-day ceasefire in Lebanon after ‘excellent conversations’Iran has stopped all petrochemical exports to prioritise domestic supply and prevent shortages of raw materials, Reuters reported.The state-owned National Petrochemical Company ordered firms to suspend exports until further notice. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Hegseth channels his inner Tarantino with fake Bible verse from Pulp Fiction
The defense secretary said his prayer drew on Ezekiel, but wording closely matches Quentin Tarantino dialogueIt was perhaps inevitable that a braggadocious Christian nationalist defense secretary elevated from his role as a weekend Fox News television host would pluck a fake Bible verse from a violent Hollywood blockbuster and present it at a Pentagon prayer session to rally the troops for the “holy war” in Iran.Certainly among a glut of stories swirling around Pete Hegseth this week, including articles of impeachment brought against him by a group of ambitious Democratic lawmakers, the bizarre allegation that the Bible-thumping Hegseth was passing off a fire-and-brimstone script by Quentin Tarantino, an Oscar-winning director, as the word of the Lord was far too compelling to ignore. Continue reading...

Computer Weekly
Open 
UK’s Sovereign AI supports supercomputing and drug discovery AI startups
The UK government’s £500m Sovereign AI fund announces first cohort of startups backed to boost economic growth and national security

Geoff Marshall
Open 
Nine Elms Station Station - Decades 2020's Ep.16

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Italy made me a manager when England 'discouraged' me - Cole
Ashley Cole won 107 caps for England, seventh on the all‑time list, but says he was "discouraged" by those in the football pyramid from becoming a head coach.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
LIV Golf CEO Denies "Speculation" That Saudi Arabia On Cusp Of Severing Ties
LIV Golf CEO Denies "Speculation" That Saudi Arabia On Cusp Of Severing Ties

Update (1130ET): Amid reports that Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund might be on the verge of pulling its funding for the league, LIV Golf CEO Scott O'Neil told staff in an email overnight that its season will go on "as planned, uninterrupted and at full throttle."



The email, which was obtained by ESPN, didn't directly address reports that PIF might stop investing in the breakaway circuit after spending more than $5 billion since its inception in 2022, or whether the league will continue competitions beyond this season.


"I want to be crystal clear: Our season continues exactly as planned, uninterrupted and at full throttle," O'Neil wrote in the email.

"While the media landscape is often filled with speculation, our reality is defined by the work we do on the grass. We are heading into the heart of our 2026 schedule with the full energy of an organization that is bigger, louder, and more influential than ever before."


LIV Golf is scheduled to play its sixth tournament of the season starting Thursday at Club de Golf Chapultepec near Mexico City.

Its first tournament in the U.S. is scheduled for May 7-10 at Trump National Golf Club in Sterling, Virginia.

*  *  *

As Middle East Eye reported earlier, Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund (PIF) is on the cusp of cutting its backing for LIV Golf, as it tightens its belt amid the US-Israeli war on Iran and delayed megaprojects at home.

The Financial Times reported on Wednesday that the kingdom’s sovereign wealth fund could announce it was stepping away from the Saudi-backed golf tour, established in 2021, as early as Thursday, taking a hit on its $5bn investment in the entity.
via AFP

The report said PIF had been weighing an exit before the US-Israeli war on Iran began, but any decision would likely send a chill through the sports world and other entities seeking cash from Gulf sovereign wealth funds.

PIF is the main backer of LIV Golf, which has racked up major losses since its founding in 2021, and the move would likely spell its demise.

PIF's bet on LIV Golf to rival the PGA Tour was one in a series of investments that were made in a bid to bolster the kingdom’s involvement in sports and entertainment, as it pushes to diversify its economy away from energy.


Saudi Arabia’s potential reversal on its costly golfing venture is part of a wider pullback on sports investing, as it looks to prioritize returns, rather than cultural influence. https://t.co/s0iQdRcFAZ
— Bloomberg (@business) April 16, 2026
Even before the US-Israeli war on Iran, high-flying projects were being cancelled or massively scaled down. The kingdom’s finance minister, Mohammed al-Jadaan, said in December that it had "no ego" preventing it from reassessing projects.

Earlier this year, Saudi Arabia suspended construction of the Mukaab, a giant cube-shaped structure set to be built in downtown Riyadh. The kingdom also shelved plans to build a desert ski resort and a large dam for an artificial lake.

Because of its East-West pipeline running from the Gulf to the Red Sea, Saudi Arabia can bypass Iran's control of the Strait of Hormuz. It is practically the only Gulf state exporting oil amid the war and is benefiting from higher oil prices.

But the conflict has also made it harder for Gulf states to present themselves as safe hubs for tourism and business.

Yasir al-Rumayyan, the governor of PIF, told Al Arabiya Business on Wednesday that the war on Iran was having an effect on PIF’s calculus, saying that “the war would add more pressure to reposition some priorities”.

Rumayyan confirmed for the first time that a 170km straight-line city envisioned to be part of the larger Neom development was no longer a priority.

"There are directives to Neom to reprioritise. Everyone thinks The ‌Line is Neom, but The Line is one project in Neom," he said. "Is it necessary to have The Line by 2030? I think no. It's good to have, but not a must-have," he said.

Cutting ties with LIV Golf would align with the kingdom’s efforts to keep more of its sovereign wealth fund cash at home. PIF is estimated to be worth $1 trillion.

Rumayyan said that PIF wanted 80 percent of its investments to go to local projects while it deployed 20 percent abroad, down from a high of 30 percent in recent years.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 13:05

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Trump Urges Extending Foreign Surveillance Program As Some Lawmakers Push For US Privacy Protections
Trump Urges Extending Foreign Surveillance Program As Some Lawmakers Push For US Privacy Protections

Via Headline USA,

Congress is set to take up the reauthorization of a divisive program that lets U.S. spy agencies pore over foreigners’ calls, texts and emails, with supporters like President Donald Trump saying it has saved lives while critics point to longstanding concerns about warrantless surveillance of Americans.
(AP Illustration/Peter Hamlin)

A key provision of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act permits the CIA, National Security Agency, FBI and other agencies to collect and analyze vast amounts of overseas communications without a warrant. It incidentally sweeps up the conversations of any Americans who interact with those foreigners targeted for surveillance.

The program expires Monday, and critics want changes, including a requirement for warrants before authorities can access the emails, phone calls or text messages of Americans. They also want limits on the government’s use of internet data brokers, who sell large volumes of personal information gleaned online, offering the government what critics say amounts to an end-run around the Constitution.

Despite bipartisan criticism, the chances of significant reforms dropped when Trump announced his support for the program’s renewal, saying it had proven its worth in supplying information vital to recent U.S. actions in Venezuela and Iran.

“The fact is, whether you like FISA or not, it is extremely important to our military,” Trump said on Truth Social Tuesday.

U.S. authorities say the program, known as Section 702 of the law, is vital to national security and has saved lives by uncovering terror plots. Critics question what they call a dangerous infringement on civil liberties and privacy.

In a Truth Social post, Trump said a different FISA provision was used to spy on his 2016 campaign but that he supported Section 702’s renewal despite misgivings that political adversaries could use parts of the law against him in the future. He called on lawmakers to extend the foreign surveillance program for another 18 months.

“My administration has worked tirelessly to ensure these FISA reforms are being aggressively executed at every level of the Executive Branch to keep Americans safe, while protecting our sacred Civil Liberties guaranteed by our Great Constitution,” Trump wrote.



Trump is a longtime critic of the nation’s intelligence services and was once opposed to Section 702 before he reversed himself. “KILL FISA” Trump posted on social media in 2024, when the provision was last reauthorized.

Trump isn’t the only one-time critic to change their mind: Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard sponsored legislation to repeal Section 702 as a Hawaii congresswoman but now supports it after being tapped to coordinate the nation’s 18 intelligence agencies.

Gabbard says new protections added since her time in Congress helped change her mind.

In addition to a requirement for a warrant to access Americans’ data, critics also want greater protections on how the FBI or other agencies can search communications and how that is reported to the public.

“Journalists, foreign aid workers, people with family overseas, all could have their communications swept up in this surveillance merely because they talked to someone outside of this country,” said Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore. The longtime critic of the law is pushing for changes that he said will ensure the government isn’t violating civil rights in secret.

Several Republicans also have suggested changes, such as the warrant requirement.

“National security and civil liberties are not mutually exclusive,” said Rep. Andy Biggs, R-Ariz. “We can give our intelligence professionals the tools they need to target foreign threats while ensuring that Americans are not subjected to unconstitutional surveillance.”

Gabbard’s office releases an annual report showing the number of foreign surveillance targets and number of searches likely to identify an American.

For 2025, the number of foreign surveillance targets increased to nearly 350,000 from almost 292,000 in 2024. Searches using terms likely to identify an American decreased slightly to 7,724 from 7,845 in 2024.

The totals are incomplete because agencies like the FBI have found ways to access the data without reporting the searches publicly, said Elizabeth Goitein, senior director of the Liberty and National Security Program at the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University.

FBI officials repeatedly violated their own standards when searching for intelligence related to the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection at the U.S. Capitol and racial justice protests in 2020, according to a 2024 court order.

“It’s reminiscent of J. Edgar Hoover’s tenure at the FBI,” Goitein said, referring to the FBI’s founding director who used illegal surveillance to harass and spy on Americans. “They can pretty much target anyone.”

Despite bipartisan concerns about the law and its implications for civil liberties, time is running out for Congress to make any changes before Monday’s expiration.

Trump’s support also reduces the odds that enough Republicans will break ranks and join Democrats to push for reforms.

Wyden said Section 702 votes are routinely delayed until the last minute, then lawmakers are told that national security demands they vote yes. Lawmakers are told, he said, that “if they vote for any amendments, the program will die and terrible things will happen and it will be all their fault.”

The best chance for inserting changes likely is the House, where a large number of lawmakers from both parties have expressed concerns.

But Rep. Rick Crawford, an Arkansas Republican who chairs the House Intelligence Committee, is backing Trump’s call for an 18-month renewal.

Crawford has taken aim in the past at what he calls the weaponization of intelligence but said last month that he believes the government can empower spy agencies while also holding them accountable.

“We can walk and chew gum at the same time,” Crawford said.

Adapted from reporting by the Associated Press. 

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 13:45

The Aviationist
Open 
Battlefield Airborne Communications Node, an Invisible yet Critical Part of the Operations over Iran
BACN provides a long-range secure communication capability, acting as a “gateway” system that bridges the gap between disparate platforms that cannot communicate directly. Throughout Operation Epic Fury, kinetic capabilities were in the spotlight, with fighter jets and bombers continuously striking Iranian targets with heavy ordnance. However, behind the scenes, there was another specialized asset which […]

Flightradar24
Open 
Lufthansa Group accelerates fleet reductions amidst soaring fuel prices and labor disputes
Lufthansa is reducing its fleet size faster than planned due to increased fuel costs and labor disputes. The airline will remove Lufthansa CityLine aircraft immediately and the A340-600 fleet in October along with a pair of 747-400s.
The post Lufthansa Group accelerates fleet reductions amidst soaring fuel prices and labor disputes appeared first on Flightradar24 Blog.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Murderer who never shared where body is gets parole
Glyn Razzell is approved for parole despite never revealing the location of his wife's body.

The Hill
Open 
House Republicans narrowly reject effort to end Trump’s war with Iran
House Republicans on Thursday defeated legislation designed to end the Iran war, marking a win for President Trump and another setback for the constitutional purists fighting to reaffirm Congress’s unique powers to use military force overseas. The vote was 213 to 214, with one Republican — Rep. Thomas Massie (Ky.) — bucking GOP leaders to...

The Hill
Open 
Beshear says Vance forgetting commandments to not worship false idols, tell lies
Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear (D) said Vice President Vance has forgotten that worship of “false idols” and support of individuals who tell “lies” is a breach of Catholic law. “I think what JD Vance is forgetting is the commandment that thou shalt not worship false idols,” Beshear told MS NOW’s Jen Psaki on Wednesday. “Thankfully,...

The Hill
Open 
Live updates: Congress grills Kennedy, Vought, Driscoll; Trump announces 10-day Israel-Lebanon truce
President Trump on Thursday announced that Israel and Lebanon have agreed to a 10-day ceasefire. He wrote on Truth Social that he had an “excellent conversation” with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Lebanese President Joseph Aoun. Chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Dan Caine told reporters on Thursday morning that 13 ships have turned around at...

The Hill
Open 
HHS ends $11M contract with Catholic Charities to care for migrant children
A Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) sub-agency has decided not to renew an $11 million contract with Catholic Charities, a move that will affect efforts to care for migrant children. The Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) will no longer fund the Catholic Charities shelter run by the Archdiocese of Miami after several years...

The Hill
Open 
Bannon advises Hegseth to ‘tone down' Bible talk: 'It steps on what's important'
Former White House strategist Steve Bannon advised Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on Thursday to tone down religious references in briefings on the conflict with Iran, arguing they distract from the operational details outlined by military leaders. “It was a briefing of precision,” Bannon said on his show “War Room,” lauding Gen. Dan Caine, the chair...

The Hill
Open 
Woman's death, fire on plane prompt reannounced power bank recall
The chargers were recalled a year ago, but additional incidents — including the death of a woman — have prompted the company to again warn consumers

The Hill
Open 
Some Trader Joe's shoppers may qualify for $100 payment in receipt settlement
The lawsuit alleges the mistake may have revealed some details about credit and debit cards used by shoppers.

The Hill
Open 
Artemis II crew to hold news conference after historic moon flyby
The crew — NASA astronauts Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover and Christina Koch, together with Jeremy Hansen of the Canadian Space Agency — returned from their historic mission on April 10.

The Hill
Open 
Gavin Newsom trashes California's Dem choices for governor; could Republicans win?  
Gavin Newsom is not thrilled with California’s remaining choices for governor.

The Hill
Open 
'Really bad': Ground vehicle nearly collides with American Airlines plane at Charlotte airport, pilot says
CLT Airport says the incident is under investigation.

The Hill
Open 
US Census Bureau releases list of 1,000 most common first names in America
The U.S. Census Bureau released the list of 1,000 most common first names, based on data collected during the 2020 Census.

The Hill
Open 
Trump support drops among Catholics after Pope Leo remarks, poll shows
The poll, conducted late last month, found the president's approval rating among Catholic voters has dropped to 48%.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
No issues with UK fuel supply, says Reeves
The chancellor was speaking at the end of the International Monetary Fund meeting in Washington.

ZDNet News
Open 
OpenAI's Codex Desktop can run your computer now - and has its own browser
From coding tool to productivity powerhouse, Codex Desktop adds computer control, automation memory, and plugin support. But can it replace traditional software?

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
Boeing 787 with just 13 hours of flight time being broken up for spare parts
With soaring demand for Boeing 787 spare parts, the latest of the type to be broken up for spares has barely ever flown and has been stored since new.

TechRadar Reviews
Open 
Eureka Ergonomic Opal standing desk review: Beautiful, stylish, and solid — but I can't ignore the mediocre storage

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11507 Broadband (xDSL) - Emergency Maintenance Wakefield (MYWAK) (New)
One of our Supplier will be carrying out a planned maintenance on Stoke City (WMCIT) exchange. Customers on City Fibre on this exchange will experience an outage during the maintenance work and services should be considered to be at risk for the duration of the maintenance window.

Zen regret any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Fri, 24th Apr 2026 08:00

End: Fri, 24th Apr 2026 16:00

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 18:37

Status: Partial

Maintenance: Emergency

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Google's AI Mode Update Tries to Kill Tab Hopping in Chrome
Google latest update to AI Mode in its Chrome browser is designed to keep the chatbot-style search tool always around once you start an online search journey.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
The UK Launches Its $675 Million Sovereign AI Fund
In a bid to minimize dependence on technology from other countries, the UK government is plowing resources into homegrown AI startups.

The Right Scoop
Open 
WATCH – DNI Tulsi Gabbard sends criminal referral to DOJ over 2019 impeachment of President Trump
Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard has just sent a criminal referral to the DOJ over the 2019 impeachment of President Trump by the House. The main target of the referral is . . .

The Right Scoop
Open 
EVIL VIDEO – Dem NY rep says she wants more illegals in her district to keep her elected
A Dem House member said in a video that she wants more illegals in her district to keep her elected and in power. Seriously. This is Rep. Yvette Clark: Political power is . . .

Telegraph
Open 
European airlines cancel hundreds of flights
European airlines cancel hundreds of flights

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
LIV golf stars face career limbo with Saudi investment expected to end in 2026
LIV CEO’s rallying email to staff did not refer to 2027Without alternative funding future is bleak for rebel tourSeveral of golf’s leading names are facing career limbo at the end of 2026 amid expectation Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund will withdraw backing for the LIV Tour.While the likelihood is Bryson DeChambeau and Jon Rahm will be afforded a pathway back to the PGA Tour, the future for others who made lucrative switches to LIV is far more uncertain. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
It will take more than £600m a year to boost UK industrial competitiveness | Nils Pratley
Bics fix accepts nose-bleed energy bills are a structural problem but pretends they are an issue for a narrow section of industryIt is “bold action” to boost UK competitiveness, claimed the government. Not everybody shared that assessment of the British industrial competitiveness scheme (Bics), the long-awaited plan to cut electricity bills for UK manufacturers by up to 25% – or, at least, to cut them for a subset of firms that are aligned with the eight chosen sectors of the “modern” industrial strategy.“Gas intensive industries in the UK have been shamefully ignored by the government in this announcement – it’s a total disgrace,” said Gary Smith, the general secretary of the GMB union, banging the drum for the likes of ceramics-makers and brickmakers that aren’t deemed modern enough for support. Employer bodies mostly did the polite thing of welcoming government assistance of any form before using phases such as “drop in the ocean”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
NHS patients should be able to write up their own medical records – and not have to rely on Post-it notes | Will Parman
The lack of a unified digital repository for patients and healthcare workers means that key medical changes are often missed. But the NHS can learn from US intelligence sharingWill Parman is the winner of the The Guardian Foundation’s 2026 Emerging Voices award (19-25 age category), recognising young talent in political opinion writingAs she battles cancer, my mum fears that she will forget to tell her consultant something important. Like many people with complex and chronic health needs, she clutches a Post-it note with 10 bullet-pointed symptoms, such as “cannot stand” and “spasms”. It is her companion during stressful appointments. We rehearse her list before we enter, and worry that we deviated too much when we leave.Even then, her peer-reviewed lists, sometimes on the back of envelopes, are inadequate when her condition may change day to day. Each list, too, must be tailored for each of her consultants – many lists get lost in her tall pile of notes and letters. I hate those car rides home when we’re upset that we didn’t say something important, fearing the consequences of this omission. In a health system in which people can wait more than a year for an appointment, you wonder how meticulous these Post-it notes need to be to convey every change in their medical condition since the initial referral letter. It raises the question of how many people have experienced this unsettling ride home.Will Parman is the winner of the The Guardian Foundation’s 2026 Emerging Voices award (19-25 age category), recognising young talent in political opinion writing Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
London primary schools see 3.5% drop in children entering reception
Capital’s schools hardest hit in England and Wales by rising housing costs and falling birthrate, with further falls predicted in coming yearsSchools in London continue to be hardest hit by housing costs and the falling birthrate. Further closures and mergers of primary schools are expected after a sharp fall in the number of children entering reception classes in the capital.London’s boroughs will have nearly 3,000 fewer infants aged four enrolling at the start of the next school year in September, according to school place offers announced by local authorities across England. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Like a concrete aircraft carrier: was LA’s giant new $724m gallery really worth all the carbon emissions?
Built on tar swamps and two tortuous decades in the making, LACMA’s latest addition used twice as much metal as the Eiffel Tower. How did America supersize revered architect Peter Zumthor?Driving down the palm-lined strip of Wilshire Boulevard in Los Angeles, a striking new crossing heaves into view. A ribbon of glass leaps over the road, sandwiched between two gigantic planes of concrete. As you get closer, the bridge swells out in sinuous arcs, swooping back on itself to inscribe an amoebic, shape-shifting blob, spreading out like an inkblot. From some angles it has a retro-futuristic air, recalling a Jetsons airport terminal, or one of California’s “Googie” style gas stations. From others, the curving roof looks like a great big tongue, flaring out to give the neighbours a raspy lick.
This concrete colossus is home to the new David Geffen Galleries of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (Lacma), a $724m mothership designed by the fabled Swiss architect Peter Zumthor. It is less a museum than a mighty piece of infrastructure, a 110,000 sq ft warehouse-cum-bridge, jacked up nine metres in the air and looming above the street with a brooding, muscular heft. Two decades in the making, and subject to tortuous years of delays, controversies and cost escalations – building on a tar swamp in a seismic zone is not straightforward – it finally opens this weekend.The Fitzcarraldian feat is the brainchild of Michael Govan, who became Lacma’s director in 2006 with an ambition to build a museum like no other, using the promise of a dazzling structure to lure donations of artworks and dollars ($125m came from LA county, the rest was fundraised). Govan cut his teeth at the Guggenheim, and on Frank Gehry’s Bilbao outpost, where he clearly got a taste for the transformative fairy dust of signature architecture. He later moved to Dia:Beacon, in New York’s Hudson Valley, where he commissioned Zumthor for a project that was ultimately unrealised. At Lacma, he was determined to make a monument for posterity, at any cost. Continue reading...

Mac Rumours
Open 
OpenAI Codex Update Adds Computer Use, Image Generation, and Memory on Mac
OpenAI is making several updates to its Codex AI coding agent. Codex is now able to operate desktop Mac apps with its own cursor, seeing what's on the screen, clicking, and typing to complete tasks.





Codex can run multiple agents on the Mac in parallel, without interfering with the user's own work. OpenAI says developers will find it useful for testing apps, iterating on frontend changes, and more. Codex can now remember preferences, recurring workflows, tech stacks, and other information about each user's personal workflow. With automation improvements, Codex is able to resume work after a pause using existing conversation threads, and it can schedule future work for itself and work on a task across days or weeks. Codex also proposes work using context from projects, memory, and connected plugins.



There is an in-app browser for Codex that allows users to comment directly on pages to provide more precise instructions to the agent. In the future, Codex will get full use of the browser for opening websites, working through user flows, taking screenshots, and inspecting outputs.



Codex has been updated to use gpt-image-1.5 for generating images in the app, which OpenAI says is helpful for creating visuals for product concepts and mockups. Codex now includes support for multiple terminal tabs, addressing GitHub review comments, and opening files directly in the sidebar with rich previews for documents like PDFs and spreadsheets.



Along with these changes, Codex has over 90 new plugins that can combine skills, app integrations, and MCP servers to improve Codex's context gathering and actions.



The updates to Codex are rolling out today to Codex desktop users signed in with ChatGPT. The personalization features are not yet available to Enterprise, Education, EU, and UK users, but will be rolling out soon. Computer use is also not yet available in the EU or the UK.Tag: OpenAIThis article, 'OpenAI Codex Update Adds Computer Use, Image Generation, and Memory on Mac' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Sky News Home
Open 
Pope follows Trump row by condemning 'tyrants' ravaging world with war
Pope Leo has condemned a "handful of tyrants" for ravaging the world, following a deepening public rift with Donald Trump over his Iran war.

Mail Online
Open 
Kelsey Grammer, 71, and wife, 47, spotted for first time with baby son - his eighth child - during Beverly Hills lunch
The Frasier star, 71, and his fourth wife Kayte Walsh, 47, couldn't hide their smiles as they stepped out with their newborn son Christopher for a lunch date in Beverly Hills.

Mail Online
Open 
Rivals stars strip naked for eye-popping sex scenes in raunchy new trailer for Disney+ 'bonkbuster'
Rivals stars have stripped naked for eye-popping sex scenes in a raunchy new trailer for the Disney+ 'bonkbuster' - as fans cheered 'we are so back!' 

Ars Technica
Open 
First look: Also's upcoming e-bike disconnects the pedals and wheels

Ars Technica
Open 
RFK Jr. forces FDA to reconsider 12 unproven peptides after 2023 ban

Ars Technica
Open 
Gemini can now create personalized AI images by digging around in Google Photos

EFF
Open 
Google Broke Its Promise to Me. Now ICE Has My Data.
In September 2024, Amandla Thomas-Johnson was a Ph.D. candidate studying in the U.S. on a student visa when he briefly attended a pro-Palestinian protest. In April 2025, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) sent Google an administrative subpoena requesting his data. The next month, Google gave Thomas-Johnson's information to ICE without giving him the chance to challenge the subpoena, breaking a nearly decade-long promise to notify users before handing their data to law enforcement. 
Google names a handful of exceptions to this promise (such as if Google receives a gag order from a court) that do not apply to Thomas-Johnson's case. While ICE “requested” that Google not notify Thomas-Johnson, the request was not enforceable or mandated by a court. Today, the Electronic Frontier Foundation sent complaints to the California and New York Attorneys General asking them to investigate Google for deceptive trade practices for breaking that promise. You can read about the complaints here. Below is Thomas-Johnson's account of his ordeal. 
Out of touch but not out of reach 
I thought my ordeal with U.S. immigration authorities was over a year ago, when I left the country, crossing into Canada at Niagara Falls.  





By that point, the Trump administration had effectively turned federal power against international students like me. After I attended a pro-Palestine protest at Cornell University—for all of five minutes—the administration’s rhetoric about cracking down on students protesting what we saw as genocide forced me into hiding for three months. Federal agents came to my home looking for me. A friend was detained at an airport in Tampa and interrogated about my whereabouts. 
I’m currently a Ph.D. student. Before that, I was a reporter. I’m a dual British and Trinadad and Tobago citizen. I have not been accused of any crime. 
I believed that once I left U.S. territory, I had also left the reach of its authorities. I was wrong. 
The email
Weeks later, in Geneva, Switzerland, I received what looked like a routine email from Google. It informed me that the company had already handed over my account data to the Department of Homeland Security. 
At first, I wasn’t alarmed. I had seen something similar before. An associate of mine, Momodou Taal, had received advance notice from Google and Facebook that his data had been requested. He was given advanced notice of the subpoenas, and law enforcement eventually withdrew them before the companies turned over his data. 
Google had already disclosed my data without telling me.
I assumed I would be given the same opportunity. But the language in my email was different. It was final: “Google has received and responded to legal process from a law enforcement authority compelling the release of information related to your Google Account.” 
Google had already disclosed my data without telling me. There was no opportunity to contest it. 
Google’s broken promise
To be clear, this should not have happened this way. Google promises that it will notify users before their data is handed over in response to legal processes, including administrative subpoenas. That notice is meant to provide a chance to challenge the request. In my case, that safeguard was bypassed. My data was handed over without warning—at the request of an administration targeting students engaged in protected political speech. 
Months later, my lawyer at the Electronic Frontier Foundation obtained the subpoena itself. On paper, the request focused largely on subscriber information: IP addresses, physical address, other identifiers, and session times and durations. 
But taken together, these fragments form something far more powerful—a detailed surveillance profile. IP logs can be used to approximate location. Physical addresses show where you sleep. Session times would show when you were communicating with friends or family. Even without message content, the picture that emerges is intimate and invasive.  
State power meets private data
What this experience has made clear is that anyone can be targeted by law enforcement. And with their massive stores of data, technology companies can facilitate those arbitrary investigations. Together, they can combine state power, corporate data, and algorithmic inference in ways that are difficult to see—and even harder to challenge. 
The consequences of what happened to me are not abstract. I left the United States. But I do not feel that I have left its reach. Being investigated by the federal government is intimidating. Questions run through your head. Am I now a marked individual? Will I face heightened scrutiny if I continue my reporting? Can I travel safely to see family in the Caribbean? 
Who, exactly, can I hold accountable?
Update: This post has been updated to include more information about Google's exceptions to their notification policy, none of which applied to the subpoena targeting Thomas-Johnson.

EFF
Open 
How Push Notifications Can Betray Your Privacy (and What to Do About It)
A phone’s push notifications can contain a significant amount of information about you, your communications, and what you do throughout the day. They’re important enough to government investigations that Apple and Google now both require a judge’s order to hand details about push notifications over to law enforcement, and even with that requirement Apple shares data on hundreds of users. More recently, we also learned from a 404 Media report that law enforcement forensic extraction tools can unearth the text from deleted notifications, including those from secure messaging tools, like Signal. The good news is that you can mitigate some of this risk. 
There are two points where notifications may betray your privacy: when they’re transmitted over cloud servers and once they land on the device. Let’s start with the cloud. It might seem like push notifications come directly from an app, but they are typically routed through either Apple or Google’s servers first (depending on if you use iOS or Android). According to a letter sent to the Department of Justice by Senator Wyden, the content of those notifications may be visible to Apple and Google, and at the very least the companies collect some metadata about what apps send a notification and when. App providers have to make the decision to hide the content from Apple and Google and implement that functionality; Signal is one app that does this. 
Then, once the notifications land on your phone, depending on your settings, the notification content may be visible on your lock screen without needing to unlock the device. This can be dangerous if you lose your device, someone steals it, or it’s confiscated by law enforcement. 
You may clear notifications after looking at them. But it turns out the content notifications get recorded in your device’s internal storage, which then makes them susceptible to recovery with certain types of forensic tools. Notification content may even persist after the app is deleted, if the OS doesn’t fully purge the app’s notification data. 
We still have a lot of unanswered questions about how the notification databases work on devices. We do not know how long notifications are stored, or whether they’re backed up to the cloud, in which case the cloud provider could get backdoor access to the content of messages if the backups are enabled and not end-to-end encrypted. This may also make backups vulnerable to law enforcement demands for data. 
Which is all to say that there are myriad ways that law enforcement can access the content or metadata of push notifications. Let’s fix that.
Consider the Strongest Notification Protections for Your Secure Messaging Apps
Secure chat tools are designed to keep the content of the messages safe inside the app. So, for secure chat apps like WhatsApp and Signal, that means the company that makes those apps cannot see the content of your messages, and they’re only accessible on your and your recipients’ devices. Once messages land on a device, it’s still important to consider some privacy precautions, particularly with notifications. 
SignalSignal offers three levels of information to include in notifications, all which are pretty self explanatory:

Name, Content, and Actions (Name and message on Android) shows the entirety of a message as well as who sent it (on iPhone you can also slide to reply, mark as read, or call back). 
Name only only shows the name of the sender. 
No Name or Content (No name or message on Android) will only show that you have a message from Signal, not who sent it or what it’s about. 

To change your settings:

On iPhone: Tap your profile picture, then Settings > Notifications > Show.
On Android: Tap your profile picture, then Notifications > Show. 

WhatsAppWhatsApp only has one option for this, and it’s currently limited to iPhone, but you can at least tell the app not to include the content of a message in the notification:

Open WhatsApp for iPhone, tap the “You” bar, then Notifications, and disable the Show preview option.

Check your other apps to see if they offer similar settings.
Limit Your Notifications Device-Wide
Since Apple and Google manage push notifications for their respective devices, they also have some visibility into certain data. Push notification data can include certain types of metadata, like which app sent a notification and when, as well as the account ID associated with the phone. In some cases, Apple and Google may have access to unencrypted content, including the content of the text in a notification or other information from the app itself. 
For most app notifications, there’s no simple way to easily figure out what metadata might be gleaned from a notification, or if the notification is unencrypted or not. But some app developers have described details along these lines. For example, Signal president Meredith Whittaker explained on social media how the Signal app handles notifications entirely on-device. Searching online for an app name along with “notification privacy,” “notification encryption” or “notification metadata” may help answer your questions, or you may need to dig around in support forums for the app.

It’s also good to reconsider whether any app should be sending you notifications to begin with. Aside from a potential decrease in the number of distractions you endure throughout the day, or the level of chaos on display on your lockscreen, limiting the apps that can send notifications and what content is visible in them can improve your privacy with respect to the sorts of metadata that may be gathered by the companies, as well as any content that may be viewable if someone has physically accessed your device.
To check and change your settings on iPhone

Open Settings > Notifications.
On the Show Previews option, you can choose whether to show the content of notifications on the lock screen, “Always,” which doesn’t require unlocking the device, “When Unlocked,” which does, and “Never,” which means notifications won’t have any details, just that you have a notification in an app. 
Alternatively, you can scroll down and change these settings per app. Just tap the app name, then the Show Previews menu, and choose how you’d like them to appear. Or, if you’ve decided you don’t want notifications from that app at all, uncheck the Allow Notifications option.

To check and change your settings on AndroidThe core version of Android relies on app developers to develop specific settings more than controlling them on a platform-wide level.

Open Settings > Notifications > App notifications to disable notifications from any app completely. Some apps may also offer internal notification options for specific types of notices, like new messages, that you can control in the app itself. Tap an app name, then tap the Addition settings in the app option to potentially customize it more.
You can also experiment with the sensitive content setting. This is up to the developer to set properly, but when done so, most notifications will require at least unlocking the device to see them. Open Settings > Notifications > Notifications on lock screen and disable “Show sensitive content.”

Control What Notifications AI Tools Can Access
In an attempt to make notifications easier to skim, both Android and iOS offer optional ways to get notification summaries using their AI tools that summarize the content of notifications. On an individual app level, WhatsApp offers this as well. Some of these summarization tools, like Apple’s, run on the device, while others, like WhatsApp’s, do not. This can all be a lot to keep track of, and sending data off device may create some level of risk for some messages.
Since this is a bit more complicated, we have another blog post that walks through the steps to take to protect messaging from accidentally ending up in AI tools built into Apple and Google's devices. For WhatsApp specifically, we have a blog detailing when you might want to turn on the app’s “Advanced Chat Privacy” feature, which can disable summaries for both yourself and others in the chat.
Balancing security, privacy, and usability with something like push notifications is a complicated task. At the very least, Apple and Google should better ensure that the content of these notifications isn’t transmitted over their servers in plain text. The companies need to also make sure that device operating systems don’t back up the notification database to the cloud, and when an app is deleted, that all notification data is purged.
We appreciate that apps like Signal allow you to control what’s visible with notifications on a per-app basis, and we’d like to see this level of granularity of choices in other secure messaging tools, like WhatsApp. Likewise, more apps should handle push notifications similarly to the way Signal does, where a ping is sent to wake up the app to check for messages, and the content of that message is never sent across servers.

Mail Online
Open 
Every party calls for Starmer to quit as he claims he didn't know Peter Mandelson failed security vetting…then was made US ambassador anyway
In an astonishing development, No10 revealed Lord Mandelson was granted clearance to take on the role against the recommendation of security vetting officials.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Pooh in pencil: sketches for original Winnie-the-Pooh book shared for first time
E H Shepard drawings go on display for book’s centenary, showing how he brought AA Milne’s character to lifePreviously unseen drawings of Winnie-the-Pooh that show the honey-loving bear before he was introduced to generations of readers in the 1926 book have come to light.Two preliminary pencil sketches by E H Shepard have been shared for the first time by his family to mark the centenary of one of the most loved books in children’s literature. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Millionaires fund last-ditch attempt to save humpback whale stranded in Germany
Critics say efforts to rescue the animal, nicknamed Timmy, unlikely to succeed and could lead to further harmA last-ditch effort to rescue a wayward whale that has transfixed Germans for weeks has begun in the Baltic Sea despite criticism it has little chance of success and could further harm the 12-tonne creature.The male humpback whale was first spotted last month near Timmendorfer Strand on the northern coast of Germany, giving rise to its nickname Timmy. It has repeatedly become stranded and then freed itself after human assistance but it is now stranded again, with rescuers saying it is fighting a losing battle for its life. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Aston Villa v Bologna: Europa League quarter-final, second leg – live
⚽ Europa League updates; kick-off 8pm BST (first leg: 3-1)⚽ Nottingham Forest v Porto – latest | Live scores | Mail NiallMuch like one of those old-timey “choose your own adventure” stories, Aston Villa have two clear paths to the Champions League. Unlike said books, there appears to be little immediate peril on either route.Villa are seven points clear of sixth-placed Chelsea in the Premier League, and got the job in this tie more than halfway done in the first leg in Italy. Get through tonight and Porto or Nottingham Forest (!) await in the semi-finals, while mid-table Sunderland and Fulham are up next in the league. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Nottingham Forest v Porto: Europa League quarter-final, second leg – live
⚽ Europa League updates; kick-off 8pm BST (first leg: 1-1)⚽ Aston Villa v Bologna – updates | Live scores | Mail ScottSix months ago this happened …… which has got to augur well for Nottingham Forest (even if it didn’t serve as much of a promising harbinger for poor old Sean Dyche). Throw in the fact that Porto have played 24 competitive matches in England and have yet to win one (D3 L21) and all signs point to YES for Vítor Pereira and his charges. The winner of this tie gets to play the victor of Aston Villa and Bologna, and the prospect of an ATVLand rammy for a place in the final is almost too much excitement for a brain to contain. So come on Forest, giddy up Villa, let’s make this happen. Kick-off is at 8pm BST, with the scores level at 1-1 after the fiasco-tinged first leg. It’s on! Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Like a concrete aircraft carrier: was LA’s giant new $724m gallery really worth all the carbon emissions?
Built on tar swamps and two tortuous decades in the making, LACMA’s latest addition used twice as much metal as the Eiffel Tower. How did America supersize Peter Zumthor?Driving down the palm-lined strip of Wilshire Boulevard in Los Angeles, a striking new crossing heaves into view. A ribbon of glass leaps over the road, sandwiched between two gigantic planes of concrete. As you get closer, the bridge swells out in sinuous arcs, swooping back on itself to inscribe an amoebic, shape-shifting blob, spreading out like an inkblot. From some angles it has a retro-futuristic air, recalling a Jetsons airport terminal, or one of California’s “Googie” style gas stations. From others, the curving roof looks like a great big tongue, flaring out to give the neighbours a raspy lick.
This concrete colossus is home to the new David Geffen Galleries of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (Lacma), a $724m mothership designed by the fabled Swiss architect Peter Zumthor. It is less a museum than a mighty piece of infrastructure, a 110,000 sq ft warehouse-cum-bridge, jacked up nine metres in the air and looming above the street with a brooding, muscular heft. Two decades in the making, and subject to tortuous years of delays, controversies and cost escalations – building on a tar swamp in a seismic zone is not straightforward – it finally opens this weekend.The Fitzcarraldian feat is the brainchild of Michael Govan, who became Lacma’s director in 2006 with an ambition to build a museum like no other, using the promise of a dazzling structure to lure donations of artworks and dollars ($125m came from LA county, the rest was fundraised). Govan cut his teeth at the Guggenheim, and on Frank Gehry’s Bilbao outpost, where he clearly got a taste for the transformative fairy dust of signature architecture. He later moved to Dia:Beacon, in New York’s Hudson Valley, where he commissioned Zumthor for a project that was ultimately unrealised. At Lacma, he was determined to make a monument for posterity, at any cost. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Hegseth’s Pentagon prayer mirrors fake Bible verse from Pulp Fiction
The defense secretary said his prayer drew on Ezekiel, but wording closely matches Quentin Tarantino dialogueIt was perhaps inevitable that a braggadocious Christian nationalist defense secretary elevated from his role as a weekend Fox News television host would pluck a fake Bible verse from a violent Hollywood blockbuster and present it at a Pentagon prayer session to rally the troops for the “holy war” in Iran.Certainly among a glut of stories swirling around Pete Hegseth this week, including articles of impeachment brought against him by a group of ambitious Democratic lawmakers, the bizarre allegation that the Bible-thumping Hegseth was passing off a fire-and-brimstone script by Quentin Tarantino, an Oscar-winning director, as the word of the Lord was far too compelling to ignore. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Lionel Messi buys fifth-tier Spanish club Cornella
Argentina World Cup winner Lionel Messi becomes the new owner of Catalan club Cornella.

The Register
Open 
Nobody knows how many CVEs Anthropic's Project Glasswing has actually found
Like the majority of the companies participating, it remains a mystery Last week, Anthropic surprised the world by declaring that its latest model, Mythos, is so good at finding vulns that it would create chaos if released. Now, under the title of Project Glasswing, over 50 selected companies and orgs are allowed to test the hyped up LLM to find security holes in their own products. But just how many problems have they really discovered?…

BBC World News
Open 
Pope lashes out at foreigners who exploit Africa
The pontiff has been unusually forthright during his visit to conflict-hit Cameroon.

BBC UK News
Open 
Andrew invited to relinquish Freedom of City
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor received the historic honour in 2012 "by virtue of patrimony".

Gizmodo
Open 
The Newest Alzheimer’s Drugs Might Be Worthless, Review Finds
Anti-amyloid drugs likely provide no "clinically meaningful" effects for people with Alzheimer's, the authors concluded.

Gizmodo
Open 
‘Lee Cronin’s The Mummy’ Should Be Called ‘Lee Cronin’s The Exorcist’
The new creature feature unwraps plenty of gore but too much déjà vu.

Gizmodo
Open 
The Next Surface PCs May Not Be the Big Upgrades You Hoped for
Expect Microsoft's next Surface Pro and Surface Laptops to cost more for a simple refresh.

Gizmodo
Open 
Anthropic Releases Claude Opus 4.7 to Remind Everyone How Great Mythos Is
Bold strategy to promote your new release as "less broadly capable" than other options.

Mail Online
Open 
Man CURED of HIV through groundbreaking transplant from his brother in first-of-its-kind procedure
A man living with HIV has been cured of the devastating disease in a pioneering transplant, doctors have revealed.

BBC World News
Open 
Naples bank robbers hold 25 people hostage then vanish through tunnel
The armed men reportedly evaded capture by escaping through the city's sewer system.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Starmer not aware Foreign Office overruled Mandelson vetting decision until this week, government says
A decision to go against the recommendation of the vetting agency was taken by officials in the Foreign Office, spokesperson says.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Is this the beginning of the end for LIV Golf - and what happens next for its star recruits?
With speculation continuing over LIV Golf's future, BBC Sport analyses whether the breakaway tour will continue.

Russia Today News
Open 
‘Hunger Games’ at the BBC: State broadcaster to shed 10% of workers

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ben Jennings on the US-Iran war and AI slop – cartoon
Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump announces Israel-Lebanon ceasefire – The Latest
The US president, Donald Trump, has said Israel and Lebanon will begin a 10-day ceasefire. In a post on Truth Social, he said he had spoken to the leaders of both countries today and claimed this would be the ‘tenth war’ he has ‘solved’. Israel reportedly has no plans to withdraw its military from southern Lebanon during the ceasefire, it has been reported. Lucy Hough speaks to senior international correspondent Julian Borger Continue reading...

CNET News
Open 
Stop Mixing by Hand. The Best Stand Mixers of 2026 Do the Hard Work for You
These are the best stand mixers to buy, including the best budget stand mixer and a premium model with serious smarts, from KitchenAid and other brands.

CNET News
Open 
The $2,899 Galaxy Z TriFold Is Back. You Can Buy It From Samsung's Store
The foldable phone paused its sales in March after selling through its inventory, but Samsung is bringing it back.

CNET News
Open 
WrestleMania 42's Most Exciting Match Isn't Even a Headliner
Commentary: Will Brock Lesnar versus Oba Femi deliver on all this hype?

CNET News
Open 
I Wish I Had This Official D&D Show When I Started Rolling Dice 25 Years Ago
The company behind Dungeons & Dragons has its official answer to Critical Role in its new show Dungeon Masters, which airs weekly on YouTube.

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11370 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Maintenance - York Area (Close)
Maintenance successfully completed.

Start: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 09:00

End: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 15:00

Clear: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 17:57

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 17:57

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11499 Colocation - Planned Datacentre Maintenance - Sandbrook (Close)
Maintenance successfully completed.

Start: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 08:00

End: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 17:00

Clear: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 17:57

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 17:57

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11492 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Maintenance - Wilmslow (MRWIL) (Close)
Maintenance successfully completed.

Start: Wed, 29th Apr 2026 01:00

End: Wed, 29th Apr 2026 06:00

Clear: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 17:57

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 17:57

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11371 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Maintenance - Evesham Area (Close)
Maintenance successfully completed.

Start: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 09:00

End: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 15:00

Clear: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 17:57

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 17:58

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Messi buys fifth-tier Spanish club Cornella
Argentina World Cup winner Lionel Messi becomes the new owner of Catalan club Cornella.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Starmer did not know Mandelson failed vetting, government says
A decision to go against the recommendation of the vetting agency was taken by officials in the Foreign Office, spokesperson says.

Autosport F1
Open 
Bearman blames Colapinto for "unacceptable" crash at Suzuka
Oliver Bearman has spoken for the first time about the accident he suffered at the Formula 1 Japanese Grand Prix - placing full responsibility on Franco Colapinto.The incident occurred on lap 22 of the 53-lap race, where Bearman started around one second behind the Alpine through Suzuka’s sector two.But he suddenly closed as Colapinto was harvesting energy and with a speed ...Keep reading

Autosport F1
Open 
Ex-F1 race director Wittich defends Masi's decision-making at 2021 Abu Dhabi GP
Former Formula 1 race director Michael Masi has received support from his successor Niels Wittich with regards to his controversial officiating in the title-deciding 2021 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix.Max Verstappen and Lewis Hamilton were tied on points going into the Yas Marina race, meaning whoever finished ahead would claim the title – unless they both ended up out of the top 10, in which case ...Keep reading

Russia Today News
Open 
Ceasefire agreed between Israel and Lebanon – Trump

Mail Online
Open 
Man CURED of HIV through groundbreaking transplant from his brother in first-of-its-kind procedure
In 2008, Timothy Ray Brown (pictured left) become the first-ever patient cured of HIV. Now, another man in Norway has been cured with the same procedure using cells from his brother.

Mail Online
Open 
Scandalous pictures that raise uncomfortable questions about THAT shot of Alice Vanderpump and ultra-wealthy reality star Kenneth Tong. Her husband's reacted with fury - but now Kenneth tells his side, shows us his photos and claims the unthinkable
The remarkable image, posted to Instagram this week by ultra-wealthy reality star Kenneth Tong, was met with rapturous comments. But at least one viewer was furious: Alice's husband.

Mail Online
Open 
Victoria Beckham kickstarts her 52nd birthday celebrations as she enjoys a lavish dinner with daughter Harper, 14, in Miami - after she addressed family estrangement with son Brooklyn
Victoria Beckham kickstarted her birthday celebrations as she enjoyed a lavish dinner with her daughter Harper at Casadonna in Miami on Wednesday.

Mail Online
Open 
Starmer on the brink as No10 admits Mandelson was made US ambassador despite FAILING security checks… but PM claims he didn't know
In an astonishing development, No10 revealed Lord Mandelson was granted clearance to take on the role against the recommendation of security vetting officials.

Boing Boing
Open 
Stop Flock campaign targets invasive surveillance network
The Stop Flock campaign takes aim at the domestic surveillance startup, whose cameras are everywhere now—even inside buildings. "Mass surveillance isn't public safety," the campaign states, "it's public control."

Flock Safety markets AI surveillance that goes far beyond reading license plates; color, bumper stickers, dents, and other features are used to build databases and identify movement patterns.

— Read the rest
The post Stop Flock campaign targets invasive surveillance network appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Watch the deranged new trailer for the Street Fighter movie
Some weird part of me has needed the forthcoming Street Fighter movie for a long time. The 1994 Hollywood movie was bad (though Raul Julia was great) and the anime was better, but this looks like just the ticket: a well-coreographed fight movie (with actual street fighting!) — Read the rest
The post Watch the deranged new trailer for the Street Fighter movie appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
SantaCon organizer allegedly ran actual con
The man behind New York's annual SantaCon, a festive sea of red suits, public intoxication, and supposed charity, has been charged with wire fraud after prosecutors say he siphoned off more than half of the $2.7 million raised, treating a holiday fundraiser as a personal revenue piggy bank. — Read the rest
The post SantaCon organizer allegedly ran actual con appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
'Justin Bieber's guy' rents Coachella buggies, drives them straight to Mexico
A Newport Beach rental company handed over four electric festival buggies to a man claiming to be part of Justin Bieber's team. The story that held together just long enough for the vehicles to make their way to Coachella, and then, very efficiently, to Tijuana, where their tracking devices mysteriously turned off. — Read the rest
The post 'Justin Bieber's guy' rents Coachella buggies, drives them straight to Mexico appeared first on Boing Boing.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Mortgage rates dip to 4-week low — just in time for the best week of the year to sell a home
Mortgage rates fell for the second straight week, setting the spring home-buying season up for a reboot after inflation worries linked to the Iran war sent rates climbing last month.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Mutual insurance companies are paying record-breaking dividends to their customers this year. Is using one right for you?
While most carriers pocket your premiums, mutual-insurance companies are owned by their customers.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Where to find the cheapest gas in America right now — up to 34 cents a gallon below the national average
Americans are already biking to work, pooling trips and adjusting travel plans, MarketWatch has reported. Those who can are looking for cheaper gas prices in their area.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
AMD has ‘indispensable assets’ — powering the stock toward its best run in two decades
AMD’s business of selling server CPUs has renewed shine in the eyes of investors.

Slashdot
Open 
Anthropic Rolls Out Claude Opus 4.7, an AI Model That Is Less Risky Than Mythos
Anthropic released Claude Opus 4.7, calling it its strongest generally available model and an improvement over Opus 4.6 in areas like software engineering, instruction-following, tool use, and agentic coding. But the company says it is "less broadly capable" than the restricted Claude Mythos Preview, "which Anthropic rolled out to a select group of companies as part of a new cybersecurity initiative called Project Glasswing earlier this month," reports CNBC. From the report: The launch of Claude Opus 4.7 on Thursday comes after Anthropic launched Claude Opus 4.6 in February. Anthropic said the new model outperforms Claude Opus 4.6 across many use cases, including industry benchmarks for agentic coding, multidisciplinary reasoning, scaled tool use and agentic computer use, according to a release. Anthropic said it experimented with efforts to "differentially reduce" Claude Opus 4.7's cyber capabilities during training.

The company encouraged security professionals who are interested in using the model for "legitimate cybersecurity purposes" to apply through a formal verification program. Claude Opus 4.7 is available across all of Anthropic's Claude products, its application programming interface and through cloud providers Microsoft, Google and Amazon. The new model is the same price as Claude Opus 4.6, Anthropic said.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Planet PostgreSQL
Open 
Ming Ying: ParadeDB is Officially on Railway
Deploy ParadeDB on Railway with one click. Full-text search, vector search, and hybrid search over Postgres — now available on your favorite cloud platform.

Mail Online
Open 
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor is urged to relinquish his City of London Freedom honour amid Epstein fallout
It is understood that elected members of the City of London Corporation have written to the former prince, 66, asking him to relinquish his Freedom of the City honour.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Hegseth’s Pentagon prayer mirrors fake bible verse from Pulp Fiction
The defense secretary said his prayer drew on Ezekiel, but wording closely matches Quentin Tarantino dialogueIt was perhaps inevitable that a braggadocious Christian nationalist defense secretary elevated from his role as a weekend Fox News television host would pluck a fake Bible verse from a violent Hollywood blockbuster and present it at a Pentagon prayer session to rally the troops for the “holy war” in Iran.Certainly among a glut of stories swirling around Pete Hegseth this week, including articles of impeachment brought against him by a group of ambitious Democratic lawmakers, the bizarre allegation that the Bible-thumping Hegseth was passing off a fire-and-brimstone script by Quentin Tarantino, an Oscar-winning director, as the word of the Lord was far too compelling to ignore. Continue reading...

The Verge
Open 
Microsoft planning Surface Laptop with an OLED display
Microsoft is preparing to launch new Surface Pro and Surface Laptop models in the coming months. Windows Central reports that the refreshed models will include both Intel and Qualcomm variants, with Microsoft opting for an OLED display option for the Surface Laptop this year. Microsoft is expected to launch new Surface Pro and Laptop models […]

The Verge
Open 
Google’s AI Mode update lets you open links without leaving the page
Google is upgrading AI Mode in Chrome with a new feature that will allow you to open links to sources alongside your chat. Now, instead of automatically opening a new tab, clicking a source will open the website side by side with AI Mode, allowing you to ask follow-up questions about what's on the page. […]

The Verge
Open 
OpenAI’s big Codex update is a direct shot at Anthropic’s Claude Code
OpenAI is beefing up its agentic coding and development system Codex with a suite of updates that let it use your computer, generate images, and remember from past experiences. Codex will now be able to operate desktop apps on your computer, OpenAI says in a blog post announcing the update. It can work in the […]

The Verge
Open 
The nine best ways to protect, customize, and accessorize your MacBook Neo
The MacBook Neo is poised to be a top-selling laptop in 2026, thanks in large part to its affordable $599 entry price. Despite launching at a more accessible price point than Apple’s $1,099 (though often discounted) 2026 MacBook Air, the Neo makes surprisingly few concessions in terms of build quality. Its design has the same […]

Computer Weekly
Open 
CYBERUK ’26: UK lagging on legal protections for cyber pros
Ahead of next week's CYBERUK conference, the CyberUp Campaign for reform of the UK's hacking laws urges the government to keep focus, and proposes a four-pillar framework that would protect cyber professionals from prosecution.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Jeep-Maker Stellantis Signs AI Deal With Microsoft
Jeep-Maker Stellantis Signs AI Deal With Microsoft

Stellantis and Microsoft are teaming up in a five‑year strategic deal to accelerate the deployment of AI across the automotive company's large portfolio of brands, including Alfa Romeo, Chrysler, Jeep, Maserati, Peugeot, and others.

The companies plan to develop more than 100 AI initiatives across customer care, product development, and operations. These include predictive maintenance, AI-assisted testing and validation, faster rollout of digital features, and personalized in-car services.

"By leveraging AI‑driven insights from secure, encrypted data, Stellantis reaffirms its commitment to put customers at the center of everything it does," Stellantis wrote in a press release.

Stellantis will build an AI-driven global cyber defense center covering its IT systems, connected vehicles, factories, and digital products, with the objective of detecting threats faster and improving resilience across its operations.



One example of physical AI being integrated into vehicles is the one highlighted by the automaker.


For example, Peugeot drivers may receive intelligent recommendations for more energy‑efficient driving in urban environments, along with proactive vehicle-health insights and feature updates designed to improve everyday usability.


The Stellantis-Microsoft partnership appears to be an attempt to push the legacy automaker into the 21st century, though there is still no indication that future Stellantis vehicles will get an in-car chatbot like those already standard on Teslas.

Last year, Tesla rolled out an over-the-air software update that integrated Grok, xAI’s AI assistant. At the same time, drivers enjoy the luxury of the Full Self-Driving (Supervised) system, which offers autonomous driving. Together, these features show how Tesla is years ahead of legacy OEMs, with physical AI already present on America's highways.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 12:05

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Google In Talks With Department Of War To Deploy Gemini AI In Classified Settings
Google In Talks With Department Of War To Deploy Gemini AI In Classified Settings

The Information, citing multiple people familiar with the discussions, reports that Google is now negotiating with the Department of War on an agreement that would allow Gemini AI models to be deployed in classified settings. This development suggests the DoW is moving very quickly to broaden the use of frontier models for military and intelligence purposes after the Anthropic fiasco.

The agreement under discussion would permit the DoW to deploy Gemini for lawful uses, signaling what can only be seen as a critical expansion of Google's DoW business, as AI models are being deeply embedded across defense and administrative functions. Sources say both parties are still negotiating the terms.



Those sources noted that Google proposed additional language in the contract to ensure that AI models used by the DoW would not be weaponized for domestic mass surveillance or for autonomous weapons without "appropriate" human oversight.

As we've previously noted, AI kill chains and autonomous weapons are flooding the battlefield across Eurasia. 

The potential deal comes after the Trump administration blacklisted Anthropic for restricting the military use of its AI models.

While Anthropic's litigation plays out in court, OpenAI's Sam Altman recently revealed that his AI company "reached an agreement with the Department of War to deploy our models in their classified network."

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 12:45

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Oil Jumps As Report On 6-Month Iran Deal Timeline Crushes Ceasefire Hopes, Hormuz Still Locked Down
Oil Jumps As Report On 6-Month Iran Deal Timeline Crushes Ceasefire Hopes, Hormuz Still Locked Down

Summary


Trump unveils 10-day Lebanon ceasefire, but which Hezbollah has not signed on for, amid heavy IDF attacks on south. BBG reports on potential 6-month timeframe for comprehensive Iran deal, oil spikes.


Iran seeks to boost rial through toll payment scheme; vessels pay Hormuz passage through Iranian banks.


US Navy: vessels seeking entry into Hormuz Strait now fair game for boarding, search, and outright seizure - including for suspicion of 'contraband'.


Hegseth: US forces are ready to restart combat if Iran doesn’t agree to a deal & strait blockade to continue for as long as it takes. Already 14 ships have been turned around.


Iran's parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf calls ceasefire in Lebanon "as important as a ceasefire in Iran."




//-->

//-->

//-->


Trump announces end of military operations against Iran by May 31st?
Yes 70% · No 31%View full market & trade on Polymarket *  *  *

Gulf, European officials See Needing 6 Months for Iran deal: BBG, Oil Spikes

A big headline out of Bloomberg has sent oil prices higher:


Some Gulf Arab and European leaders believe that a US-Iran peace deal will take about six months to be agreed and that the warring sides should extend their ceasefire to cover that timeframe, according to officials from the regions familiar with the matter.

The leaders want the vital Strait of Hormuz opened immediately to restore energy flows and are warning in private that a global food crisis may develop if that doesn’t happen by next month, said the officials, who asked not to be identified discussing private talks.


But important caveats remain: who are these "some" Gulf and "European leaders" - the latter who have remained far to the sidelines during this crisis, but who are yes still suffering the effects of the ultra-risky Operation Epic Fury Iran war gambit by Trump. Spike in crude...



Trump: Truce in Lebanon

President Trump has announced an apparent Lebanon breakthrough, announcing on Truth Social that Lebanon and Israel have agreed to a 10-day ceasefire. This just after on Thursday Israel launched at least 50 airstrikes in a matter of two hours on South Lebanon, according to national media. Israel says late Thursday its forces have no plans to withdraw ground troops from Southern Lebanon. Operations there look to continue, but presumably the ceasefire means Beirut might not be hit in the interim. 

This week, Rubio oversaw historic peace talks between Lebanese officials and the Israeli government; however, which did not include Hezbollah. Both Tehran and Hezbollah have insisted that the Lebanon conflict should be resolved through the Pakistan mediated US-Iran process. The Lebanese government has little actual sway over Hezbollah, the country's single most well-armed and influential paramilitary organization, which has more missiles and arms than even the national army. This means it remains a big unknown whether this 10-day truce will hold. Trump's Truth Social message, which claims he solved "9 wars across the world" and a "lasting peace":



Defiant Iran Reasserts Toll System: Paid Through Iranian Banks

An Iranian parliament official has been cited in newswires as saying the country's planned Strait of Hormuz toll for ships seeking to pass is to be paid through Iranian banks. Previously it was said to be through cryptocurrency, and could be as a high as $2 million Oil rose higher, given this is another indicator this game of chicken in the narrow waterway could soon lead to fresh hostilities, despite the 2-week ceasefire still being in place, soon to expire.

As for negotiations, there's optimism another round of US-Iran talks will occur, with both sides having agreed in principle, but Iran's government informed Pakistan that the US must back off its maximal demands.


Reuters: U.S. and Iranian negotiators have scaled back ambitions for a comprehensive peace deal and are instead seeking a temporary memorandum to prevent a return ​to conflict, two Iranian sources told Reuters.


Below is a machine translation from the Persian of the fresh parliament statement via state-linked ISNA:

The plan to consolidate Iran's sovereignty in the Strait of Hormuz is being framed as a way to strengthen the rial.
Iran is seeking a regulatory role in the Strait of Hormuz - one of the world’s most sensitive chokepoints -positioning it as oversight, not disruption or blackmail.
Under the plan, foreign ships would settle accounts through offices in Iran or via the Iranian banking system, a move aimed at boosting the rial.
Estimated current revenue from managing and regulating maritime traffic in the Strait of Hormuz: $10-15 billion.
Boarding, Search, & Outright Seizure

Ships seeking to enter the Hormuz Strait already sanctioned by the US just got a lot more vulnerable: under Washington’s blockade of Iranian ports, they're now fair game for boarding, search, and outright seizure, per US Naval Forces Central Command.

"In addition to enforcing the blockade, all Iranian vessels, vessels with active OFAC sanctions, and vessels suspected of carrying contraband, are subject to belligerent right to visit and search," the notice said, referring to the Office of Foreign Assets Control. "These vessels, regardless of location, are subject to visit, board, search, and seizure."

The definition of "contraband" is broad and expansive. It spans weapons, ammunition, combat aircraft, and military electronics, WSJ has described. "Petroleum products and lubricants are conditional contraband due to their essential role in military operations and their contribution to Iran’s war-sustaining economy," the advisory also said. "Contraband is defined as goods that are destined for an enemy and that may be susceptible to use in armed conflict."
US Marine Corps image

Up until now, the blockade - initially rolled out Monday - was limited to ships moving in and out of Iranian ports, but the definition who can be targeted just widened. Meanwhile, US Central Command (CENTCOM) said Wednesday that in the first 48 hours, not a single ship made it past the blockade.

Hormuz Blockade: 'As Long As It Takes'

The US will maintain a naval blockade of Iran for as long as it takes, Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth has stated in a press briefing Thursday. He and Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Dan Caine say that US forces are ready to resume major combat operations at a moment's notice, which suggests the initial two-week ceasefire could get extended, as was widely reported the day prior. But this also suggests that Washington likely has no appetite for resuming major aerial operations directly against Iran anytime soon.


General Caine:
At each point, the United States Navy will transmit a warning—a young sailor, normally on the bridge of one of those destroyers. A junior officer picks up that mic and transmits, and I quote:
"Do not attempt to breach the blockade.
Vessels will be boarded for… pic.twitter.com/VT6LvPBUnT
— Clash Report (@clashreport) April 16, 2026
On the question of resumption of major combat operations, Hegseth warned: "To Iran, choose wisely. I pray you choose a deal which is within your grasp for the betterment of your people and the betterment of the world." He followed with, "In the meantime, the War Department is locked and loaded." Additional main highlights to the Hegseth/Caine update and presser:

Iran likes to say it controls Strait of Hormuz but it has no navy
Energy industry not destroyed 'yet', US blockade shutting down exports
For as long as it takes, we will maintain blockade
Launching operation 'economic fury'
Iran is digging out bombed out launchers
I hope you choose a deal which is within your grasp
But again, the chief takeaway is that the Pentagon and Trump administration are making clear that US forces are ready to restart combat if Iran doesn't agree to a deal. On that front, US officials say future talks are likely to be held again in Pakistan’s capital, Islamabad. Prior reports have indicated both sides have "agreed in principle" to engage in another round of talks.

Iran's PressTV touting ability to inflict global economic pain...


International Monetary Fund’s chief economist says that growth is expected to slow this year amid repercussions from the war against Iran and disruptions to global oil and gas trade.
Follow Press TV on Telegram: https://t.co/LWoNSpkc2J pic.twitter.com/ZAty9htTov
— Press TV 🔻 (@PressTV) April 15, 2026
Pentagon: 13 Ships Turned Around

Since the blockade went live, US forces have already turned around 13 ships, according to Gen. Caine in the same briefing. He underscored how far this reach extends, saying operations will take place "inside Iran's territorial seas and in international waters."

Officially, the Pentagon claims the blockade is limited - targeting Iran’s ports and coastal areas while sparing vessels simply passing through the Strait of Hormuz. In practice, however, the net is touted as much wider, as US forces "will actively pursue any Iranian-flagged vessel or any vessel attempting to provide material support to Iran," including so-called "dark fleet vessels carrying Iranian oil," Caine added.

He confirmed that more than 10,000 service members are now involved in the blockade, but with more US servicemembers en route to the region.

Lebanon Still Bombed Heavily by Israel amid US Ceasefire Efforts

Israeli jets pounded Nabatiyeh in southern Lebanon Thursday, unleashing one of the heaviest barrages there since the war began and sending black smoke billowing over the region. Strikes hit near the industrial zone and a supermarket on Nabih Berri Avenue, with nearby suburbs also taking damage, according to Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency.

Iran has signaled urgency on de-escalation, with parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf calling ceasefire in Lebanon "as important as a ceasefire in Iran." He described, "In the Islamabad negotiations and afterwards, we have been seriously pursuing efforts to compel the adversaries to establish a permanent ceasefire in all areas of conflict." Pakistan's army chief is in Tehran mediating between Washington and Tehran.


⚡#BREAKING Lebanese President Joseph Aoun said in a conversation with US Secretary of State Marco: "I am not willing to talk to Netanyahu"
— War Monitor (@WarMonitors) April 16, 2026
Lebanon's leadership is in th emeantime framing any truce as a gateway to talks, despite Hezbollah having rejected direct talks with Israel. The ceasefire it is "demanding with Israel" would be a "natural entry point for direct negotiations," President Aoun said, adding: "Lebanon is keen to halt the escalation… so that the targeting of the innocents ceases, and the destruction of homes" stops.

Destruction of Al-Qasimia Bridge in Southern Lebanon


جسر القاسمية pic.twitter.com/u39LVosxnF
— Lebanon 24 (@Lebanon24) April 16, 2026
He stressed negotiations "are to be undertaken by the Lebanese authorities alone," and said "the withdrawal of Israeli forces… is an essential step," alongside redeploying the army "up to the international borders" to "end any manifestation of armed presence."

And yet Israeli strikes are now hitting infrastructure. A key bridge over the Litani River near Qasmiyeh - linking Tyre and Sidon - was reportedly destroyed, though Israel said it only "struck adjacent to it." The broader campaign is cutting off southern Lebanon, targeting chiefly Hezbollah positions, Israeli officials have claimed.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 12:45

The Hill
Open 
Greene says Trump told her if her 'son were to get killed,' it would be her fault
Former Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) said during a recent podcast appearance that President Trump had an “unkind” response when she messaged him about receiving death threats against her and her family after she resigned from Congress. Greene told the “Piers Morgan Uncensored” host Wednesday that she reached out to FBI Director Kash Patel and...

The Hill
Open 
Commission of Fine Arts approves Trump Triumphal Arch to move forward
The U.S. Commission of Fine Arts (CFA) on Thursday approved the project to construct President Trump's proposed 250-foot Triumphal Arch, to be located between the Lincoln Memorial and Arlington National Cemetery. The commission reviewed the Interior Department's submitted plans to build an arch in Memorial Circle on Columbia Island, a human-made, National Park Service-ran island...

The Hill
Open 
White House budget director: ‘We’re working’ on funding request for Iran conflict
White House Budget Director Russell Vought told senators Thursday that the White House is still working on a request to send Congress to fund the military conflict with Iran, which is estimated to cost more than $10 billion per week. Asked by Senate Budget Committee Chair Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) about when the White House will...

The Hill
Open 
Trump arts commissioner wants 3 arches in DC, not 1
A President Trump appointee to the federal Commission of Fine Arts proposed adding three arches to the nation’s capital instead of one, alleging that it aligns with the original Pierre L’Enfant plan for the city. Rodney Mims Cook Jr. has been helping Trump prepare for America 250 celebrations by sharing architectural input on the new...

The Hill
Open 
The farm bill could signal the death of responsible dog sports
The farm bill contains an amendment that could potentially ban routine dog training methods and canine sporting events, which has been promoted by animal-rights extremists and could be interpreted in ways that eliminate lawful hunting activities and other traditional dog training methods.

The Hill
Open 
Trump: Israel and Lebanon agree to 10-day ceasefire
President Trump said Thursday that Israel and Lebanon have agreed to a 10-day ceasefire after meeting in Washington to try to strike a peace deal. Trump wrote on Truth Social that he had an “excellent conversation” with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Lebanese President Joseph Aoun. “These two Leaders have agreed that in order...

The Hill
Open 
Driscoll on Army Gen. George's ouster: Civilians 'get to pick the leaders'
Army Secretary Dan Driscoll on Thursday addressed the firing of the service’s former chief of staff, Gen. Randy George, saying he deeply respects the ousted officer but that civilian officials “get to pick the leaders that they want.” “I was in North Carolina when Gen. George was asked to put in his resignation paperwork, with my...

The Hill
Open 
House Republicans narrowly reject effort to end Trump’s war with Iran
House Republicans on Thursday defeated legislation designed to end the Iran War, marking a win for President Trump and another setback for the constitutional purists fighting to reaffirm Congress’s unique powers to use military force overseas. The vote was 213 to 214, with one Republican — Rep. Thomas Massie (Ky.) — bucking GOP leaders to...

The Hill
Open 
Judge limits White House to ‘below-ground construction’ of ballroom 
A federal judge has limited President Trump’s White House ballroom project to “below-ground construction,” rejecting the administration’s claims that the entire project must proceed for security reasons. U.S. District Judge Richard Leon, an appointee of former President George W. Bush, ruled last month that construction of the $400 million ballroom must stop except where “necessary to ensure the safety and security”...

The Hill
Open 
Beshear says Vance forgetting commandments to not worship false idols, tell lies
Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear (D) said Vice President Vance has forgotten that worship of “false idols” and support of individuals who tell “lies” is a breach of Catholic law.  “I think what J.D. Vance is forgetting is the commandment that thou shalt not worship false idols,” Beshear told MS NOW’s Jen Psaki on Wednesday. “Thankfully,...

The Hill
Open 
Harris hammers Trump over gas prices amid 'war of choice'
Former Vice President Kamala Harris cast blame Wednesday on President Trump for the surge in gas prices amid the U.S. conflict with Iran, which she called a “war of choice.” “It’s 15 more dollars every time you fill up a tank of gas,” Harris said outside a gas station in Charlotte, N.C., in a video...

The Hill
Open 
Pope Leo needles Trump in clash over Iran
👑 Plus: Itinerary revealed for King Charles, Queen Camilla’s US visit {beacon} Happy Thursday. My social media feeds are all talking about the viral video of pilots caught “meowing” on a hot mic over the radio. Yes, you read that right. Air traffic control calls them out and it’s hilarious. 🎥 Enjoy the clip  ...

The Hill
Open 
Live updates: Congress grills Kennedy, Vought, Driscoll; Trump announces 10-day Israel-Lebanon truce
President Trump on Thursday announced that Israel and Lebanon have agreed to a 10-day ceasefire. He wrote on Truth Social that he had an “excellent conversation” with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Lebanese President Joseph Aoun. Chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Dan Caine told reporters on Thursday morning that 13 ships have turned around at...

BBC UK News
Open 
'My son died alone, scared, and in pain'
A Dudley nursery, its owner and nursery worker are being sentenced over baby Noah Sibanda's death.

ZDNet News
Open 
Google to pay $135M settlement to Android phone users - how to claim your share if you qualify
The suit alleges that Google sent data over cellular connections without your permission. Here's how to file a settlement claim to get paid.

ZDNet News
Open 
Want to build a startup that gets acquired? This founder shares 5 proven tips
Jem Walters built and sold a fintech app called Snoop. Here are the choices he made and would do again for success.

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Italy’s UniCredit Announces Investment in BlockInvest
Italian banking services provider UniCredit has committed €4 million to secure roughly a 16% ownership stake in BlockInvest, a tech firm specializing in blockchain-based solutions. Announced recently this month, this partnership represents a key advancement in reshaping financial market infrastructures by embracing blockchain as the... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
How Gradient Labs Takes Agentic Customer Service Well Past The Usual 15% of Queries
  Gradient Labs has successfully applied Artificial Intelligence (AI) further and faster into customer service than most fintechs. The key to its success, co-founder and CEO Dimitri Masin said, is to provide a better and faster result that leaves customers more satisfied than they’d be... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
On USA Tax Day, Old Letter from Former Defense Secretary Don Rumsfeld Sent to IRS Highlights Broken Tax Code
This post on X distributed yesterday generated a good number of views. It includes a 2014 letter to the US Internal Revenue Service (IRS) that highlights the poor state of the US tax code. Donald Rumsfeld, an old pol who passed away in 2021, who... Read More

TechRadar Reviews
Open 
Secretlab Magnus Evo standing desk review: Streamlined and refined but unmistakably Secretlab in spirit

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11369 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Maintenance - Sheffield Area (Close)
Maintenance successfully completed.

Start: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 09:00

End: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 15:00

Clear: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 17:55

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 17:56

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

Techdirt
Open 
Oh Look, The MAGA FTC Built The Censorship Industrial Complex It Was Screaming About
We’ve been covering the Trump administration’s escalating campaign against NewsGuard for a while now. It started with the House Oversight Committee’s absurd investigation of the company for the crime of expressing opinions about news reliability. But then there was the FTC’s burdensome fishing expedition and blocking of the merger of two advertising giants — Omnicom […]

Mail Online
Open 
The Pitt fans are stunned to learn breakout star Taylor Dearden's dad is Bryan Cranston
Many were surprised to find out that she is the daughter of the 70-year-old Malcolm In The Middle actor.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
LIV golf stars face career limbo with Saudi investment expected to end in 2026
LIV CEO’s rallying email to staff did not refer to 2027Without alternative funding future is bleak for rebel tourSeveral leading names in the world of golf are facing career limbo at the end of 2026, amid expectation Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund will withdraw backing for the LIV Tour. While the likelihood is Bryson DeChambeau and Jon Rahm will be afforded a pathway back to the PGA Tour, the future for others who made lucrative switches to LIV is far more uncertain.LIV’s executives, who were in bullish form over the circuit’s future when on site at last week’s Masters, subsequently attended a summit with the PIF in New York. There, the financial impact of the Middle East crisis is believed to have been specifically cited for a sudden and dramatic change in the fund’s approach. Insiders believe the PIF will seek to apply force majeure in relation to events in the Middle East as a means to extricate itself from contracts beyond the end of this year. Saudi Arabia appears more generally to be shifting focus on sporting projects in the coming years. Without access to alternative funding, LIV’s outlook is bleak given each event alone carries a prize fund of $30m. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Man used AI to make false statements in effort to shut down London nightclub
Case of businessman using AI to generate false letters of complaint against Heaven nightclub part of a growing issue, say policeA businessman has pleaded guilty to making false statements in order to shut down a nightclub, which police believe were generated using AI.A Metropolitan police source said the use of AI to generate letters by complainants who do not exist is a growing issue. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: Lebanon and Israel agree 10-day ceasefire to begin within hours, Trump says
Israeli forces will not withdraw from the south of Lebanon during the ceasefire, according to reportsUS and Iran in indirect talks to extend two-week ceasefireIran has stopped all petrochemical exports to prioritise domestic supply and prevent shortages of raw materials, Reuters reported.The state-owned National Petrochemical Company ordered firms to suspend exports until further notice. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Churchwarden jailed for murdering pensioner has conviction quashed
Benjamin Field has been in prison for the murder of Peter Farquhar, 69.

Telegraph
Open 
Explosive measles outbreaks are a sign of things to come
This man-made public health emergency is an active threat requiring an immediate response

Telegraph
Open 
The best resorts in Gran Canaria
Well thought out places to stay, from sleek adults-only retreats to all-singing, all-dancing hotels just right for families

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Police probe Islamist group's arson attack claims
An Islamist group with links to Iran has claimed responsibility for three attacks in north London.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Malala's brother Khushal on fleeing the Taliban and facing the manosphere
Khushal Yousafzai has been opening up to BBC Asian Network about the impact of one day in 2012.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Israel, Lebanon agree 10-day ceasefire, Trump says
Trump made the announcement after he spoke with Lebanese President Joseph Aoun and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Hezbollah says its commitment to the truce depends on Israel stopping attacks. DW has more.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Phil Ellis: Bath Mat review – Taskmaster goof celebrates his midlife failures
The Stand Comedy Club, GlasgowThe northerner finds the funny in banalities with this raucous compendium of all-in-it-together bantsPhil Ellis has been watching Netflix specials, and has noticed that all the alpha standups now have a hype-man to big them up pre-show. Here, then, is his own version, a shuffling fellow northerner (comic Tom Short) deadpanning a list of Ellis’s non-achievements in a threadbare American accent, punctuated by gunshot SFX and an airhorn. The modest success of a Taskmaster stint has not gone to Ellis’s head: with his new show, he continues to revel in the failures and banalities of his midlife, a 44-year-old man recently moved home with his parents – single, balding, skint.In Bath Mat, he turns all that into a raucous laughalong, inviting us to pitch abuse at him, straw-polling his observations with the audience, and laughing himself, throughout, to think he gets away with doing this for a living. Over two hours, I found the set more attenuated than the concentrated hits of Ellis I’ve enjoyed on the fringe. It’s a structureless compendium of barely related routines, with more emphasis on so-so standup than the tomfoolish antics that often characterise his work. With sections such as the chat he has with his crowd about roadkill, or another about luxury treatment for pets, we’re in the territory less of precision-focused comedy and more all-in-it-together bants. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
IMF chief Georgieva warns ‘everyone will feel the impact’ of Iran war energy price shock – business live
There will be flight cancellations ‘soon’ if oil supplies are not restored in coming weeks, says head of IEAEurope has only six weeks’ supply of jet fuel left owing to Iran war, says energy chiefThe UK’s growth acceleration in February is likely to be “short-lived”, due to the Iran war, warns Andrew Hunter, associate director and senior economist at Moody’s Analytics:“The 0.5% month-over-month jump in U.K. GDP in February, and slight upward revision to January’s data, echoes the earlier improvement in the surveys and suggests the economy had more momentum at the start of this year than previously thought.However, with those surveys weakening quite sharply in March as the Middle East conflict sent energy prices soaring, this upturn is likely to prove short lived. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘It was stressful’: inside Scotland women’s Rugby World Cup contract wrangle
Scotland’s tournament was overshadowed by off-field uncertainty but, says former international Beth Blacklock, the future is looking brighter“There were players who were definitely struggling,” says the former Scotland international Beth Blacklock of the contract uncertainty that surrounded the squad before their run to the 2025 Rugby World Cup quarter-finals.In pre-World Cup camps talks were taking place between players and the Scottish Rugby Union. Some of the 32-player squad had deals that ran until May 2026 but the rest of the team had arrangements that ended in October after the World Cup had concluded. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
What are the UK government’s plans to regulate social media for under-16s?
As Keir Starmer tells tech bosses to make their sites safer, ministers are weighing up what they can doStarmer tells social media firms: ‘Things can’t go on like this’Keir Starmer has told social media firms that “things can’t go on like this” in a meeting with tech bosses in Downing Street as pressure mounts for tougher restrictions on the industry.Ministers are considering imposing an under-16 age restriction on social media as well as other options to limit app use. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Putin is preparing for 'Pearl Harbor in space' nuclear attack, US military chief warns
Vladimir Putin is planning a Pearl Harbor-style attack against satellites in space that could cause pandemonium across the world, a US military chief has warned. 

Mail Online
Open 
Julia Roberts' brother, 69, reveals he suffered from 'deep depression' after horror car crash put him in a coma in his 20s
The 69-year-old actor told how he fell into a deep depression after suffering 'short-term memory loss' and difficulties with hand-eye co-ordination after the crash.

Mail Online
Open 
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor is urged to relinquish his City of London Freedom honour amid Epstein fallout
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor has been urged to give up his City of London Freedom honour amid the fallout of his links with paedophile financier Jeffrey Epstein. 

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Next chief executive Simon Wolfson paid record £7m last year
Company says ‘sustained outperformance’ merited pay rise as it ups profit guidance by £8m for the year to January 2027Business live – latest updatesThe Next chief executive, Simon Wolfson, took home more than £7m last year, his highest ever pay package, and could be handed up to £9.27m this year after the retailer announced plans to increase his basic salary and bonuses.The listed company said it was increasing its pay deal for the long-term leader of the fashion and homewares retailer, which now controls a string of brands in the UK including Gap, Victoria’s Secret, Cath Kidston, Reiss and FatFace, as his remuneration was 30% below the average for FTSE 100 bosses. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
From Burnley to Bayern: Kompany trains sights on PSG and European supremacy
Manager’s grounded attitude has helped the free-scoring German giants set up a tantalising Champions League showdown and de facto finalIf you thought that was good, wait until you have done it at Ewood Park. While everyone else struggled to compose themselves after watching a modern classic unfold between Bayern Munich and Real Madrid, it was Vincent Kompany who supplied the cooling balm. He had just taken Bayern back to the Champions League semi-finals in scintillating fashion, another feat to justify the decision to take him from Burnley two years ago. Not many managers have breathed such rarefied air within days of turning 40. For Kompany, though, it sat snugly alongside the snappy Lancashire climate.“I remember we beat Blackburn twice with Burnley,” he said, having been asked whether Wednesday night marked a crowning achievement in his coaching career. “Nobody in this room will want to compare it with the game today, but it was amazing. I experienced so much as a player and that was incredible. For Bayern this game is an amazing feeling, but I don’t think you wait for Real Madrid to say ‘This is the best’. You have to get it from other things as well.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Epsom church minister condemns ‘intimidating’ protest over alleged gang-rape
The Rev Catherine Hutton says ‘hate cannot drive out hate’ after protesters gather to demand information about suspectsThe minister of a church near the scene of an alleged gang-rape in Epsom has condemned the “intimidating” protest involving hundreds of people gathering in the Surrey town to demand information about the suspects from police.A woman in her 20s is believed to have been assaulted outside Epsom Methodist church after leaving Labyrinth nightclub on Saturday between 2am and 4am, according to Surrey police. Continue reading...

Russia Today News
Open 
There’s only one way to resolve the Taiwan question

Russia Today News
Open 
‘You’re killing children!’: Vance heckled at key MAGA event (VIDEOS)

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
A big topic for others, not for her - Eta on groundbreaking head coach role
New Union Berlin head coach Marie-Louise Eta discusses becoming the first female to manage a men's team in one of Europe's top five leagues.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Is this the beginning of the end for LIV Golf?
With speculation continuing over LIV Golf's future, BBC Sport analyses whether the breakaway tour will continue.

The Register
Open 
Iran has something America can only dream of: cheap broadband
Shame about the internet blackouts and airstrikes North America has some of the world's most expensive broadband, according to a new study, while Iran has the cheapest.…

The Register
Open 
DuckDB uses RDBMS to attack classic 'small changes' problem in lakehouses
Batching teensy changes in chunks creates massive performance boost, DuckDB Labs team claims The team behind in-process OLAP database DuckDB has put forward a solution to the "small changes" problem that they say plagues lakehouse implementations of the kind based on technologies from Databricks, Snowflake, Google, and others.…

Mail Online
Open 
How Leeds United are winning the battle to beat relegation: Insiders reveal Ethan Ampadu's vital role, the surprise player-bonus plan, The Flying Pizza visits, the new best-in-class training facilities and the 'no d***heads' policy
In recent years, April in Leeds has been a time of tension and impending doom. But the emotion now is excitement. So what's changed?

Gizmodo
Open 
Could This AI-Simulated Brain Lead to Human Mind-Uploading?
We’re not holding our breath.

Gizmodo
Open 
Google Makes Image Generation a Little Creepier With Personal Intelligence
Solving a problem no one had.

Gizmodo
Open 
The ‘Avatar’ Movie Leak Didn’t Come From a Paramount Email, But It’s Still Just as Bad
A new report puts a spotlight on the aftermath of one of the biggest leaks Paramount has faced in years.

Gizmodo
Open 
Webb Telescope Resolves Cosmic Identity Crisis Between Planets and Stars
Where do massive planets end and stars begin? It may come down to how they formed.

Gizmodo
Open 
SpaceX and Other Elon Musk Companies Are Propping Up Cybertruck Sales
SpaceX alone reportedly accounted for nearly 20% of Cybertrucks registered in the U.S. in late 2025.

UK Legislation
Open 
The Planning Data (England) Regulations 2026
These Regulations specify categories of planning data for the purpose of section 84 of the Levelling-up and Regeneration Act 2023 (“the 2023 Act”) and require a relevant planning authority to comply with any approved planning data standards which are applicable in processing that data. The Secretary of State publishes the relevant data standards from time to time on the following website:
https://www.gov.uk/guidance/.

UK Legislation
Open 
The Electronic Commerce (Amendment and Consequential Provision) Regulations 2026
These Regulations amend provisions of regulations which relate to the Country of Origin Principle (“CoOP”) set out in Article 3 of Directive 2000/31/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 8 June 2000 on certain legal aspects of information society services, in particular electronic commerce, in the Internal Market (OJ No. L 178, 17.7.2000, pp. 1–16) (the “e-Commerce Directive”). The regulations amended or revoked by these Regulations are secondary retained EU law within the meaning of section 11(2) of the Retained EU Law (Revocation and Reform) Act 2023 (c. 28) or are amended as a consequence of amendments made to that secondary retained EU law.

UK Legislation
Open 
The Ports of Fleetwood and Silloth (Transfer of Undertaking) Harbour Revision Order 2026
This Order is made on the application of Associated British Ports (“A.B. Ports”).

Russia Today News
Open 
Pentagon taps US carmakers for weapons production – WSJ

Mail Online
Open 
Matt LeBlanc set for TV return 22 years after Friends finale on VERY different type of show
The 58-year-old actor established himself as a sitcom icon playing the charmingly dimwitted lothario Joey Tribbiani on 10 seasons of Friends from 1994 to 2004.

Mail Online
Open 
How to have an orgasm in middle-age during sex. It's the secret so many only dare whisper to friends. Now four once-unsatisfied over-40s bravely reveal their method... every unfufilled woman and complacent man must read
Four women aged over 40 share, with the utmost honesty, how they finally discovered how to have a fulfilling sex life in middle age. Their words should make every man sit up and take notice...

Mail Online
Open 
BBC confirms future of its most popular daytime drama after 13 years on screens
The cosy period crime drama is loosely based much-loved short stories of the same name.

Mail Online
Open 
Incestuous abuse, outrageous onset behaviour and now accusations against Katy Perry: Inside story of how Ruby Rose went from Hollywood's hottest wildcard to spending years in the wilderness
Ruby Rose was once Hollywood's hottest wildcard - a gender-fluid trailblazer who went from DJ'ing to global stardom almost overnight. Here's how it all went wrong.

Mail Online
Open 
Why a rapid heart rate, sudden dizziness, and struggling to get up the stairs could be much more serious than just being 'unfit'. It could be the major warning signs of this chronic uncurable condition
A few weeks ago I was at home when, out of nowhere, I began to feel dizzy. Within minutes, I was throwing up, then horizontal on the bathroom floor, unable to speak or get up.

Mail Online
Open 
RICHARD LITTLEJOHN: Is Wes Streeting for real, boasting about two thirds of patients only waiting 18 weeks for treatment? That's more than four months!
Streeting turned up on Nick Ferrari's LBC phone-in taking questions from callers. He at least had the sense to admit that some listeners would be shouting at the radio.

Mail Online
Open 
How I clawed my way out of £15k of debt as a single mum using a very unconventional method: Lilith now earns £44k a year... her trick sounds like madness, but read her story before you scoff
When Lilith's only child left home at 18, the moment was bittersweet. Yes, as a single parent, she would miss the close bond with Nathan - but it would certainly take some pressure off the finances.

Mail Online
Open 
British Gas launches fixed energy tariff £250 below predicted July price cap - but be quick if you want to sign up
British Gas has launched a new energy deal that offers good savings on the predicted level of the upcoming July cap, but you need to be quick - it closes soon.

Mail Online
Open 
When my beloved little sister asked me to donate a kidney to her, I said no. Now she's dead, the guilt will never leave me... But read my story and tell me you wouldn't have done the same
When doctors told Philippa she might need a kidney transplant, and she asked me to be her donor, you would assume I agreed without hesitation. Once upon a time, I would have assumed the same.

BBC World News
Open 
Ex-Virginia deputy governor kills wife and himself in murder-suicide, police say
Investigators say Justin Fairfax shot his wife, Cerina, multiple times before turning the gun on himself.

Mail Online
Open 
Uzbekistan national investment fund confirms London listing in rare boost to the City
Uzbekistan's national investment fund has confirmed plans to list in London, marking the country's first foray into global stock markets.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Tell us: do you use AI for fitness?
Is AI helping with your workouts? We want to hear about itAccording to reports, people are incorporating AI into their fitness routines in a variety of ways; they have it write up training plans, design meal plans and workout playlists, and provide feedback on form.We want to hear from you: how are you using AI in your workouts? Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Have you used the new EU border system, EES? We would like to hear from you
How long did you have to wait? Perhaps you are in a queue now. Tell us your experienceThe new EU entry-exit system (EES) has caused huge delays at border checks, with some people waiting for up to three hours, airports say.Passengers in airports in countries such as France, Germany, Belgium, Italy, Spain and Greece are waiting several hours, the Airports Council International (ACI) body has said. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Will revival of Crystal Palace’s ‘hallowed turf’ create more athletics history?
Redevelopment of the National Sports Centre would be a boost to locals and those who have fought for its return“There were trees growing out of the main stand and on the indoor track and no one was doing anything about it,” says John Powell of the groundswell of despair at a crumbling Crystal Palace barely a couple of years after the Olympics were hosted to acclaim on the other side of London.A month before Sir Mo Farah secured his first gold of London 2012 on Super Saturday, he had swept to victory in the 5,000m when Crystal Palace hosted its final London Grand Prix. But that summer’s Games appeared to signal the beginning of the end for the venue that had been the home of British athletics for the previous two decades and beyond. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Moisés Caicedo to agree lucrative new deal in show of faith for Chelsea project
BlueCo ownership can point to commitment of CaicedoJan Paul van Hecke and Alex Scott are players of interestMoisés Caicedo has handed Chelsea a major boost after verbally agreeing a new deal with the club.The midfielder has been a star performer since his £115m move from Brighton in 2023 and his decision to extend his current deal represents a show of faith in the Chelsea project after a turbulent period, with the club rocked by Enzo Fernández and Marc Cucurella using recent interviews to question the direction of travel at Stamford Bridge. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Metro Bank boss handed record £2.6m a year after slashing 1,000 jobs
Dan Frumkin’s pay package comes after bank’s near collapse and rescue by Colombian billionaireBusiness live – latest updatesMetro Bank’s chief executive has been handed a £2.6m pay packet – the largest in its history – a year after slashing 1,000 jobs in response to the lender’s near collapse.The figure is more than double the £1.2m Dan Frumkin was paid in 2024. Metro pushed through the pay bump and complex bonus scheme for the former RBS and Northern Rock banker at a shareholder meeting last year. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Epsom church minister condemns ‘intimidating’ protest over alleged rape
The Rev Catherine Hutton says ‘hate cannot drive out hate’ after protesters gathered to demand information about suspectsThe minister of a church near the scene of an alleged gang-rape in Epsom has condemned the “intimidating” protest involving hundreds of people gathering in the Surrey town to demand information about the suspects from police.A woman in her 20s is believed to have been assaulted outside Epsom Methodist church in Ashley Road after leaving Labyrinth nightclub on Saturday between 2am and 4am, according to Surrey police. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Islamist group claims arson attacks in London
An Islamist group with links to Iran has claimed responsibility for three attacks in north London.

CNET News
Open 
14 of the Best Peacock Shows You Can Stream Right Now
Emilia Clarke and Haley Lu Richardson star in the spy thriller series Ponies.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Three arrests after attempted arson attack at Persian media offices in London
An Islamist group with links to Iran has claimed responsibility for three attacks in north London.

Russia Today News
Open 
Ceasefire agreed upon between Israel and Lebanon – Trump

Mail Online
Open 
Widow, 78, was mauled to death by 'relative's two Rottweiler-like' dogs in Wolverhampton
Paramedics rushed to a ground-floor flat on Willis Pearson Avenue, Wolverhampton, at 11.30pm last night following reports that an elderly woman was injured.

Mail Online
Open 
Baywatch star David Charvet accused of striking and killing dog with his truck in 'hit-and-run' incident
Charvet is accused of striking an 11-year-old dog named Sunday early Thursday morning, the canine's owner Vera Errico has told TMZ.

BBC World News
Open 
Winner of €1m Picasso 'thought it was a scam', organiser tells BBC
One of the charity draw organisers tells BBC Radio 4's Front Row about calling the painting's new owner.

BBC World News
Open 
Meghan: 'I was the most trolled person in the entire world'
Speaking in Melbourne about the harms of social media, alongside the Duke of Sussex, Meghan said she was "bullied" every day for a decade.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Metro Bank boss handed record £2.6m after slashing 1,000 jobs
Dan Frumkin’s pay deal comes after bank’s near collapse and rescue by Colombian billionaireBusiness live – latest updatesMetro Bank’s chief executive has been handed a £2.6m pay packet – the largest in its history – a year after slashing 1,000 jobs in response to the lender’s near collapse.The figure is more than double the £1.2m Dan Frumkin was paid in 2024. Metro pushed through the pay bump and complex bonus scheme for the former RBS and Northern Rock banker at a shareholder meeting last year. Continue reading...

TechRadar News
Open 
Ex-PlayStation boss says Microsoft is 'trying so hard to will' Xbox Game Pass 'into health' and suggests 'a clarifying post mortem would do the entire industry some good'

TechRadar News
Open 
'Anyone with $10 could have walked straight through': Report warns this legit-looking software is actually antivirus-killing adware

TechRadar News
Open 
James Bond 007 First Light PS5 controller pre-order build-up live — the best early links to bookmark and info you need

TechRadar News
Open 
Rivals season 2 trailer looks bonk-bustingly brilliant — but we've got to wait months for the full Hulu and Disney+ series to release as series splits in two

TechRadar News
Open 
'Is AI impacting jobs right now? We’ve looked and, honestly, we haven’t seen it': LinkedIn exec says AI isn't causing a big drop-off in hiring just yet

TechRadar News
Open 
7 of the best Mac apps to level up your new MacBook Neo

TechRadar News
Open 
Amazon's latest sale on its best-selling tech gadgets feels like Prime Day — up to 50% off TVs, Ring Doorbells, Fire tablets, and Blink cameras

Digital Trends
Open 
Samsung could level up Galaxy S27 series performance away from the silicon 
Samsung's Galaxy S27 may debut UFS 5.0 storage, capable of over 10GB/s read speeds, on select models only, with rising production costs keeping the upgrade away from the full lineup.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Here’s who walked away with $32 billion in refunds from Trump’s tax cuts this tax season
Many homeowners in Democratic-leaning states got hefty tax refunds.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Elon Musk was pushed out at PayPal. Now he’s launching a rival that could ‘disrupt’ it.
Musk has a broader reach than PayPal, analysts say, and his X Money is offering a high 6% interest rate to attract users.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
You’re feeling the pinch at the gas pump. Wait until the electric bill comes.
While futures markets bet on peace, the ‘hidden’ price of physical oil is at record highs — and it’ll hit your utility bill next.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Intel’s stock has been ‘absolutely on fire.’ Now it needs to deliver on the hype.
The chip maker’s stock has surged on good news, but one analyst is still worried about the company’s fundamentals.

Russia Today News
Open 
Dozens taken hostage in Italian bank heist (VIDEO)

Slashdot
Open 
EU Age Verification App Announced To Protect Children Online
The EU says a new age-verification app is technically ready and could let users prove they are old enough to access restricted online content without revealing their identity or personal data. Deutsche Welle reports: Once released, users will be able to download the app from an app store and set it up using proof of identity, such as a passport or national ID card. They can then use it to confirm they are above a certain age when accessing restricted content, without revealing their identity. According to the Commission, the system is similar to the digital certificates used during the COVID-19 pandemic, which allowed people to prove their vaccination status.

The app is expected to support enforcement of the bloc's Digital Services Act, which aims to better regulate online platforms. This includes restricting access to content such as pornography, gambling and alcohol-related services. Officials say the app will be "completely anonymous" and built on open-source technology, meaning it could also be adopted outside the EU.

[...] While there is no binding EU-wide law yet, the European Parliament has called for a minimum age of 16 for social media access. For now, enforcement would largely fall to individual member states, but the new app is intended to help platforms comply with future national and EU rules.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Mail Online
Open 
Star Trek actress Marina Sirtis claims she was sexually harassed by late director Michael Winner and recalls how he made her 'lie topless on the concrete floor freezing for five hours during filming'
Marina, 71, first worked with Michael on the 1983 film The Wicked Lady, but the star does not have fond memories of working with him.

Mail Online
Open 
Masseur, 72, denies 55 sexual offences including attempted rape and voyeurism relating to 14 female clients
Terence McBrien, 72, of Alnwick, Northumberland, went before Newcastle Crown Court on Thursday for a hearing lasting about an hour.

BBC World News
Open 
How did a wolf become a fugitive in South Korea?
A wolf burrowed under a fence at his zoo in South Korea becoming the country's newest fugitive.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Tell us: have you ever been concerned about the behaviour of a child you know?
We would like to hear from people who have been so concerned about the behaviour or actions of a child they know that they have considered contacting the authoritiesHas a child you know displayed behaviour or done things that have made you consider going to the authorities?We would like to speak to people who have faced this very difficult dilemma. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
RFK Jr once cut penis off ‘road-killed raccoon’ in New York, new book reveals
Health secretary in a diary entry said his kids were in the car as he cut off animal’s genitals in 2001 to ‘study them later’Robert F Kennedy Jr once cut the penis off a road-killed raccoon in an incident that is just one of several involving dead animals that the controversial US health secretary has been involved in.A new book called RFK Jr: The Fall and Rise was published this week and reveals a diary entry for Kennedy that describes the prominent vaccine critic and leader of the “Make America healthy again” (Maha) movement stopping his car on a New York highway on 11 November 2001. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Will revival of Crystal Palace’s ‘hallowed turf’ create more athletics history?
Redevelopment of the National Sports Centre would be a boost to locals and those who have fought for its return“There were trees growing out of the main stand and on the indoor track and no one was doing anything about it,” says John Powell of the groundswell of despair at a crumbling Crystal Palace barely a couple of years after the Olympics were hosted to acclaim on the other side of London.A month before Sir Mo Farah secured his second gold of London 2012 on Super Saturday, he had swept to victory in the 5,000m when Crystal Palace hosted its final London Grand Prix. But that summer’s Games appeared to signal the beginning of the end for the venue that had been the home of British athletics for the previous two decades and beyond. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Metro Bank boss handed record £2.6m after slashing 1,000 jobs
Dan Frumkin’s pay package comes after bank’s near collapse and rescue by Colombian billionaireBusiness live – latest updatesMetro Bank’s chief executive has been handed a £2.6m pay packet – the largest in its history – a year after slashing 1,000 jobs in response to the lender’s near collapse.The figure is more than double the £1.2m Dan Frumkin was paid in 2024. Metro pushed through the pay bump and complex bonus scheme for the former RBS and Northern Rock banker at a shareholder meeting last year. Continue reading...

The Verge
Open 
Roku hits a major milestone with 100 million users
Roku continues to solidify itself in a very busy streaming landscape. As of April, over 100 million households are streaming with Roku devices, including its streaming sticks and boxes and Roku TVs. Roku originally spun out of Netflix in 2008, where it was conceived as an in-house streaming device. It's not just Roku that has […]

The Verge
Open 
It’s slushy season, and Ninja’s frozen drink machine is nearly half off
Woot is making it more affordable to own a frozen drink machine. Ninja’s Slushi that has an 88-ounce container for storing your ice-cold creations is down to $184.99 at Woot, which is a whopping 47 percent off its list price. The Slushi requires no ice, just the liquid of your choosing and a little time […]

The Verge
Open 
How Netflix made us fall in love with K-dramas
This is Lowpass by Janko Roettgers, a newsletter on the ever-evolving intersection of tech and entertainment, syndicated just for The Verge subscribers once a week. What do you get if you take a bunch of ripped, shirtless male K-pop idols in boxing gloves and have them spar in the ring until they're sweating? For Netflix: […]

The Verge
Open 
Anthropic releases a new Opus model amid Mythos Preview buzz
Anthropic has released its most powerful "generally available" model to date: Claude Opus 4.7. The company called it a step up from Opus 4.6 for advanced software engineering tasks, particularly in complex coding areas that in the past required more hand-holding. It's also supposed to be better at analyzing images and following instructions, and it […]

The Verge
Open 
Gemini can now pull from Google Photos to generate personalized images
Google's Personal Intelligence feature, which lets Gemini pull data from apps like Google Photos to offer responses tailored to you, can now use that data and its Nano Banana 2 image model to create images based on your personal context. With the feature, you can use prompts like "Design my dream house" or "Create a […]

The Verge
Open 
Microsoft’s new Xbox chief starts making her mark
Microsoft's new Xbox chief has had a busy couple of months after promising "the return of Xbox." Asha Sharma met with publishers at the Game Developers Conference in March, and has also been on the road visiting Microsoft's own game studios and product teams in recent weeks. Sharma, who used to work in Microsoft's CoreAI […]

Computer Weekly
Open 
Finance regulators to address AI risks after MPs say they are ‘not doing enough’
After a Treasury committee stated that public and finance systems are ‘exposed to potential serious harm’ from AI because regulators are ‘not doing enough’ to manage risks, finance regulators say they will take action to address concerns

Computer Weekly
Open 
Interview: Bernard Seiser, vice-president of digital, data and IT, AOP Health
With long experience of tech in the life sciences sector, AOP’s digital leader is building a foundation for further data insights in all areas of the business

Russia Today News
Open 
‘Hunger Games’ at the BBC: state broadcaster to shed 10% of workers

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Can You Price In No Longer Pricing Things In?
Can You Price In No Longer Pricing Things In?

By Michael Every of Rabobank

At this point it isn’t a random walk but a determined march: markets have decided the Iran war and the Hormuz blockades are over, and everything is going to be better than normal imminently: the Nasdaq and S&P are at all-time highs and even worries over private credit are receding. In the real world, there are signs that back that stance and ones that say otherwise.

Iran warned it could sink US ships in Hormuz if they police the waterway and the Houthis could blockade the Red Sea. The FT reports Iran used a Chinese spy satellite to target US bases. Note the subtext to Trump’s subsequent Truth Social post: “China is very happy that I am permanently opening the Strait of Hormuz. I am doing it for them, also - And the World. This situation will never happen again. They have agreed not to send weapons to Iran. President Xi will give me a big, fat, hug when I get there in a few weeks. We are working together smartly, and very well! Doesn't that beat fighting??? BUT REMEMBER, we are very good at fighting, if we have to - far better than anyone else!!!"

Yet the US and Iran are reportedly weighing a two-week truce extension and inching towards a framework deal, as the latter feels the economic pressure; crucially, China is seen pressing Iran to open Hormuz; and Tehran has offered a proposal allowing ships to exit the Oman side of the Strait free of attack, if a wider deal with the US can be struck. That looks like the face-saving way for the regime to re-open the Strait… if there can be a “grand bargain” on the nuclear issue, missiles, and its regional proxies. Matching that trend, Israel is close to a one-week ceasefire with Hezbollah in Lebanon, even if there is no clear way to rid the country of the terror group despite the Israeli and Lebanese authorities now seeming united in wanting to do so.

Potentially, we could still see this war end in line with what has been our base case for a while now: a broad --if naturally disputed-- US win vs Iran by the second to third week of April, giving it de facto control of a new Middle East (or, less likely, a belated TACO). Yet the downside is longer blockades, with tail risks of any new escalation deepening and/or widening the war. The latter scenario might only be priced into the physical market, not the oil futures markets.

Meanwhile, the US Beige Book noted “The conflict in the Middle East was cited as a major source of uncertainty that complicated decision-making around hiring, pricing, and capital investment, with many firms adopting a wait-and-see posture… Many Districts continued to report signs of consumer financial strain, increased price sensitivity, and rising demand at food banks and other social service organizations, while spending among higher-income consumers was resilient… several Districts reported that rising crop prices helped offset steep price increases of fertilizer and fuel.”

Australia needs more energy imports as a fire rages at one of its two oil refineries, the latest in a series of such accidents at the few western facilities still operating. An accident, sabotage, or just the result of over-working the facility in a crisis? Regardless, the founder of Ivanhoe Mines states that: “The Australian mining industry is now on the verge of collapse due to diesel shortages… the fuel supply chain that powers every drill, truck, and haul is about to snap.” Who drove that decline in refineries, one may ask? Markets and their uncanny ability to ‘price things in.’

China’s Canton Fair is clouded by higher costs hitting its exporters due to the Iran war.

Brussels warned EU countries not to hoard fuel within their borders weeks after telling everyone there was no risk of an energy crisis. Reportedly, the European Commission also wants to see fossil fuels taxed higher than electricity to drive the EU towards renewable energy in the long term – as member states are doing the opposite in the face of this crisis so far; and, from a broader geopolitical perspective, as we see the warning that ‘Fuel scarcity is European armies’ ‘Achilles’ heel.’ No military, and no mine, currently runs on electricity.

But let’s look to the ‘all-time highs’ post-war period and see if that’s really priced in or not.

Lots of scores will be settled in lots of places. As just one example of many, Trump has warned that the US-UK trade deal “can always be changed” with bilateral relations in a “sad state” after Britain was “not there when we needed them” on Iran.

There will be major structural shifts. For example, the IMF warns the war threatens to turbocharge a looming government debt crisis. The longer the blockade goes on, the more this is true. Defence spending is going to soar even higher even faster in even more places.

Specifically, the US is pushing for a staggering $1.5 trillion defense budget, up nearly 50%, and it’s using Iran and the ‘China threat’ to convince Congress to spend (read: borrow) much more. Very significantly, the Pentagon has also approached US automakers and manufacturers to ask if they can boost weapons production, e.g., GM or Ford shifting capacity from civilian to military. I’ve long argued neo-mercantilism and the US WW2 heuristic underlined ‘resilience’ requires a broad manufacturing base that can be adapted for military purposes in a crisis; that requires commodities and energy; and, in the face of others’ neo-mercantilism, it also means tariffs, subsidies, price controls, and a stronger state hand.

Indeed, alongside the farcical disconnect between the oil screen price --where investigations are underway into potential insider trading before Trump policy pivots-- and the physical price of a barrel, that Pentagon request is a clear ‘Reverse Perestroika’: a shift from markets and consumption to state-led military-industrial production, which requires other key components to succeed, including the Fed.

Notably, Trump is refusing to allow to halt the criminal probe of Fed Chair Powell --the DOJ made a surprise visit to the Fed’s under-renovation headquarters, where they were turned away: a blockade?-- while threatening to fire him if he won’t step down from the FOMC when his term ends on May 15. Powell says he won’t step down from the Committee until Warsh is appointed as Chair by the Senate; the Senate won’t appoint Warsh until the criminal prosecution of Powell is dropped. Does somebody need both sides to go to Pakistan to sort this out? But seriously, explain the logic of the Fed remaining untouched while epic shifts in geopolitics and political economy are underway; and do it without saying, “because markets.”

On which note, New York Mayor Mamdani also announced ‘Happy Tax Day’ aimed at raising $500m by taxing billionaires’ pied-a-terres in Manhattan: how much are their equivalents in Miami, one wonders?


Happy Tax Day, New York. We’re taxing the rich. pic.twitter.com/Wky2LFXC9W
— Mayor Zohran Kwame Mamdani (@NYCMayor) April 15, 2026
Pulling this all together, it’s not just that the market has priced in only one possible geopolitical scenario ahead: it’s not pricing that geopolitics suggests a future when things aren’t priced in as the norm. At which point, what are markets for? Try answering that without answering what GDP is for.

I conclude by noting that a social media meme going round yesterday had two dinosaurs looking at a huge meteor approaching to impact the earth. The first says, “That doesn’t look good for us.” The second replies, “Don’t worry, it’s priced in.”



Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 10:25

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Trump Signs Pipeline Permits To Boost US–Canada Oil Flow
Trump Signs Pipeline Permits To Boost US–Canada Oil Flow

Authored by Kimberley Hayek via The Epoch Times,

President Donald Trump issued several pipeline permits on April 15, including one for the construction of a new pipeline to facilitate the transportation of crude oil and petroleum products between the United States and Canada, according to documents released by the White House.



The action covers four permits in total. The permit authorizing construction was issued to the Bakken Pipeline Company LP for pipeline facilities in Burke County, North Dakota. Other permits were issued for the maintenance and operation of existing pipelines at border locations in North Dakota and Michigan. The recipients of those operational permits are “Enbridge Energy, Limited Partnership” and “Enbridge Pipelines (Southern Lights) L.L.C.”—both indirect subsidiaries of Canadian pipeline giant Enbridge Inc.

According to the White House documents, the permits cover transport of crude oil and petroleum products of every description—refined and unrefined—including naphtha, liquefied petroleum gas, natural gas liquids, jet fuel, gasoline, kerosene, and diesel. The permits explicitly exclude natural gas subject to the Natural Gas Act.

Wednesday’s permits reflect the administration’s sweeping effort to expand America’s domestic and cross-border energy infrastructure.

At the CERAWeek energy conference March 2025 in Houston, Energy Secretary Chris Wright had said that Trump’s pledge to lower energy costs by boosting oil and natural gas production would require a corresponding increase in infrastructure investment.

“If ‘Drill, baby, drill’ is to [lower energy costs], we’re going to have to ‘Build, baby, build,’” Wright told reporters.

The Enbridge permits issued Wednesday supersede authorizations dating to 1991, 1994, and 2008, effectively reissuing and consolidating federal approval under the current administration. The cross-border pipeline landscape has grown increasingly complex in recent years—there are more than 2.6 million miles of oil and gas pipelines crisscrossing the United States, with 71 networks spanning the border with Canada, meaning they are primarily regulated under federal law and by treaties between the two countries.

Enbridge has long been a central player in that network, though not without controversy: The company confirmed in late 2024 that it had cleaned up roughly 60 percent of a nearly 70,000-gallon oil spill from one of its lines in Wisconsin.

The U.S.–Canada energy relationship has also been shadowed by tariff tensions. Trump threatened to impose 25 percent tariffs on Canada over border security concerns, along with a reduced levy of 10 percent on Canadian oil and gas. Wednesday’s permits signal continued bilateral energy cooperation even as trade negotiations between the two countries remain active.

The permits arrive against a backdrop of years of pipeline battles between Washington and Ottawa.

Trump has pushed for the revival of the Keystone XL pipeline, which would transport crude oil from Canada to the United States.

“The company building the Keystone XL Pipeline that was viciously jettisoned by the incompetent Biden Administration should come back to America, and get it built—NOW!” Trump wrote on Truth Social in February 2025.

The Keystone XL project was ultimately suspended on Jan. 20, 2021, when then-President Joe Biden revoked its presidential permit, citing the need to “advance environmental justice.” Biden argued the project would “not serve the U.S. national interest” based on an analysis conducted under the Obama administration citing climate risk.

Canada has been eager to expand its access to U.S. markets. Calgary-based Enbridge Inc. has been in talks with customers about expanding its Mainline pipeline network—the largest pipeline system in North America—to handle growing volumes of Canadian oil output. Canada currently sends 97 percent of its oil exports and 100 percent of its natural gas exports to the United States, leaving it with limited leverage in any trade dispute.

Wednesday’s permits are the latest step in Trump’s strategy to make North America self-sufficient in energy and a dominant exporter.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 11:05

ZeroHedge News
Open 
"It's Really Illiquid": Goldman COO Warns Retail About Private Credit And The "Perception Of Liquidity"
"It's Really Illiquid": Goldman COO Warns Retail About Private Credit And The "Perception Of Liquidity"

Speaking at Semafor’s World Economy event in Washington, D.C., President and COO of Goldman Sachs John Waldron warned that some managers have oversold how easy it is to get money out—especially to retail investors, who’ve helped balloon the market into a $1.7 trillion behemoth just as the space faces growing scrutiny and tighter conditions, according to Semafor.

“Not everybody has marketed their product as clearly as, certainly we would like to see with the clarity that this is really not a liquid product. It’s not semi-liquid. It’s really illiquid,” Waldron said.

“Those retail investors, I think, have the perception of more liquidity than is the reality.”

That mismatch matters more now. Private credit has been under pressure lately—from higher rates to jittery investors suddenly remembering they might want their cash back.



Semafor writes that Waldron isn’t predicting imminent trouble unless the broader economy cracks.

“This is an economy that has been predicted to be in trouble for a long time and shows extraordinary resilience,” he said.

“I still see that resilience.” He added, “This economy is much stronger than the narrative suggests.”

He said recent earnings don’t show “any real evidence” of serious weakness, and for now, “confidence is still pretty good,” though prolonged geopolitical tensions—like the ongoing conflict involving Iran—could start to erode that. If oil spikes and key routes like the Strait of Hormuz are disrupted, “you’re going to start to see demand destruction,” he warned.

The bigger watchpoint: liquidity.

Retail investors now make up roughly a fifth of the U.S. private credit market, drawn in by lower minimums—but not necessarily easy exits. Many of these funds cap withdrawals at around 5% per period.

“In situations where there’s a sense that there’s undercurrents of trouble in private credit, you could have more redemption pressure where people want their money back and their gates are going up because that’s the way the system works,” he concluded.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 11:25

UK Government News
Open 
Chevening Alumni Solomon Islands hosts symposium on the sustainable development goals
The inaugural symposium brought together leaders to reflect on national progress towards the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

UK Government News
Open 
DAO 01/26 letter: Reforms to the spending control and accountability framework
‘Dear Accounting Officer’ letters provide advice on accountability, regularity, propriety, value for money and annual accounting exercises.

UK Government News
Open 
DAO 02/26 letter: Novel contentious or repercussive spending
‘Dear Accounting Officer’ letters provide advice on accountability, regularity, propriety and value for money and annual accounting exercise.

UK Government News
Open 
Career Insight: Charli, Trainee Solicitor, GLD
Charli provides an insight into her training within the Government Legal Department (GLD)

UK Government News
Open 
New UK-Pakistan partnership will bolster Pakistan’s Geological Survey
A new UK programme will strengthen Pakistan’s ability to generate credible geological data and unlock growth in the mining and minerals sector across the country.
The initiative is delivered through the UK funded REMIT prog…

UK Government News
Open 
Advancing national capability in surface water flood forecasting
Positive results from a recent Flood Forecasting Centre led trial of surface water hazard and impact models.

UK Government News
Open 
Falconer announces new funding for displaced people in Lebanon
In a major increase in aid to Lebanon, Minister Falconer announced £20.5 million in new support for the Government of Lebanon’s crisis response.

Mail Online
Open 
Alex Manninger dead at 48: Former Arsenal and Liverpool goalkeeper killed after his car was hit by a train
Former Arsenal and Liverpool goalkeeper Alex Manninger has died aged 48 after his car was hit by a train in his native Austria. 

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
When jury trial cuts were foretold on TV | Letters
Charles Harris recalls a dystopian political drama series and spots a worrying parallel with today’s societyThe restriction of justice by a leftwing government was intriguingly predicted as far back as 1977 by Wilfred Greatorex in his BBC Two political drama series 1990 (Founder of Starmer’s legal chambers condemns Labour plans to cut jury trials, 13 April).Starring Edward Woodward as a journalist for Britain’s last remaining independent newspaper, the story was set in a UK where justice was fixed in favour of the state, democracy had been deliberately withered and the borders tightened. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Systemic failures that left Southport children at risk | Letters
Readers respond to the inquiry findings of gross incompetence by government agencies, which led to three little girls being killed by Axel RudakubanaWhile many public agencies, along with Axel Rudakubana and his parents, have rightly been highlighted as carrying the blame for the devastating attack on children in Southport, there are some elements of our national systems that repeatedly walk away untouched by criticism (Editorial, 13 April).Social services, the health service, police, Prevent and schools are all organised and funded by our government. The government decides how these agencies should function and what their responsibilities are. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Network Rail must restore swift nesting sites | Letter
Sue Atkinson on how nesting sites of sand martins were blocked in Perthshire, similar to that of swifts at Chapel Milton viaduct in DerbyshireYour distressing article about the unnecessary blocking of swift nesting sites in Chapel Milton viaduct triggered deja vu here in Perthshire (Anger as swifts’ nesting holes in Derbyshire rail viaduct ‘blocked up’, 10 April).In early 2024, Network Rail repointed the Inver viaduct over the River Braan and blocked up the nesting sites of a colony of sand martins. Despite repeated assurances that mitigation would be put in place, and contrary to Network Rail’s own biodiversity strategy, no nesting sites have ever been restored. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
A decade on from Brexit, Britain still flounders without a place in the world | Letters
Raj Parkash and Chris Manners on the lasting impact of the UK’s decision in 2016 to leave the EUPerhaps the saddest consequence of Brexit is that it has left the UK a profoundly unhappy country (Ten years after Brexit, this is the UK: a divided nation frozen in time, 9 April). For Brexit supporters, the dream of a proud, independent Britain able to direct its own destiny in the world is nowhere near fulfilled, as if it ever could be. And they continue to grasp at the nearest proximate cause – an “invasion” of immigrants undermining British identity and draining its resources. For those who wished to remain, Brexit has left them unmoored from the security of membership of a grouping that gave them an identity and clear position in the world.Unfortunately, that unhappiness is now exacerbated by the state of the world outside the UK. The US has upended the entire global institutional structure such that there is no certainty to be had as to how to operate in the world. And the EU seems incapable of forging a coherent identity that could forge a path through this morass. So we are left floundering without a place in the world, with the options for alignment and partnership unattractive and equally uncertain. One thing however is for sure – seeking refuge in the empty sloganeering of Nigel Farage and Zack Polanski is not the answer.Raj Parkash London Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Teleportation, aliens and cancer-busting soda - it’s not just Trump going cuckoo, his officials are too | Arwa Mahdawi
As the president’s men rave about paranormal events and Diet Coke, it seems the US’s only hope is extraterrestrial interventionPeople often criticise the Democrats for being overly cautious and never getting anything done. But this week they’ve surprised us all by unveiling concepts of a plan for getting Donald Trump out of the White House.On Tuesday House Democrats introduced legislation that would create a commission to assess whether Trump is unfit to serve and should be removed under the 25th amendment. I don’t need to tell you what precipitated this: Trump is growingly increasingly erratic, threatening genocide one minute and posting pictures of himself as Jesus Christ the next. Continue reading...

The Hill
Open 
Swalwell exit upends California governor's race: Poll 
Former Rep. Eric Swalwell's (D-Calif.) suspension of his bid for California governor has shaken up the race to replace Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) in the Golden State, new polling shows. An Emerson College Polling/Nexstar Media Group survey of California voters found Republican former Fox News host Steve Hilton, who received President Trump’s endorsement last week,...

The Hill
Open 
Stefanik defends Trump's attacks on Pope Leo: 'We know his leadership style'
Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.) on Wednesday defended President Trump’s criticism of Pope Leo XIV, after the twomen got into a public spat over the weekend about the U.S. operation in Iran. “I don't want to see the Pope as a politician. The president — we know his leadership style. He's going to stand strong for...

The Hill
Open 
White House OMB Director Russell Vought: DHS ‘disintegrating’
White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Director Russell Vought told senators at a Budget Committee hearing Thursday that the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is “disintegrating” because Congress has not funded the department since its appropriations lapsed Feb. 14. Vought told senators that the situation at the embattled department is becoming dire as...

The Hill
Open 
Trump needs a fall guy in Iran, and Pete Hegseth has definitely earned it
Donald Trump may be forced to throw Pete Hegseth under the bus for the Iran war fiasco, as his talking points are not sticking with voters and his own supporters.

The Hill
Open 
Thomas warns intolerance among younger generations will ‘infect’ courts 
Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas lamented a breakdown in civility among younger generations with ideological differences, raising concerns during a public appearance Wednesday that it will “infect” the judiciary.  While speaking at the University of Texas at Austin, a student asked Thomas to reflect on his past comments detailing friendships among the justices in the wake of today’s increasingly polarized climate. “When I said a lot of that, it...

The Hill
Open 
NPR nabs $33 million from anonymous donor after Trump funding cuts
National Public Radio is getting a new injection of funding from private donors months after President Trump's administration pulled federal dollars from the public broadcaster. NPR announced Thursday a total of more than $113 million in philanthropic investments — including the largest gift by a living donor in its history, for what it is calling a...

The Hill
Open 
Live updates: Congress grills Kennedy, Vought, Driscoll; Hegseth warns Iran to make a deal
Chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Dan Caine told reporters on Thursday morning that 13 ships have turned around at the U.S. blockade of the Strait of Hormuz. As the war nears the seven-week mark and the ceasefire hits nine days, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth warned Iran it was time to make a...

The Hill
Open 
War-torn global economy needs IMF emergency assistance
The U.S.-Israeli war on Iran has caused a major supply shock in the global energy market, disproportionately affecting energy importers, and the IMF has the power to provide relief by issuing hundreds of billions of dollars worth of liquid reserve assets called Special Drawing Rights (SDRs) to its member countries.

The Hill
Open 
Greene says Trump told her 'if my son were to get killed, it would be my fault'
Former Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) said during a recent podcast appearance that President Trump had an “unkind” response when she messaged him about receiving death threats against her and her family after she resigned from Congress. Greene told the “Piers Morgan Uncensored” host on Wednesday that she reached out to FBI Director Kash Patel...

The Hill
Open 
Commission of Fine Arts approves Trump Triumphal Arch to move forward
The U.S. Commission of Fine Arts (CFA) on Thursday approved the project to construct President Trump's proposed 250-foot Triumphal Arch, to be located between the Lincoln Memorial and Arlington National Cemetery, forward. The commission reviewed the Interior Department's submitted plans to build an arch in Memorial Circle on Columbia Island, a human-made, National Park Service-ran...

The Hill
Open 
White House budget director: ‘We’re working’ on funding request for Iran conflict
White House Budget Director Russ Vought told senators on Thursday that the White House is still working on a request to send Congress to fund the military conflict with Iran, which is estimated to cost more than $10 billion per week. Asked by Senate Budget Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) about when the White House...

The Hill
Open 
Trump arts commissioner wants three arches in DC, not one
A Trump appointee to the federal Commission of Fine Arts proposed adding three arches to the nation’s capital instead of one, alleging that it aligns with the original L’Enfant plan for the city. Rodney Mims Cook Jr. has been helping President Trump prepare for America 250 celebrations by sharing architectural input on the new developments...

ZDNet News
Open 
I've used Dell's new XPS 16 for a week, and it's the Windows laptop to beat in 2026
Dell's XPS 16 screams 'Premium laptop' thanks to its sleek design, OLED screen, and powerful hardware.

ZDNet News
Open 
You can buy an LG B5 OLED for $1,500 off at Best Buy - and it comes with a free 4K TV
The LG B5 offers a similar signature picture quality as its flagship siblings at a lower price - and there's a free TV included.

ZDNet News
Open 
Want to stand out on LinkedIn? Try this career strategist's top 3 tips for strengthening your profile
Whether you're on the job hunt or not, regularly polishing your LinkedIn profile is worth the effort. Here's why.

ZDNet News
Open 
MacBook Neo vs. Surface: Why spiraling RAM prices are bruising Microsoft's PC business but not Apple's
High memory and storage prices are crushing the market, and Microsoft's Surface is suffering the most. So why is Apple's newest MacBook immune?

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Butterflies and Condors: Remarks at the Options Market Roundtable

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Cattywampus: Statement on the CAT Concept Release

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Israel, Lebanon agree 10-day ceasefire, Trump says
Trump made the announcement after he spoke with Lebanese President Joseph Aoun and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Iran-backed Hezbollah has not yet commented on the reported truce. DW has more.

Mail Online
Open 
Trump announces 10-day ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon as a first step toward 'lasting peace'
President Donald Trump announced a 10-day ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon on Thursday.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Millionaires fund last-ditch attempt to save humpback whale stranded in Germany
Critics say efforts to rescue the animal, nicknamed Tommy, unlikely to succeed and could lead to further harmA last-ditch effort to rescue a wayward whale that has transfixed Germans for weeks has begun in the Baltic Sea despite criticism it has little chance of success and could further harm the 12-tonne creature.The male humpback whale was first spotted last month near Timmendorfer Strand on the northern coast of Germany, giving rise to its nickname Timmy. It has repeatedly become stranded and then freed itself after human assistance but it is now stranded again, with rescuers saying it is fighting a losing battle for its life. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
At least 17 people killed in Russia’s deadliest attack on Ukraine this year
More than 100 injured across country after Russia launches nearly 700 drones and dozens of ballistic and cruise missilesEurope live – latest updatesRussia has carried out its deadliest attack against Ukraine this year, killing at least 17 people and injuring more than 100 in a wave of drone and missile strikes across the country.Nine people died in the southern port city of Odesa and four were killed in Kyiv, including a 12-year-old boy. There were three fatalities in the Dnipropetrovsk region. Another person died in Zaporizhzhia oblast. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Metro Bank boss handed record £2.6m after slashing 1,000 jobs
Dan Frumkin’s pay deal comes after bank’s near collapse and rescue by Colombian billionaireBusiness live – latest updatesMetro Bank’s chief executive has been handed a £2.6m pay packet – the largest in its history – a year after slashing 1,000 jobs in response to the lender’s near collapse.The figure is more than double the £1.2m that Dan Frumkin – a former RBS and Northern Rock banker – was paid in 2024. Metro pushed through the pay bump and complex bonus scheme for Frumkin at a shareholder meeting last year. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
SNP pledges to cap bread and milk prices if it wins Scotland’s parliamentary elections
John Swinney unveils his party’s manifesto, saying cost of living is the ‘defining issue’ for voters on 7 MayUK politics live – latest updatesThe SNP will cap supermarket prices for essential goods such as bread and milk if it retains power, John Swinney has pledged, after describing the cost of living as “the defining issue of this election”.With polls pointing to a fifth Holyrood term for the Scottish National party, its leader said he would use devolved public health powers to fix prices on 20 to 50 items such as bread, milk, cheese, eggs, rice and chicken because their rising cost was “impacting our nation’s nutrition”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: Lebanon and Israel agree 10-day ceasefire to begin within hours, Trump says
The US president said the countries’ leaders are working on a deal to ‘achieve a lasting peace’US and Iran in indirect talks to extend two-week ceasefireIran has stopped all petrochemical exports to prioritise domestic supply and prevent shortages of raw materials, Reuters reported.The state-owned National Petrochemical Company ordered firms to suspend exports until further notice. Continue reading...

The Right Scoop
Open 
BREAKING: Former VA Dem Lt. Gov kills himself, wife in murder, suicide
The former Democrat Lt. Governor of Virginia, Justin Fairfax, who was embroiled in rape accusations back in 2019, just killed his wife and himself in a murder suicide this morning at their . . .

The Right Scoop
Open 
UGH VIDEO – Six Republicans vote with Dems to extend Biden TPS for Haitian ilegals
Six House Republicans voted with Democrats yesterday to advance legislation to extend Joe Biden’s Temporary Protected Status for Haitian illegals who came across the border during Biden’s term. A final vote will . . .

The Right Scoop
Open 
BIG BREAKING: Trump announces ceasefire between Israel, Lebanon
President Trump just announced that he’s helped arbitrate a ceasefire between both Israel and Lebanon, and it will begin today at 5:00 P.M. eastern. Here’s what he said: I just had excellent . . .

Sky News Home
Open 
Former Arsenal goalkeeper Alex Manninger dies after car hit by train
Former Arsenal goalkeeper Alex Manninger has died at the age of 48 after his car was struck by a train, police said.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Chelsea midfielder Caicedo agrees new contract
Chelsea midfielder Moises Caicedo agrees a lucrative new contract at Stamford Bridge as the club seeks to reward its high performers.

Mail Online
Open 
EasyJet passengers left in disbelief after being told six of them had to get off the plane because it was too heavy to fly
Passenger Kelly Wayland, 45, was on the flight travelling from Southend Airport to Malaga, Spain on April 11 when the pilot said six people had to disembark.

Mail Online
Open 
Pictured: Unsecured crane swinging out from lorry trailer seconds before it killed mother, 30, as she pushed her toddler along in pram
Shocking new images show an unsecured crane swinging from the trailer of a lorry moments before it struck and killed a mother as she pushed her toddler in a pram.

Chatham House
Open 
The Strait of Hormuz, shipping, and law
The Strait of Hormuz, shipping, and law
Explainer
sfarrell.drupa…
13 April 2026

Freedom of passage through the Strait is a key issue for all maritime nations, writes Professor Marc Weller, Director of the International Law Programme at Chatham House.















On Sunday, President Donald Trump announced a blockade against shipping ‘trying to enter, or leave, the Strait of Hormuz.’This move seems to aim at punishing Iran for having failed to agree to what Vice President JD Vance termed the ‘final and best offer’ for a peace settlement that he put forward during talks in Islamabad.The temporary ceasefire proposed by Pakistan had provided for the lifting of Iranian restrictions on maritime movements through the Strait ‘as a goodwill gesture’.This has not occurred, amid dispute about the application of the cease fire to Israel and its war in Lebanon.Act of warA blockade is an act of war. Its imposition compounds the fact that the US and Israel have launched an unlawful war against Iran. It also threatens the already fragile truce.




































Related work

How to keep the Strait of Hormuz open in the long term












Moreover, President Trump’s initial announcement seemed to suggest that it would cover all shipping through the Strait.This would have made the Gulf states, and those depending on their oil and gas, its principal victims, rather than Iran.US Central Command has now clarified that it will ‘not impede freedom of navigation of vessels transiting the Strait of Hormuz to and from non-Iranian ports.’This clarifies that a traditional blockade is intended, trying to strangulate only the economy of the opponent and forcing a surrender, rather than stopping all traffic through the Strait altogether, which would clearly be unlawful.President Trump’s initial announcement was also directed against the new Iranian practice to sell passage through the strait for a fee of up to $2 million. ‘No one who pays an illegal toll will have safe passage on the high seas,’ he added.This would expose third-party tankers to arrest and seizure by US forces beyond the Strait.But would the US really capture an Indian or Chinese super-tanker if they had paid the Iranian toll, or entered its ports or coastal areas? This would be a very significant escalation of the conflict, and Washington may well hesitate in making good its threat.








— Made with Natural Earth data.



The right of passage through the StraitFreedom of passage through the Strait of Hormuz is a key issue for all maritime nations. The Strait controls shipping in the order of around 100-140 major vessels passing before the war per day.When the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) was negotiated, a critical deal was struck reflecting this fact.






Freedom of passage through the Strait of Hormuz is a key issue for all maritime nations.






The convention accepted that coastal states can lawfully extend their territorial sea from the previously accepted limit of three nautical miles (nm) to 12 nm. This placed some 138 additional straits that are less than 24 nm wide under the jurisdiction of one or more coastal states.The Strait of Hormuz, with a width of 21 nm at its narrowest point, is covered by the territorial seas of Iran and Oman respectively.In exchange, the coastal states had to accept that a special legal regime would apply to straits used for international navigation. While the coastal states enjoy sovereignty over their territorial seas in most aspects, an original limitation to that sovereignty applies – they must accept an enhanced right of ‘transit passage’ for shipping of all nations.This right goes further than the traditional right of ‘innocent passage’ granted to shipping through the territorial sea of any state. Innocent passage allows for some interference with passing shipping in accordance with local law, for instance for the protection of the marine environment or regulation of fisheries.






The US correctly argues that transit passage has become accepted as a firm right of all states in international custom, also binding on non-parties.






Crucially, the coastal state may suspend the right of passage if it judges that demands of its national security so require.In contrast, given the lack of other viable routes, transit passage guarantees un-suspendable passage to all ships that may not be ‘impeded’ in any way by the coastal state. That right applies in peace and war, although with some necessary qualifications where the direct participants in an armed conflict are concerned.The positions of the partiesNeither the US nor Iran is a party to UNCLOS. The US correctly argues that transit passage has become accepted as a firm right of all states in international custom, also binding on non-parties. Iran asserts that it need only grant the more limited, traditional, right of innocent passage, which can be suspended. It also claims that foreign warships must coordinate access with its authorities.Oman has ratified UNCLOS, but has added statements affirming its ‘full sovereignty over its territorial sea’, and seeks to reserve its right to require prior permission for passage of warships.However, UNCLOS rules out reservations of this kind. The US Navy has conducted a ‘freedom of navigation programme’ since 1979, enforcing the right of unimpeded passage.This has regularly included unannounced passage of warships through the Strait of Hormuz. During the present truce Washington claims to have sent two guided missile destroyers through the Strait, to emphasize this point and to prepare for an operation to clear the strait of mines.Overall, the bargain of allowing all coastal states to extend their territorial seas was conditioned on universal acceptance of the regime of transit passage. Moreover, even if there could be doubt in relation to the passage of warships, which is not really the case, this would not affect the traffic of oil and gas tankers at issue in this instance.Impact of the armed conflictKazem Gharibabadi, the Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister for Legal and International Affairs, claimed earlier in the conflict that ‘we are now in a state of war, and wartime conditions cannot be governed by peacetime rules.’The US-Israeli attack on Iran clearly brought an international armed conflict into being. This turns the Strait of Hormuz into a ‘belligerent strait.’






The US-Israeli attack on Iran clearly brought an international armed conflict into being. This turns the Strait of Hormuz into a ‘belligerent strait.’






While the conflict lasts, Iran would be entitled to attack US or Israeli warships under the law of maritime warfare. This might include convoys of merchant ships conducted by US warships.Direct attacks on merchant vessels of the two belligerents and on neutrals are, however, prohibited. US and Israeli-flag merchant vessels cannot simply be sunk, although Iran could seize them, along with neutral shipping carrying contraband.Iran initially effectively blocked passage through the Strait for all maritime commerce altogether. However, this action was clearly and unambiguously rejected by the UN Security Council (UNSC) as a ‘serious threat to international peace and security.’At a meeting of the Council of the International Maritime Organization (IMO) in London, Iran later claimed to have adopted only ‘necessary and proportionate measures to prevent aggressors and their supporters from exploiting the Strait of Hormuz to advance hostile operations against Iran.’

Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple Covers iPhone 17 Pro in Stickers in New Ad
In a video uploaded to its YouTube channel in South Korea today, Apple showed off a handful of iPhone 17 Pro devices decorated with tiny stickers.





The stickers are placed on the iPhone 17 Pro's so-called "plateau," the protruding aluminum area housing the rear cameras, an LED flash, a microphone, and the LiDAR Scanner. The video has the hashtags #PhoneDecor and #iPhoneCustomization.



"Stick it here," says Apple.





The ad is accompanied by a pair of YouTube Shorts.Related Roundup: iPhone 17 ProTags: Apple Ads, South KoreaBuyer's Guide: iPhone 17 Pro (Neutral)Related Forum: iPhoneThis article, 'Apple Covers iPhone 17 Pro in Stickers in New Ad' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Badenoch accuses PM of misleading MPs over Mandelson vetting
It follows a report Lord Mandelson failed his security vetting for the role of US ambassador but this was overruled by the Foreign Office.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
'I leave as one more of you' - but how do Man City replace departing Silva?
Manchester City will lose the services of their dependable captain next season as Bernardo Silva announced he will leave the club when his contract expires this summer.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Iranians tell BBC they don't know if ceasefire with US will hold
The BBC's chief international correspondent Lyse Doucet arrived in Tehran to what she described as 'life on pause'.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
The immense cost of Iran's nuclear program
Iran insists that its nuclear program is for peaceful, civilian purposes, including energy production. But the figures and statistics paint a different picture.

Mail Online
Open 
Starmer told to QUIT over 'lies' amid claims Mandelson FAILED security vetting for US envoy - but officials were overruled
Mandelson is said to have been initially denied clearance in January 2025 - weeks after the PM had officially announced his appointment.

EFF
Open 
EFF to State AGs: Investigate Google's Broken Promise to Users Targeted by the Government
Google's Failure to Warn Users About Law Enforcement Demands for Data Is DeceptiveSAN FRANCISCO – The Electronic Frontier Foundation sent complaints today to the attorneys general of California and New York urging them to investigate Google for deceptive trade practices, related to the company's broken promise to give users prior notice before disclosing their information to law enforcement. 
The letters were sent on behalf of Amandla Thomas-Johnson, whose information was disclosed to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) without prior notice from Google. 
For nearly a decade, Google has promised billions of users that it will notify them before disclosing their personal data to law enforcement. Many times, the company has done just that. But through a hidden and systematic practice, Google has likely violated that promise numerous times over the years. This was the case for Thomas-Johnson, a Ph.D. candidate who was targeted by ICE after briefly attending a protest, effectively preventing him from contesting an invalid subpoena for his data. 
"Google should answer the question: How many other times has it broken its promise to users?” said EFF Senior Staff Attorney F. Mario Trujillo. "Advance notice is especially important now, when agencies like ICE are unconstitutionally targeting users for First Amendment-protected activity. State attorneys general should investigate Google for this deception." 
On Google’s Privacy & Terms page, it promises its users that “When we receive a request from a government agency, we send an email to the user account before disclosing information.” This promise ensures that users can protect their own privacy and decide to challenge overbroad or illegal demands on their own behalf. The company lists a handful of exceptions to this policy (such as if Google receives a gag order from a court) that do not apply to Thomas-Johnson's case. While ICE “requested” that Google not notify Thomas-Johnson, the request was not enforceable or mandated by a court. 
But on May 8, 2025, Google complied with an administrative subpoena from ICE seeking Thomas-Johnson’s subscriber information, including his name, address, IP address, and other personal identifiers. Later that same day, the company sent Thomas-Johnson a message telling him it had already complied with the subpoena, which he would have successfully challenged had he been given advance notice. Google received the subpoena in April and had more than a month to alert Thomas-Johnson. 
Communication between EFF and Google later revealed that this is a systematic issue, not an isolated one. When Google does not fulfill a subpoena within a government-provided artificial deadline, the company's outside counsel explained, Google will sometimes comply with the request and provide notice to a user on the same day. The company calls this practice “simultaneous notice.” 
"What this experience has made clear is that anyone can be targeted by law enforcement," said Thomas-Johnson. "And with their massive stores of data, technology companies can facilitate those arbitrary investigations. Who, exactly, can I hold accountable?" 
Google must commit to ending this deception and pay for its past mistakes. The attorneys general of California and New York are empowered to stop deceptive business practices and seek financial restitution stemming from those practices. As EFF writes in its complaints, they should investigate, hold Google to its public promise to give users advanced notice of law enforcement demands, and take appropriate action if necessary. 
Update: This press release has been updated to include more information about Google's exceptions to their notification policy, none of which applied to the subpoena targeting Thomas-Johnson.  For the complaints:https://www.eff.org/document/eff-letter-re-google-notice-california https://www.eff.org/document/eff-letter-re-google-notice-new-york https://www.eff.org/document/eff-letter-re-google-notice-exhibits  For Thomas-Johnson's account of his ordeal: https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2026/04/google-broke-its-promise-me-now-ice-has-my-data For more information on lawless DHS subpoenas: https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2026/02/open-letter-tech-companies-protect-your-users-lawless-dhs-subpoenas 
Contact: press@eff.org 

Tags: privacyfree speechanonymityDHSsubpoenafederal law enforcementGoogle

EFF
Open 
Google Broke Its Promise to Me. Now ICE Has My Data.
In September 2024, Amandla Thomas-Johnson was a Ph.D. candidate studying in the U.S. on a student visa when he briefly attended a pro-Palestinian protest. In April 2025, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) sent Google an administrative subpoena requesting his data. The next month, Google gave Thomas-Johnson's information to ICE without giving him the chance to challenge the subpoena, breaking a nearly decade-long promise to notify users before handing their data to law enforcement. 
Google names a handful of exceptions to this promise (such as if Google receives a gag order from a court) that do not apply to Thomas-Johnson's case. While ICE “requested” that Google not notify Thomas-Johnson, the request was not enforceable or mandated by a court. Today, the Electronic Frontier Foundation sent complaints to the California and New York Attorneys General asking them to investigate Google for deceptive trade practices for breaking that promise. You can read about the complaints here. Below is Thomas-Johnson's account of his ordeal. 
Out of touch but not out of reach 
I thought my ordeal with U.S. immigration authorities was over a year ago, when I left the country, crossing into Canada at Niagara Falls.  





By that point, the Trump administration had effectively turned federal power against international students like me. After I attended a pro-Palestine protest at Cornell University—for all of five minutes—the administration’s rhetoric about cracking down on students protesting what we saw as genocide forced me into hiding for three months. Federal agents came to my home looking for me. A friend was detained at an airport in Tampa and interrogated about my whereabouts. 
I’m currently a Ph.D. student. Before that, I was a reporter. I’m a dual British and Trinadad and Tobago citizen. I have not been accused of any crime. 
I believed that once I left U.S. territory, I had also left the reach of its authorities. I was wrong. 
The email
Weeks later, in Geneva, Switzerland, I received what looked like a routine email from Google. It informed me that the company had already handed over my account data to the Department of Homeland Security. 
At first, I wasn’t alarmed. I had seen something similar before. An associate of mine, Momodou Taal, had received advance notice from Google and Facebook that his data had been requested. He was given advanced notice of the subpoenas, and law enforcement eventually withdrew them before the companies turned over his data. 
Google had already disclosed my data without telling me.
I assumed I would be given the same opportunity. But the language in my email was different. It was final: “Google has received and responded to legal process from a law enforcement authority compelling the release of information related to your Google Account.” 
Google had already disclosed my data without telling me. There was no opportunity to contest it. 
Google’s broken promise
To be clear, this should not have happened this way. Google promises that it will notify users before their data is handed over in response to legal processes, including administrative subpoenas. That notice is meant to provide a chance to challenge the request. In my case, that safeguard was bypassed. My data was handed over without warning—at the request of an administration targeting students engaged in protected political speech. 
Months later, my lawyer at the Electronic Frontier Foundation obtained the subpoena itself. On paper, the request focused largely on subscriber information: IP addresses, physical address, other identifiers, and session times and durations. 
But taken together, these fragments form something far more powerful—a detailed surveillance profile. IP logs can be used to approximate location. Physical addresses show where you sleep. Session times would show when you were communicating with friends or family. Even without message content, the picture that emerges is intimate and invasive.  
State power meets private data
What this experience has made clear is that anyone can be targeted by law enforcement. And with their massive stores of data, technology companies can facilitate those arbitrary investigations. Together, they can combine state power, corporate data, and algorithmic inference in ways that are difficult to see—and even harder to challenge. 
The consequences of what happened to me are not abstract. I left the United States. But I do not feel that I have left its reach. Being investigated by the federal government is intimidating. Questions run through your head. Am I now a marked individual? Will I face heightened scrutiny if I continue my reporting? Can I travel safely to see family in the Caribbean? 
Who, exactly, can I hold accountable?Update: This post has been updated to include more information about Google's exceptions to their notification policy, none of which applied to the subpoena targeting Thomas-Johnson.

Mail Online
Open 
All areas of BBC News will be affected by cuts, staff told as 2,000 employees face axe and corporation vows to cut costs by 10 per cent over next three years
Employees have been told to brace for the 'tough task' of reducing costs 'significantly', in a newly revealed email.

Mail Online
Open 
Moment arsonist in tracksuit hurls 'petrol bomb' at London HQ of Iran International TV - as three are arrested after police chase 
An ignited container was thrown towards the premises of Volant Media - which owns UK-based broadcaster Iran International - at around 8.30pm last night.

Mail Online
Open 
Thousands of migrants descend on consulates across Spain after socialist government gave the green light to give 500,000 legal status
Since Saturday, some 8,000 migrants have visited the Moroccan consulate in Almeria alone to collect the necessary documentation needed to gain legal entry into the country.

Mail Online
Open 
Starmer told to QUIT over 'lies' amid claims Mandelson FAILED security vetting for US envoy - but officials were overruled
Lord Mandelson is said to have been initially denied clearance in January 2025 - weeks after the PM had officially announced his appointment.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Red hair gene favoured by natural selection over last 10,000 years, study finds
Scientists who analysed nearly 16,000 ancient remains suggest red hair and fair skin is favoured for vitamin D productionPeople with red hair who have put up with teasing or “fiery” stereotypes may be pleased to learn that they appear to be winners from an evolutionary perspective. A large genetics study has revealed that, in Europe, the gene for red hair has been actively selected for more than 10,000 years.The study did not aim to uncover the reasons for the trend, but focused on the broader question of whether human evolution has plateaued since the advent of agriculture. By analysing DNA from nearly 16,000 ancient human remains and more than 6,000 living individuals, the scientists provided compelling evidence that, in fact, biological evolution has continued apace. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Football Daily | Bayern and Madrid produce a gourmand feast before the tantrums
Sign up now! Sign up now! Sign up now? Sign up now!While a church bell clanged intermittently and bits of tumbleweed blew across the pitch at the Emirates Stadium, the Allianz Arena hosted a ding-dong battle that pretty much had it all on Wednesday night. For the second evening in eight days, it was left to Bayern Munich and Real Madrid to pull out all the stops and provide the box-office entertainment as Arsenal once again Arsenaled their way past Sporting in a bore draw to earn their place in Bigger Cup semi-finals. More or less picking up where they’d left off at the end of the first leg, Bayern and Madrid served up a gourmand feast of slapstick goalkeeping, a see-sawing scoreline, much better goalkeeping, near-misses, goals of an at times absurdly high quality, several red cards and no end of post-match salty Spanish tears and recriminations. While Madrid have little or no chance of pipping Barça to this season’s La Liga title, they certainly thrashed them in the ungracious Bigger Cup exit stakes.The image of Fermín López getting the boot from Juan Musso (yesterday’s Football Daily) clearly shows technique learned from English players. Admittedly, López’s head appeared to be at a dangerous level and one might expect an element of risk from crouching like that. As a life-long Hearts fan, I haven’t forgotten the approximation of a tackle attempted by English full-back Jason Talbot, then ‘playing’ for Livingston, on poor young winger Sam Nicholson in 2015. This was one incident in a match which, I believe, carries the accepted term ‘feisty’ (ie five goals, eight yellow cards and one red). And no, this wasn’t the red” – Ken Muir.Re: your almost-spot-on analysis of Southampton’s chances of automatic promotion (yesterday’s News, Bits and Bobs, full email edition), what you and – to be fair – every other publication I’ve read about this in, have omitted to mention is that Ipswich’s game in hand is away to Saints during the week before the last games of the season. Rather pertinent, I’d say” – Stuart Ainsworth.This is an extract from our daily football email … Football Daily. To get the full version, just visit this page and follow the instructions. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Meghan has been cast as the inverse to Diana, a photonegative of adoration. Why do we need scapegoats? | Brigid Delaney
The hatred the duchess inspires – like the mourning of her mother-in-law – reveals hidden aspects of British character and tells us something about public anxietiesWhatever unhinged parasocial relationship the adoring public had with Diana, Princess of Wales, their relationship with the Duchess of Sussex is its shadowy reflection.For decades, Diana was the subject of public adoration that was locked in a permanent hysterical register. Clive James, for example, captured the hyperbole when he described himself as a “besotted walk-on mesmerized by the trajectory of a burning angel” and Diana as like “the sun coming up; coming up giggling”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
SNP pledges to cap bread and milk prices if it wins Scotland’s parliamentary elections
John Swinney unveils his party’s manifesto, saying cost of living is the ‘defining issue’ for voters on 7 MayUK politics live – latest updatesThe SNP will cap supermarket prices for essential goods like bread and milk if it retains power, John Swinney has pledged, after describing the cost of living as “the defining issue of this election”.With polls pointing to a fifth Holyrood term for the Scottish National party, its leader said he would use devolved public health powers to fix prices on 20 to 50 items such as bread, milk, cheese, eggs, rice and chicken because their rising cost was “impacting our nation’s nutrition”. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
Police issue disorder warning after rape protest
Riot police are deployed in Epsom after protesters gather to demand descriptions of the suspects.

The Register
Open 
Brussels tells Google to hand rivals its search crown jewels as privacy row brews
Includes a to-do list on search data sharing and platform access as DMA enforcement ramps up Brussels has told Google to open up its search data and give rivals equal footing on its own platforms, sketching out how it expects the tech giant to comply with the bloc's competition rulebook.…

The Register
Open 
Americans who masterminded Nork IT worker fraud sentenced to 200 months behind bars
Fortune 500 companies and one US defense contractor got taken for $5m in four-year scam Two Americans have been jailed for a combined 200 months for helping North Korea generate $5 million through fraudulent IT worker schemes.…

Mail Online
Open 
Heather Locklear and Lorenzo Lamas posed for a RACY magazine cover over 40 years before their romance started
In the 1980s she was on the hit series Dynasty with Joan Collins and he was a big star thanks to the primetime soap opera Falcon Crest that featured Jane Wyman.

Mail Online
Open 
Royal wardrobe styling secrets for spring showers - including Kate's exact coat, boots and sunglasses formula, and how to replicate it on the high street
With spring finally here, we can expect brighter, longer days, along with chilly mornings and unpredictable rain showers.

Gizmodo
Open 
That Movie With AI Val Kilmer as a Priest Has a Trailer Now
It features Kilmer-type images of various apparent ages.

Gizmodo
Open 
Zelenskyy Says Drones Are the Future of War After Claiming Robot Unit Captured Russian Troops
"The story of Apple and many of the world’s top companies began the same way," Zelenskyy said of Ukraine's bootstrapped war industry.

Gizmodo
Open 
This New Image of Mars Is Not the Same Thing NASA Saw in 1976
A new image shows a striking contrast between Mars' desert-like terrain against dark deposits of volcanic ash.

Gizmodo
Open 
The 5 Coolest Genre Moments at Universal’s CinemaCon Panel
From Robert Eggers' 'Werwulf,' to the Minions and 'Odyssey,' there was a lot of awesome stuff at Universal's panel.

Gizmodo
Open 
Meta’s Quest Price Hikes Just Put VR in a Worse Spot
The Quest 3S and 3 are getting more expensive, and memory prices are to blame.

BBC World News
Open 
Turkish police detain 162 people over online posts about school shootings
At least 16 people were injured in a shooting at a high school on Tuesday, before another nine were killed in a separate school shooting on Wednesday.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Russia launches deadliest aerial attack in months, killing 18 in Ukraine
A Ukrainian drone attack killed two people in Russia, Moscow says, after an Orthodox Easter truce.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Lana Del Rey to sing theme for new James Bond game
The Summertime Sadness star has been keen to add her voice to the Bond franchise for a number of years.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Church warden jailed for murdering pensioner has conviction quashed
Benjamin Field has been in prison for the murder of Peter Farquhar, 69.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Archbishop of Canterbury backs pope’s calls for peace amid Trump feud
Sarah Mullally urges Anglicans to join Leo’s ‘courageous’ call and says human cost of war is incalculableThe archbishop of Canterbury has said she is standing in solidarity with Pope Leo XIV’s calls for peace amid his public feud with Donald Trump.Days after the US president objected to comments from the head of the Catholic church suggesting a “delusion of omnipotence” was fuelling the US-Israeli war in Iran, Sarah Mullally urged Anglicans to join Leo’s “courageous” call. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
Rollout of Covid vaccines extraordinary feat - inquiry report
Covid vaccines saved hundreds of thousands of lives, but a small minority harmed need better support, says report.

CNET News
Open 
Should You Buy a Self-Emptying Robot Vacuum? The Answer Isn't So Simple
They promise weeks of hands-free cleaning, but auto-empty robot vacuums defer maintenance rather than eliminating it. Here's what you need to know about the hidden costs and upkeep before you buy one.

CNET News
Open 
Character.AI Will Use AI to Let You Play a Character in Your Favorite Book
This new AI feature is taking fanfiction to another level.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Pope Leo excoriates 'tyrants' waging war instead of peace
Pope Leo XIV has admonished those waging war in the name of god and slammed "tyrants" destroying the world and its resources. The pontiff has stepped up his criticism of senseless violence, angering US President Trump.

Mail Online
Open 
Raiding Kate's closet? Alizee Thevenet appears to be wearing her royal sister-in-law's jacket from 20 years ago as she cuddles up to James Middleton in birthday snap
One of the photos showed James planting a kiss on his wife Alizee's cheek during a hiking trip to the Lake District, accompanied by the couple's beloved dogs.

Mail Online
Open 
Your dreams decoded: Scientists reveal what your nighttime visions say about you - and why night terrors might actually be GOOD for you
It's never nice waking up and remembering a scary dream - but having night terrors might actually be a good thing, experts say.

Mail Online
Open 
US 'danger tourist' who risked wiping out uncontacted tribe in YouTube stunt is detained in jail
Mykhailo Viktorovych Polyakov, 25, was arrested in March last year, two days after he set foot on the restricted territory of North Sentinel Island.

Mail Online
Open 
Japan's 'rollercoaster' bridge looks so steep terrified drivers have nightmares about it
Dubbed the 'rollercoaster bridge', the Eshima Ohashi in Japan links Matsue in Shimane Prefecture with Sakaiminato in Tottori Prefecture.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
New Jersey governor hits out at Fifa over reported $100 World Cup train tickets: ‘They should pay’
Mikie Sherrill says taxpayers should not carry burdenCosts at World Cup have come under increased scrutinyNew Jersey’s governor, Mikie Sherrill, has hit out at Fifa after reports her state’s transport system will charge $100 for a return ticket to World Cup matches this summer.New Jersey Transit lists the price for a round-trip ticket from New York’s Penn Station to MetLife Stadium, which will host eight World Cup matches this summer, including the final, as $12.90. The new pricing, reported by The Athletic earlier this week, puts the return ticket at more than $100 with no reductions for children, seniors or people with disabilities. NJ Transit told Fox 5 New York that the price has not been finalized. A decision is expected in the coming days. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
I thought hell would freeze over before I agreed with the pope. But in a world riven by cruelty, that day has finally come
It’s a relief to see the pontiff decrying brutality, because it seems most current world leaders lack the necessary spineI have never been a religious or spiritual person, even though I grew up in a religious area and had friends (and strangers) throughout school and university trying to lure me into whatever prayer disguised as organised fun they were up to. I did try it out shortly for a desperate period when I was young, attempting to pray to a god I didn’t really believe in to make me not gay, but blessedly he never answered.Despite my resistance to organised religion, I have always had a soft spot for nuns and their counterparts. The girlies.Sign up for a weekly email featuring our best reads Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
My friend keeps sending me unsettling social media videos. How do I tell her to stop? | Leading questions
People down the rabbit hole don’t always realise their experience isn’t universal, advice columnist Eleanor Gordon-Smith writes. You might have more luck trying a new tacticRead more Leading questionsMy friend of 30 years keeps sending me social media posts and videos that I either don’t find funny or are disturbing. We live far away and rarely see each other, so we communicate through a messaging app. I’ve told her many times that I prefer positive or cute things, and I don’t follow American politics.Her life is difficult and I understand why she spends so much time on social media. Last week she sent me multiple videos each day that were not of interest to me at all, including one with women slapping each other. She often buys into conspiracy theories until I disprove them. All of it upsets me. It’s like she doesn’t know who I am. I’m not replying to any of these messages but she keeps sending them. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Campaigners seek listed status for historic trig points that mapped Britain
Pillars at Cold Ashby, Northamptonshire, and Thorny Gale, Cumbria, bookended the project that modernised mappingHeritage campaigners are bidding for listing status for two concrete pillars hailed as “modest obelisks of modernity in the countryside”.These functional 120cm (4ft) stone or concrete “trig points” formed part of a 6,500-strong network of surveying posts that were vital for the development of modern mapping. Continue reading...

TechRadar News
Open 
An ancient Microsoft Excel security flaw could let hackers hijack your entire system, so patch now

TechRadar News
Open 
'It's a lot of fun': Blackmagic just turned the Apple Watch into the ultimate remote for iPhone filming

TechRadar News
Open 
Think the PS5 Pro is too expensive? This infamously pricey gaming console is coming back from the dead

TechRadar News
Open 
Battlefield 6 is getting its 'biggest map' in response to player feedback, developer says it's 'nearly four times the size of Mirak Valley'

TechRadar News
Open 
Miss Succession? Brian Cox's new movie Glenrothan will make you rethink dysfunctional family dynamics all over again — and is a world away from Waystar Royco

TechRadar News
Open 
D-Link Aquila Pro AI R95: high-speed Wi-Fi 7 at a competitive price

Digital Trends
Open 
Intel reveals secret sauce to keep gaming laptops running quieter and cooler
Intel's AI Quiet Plus isn't a new chip or a software patch; it's a certification standard that uses on-chip AI to dynamically manage noise, heat, and battery life.

Boing Boing
Open 
MAGA Mike fact-checks the Pope on Jesus
House Speaker by the thinnest margins, Mike Johnson took a moment to explain Christianity to the Pope. Suggesting that while Pope Francis might frown on war, there's always the handy "just war" doctrine for when the teachings of Jesus become a little inconvenient. — Read the rest
The post MAGA Mike fact-checks the Pope on Jesus appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Turn shoebox memories into digital keepsakes with this Kodak film and slide scanner for $40 off
TL;DR: Kodak Slide N Scan Film & Slide Scanner digitizes old slides and negatives with a built-in 5-inch LCD display for $149.99 until April 19 (MSRP $189.99), making it easy to preserve memories at home.
There's a certain kind of box most people avoid opening. — Read the rest
The post Turn shoebox memories into digital keepsakes with this Kodak film and slide scanner for $40 off appeared first on Boing Boing.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
People are actively managing their money more than ever, Charles Schwab says
Charles Schwab’s stock was leading the S&P 500’s decliners Thursday. Revenue rose to a quarterly record amid record trading activity, but missed expectations.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
IEA chief warns that Europe will run out of jet fuel in six weeks. Two carriers just cut flights from their schedules.
Lufthansa and KLM have both announced flight cuts for the summer season

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
World Athletics rejects 11 athlete transfers to Turkey
World Athletics rejects the applications of 11 elite athletes to switch their nationality to Turkey as the requests were "part of a coordinated recruitment strategy" by the country's government "to attract overseas athletes through lucrative contracts".

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Beckhams have 'always tried to be best parents', Victoria says after Brooklyn row
Victoria says she and David have always tried to "protect" their children, following a rift with their son.

Slashdot
Open 
Researchers Induce Smells With Ultrasound, No Chemical Cartridges Required
An anonymous reader quotes a report from UploadVR: A group of independent researchers built a device that can artificially induce smell using ultrasound, with no consumable cartridges required. [...] The team of four are Lev Chizhov, Albert Yan-Huang, Thomas Ribeiro, Aayush Gupta. Chizhov is a neurotech entrepreneur with a background in math and physics, Yan-Huang is a researcher at Caltech with a background in computation and neural systems, and Ribeiro and Gupta are co-researchers on the project with software engineering and AI expertise.

Instead of targeting your nose at all, the device directly targets the olfactory bulb in your brain with "focused ultrasound through the skull." The researchers say that as far as they're aware, no one has ever done this before, even in animals. A challenge in targeting the olfactory bulb is that it's buried behind the top of your nose, and your nose doesn't provide a flat surface for an emitter. Ultrasound also doesn't travel well through air. The solution the researchers came up with was to place the emitter on your forehead instead, with a "solid, jello-like pad for stability and general comfort," and the ultrasound directed downward towards the olfactory bulb.

To determine the best placement, they say they used an MRI of one of their skulls to "roughly determine where the transducer would point and how the focal region (where ultrasound waves actually concentrate) aligned with the olfactory bulb (the target for stimulation)". [...] According to the researchers, they were able to induce the sensation of fresh air "with a lot of oxygen", the smell of garbage "like few-day-old fruit peels," an ozone-like sensation "like you're next to an air ionizer," and a campfire smell of burning wood. While technically head-mounted, the current device does require being held up with two hands. But as with all such prototypes, it likely could be significantly miniaturized.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Mail Online
Open 
Shoplifting offences soar by 133% in five years - but just one in five suspects are charged
Total thefts in England and Wales rose by 133 per cent from 228,128 in 2020/21 to 530,457 in 2024/25, according to House of Commons Library data analysed by the Liberal Democrats.

Mail Online
Open 
British government urged to ban private jets amid fuel crisis by climate charity
Climate charity Possible has pushed officials to 'take swift action' to help protect people wanting to go abroad on family holidays.

Mail Online
Open 
Residents 'traumatised' after row of houses are daubed with red and black paint in latest mysterious nighttime 'brothel' attack across Britain
Residents on Lowfield Road in Kilburn, north-west London , woke up yesterday morning to find their walls covered with splashes of paint.

Mail Online
Open 
After styling himself as Jesus Christ and plastering his image across Washington like Kim Jong Un, now is the time for 'genuine alarm' over Donald Trump's mental state, PETER HITCHENS argues
Top officials in the US government should be asking themselves what to do about Trump, whose recent behaviour suggests he may not be 'entirely with us', Hitchens argued.

Mail Online
Open 
How to save Venice from sinking? MOVE IT! Scientists claim we should relocate the entire city to protect it from rising sea levels
Venice is renowned for its unique canal system and popular gondolas - but the 'Floating City' might have to be relocated to protect it from rising sea levels, experts warn.

Mail Online
Open 
Plague of bees floods Israel in eerie scenes tied to biblical warning of judgment
Tens of thousands of bees filled the skies over Israel, blanketing streets and buildings in a buzzing cloud that has sparked fears of a chilling biblical warning.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trust in vaccines needs rebuilding despite ‘extraordinary feat’ of Covid jabs, inquiry finds
Heather Hallett hails scheme but urges ministers and health services to promote better vaccine awarenessUK politics live – latest updatesThe UK’s Covid vaccination programme was “an extraordinary feat” which developed and delivered protective jabs in record time, but work is now needed to rebuild trust in vaccines and ensure better access before the next pandemic, an official inquiry has found.Heather Hallett, the chair of the statutory inquiry into the pandemic, said the vaccine rollout and the identification of an inexpensive steroid that saved the lives of thousands of UK patients, were “two of the success stories” of the pandemic.Establishing a pharmaceutical expert advisory panel to oversee the UK’s preparedness to develop, procure and manufacture vaccines and therapeutics.Producing targeted vaccination strategies and communications to increase vaccine uptake and reduce inequalities.Improving monitoring and evaluation of vaccine uptake and delivery to ensure efforts to boost uptake are effective.Helping regulatory bodies to access healthcare records for ongoing safety monitoring of new vaccines and therapeutics, andAssessing the vaccine damage payment scheme as soon as possible. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
DJ Shadow: ‘Kraftwerk are a touchstone for every phase of my career’
The hip-hop producer, remixer and crate-digger on staying fresh creatively, the influence of David Lynch and giving away his most valuable recordCan you share any regrets or missed opportunities from your career? nnagewadIn 1999, I was approached by Deftones to work on White Pony, but I had just come off of Unkle’s Psyence Fiction album. I was nursing a hip-hop image and reputation, so I was wary of working with anything that felt like it was too alternative or rock-oriented. So I missed out on being a part of a pretty seminal album. I wouldn’t say it’s a regret, necessarily, because I feel like my rationale was sound, but it’s kind of a missed opportunity.Was your move towards sample-free production on your recent albums driven by the headache and costliness of sample clearance, a desire to keep the creative process fresh, or a bit of both? EditorialJoeDefinitely both. There have been times in my career where I’ve wondered: at the end of the day, am I going to own only 15% of my catalogue because of all the samples? So that was part of it. But equally, I became known as somebody who was trying to be on the vanguard of making music with samples but I always knew I would want to make music in as many different ways as possible. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Former Arsenal goalkeeper Alex Manninger dies aged 48
Former Arsenal goalkeeper Alex Manninger has died at the age of 48 after his car was struck by a train, police said.

The Verge
Open 
Age verification is a mess but we’re doing it anyway
In the span of a few years, age verification went from an idea to standard practice on large parts of the internet. Seeking to prevent kids from accessing porn, other inappropriate content, or social media altogether, laws mandating age-gating have spread rapidly across the globe, reaching the UK, the US, Australia, France, Brazil, and many […]

Computer Weekly
Open 
Finance regulators to address AI risks after MPs say they are ‘not doing enough’
After a Treasury committee stated that the public and finance system are ‘exposed to potential serious harm’ from AI because regulators are ‘not doing enough’ to manage risks, finance regulators say they will take action to address concerns

ZeroHedge News
Open 
"The Roaring 2020s Are Back": S&P Futures Hit New Record With Nasdaq Up 12 Straight Days On Iran Truce Optimism
"The Roaring 2020s Are Back": S&P Futures Hit New Record With Nasdaq Up 12 Straight Days On Iran Truce Optimism

Stock futures are edging higher on continued optimism about an extended truce in the Middle East, while Taiwan Semi's solid results have sparked another leg higher in AI trade. As of 8:15 am ET, S&P 500 futures rose 0.1%, while Nasdaq 100 contracts +0.2%, and on pace for a 12th day of gains. The early hours of the session saw a sharp rally in technology stocks after TSMC's upbeat revenue outlook highlighted the resilience of AI chip demand. In premarket trading, Mag 7 stocks were mostly higher led by MSFT +1.8% and TSLA +1.3%.  On geopolitical headlines, the White House remains optimistic on the second round of talk (key Pakistani negotiator visits Tehran); Israel’s security cabinet met to discuss a possible ceasefire. Bond yields are 0-2bp lower with a modest gain in the dollar. Brent rose toward $96 a barrel as movements through the Strait of Hormuz remained all but paralyzed. Bonds rose, led by gains in Europe where central bank policymakers signaled they’re in no rush to raise interest rates. The dollar snapped an eight-day losing streak while gold rose above $4,800 an ounce. April’s strong stock rebound is being driven by a new kind of FOMO, according to Ed Yardeni, with Goldman saying that "despite the sharp market rebound, positioning has not fully caught up."  Still, while equities are “definitely pricing” the end of the war, we are “not there yet,” cautioned HSBC’s Patrick George while the IMF and World Bank are also worried that markets are underestimating the war’s economic damage. Today's US economic data calendar includes April New York Fed services business activity, Philadelphia Fed business outlook, weekly jobless claims (8:30am) and March industrial production (9:15am). Fed speaker slate includes Williams (8:35am) and Miran (10:35am)



In premarket trading, Mag 7 stocks are mixed: Microsoft +1.3%, Tesla +0.7%, Meta Platforms +0.5%, Nvidia -0.4%, Alphabet -0.2%, Apple +0.8%, Amazon -0.1%

Nuclear and uranium companies are set to extend this week’s rally after the White House released rules for establishing a National Initiative for American Space Nuclear Power. Oklo (OKLO) +7%, NuScale Power (SMR) +10%.
Quantum computing shares are on track to extend gains for a third consecutive session after Nvidia unveiled a suite of new open-source AI models aimed at accelerating progress within quantum computing.
Allbirds (BIRD) tumbles 21% as the newly minted AI stock takes a breather after soaring more than 580% on Thursday.
Hims & Hers (HIMS) rises 9%, with shares on track to extend the previous day’s 14% rally, after Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said the FDA is seeking to remove 12 peptides from Category 2 restrictions.
PepsiCo Inc. (PEP) gains 1% after quarterly revenue and earnings beat expectations as the maker of Doritos and Lay’s sees improvement in salty snacks volume following recent price cuts.
PPG Industries (PPG) rises 3% after the supplier of paints and coatings posted preliminary first quarter adjusted earnings per share that topped expectations.
QuidelOrtho Corp. (QDEL) sinks 17% after the health care services provider posted disappointing preliminary first-quarter revenue as US flu-like illness visits fell by about 30% from the year-earlier period.
Travelers (TRV) slips 1.4% after the insurance company posted first quarter results where net premiums written declined 1.7% from the year-ago period.
U.S. Bancorp (USB) rises about 1% after first-quarter profit beat estimates, as Chief Executive Officer Gunjan Kedia rounds out her first year leading the largest regional bank and boosting its stock.
Voyager Technologies (VOYG) gains 6% after the defense and space company signed an order with NASA for the seventh Private Astronaut Mission to the International Space Station.
Elsewhere in AI, Nvidia’s Jensen Huang said the US should seek greater cooperation with China on AI research. Politicians are also weighing in on the global AI race, with House Republicans calling for US sanctions against Chinese entities that improperly extract results from leading US AI models to develop their own competing systems. Today’s Big Take focuses on Anthropic’s race to assess the dangers of Mythos.

Stock markets have rebounded as signs of easing tensions in the Middle East, combined with a fresh burst of AI optimism and corporate earnings, pushed investors to abandon their cautious views.  Sentiment was boosted by lack of bad Iran news again: this time, the US and Iran are said to be considering a two-week ceasefire extension to allow more time to negotiate a peace deal; the next meeting between US / Iran may take place later this week with chatter from Pakistani media that Trump is said to be in attendance. April’s strong stock rebound is being driven by a new kind of FOMO, the fear of missing out on peace, according to Ed Yardeni, who said that for stocks, the V-shaped recovery this month makes it feel “like the Roaring 2020s are back." Still, while equities are “definitely pricing” the end of the war, we are “not there yet,” cautioned HSBC’s Patrick George. The IMF and World Bank are also worried that markets are underestimating the war’s economic damage.

In the latest developments in the conflict, Pakistan stepped up efforts to help the US and Iran prolong a ceasefire that’s set to expire next week.

“Investors have become conditioned to buy every dip,” said Michael Bell, head of market strategy at RBC BlueBay Asset Management. “The outlook is binary, either Hormuz reopens soon or it doesn’t. With equity markets already assuming Hormuz will reopen soon, the upside is perhaps limited.” 

The AI narrative is back in focus after TSMC raised its outlook for 2026, forecasting revenue growth of more than 30% and saying that capex is likely to lean toward the upper end of its forecast ($56 billion). Elon Musk’s Terafab project, which aims to reshape the chipmaking landscape dominated by TSMC, is reaching out to chip industry suppliers and asking them to move at ‘light speed’ on his project.

“TSMC describing AI demand as ‘extremely robust,’ pushing capex to the upper end of a $52-56 billion range, and signaling that the next three years of investment will significantly exceed the last three; that is not the language of a cycle nearing its peak,” said Amanda Lyons, information technology sector lead and head of research at Energy Group Capital.

While the S&P 500 hit a new record on Wednesday, valuation ratios are still well below the levels seen in late 2025, indicating that earnings forecasts are moving up faster than stock prices. The current 12-month forward blended PE multiple for the S&P 500 of about 21 times compares to a peak of 23 times in November. The rally is also without breadth, with more decliners than advances as the gauge passed 7,000.



Another concerning fact about the latest record high: it was reach with more decliners than advancers, suggesting the leadership of this meltup is becoming dangerously narrow. 



Lack of breadth however hasn't stopped the Nasdaq from going from oversold to overbought in 2 weeks.



Technology stocks have been snapped up in recent weeks after lagging the market for much of the year, putting the Nasdaq 100 on course for its longest winning streak since 2017 if the gauge extends gains on Thursday.

Claudia Panseri of UBS Wealth Management said her exposure to artificial intelligence stocks is focused on the US and China and is “more selective” than two years ago. “We also prefer companies which are still investing using cash, rather than companies issuing bonds,” Panseri told Bloomberg TV.

Some stocks face a volatile option expiry into Friday, with $3.3 trillion notional of options open interest expiring across US indexes, ETFs and single stocks. Investors are “scrambling” for the “under-owned right tail” according to Nomura’s cross asset desk strategist Charlie McElligott.

Meanwhile, the latest private credit headlines have a more reassuring tone, with Goldman Sachs’ global head of alternatives for wealth saying she expects private credit firms to keep drawing capital despite recent redemption episodes. That follows Blue Owl shares posting their biggest two-day gain since November 2022, and reassurances from US banks that their exposure to private credit is manageable.

Technology stocks fueled gains in Europe where the Stoxx 600 rose 0.4%. Technology and retail shares are leading gains, while telecoms and food beverage stocks are the biggest laggards. Optimism surrounding the sector got a boost after Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. raised its revenue outlook for 2026. Here are the biggest movers Thursday: 

Entain shares rise as much as 6.6% after its first-quarter online gaming revenue grew faster than expected, offsetting weaker retail and adverse sports results, according to analysts
Tesco shares rise as much as 3.5% after the UK’s largest supermarket chain delivered annual earnings ahead of expectations
Mitie Group rises as much as 4.5%, touching a record high, after the support services provider delivered a trading update
Barry Callebaut shares drop as much as 17%, hitting the lowest level since November, after the Swiss chocolate maker reported first-half earnings that missed estimates and lowered guidance for the year
Kering shares fall as much as 4.6% after the French owner of Gucci outlined financial ambitions at its capital markets day that analysts deemed cautious
EasyJet shares fall as much as 8.7%, the most since June 2022, as the low-cost airline forecasts a 1H26 headline pretax loss of between £540 million ($733 million) and £560 million
Heidelberger Druckmaschinen shares drop as much as 9.2%, pulling back from a two-month high, after the printing press maker issued a profit warning
Earlier in the session, Asian tech stocks also  climbed to a record high, while Taiwan’s total market cap topped $4.1 trillion to overtake the UK. Asian markets rose, with a key regional benchmark on course for a third-straight day of gains, on optimism over corporate earnings and a potential US-Iran ceasefire extension. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index advanced as much as 1.5%, with Samsung Electronics and Alibaba among the biggest boosts. Technology stocks led gains, with a sector gauge climbing to a new record high. South Korea’s Kospi, Japan’s Nikkei 225 and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Tech Index rose more than 2% each, while Taiwan’s total market cap climbed above $4.1 trillion to overtake the UK. Investors are renewing their interest in the artificial intelligence theme with support from resilient earnings at Asian tech hardware makers. At the same time, an outlook for an eventual end to the Middle East conflict and tamer energy prices is gaining traction. Among key moves, EV battery maker CATL climbed more than 10% in Hong Kong after better-than-expected earnings. Meanwhile, chip giant TSMC raised its revenue outlook for 2026, an upbeat forecast that underscores the resilience of AI chip demand.

In FX, the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index is up 0.2% and on course to snap an eight-day losing streak. The kiwi is the laggard among the G-10’s, falling 0.4% against the greenback. The pound falls 0.2% having derived little support from stronger-than-expected UK GDP data.

In rates, treasuries are slightly richer across the curve with gains led by the front-end and belly, supported by a wider bull steepening move seen across European bonds with oil prices steady. US yields lower by up to 2bp across front-end and belly with 2s10s, 5s30s spreads steeper by around 0.5bp and 1.2bp on the day. US 10-year trades around 4.265%, richer by 1.5bp on the day with bunds and gilts outperforming by 1.5bp and 1bp in the sector. In Europe, both UK and German 2-year yields outperform, richer by over 5bp on an outright basis, follows UK manufacturing data printing lower-than-expected. The US session includes weekly claims and a couple of Fed speakers.

In commodities, brent crude futures climb 1.6% to around $96.40 a barrel. European government bonds gain, led by the short-end as traders pare bets on interest rate hikes by the Bank of England and European Central Bank this year. UK and German 2-year yields fall 4 bps each. Precious metals advance, although are off their best levels. 

Today's US economic data calendar includes April New York Fed services business activity, Philadelphia Fed business outlook, weekly jobless claims (8:30am) and March industrial production (9:15am). Fed speaker slate includes Williams (8:35am) and Miran (10:35am)

Market Snapshot

S&P 500 mini +0.1%
Nasdaq 100 mini +0.3%
Russell 2000 mini little changed
Stoxx Europe 600 little changed
DAX little changed
CAC 40 +0.3%
10-year Treasury yield little changed at 4.28%
VIX little changed at 18.14
Bloomberg Dollar Index little changed at 1193.41
euro -0.2% at $1.178
WTI crude +1.7% at $92.84/barrel
Top Overnight News

Pakistan is stepping up efforts to ensure the US and Iran prolong a ceasefire that’s set to end next week, allowing more time for the warring sides to negotiate a lasting peace deal. The US and Iran are considering a two-week ceasefire extension, according to a person familiar with the matter, with neither side desiring to restart fighting. BBG
The Trump administration wants automakers and other American manufacturers to play a larger role in weapons production, reminiscent of a practice used during World War II: WSJ
Energy Secretary Chris Wright and Interior Secretary Doug Burgum will urge the heads of top U.S. oil and gas companies in a call Thursday to increase drilling in a bid to lower oil prices. Politico
China's economy picked up speed early in 2026, riding an export surge before the Iran war sent energy costs soaring and put global demand - vital to Beijing's growth ambitions - at risk. The 5.0% year-on-year pace in the first quarter sits at the top of China's full-year target range of 4.5%-5.0%, highlighting a resilience that sets it ‌apart from much of Asia, helped by ample strategic oil reserves and a diversified energy mix. RTRS
Australian employment rose by 17,900 in March, missing expectations and driven entirely by full-time roles, while the jobless rate held at 4.3%. BBG
The UK economy grew 0.5% in February, beating estimates to post its strongest monthly reading since January 2024. Activity was boosted by the services sector, though the data predate the Iran war. BBG
Policymakers at the European Central Bank are leaning toward keeping interest rates unchanged this month, postponing their verdict on whether the fallout of the Iran war warrants a response. BBG
Senator Thom Tillis is blocking Trump’s Fed chair nominee, Kevin Warsh, until the Justice Department drops an investigation into Powell. And the stalemate is leaving him in limbo with no clear off-ramp in sight. Politico
Anthropic’s Mythos is so skilled at hacking that access is tightly controlled. The system’s ability to autonomously find and exploit vulnerabilities is forcing banks and governments to rethink cybersecurity. BBG
Foreign holdings of Treasuries soared to a record $9.49 trillion in February. Canada led with a $50.5 billion increase, while Japan remained the largest holder. BBG
Iran Conflict

The Trump admin's goal is to bring both sides to the brink of an overarching deal to end the conflict that can then be pushed over the finish line in a second face-to-face meeting, according to ABC, citing officials. The officials acknowledge that technical talks to hammer out the fine details and implementation of the arrangement will likely take longer to complete, perhaps eventually necessitating an extension of the initial ceasefire, but that pushing back the truce’s expiration date isn’t a top priority for the administration at the moment.
US President Trump told guests Monday night he wants to bring the war in Iran to a swift end; said only way to get Iran back to negotiating table was to increase the pressure, according to WSJ citing officials at the dinner.
US President Trump posted "Trying to get a little breathing room between Israel and Lebanon. It has been a long time since the two leaders have spoken, like 34 years. It will happen tomorrow. Nice!".
Pakistani Army Chief is heading to the US on Friday as part of mediation efforts between the US and Iran, Al Jazeera reported citing a Pakistani security source.
Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry said the US and Iran are willing to hold talks and the process is continuing but no date decided for next round of US-Iran talks.
A military advisor to the Islamic Revolution Leader said Iranian Armed Forces’ launchers are ready to hit American warships and sink all of them, Press TV reported.
A senior Iranian official said the fate of Iran’s highly enriched uranium and the duration of its nuclear restrictions remain unresolved, adding that fundamental disagreements persist over nuclear issues. Iranian official said there are greater hopes for extending the ceasefire and holding a second round of talks after the trip, adding that the Pakistani army chief’s visit to Iran helped reduce differences in some areas.
Iranian officials will meet with Pakistan's army chief on Thursday in Tehran and will discuss US proposals, according to TASS.
Iran and the Pakistani mediator will discuss details of the messages exchanged between Tehran and Washington tomorrow, Thursday; via Al Jazeera citing Iranian TV.
Journalist Abas Aslani posted source said Iran-US talks are far less positive [than reported] due to contradictory US stances & Israeli spoiler efforts, media push hyping success of talks is a PR manoeuvre to calm markets and shield Trump from pressure.
Iran’s ambassador to Pakistan said Islamabad is the sole venue for Iran–US talks.
Diplomatic sources suggest that "Washington is pressing forcefully to cool down the Lebanese front", via Kan's Kais; "Second round of negotiations between Israel and Lebanon will take place in Washington soon". "Second round of negotiations between Israel and Lebanon will take place in Washington soon, and that the current contacts are focused on achieving a temporary ceasefire that will lay the groundwork for ending the war."
Two Israeli officials said the meeting of the political security cabinet ended without a decision on a ceasefire in Lebanon, according to Axios's Ravid.
Israeli media citing informed sources state that a ceasefire in Lebanon will not happen soon despite Trump's statements.
Israeli army has not received any instructions so far to prepare for a ceasefire in Lebanon, via Al Arabiya citing local reported.
Lebanese officials say a ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon is expected 'soon', according to FT.
The next meeting between Israel and Lebanon is expected to be held early next week, via Sky news Arabia citing Israel Hayom.
Iran's Interior Minister has ordered border governors to neutralise the threat of a naval blockade by strengthening and developing border trade by increasing imports of basic goods and exports of goods, utilising all national and regional capacities.
Iranian politician affiliated with Resistance Front of Islamic Iran, Mohsen Rezaei said they will not leave the Strait of Hormuz until the full realisation of Iran's rights, adds that this time, Iran has set preconditions.
Iranian Parliament Speaker Ghalifbaf said US should withdraw from 'Israel first' mistake and must comply with agreement, also said resistance and Iran are one soul both in war and ceasefire.
Hezbollah fires long-range missiles at Tel Aviv, according to Defapress.
Iranian military affiliated outlet Defapress claims that four ships broke the US naval blockade over the past 24 hours, citing satellite data.
Israeli warplanes carried out a strike on the town of Shihabiya in southern Lebanon.
US Central Command said US blockade has turned back 10 vessels in the Strait of Hormuz today.
China's Foreign Minister Wang Yi stressed to Iran that the Strait of Hormuz needs to reopen and stressed freedom of navigation in Hormuz, while he said Hormuz reopening is a unanimous call from the international community.
A more detailed look at global markets courtesy of Newsquawk

APAC stocks mostly gained following the positive lead from Wall Street, where the S&P 500 and Nasdaq printed fresh all-time highs, amid tech strength and peace talk optimism. ASX 200 bucked the trend and gave back initial gains, and more, as notable outperformance in tech was offset by losses in energy, resources, materials, financials and miners. Nikkei 225 rallied to a fresh record high after reclaiming the 59,000 status amid the hopes for a Middle East resolution and with the index led by the momentum in tech stocks. Hang Seng and Shanghai Comp were higher with further upside seen as the dust settled following the mixed Chinese GDP and activity data, in which GDP growth for Q1 missed expectations, but GDP Y/Y topped forecasts and printed at the high-end of China's official 2026 GDP growth target. Meanwhile, Industrial Production data for March was better-than-expected, but Retail Sales disappointed.

Top Asian News

Japan's top FX diplomat Mimura said told US Treasury Secretary Bessent will upgrade FX developments as needed, and both sides agreed to coordinate closely on FX.
Japanese Finance Minister Katayama said regarding exchange rates, agreed to further intensify communication with US Treasury Secretary Bessent.
Japanese Finance Minister Katayama said many central bankers are adopting a wait-and-see stance, as raising interest rates could have a negative impact on the economy, adds it is impossible to predict when the current situation ends and spillover effects.
Senior Japanese Financial Regulator official said Japan sees private credit as potential pillar in new strategy to meet corporate funding demand driven by M&A surge, according to reported.
China NBS said the economy had a good start in Q1, but the external situation is becoming more complex, adds China is to expand domestic demand and optimise supply. China will implement proactive macro policies. Expects a complex, volatile external environment. China will consolidate economic recovery foundation. Sees mixed signs of strong supply and weak demand.
Deutsche Bank upgrades China's 2026 real GDP growth to 4.9% (prev. 4.5%).
Barclays raises China 2026 GDP growth view to 4.6% (prev. saw 4.0%).
European bourses (STOXX 600 +0.2%) are broadly gaining, albeit only modestly. The CAC 40 is the outperformer, rebounding from Wednesday’s luxury-driven selloff. The FTSE 100 is also slightly higher this morning, after UK GDP came in far stronger than expected in February (0.5% vs exp. 0.1%). Sectors point to a positive bias. Top of the pile lies Technology, supported by strong TSMC earnings, which has lifted peers such ASML. Telecoms is the underperformer, with a downgrade for Telia weighing on the broader sector.

Top European News

EU Inflation Rate MoM Final (Mar) M/M 1.3% vs. Exp. 1.2% (Prev. 0.6%, Low. 1.2%, High. 1.2%).
EU Inflation Rate YoY Final (Mar) Y/Y 2.6% vs. Exp. 2.5% (Prev. 1.9%, Low. 2.5%, High. 2.6%).
EU Core Inflation Rate YoY Final (Mar) Y/Y 2.3% vs. Exp. 2.3% (Prev. 2.4%).
UK Balance of Trade (Feb) -0.720B vs. Exp. -3.6B (Prev. 3.922B).
UK Goods Trade Balance (Feb) -18.79B vs. Exp. -20.2B (Prev. -14.45B, Low. -20.5B, High. -14B).
UK GDP YoY (Feb) Y/Y 1.0% vs. Exp. 1.0% (Prev. 0.8%).
UK GDP MoM (Feb) M/M 0.5% vs. Exp. 0.1% (Prev. 0%, Low. 0.0%, High. 0.3%).
Trade/Tariffs

UK Europe Minister Nick Thomas-Symonds is expected to offer an update on the state of play in negotiations; EU Trade Chief Sefcovic, and European Parliament President Roberta Metsola, will also provide keynotes, reported Politico.
USTR Greer said US-China Board of Investment is to be a government forum, adds there's no situation where there's no trade between US and China, also said the Trump admin wants to be pragmatic regarding China.
FX

DXY edged higher throughout the entirety of the European session following punchy Iran rhetoric. The index marked a session high of 98.21, rising from its earlier trough of 97.83 made in Asia. (Full Middle East analysis on the headline feed) As it stands, both US and Iran continue communication, but there is no confirmation yet on second-round talks or a ceasefire extension - not to mention Lebanon, which remains a key point. Aside from geopolitics, POLITICO reported this morning, "a growing chorus of Republicans, eager to install Warsh, are joining the call for the administration to end the probe" into Fed Chair Powell. This comes ahead of Warsh's hearing next week. The session ahead sees remarks from Fed’s Williams (voter), who will speak at a Federal Home Loan Bank of New York event, while Miran (voter, dovish dissenter) will speak on the global outlook.
GBP knee-jerked higher on a stronger-than-expected UK GDP report from February, but now trades with very mild losses given the Dollar strength this morning. In brief, on a monthly basis, GDP rose 0.5%, while yearly saw an increase of 0.1%. This set of metrics did not encapsulate the US-Iran war and as such, MPC members will likely refer to the second-round effects of the energy shock before opting to adjust rates. Cable continues to trade towards recent highs and is essentially at pre-war levels. The pair attempted to breach 1.36, a rally which faltered at 1.3594.
Antipodeans trade mixed. While Aussie is a touch firmer against a resilient USD following jobs data - Kiwi sits at the bottom of the pile as bets for RBNZ tightening pare a touch with markets implying 77bps of easing by year end (prev. c. 83bps). NZD/USD began falling in Asia, though losses extended throughout the European morning to trade at session lows of 0.5893, the move likely to face support @ 0.5892.
JPY had a choppy overnight session with USD/JPY marking a session low of 158.27 after successful jawboning from Finance Minister Katayama; she told G7 members that Japan was watching FX with a high sense of urgency. She also reiterated close communication with the US Treasury. This, as is typically the case with the Japanese Finance Ministry, indicates officials are uncomfortable with the extent of JPY weakness, with JPY nearing the key 160 mark. Since these comments, JPY pared the entirety of the strength Katayama gave to the haven, pressured by the gains in the USD.
Central Banks

ECB officials are said to be leaning towards an April rate hold.
ECB's Schnabel said that the memory of high inflation remains fresh, and inflation expectations could be more fragile. Can afford to take time to analyse the Iran shock. We are in a relatively favourable position because we were successful in bringing down inflation to 2% before the war started, have monetary policy stance that is broadly neutral. To carefully consider data that may indicate inflation becoming entrenched or having second-round effects.
ECB’s Demarco said policymakers must be patient on rate decisions, but warns an adverse scenario could materialise; adverse scenario could require two rate hikes; longer-term inflation expectations anchored.
ECB's Muller said rate move at April meeting still cannot be ruled out, adds may not have all the data this month to determine if interest rates will have to be raised to tame an inflation surge and June meeting will offer greater body of information. No hard evidence of second-round effects of inflation.
Goldman Sachs expects the ECB to deliver 25bp rate hikes in June and September 2026 (prev. saw hikes in April and June). Analysts expect energy prices to remain persistently high through 2026, significant pass-through into inflation is likely in coming months and ECB’s communication has remained largely hawkish on the path ahead.
Fixed Income

Global fixed benchmarks opened the European session with a positive bias, but have gradually edged off best levels as the risk tone deteriorated as the morning progressed. Initial optimism was facilitated by comments from both Israeli and Lebanese officials, who said that a ceasefire is expected soon, and talks are expected to continue in the near-term. On the Iranian front, President Trump said that “he wants to bring the war in Iran to a swift end”. Thereafter, in early morning trade, a military advisor to the Islamic Revolution Leader said Iranian Armed Forces’ launchers are ready to hit American warships and sink all of them – a comment which weighed on the risk tone at the time, leading to upside in the crude complex, which pressured global fixed paper.
USTs are firmer by a couple of ticks and currently trades at the lower end of a 111-11 to 111-17 range. Ultimately, moving at the whim of geopolitical developments, with markets now awaiting clear details on when/if the second round of Iran-US talks will begin. From a domestic perspective, weekly initial jobless claims (215k expected from 219k) and continuing claims (exp. 1.84mln from 1.794mln), NY Fed services activity, Philly Fed manufacturing are all due.
Bunds are firmer by around 15 ticks and currently trade within a 125.32 to 125.62 range. German paper, as above, is off its best levels as the risk tone slipped a bit. Domestic newsflow has been fairly limited this morning, aside from an updated Goldman Sachs call for the ECB; analysts now expect the ECB to deliver 25bps rate hikes in June and September 2026 (prev. saw April and June), citing expectations that energy prices will stay high through 2026, feed through materially into inflation in the coming months and keep ECB communication largely hawkish. As it stands, money markets fully price in a 25bps hike in July. Focus later will be on the ECB Minutes (Mar), where the Bank kept rates steady – traders will be cognizant of any commentary pertaining to the Middle East situation.
Gilts are incrementally lower and trade within an 88.68 to 89.07 range. Slightly underperforming vs peers, given the hawkish impulses from a stronger-than-expected UK GDP report. In brief, on a monthly basis, GDP rose 0.5%, while yearly saw an increase of 0.1%. ING writes "UK output surged in February, but it's in line with a trend dating back to 2022, where growth is stronger in the first quarter than across the rest of the year. We're taking this latest data with a pinch of salt".
Commodities

Regional mediators are actively working to extend the US-Iran ceasefire and secure a second round of talks, with both sides agreeing in principle to reconvene, though no date or venue has been set. The Trump administration is pushing a two-stage strategy: use sustained economic and military pressure to force Iran toward the brink of a broader deal, then finalise it in a follow-up face-to-face meeting, with technical negotiations on implementation likely to extend beyond the current truce. A senior Iranian official said the fate of Iran’s highly enriched uranium and the duration of its nuclear restrictions remain unresolved, adding that fundamental disagreements persist over nuclear issues.
Pakistan has taken a central mediation role, coordinating messages between Tehran and Washington and engaging both politically and militarily, although officials confirm no timeline has been agreed for the next round. Despite publicly downplaying the need for a ceasefire extension, US officials acknowledge it may ultimately be required to keep negotiations alive as talks progress.
Crude prices edged higher following yesterday’s losses as traders feel the ceasefire could be prolonged and negotiations restarted. Brent Jun holds above USD 95/bbl this European morning (in a USD 94.43-96.85/bbl range) while WTI Jun sits in a 87.32-89.82/bbl parameter.
Spot gold trades modestly higher, just above USD 4,800/oz and well within yesterday’s USD 4,786-4,871/oz range. Base metals are flat/positive with 3M LME copper holding above USD 13k/t in a current USD 13,281.00-13,376.58/t range. Overnight data showed China’s Q1 growth accelerated on strong exports (Y/Y printed at the top end of China’s 2026 target of 4.5-5%), while March retail sales rose but slowed from February; analysts said the Iran war still poses risks to the outlook.
Australia said it secures 100mln litres extra of diesel from Brunei and South Korea.
Repsol (REP SM) is set to take back operational control of its Venezuelan oil assets and boost production following an agreement with the country’s government, according to FT.
White House is expected to urge heads of oil and gas companies to increase drilling, according to POLITICO.
Australia's Energy Minister reported that a fire at Viva Energy's (VEA AT) refinery is still not under control, while diesel and jet fuel output continues, but refinery fire may hit petrol production more.
Geopolitics (ex Iran)

Ukrainian President Zelensky posted "there can be no normalization of Russia as it is today. Pressure on Russia must work", following heavy drone attacks, via X.
Explosions reported in Ukraine's capital, Kyiv, while the Mayor said air defence systems have been activated
US Event Calendar

8:30 am: United States Apr 11 Initial Jobless Claims, est. 213k, prior 219k
8:30 am: United States Apr Philadelphia Fed Business Outlook, est. 10, prior 18.1
8:30 am: United States Apr 4 Continuing Claims, est. 1810k, prior 1794k
9:15 am: United States Mar Industrial Production MoM, est. 0.1%, prior 0.2%
9:15 am: United States Mar Capacity Utilization, est. 76.3%, prior 76.3%
Individual investors are once again snapping up so-called “meme” stocks, an early sign that retail’s animal spirits are returning to the US equity market after the mid-month tax deadline and as geopolitical tensions abate.
Central Bank speakers

8:35 am: United States Fed’s Williams Gives Keynote Remarks
10:35 am: United States Fed’s Miran Speaks in Moderated Discussion
DB's Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap

I'm back in the hotseat this morning after a holiday which saw the temperatures on the slopes range from -20 degrees at the start to +25 degrees by the end. It was truly remarkable. Just as I was driving home, I then picked up the most virulent form of man-flu which knocked me out for a few days, including any desire to have early EMR starts this week. All I could do over the weekend was lie on the sofa and watch 30 hours of Masters' golf coverage. It was brutal. I'll leave you to assess whether there was sympathy at home or not.

Just as I went on holiday, on March 30th the S&P 500 closed at 6343.7 and at an 8-month low. Fast forward 11 business days and we closed last night above 7,000 (+0.80% at 7,023) for the first time, some +10.71% higher and at record highs. Few would have believed this was possible at the time, but this episode has been a high beta version of the usual geopolitical playbook where the negative impact on average lasts 15 days and the full recovery usually takes another 15-20 days. In this example the decline was slightly beyond the 75th percentile through history and the trough took a week longer to arrive than the average but the recovery took a week or so less. However, the geopolitical playbook has broadly worked.

The rally is continuing in Asia this morning with the Nikkei (+2.06%) leading the gains and hitting fresh all-time highs on the back of technology and chip-related stocks. The KOSPI (+1.64%) is also rising significantly, back to around +47% YTD. Elsewhere the Hang Seng (+1.38%), CSI (+0.90%), and the Shanghai Composite (+0.53%) are all higher after a decent monthly dump of data this morning (details below). The S&P/ASX 200 (-0.34%) is a rare decliner. S&P 500 (+0.15%) and Nasdaq (+0.26%) futures are continuing to edge up.

Coming back to China, GDP grew +5.0% year-on-year in the first quarter, surpassing forecasts of a +4.8% increase and showing an improvement from +4.5% in the preceding quarter. Additional data on economic activity released presented a mixed yet still resilient outlook, as industrial production increased by +5.7% in March compared to the same month last year, exceeding expectations of a +5.3% rise. However, retail sales advanced by +1.7% in March, falling short of the anticipated +1.9% increase, thereby underscoring ongoing weakness in domestic demand. New home prices continued their downward trend, decreasing by -0.21% in March, following a -0.28% decline in the previous month. So the property slump continues.

When it comes to the latest move higher, risk assets took their cue to continue to climb yesterday after the AP reported that the two sides were “in principle” in agreement on extending their April 7 truce, with Bloomberg later reporting that a two-week extension was being considered. So that raised hopes about a more durable ceasefire. White House Press Secretary Leavitt said that the sides remained locked in negotiations but that the US had not “formally requested an extension of the ceasefire.” On the Iranian side there was some optimism for a deal on the back of comments from Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Baghaei who told reporters that while the country’s right to peaceful use of nuclear energy “cannot be revoked”, the level and type of enrichment is “negotiable”.

As well as the new record for the S&P 500, the Nasdaq (+1.59%) reached a record of its own as the Mag 7 saw even larger gains (+2.48%). Technology and Consumer-oriented cyclicals drove the S&P gains again, with Autos (+6.59%), Software (+4.29%), Tech Hardware (+1.57%), and Consumer Services (+1.42%) the major outperformers, while commercial-oriented cyclicals lagged such as Cap Goods (-1.73%) and Materials (-1.29%).

Alongside the news from the Middle East, positive earnings helped to support US equities, with both Morgan Stanley (+4.52%) and Bank of America (+0.97%) advancing after their latest results. Coupled with other positive surprises, that’s helped to underscore the narrative of ongoing US economic strength, despite the recent surge in energy prices. Private credit concerns have also seen a couple days of respite as the two-day move in Blue Owl Capital is now over +17%, the biggest two-day rally since late-2022 after the company’s shares fell to its lowest publicly traded level last Friday.

Meanwhile, markets were intrigued by the story that US shoe brand AllBirds surged by +582% after it announced that it would rebrand as an AI compute business. From sneakers to servers, laces to latency, footware to firmware, comfort to compute! Bet you wish I was back on holiday or on the sofa!
In fixed income, treasury yields also rose after officials questioned the case for rate cuts. For instance, Cleveland Fed President Hammack said that her baseline was to keep rates on hold for a good while, and even Treasury Secretary Bessent said that he would “understand if the Fed needs to wait on rate cuts” even if he ultimately saw large cuts beyond that. So that helped yields to rise across the curve, with the 10yr yield (+3.6bps) rising to 4.283%, whilst the 2yr yield (+1.7bps) rose to 3.76%. This comes as Fed futures are again not pricing in a full Fed cut over the next 12 months. The latest data also supported those rate moves, with the Empire state manufacturing index for April up to a 5-month high of 11.0 (vs. 0.0 expected).

Earlier in Europe, equities were more subdued, particularly after some more negative earnings reports came through. That included French companies Kering (-9.29%) and Hermes (-8.22%), which weighed on the CAC 40 (-0.64%). And ASML also fell -4.22%, despite raising its full-year sales forecast. So equities took a hit across the continent, with the STOXX 600 (-0.43%) falling back, despite the more positive headlines about potential US-Iran talks.

Sovereign bonds also lost ground, with yields on 10yr bunds (+2.0bps), OATs (+2.4bps) and gilts (+3.4bps) moving higher. However, expectations for an imminent ECB rate hike continued to decline, with pricing for an April hike down to a one-month low of 23.9% at the close yesterday. 58.3bps of hikes were priced in by year end at yesterday’s close, down from 81bps on March 24th.

Markets generally continue to trade on optimism that the conflict will ultimately be sorted out in weeks even if the current situation in the Strait of Hormuz remains unchanged. The US naval blockade is far from over, with US Central Command posting on X yesterday that no vessels have been able to make it past US forces, with 9 vessels complying with US direction to turn back to Iran.

Trump also announced that President Xi had given him a call, later posting that China is “very happy” that he is “permanently opening up” the Strait of Hormuz, and have agreed to not send their weapons to Iran. His post followed an earlier FT report that Iran had secretly acquired Chinese spy satellite to target US military bases across the Middle East during the conflict.

Finally, Australia’s labour market data showed that the unemployment rate remained unchanged at 4.3% in March. Meanwhile, employment experienced a modest increase of 17,900, compared to the anticipated 20,000, for the month. Firms contributed by adding 52,500 full-time positions, indicating a degree of underlying resilience despite a slight slowdown in hiring. This data emerges as the RBA cautions that it may be necessary to further increase interest rates in the upcoming months to mitigate inflation, which is already significantly above the target and poses a risk of rising even higher.

To the day ahead now, data releases include the US April New York Fed services business activity, Philadelphia Fed business outlook, March industrial production, and initial jobless claims. We’ll also get the ECB’s account of the March meeting, and hear from the Fed’s Williams and Miran, the ECB’s Schnabel, Kazaks, Rehn and Kocher, and the BoE’s Taylor.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 08:45

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Sotomayor Apologizes After Criticizing Kavanaugh Over Immigration Case
Sotomayor Apologizes After Criticizing Kavanaugh Over Immigration Case

Authored by Tom Gantert via The Epoch Times,

U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice Sonia Sotomayor apologized in a statement for comments she recently made about Associate Justice Brett Kavanaugh.


“At a recent appearance at the University of Kansas School of Law, I referred to a disagreement with one of my colleagues in a prior case, but I made remarks that were inappropriate,” Sotomayor said in the statement released by the Supreme Court.

“I regret my hurtful comments. I have apologized to my colleague.”


Sotomayor was at an event April 7 at the University of Kansas School of Law when she criticized Kavanaugh over his stance involving U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents stopping individuals to question them about their immigration status.



Her remarks appeared to reference the Supreme Court’s Sept. 8, 2025, emergency order in Noem v. Vasquez Perdomo, which allowed immigration enforcement to continue while legal challenges proceed.

The Supreme Court issued a temporary order allowing the practice to continue while the case moves through the courts.

In a concurring opinion, Brett Kavanaugh wrote that such encounters are typically brief and that individuals are generally released quickly.


“I had a colleague in that case who wrote, you know, these are only temporary stops,” Sotomayor said, referencing Kavanaugh, according to Bloomberg.

“This is from a man whose parents were professionals. And probably doesn’t really know any person who works by the hour.”


Kavanaugh’s parents were Martha Kavanaugh, an associate judge in Maryland, and Everett Kavanaugh Jr., a Washington lobbyist.

Sotomayor’s parents were Juan Sotomayor, a tool worker with a third-grade education, and Celina Baez, a nurse.

Jonathan Turley, a law professor at George Washington University Law School, said Sotomayor’s criticism of Kavanaugh suggested “that he is an out-of-touch elitist.”

“The suggestion is that Kavanaugh has avoided—and continues to avoid—interactions with people who get paid on an hourly basis—while she is more inclusive in her circle of friends. It is obviously false, but more importantly, petty and unfair,” Turley posted April 12 on X.

David French, a former attorney and columnist for The New York Times, said Sotomayor’s comments were “inappropriate.”

“This gets a little personal feeling to me,” French said on The Dispatch podcast on April 14.

“Maybe they know each other well enough to where she can make assumptions or make educated guesses about what his parents experienced or their broader experience. I don’t know. To me, it’s not even a close call. It was over the line in its personal nature.”

The Epoch Times reached out to Sotomayor and Kavanaugh for comment.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 09:10

ZeroHedge News
Open 
War Economy Returns: From Trucks To Tanks, Pentagon Looks To Automakers To Rebuild America's Arsenal
War Economy Returns: From Trucks To Tanks, Pentagon Looks To Automakers To Rebuild America's Arsenal

With two active conflict areas in Eurasia - the Russia-Ukraine conflict in Eastern Europe and the U.S.-Iran theater in the Gulf - the world is moving deeper into a war cycle. The latest indicator is not only that militaries around the world are beginning to stockpile one-way attack drones, but also the early-stage push to convert underused civilian industrial capacity, including struggling auto production lines, into wartime manufacturing hubs.

The Wall Street Journal is out with a new report that describes just that, noting that the Trump administration is exploring whether U.S. manufacturers, including GM, Ford, GE Aerospace, and Oshkosh, can convert civilian industrial capacity into weapons production as conflicts across Eurasia drag on and deplete critical weapons stockpiles.

The effort to boost the war economy is part of what Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has described as putting the defense industrial base on a "wartime footing."

A Department of War official said the agency "is committed to rapidly expanding the defense industrial base by leveraging all available commercial solutions and technologies to ensure that our warfighters maintain a decisive advantage."

Senior defense officials told the outlet that Mary Barra of General Motors and Jim Farley of Ford Motor have been briefed on converting auto production lines into weapons manufacturing facilities. The report did not provide details on what types of weapons could be produced in the factories or on the downtime required to convert those lines.

Those officials said GE Aerospace and vehicle and machinery maker Oshkosh were among other manufacturers briefed.

The historical precedent is that America converted its automotive base during World War II to produce record numbers of main battle tanks, bombers, and fighter planes to win the war.



Let's not forget that GM and Ford both repurposed production lines during the Covid pandemic to produce ventilators, so it's not far-fetched that these automakers could one day be rolling tanks down the production lines.

One major hurdle is the far-left unions, which could force labor actions such as strikes, as the broader left-wing ecosystem has transformed into a pressure campaign against anything related to Trump, whether foreign or domestic policy.

Evidence of converting underused civilian industrial capacity has already been seen with the German automaker Volkswagen, which will soon transform its Lower Saxony factory from producing T-Roc Cabriolets to manufacturing parts for the Iron Dome missile interceptor system.

In mid-February, we highlighted a conversation between Anduril Industries founder Palmer Luckey and Joe Rogan about how the U.S. won World War II. Luckey noted:


"How did the United States win World War II … Manufacturing. Some of it was new factories, but most of it was taking over old factories."



.@PalmerLuckey “WWII we turned our automotive factories into missile factories” https://t.co/P6ZjQsPjeW pic.twitter.com/uUJmcTTupU
— Molly O’Shea (@MollySOShea) April 16, 2026
That's why Chinese autos will never flood the U.S.: it would destroy the auto industrial base that can easily be converted to wartime production. However, the current left-wing regime in Europe has already chosen to hollow out its industrial core by flooding the continent with BYD cars.

This is wartime stuff.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 09:35

ZeroHedge News
Open 
US Industrial Production Unexpectedly Drops In March (After Huge Upward Revision For Feb)
US Industrial Production Unexpectedly Drops In March (After Huge Upward Revision For Feb)

At first glance the 0.5% MoM decline in US Industrial production (considerably worse than than the 0.1% MoM rise expected - and dragging YoY growth in IP down to +0.74%) is bad news... suggesting immediate impacts from the war are being felt and sparking headlines decrying President Trump's actions.



Source: Bloomberg

However, while we agree that the decline is notable, the fact that February's data was revised drastically higher, from +0.2% to +0.7% MoM, means that over the two months, industrial production overall is actually higher (and up 0.2% since the end of the war)...



Source: Bloomberg

Energy was behind the slowdown:


March oil and gas drilling posted a decline of 2.4% m/m after rising 0.6% in Feb., Federal Reserve data show.


March consumer energy products was decline of 2.1% m/m after rising 2.3% in Feb.


March commercial energy products declined 0.3% m/m after increasing 0.8% in Feb.

.

A similar picture evolves for Manufacturing production which fell 0.1% MoM in March (worse than the 0.1% MoM rise expected) after February's 0.2% MoM rise was revised up 2x to a 0.4% MoM rise. Nevertheless, Manufacturing production YoY slowed to just 0.5%...



Source: Bloomberg

Bottom Line: it's not great news that industrial production is slowing... but it's not as dire as it looks at first glance (and remember Manufacturing PMIs were strong)...



...and energy production is unpredictable at best in the current environment.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 09:35

ZeroHedge News
Open 
DOJ Petitions Court To Toss Convictions Of Unpardoned Jan. 6 Defendants
DOJ Petitions Court To Toss Convictions Of Unpardoned Jan. 6 Defendants

Authored by Janice Hisle via The Epoch Times,

The Justice Department is petitioning an appeals court to throw out the convictions of unpardoned defendants who were charged in connection with the U.S. Capitol breach on Jan. 6, 2021.

“The United States has determined ... that dismissal of this criminal case is in the interests of justice,” read a motion filed April 14 in the case of Elmer Stewart Rhodes III, Kelly Meggs, Kenneth Harrelson, and Jessica Watkins.

All four defendants belonged to the Oath Keepers, a group that says its members are mostly former military, police, and medics who are dedicated to upholding Constitutional rights. Rhodes, the group’s founder, had been one of the most high-profile Jan. 6 defendants; he was sentenced to 18 years in prison for seditious conspiracy and other charges.



In their motion filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, federal prosecutors said they would file separate motions-to-vacate in “similar” Jan. 6 cases.

Those cases involve four other Oath Keepers—Roberto Minuta, Edward Vallejo, David Moerschel, and Joseph Hackett—along with Proud Boys members Ethan Nordean, Joseph Biggs, Zachary Rehl, and Dominic Pezzola.

The Proud Boys group has said it is open to men who are “gay or straight,” and of all races and religions who support Western values that created the modern world.

After being sworn in as the 47th president in 2025, President Donald Trump granted full pardons to about 1,500 people who faced Jan. 6 charges.

However, he stopped short of pardoning 14 defendants who were Oath Keepers and Proud Boys.

He instead commuted their sentences, leaving their convictions still standing.

Cases involving 12 of those defendants are part of the motion that U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro signed on April 14.

The remaining two defendants who had not received pardons include Oath Keeper associate Thomas Caldwell, who received a delayed presidential pardon in March 2025. The other is former Proud Boy Jeremy Bertino, who admitted guilt and served as a prosecution witness against other Proud Boys.

If the Washington appeals court vacates the convictions as requested, prosecutors then would move to dismiss the cases “with prejudice,” Pirro wrote.

That specification would permanently bar prosecutors from refiling the charges.

Since 1977, the U.S. Supreme Court has “recognized that appellate courts have authority” to take the action Pirro has requested, the filing said.

Some members of the Oath Keepers and Proud Boys did receive pardons, including former Proud Boys national chairman Henry “Enrique” Tarrio. He had been convicted of seditious conspiracy and other charges that brought a 22-year sentence—the longest meted out to any Jan. 6 defendant.

Last year, Tarrio, Biggs, Rehl, Nordean, and Pezzola filed a $100 million civil lawsuit against the federal government, alleging prosecutors violated their constitutional rights.

Nicholas Smith, an attorney who represents Nordean, expressed gratitude to the Justice Department for its “wise decision” in seeking dismissal of the convictions.

“We don’t want a precedent that says that any physical confrontation between protesters and law enforcement means a crime akin to treason, such as seditious conspiracy,” Smith said.

However, former Metropolitan Police Officer Michael Fanone, who suffered a heart attack after a rioter shocked him with a stun gun on Jan. 6, spoke out against the Justice Department’s motion to throw out the convictions.

“I would remind Americans that these were traitors to this country,” Fanone said. “They planned, incited, and carried out an insurrection.”

In a post on X, John Strand, a Jan. 6 defendant and conservative activist, said the government’s move constituted “exoneration” for defendants who were “entrapped and crushed by an evil, weaponized government.”

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 09:45

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Former Virginia Lt. Gov. Justin Fairfax And Wife Found Dead In Apparent Murder-Suicide
Former Virginia Lt. Gov. Justin Fairfax And Wife Found Dead In Apparent Murder-Suicide

Justin Fairfax, the former lieutenant governor of Virginia, and his wife, Cerina Fairfax, a dentist, were found dead in an apparent murder-suicide at their home shortly after midnight on Thursday, according to Fairfax County police.
Justin Fairfax in 2019. He served as Virginia’s lieutenant governor from 2018 to 2022.Credit...Parker Michels-Boyce for The New York Times

Fairfax, 47, shot and killed his wife before turning the gun on himself, Police Chief Kevin Davis said. The couple’s teenage children were home at the time of the shootings.

Davis described the deaths as the result of an “ongoing domestic dispute surrounding a complicated or messy divorce.” Court records show that the Fairfaxes had been engaged in divorce proceedings this year.

Fairfax, a Democrat, served as Virginia’s lieutenant governor from 2018 to 2022 after winning election in 2017 alongside Gov. Ralph Northam. He largely remained out of the spotlight until 2019, when a series of scandals engulfed the state’s Democratic leadership.

The crisis began when old medical school yearbook photos surfaced appearing to show Governor Northam in blackface. As calls mounted for Northam’s resignation, two women came forward to accuse Mr. Fairfax, who would have been next in line for the governorship, of sexual assault. One alleged the assault occurred in 2000 at Duke University; the other said it took place in 2004 at the Democratic National Convention, the NY Times reports.

Fairfax denied both allegations - but the accusations effectively stalled momentum to force Northam from office. The situation grew more chaotic when the state attorney general, the third-ranking Democrat in Virginia’s executive branch, admitted he too had worn blackface as a college student. All three men ultimately served out their full terms.

Insisting he had done nothing wrong, Fairfax launched a bid for governor in the 2021 Democratic primary. In one televised debate, he accused his rival, former Gov. Terry McAuliffe, of “treating me like Emmett Till” for calling on him to resign over the sexual assault allegations.

With minimal institutional support and limited fundraising, Fairfax finished fourth in the primary, receiving just 3.6 percent of the vote. Mr. McAuliffe won the nomination but lost the general election to Republican Glenn Youngkin.


You're never going to believe what happened next. https://t.co/pvwGEeQald
— Stephen L. Miller (@redsteeze) April 16, 2026
Fairfax had kept a low public profile since leaving office. Thursday’s tragedy marks a grim end to a once-promising political career that was repeatedly overshadowed by scandal and personal turmoil.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 10:05

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Defiant Iran Reasserts Toll System, Paid Through Iranian Banks After US Vows Hormuz Blockade Stays "As Long As It Takes"
Defiant Iran Reasserts Toll System, Paid Through Iranian Banks After US Vows Hormuz Blockade Stays "As Long As It Takes"

Summary


Iran seeks to boost rial through toll payment scheme; vessels pay Hormuz passage through Iranian banks.


US Navy: vessels seeking entry into Hormuz Strait now fair game for boarding, search, and outright seizure - including for suspicion of 'contraband'.


Hegseth: US forces are ready to restart combat if Iran doesn’t agree to a deal & strait blockade to continue for as long as it takes. Already 14 ships have been turned around.


Iran's parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf calls ceasefire in Lebanon "as important as a ceasefire in Iran."


Heavy Israeli bombardment of southern Lebanon, including targeting of infrastructure and bridges.




//-->

//-->

//-->


Trump announces end of military operations against Iran by May 31st?
Yes 70% · No 31%View full market & trade on Polymarket *  *  *

Defiant Iran Reasserts Toll System: Paid Through Iranian Banks

An Iranian parliament official has been cited in newswires as saying the country's planned Strait of Hormuz toll for ships seeking to pass is to be paid through Iranian banks. Previously it was said to be through cryptocurrency, and could be as a high as $2 million Oil rose higher, given this is another indicator this game of chicken in the narrow waterway could soon lead to fresh hostilities, despite the 2-week ceasefire still being in place, soon to expire.

As for negotiations, there's optimism another round of US-Iran talks will occur, with both sides having agreed in principle, but Iran's government informed Pakistan that the US must back off its maximal demands.

Below is a machine translation from the Persian of the fresh parliament statement via state-linked ISNA:

The plan to consolidate Iran's sovereignty in the Strait of Hormuz is being framed as a way to strengthen the rial.
Iran is seeking a regulatory role in the Strait of Hormuz - one of the world’s most sensitive chokepoints -positioning it as oversight, not disruption or blackmail.
Under the plan, foreign ships would settle accounts through offices in Iran or via the Iranian banking system, a move aimed at boosting the rial.
Estimated current revenue from managing and regulating maritime traffic in the Strait of Hormuz: $10-15 billion.
Boarding, Search, & Outright Seizure

Ships seeking to enter the Hormuz Strait already sanctioned by the US just got a lot more vulnerable: under Washington’s blockade of Iranian ports, they're now fair game for boarding, search, and outright seizure, per US Naval Forces Central Command.

"In addition to enforcing the blockade, all Iranian vessels, vessels with active OFAC sanctions, and vessels suspected of carrying contraband, are subject to belligerent right to visit and search," the notice said, referring to the Office of Foreign Assets Control. "These vessels, regardless of location, are subject to visit, board, search, and seizure."

The definition of "contraband" is broad and expansive. It spans weapons, ammunition, combat aircraft, and military electronics, WSJ has described. "Petroleum products and lubricants are conditional contraband due to their essential role in military operations and their contribution to Iran’s war-sustaining economy," the advisory also said. "Contraband is defined as goods that are destined for an enemy and that may be susceptible to use in armed conflict."
US Marine Corps image

Up until now, the blockade - initially rolled out Monday - was limited to ships moving in and out of Iranian ports, but the definition who can be targeted just widened. Meanwhile, US Central Command (CENTCOM) said Wednesday that in the first 48 hours, not a single ship made it past the blockade.

Hormuz Blockade: 'As Long As It Takes'

The US will maintain a naval blockade of Iran for as long as it takes, Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth has stated in a press briefing Thursday. He and Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Dan Caine say that US forces are ready to resume major combat operations at a moment's notice, which suggests the initial two-week ceasefire could get extended, as was widely reported the day prior. But this also suggests that Washington likely has no appetite for resuming major aerial operations directly against Iran anytime soon.


General Caine:
At each point, the United States Navy will transmit a warning—a young sailor, normally on the bridge of one of those destroyers. A junior officer picks up that mic and transmits, and I quote:
"Do not attempt to breach the blockade.
Vessels will be boarded for… pic.twitter.com/VT6LvPBUnT
— Clash Report (@clashreport) April 16, 2026
On the question of resumption of major combat operations, Hegseth warned: "To Iran, choose wisely. I pray you choose a deal which is within your grasp for the betterment of your people and the betterment of the world." He followed with, "In the meantime, the War Department is locked and loaded." Additional main highlights to the Hegseth/Caine update and presser:

Iran likes to say it controls Strait of Hormuz but it has no navy
Energy industry not destroyed 'yet', US blockade shutting down exports
For as long as it takes, we will maintain blockade
Launching operation 'economic fury'
Iran is digging out bombed out launchers
I hope you choose a deal which is within your grasp
But again, the chief takeaway is that the Pentagon and Trump administration are making clear that US forces are ready to restart combat if Iran doesn't agree to a deal. On that front, US officials say future talks are likely to be held again in Pakistan’s capital, Islamabad. Prior reports have indicated both sides have "agreed in principle" to engage in another round of talks.

Iran's PressTV touting ability to inflict global economic pain...


International Monetary Fund’s chief economist says that growth is expected to slow this year amid repercussions from the war against Iran and disruptions to global oil and gas trade.
Follow Press TV on Telegram: https://t.co/LWoNSpkc2J pic.twitter.com/ZAty9htTov
— Press TV 🔻 (@PressTV) April 15, 2026
Pentagon: 13 Ships Turned Around

Since the blockade went live, US forces have already turned around 13 ships, according to Gen. Caine in the same briefing. He underscored how far this reach extends, saying operations will take place "inside Iran's territorial seas and in international waters."

Officially, the Pentagon claims the blockade is limited - targeting Iran’s ports and coastal areas while sparing vessels simply passing through the Strait of Hormuz. In practice, however, the net is touted as much wider, as US forces "will actively pursue any Iranian-flagged vessel or any vessel attempting to provide material support to Iran," including so-called "dark fleet vessels carrying Iranian oil," Caine added.

He confirmed that more than 10,000 service members are now involved in the blockade, but with more US servicemembers en route to the region.

Lebanon Still Bombed Heavily by Israel amid US Ceasefire Efforts

Israeli jets pounded Nabatiyeh in southern Lebanon Thursday, unleashing one of the heaviest barrages there since the war began and sending black smoke billowing over the region. Strikes hit near the industrial zone and a supermarket on Nabih Berri Avenue, with nearby suburbs also taking damage, according to Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency.

Iran has signaled urgency on de-escalation, with parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf calling ceasefire in Lebanon "as important as a ceasefire in Iran." He described, "In the Islamabad negotiations and afterwards, we have been seriously pursuing efforts to compel the adversaries to establish a permanent ceasefire in all areas of conflict." Pakistan's army chief is in Tehran mediating between Washington and Tehran.


⚡#BREAKING Lebanese President Joseph Aoun said in a conversation with US Secretary of State Marco: "I am not willing to talk to Netanyahu"
— War Monitor (@WarMonitors) April 16, 2026
Lebanon's leadership is in th emeantime framing any truce as a gateway to talks, despite Hezbollah having rejected direct talks with Israel. The ceasefire it is "demanding with Israel" would be a "natural entry point for direct negotiations," President Aoun said, adding: "Lebanon is keen to halt the escalation… so that the targeting of the innocents ceases, and the destruction of homes" stops.

Destruction of Al-Qasimia Bridge in Southern Lebanon


جسر القاسمية pic.twitter.com/u39LVosxnF
— Lebanon 24 (@Lebanon24) April 16, 2026
He stressed negotiations "are to be undertaken by the Lebanese authorities alone," and said "the withdrawal of Israeli forces… is an essential step," alongside redeploying the army "up to the international borders" to "end any manifestation of armed presence."

And yet Israeli strikes are now hitting infrastructure. A key bridge over the Litani River near Qasmiyeh - linking Tyre and Sidon - was reportedly destroyed, though Israel said it only "struck adjacent to it." The broader campaign is cutting off southern Lebanon, targeting chiefly Hezbollah positions, Israeli officials have claimed.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 10:10

The Aviationist
Open 
Sikorsky Announces New Armed Black Hawk Kit
The new Armed Black Hawk kit allows UH-60s to be quickly reconfigured for new mission sets, allowing greater flexibility and eliminating the need for dedicated helicopter types. Sikorsky announced on Apr. 15, 2026, its new Armed Black Hawk kits, on occasion of the Army Aviation Warfighting Summit in Nashville, Tennessee. The kit adds new stub […]

Mail Online
Open 
QUENTIN LETTS: The day before Starmer's Commons tantrum, the Speaker sent the PM packing when he tried to overturn protocol at a grand Westminster funeral
Readers will recall that the PM came over all unnecessary after Sir Lindsay told him to stop evading questions from Kemi Badenoch.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trust in vaccines needs rebuilding despite ‘extraordinary feat’ of Covid jabs, inquiry finds
Heather Hallett hails vaccine scheme but criticises rule that only those meeting 60% disabled threshold can get payoutsUK politics live – latest updatesThe UK’s Covid vaccination programme was “an extraordinary feat” which developed and delivered protective jabs in record time, but work is now needed to rebuild trust in vaccines and ensure better access before the next pandemic, an official inquiry has found.Heather Hallett, the chair of the statutory inquiry into the pandemic, said the vaccine rollout and the identification of an inexpensive steroid that saved the lives of thousands of UK patients, were “two of the success stories” of the pandemic.Establishing a pharmaceutical expert advisory panel to oversee the UK’s preparedness to develop, procure and manufacture vaccines and therapeutics.Producing targeted vaccination strategies and communications to increase vaccine uptake and reduce inequalities.Improving monitoring and evaluation of vaccine uptake and delivery to ensure efforts to boost uptake are effective.Helping regulatory bodies to access healthcare records for ongoing safety monitoring of new vaccines and therapeutics, andAssessing the vaccine damage payment scheme as soon as possible. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Alex Manninger, former Arsenal goalkeeper, dies aged 48 after road accident
Austrian was capped 33 times for his national teamManninger won Premier League during Arsenal spellAlex Manninger, the former goalkeeper who helped Arsenal win the Double in 1998, has died in a car accident in Austria, aged 48.His first club, Red Bull Salzburg, broke the sad news on Thursday. The Austrian Bundesliga club said in a post on its official X account: “We mourn our former goalkeeper Alexander Manninger, who tragically lost his life in a traffic accident. Our thoughts are with his family and friends. Rest in peace, Alexander.” Continue reading...

Harvard Business Review
Open 
When Your Ambition Starts to Exhaust You
Five questions to help you recalibrate.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Rollout of Covid vaccines an extraordinary feat, inquiry report finds
Covid vaccines saved hundreds of thousands of lives, but a small minority harmed need better support, says report.

The Hill
Open 
Watch live: Army Secretary Dan Driscoll testifies before House on 2027 budget
U.S. Army Secretary Dan Driscoll will testify before a House Appropriations Committee panel on Thursday morning over President Trump's fiscal 2027 budget request, which seeks 1.5 trillion in funding for the Pentagon. Driscoll's appearance on Capitol Hill also comes as tensions brew between Driscoll and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. Despite the pressure, the Army secretary...

The Hill
Open 
Live updates: Kennedy testifies in House; Hegseth warns Iran to make a deal
Chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Dan Caine told reporters on Thursday morning that 13 ships have turned around at the U.S. blockade of the Strait of Hormuz. As the war nears the seven-week mark and the ceasefire hits nine days, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth warned Iran it was time to make a...

The Hill
Open 
Republicans announce 2026 target map for state legislatures, highlight redistricting
A Republican group tasked with growing its majorities in state legislatures announced Thursday its list of priority states ahead of the November midterms, highlighting how some races could impact redistricting over the next decade in a memo shared first with The Hill. In a memo from the Republican State Leadership Committee (RSLC), the Republican group said it’s looking to defend...

The Hill
Open 
Blame Mike Johnson for the stalemate in Congress
Whether it is punitive tariffs, aggressive immigration tactics or ill-conceived military actions, Congress has been remarkably obsequious in permitting President Trump to do anything he wishes — even when such actions blatantly violate the Constitution. The Speaker of the House, Mike Johnson (R-La.), is ultimately responsible for such permissiveness.

The Hill
Open 
Watch live: DHS officials testify before House on fiscal 2027 budget amid shutdown
Department of Homeland Security (DHS) officials will testify before the House Appropriations Committee on Thursday morning as the partial government shutdown stretches into its 9th week. The hearing will focus on the White House's fiscal 2027 budget request — which includes more funding for Trump's crackdown on immigration. It also comes as the administration faces...

The Hill
Open 
Republicans float short-term spy powers extension as they struggle to strike deal
Some House Republicans are floating a two-month extension of the nation’s warrantless spy powers as the clean, 18-month extension requested by President Trump hits a wall within the right wing of the GOP, according to three sources familiar. The two-month extension would buy the House time to debate a series of reforms pitched by the...

The Hill
Open 
Mamdani's wife Rama Duwaji apologizes for tweets sent as teenager
Rama Duwaji, the wife of New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani, has apologized in an interview published Wednesday over tweets she made as a teenager. Duwaji was criticized after old tweets unearthed in March showed her using the n-word and a gay slur, and hurling insults at Israel. “This experience has absolutely changed my life. I...

The Hill
Open 
GOP anxiety over Trump, gas prices and war outlook: Join the live discussion
Is President Trump's blockade of the Strait of Hormuz working? What do Republicans think about his prediction that gas prices may be higher in November and how nervous are they about the war? What are the prospects for a budget reconciliaton bill to reopen the Department of Homeland Security? And what might be in such...

The Hill
Open 
DeSantis delays Florida's redistricting special session
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) is delaying his special session on redistricting, issuing a proclamation on Wednesday that the state legislature would convene between April 28 and May 1 instead of next week.  The rescheduled special session will also focus on issues related to artificial intelligence and medical freedom.   DeSantis initially called for a special session next week to take...

The Hill
Open 
Watch live: US trade rep testifies before House on White House budget after tariff blow
U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer will testify before the House Appropriations Committee on Thursday morning to discuss President Trump's fiscal 2027 budget request. Trump is seeking to boost investment in U.S. businesses as part of the administration's "America First" trade agenda. The request also includes a $10 million increase in trade enforcement at the International...

The Hill
Open 
Hegseth compares media to Jewish biblical group that clashed with Jesus
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on Thursday complained about an “endless stream of garbage” from the media in its coverage of the Iran war, comparing the Pentagon press corps to the Pharisees, the biblical Jewish group that often clashed with Jesus. “As I just can't help but notice the endless stream of garbage, the relentlessly negative...

The Hill
Open 
Trump's foreign election ad-Vance man
Vice President JD Vance endorsed Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban for reelection in last Sunday's parliamentary elections, despite the administration's efforts to secure his victory, Orban lost by a large margin to opposition leader Peter Magyar.

The Hill
Open 
Swalwell exit upends California governor's race: Poll 
Rep. Eric Swalwell's (D-Calif.) suspension of his bid for California governor has shaken up the race to replace Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) in the Golden State, new polling shows. An Emerson College Polling/Nexstar Media Group survey of California voters found Republican former Fox News host Steve Hilton, who received President Trump’s endorsement last week, leading...

The Hill
Open 
GOP chairman Tom Cole: Randy George dismissal 'a real loss'
Rep. Tom Cole (R-Okla.) said that the ouster of the Army’s chief of staff, Gen. Randy George, is a “real loss” for the military during a hearing with Army Secretary Dan Driscoll. "I just want the record to reflect how much we regret. I personally regret, at least he's no longer in active service. He's...

The Hill
Open 
How safe are your roads this summer? New study finds the safest states for drivers
A new MoneyGeek study finds the 100 days between Memorial Day and Labor Day are becoming less deadly.

Sky News Home
Open 
Former Arsenal goalkeeper Alex Manninger dies aged 48
Former Arsenal goalkeeper Alex Manninger has died in a traffic accident at the age of 48.

Mail Online
Open 
Tiger Woods prosecutors in bitter legal battle to uncover golf icon's medical records after DUI arrest
Woods, 50, was detained on March 27 after flipping his SUV while trying to overtake a truck and trailer at high speed in the billionaire enclave of Jupiter Island. Police found two pills in his pocket.

Mail Online
Open 
Powerful ex-Democrat Justin Fairfax murders dentist wife then kills himself at $1m Virginia home in rage after she filed for divorce, cops say
Justin Fairfax, a Democrat, shot his dentist spouse Cerina dead in the unfinished basement of their home in Annandale in the early hours of Thursday.

Mail Online
Open 
Small boat migrants headed for Britain are being launched from Belgium in bid to avoid French crackdown
Police say 'taxi boats' are leaving towns as far as 60 miles from Britain before picking up migrants along the Belgian and French coastlines.

Mail Online
Open 
Caught red-haired! There's a host of A-listers faking their auburn locks... so, can YOU tell which celebs have fooled everyone and whose the real-deal?
The ginger gene has become more common among Europeans, according to new research by Harvard University.

ZDNet News
Open 
You can get 50% off YouTube Premium for 1 year right now - but the deal ends soon
YouTube Premium just got a price hike, but for a limited time, the Individual plan is discounted - and renews at 25% off after this 12-month offer ends.

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
France’s SG-Forge Partners with Consensys to Integrate USD CoinVertible Stablecoin into MetaMask Wallet
French banking provider Societe Generale has partnered with Consensys, a prominent blockchain technology firm. The collaboration aims to make SG-Forge’s USD CoinVertible stablecoin readily available to users of MetaMask, the leading self-custodial web3 wallet, thereby opening up its features to a vast global audience.  Announced... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Record Breaking Trading in Private Securities Market During Q1 2026
Secondary trading of private market securities set a “blistering pace” during the first quarter of 2026, according to a recent report. The activity was driven by the hot artificial intelligence (AI) Market as well as an expectation that the initial public offering market will pick... Read More

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Key findings from Covid inquiry report on vaccines
Immunisation saved hundreds of thousands of UK lives, but vaccine hesitancy remains an issue.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Rollout of Covid vaccines an extraordinary feat, inquiry report finds
Covid vaccines saved hundreds of thousands of lives, but small minority harmed need better support, says report.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Anthropic Plots Major London Expansion
As tensions with the US government mount, Anthropic has leased a new office with enough space to quadruple its 200-person head count in London.

The Right Scoop
Open 
DUDE VIDEO – Hegseth compares anti-Trump press to pharisees who hated Jesus
This morning War Secretary Pete Hegseth compared the anti-Trump press to the pharisees who hated Jesus. Watch below: After the recent post and deletion of the Trump Jesus photo by President Trump, . . .

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Germany news: Teacher group urges action over pupil violence
A German teachers' group says decisive action is needed to counter a surge in violence in classrooms and corridors. Meanwhile, the Greens say a blanket speed limit on major highways would halp save fuel. DW has more,

Mail Online
Open 
London Underground worker, 51, wins £250,000 during family trip to Madrid - and reveals first thing he bought after landing incredible jackpot
A Super 6 player from Bassingbourn, Cambridgeshire has scooped the £250,000 jackpot after correctly predicting six scores from this weekend's Premier League action.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Alex Manninger, former Arsenal goalkeeper, dies aged 48 after road accident
Austrian was capped 33 times for his national teamManninger won Premier League during Arsenal spellAlex Manninger, the former goalkeeper who helped Arsenal win the Double in 1998, has died in a car accident in Austria, aged 48.Hi first club, Red Bull Salzburg, broke the sad news on Thursday. The Austrian Bundesliga club said in a post on its official X account: “We mourn our former goalkeeper Alexander Manninger, who tragically lost his life in a traffic accident. Our thoughts are with his family and friends. Rest in peace, Alexander.” Continue reading...

Mac Rumours
Open 
Get Apple's M5 MacBook Air at $150 Off Before Amazon Runs Out
Amazon recently introduced a few new record low prices on the M5 MacBook Air, offering $150 off multiple models of the notebook. We've begun noticing that deals aren't as plentiful as they were over the weekend, so if you've been holding off now will be the time to get the M5 MacBook Air at these best-ever prices.



Note: MacRumors is an affiliate partner with Amazon. When you click a link and make a purchase, we may receive a small payment, which helps us keep the site running.



Amazon has the 512GB 13-inch M5 MacBook Air for $949.00, down from $1,099.00, and the 24GB/1TB model for $1,349.00, down from $1,499.00. Both of these represent record low prices for each configuration.



$150 OFF13-inch M5 MacBook Air (512GB) for $949.00

$150 OFF13-inch M5 MacBook Air (16GB/1TB) for $1,149.00

$150 OFF13-inch M5 MacBook Air (24GB/1TB) for $1,349.00



In terms of the 15-inch models, you'll find up to $150 off the M5 MacBook Air, with multiple color options on sale for each configuration. Prices start at $1,149.00 for the 512GB model, down from $1,299.00, and also include both 1TB models on sale.



$150 OFF15-inch M5 MacBook Air (512GB) for $1,149.00

$150 OFF15-inch M5 MacBook Air (16GB/1TB) for $1,349.00

$150 OFF15-inch M5 MacBook Air (24GB/1TB) for $1,549.00



If you're on the hunt for more discounts, be sure to visit our Apple Deals roundup where we recap the best Apple-related bargains of the past week.







Deals Newsletter

Interested in hearing more about the best deals you can find in 2026? Sign up for our Deals Newsletter and we'll keep you updated so you don't miss the biggest deals of the season!









Related Roundup: Apple DealsThis article, 'Get Apple's M5 MacBook Air at $150 Off Before Amazon Runs Out' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mail Online
Open 
Rick Moranis, 72, makes rare appearance at CinemaCon for his big screen comeback in Spaceballs 2
Ghostbusters icon Rick Moranis made a rare appearance at CinemaCon 2026 in Las Vegas on Wednesday, ahead of his big screen comeback in Spaceballs 2.

Mail Online
Open 
Starmer faces fresh Mandelson storm amid claims he FAILED security vetting for US ambassador - but officials were overruled
Lord Mandelson is said to have been initially denied clearance in January 2025 - weeks after the PM had officially announced his appointment.

Mail Online
Open 
Armed police arrest three over arson attack on Iranian media organisation in London as black SUV crashes trying to flee the scene
An ignited container was thrown towards the premises of Volant Media - which owns UK-based broadcaster Iran International - at around 8.30pm last night.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Vaccines a huge success, but public trust must be earned - key findings from Covid report
Immunisation saved hundreds of thousands of UK lives, but vaccine hesitancy remains an issue.

Ars Technica
Open 
Meet the Quantum Kid

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Iran war: US ready to attack if no Iran deal reached
Pentagon chief Hegseth has warned that US forces are ready to restart combat if Iran rejects a deal. Meanwhile, Iranian state media reported that Pakistan's army chief has met parliament speaker Ghalibaf. DW has more.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Can Iran justify its
Iran insists that its nuclear program is for peaceful, civilian purposes, including energy production. But the figures and statistics paint a different picture.

Mail Online
Open 
Taylor Swift offers intimate glimpse into famous friend group as she names the 'real' confidante who 'never lies'
The artist is known for having many famous pals, including Selena Gomez , Gigi Hadid , Emma Stone and Sabrina Carpenter.

Mail Online
Open 
How toxic is your gym kit? Lululemon is being investigated in Texas for using harmful "forever chemicals" in its designs
Lululemon is currently under investigation in Texas for potentially using toxic PFAS in its apparel.

Mail Online
Open 
Scott Mills steps out for a dog walk with his husband as friends reveal the DJ is in 'crisis' after being fired by the BBC over historical allegation of serious sexual offences
Scott Mills stepped out with his loyal husband for the second day in a row on Thursday.

Mail Online
Open 
Plague of bees swarms Israel in eerie scene tied to biblical warning amid Iran conflict
Tens of thousands of bees filled the skies over Israel, blanketing streets and buildings in a buzzing cloud that has sparked fears of a chilling biblical warning.

Mail Online
Open 
Armed police arrest three over arson attack on Iranian media organisation in London as black SUV crashes trying to flee the scene
The attempted arson attack occurred at the offices of a media organisation in Wembley, north-west London, shortly after 8pm on Wednesday.

BBC UK News
Open 
About 15,000 drivers can pursue Arnold Clark data breach claim
Lord Sandison said the claimants can bring group proceedings at the Court of Session after the 2022 data breach.

The Register
Open 
Visual Studio 18.5 lands with AI debugging at a price, devs still feeling blue
Latest version points to a shift in how Microsoft thinks about IDEs Visual Studio 2026 18.5 arrives with two headline changes – a smarter code suggestion system and an AI-powered debugger. Yet developer frustration over color contrast and forced updates continue to overshadow the improvements.…

The Register
Open 
Make crappy moves around AI and face voter backlash, govts warned
When the taxpayers are wondering whose side you are on... Britain's government faces a public backlash against AI unless it can show ordinary people that they stand to benefit from its push to inject the technology into every area of the UK in the name of growth.…

Deutsche Welle
Open 
How the Hormuz Strait crisis is squeezing India's SMEs
Since the blockade of the vital shipping route, spice hub Kerala and ceramics manufacturing center Morbi are two of regional sites in India affected. Can anything be done to support small-scale traders there?

BBC World News
Open 
India pushes for women's quota bill as row over parliamentary seats intensifies
Southern Indian leaders urge mass mobilisation over concerns about redrawing electoral boundaries.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Moya Brennan obituary
Singer and musician who was a founder member of Clannad and lent an ethereal beauty to the theme of the TV series Harry’s GameMoya Brennan, who has died aged 73, was a founder member, lead singer and harpist with the Irish folk band Clannad. It was Moya’s ethereal singing voice that contributed to the band’s distinctive sound, particularly on the theme music for the television series Harry’s Game in 1982. Moya later pursued a successful solo career, collaborating and recording with an impressive number of performers across the musical spectrum.Formed in 1970, the band was initially called Clann As Dobhar (the family from Dore), which was soon shortened to Clannad. The band members were all related: Moya’s brothers, Ciarán and Pól Brennan, were joined by Pádraig and Noel Duggan, identical twins who were Moya’s uncles, though very similar to her in age. For a time, Moya’s sister Enya was also a member, until she left to pursue her highly successful solo career. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Robert F Kennedy Jr testifies to Congress over healthcare agenda and budget requests – US politics live
Health secretary faces questions in packed House Ways and Means committee hearing Sign up for the Breaking News US emailChairman of the joint chiefs of staff Dan Caine says the US military remains ready to re-engage in combat “at literally a moment’s notice”.He says the blockade covers Iran’s ports and coastlines and applies to all ships, regardless of which flag they are sailing under. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Red hair gene favoured by natural selection over last 10,000 years, study finds
Scientists suggest red hair and fair skin were favoured for vitamin D efficiency in study focused on whether human evolution plateaued after advent of agriculture People with red hair who have put up with teasing or “fiery” stereotypes may be pleased to learn that they appear to be winners from an evolutionary perspective. A large genetics study has revealed that, in Europe, the gene for red hair has been actively selected for more than 10,000 years.The study did not aim to uncover the reasons for the trend, but focused on the broader question of whether human evolution has plateaued since the advent of agriculture. By analysing DNA from nearly 16,000 ancient human remains and more than 6,000 living individuals, the scientists provided compelling evidence that, in fact, biological evolution has continued apace. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
At least 17 people killed in Russia’s deadliest attack on Ukraine this year
More than 100 injured across country after Russia launches nearly 700 drones and dozens of ballistic and cruise missilesEurope live – latest updatesRussia has carried out its deadliest attack against Ukraine this year, killing at least 17 people, and injuring more than 100, in a wave of drone and missile strikes across the country.Nine people died in the southern port city of Odesa, with four killed in Kyiv, including a 12-year-old boy. There were three fatalities in the Dnipropetrovsk region. Another person died in Zaporizhzhia oblast. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Alex Manninger, former Arsenal goalkeeper, dies aged 48 after road accident
Austrian was capped 33 times for his national teamManninger won Premier League during Arsenal spellThe former Arsenal goalkeeper Alex Manninger has been killed in a road accident, his first club Red Bull Salzburg have announced.The Austrian Bundesliga club said on Thursday that the 48-year-old had died, in a post on its official X account. It said: “We mourn our former goalkeeper Alexander Manninger, who tragically lost his life in a traffic accident. Our thoughts are with his family and friends. Rest in peace, Alexander.” Continue reading...

Gizmodo
Open 
The New ‘Street Fighter’ Trailer Is Goofy as Hell
After a rocky first teaser late last year, 'Street Fighter' is back for round two.

Gizmodo
Open 
The He-Man Transformation in ‘Masters of the Universe’ Gave Us Chills
io9 saw 20 minutes of footage from the Mattel movie, which included the moment everyone was waiting for.

Mail Online
Open 
Ben Shephard derails This Morning makeovers with VERY rude question - as squirming host snaps 'shall we move on?' and Cat Deeley shoots daggers at him
The host was left squirming as he tried to explain himself while his co-host Cat Deeley and fashion presenter Jo Good struggled to keep control of the segment.

Mail Online
Open 
Westlife unveil new 'heartfelt ballad' featuring absent bandmate Mark Feehily despite his ongoing hiatus - as group release fresh tracks ahead of World Tour
Westlife have unveiled new music ahead of their 25th anniversary world tour. 

Mail Online
Open 
Manchester Piccadilly tells passengers 'do not travel' with cancellations and severe delays affecting all trains
Travellers with journeys to or from Manchester Piccadilly have been warned to face disruption as a result of a major overhead cable failure.

BBC UK News
Open 
'Woman in pyjamas' wanted after alleged fuel thefts
CCTV has been released from two petrol stations in north Wales of an Audi driver apparently wearing pyjamas.

Mail Online
Open 
Emmerdale star QUITS soap after 'changing focus in life' - and her final scenes have already aired
The soap star had plans to return to the programme, and her character even told family and friends that she would be back, but now Georgia has decided not to.

Mail Online
Open 
The most stylish swimwear available now that will definitely sell out by summer
If you're in the market for new swimwear, we have you covered with this edit of our favourite, figure-flattering swimwear below.

Mail Online
Open 
Vaping IS a cancer risk - although less so than smoking, researchers say
Vaping can cause cancer , say researchers - but still isn't as damaging as smoking cigarettes.

Mail Online
Open 
Woke NYC mayor's wife sniffs at 'tabloid' for unearthing her N-word and homophobic posts as she offers VERY weak apology
Rama Duwaji, 28, apologized for several inappropriate posts in a report on Wednesday following her accounts being exposed nearly a month ago.

BBC World News
Open 
Frank Gardner: Why China keeps cropping up in Iran war stories
BBC Security Correspondent Frank Gardner explains how the world's second-largest economy fits into the Gulf conflict.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Possibility of Tenderness by Jason Allen-Paisant audiobook review – meditations on nature and belonging
The poet reconnects with the landscape of the May Day Mountains in Jamaica where he grew up in a personal story of migration, race and rural lifeAn award-winning poet living in Roundhay Park, Leeds, Jason Allen-Paisant spent his early childhood living with his grandmother in Coffee Grove, a hilly rural district of Jamaica which was cut off from basic amenities such as electricity and water. Seen through the eyes of a child, Coffee Grove was, he notes, “both a tiny place and a huge planet”. There he developed a close relationship with the local plant life through climbing trees, picking fruit and helping his grandmother harvest yams on the “grung”, the local name for their small plot of land.Allen-Paisant later yearned for pastures new, moving first to Paris and then to Britain to study at Oxford. His dream of upward mobility had become a reality, yet in the UK he noticed his interactions with nature were few and far between. He came to realise “just how much class keeps people in Britain from the privileges of land and soil and also keeps them from the tenderness that comes with forming kinship with the earth”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Samuel Hasselhorn: Schubert Hoffnung review – timbral and emotional flexibility is in ample supply
Hasselhorn/Bushakevitz(Harmonia Mundi)The German baritone’s all-Schubert disc with pianist Ammiel Bushakevitz is full of communicative diction and poetic phrasingNow in his mid-30s, German baritone Samuel Hasselhorn is a major player in a veritable rat-pack of high-flying young lieder singers. His growing discography includes an ongoing series with pianist Ammiel Bushakevitz, part of Harmonia Mundi’s Schubert 200 project to record all the composer’s songs, from 1823 onwards, ahead of the 2028 bicentenary of his death.The year 1826 found Schubert in affirmative mood, a torrent of lieder reflecting a newfound sense of optimism. The album, appropriately entitled Hoffnung, the German word for hope, opens with a nuanced account of the expansive Im Freien. The combination of Hasselhorn’s communicative diction and Bushakevitz’s poetic phrasing brings a rapt intimacy to this six-minute celebration of nocturnal beauty. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Now you can break up with big tech at a bar: ‘cybersecurity disguised as a party’
These digital security organizers bring the fight for online privacy to dance parties, wine meetups and reading groupsImani Thompson shows up at Wonderville Bar in Brooklyn looking ready for a DJ set, or to drink, or to dance the night away with friends. While she’ll probably do the latter, she’s also a cybersecurity organizer leading the evening’s event.Thompson is the host, along with the New York City-based tech organizing coalition Cypurr Collective, of Break Up With Google. Its purpose isn’t a mystery; the main goal is to help attenders understand how to mitigate their vulnerability to surveillance through major tech services. But it’s also important for people to have fun while they do it, Thompson said – hence the DJs playing until the wee hours of the morning. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The best vitamin C serums in the UK for every skin type and budget, tested
Whether you want to tackle hyperpigmentation or brighten mature skin, these are our expert’s favourite formulas for a glowy complexion• The best LED face masks, testedVitamin C is having a moment in skincare because of its ability to gently brighten, reduce pigmentation and support collagen production. It also helps to neutralise free radicals – those unstable molecules generated by UV light and pollution that can lead to premature ageing – making it an essential part of your morning skincare routine (alongside an SPF).But is a vitamin C serum suitable for everyone? And if so, how do you know which one is right for you? “Individuals with sensitive, reactive or rosacea-prone skin should approach L-ascorbic acid – the most commonly used active form of vitamin C in skincare – carefully, as it can trigger inflammation in compromised skin barriers,” says pharmacist and skincare expert Dr Sonal Chavda-Sitaram.Best vitamin C serum overall:CeraVe skin renewing vitamin C serumBest budget vitamin C serum:Elf Skin Brighten + Glow vitamin C + E + ferulic serum Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
DJ Shadow: ‘Kraftwerk are a touchstone for every phase of my career’
The hip-hop producer, remixer and crate-digger on staying fresh creatively, the influence of David Lynch and giving away his most valuable recordCan you share any regrets or missed opportunities from your career? nnagewadIn 1999, I was approached by Deftones to work on White Pony, but I had just come off of Unkle’s Psyence Fiction album. I was nursing a hip-hop image and reputation, so I was wary of working with anything that felt like it was too alternative or rock-oriented. So I missed out on being a part of a pretty seminal album. I wouldn’t say it’s a regret, necessarily, because I always feel like my rationale is sound at the time that I made it, but it’s kind of a missed opportunity.Was your move towards sample-free production on your recent albums driven by the headache and costliness of sample clearance, a desire to keep the creative process fresh, or a bit of both? EditorialJoeDefinitely both. There have been times in my career where I’ve wondered: at the end of the day, am I going to own only 15% of my catalogue because of all the samples? So that was part of it. But equally, I became known as somebody who was trying to be on the vanguard of making music with samples but I always knew I would want to make music in as many different ways as possible. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Three held over alleged arson attempt at Persian media office in London
No injuries and no damage reported in Wembley incident and Met says it is not being treated as terrorismA teenager and two men have been arrested after an attempted arson attack at the offices of a Persian media organisation in north-west London, the Metropolitan police said.Officers on patrol were told at about 8.30pm on Wednesday that an “ignited container” had been thrown towards the site in Wembley, landing in a car park where the fire immediately died out. There were no injuries and no damage was reported. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Revealed: Mandelson failed vetting but Foreign Office overruled decision
Guardian investigation uncovers decision by UK security officials to deny clearance before Mandelson took up role as US ambassadorOfficials debate withholding Mandelson vetting documents from parliamentFive key questions: Who overruled the decision to deny Mandelson security clearance?Peter Mandelson failed his security vetting clearance but the decision was overruled by the Foreign Office to ensure he could take up his post as ambassador to the US, an investigation by the Guardian can reveal.According to multiple sources, Mandelson was initially denied clearance in late January 2025 after a developed vetting process, a highly confidential background check by security officials. Continue reading...

CNET News
Open 
44 of the Best Movies on Netflix You Should Stream Now
Catch up on this year's Oscar winners and some great titles that are leaving soon.

CNET News
Open 
Trading Speed for Depth: Does Using AI for Work Affect Our Confidence?
A new study published by the American Psychological Association found a negative correlation between AI use and confidence in our abilities.

CNET News
Open 
Canva Really Wants to Be Your Workplace AI Bestie
The new Canva feels AI-first, design second.

CNET News
Open 
The Best Part of the New Moto G Stylus Phone Is a Pen I Actually Use
Review: The 2026 Moto G Stylus has a mix of modern and classic features, giving it a unique appeal.

Pulsant Status
Open 
(CHG0058873) Planned Maintenance - Storage Platform (Reading - SE-4)

Pulsant Status
Open 
(CHG0058876) Planned Maintenance - Storage Platform (Milton Keynes - SE-1)

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Senegal: The Goethe-Institut opens its new building in Dakar
The Goethe-Institut's new building in Dakar champions sustainable architecture, made from the earth. Star architect Francis Kere has blended local materials with contemporary design.

Mail Online
Open 
The 'Establishment plot' thickens: RICHARD EDEN reveals the fears inside Kate and Wills' camp as Harry and Meghan put on a royal show Down Under and rumours about couple's return to Britain swirl
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex might be 10,000 miles away, but their quasi-royal tour of Australia is meant to be a preview of what we can expect when they return to Britain this summer.

Mail Online
Open 
How the Duke and Duchess of the Dollar are now doing everything the late Queen wanted to avoid, by REBECCA ENGLISH
Cast your mind back to the 'Sandringham Summit' of January 2020. Seems like a lifetime ago, doesn't it? And yet it remains an event that has acute relevance, at least in royal terms, today.

Mail Online
Open 
'We enter each fight a little more haggard until we just can't fight any more': Restaurant industry heavyweights tell me how Labour's successive economic raids on the hospitality business are 'killing the industry' by TOM PARKER BOWLES
'I don't know why everyone's making such a fuss about restaurants,' says a friend of mine who has scant interest in the things that really matter.

BBC World News
Open 
South African opposition figure Malema sentenced to five years in prison for firing a gun
Malema is appealing against the decision, which means he is not going to prison immediately.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Alex Manninger, former Arsenal goalkeeper, dies aged 48 after road accident
Austrian was capped 33 times for his national teamManninger won Premier League during Arsenal spellThe former Arsenal goalkeeper Alex Manninger has been killed in a road accident, his first club Red Bull Salzburg have announced.The Austrian Bundesliga club said on Thursday that the 48-year-old had died, in a post on its official X account. It said: “We mourn our former goalkeeper Alexander Manninger, who tragically lost his life in a traffic accident. Our thoughts are with his family and friends. Rest in peace, Alexander.”This story will update Continue reading...

WikiNews
Open 
United States announces blockade on the Strait of Hormuz
Wednesday, April 15, 2026
 


Politics and conflicts
Related articles


15 April 2026: United States announces blockade on the Strait of Hormuz
12 March 2026: US president Donald Trump demands the unconditional surrender of Iran
12 March 2026: PM of Australia sends E-7A Wedgetail and air-to-air missiles to UAE
7 March 2026: US President Donald Trump appears to wear makeup after apparent rash breaks out on neck, reports say
2 March 2026: Green Party wins major by-election in northern England city of Manchester


Collaborate!

Pillars of Wikinews writing
Writing an article


Map depicting the Strait of Hormuz. Image: Goran_tek-en.
On Sunday, United States President Donald Trump announced on Truth Social that the US is imposing a blockade on the Strait of Hormuz. According to Trump, the blockade was in effect as of 10:00 a.m. Eastern Time (1400 UTC).
The blockade was imposed following the collapse of talks held in Islamabad between the United States and Iran.
"Effective immediately, the United States Navy, the finest in the world, will be BLOCKADING any and all ships trying to enter, or leave, the Strait of Hormuz," Trump declared.
According to The Guardian, oil prices briefly rose above US$100 a barrel following news of the blockade, before easing back to just over US$99; gas prices also increased.
Iranian parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf posted on X to "Enjoy the current pump figures. With the so-called 'blockade', soon you'll be nostalgic for $4–$5 gas." He further stated that Iran would respond in kind to both escalation and diplomacy, warning that it would "fight" if confronted militarily but would "deal with logic" if approached constructively.
China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs expressed hope that the ceasefire would remain stable, stating that Beijing is willing to cooperate with all parties to "guarantee the uninterrupted flow of energy supplies," and that stability in the Strait of Hormuz is critically important to China.




Have an opinion on this story? Share it!


Sources


edit





Julia Kollewe. Oil price tops $100 a barrel after peace talks fail and Trump orders blockade — The Guardian, 13 April 2026
Lauren Edmonds, Huileng Tan, and Theron Mohamed. Oil surges past $100 a barrel after US-Iran peace talks fail and Trump threatens to blockade the Strait of Hormuz — Business Insider, 13 April 2026
'Enjoy it now:' Iran warns of painful oil price surge as Trump escalates blockade threat — The Times of India, 13 April 2026
China Reacts to Strait of Hormuz Blockade: Global Energy Security at Risk — IranWire, 13 April 2026.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-box{background-color:#FFFFFF;border:1.5px solid #a7d7f9;border-radius:9px;padding:4px 6px;width:36%}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-header{font-size:1.1em}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-header:after{content:"";display:block;width:60%;height:2px;background-color:#a7d7f9;margin-top:6px;margin-bottom:6px}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-buttons{display:flex;flex-wrap:wrap;justify-content:center;align-items:center}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-buttons .wn-social-bookmarks-btn{margin:2px}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn{display:inline-flex;justify-content:center;align-items:center;width:36px;height:36px;background-color:#e0e5ec;border:1px solid #dddddd;border-radius:3px;cursor:pointer;box-shadow:0 2px 5px rgba(0,0,0,0.05);transition:transform 0.15s ease,box-shadow 0.15s ease,background-color 0.15s ease,border-color 0.15s ease}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn:hover{transform:translateY(-2px);box-shadow:0 4px 8px rgba(0,0,0,0.14)}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn:active{transform:none;box-shadow:0 2px 4px rgba(0,0,0,0.08)}@media(max-width:768px){.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-box{width:100%;padding:10px 14px}}html.skin-theme-clientpref-night .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-box{background-color:#1a1b1d;border-color:#3b3f44}html.skin-theme-clientpref-night .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-header:after{background-color:#3b3f44}html.skin-theme-clientpref-night .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn{background-color:#2c2c2c;border-color:#444444;box-shadow:0 2px 5px rgba(0,0,0,0.2)}html.skin-theme-clientpref-night .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn:hover{background-color:#3a3a3a;box-shadow:0 4px 8px rgba(0,0,0,0.3)}html.skin-theme-clientpref-night .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn:active{box-shadow:0 2px 4px rgba(0,0,0,0.2)}@media(prefers-color-scheme:dark){html.skin-theme-clientpref-os .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-box{background-color:#1a1b1d;border-color:#3b3f44}html.skin-theme-clientpref-os .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-header:after{background-color:#3b3f44}html.skin-theme-clientpref-os .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn{background-color:#2c2c2c;border-color:#444444;box-shadow:0 2px 5px rgba(0,0,0,0.2)}html.skin-theme-clientpref-os .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn:hover{background-color:#3a3a3a;box-shadow:0 4px 8px rgba(0,0,0,0.3)}html.skin-theme-clientpref-os .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn:active{box-shadow:0 2px 4px rgba(0,0,0,0.2)}}.mw-parser-output #mw-customcollapsible-wn-extra{flex-basis:100%;display:flex;justify-content:center}.mw-parser-output #mw-customcollapsible-wn-extra .mw-collapsible-content{display:flex;flex-wrap:wrap;justify-content:center;align-items:center;margin-top:3px}







   Share this article



 
 
 
 
 
 

 




 
 
 
 

TechRadar News
Open 
De'Longhi's super-smart new coffee maker 'learns' your favorite hot and cold drinks, and brews them in moments

TechRadar News
Open 
Autonomous agentic assistants are at an 'absolute early adopter stage': Scheduling in Canva AI 2.0 is about to "democratize" that

TechRadar News
Open 
'AI-crawled sites generate 320% more human traffic': An interview with Duda's Oded Ouaknine on the future of AEO

TechRadar News
Open 
Two years in the making: Canva AI 2.0 required an entire re-architecturing effort, and its yours to try if you can find the easter egg

TechRadar News
Open 
Netflix reveals first image and 2027 release window for Charlie Vs. the Chocolate Factory — and it'll put a deliciously sour twist on Roald Dahl's classic tale

TechRadar News
Open 
Sales of the Lego Artemis skyrocket by 320% at Argos — here's where to buy the popular set and 11 other space-themed builds

TechRadar News
Open 
Crimson Desert is 'not a copy of other AAA games' according to The Witcher 3 director — and after my 175 hours of playtime and five million copies sold, it all makes sense

TechRadar News
Open 
What goes around comes around: Jury finds Live Nation guilty of working as an illegal monopoly to dominate the live music market, and I’m thrilled for the future of ticket prices at gigs

TechRadar News
Open 
A computer without electricity? Mechanical computing concept 'could help improve people's lives' with all sorts of potential real-world uses

TechRadar News
Open 
'Towards a full private digital workspace': Tuta debuts quantum-resistant cloud storage ahead of Google Drive, OneDrive

TechRadar News
Open 
13 of the best Record Store Day 2026 releases, as picked by TechRadar — Pavement, Public Service Broadcasting and more

TechRadar News
Open 
Who goes there? Your Ring doorbell can now recognise up to 50 familiar faces, and let you know if a caller is a friend or a stranger

Atlas Obscura
Open 
Long March for Freedom in Cape Town, South Africa

Digital Trends
Open 
Canva can now automate repetitive tasks and help you build interactive experience without coding
Canva is introducing automation features that let users schedule tasks like weekly content creation and meeting briefings to run automatically. In addition, it's updated no-code tools allow users to build and refine interactive experiences using simple prompts.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Planning to age in place? Watch out for these hidden costs.
Most retirees want to stay in their homes as they age. It might not be worth it.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
A bullish indicator for software stocks just flashed. Why a true comeback could be in the cards.
After a five-month slide fueled by AI disruption fears, the software sector has closed above its 50-day moving average in a key technical breakout.

Mail Online
Open 
Uzbekistan national wealth fund confirms London listing in rare boost to the City
Uzbekistan's national wealth fund has confirmed plans to list in London, marking the country's first foray into global stock markets.

Mail Online
Open 
Pete Hegseth reads fake Pulp Fiction Bible verse during Pentagon prayer service
Pete Hegseth appeared to draw inspiration from a fake Bible verse recited in the 1994 film Pulp Fiction while giving a sermon.

Mail Online
Open 
Liam Payne's sister says she's 'struggling' and feels 'homesick' for her life before grief as she reflects on 18 months since his tragic death
The One Direction singer fell from a third floor balcony at the upscale CasaSur hotel in Palermo on October 16 2024 aged of 31.

Mail Online
Open 
Taylor Swift names her most 'real' Hollywood friend, and it's NOT Selena Gomez
The artist is known for having many famous pals, including Selena Gomez , Gigi Hadid , Emma Stone and Sabrina Carpenter.

Mail Online
Open 
Boy, 16, and two men arrested in counter-terror probe after Persian media firm in London targeted in 'firebomb' attack
The attempted arson attack occurred at the offices of a media organisation in Wembley, north-west London, shortly after 8pm on Wednesday.

Planet PostgreSQL
Open 
Andreas Scherbaum: PGConf India 2026 - Review
This was my first time attending PGConf.India. That is a conference I wanted to visit for quite a while, heard good things about the it, but never had a chance before. During past years it overlapped with another conference I’m attending in Germany - but this year it worked out! Overall this is the 9th Indian PostgreSQL Conference, with no signs of slowing down.
Stage at PGConf India 2026 The conference is well attended, and very vibrant.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The power of the Dunst: Kirsten’s best film performances – ranked!
As she approaches her 44th birthday, we celebrate an actor who can move from dreamy psychodrama for Sofia Coppola to gritty angst for Jane CampionAn elegant, sun-soaked Patricia Highsmith adaptation with fine work from Viggo Mortensen as a con man and Dunst as his wife, holidaying in early 1960s Athens when they meet an American tour guide (Oscar Isaac). It seems tantalisingly unclear at first whether his designs are on the chirpy young bride or her shady older husband. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
UK’s Covid vaccine programme must rebuild trust before next pandemic strikes, inquiry warns
Heather Hallett hails vaccine scheme but criticises rule that only those meeting 60% disabled threshold can get payoutsThe UK’s Covid vaccination programme was “an extraordinary feat” which developed and delivered protective jabs in record time, but work is now needed to rebuild trust in vaccines and ensure better access before the next pandemic, an official inquiry has found.Heather Hallett, the chair of the statutory inquiry into the pandemic, said the vaccine rollout and the identification of an inexpensive steroid that saved the lives of thousands of UK patients, were “two of the success stories” of the pandemic.Establishing a pharmaceutical expert advisory panel to oversee the UK’s preparedness to develop, procure and manufacture vaccines and therapeutics.Producing targeted vaccination strategies and communications to increase vaccine uptake and reduce inequalities.Improving monitoring and evaluation of vaccine uptake and delivery to ensure efforts to boost uptake are effective.Helping regulatory bodies to access healthcare records for ongoing safety monitoring of new vaccines and therapeutics, andAssessing the vaccine damage payment scheme as soon as possible. Continue reading...

The Verge
Open 
Canva’s AI 2.0 update goes all in on prompt-powered design tools
Canva has overhauled its design and workspace suite as it attempts to become the ultimate centralized hub for AI-powered content creation. The platform announced its Canva AI 2.0 update today, introducing updated tools and new prompt-based editing capabilities that allow users to make or adjust their work by describing what they want to create to […]

The Verge
Open 
Moft adds a tracker and shutter button to its magnetic tripod wallet
Moft's MagSafe wallets have long been overachievers with folding designs that double as smartphone stands. Its latest creation, the Moft Trackable Tripod Wallet, does even more. It carries forward the same functionality as Moft's original magnetic wallet that unfolds into a miniature tripod, but adds built-in tracking capabilities through Apple's Find My network, and a […]

The Verge
Open 
The Cybertruck of e-bikes is here to replace your car
It was at about 36 miles per hour that I decided the Infinite Machine Olto is not a bike. Sure, it has pedals, you don't need a license to ride it in most (but not all!) places in the US, and the folks at Infinite Machine assured me it is allowed in the bike lane. […]

The Verge
Open 
Character.AI’s new Books mode turns reading into roleplay
Mired in controversy and legal woes over concerns about its chatbots' interactions with users, particularly teens, Character.AI seems to be playing it safer with a new "Books" mode. The new format lets users step inside familiar worlds for a more structured roleplaying experience, one the company hopes will broaden perceptions of what AI roleplay can […]

The Verge
Open 
Ronan Farrow on Sam Altman’s ‘unconstrained’ relationship with the truth
Today on Decoder, I’m talking with Ronan Farrow, one of the biggest stars of investigative reporting working today. He broke the Harvey Weinstein story, among many, many others. And just last week, he and co-author Andrew Marantz published an incredible deep-dive feature in The New Yorker about OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, his trustworthiness, and the […]

Computer Weekly
Open 
Cyber Essentials closes the MFA loophole but leaves some organisations adrift
Some organisations risk losing their Cyber Essentials certifications because of difficulties implementing multi-factor authentication, but there is a solution.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Anatomy of the clitoris: 3D images reveal its nerve system
New 3D images reveal the clitoris’s complex nerve network, highlighting long‑standing gaps in medical understanding of the female body.

Mail Online
Open 
Jonjo Shelvey takes first steps into management with second-tier side in UAE... but insists he feels safe in war-torn region because 'England is full of scumbags'
It's not the most conventional introduction to a career in football management - living in a country hit by Iranian drone attacks while in charge of a second-tier side in Dubai.

Mail Online
Open 
Crowds gather at Epsom church where 'woman was gang raped by group of men' after protesters hurled objects at riot police in fury over 'refusal to give descriptions of suspects'
Around 200 residents descended on Epsom Methodist Church for the Hope for Epsom service just hours after furious protesters hurled objects at riot police.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
News of BBC jobs cuts ‘real concern‘, says UK’s culture secretary
Lisa Nandy says staff have been strongly affected as some express frustration that high-paid presenters and executives likely to be safeThe BBC’s sudden announcement of 2,000 job cuts has had a “very strong effect” on staff, the UK’s culture secretary, Lisa Nandy, has said, as employees expressed frustration that highly paid presenters and senior staff would not be the prime targets of the cuts.Nandy, who has been having conversations with BBC staff during discussions about the broadcaster’s charter renewal, is understood to be keen for employees to be involved in making the cost-cutting plan, which will affect as many as 10% of the broadcaster’s 21,000 staff over the next three years. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Pope criticises 'tyrants' who spend billions on wars after Trump spat
The comments follow a high-profile spat with US President Donald Trump, who called the Pope weak on crime.

Sky News Home
Open 
Woman in her 70s killed in UK's third fatal dog attack in a week
A woman in her 70s has died after being attacked by two dogs in a house in Wolverhampton.

The Hill
Open 
Spanberger’s fall from grace wasn’t 'stunning' — it was predictable
There’s a deeper issue at play: credibility.

The Hill
Open 
Watch live: RFK Jr. faces questioning by House over HHS policies, budget
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. will face questioning before the House Ways and Means Committee on Thursday morning on the Trump administration's "Make America Healthy Again" policies and President Trump's fiscal 2027 budget request. The hearing marks Kennedy's first appearance on Capitol Hill since a highly contentious Senate Finance Committee hearing...

The Hill
Open 
Caine says 13 ships made 'wise decision' to turn around amid US blockade
The Chairman of Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Dan Caine, provided an update on the U.S.-imposed blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, saying that so far 13 ships have turned around and not passed through the passage. “The captains of all these ships made the wise decision not to move transit or run this blockade,”...

The Hill
Open 
Watch live: Trump Triumphal Arch plans to be presented to Commission on Fine Arts
The Trump administration will present President Trump's proposal for a Triumphal Arch project to the Commission of Fine Arts (CFA) on Thursday morning. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt announced during Wednesday's press briefing that the Interior Department would soon submit plans to begin construction of the 250-foot arch in Memorial Circle on Columbia Island...

The Hill
Open 
Cruz says Trump 'spoke to me seriously' about Supreme Court vacancies
Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) on Wednesday said President Trump spoke to him “seriously” about filling a hypothetical Supreme Court vacancy in his first term but maintained that his priority is policy fights instead of ruling on legal battles. “In the first Trump term, the president spoke to me seriously about all three vacancies, and three...

The Hill
Open 
The Pentagon is going all-in on autonomous warfare
Central to this plan is the Departmental Autonomous Warfighting Group, which is getting a 24,000 percent budget increase.

The Hill
Open 
Pirro creates tip line for information about Swalwell
U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia Jeanine Pirro on Wednesday created a tipline for information related to sexual misconduct allegations against Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.), who resigned from Congress after several women came forward over the past week. "If you hear about someone who was allegedly drugging, choking, raping victims, who has lived in...

The Hill
Open 
Former Virginia lieutenant governor kills wife, himself in murder-suicide: Police
Former Virginia Lt. Gov. Justin Fairfax (D) killed his wife and himself in an overnight murder-suicide at their home in Fairfax County, police said Thursday morning. Fairfax Police Chief Kevin Davis told reporters that Fairfax fatally shot his wife, Cerina Fairfax, in their home in Annandale, Va., before killing himself. “This has been an ongoing...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Fifa blamed for $100 World Cup train fare for 30-minute ride
New Jersey Governor Mikie Sherrill accuses Fifa of failing to provide funding, which means fans must foot the bill for high transport costs at the World Cup this summer.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Ministers approve £100 oil payment for lower income households in Northern Ireland
It's understood the Executive has pledged £19m to go along with the £17m already set aside for the scheme.

Mail Online
Open 
Father who murdered five-week-old daughter after causing more than 40 fractures and brain injury jailed for life
Sean Jefferson, 35, claimed he had lost his temper when he attacked baby Darcy-Leigh Jefferson, who suffered scores of fractures to her ribs and both her legs

Mail Online
Open 
Air ambulances would be prioritised under 'worst case scenario' planning for jet fuel shortages as ministers war-game possibility of supplies drying up around May half-term holidays
Ministers are currently war-gaming the possibility of supplies of the fuel starting to dry up around the May half-term holidays, in about five to six weeks' time, if the Strait of Hormuz remains closed.

Mail Online
Open 
The three sunglasses shapes making you look dated - and the ones fashionable women are shopping instead
Sunglasses are one of the hardest-working pieces in your wardrobe.

Mail Online
Open 
Ex-Labour MP gets coveted Parliamentary pass despite ongoing sleaze probe - and getting '£1m payoff' because he was 'too ill to work'
Andrew Gwynne, who resigned as MP for Gorton and Denton in January, is among nearly 500 former MPs to hold a coveted security pass for the parliamentary estate.

Mail Online
Open 
Why shark attacks are on the rise as holidaymaker fights for his life after Maldives horror bite - as experts blame influencers
As a British holidaymaker is left fighting for his life after a shark attack in the Maldives, experts warn that a surge in incidents may be fuelled by celebs and influencers

Mail Online
Open 
Queen Elizabeth still reigns supreme: Late monarch is the most popular royal in UK poll followed by Diana, the Waleses and Princess Anne - while King is fifth and Andrew comes last
The late monarch, who died aged 96 in September 2022, is still viewed positively by three out of four Britons [81%] - higher than any of her living relatives.

Mail Online
Open 
Crowds gather at Epsom church where 'woman was gang raped by group of men' after angry protests over 'refusal to give description of suspects'
Around 200 residents descended on Epsom Methodist Church for the Hope for Epsom service just hours after furious protesters hurled objects at riot police.

Mail Online
Open 
Boy, 16, and two men arrested in counter-terror probe after Persian media firm in London targeted in 'firebomb' attack
A 16-year-old boy and two men have been arrested in a counter-terrorism probe after a Persian media firm was targeted in an alleged firebomb attack.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
First trailer released for western starring AI version of Val Kilmer
Footage of As Deep As the Grave screened in the US, featuring an authorised visual deepfake of the actor who died in 2025A trailer has been released for the first film to star an authorised generative AI version of a major Hollywood actor.Val Kilmer was cast in western As Deep As the Grave before his death in April 2025. Production delays meant he never shot any scenes, but the creative team worked with UK-based company Sonantic to create an AI speaking voice based on his old recordings. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Blue Labour gets bluer with MP’s noble quest for a summer of sex | John Crace
Samantha Niblett says her campaign is about ‘taking control of our Britishness’ – bring on the union jack dildosWe could almost be back in the San Francisco of the 1960s. Tune in, turn on, drop out. Make love not war. A hippy counterculture that turned its back on the American involvement in Vietnam. One determined to shape a new world order.Fast forward to today and we have one MP who is hellbent on making 2026 the summer of sex. One who wants to focus politicians’ attention on the joys of the orgasm. To return to the simpler pleasures of life. Though without the need for everyone to take acid. The world is hallucinogenic enough. And who’s to say she’s wrong? Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
News of BBC jobs cuts ‘real concern‘, says UK’s culture secretary
Lisa Nandy says BBC staff have been strongly affected and have expressed frustration that high-paid presenters and executives are unlikely to be affectedThe BBC’s sudden announcement of 2,000 job cuts has had a “very strong effect” on staff, the UK’s culture secretary, Lisa Nandy, has said, as employees expressed frustration that highly paid presenters and senior staff would not be the prime targets of the cuts.Nandy, who has been having conversations with BBC staff during discussions about the broadcaster’s charter renewal, is understood to be keen for employees to be involved in making the cost-cutting plan, which will affect as many as 10% of the broadcaster’s 21,000 staff over the next three years. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Ministers approve £100 oil payment for lower income households
It's understood the Executive has pledged £19m to go along with the £17m already set aside for the scheme.

ZDNet News
Open 
Tidal vs. Qobuz: I tried both hi-res streaming services, and they couldn't be more different
Both music streaming services cater to fans of high-fidelity audio, but the right choice for you likely lies in the more granular features.

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Bank of Ireland Reports Surge in Digital Banking Activity and Payment Volumes During Early 2026
Bank of Ireland has released fresh quarterly data highlighting robust expansion in its customers’ use of online banking tools and electronic payments through the first three months of 2026. The figures, made public on 15 April, underscore a clear shift toward convenient, technology-driven financial services... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Opening Remarks at the Options Market Structure Roundtable

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Opening Remarks at the Options Market Structure Roundtable

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Opening Remarks at the Options Market Structure Roundtable

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Opening Remarks at the Options Market Structure Roundtable

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Bank of England Aims to Strengthen Banking Failure Preparedness Through Revised Operational Guidelines
The Bank of England has recently released the latest and updated operational guidance outlining how it would apply the United Kingdom’s resolution framework if a bank were to fail. The documents, released recently this month, aim to enhance transparency and operational readiness for handling distressed... Read More

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
UPS projects to boost capacvity at 3 Asia air hubs
UPS has completed the expansion of a warehouse in Seoul, S. Korea and has big hub expansions underway in Hong Kong and the Philippines.

Sky News Home
Open 
London residents ask: 'Have we unknowingly been living in China for eight years?'
Residents living on the site of the new Chinese "super embassy" in London fear they have unknowingly been living "in China" since 2018.

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11505 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Maintenance - EAKLN-Kings Lynn (New)
Our supplier is carrying out planned maintenance affecting the listed exchange. Customers will lose connectivity for 1 hour 30 minutes during the maintenance window.

Start: Wed, 6th May 2026 00:05

End: Wed, 6th May 2026 06:00

Update: Wed, 6th May 2026 06:00

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 14:22

Status: Outage

Maintenance: Planned

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11506 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Maintenance - EASAF-Saffron Walden (New)
Our supplier is carrying out planned maintenance affecting the listed exchange. Customers will lose connectivity for 1 hour 30 minutes during the maintenance window.

Start: Thu, 7th May 2026 00:05

End: Thu, 7th May 2026 06:00

Update: Thu, 7th May 2026 06:00

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 14:22

Status: Outage

Maintenance: Planned

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Congress Turns Up Pressure on DHS Over Palantir’s Role in Immigration Crackdown
Democrats are demanding answers about Palantir and other surveillance firms powering Trump’s hard-line immigration enforcement agenda.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Anthropic Plots Major London Expansion
As tensions with the US government mount, Anthropic has leased a new office with enough space to quadruple its 200-person headcount in London.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Former Arsenal goalkeeper Alex Manninger dies after car struck by train in Austria
Former Arsenal goalkeeper Alex Manninger dies at the age of 48 after his car is struck by a train.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Three arrests after attempted arson attack at Persian media offices in London
An ignited container was thrown towards the building of a Persian language media organisation, police said.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Mummy review – classic monster gets dug up for unravelling resurrection
Irish director Lee Cronin follows his Evil Dead reboot with what feels like another Evil Dead film but without a real sense of humourWarner Bros would prefer that you referred to their new hard R take on The Mummy as Lee Cronin’s The Mummy, a bafflingly grandiose insistence that has earned some deserved ridicule online over the past few weeks. It’s partly to separate it from Universal’s upcoming return to the 90s-00s franchise (Blumhouse, the horror hit-makers behind the film, on X posted: “BRENDAN FRASER IS NOT IN LEE CRONIN’S THE MUMMY” last week) as well as what those films represented – safe, family-friendly and easily theme park-able. It’s also an attempt to capitalise on our pop auteur moment, one that Warners has helped to create with Ryan Coogler and Zach Cregger both front and centre of the campaigns for their hit genre films last year (The Mummy’s trailer notably heralds it as “from the studio who brought you Weapons” as if that were to mean all that much).While it is refreshing to see a studio focus on pushing a director over an actor (the last attempt at a Mummy movie relied on the star power of Tom Cruise, a decision that couldn’t stop the film from losing a considerable amount of money), it also speaks to an unearned indulgence and an expedited crowning of a genius before one has really had the chance to prove oneself (a lose-lose of-the-moment trend we need to move away from and one that, to his credit, Cronin was unsure about being a part of). Cronin, an Irish film-maker who has made just two films to date (The Hole in the Ground and Evil Dead Rise), is an undeniable visual talent but his Mummy is also absurdly, watch-checkingly overlong (134 minutes is an unacceptable length for a genre film as thin as this), tonally unsure and, fatally, not all that scary. It’s also, for something so clearly attributed to just one person, a film so deeply influenced by the work of many, many others. It might not feel like a Mummy movie you’ve seen before but it’ll feel like a great deal else. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Manchester City captain Bernardo Silva confirms he will leave club at end of season
31-year-old has been at club for nine yearsPortuguese says he will be ‘a City supporter for life’Bernardo Silva has confirmed he will leave Manchester City in May, with the captain saying he will cherish the legacy he helped build in nine years at the club, winning the 2022-23 treble and a record four consecutive titles.Silva joined City from Monaco in July 2017 for £43.5m and has been a key member of the generational success of Pep Guardiola’s team, winning six Premier League titles, two FA Cups, five League Cups, the Champions League and two Fifa Club World Cups. Including the Community Shield, the Portuguese has 19 honours with City Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Blue Labour gets bluer with MP’s noble quest for a summer of sex | John Crace
Samantha Niblett says her campaign is about ‘taking control of our Britishness’ – bring on the union jack dildosWe could almost be back in the San Francisco of the 1960s. Tune in, turn on, drop out. Make love not war. A hippy counterculture that turned its back on the American involvement in Vietnam. One determined to shape a new world order.Fast forward to today and we have one MP who is hellbent on making 2026 the summer of sex. Who wants to focus politicians’ attention on the joys of the orgasm. To return to the simpler pleasures of life. Though without the need for everyone to take acid. The world is hallucinogenic enough. And who’s to say she’s wrong? Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
UK’s Covid vaccine programme must rebuild trust before next pandemic strikes, inquiry warns
Heather Hallett hails vaccine scheme but criticises rule that only those meeting 60% disabled threshold can get payoutsThe UK’s Covid vaccination programme was “an extraordinary feat” with protective jabs developed and delivered in record time, but work is now needed to rebuild trust in vaccines and ensure better access before the next pandemic strikes, an official inquiry has found.Lady Hallett, the chair of the statutory inquiry into the pandemic, said the vaccine rollout and the identification of an inexpensive steroid that saved the lives of thousands of UK patients, were “two of the success stories” of the pandemic. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Starmer tells social media firms: ‘Things can’t go on like this’
PM demands real world changes in Downing Street meeting with senior figures from Meta, TikTok, Google and XKeir Starmer has told social media bosses “things can’t go on like this” in a meeting about internet safety at Downing Street.The prime minister summoned senior figures from Meta, TikTok, Google, Snapchat’s owner and X to No 10 on Thursday morning as the government considers imposing new restrictions on platforms, including an Australia-style ban for under-16s. Meta owns Facebook and Instagram, and Google owns YouTube. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Justin Trudeau at Coachella? That’s just wrong: at a certain age, things must change | Emma Brockes
If you have to consult the Reddit thread ‘am I too old for Coachella?’, then the answer is probably ‘yes’This morning, over breakfast, in the course of discussing the week’s news, I happened to say the word “Coachella” in front of my two scornful 11-year-olds, whose heads snapped up from their screens in unison. “How have you heard of Coachella?” said one in amazement. “How have you heard of Coachella?” I replied. They exchanged a look with which I’ve become increasingly familiar – namely, the “here we go” look reserved by the very young for the very middle-aged. “What is Coachella, then?” I said, to which they replied: “It’s where influencers go.”This is, of course, an accurate summary of what the California music and arts festival has become in the 27 years since its inception, but that’s not why I bring it up. The festival, which is running this week, has featured Jack White, FKA Twigs and Sabrina Carpenter, but most of the publicity has gone on the audience; specifically, on the attendance of Justin Trudeau, the former prime minister of Canada, who, along with his girlfriend, Katy Perry, was photographed dancing to Justin Bieber and squatting chairless on a kerb, red plastic cups perched on their knees. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Ex-keeper Manninger dies after car hit by train
Former Arsenal goalkeeper Alex Manninger dies at the age of 48 after his car is struck by a train.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Arrests over Persian media offices arson attempt
An ignited container was thrown towards the building of a Persian language media organisation, police said.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Former Arsenal goalkeeper Alex Manninger dies after car hit by train
Former Arsenal goalkeeper Alex Manninger dies at the age of 48 after his car is struck by a train.

Chatham House
Open 
From Destruction to Recovery: Building Ukraine’s Future Prosperity
From Destruction to Recovery: Building Ukraine’s Future Prosperity
14
May 2026 — 14:00 TO 19:15 BST
Anonymous (not verified)
14 April 2026

Chatham House
Half day conference on the war-time recovery of Ukraine and necessary policies to support its long-term prosperity building on the experience and analysis of both Chatham House and the EBRD.
Half day conference on the war-time recovery of Ukraine and necessary policies to support its long-term prosperity building on the experience and analysis of both Chatham House and the EBRD.
Chatham House in partnership with the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development is convening a high-level conference to discuss the roadmap for Ukraine’s economic recovery. The destruction caused by the Russian invasion is staggering. After four years of war the total cost of reconstruction and recovery in Ukraine is almost $588 billion. Sustaining economic stability in war time and preparing for the most ambitious economic recovery project of the century, require effective collaboration of Ukrainian state, western donors, private sector and wider civil society. Ukraine’s integration with the EU and deep structural reforms could catalyse economic growth and enable social recovery and industrial reconstruction.How can Ukraine and its international partners develop security arrangements that provide credible long term assurances and strengthen regional stability?Which reforms could strengthen Ukraine’s economic growth and support a more predictable and competitive business environment? How to sustain momentum on the way to full membership in the EU?How can Ukraine position itself competitively in emerging European value chains?

Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple Hits Record 30% Recycled Content Across All Products in 2025
Apple today announced that a record 30% of material across all products it shipped in 2025 came from recycled content, alongside a series of other environmental milestones published in its annual Environmental Progress Report.





The achievement marks new highs across several specific components. All batteries designed by Apple now use 100% recycled cobalt, all magnets use 100% recycled rare earth elements, and all Apple-designed printed circuit boards use 100% recycled gold plating and tin soldering. Apple also completed the transition to fully fiber-based packaging, fulfilling a pledge to remove all plastic from packaging by 2025, a goal the company says it reached across every package manufactured today.



Apple's greenhouse gas emissions in 2025 remain down over 60% compared to 2015 levels, holding constant from 2024 despite significant business growth. The company is working toward its Apple 2030 goal of carbon neutrality across its entire footprint by the end of the decade.



MacBook Neo leads the lineup on recycled material. It contains 60% recycled content overall, which is the most of any Apple device to date, and features a new aluminum forming process that uses half the raw material compared to traditional machining. Apple and its suppliers also developed an anodization process that achieves a 70% water-reuse rate, turning a traditionally water-intensive step into a near-closed-loop system. Apple said it plans to expand this process to additional production lines in coming years.



Apple launched Cora, a new electronics-recycling line at its Advanced Recovery Center in California, designed to achieve material recovery rates significantly higher than industry baselines using precision shredding and advanced sensor technology. The company also developed A.R.I.S., a machine learning-powered detection system that helps recyclers classify and sort electronic scrap, running on the Mac mini, which Apple is piloting with partner recyclers.



Apple's direct suppliers procured more than 20 gigawatts of renewable energy in 2025 through the Supplier Clean Energy Program, generating more than 38 million megawatt-hours of electricity, which is enough to power more than 3.4 million U.S. households for a year. Apple itself procured an additional 1.8 gigawatts to power its offices, retail stores, and data centers entirely on renewable electricity.



Apple and its suppliers saved 17 billion gallons of fresh water in 2025, and the company replenished more than half of the water it withdrew to support its global facilities. All eight Apple-owned data centers have now been certified to the Alliance for Water Stewardship standard. Apple has set a goal to replenish all water withdrawn by its facilities worldwide by 2030.



Apple Fifth Avenue in New York City became the company's first retail store to achieve TRUE Zero Waste Certification, which requires facilities to divert more than 90 percent of their waste from landfills. Across its supply chain, Apple and its suppliers redirected more than 600,000 metric tons of waste from landfills in 2025, with 400 supplier facilities participating in the company's Zero Waste Program.Tag: Apple EnvironmentThis article, 'Apple Hits Record 30% Recycled Content Across All Products in 2025' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple Offers 10% Off AirPods and More for Earth Day Device Recycling
Apple is offering 10% off AirPods, Beats, or accessories to customers who recycle an eligible iPhone, iPad, Apple Watch, or Mac at a participating Apple Store through May 16.





The discount applies when the recycling and purchase are completed in the same transaction. The promotion runs from today, April 16, through to May 16. Products brought in for recycling undergo screenings, with eligible devices sent to Apple's advanced recycling systems, including Daisy and Cora, for further processing. See Apple's terms and conditions for more information.



The promotion was announced alongside Apple's annual Environmental Progress Report, which revealed a record 30% of material across all products shipped in 2025 came from recycled content.Related Roundup: AirPods 4Buyer's Guide: AirPods (Neutral)Related Forum: AirPodsThis article, 'Apple Offers 10% Off AirPods and More for Earth Day Device Recycling' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Ex-keeper Manninger dies after car hit by train
Former Arsenal goalkeeper Alex Manninger died at the age of 48 after his car was struck by a train.

Mail Online
Open 
Pilots recorded barking and meowing at each other close to notorious DC airport that suffered deadly crash last year
The airport was the site of the deadliest plane crash in the US in nearly 25 years, which arguably casts the lighthearted exchange in a more serious light.

Mail Online
Open 
Alex Manninger dead at 48: Former Arsenal and Liverpool goalkeeper killed after his car was hit by a train
Former Arsenal and Liverpool goalkeeper Alex Manninger has died at the age of 48 after suffering a car accident involving a local railway in his native Austria. 

Mail Online
Open 
Victoria Beckham says 'all we've ever tried to do is protect and love our children' as she breaks silence on family estrangement from son Brooklyn and addresses 'guilt' over bringing him up in the public eye
Victoria Beckham has spoken out on her family's estrangement from eldest son Brooklyn Beckham, insisting that she and husband David have always 'tried to protect and love our children'.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
News of BBC jobs cuts ‘real concern‘, says UK’s culture secretary
Lisa Nandy says BBC staff have been strongly affected and have expressed frustration that high-paid presenters and executives are unlikely to be affectedThe BBC’s sudden announcement of 2,000 job cuts has had a “very strong effect” on staff, the UK’s culture secretary, Lisa Nandy, has said, as employees expressed frustration that highly paid presenters and senior staff would not be the prime targets of the cuts.Nandy, who has been having conversations with BBC staff during discussions about the broadcaster’s charter renewal, is understood to be keen that staff are involved in making the cost-cutting plan, which will affect as many as 10% of the broadcaster’s 21,000 employees over the next three years. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Former Arsenal goalkeeper Alex Manninger dies after car hit by train
Former Arsenal goalkeeper Alex Manninger died at the age of 48 after his car was struck by a train.

Sky News Home
Open 
Boy, 16, among three held over attempted arson on Persian language group in London
Three people, including a 16-year-old boy, have been arrested after an attempted arson attack on the offices of a Persian language media organisation.

Sky News Home
Open 
Former Arsenal goalkeeper Alex Manninger has died in a traffic accident, aged 48
Former Arsenal goalkeeper Alex Manninger has died in a traffic accident at the age of 48.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Arrests after arson attempt on Persian offices
An ignited container was thrown towards the building of a Persian language media organisation, police said.

Mail Online
Open 
Lobster 'liberated' from restaurant by animal rights activist would have died instantly when she threw it back in sea, says furious owner
Eco-warrior Emma Smart, 47, stormed into Catch at the Old Fish Market in Weymouth, Dorset, and 'freed' the lobster which she believed was going to be eaten.

Mail Online
Open 
Mindy Kaling's weight-loss secrets revealed as star, 46, looks slimmer than ever despite struggling with body image since high school and accepting she'd be 'chubby for life'
Mindy has long spoken about the challenges she's faced, including years of fat-shaming and what she once described as 'backhanded compliments.'

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Palestine FA officials denied entry to Canada for Fifa pre-World Cup meeting
Three officials have had applications for visas rejectedFifa Congress will take place in Vancouver on 30 AprilOfficials from the Palestine Football Association have been denied entry to Canada ahead of a pre-World Cup meeting of Fifa’s member associations to be held in Vancouver this month.Three officials have had applications for visas to enter Canada rejected, with the association subsequently asking Fifa to intervene with immigration authorities on their behalf. It comes amid concerns over the ability of some nations to travel freely to this summer’s 48-team tournament, which will be held across the USA, Canada and Mexico. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Search for migrant sex offender cost police £150k
Hadush Kebatu's mistaken release is a "symptom of a broken system", a former Met officer says.

Sky News Home
Open 
British man accused of leading terrorist fighters in Somalia appears in court
A Briton has appeared in court accused of leading a group of fighters from the al Shabaab terrorist group in Somalia.

Sky News Home
Open 
Boy, 16, among three held over attempted arson on Persian language group in London
Three people, including a 16-year-old boy, have been arrested following an attempted arson attack on the offices of a Persian language media organisation.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
News of BBC jobs cuts ‘real concern‘, says UK’s culture secretary
Lisa Nandy says BBC staff have been strongly affected and have expressed frustration that high-paid presenters and executives are unlikely to be affectedThe BBC’s sudden announcement of 2,000 job cuts has had a “very strong effect” on staff, the UK’s culture secretary, Lisa Nandy, has said, as employees express frustration that highly paid presenters and senior staff will not be the prime targets of the cuts.Nandy, who has been having conversations with BBC staff during discussions about the broadcaster’s charter renewal, is understood to be keen that staff are involved in making the cost-cutting plan, which will affect as many as 10% of the broadcaster’s 21,000 employees over the next three years. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Manchester City captain Bernardo Silva confirms he will leave club at end of season
31-year-old has been at club for nine yearsPortuguese says he will be ‘a City supporter for life’Bernardo Silva has confirmed his departure from Manchester City in May, with the captain saying he will cherish the legacy he helped build in nine years at the club where he won the 2022-23 treble and a record four consecutive titles.Silva joined City from Monaco in July 2017 for £43.5m and has been a key member of the generational success of Pep Guardiola’s team, winning six Premier League titles, two FA Cups, five League Cups, the Champions League and two Fifa Club World Cups. Including the Community Shield, the Portuguese has 19 honours with City Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Declan Rice demands Arsenal improve for title showdown at Manchester City
‘Etihad is the ultimate test – bring it on,’ says midfielder‘We have six games to go and we know how big it is’Declan Rice has insisted Arsenal must be better at Manchester City on Sunday if they are to press their Premier League title claims.The midfielder is conscious of his club’s curious situation: six points clear of City at the top of the table, albeit having played an extra game, and the only English team in the Champions League semi-finals. But the mood is edgy and Rice is aware that the fans have concerns over the style of play. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Starmer tells social media firms in No 10 meeting ‘things can’t go on like this’
PM summons senior figures from Meta, TikTok, Google and X and says social media is ‘putting our children at risk’Keir Starmer has told social media bosses “things can’t go on like this” in a meeting about internet safety at Downing Street.The prime minister summoned senior figures from Meta, TikTok, Google, Snapchat’s owner and X to No 10 on Thursday morning as the government considers imposing new restrictions on platforms, including an Australia-style ban for under-16s. Meta owns Facebook and Instagram, and Google owns YouTube. Continue reading...

The Register
Open 
Git identity spoof fools Claude into giving bad code the nod
Forged metadata made AI reviewer treat hostile changes as though they came from known maintainer Security boffins say Anthropic's Claude can be tricked into approving malicious code with just two Git commands by spoofing a trusted developer's identity.…

Sky News Home
Open 
Three men arrested, including 16-year-old, after attempted arson attack on Persian language group
Three people, including a 16-year-old boy, have been arrested following an attempted arson attack on the offices of a Persian language media organisation.

Gizmodo
Open 
Behold the Punny Titles of ‘Rick and Morty’ Season 9
Plus, get your first look at Ridley Scott's new post-apocalyptic movie.

UK Legislation
Open 
The Customs (Northern Ireland) (EU Exit) (Amendment) (No. 2) Regulations 2026
These Regulations amend the Customs (Northern Ireland) (EU Exit) (Amendment) Regulations 2026 (S.I. 2026/393) to change the coming into force date of those Regulations from 20th April 2026 to 25th May 2026.

UK Legislation
Open 
The Customs (Northern Ireland) (EU Exit) (Amendment) Regulations 2026
These Regulations amend the Customs (Northern Ireland) (EU Exit) Regulations 2020 (S.I. 2020/1605) (“the 2020 Regulations”), in particular, Chapter 5 (reliefs and repayment) and Chapter 6 (repayment or remission of duty on production of evidence) of Part 2 (importation of goods and goods potentially for export) of the 2020 Regulations.

UK Legislation
Open 
Digital Assets (Scotland) Act 2026
An Act of the Scottish Parliament to make provision about the nature of certain digital assets as objects of property in Scots law; and for connected purposes.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
James Bond studio heads urge patience over casting announcement
Executives from Amazon MGM are no closer to revealing who is lined up for the coveted role, saying, ‘We’re taking the time to do this with care and deep respect’The new James Bond studio heads have attempted to calm fans about who will play the British spy in the new film.Speaking at trade show CinemaCon in the US on Wednesday, executives from Amazon MGM studios – which bought the series rights as part of an $8.45bn (£6.9bn) deal in 2022 – indicated that an abundance of caution on their part meant the role was not yet cast. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Iranians tell BBC they don't know if ceasefire will hold
The BBC's chief international correspondent Lyse Doucet arrived in Tehran to what she described as 'life on pause'.

Sky News Home
Open 
'God of chaos' asteroid set to pass close to Earth
A large asteroid named after a god of chaos is on track for a historic close pass of Earth, according to NASA.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Europe has 'maybe 6 weeks of jet fuel left', energy boss warns as Strait of Hormuz effectively closed
Flights could soon be cancelled if supplies from the Gulf remain blocked, says the International Energy Agency.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Firefighters battle huge blaze at Australian oil refinery
Officials say there were no suspicious circumstances behind the fire at the Viva Energy Geelong oil refinery, one of only two in Australia. Authorities have warned of disruptions to domestic fuel supply.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
US jury finds Live Nation, Ticketmaster hold illegal monopoly
The verdict will not bring immediate relief to concertgoers frustrated by high ticket prices, but could cost the company hundreds of millions of dollars.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Lufthansa axes CityLine fleet early over strikes, fuel costs
Germany's Lufthansa says it will retire older CityLine aircraft earlier than planned in response to strikes and rising fuel costs. As unions stage walkouts on two fronts, the Iran war has sent kerosene prices spiraling.

Mail Online
Open 
Why some people suffer bowel 'homesickness': Condition which makes thousands of people's guts seize uncomfortably on holiday - and how to fix it, fast
We talk endlessly about avoiding traveller's tummy, but what about the opposite problem no one readily admits to?

CNET News
Open 
Spotify Champions Live Music With Independent Music Venue Deal
The year-long partnership will spotlight the independent live music venues and artists in the US directly through Spotify's app.

CNET News
Open 
Little Caesars Wants ChatGPT to Order Your Pizza for You
You can personalize your pie and place your order without leaving the chatbot.

CNET News
Open 
DJI Osmo Pocket 4 Is a Great Vlogging Camera, but Not for the US
From its new sensor, film profiles and built-in storage, the Osmo Pocket 4 has a lot to offer. Shame it won't be on sale in the US at launch.

CNET News
Open 
Don't Lose Your Texts: How to Move Away From Samsung Messages Before It Shuts Down
Samsung is deactivating its long-standing Messages app in July. Here's what to do next.

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11504 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Maintenance - NDCAN-Canterbury (New)
Our supplier is carrying out planned maintenance affecting the listed exchange. Customers will lose connectivity for 2 hours during the maintenance window.

Start: Wed, 6th May 2026 00:05

End: Wed, 6th May 2026 06:00

Update: Wed, 6th May 2026 06:00

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 13:54

Status: Outage

Maintenance: Planned

Mail Online
Open 
Actress Zawe Ashton and ex-BBC presenter Samira Ahmed prompt backlash by complaining about dead child in horror movie poster
Zawe Ashton, 41, and Samira Ahmed, 57, both argued the poster - which shows a close-up image of a mummified girl - could have an 'impact' on grieving families who have lost a child.

BBC World News
Open 
'Unprecedented' fire at Australian oil refinery to affect nation's petrol supplies
The fire has deepened fears over the nation's petrol supplies amid a global crunch.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Asha Bhosle obituary
One of the great Bollywood singers whose thousands of songs ranged from ghazals to dance tunes and popAsha Bhosle, who has died aged 92, was the best-known singer in India, an extraordinary artist whose career spanned over eight decades, during which she recorded about 12,000 songs.She first became famous as a playback singer – recording songs that would then be lip-synced by actors in Bollywood movies. Though she was not on screen, her voice made her even more celebrated than those pretending to sing her songs. She also recorded extensively under her own name, and after establishing her reputation in Asia became known to western audiences first through Brimful of Asha, the 1997 tribute song by Cornershop, and then through her collaborations with musicians as varied as Boy George, Kronos Quartet and, most recently, Gorillaz. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Behind the bluster, Donald Trump desperately needs a peace deal with Iran. Here's a solution | Rajan Menon
Washington and Tehran will have to make compromises and the current deadline must be extended. But with the will there’s clearly a way The failure of the Islamabad talks to end the US-Israel war on Iran was hardly surprising, given the stark differences between Washington’s 15-point proposal and Tehran’s 10-point equivalent. The 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), which capped Iran’s uranium enrichment, took more than two years to negotiate, and its roots actually reach back to 2003. The US vice-president, JD Vance, spent less than a full day in Islamabad for negotiations that included the nuclear question and several others.The surprise was Vance’s explanation for the failure – that Iran rejected the terms presented by the US. The American side was not in a position to dictate terms because Iran stood firm when the 8 April ceasefire took effect. But Vance seemed to believe, as does his boss Donald Trump, that the Iranians had been defeated and the US didn’t have to budge.Rajan Menon is professor emeritus of international relations at Powell School, City University of New York, and senior research fellow at Columbia University’s Saltzman Institute of War and Peace Studies Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
A single Epstein email shines a light on myths about American justice – and art | Alex Duran
In prison, I witnessed the gap in accountability between the poor and the elite. A banker’s message to Epstein is racist and reductiveHere is an email that should bring shame to Jes Staley:you want to know why we are not São Paolo, watch the TV adds on the Superbowl. Its all about hip blacks in hip cars with white women.The group that should be in the streets, has been bought off. By Jay Z Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Starmer tells social media firms in No 10 meeting ‘things can’t go on like this’
PM summons senior figures from Meta, TikTok, Google and X and says social media is ‘putting our children at risk’Keir Starmer has told social media bosses “things can’t go on like this” in a Downing Street meeting over internet safety.The prime minister summoned senior figures at Meta, TikTok, Google, Snapchat’s owner and X to No 10 on Thursday morning as his government considers imposing new restrictions on platforms, including an Australia-style ban for under-16s. Meta owns Facebook and Instagram, and Google owns YouTube. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Europe live: Russia ‘does not deserve’ lifting of sanctions, Zelenskyy says, after deadly overnight strikes in Ukraine
Ukrainian president says nearly 700 Russian drones and 19 ballistic missiles mostly targeted Kyiv, Odesa and DniproGerman chancellor Friedrich Merz and Irish prime minister Micheál Martin are now speaking at a press conference after their meeting in Berlin.Let’s listen in. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Scottish retailers dismiss SNP proposal to cap price of essential foods as a ‘potty gimmick’ – UK politics live
Scottish Retail Consortium blames rising supply chain and commodity costs as it also hits out at ‘relentless rises in statutory costs imposed by government’ Swinney says this is a manifesto for the whole of Scotland.He confirms that the SNP would argue for the Scottish power to have more control over energy policy (still largely reserved to Westminter). He says:The problem is not that we do not have the energy. The problem is that Westminster has the power. This election is our opportunity to take those powers and put them into Scotland’s hands. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Is Spanish dominance in Europe coming to an end?’ – Sid Lowe answered your football questions
Sid Lowe is our Spanish football correspondent and has been covering an increasingly busy beat for years. He answered your questions on everything from the Champions League to La Liga … and lookalikestrollercoaster asks: Why have so many Spanish clubs competing in the Champions League or European Cup been relegated? It happened with Real Betis and with Villarreal. We have seen leading Spanish clubs fall to the second division and even to lower leagues, see Deportivo.Sid:There are lots of elements at play here, and they are not all the same going back over time, as the structure of Spanish football has changed (collective TV deal, etc), while some clubs had their own specific issues (Depor’s success, built on money they didn’t really have, was what brought their fall, for example). The short-term reason for some teams – look at Athletic this season, for example – is that they don’t always have the resources for both competitions. There’s definitely a financial component to it. Villarreal’s relegation in 2012 was baffling but internally they had overspent – which is unlike them, a stable and financially strong club – although they did learn from that.Look at the second division now and it is full of massive clubs (historically). Zaragoza are the really clear example … Sporting, Málaga, Depor, similar with Oviedo until last summer. Often laden with debt, often unready for the sudden fall off of income, etc …I don’t know … I’m not sure that I feel that the people I bigged up (early) have started suffering better fates … have they? It might not have been that bad before. Or maybe it was, ha.There’s a related issue here, actually, which is part of the daily battle … most pieces are on-demand, so to speak, (the desk asks about an issue or I suggest an issue or whatever), but on Mondays, the regular column linked to the weekend games, I more or less write what I want (over a 38-week season there might be three or four weeks when the desk suggests/wants a certain topic and I’m not totally mad: if it’s clásico weekend then very likely that will be the focus). Which is why you get Leganés or Levante. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Parents jailed over death of five-week-old child
Sean Jefferson and Amy Clark are sentenced following a campaign of violence against baby Darcy-Leigh.

Russia Today News
Open 
Jesus slaps Trump in AI clip shared by Iran (VIDEO)

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Covid jabs huge success, but work needed on trust in vaccines - key findings from Covid report
Immunisation saved hundreds of thousands of UK lives, but vaccine hesitancy remains an issue.

TechRadar News
Open 
Turtle Beach reveals the successor to the Stealth Pro, one of our favorite premium gaming headsets, featuring CrossPlay 2.0 multiplatform switching and Dolby Atmos

TechRadar News
Open 
The Sony WH-CH520 Headphones offer 'simply superb value' at just $38 on Amazon

TechRadar News
Open 
Tomodachi Life: Living the Dream director says development started in 2017 after discussing a 'special attachment' to the series with the producer, but had already 'squeezed all we could' out of the 3DS title

TechRadar News
Open 
Plot twist! Canva just made another premium tool completely free for creators — I didn't expect this one, but I'll take it

TechRadar News
Open 
Whoop is moving beyond wearables to test your blood, integrating the results with its AI-powered app — and its latest evolution is smarter than ever

TechRadar News
Open 
De'Longhi's super-smart new coffee maker that 'learns' your favorite hot and cold drinks, and brews them in moments

Digital Trends
Open 
Millions of Americans are talking to AI about health, and some are dangerously skipping real doctors
Turns out a lot of people would rather ask an AI about their symptoms than pay for a doctor's visit. A new survey puts some striking numbers behind that trend.

Digital Trends
Open 
I didn’t expect food reels to help my diet – but they might
Watching food videos may help dieters reduce cravings and avoid overeating, according to new research.

Digital Trends
Open 
Steam spotted cooking up a game price tracker to save patient souls a few dollars
Valve appears to be building a 30-day price history tracker directly into Steam, letting you check recent price drops without leaving the app.

Digital Trends
Open 
Social media is helping us curb cravings? Research says it’s a potent trick for the diet-conscious
A new University of Bristol study suggests dieters may use indulgent food content as a craving substitute, even as other research links social media to body-image harm and disordered eating.

Digital Trends
Open 
Microsoft leaks predict the obvious: The Surface line has no answer for the MacBook Neo
Leaked plans for Microsoft's 2026 Surface lineup show display upgrades and a two-stage chip rollout, yet the company still has nothing for buyers looking at Apple's MacBook Neo.

Digital Trends
Open 
AI images are now being abused to fake evidence for vehicle insurance fraud
AI-edited vehicle photos are becoming a new insurance fraud tool, with Admiral linking a rise in cases to manipulated crash images, duplicate filings, and fabricated claim materials that can raise costs across the system.

Digital Trends
Open 
Canva AI 2.0 aims to reshape how you turn ideas into polished projects
Canva has unveiled its AI 2.0 update, bringing a more conversational approach to designing and completing projects. Instead of starting from templates, users can describe what they need to generate structured, editable design.

Digital Trends
Open 
Canva now integrates with your work apps so you can get more done without leaving the platform
Canva is expanding beyond design with new integrations that connect tools like Slack, Gmail, and Google Drive to help users pull in context from across apps for their projects.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
‘We keep our finances separate’: My boyfriend is in his 50s with no retirement savings — how worried should I be?
“He built our home over the last three years. We are both on the title and carry no mortgage.”

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
With the largest industrial IPO since 1999, this air-quality giant is going public
Madison Air raises $2.2 billion in the largest IPO this year, and the largest from the industrial sector since 1999.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Germany, Israel see growing divide after criticism of Merz
The Israeli finance minister's sharp criticism of the German chancellor's views on Israel's settlement policy is just the latest sign of a growing estrangement. What's the current state of German-Israeli relations?

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Top EU court rules online gamblers can sue for compensation if betting illegal in home country
The ECJ has ruled that online gamblers can seek compensation if they lost money when gambling was illegal in their home country, even if the laws have since changed. This could pave the way for others to reclaim losses.

Mail Online
Open 
Mindy Kaling's weight loss secrets revealed as star, 46, looks slimmer than ever despite struggling with body image since high school and accepting she'd be 'chubby for life'
Mindy has long spoken about the challenges she's faced, including years of fat-shaming and what she once described as 'backhanded compliments.'

Mail Online
Open 
Good Morning Britain's Kate Garraway just wore a £60 dress from Next that looks very designer - it's still in stock and perfect for spring
The TV star, 58 - who is reportedly 'smiling again' after growing close to a broadcaster friend two years after the tragic death of her husband Derek - usually presents the ITV show on Friday.

Mail Online
Open 
Keir Starmer warns tech firms he WILL take action on addictive social media for kids after hauling bosses into Downing Street - but admits he doesn't know what he'll do or when
The Prime Minister hauled bosses from X, Snap, TikTok , Google , and Instagram parent company Meta into Downing Street on Thursday morning.

Mail Online
Open 
Jack Whitehall heads out for a game of padel after leaving his mother Hilary 'despairing' by making wedding faux pas with just days to go until his big day with Roxy Horner
The TV presenter, 37, cut a casual figure as he stepped out for a morning game on Thursday ahead of his weekend nuptials to model fiancée Roxy Horner.

Mail Online
Open 
Ellie Bamber transforms into Kate Moss in first trailer for Moss & Freud biopic about the iconic supermodel's volatile relationship with the late artist
Ellie Bamber's transformation into iconic supermodel Kate Moss was displayed in full in the first trailer for the Moss & Freud biopic.

Mail Online
Open 
Andrew Lloyd Webber's cellist brother, Julian, 75, reveals he is battling prostate cancer and says 'I did not want to let anyone down so I kept my diagnosis secret'
Andrew Lloyd-Webber's brother Julian Lloyd Webber has announced he will receive treatment for prostate cancer after being diagnosed with the condition.

Mail Online
Open 
Reeves is accused of using woke 'gender parity' concerns to block defence spending as fears grow Britain is defenceless against Putin
Amid an increasingly bitter Labour civil war over defence spending the Chancellor was said to have told MoD chiefs asking for money they were not doing enough to employ more women.

The Verge
Open 
Intel’s cheaper Panther Lake chips are for budget-friendly laptops
Intel is announcing a family of cheaper Panther Lake laptop processors called the Core Series 3 line. They're built on the same Intel 18A process as the higher-end Core Ultra Series 3 family of chips, but they have less of just about everything spec-wise. The Core Series 3 (non-Ultra) line encompasses six different chips, with […]

The Verge
Open 
Meta blames RAM shortage for $100 Quest 3 price hike
Meta is the next tech company to hike up hardware prices due to the global memory shortage. Beginning April 19th, Meta's 128GB Quest 3S VR headset will cost $349.99, the 256GB Quest 3S will cost $449.99, and the Quest 3 will cost $599.99. Those are increases of $50 for both Quest 3S models and $100 […]

Computer Weekly
Open 
Dubai rolls out AI training for 50,000 government staff
An initiative under Digital Dubai, in partnership with government HR and AI bodies, reflects the wider UAE strategy to embed artificial intelligence across public services, workforce development and economic diversification plans

Mail Online
Open 
Being obese before 30 raises risk of early death by 70 per cent, say researchers
Putting on excess weight before the age of 30 could dramatically raise the risk of dying early, a major study suggests.

Mail Online
Open 
British man, 43, appears in court accused of leading platoon for Somali terror group Al-Shabaab - as he faces a raft of other terrorism charges
Jermaine Grant, 43, is charged with directing the activities of Al-Shabaab. Prosecutors allege he attended Al-Shabaab commando training camps and took part in a number of battles in Somalia.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Fifa blamed for $100 World Cup trains from New York
New Jersey Governor Mikie Sherrill accuses Fifa of failing to provide funding, which means fans must foot the bill for high transport costs at the World Cup this summer.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
From Trucks To Tanks: Pentagon Looks To Automakers To Rebuild America's Arsenal
From Trucks To Tanks: Pentagon Looks To Automakers To Rebuild America's Arsenal

With two active conflict areas in Eurasia - the Russia-Ukraine conflict in Eastern Europe and the U.S.-Iran theater in the Gulf - the world is moving deeper into a war cycle. The latest indicator is not only that militaries around the world are beginning to stockpile one-way attack drones, but also the early-stage push to convert underused civilian industrial capacity, including struggling auto production lines, into wartime manufacturing hubs.

The Wall Street Journal is out with a new report that describes just that, noting that the Trump administration is exploring whether U.S. manufacturers, including GM, Ford, GE Aerospace, and Oshkosh, can convert civilian industrial capacity into weapons production as conflicts across Eurasia drag on and deplete critical weapons stockpiles.

The effort to boost the war economy is part of what Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has described as putting the defense industrial base on a "wartime footing."

A Department of War official said the agency "is committed to rapidly expanding the defense industrial base by leveraging all available commercial solutions and technologies to ensure that our warfighters maintain a decisive advantage."

Senior defense officials told the outlet that Mary Barra of General Motors and Jim Farley of Ford Motor have been briefed on converting auto production lines into weapons manufacturing facilities. The report did not provide details on what types of weapons could be produced in the factories or on the downtime required to convert those lines.

Those officials said GE Aerospace and vehicle and machinery maker Oshkosh were among other manufacturers briefed.

The historical precedent is that America converted its automotive base during World War II to produce record numbers of main battle tanks, bombers, and fighter planes to win the war.



Let's not forget that GM and Ford both repurposed production lines during the Covid pandemic to produce ventilators, so it's not far-fetched that these automakers could one day be rolling tanks down the production lines.

One major hurdle is the far-left unions, which could force labor actions such as strikes, as the broader left-wing ecosystem has transformed into a pressure campaign against anything related to Trump, whether foreign or domestic policy.

Evidence of converting underused civilian industrial capacity has already been seen with the German automaker Volkswagen, which will soon transform its Lower Saxony factory from producing T-Roc Cabriolets to manufacturing parts for the Iron Dome missile interceptor system.

In mid-February, we highlighted a conversation between Anduril Industries founder Palmer Luckey and Joe Rogan about how the U.S. won World War II. Luckey noted:


"How did the United States win World War II … Manufacturing. Some of it was new factories, but most of it was taking over old factories."



.@PalmerLuckey “WWII we turned our automotive factories into missile factories” https://t.co/P6ZjQsPjeW pic.twitter.com/uUJmcTTupU
— Molly O’Shea (@MollySOShea) April 16, 2026
That's why Chinese autos will never flood the U.S.: it would destroy the auto industrial base that can easily be converted to wartime production. However, the current left-wing regime in Europe has already chosen to hollow out its industrial core by flooding the continent with BYD cars.

This is wartime stuff.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 07:45

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Fire Erupts At Major Australian Refinery, Amplifying Fuel Shock As "Green" Killed Refining Buffer
Fire Erupts At Major Australian Refinery, Amplifying Fuel Shock As "Green" Killed Refining Buffer

Australia's failed "green" domestic energy policies had already sparked a fuel-supply shock shortly after the U.S.-Iran conflict disrupted tankers at the Hormuz chokepoint. Now, a fire has broken out at the larger of Australia's two remaining oil refineries, adding even more fuel supply woes. 

Victoria state fire authorities said the blaze erupted at Viva Energy's 120,000-barrel-per-day Geelong refinery, one of only two operating oil refineries left in Australia. The refinery accounts for roughly 10% to 12% of Australia's fuel supply while covering about half of Victoria's fuel demand.


Reported Viva Energy's Corio refinery in Geelong is ablaze
Source: Geelong Community FB pic.twitter.com/oRsI10fVr3
— Timjbo 🇦🇺 (@TimjboAU) April 15, 2026
Reuters cited authorities early Thursday saying the fire at the refinery is now "under control."

In a separate report, Al Jazeera noted that flames were reported to be as high as 200 feet and that a "gas leak" was potentially the source of the fire.


An oil refinery is engulfed in flames after an explosion in Victoria on Wednesday morning.
Viva Energy in Corio, near Geelong, is one of Australia’s last two oil refineries, and the blaze which engulfed it comes amid a global fuel crisis.
The refinery supplies over 50 per cent… pic.twitter.com/ovPkuIGO73
— 7NEWS Australia (@7NewsAustralia) April 15, 2026
"This is not a positive development, but obviously there's a long way to go in terms of working out just what the impact is," Energy Minister Chris Bowen told local outlet Channel Nine.

The incident has once again exposed how thin Australia's refining buffer has become after "green" was prioritized over common-sense domestic energy policies, including the import of a vast share of its fuel needs from the Gulf.

Viva Energy said the incident is set to affect petrol and aviation gasoline. The good news is that the plant is still producing jet fuel and diesel.

Australian Strategic Policy Institute analyst John Coyne warned, "I would expect we'd see a price hike depending on the scale of the damage, and secondly, it reinforces the challenges we have in terms of sovereign and resilient capabilities here."

There was no indication from Viva Energy of the specific damage or a repair timeline.

Australia's decision to prioritize "green" policies while allowing its fossil-fuel complex and refining capacity to deteriorate looks absolutely reckless and now nation-killing.

Let's not forget there has been a wave of high-value energy assets damaged in conflicts across Eurasia or mysterious industrial accidents elsewhere. 

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 08:20

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Despite 'Survey' Sadness, Jobless Claims Slide Near Historic Lows
Despite 'Survey' Sadness, Jobless Claims Slide Near Historic Lows

The number of Americans filing for jobless benefits for the first time fell to just 207k (below the 213k expected and down from the prior 209.25k) - back near its lowest levels in 5 years (and trend towards its lowest level in 50 years)...



Source: Bloomberg

Despite a small pick up last week, Continuing jobless claims have been below the 1.9 million Maginot Line since the start of the year...



Source: Bloomberg

Finally, as the following chart suggests, while it may be "hard to get" a new job, firing remains very low...



Source: Bloomberg

The 'no hire, no fire' economy is alive and kicking.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 08:37

UK Government News
Open 
RAAC hit court reopens in boost for London justice
Victims across London will see justice delivered faster and fairer as Harrow Crown Court reopens in a major Government drive to cut court backlogs. 

UK Government News
Open 
New UK Aid for displaced people in Lebanon as Minister visits Beirut
Minister for the Middle East in Lebanon on first visit since regional escalation and pledges new humanitarian funding

Ian Visits
Open 
Fewer trains to call at Wandsworth Town station during step-free upgrade works
Work to add new lifts at Wandsworth Town station means fewer trains will stop there this summer.Read more ›

The Hill
Open 
Tillis says Trump should apologize to pope: 'When you’re wrong, you’re wrong'
Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) on Wednesday said President Trump should apologize to Pope Leo XIV following their public spat over the U.S.-Israeli conflict in Iran, adding that "when you're wrong, you're wrong." "To say soft on crime or soft on the border, that’s what you say to an opponent in the next election," Tillis told...

The Hill
Open 
America’s double standard on nuclear Islamism
By any reasonable strategic measure, the divergent nature of U.S. policy toward Iran and Pakistan defies logic. Both are Islamic republics. Both are authoritarian in structure. Both have had links to transnational terrorist networks. And both have long had fraught relationships with Washington. Yet one is relentlessly sanctioned, threatened and even denied civilian nuclear rights...

The Hill
Open 
Bomb threat at home of Pope Leo's brother: Police
A bomb threat occurred at the home of the brother of Pope Leo XIV on Wednesday night, police in Illinois confirmed.

The Hill
Open 
Live updates: Hegseth, Caine brief on Iran amid blockade, waning ceasefire
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Dan Caine will brief reporters on Thursday morning, as the war nears the seven-week mark and the ceasefire hits nine days. A series of Trump officials will make their way to Capitol Hill on Thursday, where lawmakers continue to duke it out...

The Hill
Open 
Trump is trying to undo 50 years of energy efficiency gains
The Trump administration continues to endorse energy waste, even as its Mideast war drives up oil and gas prices. 

The Hill
Open 
Average 2026 tax refunds up, but well below Trump’s expectations
Tax refunds for 2026 may be higher, but they are falling well below President Trump's expectations after his "One Big Beautiful Bill" was signed into law last year, ensuring new tax breaks for Americans. The average check going to Americans is up 11 percent, at $3,462, from 2025's $3,116, according to filing season data from...

Mail Online
Open 
Iran propaganda video portrays Trump as a Minion struggling to open Strait of Hormuz - after president was thrown into Hell by Jesus in previous Tehran mockery
The Iranian Embassy in Russia published the AI clip on Wednesday as the US steps up its blockade of the strait in attempt to gain control over the vital passageway.

Mail Online
Open 
Sussexes are all smiles as they touch down in Sydney for last leg of 'cosplay royal' tour ahead of Meghan's appearance at £1,400 'girls' weekend' retreat
The couple smiled and waved as they came off a Qantas jet after spending time in Melbourne and Canberra since landing from LA on Tuesday.

Mail Online
Open 
Victoria Beckham says 'all we've ever tried to do is protect and love our children' as she breaks silence on family estrangement from son Brooklyn and addresses 'guilt' over bringing him up in the public eye
Victoria Beckham has spoken out on their family's estrangement from eldest son Brooklyn Beckham.

Mail Online
Open 
Pete Hegseth warns Iran US military is 'locked and loaded' and intelligence is better than EVER to strike at moment's notice
Pete Hegseth claimed the US military is 'locked and loaded' to strike Iran , even as Donald Trump insists his administration is still pursuing a deal with the Islamic regime.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
A water fight in Laos and a coal-fired Fiat: photos of the day – Thursday
The Guardian’s picture editors select photographs from around the world Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Live Nation and Ticketmaster had monopoly over big venues, US jury finds
Verdict in states’ case says concert giant stifled competition in ticketing industry, raising pressure for changesThe concert giant Live Nation and its Ticketmaster subsidiary has a harmful monopoly over big concert venues, a Manhattan federal jury has found, dealing the company a loss in a lawsuit over claims brought by dozens of US states.The jury deliberated for four days before reaching its decision on Wednesday in the closely watched case, which helped peel back the curtain on a business that dominates live entertainment across much of the world. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Will revival of Crystal Palace’s ‘hallowed turf’ create more athletics history?
Redevelopment of the National Sports Centre would be a boost to locals and those who have fought for its return“There were trees growing out of the main stand and on the indoor track and no one was doing anything about it,” says John Powell of the groundswell of despair at a crumbling Crystal Palace barely a couple of years after the Olympics were hosted to acclaim across the other side of London.A month before Sir Mo Farah secured his second gold of London 2012 on Super Saturday, he had swept to victory in the 5,000m when Crystal Palace hosted its final London Grand Prix. But that summer’s Games appeared to signal the beginning of the end for the venue that had been the home of British athletics for the previous two decades. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Church warden jailed for life for murder of lecturer has conviction quashed
Retrial ordered in case of Benjamin Field, found guilty in 2019 of murdering Peter Farquhar, 69, in BuckinghamshireA church warden who was jailed for life for the murder of a university lecturer has had his conviction quashed at the court of appeal and a retrial has been ordered.Benjamin Field was jailed for at least 36 years in 2019 after being found guilty of murdering 69-year-old Peter Farquhar in Maids Moreton, Buckinghamshire. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: US to block Iranian ports for ‘as long as it takes’ and is ready to restart combat if talks fail, Hegseth warns
Pentagon chief said that the US is ‘reloading with more power than before’ and Iran has choice of ‘the easy way or the hard way’US and Iran in indirect talks to extend two-week ceasefireIran has stopped all petrochemical exports to prioritise domestic supply and prevent shortages of raw materials, Reuters reported.The state-owned National Petrochemical Company ordered firms to suspend exports until further notice. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Migrants making false domestic abuse claims to stay in UK, BBC investigation reveals
In the third part of an undercover investigation, the BBC reveals how rules aimed at protecting abuse victims are being exploited.

Sky News Home
Open 
A trick to get free delivery on Amazon | Money newsletter
More than 185,000 people have now signed up to our free Money newsletter, which brings the kind of content you enjoy in the award-winning Money blog directly to your inbox every week.

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Vaults or Non‑Custodial Smart Contracts are Pooling Deposits into Yield‑Generating Strategies : Analysis
Coin Metrics explained in a blog post that on-chain vaults have solidified their role as essential infrastructure for yield generation and capital allocation. According to Coin Metrics’ latest State of the Network report, these tools function much like professionally managed funds or structured products, yet... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
eToro to Acquire Zengo to Enhance Self-Custody Crypto Capabilities
Investment platform eToro (NASDAQ:ETOR) has reached an agreement to purchase Zengo, a specialist in user-managed cryptocurrency storage solutions. The transaction is estimated to be valued at around $70 million. This strategic acquisition reflects eToro’s ongoing efforts to deepen its involvement in DLT or blockchain-based services... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Fintech VC TTV Capital Leads Investment in Hamilton AI
A venture capital firm specializing in financial technology has led a $7.5 million seed funding round for an innovative startup reshaping private aviation operations. TTV Capital, with more than two decades devoted exclusively to fintech deals, took the lead on the investment in Hamilton AI.... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Nasdaq and S&P 500 Rebound Strongly, Surpass Previous Records After Erasing Wartime Declines
On Wednesday, the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite both finished trading at unprecedented levels, marking a significant milestone in the ongoing market recovery. This upward movement gained support from several positive factors, including lower crude oil costs, impressive earnings growth at major banks, and rising... Read More

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11500 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Maintenance - LVARR-Arrowbrook (New)
Our supplier is carrying out planned maintenance affecting the listed exchange. Customers will lose connectivity for 5 hours during the maintenance window.

Start: Tue, 5th May 2026 00:05

End: Tue, 5th May 2026 06:00

Update: Tue, 5th May 2026 06:00

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 13:23

Status: Outage

Maintenance: Planned

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11501 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Maintenance - MYMAN-Bradford - Manningham (New)
Our supplier is carrying out planned maintenance affecting the listed exchange. Customers will lose connectivity for 5 hours during the maintenance window.

Start: Wed, 6th May 2026 00:05

End: Wed, 6th May 2026 06:00

Update: Wed, 6th May 2026 06:00

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 13:25

Status: Outage

Maintenance: Planned

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11502 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Maintenance - NDCAN-Canterbury (New)
Our supplier is carrying out planned maintenance affecting the listed exchange. Customers will lose connectivity for 5 hours during the maintenance window.

Start: Fri, 8th May 2026 00:05

End: Fri, 8th May 2026 06:00

Update: Fri, 8th May 2026 06:00

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 13:37

Status: Outage

Maintenance: Planned

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11503 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Maintenance - SSTXY-Tewkesbury (New)
Our supplier is carrying out planned maintenance affecting the listed exchange. Customers will lose connectivity for 5 hours during the maintenance window.

Start: Fri, 8th May 2026 00:05

End: Fri, 8th May 2026 06:00

Update: Fri, 8th May 2026 06:00

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 13:37

Status: Outage

Maintenance: Planned

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Smart Plug Guide (2026): When You Should and Shouldn’t Use One
Smart plugs can add controls to any outlet, but they aren’t perfect for everything. Here’s our guide to using one and which ones to buy.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
The 10 Best MagSafe Phone Grips for Your Butter Fingers (2026)
Keep your phone firmly in hand and add some personality with these comfortable, durable, and nifty smartphone grips.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Fifa blamed as New York World Cup trains to cost $100
New Jersey Governor Mikie Sherrill accuses Fifa of failing to provide funding, which means fans must foot the bill for high transport costs at the World Cup this summer.

Techdirt
Open 
The Wall Street Journal Wonders Why There Are Suddenly So Many Sleazy Fees
I cut my teeth as a telecom reporter, so I spent a lot of time writing about how broadband monopolies and cable TV giants rip off consumers with sleazy, misleading fees. I also spent a lot of that time writing about how lobbying and regulatory capture have ensured that big companies see no meaningful penalties […]

Russia Today News
Open 
US senators fail to halt Trump’s arms sales to Israel

BBC Formula One
Open 
Lotus 79 voted most beautiful F1 car by BBC Sport users
We asked you to select the best-looking F1 car in history from our shortlist of 13, and the Lotus 79 came out on top.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Bellingham says Camavinga red 'a joke' as Real fury grows
Real Madrid's Jude Bellingham says the decision to send off team-mate Eduardo Camavinga during their 4-3 Champions League loss to Bayern Munich was "a joke".

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Home Office investigating after BBC finds migrants making false claims to stay in UK
No 10 says the government is working to ensure "anyone potentially abusing our immigration system is held accountable".

Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple Vision Pro Shoot Ended in Fatal Aircraft Crash
A British paraplegic adventurer was being filmed for an Apple Vision Pro immersive video series during a fatal aircraft crash in the Jordanian desert in July 2024, Bloomberg's Mark Gurman reports.





Claire Lomas became internationally recognized in 2012 when she became the first person to complete the London Marathon using a robotic exoskeleton suit, five years after being paralyzed from the waist down in a horse-riding accident. Apple was apparently working with London-based Atlantic Studios to film Lomas for its Apple Immersive Video series called Adventure. A camera system was mounted on the plane itself, and Lomas was actively being recorded when the crash occurred. Lomas died from her injuries within weeks of the crash at the age of 44.



The planned episode was set to showcase multiple Jordanian landmarks, including the Wadi Rum valley and the ancient city of Petra. The original release date for was sometime in 2025. Apple spent millions of dollars per episode on the series, with Atlantic producing and Apple distributing.



People involved with the production say there were broader safety concerns during the making of the Adventure series, including crews working longer hours than staff felt was safe, filming in harsh climates, and operating equipment in conditions the crew had limited training for. Staffers reportedly raised these concerns with their superiors at Apple, which in response sent a health and safety representative to work periodically alongside production staff. There is no record of other major injuries tied to the series.



Apple and Atlantic continued working together after the crash; a Colorado episode was filmed in August 2024. Apple has released five Adventure episodes to date, featuring athletes highlining 3,000 feet in the air, swimming under Arctic ice, parkouring across Paris, cliff diving in Spain, and racing cars in Colorado. No new episodes have been published since last year.



The Adventure series sits within Apple's broader Apple Immersive Video offering for the Vision Pro, which Apple describes as a "180-degree, 3D 8K recording format captured with Spatial Audio." The format is one of the headset's primary selling points and is used in in-store demonstrations of the $3,499 device.Related Roundup: Apple Vision ProBuyer's Guide: Vision Pro (Buy Now)Related Forum: Apple Vision ProThis article, 'Apple Vision Pro Shoot Ended in Fatal Aircraft Crash' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Pope criticises 'tyrants' who spend billions on wars, days after Trump spat
The comments follow a high-profile spat with US President Donald Trump, who called the Pope weak on crime.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Lufthansa axes CityLine fleet early over strikes, fuel costs
German airline Lufthansa says it will retire aircraft earlier than planned as it responds to strikes and rising fuel costs.

Mail Online
Open 
Nine top jobs paying up to £75k which bosses are eager to fill - with no industry experience needed
Finding a job is getting harder as unemployment rises - almost 1.9 million Brits were out of work in the three months to January, according to latest figures.

Mail Online
Open 
'They were playing Russian Roulette with our children': Mother condemns nursery worker who left her child to die 'alone, scared and in pain' - as she is sentenced for manslaughter
Noah Sibanda died after the incident at Fairytales Day Nursery in Dudley, having been physically restrained face down on a cushion with a blanket over his face and a leg placed over him.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
South African politician Julius Malema given five-year jail term for gun offence
Leader of leftwing Economic Freedom Fighters was convicted last year for firing rifle in the air at 2018 rallyThe South African leftwing politician Julius Malema has been sentenced to five years in prison for firing a rifle in the air at a political rally in 2018.Lawyers for the leader of the Economic Freedom Fighters, South Africa’s fourth largest political party, immediately appealed, and Malema will remain free while the appeal proceedings are under way. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
More than 100 writers quit French publisher in protest against rightwing owner Vincent Bolloré
Tycoon’s media empire accused of pushing far-right ideas, as writers say: ‘We refuse to be hostages in ideological war’Europe live – latest updatesMore than 100 writers have quit the historic French publishing house Grasset in protest at its conservative billionaire owner, Vincent Bolloré, whose media empire has been accused of promoting reactionary and far-right ideas.In an unprecedented walkout, dozens of writers including the acclaimed punk feminist novelist Virginie Despentes and the philosopher Bernard-Henri Lévy, signed an open letter against Bolloré, 74, who is close to far-right figures. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
How will attitudes change if students like me aren’t taught the truth about British colonial history? | Astrid Barltrop
The skewed perspectives in my A-level curriculum are staggering. Until that changes, harmful ideas about race and migration will live onAstrid Barltrop is the winner of the The Guardian Foundation’s 2026 Emerging Voices award (16-18 category) and a year 13 student in Oxfordshire“Lord Cromer was a successful consul-general of Egypt. To what extent do you agree?” I read this essay prompt in my A-level history class, wondering what “successful” means. Successful in forcing austerity on Egyptians to line the pockets of British financiers? Successful in civilising a country of people he viewed as “subversive demagogues” and “subject races”?Thankfully my essay could argue that Cromer wasn’t successful if I tried to frame “success” in terms of how he impacted the Egyptian population: he imposed an unfair land tax system and restricted access to education. But even then I had to write it under the implicit assumption that colonial rulers can be successful for a population – it’s just that this one wasn’t. Why doesn’t discussion around Cromer – and the values he embodied – instead centre on the right to rule? Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Europe live: Russia ‘does not deserve’ lifting of sanctions, Zelenskyy says, after deadly overnight strikes in Ukraine
Ukrainian president says nearly 700 Russian drones and 19 ballistic missiles mostly targeted Kyiv, Odesa and DniproBack to Ukraine, and the overnight Russian attacks on the country, we can now bring you a bit more on this with these interviews with local residents affected by the strikes.Meanwhile, the European Commission has confirmed that it will hold first early talks with the incoming Hungarian government of Péter Magyar on Friday as it hopes for a constructive relationship after years of clashes with Viktor Orbán. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: US will blockade Hormuz ‘as long as it takes’ and is ready to restart combat if talks fail, Hegseth warns
The US defence secretary said that the US is ‘reloading with more power than before’ and will maintain a navy blockade on the strait of HormuzUS and Iran in indirect talks to extend two-week ceasefireIran has stopped all petrochemical exports to prioritise domestic supply and prevent shortages of raw materials, Reuters reported.The state-owned National Petrochemical Company ordered firms to suspend exports until further notice. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Mother condemns nursery worker for treating her toddler 'worse than an animal' after he suffocated while staff tried to make him fall asleep - as carer is sentenced for manslaughter
Noah Sibanda died after the incident at Fairytales Day Nursery in Dudley, having been physically restrained face down on a cushion with a blanket over his face and a leg placed over him.

Mail Online
Open 
Sheridan Smith unveils a radiant new look as she attends the premiere of her new thriller The Cage
Sheridan Smith unveiled her radiant new look as she attended the premiere of her new thriller The Cage at Soho Hotel in London on Thursday. 

Mail Online
Open 
A&E deluged as NHS emergency services suffer busiest month on record - surging meningitis cases blamed
Accident and emergency service departments across England saw the highest number of attendances ever this March, according to new health service figures.

Mail Online
Open 
Bizarre moment Premier League cult hero splits his head open live on TV with impromptu act
The West Ham and Lazio legend is now a regular pundit for Sky Sports Italia but took his analysis to a bizarre new level on Wednesday night.

Mail Online
Open 
The 'Establishment plot' thickens: RICHARD EDEN reveals the fears inside Kate and Wills' camp as Harry and Meghan put on a Royal show Down Under and rumours about couple's return to Britain swirl
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex might be 10,000 miles away, but their quasi-royal tour of Australia is meant to be a preview of what we can expect when they return to Britain this summer.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Paula Rego review – tantalising drawings with the shoeprints left on them
Victoria Miro, LondonMischievous, moving and troubled tales of female oppression unspool across the largest ever exhibition of the artist’s drawings, which show an intuitive touch her paintings lackWhen Paula Rego was nine, she drew her grandmother sitting comfortably in a chair. The old woman’s hair is pinned back, and she wears dangly earrings and thick-rimmed glasses on a chain. She might be reading or sewing – it’s hard to tell. Whatever it is, she’s absorbed in the task at hand. Just like the young artist, who, even as a child, diligently signed and dated her work, in neat script shooting up from the tip of her grandmother’s shoe like a flare in a night sky.This small, tender sketch is part of the largest exhibition of the Portuguese-born artist’s drawings to date. Curated by her son, Nick Willing, the show features works on paper from the 1950s, right around the time that she settled in Britain, to her death in 2022. Unspooling from lines in pencil, pastel, pen and ink are tantalising tales of people and places real and imagined, and periods in Rego’s own life when she felt afraid, inspired or fierce. Sometimes the tales intertwine. Sometimes they stand alone. They can be mischievous, moving, troubled. All are full of feeling. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Minister to propose £100 oil payment for lower income households in Northern Ireland
It's understood the Executive has pledged £19m to go along with the £17m already set aside for the scheme.

The Register
Open 
Textbook titan McGraw Hill on ransomware crew's reading list after 13.5M records exposed
Publisher claims misconfigured Salesforce-hosted page leaked data Textbook giant McGraw Hill has landed on a ransomware crew's leak site after an alleged Salesforce-linked misconfiguration spilled 13.5 million records into the wild.…

Sky News Home
Open 
Deaths from dog bites surge more than 200% in a year, report shows
Deaths from dog bites surged by more than 200% in a year, according to a new report on accidental deaths and hospital admissions.

Gizmodo
Open 
DJI’s Osmo Pocket 4 Is Yet Another Drool-Worthy Vlogging Camera You Can’t Buy
The sequel to the much-loved gimbal-mounted vlogging camera now includes a little light for dim interiors.

Gizmodo
Open 
Reebok Wants a Piece of the Ray-Ban Meta Smart Glasses Action
A new line of smart eyewear with Reebok branding acts as an alternative to Meta's Ray-Ban AI glasses.

Gizmodo
Open 
Steven Spielberg Wants to Keep ‘Disclosure Day’ Secret, But New Footage Did the Opposite
Emily Blunt and Josh O'Connor star in the latest film from the legendary filmmaker, out June 12.

Gizmodo
Open 
Govee’s Next Trick Is Just a Whole Dang Wall of Light
The Govee Lightwall is a big rectangle of lights to annoy your neighbors with.

Mail Online
Open 
Europe 'has six weeks of jet fuel left' as UK braces for summer of shortages and Strait remains blocked by Iran War  - Live updates 
Israel's cabinet met on Wednesday to discuss a possible ceasefire in neighbouring Lebanon, a senior Israeli official said,

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Europe has only six weeks’ supply of jet fuel left owing to Iran war, says energy chief
There will be flight cancellations ‘soon’ if oil supplies are not restored in coming weeks, says head of IEABusiness live – latest updatesMiddle East crisis – live updatesEurope has only six weeks’ supply of jet fuel left before shortages will hit because of the Iran war, according to the head of a global energy watchdog.Fatih Birol, the executive director of the International Energy Agency, said there would be flight cancellations “soon” if oil supplies from the Middle East were not restored within the coming weeks. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Europe live: Russia ‘does not deserve’ lifting of sanctions, Zelenskyy says, after deadly overnight strikes in Ukraine
Ukrainian president says nearly 700 Russian drones and 19 ballistic missiles mostly targeted Kyiv, Odesa and DniproMeanwhile, the European Commission has confirmed that it will hold first early talks with the incoming Hungarian government of Péter Magyar on Friday as it hopes for a constructive relationship after years of clashes with Viktor Orbán. The meeting in Budapest comes just days after Magyar’s historic win ending Orbán’s 16 years in power.“These are preliminary talks that are taking place in order to make sure that once the government is in place, really, action can be taken if appropriate, and that we do not waste any time.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: Hegseth gives Iran war update as countries seek to extend ceasefire
The US defence secretary said that the US is ‘reloading with more power than power’ and will maintain a navy blockade on the strait of HormuzUS and Iran in indirect talks to extend two-week ceasefireIran has stopped all petrochemical exports to prioritise domestic supply and prevent shortages of raw materials, Reuters reported.The state-owned National Petrochemical Company ordered firms to suspend exports until further notice. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Captain Silva to leave Man City at end of season
Manchester City captain Bernardo Silva will leave the club when his contract expires at the end of this season.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Woman dies after being attacked by dogs at house
The dogs, not thought to be a banned breed, are destroyed after attacking the woman aged in her 70s.

Mail Online
Open 
Love Island star Lauren Wood is forced to backtrack after claiming her £1,000 Louis Vuitton handbag was 'stolen off her shoulder' during a girls' day out in Lawless London
Love Island star Lauren Wood has been forced to backtrack after claiming her £1,000 Louis Vuitton handbag was 'stolen off her shoulder'while out in Lawless London. 

Mail Online
Open 
Jonjo Shelvey takes first steps into management with second-tier side in UAE... but insists he feels safe in war-torn region because 'England is full of scumbags'
It's not the most conventional introduction to a career in football management -navigating the backdrop of Iranian drone attacks while in charge of a second-tier side in Dubai.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Just the tonic: why it’s more than a mixer
Tonic is much more than a bit player in a G&T. A lot of it’s good enough to drink soloIf a tonic is something that “makes you feel stronger and happier”, my tonics come in the form of good wine, bad chocolate and an ageing whippet called Ernie. Recently, though, I’ve found myself craving the OG tonic – tonic water – which started life as a malaria treatment in the age of the British empire.In the 17th century, Jesuit missionaries brought quinine, a bitter compound found in the bark of American cinchona trees, to Europe. They knew that indigenous people had been using it to treat fevers, and by the 1700s it was routinely being used as an antimalarial in tropical colonies. But there was a snag: quinine is unpalatable. To offset its impossible bitterness, it was combined with water and sugar to make a drink that enabled those stationed in the tropics to self-medicate every day. By the Victorian times, that self-medication had taken on a different aspect; not only had tonic water become fizzy, but it was routinely combined with gin for a drink now emblematic of the British Raj. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
More than 100 writers quit French publisher in protest against rightwing owner Vincent Bolloré
In open letter, writers criticise Bollaré for promoting reactionary and far-right ideas and say ‘we refuse to be hostages in ideological war’More than 100 writers have quit the historic French publishing house, Grasset, in protest at its billionaire conservative owner, Vincent Bolloré, whose media empire has been accused of promoting reactionary and far-right ideas.In an unprecedented walk-out, dozens of writers including the acclaimed punk feminist novelist Virginie Despentes and the philosopher Bernard-Henri Lévy, signed an open letter against Bolloré, 74, who is close to far-right figures. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Don’t put me in a box’: Pellegrino Matarazzo’s extraordinary journey from New Jersey to Real Sociedad
Real Sociedad’s coach’s career reveals plenty about the man leading the proud Basque club to only their fourth Copa del Rey finalThere is a moment, about halfway through a long conversation about an extraordinary journey from New Jersey to Seville, when Pellegrino Matarazzo stops mid-sentence. “I keep using that word: ‘special’. I’m realising now that my English is terrible,” Real Sociedad’s coach says.So much so that when it finally comes to an end, after he has moved from management and mathematics to music – to OK Computer and Nino D’Angelo, tapes in the old Chevy and all-night sessions on guitar and baglama – he has a suggestion. Laughing now, about to bid farewell, he says: “Feel free to replace any words I used over 10 times. So: ‘special’…” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Eddie Howe faces familiar foes with Newcastle reign at a crossroad | Louise Taylor
Newcastle face Bournemouth on Saturday with the manager under increasing pressure at St James’ ParkEddie Howe has reason to believe that April really is the cruellest month. This time last year Newcastle’s manager was hospitalised with pneumonia and, 12 months later, he can barely switch on a radio or glance at a newspaper without receiving yet another reminder he is “under pressure”.As fans and pundits debate whether Cesc Fàbregas, Xabi Alonso, Andoni Iraola, Oliver Glasner or AN Other might perform a superior job, one thing is clear: Howe has six games to reassure Newcastle’s hierarchy that he remains the right man to lead his 14th-placed team through what promises to be a significant summer rebuild. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
How will attitudes change if students like me aren’t taught the truth about British colonial history? | Astrid Barltrop
The skewed perspectives in my A-level curriculum are staggering. Until that changes, harmful ideas about race and migration will live onAstrid Barltrop is the winner of the 2026 Emerging Voices award (16-18 category) and a year 13 student in Oxfordshire“Lord Cromer was a successful consul-general of Egypt. To what extent do you agree?” I read this essay prompt in my A-level history class, wondering what “successful” means. Successful in forcing austerity on Egyptians to line the pockets of British financiers? Successful in civilising a country of people he viewed as “subversive demagogues” and “subject races”?Thankfully my essay could argue that Cromer wasn’t successful if I tried to frame “success” in terms of how he impacted the Egyptian population: he imposed an unfair land tax system and restricted access to education. But even then I had to write it under the implicit assumption that colonial rulers can be successful for a population – it’s just that this one wasn’t. Why doesn’t discussion around Cromer – and the values he embodied – instead centre on the right to rule? Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
How Giorgia Meloni’s cosy relations with Donald Trump turned sour
With an eye on elections in 2027, Italy’s far-right PM appears to be making a tactful pivot away from US presidentEurope live – latest updatesSix months ago, Italy’s far-right prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, stood surrounded by men on a stage in Sharm el-Sheikh, where world leaders had gathered to discuss the Gaza peace deal.In front of her, Donald Trump showered praise and insults on the assembled leaders, before describing Meloni as a “beautiful young woman”. Turning towards her, he added: “You don’t mind being called beautiful, right? Because you are. Thank you very much for coming.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Europe has only six weeks’ supply of jet fuel left due to Iran war, says energy chief
There will be flight cancellations ‘soon’ if oil supplies are not restored in coming weeks, says head of IEABusiness live – latest updatesMiddle East crisis – live updatesEurope has only six weeks’ supply of jet fuel left before shortages will hit because of the Iran war, according to the head of a global energy watchdog.Fatih Birol, the head of the International Energy Agency (IEA), said there will be flight cancellations “soon” if oil supplies from the Middle East are not restored within the coming weeks. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: Hegseth gives Iran war update as countries seek to extend ceasefire
The US and Iran have been in indirect talks aimed at extending the two-week ceasefire beyond its expiry on 22 AprilUS and Iran in indirect talks to extend two-week ceasefireIran has stopped all petrochemical exports to prioritise domestic supply and prevent shortages of raw materials, Reuters reported.The state-owned National Petrochemical Company ordered firms to suspend exports until further notice. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Ban for over-the-counter flea treatments for pets considered
Ministers are considering restricting spot-on treatments and collars to prescriptions from vets and medical professionals.

Sky News Home
Open 
Residents living on new UK Chinese embassy site fear they have unknowingly been living 'in China' since 2018
Residents living on the site of the new Chinese "super embassy" in London fear they have unknowingly been living "in China" since 2018.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Minister to propose £100 oil payment for lower income households in Northern Ireland
The scheme, which would affect about 340,000 households, needs to be approved by the executive.

CNET News
Open 
iPhone 17 vs. iPhone 16: Should You Upgrade?
Apple's iPhone 17 has a lot in common with last year's model, but there are notable improvements to the camera, display and battery.

Apple News
Open 
Apple accelerates progress with highest-ever recycled material in its products

Mail Online
Open 
As the Middle East crisis continues, how the cost of your staycation REALLY compares with a 'cheap' holiday abroad - when you factor in everything from food to fuel
With spring underway and Brits starting to book upcoming trips, a nice UK staycation might sound appealing - but is it really cheaper than heading overseas?

Mail Online
Open 
Pope takes a veiled dig at Trump with attack on 'tyrants' spending 'billions on killing'... while Europe 'has six weeks of jet fuel left' - Live updates
Israel's cabinet met on Wednesday to discuss a possible ceasefire in neighbouring Lebanon, a senior Israeli official said,

Mail Online
Open 
Covid jab rollout an 'extraordinary feat' but those harmed or killed by side-effects were let down and payout to victims should be doubled, inquiry finds
Baroness Heather Hallett, chair of the UK Covid-19 inquiry, described the speed at which the vaccines were developed and rolled out as an 'extraordinary feat'.

Mail Online
Open 
UK holiday flight to Gran Canaria is diverted due to 'smoke in the cabin'
The incident triggered a 'red code alert' at the Algarve airport, with emergency response vehicles being mobilised although the plane landed safely.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
How Giorgia Meloni’s cosy relations with Donald Trump turned sour
With an eye on elections in 2027, Italy’s PM has made tactful pivot away from US presidentSix months ago, Italy’s far-right prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, stood surrounded by men on a stage in Sharm el-Sheikh, where world leaders had gathered to discuss the Gaza peace deal.In front of her, Donald Trump showered praise and insults on the assembled leaders, before describing Meloni as a “beautiful young woman”. Turning towards her, he added: “You don’t mind being called beautiful, right? Because you are. Thank you very much for coming.” Continue reading...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Rwanda ties Mozambique troop deployment to EU funding
The future deployment of Rwandan troops in the fight against terrorism in Mozambique's northern Cabo Delgado province is uncertain. Kigali's demand for compensation puts Europe in a strategic dilemma.

TechRadar News
Open 
'It would've sounded really strange.' Stranger Things: Tales From 85 creator explains why the main show's cast didn't return for the Netflix spin-off — but I don't buy his argument

TechRadar News
Open 
RAM prices are easing, and Corsair's 32GB Vengeance RGB Pro kit is currently under $240 with this promo code

TechRadar News
Open 
Microsoft's next-gen Surface devices don't sound exciting going by rumors — and I worry they'll be poor value even compared to MacBooks

TechRadar News
Open 
'They have ghost cities, they have ghost data centers too': Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang warns of "enormous" China compute capacity - but says 'we want the United States to win'

TechRadar News
Open 
Don't pay bonkers prices for desktop RAM — this 32GB G.SKILL Flare X5 DDR5-6000 kit is $135 off right now using this special code

TechRadar News
Open 
Avid’s new Google partnership brings Agentic AI to the editing suite — and I’ve got the scoop on what this really means for creative professionals

TechRadar News
Open 
DJI Pocket 4 vs DJI Pocket 3: 7 upgrades for the next best-selling vlogging camera

TechRadar News
Open 
Netgear routers seemingly won’t be banned in the US after all – and this just proves the ban was never about security

TechRadar News
Open 
Elon Musk reveals Tesla’s powerful new AI5 chip — but don't expect it to improve Full Self-Driving anytime soon

TechRadar News
Open 
'This is not a traditional coding error': Experts flag potentially critical security issues at the heart of Anthropic's MCP, exposes 150 million downloads and thousands of servers to complete takeover

Digital Trends
Open 
AI tools are freeing up more time for us, but research says a lot of us are just burning it
New research says ChatGPT is helping Americans finish household digital chores faster, but much of the saved effort goes to leisure instead of learning, training, or other forms of self-improvement, with adoption gaps adding another concern.

Digital Trends
Open 
Microsoft’s next Surface Laptop could get an OLED panel, but I’m already shaking in fear
New report suggests that Microsoft’s next Surface Laptop could finally get OLED options, but with recent Surface price hikes already in place, that upgrade may not come cheap.

Digital Trends
Open 
Microsoft College Offer doles out free software so that you forget that MacBook Neo is a better deal
Microsoft is using free software, Game Pass, and student laptop discounts to make Windows 11 PCs more appealing for college buyers, but the real value still depends on the hardware, eligibility rules, and whether you'll use the extras.

Digital Trends
Open 
Windows Recall still has a side door into your private PC history
Windows Recall's database may be better protected now, but a new proof of concept suggests the data path after sign in still creates privacy risks for Windows 11 users.

Mail Online
Open 
Jonjo Shelvey takes first steps into management with second-tier side in UAE... but insists he feels safe in war-torn region because 'England is full of scumbags'
It's not the smoothest of introductions to a career in football management - dodging Iranian drone attacks while managing a second-tier side in Dubai.

Mail Online
Open 
100m tourists are set to flock to Spain this summer, but most won't head to these crowd-free hidden gems
As hordes of tourists are expected to head to Spain this summer, here are some quieter spots that offer beautiful landscapes and dreamy beaches without the crowds.

Mail Online
Open 
Britain must defend itself - but don't panic: Russia's military is decrepit, our Navy is shrinking, and we are no longer a great power. Let's spend wisely, not give in to hysteria, says PETER HITCHENS
We need to be strongly defended. I've been saying so for years, particularly pointing out the way that our navy has been shrivelling away and our army has evaporated.

Mail Online
Open 
Man who bought 500-year-old Cotswolds cottage he dreamed of living in since childhood reveals the 'maddening reality' of renovating - as he tackles maggots, poison and a collapsed roof
Jacob Harrell is sharing his and wife Amber's progress on YouTube - where they have 251,000 subscribers - as the couple begin their second year of the project in the Cotswolds.

Mail Online
Open 
'An absolute UNIT': Dog owner's twisted brags about 'Badman Bruce' - which later sank its teeth into a police officer's stomach
Shayla Dalligan, owner of the Belgian Malinois, boasted about her dog being an 'absolute unit' in the caption of a video posted to her firm's Instagram page.

Mail Online
Open 
Pope says the world is being ravaged by a handful of tyrants and condemns leaders who spend billions on wars - after Trump's social media attacks
Pope Leo XIV made the unusually forceful remarks during a trip to Cameroon on Thursday after the US President launched a tirade against him over his repeated criticism of the war in Iran .

Mail Online
Open 
Snooker greats including Dennis Taylor, Stephen Hendry, Steve Davis and Jimmy White say farewell to John Virgo at memorial service to giant of the game after his death aged 79
Virgo's widow Rosie Ries was also among those congregating at Sheffield Cathedral, along with other snooker pros such as Ken Doherty, John Higgins and Cliff Thorburn.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Saylor’s Strategy on the cusp of being profitable on its bitcoin holdings again
Having weathered multiple storms since last October’s record high in bitcoin, Saylor’s Strategy briefly went back into the money this week

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
CoreWeave upsizes bond deal for an additional $1 billion. AI debt is in vogue.
CoreWeave expanded its high-yield bond offering to $2.75 billion on Thursday after outsized investor and customer demand.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
This hidden oil price is ripping the hull out of the global economy
Gasoline is the crisis you can see. Here’s the one you can’t.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
The E.U. asks Google to share its search-engine data with competitors
The European Commission has proposed measures to Google to minimize its dominance.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
New Social Security proposal would cap payments for wealthy people now — and many more later on
Benefit limits could do a lot to solve Social Security’s fiscal problems, CRFB suggests. But check the fine print.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Russia launches deadliest drone and missile attack in months, killing 17 in Ukraine
Meanwhile, a Ukrainian drone attack killed two people in Russia, officials say.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Church in Wales approves blessings of same-sex marriages
Temporary measures already allowed same-sex couples to get their marriage or civil partnership blessed.

Mail Online
Open 
Is YOUR online chemist fake? Criminal 'cloning' pharmacy websites to trick patients and sell counterfeit drugs, investigation reveals
One in ten online pharmacies have had their websites cloned by criminals selling lucrative counterfeit weight-loss jabs, a worrying investigation has revealed.

Mail Online
Open 
I was just three when dad fatally stabbed mum 36 times with her own dressmaking scissors. Yet after his two years in prison, I was forced to move back in with him
Gemma was just three years old when her father killed her mother - stabbing her 36 times with her scissors - while their young daughter ate her breakfast downstairs.

Mail Online
Open 
Katie Price's husband Lee Andrews addresses marital strain, posts X-rated photos to plug his $18-a-month OnlyFans and reveals hair transplant plans in latest social media ramblings
Katie Price's husband Lee Andrews has addressed rumours of marital strife in his latest slew of social media ramblings. 

Mail Online
Open 
London alleyway goes up for sale for £1,500: L-shaped plot of land comes without a property but boasts 'good connectivity' to adjoining roads
The attractive L-shaped plot of land in Enfield, in the north of the city, comes without a property or even a roof to shelter the occupant from the capital's famously unpredictable weather.

Mail Online
Open 
Lobster 'liberated' from restaurant and thrown into sea by animal rights activist would have been killed by cold water, fuming eaterie boss says - and crutacean's tank mate died soon after
Eco-warrior Emma Smart, 47, stormed into Catch at the Old Fish Market in Weymouth, Dorset, and 'freed' the lobster which she believed was going to be eaten.

Mail Online
Open 
Pope says the world is being ravaged by a handful of tyrants and condemns leaders who spend billions on wars - after Trump's social media attacks
Pope Leo XIV made the unusually forceful remarks during a visit to Cameroon on Thursday after the US President repeatedly condemned him.

The Verge
Open 
Spotify just won $322 million from music pirates it can’t find
Spotify and the three major labels have won a $322 million default judgement against Anna's Archive, the open-source library and pirate activist group that planned to publicly release millions of music files scraped from Spotify's platform. The judgment comes after the unknown operator of Anna's Archive failed to respond to a lawsuit filed by Spotify, […]

The Verge
Open 
Govee’s new LED Lightwall comes with its own self-standing frame
Govee has announced an upgraded version of its hanging Curtain Lights Pro that can instead be used nearly anywhere you have access to an outlet or large battery. At $449.99, Govee's new Lightwall is more than twice as expensive as the $199.99 Curtain Lights Pro, but comes with more LEDs in a denser array and […]

The Verge
Open 
DJI’s Osmo Pocket 4 camera is better at capturing slo-mo footage and photos
Following months of leaks, DJI has announced the fourth version of its handheld stabilized vlogger camera. Unlike the Osmo Pocket 3 that debuted way back in September 2023 with major upgrades like a 1-inch sensor and a larger rotating touchscreen, the new Osmo Pocket 4 features similar hardware with upgraded capabilities including higher frame rates […]

Computer Weekly
Open 
One year on from the M&S cyber attack: What did we learn?
A year on from the Marks & Spencer cyber attack, we look back at the incident, consider the lessons learned and ask if the retail sector is any more secure today

ZeroHedge News
Open 
New Hungarian Prime Minister Says Borders Will Remain Shut To Immigrants
New Hungarian Prime Minister Says Borders Will Remain Shut To Immigrants

In the wake of Viktor Orbán's election defeat, one of the greatest fears among conservatives in the region is an unconstrained EU able to take action on foreign policy, health, and immigration without the threat of a veto.  It is widely assumed that the incoming prime minister of Hungary, Péter Magyar, will seek a fast resolution of Brussels’ key issues with Hungary in order to unlock some €35 billion in funding. 

His election win was heralded as a substantial victory for the global left wing, from EU globalists to Democrats in the US.  Their assumption is that with Orbán's veto power out of play, they will be able to do they want in Ukraine and in Hungary.  However, the new Prime Minster may not be as cooperative as they initially believed.  

Magyar has stated that he will not try to block a €90 billion EU loan to Ukraine which Orbán originally vetoed, but he also stated that Hungary will not be contributing to such loans and that the government will not support any attempt to induct Ukraine into the EU.  He also announced this week that he will not allow Hungary to join in the EU's "Migration Pact" and that he plans to further strengthen Hungary's borders. 



This includes a continued rejection of the EU's asylum rules, which are widely abused by third world migrants to freely enter Europe and gain access to welfare subsidies.      

Beyond the Ukraine funding veto, it was Orbán's refusal to submit to open borders and mass immigration that caused constant conflict with the EU.  He was frequently referred to by the political left as a "dictator" and a "fascist" in part because of his strict border policies (even though he is voluntarily leaving office after losing the election, which is not the behavior of a dictator).    

Ursula von der Leyen, President of the European Commission, attacked Orbán regularly for his border controls, stating that Hungary's program to reinforce their borders with walls and barbed wire was in violation of EU immigration standards.  

It appears that this will not stop under Magyar.


🇭🇺 HUGE! Magyar Péter REJECTS the EU Migration Pact:
"Hungary will not accept any pact. In fact, I'm going to reinforce the border fence even more."
Ursula's European Union cheered for nothing! pic.twitter.com/qndVbTRkIf
— Based Hungary 🇭🇺 (@HungaryBased) April 15, 2026
The purpose of the EU Commission is to subjugate member countries through centralized monetary dependency and a series of financial sanctions if they step out of line.  Financial leverage has been used on a number of occasions by the Commission to force nations to accept ever expanding mass immigration, largely from Muslim fundamentalist populations in countries like Algeria, Morocco, Syria and Afghanistan.  Hungary is one of the few European nations to resist this multicultural agenda.


Without any further comment.🇭🇺🤝🇺🇸
From President Donald Trump about Peter Magyar:
"He’s a good man. I think he’s going to do a good job."
— Magyar Péter (Ne féljetek) (@magyarpeterMP) April 15, 2026
While it is a member state, Hungary is not currently in the eurozone, using its own currency, the Hungarian forint, rather than the euro.  

It may be that the EU sees Magyar as an acceptable trade, as long as they get their funding package for Ukraine.  They probably also intend to play the long game, hoping that once Hungary joins the eurozone they can be manipulated over time using monetary leverage.  That said, their intentions have long focused on using Hungary as a fresh sponge to absorb migrants, and this is simply not going to happen according to Magyar's post-election declarations.      

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 06:55

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Goldman Sachs To Use Options Strategy For Planned Bitcoin Income ETF
Goldman Sachs To Use Options Strategy For Planned Bitcoin Income ETF

Authored by Nate Kostar via CoinTelegraph.com,

Goldman Sachs has filed with the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to launch a Bitcoin-linked exchange-traded fund designed to generate income while limiting exposure to the cryptocurrency’s volatility, according to a preliminary prospectus dated April 14.



The proposed Goldman Sachs Bitcoin Premium Income ETF would aim to deliver current income alongside capital appreciation by investing primarily in spot Bitcoin exchange-traded products (ETPs) and related options, rather than holding Bitcoin directly.

The fund would generate yield by selling call options on Bitcoin-linked ETPs, a strategy that can produce premium income but may cap upside in rising markets.

According to the filing, the actively managed fund would maintain at least 80% exposure to Bitcoin-linked assets and could allocate as much as 25% of its holdings through a Cayman Islands subsidiary, a structure commonly used to gain commodities exposure under the US Investment Company Act.

The fund expects to vary its options “overwrite” strategy — that is, selling call options against its holdings — between roughly 40% and 100% of its Bitcoin exposure depending on market conditions, and may distribute a significant portion of returns as income or return of capital.

It would gain exposure through a mix of spot Bitcoin ETPs and derivatives, combining direct holdings with options-based positions. The strategy may perform better in flat or moderately rising markets but could underperform during strong rallies as upside is capped.

Eric Balchunas, ETF analyst at Bloomberg, described the product as “Boomer Candy” in a post on X, suggesting the structure may appeal to investors seeking income and lower volatility over full upside exposure.



Source: Eric Balchunas

Separately, Goldman Chair and CEO David Solomon told analysts on Monday that the company last week closed on its acquisition of Innovator Capital Management, an issuer of defined outcome exchange-traded funds. The addition of Innovator’s 170 ETFs puts Goldman in the top 10 of global active ETF providers, Solomon said on the first-quarter earnings call.

Active crypto ETFs gain traction as strategies evolve beyond price tracking

The filing from Goldman Sachs comes as asset managers move beyond basic price-tracking crypto funds, with more complex and actively managed strategies gaining traction across the ETF market.

In January, Bitwise Asset Management launched an actively managed ETF designed to hedge against currency debasement.

The fund allocates across assets including Bitcoin, precious metals and mining equities, reflecting a broader push to integrate digital assets into diversified, macro-focused portfolios.

In March, T. Rowe Price amended its filing with the SEC for a proposed actively managed crypto ETF that would invest directly in digital assets.

The updated prospectus outlines a portfolio that may include assets such as Bitcoin, Ethereum and Solana.

Fund issuer 21Shares is also expanding into more sophisticated strategies. In February, the company launched a Europe-listed ETP tied to Strategy’s preferred stock (STRC), offering exposure to a yield-generating instrument linked to the company’s Bitcoin-focused capital strategy.

Speaking to Cointelegraph, 21Shares President Duncan Moir said the shift reflects broader demand for more advanced products, noting that crypto is “particularly well-suited to active management.”



“Why Active ETFs Are Gaining Momentum as Investors Seek New Solutions.” Source: Goldmansachs.com

According to a March report compiled by Morningstar and Goldman Sachs Asset Management, active ETFs held nearly $1.8 trillion in assets globally at the end of 2025, with flows significantly outpacing passive products.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 07:20

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Trump's Blockade Is Breaking Iran... And European Elites Are Angry
Trump's Blockade Is Breaking Iran... And European Elites Are Angry

Authored by Brandon Smith via Alt-Market.us

In March I published an article titled “Global Energy Crisis Or Iranian Surrender In Five Weeks?” in which I outlined the “worst case” and “best case” scenarios for the war in Iran. In my best case scenario I argued in favor of a specific plan to end the conflict quickly: A US naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, flipping the tables on Iran by blocking or seizing any oil tankers or gas tankers which exit Iranian ports.

Two weeks later, the Trump Administration has implemented this exact strategy.

The effectiveness of the blockade is already apparent; the propaganda bots on social media are scrambling to find a narrative to counter it, but they are failing. Why? Because Iran already tried to lock down the strait (which is an international waterway), and any government cheering (or secretly cheering) for Iran’s actions is now unable to make a rational argument against the US doing the same thing to Iran. As I noted in March:

“We constantly hear about international exposure to the Hormuz shutdown, but the media rarely mentions that Iran is the MOST exposed economy of all. For now, Iranian oil ships continue to pass through the strait and these vessels are Iran’s economic lifeline. Strategic estimates suggest that without the steady passage of these oil tankers, the Iranian economy would completely collapse within five weeks…”

I then summarized what I believed was the simplest solution to end the war:

“Iranian cargo ships can be targeted for seizure by a US blockade of the Persian Gulf well away from the narrow waters of the Hormuz. The ships could be destroyed, but I suspect the Department of Defense will try to avoid oil spills and ecological disasters. Instead, the best option is to capture Iran’s tankers and then redirect the oil to countries in danger of shortages.

Iran has the option of shutting off GPS tracking for their vessels (shadow fleet), but this would not help them maneuver past a comprehensive US blockade. In other words, I argue that the US could turn the tables on Iran and use their reliance on the Hormuz against them.

With Iran’s economy in shambles, they will no longer be able to purchase missiles or drones for resupply from Russia and China. They won’t be able to pay for logistic resources for their military and they won’t be able to contain public unrest. The Iranians would be forced to negotiate and the war would be over quickly with minimal risk to US troops.”

For now, the US is not seizing Iran’s tankers and is merely sending them back to where they came from. However, it would seem that the Trump Administration and their military advisers have come to the same basic conclusions I did.



For years I have expressed my concerns about a potential conflict in Iran, largely because of the precarious global economic risks associated with mass energy shortages caused by a closure of the Hormuz, which transits around 25% of the world’s energy exports. That said, I do not care about “picking sides” when it comes to Israel or Iran.

This debate is irrelevant and designed, I think, to divide US conservatives over ancient tribal vendettas that do not involve us. I don’t care about the Israeli government or “Zionism” and I certainly don’t care what happens to the theocratic and tyrannical Muslim regime in Iran. We have much more important things to think about.

What matters to me is how the US and the American people are affected by geopolitical events. There has been endless debate on what the war is really about, whether it be Iranian nukes, Israeli schemes, Saudi schemes, control of global oil markets, etc. (I think every action the Trump Administration has take so far from Venezuela to Iran has largely been designed to contain China). In any case, a long term closure of the Hormuz will eventually result in market cascades and a stagflationary crisis.

What matters now is ending the war as quickly and decisively as possible without leaving the Homuz and 25% of global energy exports under Iran’s control. After that, people can wrestle over the “moral and constitutional” quandary to their heart’s content.

First, I think it’s vitally important to address some lies and disinformation being spread by propagandists and foreign agents online about the US blockade, so let’s quickly go down the list…

Lie #1: The US Is Blocking All Ships Traveling Through The Strait

This is false. The US is only blocking ships coming from Iranian ports. All other ships have been allowed to pass without incident. This lie is being spread by disinfo agents all over social media and it is also being spread by foreign governments from the UK to France to China. This, to me, says A LOT about the true agenda of these countries, given that they said little or nothing about Iran locking down the strait.

Lie #2: Chinese Vessels Have Broken The Blockade And The US Is Afraid

Nope. All Chinese vessels coming from Iranian ports have been turned away and any vessels coming from alternative ports have been allowed to pass. At the time this article is being published, only one ship from an Iranian port has allegedly slipped through the blockade, though the story on this ship might be fabricated. All other Iranian ships have been repelled.

Lie #3: The Blockade Puts US Naval Ships At Serious Risk

No, it does the opposite. US ships have no need to traverse the narrow Hormuz to blockade it. All they have to do is wait outside of it and turn back Iranian tankers that approach. No mines, no missiles, no drones, no tiny attack boats, nothing Iran has the ability to deploy has much of a chance of harming the US Navy. In fact, reports indicate ships like the USS Abraham Lincoln (an aircraft carrier) have already been targeted hundreds of times by Iran with no damage taken.

There is nothing Iran can do about a comprehensive blockade.

Lie #4: Iran Is Used To Sanctions And Can Hold Out Longer Than The US

No, they can’t. Only 7% of energy exports going to the US travel through the Hormuz. Iran’s entire economy hangs by a thin thread and that thread is oil exports to countries like China or Vietnam.

Iran is reportedly losing around $430 million each day that their ships remain stuck in the strait, and they have already taken around $270 billion in infrastructure damages. Iran pays for new weapons and military logistics with oil revenues. Their soldiers are paid in part with oil revenues. They mitigate civil unrest with oil revenues.

I suspect that the blockade will force Iran back into negotiations within a couple weeks. That’s how little time they have left.

Lie #5: Iran Has Alternative Ways To Bypass The Blockade

No, they don’t. Overland routes without ample pipelines are no substitute for the ease of oil tanker shipments. Even if they did have such pipelines, those lines could be easily destroyed.

By extension, as Iran’s oil exports stack up they will quickly run out of storage space, which means they will have to shut down drilling. This would cause significant damage to their oil infrastructure within weeks due to pressure differentials.

Recent news indicates that Iran has already halted all petrochemical exports until further notice. If true, this proves that the blockade is highly effective.

Lie #6: The Chinese Will Intervene And Force The Strait To Reopen

As noted, the strait is not closed. Only Iranian ports are closed. Furthermore, China has stayed away from direct intervention in the Hormuz because they simply don’t have the naval capacity to square off with the US even if they wanted to.

Keep in mind, only a week ago the Chinese government vetoed a UN resolution to reopen the strait when they thought Iran was going to control it. The CCP is impotent and they can do nothing.

Lie #7: The US Is Losing All Its Allies Over The Blockade

Wrong. What the blockade (and the war in general) is doing is exposing the countries which were pretending to be our allies when it was convenient. I examined this problem in my last article “The US Separation From Europe And NATO Is Long Overdue”, and this brings me to my final point on the war.

The fact that the European elites are suddenly so concerned with the US blockade, enough to call for a “coalition” to reopen the strait and “circumvent” the US, tells us all we need to know. I continue to believe that the globalists in these nations have been feeding off the US while at the same time organizing a “multicultural alliance” behind the scenes – A socialist new world order to supplant western civilization and leave the US behind as a husk.

Part of this agenda clearly involves a partnership with Islamic fundamentalists as a goon squad to oppress native western populations. This is why the elites have flooded Europe with third world migrants – Ignoring the concerns of citizens and even arresting people who speak out.

This is also why the Pope is so adamant to call for a Muslim/Christian pact (while he blatantly ignores the fact that Europeans have been terrorized by Muslim immigrants for over a decade). Let’s not forget that during the pandemic lockdowns, the Vatican joined with the globalists to form the Council for Inclusive Capitalism (run by Lynn Forester de Rothschild). Modern-era Popes are not friends to conservatives or Christians, but I plan to go into that problem in my next article.

The blockade, I believe, is so effective that it has struck fear in Iran, fear in China, and fear in the liberal order in Europe which was counting on the war to drag on for months or years. Look at how angry they all are that Trump flipped the script on the Hormuz? Why all the emotion and irrational hand wringing after the strait has been opened to MORE ships and oil traffic? Why all the panic when oil prices are falling? It doesn’t make sense unless they WANT the US to fail.

Regardless of how you might feel personally about the Iran war, it is undeniable that the situation has revealed many of our supposed allies as enemies. In reality, they were always enemies. The only thing that has changed is that the truth is finally out in the open.

Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of ZeroHedge.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 07:25

UK Government News
Open 
New digital service becomes the primary route for planning and enforcement appeals
Following the successful national rollout of our new digital service, we are now entering the next phase of our transformation. The legacy Appeals Casework Portal (ACP) has stopped accepting new planning and enforcement appe…

UK Government News
Open 
Economic growth, innovation and customer service on the agenda for UK Flag Forum 2026
Delegates from across the UK maritime sector gathered in London to discuss opportunities for strengthening economic growth, innovation and industry-government collaboration at UK Flag Forum 2026. 

UK Government News
Open 
New practical advice for families to get children school ready
New government guidance and practical advice launched on primary school offer day to help families get children ready for school, backed by language support.

Department for Education
Open 
New practical advice for families to get children school ready
New government guidance and practical advice launched on primary school offer day to help families get children ready for school, backed by language support. | Department for Education.

Ian Visits
Open 
How a shoe firm built a modernist town in Essex – and the exhibition telling its story
Just under a century ago, a new town was built in East Tilbury to provide shoes to footsore Brits, and now an exhibition is telling the story of the Bata shoe company.Read more ›

The Hill
Open 
Thune’s remarks highlight brewing battle over Fed chair
Morning Report is The Hill’s a.m. newsletter. Subscribe here. In today’s issue: A showdown over the leadership of the Federal Reserve is ramping up ahead of a confirmation hearing for President Trump’s nominee for chair set for next week. Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) on Wednesday urged the administration to “wrap up” its investigation of...

The Hill
Open 
North Korea: The next Armageddon?
Kim likely views his nuclear program as his only guarantee of regime survival, which is why he will keep his foot on the nuclear accelerator.

The Hill
Open 
Trump’s ICE crackdown is hurting America’s armed forces 
Immigrants and the children of immigrants are a crucial source of personnel for the U.S. military. Given events in the Middle East, it’s an odd time to go out of the way to alienate them, but that’s what the White House, congressional Republicans and Republican governors and legislators in numerous states seem intent on doing. 

The Hill
Open 
Watch live: Hegseth, Caine brief on Iran operation amid blockade
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Joint Chiefs of Staff Chair Dan Caine will brief reporters Thursday morning on the U.S. military operation in Iran, just over a week into the fragile ceasefire between the Trump administration and Tehran. President Trump imposed a blockade on the Strait of Hormuz this week, pushing back on Iran for...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
German news: Teacher group urges action over pupil violence
A German teachers' group says decisive action is needed to counter a surge in violence in classrooms and corridors. Meanwhile, the Greens say a blanket speed limit on major highways would halp save fuel. DW has more,

Deutsche Welle
Open 
US jury finds Live Nation, Ticketmaster holds harmful monopoly
The verdict, will not bring immediate relief to concertgoers frustrated by high ticket prices, but could cost the company.

Mail Online
Open 
Bond favourite Aaron Taylor-Johnson, 35, and director wife Sam, 59, pucker up for a kiss as they look more loved-up than ever after 17 years together
The 007 favourite has shown he doesn't need a Bond girl as Sam puckered up for a kiss in the street on Tuesday.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
V&A East collection review – a dazzling wealth of inspiration to fire up the geniuses of the future
From showstopping fabrics to mind-expanding photos and an opening show celebrating Black British music, the real value of London’s new museum will surely lie in the art it inspiresOur architecture critic on the building Outside the V&A’s new outpost in east London, a nondescript young person stares blankly out across the old Olympic Park. This five-metre-tall sculpture is generic by design, an amalgam of “images, 3D scans and observations” of local people. It is easy to see why Thomas J Price’s idea appealed to a museum eager to engage with the area’s diverse communities – here is the quintessence of east London youth, executed at the scale of Michelangelo’s David – but by smoothing out the differences between individuals it sends out a confusing message.To aggregate data and identify common denominators is, after all, the logic of the algorithm. So the worry is that this museum will likewise second-guess the desires of its audience based on predictive models, guiding visitors towards things they are predisposed to “like” and away from opinions they are presumed not to share. So it is a relief to find, on entering the building, a vision of how people make and cultures meet that is infinitely richer, more heterogeneous and more open-ended than those first impressions suggest. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Piteå IF feel the pinch as Swedish football’s outlier: ‘It’s an impossible puzzle’
Thirteen of the Damallsvenskan’s 14 teams are based in the south. For Piteå IF, rising costs are now the priorityPiteå IF are entering their 17th season as a top-division side in Sweden’s Damallsvenskan, but the challenge for them is getting tougher and tougher every year.And it is not a small budget compared to clubs such as Hammarby and Häcken who have, in recent years, been able to rely on the support of major men’s club, or the rejuvenated Malmö FF side, but geographical issues which have put a strain on club finances. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘It was stressful’: inside Scotland women’s Rugby World Cup contract wrangle
Scotland’s tournament was overshadowed by off-field uncertainty but, says former international Beth Blacklock, the future is looking brighter“There were players who were definitely struggling,” says the former Scotland international Beth Blacklock of the contract uncertainty that surrounded the squad before their run to the 2025 Rugby World Cup quarter-finals.In pre-World Cup camps talks were taking place between players and the Scottish Rugby Union. Some of the 32-player squad had deals which ran until May 2026 but the rest of the team had arrangements which ended in October after the World Cup had concluded. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
How Giorgia Meloni’s cosy relations with Donald Trump turned sour
With an eye on elections in 2027, Italy’s PM has made tactful pivot away from US presidentSix months ago, Italy’s far-right prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, stood surrounded by men on a stage in Sharm el-Sheikh, where world leaders had gathered to discuss the Gaza peace deal.In front of her, Donald Trump, showered praise and insults on the assembled leaders, before describing Meloni as a “beautiful young woman”. Turning towards her, he added: “You don’t mind being called beautiful, right? Because you are. Thank you very much for coming.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Champions League reaction: Sid Lowe answers your questions – live
Sid Lowe is our Spanish football correspondent, based in Madrid, and has been covering an increasingly busy beat for years. He answers your questionstrollercoaster asks: Why have so many Spanish clubs competing in the Champions League or European Cup been relegated? It happened with Real Betis and with Villarreal. We have seen leading Spanish clubs fall to the second division and even to lower leagues, see Deportivo.Sid:There are lots of elements at play here, and they are not all the same going back over time, as the structure of Spanish football has changed (collective TV deal, etc), while some clubs had their own specific issues (Depor’s success, built on money they didn’t really have, was what brought their fall, for example). The short-term reason for some teams – look at Athletic this season, for example – is that they don’t always have the resources for both competitions. There’s definitely a financial component to it. Villarreal’s relegation in 2012 was baffling but internally they had overspent – which is unlike them, a stable and financially strong club – although they did learn from that.Look at the second division now and it is full of massive clubs (historically). Zaragoza are the really clear example … Sporting, Málaga, Depor, similar with Oviedo until last summer. Often laden with debt, often unready for the sudden fall off of income, etc …I don’t know … I’m not sure that I feel that the people I bigged up (early) have started suffering better fates … have they? It might not have been that bad before. Or maybe it was, ha.There’s a related issue here, actually, which is part of the daily battle … most pieces are on-demand, so to speak, (the desk asks about an issue or I suggest an issue or whatever), but on Mondays, the regular column linked to the weekend games, I more or less write what I want (over a 38-week season there might be three or four weeks when the desk suggests/wants a certain topic and I’m not totally mad: if it’s clásico weekend then very likely that will be the focus). Which is why you get Leganés or Levante. Continue reading...

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11498 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned maintenance Stoke City (WMCIT) (Close)
Start: Fri, 17th Apr 2026 00:05

End: Fri, 17th Apr 2026 06:00

Clear: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 12:22

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 12:22

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Heybike Comfort Ranger 3.0 Pro Electric Bike Review: Tough Little Cargo Ebike
This fully waterproof little folding cargo ebike is tough enough to take on rain and the worst potholes Montana has to offer.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
This Beanie Is Designed to Read Your Thoughts
California-based startup Sabi is developing a thought-to-text wearable that could usher in the cyborg future.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Best MacBook Accessories (2026): Chargers, Covers, Keyboards, and More
From charging adapters to external monitors, I’ve gathered the absolute best peripherals for your MacBook.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
LG Sound Suite Review: Big Sound for Larger Rooms
The Dolby Atmos soundbar setup rivals the best from Samsung and Sonos.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Champions League reaction: Sid Lowe answers your questions – live
Sid Lowe is our Spanish football correspondent, based in Madrid, and has been covering an increasingly busy beat for years. He answers your questionsCarlosZ asks: Hi Sid, what became of Viktor Onopko?Sid:The one and only Viktor Onopko! What a player. He’s assistant coach of the Russian national team, I think.I went to do a piece with the Spanish unemployed players team a few years ago and they played CSKA and he was there as assistant to Slutsky, if memory serves. I missed him post game, didn’t get the chance to speak to him and have regretted it ever since.He would love it to be Jürgen Klopp … which doesn’t mean it will be. I’m intrigued by this situation. We could be in for a long few months. And endless names.I also think it needs more than just the change of name, it’s also about culture and power at the club. And the perception of a need to change that was already there, which is why the sacking of Xabi Alonso doesn’t only feel like a pity but also a missed opportunity. There is, I think, an irritation at his sacking that is not just about him as a coach but what he symbolised, what he was supposed to bring, and the fact that it was undermined by his authority effectively being removed. As for a name, someone like Mauricio Pochettino wouldn’t surprise me. Continue reading...

Telegraph
Open 
Telegraph Fantasy Football tips: Game Week 32
The experts at Fantasy Football Hub are back with their selection advice for GW32

Telegraph
Open 
Five newborn babies die from mpox in Pakistan
The deadly outbreak raises concerns that the virus has gained a foothold in the Asian country

Mac Rumours
Open 
4 New Apple Intelligence Features Found in Apple Code, Likely in iOS 27
iOS 27 is likely to introduce at least four new Apple Intelligence features that function within system apps, based on backend code discovered by Nicolás Alvarez and confirmed by MacRumors.





First up, Apple is expected to lean more heavily into Visual Intelligence in iOS 27, since the company is reportedly developing AI wearable devices that will leverage the feature. Apple is reportedly working on smart glasses, AirPods with cameras, and a wearable AI pin or pendant.



To that end, Visual Intelligence appears to be getting at least two new capabilities. One of them will likely let you scan a food nutrition label to get more information, which could well integrate into the Health app. Another will offer to add printed phone numbers/addresses to your Contacts. Visual Intelligence already offers to add calendar dates to your Calendar, so an equivalent feature for contacts makes sense.



Elsewhere, Apple's Wallet app is likely to gain the ability to generate digital passes from scans of things like event tickets, gym membership cards and the like. Google Wallet for Android already does something similar, using AI to determine the content of a pass.



Meanwhile, in Safari, we're expecting a new AI feature that will automatically name Tab Groups for users based on the contents of the tabs within the group.



We can't say with certainty that the above features will work as described, since we're interpreting them from the names of individual code strings. Likewise, we do not know for sure that they will appear in iOS 27 or a future point update of the upcoming software, but given that Apple is working on a smarter version of ‌Siri‌ for iOS 27 with deeper integration across apps, the timing fits.



Apple will unveil iOS 27 at the Worldwide Developers Conference in June, before launching in September just ahead of when new iPhone models come out.Related Roundup: iOS 27Tags: Apple Intelligence, Visual IntelligenceThis article, '4 New Apple Intelligence Features Found in Apple Code, Likely in iOS 27' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple Was Filming Fatal Aircraft Crash for Vision Pro
A British paraplegic adventurer was being filmed for an Apple Vision Pro immersive video series during a fatal aircraft crash in the Jordanian desert in July 2024, Bloomberg's Mark Gurman reports.





Claire Lomas became internationally recognized in 2012 when she became the first person to complete the London Marathon using a robotic exoskeleton suit, five years after being paralyzed from the waist down in a horse-riding accident. Apple was apparently working with London-based Atlantic Studios to film Lomas for its Apple Immersive Video series called Adventure. A camera system was mounted on the plane itself, and Lomas was actively being recorded when the crash occurred. Lomas died from her injuries within weeks of the crash at the age of 44.



The planned episode was set to showcase multiple Jordanian landmarks, including the Wadi Rum valley and the ancient city of Petra. The original release date for was sometime in 2025. Apple spent millions of dollars per episode on the series, with Atlantic producing and Apple distributing.



People involved with the production say there were broader safety concerns during the making of the Adventure series, including crews working longer hours than staff felt was safe, filming in harsh climates, and operating equipment in conditions the crew had limited training for. Staffers reportedly raised these concerns with their superiors at Apple, which in response sent a health and safety representative to work periodically alongside production staff. There is no record of other major injuries tied to the series.



Apple and Atlantic continued working together after the crash; a Colorado episode was filmed in August 2024. Apple has released five Adventure episodes to date, featuring athletes highlining 3,000 feet in the air, swimming under Arctic ice, parkouring across Paris, cliff diving in Spain, and racing cars in Colorado. No new episodes have been published since last year.



The Adventure series sits within Apple's broader Apple Immersive Video offering for the Vision Pro, which Apple describes as a "180-degree, 3D 8K recording format captured with Spatial Audio." The format is one of the headset's primary selling points and is used in in-store demonstrations of the $3,499 device.Related Roundup: Apple Vision ProBuyer's Guide: Vision Pro (Buy Now)Related Forum: Apple Vision ProThis article, 'Apple Was Filming Fatal Aircraft Crash for Vision Pro' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Chatham House
Open 
AI and National Security: Who's Really in Control?
AI and National Security: Who's Really in Control?
20
April 2026 — 18:00 TO 19:15 BST
Anonymous (not verified)
23 March 2026

Chatham House and Online
Experts discuss who controls AI, and on whose terms.
The International Security Programme brings together a panel of experts to discuss who controls AI, and on whose terms?
When the US government designated Anthropic a national security threat earlier this year — a label previously reserved for foreign adversaries — it exposed a fault line that had been building for years: who controls AI, and on whose terms?This panel brings together voices from research, journalism, military and industry to examine who really controls AI when national security is at stake — and what the answer means for democracy, global order and world security.Key questions include:Who controls AI when governments and companies fundamentally disagree — and what happens when companies have more leverage than states?Should AI companies be treated as national security infrastructure?Who is accountable when military decisions rely on private AI systems?This event is part of the AI Collaborative, a program of the Howard Baker Forum implemented in partnership with Chatham House.Please note, in-person participation is at full capacity however you can join virtually by registering to attend online.

Mail Online
Open 
Son admits keeping dead mother's body in a chest freezer for over two years so he could continue pocketing her pension to fund his bachelor lifestyle
Christopher Phillips' mother Sylvia - who was in her 80s - died at some point in 2023 at their home in the Welsh seaside town of Porthcawl.

Mail Online
Open 
The dismal lives of those under HS2: Residents of village 'destroyed' by high-speed railway works left thousands out of pocket by damage and can't even sell their homes
Homeowners in Water Orton, Warwickshire, have claimed that 'estate agents won't touch them' amid the 'monster' concrete works which are not set to be completed for more than six years.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
What mines has Iran laid in the strait of Hormuz and how can the US remove them?
Trump plans to start anti-mine operations as part of a wider attempt to open the strait, but the clearance is laborious and dangerousMiddle East crisis – live updatesDonald Trump has said he plans to begin anti-mine operations in the strait of Hormuz as part of a wider attempt to reopen the waterway, which has in effect been closed to marine traffic by Iran since the US and Israel launched their war in late February. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Pedro Pascal v Pedro Piscal: actor in legal battle with Chilean spirit brand
Pedro Piscal pisco is latest Chilean brand to resemble a Hollywood name – and others have fought off the lawsuitsThe actor Pedro Pascal is waging a legal battle against a Chilean pisco merchant who has chosen a cheeky name for his brand of the country’s national spirit: Pedro Piscal.David Herrera registered the brand name with a Chilean commercial regulator in 2023 and began selling his pisco in off-licences and restaurants. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Covid jab injury payments must be urgently reformed, says inquiry chair
Heather Hallett hails vaccine scheme but criticises rule that only those meeting 60% disabled threshold can get payoutsThe Covid-19 vaccine programme in the UK was an “extraordinary feat” but the payment scheme for people injured by the jabs must be urgently reformed, the public inquiry on the pandemic has found.In her report, the inquiry chair, Heather Hallett, praised the fact the UK was a world leader in biomedical sciences, which set it in good stead for developing and rolling out vaccines at scale. But she said the government must act urgently to reform the scheme for payments to the “small minority” of people seriously injured by the vaccines, and almost double maximum payouts to at least £200,000 from an upper limit of £120,000 at present. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Europe live: Russia ‘does not deserve’ lifting of sanctions, Zelenskyy says, after deadly overnight strikes in Ukraine
Ukrainian president says nearly 700 Russian drones and 19 ballistic missiles mostly targeted Kyiv, Odesa and DniproMeanwhile, we are also getting a confirmation that Hungary’s outgoing prime minister Viktor Orbán will skip his final EU summit as he readies to hand over power after losing power in last Sunday’s parliamentary election.Hungary’s EU affairs minister János Bóka confirmed he would not attend the meeting “due to his duties related to the handover of power,” and Hungary will not be politically represented in his absence. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Champions League reaction: Sid Lowe answers your questions – live
Sid Lowe is our Spanish football correspondent, based in Madrid, and has been covering an increasingly busy beat for years. He answers your questionsGUnit asks: Some years ago, us regular readers of your column had this running joke about the curse of Sid Lowe; ie whenever you’d write an article praising a team, they’d go and lose the next match. Would you say it’s broken now?Sid:I don’t know … I’m not sure that I feel that the people I bigged up (early) have started suffering better fates … have they? It might not have been that bad before. Or maybe it was, ha.There’s a related issue here, actually, which is part of the daily battle … most pieces are on-demand, so to speak, (the desk asks about an issue or I suggest an issue or whatever), but on Mondays, the regular column linked to the weekend games, I more or less write what I want (over a 38-week season there might be three or four weeks when the desk suggests/wants a certain topic and I’m not totally mad: if it’s clásico weekend then very likely that will be the focus). Which is why you get Leganés or Levante.The one and only Viktor Onopko! What a player. He’s assistant coach of the Russian national team, I think.I went to do a piece with the Spanish unemployed players team a few years ago and they played CSKA and he was there as assistant to Slutsky, if memory serves. I missed him post game, didn’t get the chance to speak to him and have regretted it ever since. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Woman dies after being attacked by dogs at house
The dogs, not thought to be a banned breed, were destroyed after attacking the woman aged in her 70s.

Ars Technica
Open 
The race to Shackleton Crater is on—will Jeff Bezos or China get there first?

Russia Today News
Open 
EU spied on Orban for years – former Slovak minister

Russia Today News
Open 
Hegseth faces impeachment calls over Iran war

Mail Online
Open 
From cows mooing in the milk aisle to price changes every hour - the tricks supermarkets are plotting to get you to spend more
Shoppers are set to be bombarded with fresh tricks to make us raise our spending over the next few years as retailers adopt the latest technologies.

Mail Online
Open 
Why some people suffer bowel 'homesickness': Condition which makes thousands of people's guts seize uncomfortably on holiday - and how to fix them, fast
We talk endlessly about avoiding traveller's tummy, but what about the opposite problem no one readily admits to?

Mail Online
Open 
A longevity expert reveals how to live longer, without spending a fortune - including the supplement we all should be taking
Dr Josh Berkowitz shares his top 8 tips for living longer, for less - and you may be doing some of them already.

Mail Online
Open 
A simple spoonful of this cheap £2.50 health food keeps you feeling fuller for longer and stops you getting bloated. But two expert nutritionists reveal warning signs you need to know before digging in
TikTok is rife with wellness hacks and trends. One woman told viewers that if they're feeling bloated, this will 'flush everything out'. But is there any substance behind the hype?

Mail Online
Open 
As Harry and Meghan's 'Establishment plot' to return to Britain thickens, RICHARD EDEN reveals what insiders really think about their 'faux Royal tour'...
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex might be 10,000 miles away, but their quasi-royal tour of Australia is meant to be a preview of what we can expect when they return to Britain this summer.

Mail Online
Open 
Europe 'has six weeks of jet fuel left' as UK braces for summer of shortages and Strait remains blocked by Iran war  - Live updates 
Israel's cabinet met on Wednesday to discuss a possible ceasefire in neighbouring Lebanon, a senior Israeli official said,

BBC World News
Open 
Blunt-speaking Pope tells Cameroon to root out corruption to find peace
The pontiff was unusually forthright in his address at the presidential palace.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
LIV Golf insists season will go ahead ‘at full throttle’ amid doubts over future
Scott O’Neil sends rallying cry to staff after reportsMcGinley says PGA Tour could now ‘play hardball’LIV Golf has insisted the tour intends to continue “uninterrupted and at full throttle” this season amid claims its Saudi Arabian backers will imminently withdraw having funded the breakaway league to the tune of $5bn (£3.68bn).The future of the rebel tour was mired in confusion on Wednesday following an executive meeting in New York and publication of a new Saudi investment strategy that did not mention sport and emphasised sustainability. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Jessie Ware: Superbloom review – Table Manners host dishes up more disco – but where are the bangers?
(EMI)The podcaster’s third sequin-festooned album in a row is her most retro, with its slightly cringe moments balanced by unerring quality control and opulent arrangementsRecent episodes of Table Manners, the podcast Jessie Ware co-hosts with her mother, Lennie, have begun with a brief advert for Ware’s new album: listeners, it advises, can get 10% off by preordering Superbloom using a special code. The fact that the advert is directing traffic from Ware’s podcast to her music feels slightly telling. As side hustles go, Table Manners has proved extraordinarily successful, attracting A-list guests: Margot Robbie, Jeremy Allen White, Paul McCartney, Robert De Niro. Indeed, it’s proved so successful that it scarcely seems like a side hustle at all: in 2026, Ware is probably better known as a podcaster than a singer. Hats off to her: in an uncertain era, when rock and pop artists are well advised to have a backup plan, there’s something hugely impressive about how big Ware’s has become. Still, there lurks the danger of her music seeming an afterthought: like the 10% off ad, something to get out of the way before the more serious business of enjoying banana bread with Lisa Kudrow.You can hear the impact of Table Manners on Superbloom in a literal sense: a track called Automatic features a deep-voiced spoken-word appearance from Euphoria star Colman Domingo, previously a guest on the podcast. It’s also an album marked by a sense of doubling down. Ware’s third album in a row to mine a disco-pop hybrid, it’s also the most straightforwardly retro of the trio, sanding away the sheen of futuristic electronica found on 2020’s What’s Your Pleasure? and 2023’s That! Feels Good! in favour of lush orchestration: even the most synth-heavy tracks here speak less of the present than they do the early 80s post-disco boogie genre. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Meghan says she was 'the most trolled person in the entire world'
The Duchess of Sussex has said she was "the most trolled person in the entire world" on social media.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
UK prepares for food shortages in worst case scenario as Iran war continues
The UK could face some food shortages by the summer under a worst case scenario drawn up by government officials.

Mail Online
Open 
Europe 'has maybe six weeks of jet fuel left', with flight cancellations possible 'soon' - Live updates
Israel's cabinet met on Wednesday to discuss a possible ceasefire in neighbouring Lebanon, a senior Israeli official said,

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest review – Aaron Pierre makes a mesmerising McMurphy
Old Vic theatre, LondonDirector Clint Dyer brings a fresh political focus to Ken Kesey’s story of disempowerment but the relentless misogyny of the text feels retrogradeWhen Randle P McMurphy is thrust into an American psychiatric hospital in the early 1960s, the torpid air begins to crackle. As the anarchic McMurphy, Aaron Pierre gives a storming performance but although Clint Dyer’s stirring take on Ken Kesey’s 1962 novel boldly reframes the story, the text can’t support his ideas.McMurphy immediately locks horns with authoritarian Nurse Ratched (Olivia Williams). He pivots and provokes, urging fellow patients to resist, play and party. Pierre roams the space with a pumped-up strut or an incongruous dainty scamper. He gives good fraternal hugs, but there’s a frantic vulnerability beneath the booming laugh. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
What mines has Iran laid in the strait of Hormuz and how could the US remove them?
Trump plans to start anti-mine operations as part of a wider attempt to open the strait, but the clearance is laborious and dangerousMiddle East crisis – live updatesDonald Trump has said he plans to begin anti-mine operations in the strait of Hormuz as part of a wider attempt to reopen the waterway, which has in effect been closed to marine traffic by Iran since the US and Israel launched their war in late February. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Champions League reaction: Sid Lowe answers your questions – live
Sid Lowe is our Spanish football correspondent, based in Madrid, and has been covering an increasingly busy beat for years. He answers your questionsstooze asks: If you could choose one (or maybe two, three?) genuine feelgood stories from Spanish football this season – ones that virtually everyone in Spain would agree on – what would they be?Sid:Santi Cazorla, of course. (But maybe that is more last season than this, what with things not going quite so well now … ). Watching him get an ovation at every ground is lovely.Vedat Muriqi: my word, he’s amazing. And everyone loves him. Top character too. I’m very, very close to considering him player of the year.Difficult to answer this because to be honest I’m not entirely sure about the UK media/societal/fan response to Arsenal. But, not being RM or FCB, having a defensive identity (previously, but it lingers here too), having a coach like Simeone, I would say that Atlético fans will feel that they have felt the finger of accusation pointing at them often as well … I’m not sure I would call it outrage, or across the board, but the accusation of anti-football, boring, etc … all that is there I guess.It’s not all cliche of course, and cliches and stereotypes are often rooted in some truth. I remember an opposition coach coming past me after a game at Atlético once, years ago in fairness, and saying “Christ, they’re a horrible team, aren’t they?” Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
South African opposition leader jailed for firing rifle at rally
A South African opposition leader has been handed a five-year prison sentence for firing a rifle in the air at a rally.

The Register
Open 
Swarm welcome: Britain lines up 120,000 drones for Ukraine
Giant UAV package will include strike, recon, logistics, and maritime systems The UK government says it will deliver at least 120,000 drones to Ukraine this year to help it fight against Russia.…

Gizmodo
Open 
Sperm Whales Speak With a Complex Alphabet and Even Have ‘Vowels,’ Study Finds
Linguists hope to be conversant in rudimentary-level sperm whale in the next five years.

Gizmodo
Open 
We’re Obsessed With the Hilarious First Footage From ‘Spaceballs 2’
It's called 'Spaceballs: The New One.' Yes, for real. It's out April 23, 2027.

Mail Online
Open 
Urgent warning over asthma attack guidelines as mixed-race 22-year-old dies after misinterpretation of the term 'deathly colour'
A coroner has called for urgent reforms to asthma attack guidelines after a 22-year-old mixed-race man died due to a misunderstanding during an emergency call.

Mail Online
Open 
Emotional Rory McIlroy opens up to Amanda Balionis about the 'joy' of his Masters triumph two years after romance rumor
Two years after unsubstantiated rumours of an affair between golf reporter Balionis and grand slam winner McIlroy, she interviewed him several times during this year's tournament.

Mail Online
Open 
SNP leader Swinney under fire over 'back-of-a-fag-packet' plan for price cap on essential FOODS in Scotland
The SNP leader said he planned to use devolved public health powers to bring in controls on 'everyday items that make up a decent diet', citing bread, milk, cheese, eggs, rice and chicken.

Mail Online
Open 
Jodie Marsh is charged with assault after 'putting her hands on neighbour's neck' in row over animal sanctuary
The former glamour model, 47, said she 'lost it' with her neighbour after he carried out a 'campaign of harassment' against her.

Mail Online
Open 
Moment police catch upskirter targeting young women in Soho - and find videos of 20 victims on his phone that he'd taken that night
Registered sex offender James Manchand, 62, from Camden in north London, has now been jailed for 20 months.

Mail Online
Open 
Woman in her 70s dies after being attacked by two dogs at house as police arrest 37-year-old man
Emergency services rushed to Willis Pearson Avenue, Wolverhampton, at about 1.30pm today following reports that an elderly woman was injured.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘It was stressful’: inside Scotland women’s Rugby World Cup contract wrangle
Scotland’s tournament was overshadowed by off-field uncertainty but, says former international Beth Blacklock, the future is looking brighter“There were players who were definitely struggling,” says the former Scotland international Beth Blacklock of the contract uncertainty that surrounded the squad before their run to the 2025 Rugby World Cup quarter-finals.In pre-World Cup camps contract talks were taking place between players and the Scottish Rugby Union. Some of the 32-player squad had deals which ran until May 2026 but the rest of the team had arrangements which ended in October after the World Cup had concluded. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Champions League reaction: Sid Lowe answers your questions – live
Sid Lowe is our Spanish football correspondent, based in Madrid, and has been covering an increasingly busy beat for years. He answers your questionsGoatse asks: Has there ever been such loud, blanket, across-the-board outrage at Atlético’s playing style from both the Spanish media and from Spanish fans as there has been around Arsenal from the English media and other clubs’ fans for the past few months?Sid:Difficult to answer this because to be honest I’m not entirely sure about the UK media/societal/fan response to Arsenal. But, not being RM or FCB, having a defensive identity (previously, but it lingers here too), having a coach like Simeone, I would say that Atlético fans will feel that they have felt the finger of accusation pointing at them often as well … I’m not sure I would call it outrage, or across the board, but the accusation of anti-football, boring, etc … all that is there I guess.It’s not all cliche of course, and cliches and stereotypes are often rooted in some truth. I remember an opposition coach coming past me after a game at Atlético once, years ago in fairness, and saying “Christ, they’re a horrible team, aren’t they?”Atlético have changed a lot since then … or sort of. Their title challenge, insofar as there was ever one, was over by Christmas really and there have been evolutions, shifts, changes in form. I think there’s a momentum and a clarity about them now that wasn’t there before. An obvious, if simplistic example: Antoine Griezmann and Koke were supposed to be getting phased out but are among the best and will play now. Griezmann is sensational. Marcos Llorente has been full-back and midfielder, and is a freak of nature.It feels like every year there’s this almost existential debate about what Atlético are and at some point along the way they sort of find themselves. What they are not, by the way, is what so many people seem to think they are. “We attack better than we defend,” Diego Simeone says and he is right. In terms of the last Arsenal game and this one, I guess there’s the change in Arsenal themselves and also the very basic thing which is that it is a different context now than in the league phase. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
How online bargains may be dangerous
Experts warn of hidden risk of counterfeits, while the government consults on stricter product safety rules.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Woman dies after being attacked by dogs at house
The woman, aged in her 70s died at the scene in Wolverhampton on Wednesday night.

Sky News Home
Open 
The curious link between Helen Mirren's garden and food prices
What do an Oscar-winning actress and your grocery bill have in common? More than you might think.

Mail Online
Open 
Evil trolls made my life hell after the death of my son - they feed off tragedy and won't stop for the most terrifying reason, warns Jay Slater's mum
Jay Slater's mum Debbie Duncan has opened up on how 'tragedy trolling' made her life hell, and admitted that they have 'never stopped' with their tirade against her.

Mail Online
Open 
Trans woman heavily criticised after being appointed to represent an endometriosis charity resigns 'in best interests' of the cause
Steph Richards, 73, was announced as the parliamentary engagement officer for Endometriosis South Coast last month.

Mail Online
Open 
Pregnant Molly-Mae Hague TRIPLES her earnings as she rakes in a staggering £5million in one year thanks to her influencer empire
Accounts for the former Love Island winner's company MMH Holdings Limited show assets in her business rocketed from £2.8million up to £8.3million.

Mail Online
Open 
Europe 'has maybe six weeks of jet fuel left' - as Iran hints it will open Strait of Hormuz - Live updates
Israel's cabinet met on Wednesday to discuss a possible ceasefire in neighbouring Lebanon, a senior Israeli official said,

Mail Online
Open 
Shirtless Spencer Matthews and Vogue Williams pack on the PDA with a passionate kiss as they hit the beach on a family trip to St. Barts
Shirtless Spencer Matthews and Vogue Williams packed on the PDA with a passionate kiss as they hit the beach on a family trip to St. Barts on Thursday. 

Mail Online
Open 
Woman in her 70s dies after being attacked by two dogs at house as police arrest 37-year-old man
Emergency services rushed to Willis Pearson Avenue at about 1.30pm on Wednesday to reports a woman in her 70s had been injured, West Midlands Police said.

Sky News Home
Open 
Political intelligence provider DeHavilland's owners plot sale

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Church warden murder conviction quashed
Benjamin Field has been in prison for the murder of Peter Farquhar, 69.

Mail Online
Open 
The Testaments viewers sickened by 'vile' sexual abuse scene between dentist and teenage patient - with 'heartbreaking' twist that 'sent shivers down their spines'
The new series follows the story of the sequel book of the same name.

Mail Online
Open 
'The greatest documentary series of all time' is coming to an end after 70 years with tear-jerking finale hailed as 'pure magic'
The 'Up' series first hit screens in 1964, following fourteen participants who were all seven years old at the time.

Mail Online
Open 
Hidden detail in Meghan's jewellery as she pays subtle tribute to Prince Harry on day three of their quasi-royal tour of Australia
The Sussexes today joined an Aboriginal walking tour, before meeting young advocates involved in mental health engagement programme Batyr in Melbourne.

Mail Online
Open 
Unemployed youths should be in the Army instead of being paid to do nothing, says former general
Major General Tim Cross said that people classed as Neets - not in employment, education or training - should be given the opportunity to serve their country instead of getting benefits.

Mail Online
Open 
Starmer faces demands to APOLOGISE to Speaker Lindsay Hoyle over 'shameful' PMQs rant after being rebuked for deflecting questions
Keir Starmer confronted Lindsay Hoyle in the chamber after being reminded during yesterday's session that he was the one facing questions - not the Leader of the Opposition.

Mail Online
Open 
Moment masked gang ram car into pawnbrokers in daylight raid before filling boot with gold
Masked thieves ploughed a Peugeot 207 into the glass window of H&T Pawnbrokers on Soho Road, Birmingham, and looted the display before making a getaway.

Mail Online
Open 
POLL OF THE DAY: Was the US-Israeli war on Iran a 'mistake', as Reeves claims?
Chancellor Rachel Reeves's criticism of Donald Trump's war on Iran has intensified as she publicly savaged the US President's decision to launch the conflict in the Middle East.

Mail Online
Open 
Do YOU know your mayglem from your minger? Scientists are creating a census of British regional swear words - so, how many do you recognise?
Scientists from the University of Sheffield have set out to create the UK's first-ever national swear word census.

Mail Online
Open 
Covid jab rollout an 'extraordinary feat' but those harmed or killed by side-effects were let down, inquiry finds
Baroness Heather Hallett, chair of the UK Covid-19 inquiry, described the speed at which the vaccines were developed and rolled out as an 'extraordinary feat'.

Mail Online
Open 
Ex-BBC presenter Samira Ahmed is ridiculed for complaining to advertising watchdog over The Mummy film poster because of 'impact on children'
Samira Ahmed, 57, argued the poster - which shows a close-up image of a mummified child - could affect both children and bereaved parents.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
What mines have Iran laid in the strait of Hormuz and how could the US remove them?
Trump plans to start anti-mine operations as part of a wider attempt to open the strait, but the clearance is laborious and dangerousMiddle East crisis – live updatesDonald Trump has said he plans to begin anti-mine operations in the strait of Hormuz as part of a wider attempt to reopen the waterway, which has in effect been closed to marine traffic by Iran since the US and Israel launched their war in late February. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Champions League reaction: Sid Lowe answers your questions – live
Sid Lowe is our Spanish football correspondent, based in Madrid, and has been covering an increasingly busy beat for years. He answers your questionscordelspo asks: Do you think Atlético will trouble Arsenal? They were hammered 4-0 in the group stages; has anything changed since then to make you think there will be a different outcome?And, on a similar theme, benjvj asks: Good morning Sid, greetings from Valencia. What are Arsenal’s chances in Madrid? Will the atmosphere be as wild as against Barcelona?Atlético have changed a lot since then … or sort of. Their title challenge, insofar as there was ever one, was over by Christmas really and there have been evolutions, shifts, changes in form. I think there’s a momentum and a clarity about them now that wasn’t there before. An obvious, if simplistic example: Antoine Griezmann and Koke were supposed to be getting phased out but are among the best and will play now. Griezmann is sensational. Marcos Llorente has been full-back and midfielder, and is a freak of nature.It feels like every year there’s this almost existential debate about what Atlético are and at some point along the way they sort of find themselves. What they are not, by the way, is what so many people seem to think they are. “We attack better than we defend,” Diego Simeone says and he is right. In terms of the last Arsenal game and this one, I guess there’s the change in Arsenal themselves and also the very basic thing which is that it is a different context now than in the league phase.There are loads of elements to this, not least as it’s a long time, and there have definitely been big shifts economically and so on, and obviously a lot of it is societal, which is being played out everywhere not just here.I think some parts remain the same, the quality of the football, the taste for technique (in very broad terms, as there are a million caveats), lots of players coming through … you can see shifts in the national team of course: they were like England, the “big” team that never won and that has changed. Obviously, I think the big difference between Spain and elsewhere (well, England in this case), is the dominance of two teams … and yet that does not entirely eclipse the other clubs, some of which are very big, and I’m always very conscious of giving space and proper attention to the “other 18”. They often feel abandoned by Spanish media/society, I think. In terms of reporting, that’s central to it. Continue reading...

CNET News
Open 
This iPhone Search Bar Hack Makes Navigating Your Call History Easy
Apple introduced this feature in 2024 alongside iOS 18.

Andrews and Arnold Status
Open 
[PEW] Broadband: CityFibre: Network Maintenance - Regional. (Open)

Andrews and Arnold Status
Open 
[PEW] Broadband: CityFibre: Network Maintenance - Regional. (Open)

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Imagine a world where no one has heard of The Beatles
An unsuccessful singer-songwriter wakes up in a world where no-one remembers The Beatles.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Woman dies after being attacked by dogs at house
The woman, aged in her 70s died at the scene in Wolverhampton on Wednesday.

Russia Today News
Open 
Incoming Hungarian PM pledges crackdown on critical media

Mail Online
Open 
How many healthy years do you have left? Scientists say they can predict it based on where you live. Use our map to see what your postcode says for your future...
A new interactive map from the Daily Mail allows readers to see how many years they'll spend in good health, according to where they live.

BBC World News
Open 
Brazil's former spy chief released from ICE detention
Bolsonaro ally Alexandre Ramagem was stopped by immigration agents in Orlando, Florida on Monday.

BBC World News
Open 
Turkish police detain 162 people over online praise for school shootings
At least 16 people were injured in a shooting at a high school on Tuesday, before another nine were killed in a separate school shooting on Wednesday.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Fifa blamed as World Cup trains set to cost $100
New Jersey Governor Mikie Sherrill accuses Fifa of failing to provide funding, which means fans must foot the bill for high transport costs at the World Cup this summer.

TechRadar News
Open 
Fitbit’s upcoming Whoop rival has been repeatedly leaked by Steph Curry, images show — and it could launch imminently

TechRadar News
Open 
The war in Iran is reaching cyberspace - here’s how to prepare

TechRadar News
Open 
Russia hits European thermal power plant in attempted ‘destructive’ cyberattack – Pro-Kremlin hackers are engaging in ‘riskier and more reckless behavior’ in latest attempt to cripple Western critical infrastructure

TechRadar News
Open 
How AI has made bad measurement worse

TechRadar News
Open 
There's a secret sale going on at Bambu Lab right now — and the best 3D printer our expert has ever tested is one of four machines massively discounted

TechRadar News
Open 
Nothing Warp could have had AirDrop-like potential, but after less than 24 hours, it’s gone

TechRadar News
Open 
The world's smallest ereader fits in the palm of your hand — and you can make your own for less than $50

TechRadar News
Open 
Beef season 2 is the dumbest new Netflix show in years — but I can't stop laughing at these wildly inappropriate cultural Easter eggs

TechRadar News
Open 
'We heard you like Swedish candy' — IKEA's meatball-flavored lollipop started as an April Fools joke, but now it's really happening, and you can try it soon

TechRadar News
Open 
The most critical digital workplace skill we still don’t know how to hire, measure, or reward

TechRadar News
Open 
'It would've sounded really strange' — Stranger Things: Tales From 85 creator explains why the main show's cast didn't return for the Netflix spin-off, but I don't buy his argument

TechRadar News
Open 
Your OpenClaw agents can empty your inbox and leak your data. Here's how to secure them

Digital Trends
Open 
Ready for phones with a massive 11,000mAh battery? Honor might just give you one
Battery anxiety might finally take a backseat — there’s an 11,000mAh phone on the way, and it sounds like the kind of device that won’t have you reaching for the charger every few hours.

Digital Trends
Open 
Apple retail stores could soon spare you the lengthy wait for fixing Apple Watch software
Apple is bringing Apple Watch software repairs to retail stores and Apple Authorized Service Providers this month, ending the need to mail your watch to repair centers for software fixes.

Digital Trends
Open 
Motorola Razr Fold could finally hit the shelves next month
After months of teasers and partial reveals, the Motorola Razr Fold now has a concrete launch date, pre-order discounts, and competitive specs.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
‘Felony charges are pending’: My mother set up a trust for my sibling who stole $100,000 from a bank. Can the trust be seized?
“Mom established a trust for one sibling who was not trustworthy. I am the trustee of my sibling’s trust.”

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Nvidia’s Jensen Huang takes on the hype: AI is not a nuke and it won’t take all the jobs
Nvidia’s Jensen Huang — in promoting exports to China — tries to calm fears over AI’s capabilities.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Why this market rally still has room to run — until these two signals flash
Nomura strategist Charlie McElligott says there’s no reason to abandon this market chase higher, but there may soon be.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Woman dies after being attacked by dogs at house
The woman, aged in her 70s died at the scene in Wolverhampton on Wednesday evening.

Slashdot
Open 
Bullet Train Upgrade Brings 5G Windows, Noise-Cancelling Cabins To Japan
Some Japanese bullet trains will soon support premium private suites this October, featuring windows with embedded 5G antennas for steadier onboard Wi-Fi and NTT noise-cancelling cabin tech to reduce train noise. The 5G window antennas are designed to maintain line-of-sight connections as trains race past base stations at up to 285 km/h. The Register reports: Rail operator JR Central announced the new tech late last month and will initially deploy a couple of the suites on six trains. The carrier explained that the antennas come from a Japanese company called AGC that weaves microscopic wires through glass to form an antenna. JR Central will connect the windows to an on-train Wi-Fi router.

AGC says rival tech relies on 5G signals reaching a train and then bouncing around inside before reaching the Wi-Fi unit. The company says antennas woven into train windows maintain line of sight to nearby 5G base stations. That matters because JR Central's Shinkansen can achieve speeds of up to 285 km/h, which means they speed past cellular network base stations so quickly that it's frequently necessary to reconnect to another radio. AGC says keeping a line of sight connection means its antennas allow increased 5G signal strength, so Wi-Fi service on board trains should be more stable and speedy.

The sound-deadening kit JR Central will deploy is called Personalized Sound Zone (PSZ) and comes from Japan's tech giant NTT. The tech uses the same principles applied to noise-cancelling headphones -- determine the waveform of sound and project an inversion of that waveform that cancels out ambient noise.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
South African politician Julius Malema given five-year jail term for gun offence
Leader of leftwing Economic Freedom Fighters was convicted last year for firing rifle in the air at 2018 rallyThe South African leftwing politician Julius Malema has been sentenced to five years in prison for firing a rifle in the air at a political rally in 2018.Lawyers for the leader of the Economic Freedom Fighters, South Africa’s fourth largest political party, immediately sought leave to appeal. The magistrate is currently considering whether to grant this. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
MSC’s ‘blue tick’ scheme creates illusion of ethically sourced fish, study claims
Sustainability certification by Marine Stewardship Council may be obscuring labour abuses in seafood supply chains, say researchersThe Marine Stewardship Council (MSC), which operates a “blue tick” scheme to indicate the sustainability of fish, has been accused of creating an “illusion” of ethical sourcing, after a study reported that widespread labour abuses have taken place on the fishing vessels it approves.One in five vessels where the crew reported abuses to the International Transport Workers’ Federation (ITF) over the last five years took place on ships catching seafood certified as sustainable by the MSC, researchers found. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
In the footsteps of Linnaeus: scientists share their passion for species from tiny wasps to hairy plants – in pictures
For his project ‘De Oförtrutna’ (The Relentless), photographer Christer Björkman pictured Swedish scientists working in the spirit of Carl Linnaeus, the botanist who created the modern taxonomic system that classifies organisms based on appearance. Each scientist brought to the shoot a book and an item of importance to their work Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Church warden jailed for life for murder of lecturer has conviction quashed
Retrial ordered in case of Benjamin Field, found guilty in 2019 of murdering Peter Farquhar, 69, in BuckinghamshireA former church warden who was jailed for life for the murder of a university lecturer has had his conviction quashed at the court of appeal.Benjamin Field was jailed for at least 36 years in 2019 after being found guilty of murdering 69-year-old Peter Farquhar in Maids Moreton, Buckinghamshire. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Starmer tells social media firms in No 10 meeting ‘things can’t go on like this’
PM summons senior figures from Meta, TikTok, Google and X and says social media is ‘putting our children at risk’Keir Starmer has told social media bosses “things can’t go on like this” in a Downing Street meeting over internet safety.The prime minister summoned senior figures at Meta, TikTok, Google and X to No 10 on Thursday morning as his government considers imposing new restrictions on platforms, including an Australia-style ban for under-16s. Meta owns Facebook and Instagram, and Google owns YouTube. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Champions League reaction: Sid Lowe answers your questions – live
Sid Lowe is our Spanish football correspondent, based in Madrid, and has been covering an increasingly busy beat for years. He answers your questionsproevpete asks: Hi Sid. How has La Liga and Spanish football more broadly changed since you started your reporting career? And how has the actual reporting of it changed in that time as well?Sid:There are loads of elements to this, not least as it’s a long time, and there have definitely been big shifts economically and so on, and obviously a lot of it is societal, which is being played out everywhere not just here.I think some parts remain the same, the quality of the football, the taste for technique (in very broad terms, as there are a million caveats), lots of players coming through … you can see shifts in the national team of course: they were like England, the “big” team that never won and that has changed. Obviously, I think the big difference between Spain and elsewhere (well, England in this case), is the dominance of two teams … and yet that does not entirely eclipse the other clubs, some of which are very big, and I’m always very conscious of giving space and proper attention to the “other 18”. They often feel abandoned by Spanish media/society, I think. In terms of reporting, that’s central to it.Thank you. And hello everyone. Tea made, so I’m ready. (Which, erm, maybe undermines this first question/answer a bit).I suppose the simple answer is: people. And, in truth, while I do think Spain is special and there are lots of very good reasons to believe it’s different, who knows, it might have worked out the same way if somehow I had ended up in Italy or France or Germany or wherever. The practical answer, which takes in the language and, from there, I guess the affinity, is that I did Spanish at school (as well as French). Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
Son admits storing body of his mum in chest freezer at home
Christopher Phillips kept the body of his mum in a chest freezer at home in Porthcawl.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
What's happening to the UK economy and how does it affect you?
The rate of UK economic growth affects things like pay increases and the amount of tax raised.

Nature
Open 
Daily briefing: The air is full of DNA — here’s what it can teach us

Nature
Open 
Daily briefing: Youthifying 'mirror' brings back more vivid childhood memories

Nature
Open 
Venus’s impenetrable haze could be made of cosmic dust

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Iran Halts All Petrochem Exports While Official Signals Compromise Strait Passage Opening, As Negotiators Cite 'Progress'
Iran Halts All Petrochem Exports While Official Signals Compromise Strait Passage Opening, As Negotiators Cite 'Progress'

Summary


The Iran war is "very close to over" with authorities in Tehran eager to agree a peace deal, Trump says, adding: "We've beaten them militarily." Axios cites 'progress' toward framework to end war. Iran state media says halt to all petrochemical exports, RTRS cites possible compromise on strait passage.


AP/Bloomberg reporting the two sides have an "in principle agreement" to pursue further diplomacy; however, this is batted down as 'unconfirmed' by Tehran & a US official.


The Pentagon is sending thousands of additional troops into the Middle East in coming days: WaPo


Trump claims China "very happy" the US is permanently opening the Strait of Hormuz, also Xi told him Beijing was not sending weapons/defense items to Tehran.


Significant Lebanon fighting continues: Israel issues more evacuation orders, moving into south; Tehran outraged, threatens Red Sea shipping. Unconfirmed reports of one-week Lebanon ceasefire about to take effect.




//-->

//-->

//-->


US x Iran permanent peace deal by April 30, 2026?
Yes 33% · No 68%View full market & trade on Polymarket *  *  *

Big Iran Overture in the Works?

A status quo compromise emerging? The latest to hit the newswires:


IRAN COULD CONSIDER SHIPS BEING ABLE TO SAIL THROUGH OMAN SIDE OF STRAIT OF HORMUZ WITHOUT INTERFERENCE OR ATTACK AS PART OF A DEAL WITH THE US: REUTERS, CITING SOURCE CLOSE TO TEHRAN

IRAN WILL MAINTAIN CONTROL OVER ITS WATERS IN THE STRAIT OF HORMUZ AND OMAN WILL DECIDE ABOUT ITS OWN SIDE OF THE WATERWAY - SOURCE CLOSE TO TEHRAN


Iran has just signaled willingness to allow strait traffic pass unconditionally on the Oman side of the strait, perhaps as a face-saving measure, amid talk of a 2nd Pakistan peace summit being put together, as a potential uneasy status quo emerges.



Iran Halts Petrochemical Exports

Is Trump's blockade working?


IRAN HALTS PETROCHEMICAL EXPORTS UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE: ISNA


CNBC also in a breaking headline writes:  Iran halts all petrochemical exports ‘until further notice,’ Iranian state media reports. This comes after a new Pentagon warning to all vessels stuck in the Strait of Hormuz.

CENTCOM Updates Tanker Numbers amid Blockade

CENTCOM provides a Wednesday update: "During the first 48 hours of the U.S. blockade on ships entering and exiting Iranian ports, no vessels have made it past U.S. forces. Additionally, 9 vessels have complied with direction from U.S. forces to turn around and return toward an Iranian port or coastal area."


TEN VESSELS HAVE BEEN TURNED AROUND BY US BLOCKADE: CENTCOM


A big question remains: will Iran confront the US blockade militarily?... or will an uneasy status quo of limited vessel traffic continue to make it through Hormuz amid a potentially extended ceasefire that goes beyond the 2-week window?

A new warning from the White House/CENTCOM:


The White House and the U.S. military published a clip of a warning to ships, telling them not to breach the blockade of Iranian ports and coastal areas. In a maritime radio message, a U.S. servicemember tells ships that they will be boarded for interdiction and seizure if they attempt to travel to or from an Iranian port.



U.S. naval vessels are on patrol in the Gulf of Oman as CENTCOM continues to execute a U.S. blockade on ships entering and departing Iranian ports. U.S. forces are present, vigilant, and ready to ensure compliance. pic.twitter.com/dnHR2oz0ZN
— U.S. Central Command (@CENTCOM) April 15, 2026
Meanwhile in Tehran...


Footage of Iran's Foreign Minister Seyyed Abbas Araghchi welcoming Pakistan's Chief of Army Staff Field Marshal Syed Asim Munir upon his arrival in Tehran.
Follow Press TV on Telegram: https://t.co/LWoNSpkc2J pic.twitter.com/32pF6ONkiZ
— Press TV 🔻 (@PressTV) April 15, 2026
'Progress' Reported in US-Iran Contacts

Axios reports that US and Iranian negotiators "made progress in talks on Tuesday" while moving closer to a framework agreement to end the war, according to two US officials. The headline briefly pushed oil lower. This comes as Pakistan's top general headed a high-ranking political-security delegation from Pakistan to convey the US message and plan the second round of talks to Tehran. Per details in Axios:

"They were on the phone and backchanneling with all the countries and they are getting closer," the U.S. official said.
A second U.S. official confirmed progress was made Tuesday.
"We want to make a deal. And parts of their government want to make a deal. Now the trick is to get the whole of government over there to make the deal," a third U.S. official said.
Meanwhile, state Tasnim is reporting that Pakistan is getting ready to host the second round of Iran-US talks.

Lebanon Ceasefire Imminent? 

The Hezbollah-affiliated Al-Mayadeen channel, citing a senior Iranian source, reports that a ceasefire in Lebanon will begin tonight. "The duration of the ceasefire will be one week and will extend until the end of the ceasefire period between Iran and the United States."

However, there's been no confirmation of this from Israel or the US, or in Israeli media. The Lebanese government just met with Israeli officials for Rubio-sponsored talks in Washington yesterday, but there was no word of a definitive ceasefire coming from the meeting, and currently Hezbollah and Israel are not directly talking at all. It remains unclear whether this could be a sign of Lebanese officials getting Hezbollah on board with a pause in fighting.

Meanwhile, two fresh notes on the question of advancing a second round of US-Iran negotiations:

Iranian media reported that Field Marshal Asim Munir, Chief of Staff of the Pakistani Army, headed a high-ranking political-security delegation from Pakistan to convey the US message and plan the second round of talks, and is scheduled to meet with officials of the Islamic Republic.
Regional mediators are trying to extend the U.S.–Iran cease-fire and restart talks after failed negotiations in Islamabad, but no date or venue has been set. A new round is unlikely before Pakistan completes its regional diplomatic
'Very Close' To War Over, Diplomacy in Reach: Trump

The latest from Trump: The Iran war is "very close to over" with authorities in Tehran eager to agree a peace deal, President Trump claimed in a fresh interview broadcast Wednesday. "We’ve beaten them militarily, totally," Trump told Fox Business in a prerecorded interview. "I think it’s close to over, I view it as very close to over... If I pulled up stakes right now it would take them 20 years to rebuild that country, and we’re not finished." He added: "We’ll see what happens, I think they want to make a deal very badly."

This as the Associated Press has reported the US and Iran are closer to extending a ceasefire and restarting negotiations, even amid the intensifying standoff over the Strait of Hormuz as the US Navy has blockaded it for all shipping leaving Iranian ports or with ties, or under sanction.

The two sides have an "in principle agreement" to pursue further diplomacy after last weekend's failed Islamabad talks. Trump on Tuesday had optimistically cited that the next round could be just two days away. Mediators are said to be pushing for a compromise on outstanding issues including Hormuz and Iran's nuclear program before the April 7 truce expires next week, the news agency said - as they also eye the extension off the initial two weeks.


IRAN'S TASNIM: US-SANCTIONED CONTAINER SHIP GOLBON PASSED THROUGH HORMUZ pic.twitter.com/Wtca8fTZ2b
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) April 15, 2026
However, Iran's Foreign Ministry has made clear the reports about the ceasefire extension are not confirmed, while Axios' Barak Ravid similarly writes - US official tells me: "The US has not agreed to an extension of the ceasefire. There is continued engagement between the U.S. and Iran to reach a deal."

Iran meanwhile is warning that it sees a prolonging of the US blockade as "a prelude to a breach of the ceasefire," a military spokesman said, as featured state TV. Iran's military "will not permit any exports or imports to continue in the Persian Gulf, the Sea of Oman or the Red Sea" if it continues, the spokesman added. 


IRAN'S BAGHAEI: NO SPECIFIC DAY SET FOR NEW US NEGOTIATIONS

Via AP: A billboard depicting U.S. aircraft caught by Iranian armed forces in a fishing net.

 

Trump on China

President Trump says he asked his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping not to supply weapons to Iran, and Xi replied he was not doing so. "I had heard that China’s giving weapons to, I mean - you’re seeing it all over the place - to Iran," Trump also said in the aforementioned Fox Business interview.

"And I wrote him a letter asking him not to do that, and he wrote me a letter saying that essentially he’s not doing that." Major media outlets previously reported that US intelligence indicated China was preparing to ship advanced weaponry to Iran. Beijing's public rejection of the "baseless smear" - as the Foreign Minister called it - has indeed been swift and vehement.

With oil prices remaining elevated, with Brent crude trading about 33% higher than before the start of the war, Trump has issued a new Truth Social claiming China is "very happy that I am permanently opening the Strait of Hormuz." This even though in many cases it is China bound tankers being blocked and turned back by the US naval armada. "This situation will never happen again," Trump added. He is set to meet with Xi in Beijing on May 14-15. On this he wrote that "President Xi will give me a big, fat, hug when I get there in a few weeks. We are going working together smartly, and very well!" But then Trump says "But remember, we are very good at fighting, if we have to..."



More Troops Sent to Mideast

The Washington Post is out with a new report of more troops being sent to the theatre. "The Pentagon is sending thousands of additional troops into the Middle East in the coming days, as the Trump administration attempts to pressure Iran into a deal that could end the weeks long conflict there while considering the possibility of additional strikes or ground operations if a fragile ceasefire deal does not hold."

Already a combined estimated ten thousand US sailors, Marines, and personnel - on at least a dozen US warships, are maintaining the Trump-ordered blockade on Hormuz. So Washington continues to try and build leverage, also with the announced additional forces being prepped, while also sounding optimistic on a potential peace deal - thought to two sides are very far apart especially on the nuclear issue.

Trump has at times still shrugged off the importance of a final peace deal, having told ABC News that while an official peace agreement may not be necessary, "I think a deal is preferable because then they can rebuild." He had said, "They really do have a different regime now. No matter what, we took out the radicals."


Trump:
I wrote a letter to Xi. I asked him not to give Iran weapons. He wrote me a letter, and he is saying that he is essentially not doing that. pic.twitter.com/yrTT9Dwi2V
— Clash Report (@clashreport) April 15, 2026
Tehran (& Houthis) Threaten Red Sea Trade as Lebanon Fighting Persists

Iran's army warned it will block trade through the Red Sea, the Persian Gulf, and the Sea of Oman if the US naval blockade on Iranian ports continues. In a statement carried by Iranian state television, the head of the military's central command center said the "powerful armed forces of the Islamic Republic will not allow any exports or imports to continue in the Persian Gulf, the Sea of Oman and the Red Sea."

According to more via Al Jazeera, he added that Iran will "act decisively to defend its national sovereignty and its interests." One key factor which has outraged Iran is Israel's continued major attacks on Lebanon, after last Wednesday's massive aerial attack on Beirut and elsewhere which left over 300 dead. Israel on Wednesday said that Hezbollah fired 40 rockets into Israel earlier in the morning.

An Israeli drone strike on the Jiyeh road, Lebanon



More Geopolitical Headlines

via Newsquawk...

Effort to extend US-Iran ceasefire has made progress, AP reports citing official; mediators aim to extend the ceasefire for at least another two weeks; both sides gave an “in principle agreement” to extend the ceasefire.
Discussions are underway regarding possible extension of temporary ceasefire between Iran and US, according to Arab diplomatic sources cited by Russia on Wednesday and being reported by Chinese press CCTV.
However, US President Trump said it could end either way, but thinks a deal is preferable because then Iran can rebuild, also said he isn't thinking about extending the ceasefire and doesn't think it will be necessary, according to reported citing ABC reporter on X.
The Pentagon is sending thousands of additional troops into the Middle East in the coming days, WaPo reports citing US officials; in a bid to pressure Iran while mulling the possibility of additional strikes or ground operations if the ceasefire breaks.
US President Trump said it's "very possible" a deal with Iran will be reached by the time the King visits the US later this month (27-29th April), Sky News reported.
US President Trump said he views the war being very close to over, according to Fox News.
US VP Vance said we are negotiating with Iran and ceasefire is holding, adds Iranian negotiators wanted to make a deal.
Feel good about where we are.
Lot of mistrust between the US and Iran, can't be solved overnight.
US Vice President JD Vance is expected to lead a potential second round of talks with Iranian officials should negotiations lead to another face-to-face meeting before the ceasefire expires next week, according to sources familiar cited by CNN.
Pakistan leadership’s overseas tour until April 18th dims prospects of US-Iran talks in Islamabad before April 18th, Pakistani journalist Mallick reported.
Iran is to use alternative ports to those in southern Iran to bypass the US blockade in the Strait, Mehr News reported.
An Iranian VLCC (Very Large Crude Carrier), which was on the US sanctions list, entered the waters of Iran past the US blockade, Fars reported.
Iran secretly acquired a Chinese spy satellite that gave the Islamic republic a powerful new capability to target US military bases across the Middle East during the recent war, according to an FT investigation.
US Central Command said blockade of Iranian ports has been fully implemented and that US forces have completely halted economic trade going into and out of Iran by sea.
US has intercepted eight Iran-linked oil tankers since the start of the blockade, according to WSJ.
New satellite images show Iran digging for missile launchers trapped underground amid a ceasefire, according to CNN.
More than 20 commercial ships have passed through the Strait of Hormuz in the past 24 hours, WSJ reported, citing US officials.
US destroyer interdicted two oil tankers that attempted to leave Iran on Tuesday, according to an official cited by Reuters.
US President Trump reiterates on Truth Social "NATO wasn’t there for us, and they won’t be there for us in the future!".
Europe is accelerating a NATO fallback plan in case US President Trump pulls US out of the treaty, according to WSJ.
US Pentagon is likely to trim its Iran wall funding request, according to WSJ citing Senator Coons who is the top democrat on the Senate appropriations defense committee.
* * *



Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 03:15

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Zelensky Goes Full "Lord Of War" As Ukraine Pitches Battle-Tested War Robots To Highest Bidder
Zelensky Goes Full "Lord Of War" As Ukraine Pitches Battle-Tested War Robots To Highest Bidder

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky took the stage and stated that Ukraine's military-industrial base has created some of the world's most advanced unmanned platforms, already deployed against Russia and forever changing how warfare is conducted.



"For the first time in the history of this war, an enemy position was taken exclusively by unmanned platforms, ground systems, and drones," Zelensky said in a post on X.


The future is already on the front line – and Ukraine is building it. These are our ground robotic systems. For the first time in the history of this war, an enemy position was taken exclusively by unmanned platforms – ground systems and drones. The occupiers surrendered, and the… pic.twitter.com/qLQKfxPdiB
— Volodymyr Zelenskyy / Володимир Зеленський (@ZelenskyyUa) April 13, 2026
He pointed to a growing number of Ukrainian defense firms, including Ratel, TerMIT, Ardal, Rys, Zmiy, Protector, and Volia, claiming their robotic systems have carried out more than 22,000 frontline missions in just three months.



Zelensky's broader message seemed more like a PR pitch for Ukraine's defense firms, which are capable of producing millions of FPV drones annually, as well as deep-strike systems, interceptors, ground robots, and maritime drone boats.


‼️ ZELENSKYY: For the first time in the war, an enemy position was captured entirely by ground robotic systems and drones - without any infantry. A robot entered the most dangerous zones instead of a soldier and took the positions.
«The future is here, on the battlefield, and… pic.twitter.com/maqECUunEj
— Kateryna Lisunova (@KaterynaLis) April 13, 2026
"Ukraine's robots were sculpted by combat. I've seen the video footage of their UGVs taking hostages. This is what future battles will look like," Foundation Robotics co-founder Mike LeBlanc said in a statement.

LeBlanc's team is preparing its Phantom humanoid robots for testing and continues to develop militarized humanoid prototypes designed to operate alongside warfighters in high-risk environments.

In February, Foundation sent two Phantom MK1 robots to Ukraine for testing, according to a TIME Magazine article.



Ukraine's capital markets have been frozen by war, leaving many of the country's battlefield-proven "war unicorns" starved of traditional funding. However, the Middle East conflict has accelerated a new export pathway, as drone warfare and AI-enabled kill chains reshape how militaries think about defense.

Reuters has reported that Gulf states, including Saudi Arabia and the UAE, are exploring Ukrainian interceptor drones as a more affordable response to the emergence of Iranian one-way attack drones. At the same time, Ukrainian firms or their European subsidiaries are eyeing U.S. civilian and defense markets to sell their combat-tested systems. The first plausible path into the U.S. market appears to be through affordable counter-drone solutions and other layered air-defense technology.

Meanwhile, so-called "experts" cited by The Moscow Times called Zelensky's X posts "mainly a PR move," but highlighted how robots "are already transforming both tactics and strategy" in the four-year war. 

Zelensky is correct: "The future is already on the front line.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 05:45

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Speculation Explodes Following Disappearance Of 10th Expert With UFO And Nuclear Secrets
Speculation Explodes Following Disappearance Of 10th Expert With UFO And Nuclear Secrets

Authored by Steve Watson via Modernity.news,

Following the revelation that yet another government contractor with links to nuclear secrets and suspected dark project UAP information has vanished, speculation as to what exactly is going on has massively intensified.



The case of Steven Garcia, a 48-year-old property custodian at the Kansas City National Security Campus in Albuquerque, New Mexico, marks the latest entry in a disturbing sequence of deaths and vanishings among individuals connected to NASA, nuclear weapons components, and sensitive aerospace research.

Los Angeles Magazine contributor Lauren Conlin joined “Jesse Weber Live” to discuss the case, noting its eerie parallels to prior incidents.



Garcia’s disappearance is being framed as the 10th missing person case in the UFO mystery.



The disturbing pattern of deaths continues to baffle.



Garcia was last seen leaving his Albuquerque home on foot on August 28, 2025, carrying only a handgun. He left behind his phone, keys, wallet, and car. Officials have described him as potentially a danger to himself, but no trace has been found in the remote area where he lived.

Conlin emphasized the chilling similarities during the NewsNation segment. “This one is chilling to me because, as you said it echoes Neal McCasland’s disappearance. It was like the same thing in the state of New Mexico,” she stated. McCasland, a retired Air Force major general with deep UFO community ties, vanished from the same region earlier in 2026.

Garcia held top security clearance at the Kansas City National Security Campus (KCNSC), which manufactures over 80 percent of the non-nuclear components for U.S. military nuclear weapons.

“So Stephen Garcia, I mean he had a top security clearance at KCNSC,” Conlin explained. “They manufacture 80% of non-nuclear components that go into building military nuclear weapons and I mean he oversaw tens of millions dollars of assets, equipment some classified.”

She added that Garcia’s role involved handling “some classified, some not,” leaving open questions about his knowledge base. “We don’t know what was going on in this guy’s head right, the officials had said that he may have been a danger to himself.”

Neighbors noted he lived in a very remote area and worked in aerospace research. Conlin even raised a provocative possibility on air: “I have to wonder, again I know this sounds crazy but it could be an option here is the government doing this? Are they taking out their own people because of XYZ.”

The timing adds to the intrigue. Garcia’s disappearance occurred amid heightened congressional scrutiny of UAP (unidentified anomalous phenomena) videos and related programs, including a deadline set by Rep. Anna Luna for the release of specific footage.



Multiple individuals on the list of those who have vanished or died worked at or with NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), Los Alamos National Laboratory, or Air Force Research Laboratory projects involving asteroid defense, rocket engines, and classified aerospace systems.

No official connections have been publicly confirmed by law enforcement between the cases, yet the geographic clustering in New Mexico and California, combined with shared professional networks in nuclear and space tech, continues to fuel speculation.

Online discussions on X and Reddit’s r/UFOs and related communities have exploded with theories attempting to explain the pattern. Many users point to foreign intelligence operations, suggesting adversaries like China or Russia may be targeting U.S. experts to steal or neutralize knowledge of advanced technologies, including those potentially linked to UAP reverse-engineering programs. Ex-FBI officials have been cited in reports noting that foreign services have long pursued Americans with critical tech secrets.

Others speculate a domestic cover-up angle: that insiders with knowledge of classified UAP programs or non-human technology are being silenced to delay or control disclosure efforts, especially as Congress pushes for more transparency on UAP videos and related footage. Some tie the cases to specific projects like advanced alloys (e.g., Mondaloy) or propulsion systems funded through overlapping NASA, DoE, and Air Force channels.

A smaller but vocal group questions whether personal factors—extreme stress from high-clearance work or mental health crises—could explain the cluster, though critics argue the sheer number and similarities make coincidence unlikely.

Calls for an independent task force or deeper FBI probe appear frequently in threads, with users linking the pattern to historical UFO lore around sites like Roswell and Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.

Whatever the explanation, the cases underscore ongoing questions about transparency in America’s most sensitive scientific and defense programs. As more details emerge on Garcia and the others, the public demand for answers only intensifies. The full picture may yet reveal connections that challenge assumptions about how these secrets are guarded—and at what cost.

Your support is crucial in helping us defeat mass censorship. Please consider donating via Locals or check out our unique merch. Follow us on X @ModernityNews.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 06:30

BBC Formula One
Open 
Puss in Boots, voiced by Antonio Banderas, is on an exciting quest
Puss teams up with a fellow thieving feline and Humpty Dumpty to go on an exciting quest.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
LIV Golf to continue 'at full throttle' amid collapse rumours
LIV Golf chief executive Scott O'Neil tells players that the 2026 season will continue uninterrupted amid rumours that the tour is on the verge of collapse.

The Hill
Open 
House Republicans bristle at Senate-driven DHS plan
House Republicans are not pleased with what is shaping up to be a Senate-driven plan to end the record-long Department of Homeland Security (DHS) shutdown, bristling at again being told what to do by the upper chamber and raising objections that could be land mines for the proposal. GOP leaders want to fund Immigration and...

The Hill
Open 
Mejía, Hathaway clash in New Jersey race to fill Sherrill's House seat: What to know
Voters in northern New Jersey will head to the polls Thursday to decide who should fill Gov. Mikie Sherrill's (D) former House seat for the remainder of the year. Republican Joe Hathaway, a councilman in Randolph, N.J., is running against former Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) campaign aide Analilia Mejia (D) and independent Alan Bond, who...

The Hill
Open 
Andy Beshear makes waves in Democratic circles as Southern moderate
Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear is beginning to break through in Democratic circles. At last week’s National Action Network (NAN) conference — a key gathering of Black leaders and activists — Beshear stood out among a crowded field of potential contenders, catching the attention of the Rev. Al Sharpton.   Sharpton, who is the founder of...

The Hill
Open 
Sudan’s prime minister claims victory; counts on Trump for peace 
KHARTOUM, Sudan — Sudan’s army-appointed prime minister declared victory last week in the long-running civil war against the rebel Rapid Support Forces, while holding court with foreign journalists in a borrowed conference room of the minerals department. The ad hoc meeting space represents the Sudanese Armed Forces attempt to exercise a degree of normalcy in...

The Hill
Open 
Kennedy's new podcast might satisfy MAHA, but it won't save 'Republican bacon'
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s new podcast stands to gratify his "Make America Healthy Again" (MAHA) base after recent letdowns, though whether it will be able to energize this voting bloc ahead of the midterms remains dubious. This latest project from Kennedy comes as his place within the Trump administration has...

The Hill
Open 
El-Sayed, McMorrow neck-in-neck in Michigan Democratic Senate primary: Poll 
Democrats Abdul El-Sayed and Mallory McMorrow are neck-and-neck in new polling on the competitive primary for Senate in Michigan, besting Rep. Haley Stevens (D-Mich.) in the race for a rare open seat. A new Emerson College Polling/WOOD-TV survey found 24 percent of likely primary voters in Michigan each support El-Sayed, the former Wayne County health...

The Hill
Open 
Tensions over AI reach new high after violent attacks
Two violent attacks against OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and a city council member are prompting new fears over whether the debate around the technology has turned dangerous. Tensions reached a new high this week as technology leaders in Washington, D.C., and Silicon Valley quickly blamed the anti-AI rhetoric for the recent violence, while AI opposition...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
South Africa's Malema sentenced to jail on gun charges
The EFF opposition politician was convicted of firing a rifle at a political rally eight years ago. The court has granted him leave to appeal the sentence.

Mail Online
Open 
Meghan's back in tights! After complaining she had to wear 'inauthentic nude pantyhose' as a working royal, the Duchess dons nylons in sunny Melbourne
Prince Harry and Meghan are currently embarking on a four-day quasi-royal tour of Australia, with an itinerary that includes a mix of charity and business events across the country.

ZDNet News
Open 
This stroller turns into a carry on-suitcase, and I recommend it for traveling parents
The TernX aims to make airport travel with a child easier. Here's how to decide if the high price tag is worth it for you.

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11499 Colocation - Planned Datacentre Maintenance - Sandbrook (New)
The maintenance team are working on the cooling units in the DC2 rooms OC5 & OC8.




Start: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 08:00

End: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 17:00

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 11:19

Status: Up

Maintenance: Planned

Wired Top Stories
Open 
MAGA Indians Went All In on Trump. Many Right-Wingers Can’t Stand Them
South Asians are a powerful, visible minority in the Trump administration. They’re also facing a racist backlash, fueled in part by the white nationalist Groyper movement.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Where the DOGE Operatives Are Now
WIRED tracked down some of the most prominent figures of last year’s DOGE invasion. Here's where they are now—in government and beyond.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
The Star Trek Communicator Is Now a High-End Wristwatch
This luxury Swiss watch brand has gone where no one has gone before. Unfortunately, the price is out of this world too.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Tempo Prepared Meal Subscription Review (2026): Surprisingly Tasty
After testing 14 meals from Tempo, a spin-off subscription service from Home Chef, a colleague and I were surprised by how much we liked them. But lord, there's lots of chicken

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Robot Vacuum Throwdown: Shark Versus Dyson (2026)
I let Shark’s and Dyson’s new AI-powered robot vac-mops loose in my home. One was a clear winner.

Mail Online
Open 
Rents DIDN'T rise at the start of this year for first time in almost a decade: What do tenants now pay in your area?
Monthly rents at the beginning of the year stagnated for the first time since 2017, in welcome news for cash-strapped tenants.

Mail Online
Open 
Netflix fans already divided after first trailer for Little House On The Prairie reboot - with streamer attacked for 'shattering childhoods' because 'the original can't be replaced'
The original iteration of the Western historical drama aired for nine seasons from 1974 to 1983, starring Michael Landon and Melissa Gilbert.

Mail Online
Open 
Fish restaurant boss is 'deeply disappointed' after animal rights activist was let off the hook for grabbing lobster and throwing it into harbour 'like a cricket ball'
Eco-warrior Emma Smart, 47, stormed into Catch at the Old Fish Market in Weymouth, Dorset, and 'freed' the lobster which she believed was going to be eaten.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Eddie Howe faces familiar foes with Newcastle reign at a crossroad | Louise Taylor
Newcastle face Bournemouth on Saturday with the manager under increasing pressure at St James’ ParkEddie Howe has reason to believe that April really is the cruellest month.This time last year Newcastle’s manager was hospitalised with pneumonia and, 12 months later, he can barely switch on a radio or glance at a newspaper without receiving yet another reminder he is “under pressure”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Europe live: Russia ‘does not deserve’ lifting of sanctions, Zelenskyy says, after deadly overnight strikes in Ukraine
Ukrainian president says nearly 700 Russian drones and 19 ballistic missiles mostly targeted Kyiv, Odesa and DniproResponding to Zelenskyy’s comments on sanctions (10:06), the European Commission said that “giving any relief in terms of sanctions … vis a vis Russia is not helpful in maintaining the pressure” on Moscow to end its aggression against Ukraine.“It should be ironic that Russia is actually benefiting from the war in the Middle East,” the commission’s chief spokesperson Paula Pinho told reporters. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Justin Trudeau at Coachella? That’s just wrong: at a certain age, things must change
If you have to consult the Reddit thread ‘am I too old for Coachella?’, then the answer is probably ‘yes’This morning, over breakfast, in the course of discussing the week’s news, I happened to say the word “Coachella” in front of my two scornful 11-year-olds, whose heads snapped up from their screens in unison. “How have you heard of Coachella?” said one in amazement. “How have you heard of Coachella?” I replied. They exchanged a look with which I’ve become increasingly familiar – namely, the “here we go” look reserved by the very young for the very middle-aged. “What is Coachella, then?” I said, to which they replied: “It’s where influencers go.”This is, of course, an accurate summary of what the California music and arts festival has become in the 27 years since its inception, but that’s not why I bring it up. The festival, which is running this week, has featured Jack White, FKA Twigs and Sabrina Carpenter, but most of the publicity has gone on the audience; specifically, on the attendance of Justin Trudeau, the former prime minister of Canada, who, along with his girlfriend, Katy Perry, was photographed dancing to Justin Bieber and squatting chairless on a kerb, red plastic cups perched on their knees. Continue reading...

BBC Formula One
Open 
The Chequered Flag Podcast
How are F1’s smallest team performing so well?

BBC Formula One
Open 
Do you have to be a millionaire to become an F1 driver?
Andrew Benson assesses how much money is needed to reach Formula 1 and why costs have increased so much.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Minister considers banning over-the-counter flea treatments for pets
Ministers are considering restricting spot-on treatments and collars to prescriptions from vets and medical professionals.

Mac Rumours
Open 
iPhone 18 Pro Variable Aperture Camera Enters Production
Apple has started ramping up its supply chain for a new variable aperture camera system expected to debut in the iPhone 18 Pro and Pro Max this September, reports Korea's ETNews.





Apple has never implemented a variable aperture on an iPhone. From the iPhone 14 Pro through the iPhone 17 Pro, the main camera uses a fixed ƒ/1.78 aperture, meaning the lens remains fully open at all times when capturing images.



In contrast, a variable aperture lets the camera control how much light reaches the sensor. In low-light conditions, it opens to admit more light, while in bright scenes, it closes to avoid overexposure. This should also give users more control over depth of field.



In December 2024, Apple supply chain analyst Ming-Chi Kuo was first to say that that the main rear camera on both ‌iPhone 18 Pro‌ models will offer variable aperture. A report from October 2025 said Apple was moving ahead with plans to bring the technology to next-generation iPhones and was discussing components with suppliers.



According to industry sources cited by today's report, Chinese supplier Sunny Optical has already started producing the actuators that enable the aperture mechanism, while camera module assembly will follow in early summer. Apple's primary camera partner LG Innotek is said to be preparing to begin production around June or July, with dedicated equipment being installed at its Gumi facility in South Korea. Module makers such as Cowell are also expected to take part in the process.



LG Innotek is reportedly likely to take on a larger share of production for the main camera module due to the system's added complexity. A similar thing happened when Apple adopted a folded tetraprism zoom lens in the iPhone 15 Pro Max, where LG Innotek initially served as the sole supplier.

10 Reasons to Wait for the iPhone 18 Pro

The ‌iPhone 18 Pro‌ and ‌iPhone 18 Pro‌ Max are expected to be announced alongside Apple's first foldable iPhone sometime around September.Related Roundup: iPhone 18 ProThis article, 'iPhone 18 Pro Variable Aperture Camera Enters Production' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mail Online
Open 
What men should NEVER wear to a wedding: Style expert reveals the sartorial mistakes that will horrify the bride - and the sharp alternatives that will guarantee you look the part
The Daily Mail spoke to expert Josh Isles at The Wedding Travel Company, for insight into how men can look sharp and feel at ease, whatever the setting.

Mail Online
Open 
From Philadelphia to Copella juice and Tyrell's crisps...The middle-class kitchen staples may not be as good for you than cheap own-brand alternatives
Splurging on expensive, branded food items rather than own-brand alternatives can often feel like a well-deserved treat. But in reality the cheaper version can include fewer calories.

Mail Online
Open 
Former churchwarden jailed for murdering his university lecturer lover has his conviction quashed after appeal
Benjamin Field, who was jailed for life in 2019 for the murder of university lecturer Peter Farquhar, has had his conviction quashed at the Court of Appeal.

Mail Online
Open 
Wayne Lineker's mystery love interest revealed: King Of Ibiza, 63, dating Irish model Dahna McMillian, 29, with a famous dad - and he's whisked her away on a lavish trip to the Maldives
Wayne Lineker's new mystery love interest is an Irish model called Dahna McMillian, whose father Lennie is a famous sportsman. 

BBC UK News
Open 
Son admits preventing lawful burial of mum after storing her body in freezer
Christopher Phillips kept the body of his mum in a chest freezer at home in Porthcawl.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Ekitike to miss rest of season and World Cup with ruptured Achilles
France striker Hugo Ekitike will miss the World Cup after suffering a rupture of the Achilles tendon during Liverpool's Champions League defeat by Paris St-Germain on Tuesday.

Sky News Home
Open 
Church warden serving life for murder of university lecturer has conviction quashed
A former church warden who was jailed for life for the murder of a university lecturer has had his conviction quashed by the Court of Appeal.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Channel 4 programming chief Ian Katz to leave after nearly nine years
Exit of former Newsnight editor as chief content officer comes after appointment of new CEO Priya DograChannel 4’s content chief, Ian Katz, who holds responsibility for the broadcaster’s £650m annual programming budget and output, is to leave after almost nine years in the post.Katz, a former senior executive at the Guardian, became the channel’s director of programmes in January 2018 after moving from the BBC where he was editor of Newsnight. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Live Nation and Ticketmaster ran a monopoly over big US venues, jury finds
Concert giant Live Nation and its subsidiary Ticketmaster have had a harmful monopoly over big music venues, a jury in the US has found.

Mail Online
Open 
Jeremy Clarkson's choir land starring role in new Clarkson's Farm after dazzling judges and viewers on Britain's Got Talent in move to 'take show in more uplifting direction after seriously dark series'
During their audition for the ITV show, the group - aged between 27 and 74 - performed a rendition of 'One Day Like This' by Elbow.

Mail Online
Open 
Paris Fury plays matchmaker as she attempts to set her son Prince, 14, up with Princess Andre, 18, in awkward moment from their Netflix series
In scenes from the new show At Home With The Furys, which dropped on Sunday, Paris could be seen introducing Princess, 18, with her son Prince, 14.

BBC Technology News
Open 
TV for dogs booms but are they watching?
TV channels for dogs are multiplying but research is mixed on whether dogs are watching.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Move over matcha: how ube cocktails and coffees are hitting the UK’s sweet spot
Brightly coloured yam, long enjoyed in east Asia, has been appearing in drinks, desserts – and, of course, TikTok feedsBright purple coffees and cocktails made with a root vegetable called ube have hit the high street in the UK after the yam’s striking hue caused a sensation on social media. Many are calling ube the “new matcha”, and it has a nutty, creamy, sweet taste, like a mix between coconut and vanilla.Ube coloured and flavoured drinks became popular in the US last year, after an earlier boom in Australia. Farmers in the Philippines, where the root vegetable is often sourced, have been struggling to meet demand. Continue reading...

The Register
Open 
Microsoft announces product it doesn't want you to buy: Extended security updates for old Exchange, and Skype for Biz
Just migrate already, would you? But if you can't, Redmond will take your cash Microsoft will keep delivering security updates for old versions of Exchange Server and Skype for Business Server, after admitting that some customers aren't ready to make the move to newer products.…

Mail Online
Open 
The staple groceries that could vanish from supermarket shelves this summer if Middle East crisis continues
Carbon dioxide (CO2) supplies are predicted to drop should the conflict last into the summer, which could see UK shoppers face less variety of some items on the shelves.

Mail Online
Open 
Wellwishers donate more than £25,000 to charity after ultra marathon runner died trying to beat record for 234-mile route in memory of his friend
David Parrish, 35, was attempting to complete the fastest ever crossing of the Cape Wrath Trail in honour of his late friend, Luke Ireland. He was discovered in the remote Kintail mountains.

Mail Online
Open 
Popular chain Franco Manca to shut 16 pizza restaurants after being hit by 'disproportionately high' taxes - with 200 jobs at risk
The pizza chain also cited a lack of business rates relief for restaurants as it said a minority of its sites were 'no longer sustainable'.

BBC UK News
Open 
Son admits preventing lawful burial of his mum found in chest freezer
Christopher Phillips kept the body of his mum in a chest freezer at home in Porthcawl.

Russia Today News
Open 
Pakistan-mediated US-Iran talks nearing breakthrough – media

Mail Online
Open 
Sort Your Life Out fans rush to Stacey Solomon's defence as critic shares cynical theory about why she embraces her natural grey hair on show
The popular programme hit our screens in 2021 and follows the former Loose Women star help people declutter their pads and transform them into their dream home.

Mail Online
Open 
The Ed Sheeran effect: The number of light-skinned redheads is surging in Europe - and scientists don't know why
Redheads who were teased in the school playground now have the last laugh - as a study reveals their numbers are surging thanks to natural selection.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Blades of the Guardians review – swords to the fore in martial arts master Yuen Woo-ping’s wuxia heaven
Impressive film is full of exquisite fight scenes and action-movie stalwarts who overcome a ridiculously tangled plotRecently becoming the most successful wuxia film of all time at the Chinese box office, Blades of the Guardians offers a duly impressive spectacle, chock-full of epic set-pieces that lean more on physical effects than CGI, and of course lashings of exquisitely choreographed fight scenes mostly using – as the title suggests – swords.One wouldn’t expect anything else, given it is directed by veteran fight choreographer Yuen Woo-ping, best known to western audiences for his contributions to films such as Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, the Matrix movies and Kill Bill. Asian viewers might revere him more for directing classics such as Drunken Master, the Tiger Cage pictures, Iron Monkey and many more. In addition, Blades puts megastar Wu Jing at the centre of the story, a performer who got his big break back in the 90s working with Yuen on Tai Chi Boxer. From there, Yuen fills out the cast with lots of stalwart action-movie faces, including good ol’ Jet Li as a levitating evil general and Tony Leung Ka-fai as a noble father, plus up-and-coming faces like popstar/actor Yu Shi as a bounty hunter and Chinese opera star Chen Lijun as a plucky princess who’s handy with a bow and arrow. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Rebuilding review – Josh O’Connor stoically pieces a life back together after wildfire trauma
After losing his property, O’Connor’s rancher finds himself relocated to a trailer park and starts the long road to healing in this subdued, sweet dramaHere is a sweet, sad country song of a movie directed by Max Walker-Silverman; stoic and subdued. Josh O’Connor plays Dusty, a Colorado rancher who has just been hit by a wildfire, losing to the flames property which had been in the family for generations. The movie begins with the stark panorama of charred trees in a scorched and arid landscape; the farmland is still his, but utterly barren for the forthcoming decade, a grim assessment made by a bank official who rejects Dusty’s application for a loan with the land as collateral.Like many local people in the same situation, Dusty now has to live in a spartan trailer in a government-funded emergency camp, and he takes a mortifying job working on the highway. His crisis has meant a new poignancy in his connection with ex-wife Ruby (Meghann Fahy), 10-year-old daughter Callie-Rose (Lily LaTorre) and his kindly, caring but ailing mother-in-law Bess, played by Amy Madigan (recently an Oscar-winner for her performance in Weapons). When Dusty collects Callie-Rose for regular visits, she now has to come to his grim trailer and they have to park up by the local library in his pickup to pinch the wifi so Callie-Rose can do homework on her tablet. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ian Katz to leave role as Channel 4 programming chief in the autumn
Exit of former Newsnight editor after eight years comes after appointment of new chief executive Priya DograChannel 4’s content chief, Ian Katz, who holds responsibility for the broadcaster’s £650m annual programming budget and output, is to leave after almost nine years in the post.Katz, a former senior executive at the Guardian, became the channel’s director of programmes in January 2018, having moved from being the editor of BBC’s Newsnight. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Scrutiny of Hegseth mounts as Democrats attempt to rein in Trump administration over Iran war – US politics live
House Democrats file impeachment articles against Trump’s defense secretary as Senate Democrats fail to pass measures to check White House power over Iran warSign up for the Breaking News US emailThe first impeachment article alleges that Pete Hegseth started the conflict with Iran “without a declaration of war or specific statutory authorization by the Congress,” and “knowingly exposing members of the Armed Forces of the United States to substantial and foreseeable risk of injury or death.”Another article held Hegseth responsible for the strike on an Iranian primary school on 28 February – the day the United States and Israel began bombing Iran – which killed at least 170 people, including students and teachers.Trump threatened to fire Jerome Powell if he stays on as US Federal Reserve chair past the end of his tenure and doubled down on a criminal investigation into renovations of the central bank’s headquarters.Wall Street scaled a fresh all-time high amid growing optimism among investors that the US-Israel war on Iran will soon be over.The supreme court justice Ketanji Brown Jackson has delivered a sustained attack on her conservative colleagues’ use of emergency orders to benefit the Trump administration.Trump defended his consumption of diet soda by suggesting it might help prevent cancer, according to recent comments shared by Mehmet Oz.The US and Iran have been in indirect talks aimed at extending the two-week ceasefire beyond its expiry on 22 April, as Pakistan’s army chief arrived in Tehran to continue mediation efforts.John Eastman, the Republican legal scholar who convinced Trump he could stay in office despite losing the 2020 election, lost his license to practice law in California. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
South African politician Julius Malema given five-year jail term for gun offence
Leader of leftwing Economic Freedom Fighters was convicted last year for firing rifle in the air at 2018 rallyThe South African leftwing politician Julius Malema has been sentenced to five years in prison for firing a rifle in the air at a political rally in 2018.Lawyers for the leader of the Economic Freedom Fighters, South Africa’s fourth largest political party, immediately sought leave to appeal. Legal arguments are ongoing. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Arsenal fans around the world on the title race: ‘I feel panic, anxiety, everything’
Supporters everywhere will be watching Sunday’s big game against Manchester City, united by nerves My father is a Liverpool fan. When he was watching a game I saw an advertisement for the Premier League broadcast and saw Thierry Henry scoring a goal and that was it. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
My son is getting glasses for the first time. He’s fine about it but I’m an emotional wreck | Stuart Heritage
Fortunately, he doesn’t have the childhood insecurities that led to me picking glasses that I hoped would make me invisible – he’s happy to look like Prue LeithThis afternoon, I will take my son to the optician to pick up his first pair of glasses. He is entirely unfazed by this new chapter. I, on the other hand, am a mess.Between the ages of five and 36 (at which point, fed up with sticky toddler fingerprints smeared across my glasses, I had laser treatment), I was wildly shortsighted. So shortsighted that, even with the thinnest available lenses, I still looked like a boy with a pair of jam jars strapped to his face. And while there is obviously nothing wrong with wearing glasses, I am acutely aware of the effect they can have on a young person. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
I was one of Lena Dunham’s haters. I want to say I’m sorry | Dave Schilling
The truth is, we were all just jealousTo Lena Dunham, I need to say that I’m sorry. I’m sure she’ll never read this, since she doesn’t seem like the kind of person who Googles herself. If I was Lena, I certainly wouldn’t. The internet is full of mockery, sarcasm and outright cruelty. I’ve been part of the problem, too. Lena and I were starting off our careers at the same time, those halcyon days of the 2010s, when people still subscribed to cable TV and social media was just a fun new tool to post random thoughts and photos of your brunch. Now, if you post a photo of a meal, people will scream at you for bragging that you can afford food.Fourteen years since HBO’s Girls turned Dunham from an indie film darling into a mainstream superstar, the writer/director is now releasing a memoir that reflects on her time in the cultural crosshairs. The headline of a New York Times interview reads: “Lena Dunham Is Still Trying to Figure Out Why People Hated Her So Much.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Europe live: Russia ‘does not deserve’ lifting of sanctions, Zelenskyy says, after deadly overnight strikes in Ukraine
Ukrainian president says nearly 700 Russian drones and 19 ballistic missiles mostly targeted Kyiv, Odesa and DniproFollowing the overnight attacks, the Ukrainian military struck two oil depots in Russia-occupied Crimea and infrastructure in Russia’s southern port of Tuapse, Kyiv’s drone forces commander said on the Telegram app.Meanwhile, Russia’s defence ministry claimed that its overnight attack was focused on striking production facilities for cruise missiles and drones and energy targets, which it said supplied Ukraine’s armed forces, Reuters reported. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
Apology after 74-year-old waits 10 hours for ambulance
Julie Mayo says her mother, Irene Lowry, who has Parkinson's, was left "in agony" on the floor with a broken shoulder during the long wait.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Minister to propose £100 oil payment for lower income households in NI
The scheme, which would affect about 340,000 households, needs to be approved by the executive.

Sky News Home
Open 
'Acts of pure evil': UK-born man accused of two murders and a shooting in US
A UK-born man is accused of murdering two women and shooting a homeless man in an apparently random attack.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
England's Botterman & Campbell out of Six Nations
England prop Hannah Botterman and hooker May Campbell will play no part in the Women's Six Nations as they require surgery.

Mail Online
Open 
List of Franco Manca restaurants set to close as popular pizza chain blames 'disproportionately high taxes' - with more than 200 jobs at risk
Half of the doomed Franco Manca branches are in London, with more than 200 jobs at risk overall from the scaling back.

CNET News
Open 
Vitamix Is Quietly Phasing Out the Popular (and Affordable) Explorian. I Found Out Why
Much to our surprise, the beloved Explorian E310 is being phased out of production after more than a decade. Here's a look at the new entry-level blender from Vitamix replacing it.

Russia Today News
Open 
BBC unveils ‘devastating’ wave of job cuts amid financial strain

Deutsche Welle
Open 
South Africa's Malema sentenced to jail on gun charges
The EFF opposition politician was convicted of firing a rifle at a political rally eight years ago. Lawyers say they will file an appeal immediately.

Mail Online
Open 
Newsletter Exclusive: How to reduce your brain's biological age in just three months, by a world-leading neurologist whose regime is clinically proven to work. Use our interactive brain calculator - and follow the guide
For decades, scientists and doctors believed that Alzheimer's disease was mostly genetic and certainly not preventable.

Mail Online
Open 
Do you have avoidable wrinkles? Skincare expert reveals the 7 ageing mistakes we're ALL guilty of - even celebs! (and why you need to stop sleeping on your side)
Award-winning industry leader Smita Ahluwalia, based in London, believes healthy skin is the foundation of a person's confidence.

Mail Online
Open 
Dubai's famous Jumeirah Burj al Arab hotel closes for major refurbishments as tourists avoid UAE due to Iran war
The seven-star Burj Al Arab has announced a 'carefully phased' renovation programme, with a temporary closure expected to last 18 months.

Mail Online
Open 
Cruel Intentions star Ryan Phillippe leaves fans hot under the collar while showing off his ripped physique in a rare thirst trap in his sauna
Cruel Intentions fans gushed Ryan Phillippe has 'still got it' as he showcased his ripped physique in a rare thirst trap in his sauna on Instagram on Thursday.

Mail Online
Open 
Reeves is accused of using woke 'gender parity' concerns to block defence spending as fears grow Britain is defenceless against Putin
The Chancellor has been accused of stalling major plans to pouring much needed money into the beleaguered Armed Forces because of poor 'gender parity'.

Stratechery
Open 
An Interview with F1 Driver and Venture Capitalist Nico Rosberg About the Drive to Win
An interview with former F1 driver and current venture capitalist Nico Rosberg about finding the mental edge and maximizing opportunities.

Propublica
Open 
3D-Printed Homes, an Abandoned $590,000 Deposit, the FBI: What Really Happened in This Small Town?
The post 3D-Printed Homes, an Abandoned $590,000 Deposit, the FBI: What Really Happened in This Small Town? appeared first on ProPublica.

TechRadar News
Open 
'ChatGPT keeps getting flagged over and over again' — Gemini is the best AI at mimicking human writing and evading detection

TechRadar News
Open 
The Future Games Show Summer Showcase, FGS Live, and the PC Gaming Show have been confirmed for June, with the Showcase to feature 'world premieres, exclusive trailers, and stealth demo drops'

TechRadar News
Open 
Ninja's gorgeous 8-in-1 multicooker returns to its record-low price on Amazon

TechRadar News
Open 
Millions of hotel goers may have been exposed after hackers steal data and leak it on Telegram

TechRadar News
Open 
Why ‘just enough to succeed’ should be your only approach to tooling

Digital Trends
Open 
OnePlus Pad 4 is a solid iPad antidote for Android loyalists, and it’s about to land in stores
For Android users who’ve always looked at the iPad with envy, the OnePlus Pad 4 is shaping up to be a very convincing antidote—and it is not hard to see why. OnePlus is pitching its next flagship tablet as a big-screen, keyboard-friendly, ultra-slim machine that can handle work, streaming, and gaming without feeling like an […]

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
SNL alum Pete Davidson lists his private, upstate N.Y. home on 6 acres for $2.27 million
“Saturday Night Live” alum Pete Davidson has listed his upstate New York property for $2.27 million after owning it for just three years, so he can be closer to his family, who reside on Staten Island.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
TSMC beat-and-raise shows chip momentum is continuing
TSMC is cognizant of “macroeconomic uncertainties” perhaps becoming a factor but thus far, the pace of the global AI buildout is unrelenting.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Retail investors missed the rally. Why strategist Tom Lee says they’ll lead the next one.
Fundstrat found that while retail investors sold aggressively as the market bottomed at the end of March, hedge funds were buying the dip

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
‘Felony charges are pending’: My mother set up a trust for my sibling who stole $100,000 from a bank. Can the trust be seized?
“Felony charges are pending.”

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
I’m selling my law practice and retiring. Do I pay off the $2 million mortgage on my office building — or rent it out?
“My wife is not a fan of tying up $2 million of equity in one building.”

BBC World News
Open 
Wanted activist arrested in South Africa over support for Benin coup plot
Keba Seba is known for opposing French influence in Africa and backing West Africa's military leaders.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Europe live: Russia ‘does not deserve’ lifting of sanctions, Zelenskyy says, after deadly overnight strikes in Ukraine
Ukrainian president says nearly 700 Russian drones and 19 ballistic missiles mostly targeted Kyiv, Odesa and DniproMeanwhile, Russia’s defence ministry claimed that its overnight attack was focused on striking production facilities for cruise missiles and drones and energy targets, which it said supplied Ukraine’s armed forces, Reuters reported.But the Ukrainian authorities said that the strikes killed a number of civilians, including two teenage children, with 16 dead, and some 100 wounded in total. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
SNP would set maximum price for essential foods, says Swinney as he fears costs affecting nutrition in Scotland – UK politics live
SNP leader and first minister launches election manifesto as party fights to remain in power at HolyroodSwinney says this is a manifesto for the whole of Scotland.He confirms that the SNP would argue for the Scottish power to have more control over energy policy (still largely reserved to Westminter). He says:The problem is not that we do not have the energy. The problem is that Westminster has the power. This election is our opportunity to take those powers and put them into Scotland’s hands. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: Netanyahu ‘to speak to Lebanese leader today’ but Beirut reportedly unaware of plans
Israeli minister says pair to speak after ‘many years of total disconnect’ but reports say that Lebanese were not aware of plans first outlined by TrumpUS and Iran in indirect talks to extend two-week ceasefireIran has stopped all petrochemical exports to prioritise domestic supply and prevent shortages of raw materials, Reuters reported.The state-owned National Petrochemical Company ordered firms to suspend exports until further notice. Continue reading...

Computer Weekly
Open 
UK government’s £500m sovereign AI fund bids to commercialise research
The UK government is launching a £500m Sovereign AI Unit to boost artificial intelligence startups and drive economic growth through strategic and long-term investments

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Iran Boasts It Is Fast Rebuilding Bridges & Rail Lines After US Wrought Destruction
Iran Boasts It Is Fast Rebuilding Bridges & Rail Lines After US Wrought Destruction

Iran is seeking to put out images showing its resiliency after the country was hit with tens of thousands of airstrikes during over a month of the US-Israel Operation Epic Fury, including blowing up bridges, rail lines and other infrastructure.

The US and Israel struck bridges and rail lines to cripple Iran's national transport network. Israel especially adopted attacks against key civilian infrastructure as a battle tactic, in hopes that eventually there would be a groundswell of anti-Tehran anger domestically, leading to government overthrow.


The bridge that was bombed by Israel and the US in Iran a few days ago, will be operational soon.
Iranian engineers are hard at work. pic.twitter.com/BJYicGKZud
— Sentletse 🇿🇦🇷🇺🇵🇸🇱🇧 (@Sentletse) April 15, 2026
However, Tehran officials and state publications have been boasting of restoring key rail links within days, showcasing the drive of its engineers and its reconstruction capacity.

This actually began happening even while the bombs were still falling while the ceasefire was in effect, with reports that even underground missile silos were being dug out and restored after some 12 hours of being attacked.

President Trump himself repeatedly threatening to bomb bridges, power plants, and other infrastructure to send Iran "back to the Stone Age."

While vital infrastructure and even energy sites have indeed in many cases been obliterated, the lights are still on across the country, save for the persisting government-imposed internet blackout.

Since the fragile ceasefire took effect on April 8, Iranian officials say multiple damaged rail lines and bridges have been restored in record time - sometimes within 40 to 96 hours - using domestic engineering teams. These efforts have showcased by pro-Iran and even sometimes official diplomatic accounts on X.


An incredible railway bridge reconstruction in #Iran after a U.S.-Israel attack.
Speed, precision, and dedicated teamwork: Charbagh railway bridge back in service in just #72 hours🚂. pic.twitter.com/UJl4cL9ENe
— Embassy of Iran in Bulgaria (@IRANinBULGARIA) April 11, 2026
But the war has not yet been fully declared over, after one failed round of peace talks in Pakistan, and as the US still maintains a naval blockade on the Strait of Hormuz.

In many ways the current tense calm is a game of chicken, with each side seeing how much economic pain it can both impose and endure, before the other side blinks and backs down.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 04:15

ZeroHedge News
Open 
UK Voters Call For Lower Taxes & Energy Bills As Economic Concerns Grow
UK Voters Call For Lower Taxes & Energy Bills As Economic Concerns Grow

Via CityAM,


According to a new poll, most British voters want lower energy costs and tax cuts to support growth.


A large majority rated the UK economy as poor and showed little faith in current progress.


Business leaders are also increasingly pessimistic, citing geopolitics and rising costs.

British voters want Rachel Reeves to cut taxes and reduce energy costs in order to focus on growth, as a majority of people felt the UK economy was “poor”, new research has shown.



Polling by Freshwater Strategy for the Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA), a free market think tank, suggested that the vast majority of Brits wanted the Labour government to focus on economic growth more than it currently does. 

The findings back up the Labour government’s primary mission, which is to grow the UK economy. 

But respondents in a survey and focus groups suggested that voters supported small-state policies to deliver improved growth, as much of the public was confused about the measurements used by the government to track achievements. 

Polling found that 77 percent believed energy costs should be reduced, while 72 percent backed lower taxes for workers. A slightly lower portion, 66 per cent, backed tax cuts for businesses. 

When faced with a direct choice, Britons backed economic growth even if it led to some environmental damage, while most also wanted energy to be cheaper, even if it meant slower progress to net zero. 

Taxes and energy costs top Brits’ priorities

Respondents to the survey of 3,000 voters were also more likely to say that GDP growth benefited the government more than individuals. 

In a damning indictment, nearly two-thirds of people (65 per cent) rated the UK economy as “poor” but overestimated the average wealth of Brits compared to Germans, Australians, and Americans. 

Kristian Niemietz, editorial director of the IEA, said the lack of progress made in the last 18 years “should be the number one public policy issue of our time”. 

“While political discourse in Britain may not always reflect it, Britain is clearly not a country that is comfortable with economic stagnation and relative decline,” Niemietz said.

“We still have the social expectations associated with a growing economy. What we do not have is the economic performance to match those expectations.”

Middle East war rattles finance chiefs

Low sentiment across the public reflects wider pessimism among business leaders, with one survey of 79 chief financial officers suggesting that confidence had fallen to a six-year low. 

Deloitte’s finance chief survey suggested that the war in the Middle East had weakened top business leaders’ hopes of an economic recovery, as geopolitics was cited as the top risk. 

Levels of concern around geopolitics were at a record high, according to the survey, while rising energy prices and the prospect of higher interest rates were also among the top risks. 

Deloitte UK chief economist Ian Stewart said: “Rarely in the last 16 years have UK chief financial officers been more focused on cost control than today. 

“This challenging environment is prompting chief financial officers to scale back expectations for margins and sharpen their focus on cost reduction and cash conservation. 

“The immediate priority for finance leaders is to strengthen balance sheets in the face of external headwinds.”

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 05:00

Russia Today News
Open 
Trump wants to ‘rewire’ global oil away from Hormuz – expert (VIDEO)

UK Government News
Open 
Call for evidence launches on pet flea and tick treatments in UK waterways
New drive could help reduce environmental impact

UK Government News
Open 
The Universal Credit, Personal Independence Payment, Jobseeker’s Allowance and Employment and Support Allowance (Claims and Payments) (Amendment) Regulations 2026
Letters between the chair of the Social Security Advisory Committee (SSAC) and DWP Director of Poverty, Family and Disadvantage.

UK Government News
Open 
AAIB Report: Cagatay CGT-50, (UAS registration n/a)
Cagatay CGT-50, (UAS registration n/a), right wing separated from airframe in-flight, Radnor Range, Powys, 5 October 2023

UK Government News
Open 
Russia’s approach to the Easter ceasefire demonstrates its contempt for peace: UK statement to the OSCE
Ambassador Holland says Russia’s approach to the Easter ceasefire demonstrates its contempt for peace, highlighting thousands of ceasefire violations and attempts to distort the narrative. Ukraine made a good faith commitmen…

UK Government News
Open 
On Russian submarine activity in the Atlantic: Joint statement to the OSCE
Ambassador Holland updates on recent Russian activity in the Atlantic, speaking on behalf of Norway, the Netherlands and the UK.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
South Africa's Malema sentenced to jail on gun charges
The left-wing opposition politician was convicted of firing a rifle at a political rally eight years ago. Lawyers say they will file an appeal immediately.

Mail Online
Open 
From the cult-classic Philadelphia to Copella juice and Tyrell's crisps...The middle-class kitchen staples may not be as good for you than cheap own-brand alternatives
Splurging on expensive, branded food items rather than own-brand alternatives can often feel like a well-deserved treat. But in reality the cheaper version can include fewer calories.

Mail Online
Open 
Specialist emergency crews rush to aviation incident unfolding in South Australia after alert was triggered
Emergency services have been called to an unfolding aviation incident.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Gossip around Azzi Fudd and Paige Bueckers’s relationship misreads the WNBA
The former UConn star’s draft night should have been about her talent. Instead, speculation shows how the league is still being viewed through the wrong lensSign up for our WNBA 30 newsletterFor the first time in a while, there was no consensus on who would go No 1 overall in the WNBA draft this year. When the Dallas Wings did make their pick, they chose Azzi Fudd, who had distinguished herself under Geno Auriemma at UConn, including a national championship in 2025.The moment she was picked was pure: a delighted and seemingly nervous Fudd joined WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert onstage. She took photos with her jersey, made it through the ESPN interview that immediately followed, and beamed at her family and teammates in the audience. Paige Bueckers, who played alongside the 23-year-old at UConn and was the No 1 pick for the Wings in 2025, was there also to celebrate a well-deserved honor for Fudd. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
Police warning after protesters demand Epsom rape suspects' descriptions
The force has urged people not to speculate after the rape of a woman outside a church by several men.

The Hill
Open 
Trump’s religious mocking, Iran war inject distractions from domestic policy
President Trump is distracting from his own agenda this week, winning headlines for a series of AI posts invoking Jesus Christ even as his administration seeks to drive home preferred messages on the Iran war and the economy. The White House marked Tax Day by putting Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Small Business Administrator Kelly...

Air Accidents Investigation Branch
Open 
AAIB Report: Cagatay CGT-50, (UAS registration n/a)
Cagatay CGT-50, (UAS registration n/a), right wing separated from airframe in-flight, Radnor Range, Powys, 5 October 2023 | Air Accidents Investigation Branch.

ZDNet News
Open 
Protect your devices with our pick for the best antivirus software, now over 60% off
Bitdefender Total Security offers protection against spam, malware, and more - and the software is heavily discounted on Amazon now.

ZDNet News
Open 
The best small business VoIP providers of 2026: Expert tested and reviewed
We looked at affordable yet feature-rich VoIP providers to help you settle on the perfect phone system. Which service offers the best value for small businesses?

Deutsche Welle
Open 
A court in South Africa has sentenced opposition politician Julius Malema to five years in prison over a 2018 rally firearms incident
He was convicted of firing a rifle at a political rally eight years ago.

Mail Online
Open 
Drivers receive 48,000 parking tickets A DAY from private companies - costing us up to £4.8million in fines
Some 13.1million tickets were issued by parking management firms between April and December last year, according to new analysis of Government data.

Mail Online
Open 
Best affordable perfumes: From M&S to Zara, a beauty editor reveals exactly which High Street fragrances smell as good as designer scents - from just £15.99
As a beauty editor of over 12 years with access to all the newest (and priciest) fragrance launches, it's safe to say that I have a somewhat discerning taste.

BBC UK News
Open 
Police warning after protesters demand Epsom rape suspects' descriptions
Riot police are deployed in Epsom after protesters gathered to demand descriptions of the suspects.

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11497 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned maintenance Stoke City (WMCIT) (New)
One of our Supplier will be carrying out a planned maintenance on Stoke City (WMCIT) exchange. Customers on Freedom Fibre on this exchange will experience an outage during the maintenance work and services should be considered to be at risk for the duration of the maintenance window.

Zen regret any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Fri, 17th Apr 2026 00:05

End: Fri, 17th Apr 2026 06:00

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 10:28

Status: Partial

Maintenance: Planned

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11498 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned maintenance Stoke City (WMCIT) (New)
One of our Supplier will be carrying out a planned maintenance on Stoke City (WMCIT) exchange. Customers on Freedom Fibre on this exchange will experience an outage during the maintenance work and services should be considered to be at risk for the duration of the maintenance window.

Zen regret any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Fri, 17th Apr 2026 00:05

End: Fri, 17th Apr 2026 06:00

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 10:28

Status: Partial

Maintenance: Planned

Wired Top Stories
Open 
The Best Pillows for Neck Pain, Recommended by a Sleep Science Coach (2026)
Neck pain takes many forms, but these WIRED-tested pillows may save your sleep.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Police issue disorder warning after Epsom rape protest
Riot police are deployed in Epsom after protesters gathered to demand descriptions of the suspects.

Mail Online
Open 
Love Island's Zach Noble and his pregnant girlfriend Ava Hirons reveal their baby's gender as they share a sweet gallery of photos
To announce the pregnancy, the couple shared a picture of a baby scan on social media in February.

Mail Online
Open 
Council to prosecute historic hotel after death of 21-year-old woman whose windpipe 'was crushed by falling wardrobe following night out'
Chloe Haynes, 21, was found dead under the heavy wooden wardrobe at the Britannia Adelphi Hotel in Liverpool after travelling to the city for a night out on September 10, 2022.

Mail Online
Open 
From the cult-classic Philadelphia to Copella juice and Tyrell's crisps...The middle-class kitchen staples may not be as good for you than cheap own-brand alternatives
Splurging on expensive, branded food items rather than own-brand alternatives can often feel like a well-deserved treat.

Mail Online
Open 
Jack Whitehall's mother Hilary is left 'despairing' by faux pas with just days to go until his wedding to Roxy Horner
Jack Whitehall's mother Hilary was left raging after her funnyman son gave her incorrect information about his upcoming wedding. 

Mail Online
Open 
First Punch the monkey, now Linh Mai! Adorable baby elephant is the latest internet sensation after being shunned by her mother - as one fan says 'my heart can't take this anymore'
Earlier this year, Punch the monkey captured the hearts of millions across social media, after he was shunned by his mother. Now, an adorable baby Asian elephant has suffered the same fate.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ian Katz to leave role as Channel 4 content chief in the autumn
Exit of former Newsnight editor after eight years comes after appointment of new chief executive Priya DograChannel 4’s content chief, Ian Katz, who holds responsibility for the broadcaster’s £650m annual programming budget and output, is to leave after almost nine years in the post.Katz, a former senior executive at the Guardian, became the channel’s director of programmes in January 2018, having moved from being the editor of BBC’s Newsnight. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Wave of Russian drone and missile attacks kill at least 16 in Ukraine
Meanwhile, a Ukrainian drone attack killed two children in Russia, officials say.

Mac Rumours
Open 
iPhone 18 Pro Variable Aperture Camera Enters Production
Apple has started ramping up its supply chain for a new variable aperture camera system expected to debut in the iPhone 18 Pro and Pro Max this September, reports Korea's ETNews.





Apple has never implemented a variable aperture on an iPhone. From the iPhone 14 Pro through the iPhone 17 Pro, the main camera uses a fixed ƒ/1.78 aperture, meaning the lens remains fully open at all times when capturing images.



In contrast, a variable aperture lets the camera control how much light reaches the sensor. In low-light conditions, it opens to admit more light, while in bright scenes, it closes to avoid overexposure. This should also give users more control over depth of field.



In December 2024, Apple supply chain analyst Ming-Chi Kuo was first to say that that the main rear camera on both ‌iPhone 18 Pro‌ models will offer variable aperture. A report from October 2025 said Apple was moving ahead with plans to bring the technology to next-generation iPhones and was discussing components with suppliers.



According to industry sources cited by today's report, Chinese supplier Sunny Optical has already started producing the actuators that enable the aperture mechanism, while camera module assembly will follow in early summer. Apple's primary camera partner LG Innotek is said to be preparing to begin production around June or July, with dedicated equipment being installed at its Gumi facility in South Korea. Module makers such as Cowell are also expected to take part in the process.



LG Innotek is reportedly likely to take on a larger share of production for the main camera module due to the system's added complexity. A similar thing happened when Apple adopted a folded zoom lens in the iPhone 15 Pro Max, where LG Innotek initially served as the sole supplier.

10 Reasons to Wait for the iPhone 18 Pro

The ‌iPhone 18 Pro‌ and ‌iPhone 18 Pro‌ Max are expected to be announced alongside Apple's first foldable iPhone sometime around September.Related Roundup: iPhone 18 ProThis article, 'iPhone 18 Pro Variable Aperture Camera Enters Production' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mail Online
Open 
The immense power of black holes: Scientists record 'dancing jets' as powerful as 10,000 SUNS coming from voids
Using a radio telescope scanning the entire planet, scientists recorded the 'dancing jets' erupting from a black hole 7,000 light-years from Earth.

Mail Online
Open 
Meghan's back in tights! After complaining she had to wear 'inauthentic nude panythose' as a working royal, the Duchess dons nylons in sunny Melbourne
Prince Harry and Meghan are currently embarking on a four-day quasi-royal tour of Australia, with an itinerary that includes a mix of charity and business events across the country.

Mail Online
Open 
Two major airlines hiking flight prices up by almost £100 due to jet fuel costs
Two European airlines have had to increase their fares for the second time, totalling to nearly £100 on some routes, due to the soaring jet fuel costs.

Mail Online
Open 
Innocent black man arrested after mass stabbing on train near Huntingdon launches formal police complaint over 'racial bias'
The 35-year-old man, who has not been named, was released with no further action after officers established he was not involved.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Things can't go on like this with online safety, Starmer tells tech bosses
It comes as the government continues to consult on whether to ban under-16s from social media in the UK.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
South Africa's Malema sentenced to jail on gun charges
He was convicted of firing a rifle at a political rally eight years ago.

Mail Online
Open 
Moment missile-throwing protesters took on police as furious protests erupted in Epsom demanding description of gang-rape suspects
Footage shows two young boys repeatedly pelting police in Epsom with items taken from inside a ripped black bin bag, with one of them also throwing a traffic cone.

BBC World News
Open 
Turkish police order 83 arrests over online praise for school shootings
At least nine were killed in a school shooting in southern Turkey on Wednesday, a day after another attack injured 16 people at a high school.

BBC UK News
Open 
Minister to propose £100 oil payment for lower income households
The scheme, which would affect about 340,000 households, needs to be approved by the executive.

The Register
Open 
QUIC will soon be as important as TCP – but it's vastly different
Deciphering the third transport protocol's four RFCs is a task to rival the proverbial blind man trying to understand an elephant While Larry was producing most of the content for the "Request/Reponse" chapter for the next edition of our book, I took the lead on writing a section on QUIC, since I have closely followed its development.…

The Register
Open 
Cops hand Motorola £25M no-bid deal to keep 2000-era radios alive
Biz as usual for Brit public sector: ESN replacement is 12 years late and £3B over budget UK police tech buyers have awarded a £25 million no-competition contract for communications technology first commissioned in 2000, with the replacement project 12 years behind schedule and £3 billion over budget.…

The Register
Open 
Obsolete Google nag drowns out vital bar information at Swedish concert hall
Backup and Sync may be dead, but it still knows how to kill the buzz before the ukuleles start Bork!Bork!Bork!  Sweden is arguably the home of bork – think the Swedish Chef from The Muppets – so we are delighted to note an example of the breed turning up north of Stockholm.…

Mail Online
Open 
Killer laughs and fist-bumps on bus after murdering student - before boasting: 'I stabbed him in the back'
Dino Donaldson murdered 21-year-old accounting student Anojan Gnaneswaran at Strawberry Hill station in Twickenham after a disagreement over drugs.

Mail Online
Open 
BBC radio presenter, 53, died of an infection after road crash while on holiday with her family in Canada, inquest hears
Lynda Shahwan, 53, from Heath in Cardiff, hosted the popular 'Plotcast' podcast with Radio Two gardener Terry Walton and had worked across BBC shows for many years.

Mail Online
Open 
Reeves accused of resisting pleas for a major defence spending boost because the military doesn't employ enough women
The Chancellor has been accused of stalling major plans to pouring much needed money into the beleaguered Armed Forces because of poor 'gender parity'.

Mail Online
Open 
Jenny Powell, 58, shows off her incredible figure in a red swimsuit as she braves a cold water lake swim to embrace 'the calm and the chaos'
The TV presenter, 58, who is known for her love of fitness, took to Instagram and shared snaps by the lake as she took a break from work on Greatest Hits radio.

Mail Online
Open 
Devastated wife of newlywed shark attack victim accuses Maldives tour firm of 'serious negligence' after attack near fish processing plant left him fighting for life with amputated leg
The wife of a Spanish doctor who was left fighting for his life after being attacked by a shark on his honeymoon in the Maldives has accused their tour group of 'serious negligence.'

Mail Online
Open 
Revealed: Labour Party donor is the buyer of Nick Candy's £265million mansion in 'Britain's most expensive house sale'
Trading firm co-founder Suneil Setiya has reportedly bought Nick Candy's £265million London mansion, Providence House.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Tesco warns profits could fall amid Iran war uncertainty
Boss Ken Murphy plays down food inflation fears as supermarket’s annual profits rise by 8.5% to £2.4bnBusiness live – latest updatesTesco has warned that profits could fall back in the year ahead, citing increased uncertainty caused by the conflict in the Middle East.Ken Murphy, its chief executive, said that despite concerns about the impact of the closure of the strait of Hormuz on oil, gas and linked chemicals, the UK’s largest supermarket chain was “in good shape” on stocks of fuel for its petrol stations and distribution network. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Europe live: Russia ‘does not deserve’ lifting of sanctions, Zelenskyy says, after deadly overnight strikes in Ukraine
Ukrainian president says nearly 700 Russian drones and 19 ballistic missiles mostly targeted Kyiv, Odesa and DniproThe Kremlin’s latest deadly attack comes after the end of a 32-hour Orthodox Easter truce marred by accusations of mass violations, according to both countries, AFP noted.Peace talks spearheaded by the United States to end the war now grinding through its fifth year have been derailed by US and Israeli war with Iran, it noted. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Contingency plans in place for possible food shortages if Iran war continues, minister confirms – UK politics live
Peter Kyle did not dispute Times’ report that under a ‘reasonable worst-case scenario’ supermarkets might start running out of some itemsSwinney says this is a manifesto for the whole of Scotland.He confirms that the SNP would argue for the Scottish power to have more control over energy policy (still largely reserved to Westminter). He says:The problem is not that we do not have the energy. The problem is that Westminster has the power. This election is our opportunity to take those powers and put them into Scotland’s hands. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
Minister to propose £100 oil payment for lower income households
The scheme, which would affect around 340,000 households, needs to be approved by the executive.

BBC UK News
Open 
Things can't go on like this with online safety, Starmer tells tech bosses
Top executives from firms such as Meta and YouTube will be asked what they are doing to protect children.

Gizmodo
Open 
Kalshi Wants Your ID Whether You Gamble or Not (You Know, for Kids)
The CEO says "we've been thinking about this a lot."

UK Legislation
Open 
Correction Slip
This Order authorises London Luton Airport Limited (referred to in this Order as the undertaker) to undertake works to redevelop Luton Airport in Luton, Bedfordshire and carry out all associated works.

BBC UK News
Open 
Teacher's karaoke rendition of Nessun Dorma viewed by millions
Benjamin Gillham's friend put his name down to sing the opera classic on a night out in Liverpool.

Mail Online
Open 
Karren Brady, 57, shows off her slim figure in glamorous snaps ahead of The Apprentice final after denying using weight-loss jabs
Karren Brady showed off her slim figure in a glamorous blue co-ord as she posed for stunning Instagram snaps ahead of The Apprentice final on Thursday night. 

Mail Online
Open 
Moment children hurl missiles at police in Epsom amid demands for description of gang-rape suspects
Footage shows two young boys repeatedly pelting police in Epsom with items taken from inside a ripped black bin bag, with one of them also throwing a traffic cone.

BBC World News
Open 
South African opposition figure Malema sentenced to five years in prison
Malema is appealing against the decision to prevent him from being taken to prison on Thursday.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Tesco warns profits could fall amid Iran war uncertainty
UK’s biggest supermarket voices caution for year ahead despite annual profits rising 8.5% to £2.4bnBusiness live – latest updatesTesco has warned that profits could fall back in the year ahead, citing increased uncertainty caused by the conflict in the Middle East.Ken Murphy, its chief executive, said that despite concerns about the impact of the closure of the strait of Hormuz on oil, gas and linked chemicals, the UK’s largest supermarket chain was “in good shape” on stocks of fuel for its petrol stations and distribution network. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Struggling theatres must ‘programme their way out’, says Young Vic director
Nadia Fall calls for bold thinking as she announces new shows including anti-Trump version of Thelma & LouiseTheatres facing financial difficulty can only prosper by “programming their way out of it”, according to the Young Vic artistic director, Nadia Fall, who has announces her new slate of shows, including an anti-Trump musical version of Thelma & Louise.Fall, who took the helm at the Young Vic in 2025 and oversaw staff cuts after a £500,000 deficit in the last financial year, said theatres must put on unmissable productions in order to balance the books. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Contingency plans in place for possible food shortages if Iran war continues, minister confirms – UK politics live
Peter Kyle did not dispute Times’ report that under a ‘reasonable worst-case scenario’ supermarkets might start running out of some itemsSwinney confirms that he views a vote for the SNP as a vote to hold a referendum on independence.That would be “a referendum that will allow Scotland to reclaim our place at the heart of Europe, and a referendum that I intend to win”, he says.In the two years since becoming first minister, I’ve dedicated every single day to improving the lives of the people of Scotland.When I took office, I promised I would deliver for Scotland falling waiting times, more operations, GP walk-in clinics, frozen rail fares, peak rail fares abolished, child poverty down and winter fuel payments restored. Friends, I keep my promises. That is my record. It’s a record I’m proud to take to the people of Scotland.But make no mistake about it, I am only just getting started. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: Netanyahu ‘to speak to Lebanese leader today’ but Beirut reportedly unaware of plans
Israeli minister says pair to speak after ‘many years of total disconnect’ but reports say that Lebanese were not aware of plans first outlined by TrumpUS and Iran in indirect talks to extend two-week ceasefirePakistan’s foreign ministry said no dates have been decided for a second round of talks between the US and Iran.Asim Munir, Pakistan’s army chief, is in Iran as part of ongoing mediation efforts to renew negotiations as the deadline for the fragile US-Iran ceasefire looms. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Spice Girls' outfits go on show in '90s exhibition
The show at the Barbican Music Library celebrates 1996 and includes Mel B's leopard-print catsuit

Sky News Home
Open 
Why Helen Mirren's garden could have a direct impact on your food bills
What do an Oscar-winning actress and your grocery bill have in common? More than you might think.

Mail Online
Open 
Sharon Osbourne confirms plans to attend far-Right activist Tommy Robinson's 'Unite the Kingdom' march
Sharon Osbourne has said she will be attending an anti-immigration march organised by far-right commentator Tommy Robinson.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
EasyJet warns of impact on profits as Iran war hits bookings and fuel prices
Budget airline says passengers are leaving it later to book flights owing to economic uncertaintyBusiness live – latest updatesMiddle East crisis – live updatesThe budget airline easyJet has warned the impact of the Iran war on bookings and oil prices will hit its profits, having driven up fuel costs by £25m in the last month alone.It said it expected to report an increased pre-tax loss of £540-£560m for the six months to March, up from £394m in the first half of 2024-25. The carrier typically makes its money in the second half of the year which includes the peak summer period. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Contingency plans in place for possible food shortages if Iran war continues, minister confirms – UK politics live
Peter Kyle did not dispute Times’ report that under a ‘reasonable worst-case scenario’ supermarkets might start running out of some itemsThe waiting list for routine hospital treatment in England has fallen for the fourth month in a row, the Press Association reports. PA says:An estimated 7.22 million treatments were waiting to be carried out at the end of February, relating to 6.11 million patients.This is down from 7.25 million treatments and 6.13 million patients at the end of January.Automotive and aerospace, steel, and pharmaceuticals are among the sectors where eligible businesses are to benefit from a one-off additional payment in 2027. This will cover the support firms would have received if BICS had been in place from April 2026.Eligibility has also been expanded by 40%, from 7,000 to over 10,000 businesses. This targets support at energy-intensive firms on the number one issue they face – high electricity costs. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: Netanyahu ‘to speak to Lebanese leader today’ but Beirut reportedly unaware of plans
Israeli minister says pair to speak after ‘many years of total disconnect’ but reports say that Lebanese were not aware of plans first outlined by TrumpUS and Iran in indirect talks to extend two-week ceasefireA member of Israel’s security cabinet, Galia Gamliel, said the prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, will speak to the Lebanese president, Joseph Aoun, today, according to Israeli media.The conversation will take place “after so many years of a total disconnect in the dialogue between the two states, and this move will hopefully, in the end, lead to prosperity”, she told the Israeli Army Radio, the Times of Israel reported. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Prehistoric hippo and mammoth bones a 'once in a lifetime' find in cave under Welsh castle
Archaeologists have so far uncovered "extremely rare" evidence of early humans and animals at the cave.

Department for Transport
Open 
Fixing the foundations: government fund to fix England's bridges, flyovers and tunnels now open
Funding will help local councils with cost of fixing England's ageing road infrastructure. | Department for Transport.

Mail Online
Open 
The Repair Shop guest left 'shaking and stuck for words' as 'tiny treasures' with incredible past are restored - along with her 'dad's legacy'
Debbie Lee, from Southend-on-Sea, was keen to have the 'tiny treasures' brought back to their original condition with the help of goldsmith Richard Talman.

Mail Online
Open 
Specialist emergency crews rush to major aviation incident unfolding in South Australia
Emergency services have been called to an unfolding aviation incident.

Mail Online
Open 
Female 'Thai' sex attacker targets another man in his 70s by groping the OAP and stealing gold chain - days after pensioner said he was assaulted and had Rolex watch stolen
The victim, in his 70s, was walking on a footpath in Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire, at around 12.40pm on March 19 when the woman began touching him inappropriately.

BBC World News
Open 
Shakespeare's 'missing' home mapped with discovery
A Shakespeare expert identifies the location and size of the property the playwright bought in1613.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘A feeling of ecstasy’: how Anne Hathaway and FKA twigs created the thunderous Mother Mary soundtrack
The stars of David Lowery’s psychodrama on the secrets behind creating music for a fictional pop divaAs David Lowery, the director, was writing the fictional pop star Mother Mary for his new film of the same name, he spent a lot of time studying the last 25 years in music. He listened to Taylor Swift (whose Reputation concert film inspired the performances in the film), Lorde and FKA twigs, who appears on screen as a medium named Imogene. But as the film’s haunted love story between Mary (played by Anne Hathaway) and her former best friend and designer Sam Anselm (Michaela Coel) emerged, his listening habits shifted.“The pop music fell away and other music started to enter that sphere,” he says in A24’s New York offices. He’s sitting beside twigs and Hathaway the day after the trio attended the film’s premiere in the city. “James Blake and Aldous Harding really captured the emotion that I was trying to type out between Sam and Mother Mary. They began to help me channel the feeling of the movie itself.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Massive Attack: Boots on the Ground (ft Tom Waits) review – first single in a decade is a dark hymn for our times
(Play It Again Sam)Unsettling breathing, arrhythmic clatter, gloomy piano and military snares underpin a Beefheartian portrayal of a boorish warmonger on the band’s ominous returnEven by the standards of a band noted for their unhurried approach, Massive Attack’s recorded output has dwindled to a trickle in recent years. They’ve seldom been out of the press, but less as a result of their music than their political campaigning: frontman Robert Del Naja was among the 500 people arrested at last Saturday’s Palestine Action protest. It is six years since they last released any new music – a trio of YouTube videos on which their music effectively acted as a soundbed for spoken-word pieces about global system change – and a decade since they released something you could actually buy, a single called The Spoils. Their most recent album, Heligoland, came out in 2010: Taylor Swift was still a country star, Harry Styles was still at school, Instagram and TikTok had yet to be launched.It means that any new release automatically carries a sense of event, particularly if you’re old enough to remember how significantly Massive Attack altered the musical landscape of the 90s. You could formulate an argument that their debut album, Blue Lines, was the single most influential British album of its era: it spawned an entire subgenre, trip-hop, in its wake; 35 years on, you can still hear its echoes everywhere, from the mainstream pop of Billie Eilish and Lana Del Rey to the nu-soul of Joy Crookes and Greentea Peng to the endless swathes of anonymous “lo-fi beats” that get millions of streams on Spotify. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ready, set, ride! Everything you need to cycle with kids
Transporting little ones by bike is fun, practical and good for the planet – here’s how to get started• The best bike panniers and handlebar bagsIn the least weird way possible, strapping children to bicycles is a longstanding tradition in my family. My grandparents used to haul their three kids around in a rickety wooden trailer hitched to the back of their tandem (see picture below), and some of my earliest memories involve being wedged into a bright red child seat with a gargantuan foam mushroom of a helmet obstructing my upper peripheral vision. Now that my son is old enough, it’s our turn to pick up the baton.Turns out, there are a lot of ways to strap a kid to a bike, and I’ve spent the past six months researching all the options to figure out what’s best. I’ve also spent lots of time using trailers and rear-mounted seats, as they were most appropriate for my son’s age and my bike setup. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Norway’s state telecoms firm accused of helping Myanmar regime seize activists
Lawsuit in Norway alleges Telenor passed on data helping Myanmar military arrest 1,200 activists, some in safe housesWhen even two weeks of torture could not force Aung Thu to betray his fellow anti-coup activists, his military interrogators in Myanmar tried something different: they asked a Norwegian telecoms company, Telenor, then the largest one operating in the country, for its data on him.The company – whose majority shareholder is the Norwegian government – had first entered Myanmar in 2013 as it was transitioning to democracy, promising to connect users who had been isolated from the world. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Wildings in Newport, Wales: the grand department store that became an illicit cannabis farm
For decades, Wildings was the poshest shop in town. But since it closed down in 2019, the storied building has fallen into disrepair and been commandeered as a drug den and a skate park. What happened?I’m standing outside a lift in a department store in Newport, Wales, looking at the sign, wondering where to go. Stay on the ground floor for shoes, giftware and presents, ladies’ accessories and Estée Lauder? Or up to the first floor for furniture and ladies’ fashions – Annabelle, Tigi-Wear, Autonomy? It’s the second floor for cookshop and homeware. Lingerie is on three, plus Alfred’s coffee shop and tea room. Maybe I’ll go straight there for a cappuccino and a ponder …But nothing happens when I press the button. The panel is hanging from the wall by its wires and doesn’t look safe. I’d be nervous about stepping into this lift. Plus, it’s dark. I’m using the torch on my phone to read the sign. There’s no giftware on this floor, no presents, no cosmetics counter. Once, this floor would have smelled of perfume; now, it’s musty, cold and empty. Because, on 19 January 2019, after 144 years of trading, this department store, Wildings, closed its doors for ever. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
O'Sullivan to play China's He in Crucible opener - see full draw
Seven-time winner Ronnie O'Sullivan begins his bid for a record-breaking eighth World Snooker Championship title with a match against China's debutant He Guoqiang at the Crucible.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
UK prepares for food shortages in worst case scenario as Iran war continues
The UK could face some food shortages by the summer under a worst case scenario drawn up by officials.

Propublica
Open 
What You Should Know About Lead Contamination in Omaha, Nebraska
The post What You Should Know About Lead Contamination in Omaha, Nebraska appeared first on ProPublica.

TechRadar News
Open 
2026 is the year payroll stacks break, and AI must grow up

Digital Trends
Open 
How to stop watching YouTube Shorts?
YouTube is finally letting you kick Shorts out of your feed entirely. Here’s a quick guide to cutting the scroll and taking back control of your screen time.

Digital Trends
Open 
Damning report finds Apple and Google’s app stores boosting nudify apps
Despite having policies banning explicit content, Apple and Google are reportedly pointing users to AI nudify apps through autocomplete suggestions and sponsored ads. Some of those apps were even rated suitable for kids.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
World Cup 2026: Fans with disabilities 'excluded'
Complaints that the 2026 World Cup, hosted largely by the USA, is a rip off have been widespread and constant. But it's not just the prices that are making it feel impossible for football fans with disabilities.

Mail Online
Open 
Preston says he 'hated being famous' and 'trauma-bonded' with ex Chantelle Houghton over their 'nightmare' life after CBB as he reflects on near-death experience and OxyContin addiction
The Ordinary Boys frontman Samuel Preston has reflected on his loathing of fame and his battles with addiction. 

Mail Online
Open 
Karren Brady shows off her slim figure in glamorous snaps ahead of The Apprentice final after denying using weight-loss jabs
Karren Brady showed off her slim figure in a glamorous blue co-ord as she posed for stunning Instagram snaps ahead of The Apprentice final on Thursday night. 

Mail Online
Open 
Spain and Portugal holiday bookings surge as Brits avoid Middle East destinations amid global jet fuel crisis triggered by Iran war
Summer flight bookings to Spain have soared 32 per cent year-on-year with hotel searches up 28 per cent. Portugal has recorded a 21 per cent rise in flight bookings with hotel searches up 16 per cent.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
EasyJet warns profits will suffer as Iran war hits bookings and fuel prices
Budget airline says passengers are leaving it later to book flights owing to economic uncertaintyBusiness live – latest updatesThe budget airline easyJet has warned the impact of the Iran war on bookings and oil prices will hit its profits, having driven up fuel costs by £25m in the last month alone.It said it expected to report an increased pre-tax loss of £540-£560m for the six months to March, up from £394m in the first half of 2024-25. The carrier typically makes its money in the second half of the year which includes the peak summer period. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
From friendship to friction: Inside the growing tensions between Trump and Starmer
BBC’s Sarah Smith examines how the Iran war has led to discrepancies between the US president and UK prime minister.

Computer Weekly
Open 
UK businesses must face up to AI threat, says government
Technology secretary Liz Kendall urges Britain’s business community to sit up and pay attention to emerging AI threats, following the debut of Anthropic’s new frontier model, Mythos

Computer Weekly
Open 
UAE education builds digital resilience as regional tensions accelerate shift to remote learning
Ankabut CEO Tarek Jundi outlines how national infrastructure, AI-driven platforms and distance-learning capabilities are helping schools and universities maintain continuity amid geopolitical uncertainty

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Continuing Slump In Global Media Climate Agitprop Bodes Ill For Future Net Zero Support
Continuing Slump In Global Media Climate Agitprop Bodes Ill For Future Net Zero Support

Authored by Chris Morrison via THE DAILY SCEPTIC,

Decades of careful grooming of incurious journalists designed to whip up a non-existent climate emergency have failed to halt a dramatic continuing collapse in mainstream media stories backing the Net Zero fantasy. Last year saw a 14% global slump in climate-related stories compared to 2024, which was already 38% down on peak Greta hysteria in 2021. Perhaps there is only so long that once trusting consumers are prepared to read, let alone pay for identical, narrative-driven drivel that is often so one-sided that it is an insult to the intelligence. Exhibit 1: the BBC’s October 2023 classic – Climate change could make beer taste worse. 



The greatest declines over 2025 were found in Africa, the Middle East and North America. Interestingly, the failed Amazon COP30 meeting in November 2025 was followed the month after by coverage falling off a cliff in Latin America (-61%), Oceania (-52%) and the European Union (-41%). A period of private grief seems to have given  the long-suffering public a merciful break from the relentless cacophony of climate catastrophising. 

News of the continuing falls in climate change and global warming coverage are contained in the latest annual report from the Media and Climate Change Observatory (MeCCO) at the University of Colorado Boulder. To produce its latest findings, MeCCO tracked the volume of newspaper, wire services, radio and TV climate stories across 59 countries and seven regions. The work is said to have used a consistent methodology since 2004.The graph below shows clearly the spikes in the Greta hysteria around the start of the current decade, and the earlier Gore grift that followed the release of his ‘An Inconvenient Truth’ film.



University journalism courses often run climate modules but prospects for aspiring students looking to make the world safe for Net Zero fanatics do not look good. The Guardian can only do so much, but in the UK, coverage was 34% down in the 12 months to November 2025. In the USA, the sackings have started with a vengeance. Last year, new managers at CBS News removed most of the climate crisis team. Recent reports suggest that everyone on the climate beat has now been binned. In February 2026, the Washington Post cut 14 climate writing positions, leaving only five journalists in place.

Last year was a bad time for the climate groomers that are largely funded by Green Blob billionaires seeking societal upheaval by depriving modern (and developing) industrial countries of vital hydrocarbons. Groomed journalists working in narrative-driven mainstream media are seen as key to driving up fear of the invented climate crisis. One of the first lessons taught to useful idiot fear mongers is that the opinion, often incorrectly referred to as a theory, that human cause most if not all recent  climate change, is ‘settled’. The incurious are not encouraged to ask if this is the first scientific opinion to be declared settled, or at least the first since the Roman Popes of old adjudicated ex cathedra on these matters.

In the UK, the National Council for the Training of Journalists (NCTJ) is a respected industry-based charity that has operated since the 1950s. But its climate change training is laughable. In what other investigative fields are journalists encouraged to rely on a claimed ‘consensus’, and encouraged not to disclose alternative views? What quicker way is there, it might be asked, to replacing the writer with an AI tool? Funded by the Google News Initiative (GNI), the NCTJ offers a free e-learning course on climate change reporting. As with all climate science grooming agitprop sessions, there is a warning about avoiding ‘false balance’. In effect, this means denying publicity to sceptical scientists who investigate opinion by following the time-honoured process of scientific falsification.

GNI is a major funder of the attempts made to silence dissenting climate opinions. One of the major weapons deployed involve so-called ‘fact-checkers’ which, in the Daily Sceptic’s own experience, do little more than attack inconvenient science findings with opinionated claims of ‘misinformation’. Discussing the underlying science does not appear to be a priority, rather the negative verdicts are helpful in cancelling advertising, and diminishing impact in the social media sphere.

In the UK, GNI is a funder of the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism. Until recently, this operation ran a six-month groomer for climate writers under its Oxford Climate Journalism Network (OCJN) operation. The course has also attracted considerable funding from the former Extinction Rebellion paymaster Sir Christopher Hohn, and over four years it hosted around 800 journalists from 80 countries. Alas, the indoctrination pitstop pulled down the shutters late last year. The “flagship online course” will no longer be setting tasks asking participants to write a news story showing why mangoes are less tasty this year due to climate change. We can only pray that similar restrictions now apply to other climate-challenged comestibles.

It seems the world is getting tired of clickbait, centrally-determined climate claptrap that for too long has provided an unscientific base for the Net Zero fantasy. Pseudoscience gaslighting has allowed rigged computer models to predict headline-grabbing Armageddon ‘tipping points’, and contributed to the mainstream spread of unchallenged lies that extreme weather events are getting worse. Good news stories such as the major ‘greening’ of the Earth are ignored, while the vital role played in this by the gas of life carbon dioxide is downplayed. None more so than SciLine, a Green Blob-funded operation connected to the Association for the Advancement of Science, publisher of Science.

“In many cases, CO2 disproportionately favours weeds over crops causing more problems for agriculture”, it helpfully notes in its guide to journalists.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 03:30

UK Government News
Open 
High Code compliance maintained as some supplier issues increase
Read about the GCA 2026 annual survey results.

UK Government News
Open 
Connections Reform: delivery update and battery capacity
Joint update from DESNZ and Ofgem on connections reform delivery and the level of battery storage capacity in the reformed queue.

UK Government News
Open 
Ofqual fines Cambridge OCR £270k for physics exam paper errors
AS and A Level physics exam materials containing errors were delivered to over 14,000 students which affected some grades.

UK Government News
Open 
SFO sets out ambitions for year ahead
Director presents roadmap for organisation at first public event.

UK Government News
Open 
Dstl assesses robotic systems in hazardous incident recovery trial
Robots, not people, could respond to future high-risk incidents following the Defence Science and Technology Laboratory's recent testing.

Ian Visits
Open 
Mystery solved: Shakespeare’s Blackfriars house located at last
A newly uncovered 17th-century floor plan appears to fix the exact site of the playwright’s only known London property — and it turns out the existing plaque had it right all along.Read more ›

Mail Online
Open 
Fears Saudi Arabia will cancel $6b LIV Golf amid Iran crisis after fans spot detail in CEO's leaked email
A leaked email from LIV Golf's CEO insisting it is business as normal at the crisis-plagued breakaway league has been ripped apart by fans on social media.

Mail Online
Open 
Kate Ferdinand celebrates Tia's 15th birthday with sweet tribute after returning to war-torn Dubai and says it's 'the biggest privilege to be your step-mum'
Kate, who married former footballer Rio, 47, in 2019, shared a snap of Tia back in Dubai looking out at the city's eye-catching skyline.

Mail Online
Open 
Easyjet losses widen as airline takes a £25m hit on soaring fuel costs amid Iran war
Easyjet expects to make a hefty loss in its first half and said war in the Middle East added £25m to its fuel bill in March.

BBC World News
Open 
India to decide women's quota bill as row over parliamentary seats intensifies
Southern Indian leaders urge mass mobilisation over concerns about redrawing electoral boundaries.

Mail Online
Open 
Fears grow of Russian conflict with NATO as Putin gets new powers to launch overseas attacks
The Russian President is poised to tighten his grip on military power with a controversial new law that could pave the way for his troops to be sent abroad under a sweeping new pretext.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Contingency plans in place for possible food shortages if Iran war continues, minister confirms – UK politics live
Peter Kyle did not dispute Times’ report that under a ‘reasonable worst-case scenario’ supermarkets might start running out of some itemsPeter Kyle, the business secretary, was giving interviews this morning to promote a government announcement that will help companies in energy-intensive industries with fuel bills.As the Department for Business and Trade says in a news release, the existing scheme – the British Industrial Competitiveness Scheme, or BICS – is being expanded. It says:Automotive and aerospace, steel, and pharmaceuticals are among the sectors where eligible businesses are to benefit from a one-off additional payment in 2027. This will cover the support firms would have received if BICS had been in place from April 2026.Eligibility has also been expanded by 40%, from 7,000 to over 10,000 businesses. This targets support at energy-intensive firms on the number one issue they face – high electricity costs.Anyone abusing protections for people fleeing persecution over gender or sexual orientation is beyond contempt.Let me be clear: try to defraud the British people to enter or remain in the UK and your asylum claim will be refused, your support cut off, and you will find yourself on a one-way flight out of Britain.A Reform UK government will put a stop to the legal-industrial complex exploiting the generosity of the British taxpayer. We will criminally prosecute unscrupulous immigration lawyers by creating a new strict liability offence. We will also end legal aid for illegal arrivals and visa overstayers. Those who break into our country will no longer get taxpayer funds to fight their removal.Reform will ensure our borders are secured, illegal migrants deported and British taxpayers are no longer defrauded in this manner.A Reform government will make facilitating a false asylum claim a ‘strict liability’ criminal offence. There will be no requirement to prove intent in prosecutions, and this serious crime will be punishable by up to 2 years in jail. Lawyers defrauding the British people in this way will not be tolerated. Similar duties already apply to law firms and lawyers to prevent bribery and tax evasion and it’s reasonable to also apply this to immigration law firms. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: Netanyahu ‘to speak to Lebanese leader leader today’ but Beirut reportedly unaware of plans
Israeli minister says pair to speak after ‘many years of total disconnect’ but reports say that Lebanese were not aware of plans first outlined by TrumpUS and Iran in indirect talks to extend two-week ceasefireA member of Israel’s security cabinet, Galia Gamliel, said the prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, will speak to the Lebanese president, Joseph Aoun, today, according to Israeli media.The conversation will take place “after so many years of a total disconnect in the dialogue between the two states, and this move will hopefully, in the end, lead to prosperity”, she told the Israeli Army Radio, the Times of Israel reported. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
'LIV Golf season to continue' amid collapse rumours
LIV Golf chief executive Scott O'Neil reportedly tells players that the 2026 season will continue uninterrupted amid rumours that the tour is on the verge of collapse.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Prehistoric hippo bones a 'once in a lifetime' find in cave under Welsh castle
Archaeologists have so far uncovered "extremely rare" evidence of early humans and animals at the cave.

Russia Today News
Open 
Second round of US-Iran talks being discussed – White House

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Trump's Strait of Hormuz blockade hits Iran's oil trade
A US naval blockade cuts off Iran's main source of hard currency by halting most of its oil exports. Will President Trump's pressure force Tehran back to negotiations or widen the conflict?

Deutsche Welle
Open 
German news: Teacher group urges action over pupil violence
A German teachers' group says decisive action is need to counter a surge in violence in classrooms and corridors. Meanwhile, the Greens say a blanket speed limit on major highways would halp save fuel. DW has the latest.

Mail Online
Open 
Celebrity Ex On The Beach stars spits out his drink as stunning ex wades out of the sea in string bikini after five years without contact - and she instantly reveals her game plan
The fourth series of the reality show, which premiered in 2019, hit Paramount+ on March 31.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Andoni Iraola pulled Bournemouth out of Howe’s shadow and toward a stable, hopeful future | Jeff Rueter
The manager, set to depart after this season, transformed the Cherries into a legitimate talent factory and one of the Premier League’s most entertaining sidesThe walls of the Emirates could hardly contain Andoni Iraola’s beaming grin. As he crossed the touchline last Saturday after Bournemouth’s 2-1 win, his stride wasn’t one of rushing disbelief. He applauded the away support in between tousles of his charges’ heads and slaps on their sweat-soaked backs. The coach knew his side had completely outplayed the league leaders for their third win in four against Arsenal.This wasn’t a Bournemouth upset of old. It was further evidence that these arenas have never been more welcoming to the Cherries – and these arenas are the sites that Iraola is ready to call his next home. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Contingency plans in place for possible food shortages if Iran war continues, minister confirms – UK politics live
Peter Kyle did not dispute Times’ report that under a ‘reasonable worst-case scenario’ supermarkets might start running out of some itemsReform UK has said that it would tighten the law to make it easier to prosecute lawyers and advisers who help people make bogus asylum claims.Zia Yusuf, the party’s home affairs spokesperson, announced the proposals in response to a major BBC investigation illustrating the extent of fraud in the asylum advice industry.Anyone abusing protections for people fleeing persecution over gender or sexual orientation is beyond contempt.Let me be clear: try to defraud the British people to enter or remain in the UK and your asylum claim will be refused, your support cut off, and you will find yourself on a one-way flight out of Britain.A Reform UK government will put a stop to the legal-industrial complex exploiting the generosity of the British taxpayer. We will criminally prosecute unscrupulous immigration lawyers by creating a new strict liability offence. We will also end legal aid for illegal arrivals and visa overstayers. Those who break into our country will no longer get taxpayer funds to fight their removal.Reform will ensure our borders are secured, illegal migrants deported and British taxpayers are no longer defrauded in this manner.A Reform government will make facilitating a false asylum claim a ‘strict liability’ criminal offence. There will be no requirement to prove intent in prosecutions, and this serious crime will be punishable by up to 2 years in jail. Lawyers defrauding the British people in this way will not be tolerated. Similar duties already apply to law firms and lawyers to prevent bribery and tax evasion and it’s reasonable to also apply this to immigration law firms.Currently head teachers have the power to ban smartphones in their schools, with a number of councils in Scotland having acted.However Swinney said that the SNP will now seek to “ensure a full national ban in Scotland’s classrooms”. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Chinese man jailed after trying to smuggle 2,000 live ants out of Kenya
A Chinese man has been jailed after trying to smuggle more than 2,000 live ants out of Kenya.

Mail Online
Open 
Woman, 26, reveals how she can live on just £600 a month after converting a Ford Transit van into a 'bougie' pink apartment on wheels
Heidi Elliott, 26, bought her small high top van for £15,000 and has spent the last year renovating the small vehicle into her dream 'apartment on wheels'.

Mail Online
Open 
Monarch of the Glen star Alexander Morton dies aged 81: Tributes pour in as Scottish actor who was Leo Woodall's stepfather passes away
Scottish actor Alexander 'Sandy' Morton, who is best known for playing Golly Mackenzie in the BBC series Monarch of the Glen, has died aged 81.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: Doubts cast over Trump’s claim that Lebanese-Israel meeting to take place today
Reports that Lebanese officials were not aware of plans for talks revealed by US president in social media postUS and Iran in indirect talks to extend two-week ceasefireA member of Israel’s security cabinet, Galia Gamliel, said the prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, will speak to the Lebanese president, Joseph Aoun, today, according to Israeli media.The conversation will take place “after so many years of a total disconnect in the dialogue between the two states, and this move will hopefully, in the end, lead to prosperity”, she told the Israeli Army Radio, the Times of Israel reported. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
'I was the most trolled person in the world,' Meghan says during Australia visit
Alongside her husband, the Duchess of Sussex was speaking to young people in Melbourne about the harms of social media.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
UK preparing for some food shortages in Iran war worst case scenario
The UK could face some food shortages by the summer under a worst case scenario drawn up by officials.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Hunt for escaped wolf sparks AI fakes and meme coins
Hundreds have been deployed to find Neukgu, a young wolf that has eluded capture for a week and counting.

Mail Online
Open 
Bank of England chief hints interest rates could rise - but says it will not rush to make the 'difficult' decision
The Bank of England is facing a 'difficult' decision on interest rates as the Middle East conflict pushes up prices, the Governor has warned.

Mail Online
Open 
Russia closes off Arctic waters near NATO borders and designates them 'missile impact zones'
The exclusion zones lie off northern Norway, close to NATO territory, and will remain restricted until April 30 in an unusually long safety notice for the region.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
UK economy showed surprise 0.5% growth before Iran war
ONS figure for February suggests Britain was gaining momentum before conflict dashed hopes of recoveryBusiness live – latest updatesUK GDP expanded by a stronger than expected 0.5% in February, official figures show, suggesting the economy was gaining momentum before the onset of war in the Middle East dashed hopes of recovery.The jump, reported by the Office for National Statistics (ONS), was significantly bigger than the 0.1% forecast by economists. January’s flatlining figure was also revised up, to 0.1% growth. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Satellite images reveal scale of Israeli demolitions as Lebanese villages destroyed
BBC Verify analysis found more than 1,400 buildings had been destroyed since 2 March.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Meghan says she was 'most trolled person in the world'
Alongside her husband, the Duchess of Sussex was speaking to young people in Melbourne about the harms of social media.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Huge hunt for escaped wolf sparks AI fakes and meme coins
Hundreds have been deployed to find Neukgu, a young wolf that has eluded capture for a week and counting.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
'I was the most trolled person in the world,' Meghan says
Alongside her husband, the Duchess of Sussex was speaking to young people in Melbourne about the harms of social media.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Inside a long hunt for an escaped wolf
Hundreds have been deployed to find Neukgu, a young wolf that has eluded capture for a week and counting.

The Register
Open 
QUIC will soon be as important as TCP – but it's vastly different
Deciphering the third transport protocol's four RFCs is a task to rival the proverbial blind man trying to understand an elephant While Larry was producing most of the content for the "Request/Reponse" chapter for the next edition of our book, I took the lead on writing a section on QUIC (Quick UDP Internet Connections), since I have closely followed its development.…

The Register
Open 
Server-room lock was nothing but a crock
Your cybersecurity is only as good as the physical security of the servers PWNED  Welcome back to Pwned, the column where we immortalize the worst vulns that organizations opened up for themselves. If you’re the kind of person who leaves your car doors unlocked with a pile of cash in the center console, this week’s story is for you.…

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
O'Sullivan to play China's He in Crucible round one
Seven-time winner Ronnie O'Sullivan begins his bid for a record-breaking eighth World Snooker Championship title with a match against China's debutant He Guoqiang at the Crucible.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Wave of Russian drone and missile attacks kill at least 15 in Ukraine
Meanwhile, a Ukrainian drone attack killed two children in Russia, officials say.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Why cheap power could matter more than clean power in the push for net zero
The question of how important making our electricity clean is to going green is coming under increasing scrutiny

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Iran sees hundreds of thousands of jobs lost due to war
After six weeks of war, job losses are growing in Iran. Destroyed industrial facilities have brought production in many sectors to a standstill, hitting Iranian workers particularly hard.

Mail Online
Open 
US tech giant targets assets of Mike Lynch's widow in £900m damages hunt after British billionaire and his daughter died in yacht sinking
The entrepreneur, known as 'Britain's Bill Gates', died in the Bayesian superyacht tragedy in Sicily in 2024 alongside his teenage daughter Hannah and five others.

Mail Online
Open 
The photos that show Aussies who forked over $3,200 for tickets to Meghan's exclusive 'Her Best Life' weekend retreat were royally ripped off
Meghan Markle fans who paid extra for the VIP package at her retreat could be feeling a little sour after seeing photos of the couple's tour so far.

Mail Online
Open 
Rochelle Humes reveals she made more money in S Club Juniors than The Saturdays after 'the money just went out of the music industry'
Rochelle Humes insisted it was hard to live the 'expected lifestyle' in The Saturdays as she revealed she made more money in S Club Juniors.

Mail Online
Open 
Award-winning army Instagram influencer suing the MoD for £660,000 after quartermaster 'bullying' campaign
Former sergeant Jonathan Biney, who was honoured as Military Communicator of the Year in 2020 for promoting army life as an influencer, says he was repeatedly called a 'c***' by his unnamed superior.

Mail Online
Open 
I'm A Celebrity's Beverley Callard 'trying to be brave and strong' as she shares 'weird' cancer update with fans and says 'I don't know what this means' in vulnerable video
The actress admitted she 'didn't know' what the 'weird' update on the disease meant as she revealed she had been called in for another consultation by her doctor.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Andoni Iraola pulled Bournemouth out of Howe’s shadow and toward a stable, hopeful future
The manager, set to depart after this season, transformed the Cherries into a legitimate talent factory and one of the Premier League’s most entertaining sidesThe walls of the Emirates could hardly contain Andoni Iraola’s beaming grin. As he crossed the touchline last Saturday after Bournemouth’s 2-1 win, his stride wasn’t one of rushing disbelief. He applauded the away support in between tousles of his charges’ heads and slaps on their sweat-soaked backs. The coach knew his side had completely outplayed the league leaders for their third win in four against Arsenal.This wasn’t a Bournemouth upset of old. It was further evidence that these arenas have never been more welcoming to the Cherries – and these arenas are the sites that Iraola is ready to call his next home. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
Why cheap power could matter more than clean power in the green push
The question of how important making our electricity clean is to going green is coming under increasing scrutiny

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Move over wind farms: Why some argue cutting costs is the best way to cut carbon
The question of how important making our electricity clean is to going green is coming under increasing scrutiny

Mail Online
Open 
Landlord exodus: 220,000 rental properties to disappear this year as Renters' Rights Act arrives
Buy-to-let has ballooned over the last 15 years, but this is now sliding into reverse as landlords fear increased regulation.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
LIV Golf to continue 'at full throttle' amid collapse rumours
LIV Golf chief executive Scott O'Neil reportedly tells players that the 2026 season will continue uninterrupted amid rumours that the tour is on the verge of collapse.

Pulsant Status
Open 
CHG0057201 - Planned at Risk Network Maintenance in Maidenhead SE-2 IP Fabric - Thursday 30/04/2026 2000 BST - 2300 BST

Pulsant Status
Open 
CHG0057712 - Planned at Risk Network Maintenance in Milton Keynes SE-1 IP Fabric - Thursday 30/04/2026 2200 BST - 0000 BST

BBC UK News
Open 
Why cheap power may matter more than clean power in the green shift
From heat pumps to offshore wind, the UK’s net zero push is facing growing scrutiny. Are rising costs undermining climate goals?

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Huge hidden cave under castle with prehistoric hippo bones 'once in a lifetime' find
Archaeologists have so far uncovered "extremely rare" evidence of early humans and animals at the cave.

Autosport F1
Open 
Domenicali: F1 'needs to decide' on the next engine regulations this year
Formula 1 CEO and president Stefano Domenicali believes the series as a whole should try and agree on a future power unit formula as early as this year, backing a push for a lighter and simpler engine.Initiated by FIA president Mohammed Ben Sulayem's public desire for F1 to move to simpler, cheaper power units in the future, F1 stakeholders held meetings 12 months ago on what a future engine ...Keep reading

Mail Online
Open 
Michael J. Fox makes first red carpet appearance since he was forced to reassure fans he's 'still alive' after CNN error sparked death rumours
The actor's supposed demise was sparked earlier this month after a colossal blunder by US news outlet CNN.

Mail Online
Open 
Sharon Osbourne confirms plans to attend far-right activist Tommy Robinson's 'Unite the Kingdom' march
Sharon Osbourne has said she will be attending an anti-immigration march organised by far-right commentator Tommy Robinson.

Mail Online
Open 
'Mortified' tennis camera crew are caught discussing Carol Vorderman's sex life 'with six guys' on a hot mic during live broadcast
A tennis camera crew have been left 'mortified' after being picked up on a hot mic speculating about Carol Vorderman's sex life on a live broadcast. 

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Miroirs No 3 review – Christian Petzold’s elegantly unnerving mystery of grief and family dysfunction
There’s a hint of PD James about this cuckoo in the nest story starring Paula Beer as a depressed pianistGerman director Christian Petzold, the Chabrol of modern European cinema, delivers an elegant and disquieting psychological mystery of the sort that doesn’t interest today’s British film-makers, though this one appears to have more than a taste of PD James or Ruth Rendell. There’s also a hint of Joseph Losey’s Accident. It is about family dysfunction and grief and unnervingly lays out the aftermath of a sudden violent trauma. The faint suggestion that the film itself has gone into a kind of shock could have layered the proceedings with something infinitesimally dreamlike and unreal, an atmosphere often to be found in Petzold’s films. What makes this film interesting is that it isn’t heading for a macabre twist or chilling denouement but something positive and even redemptive.Petzold’s longtime female lead Paula Beer plays Laura, a brilliant pianist studying music in Berlin, clearly in a fragile and depressed state. We are ultimately to see her on stage performing the third movement of Maurice Ravel’s Miroirs, the dreamily rippling A Boat on the Ocean, which gives the film its title. Paula is stuck in an unhappy relationship with boorish would-be music mogul Jakob (Philip Froissant), who one tense afternoon loses control of his open-topped sports car in the Brandenburg countryside. The results are catastrophic for Jakob, but Laura, thrown clear from the passenger seat, miraculously survives with hardly more than a scratch. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
AI is destroying jobs – and the energy crisis could make that much worse | Larry Elliott
Every wave of new tech has come with a doomsday scenario. But governments just aren’t planning a human response on the scale required The transition to a world of artificial intelligence has given a whole new meaning to the concept that capitalism can only renew itself through creative destruction. This is the idea that clapped-out technologies have to be replaced by new ways of doing things, even though the process can be brutal.That has been the way of things for every new wave of inventions since the dawn of the industrial age in the mid-18th century, but with machines now displaying cognitive skills, able to both think and learn, the potential for economic disruption is all the greater.Larry Elliott is a Guardian columnist Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Shoe brand Allbirds' shares rise 580% after it pivots from footwear to AI
The company is selling off its shoe brand as it plans to shift to providing technology infrastructure.

TechRadar News
Open 
I wasn’t driven mad by the puzzles in Cthulhu: The Cosmic Abyss, but some frustrating decisions and technical hiccups almost ruined this clever cosmic horror puzzler

Digital Trends
Open 
After price hike, YouTube Premium is now half the price if you pay for Google One
Google is now dangling a 50% YouTube Premium discount for Google AI Pro subscribers, but the deal is limited and tied to the Google One ecosystem.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Breakthrough £90,000 Alzheimer's drugs unlikely to benefit patients, report suggests
A major review has provoked a backlash after concluding the medicines provide too little benefit to be noticed.

Mail Online
Open 
'Latin Gang' who sliced off man's fingertips as they hacked him to death in London machete fight face life in jail
Giovanny Rendon Bedoya, 21, died in a 'vicious' onslaught from a South American gang in Hillingdon Street, Walworth, last April.

Mail Online
Open 
Dementia drugs hailed as 'beginning of the end' for Alzheimer's do not work, major report finds
A major review has found that new Alzheimer's drugs hailed as breakthroughs may offer only limited benefits for patients.

Mail Online
Open 
Russia's threat to bomb Britain: Kremlin lists 'potential targets' in London, Leicester, Reading and Suffolk it claims are making drones for Ukraine
The Kremlin has published a list of 'potential targets' across Europe after launching hundreds of drones at Ukraine in an overnight raid.

Mail Online
Open 
Male and female migrants are falsely claiming to be victims of domestic abuse after being encouraged to dupe authorities by rogue legal advisers
Rogue lawyers are charging £900 to help migrants, both male and female, to fabricate domestic abuse claims to fast track a permanent stay in Britain.

Mail Online
Open 
'I just want to make my mum proud': Pauline Quirke's son takes on the London Marathon with Hollywood star pal Jack O'Connell to raise money for dementia charities
Pauline Quirke's son Charlie said he only wants to make his mother proud while running his first London marathon to raise money after her dementia diagnosis.

Slashdot
Open 
UK Households To Be Urged To Use More Power This Summer As Renewables Soar
Longtime Slashdot reader AmiMoJo shares a report from the Guardian: Households will be called on to boost their consumption of Great Britain's record renewable energy this summer to help balance the power grid and lower energy bills. Under the new plans, people could be encouraged to run dishwashers and washing machines or charge up their electric vehicles when there is more wind and solar power than the electricity grid needs. The plan will be delivered with the help of energy suppliers, which may choose to offer heavily discounted or free electricity to their customers during specific periods when the energy system operator predicts there will be a surplus of electricity.

Many suppliers already offer more than 2 million households the opportunity to pay lower rates for electricity used during off-peak hours but this will be the first time that the system operator will use this tool to help balance the grid. The National Energy System Operator (Neso) hopes that by issuing a market notice to call on energy users to increase their consumption it can avoid making hefty payments to turn wind and solar farms off when demand for electricity is low, which are ultimately paid for through energy bills.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Players told LIV Golf to run 'for many years' amid collapse rumours
LIV Golf chief executive Scott O'Neil reportedly tells players that the 2026 season will continue uninterrupted amid rumours that the tour is on the verge of collapse.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Economy grew faster than expected ahead of Iran war
The economy saw its biggest monthly rise in more than two years just before the outbreak of the US-Israeli war with Iran.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Hippo bones and woolly rhino part of 'once-in-a-lifetime' find in medieval castle cave
Archaeologists have so far uncovered "extremely rare" evidence of early humans and animals at the cave.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
UK could face food shortages in worst case Iran war scenario
The UK could face some food shortages by the summer under a worst case scenario drawn up by officials.

Mail Online
Open 
Surprise for Rachel Reeves as UK economy clawed back ground with 0.5% growth in February… but that was BEFORE the Middle East crisis erupted
GDP was up 0.5 per cent in February, the fastest expansion in more than two years and significantly higher than analysts had pencilled in.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Chris Mason: Ministers have to close asylum loopholes while protecting genuinely vulnerable
There has been a stickiness to the electorate's concerns about issues of immigration and asylum, Chris Mason writes.

Mail Online
Open 
Scandalous moment Temptation Island cheats on his girlfriend with TWO women in tent - before she gets the ultimate revenge
Temptation Island returned to our screens with its 10th series earlier this week. And the reality show has not disappointed viewers since landing on Netflix on April 10.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: Doubts cast over Trump’s claim that Lebanese-Israel meeting to take place today
Reports that Lebanese officials were not aware of plans for talks revealed by US president in social media postUS and Iran in indirect talks to extend two-week ceasefireThe military adviser to Iran’s supreme leader warned that Tehran would sink American ships in the strait of Hormuz if the US decided to “police” the narrow waterway.Mohsen Rezaei, a former commander-in-chief of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) who was named as a military adviser by Mojtaba Khamenei last month, also threatened to take American soldiers hostage if they came ashore and “demand one billion dollars for each captive”. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Trump plans new arch twice as tall as Lincoln Memorial - this is where it would go
The BBC's Ione Wells explains where the 250ft structure would be built and why it's controversial.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
UK could face food shortages in 'worst case' Iran war scenario
The UK could face some food shortages by the summer under a worst case scenario drawn up by officials.

Mail Online
Open 
Lachie Neale FINALLY breaks his silence about his scandalous split with wife Jules as he makes an emotional admission
Neale had barely said a word about footy's biggest scandal since it broke last November, but that all changed on Thursday afternoon.

Mail Online
Open 
Jack Whitehall's mother Hilary is left despairing after he gave her 'the wrong dress code' ahead of his wedding to model Roxy Horner
Jack Whitehall's mother Hilary was left raging after her funnyman son gave her incorrect information about his upcoming wedding. 

Mail Online
Open 
Jude Bellingham is told 'shut your mouth' by Real Madrid team-mate Vinicius Jnr in furious row as stars went into meltdown during bad-tempered Champions League exit
Real Madrid were dumped out of the Champions League by Bayern Munich on Wednesday night in a game in which emotions among those in white threatened to boil over.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Pragmata review – soulful sad dad saga in stunning outer space
PlayStation 5 (version tested), Xbox, PC, Switch 2; CapcomEngineer Hugh is sent from Earth to investigate a malfunctioning research station and meets a young android who helps him fend off murderous mechsWhen Pragmata was announced alongside the PlayStation 5 in 2020, its shiny trailer promised slick sci-fi action in outer space. While it certainly delivers those futuristic thrills in spades, what I didn’t expect was a tender tale of paternal love. This is Capcom’s belated, surprisingly soulful first entry into gaming’s sad dad genre.In this near-future fiction, a corporation named Delphi has established a research station on the moon’s surface to experiment with advanced 3D printing tech, using “Lunafilament” to easily recreate everything from tools to entire buildings. Predictably, things soon go very wrong. As the station suddenly goes dark, engineer Hugh is sent from Earth to investigate.Pragmata is out April 17; £49.99 Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Geelong fire: blaze at one of Australia’s two oil refineries extinguished after 13 hours as fuel supply fears remain
Petrol production hit and full extent of damage unknown after ‘unprecedented’ fire at Viva plant in CorioFollow our Australia news live blog for latest updatesGeelong oil refinery fire: what we know so farGet our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcastAn explosive fire at a Geelong oil refinery – which supplies half of Victoria’s fuel and 10% of Australia’s – has been extinguished, with the impact on petrol production and the extent of the damage still unknown.The blaze at the Viva Energy facility in Corio – one of two refineries left in the country – broke out just after 11pm Wednesday, with Fire Rescue Victoria alerted to the blaze by multiple calls to triple zero reporting explosions and flames. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Surprise for Rachel Reeves as UK economy clawed back ground with 0.5% growth in February… but that was BEFORE the Middle East crisis erupted
The Office for National Statistics (ONS) said gross domestic product (GDP) grew by 0.5 per cent month-on-month in February, following upwardly revised growth of 0.1 per cent in January.

Sky News Home
Open 
UK economy grows by surprising amount
The UK economy grew far more than expected in the month before the war in Iran began, latest official figures show.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Back to books - Sweden's schools cutting back on digital learning
Swedish classrooms swap laptops for books, pens and paper, raising concerns from the tech sector.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
What's behind Israeli attacks along Lebanon's Litani River?
Israel is pushing forward with plans to remove Lebanese homes and residents from between the Litani River and its own border, creating a buffer zone. Why is the area strategically important in the Middle East conflict?

Mail Online
Open 
Brace for summer of shortages: Chicken and pork among products facing crunch from Middle East crisis as ministers 'plan for rationing CO2'
A 'reasonable worst case' scenario drawn up by the Government suggested that disruption to carbon dioxide supplies from the Middle East could have major impacts.

Mail Online
Open 
How to up your chance of winning big in the new £1billion Powerball (and why you SHOULDN'T use your birthday as your lottery numbers)
Who wants to be a billionaire? If you have any sense, you'll be shouting 'Me!' from the rooftops.

Mail Online
Open 
I've spoken to the world's top bankers, says City guru ALEX BRUMMER. The mood's bleaker than I've ever seen. It's about to all come down... I saw the last crash coming, now we should be terrified
It is true that the International Monetary Fund's annual gathering of finance ministers and bankers often seems to be held during a state of crisis.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Geelong fire: blaze at one of Australia’s two oil refineries extinguished after 13 hours as fuel supply fears remain
Petrol production affected and full extent of damage unknown after ‘unprecedented’ fire at Viva refinery in CorioFollow our Australia news live blog for latest updatesGeelong oil refinery fire: what we know so farGet our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcastAn explosive fire at a Geelong oil refinery – which supplies half of Victoria’s fuel and 10% of Australia’s – has been extinguished, with the impact on petrol production and the extent of the damage still unknown.The blaze at the Viva Energy facility in Corio – one of two refineries left in the country – broke out just after 11pm Wednesday, with Fire Rescue Victoria alerted to the blaze by multiple calls to triple zero reporting explosions and flames. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Champions League reaction: post your questions for Sid Lowe
Sid Lowe is our Spanish football correspondent, based in Madrid, and has been covering a very busy beat for years. He will be answering your questions from 12pm BST Sid Lowe is the Guardian’s Spanish football correspondent, based in Madrid, and has been covering an increasingly busy beat for years. And after a busy week of action in the Champions League, La Liga and beyond, post your questions below the line; he’ll answer as many as he can from 12pm BST.In the meantime, here’s his report from Madrid, where Atlético knocked Barcelona out of the quarter-finals, plus Andy Hunter’s dispatch from PSG’s win over Liverpool. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Stella McCartney launches sustainable collection with H&M
British designer aims to bring eco-friendly awareness to the high street in second collection with retailerStella McCartney, the luxury fashion designer who refuses to use leather, fur or feathers, is returning to the high street for a sustainable collection with H&M.The collaboration between the British designer and the Swedish retail company will go on sale in May. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Tesco warns profits could fall amid Iran war uncertainty
UK’s biggest supermarket voices caution for year ahead despite annual profits rising 8.5% to £2.4bnBusiness live – latest updatesTesco has warned that profits could fall back in the year ahead amid “increased uncertainty caused by the conflict in the Middle East”.The warning came after the UK’s biggest supermarket hit its highest share of the market in a decade. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
FA opens investigation into alleged breach of betting regulations by Kettering manager
Allegations relate to Liam McDonald’s time at Redditch They include a claim that he bet against his own teamThe Football Association has opened an investigation into allegations of a breach of betting regulations by the Kettering Town manager, Liam McDonald.The allegations are understood to be historic and relate to McDonald’s time as manager of Redditch a decade ago. They include a claim that he bet against his own team. The FA’s betting rules enforce a strict ban on any participants in the game from Step 4 upwards placing any bets on football anywhere in the world. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Andy Simpson, the unluckiest England rugby player in history, finally gets his Test cap
Longsuffering hooker, who warmed bench for 21 Tests and lost part of a thumb, is getting RFU recognition at lastInitially, Andy Simpson thought it was a Saturday morning wind-up. Someone from the Rugby Football Union museum was phoning to tell him that, at the age of 71, he was finally a capped England player. Given he had retired without featuring in an officially recognised Test – “the first thing you think is: ‘Who’s taking the mickey here?’” – his scepticism was understandable.But no, it was totally legit. Simpson is among 47 former players now basking in a warm, rosy glow that had previously eluded them. Having trawled through its archives, the RFU has deemed that several fixtures against full-strength national teams – including a 1986 contest between Italy and an England B side containing Simpson – were effectively Test matches. The long wait is over and the golden oldie debutants have been invited to attend a special, if belated, capping ceremony on 8 June. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ticket to ride? Fifa premium makes this the World Cup that actively hates you | Jonathan Liew
The $95 bus trip to Foxborough highlights a tournament unique in modern times – one that ultimately makes no secret of its disdain for the paying publicLike any journalist with an unerring nose for an offbeat feature, my interest was sharply piqued by this week’s announcement of the $95 bus ride. What magnificent accoutrements might conceivably justify the £70 fare for a half-hour journey from south Boston to Foxborough? An at-seat shiatsu? A pool deck? A five-course dining experience? A brief but moving Céline Dion set in the aisles? At the very least, I felt I owed it to my profession to find out for sure.Alas upon closer investigation, the Boston Stadium Express being launched for this summer’s World Cup appears to be an entirely regular bus journey on an entirely regular bus with entirely regular bus seats. Your non-refundable ticket – no child concessions – entitles you simply to be dropped off a 15-minute walk from the ground, and picked up again from the same place. There is, in short, no more complex rationale for the Boston organising committee to charge £70 than the fact that they can, and the World Cup only comes once, and if you don’t want to pay then some other rube will. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Week in wildlife: Puffin rescue and a gosling’s first gander
This week’s best wildlife photographs from around the world Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Will revival of Crystal Palace’s ‘hallowed turf’ create more athletics history?
Redevelopment of the National Sports Centre would be a boost to locals and those who have fought for its return“There were trees growing out of the main stand and on the indoor track and no one was doing anything about it,” says Jim Powell of the groundswell of despair at a crumbling Crystal Palace barely a couple of years after the Olympics were hosted to acclaim across the other side of London.A month before Sir Mo Farah secured his second gold of London 2012 on Super Saturday, he had swept to victory in the 5,000m when Crystal Palace hosted its final London Grand Prix. But that summer’s Games appeared to signal the beginning of the end for the venue that had been the home of British athletics for the previous two decades. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Champions League reaction: post your questions for Sid Lowe
Sid Lowe is our Spanish football correspondent, based in Madrid, and has been covering a very busy beat for years. He answers your questionsSid Lowe is the Guardian’s Spanish football correspondent, based in Madrid, and has been covering an increasingly busy beat for years. And after a busy week of action in the Champions League, La Liga and beyond, post your questions below the line; he’ll answer as many as he can from 12pm BST.In the meantime, here’s his report from Madrid, where Atlético knocked Barcelona out of the quarter-finals, plus Andy Hunter’s dispatch from PSG’s win over Liverpool. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Beef season two review – the best show on TV becomes an unlovable White Lotus rip-off
Carey Mulligan and Oscar Isaac are a miserable couple who run a country club and get blackmailed in a rich v poor potboiler that has been done so much better before – not least in the stunning first series. What a shameWe may have to start calling it White Lotus Derangement Syndrome. This is a condition spreading through the television commissioning system since Mike White debuted his brilliant anthology series five years ago, whereby drama is produced by setting poorer Americans alongside richer Americans in a location the latter choose to come to and the former can’t escape. In The White Lotus, they are the staff and guests at a variety of luxury resorts. In Sirens, the personal assistants of kabillionaires. In whatever Nicole Kidman is in they can be single mothers with children at assisted places at schools with the cashmere-clad elite, servants to expats nursing secret sadnesses in luxurious apartments, masseuses and other service providers at exclusive spa retreats, or exploited or sexually harassed nannies to people who think nothing of exploiting or harassing their nannies. In non-Kidman derivatives, the dogged blue collar viewer-avatars can also include cops, struggling novelists or academics. Unless the academic is a tenured professor, in which case the underdog becomes a sexually harassed student, who should probably unionise with the nannies.Now we have the second season of Beef to join the throng. The first, starring Steven Yeun and Ali Wong both doing career-best work, played out to near-universal acclaim as the story of a minor altercation in a car park between their two characters that gradually transformed credible pettiness into a credible psychodrama that built to an operatic climax. The new one stars Carey Mulligan and Oscar Isaac as a married couple who oversee the running of a luxury country club. Josh is the general manager (with a penchant for gambling and camgirls), Lindsay is the interior designer-cum-hostess (with a penchant for restoring the social status she had as a posho in her native England and an icily ruthless streak). They are both frustrated with where life has led them – so close to real money, but so far from having it themselves. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
90s rock icon Bob Mould: ‘When Cobain died, I pulled the plug – there was nothing worth saving’
Mould’s fearsomely loud power trio Sugar rode the wave of grunge, but called it quits when the scene lost its innocence. Now the band are reuniting – before it’s too lateThe beating heart of Sugar was always the sound of Bob Mould’s guitar: a colossal, metallic, thunderous thing, like a sonic boom you could whistle. “It was incredible, being engulfed by that wall of sound,” remembers bassist David Barbe from his office at the University of Georgia, weeks before the group are due to play their first shows in more than three decades. “Bob was so loud, there were times on stage when I could see Malcolm drumming, but I couldn’t actually hear him.”“I didn’t wear earplugs when I started playing with Bob,” adds Malcolm Travis, the aforementioned drummer, from his home in Cape Cod, Massachusetts. “But soon afterwards, I did. It was just deafening.” And while everyone involved is 30 years older than the last time they played together, age has not withered them; anyone who’s caught Mould playing solo in recent years will attest that his guitar is still fearsomely loud. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
You be the judge: should my girlfriend change the way she bags her supermarket shopping?
Dougie and Teresa don’t see eye to eye when it comes to supermarket packing. You decide whose argument checks out• Find out how to get a disagreement settled or become a jurorShe says if you’re bagging stuff at the checkout, you’re holding up the people behind youHe just doesn’t understand the system. The packing shelves at the back are there to help customers Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Effect of ‘gamechanger’ Alzheimer’s drugs ‘trivial’, review concludes
Data assessed from 17 clinical trials of anti-amyloid drugs found no ‘meaningful effect’ on cognitive declineDrugs that have been hailed as a gamechanger for the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease make no noticeable difference to patients, according to an extensive review.The analysis of clinical trials in people with mild cognitive impairment or mild dementia found that the effects of anti-amyloid drugs on cognition and dementia severity over 18 months were “trivial”, with improvements in functional ability “small at best”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
UK economy on ‘stronger footing’ than expected before energy shock after February growth surge – business live
UK economy smashes forecasts with 0.5% growth in February, but economists fear growth will now slow sharply due to Iran warThe UK’s growth acceleration in February is likely to be “short-lived”, due to the Iran war, warns Andrew Hunter, associate director and senior economist at Moody’s Analytics:“The 0.5% month-over-month jump in U.K. GDP in February, and slight upward revision to January’s data, echoes the earlier improvement in the surveys and suggests the economy had more momentum at the start of this year than previously thought.However, with those surveys weakening quite sharply in March as the Middle East conflict sent energy prices soaring, this upturn is likely to prove short lived. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
£124m spent but Newcastle no closer to striker solution
Newcastle United spent £124m to replace departing Alexander Isak, but Eddie Howe's men now seem no closer to finding their striking solution.

Sky News Home
Open 
UK economy grows by surprising amount but it could be last uptick for a while
The UK economy grew far more than expected in the month before the war in Iran began, latest official figures show.

TechRadar News
Open 
Beef season 2 ending explained: everything that happened in the hit Netflix series' explosive and unhinged finale

TechRadar News
Open 
My pre-teen son tested the Garmin Bounce 2 to see if it's really the top smartwatch for kids

Sky News Home
Open 
UK economy grows by surprising amount but it could be last uptick for a while
The UK economy grew far more than expected in the month before war in Iran began, latest official figures show.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Big energy shock will push up prices, Bank boss tells BBC
Bank of England governor says the Iran war energy shock makes the next interest rate decision "very, very difficult".

Mail Online
Open 
Harry tells Australians he didn't want to be a royal as Meghan says she was bullied online 'every day for 10 years' and became 'most trolled person in the world'
On day three of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex's Australian tour, the couple spoke to students in Melbourne about the dangers of social media and its impact on mental health.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Europe's Electrification Dream Is Hitting A Wall
Europe's Electrification Dream Is Hitting A Wall

Authored by Gisele Widdershoven via OilPrice.com,


Europe’s electrification strategy is ambitious but constrained by lagging grid infrastructure, creating bottlenecks that are already delaying industry and investment.


Massive funding needs—running into trillions—combined with regulatory complexity and slow buildouts are exposing a gap between policy ambition and physical reality.


Without better coordination, prioritization, and financing, Europe risks higher costs, weaker competitiveness, and a stalled energy transition.

The message given by Ursula von der Leyen to electrify the European economy is strategically coherent, politically appealing, and, on the surface, even unavoidable. It will be the real deal to decarbonize industry and power transport, reduce dependence on imported fossil fuels, and anchor Europe’s competitiveness. The latter is especially valid in an increasingly fragmented geopolitical order. Electrification is presented as the backbone of Europe’s future prosperity and security.

However, beneath this clear vision lies a far more uncomfortable reality. Brussels is not only pursuing an energy transition but also transforming its industrial base, transport systems, infrastructure networks, and geopolitical posture. All of this needs to be done while facing an increased financial, physical, and strategic strain. Electrification is not failing at present because the overall idea or strategy is wrong, but because the system required to support it is already overstretched. At the same time, and maybe even more important, the bill to fix that system is only beginning to emerge.



The real core problem of Brussels is not its ambition, but the sequencing of it all.

Europe is already accelerating the electrification of demand, mainly in the industrial, transport, and heating sectors, while simultaneously pushing to expand renewable supply at an unprecedented speed. One pivotal issue, however, seems to be constantly forgotten: the infrastructure that must connect the two is lagging dangerously behind. Policymakers and advisors should realize that electricity systems are not abstract constructs, but physical networks with hard limits. Throughout Europe, these limits have already been reached.

The prime example of this situation is the Netherlands.

Throughout the continent, the Dutch energy transition has been presented as a model: one of the highest per-capita deployments of offshore wind in the world, widespread solar adoption, aggressive electrification policies, and a political consensus around decarbonization. If Brussels’ overall strategy were working as intended, the Netherlands should be its showcase.

In reality, however, it is its warning.

At present, the Dutch electricity grid is no longer able to keep pace with the pace of change. The country’s grid congestion has become structural, not incidental. An ever-growing list of thousands of companies, some even stating 15,000+, are already on waiting lists for grid connections or capacity upgrades. In several Dutch regions, industrial clusters cannot expand, while new investments are delayed or diverted. The most shocking issue is that even residential developments are hindered or blocked by the lack of electricity.

The paradox is striking. At certain moments, especially when there is a positive combination of wind and sun, the Netherlands produces more renewable electricity than it can use. At other times, the country cannot supply enough electricity to meet demand. The Dutch system is increasingly hit by a system that needs to deal with a simultaneous suffering of surplus and scarcity.

This is not a temporary imbalance but the predictable outcome of a system in which generation has outpaced infrastructure. It is also where Europe’s electrification narrative begins to unravel.

The EC’s strategy again assumes a relatively smooth scaling of supply, demand, and infrastructure. Reality, however, is much more complex. At present, infrastructure development lags due to permitting constraints, investment bottlenecks, and physical construction timelines. At the same time, demand does not scale linearly, especially when industries hesitate amid uncertainty about costs and grid access. The system itself introduces frictions, such as congestion, curtailment, and volatility, all undermining efficiency.

Across Europe, an increasing number of grid operators are issuing urgent warnings as connection queues grow while investment pipelines stall. All are looking at a situation where the congestion costs are rising. And yet the policy response remains focused primarily on accelerating renewable deployment and electrification targets, as if infrastructure will inevitably follow.

It will not.

Right now, now is that electricity grids cannot be expanded at the pace of policy ambition. Building high-voltage transmission lines takes years, often more than a decade. At the same time, distribution networks require massive upgrades to handle decentralized generation and electrified demand. Local opposition, environmental regulations, and supply chain constraints slow all of this.

Brussels dramatically underestimates the scale of investment needed, which should motivate industry leaders to develop innovative financing strategies and advocate for substantial capital allocation to meet the €660 billion annual target and beyond.

To be clear, this is not incremental spending, but a structural reallocation of capital on a scale rarely seen outside wartime economies.

Given the €1.2 trillion investment requirement for electricity grids alone by 2040, policymakers should explore innovative financing models, public-private partnerships, and EU-level funding instruments to mobilize the necessary capital efficiently.

Addressing electrification requires a collective effort to rebuild Europe’s entire energy backbone, highlighting the importance of coordinated strategic planning among policymakers, industry, and investors to prevent economic inefficiency and political fragility.

That is where the Dutch case becomes valid. The Netherlands has already demonstrated that high levels of renewable penetration do not automatically translate into effective electrification. Without grid capacity, renewable energy cannot be fully utilized. Without certainty about the connection, industrial electrification stalls. Without system flexibility, volatility increases.

In other words, the transition becomes economically inefficient and politically fragile.

Another major constraint is that the financial challenge does not exist in isolation. It is unfolding within a rapidly deteriorating geopolitical environment.

The European Union is simultaneously being forced to increase defense spending, support Ukraine, and respond to renewed instability in global energy markets. The war in Ukraine has already triggered a structural shift in defense priorities, with European defense spending reaching hundreds of billions annually and new EU-level instruments targeting up to €800 billion in mobilized resources.

Since the last two months, tensions in the Middle East, especially in Hormuz, have reintroduced energy security risks that Europe had hoped electrification would mitigate. Roughly a fifth of global oil and LNG flows through Hormuz. Even partial disruptions immediately translate into higher prices, increased volatility, and renewed dependence on external suppliers.

This strategic contradiction is compounded by geopolitical risks, such as disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz and increased defense spending, which threaten to undermine Europe's energy security and complicate the transition to electrification despite its intended benefits.

Brussels attempts to invest heavily in electrification to reduce energy vulnerability, while simultaneously being forced to spend heavily on defense and absorb the costs of ongoing fossil fuel dependence. The energy transition does not replace one system with another, but it layers new costs on top of old ones.

This is the fiscal collision at the heart of the European project. The real question right now, which needs to be answered honestly, is: who is going to pay?

Most European governments are already fiscally constrained, as public debt levels remain elevated following the pandemic and energy crisis. They also need to deal with increased defense spending, while social pressures are rising. The idea that national budgets alone can finance the electrification of the economy is no longer credible.

Again, private capital is often presented as the solution. Brussels strategy relies heavily on mobilizing institutional investors, de-risking projects, and leveraging capital markets. However, private capital is not a substitute for public strategy. Private capital flows where risk-adjusted returns are predictable. Grid infrastructure, industrial electrification, and system flexibility often do not meet these criteria without significant public guarantees.

Moreover, the scale required goes far beyond what current mechanisms can deliver. Even ambitious instruments such as the Innovation Fund or the proposed Industrial Decarbonization Bank, targeting tens or even hundreds of billions, remain small relative to the annual investment gap.

Europe’s uncomfortable truth is that it will need to adopt a fundamentally different financing model. Electrification at this scale clearly requires something closer to a strategic investment doctrine than a collection of policy instruments. Brussels will need to deal with a reality that requires prioritization, coordination, and, for all parties, critical acceptance of trade-offs.


First, Europe will need to elevate energy infrastructure to the same strategic level as defense. If joint borrowing and coordinated financing can be justified for military capabilities, the same logic applies to cross-border electricity grids, storage systems, and industrial electrification corridors. These are not optional climate investments; they are the foundation of economic resilience.


Second, existing revenue streams, particularly from carbon pricing mechanisms, must be more aggressively redirected toward infrastructure. The current allocation is insufficient relative to the scale of need.


Third, public financial institutions, the European Investment Bank and national development banks—must significantly expand their role, particularly in areas where private capital remains hesitant.

All the above, however, will eliminate the need for prioritization.

The current reality shows that Europe cannot fund everything simultaneously. It cannot electrify all industries at once, build all infrastructure at once, and meet all geopolitical commitments without making choices. It is a political illusion to believe that coordination and efficiency gains will eliminate trade-offs.

The Dutch experience already demonstrates what happens when these trade-offs are ignored. Infrastructure constraints begin to shape economic outcomes. Investments are delayed or redirected. The energy transition loses momentum not because of political opposition, but because of practical limitations.

If we scale the Dutch experience to the European level, the consequences could be far more significant. Industries that depend on reliable, high-capacity electricity, especially chemicals, steel, and data infrastructure, will look beyond Europe if energy systems cannot deliver. Investment flows may shift to regions with more robust infrastructure. And Europe’s industrial base could erode at precisely the moment it seeks to strengthen it.

This is the risk embedded in the current electrification narrative.

Brussels assumes that more renewable energy and more electrification will automatically lead to lower costs, greater security, and enhanced competitiveness. Facts on the ground, however, show that without the infrastructure and financing to support it, the opposite may occur: higher costs, increased volatility, and reduced competitiveness.

The greatest danger is not a failure of electrification, but that it will proceed in an unbalanced way. There is a huge risk of too much generation without infrastructure, too much demand without connectivity, and too much ambition without sequence.

This is already happening.

The Netherlands shows that even a highly advanced energy transition can hit hard physical limits. These limits are not theoretical. They are visible in grid congestion, curtailed renewable output, delayed investments, and constrained economic growth.

Europe as a whole is now approaching the same inflection point.

Von der Leyen is right that electricity will define Europe’s future. However, to define the future is not the same as building it. Brussels needs to understand that building requires infrastructure that takes decades, capital that runs into trillions, and political choices that are far more difficult than current rhetoric suggests. We are not only looking at an energy strategy when pursuing electrification, but also at a test of Europe’s ability to align ambition with reality.

At present, that alignment is missing.

The physical limits of a grid need to be confronted by Europe, including the financial scale of its ambitions, and the geopolitical pressures shaping its choices. If not, the electrification agenda will remain incomplete. Again, the vision is not wrong, but the system required to deliver it is not yet ready. At the same time, the willingness to pay for it has not yet been fully acknowledged.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 02:00

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Germany Accelerates Kamikaze Drone Stockpiling With Rheinmetall Deal
Germany Accelerates Kamikaze Drone Stockpiling With Rheinmetall Deal

Germany's parliament has approved a sizeable contract for defense giant Rheinmetall to supply loitering munitions, or kamikaze drones, to the Bundeswehr, underscoring just how quickly European militaries are internalizing drone warfare lessons from both the Russia-Ukraine war and, more recently, the U.S.-Iran conflict. Berlin's latest procurement push makes it clear that one-way attack drones are becoming a serious threat, and the race to stockpile them has begun.

Bloomberg reports that the budget committee of the Bundestag approved the Defense Ministry's proposal for an initial tranche of Rheinmetall's suicide drones worth $345 million.



The deal is capped at around $1.2 billion for Rheinmetall loitering munitions and depends on the firm meeting development and delivery milestones. The drones are initially intended for Germany's brigade in Lithuania, but there is a possibility that they will be deployed elsewhere.

The approval follows Germany's February decision to purchase $637 million worth of strike drones from startups Helsing and STARK. Rheinmetall missed out on those deals because it lacked a working prototype at the time.

The Defense Ministry confirmed the latest contract without identifying Rheinmetall: "As with the other two contracts, there are clearly defined qualification requirements, termination milestones, and innovation clauses."

Lessons learned from the current conflicts across Eurasia have served as a wake-up call for countries around the world, unleashing a frantic race among the world's militaries to procure low-cost attack drones.

What follows will be counter-drone systems to combat this emerging threat, as the war in the Middle East showed that the US and its Gulf allies lacked low-cost solutions.

On the U.S. homeland front, the Federal Aviation Administration has given the U.S. military the green light to deploy high-energy counter-drone laser weapons in U.S. airspace. Alarmingly, there are very few, if not any, low-cost counter-drone systems guarding America's data centers, transmission substations, stadiums, and other critical infrastructure.

One month before the US-Iran conflict broke out, we informed readers of the urgent need for data centers to consider counter-drone systems. What followed were multiple data centers struck by Iranian drones in the Gulf region. Civilian infrastructure will not be spared as the world becomes increasingly dangerous and chaotic.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/16/2026 - 02:45

Department for Education
Open 
Government to examine deaths of vulnerable care leavers
Review into deaths of young people leaving the care system to be published later this year, led by Ashley John-Baptiste and Clare Chamberlain | Department for Education.

Ian Visits
Open 
First look inside the new V&A East Museum
A giant stone armour-clad hermit crab of a building has arrived in East London, as the latest expansion for the V&A’s growing empire of outposts.Read more ›

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
UK economy grew faster than expected ahead of Iran war
The economy saw its biggest monthly rise in more than two years just before the outbreak of the US-Israeli war with Iran.

Mail Online
Open 
Poh Ling Yeow fangirls over Meghan Markle as she walks onto the set of MasterChef Australia after her surprise Aussie TV role was revealed
Poh Ling Yeow has come in for a roasting from fans after Channel 10 announced that Meghan Markle would appear as a guest judge on MasterChef Australia.

Mail Online
Open 
US military obliterates vessel in Pacific Ocean and kills three 'narco-terrorists' as part of Operation Southern Spear
The strike has brought the total number of vessels destroyed as part of Operation Southern Spear to 52, and it has brought the total number of people killed in the attacks to 174.

Mail Online
Open 
An orgy. 'Vile' behaviour and infidelity. Made In Chelsea bad boy Alex Mytton appalled onscreen - which is why what he's up to now is so shocking, revealed by MOLLY CLAYTON
He was Made In Chelsea's biggest love rat, renowned for cheating scandals, explosive rows and many, many nights of boozing.

Mail Online
Open 
Meghan tells fans she was bullied online 'every day for 10 years' and became 'most trolled person in the world' as Prince Harry says he never wanted to be a working royal because 'it killed my mum' 
On day three of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex's Australian tour, the couple spoke to students in Melbourne about the dangers of social media and its impact on mental health.

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11322 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Maintenance - CLSHO-Shoreditch (Close)
Start: Wed, 15th Apr 2026 22:00

End: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 06:00

Update: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 06:00

Clear: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 07:30

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 07:37

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11336 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Maintenance - Gateshead (Close)
Maintenance successfully completed.

Start: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 00:01

End: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 06:00

Clear: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 07:30

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 07:38

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11378 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Maintenance - NEHZ-Hexham (Close)
Maintenance successfully completed.

Start: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 00:05

End: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 06:00

Update: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 06:00

Clear: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 07:38

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 07:38

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#11441 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Maintenance - Kentish town (Close)
Start: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 00:05

End: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 07:00

Clear: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 07:38

Edited: Thu, 16th Apr 2026 07:38

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

Telegraph
Open 
Seven goals and two red cards as Bayern kill off Real Madrid in classic
Seven goals and two red cards as Bayern kill off Real Madrid in classic

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
UK economy was growing faster than expected in February before Iran war began – business live
UK economy smashes forecasts with 0.5% growth in FebruaryThe UK’s growth acceleration in February is likely to be “short-lived”, due to the Iran war, warns Andrew Hunter, associate director and senior economist at Moody’s Analytics:“The 0.5% month-over-month jump in U.K. GDP in February, and slight upward revision to January’s data, echoes the earlier improvement in the surveys and suggests the economy had more momentum at the start of this year than previously thought.However, with those surveys weakening quite sharply in March as the Middle East conflict sent energy prices soaring, this upturn is likely to prove short lived. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Cold comfort for Rachel Reeves as UK economy clawed back ground with 0.5% growth in February… but that was BEFORE the Middle East crisis erupted
The Office for National Statistics (ONS) said gross domestic product (GDP) grew by 0.5 per cent month-on-month in February, following upwardly revised growth of 0.1 per cent in January.

BBC World News
Open 
Israeli demolitions levelling towns in south Lebanon, satellite images show
BBC Verify analysis found more than 1,400 buildings had been destroyed since 2 March.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
'Breakthrough' Alzheimer's drugs unlikely to benefit patients, report suggests
A major review has provoked a backlash after concluding the medicines provide too little benefit to be noticed.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
UK economy grew faster than expected ahead of Iran war
The Office for National Statistics says the economy expanded by 0.5% in February.

Mail Online
Open 
Iconic Baywatch babe to reprise role in reboot with Brooks Nader and Livvy Dunne 34 years after leaving series
The upcoming Baywatch reboot is getting an extra dose of nostalgia now that one of the original show's cast members has signed on.

Mail Online
Open 
Amanda Bynes shows off dramatic new hair transformation as she ditches her bleach blonde look
The actress ditched her bleach blonde tresses for a dark new look that she debuted in two videos via her Instagram Stories.

Mail Online
Open 
Cold comfort for Rachel Reeves as UK economy clawed back ground with 0.5% growth in February… but that was BEFORE the Middle East crisis erupted
The Office for National Statistics (ONS) said gross domestic product (GDP) grew by 0.5 per cent month-on-month in February following upwardly revised growth of 0.1 per cent in January.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Play-off pending? How draw at Etihad could set up thrilling finale
Man City's meeting against Arsenal may go a long way to deciding the destination of the Premier League trophy in May, but how close a finish could it be?

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Play-off pending? How a draw at the Etihad could set up thrilling finale
Man City's meeting against Arsenal may go a long way to deciding the destination of the Premier League trophy in May, but how close a finish could it be?

Mail Online
Open 
Super-rich crypto boss fiancé of influencer found dead in Zanzibar days after engagement is held for questioning as it emerges they had explosive fight before her death
Joe McCann, 45, a crypto founder, is being questioned by the Tanzania Police Force about influencer Ashlee Jenae's death at the Zuri Zanzibar resort.

Mail Online
Open 
See the moment Prince Harry asked AFL stars a VERY Aussie question before they gave him a surprising rating for his skills at kicking a footy
The royal blended right in with a trio of footy stars when he visited Western Bulldogs headquarters in Footscray on Wednesday.

Mail Online
Open 
Fans roast Nicole Kidman for her 'wig fail' at CinemaCon in Las Vegas with Sandra Bullock
Fans have roasted Nicole Kidman for having another 'wig fail' when she stepped onto the red carpet with fellow actress Sandra Bullock this week.    

Mail Online
Open 
Our flights were cancelled because of Iran conflict but travel agent Opodo won't refund our £2,675: CRANE ON THE CASE
My husband and I booked flights to Islamabad to deal with some family matters, after our son sadly died aged 33. However, this was disrupted by the Iran conflict.

Mail Online
Open 
If I give £425k to my son to buy a house for me to live in rent free can I avoid inheritance tax AND care bills?
Would the cash I give my son to buy this new property fall outside of my estate and potentially for calculation of care costs? Nick Nesbitt of Forvis Mazars replies.

Mail Online
Open 
Middle East peace breakthrough as Iran hints it will open Strait of Hormuz and Trump hails major Israel and Lebanon development - Live updates
Israel's cabinet met on Wednesday to discuss a possible ceasefire in neighbouring Lebanon, a senior Israeli official said,

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
UK economy was growing faster than expected in February before Iran war began – business live
UK economy smashes forecasts with 0.5% growth in February“Widespread growth” across the UK services sector helped the economy to expand strongly in February, by an impressive 0.5%.Today’s GDP report shows that 12 of the 14 subsectors of the services economy grew during the month, helping services to grow by 0.5%.“Growth increased further in the three months to February led by broad-based increases across services.“Within services, growth was driven by wholesaling, market research, hospitality, and publishing, which all performed well in the three months to February. Meanwhile car production recovered from the effects of the autumn cyber incident. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Report suggests 'breakthrough' Alzheimer's drugs unlikely to benefit patients
A major review has provoked a backlash after concluding the medicines provide too little benefit to be noticed.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Berlin hosts Sudan conference amid brutal, forgotten war
The war in Sudan has been raging for the past three years, and a ceasefire is nowhere in sight. Participants at a conference of donors in Berlin hope at least to ease the suffering of the people caught in the middle.

Mail Online
Open 
Trump's Department of War 'not being honest' about scale of damage from Iran conflict as satellite images lay bare billions of dollars worth of equipment losses, claims new Daily Mail show
Looking at one air base on just one day of the Iran war, it appears probable that the US lost over a billion dollars worth of equipment.

Mail Online
Open 
I used to spend £120 on takeaways every WEEK... I was obese and miserable before I lost 5 stone without fat jabs
Whitley Lloyd, 34, from Brecon in Wales, once spent up to £120 a week on takeaways and says she was left 'out of breath doing almost anything'.

Mail Online
Open 
Would you welcome Prince Harry and Meghan Markle back with open arms? Have your say in the Palace Confidential poll
You've read the headlines and heard our experts' opinions - but what do YOU think?

Mail Online
Open 
Cold comfort for Rachel Reeves as UK economy clawed back ground with 0.5% growth in February… but that was BEFORE the Middle East crisis erupted
The UK economy grew by 0.5 per cent in February, the Office for National Statistics said today.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
UK economy was growing faster than expected in February before Iran war began – business live
UK economy smashes forecasts with 0.5% growth in FebruaryThe UK economy also grew by 0.5% in the three months to February, helped by the end of the cyber-attack disruption at Jaguar Land Rover last autumn.That’s up from 0.3% growth in the three months to January.“Growth increased further in the three months to February led by broad-based increases across services.“Within services, growth was driven by wholesaling, market research, hospitality, and publishing, which all performed well in the three months to February. Meanwhile car production recovered from the effects of the autumn cyber incident. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
UK economy grew faster than expected in February
The Office for National Statistics says the economy expanded by 0.5% in February.

Russia Today News
Open 
Fury over fuel: Protests across Northern Ireland (VIDEOS)

Russia Today News
Open 
US DOJ moves to overturn convictions for far-right Capitol rioters

Mail Online
Open 
'Scott Mills was the nicest man in showbiz... We are worried': Star's friends reveal the crisis of BBC DJ as he and young husband are seen looking unrecognisable in first images
Underneath a pair of black sunglasses and a large New York Yankees baseball cap, Scott Mills appears gaunt and unshaven.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Colours of Time review – Monet meets Mamma Mia in charming French artist comedy
A country girl’s search for answers in the belle époque is ingeniously intercut with the adventures of her ragtag descendants in Cédric Klapisch’s filmThe original French title of Cédric Klapisch’s new film is La Venue de L’Avenir, or The Arrival of the Future; it is an entertaining sentimental fantasy, a chocolate-boxy ensemble picture in Klapisch’s distinctive style, inventing a romantic backstory to the career of Claude Monet and his contemporary, the pioneering photographer Félix Nadar.These two whiskery bohemians are effectively involved in a Mamma Mia-type paternity puzzle concerning the drama’s female lead. Adèle (Suzanne Lindon) is a fictional young woman who during the belle époque makes a fateful journey to find her errant mother in Paris, leaving behind her sweetheart and the village where she was brought up, in the countryside near Monet’s home town of Le Havre. Her life and times are rediscovered by her descendants in the present day, and we intercut enjoyably between past and present. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Wales’s first minister calls on Keir Starmer to halt US-UK space defence project
Eluned Morgan says US under Donald Trump is ‘not partner it once was’ with Iran threats and ‘contempt’ towards UKWales’s first minister has called on Keir Starmer to suspend a big joint defence project with the US, saying that under Donald Trump the country is “not the partner it once was”.In a statement on Wednesday, Labour’s Eluned Morgan cited the US president’s “contempt” towards the UK and his threat to “annihilate” Iran as reasons to halt the development of the Deep Space Advanced Radar Capability (Darc) programme in Pembrokeshire, part of the Aukus defence partnership between the UK, US and Australia. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Artists, clowns, runaways: a stay at the Chelsea Hotel – in pictures
Patti Smith lived there in ‘creative chaos’, while others paid their bills with paintings. Fellow guest Albert Scopin unpacked his camera to capture the iconic New York hotel and its clientele Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Yesteryear by Caro Claire Burke review – the downfall of an all‑American tradwife
The premise – Instagram influencer is confronted by pioneer reality – is genius. But does this high-concept debut live up to the hype?Could Caro Claire Burke’s Yesteryear be the first great tradwife novel? This was my hope: finally, a literary response to the unhinged social trend of women cosplaying “traditional Christian values” – pronatalism and obeying one’s husband – to large social media followings. I am not immune to hype, and Yesteryear has been hyped to high heaven, prompting massive auctions for the rights, and landing a film deal with Anne Hathaway.You have to admit that the premise – Instagram tradwife wakes up in what appear to be the actual pioneer days, and finds that traditional wifedom is not as much of a hoot as her whitewashed social media re-enactment had implied – is genius. As one of the “Angry Women” our heroine Natalie so disparages, I was looking forward to some sweet schadenfreude. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Bath, Harrogate … Woodhall?’ A short break in one of the UK’s most forgotten spa towns
The Lincolnshire village, the height of fashion a century ago, offers fascinating history, a woodland cinema, excellent cycle routes and a deeply restorative feelIt was 6.30am, the cockcrow slot at Jubilee Park lido, and still not quite light. I hadn’t wanted to come this early – it was the only time I’d been able to book. But as I slid into the pool – heated to a delicious 29C – I realised it was a gift. Vapours rose dreamily into cool air laced with owl hoots and the whiff of dewy blooms, and I swam into a sunrise that became more vivid with every stroke. A man in the next lane paused to admire the reddening dawn too; he was hungover, he said, but had come to do his morning lengths nonetheless. A cure of sorts.Bath, Harrogate, Buxton – Woodhall? This Lincolnshire village isn’t one of Britain’s headline spa towns. Most probably don’t know where it is – 18 miles (29km east of Lincoln, for the record. But at the turn of the 20th century, Woodhall Spa was among the most fashionable places to be seen, to be healed. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
CEO of bitcoin firm championed by Nigel Farage leaves company
Resignation announced of Jai Patel, whose liquidated crypto firm was relaunched as Stack BTC this yearThe chief executive of a bitcoin company promoted by Nigel Farage has left his role as the venture attempts to convince investors that it is going to deliver “long-term value” for shareholders.Stack BTC was launched to much fanfare in March this year, with Farage and former chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng becoming some of its first shareholders. The company says its founder is Paul Withers, a friend of the Reform UK leader who owns a gold bullion company that Farage has also promoted, Direct Bullion. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ammonia pollution hotspots found in areas of UK with most pig and poultry factory farms
Map reveals most severe concentrations of ammonia emissions, which are dangerous to health and environmentAmmonia pollution hotspots have been identified in areas with some of the greatest numbers of intensive pig and poultry farms in Britain, research has revealed.A new map for the first time reveals the most severe concentrations of ammonia emissions are clustered in Lincolnshire, Herefordshire and Norfolk. These regions all have a high density of intensive poultry and pig units that drive dangerous levels of ammonia, according to researchers from Compassion in World Farming (CiWF) and Sustain. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
UK economy showed surprise 0.5% growth before Iran war
ONS figure for February suggests economy was gaining momentum before conflict stoked inflation with soaring energy pricesThe UK economy unexpectedly expanded by 0.5% in February, before the war in the Middle East dashed hopes of an uptick in growth this year, official figures show.The unusually large increase reported by the Office for National Statistics, suggests the economy had gained momentum before the conflict began. Economists had forecast just a 0.1% expansion. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Arsenal are painful to watch but maybe this is just how you win things | Barney Ronay
The crowd were getting anxious and players are either missing or off form but they have still reached the Champions League semi-finalsAnd so I am become a meme. Towards the end of this game, already booked for standing on the edge of the pitch whirling his arms in a balletic, immaculately groomed pose of horror, like an oversized wedding cake figurine at the world’s most distressing wedding, Mikel Arteta could be seen pulling his jumper up over his eyes to obscure the spectacle in front of him. Not so fast, Mikel. We’re all in this together you know.At the final whistle, with a controlled, job-done 0-0 safely in the bag, Arteta could be seen striding out in front of the post-match column of Arsenal players, conducting the crowd, an urgent, compact, dark-haired figure with, from a distance, something of the business-casual Tom Cruise about him. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Colombia’s history-making VP blames racism for four years of frustration
Francia Márquez, the country’s first Black vice-president, opens up about the strains in her relationship with the president and the obstacles she has faced: ‘The Colombian state is a racist state’In the historic centre of Colombia’s capital, Bogotá, a gallery of portraits at the vice-president’s official residence displays the faces of all former vice-presidents since the country became a republic in 1886. All of them are white.When the current president and vice-president leave office in August, the wall will include an Afro-Colombian face for the first time: Francia Márquez, 44, the first Black woman to become vice-president in a country where at least 10% of the population is Afro-descendant. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Trump announces leaders of Israel and Lebanon will meet for the first time in 33 YEARS... with huge ramifications for war in Iran
The president's late-night announcement comes after a meeting between Lebanese and Israeli officials in Washington DC.

Sky News Home
Open 
UK economy back to growth but it could be the last for a while
The UK economy grew far more than expected in the month before war in Iran began, latest official figures show.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Seven goals, fastest strike and two red cards - Bayern-Real delivers drama
The quickest strike of this season's Champions League, seven goals, two red cards and the 15-time winners exiting in anger - once again the knockout stages of Europe's elite tournament delivered drama in spades.

TechRadar News
Open 
VodafoneThree gets Ofcom approval to bring satellite connectivity to your smartphone

Digital Trends
Open 
You can finally remove annoying YouTube Shorts from your feed
YouTube's new zero-minute Shorts timer removes them from your homepage entirely, giving you an easy way to cut back on scrolling without deleting the app.

Mail Online
Open 
Trump takes a shot at the UN as he sends blunt 'America First' message to the world marking a major shift in the global order... and US businesses are expected to reap the benefits
The United States wants to spread its de-emphasis on foreign aid to developing nations. Secretary of State Marco Rubio told US diplomats to push countries to back a 'trade over aid' initiative.

Mail Online
Open 
Meghan tells fans she was bullied online 'every day for 10 years' and became 'most trolled person in the world' as Prince Harry suffers awkward selfie moment with Australian TV reporter
On day three of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex's Australian tour, the couple spoke to students in Melbourne about the dangers of social media and its impact on mental health.

Mail Online
Open 
'It killed my mum': Harry bares all as he reveals why he wanted to quit royal life during emotional speech at $997-a-head summit
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have appeared at a series of engagements in both Melbourne and Canberra so far, with spectators all saying the same thing about a tender moment between the pair.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Arsenal limp to semis but Arteta wanted fire - does style matter?
Mikel Arteta wanted "fire" from his Arsenal players but instead got a sluggish performance as the Gunners did what was needed to reach the Champions League semi-finals.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Cool Hand Luke actress Joy Harmon dies aged 87
Harmon was best known for a car-washing scene in the Paul Newman prison drama.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
February GDP report to show if UK economy was growing before Iran war began – business live
Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial newsEconomic growth in China has accelerated in the last quarter, in an encouraging start to the year for Beijing.China’s gross domestic product (GDP) grew by 5%, year on year, in the first quarter of 2026, data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) released today shows.“The growth of production and supply accelerated, market demand continued to improve, employment was generally stable, market prices picked up moderately, and high-quality development advanced with new and positive momentum.” Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Wave of Russian drone and missile attacks kill 15 in Ukraine
Meanwhile, a Ukrainian drone attack killed two children in Russia, officials say.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
February GDP report to show if UK economy was growing before Iran war began – business live
Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial newsRachel Reeves has announced an expansion of support for the most energy-intensive UK businesses, as they face soaring bills as a result of the Middle East conflict.The chancellor said the long-promised British Industrial Competitiveness Scheme (BICS) would be expanded to cover 10,000 companies, up from the 7,000 originally announced.With the economy stagnating to start the year, we expect a rebound in February. We don’t discount an upward revision to January GDP either. Our nowcast models point to both a potential upward revision to January and some further upward momentum in February.What do we see for February GDP? We see GDP expanding by 0.2% m-o-m, lifted by broad-based momentum across the services, production and construction sectors. Continue reading...

Wired Top Stories
Open 
60% HP Discount Codes & Coupons April 2026
Save up to 60%, plus an extra 20% with HP promo codes for laptops, printers, PCs, and more tech.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Uplift Desk Coupon Codes & Discounts: Up to $570 Off
Upgrade your home office with the best Uplift Desk discount codes. Save on standing desks, ergonomic chairs, and accessories during the Spring Setup Sale.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
50% Off DoorDash Promo Code | April 2026
Explore today’s top DoorDash promo codes for $25 off your first order, free delivery, and 50% off DashPass for students and select users.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Therabody Promo Codes: 15% Off April 2026
Save on the science-backed devices you’ve been eyeing with 15% off Theragun discount code and 30% off other great deals.

BBC UK News
Open 
'No estate agent will touch our home due to HS2'
Linda Franklin, who lives opposite a construction site in Water Orton, says she "dreads coming home".

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Several killed in Russian strikes across Ukraine, many more injured
A 12-year-old was among those killed as Russian missile and drone attacks hit Ukrainian cities of Kyiv, Odesa and Dnipro.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
TV tonight: Nicola Coughlan and Lydia West return in comedy Big Mood
Prepare for wedding chaos in Camilla Whitehill’s sharp series. Plus: it’s the Apprentice final. Here’s what to watch this evening10pm, Channel 4Series one of Camilla Whitehill’s comedy ended with best friends Maggie (Nicola Coughlan) and Eddie (Lydia West) parting ways, in part because of Maggie’s struggles with bipolar disorder. A year later, they’re reunited as bridesmaids at a friend’s wedding. Maggie is focused on her recovery from lithium poisoning and keen to prove she’s in her “stable girl era”; Eddie has a new Maggie in crystal-wielding “light worker” Whitney. What could possibly go wrong? Lucinda Everett Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Horse urine perfume: How online bargains may be dangerous
Experts warn of hidden risk of counterfeits, while the government consults on stricter product safety rules.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Move over wind farms: Why some argue cutting costs is the best way to cut carbon
From heat pumps to offshore wind, the UK’s net zero push is facing growing scrutiny. Are rising costs undermining climate goals?

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Watch: Reporter told to fake domestic abuse claim to remain in the UK
Some migrants are being encouraged to fabricate abuse allegations in order to stay in the UK.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Northern Marianas brace for weeks without power after super typhoon Sinlaku
Officials report severe flooding in Saipan hospital, fierce winds and toppled utility poles in wake of Super Typhoon Sinlaku Some hard hit areas of the Northern Marianas could be without power and water for weeks after the Pacific Ocean islands were battered by a super typhoon, an official has said.The only hospital on Saipan, a US territory that is the largest of the Mariana Islands, experienced severe flooding and on Thursday there had been reports of big resorts losing backup generators, said Ed Propst, a former lawmaker who works in the governor’s office. Continue reading...

The Register
Open 
Bullet train upgrade brings 5G windows and noise-cancelling cabins to Japan
Private Shinkansen suites are pulling up to the station in October Some Japanese bullet trains will soon be equipped with private suites that include windows with embedded 5G antennas and noise-cancelling technology that envelops passengers in a bubble of quiet.…

BBC UK News
Open 
Stormont ministers to discuss fuel cost pressures
The issue will be raised in the context of ongoing talks at the executive about a multi-year budget.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Former champion Brecel misses out on Crucible - draw coming up on BBC
Former winner Luca Brecel fails to qualify for the 2026 World Snooker Championship, losing to Wales' Jak Jones in the last qualifying round.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Thursday news quiz: Trump is unwise, an emperor dies and a €1m raffle prize
Test yourself on topical news trivia, pop culture and general knowledge every Thursday. How will you fare?It is time for the Thursday news quiz, where even the most distinguished appearances can conceal a lingering doubt. A perfectly groomed moustache may suggest authority – until, thanks to our illustration from Anaïs Mims, it starts curling into a question mark of its own. Fifteen questions await – frankly rather more on the general knowledge side than topical news because the quiz master has been on holiday in Brighton and wrote most of it in advance, but it is what it is. There are no prizes, but we always enjoy hearing how you got on in the comments. Allons-y!The Thursday news quiz, No 243 Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Rachel Roddy’s ‘high-ranking’ penne with potatoes, cabbage, butter and cheese – recipe
Penne may be the default short pasta all-rounder, but this variation on an alpine classic is soft, warming and a bit specialIn December 2023, the magazine La Cucina Italiana ranked Italians’ favourite pasta shapes, according to data gathered by Unione Italiana Food (“the leading association in Italy for the direct representation of food product categories”). I love this sort of thing. According to the UIF, by processing NielsenIQ data (comprehensive market research, consumer intelligence and retail measurement), they identified the five most popular shapes from over 500, and examined how preferences vary in different regions.In first place was spaghetti, while penne came in second, with these two shapes – which also takes in thinner spaghettini, chunkier spaghettoni and both ridged and smooth penne – accounting for 78% of all pasta sold in Italy in 2023. The regional variations of three, four and five are as follows: in the north-west and north-east, fusilli, short pasta and mixed pasta for broth or minestra; in central Italy, short pasta, fusilli and rigatoni; in the south, mixed pasta for broth or minestra, short pasta and tortiglioni. It has to be said that the regional variations are a bit baggy, considering that short pasta takes in eight shapes: conchiglie, farfalle, mezze maniche, orecchiette, pasta mista, penne again (which is confusing), paccheri and trofie. All of which is justification for calling this week’s column the second highest-ranking pasta shape in Italy with potatoes, cabbage, butter and cheese (while also noting that you can instead use the shapes ranked number three, four and five). Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Future of the NHS, saviour of the high street? High hopes for health hub in a Barnsley shopping centre
Transfer of medical services from hospital to former Wilko store is improving healthcare access and boosting footfallIt is a revolution that might just save the NHS – and the high street. Imagine being able to have your eyes tested, mole examined or get an appointment with a consultant without going to your local hospital – and maybe fit in some shopping or a cinema visit afterwards.That, increasingly, is what people in Barnsley are doing after an unprecedented relocation of medical services from the district general hospital into a purpose-built outpatients centre in the Alhambra shopping centre, which is getting a new lease of life thanks to the experiment. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Private rents in Great Britain stop rising for first time since 2017
More landlords having to cut prices to secure tenants, Rightmove data showsAverage private rents have stopped rising in Great Britain after almost a decade of increases, as more landlords cut their prices to secure a tenant, data shows.The typical advertised private rent outside London for properties coming on to the market remained flat at £1,370 a calendar month in the first three months of 2026, according to the property website Rightmove. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Justin Trudeau at Coachella? That’s just wrong: at a certain age, things must change
If you have to consult the Reddit thread ‘am I too old for Coachella?’, then the answer is probably ‘yes’This morning, over breakfast, in the course of discussing the week’s news, I happened to say the word “Coachella” in front of my two scornful 11-year-olds, whose heads snapped up from their screens in unison. “How have you heard of Coachella?” said one in amazement. “How have you heard of Coachella?” I replied. They exchanged a look with which I’ve become increasingly familiar – namely, the “here we go” look reserved by the very young for the very middle-aged. “What is Coachella, then?” I said, to which they replied: “It’s where influencers go.”This is, of course, an accurate summary of what the California music and arts festival has become in the 27 years since its inception, but that’s not why I bring it up. The festival, which is running this week, has featured by Jack White, FKA Twigs and Sabrina Carpenter, but most of the publicity has gone on the audience; specifically, on the attendance of Justin Trudeau, the former prime minister of Canada, who, along with his girlfriend, Katy Perry, was photographed dancing to Justin Bieber and squatting chairless on a kerb, red plastic cups perched on their knees. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
I feared my son had a brain tumour but he'd been poisoned with vitamin D
Investigations found Roo had been accidentally poisoned with a dose of vitamin D prescribed for growing pains.

Mail Online
Open 
Meghan claims she was 'the most trolled person in the world' as she opens up about relentless bullying 'every day for 10 years' during emotional visit with mental health advocates
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have appeared at a series of engagements in both Melbourne and Canberra so far, with spectators all saying the same thing about a tender moment between the pair.

CNET News
Open 
New AT&T Elite 2.0 Phone Plan Boosts Wireless Hotspot and Data Performance
For customers willing to pay for it, the new top plan offers more high-speed data and performance than the former one.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Chris Mason: The challenge of closing asylum loopholes while protecting genuine cases
There has been a stickiness to the electorate's concerns about issues of immigration and asylum, Chris Mason writes.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Russia pummels Ukraine with drone and missile strikes, killing at least 12
Missile and drone attacks on the port city of Odesa killed six people, with other fatalities recorded in Kyiv and DniproRussian strikes killed at least 12 people in Ukraine, local authorities have said, after Moscow pummelled its neighbour in overnight attacks.Missile and drone attacks on the southern port city of Odesa killed six people, the head of the city’s military administration, Sergiy Lysak, wrote on Telegram on Thursday. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Migrants making false domestic abuse claims to stay in UK, BBC investigation finds
In the third part of an undercover investigation, the BBC reveals how rules aimed at protecting abuse victims are being exploited.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Russian drone and missile attacks kill 13 people in Ukraine
Meanwhile, a Ukrainian drone attack killed two children in Russia, officials say.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Trump's Blockade Is Breaking Iran... And European Elites Are Angry
Trump's Blockade Is Breaking Iran... And European Elites Are Angry

Authored by Brandon Smith via Alt-Market.us

In March I published an article titled “Global Energy Crisis Or Iranian Surrender In Five Weeks?” in which I outlined the “worst case” and “best case” scenarios for the war in Iran. In my best case scenario I argued in favor of a specific plan to end the conflict quickly: A US naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, flipping the tables on Iran by blocking or seizing any oil tankers or gas tankers which exit Iranian ports.

Two weeks later, the Trump Administration has implemented this exact strategy.

The effectiveness of the blockade is already apparent; the propaganda bots on social media are scrambling to find a narrative to counter it, but they are failing. Why? Because Iran already tried to lock down the strait (which is an international waterway), and any government cheering (or secretly cheering) for Iran’s actions is now unable to make a rational argument against the US doing the same thing to Iran. As I noted in March:

“We constantly hear about international exposure to the Hormuz shutdown, but the media rarely mentions that Iran is the MOST exposed economy of all. For now, Iranian oil ships continue to pass through the strait and these vessels are Iran’s economic lifeline. Strategic estimates suggest that without the steady passage of these oil tankers, the Iranian economy would completely collapse within five weeks…”

I then summarized what I believed was the simplest solution to end the war:

“Iranian cargo ships can be targeted for seizure by a US blockade of the Persian Gulf well away from the narrow waters of the Hormuz. The ships could be destroyed, but I suspect the Department of Defense will try to avoid oil spills and ecological disasters. Instead, the best option is to capture Iran’s tankers and then redirect the oil to countries in danger of shortages.

Iran has the option of shutting off GPS tracking for their vessels (shadow fleet), but this would not help them maneuver past a comprehensive US blockade. In other words, I argue that the US could turn the tables on Iran and use their reliance on the Hormuz against them.

With Iran’s economy in shambles, they will no longer be able to purchase missiles or drones for resupply from Russia and China. They won’t be able to pay for logistic resources for their military and they won’t be able to contain public unrest. The Iranians would be forced to negotiate and the war would be over quickly with minimal risk to US troops.”

For now, the US is not seizing Iran’s tankers and is merely sending them back to where they came from. However, it would seem that the Trump Administration and their military advisers have come to the same basic conclusions I did.



For years I have expressed my concerns about a potential conflict in Iran, largely because of the precarious global economic risks associated with mass energy shortages caused by a closure of the Hormuz, which transits around 25% of the world’s energy exports. That said, I do not care about “picking sides” when it comes to Israel or Iran.

This debate is irrelevant and designed, I think, to divide US conservatives over ancient tribal vendettas that do not involve us. I don’t care about the Israeli government or “Zionism” and I certainly don’t care what happens to the theocratic and tyrannical Muslim regime in Iran. We have much more important things to think about.

What matters to me is how the US and the American people are affected by geopolitical events. There has been endless debate on what the war is really about, whether it be Iranian nukes, Israeli schemes, Saudi schemes, control of global oil markets, etc. (I think every action the Trump Administration has take so far from Venezuela to Iran has largely been designed to contain China). In any case, a long term closure of the Hormuz will eventually result in market cascades and a stagflationary crisis.

What matters now is ending the war as quickly and decisively as possible without leaving the Homuz and 25% of global energy exports under Iran’s control. After that, people can wrestle over the “moral and constitutional” quandary to their heart’s content.

First, I think it’s vitally important to address some lies and disinformation being spread by propagandists and foreign agents online about the US blockade, so let’s quickly go down the list…

Lie #1: The US Is Blocking All Ships Traveling Through The Strait

This is false. The US is only blocking ships coming from Iranian ports. All other ships have been allowed to pass without incident. This lie is being spread by disinfo agents all over social media and it is also being spread by foreign governments from the UK to France to China. This, to me, says A LOT about the true agenda of these countries, given that they said little or nothing about Iran locking down the strait.

Lie #2: Chinese Vessels Have Broken The Blockade And The US Is Afraid

Nope. All Chinese vessels coming from Iranian ports have been turned away and any vessels coming from alternative ports have been allowed to pass. At the time this article is being published, only one ship from an Iranian port has allegedly slipped through the blockade, though the story on this ship might be fabricated. All other Iranian ships have been repelled.

Lie #3: The Blockade Puts US Naval Ships At Serious Risk

No, it does the opposite. US ships have no need to traverse the narrow Hormuz to blockade it. All they have to do is wait outside of it and turn back Iranian tankers that approach. No mines, no missiles, no drones, no tiny attack boats, nothing Iran has the ability to deploy has much of a chance of harming the US Navy. In fact, reports indicate ships like the USS Abraham Lincoln (an aircraft carrier) have already been targeted hundreds of times by Iran with no damage taken.

There is nothing Iran can do about a comprehensive blockade.

Lie #4: Iran Is Used To Sanctions And Can Hold Out Longer Than The US

No, they can’t. Only 7% of energy exports going to the US travel through the Hormuz. Iran’s entire economy hangs by a thin thread and that thread is oil exports to countries like China or Vietnam.

Iran is reportedly losing around $430 million each day that their ships remain stuck in the strait, and they have already taken around $270 billion in infrastructure damages. Iran pays for new weapons and military logistics with oil revenues. Their soldiers are paid in part with oil revenues. They mitigate civil unrest with oil revenues.

I suspect that the blockade will force Iran back into negotiations within a couple weeks. That’s how little time they have left.

Lie #5: Iran Has Alternative Ways To Bypass The Blockade

No, they don’t. Overland routes without ample pipelines are no substitute for the ease of oil tanker shipments. Even if they did have such pipelines, those lines could be easily destroyed.

By extension, as Iran’s oil exports stack up they will quickly run out of storage space, which means they will have to shut down drilling. This would cause significant damage to their oil infrastructure within weeks due to pressure differentials.

Recent news indicates that Iran has already halted all petrochemical exports until further notice. If true, this proves that the blockade is highly effective.

Lie #6: The Chinese Will Intervene And Force The Strait To Reopen

As noted, the strait is not closed. Only Iranian ports are closed. Furthermore, China has stayed away from direct intervention in the Hormuz because they simply don’t have the naval capacity to square off with the US even if they wanted to.

Keep in mind, only a week ago the Chinese government vetoed a UN resolution to reopen the strait when they thought Iran was going to control it. The CCP is impotent and they can do nothing.

Lie #7: The US Is Losing All Its Allies Over The Blockade

Wrong. What the blockade (and the war in general) is doing is exposing the countries which were pretending to be our allies when it was convenient. I examined this problem in my last article “The US Separation From Europe And NATO Is Long Overdue”, and this brings me to my final point on the war.

The fact that the European elites are suddenly so concerned with the US blockade, enough to call for a “coalition” to reopen the strait and “circumvent” the US, tells us all we need to know. I continue to believe that the globalists in these nations have been feeding off the US while at the same time organizing a “multicultural alliance” behind the scenes – A socialist new world order to supplant western civilization and leave the US behind as a husk.

Part of this agenda clearly involves a partnership with Islamic fundamentalists as a goon squad to oppress native western populations. This is why the elites have flooded Europe with third world migrants – Ignoring the concerns of citizens and even arresting people who speak out.

This is also why the Pope is so adamant to call for a Muslim/Christian pact (while he blatantly ignores the fact that Europeans have been terrorized by Muslim immigrants for over a decade). Let’s not forget that during the pandemic lockdowns, the Vatican joined with the globalists to form the Council for Inclusive Capitalism (run by Lynn Forester de Rothschild). Modern-era Popes are not friends to conservatives or Christians, but I plan to go into that problem in my next article.

The blockade, I believe, is so effective that it has struck fear in Iran, fear in China, and fear in the liberal order in Europe which was counting on the war to drag on for months or years. Look at how angry they all are that Trump flipped the script on the Hormuz? Why all the emotion and irrational hand wringing after the strait has been opened to MORE ships and oil traffic? Why all the panic when oil prices are falling? It doesn’t make sense unless they WANT the US to fail.

Regardless of how you might feel personally about the Iran war, it is undeniable that the situation has revealed many of our supposed allies as enemies. In reality, they were always enemies. The only thing that has changed is that the truth is finally out in the open.

Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of ZeroHedge.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 23:25

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Iran war: White House mulling fresh talks with Tehran
The Trump administration is considering plans for a second round of in-person talks between the US and Iran in Pakistan, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Russia pummels Ukraine with drone and missile strikes, killing three
Two killed, including a child, in Kyiv with another death in the city of Dnipro amid strikes across the countryRussian strikes killed at least 12 people in Ukraine, local authorities have said, after Moscow pummelled its neighbour in overnight attacks.Missile and drone attacks on the southern port city of Odesa killed six people, the head of the city’s military administration Sergiy Lysak wrote on Telegram on Thursday. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Police warn protesters - and say Epsom rape suspects can't be identified
Police have warned protesters after saying they are unable to identify suspects who raped a woman outside a church in Surrey due to a lack of information.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Harry and Meghan join Aboriginal walking tour in Melbourne
During their visit down under, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex have chosen to learn more about First Nations Australians' history.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Iran war: Pakistan delegation in Tehran to continue talks
A high-level delegation from Pakistan is to continue talks in Tehran to push for fresh US-Iran negotiations. Follow DW for more.

Sky News Home
Open 
Teens staying silent on politics for fear of being 'cancelled'
One in five teenagers in the UK do not share their political views due to a fear of being "cancelled", according to a new report. 

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Can anyone stop Jordan Bardella in France? A crowded field could gift the election to the far right
A long list of contenders want to be president in 2027. But with anti-establishment sentiment dominating the national mood, outsiders have the advantageWanted: politician capable of appealing to the moderate right, centre and moderate left to beat hard-right populist Jordan Bardella in the run-off of France’s 2027 presidential election. The search began in earnest after last month’s municipal elections, in which the left held on to most big cities while conservatives or the far-right National Rally (RN) hoovered up smaller towns. This year will be a marathon race to select a single candidate to face Bardella, 30, or his patron, Marine Le Pen, 57, in the final round. Le Pen remains ineligible unless an appeals court in July overturns her sentence for embezzlement of EU funds.All opinion polls give the anti-immigration, Eurosceptic RN a sizeable lead in voting intentions for the first round. Bardella, the party’s smooth-talking but inexperienced leader, is polling as high as 38%. Barring a miracle, he seems sure of a place in the run-off. That leaves only one slot for a candidate who can reconcile mainstream conservative and liberal centrist supporters of outgoing President Emmanuel Macron, and then win over sufficient socialist, green and even radical-left voters. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Fame quickly became a nightmare’: Preston on Big Brother, falling from a balcony – and reforming the Ordinary Boys
‘Trauma-bonding’ with his future wife on Big Brother, selling their wedding pics to OK!, walking off Buzzcocks, writing hits for stars like Kylie and Olly Murs … as the singer returns, he looks back at a tumultuous career‘I hated being famous,” Samuel Preston says. “I hated, hated, hated it.” Twenty years ago, Preston, who presented himself by his surname to emulate Morrissey, was experiencing a very intense type of notoriety. He had been NME-famous with Worthing band the Ordinary Boys, whose socially conscious ska-influenced indie-punk had a strong cult following known as the Ordinary Army, thanks to hits such as Boys Will Be Boys. But his stint in the 2006 edition of Celebrity Big Brother, and the national interest in his will-they-won’t-they relationship with fellow contestant Chantelle Houghton – the fake “celebrity” sent in to dupe the B-listers – was what sent his profile through the roof.After leaving the show, he says, “I was on loads of Prozac. I was in a weird space.” Now, after years living on-off in the US, becoming a successful songwriter for hire (to the likes of Kylie Minogue, Cher, Olly Murs, Liam Payne and Jessie Ware), and surviving a near-death experience and OxyContin addiction, Preston is making a comeback with the Ordinary Boys. The band’s new single Peer Pressure is their first music since 2015 (not counting a Christmas single with Olly Murs). Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Can you stop malaria crossing borders? One nation’s bid to wipe out the disease
Informal migration, plus climate change and rising numbers of cases globally, are complicating the tireless efforts of the landlocked African country to eradicate the killer diseaseThe freezer is filled with blue-lidded tubes of cows’ blood, ready to be defrosted and used to feed the colony of mosquitoes. “Also, you can use your arm,” says Nombuso Princess Bhembe, who tends the mosquitoes at Eswatini’s national insectary, an unremarkable building in the town of Siphofaneni, part of the southern African country’s push to eliminate malaria.But the landlocked nation of 1.2 million people, formerly known as Swaziland, is facing headwinds from not only the climate crisis, aid cuts and insecticide resistance but also economic migration from countries with higher case numbers. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
When the ‘Dubai dream’ goes wrong - podcast
Journalist Will Coldwell tells the story of how a British businessman was imprisoned in Dubai – and how his family finally got him homeWhen Albert Douglas found out he was facing a long prison sentence in Dubai, he tried to escape the UAE … and failed. What followed was years of court proceedings, time in prison and even, Douglas says, beatings and torture.In recent years, scores of business owners, unsuspecting tourists and influencers have been detained in Dubai – caught up in an opaque legal system, charged with breaking laws they may not even have been aware of. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
US launches fifth strike on alleged Pacific drug boat in a week, killing three
Wednesday’s strike brings the total of those killed in US military strikes on alleged drug boats to at least 177Three people were killed in a US strike on another alleged drug-trafficking boat, the fifth such deadly attack in as many days, military officials have announced.US southern command said it conducted “a lethal kinetic strike on a vessel operated by Designated Terrorist Organizations” in the eastern Pacific, without naming the alleged group, in an X post. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Woman overserved on cruise given $300,000 in damages
A cruise passenger who was overserved alcohol and suffered a possible traumatic brain injury after falling down some stairs has been awarded £220,000 in damages.

CNET News
Open 
Today's NYT Connections: Sports Edition Hints and Answers for April 16, #570
Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for April 16 No. 570.

CNET News
Open 
Today's NYT Mini Crossword Answers for Thursday, April 16
Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for April 16.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
India faces energy squeeze as US ends Iran, Russia oil waivers
Washington's decision to let Iranian and Russian oil waivers expire threatens to tighten India's crude oil supply, as New Delhi had relied on temporary relief to sustain imports. DW has the latest.

Slashdot
Open 
Nature Is Still Molding Human Genes, Study Finds
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the New York Times: Many scientists have contended that humans have evolved very little over the past 10,000 years. A few hundred generations was just a blink of the evolutionary eye, it seemed. Besides, our cultural evolution -- our technology, agriculture and the rest -- must have overwhelmed our biological evolution by now. A vast study, published on Wednesday in the journal Nature, suggests the opposite. Examining DNA from 15,836 ancient human remains, scientists found 479 genetic variants that appeared to have been favored by natural selection in just the past 10,000 years.

The researchers also concluded that thousands of additional genetic variants have probably experienced natural selection. Before the new study, scientists had identified only a few dozen variants. "There are so many of them that it's hard to wrap one's mind around them," said David Reich, a geneticist at Harvard Medical School and an author of the new study. He and his colleagues found that a mutation that is a major risk factor for celiac disease, for example, appeared just 4,000 years ago, meaning the condition may be younger than the Egyptian pyramids. The mutation became ever more common. Today, an estimated 80 million people worldwide have celiac disease, in which the immune system attacks gluten and damages the intestines.

The steady rise of the mutation came about through natural selection, the scientists argue. For some reason, people with the mutation had more descendants than people without it -- even though it put them at risk of an autoimmune disorder. Other findings are even more puzzling. The researchers found that genetic variants that raise the odds of a smoking habit have been getting steadily rarer in Europe for the past 10,000 years. Something is working against those variants -- but it can't be the harm from smoking. Europeans have been smoking tobacco for only about 460 years. The scientists can't see from their research so far what forces might be making these variants more or less common. "My short answer is, I don't know," said Ali Akbari, a senior staff scientist at Harvard and an author of the study. The researchers also found that some variants, like the one linked to Type B blood, became much more common in Europe around 6,000 years ago, while others changed direction over time. For example, a TYK2 immune gene variant that may have once been beneficial later became harmful because it increased tuberculosis risk.

The study also found signs of natural selection in 44 out of 563 traits. Variants linked to Type 2 diabetes, wider waists, and higher body fat have become less common, possibly because farming and carbohydrate-heavy diets made once-useful fat-storing traits more harmful. Other findings, such as selection favoring genes linked to more years of schooling, are harder to interpret.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Gabbard Sends Criminal Referrals For 2019 Trump Impeachment Whistleblower, IG Coverup
Gabbard Sends Criminal Referrals For 2019 Trump Impeachment Whistleblower, IG Coverup

On Monday, DNI Tulsi Gabbard and the House Intelligence Committee released declassified transcripts revealing that the whistleblower whose complaint about Trump and Zelensky's 'perfect call' as an extreme parisan who had a "prior professional relationship with one of the Democratic Presidential candidates," and despite those facts, former-Intelligence Community Inspector General (ICIG) Michael Atkinson claimed "I did not find the complainant (whistleblower) was biased."
Tulsi Gabbard, director of national intelligence, during a news conference in the James S. Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House on July 23, 2025.Eric Lee / Bloomberg via Getty Images

Well, tonight they're the recipients of two criminal referrals. Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard on Wednesady referred who is believed to be former CIA analyst Eric Ciaramella - along with the former intelligence community inspector general who fast-tracked it - for potential criminal investigation, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence announced Tuesday.

The referrals to the Justice Department, first reported by Fox News and confirmed by multiple officials familiar with the matter, come days after Gabbard’s office declassified more than seven-year-old transcripts and supporting documents that Democrats and the intelligence community had kept under wraps since the fall of 2019. The newly public records raise fresh questions about the origins and handling of the complaint that accused Trump of pressuring Ukraine to investigate Joe Biden and his son Hunter.


NEW RECORDS VIA @DNIGabbard @RepRickCrawford ATKINSON TRANSCRIPTS
- First Trump Impeachment + Whistleblower Motive
Whistleblower met with Democrats on House Intelligence Committee (then led by Adam Schiff) BEFORE reporting his allegations to the Intelligence Community… pic.twitter.com/x7A1IxHLLO
— Catherine Herridge (@C__Herridge) April 13, 2026
Ciaramella was a CIA analyst detailed to the National Security Council at the time. According to the declassified materials, he had no firsthand knowledge of Trump’s July 25, 2019, phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and instead relied on secondhand accounts from NSC colleagues. He was a registered Democrat who had previously worked on Ukraine policy under then-Vice President Biden - including traveling with him - and had pre-complaint contacts with Democratic staff on the House Intelligence Committee, including aides to then-Chairman Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), the records show.

Former Intelligence Community Inspector General Michael Atkinson, who received the complaint in August 2019, is accused in the declassified files of deviating from standard procedures. He allegedly changed the whistleblower complaint form to accommodate hearsay information, ignored Justice Department guidance that the complaint did not qualify as an “urgent concern,” did not review the actual call transcript, and relied on a narrow set of interviews - including one with a witness who had co-authored the controversial 2017 Intelligence Community Assessment on Russian election interference and had ties to former FBI official Peter Strzok.



Gabbard, a Trump ally installed as DNI earlier this year, framed the declassification and referrals as long-overdue accountability.

“Deep state actors within the Intelligence Community concocted a false narrative that was used by Congress to usurp the will of the American people and impeach the duly-elected President of the United States,” Gabbard said in a statement accompanying the release. “Inspector General Atkinson failed to uphold his responsibility to the American people, putting political motivations over the truth.”

The ODNI general counsel’s referral letter, obtained by outlets covering the story, cited possible violations of federal criminal law by “one or more former employees of the intelligence community,” specifically referencing Atkinson’s 2019 congressional briefings.

The declassified package - released by the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence at the request of Chairman Rick Crawford (R-Ark.) following a March 24 committee vote - includes closed-door transcripts of Atkinson’s 2019 testimony before the panel. Those transcripts had been withheld from Trump’s defense team during the impeachment proceedings and from the broader public for more than seven years.

The move revives one of the most contentious chapters of Trump’s first term and comes as his second administration aggressively pursues investigations into perceived abuses by the intelligence community during the Russia investigation, the 2020 election challenges and both impeachments.

Schiff, now a senator from California, and other Democrats involved in the original impeachment have not yet commented publicly on the latest developments. A spokesman for the House Intelligence Committee under Democratic control in 2019 called the declassification “a partisan stunt designed to rewrite history.”

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 22:10

ZeroHedge News
Open 
CBS '60 Minutes' Left Out The Most Damning Part Of The Story
CBS '60 Minutes' Left Out The Most Damning Part Of The Story

Submitted by American Truckers United,

Over the last year, the American people have awakened to the reality of truck drivers unable to speak English, operating with non-domicile CDLs, and wreaking havoc on our roadways. What had yet to gain national attention was the ownership behind these illicit trucking companies. The 60 Minutes special that aired this weekend finally changed that by exposing one of the worst “chameleon carriers” in the industry.


Chameleon carriers are four times more likely to be involved in crashes, according to data from a risk assessment firm, Fusable. pic.twitter.com/3l5LOUQcyQ
— 60 Minutes (@60Minutes) April 12, 2026
The CBS report laid out the crisis in stark detail. The motor carrier mentioned is a Serbian-based network that repeatedly sheds its identity—changing names and USDOT numbers—to erase thousands of safety violations and hundreds of crashes. Drivers described forced 18-hour days, ELD cheating orchestrated by dispatchers in Serbia, and paychecks that came back negative after excessive lease, insurance, and repair fees were skimmed off the top. The carrier network racked up nearly 15,000 violations and 500 accidents in just two years while hauling freight for major shippers. Yet the carrier insists it is merely a “leasing company,” not a motor carrier, and therefore bears no responsibility for the trucks or drivers operating under its trailers. 


A whistleblower from a Super Ego-affiliated company says dispatchers and managers in Serbia were told to overwork and exploit American drivers. pic.twitter.com/cdvIbaSL38
— 60 Minutes (@60Minutes) April 12, 2026
60 Minutes built a compelling case that dismantled their narrative.  

What 60 Minutes likely left on the cutting-room floor is the most damning part of the story: who keeps loading these illegal carriers with freight in the first place? Who failed—or refused—to vet the motor carrier, its foreign ownership, or its forced-labor operations?

The answer points directly to freight brokers, with industry giant C.H. Robinson at the forefront. Despite the motor carrier not being a registered motor carrier with the USDOT, C.H. Robinson awarded it “Carrier of the Year” in the 1,000+ truck category for 2025. Industry sources allege that the selection process for this award involves rigorous vetting and requires final approval from upper management. Such high-level oversight strongly suggests that senior leadership at C.H. Robinson may have been directly involved in bestowing one of its most prestigious honors on a well-known chameleon carrier.


CH Robinson (ATA & TIA Member) awarded Super Ego as one of their carriers of the year for 2025 https://t.co/A6Q6OaStFx
— American Truckers 🚛🦅 (@atutruckers) April 13, 2026
This is not merely a failure of due diligence. It reflects a pattern of willful blindness, driven by greed, that prioritizes profit margins over safety, regulatory compliance, and the integrity of America’s trucking industry.

Large freight brokers have spent the past six years expanding their market share by abandoning legacy American-owned asset-based carriers and instead tapping a new, captive capacity source: foreign networks running what amounts to organized forced-labor schemes. Dispatch operations remain in foreign countries while unsafe trucks terrorize American highways. The brokers pocket the margin; the public pays the price in crashes, congestion, and national-security risks.

Trucking is the backbone of U.S. supply chains. When middlemen profit by partnering with chameleon carriers that exploit truck drivers, they do more than undercut honest American trucking companies—they corrupt a dangerous occupation that is critical to our economy and national defense. 


Current State of the US Trucking Industry pic.twitter.com/zbG9hZRJQ2
— American Truckers 🚛🦅 (@atutruckers) April 13, 2026
This scandal extends far beyond the chameleon carriers themselves. It lies with the large freight brokers, the real profiteers, who continue to provide them with freight and access to the highways, accelerating the decline of American-owned trucking companies while leaving crash victims and their families without meaningful accountability or support.

Hold the brokers accountable for what they have done to our industry! Demand Accountability! Demand Broker Liability!

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 22:35

ZeroHedge News
Open 
"Can Only Imagine What FCC Has To Say": Open Source Military Radar Plans Appear Online
"Can Only Imagine What FCC Has To Say": Open Source Military Radar Plans Appear Online

Someone on GitHub has built an open-source radar system capable of tracking multiple targets up to roughly 12 miles away, at a fraction of the cost that a major defense contractor would typically charge for a comparable system.

AERIS-10 is an open-source phased-array radar system that demonstrates how advanced sensing technology has moved out of the defense-prime world and into civilian hands, with one person releasing all the design and development files on GitHub.



The 10.5 GHz phased-array radar system is available in two versions:


AERIS-10 is an open-source, low-cost 10.5 GHz phased array radar system featuring Pulse Linear Frequency Modulated (LFM) modulation. Available in two versions (3km and 20km range), it's designed for researchers, drone developers, and serious SDR enthusiasts who want to explore and experiment with phased array radar technology.




The developers wrote, "The AERIS-10 project aims to democratize radar technology by providing a fully open-source, modular, and hackable radar system."

"Whether you're a university researcher, a drone startup, or an advanced maker, AERIS-10 offers a platform for experimenting with beamforming, pulse compression, Doppler processing, and target tracking," they added.

X user chiefofautism noted, "One person built what defense contractors charge a quarter million for and open-sourced it."

That's a great question:


I can only imagine what the FCC will have to say about this...
— E__Strobel (@E__Strobel) March 13, 2026

The bigger takeaway is not the project itself, but what it signals: dual-use capability has shifted into the civilian and open-source domain, a shift that is clearly visible in the drone world. It also shows how powerful dual-use technology is now becoming accessible outside the traditional defense-contractor ecosystem - something the Department of War will find increasingly difficult to ignore as funding flows redirect to "war unicorns" promising faster innovation at lower cost. 

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 23:00

The Hill
Open 
Vance tells Pope Leo to 'be careful', Homan says 'leave politics alone'
Senior Trump administration officials escalated criticism of the Vatican on Tuesday, with Vice President Vance warning Pope Leo XIV to “be careful” when speaking about theology and White House Border Czar Tom Homan telling him to “leave politics alone.” Vance, a Catholic, issued the warning while addressing the pope’s opposition to the conflict with Iran...

The Hill
Open 
Tillis on Trump's reasoning for posting AI Jesus image: 'I’ll take it at face value'
Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) said on Wednesday that he was willing to take President Trump’s explanation for a controversial post depicting the president as a Jesus-like figure at “face value,” arguing that he was more concerned with Trump’s comments toward Pope Leo XIV. “I worry less about the post,” Tillis said during an exclusive interview...

Sky News Home
Open 
Woman given 14 shots of tequila on cruise gets £220k in damages
A cruise passenger who was overserved alcohol and suffered a possible traumatic brain injury after falling down some stairs has been awarded £220,000 in damages.

ZDNet News
Open 
I found a way to roll back buggy Google Services updates on Android - in just a few clicks
If Google Services update on your Android is giving you problems, there's an easy fix - no factory reset needed.

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Open Trades Ltd – Financial Conduct Authority | FCA

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
Growing list of Airbus A320 aircraft slated for disassembly
GA Telesis, LLC, a global provider of commercial aviation and aerospace lifecycle solutions, announced on Wednesday that it has acquired two Airbus A320neo aircraft.

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
Army designates new VTOL aircraft as Cheyenne II, honoring native American heritage
Bell Textron Inc. announced Wednesday that the U.S. Army has officially designated the MV-75 aircraft as the Cheyenne II.

Techdirt
Open 
Nintendo’s Haphazard ‘Mario Maker 2’ Takedown Process Rife With Abuse
We’ve talked for many years about Nintendo’s shotgun approach to IP enforcement, as well as its heavy-handed ToS enforcement policies that can include bricking customer consoles and/or banning their accounts if they do something Nintendo doesn’t like, even if it’s not strictly illegal. This has all set up an ecosystem where being a Nintendo fan […]

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Geelong fire: blaze at one of Australia’s two oil refineries extinguished after 13 hours as fuel supply fears remain
Petrol production affected and full extent of damage unknown after ‘unprecedented’ fire at Viva refinery in CorioFollow our Australia news live blog for latest updatesGeelong oil refinery fire: what we know so farGet our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcastAn explosive fire at a Geelong oil refinery – which supplies half of Victoria’s fuel and 10% of the nation’s – has been extinguished, though petrol production continues to be affected and authorities warn the full extent of the damage is still unknown.The blaze at the Viva Energy facility in Corio – one of two refineries left in Australia – broke out just after 11pm Wednesday, with Fire Rescue Victoria alerted to the blaze by multiple calls to triple zero “reporting explosions and flames”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Russia pummels Ukraine with drone and missile strikes, killing three
Two killed, including a child, in Kyiv with another death in the city of Dnipro amid strikes across the countryRussian forces attacked Kyiv and other cities early on Thursday, killing three people, including a 12-year-old child, injuring more than 20 and badly damaging buildings, officials said.Moscow has fired hundreds of drones on its neighbour almost nightly since the beginning of the four-year war, and recently expanded daytime strikes. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Russian attacks leave three dead in Ukraine
Meanwhile, a Ukrainian drone attack killed two children in Russia, officials say.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
China's economy grows faster than expected despite Iran war
The better-than-expected GDP data comes as Asian countries have been hit hard by the impact of the conflict.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
How South Korea plans to use the Iran crisis to spur a renewables revolution
Energy crisis unfolding in Middle East has added political urgency, and more funding, to transform South Korea’s solar industryIn Guyang-ri, a farming village of 70 households about 90 minutes south-east of Seoul, people gather for communal free lunches six days a week. The meals are funded by the village’s one-megawatt solar installation, which generates roughly 10m won ($6,800) in net profit each month.“Residents eat lunch together every day, so we see each other’s faces, talk together,” says Jeon Joo-young, the village chief. “Bonds and solidarity between residents become much stronger. Life becomes more enjoyable.” Continue reading...

Gizmodo
Open 
That Movie with AI Val Kilmer as a Priest Has a Trailer Now
It features Kilmer-type images of various apparent ages.

Mail Online
Open 
Meghan gives her review of Australia during third day of whirlwind tour - after Harry was ambushed by Channel Seven reporter in awkward selfie encounter
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have appeared at a series of engagements in both Melbourne and Canberra so far, with spectators all saying the same thing about a tender moment between the pair.

Sky News Home
Open 
Setback in Australia's fuel crisis as fire breaks out at oil refinery
A large fire has broken out at one of Australia's two operating oil refineries - prompting fears over the country's petrol supplies amid global disruption caused by the Middle East conflict.

Digital Trends
Open 
Notta Launches Bot-Free Meeting Recording for Mac and Windows
Notta’s Bot-Free mode is quietly changing how professionals record and transcribe meetings — no interruptions, no waiting, no awkward “who invited that?”  If you’ve ever used an AI meeting assistant, you know the moment. You’re mid-sentence, the agenda is finally moving, and then — a bot joins. Everyone pauses. Someone asks “did you invite a recorder?”  This standard method of joining requires […]

Mail Online
Open 
Nine dead and 13 wounded as students jump from windows to flee teen shooter 'armed with five guns' in Turkey in second school shooting in two days
Harrowing images from Kahramanmaras captured pupils and teachers fleeing the school building, with people even seen frantically jumping from open windows.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Business Financial Distress Nears COVID Levels As Sole Trader Numbers Rise
Business Financial Distress Nears COVID Levels As Sole Trader Numbers Rise

Authored by Rex Widerstrom via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

The volume of businesses struggling to pay their debts in Australia is on track to exceed the heights set during the COVID-19 pandemic, according to two reports on the nation’s economic health.
Australian dollar coins and banknotes in Melbourne, Australia on April 4, 2024. AAP Image/Joel Carrett

Up to 13 percent of working-age Australians and 47 percent of secondary school students want to work for themselves or start a business, but that’s not translating into a pipeline of new enterprises, according to the Committee for the Economic Development of Australia (CEDA).

“Our analysis shows the proportion of business owners in the workforce has declined steadily over the past two decades and fell to a record low last year. The decline has been sharpest for owner-managers with employees and less steep for solo owner-operators. It is evident across all age groups, including younger workers,” said CEDA Chief Executive Melinda Cilento.

While the total rate of business formation has grown moderately over the past decade, it has been almost entirely driven by growth in sole traders.

In contrast, entry rates for businesses that employ staff declined steadily through the 2000s and has since been relatively flat.

This trend has coincided with the rise in second jobs, “side hustles,” and digital-platform work.

“Starting a side hustle or taking on gig work can be a flexible way to get started and gain some hands-on experience,” Cilento said. ”But the evidence suggests most of these activities are intended only to top-up household income, and not to build the next generation of employing firms.

“If we want a more productive, competitive, and resilient economy, we need to make it easier for people to turn a good idea into a growing enterprise.”

To help achieve that, CEDA wants the federal government to use next month’s federal Budget to introduce further cuts to “red tape” and to review existing business support programmes.

This entails eliminating redundant or out-of-date regulatory obstacles, streamlining the application process for grants and other support programmes, and expanding access to financing and insurance.

The government should also promote business advice and training more effectively, and remove anti-competitive obstacles that hinder the entry and expansion of new businesses, CEDA says.

Auditors Sound Warning

Meanwhile, 2025 was a record year for “going concern” notices for businesses unable to pay their debts with in the next 12 months, according to Chartered Accountants.

The group was concerned about the viability of 28 percent of Australian-listed companies outside the mining sector, up from 20 percent in 2021.

That compares to 15 percent in New Zealand and approximately 8 percent in comparable high‑income countries internationally.

Among Australian miners, the figure increased to nearly half, up from 32 percent in 2021.

“This level of uncertainty exceeds that seen at the height of the COVID disruptions and reflects the cumulative impact of global trade uncertainty, market volatility, higher interest rates, and persistent inflationary pressures on business viability,” said Chartered Accountants Australia and New Zealand (CA ANZ).

Its report, “Insights into 2025 auditor reports: A focus on going concern,” was conducted in partnership with the Universities of Melbourne and Queensland, and took place before the current Middle East conflict and its resulting energy price shock.

“Auditors are now flagging greater uncertainty than during the pandemic itself, which shows how sustained economic pressures around liquidity, refinancing, and future profitability can be just as challenging for businesses as an acute shock,” said Amir Ghandar.

While mining is under particular pressure, the conditions are also affecting other capital-intensive industries such as information technology and health care.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 20:55

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Bessent Keeps Running Tally Of China As "Unreliable Global Partner" - Count Now Stands At Three
Bessent Keeps Running Tally Of China As "Unreliable Global Partner" - Count Now Stands At Three

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told reporters Tuesday that Beijing’s panic hoarding of crude and refined products, while refusing to join the rest of the world in releasing supplies to offset the Gulf energy shock, has now demonstrated for the third time in five years that China is an "unreliable global partner."

"China has been an unreliable global partner three times in the past five years; once during COVID, when they hoarded healthcare products, second on rare earth," Bessent said, referring to Beijing's move last year to weaponize rare earth exports against the US in the tit-for-tat trade war that disrupted US supply chains, including temporary factory shutdowns such as production lines briefly shuttered by Ford Motor Company.



Bessent said China continued to purchase tanker loads of crude instead of helping ease the global supply crunch caused by Iran’s closure of the Strait of Hormuz, despite already holding a massive strategic reserve. He also noted that China restricted exports of crude products early in the conflict. 

Reuters noted that China's strategic petroleum reserve "was roughly the same size as that of the entire reserve held by the 32-member International Energy Agency, but it was continuing to purchase oil."

Bessent added, "They continued buying, and they've been hoarding, and they have cut off exports of many products." 

On US-China relations, he told reporters he's been in contact with Chinese officials about the hoarding issue. 

He declined to comment on whether the dispute and elevated tensions will derail an upcoming Trump-Xi meeting in Beijing, which has been pushed to mid-May.

"I think the message for the visit is stability. We've had great stability in the relationship since last summer; that emanates from the top down," he said. "I think that communication is the key."

Bessent added that the US military blockade would ensure that no Chinese tankers or other ships would pass the strait: "So they're not going to be able to get their oil. They can get oil. Not Iranian oil." 

Last week, International Energy Agency chief Fatih Birol warned that governments must avoid panic hoarding and refrain from imposing fuel export bans as the Gulf energy shock continues to ripple outward to Asia, Africa, Europe, and eventually reaches the US West Coast.

"I urge all countries not to impose bans or restrictions on exports," Fatih Birol emphasized in a Financial Times interview. "It is the worst time when you look at the global oil markets. Their trade partners, their allies and their neighbors will suffer as a result."

The FT noted that Birol was "careful not to name China directly," but made very clear his warning was likely aimed at Beijing.

So Bessent is clearly keeping a running tally of Beijing’s behavior as an "unreliable global partner," and by his count, the number now stands at three.

What comes next is unclear, but the next signal will likely come from the upcoming Trump-Xi meeting.

* * *



Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 21:20

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Human Smuggler Extradited From Brazil To US: DOJ
Human Smuggler Extradited From Brazil To US: DOJ

Authored by Troy Myers via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

A Bangladeshi national, alleged by the Department of Justice (DOJ) to be a “prolific” alien smuggler, made his first appearance Monday in a Laredo, Texas, federal courtroom following his extradition from Brazil, according to a DOJ statement.
Illegal immigrants who are believed to have crossed the border from Mexico into the United States are seen after the truck they were being transported in was interdicted by law enforcement officers in Laredo, Texas, on Sept. 13, 2022. Department of Justice/Handout via Reuters

The indictment against Saiful Islam, 39, in the Southern District of Texas accuses him of being part of a conspiracy that smuggled numerous illegal immigrants through Central America to the United States, the DOJ said.

“Islam participated in a wide-ranging human smuggling operation,” the agency said.

The Bangladeshi man also allegedly helped other smugglers by facilitating the travel of aliens from São Paulo, Brazil, and other locations in South America, Central America, and Mexico, eventually instructing them in how to illegally cross the Rio Grande River or jump the border fence.

Islam’s charges include conspiracy to bring an alien to the United States, multiple counts of bringing an alien to the United States for financial gain, and conspiracy to encourage or induce an alien to enter the United States, according to the DOJ statement. He also faces potentially hundreds of thousands of dollars in fines.

A conviction on the charge of bringing an alien to the United States for financial gain carries a mandatory minimum sentence of three to five years in prison, depending on additional factors, and a maximum of 15 years.

Islam would face a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison on the other two charges if he is convicted of them.

There is no listed attorney for Islam yet in his online docket, which shows his case was assigned to a judge in August 2020.

Several agencies are coordinating in the investigation of Islam, including Homeland Security Investigations, Customs and Border Protection’s International Interdiction Task Force, the U.S. Marshals Service, and INTERPOL.

The DOJ credited its Joint Task Force Alpha, the agency’s lead effort in fighting human smuggling and trafficking by cartels and other criminal organizations, in investigating, charging, and prosecuting Islam.

Joint Task Force Alpha’s main goal is targeting leaders and organizers of cartels throughout the Americas, Mexico, and the “Northern Triangle countries” of Guatemala, El Salvador, and Honduras, the Justice Department said.

Former Attorney General Pam Bondi announced last September an expansion of the agency to cover Canada, the Caribbean, maritime borders, and elsewhere.

“This Department of Justice is investigating and prosecuting human smuggling more aggressively than ever before,” Bondi said.

Joint Task Force Alpha has, to date, arrested more than 450 domestic and international leaders, organizers, and facilitators of alien smuggling or trafficking. According to the Monday DOJ statement, the agency’s work has resulted in more than 395 U.S. convictions, more than 345 “significant jail sentences imposed, and forfeitures of substantial assets.”

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 21:45

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Howl recordings and an AI image: Inside South Korea's long hunt for an escaped wolf
Hundreds have been deployed to find Neukgu, a young wolf that has eluded capture for a week and counting.

Chatham House
Open 
What does China’s new Five-Year Plan mean for the climate?
What does China’s new Five-Year Plan mean for the climate?
Audio
thilton.drupal
17 March 2026

Anna speaks to James Kynge and Lauri Myllyvirta (CREA) about what the plan reveals about China’s climate and clean tech ambitions, as well as it’s broader geopolitical goals.







China is the world’s largest emitter and dominates global production of green technology. A few days ago, the National People’s Congress approved the country’s 15th Five-Year Plan, China’s main economic and policy blueprint for the period 2026–2030. What does the new plan say about China’s climate and clean tech ambitions? And what does it reveal about China’s broader geopolitical and foreign policy goals?To discuss this, Anna is joined by James Kynge (Senior Research Fellow for China in the World at Chatham House’s Asia-Pacific Programme) and Lauri Myllyvirta (Lead Analyst at and Co-founder of the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air, CREA).Want to learn more? Please see:- The expert comment ‘China’s Five Year Plan commits to economic resilience – as the Iran war exposes the fragility of global supply’, by Dr Yu Jie (Senior Research Fellow on China, Chatham House). Available here. - The article ‘China’s 5-Year-Plan: Latest draft shows emission targets out, clean energy targets in’, by Bernice Lee (Distinguished Fellow, Chatham House). Available here. - The article ‘Can the West recover from China’s hi-tech knockout blow?’, by James Kynge (Senior Research Fellow for China in the World, Chatham House). Available here.About The Climate Briefing The Climate Briefing explores key themes in the UN climate negotiations and international climate politics. The podcast is hosted by Bhargabi Bharadwaj and Anna Aberg from Chatham House and features interviewees from governments, international organizations, academia and civil society organizations from across the world. You can also listen to The Climate Briefing on Apple Podcasts and Spotify

Chatham House
Open 
Is Iran one crisis too many for Trump? Independent Thinking podcast
Is Iran one crisis too many for Trump? Independent Thinking podcast
Audio
sseth.drupal@c…
20 March 2026

The US-Israel war on Iran is straining Trump’s alliances, at home and abroad.







Three weeks into exactly the kind of war of choice that he spent years decrying, US President Donald Trump is not getting the amount of international support that he seeks for his campaign of air strikes on Iran.There is also reluctance among NATO and other allies to be drawn into the political and economic turmoil caused by the US-Israeli campaign, and Tehran’s region-wide retaliation.Our experts discuss the state of US-Gulf relations, the muted European response to Trump’s appeals for help in re-opening the Strait of Hormuz, and what it could mean elsewhere in the world for ongoing crises in Ukraine, Cuba and Venezuela.Joining host Bronwen Maddox this week are Dr Neil Quilliam, an associate fellow in our Middle East and North Africa Programme; Dr Christopher Sabatini, senior research fellow for Latin America; and Heather Hurlburt, a consulting fellow in our US and North America Programme.About Independent ThinkingIndependent Thinking is a weekly international affairs podcast hosted by our director Bronwen Maddox, in conversation with leading policymakers, journalists, and Chatham House experts providing insight on the latest international issues.More ways to listen: Spotify, Apple Podcasts.

Chatham House
Open 
Africa Aware: Rebuilding regional order and security in West Africa
Africa Aware: Rebuilding regional order and security in West Africa
Audio
thilton.drupal
23 March 2026

Following a panel event on West African security with foreign ministers of Ghana and Nigeria at Chatham House, Paul Ejime and Paul Melly join the podcast to discuss the ministers’ call for local security solutions in the region.







The withdrawal of Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger from ECOWAS early last year – and the subsequent formation of the Alliance of Sahel States (AES) – has posed a critical challenge for regional cooperation, particularly on security. According to the Global Terrorism Index, the Sahel is the ‘epicentre of terrorism’ and rising insecurity is compounded by stalled progress on core issues including the right of hot pursuit, joint military operations, intelligence sharing and tackling illicit finance. Following a panel event on West African security with Ghana and Nigeria’s foreign ministers at Chatham House, Paul Ejime and Paul Melly join the podcast to discuss the ministers’ call for local security solutions in the region. The panel event formed part of the Chatham House Africa Programme’s ongoing work on African peace and security. The Programme will shortly launch a new project focused on regional conflict systems in the Horn of Africa, the Sahel and Central Africa. About Africa Aware Africa Aware is a podcast from the Chatham House Africa Programme bringing together leading international experts to provide in-depth analysis and sharp insights on the political, economic and social issues shaping African countries, their international relations and the continent as a whole. You can also listen to Africa Aware on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.

Chatham House
Open 
Africa Aware: Can minerals buy peace in the DRC?
Africa Aware: Can minerals buy peace in the DRC?
Audio
LToremark
31 March 2026

Christian-Géraud Neema and Joshua Walker discuss how the short and long-term implications of the DRC’s pivot to the US are affecting its strategic autonomy, mining sovereignty, and what it means for President Tshisekedi’s political options.







As a key mediator in the ongoing conflict in the eastern provinces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the United States has brokered peace agreements backed by security guarantees and by the investment potential of the country’s vast mineral wealth. However, critics warn this ‘minerals for peace’ approach risks overlooking unresolved issues – from the protection of minority rights to the limited role of the African Union, and fragile state-society relations in the DRC. In this episode, Christian-Géraud Neema and Joshua Walker join the Africa Programme’s Romane Dideberg and Lisa Musumba to discuss how the short and long-term implications of the DRC’s pivot to the US are affecting its strategic autonomy, mining sovereignty, and what it means for President Tshisekedi’s political options. About Africa Aware Africa Aware is a podcast from the Chatham House Africa Programme bringing together leading international experts to provide in-depth analysis and sharp insights on the political, economic and social issues shaping African countries, their international relations and the continent as a whole.You can also listen to Africa Aware on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.

Chatham House
Open 
The Climate Briefing: Climate change, energy and geopolitics
The Climate Briefing: Climate change, energy and geopolitics
Audio
thilton.drupal
1 April 2026

Anna and Bhargabi are joined by three experts to explore the links between climate change, energy and geopolitics.







As the conflict in the Middle East rattles energy markets, this episode explores the connections between climate change, energy, and geopolitics. It addresses questions such as:- What does the war in Iran reveal about the links between fossil fuels, vulnerability, and power? What lessons can be drawn? - What does the energy transition mean for global geopolitics, and how should governments manage the ‘messiness’ of the process? - How are the impacts of climate change reshaping our world, and what can be done to navigate the challenges that arise?To unpack these dynamics, Anna and Bhargabi are joined by Arthur Snell (a former diplomat and author of Elemental: The New Geography of Climate Change and How We Survive It), Michael Bradshaw (Professor of Global Energy at Warwick Business School, Associate Fellow at Chatham House, and author of The Geopolitics of Energy System Transformation: Managing the Messy Mix), and Dr Beatrice Mosello (Senior Research Fellow at Chatham House).About The Climate Briefing The Climate Briefing explores key themes in the UN climate negotiations and international climate politics. The podcast is hosted by Bhargabi Bharadwaj and Anna Aberg from Chatham House and features interviewees from governments, international organizations, academia and civil society organizations from across the world. You can also listen to The Climate Briefing on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.

Chatham House
Open 
Africa Aware: Emergency Response Rooms: Sudan’s humanitarian lifeline
Africa Aware: Emergency Response Rooms: Sudan’s humanitarian lifeline
Audio
thilton.drupal
9 April 2026

Guests discuss the vital role Sudan Emergency Response Rooms play in the humanitarian response to the ongoing war – particularly the less documented contributions of Sudanese women.







Since the war in Sudan began in 2023, grassroots, volunteer-led mutual aid groups – the Emergency Rooms (ERRs) – have delivered vital humanitarian assistance and played a key role in safeguarding civilian life across the country in the face of the devastating conflict. The work of the ERRs is grounded in the Sudanese tradition of ‘nafeer’, an Arabic word meaning collective action.Less documented is the critical role Sudanese women play in responding to humanitarian needs arising from the conflict. They are at the forefront of providing medical assistance and psychosocial support, creating safe spaces for children and responding to gender-based violence.




































Related work

Sudan’s volunteer-led aid network receives 2025 Chatham House Prize












In this episode, we are joined by Alaa Hassan Taris and Khalid Gurashi, representatives of the ERRs who were in London to receive the Chatham House Prize in recognition of their crucial role in delivering humanitarian support during the ongoing war in Sudan. Dr Eva Khair, founder of the Sudan Transnational Consortium, also joins the conversation with Alaa and Khalid to discuss how vital grassroots-led responses are within the wider international humanitarian picture and highlight the imperative for continued advocacy on the global stage.Find more information about the ERRs and how to support their work here.The Chatham House Prize 2025 was generously supported by Dr Mo Ibrahim, Open Society Foundations and Quadrature Climate Foundation.About Africa AwareAfrica Aware is a podcast from the Chatham House Africa Programme bringing together leading international experts to provide in-depth analysis and sharp insights on the political, economic and social issues shaping African countries, their international relations and the continent as a whole.You can also listen to Africa Aware on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Iran war: White House mulling fresh talks with Tehran
The Trump administration is considering plans for a second round of in-person talks between the US and Iran in Pakistan, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said. DW has the latest.

BBC World News
Open 
Former US Marine pilot loses appeal against extradition from Australia
Daniel Duggan was arrested in 2022 over claims he illegally trained the Chinese military in South Africa.

The Register
Open 
Indian government investigating TCS after police sting finds sexual harassment
Services giant’s staff accused of assaults, inappropriate religious practices Police in the Indian city of Nashik conducted a sting operation at Tata Consultancy Services and allegedly found instances of sexual harassment and other revolting behavior.…

Gizmodo
Open 
‘You Can’t Miss What Our Values Are’: Before Its Pivot to AI, Allbirds Sounded Very Different
An interview from 2019 is a depressing reminder of what the big corporate trend was back then.

UK Legislation
Open 
The River Tyne (Tunnels) (Revision of Tolls) Order 2026
This Order, made in consequence of a determination by the North East Combined Authority in accordance with paragraph 2, Schedule 14 of the River Tyne (Tunnels) Order 2005, increases the maximum toll for use of the Tyne Tunnel by cab, from £2.50 to £2.60 and by light goods vehicles, vans and buses over 3.5 tonnes from £5.00 to £5.20.

Russia Today News
Open 
Belgium seizes military equipment bound for Israel

CNET News
Open 
Best Power Bank for iPhones in 2026
I tested a variety of iPhone battery packs, including MagSafe-enabled magnetic power banks with ultrafast 25-watt Qi2 wireless charging, as well as more affordable models that cost less than $20. These are my current top picks.

CNET News
Open 
Stuck in a Coffee Rut? ChatGPT Can Now Plan Your Next Starbucks Order
Don't be surprised if the chatbot suggests mixing espresso with lemonade.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
UK signs deal to rejoin EU's Erasmus exchange scheme
Britain will rejoin the popular Europe-wide student exchange program six years after leaving it.

Mail Online
Open 
Pentagon wants Ford and General Motors to 'help war effort' by making weapons and military supplies as stocks rapidly become depleted
The Trump administration is in talks with the two automakers and other firms as it continues on with the war in Iran. The US is also supporting the Ukrainian war effort against Russia.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Geelong fire: fuel supply fears after out-of-control blaze at one of Australia’s two remaining oil refineries
Petrol production affected at Viva plant in Corio as mayor calls blaze ‘unprecedented’Follow our Australia news live blog for latest updatesGet our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcastAn explosive fire at a Geelong oil refinery – which supplies half of Victoria’s fuel and 10% of the nation’s – has broken out, with petrol production to be affected for some time and authorities warning the full extent of the damage is still unknown.The blaze at the Viva Energy facility in Corio – one of two refineries left in Australia – broke out just after 11pm Wednesday, with Fire Rescue Victoria alerted to the blaze by multiple calls to triple zero “reporting explosions and flames”. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Hundreds of protesters in Epsom demand description of men 'who gang raped woman outside church' as they come face to face with riot police in the street
Protests broke out in the upmarket Surrey town amid a demand for answers from police about a reported gang rape, which they claim the force has not released enough information about.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Geelong fire: out-of-control blaze at oil refinery prompts Australian fuel supply fears
Petrol production affected at Viva oil refinery in Corio as Geelong mayor calls blaze ‘unprecedented’ Follow our Australia news live blog for latest updatesGet our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcastAn explosive fire at a Geelong oil refinery – which supplies half of Victoria’s fuel and 10% of the nation’s – has broken out, with petrol production to be affected for some time and authorities warning the full extent of the damage is still unknown.The blaze at the Viva Energy facility in Corio – one of two refineries left in Australia – broke out just after 11pm Wednesday, with Fire Rescue Victoria alerted to the blaze by multiple calls to triple zero “reporting explosions and flames”. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
One in five teens fear being 'cancelled' over political views
One in five teenagers in the UK do not share their political views due to a fear of being "cancelled", according to a new report. 

Nature
Open 
AI models ‘subliminally’ transmit biases when training other systems

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Major Israeli PAC Flips: Tel Aviv Should Pay Out-Of-Pocket If It Wants US Weapons
Major Israeli PAC Flips: Tel Aviv Should Pay Out-Of-Pocket If It Wants US Weapons

via Middle East Eye

The pro-Israel advocacy group J Street is now calling for an end to "direct" US military support to Israel, per a new policy document published this week. The group had previously backed Washington's continued provision of defensive weapons systems, such as the replenishment of Israel's Iron Dome, at no cost to Israelis. 

Now, it says the US "should continue to sell" short-range air and ballistic missile defense capabilities to Israel, but Israel should use its own money to pay for them. 
Source: Times of Israel

"Israel faces real security challenges that require a significant defense investment. With a per capita GDP comparable to leading US allies such as the United Kingdom, France and Japan, as well as an annual defense budget of over $45 billion, it has the financial means to address these challenges," J Street said. 

"It does not require almost $4 billion per year in US financial subsidies to purchase weapons," it added. "Continuing this assistance is both unnecessary and politically counterproductive, creating avoidable tensions in US domestic politics and in the bilateral relationship."

The way the current military aid package operates is that the US provides Israel with American taxpayer funds, and those funds are put into US weapons companies to acquire equipment. 

On its website, J Street says that it "organizes pro-Israel, pro-peace, pro-democracy Americans to promote US policies that embody our deeply held Jewish and democratic values and that help secure the State of Israel as a democratic homeland for the Jewish people". 

Political tide turns

J Street's shift follows a distinct change in attitudes towards Israel among the American public after what has been widely labeled genocide in Gaza, where over 72,000 Palestinians have been killed since Israel's war on the enclave broke out in October 2023. 

But perhaps more importantly for the group, whose support base is made up of Democrats, the party's future is changing course. Progressive New York Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who is widely believed to be seeking higher office, announced earlier this month that she would no longer vote for any US military support to Israel, despite having previously backed the provision of defensive weapons, much to the disappointment of many of her supporters. 

It is notable, however, that her statement followed Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's surprise declaration earlier this year that Israel will not seek to renew its military aid package with the US in 2028. "I want to taper off the military aid within the next 10 years," all the way down to zero, Netanyahu told The Economist in January. 

J Street's new position demands that any future US arms sales that Israel pays for out-of-pocket "be fully consistent with American law", which echoed Ocasio-Cortez's statement.

US law prohibits security assistance to any country whose government engages in a consistent pattern of gross human rights violations or blocks or restricts the transport or delivery of US-backed humanitarian aid.


This moment demands a reset. J Street is calling for the U.S. to end unconditional financial military subsidies to Israel and to move towards a relationship where we treat Israel like any other ally.
J Street supports:
– Phasing out taxpayer-funded military aid by 2028, when the…
— J Street (@jstreetdotorg) April 13, 2026
"US arms sales to Israel should be further conditioned to incentivize alignment with American interests and laws - as has been the case with other allies and partners – when their behavior is inconsistent with US interests," J Street said. At the same time, the group acknowledges that Washington and Israel generally share the same interests anyway. "The US also benefits meaningfully from the relationship. Intelligence sharing has been critical in campaigns such as the fight against ISIS, while joint operations such as Israel’s 2006 strike on Syria’s secret nuclear facility have advanced shared security goals."

It added that because "approximately 500,000 American citizens live in Israel", selling it weapons should continue to be a US national security priority. 

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 20:05

UK Government News
Open 
Faster and fairer justice for victims thanks to major magistrate recruitment drive
Thousands of new magistrates will be recruited and trained in under half the time it currently takes thanks to a new drive to bolster the ranks and deliver faster and fairer justice for victims.

UK Government News
Open 
Government to examine deaths of vulnerable care leavers
Review into deaths of young people leaving the care system to be published later this year, led by Ashley John-Baptiste and Clare Chamberlain

Mail Online
Open 
Meghan Markle joins new season of MasterChef Australia leaving fans of the show divided
Meghan Markle will be guest-starring on the new season of MasterChef Australia and fans of the beloved series have had a mixed reaction to the news. 

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ukraine war briefing: Netherlands to spend almost $300m on making drones for Ukraine
Nato promises not to lose sight of Ukraine conflict; Russia attacks Kyiv. What we know on day 1,512The Netherlands will spend 248m euros ($293m) on producing drones for Ukraine, Dutch defence minister Dilan Yesilgoz-Zegerius said on Wednesday. “Drones play a crucial role on the modern battlefield. Ukrainians deploy them with incredible skill to repel the incessant Russian attacks,” she said after meeting her counterparts from Nato countries and the alliance’s secretary general Mark Rutte in Berlin on Wednesday. “Thanks to the good cooperation with Ukraine, we are learning directly from this. This also offers opportunities for our business community,” she added. The drones will be manufactured in the Netherlands and Ukraine.Rutte and Kyiv’s top allies vowed Wednesday they would not lose sight of Ukraine’s conflict with Russia and called on others to urgently boost their support for the country. With the outbreak of the US-Israel war against Iran, fears have grown that international support for Kyiv is waning, more than four years since Moscow’s full-scale invasion. American-led talks to end Europe’s deadliest conflict since the second world war have stalled since the start of the Middle East war, at a time US support for Ukraine was already weakening under US president Donald Trump.Russia’s defence ministry warned on Wednesday that European plans to step up drone supplies to Ukraine are dragging those countries deeper into a war with Russia. The ministry said it believes governments in a number of EU countries have decided to increase the production and supply of drones to Ukraine, a move Moscow views as a step that is escalating the conflict. It published a list of factories and enterprises in several European countries it alleges manufacture drones or drone components, and gave their addresses, including sites in Britain, Germany, Spain, Italy, Israel and Poland, among others.Russian forces attacked Ukrainian capital Kyiv with missiles early on Thursday, killing a 12-year-old child, injuring several people, including emergency crew members, and damaging buildings, mayor Vitali Klitschko said. “As a result of the enemy attack, a 12-year-old child has been killed,” Klitschko wrote on Telegram. “At the moment, 10 people are injured. That includes several medics.” He said a large fire had broken out in a building in the Obolon district in the north of the capital, while debris had fallen in several locations. Tymur Tkachenko, head of the city’s military administration, said at least four people had been injured.A Russian strike on an apartment building in Ukraine’s Black Sea port of Odesa killed one person and injured six on Wednesday, the head of the local military administration said. Serhiy Lysak, writing on Telegram, said apartments from the fifth to the seventh floor of the building were damaged. He posted photos showing at least one apartment badly damaged and debris strewn throughout the building’s interior.Ukraine’s defence ministry said on Wednesday it was introducing a new model of operations integrating drone warfare with infantry activity and pointed to successes announced by its top commander in retaking territory from Russian forces in the south of the country. Top commander Oleksandr Syrskyi said Kyiv’s forces had regained control of nearly 50 sq km (19 sq miles) of its territory from Russia in March, building on its gains since the start of the year. Drones have assumed a prominent role in the four-year-old war pitting Kyiv against Moscow. Both sides have also devoted resources to developing ways to intercept drones and upgrade air defences.A Ukrainian unit told AFP on Wednesday that it has carried out more than 100 attacks on the front using ground robots, after president Volodymyr Zelenskyy recently hailed the capture of a Russian position thanks to this new method. “In total, there have already been over 100 such operations,” said a source within the NC-13 company, which specialises in the use of these combat machines and is part of Ukraine’s 3rd Assault Brigade. “These operations include the elimination of enemy personnel, the destruction of shelters, command posts, and other enemy infrastructure objects. These are no longer isolated incidents, but systematic combat operations,” the source said. The systems allow the replacement of infantry assaults – which can result in soldier deaths – but also to detect and engage targets and prevent enemy infiltrations, the source said. Continue reading...

ZDNet News
Open 
Don't fall for the 'Vivid' TV trap when shopping - how I get the most color accurate setup
Does your TV have an overly bright, overly saturated picture? Your settings might be set for the store, not your living room.

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Tether Launches Self-Custodial Digital Assets Wallet
Tether—which claims to be one of the largest digital assets companies and a key player in the web3 and stablecoin as the issuer of USD₮—has released tether.wallet. This self-custodial mobile application delivers the company’s vast financial network straight to individual users, targeting the hundreds of... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Circle Introduces Solution to Enable Frequent Stablecoin USDC Payouts Across Blockchains
Circle has introduced a new way for platforms handling frequent USDC payouts across multiple blockchains. Instead of executing every cross-chain transfer individually, developers can now leverage the Cross-Chain Transfer Protocol (CCTP) to let local fulfillers pay recipients immediately on their preferred chain while the platform... Read More

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
'Unprecedented' fire at Australian oil refinery to impact nation's petrol supplies
The fire has deepened fears over the nation's petrol supplies amid a global crunch.

Mail Online
Open 
Furious dump truck driver empties trash he removed from customer back onto their lawn over unpaid bill
Shortly before dumping the trash back onto the California home, one of the two people handling the truck appeared to say in Spanish that the homeowners 'haven't paid' for the service.

Mail Online
Open 
Real Madrid lose the plot after Bayern Munich defeat: Furious stars confront referee over controversial decision as player is sent off AFTER full-time before angry tunnel row in chaotic scenes
Real Madrid's anguish soon turned to fury after full-time in their absorbing defeat by Bayern Munich on Wednesday night. Referee Slavko Vincic was harangued after the game ended.

Mail Online
Open 
Megyn Kelly slams Sydney Sweeney for 'sexualizing infancy' with Euphoria baby scene
Megyn Kelly lashed out at Sydney Sweeney while discussing a controversial clip of her Euphoria character dressed as a baby while filming OnlyFans content.

Mail Online
Open 
Woman checked night camera for raccoons then saw every homeowner's worst nightmare STARING back at her
Several witnesses in the Philadelphia neighborhood spotted the masked figure. 'It's very violating,' one resident said.

Mail Online
Open 
Who knew she could sing? Elle Macpherson's secret talent revealed on The Masked Singer
Elle Macpherson, 62, recently shared her talent for tunes when she was revealed as one of the celebrity contestants on the Spanish version of hit reality show The Masked Singer.

Mail Online
Open 
Video surfaces from the night Ruby Rose claims Katy Perry sexually assaulted her - as more details emerge of the evening amid police probe
New details have emerged of the night Ruby Rose claims Katy Perry sexually assaulted her at a nightclub in Melbourne, Australia, in 2010.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
BBC at the site of Trump's planned 'triumphal arch'
BBC's Ione Wells explains where the 250ft structure would be built and why it's controversial.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
'Huge shock' as refinery blaze threatens Australia's petrol supplies
The fire has deepened fears over the nation's petrol supplies amid a global crunch.

Mail Online
Open 
This is Britain's 'Leaning Tower of Pisa'... and it's in need of your help
The spire on the 12th century building in the village of Dry Doddington, Lincolnshire, famously angles at 5.1 degrees, giving it its signature tilting look.

Mail Online
Open 
Burger kitchen comes under fire for turning away allergy sufferers
Jeff Taylor, who owns Bun X, which operates in Norwich, received a wave of criticism and a handful of one-star reviews after refusing to serve customers with food allergies.

Mail Online
Open 
Look who's back for another spell... Nicole Kidman and Sandra Bullock reunite as witches after 28 years
They bewitched audiences nearly three decades ago as the enchanting Owens sisters.

Mail Online
Open 
Shameless mother, 43, who covered up her teenage son's hit-and-run crash that left a little boy fighting for his life is jailed
Kaylem Longhurst, then 16, fled the scene after hitting little Arlo while riding an off-road motorbike around Shotton, Flintshire, on September 11, 2024.

Mail Online
Open 
Sir Lenny Henry says finding out about his biological father 'hit him like a truck' as he opens up on his childhood
Sir Lenny Henry has shared how he felt the moment he found out about his biological father as he opened up about his childhood.

Mail Online
Open 
Shakespeare's 'missing' London house is FOUND after 400 years: Floorplan confirms the exact address in Blackfriars where The Bard spent his later years
Much of William Shakespeare's life is shrouded in mystery - but a key riddle has just been solved, thanks to a newly discovered floorplan.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump news at a glance: president renews threats against federal reserve chair, pushes his replacement
Trump reiterated his claim that Powell is doing a ‘bad job’ as justice department continues with criminal investigation into Powell over renovations at the Fed’s headquarters – key US politics stories from 15 April at a glanceDonald Trump threatened to fire Jerome Powell if he stays on as US Federal Reserve chair past the end of his tenure and doubled down on a criminal investigation into renovations of the central bank’s headquarters.As the White House pushes Trump’s new nominee to take charge of the Fed, Kevin Warsh, Powell has a month left in the role. The possibility of Powell staying on as chair past 15 May, the official end of his term, has grown amid mounting scrutiny of Trump’s approach to the Fed in the Senate, which is required to approve Warsh’s nomination. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Geelong fire: out-of-control blaze at oil refinery prompts Australian fuel supply fears
Petrol production affected at Viva oil refinery in Corio as Geelong mayor calls blaze ‘unprecedented’ Follow our Australia news live blog for latest updatesGet our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcastAn explosive fire at a Geelong oil refinery – which supplies half of Victoria’s fuel and 10% of the nation’s – has broken out, with petrol production to be affected for some time and authorities warning the full extent of the damage is still unknown.The blaze at the Viva Energy facility in Corio – one of two refineries left in Australia – broke out just after 11pm Wednesday, with Fire Rescue Victoria alerted to the incident by multiple calls to triple zero “reporting explosions and flames”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Bernie Sanders’ effort to block US weapons sales to Israel fails in Senate
Senator’s fourth attempt for resolutions fails, but votes show growing appetite among Democrats to impose limitsBernie Sanders on Wednesday led a failed effort to block the sale of bombs and bulldozers to Israel, but the votes revealed a growing appetite among Democrats to impose limits on US weapons transfers to a longtime US ally.It was the fourth time Sanders, an independent who caucuses with Senate Democrats, had forced consideration of resolutions cutting off military aid for Israel in the Senate, all of which have been rejected by the chamber’s Republican majority, and many Democrats. Continue reading...

The Register
Open 
Google Chrome lacks protection against one of the most basic and common ways to track users online
Browser fingerprinting is everywhere Google markets its Chrome browser by citing its superior safety features, but according to privacy consultant Alexander Hanff, Chrome does not protect against browser fingerprinting – a method of tracking people online by capturing technical details about their browser.…

Mail Online
Open 
One of the two men who was locked up for chopping down the Sycamore Gap tree 'has already walked free from prison'
Last July, Adam Carruthers, 33, and Daniel Graham, from Carlisle, Cumbria, were sentenced to four years and three months after they felled the 19th-century Sycamore Gap Tree.

Mail Online
Open 
Brett Goldstein 'accidentally' became a breakout star of Ted Lasso and is now taking over Hollywood with a Warner Bros deal, two Emmys and 'growing close' to Jennifer Lopez
He is quickly taking over Hollywood after 'accidentally' becoming a breakout star on Ted Lasso in 2020.

CNET News
Open 
Apple Reportedly Threatened to Remove Grok From App Store Over Deepfakes
Apple warned Elon Musk's xAI that its Grok AI would be removed from the App Store if it didn't make changes to prevent the app from being used for sexualized imagery.

CNET News
Open 
Apple Reportedly Plans to Send Siri Engineers to AI Coding Bootcamp
The move comes just weeks before the company is expected to unveil a new Siri.

CNET News
Open 
Google Will Pay $135M to Android Phone Owners. Learn Who's Eligible and How to Get Paid
If you used an Android phone with cell service in the last nine years, you could be eligible for compensation.

CNET News
Open 
Spotify Champions Live Music With Independent Music Venue Deal
The year-long partnership will spotlight the best of independent live music venues and artists in the US directly through Spotify's app.

Mail Online
Open 
Sara Cox 'is eyed up by BBC bosses for Radio 2 Breakfast Show gig' after Scott Mills' sacking over historical allegation of serious sexual offences
Sara Cox is said to be next in line for the Radio 2 Breakfast Show gig after Scott Mills was sacked from the BBC.

Mail Online
Open 
EDEN CONFIDENTIAL: Nigel Farage's got his Diamond candidate for local elections
Anne Diamond is one of the biggest stars on GB News , but her ex-husband has been inspired to enter politics by another of the channel's leading presenters - Nigel Farage.

Mail Online
Open 
Transport Secretary's car has to be towed 'after hitting a POTHOLE'
The Labour minister had been driving home from her Swindon South constituency when her green Mini Cooper struck a hole on the B4437 outside Burford in Oxfordshire.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Nebraska police shoot knife-wielding woman who abducted child from Walmart
The 31-year-old woman randomly abducted a three-year-old boy out of the Omaha supermarket at knifepoint, police say.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Finding Neukgu: South Korea's viral hunt for a runaway wolf
Hundreds have been deployed to find Neukgu, a young wolf that has eluded capture for a week and counting.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Back to books - Sweden's schools give up digital learning
Swedish classrooms swap laptops for books, pens and paper, raising concerns from the tech sector.

Russia Today News
Open 
Most Germans dissatisfied with Merz government – poll

BBC UK News
Open 
'Enormous' cave hidden under medieval castle could rewrite prehistory, researchers say
Archaeologists have so far uncovered "extremely rare" evidence of early humans and animals at the cave.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Nebraksa police shoot knife-wielding woman who abducted child from Walmart
The 31-year-old woman randomly abducted a three-year-old boy out of the Omaha supermarket at knifepoint, police say.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Waymo Partners With Waze To Use Self-Driving Cars To Track Potholes
Waymo Partners With Waze To Use Self-Driving Cars To Track Potholes

Authored by Dylan Morgan via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

Two Alphabet-owned companies, Waymo and Waze, announced on April 9 that they will team up to detect potholes and share that information with local government agencies to help get them filled more efficiently.
A self-driving Waymo vehicle awaits passengers in Los Angeles on July 1, 2025. John Fredricks/The Epoch Times

“Waymo is already making roads safer where we operate,“ said Arielle Fleisher, the company’s policy development and research manager, in a statement. ”We want to build on the safety benefits of our service by partnering with organizations and city officials to help improve the infrastructure we all depend on.”

Waymo, which started out as a Google self-driving car project in 2009 and spun out into its own company under Alphabet in 2016, said the pothole program was inspired from feedback it gathered from city officials over the years and is intended to fill reporting gaps.

Waymos are covered with cameras and sensors. The company said it will use its feedback systems to detect potholes and share that information through Waze’s platform, which users will be able to verify.

Waze, a GPS navigation app that lets drivers alert others with live updates, was acquired by Alphabet-subsidiary Google in 2013 for around $1.1 billion.

“This pilot program with Waymo adds another source of data to that effort, giving cities a clearer picture of road conditions through our Waze for Cities platform. It’s a great example of how working together helps our community and makes our roads better for everyone,” Waze Strategic Partner Manager Andrew Stober said.

Waze and Waymo will launch the pilot program in five areas—the San Francisco Bay Area, where the two companies are headquartered in Mountain View, as well as the Los Angeles, Phoenix, Austin, and Atlanta metro areas.

“We appreciate the collaboration with Waymo and Waze as we explore how technology can help identify issues like potholes faster so we can respond more efficiently,” San Jose Mayor Matt Mahan said in a statement. “We’re always looking for innovative ways to deliver better services for residents.”

Waymo said it has already identified around 500 potholes in these locations and will work to expand the program to more cities it serves.

Alongside these five locations, Waymo also operates in Dallas, Houston, Miami, Nashville, Orlando, and San Antonio.

The Nashville location is the newest addition, as Waymo started allowing users in Nashville on a rolling basis on April 7. The company also announced in February that it will expand to Charlotte, Chicago, and Sacramento, where it has released its fleet to begin gathering data on Sacramento’s streets.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 19:15

ZeroHedge News
Open 
China's Unitree Unveils Robot With "Human-Like Physique" That Can Outrun Most People
China's Unitree Unveils Robot With "Human-Like Physique" That Can Outrun Most People

The race for bipedal humanoid robot intelligence has certainly been in the news, with robots receiving "AI brains" that have already brought them onto factory floors and will likely become more visible in the public world in the coming years (see UBS). 

But there is another race that Chinese robot maker Unitree is simultaneously part of, and that is actual speed.

In recent days, Unitree posted a video on X titled "Unitree Breaks the World Record Again," indicating that one of its humanoid robots now has the "physique of an ordinary person, running at a world champion's speed."

Unitree said the robot completed a sprint at 10 meters per second, or 22.4 mph. For context, the fastest human sprint speed ever recorded was Usain Bolt's 27.8 mph during his 100-meter world record run at the 2009 World Championships in Athletics.


10m/s!! Unitree Breaks the World Record Again😊
With the physique of an ordinary person, running at a world champion’s speed!
Leg length: 0.4+0.4=0.8m, body weight: approx. 62kg!
H1: “Give me one more chance, give the world one more honor!” pic.twitter.com/Fk4Zo9zKit
— Unitree (@UnitreeRobotics) April 11, 2026
Related:

Will Chinese Robot Maker Unitree's Shanghai IPO Spark A Humanoid-Investing Bubble


Combine intelligence with speed, and the world is certainly racing toward the rise of robots that could one day chase down a human or even appear on the battlefield.



That's likely already happened. 

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 19:40

The Hill
Open 
Georgia Republican says ouster of Gen. George will have 'chilling effect' on military 
Rep. Austin Scott (R-Ga.) said during a hearing on Wednesday that Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s recent ouster of Gen. Randy George, the U.S. Army’s former chief of staff, will have a “chilling effect” on the way the armed services operate.  Scott, who praised George as “well respected, well liked by many of us,” asked Gen. Christopher...

The Hill
Open 
Blanche backs public hearings with Epstein survivors
Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche said on Wednesday that he would support public congressional hearings with victims of the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, less than a week after the chair of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee committed to holding them. “Of course,” Blanche responded when asked at the Semafor World Economy summit...

Mail Online
Open 
Kemi Badenoch: We must act now to stop the SNP tearing Britain apart
Scots unionist voters are being urged by Kemi Badenoch to unite to help stop the SNP 'tearing our country apart'.

Mail Online
Open 
CLAIRE COUTINHO: A shameful betrayal of women... but what do we expect from a party whose leader can't define what a woman is?
For a party that claims a strong history of feminism, today's Labour has a sorry record.

Mail Online
Open 
The healthiest bread in Britain: 59p supermarket sliced loaf takes top spot in new consumer watchdog analysis - beating upmarket 'artisan' rye
Spending more on artisan bread may not buy you a healthier loaf - with new analysis showing some of the cheapest supermarket options come out on top.

Mail Online
Open 
Shakespeare's 'missing' London house is FOUND after 400 years: Floorplan confirms the exact address in Blackfriars where The Bard spent his later years
Much of William Shakespeare's life is shrouded in mystery - but a key riddle has just been solved, thanks to a newly-discovered floorplan.

Mail Online
Open 
Dementia patients at risk as many care staff get 'less training than coffee shop workers', major report reveals
New research commissioned by Alzheimer's Society has revealed that half of all dementia training packages for care staff last just one to two hours.

Mail Online
Open 
Time to end the biomass scam: Drax, Britain's largest carbon emitter, received £1bn in subsidies last year - £2.7m a day and more than £100k an hour, which we all pay for
The controversial biomass power station receives 'overly generous' payments of £2.7million a day and more than £100,000 an hour, energy think tank Ember found.

Mail Online
Open 
80s Brat Pack icon baffles fans with unrecognizable look at 66 on rare outing
One of the 80s' most iconic heartthrobs shocked fans with a jaw-dropping look during a rare outing in Los Angeles on Wednesday.

Mail Online
Open 
The Morning Poll: Is it acceptable for Harry and Meghan to make money from their 'quasi-royal' tour of Australia?
The Morning Poll: Is it acceptable for Harry and Meghan to make money from their 'quasi-royal' tour of Australia?

Mail Online
Open 
'We enter each fight a little more haggard until we just can't fight anymore': Restaurant industry heavyweights tell me how Labour's successive economic raids on the hospitality business are 'killing the industry' by TOM PARKER BOWLES
'I don't know why everyone's making such a fuss about restaurants,' says a friend of mine who has scant interest in the things that really matter.

Mail Online
Open 
LAURA CRAIK: John Lewis sharpens its stilettos in battle with M&S by poaching Topshop guru
John Lewis has announced the appointment of Jacqui Markham as its new creative director of fashion, replacing Queralt Ferrer, who held the position for four years.

Mail Online
Open 
Graham Norton reveals he told Taylor Swift she 'made his dreams come true' after he appeared in her music video
Graham Norton has revealed he told pop icon Taylor Swift she 'made his dreams come true' by asking him to appear in her nineties-themed music video for Opalite.

Mail Online
Open 
American Pie star Shannon Elizabeth, 52, announces she is joining OnlyFans for a 'new chapter'
American Pie star Shannon Elizabeth revealed that she is joining OnlyFans for a 'new chapter' in her life and to 'just be free.'

Mail Online
Open 
Coleen Rooney suffers devastating blow as Primark slashes prices of her clothing range just one month after landing in stores and signing multi-million-pound deal
Coleen Rooney has suffered a devastating blow to her new clothing collection with Primark, just a month after landing in stores.

Mail Online
Open 
The world's best food markets revealed - and a UK spot comes in second place
A new study has revealed the top 20 global food markets, with must-visit destinations including São Paulo, Bangkok, and Amsterdam, Munich and New York.

Mail Online
Open 
The UK's 10 best hotels for under £100 - and how to bag the cheapest room rate
Looking for a hotel stay in the UK that won't break the bank? Look no further - as we take a peek at 10 of the best hotels for a stay under £100.

Mail Online
Open 
Amanda Knox is travelling to the UK... to promote her film about the murder of British student Meredith Kercher
Knox, 38, was twice convicted and twice acquitted of Ms Kercher's murder in Perugia, Italy - after she died while the pair lived together studying abroad in November 2007.

Mail Online
Open 
What's the hold up? Kemi attacks Starmer over defence spending and failure to set out plans
The Conservative leader tore into Sir Keir in the Commons over his failure to set out his plans to increase military funds, which have been delayed for over half a year.

Mail Online
Open 
Katie Holmes, 47, fuels plastic surgery whispers with fresh-faced look... after night out with Joshua Jackson
Katie Holmes left fans doing a double-take as she stepped out in New York on Wednesday, looking absolutely ageless. 

Mail Online
Open 
Hospice nurse who bet colleagues a patient would die on Christmas Day and refused traveller family's request to see loved one 'because they will burn the body in a caravan' is struck off
Naomi Butcher, 60, from Burgess Hill, West Sussex, made discriminatory comments and a string of serious errors which saw her put a patient at risk of death.

Mail Online
Open 
Live Nation and Ticketmaster lose monopoly lawsuit sparked by Taylor Swift's botched Eras Tour ticket sales
Four years after being slammed by Taylor Swift, Live Nation and its Ticketmaster subsidiary have been found liable for having a harmful monopoly over large venues.

Mail Online
Open 
Pet sitters caught on camera kicking and dragging family dog they were paid £1,400 to look after while owners were on holiday
Paige Williams, 25, was entrusted with caring for three dogs, two cats and two birds of prey in Solihull while their owners were away for four weeks on holiday in July and August 2024.

ZDNet News
Open 
I've been subscribed to a data removal service a month now - what I wish I knew sooner
Data removal services automate the removal of your information from the web, but their biggest benefit lies elsewhere.

ZDNet News
Open 
The same Microsoft Surface I bought 4 months ago is 69% more expensive now - here's why
High memory and storage prices are crushing the PC business, and Microsoft's Surface is suffering most of all. So why is the MacBook Neo immune?

The Right Scoop
Open 
UNREAL VIDEO – NYC Mayor claims this arrest “disturbing and unacceptable”
This is unreal. Both the NYC commie mayor and his lapdog NYPD commissioner condemn this arrest, with the mayor calling it “disturbing and unacceptable.” See for yourself: Does the fact that the . . .

Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple Stores Will Soon Be Able to Restore Apple Watch Software In-House
Apple retail locations and Apple Authorized Service Providers will soon be able to restore Apple Watch software in-store without needing to send an Apple Watch to a service center, according to a retail source that spoke to MacRumors.





Right now, Apple Watches that can't be restored using an iPhone need to be mailed to an Apple Repair Center for service. There is no in-store repair option, so customers have to wait for the Apple Watch to be shipped to the repair depot, get repaired, and be shipped back.



Starting later this month, Apple Stores and AASPs will be able to use an Apple Watch repair dock that connects to a Mac to restore the software on an Apple Watch. An in-store option for fixing software will make software-based repairs much quicker.



With watchOS 8.5 and iOS 15.4, Apple introduced an iPhone-based wireless restore option, but it is limited. It can only be used when a restore prompt is shown on the Apple Watch. For software issues where the iPhone restore doesn't work, the Apple Watch needs a specialized repair currently unavailable in retail stores. Failed updates, bricked devices, and boot loops can't be fixed with an iPhone.



Early Apple Watch models had a diagnostic port that Apple Stores could use for software fixes, but it was removed with the Apple Watch Series 7, and Apple switched to a wireless restoration process. After the port was dropped, Apple Watch software repairs had to be done at Apple Service Centers, making software-based failures a hassle for customers.Related Roundup: Apple Watch 11Buyer's Guide: Apple Watch (Neutral)This article, 'Apple Stores Will Soon Be Able to Restore Apple Watch Software In-House' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Ars Technica
Open 
Jury finds Live Nation/Ticketmaster is illegal monopoly that overcharged fans

Ars Technica
Open 
Florida surgeon charged with killing man after removing liver instead of spleen

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
The Papers: 'Summer of shortages' and 'War windfall'
Fears the Iran war could lead to UK supermarket shortages this summer and news of big oil windfalls lead Thursday's papers.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
The Papers: inal 'Summer of shortages' and 'War windfall'
Fears the Iran war could lead to UK supermarket shortages this summer and news of big oil windfalls lead Thursday's papers.

Mail Online
Open 
How I melted away my wobbly tummy at 50 in just FIVE WEEKS. I was exhausted and miserable - then a friend let me in to the 'cult' secret that's transforming the middle-aged. This is exactly how... you'll NEVER guess
For me, burnout came on gradually but towards the end, I felt permanently wired and exhausted. A doctor signed me off for six weeks. What would I do now?

Mail Online
Open 
'Scott Mills was the nicest man in showbiz... We are worried': Star's friends reveal the crisis of BBC DJ as he and young husband are seen looking unrecognisable in first images
Underneath a pair of black sunglasses and a large New York Yankees baseball cap, Scott Mills appears gaunt and unshaven

Mail Online
Open 
An orgy. 'Vile' behaviour and infidelity. Made In Chelsea bad boy Alex Mytton appalled onscreen - which is why what he's up to now is so shocking, revealed by MOLLY CLAYTON
He was Made In Chelsea 's biggest love rat, renowned for cheating scandals, explosive rows and many, many nights of boozing.

Mail Online
Open 
That embarrassing 'regrowth stubble' after removing facial hair can be mortifying - but there are fixes that won't cost thousands
Women don't like to talk about facial hair. While younger generations are more at ease with body hair in general for many of us, sporting an actual moustache is a bridge too far.

Mail Online
Open 
CLARE FOGES: Day Boris told me I had eyes like Maltesers - and why flattery isn't harassment
The 82-year-old gentleman leaned over the table and declared: 'If I was 40 years younger I'd be asking you on a date… you're an attractive woman, if you don't mind me saying.'

Mail Online
Open 
'Men without hair don't do anything for me. But he was CLEARLY attracted to me': Our most confident participant yet gets a sharp reality check in this week's Blind Date
Every week, FEMAIL asks two singletons to report back from their blind date. This week Rachanaa, 42, and Dan, also 42, recall their encounter and reveal if there was a spark.

Mail Online
Open 
Awkward moment Channel Seven reporter ambushes an unimpressed Prince Harry for a selfie before he's shooed away by security on third day of Sussexes' Aussie tour
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have appeared at a series of engagements in both Melbourne and Canberra so far, with spectators all saying the same thing about a tender moment between the pair.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Arteta wanted fire but Arsenal limp to semis - does style matter?
Mikel Arteta wanted "fire" from his Arsenal players but instead got a sluggish performance as the Gunners did what was needed to reach the Champions League semi-finals.

Mail Online
Open 
Fresh heartache for Ralf Schumacher's ex-wife Cora as she dumps US model boyfriend who she found love again with after divorcing F1 star who came out as gay
Cora Schumacher, 49, who was married to Michael Schumacher's younger brother Ralf, 50, for 14 years until 2015, said this week that her heart is 'broken'.

Mail Online
Open 
David and Victoria Beckham win planning row to plant forest at their luxury £6.15million Cotswolds home after being targeted by burglary gangs
The former footballer, 50, and the fashion designer, 51, submitted plans with West Oxfordshire District Council to plant 79 trees and a wildflower meadow at their luxury Cotswolds home.

Mail Online
Open 
Lena Dunham's Girls' complicated legacy: From whitewashing and nepotism backlash, to THAT controversial 'rape' scene and intense body shaming as creator makes explosive claims about violent co-star Adam Driver
When Girls burst onto screens back in 2012 it appeared to be just what people needed, a raucous and realistic portrayal of young women living in New York in their twenties. 

Mail Online
Open 
A wife murderer, a teenage thief and a REAL Peaky Blinder: Incredible rogues gallery offers stark snapshot of Britain's Victorian underworld
The sharp cheekbones and tailored suits of Cillian Murphy's Tommy Shelby put the Peaky Blinders up with Manhattan's Italian mobsters and Cuban gangsters from Florida.

Mail Online
Open 
All of Euphoria's disturbing moments as fans are left disgusted by stomach-churning scenes in critically panned season three
While the show was famed for breaking boundaries with its graphic portrayal of teenage drug use, sex, and violence, fans claimed creator Sam Levinson has 'gone too far this time'.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Gray whales, once rare in San Francisco Bay, dying there at alarming rates
Researchers find increase in whale deaths in the bay, largely because of collisions with vessels on busy shipping routeGray whales have historically been a rare sight in the San Francisco Bay. They trek from the warm lagoons of Mexico’s Baja California more than 10,000 miles (16,000km) north to the Arctic region to feast on shrimp-like animals during the summers, seldom stopping in the busy shipping corridor for prolonged periods.But in recent years, that story has changed in a dire way. A new study, published this week in the journal Frontiers in Marine Science, has found that gray whales in the bay have been dying at alarming rates, largely due to collisions with vessels. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Brett Goldstein 'accidentally' became a breakout star of Ted Lasso and is now taking over Hollywood with a  Warner Bros deal, two Emmys and 'growing close' to Jennifer Lopez
He is quickly taking over Hollywood after 'accidentally' becoming a breakout star on Ted Lasso in 2020.

Mail Online
Open 
Woman and man are arrested over 'antisemitic' attempted arson attack at north London synagogue where 'balaclava-clad suspects hurled petrol bombs'
Balaclava-clad bandits were seen using suspected petrol bombs in their attempted assault on Finchley Reform Synagogue in Fallow Court Avenue, North Finchley.

Mail Online
Open 
Reform UK leader Nigel Farage visits Crowborough after migrants moved into army barracks despite outcry from local residents
The Reform UK leader was pictured grinning from ear-to-ear on Wednesday afternoon as he met with supporters ahead of May's local elections.

CNET News
Open 
ADT Introduces a Glowing Warning Sign and New Emergency Options for Home Security
ADT updates its security tech with Live Light, a smart yard sign and My Safety mobile emergency contact services.

TechRadar News
Open 
Jackery's latest portable power station deals massively cut the price of some of our top-performing solutions for off-grid, RV, and home back-up

TechRadar News
Open 
NYT Strands hints and answers for Thursday, April 16 (game #774)

TechRadar News
Open 
Quordle hints and answers for Thursday, April 16 (game #1543)

TechRadar News
Open 
NYT Connections hints and answers for Thursday, April 16 (game #1040)

Mail Online
Open 
White House 'feels good about the prospects of a deal' with US-Iran peace talks set to return
Reports suggested the US and Iran are considering extending the ceasefire by two weeks to allow further peace negotiations. But last night the White House denied it had formally requested an extension.

Mail Online
Open 
Wild conspiracy theories circulate after one of Australia's last two oil refineries burst into flames as Nat Barr asks: 'Was it sabotage?'
Nat Barr questioned Energy Minister Chris Bowen about the wild claims surrounding the Geelong refinery blaze.

Slashdot
Open 
Boston Dynamics' Robot Dog Can Now Read Gauges, Spot Spills, and Reason
Boston Dynamics has integrated Google DeepMind into its robotic dog Spot, giving it more autonomous reasoning for industrial inspections like spotting spills and reading gauges. Spot can also now recognize when to call on other AI tools. IEEE Spectrum reports: Boston Dynamics is one of the few companies to commercially deploy legged robots at any appreciable scale; there are now several thousand hard at work. Today the company is announcing that its quadruped robot Spot is now equipped with Google DeepMind's Gemini Robotics-ER 1.6, a high-level embodied reasoning model that brings usability and intelligence to complex tasks.

[T]he focus of this partnership is on one of the very few applications where legged robots have proven themselves to be commercially viable: inspection. That is, wandering around industrial facilities, checking to make sure that nothing is imminently exploding. With the new AI onboard, Spot is now able to autonomously look for dangerous debris or spills, read complex gauges and sight glasses, and call on tools like vision-language-action models when it needs help understanding what's going on in the environment around it. "Advances like Gemini Robotics-ER 1.6 mark an important step toward robots that can better understand and operate in the physical world," Marco da Silva, vice president and general manager of Spot at Boston Dynamics, says in a press release. "Capabilities like instrument reading and more reliable task reasoning will enable Spot to see, understand, and react to real-world challenges completely autonomously."

You can watch a demo of Spot's new capabilities on YouTube.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Russia Today News
Open 
Iran considering easing Strait of Hormuz restrictions – Reuters

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Major fire at Australian oil refinery to impact nation's petrol supplies
The fire has deepened fears over the nation's petrol supplies amid a global crunch.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Former Brazilian Intelligence Chief Detained By ICE In Florida
Former Brazilian Intelligence Chief Detained By ICE In Florida

Authored by Charis Summers via The Epoch Times,

Alexandre Ramagem, a former chief of the Brazilian intelligence agency and a close ally of former President Jair Bolsonaro, has been detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers in Orlando, Florida.



Ramagem was chief of the ABIN intelligence agency from 2019 until 2022, when he was elected to the Chamber of Deputies, representing Bolsonaro’s Liberal Party.

In September 2025, he was sentenced to 16 years in prison for his role in an attempted coup in 2023 by Bolsonaro supporters. His congressional seat was later declared vacant. Brazilian authorities said Ramagem fled the South American nation before he would have started serving his sentence.

Brazil’s federal police said in an April 13 statement that a “fugitive of the country’s justice was arrested” in Orlando, but did not mention Ramagem by name. Police said the unnamed fugitive was recently sentenced by the country’s top court for the same three counts as Ramagem’s conviction.

“The arrest stemmed from international police cooperation between the Federal Police and U.S. law enforcement authorities,” Brazilian authorities said. “The prisoner is considered a fugitive from Brazilian justice after conviction for the crimes of armed criminal organization, coup d’état and attempted violent abolition of the rule of law.”

The Epoch Times reached out to ICE and Immigrex, a visa consultation service and law firm representing Ramagem, for comment, but did not receive a response by publication time.

Bolsonaro was convicted and sentenced to 27 years in jail in September 2025.

‘Traffic Infraction’

Ramagem appeared as “in custody” in ICE’s online detainee database on April 13. The Epoch Times was unable to verify the reason for Ramagem’s arrest, or whether it was related to Brazil’s request to extradite him.

In an April 13 post on X, Paulo Figueiredo, ​a Bolsonaro ally who lives in Florida, said Ramagem was ‌detained after a “minor traffic infraction” in Orlando, and then referred to ICE.

“Ramagem’s status is LEGAL: he has a pending asylum application, filed some time ago and still under review, which allows him to remain lawfully in the United States until a final decision is made in the case,” Figueiredo said.



Brazilian senator and presidential candidate Flávio Bolsonaro in Grapevine, Texas, at the Conservative Political Action Conference on March 28, 2026. The Epoch Times

Bolsonaro’s son, Flávio, who is also a Brazilian senator, said in an April 13 post on X that Ramagem “has a pending asylum application, is well supported legally, and there is an expectation that he will be released soon.”

Brazil is due to hold presidential elections in October 2026, with the winner taking office in January 2027.

The trials of Bolsonaro and Ramagem stemmed from the aftermath of the 2022 Brazilian presidential election, which included attacks on government buildings by Bolsonaro’s supporters.

Bolsonaro and his aides denied any involvement and said that they were the target of political persecution under the administration of his former competitor, Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, or Lula.

During Bolsonaro’s trial, U.S. President Donald Trump referred to it as a “witch hunt” and said Bolsonaro was not guilty of anything, except having fought for the people.



Former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro (2nd L) greets supporters next to his wife Michelle Bolsonaro during a rally in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on Feb. 25, 2024. Nelson Almeida/AFP via Getty Images

Bolsonaro started his prison sentence in November but was released to house arrest last month after suffering a bout of pneumonia.

In an April 13 post on X, Jorge Seif Júnior, who sits in the Brazilian federal senate, said Ramagem’s detention is “another case of political persecution in Brazil.”

“Today I formally submitted to the U.S. Embassy in Brasilia Official Letter No. 013/2026, presenting the relevant arguments regarding the detention, by ICE, of Brazilian Federal Police officer and Congressman Alexandre Ramagem,” he wrote. “This is yet another case of political persecution in Brazil, as seen with Jair Bolsonaro and Eduardo Bolsonaro. In light of this, I advocate for the granting of political asylum. ”

Lula, on April 14, called ‌on Ramagem to return to Brazil to serve his sentence.

“I believe Ramagem will come back to Brazil, he ​has to come ​back to serve his sentence,” Lula ‌said ⁠in an interview with local media.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 17:40

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Do White People Even Play Golf?
Do White People Even Play Golf?

Nike has long been one of the most recognizable athletic brands in the world, but the sneaker and apparel company has suffered rapid brand deterioration amid its move to fully embrace woke corporate politics, with its stock collapsing roughly 75% from its peak during the Covid era, when the Marxist NGO Black Lives Matter gained traction across corporate America.


Nike’s stock has been a disaster and is trading at 2014 prices. Management just can’t figure out why.
— Time Traveller (@802701AD) April 13, 2026
Even as the face of golf continues to change among the 28.1 million Americans who played in 2024 - with 28% female and 25% Black, Asian, or Hispanic, both the highest proportions ever recorded according to the National Golf Foundation - a viral post on X appears to show Nike’s unhinged corporate culture being criticized once again.

"Do White people even play golf?" one X user asked, after viewing Nike's website, which features all things golf, and finding the lack of diversity ...


Do White people even play golf? https://t.co/JQjgHI87FG pic.twitter.com/oBQbP56zZm
— Pub (@PubWanghaf) April 13, 2026
X users thought it was a joke ...


I thought it was a joke but there are ZERO white people on the Nike app pic.twitter.com/B0CBpo4EPg
— Dean (@Noticed2late) April 13, 2026
X users weren't happy:


That’s why I think @nike can go to hell. I’ll never buy any of their shit.
— Ronald Camillo (@ronald_camillo) April 13, 2026

NIKE has gone woke and it is actually going BROKE: -68% in the last 5Y
— Loris_Luca_I (@BLL_1973) April 13, 2026


Have we already forgotten when @Nike included anti-white training to their employees? Fnck @Nike
— George WOOshington (@rosticles) April 13, 2026

When I saw the 200$ shoes and 80$ shirt I wondered who could afford to dress themselves, let alone green fees and a day off work
— Fred (@Fredheelclicker) April 14, 2026
Pure gold.


Funny how they dropped the one black guy that’s been carrying them for decades in golf
— Strategeristic (@strategeristic) April 13, 2026
This is yet another brand choice by Nike, reflecting not the current audience but instead the audience they want to cultivate or the social message they want associated with the sport. This type of marketing may only push golfers toward other brands, such as Peter Millar, G/FORE, and Holderness & Bourne.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 18:00

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Pentagon Accused Of Cover-Up After Missing Deadline On 46 Military UAP Videos
Pentagon Accused Of Cover-Up After Missing Deadline On 46 Military UAP Videos

Authored by Steve Watson via Modernity.news,

The Pentagon has come under fire for failing to meet a congressional deadline to release dozens of military videos showing unidentified aerial phenomena, sparking fresh claims of a bureaucratic stall on one of the most sensitive national security issues in decades.



Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, R-Fla., had pressed Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to deliver 46 specific clips by April 14. Whistleblowers had told her task force that the Pentagon’s All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) already possessed the records. Yet as the deadline passed with no delivery, critics pointed to a pattern of delay that has long fueled public distrust.

The requested material includes spherical objects maneuvering erratically over Afghanistan, cigar-shaped craft, Tic Tac-style encounters, transmedium vehicles moving between air and water, and multiple formations captured near U.S. military assets, submarines, and sensitive airspace.


🚨Lawmaker asks Hegseth to release UAP videos citing national security concerns
Rep. Anna Paulina Luna. R-Fla., is asking Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to hand over dozens of military “unidentified aerial phenomena” videos by April 14. NBC News' Gadi Schwartz reports. Today is… pic.twitter.com/pQ0yQDCljR
— Skywatch Signal (@UAPWatchers) April 14, 2026
On April 15, with the deadline missed, the War Department moved to address the growing pressure. A U.S. official told Liberation Times that AARO is now actively working with the White House and other agencies to prepare previously unseen UAP records for public release.

“The Department of War’s All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) is working in close coordination with the White House and across federal agencies to consolidate existing UAP records collections and facilitate the expeditious release of never-before-seen UAP information,” the official stated.



The official added that “Since the office was established, AARO has made progress to make UAP information available and transfer those records to the National Archives in accordance with federal law. We welcome the president’s initiative to supercharge these efforts and make more UAP information available to the public as soon as possible.”


?War Department Says White House Coordinating Release of UFO Material
Ina recent article by @ChrisUKSharp a U.S. War Department official told Liberation Times that the Pentagons dedicated UFO office is working with the White House and federal agencies to prepare the release of… pic.twitter.com/QTlZgMZvKL
— Skywatch Signal (@UAPWatchers) April 15, 2026
The statement comes following mounting outrage over the missed deadline, with Luna herself noting the Pentagon’s initial silence.


https://t.co/cJ39OUywOD ??
— Daily Mail US (@Daily_MailUS) April 14, 2026
This episode fits a broader pattern of incremental movement on UAP transparency. Just days ago, Rep. Tim Burchett indicated that names, dates, people, and locations tied to the phenomenon are set to emerge in upcoming briefings.



Earlier this year the U.S. government quietly registered the domain aliens.gov, adding fuel to speculation that formal acknowledgment of non-human intelligence is being prepared at the highest levels.



And in January an insider warned the Bank of England to ready itself for imminent alien disclosure, suggesting the topic has moved well beyond fringe discussion and into institutional planning.



President Trump directed the process of identifying and releasing government files on UAP, UFOs, and extraterrestrial matters back in February. Yet the slow pace continues to frustrate lawmakers and the public alike.

Luna’s task force has emphasized the national security angle, arguing that unexplained objects operating in restricted airspace warrant full scrutiny rather than continued secrecy. The videos in question were reportedly captured by fighter jets, drones, surveillance aircraft, and naval assets across multiple theaters.

While AARO’s latest statement signals forward momentum and coordination at the White House level, skeptics note that similar promises have been made before without full delivery. The public, long accustomed to partial disclosures and redacted reports, is watching closely to see whether this round produces genuine transparency or another round of managed narrative.

The stakes extend beyond curiosity. If these objects represent advanced technology—human or otherwise—the public has a right to know what their governments have documented in their name. Continued foot-dragging only deepens suspicion that elements within the bureaucracy prefer control over candor.

Your support is crucial in helping us defeat mass censorship. Please consider donating via Locals or check out our unique merch. Follow us on X @ModernityNews.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 18:25

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Build It, And They Will Come? Not The Case At Baltimore's Harbor East Luxury Tower
Build It, And They Will Come? Not The Case At Baltimore's Harbor East Luxury Tower

The Four Seasons Private Residences in Harbor East, situated in crime-ridden Baltimore City and serving as a flagship luxury development project tied to the Inner Harbor's waterfront revitalization, was originally envisioned as an ultra-luxury tower designed to attract the rich and powerful. The premise for building the tower, which opened in 2017, was very simple: build it, and they will come.

The Paterakis family, one of the most prominent business and real estate families in the Baltimore metro area, best known for their baking empire and for transforming part of the city's waterfront over the decades, backed the Four Seasons Private Residences project, with one-bedroom condos hitting the market in 2017 for $1 million.



Yet the saying "build it, and they will come" didn't play out here, as the latest report from local outlet Baltimore Banner says a third of the 62 condos "have never sold," and the current listing price now "starts in the $500,000s."



Three investors told the local outlet that "the true price is even lower" for these one-bedroom units. That would suggest a 50% collapse in value over just nine years since the 2017 debut.

The outlet continued:


The trio scooped up 11 units at the Four Seasons last year. Now they’re suing Harbor East Parcel D-Residential LLC in Baltimore Circuit Court, accusing the seller of artificially inflating the sale price listed in public records. Harbor East Parcel-D Residential is the limited liability company used by the Paterakis family and other investors to own and sell the condos. George Philippou, a son-in-law of Paterakis Sr., signs deeds and other property records on behalf of the company.

David J. Shuster, an attorney for the limited liability company, said in a statement that the claims in the lawsuit are without merit and declined to comment further, citing the ongoing litigation. The Four Seasons, a Toronto-based company that operates resorts, hotels and condos around the world, did not respond to a request for comment.


Paterakis' bad bet on the ultra-luxury tower in Harbor East appears to be following a similar pattern to other high-profile redevelopment projects around the Inner Harbor, including Under Armor CEO Kevin Plank's Baltimore Peninsula project, which has struggled.



Let's not forget that the actual Inner Harbor is virtually a ghost town:


Downtown Baltimore is witnessing a troubling trend as businesses continue to close, leaving employees without jobs and residents without essential services.
The latest casualty is the Sheraton Hotel, a key fixture of the Inner Harbor, which has left 69 employees jobless.… pic.twitter.com/PagIL8uW9J
— FOX Baltimore (@FOXBaltimore) January 17, 2026
At a broader level, the common denominator behind these redevelopment failures is impossible to ignore: Baltimore's population has collapsed to a 100-year low in a relatively short period, eroding demand for urban revival projects. Much of that decline can be linked to a city and state controlled by unhinged Democratic Party kings and queens, pushing far-left policies that have only backfired into a California-style exodus of residents.



Baltimore's failure is a direct result of the one-party rule of Democratic queens and kings who appear to have done nothing but economically sabotage the state.

But the story here takes a twist because there is a movement inside the business community, especially among Sinclair Executive Chairman David Smith, to combat the far-left crazies who run the city and state through information warfare. Democrats have freaked out that Smith bought the largest paper in the state, The Baltimore Sun, as the left-wing regime has failed to counter the narratives, while left-wing Gov. Wes Moore's polling data implodes.

Alex Soros & Gov. Moore. 



Here's a novel idea for the business community that has watched its state and city implode under a far-left regime: it's time to go on the offensive and ensure common-sense politicians are elected in future elections, rather than left-wing activists who have no problem abusing taxpayers and looting state coffers for progressive projects, such as this:


Maryland Delegate Kathy Szeliga (R) EMBARESSES Democrats who want to force "appropriately sized tampons" into men's bathrooms.
Szeliga: "I've never heard of such a thing... what do you consider appropriate???"pic.twitter.com/jjasHIMtRE https://t.co/gsjXEzXVre
— Libs of TikTok (@libsoftiktok) March 24, 2026

Meanwhile, just an hour south: "D.C. Economy "Under Strain," Faces Biggest Spending Cuts Since Great Recession." 

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 18:50

The Hill
Open 
Scarborough: US allies 'very positive' about US blockade of Strait of Hormuz
MS NOW co-host Joe Scarborough on Wednesday said U.S. allies are reacting with a “very positive” attitude to the American blockade of the Strait of Hormuz.  The Trump administration effectively closed the strait this week, blocking Iran from choosing which ships are allowed to pass through the critical choke point. “There was a growing unease...

The Hill
Open 
GOP stops 4th attempt to curtail Trump’s Iran war powers
Welcome to The Hill's Defense & NatSec newsletter {beacon} Defense &National Security Defense &National Security   The Big Story GOP stops 4th attempt to curtail Trump’s Iran war powers Senate Republicans for the fourth time have blocked a resolution to limit President Trump’s war authority in Iran for as the conflict inches closer to a...

The Hill
Open 
Georgia Republican says ouster of Gen. George will have ‘chilling effect’ on military 
Rep. Austin Scott (R-Ga.) said during a hearing on Wednesday that Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s recent ouster of Gen. Randy George, the U.S. Army’s chief of staff, will have a “chilling effect” on the way the armed services operate. Scott, who praised George as “well respected, well liked by many of us,” asked Gen. Christopher C....

The Hill
Open 
Where US-Iran talks stand as ceasefire deadline looms 
Time is running out on a fragile ceasefire between the U.S., Israel and Iran, increasing pressure on mediators to get both Washington and Tehran back to the table for a second round of talks to end the nearly two-month war. Ahead of the scheduled ceasefire expiration on April 22, Pakistani officials are carrying out a...

The Hill
Open 
Democrats slam, Republicans defend Vought during testy House hearing: 3 takeaways
White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Director Russell Vought on Wednesday sparred with Democrats on the House Budget Committee over spending cuts proposed or enacted by the Trump administration. The annual hearing followed the Trump administration's unveiling of its proposed budget for fiscal 2027, which included a 40 percent increase to defense spending...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Seven goals, fastest strike & two red cards - Bayern-Real delivers drama
The quickest strike in this season's Champions League, seven goals, two red cards and the competition's 15-time winners exiting in anger - once again the knockout stages of European club football's elite tournament has delivered drama in spades.

Mail Online
Open 
White House denies wanting to extend ceasefire - as Iran threatens to shut down the Red Sea unless Trump lifts naval blockade: RECAP
RECAP: Read the Daily Mail's coverage of the ongoing Middle East crisis as the White House denies reports that it wants to extend the ceasefire with Iran

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Long live the ‘unc game
‘Unc’ (short for uncle) is meant to disparage older players, but the industry should make games for all generations• Don’t get Pushing Buttons delivered to your inbox? Sign up hereWhile researching women’s experiences in multiplayer video games recently, I came across this thread on the subreddit about Bungie’s latest live shooter, Marathon. “I’ve played a lot of shooters, and as a feminine-presenting player tbh it’s often a struggle,” it reads. “I’ve heard all the ‘get back to the kitchen’ jokes … ​But Marathon has been completely different, guys. I haven’t had a single issue, people have been incredibly kind and helpful… ​The community feels genuinely welcoming to everyone.”The top-voted reply? “Benefit of being an unc game.” Continue reading...

Wired Top Stories
Open 
‘Avatar: Aang, The Last Airbender’ Leaked Online. Some Fans Say Paramount Deserves the Fallout
After the full movie leaked, animators mourned the chance to release their work as intended. Others feel the leak is justified in light of Paramount’s marketing blunders and association with Trump.

Telegraph
Open 
Unimaginative Arsenal scrape into Champions League semi-final
Unimaginative Arsenal scrape into Champions League semi-final

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Long live the ‘unc game’
‘Unc’ (short for uncle) is meant to disparage older players, but the industry should make games for all generations• Don’t get Pushing Buttons delivered to your inbox? Sign up hereWhile researching women’s experiences in multiplayer video games recently, I came across this thread on the subreddit about Bungie’s latest live shooter, Marathon. “I’ve played a lot of shooters, and as a feminine-presenting player tbh it’s often a struggle,” it reads. “I’ve heard all the ‘get back to the kitchen’ jokes … ​But Marathon has been completely different, guys. I haven’t had a single issue, people have been incredibly kind and helpful… ​The community feels genuinely welcoming to everyone.”The top-voted reply? “Benefit of being an unc game.” Continue reading...

Mac Rumours
Open 
iOS 26.4 No Longer Signed by Apple, Blocking Downgrades From iOS 26.4.1
Apple today stopped signing iOS 26.4, so iPhone users who have updated to iOS 26.4.1 are no longer able to downgrade to the earlier version of iOS. iOS 26.4.1 came out a week ago.





When software is "signed," it means it can pass the server-side verification check that Apple does when a user downloads a new version of iOS on an iPhone. An update that's not signed can't be installed because it won't pass the verification check.



Apple does not show users earlier versions of iOS after an upgrade has been released, but when software is still signed, it is possible to downgrade with the macOS Finder app on a Mac or the Apple Devices app on a Windows PC.



Unsigning software prevents Apple customers from installing outdated, less secure versions of iOS, and Apple typically stops signing an update a week or so after new software comes out.



iOS 26.4.1 fixed iCloud syncing issues and Stolen Device Protection on enterprise devices. While iOS 26.4.1 is the current publicly available version of iOS, Apple is also beta testing an iOS 26.5 update.Related Roundups: iOS 26, iPadOS 26Related Forum: iOS 26This article, 'iOS 26.4 No Longer Signed by Apple, Blocking Downgrades From iOS 26.4.1' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Seven goals, fastest strike & two red cards - Bayern-Real delivers drama
The quickest strike in this season's Champions League, seven goals, two red cards and the competition's 15-time winners exiting in anger - once again the knockout stages of European club football's elite contest has delivered drama in spades.

Mail Online
Open 
Parent like it's 1999: Mums and Dads are going retro bringing up the kids by letting them be bored, ditching iPhones and watching more sedate 90s films and TV
The trend for 'parenting like its the 90s' includes digging out retro technology, playing board games together and even letting children be bored without the distraction of iPhones,

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Real Madrid set for rare trophyless season - will Arbeloa pay the price?
After losing out to Bayern Munich in a thrilling Champions League quarter-final, Real Madrid face the prospect of a trophyless season that could cost Alvaro Arbeloa his job.

BBC UK News
Open 
Fake damage and imaginary watches - how AI images are being used in insurance scams
An insurer reports a 71% rise in fraudulent claims, driven partly by an increase in faked images.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Nine universities start legal action over student loan error row
About 22,000 students in England were told they were given loans by mistake and must immediately pay the money back.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
More big energy users to get help as support plan expanded
A scheme to cut bills for firms that are heavy energy users is being extended to cover an additional 3,000 businesses.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
How South Korea plans to use the Iran crisis to spur a renewables revolution
Energy crisis unfolding in Middle East has added political urgency, and more funding, to transform the solar industry in particularIn Guyang-ri, a farming village of 70 households about 90 minutes south-east of Seoul, residents gather for free communal lunches six days a week. The meals are funded by the village’s one-megawatt solar installation, which generates roughly 10m won ($6,800) in net profit each month.“Residents eat lunch together every day, so we see each other’s faces, talk together,” says Jeon Joo-young, the village chief. “Bonds and solidarity between residents become much stronger. Life becomes more enjoyable.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Lincolnshire church leaning more than Tower of Pisa needs £100k to fix wonky floor
Fundraising under way to fix uneven floor at Dry Doddington’s 14th century church as stone slabs shiftA church in the Midlands that leans more than the Tower of Pisa is in need of more than £100,000 in repairs to renovate its wonky floor.
Dry Doddington’s St James church tower in Lincolnshire is famous for its jaunty angle of 5.1 degrees, compared to the landmark in Piazza dei Miracoli, Tuscany, which has a lean of about 3.97 degrees.Residents are trying to raise money for the Grade II-listed building, which was built in the 12th century. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Drax claimed record £999m in subsidies for burning trees in 2025, thinktank says
Company has received about £8.7bn in renewable energy subsidies since 2012, despite claims wood pellets are not sourced sustainablyThe owner of the Drax power plant in North Yorkshire received record subsidies of almost £1bn for burning trees to generate electricity in 2025, a climate thinktank has calculated.The company was paid £999m last year for generating about 4.5% of Great Britain’s electricity from its biomass plant, costing each household £13 a year, according to analysts at Ember. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
English councils need to hire 1,400 more educational psychologists, says report
Rising demand from children with special needs means the £140m required could come from government grantsCouncils in England need to hire 1,400 more educational psychologists at a cost of £140m to meet demand from children with special needs such as autism, according to a new report.Research by the Education Policy Institute (EPI) found huge regional variations and chronic shortages in qualified educational psychologists working with schools, and concluded that a 40% increase in the workforce was needed to iron out the differences between the best and worst-off areas. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
People in north of England twice as likely to be killed in accidents as Londoners, report finds
Safety charity warns deaths are rising overall and closely linked to deprivationPeople in the north of England are twice as likely to be killed in accidents than Londoners, with accidental deaths clearly linked to deprivation, a report has found.The research, from safety charity the Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents (RoSPA), highlights vast regional differences in accidental deaths, which have also seen an overall increase. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
The city where primary school places come with a toilet-training guide
Teachers say more children are starting school without skills like basic communication and potty training.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Move over wind farms: why some argue cutting costs is the best way to cut carbon
From heat pumps to offshore wind, the UK’s net zero push is facing growing scrutiny. Are rising costs undermining climate goals?

Mail Online
Open 
TOM LEONARD: How Elon Musk's plan to launch ONE MILLION satellites could make him the most terrifyingly powerful man on the planet
Look up into the night sky and, if you can see anything up there that's bright and moving, chances are it belongs to Elon Musk.

Mail Online
Open 
Labour's shameful betrayal of women: Single-sex space ruling is STILL being ignored by hundreds of public bodies... because ministers let them
The ruling specified that 'woman' in the Equality Act referred to biological sex, but a Daily Mail audit has found that NHS trusts, police forces, town halls and Whitehall departments are failing to comply.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Horse urine perfume: why online bargains may be dangerous
Experts warn of hidden risk of counterfeits, while the government consults on stricter product safety rules.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Live Nation and Ticketmaster had monopoly over big venues, US jury finds
Verdict in states’ case says concert giant stifled competition in ticketing industry, raising pressure for changesConcert giant Live Nation and its Ticketmaster subsidiary had a harmful monopoly over big concert venues, a Manhattan federal jury has found, dealing the company a loss in a lawsuit over claims brought by dozens of US states.The jury deliberated for four days before reaching its decision on Wednesday in the closely watched case, which helped peel back the curtain on a business that dominates live entertainment across much of the world. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Gray whales, once rare in San Francisco Bay, dying there at alarming rates
Researchers find increase in whale deaths in the Bay, largely because of collisions with vessels on busy shipping routeGray whales have historically been a rare sight in the San Francisco Bay. They trek from the warm lagoons of Mexico’s Baja California more than 10,000 miles (16,000km) north to the Arctic region to feast on shrimp-like animals during the summers, seldom stopping in the busy shipping corridor for prolonged periods.But in recent years, that story has changed in a dire way. A new study, published this week in the journal Frontiers in Marine Science, has found that gray whales in the bay have been dying at alarming rates, largely due to collisions with vessels. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Díaz and Olise late show sends Bayern into semi-finals after Real Madrid classic
When the dust kicked up by an utterly scintillating two-legged struggle had settled, Bayern Munich could bathe in the glow of a win for the ages and linger dreamily on the prospect of a semi-final against Paris Saint-Germain.It is the tie most neutrals wanted but the bar for entertainment has been raised sky high now. Real Madrid should curse themselves, and one of their number in particular, for letting things career out of their control at the death; the sadness for those with no skin in the game came from being deprived an additional half-hour of the near ceaseless thrills both teams were serving up here. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Edgy Arsenal squeeze past Sporting to set up Atlético Madrid semi-final
To borrow a line from Mikel Arteta, it is not meant to be easy. And it was anything but on the latest anxiety-ridden, claustrophobic occasion for his Arsenal team. The club’s recent wobble has been pronounced. The loss to Manchester City in the Carabao Cup final. The FA Cup exit at Southampton. The Premier League defeat against Bournemouth that has imperilled their title push. The nerves are pounding like a migraine and this was a night which was always going to be entirely outcome-based.Hold on to the 1-0 lead from the first-leg of this quarter-final and it would be triumph – only a fourth appearance in the semi-finals of the competition. Fall short against a tidy Sporting team and ignominy was guaranteed; a deepening of the existential crisis. It is City next at the Etihad Stadium on Sunday, after all. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
MPs vote against social media ban for under-16s a second time
Commons rejects proposal by 256 to 150 to side with government on plan to tackle online harms affecting childrenMPs have rejected a proposal to ban under-16s from using social media for the second time, as the prime minister summoned tech bosses to demand tougher action on internet safety.The House of Commons sided with the government against a Lords amendment to the children’s wellbeing and schools bill that imposed a new age limit on using social media platforms, amid pressure from parents and campaign groups for greater urgency in tackling online harms. Continue reading...

CNET News
Open 
AT&T Rumored to Launch New Top-Tier Unlimited Phone Plan Soon
Online reports point to a new plan, potentially called Elite 2.0, that boosts hotspot data for a premium price.

TechRadar News
Open 
I used ChatGPT to envision my kid’s doodles as real animals, and they looked surprisingly lifelike

TechRadar News
Open 
I have an Allbirds collection that I love, and its AI pivot feels worse than poorly-fitting shoes

TechRadar News
Open 
Is this the tipping point for AI at work? New Gallup survey finds half of all US employees now use it in some way

Digital Trends
Open 
MSI unveils a barrage of laptops with up to RTX 5090 graphics and Intel Arrow Lake chips
With competitors already out the door with Arrow Lake-HX Plus laptops, MSI has arrived with a 13-strong lineup ranging from entry-level Cyborgs to RTX 5090-toting Raiders and Titans.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Allbirds’ AI pivot sends its stock soaring nearly 600%. We’ve seen this movie before.
It’s not unprecedented for struggling companies to latch on to the hot trend of the moment — remember the blockchain hype cycle?

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Google’s stake in SpaceX could be worth more than most companies on the planet
The search giant has a lot to gain from SpaceX’s upcoming initial public offering.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
U.S. businesses hit the brakes on hiring and spending as Iran war dims optimism over economy, Fed report finds
Many Fed districts also reported growing signs of financial strain among consumers, along with increased price sensitivity and rising demand at food banks.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Microsoft’s stock has sprung back to life — and is on its strongest run in 3 years, by one measure
After frustrating investors for months, Microsoft shares just clinched their best three-session performance since April 2023.

Boing Boing
Open 
What if your calendar ran on a worm that splits itself in half?
Once or twice a year, on reefs across Vanuatu, Samoa, Fiji, Timor-Leste, and other islands of the southwestern Pacific, the palolo worm tears itself in half. The front portion stays put in the coral rubble where the worm normally hides. The back end grows tiny eyes, swells with gametes — blue-green if female, orange if male — and rises toward the surface, where it ruptures, spilling its cargo into the sea. — Read the rest
The post What if your calendar ran on a worm that splits itself in half? appeared first on Boing Boing.

Slashdot
Open 
US Jobs Too Important To Risk Chinese Car Imports, Says Ford CEO
In an interview with Fox News, Ford CEO Jim Farley warned that allowing Chinese vehicle imports could put nearly a million U.S. jobs at risk. He said China's heavily subsidized auto industry has enough excess capacity to supply the entire U.S. market, while also raising serious cybersecurity concerns given how much data modern connected cars collect. Ars Technica reports: "First of all, the Chinese have huge direct support for their auto companies," Farley said, while noting that China has the ability to build an additional 21 million vehicles a year on top of the 29 million that are expected to roll off Chinese production lines in 2026. "They have enough capacity in China to cover all the manufacturing, all the vehicle sales in the United States," Farley said.

"Manufacturing is the heart and soul of our country, and for us to lose those exports would be devastating for our country," he continued, before pointing out the cybersecurity worries about Chinese cars. "All the vehicles have 10 cameras. They can collect a lot of data," he said.

Farley has praised Chinese EVs like the Xiaomi SU7, even going on podcasts to sing its praises. But he believes Ford's forthcoming affordable Kentucky-built EVs, due to start hitting dealerships next year, have what it takes to be competitive. When asked about new car prices rising an average of 2 percent last year, Farley repeatedly said that Ford had "worked with the administration" so that there's "essentially no big impact" of the Trump tariffs. The CEO justified the rising costs by pointing to the F-150's sales as proof of its value.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

The Verge
Open 
YouTube now lets you turn off Shorts
YouTube's time management settings now have an option to put a zero-minute time limit on Shorts, effectively removing them from your app in Android and iOS. The option is an update to the Shorts timer YouTube originally announced in October; the lowest previous option was 15 minutes. The feature was expanded in January to give […]

The Aviationist
Open 
U.S. Army Officially Names MV-75 as Cheyenne II
The U.S. Army has officially named the MV-75 Future Long Range Assault Aircraft as Cheyenne II, in a tribute to the Cheyenne Tribes known for mobility, resilience, and disciplined strength. The U.S. Army has officially announced that the MV-75 Future Long Range Assault Aircraft (FLRAA) will be named as Cheyenne II. The new popular name […]

The Hill
Open 
Republican House candidate drops out of Minnesota race for Middle East deployment
Republican House candidate Tyler Kistner announced Wednesday that he’s dropping out of the race for Rep. Angie Craig’s Minnesota’s 2nd Congressional seat due to a Middle East deployment.  Kistner ran unsuccessfully for Craig’s seat in both 2020 and 2022, coming within single-digits of an upset. He had mounted another 2026 bid as Craig vacates her...

The Hill
Open 
Treasury Sec. eyes $3 gas
{beacon} Energy & Environment Energy & Environment   The Big Story Treasury Sec. eyes $3 gas Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told reporters at the White House press briefing on Wednesday that Americans could start seeing $3 gas prices “sooner rather than later” depending on how negotiations to open Iran’s Strait of Hormuz end up playing...

The Hill
Open 
The Memo: Iran war roils Trump’s relations with China in advance of high-stakes trip
The war in Iran — and President Trump’s shifting tactics in fighting it — are roiling relations with China, just weeks before the president is to make a high-stakes trip there. The complicated dynamics have a straightforward core. China has numerous ties with Iran, economically and strategically. At the same time, Beijing has zero interest...

The Hill
Open 
White House pushes cryptocurrency bill as midterms loom
{beacon} Technology Technology   The Big Story White House ramps up pressure to pass crypto bill The Trump administration is turning up pressure to pass a major cryptocurrency bill as Congress returns from a two-week recess with a shrinking window to get the legislation across the finish line before November’s midterm elections. © Greg Nash...

The Hill
Open 
Pope Leo says 'we can live in peace' amid spat with Trump
Pope Leo XIV on Wednesday doubled down on his message amid President Trump's criticism of the pontiff over his comments on the war in Iran. “We have different beliefs, we have different ways of worshipping, we have different ways of living, we can live together in peace,” he told reporters on the papal plane, according...

The Hill
Open 
Roblox reaches kids safety agreement with Nevada
The gaming platform Roblox has agreed to implement a series of kids safety measures and pay the state of Nevada $12 million in a new settlement, Nevada Attorney General Aaron Ford announced Wednesday. Ford, a Democrat, said Roblox was responsive to Nevada's 2024 investigation into the gaming platform, allowing the state to reach an agreement...

The Hill
Open 
TMZ's arrival on Capitol Hill elicits both groans and curiosity
TMZ's move into the Capitol Hill media scene is sparking eye rolls from lawmakers, aides and journalists who spend their days in the halls of Congress and fueling steady chatter among them about the outlet’s motives and unconventional reporting style. A tabloid known for its sensational headlines and dirt-digging on actors, athletes and celebrities, TMZ...

The Hill
Open 
Sotomayor apologizes to Kavanaugh over remarks on his immigration stop opinion 
Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor publicly apologized to Justice Brett Kavanaugh on Wednesday for her comments at a recent talk criticizing his opinion concerning the Trump administration’s immigration stops. “At a recent appearance at the University of Kansas School of Law, I referred to a disagreement with one of my colleagues in a prior case, but...

The Hill
Open 
John Eastman disbarred in California over efforts to overturn 2020 election
John Eastman, a lawyer who spearheaded efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election in President Trump's favor, has been formally disbarred in California The California Supreme Court on Wednesday declined to review his appeal of a lower court's recommendation to strip him of his law license, instead ordering his disbarment. "The court...

The Hill
Open 
RFK Jr. to face questioning in House, Senate
Presented by the Coalition to Strengthen America’s Healthcare {beacon}  View Online Health Care Health Care PRESENTED BY The Big Story Kennedy set for Hill visits Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. kicks off a whirlwind of congressional hearings on Thursday, testifying before the House Ways and Means Committee in the morning and the House Appropriations health subcommittee in the...

The Hill
Open 
Oz says Trump defended diet soda habit, joking it 'kills cancer cells'
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Administrator Dr. Mehmet Oz revealed on Monday that President Trump has an unusual defense for his diet soda habit, joking that the president often says the beverage “kills cancer cells.” “Your dad argues that diet soda is good for him because it kills grass. It's poured on grass,...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Firefighters battle huge blaze at Australian oil refinery
The fire is burning out of control at the Geelong oil refinery, one of only two in Australia.

Techdirt
Open 
War As A Pretext: Gulf States Are Tightening The Screws On Speech—Again
War does not only reshape borders. It also reshapes what can be seen, said, and remembered.  When governments invoke “misinformation” during wartime, they often mean something simpler: speech they do not control. Since the escalation of conflict between the United States, Israel, Iran, and related spillover attacks in the Gulf, several governments have intensified efforts to silence […]

ZDNet News
Open 
I tried Google's new desktop app for Windows, and I'll never search the old way again
Now available to all, the app delivers a faster way to access tools like Gemini, Lens, and Search. See why it's totally worth a download.

The Right Scoop
Open 
WATCH: Ben Shapiro goes after JD Vance for promoting Theo Von
Apparently Vice President JD Vance recommended Theo Von’s podcast at Turning Point USA this week and Ben Shapiro has a big problem with that, referring to Von as a ‘Bernie Sanders leftist’ . . .

Telegraph
Open 
Ten goals and 73 shots: Bayern knock out Real Madrid in one of the great European ties
Ten goals and 73 shots: Bayern knock out Real Madrid in one of the great European ties

Telegraph
Open 
Unimaginative Arsenal scrape into ‘historic’ consecutive Champions League semis
Unimaginative Arsenal scrape into ‘historic’ consecutive Champions League semis

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
US jury finds Live Nation and subsidiary Ticketmaster operated monopoly
Verdict in states’ case says concert giant stifled competition in ticketing industry, raising pressure for changesConcert giant Live Nation and its Ticketmaster subsidiary had a harmful monopoly over big concert venues, a Manhattan federal jury has found, dealing the company a loss in a lawsuit over claims brought by dozens of US states.The jury deliberated for four days before reaching its decision on Wednesday in the closely watched case, which helped peel back the curtain on a business that dominates live entertainment across much of the world. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Harry Maguire given extra one-match ban for ‘joke’ comment towards officials
Defender shown red card against BournemouthOfficials claim Maguire made remark as he left fieldHarry Maguire will miss Manchester United’s trip to Chelsea having been handed an additional one-match ban by the Football Association for his reaction to being sent off at Bournemouth.The 33-year-old was shown a red card at the Vitality Stadium last month for a foul in the area on Evanilson, with Eli Junior Kroupi scoring from the resulting penalty as Bournemouth sealed a 2-2 draw. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Edgy Arsenal squeeze past Sporting to set up Atlético Madrid semi-final
To borrow a line from Mikel Arteta, it is not meant to be easy. And it was anything but on the latest anxiety-ridden, claustrophobic occasion for his Arsenal team. The club’s recent wobble has been pronounced. The loss to Manchester City in the Carabao Cup final. The FA Cup exit at Southampton. The Premier League defeat against Bournemouth that has imperilled their title push. The nerves are pounding like a migraine and this was a night which was always going to be entirely outcome-based.Hold on to the 1-0 lead from the first-leg of this quarter-final and it would be triumph – only a fourth appearance in the semi-finals of the competition. Fall short against a tidy Sporting team and ignominy was guaranteed; a deepening of the existential crisis. It is Manchester City next at the Etihad Stadium on Sunday, after all. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Bayern strike late to beat Real Madrid in seven-goal thriller
Bayern Munich leave it late in a back-and-forth classic to beat Real Madrid 4-3 to set up a meeting with Paris St-Germain in the semi-finals of the Champions League.

Mail Online
Open 
Kim Kardashian seems to be nesting with boyfriend Lewis Hamilton as they shop for home goods together
The lovebirds, who were first spotted together at the Super Bowl in February, even matched their attire with similar pale tones as they hinted they may be nesting together in Southern California.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
France seeks release of 86-year-old French widow detained by ICE
Agents detained Marie-Therese Ross in Alabama on 1 April after she overstayed her 90-day visa, according to DHSThe French government is pressing the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to release the 86-year-old French widow of a military veteran from immigration custody after she was detained earlier this month.US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents detained Marie-Therese Ross in Alabama on 1 April after she overstayed her 90-day visa, according to DHS. Ross is now being held at a federal immigration detention facility in Louisiana. Continue reading...

The Register
Open 
Anthropic's Project Glasswing CVE tally is still anyone's guess
Like the majority of the companies participating, it remains a mystery Last week, Anthropic surprised the world by declaring that its latest model, Mythos, is so good at finding vulns that it would create chaos if released. Now, under the title of Project Glasswing, over 50 selected companies and orgs are allowed to test the hyped up LLM to find security holes in their own products. But just how many problems have they really discovered?…

BBC UK News
Open 
First minister admits north Wales NHS 'not a pretty sight'
Criticism of the NHS features prominently as voters question party leaders live on BBC One Wales.

Gizmodo
Open 
The First ‘Clayface’ Footage Was Wonderfully Disgusting
Tom Rhys Harries stars as the Batman villain in the new film arriving October 23.

BBC UK News
Open 
First minister admits north Wales NHS 'not a pretty sight'
Criticism of the NHS features prominently as voters question party leaders live on BBC Wales television.

Sky News Home
Open 
Man 'tried to break into London's Israeli embassy armed with two knives', court hears
A man who twice entered the UK by small boat tried to break into the Israeli embassy in London with two knives to "exact revenge" for the killing of children in Gaza, a court heard.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Gray whales, once rare in San Francisco Bay, dying there at alarming rates
Researchers find increase in whale deaths in the Bay, largely because of collisions with vessels on busy shipping routeGray whales have historically been a rare sight in the San Francisco Bay. They trek from the warm lagoons of Mexico’s Baja California over 10,000 miles north to the Arctic region to feast on shrimp-like animals during the summers, seldom stopping in the busy shipping corridor for prolonged periods.But in recent years, that story has changed in a dire way. A new study, published this week in the journal Frontiers in Marine Science, has found that gray whales in the Bay have been dying at alarming rates, largely due to collisions with vessels. Continue reading...

Russia Today News
Open 
US turned down Russian offer to take Iran’s enriched uranium – Kremlin

Mail Online
Open 
Britain's debt burden means the nation has put itself through tax hell to run on the spot, says ALEX BRUMMER
There has been no fiscal statement since Chancellor Rachel Reeves arrived at the Treasury which has failed to mention Liz Truss.

Sky News Home
Open 
Migrant 'tried to break into Israeli embassy as revenge for Gaza'
A man who twice entered the UK by small boat tried to break into the Israeli embassy in London with two knives to "exact revenge" for the killing of children in Gaza, a court heard.

CNET News
Open 
Motorola Razr Fold Price Revealed Thanks to UK Preorders Going Live
The two-panel folding phone could be pricey in the US based on a direct currency conversion, but it might not be the final cost.

CNET News
Open 
Google Launches Dedicated Gemini App for MacOS
Get faster access to some of Gemini's best features without switching tabs.

CNET News
Open 
Horizon Zero Dawn Remastered, Squirrel With a Gun and More Are Coming to PlayStation Plus in April
Some other games might be fun, but Squirrel With a Gun has my full attention.

CNET News
Open 
Scientists Use AI to Map Ocean Currents in Incredible Detail
Understanding ocean currents is important for work such as weather forecasting, climate research, search-and-rescue operations and oil spill response.

CNET News
Open 
Spotify Will Let Customers Buy a Hard-Copy Book With a Click in the App
The music streaming app is starting a new feature with Bookshop.org.

XKCD
Open 
Make It Myself

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Lyse Doucet in Iran: Under fragile ceasefire, Iranians wonder if US deal can be done
The BBC's chief international correspondent reports from Iran as diplomatic efforts to avoid a return to war intensify.

Mail Online
Open 
Natalie Cassidy cuts a chic figure as she joins leggy AJ Odudu and Katherine Jenkins at the M&S Sparks launch
The actress joined AJ Odudu and Katherine Jenkins at the  M&S Sparks Launch at 180 The Strand in London on Wednesday night.

Mail Online
Open 
I'm A Celeb star Gemma Collins accuses show of 'trying to kill her' after being pelted in the face with gunge and failing crucial food challenge
I'm A Celebrity's Gemma Collins accused show bosses of 'trying to kill her' after she got pelted in the face with gunge and failed a crucial food challenge. 

Mail Online
Open 
Beloved ex-UFC fighter Mark Hunt arrested on domestic violence charge after allegedly threatening to kill female acquaintance
The MMA cult hero affectionately known as the 'Super Samoan' was taken into custody by police in north-east New South Wales on Tuesday night, according to the Sydney Morning Herald .

Mail Online
Open 
CHRISTOPHER STEVENS reviews Grayson Perry Has Seen The Future: A profoundly dispiriting vision of a world taken over by robots and AI
CHRISTOPHER STEVENS: If the future is anything like Sir Grayson Perry predicts, all we've got left to look forward to is the past.

Mail Online
Open 
Kim Kardashian seems to be nesting with boyfriend Lewis Hamilton as they shop for home goods together
The lovebirds, who were first stopped together at the Super Bowl in February, even matched their attire with similar pale tones as they hinted they may be nesting together in Southern California.

Mail Online
Open 
I'm A Celeb star Jimmy Bullard beats his 'old gaffer' Harry Redknapp in 'worst ever' eating challenge after gagging on pig anus, wild boar penis and rotten tofu - and fans are stunned by the huge portions
On Wednesday night's episode, King Rhino Jimmy Bullard, 37, took on his first football manager King Lion Harry Redknapp, 79,in Beastly Braa.

Mail Online
Open 
Greens would spend 2.5% of GDP - more than the current defence budget - on foreign aid and want military review to focus on Net Zero
The Greens want to spend 2.5 per cent of national income on supporting developing nations by 2030 - more than the UK's current defence budget.

Mail Online
Open 
Arsenal looked full of fear and rode their luck in reaching the Champions League semi-finals - their nervy display in twitchy draw with Sporting will not daunt the mentality monsters who lie ahead, writes OLIVER HOLT
OLIVER HOLT: Arsenal did not play like the heroes of yesteryear. They were tentative again as they squeezed through to the Champions League semi-finals.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Edgy Arsenal squeeze past Sporting to set up Atlético Madrid semi-final
To borrow a line from Mikel Arteta, it is not meant to be easy. And it was anything but on the latest anxiety-ridden, claustrophobic occasion for his Arsenal team.The club’s recent wobble has been pronounced. The loss to Manchester City in the Carabao Cup final. The FA Cup exit at Southampton. The Premier League defeat against Bournemouth. The nerves are pounding like a migraine and this was a night that was entirely outcome-based. Continue reading...

TechRadar News
Open 
'Every Apple user needs to know about this nasty scam': Fake warnings tell users their iCloud data will be deleted — but don't fall for this devious phishing trick

Digital Trends
Open 
Nothing’s Warp app promised to fix cross-platform file sharing, then vanished within hours
Android's freshest AirDrop alternative lasted less than a day on the Play Store. Nothing's Warp app went from launch announcement to unexplained takedown in a single news cycle.

Digital Trends
Open 
Google’s Gemini just gatecrashed Apple’s Mac party, and it beat Siri to the door
Google's Gemini has arrived on Mac as a native app, free, feature-packed, and accessible with a single keyboard shortcut, beating Apple's long-delayed Siri overhaul

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
The S&P 500 just clinched a record high. Here are 6 charts to watch for what comes next.
The index on Wednesday tallied its first intraday and closing record highs since the start of the Iran conflict.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
This tax season’s big winners got over $32 billion back from new tax cuts
Many homeowners in Democratic-leaning states got hefty tax refunds.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Nvidia’s stock seals its longest winning streak ever. Is the momentum for real?
Some analysts say Nvidia’s recent strength reflects an improved perception of the AI landscape, while others simply chalk it up to a broad-market recovery.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Live Nation stock falls as jury finds ticketing giant acted as an illegal monopoly. Here’s what happens next.
Shares of Live Nation sank on Wednesday after a jury found that the Ticketmaster parent had acted as an illegal monopoly over the ticketing industry, according to reports.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
The oil market thinks the worst is over from the Iran war. The damage suggests otherwise.
Costly repairs in the Middle East point to a slow recovery — a condition that may result in crude prices staying higher for longer.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Hims & Hers stock jumps as U.S. moves forward with plan to reassess popular peptides
Hims & Hers Health’s plan to enter the business of selling peptides is looking a lot more realistic.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
The ‘ultimate contrarian trade’ is starting to pay off for investors. Why it might have more room to run.
After a long stretch of sharp underperformance, software stocks may be poised to catch up to semiconductor names, as the gap between the two groups has become so extreme that it may be ripe for a reversal.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
U.S. businesses hit the brakes on hiring and spending as Iraq war dims optimism over economy, Fed report finds
Many Fed districts also reported growing signs of financial strain among consumers, along with increased price sensitivity and rising demand at food banks.

Boing Boing
Open 
A keyfob-sized e-reader you can 3D print for about $30
YouTuber Paul Lagier has built an e-reader barely larger than an adult thumb out of a 3D-printed shell, an ESP32 microcontroller, a small battery, and a Heltec Wireless Paper e-ink display. The whole build runs about $30 in parts, according to Android Authority, or roughly a fifth of the cheapest Kindle. — Read the rest
The post A keyfob-sized e-reader you can 3D print for about $30 appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Iran's most effective weapon might be AI karaoke
The United States deploys fleet after fleet, and its leadership threatens to terrorize Iran and further hobble the glocal economy with a reciprocal blockade in the Strait of Hormuz. Iran has been busy winning the war by flooding the internet with witty AI-generated videos that turn geopolitical tension into viral content, now including a surreal clip of Donald Trump singing "Blockade." — Read the rest
The post Iran's most effective weapon might be AI karaoke appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Orwell predicted the AI slop novel in 1949
Historian Laura Beers, who is part of the Bartz v. Anthropic class action settlement, writes in The Conversation about realizing that Claude wasn't just trained on the content of her books — it was trained on her voice. In March 2026, journalist Julia Angwin filed a similar suit against Grammarly, accusing the company of using writers' identities to power an "Expert Review" tool that mimics specific authors. — Read the rest
The post Orwell predicted the AI slop novel in 1949 appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Learn a new language at your pace with Promova for life
TL;DR: Lifetime access to the Promova app for language learning is now only $54.97 (MSRP $299.99) until Apr. 26 at 11:59p.m. PT.
Want to learn a new language in a safe and supportive environment? Promova is a modern app that focuses on effective and enjoyable learning — get the knowledge without getting overwhelmed. — Read the rest
The post Learn a new language at your pace with Promova for life appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Harassment streamer Johnny Somali sentenced to six months labor in Korea
Ramsey Khalid Ismael, the harassment streamer who calls himself Johnny Somali, spent months on camera insisting that no Korean court would ever put him behind bars. A Seoul judge just put him behind bars.
Attorney Andrew Esquire, who has been tracking the case, reports on YouTube that Ismael was convicted on all eight charges against him: four counts of business obstruction, two under Korea's minor crimes act, and two for distributing deepfakes. — Read the rest
The post Harassment streamer Johnny Somali sentenced to six months labor in Korea appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Your odds of finding a 100-year-old message in a bottle: 1 in 8 million
With 8 billion people on Earth, mathematician Kevin Burke calculates that any one person's chances of stumbling across a century-old message in a bottle are about 1 in 8 million. The calculation takes just two steps, as Burke explains in The Conversation. — Read the rest
The post Your odds of finding a 100-year-old message in a bottle: 1 in 8 million appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
An open-source bot that only bets 'no' on Polymarket is making money
Sterling Crispin, an artist and engineer, built a Python bot called Nothing Ever Happens that does one thing on Polymarket — it bets against every event. New prediction market opens? The bot buys "No." Automatically, around the clock, for every market it can find. — Read the rest
The post An open-source bot that only bets 'no' on Polymarket is making money appeared first on Boing Boing.

Slashdot
Open 
Cal.com Is Going Closed Source Because of AI
Cal is moving its flagship scheduling software from open source to a proprietary license, arguing that AI coding tools now make it much easier for attackers to scan public codebases for vulnerabilities. "Open source security always relied on people to find and fix any problems," said Peer Richelsen, co-founder of Cal. "Now AI attackers are flaunting that transparency." CEO Bailey Pumfleet added: "Open-source code is basically like handing out the blueprint to a bank vault. And now there are 100x more hackers studying the blueprint." The company says it still supports open source and is releasing a separate Cal.diy version for hobbyists, but doesn't want to risk customer booking data in its commercial product. ZDNet reports: When Cal was founded in 2022, Bailey Pumfleet, the CEO and co-founder, wrote, "Cal.com would be an open-source project [because] limitations of existing scheduling products could only be solved by open source." Since Cal was successful and now claims to be the largest Next.js project, he was on to something. Today, however, Pumfleet tells me that AI programs such as "Claude Opus can scour the code to find vulnerabilities," so the company is moving the project from the GNU Affero General Public License (AGPL) to a proprietary license to defend the program's security.

[...] Cal also quoted Huzaifa Ahmad, CEO of Hex Security, "Open-source applications are 5-10x easier to exploit than closed-source ones. The result, where Cal sits, is a fundamental shift in the software economy. Companies with open code will be forced to risk customer data or close public access to their code." "We are committed to protecting sensitive data," Pumfleet said. "We want to be a scheduling company, not a cybersecurity company." He added, "Cal.com handles sensitive booking data for our users. We won't risk that for our love of open source."

While its commercial program is no longer open source, Cal has released Cal.diy. This is a fully open-source version of its platform for hobbyists. The open project will enable experimentation outside the closed application that handles high-stakes data. Pumfleet concluded, "This decision is entirely around the vulnerability that open source introduces. We still firmly love open source, and if the situation were to change, we'd open source again. It's just that right now, we can't risk the customer data."





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Planet PostgreSQL
Open 
Bruce Momjian: Postgres 19 Release Notes
I have just completed the first draft of the Postgres 19 release notes. It includes little developer community feedback
and still needs more XML markup and links. This year I have created a wiki page explaining the process I
use.

The release note feature count is 212, which includes a strong list of administrative and monitoring features.
Postgres 19 Beta 1 should be released in a few months. The final release is planned for September/October of this year.

BBC UK News
Open 
Monarch of the Glen actor Alexander Morton dies aged 81
The Glasgow-born actor appeared on stage and screen over more than five decades including stints in Take The High Road and River City.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
US jury finds Live Nation and Ticketmaster subsidiary operated monopoly
Verdict in states’ lawsuit says concert giant stifled competition, raising pressure for changes to ticketing marketConcert giant Live Nation and its Ticketmaster subsidiary had a harmful monopoly over big concert venues, a Manhattan federal jury has found, dealing the company a loss in a lawsuit over claims brought by dozens of US states.The jury deliberated for four days before reaching its decision on Wednesday in the closely watched case, which helped peel back the curtain on a business that dominates live entertainment across much of the world. Continue reading...

The Verge
Open 
Ford’s EV and software chief Doug Field is leaving the company
Ford is shaking things up as it relates to its EV and software teams. Doug Field, who left Apple five years ago to helm Ford's multibillion-dollar bet on electric vehicles and software, is stepping down next month. Getting a promotion will be Alan Clarke, the ex-Tesla engineer who now leads Ford's California-based skunkworks lab. Clarke's […]

Computer Weekly
Open 
UK businesses must face up to AI threat, says government
Business secretary Liz Kendall urges Britain’s business community to sit up and pay attention to emerging AI threats, following the debut of Anthropic’s new frontier model, Mythos.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Watch: Vance Pledges Probe Into Epstein 'Pizza' And 'Grape Soda' References
Watch: Vance Pledges Probe Into Epstein 'Pizza' And 'Grape Soda' References

Authored by Steve Watson via Modernity.news,

Vice President JD Vance has publicly committed to investigating references in the Jeffrey Epstein files that he says evoked the Pizzagate conspiracy theory, citing emails mentioning “pizzas or grape sodas” in odd contexts.



His remarks come as Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche doubled down on the Department of Justice’s position that every relevant document has already been released, leaving critics to question whether the full truth about Epstein’s network will ever see daylight.

In remarks at a Turning Point USA event, Vance described reviewing the files and encountering an email that stood out.


JD Vance says he is in the process of opening an investigation into the "Pizzagate conspiracy theory" after he read strange words involving pizza and grape soda in the Epstein files.
Vance has now publicly pledged to follow up on this matter.
"I remember it sounding like the… pic.twitter.com/eu122DyAhw
— Shadow of Ezra (@ShadowofEzra) April 14, 2026
“One person sent an e-mail to Jeffrey Epstein saying oh they were some really nice like pizzas or grape sodas or something like that,” he recalled. “And I remember it sounding like the Pizzagate conspiracy theory.”

His reaction was direct: “We should absolutely investigate.”

Vance added that he plans to follow up “to see whether we’ve investigated that person because we should. We absolutely should when you see evidence of sexual assault sexual misconduct regardless of who the powerful not fact.”

The comments have reignited scrutiny over language in the Epstein files that some have long argued resembles coded references first highlighted in 2016. Those earlier claims, known as Pizzagate, originated from WikiLeaks releases of John Podesta’s emails that contained repeated, seemingly out-of-context mentions of pizza alongside other odd terms.

Recent Epstein document dumps have revived the debate, with analysts pointing to hundreds of “pizza” references that do not appear to describe food.


New Jeffery Epstein documents have emails consistently use one very familiar word
The word Pizza
The emails they write when referring to pizza don’t make any sense if they were talking about the food….
Pizzagate was 100% real. Where are the arrests pic.twitter.com/KqkmsHk4c6
— Wall Street Apes (@WallStreetApes) February 6, 2026
Mike Benz, in analysis of the newer files, noted: “In these new files, you’ll see a lot of people talking about PIZZA in a way that (seems like a code), it’s kind of impossible.”


Mike Benz:
In these new files, you’ll see a lot of people talking about PIZZA in a way that (seems like a code), it’s kind of impossible.
Drop a ? if you’ve been vindicated
Cliphttps://t.co/M6YlH9oRMY
Full Interviewhttps://t.co/03XLFBWHQm pic.twitter.com/tSXCvFBOa5
— MJTruthUltra (@MJTruthUltra) February 5, 2026
A separate development underscores the tension. Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche appeared on Fox News and doubled down on declaring the Epstein files exhausted.

“We have released everything. We reviewed six million pieces of paper!” Blanche stated, adding “We are not sitting on a single piece of paper to be released.”


Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche tells Americans he will cover up the child trafficking network of Jeffrey Epstein by not releasing the rest of the Epstein files.
He says people should trust him when he says there is not a single document that the government has that should… pic.twitter.com/Hi52DfzKxM
— Shadow of Ezra (@ShadowofEzra) April 14, 2026
He insisted that if anything new surfaces it would be made public, but emphasized the DOJ’s review covered millions of pages unrelated to Epstein and that Congress could access unredacted materials if lawmakers chose to examine them.

ernity.news/wp-includes/js/wp-embed.min.js

The Pizzagate theory first gained traction in late 2016 after WikiLeaks published thousands of emails from Hillary Clinton’s campaign chairman John Podesta. Researchers flagged phrases like “pizza” and “hot dogs” appearing in contexts that seemed unrelated to meals—patterns that echoed an FBI intelligence bulletin on pedophile code words, where “pizza” was listed as slang for girl and “hot dog” for boy. Comet Ping Pong, a Washington, D.C. pizzeria, became the focal point after its owner’s Instagram posts and the restaurant’s alleged basement (which does not exist) fueled speculation of a child-sex ring operating out of the basement.

While mainstream outlets quickly labeled the theory a hoax, the Epstein files have now surfaced hundreds of similar “pizza” mentions. Multiple reports note exchanges involving Epstein’s urologist, Dr. Harry Fisch, that pair “pizza and grape soda” with references to erectile-dysfunction medication in ways that read as cryptic to outsiders. One 2018 message reads: “lets go for pizza and grape soda again. No one else can understand. Go kno.” Another simply states “Pizza and grape soda[.] Nough said.”



Debunkers argue these are innocent food references or jokes, yet many counter that the volume and context—especially when layered atop Epstein’s documented trafficking network—demand investigation rather than dismissal.



This latest flare-up fits a pattern of incremental disclosures followed by official assurances that the matter is closed. Vance’s willingness to revisit the “Pizzagate” framing, however tentatively, marks a rare high-level acknowledgment that some of the file language warrants a second look.



The Epstein saga has repeatedly exposed fractures between what officials claim has been fully disclosed and what the public believes remains concealed. Whether Vance’s pledged follow-up produces meaningful accountability—or joins the growing list of unfulfilled promises—will test whether transparency on elite networks is still possible. For now, the strange language in the files keeps the questions alive, and the public’s demand for answers shows no sign of fading.

Your support is crucial in helping us defeat mass censorship. Please consider donating via Locals or check out our unique merch. Follow us on X @ModernityNews.

* * * Click. Plant. Don't trust your brother.



Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 12:50

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Iran Halts All Petrochem Exports While Official Signals Compromise Strait Passage Opening, As Negotiators Cite 'Progress'
Iran Halts All Petrochem Exports While Official Signals Compromise Strait Passage Opening, As Negotiators Cite 'Progress'

Summary


The Iran war is "very close to over" with authorities in Tehran eager to agree a peace deal, Trump says, adding: "We've beaten them militarily." Axios cites 'progress' toward framework to end war. Iran state media says halt to all petrochemical exports, RTRS cites possible compromise on strait passage.


AP/Bloomberg reporting the two sides have an "in principle agreement" to pursue further diplomacy; however, this is batted down as 'unconfirmed' by Tehran & a US official.


The Pentagon is sending thousands of additional troops into the Middle East in coming days: WaPo


Trump claims China "very happy" the US is permanently opening the Strait of Hormuz, also Xi told him Beijing was not sending weapons/defense items to Tehran.


Significant Lebanon fighting continues: Israel issues more evacuation orders, moving into south; Tehran outraged, threatens Red Sea shipping. Unconfirmed reports of one-week Lebanon ceasefire about to take effect.




//-->

//-->

//-->


US x Iran permanent peace deal by April 30, 2026?
Yes 33% · No 68%View full market & trade on Polymarket *  *  *

Big Iran Overture in the Works?

A status quo compromise emerging? The latest to hit the newswires:


IRAN COULD CONSIDER SHIPS BEING ABLE TO SAIL THROUGH OMAN SIDE OF STRAIT OF HORMUZ WITHOUT INTERFERENCE OR ATTACK AS PART OF A DEAL WITH THE US: REUTERS, CITING SOURCE CLOSE TO TEHRAN

IRAN WILL MAINTAIN CONTROL OVER ITS WATERS IN THE STRAIT OF HORMUZ AND OMAN WILL DECIDE ABOUT ITS OWN SIDE OF THE WATERWAY - SOURCE CLOSE TO TEHRAN


Iran has just signaled willingness to allow strait traffic pass unconditionally on the Oman side of the strait, perhaps as a face-saving measure, amid talk of a 2nd Pakistan peace summit being put together, as a potential uneasy status quo emerges.



Iran Halts Petrochemical Exports

Is Trump's blockade working?


IRAN HALTS PETROCHEMICAL EXPORTS UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE: ISNA


CNBC also in a breaking headline writes:  Iran halts all petrochemical exports ‘until further notice,’ Iranian state media reports. This comes after a new Pentagon warning to all vessels stuck in the Strait of Hormuz.

CENTCOM Updates Tanker Numbers amid Blockade

CENTCOM provides a Wednesday update: "During the first 48 hours of the U.S. blockade on ships entering and exiting Iranian ports, no vessels have made it past U.S. forces. Additionally, 9 vessels have complied with direction from U.S. forces to turn around and return toward an Iranian port or coastal area."


TEN VESSELS HAVE BEEN TURNED AROUND BY US BLOCKADE: CENTCOM


A big question remains: will Iran confront the US blockade militarily?... or will an uneasy status quo of limited vessel traffic continue to make it through Hormuz amid a potentially extended ceasefire that goes beyond the 2-week window?

A new warning from the White House/CENTCOM:


The White House and the U.S. military published a clip of a warning to ships, telling them not to breach the blockade of Iranian ports and coastal areas. In a maritime radio message, a U.S. servicemember tells ships that they will be boarded for interdiction and seizure if they attempt to travel to or from an Iranian port.



U.S. naval vessels are on patrol in the Gulf of Oman as CENTCOM continues to execute a U.S. blockade on ships entering and departing Iranian ports. U.S. forces are present, vigilant, and ready to ensure compliance. pic.twitter.com/dnHR2oz0ZN
— U.S. Central Command (@CENTCOM) April 15, 2026
Meanwhile in Tehran...


Footage of Iran's Foreign Minister Seyyed Abbas Araghchi welcoming Pakistan's Chief of Army Staff Field Marshal Syed Asim Munir upon his arrival in Tehran.
Follow Press TV on Telegram: https://t.co/LWoNSpkc2J pic.twitter.com/32pF6ONkiZ
— Press TV 🔻 (@PressTV) April 15, 2026
'Progress' Reported in US-Iran Contacts

Axios reports that US and Iranian negotiators "made progress in talks on Tuesday" while moving closer to a framework agreement to end the war, according to two US officials. The headline briefly pushed oil lower. This comes as Pakistan's top general headed a high-ranking political-security delegation from Pakistan to convey the US message and plan the second round of talks to Tehran. Per details in Axios:

"They were on the phone and backchanneling with all the countries and they are getting closer," the U.S. official said.
A second U.S. official confirmed progress was made Tuesday.
"We want to make a deal. And parts of their government want to make a deal. Now the trick is to get the whole of government over there to make the deal," a third U.S. official said.
Meanwhile, state Tasnim is reporting that Pakistan is getting ready to host the second round of Iran-US talks.

Lebanon Ceasefire Imminent? 

The Hezbollah-affiliated Al-Mayadeen channel, citing a senior Iranian source, reports that a ceasefire in Lebanon will begin tonight. "The duration of the ceasefire will be one week and will extend until the end of the ceasefire period between Iran and the United States."

However, there's been no confirmation of this from Israel or the US, or in Israeli media. The Lebanese government just met with Israeli officials for Rubio-sponsored talks in Washington yesterday, but there was no word of a definitive ceasefire coming from the meeting, and currently Hezbollah and Israel are not directly talking at all. It remains unclear whether this could be a sign of Lebanese officials getting Hezbollah on board with a pause in fighting.

Meanwhile, two fresh notes on the question of advancing a second round of US-Iran negotiations:

Iranian media reported that Field Marshal Asim Munir, Chief of Staff of the Pakistani Army, headed a high-ranking political-security delegation from Pakistan to convey the US message and plan the second round of talks, and is scheduled to meet with officials of the Islamic Republic.
Regional mediators are trying to extend the U.S.–Iran cease-fire and restart talks after failed negotiations in Islamabad, but no date or venue has been set. A new round is unlikely before Pakistan completes its regional diplomatic
'Very Close' To War Over, Diplomacy in Reach: Trump

The latest from Trump: The Iran war is "very close to over" with authorities in Tehran eager to agree a peace deal, President Trump claimed in a fresh interview broadcast Wednesday. "We’ve beaten them militarily, totally," Trump told Fox Business in a prerecorded interview. "I think it’s close to over, I view it as very close to over... If I pulled up stakes right now it would take them 20 years to rebuild that country, and we’re not finished." He added: "We’ll see what happens, I think they want to make a deal very badly."

This as the Associated Press has reported the US and Iran are closer to extending a ceasefire and restarting negotiations, even amid the intensifying standoff over the Strait of Hormuz as the US Navy has blockaded it for all shipping leaving Iranian ports or with ties, or under sanction.

The two sides have an "in principle agreement" to pursue further diplomacy after last weekend's failed Islamabad talks. Trump on Tuesday had optimistically cited that the next round could be just two days away. Mediators are said to be pushing for a compromise on outstanding issues including Hormuz and Iran's nuclear program before the April 7 truce expires next week, the news agency said - as they also eye the extension off the initial two weeks.


IRAN'S TASNIM: US-SANCTIONED CONTAINER SHIP GOLBON PASSED THROUGH HORMUZ pic.twitter.com/Wtca8fTZ2b
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) April 15, 2026
However, Iran's Foreign Ministry has made clear the reports about the ceasefire extension are not confirmed, while Axios' Barak Ravid similarly writes - US official tells me: "The US has not agreed to an extension of the ceasefire. There is continued engagement between the U.S. and Iran to reach a deal."

Iran meanwhile is warning that it sees a prolonging of the US blockade as "a prelude to a breach of the ceasefire," a military spokesman said, as featured state TV. Iran's military "will not permit any exports or imports to continue in the Persian Gulf, the Sea of Oman or the Red Sea" if it continues, the spokesman added. 


IRAN'S BAGHAEI: NO SPECIFIC DAY SET FOR NEW US NEGOTIATIONS

Via AP: A billboard depicting U.S. aircraft caught by Iranian armed forces in a fishing net.

 

Trump on China

President Trump says he asked his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping not to supply weapons to Iran, and Xi replied he was not doing so. "I had heard that China’s giving weapons to, I mean - you’re seeing it all over the place - to Iran," Trump also said in the aforementioned Fox Business interview.

"And I wrote him a letter asking him not to do that, and he wrote me a letter saying that essentially he’s not doing that." Major media outlets previously reported that US intelligence indicated China was preparing to ship advanced weaponry to Iran. Beijing's public rejection of the "baseless smear" - as the Foreign Minister called it - has indeed been swift and vehement.

With oil prices remaining elevated, with Brent crude trading about 33% higher than before the start of the war, Trump has issued a new Truth Social claiming China is "very happy that I am permanently opening the Strait of Hormuz." This even though in many cases it is China bound tankers being blocked and turned back by the US naval armada. "This situation will never happen again," Trump added. He is set to meet with Xi in Beijing on May 14-15. On this he wrote that "President Xi will give me a big, fat, hug when I get there in a few weeks. We are going working together smartly, and very well!" But then Trump says "But remember, we are very good at fighting, if we have to..."



More Troops Sent to Mideast

The Washington Post is out with a new report of more troops being sent to the theatre. "The Pentagon is sending thousands of additional troops into the Middle East in the coming days, as the Trump administration attempts to pressure Iran into a deal that could end the weeks long conflict there while considering the possibility of additional strikes or ground operations if a fragile ceasefire deal does not hold."

Already a combined estimated ten thousand US sailors, Marines, and personnel - on at least a dozen US warships, are maintaining the Trump-ordered blockade on Hormuz. So Washington continues to try and build leverage, also with the announced additional forces being prepped, while also sounding optimistic on a potential peace deal - thought to two sides are very far apart especially on the nuclear issue.

Trump has at times still shrugged off the importance of a final peace deal, having told ABC News that while an official peace agreement may not be necessary, "I think a deal is preferable because then they can rebuild." He had said, "They really do have a different regime now. No matter what, we took out the radicals."


Trump:
I wrote a letter to Xi. I asked him not to give Iran weapons. He wrote me a letter, and he is saying that he is essentially not doing that. pic.twitter.com/yrTT9Dwi2V
— Clash Report (@clashreport) April 15, 2026
Tehran (& Houthis) Threaten Red Sea Trade as Lebanon Fighting Persists

Iran's army warned it will block trade through the Red Sea, the Persian Gulf, and the Sea of Oman if the US naval blockade on Iranian ports continues. In a statement carried by Iranian state television, the head of the military's central command center said the "powerful armed forces of the Islamic Republic will not allow any exports or imports to continue in the Persian Gulf, the Sea of Oman and the Red Sea."

According to more via Al Jazeera, he added that Iran will "act decisively to defend its national sovereignty and its interests." One key factor which has outraged Iran is Israel's continued major attacks on Lebanon, after last Wednesday's massive aerial attack on Beirut and elsewhere which left over 300 dead. Israel on Wednesday said that Hezbollah fired 40 rockets into Israel earlier in the morning.

An Israeli drone strike on the Jiyeh road, Lebanon



More Geopolitical Headlines

via Newsquawk...

Effort to extend US-Iran ceasefire has made progress, AP reports citing official; mediators aim to extend the ceasefire for at least another two weeks; both sides gave an “in principle agreement” to extend the ceasefire.
Discussions are underway regarding possible extension of temporary ceasefire between Iran and US, according to Arab diplomatic sources cited by Russia on Wednesday and being reported by Chinese press CCTV.
However, US President Trump said it could end either way, but thinks a deal is preferable because then Iran can rebuild, also said he isn't thinking about extending the ceasefire and doesn't think it will be necessary, according to reported citing ABC reporter on X.
The Pentagon is sending thousands of additional troops into the Middle East in the coming days, WaPo reports citing US officials; in a bid to pressure Iran while mulling the possibility of additional strikes or ground operations if the ceasefire breaks.
US President Trump said it's "very possible" a deal with Iran will be reached by the time the King visits the US later this month (27-29th April), Sky News reported.
US President Trump said he views the war being very close to over, according to Fox News.
US VP Vance said we are negotiating with Iran and ceasefire is holding, adds Iranian negotiators wanted to make a deal.
Feel good about where we are.
Lot of mistrust between the US and Iran, can't be solved overnight.
US Vice President JD Vance is expected to lead a potential second round of talks with Iranian officials should negotiations lead to another face-to-face meeting before the ceasefire expires next week, according to sources familiar cited by CNN.
Pakistan leadership’s overseas tour until April 18th dims prospects of US-Iran talks in Islamabad before April 18th, Pakistani journalist Mallick reported.
Iran is to use alternative ports to those in southern Iran to bypass the US blockade in the Strait, Mehr News reported.
An Iranian VLCC (Very Large Crude Carrier), which was on the US sanctions list, entered the waters of Iran past the US blockade, Fars reported.
Iran secretly acquired a Chinese spy satellite that gave the Islamic republic a powerful new capability to target US military bases across the Middle East during the recent war, according to an FT investigation.
US Central Command said blockade of Iranian ports has been fully implemented and that US forces have completely halted economic trade going into and out of Iran by sea.
US has intercepted eight Iran-linked oil tankers since the start of the blockade, according to WSJ.
New satellite images show Iran digging for missile launchers trapped underground amid a ceasefire, according to CNN.
More than 20 commercial ships have passed through the Strait of Hormuz in the past 24 hours, WSJ reported, citing US officials.
US destroyer interdicted two oil tankers that attempted to leave Iran on Tuesday, according to an official cited by Reuters.
US President Trump reiterates on Truth Social "NATO wasn’t there for us, and they won’t be there for us in the future!".
Europe is accelerating a NATO fallback plan in case US President Trump pulls US out of the treaty, according to WSJ.
US Pentagon is likely to trim its Iran wall funding request, according to WSJ citing Senator Coons who is the top democrat on the Senate appropriations defense committee.
* * *



Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 14:15

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Russia Vows To 'Fill China's Energy Resource Gap' Amid Hormuz Crisis In Lavrov-Xi Meeting
Russia Vows To 'Fill China's Energy Resource Gap' Amid Hormuz Crisis In Lavrov-Xi Meeting

At a moment it remains a serious open question over just how vulnerable China is to the Hormuz Strait crisis, and now with the US-imposed US naval blockade of the vital oil transit waterway, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov is in Beijing pledging energy support to China. 

Lavrov met with President Xi Jinping on Wednesday, during which Xi urged China and Russia to "give full play to the advantages of geographic proximity and complementarity, deepen all-round cooperation and raise the resilience of each other's development."

Russia remains China's top energy supplier. "Both sides should maintain strategic focus, trust each other, support each other, develop together," Xi continued, according to a Chinese state media readout.
via Russian Foreign Ministry

Lavrov in turn told Xi that Chinese-Russian relations play a "stabilizing role in world affairs" at a time of global "chaos and turmoil." This has been a consistent theme on which relations and trust have been built between Beijing and Moscow going back to the start of the Ukraine war over four years ago.

Importantly, after the meeting the Russian foreign minister announced to a press conference that Moscow stands ready to increase energy supplies to China.

"Russia can certainly fill the resource gap that has arisen in China and other countries interested in working with us on an equal and mutually beneficial basis," Lavrov stated.

The two-day Lavrov visit is toward laying the groundwork for an upcoming summit between Xi and Russian President Vladimir Putin. It's expected for the first half of this year, but likely after Trump's upcoming May 14-15 summit with the Chinese leader.

The Hormuz crisis is a threat to Chinese energy given Asia's largest power still depends heavily on global supply routes it does not fully control. While Beijing has for many years sought to diversify through pipelines from Russia and Central Asia, the reality is that those projects take years to build and remain far too limited to replace the volume of oil moving through Hormuz.

However, there's a strong counterargument pushing back against the assumption that Trump's Iran moves will ultimately squeeze and devastate China. Alongside Russia coming to Beijing's side with its recently unsanctioned oil, there are also these aspects to consider:


While China is to some extent dependent on Gulf oil, so is the rest of Asia. While the United States might be insulated from some of the worst consequences of the Hormuz closure, the economies of our Asian allies are not. Asian economies are among the most dependent on Middle Eastern oil, with South Korea receiving around 70 percent and Japan receiving a whopping 95 percent of their oil from the Middle East. The Council on Foreign Relations notes that in 2024, 84 percent of the oil and 83 percent of LNG shipped through Hormuz were bound for Asia. That is not a targeted squeeze. Instead, such a move looks to be made without much heed to Asia at all, hitting the very states Washington is supposedly positioning against Beijing.

China is actually one of the best-positioned countries in Asia to handle this exact crisis because of existing stockpiles, diversified supply chains, a coal-dependent electric grid, and pipeline alternatives. While China is vulnerable, it is more insulated than most of Asia, only receiving around 20 percent of its oil from Hormuz.


There's a certain irony in the fact that an early element of blowback from the Iran war was that Washington scrambled to remove sanctions on Russian crude oil transiting the high seas, to bat down soaring global oil prices, and yet it is this very unsanctioned oil flow which will benefit China.



And the 'unintended consequences' continue to trickle over. The American Conservative writes, "This damage to our Pacific allies is not theoretical. Across Asia, partner governments are already scrambling as their economies face the worst crisis in decades. Asian nations are shortening workweeks and implementing fuel controls, disrupting their economies as tension mounts. Many Asian economies have turned to Russia amid this turmoil, bolstering the economy of another supposed U.S. enemy."

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 15:40

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Beige Book Confirms Uncertainty, Fuel Costs Surged On Iran War As Economy Grew At "Slight To Modest" Pace
Beige Book Confirms Uncertainty, Fuel Costs Surged On Iran War As Economy Grew At "Slight To Modest" Pace

US economic activity continued to increase at a "slight-to-modest" pace across most regions as the war with Iran generated a new wave of uncertainty and higher energy costs, the Federal Reserve said. The just released Beige Book - which featured information compiled by the New York Fed and collected through April 6, capturing the early effects of the war on the US economy - was the first one to discuss the state of the US economy after the Iran war started, and came at time when gas prices sstayed above $4/gal for two weeks after the biggest monthly jump in decades, with March fuel spending up 16% according to Bank of America card spending data.

So far, Bank of America said that discretionary spending remains resilient—but risks rise if Hormuz disruptions persist. The Fed agreed, with the Beige Book reporting that overall economic activity increased at a slight to modest pace in eight of the twelve Federal Reserve Districts, while two Districts reported little change (San Francisco and St Louis), and two Districts reported slight to modest declines (Boston and New York).

Price growth remained moderate overall, but energy and fuel costs rose “sharply” in all 12 Fed districts, the central bank reported in its Beige Book survey of regional business contacts released Wednesday.

“The conflict in the Middle East was cited as a major source of uncertainty that complicated decision-making around hiring, pricing and capital investment, with many firms adopting a wait-and-see posture,” the Fed said.

Bloomberg's NLP model that measures net sentiment by evaluating hawkishness (+ score) and dovishness (- score) pictured below. Recent reading comes in at +1.2.



Several policymakers have signaled a preference to keep borrowing costs steady for quite some time while they evaluate the economic data. Officials are expected to leave their benchmark rate unchanged when they meet on April 28-29, according to pricing in futures contracts. A growing number of officials are concerned the war could fuel inflation, and more favored language at their March gathering that would have made it clear the Fed may need to raise interest rates.

Taking a closer look at the Beige Book, the conflict in the Middle East was cited as a major source of uncertainty that complicated decision-making around hiring, pricing, and capital investment, with many firms adopting a wait-and-see posture.

Manufacturing activity rose slightly to moderately in most Districts. Banking sector activity was generally steady with loan demand stable to up moderately.
On balance, consumer spending increased slightly despite harsh winter weather in some regions and higher fuel prices.
Many Districts continued to report signs of consumer financial strain, increased price sensitivity, and rising demand at food banks and other social service organizations, while spending among higher-income consumers was resilient.
Housing market activity softened across several Districts as heightened uncertainty and rising mortgage rates dampened buyer demand.
Commercial real estate markets improved, with strength in industrial properties, especially data center projects. Office markets saw solid demand for Class A space but weaker demand for lower-tier properties.
Energy activity was up slightly as oil prices rose, though many producers remained cautious about increasing drilling due to uncertainty about the persistence of higher prices. Agricultural activity was mixed, and several Districts reported that rising crop prices helped offset steep price increases of fertilizer and fuel.
Business outlooks varied amid widespread uncertainty about future conditions.
In terms of Labor Markets, the Beige Book noted the following: 

On balance, employment was steady to up slightly during this reporting period, though one District noted a slight decline.
Most Districts described labor demand as stable, with low turnover, minimal layoffs, and hiring mostly for replacement.
Several Districts noted increased demand for temporary or contract workers, as firms remained cautious about committing to permanent hires.
Many Districts reported that labor availability had improved, although difficulty finding some skilled workers, especially in the skilled trades, persisted.
While most Districts indicated that AI had not yet significantly impacted overall staffing levels, some noted that AI-driven productivity improvements had enabled many firms to delay or reduce hiring. Wages generally continued to rise at a modest to moderate pace.
Some Districts noted continued wage pressures for some roles in health care and the skilled trades, though overall wage competition remained muted.
Energy prices were sharply higher 

Price growth mostly remained moderate overall, with the vast majority of Districts reporting moderate increases and others pointing to modest growth. Generally, input cost increases outpaced selling price growth, compressing margins.
Energy and fuel costs rose sharply in all Districts, attributed to the Middle East conflict, leading to higher freight and shipping costs and higher prices for plastics, fertilizers, and other petroleum-based products.
Input cost pressures beyond energy-related increases were also widespread. Several Districts reported rising prices for metals due to tariffs, such as steel, copper, and aluminum. Technology costs rose for both hardware and software. Insurance premiums and health care costs continued to climb.
Finally, here are the main highlights by Fed districts:

Boston: Economic activity declined slightly, employment and wages were flat, and prices rose at a moderate pace. Consumer spending was flat, as was activity in most sectors, but home sales slowed further. The conflict in the Middle East contributed to rising energy prices and created fresh uncertainty, though the outlook remained optimistic on balance.
New York: Economic activity continued to decline modestly amid heightened uncertainty in large part due to shifts in tariff policy and the Middle East conflict. On balance, employment held steady, and wage growth remained modest. The pace of selling price increases remained moderate, and input price increases picked up markedly. Consumer spending grew slightly. Businesses generally expected little improvement in the months ahead.
Philadelphia: Economic activity in the Third District grew slightly, down from a modest pace last period. Employment declined slightly, and wages again rose modestly. Prices continued to rise moderately, although cost pressures increased. Activity held steady for nonmanufacturers and increased moderately for manufacturers. Firms expect growth over the next six months, but uncertainty has risen further.
Cleveland: Fourth District business activity increased modestly, with similar growth expected in the months ahead. Manufacturers reported increased demand, while retailers saw modest declines amid higher fuel prices. Residential real estate rebounded after a harsh winter. Employment grew slightly, and wages increased moderately. Nonlabor costs remained robust, while selling prices grew moderately.
Richmond: The regional economy continued to grow modestly in recent weeks. Consumer spending on retail, travel, and tourism increased modestly. Nonfinancial service providers also reported modest growth in demand. Other sectors of the regional economy reported little change this cycle. Employment expanded slightly, wages picked up modestly, and price growth remained moderate.
Atlanta: Economic activity grew at a modest pace. Employment remained flat and wages rose modestly. Prices and input costs also increased modestly. Retail sales and travel continued to expand. On balance, residential and commercial real estate conditions improved. Transportation and manufacturing activity expanded. Energy activity rose, but agricultural conditions were flat.
Chicago: Economic activity in the Seventh District increased slightly over the reporting period. Manufacturing demand rose modestly; consumer spending increased slightly; construction and real estate activity, employment and business spending were flat on balance; and nonbusiness contacts saw no change in economic activity. Prices rose moderately, wages rose modestly, and financial conditions tightened modestly. Farm income expectations for 2026 declined some.
St. Louis: Economic activity has remained unchanged since our previous report. Employment levels were unchanged and wage growth was moderate. Prices have risen moderately, but several contacts expressed concern about escalating energy costs. The outlook remains cautiously optimistic, yet contacts are attentive to risks to the economy associated with the conflict in the Middle East.
Minneapolis: District economic activity increased slightly. Employment increased slightly and labor demand turned positive over the past two months. Prices increased modestly overall, but input price pressures intensified as oil price spikes fed through to freight and raw materials. Contacts across industries reported significant uncertainty.
Kansas City: The Tenth District's economy grew slightly over the reporting period, while employment levels remained flat. Manufacturing firms indicated suppliers have implemented automatic surcharges tied to logistics and energy inputs. District oil and gas activity remains steady. Overall, prices have increased modestly.
Dallas: Economic activity in the Eleventh District expanded slightly. Manufacturing output growth slowed, while activity in services was largely flat. Energy sector activity ticked up, and bank lending increased on strength in commercial real estate, while home sales were slow. Employment grew slightly, while wages and prices increased modestly to robustly. Outlooks deteriorated amid elevated geopolitical uncertainty and fuel price concerns.
San Francisco: Economic activity was stable at subdued levels over the reporting period. Employment levels were unchanged on net. Prices rose moderately, driven primarily by higher energy costs, while wages grew slightly. Retail sales grew slightly. Conditions were stable in services and manufacturing, down in agriculture, and mixed in real estate.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 15:45

ZeroHedge News
Open 
White House: 'Era Of Amnesty Is Over'
White House: 'Era Of Amnesty Is Over'

Authored by Catherine Salgado via PJ Media,

“No more activist judges shielding criminal illegals. No more endless delays. Only results.” The Trump White House is celebrating multiple massive immigration enforcement wins that signal the era of mass migration and mass amnesty is over.
AP Photo/Gerald Herbert

Since Donald Trump came back into office, federal authorities have removed three million illegal aliens from the United States through ICE deportations or voluntary deportations, which is the biggest reduction in illegal migration in modern history, according to a White House press release on April 9. This is exactly what the American people voted for. This is the sort of reform we hoped to see when immigration became one of the top issues in the 2024 election.

Besides the three million deportees, border officers have not released a single illegal alien into the United States at our borders for 11 straight months. The “era of amnesty is over,” indeed.

The overwhelming majority of asylum claims have long been fraudulent, and that is one major area where the Trump administration implemented reform. The U.S. immigration authority now grants asylum in only 7% of cases, slashing the number of criminals and illegal aliens who tried to use asylum claims as a free ticket into our country. In contrast, under Joe Biden and Kamala Harris, the government approved over 50% of asylum claims, according to the release.

I will give just two illustrations of why this is a big deal. First, just this week, the U.S. State Department revoked the lawful permanent resident status it had granted to Hamideh Soleimani Afshar, the niece of mass-murdering Iranian jihad leader Qasem Soleimani. Afshar had obtained residency and a life of luxury in the United States by claiming asylum here. Yet she repeatedly returned to Iran and regularly spouted pro-regime propaganda, illustrating how bogus her asylum claim was. And second, back in 2024, an Ecuadoran “asylum seeker” raped a 13-year-old at knifepoint in New York. These are only two examples of how broken our asylum system was before the Trump administration took over.

The White House release also highlighted the following wins:


Deportations and removal orders are surging: In fiscal year 2025, immigration courts issued nearly 500,000 removal orders — a 57% increase over the prior year — as criminal illegals are removed faster and in far greater numbers than ever before.

The massive court backlog is being slashed: Hundreds of thousands of cases have already been cleared since Inauguration Day, with reductions accelerating every month — ending the years-long delays that let illegals remain indefinitely.


And, as noted above, the Trump administration has successfully closed our borders.

The White House press release enthusiastically concluded, “President Trump promised to end the open borders nightmare — and he is delivering on that promise with unrelenting force. The era of catch-and-release, mass releases, and activist judicial amnesty is over.”

As we celebrate the 250th year of America’s existence, there is no better time to reflect on what national sovereignty and security mean.

* * *



Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 16:20

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Mullin Blasts Biden Admin After DHS Employee Killed By Naturalized Felon
Mullin Blasts Biden Admin After DHS Employee Killed By Naturalized Felon

On Monday, Lauren Bullis, a 40-year-old Department of Homeland Security (DHS) employee, was "brutally shot and stabbed to death" while walking her dog, and DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin is blaming the Biden administration for her murder.
Olaolukitan Adon Abel (left) and Lauren Bullis (Photos: DHS)

Bullis, an auditor with the DHS Office of Inspector General, was found on Battle Forest Drive in DeKalb County, Georgia, around 6:50 a.m. Witnesses saw a man standing over her body before he fled. She was not the only victim. According to reports, a neighbor heard the gunfire and ran out of her house to see what was happening. The neighbor told local media that it appeared Adon-Abel was attempting to sexually assault Bullis.

Before Bullis died, police discovered another woman had been shot multiple times outside a Checkers & Rally’s restaurant. She later succumbed to her injuries. Then, in Brookhaven, a homeless man was ambushed while sleeping outside a shopping center. He was shot several times and remains in critical condition.

That suspect is Olaolukitan Adon-Abel, 26, born in the United Kingdom and naturalized as a U.S. citizen in 2022 under the Biden administration. Adon-Abel was arrested on Monday and now faces two counts of murder, aggravated assault, possession of a firearm during the commission of a crime, and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. As a convicted felon, he not only shouldn’t have had a gun, but according to federal law, he should not have been a citizen either.

Adon-Abel had convictions for sexual battery, battery against a police officer, obstruction, assault with a deadly weapon, and vandalism — a trail of violence spanning years. And yet, in 2022, the Biden administration's U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services granted him full citizenship. The legal standard for naturalization, as outlined in 8 U.S.C. § 1427, requires applicants to demonstrate "good moral character." Someone who has assaulted a police officer and committed sexual battery should not clear that bar. 

"Yesterday, a DHS employee, Lauren Bullis, was brutally shot and stabbed to death by Olaolukitan Adon Abel, a 26-year-old born in the United Kingdom, who was naturalized by the Biden Administration in 2022," DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin said in a statement to Fox News. "Since President Trump took office, USCIS has implemented measures to ensure individuals with criminal histories and who otherwise lack good moral character do not attain citizenship."

Mullin continued, “He possesses a prior criminal record that includes convictions for sexual battery, battery against a police officer, obstruction, and assault with a deadly weapon, vandalism and now stands accused of murdering DHS employee Lauren Bullis by shooting and stabbing her while she walked her dog. He has also been arrested for the murder of an unidentified woman whom he reportedly shot outside a Checkers, before randomly shooting a homeless man multiple times outside a Kroger in Brookhaven."

He added, “These acts of pure evil have devastated our Department, and my prayers are with the families of the victims.”

The Biden administration routinely dismissed concerns about immigration vetting as fearmongering. Critics who raised red flags about naturalization standards were called nativists or worse. But the standard is not political — it is statutory. Federal law bars naturalization for individuals who cannot demonstrate good moral character, and multiple violent criminal convictions are about as clear a disqualifier as exists in the code.



Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 16:40

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Treasury Secretary Says Order On Citizenship Proof For Banking Is 'In Process'
Treasury Secretary Says Order On Citizenship Proof For Banking Is 'In Process'

Authored by Jack Phillips via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Monday confirmed that an executive order mandating banks to collect citizenship information on customers is underway.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent addresses journalists in Paris on March 16, 2026. Ludovic Marin / AFP via Getty Images

“It’s in process. And I don’t think it’s unreasonable, because, why don’t we have information on who’s in our banking system?” he told Semafor in an April 13 interview, responding to whether the Trump administration was working on the banking order.

“I have a place in the UK; they want to know who lives in every apartment—and how do we know that it’s not part of a foreign terrorist organization?” he added.

At least one Republican lawmaker has asked the Trump administration to implement such an order, and The Wall Street Journal reported, citing anonymous sources, that banks could be tasked with requiring people to submit passports under the policy.

In a post issued on X in October 2025, Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) included a letter he sent to Bessent urging the secretary to carry out a “comprehensive review of current rules that allow illegal aliens to obtain financial services and access to the U.S. banking system.”

“Access to the American banking system is a privilege that should be reserved for those who respect our laws and sovereignty,” Cotton wrote in the letter. “When individuals are allowed to open accounts without verifying legal status, we are permitting illegal aliens to establish financial roots and integrate economically, all while bypassing the legal channels that millions use properly.”

Cotton asked whether the administration could implement the order under the USA PATRIOT Act, a Bush administration-era law enacted in the aftermath of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, or the Bank Secrecy Act, a 1970 anti-money laundering law.

The Trump administration has prioritized cracking down on illegal immigration as well as entitlement fraud. Since he took office in January 2025, President Donald Trump has issued multiple executive orders and memoranda to boost the deportation of illegal immigrants and end temporary deportation protection programs for certain countries.

Trump has also called on Congress to pass the SAVE America Act, which has stalled in the Senate, to require photo IDs for voting and proof of U.S. citizenship to register to vote.

In a post last month, the president said that there would be no deal to end the partial shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) unless some Democrats join Republicans to pass the measure.

The bill must include “their approval of Voter I.D., (with picture!), Citizenship to Vote, No Mail-In Voting (with exceptions), All Paper Ballots, No Men In Women’s Sports, and No Transgender MUTILIZATION of our precious children,” he wrote in a Truth Social post on March 22. He also called on congressional lawmakers to stay in Washington during the Easter recess, although the lawmakers ultimately went on their break.

Last month, the Trump administration established an anti-fraud task force that would investigate instances of illegal immigrants engaging in benefits fraud as well as other forms of waste and abuse.

The Epoch Times contacted the White House for comment on Tuesday.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 17:00

ZeroHedge News
Open 
IMF Warns US Treasury Market Prone To "Sudden Repricing" Due To Soaring Debt, Overreliance On Bills
IMF Warns US Treasury Market Prone To "Sudden Repricing" Due To Soaring Debt, Overreliance On Bills

The International Monetary Fund warned Wednesday that the relentless US debt issuance is undermining the premium Treasuries have commanded from investors, with implications for government securities across the globe.

“The increase in the US Treasury security supply is compressing the safety premium that US Treasuries have traditionally commanded — an erosion that pushes up borrowing costs globally,” the Washington-based IMF said in its latest Fiscal Monitor report.

The US has been selling large volumes of debt because its budget deficit has averaged roughly 6% of gross domestic product over the past three years, an unprecedented shortfall outside of wartime or recession eras. The gap is expected to stay around those levels throughout the coming decade, according to the Congressional Budget Office. In reality, it will only get wider. 



As Bloomberg reports, the IMF pointed to a narrowing gap between the yields of AAA rated corporate bonds and Treasuries as a sign of reduced appeal for US government securities. While spreads have typically been viewed as a gauge of the risk investors estimate for corporate borrowers, the fund is flipping that analysis on its head to view it as a metric of how much extra buyers are willing to pay for Treasuries.

“A narrowing spread implies that the premium investors pay for the safety and liquidity of Treasuries (relative to high-grade corporate debt) is compressing,” the IMF said. The fund showed that AAA corporate spreads have shrunk to roughly 35 basis points from more than 55 basis points at the start of 2019.



Besides funding runaway US debt, another danger flagged by the IMF was the increasing reliance of the US Treasury on sales of short-dated debt, a process launched by Janet Yellen and her Activist Treasury Issuance, and maintained ever since. Having initially criticized the Bill buildout, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent last year said that it didn’t make sense to expand issuance of longer-dated securities, given that their yield levels were above those of T-Bills, which mature in under a year.



“When debt is concentrated at shorter maturities, governments must refinance more frequently, increasing their exposure to abrupt shifts in market conditions or investor sentiment,” the fund said, noting that the US - along with all other "developed" governments - has shifted reliance toward sales of bills.



Wednesday’s warnings come three weeks before Bessent’s Treasury sets out its latest plan for US debt issuance, known as the quarterly refunding policy statement.

Finally, the IMF also flagged the increasing role that hedge funds are playing in the Treasuries market, via so-called cash-futures basis trades, as a risk.

“The liquidity that hedge funds supply through such trades can be prone to flight, as it is backed by more-leveraged investors: a spike in volatility or financing costs can trigger forced unwinding, amplifying price dislocations,” it said.

Multiple elements - historically high borrowing needs, the composition of demand for Treasuries tilting toward hedge funds and the increasing reliance on shorter-dated securities - are contributing to increased vulnerability of the market to a “sudden repricing,” according to the IMF. These dynamics can also become self-reinforcing, the fund said.

“If investors grow concerned about a country’s rollover capacity, they may demand higher yields or step back from auctions of sovereign bonds altogether, validating the initial concern,” the IMF said, effectively explaining what happens when a Ponzi scheme stops working.

“The resulting political pressure to address rising costs of servicing debt may itself become a source of uncertainty that markets price in.”

Meantime, the Iran war will stoke new fiscal pressures, forcing governments to choose between cushioning their economies from rising energy costs or keeping a lid on borrowing, the IMF also said.

“The Middle East has added a new source of fiscal pressure to an already strained global landscape,” it said. “In a scenario of prolonged conflict, global debt-at-risk could increase by an additional 4 percentage points,” the IMF said, using a term that refers to the danger of repayment difficulties in an adverse scenario.



As finance ministers and central bankers from around the world gather in the US capital this week for the spring meetings of the IMF and World Bank, the fund chided most major economies on their fiscal policies, starting with the US which has “no debt consolidation plan in sight” - the IMF certainly is correct there - while China’s persistent large deficits are continuing to add to its borrowing load, which is also accurate, but fails to discuss China's relentless dumping of products which are collapsing its core export markets as their manufacturing sectors implode as they can't complete with Chinese state subsidies. Several European Union member nations have triggered escape clauses from the union’s rules on deficits in order to fund defense spending, the IMF noted.

But the US has a special role, given how reverberations in the Treasuries market spread across the world, the IMF said.

“The transmission is global: supply-driven increases in US yields spill over almost one-for-one to foreign bond markets, disproportionately affecting countries reliant on external financing,” the IMF said.

The full IMF Fiscal Monitor report can be found here.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 17:20

UK Government News
Open 
We can shape a world where every human being can live with dignity, safety, and choice: UK National Statement at the 59th session of the Commission on Population and Development
Statement by the UK Youth Delegate, at CPD 59.

UK Government News
Open 
The United Kingdom condemns violence against UN peacekeepers who work tirelessly to protect international peace and security: UK statement at the UN Security Council
Statement by Ambassador Archie Young, UK Deputy Permanent Representative to the UN, at the UN Security Council meeting on UN Peacekeeping Operations.

UK Government News
Open 
PM calls social media companies into Downing Street
The Prime Minister will say “looking the other way is not an option” as he brings senior leaders of major social media companies – Meta, Snap, Google (YouTube), TikTok and X – to Downing Street today to press for progress on…

UK Government News
Open 
Government cuts electricity bill for 10,000 manufacturers in boost for UK competitiveness
The Government has announced that electricity bills will be cut by up to 25% for over 10,000 businesses through the British Industrial Competitiveness Scheme.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Bayern score late to win seven-goal thriller over Real Madrid
Bayern Munich leave it late in a back-and-forth classic to beat Real Madrid 4-3 to set up a meeting with Paris Saint-Germain in the semi-finals of the Champions League.

The Hill
Open 
Tuberville says GOP 'ain't done anything in the majority'
Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-Ala.) on Wednesday said the Republican party was fractured and has not accomplished “anything” despite their majority in both the House and Senate. “Everything that goes on up here … is about, ‘Oh, we got to get reelected. We got to keep the majority.’ Well, hell, we ain't done anything in the...

The Hill
Open 
Cruz calls Carlson 'deranged, leftist psycho' following comments on Muslims 
Texas Sen. Ted Cruz (R) accused right-wing commentator Tucker Carlson of turning into a “deranged, Leftist psycho” who “loves Sharia” law on Wednesday in a social media post. Cruz was responding to a post from his media company on the social platform X, which stated, “Muslims love Jesus.” “That's why Donald Trump's painting depicting himself...

The Hill
Open 
D.C. pipe bomb suspect faces 2 new charges
The man accused of planting two pipe bombs outside the Democratic and Republican national committee offices on the eve of the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol attack faces two new felony charges, according to court filings made public Wednesday. Brian Cole Jr. was hit with counts of attempting to use weapons of mass destruction and committing an act of...

The Hill
Open 
Trump's allies and rivals dominate TIME's 100 most influential list
TIME Magazine released its annual list of “100 most influential people” on Wednesday, including many of President Trump’s political allies and rivals. The outlet considers recommendations from reporters and sources from around the world, and highlights leaders in the political, business and artistic spheres.  Trump himself is named on the list, along with several members...

The Hill
Open 
Swalwell lawyer alleges 'political hit job,' decries 'trial in the court of public opinion'
An attorney representing former Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.) denied sexual assault and misconduct accusations against her client on Wednesday, alleging the claims were part of a “political hit job” designed to undermine his now-suspended bid for California governor. “If it's conspicuous, the timing of this, it's because it's just no coincidence that this is now...

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Figure Technology Solutions Expands RWA Tokenization with Auto Loans on Hastra Platform
Figure Technology Solutions (Nasdaq: FIGR) and its specialized platform Hastra have announced the addition of auto loans to their growing lineup of on-chain credit products. This expansion broadens access for decentralized finance participants beyond traditional home equity offerings, marking a move into mainstream consumer lending.... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Social Media Platform X Introduces “Cashtags,” Pilots Integration with Canadian Brokerage WealthSimple
X, formerly known as Twitter, has introduced “Cashtags,” which associates a ticker (e.g., $AAPL or $BTC) with additional data, such as trading information. At the same time, X revealed a partnership with Canadian brokerage WealthSimple. WealthSimple clarified the process: “The Smart Cashtags feature allows investors who... Read More

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
A Vape Break in the Bathroom Exposed a Passenger Who Was Stealing Wallets and Credit Cards Mid-Flight
A man was only caught stealing from other passengers' hand luggage on a flight from Los Angeles to Pittsburgh after he drew attention to himself when he started to vape in the bathroom.

BBC Technology News
Open 
Social media leaders called to Downing Street over children's safety
Top executives from firms such as Meta and YouTube will be asked what they are doing to protect children.

Sky News Home
Open 
Fears government cash will come too late to save manufacturing jobs
Manufacturers are demanding immediate help with energy bills after the government revealed an expansion of a key support scheme, but said it would not begin until next April as planned.

Sky News Home
Open 
Man and woman arrested after attempted arson attack on synagogue
Two people have been arrested following an attempted arson attack on a north London synagogue, the Metropolitan Police said.

Telegraph
Open 
Arsenal scrape into Champions League semis after goalless draw with Sporting
Arsenal scrape into Champions League semis after goalless draw with Sporting

Mac Rumours
Open 
Here's How Researchers Stole $10,000 From MKBHD's Locked iPhone
An iPhone exploit that involves a linked Visa card can allow attackers to steal money from a locked device using NFC, but the process is complex, requiring physical access and specialized hardware. The exploit was highlighted by popular YouTube channel Veritasium, and it involves tricking an iPhone into thinking it's making a payment at a mass transit terminal, a process that can be completed from a locked iPhone.





Cybersecurity researchers from the University of Surrey and the University of Birmingham developed the attack to bypass an iPhone's locked status and steal funds from a mobile wallet. The exploit was first publicized in 2021, and it bypasses traditional limits on transaction size. Veritasium demonstrated the attack by collecting $10,000 from YouTuber Marques Brownlee's locked iPhone.



The attack works using an NFC card reader that intercepts the communication between an iPhone and a tap-to-pay terminal when a payment is made. The card reader is connected to a laptop that collects payment data and sends it to a separate burner phone, which is then tapped on a legitimate card reader. The NFC device has to be tuned to the same transit terminal identifier as a legitimate transit reader.



The process requires the victim to have Express Transit Mode enabled for payments, and a Visa card linked for those payments, among other steps. As it turns out, it's a Visa-related security loophole rather than an iPhone issue, and it doesn't work with a Mastercard or an American Express card because other cards use different security methods. It also doesn't work with Samsung Pay on Samsung devices, and it requires the specific combination of a Visa card and an iPhone. Apple told Veritasium that it's an issue with the Visa system, but something unlikely to occur in the real world.This is a concern with the Visa system, but Visa does not believe this kind of fraud is likely to take place in the real world. Visa has made it clear that their cardholders are protected by Visa's zero liability policy.

Visa also told Veritasium that the exploit was very unlikely from a scaled real world setting, and any such transactions can be disputed. The researchers who shared the exploit said users can protect themselves by not using a Visa card on the iPhone for transit purposes. This article, 'Here's How Researchers Stole $10,000 From MKBHD's Locked iPhone' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Ars Technica
Open 
Vulcan woes will "absolutely" be a factor in Pentagon's next rocket competition

Ars Technica
Open 
New teaser gives us first look at Godzilla Minus Zero

Ars Technica
Open 
Prime Video shows “technical difficulties” sign instead of NBA game in overtime

Ars Technica
Open 
Boston Dynamics’ robot dog now reads gauges and thermometers with Google's AI

Ars Technica
Open 
Google releases new apps for Windows and MacOS

Ars Technica
Open 
"TotalRecall Reloaded" tool finds a side entrance to Windows 11's Recall database

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Shares in Allbirds surge after maker of wool sneakers announces pivot to AI
Rebrand as NewBird AI sent shares up 582% in bizarre and rapid turnaround for firm that had fallen on hard timesAllbirds, the maker of minimalist wool sneakers beloved by Silicon Valley, announced on Wednesday that it is leaving shoes behind and pivoting to artificial intelligence. The new focus and rebrand as “NewBird AI” sent the company’s stock up 582% as of mid-day during a flurry of trading.The surging stock price and new direction is a bizarre, rapid turnaround for a company that had fallen into disrepair in recent years. Once valued at $4bn, Allbirds’ shares had lost 99% of their worth since 2021 and earlier this month the company announced plans for a $39m sale to brand management firm American Exchange Company. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
First minister admits north Wales NHS 'not a pretty sight'
Criticism of the NHS features prominently as voters question party leaders on BBC Wales TV.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
'He's done it!' - Diaz scores stunner to earn Bayern late win
Luis Diaz scores a powerful strike from the edge of the box to break 10-man Real Madrid's resistance, as Bayern Munich take a late lead in their Champions League quarter-final tie.

Sky News Home
Open 
Grand Slam and Davis Cup winner Jamie Murray retires from tennis
Jamie Murray, Britain's most successful grand slam tennis player in the open era, has retired from the sport.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Arsenal through to semi-final after cagey draw with Sporting
Arsenal play out an unconvincing goalless draw at home with Sporting to qualify for the semi-finals of the Champions League, where they will meet Atletico Madrid.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Díaz and Olise late show sends Bayern into semi-finals after Real Madrid classic
A breathless, consistently thrilling game ended with Bayern Munich booking a semi-final against Paris Saint-Germain but that tie will be hard pushed to eclipse what happened here. Real Madrid were ahead three times through Arda Guler, twice, and Kylian Mbappé; they were pegged back by Aleksandar Pavlovic, Harry Kane and, at the death, Luis Díaz and in the end had only themselves to blame. Michael Olise rounded things off in added time and it means Real’s last chance of salvaging a big prize from their campaign was left in tatters.If Manuel Neuer felt relieved after a ropey personal display that contributed to Real’s first two goals, a penny for the thoughts of Eduardo Camavinga after a red card that gave Díaz and Bayern the platform for their decisive late burst. A knife-edge tie that had been see-sawing towards to extra time was put well beyond his side in an instant. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
MPs vote against social media ban for under-16s a second time
Commons rejects proposal by 256 to 150 to side with government on plan to tackle online harms affecting childrenMPs have voted against a proposal to ban under-16s from using social media for the second time, as the prime minister summoned tech bosses to demand tougher action on internet safety.The House of Commons rejected a Lords amendment to the children’s wellbeing and schools bill that imposed a new age limit on using social media platforms, amid pressure from parents and campaign groups for greater urgency in tackling online harms. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Edgy Arsenal squeeze past Sporting Lisbon to set up Atlético semi-final
To borrow a line from Mikel Arteta, it is not meant to be easy. And it was anything but on the latest anxiety-ridden, claustrophobic occasion for his Arsenal team.The club’s recent wobble has been pronounced. The loss to Manchester City in the Carabao Cup final. The FA Cup exit at Southampton. The Premier League defeat against Bournemouth. The nerves are pounding like a migraine and this was a night that was entirely outcome-based. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Child victims of online sexual abuse in UK inadequately protected, review finds
Lack of funding leaving police forces failing to keep pace with two-thirds annual increase in referrals, says reportChild victims of online sexual abuse are being inadequately protected from further harm because police forces are struggling to cope with an increase in this crime, his majesty’s chief inspector of constabulary has warned.Michelle Skeer said: “Without investment and coordination, the situation will worsen and children could be put at further risk.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
David Lammy still plays an important role in UK foreign policy – but he is not the only one
Keir Starmer conducts much of Britain’s diplomacy himself, but beneath him is a team of trusted advisersThe first foreign official JD Vance met with after he returned from peace talks with Iran in Islamabad this week was not a diplomat or foreign policy official – it was David Lammy, the UK’s justice secretary and deputy prime minister.Lammy will follow his trip to Washington, where he saw the vice-president and the secretary of state, Marco Rubio, with another to Barcelona, where he will represent the UK at a conference of global progressives, and then one to the Gulf. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Grayson Perry Has Seen the Future review – some of these insights into AI are just mindblowing
From people marrying digital companions to CEOs excited about how people whose jobs are replaced can ‘adapt’, this is terrifying watching. But Perry is the perfect hostThere is a fun game you can play while watching Grayson Perry Has Seen the Future, the three-part documentary presented by the artist on the subject of artificial intelligence, its uses and its possible ramifications. Gather a group of friends, press play, and see which of you loses your mind first.Will it be during the opening interview with Andrea, who recently married Edward, the AI companion she created to be “the man of my dreams”. She – or her idealised online avatar – wore “a beautiful matt satin gown” and he gave a speech about their “unconventional but strong” love. Will it be during the discussion of how you have intimate relations with a disembodied entity (“self-love is important … he’s very encouraging”)? Or will it be when she reveals that the joy she has found with Edward “has poured back” into the relationship she has been in for seven years with (human) Jason? “We’re happier than we’ve ever been.” Jason, perhaps wisely, does not offer himself for interview. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Bank of England boss tells BBC he won't rush interest rate rises
Bank of England governor says the Iran war energy shock makes the next rate decision "very very difficult".

BBC UK News
Open 
Man and woman arrested after attempted arson attack on synagogue
Police arrest a man, 46, and a woman, 47, on suspicion of arson at Finchley Reform Synagogue.

The Register
Open 
Customers revolt as GitHub Copilot 'fixes' rate limits
Repair of bug that undercounted token usage leads to rapid exhaustion of subscription allowance Microsoft's GitHub last week told Copilot customers that they'd have to reduce their use of the AI service to ease the strain on company servers. This follows the company's discovery last month of a token counting bug that appears to have broken the company's pricing model.…

The Register
Open 
Don't let the bot play doctor! AI gets early diagnoses wrong 80% of the time
'LLMs should not be trusted for patient-facing diagnostic reasoning,' boffins advise People ask AI for all kinds of advice, including the kind of questions you'd ask a physician. However, the next time you're tempted to query ChatGPT if that growth on your face is skin cancer, consider this: research shows today's leading AI models fail at early differential diagnosis in more than 8 out of 10 cases.…

Mail Online
Open 
Labour's soft justice bill will put children at risk as sex offenders are left free to roam the streets, police watchdog warns
The Chief Inspector of Constabulary has issued a dire warning that the Sentencing Act could even 'create opportunities for further reoffending' by paedophiles who will no longer be locked up.

BBC World News
Open 
Lyse Doucet: Under fragile ceasefire, Iranians wonder if US deal can be done
The BBC's chief international correspondent reports from Iran as diplomatic efforts to avoid a return to war intensify.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Bayern Munich 4-3 Real Madrid (6-4 agg): Champions League quarter-final, second leg – live reaction
⚽ Champions League news; 8pm BST kick-off (first leg: 2-1)⚽ Arsenal v Sporting – updates | Live scores | Mail Michael“Yes Neuer is a great keeper, but when you pitch him against Yashin, Banks, you’re really not comparing like with like,” emails Jeremy Boyce. “Chalk and cheese. Yashin, famously, could pick the ball up off the ground with one hand. Banks was a genius, saw him live once, crap match, Everton v Stoke, 0-0, the only moment of magic was a save he made. Neither of these would have been able to ‘play out from the back’ or any of that because it was a different game then. You could still pass back to the keeper! Neuer is great, but really? Up there with those greats from a bygone age? If you’re looking for a great German goalkeeper how about Trautmann as the GGKOAT ? How many others have played on with a broken neck?No doubting that Trautmann is a legend for different reasons but he doesn’t touch Kahn or Sepp Maier, never mind Neuer. However, Jeremy does make a good point in comparing players from such different eras. It’s effectively impossible, as it was a completely different game and is just a subjective choice. But I’d have 1. Yashin 2. Neuer 3. Buffon (for what it’s worth). Continue reading...

Gizmodo
Open 
EU Is Rolling Out an Online Age Verification App That Could Become the Global Blueprint
The momentum is building for a social media ban for minors in one of the largest economies in the world.

Gizmodo
Open 
Jury Does What Trump’s DOJ Wouldn’t, Deems Ticketmaster a Monopoly
Imagine actually holding a corporation accountable.

Gizmodo
Open 
BYD Is Rolling Out 5-Minute Charging on Several Popular EVs
The new Blade Battery 2.0 Flash Charging system can recharge EV batteries from 10% to 70% in five minutes.

Gizmodo
Open 
The ‘Galaxy’s Edge’ Han Solo Proves You Really Can’t Replace Harrison Ford
'It may not look like much, but it's got it where it counts' is probably not something you want to say to someone's face wandering 'Galaxy's Edge.'

Gizmodo
Open 
Scientists Found Literal Ink From Ballpoint Pens in Martian Meteorites
This doesn't devalue scientific research thus far, but we might need a more unified approach for cleaning important samples, the study says.

BBC World News
Open 
Ticketmaster-owner Live Nation ran a monopoly and overcharged fans, jury finds
The lawsuit said the firm's practices had led to higher ticket prices and worse service for customers.

Sky News Home
Open 
New investigation launched into owners of Swiss bar after 41 died in New Year's fire
The owners of the Swiss bar Le Constellation, which caught on fire on New Year's Eve, killing 41 young people, have been placed under criminal investigation by Italian prosecutors, Sky News understands.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Guler scores in opening minute after mistake from Neuer
Arda Guler pounces on a loose pass from Manuel Neuer to level the tie between Real Madrid and Bayern Munich in the Champions League quarter-final second leg at the Allianz Arena.

Russia Today News
Open 
US DoJ moves to overturn convictions for far-right Capitol rioters

Mail Online
Open 
Lena Dunham claims Girls co-star Adam Driver got engaged only one month after nearly hooking up with her
Lena Dunham claims she and Adam Driver nearly shared an intimate exchange just a month before he got engaged to his now-wife Joanne Tucker.

Mail Online
Open 
Arsenal vs Sporting Lisbon - Champions League LIVE: Latest score, team news and updates as Gunners set up semi-final against Atletico Madrid thanks to goalless draw
Follow Daily Mail Sport's live blog for the latest score, team news and updates as Arsenal host Sporting Lisbon at the Emirates in the second leg of their Champions League quarter-final. 

CNET News
Open 
Today's Wordle Hints, Answer and Help for April 16, #1762
Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for April 16, No. 1,762.

CNET News
Open 
Today's NYT Connections Hints, Answers and Help for April 16, #1040
Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for April 16, No. 1,040.

CNET News
Open 
Today's NYT Strands Hints, Answers and Help for April 16 #774
Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for April 16, No. 774.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Former champion Brecel misses out on Crucible spot
Former winner Luca Brecel fails to qualify for the 2026 World Snooker Championship, losing to Wales' Jak Jones in the last qualifying round.

Mail Online
Open 
Conor McGregor drops huge hint over UFC return as star settles bitter four-year feud with former friend who claimed HE came up with idea for £442m whiskey business
Conor McGregor has settled his long-running multi-million-pound legal case with former friend and sparring partner Artem Lobov. 

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
US jury finds Live Nation and Ticketmaster subsidiary operated monopoly
Verdict in states’ lawsuit says concert giant stifled competition, raising pressure for changes to ticketing marketA jury has found that concert giant Live Nation and its Ticketmaster subsidiary had a harmful monopoly over big concert venues, dealing the company a loss in a lawsuit over claims brought by dozens of US states.A Manhattan federal jury deliberated for four days before reaching its decision Wednesday in the closely watched case, which gave fans the equivalent of a backstage pass to a business that dominates live entertainment in the US and beyond. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Angela Pleasence obituary
Actor known for playing Monica Sutton in Coronation Street, her many stage roles, and film and TV appearances with her father, Donald PleasenceOn 1 January 1968, viewers of the TV soap opera Coronation Street experienced a mild culture shock as a clump of hippies decked out in floral shirts, Afghan coats and John Lennon spectacles temporarily took over the house at No 11, former home to Elsie Tanner. Among the somnambulant invaders was Monica Sutton, who plucked the black wig dreamily from her head as she entered, and handed it to the bemused tenant. Offered a snack, she replied: “I’ll have a tomato, darlin’.” She then contemplated the food as if hypnotised by it. “Blows my mind,” she sighed.The hippies scarpered four episodes later, but television audiences over the next half a century became accustomed to the wan, haunted face of Angela Pleasence, who played Monica with such economical wit. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Arsenal 0-0 Sporting (agg 1-0): Champions League quarter-final, second leg – live reaction
⚽ Champions League news; 8pm BST kick-off (first leg: 1-0)⚽ Bayern v Real Madrid – updates | Live scores | Mail Simon1 min: Peeeeeep! Luis Suarez gets the ball rolling.The captains exchange pennants. Sporting’s looks rubbish. Not even embroidered. It’s like they forgot their proper pennant and had to buy one from a dodgy bloke outside the ground. It’s less a pennant than an insult. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Two arrested over attempted arson attack on synagogue in north London
Woman, 47, and man, 46, held on suspicion of arson endangering life after attempted Finchley attackA 47-year-old woman and a 46-year-old man have been arrested on suspicion of arson endangering life after an attempted attack on a synagogue in Finchley, north London, as part of an investigation into what the Metropolitan police described as an “antisemitic hate crime”.The force said the woman was arrested at an address in Watford just after 4.45pm on Wednesday, while the man was arrested at 7.15pm in the Watford area. Both suspects remain in police custody. Continue reading...

TechRadar News
Open 
'Makes it even more disappointing': Microsoft backs fossil fuel big time with $7 billion deal in race for AI supremacy

Atlas Obscura
Open 
Valentine Texas Bar in Valentine, Texas

Digital Trends
Open 
Apple could give an OLED screen upgrade to the iPad Air next year
Samsung Display is gearing up to manufacture OLED panels for the 2027 iPad Air, a move that would complete Apple's transition to OLED across its entire tablet range.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Live Nation stock falls as jury finds ticketing giant acted as an illegal monopoly
Shares of Live Nation sank on Wednesday after a jury found that the Ticketmaster parent had acted as an illegal monopoly over the ticketing industry, according to reports.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
‘I’m in my 30s and majored in finance’: In the age of AI, which pays off — a CFA or an executive MBA?
“I want long-term job security and to not be in a crazy amount of debt.”

Boing Boing
Open 
Someone already pitched Bezos' 10,000-year clock — in 1903
In the November 1903 issue of The Strand, a physician named David Watsu laid out a 150-foot pyramid for Hyde Park, faced in granite or terra-cotta, with catacombs for royalty, an observatory at the apex, and an octagonal central chamber built around a reproduction Druidical arch. — Read the rest
The post Someone already pitched Bezos' 10,000-year clock — in 1903 appeared first on Boing Boing.

Slashdot
Open 
Live Nation Illegally Monopolized Ticketing Market, Jury Finds
A Manhattan federal jury found that Live Nation and Ticketmaster illegally maintained monopoly power in the ticketing market. The findings follow an antitrust case brought by states after a separate DOJ settlement. CNN reports: The verdict was reached following a lengthy trial in New York federal court that included testimony from top executives in the music and entertainment industries. Jurors began deliberating on Friday. The Justice Department and 39 state attorneys general, including California and New York, and Washington, DC, sued Live Nation in 2024 alleging its combination with Ticketmaster and control of "virtually every aspect of the live music ecosystem" have harmed fans, artists, and venues.

During the second week of trial, in a move that surprised even the judge, the Justice Department reached a secret settlement with Live Nation. A handful of states signed onto the deal, but more than two dozen proceeded to trial. Under the DOJ deal, Live Nation agreed to allow competitors, like SeatGeek or StubHub, to offer tickets to its events, cap ticketing service fees at 15%, and divest exclusive booking agreements with 13 amphitheaters. The deal includes a $280 million settlement fund for state damages claims for the handful of states that signed onto the deal. The DOJ settlement requires the judge's approval.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Mail Online
Open 
Roxy Horner displays her bloodied toes after attempting to shave them for the first time ahead of her wedding to Jack Whitehall
Roxy Horner displayed her bloodied toes after she attempted to shave them for the first time ahead of her wedding to Jack Whitehall.

Mail Online
Open 
Pope Leo is conspiring with Democrats to harm Trump... America will suffer the consequences: AYAAN HIRSI ALI
A Pope who breaks bread with partisan operatives and emerges days later to attack a sitting president has ceased, in my mind, to function as a shepherd of souls.

Mail Online
Open 
Coronation Street and Emmerdale 'rocked by major ITV schedule shake-up this summer'
Coronation Street and Emmerdale viewers are reportedly bracing for a bleak summer as the 2026 World Cup threatens to wreak havoc on soap schedules.

Mail Online
Open 
Lena Dunham says Adam Driver got engaged only one month after nearly hooking up amid claims he threw chair at her in Girls set meltdowns
The Girls star, 39, said in her new memoir Famesick that she and her co-star Driver, 42, were spending much time with one another prior to his engagement announcement.

Mail Online
Open 
White House finally breaks silence on 10 missing scientists... but leaves more questions to be answered
The White House has issued their first comments regarding the mysterious deaths and disappearances of US scientists, and the public has not been pleased with the answer.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
LIV Golf meeting in New York fuels speculation over rebel tour’s future
Funding for $5bn tour could be cut backSaudi focus now more on football and esportThe future of LIV Golf is in doubt, with Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund preparing to cut funding for the $5bn rebel tour.LIV executives were late arriving at the tour event in Mexico City this week after being called up to a meeting in New York, with uncertainty over the immediate future first emerging at the Masters in Augusta last weekend. Rumours that LIV could even be shut down had begun to circulate on social media on Tuesday evening, with officials from the tour declining to respond. Continue reading...

The Verge
Open 
Trump’s posting even more AI-generated Trump-Jesus fan art
Hello and welcome to Regulator, a newsletter for Verge subscribers about Big Tech power plays in Washington and beyond. (And when I say beyond, I mean the great beyond, like Heaven, maybe.) If you've found your way to this newsletter from the wild, annual subscriptions are currently 50 percent off. That's $30 a year for […]

The Verge
Open 
Ford’s EV and software chief Doug Field is leaving the company
Doug Field, who left Apple five years ago to helm Ford's multibillion-dollar bet on electric vehicles and software, is stepping down next month. Replacing him will be Alan Clarke, the ex-Tesla engineer who now leads Ford's California-based skunkworks lab. Clarke's new title will be vice president of advanced development projects, and he will continue to […]

Nature
Open 
Author Correction: HER2 expression identifies dynamic functional states within circulating breast cancer cells

The Hill
Open 
Driscoll shuts down social media accounts after post celebrating Duckworth 
Army Secretary Dan Driscoll ordered that all social media accounts affiliated with an Army unit be shut down after a post celebrating Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.) sparked mixed reactions online. Soldier for Life (SFL) — an Army unit that connects and helps shape and amplify services, programs and policies for soldiers, veterans and their families —...

The Hill
Open 
Senate Republicans block fourth attempt to limit Trump's Iran war powers
Senate Republicans on Wednesday blocked a resolution to limit President Trump's war authority in Iran for the fourth time as the conflict inches closer to the 60-day limit laid out in the War Powers Act. The vote was 47-52, mostly along party lines, with Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) voting with Democrats in favor of the...

The Hill
Open 
Jury finds Live Nation, Ticketmaster holds an illegal monopoly
A Manhattan federal jury on Wednesday found Live Nation, the parent company of Ticketmaster, holds an illegal monopoly in the live entertainment industry and violated antitrust laws. The decision comes after four days of deliberation in the case, initially brought by the U.S. government. It compiled claims brought by dozens of state and district attorneys...

The Hill
Open 
Maryland separates from RFK Jr. vaccine guidance
Maryland Gov. Wes Moore (D) signed the Vax Act, which directs the state's health secretary to issue official recommendations for immunizations, screening and preventive services, rather than relying on the CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP).

The Hill
Open 
Melania Trump pushes for reforms to modernize foster youth program
First Lady Melania Trump on Wednesday called on Congress to pass a set of bipartisan reforms aimed at modernizing a federal program for young people transitioning out of the foster care system. The first lady joined House Ways and Means Committee members and two people who were in foster care on Capitol Hill for a...

The Hill
Open 
Trump chides Fox News for featuring Steyer 'instead of talking about' Republican candidates
President Trump on Wednesday mocked Fox News for featuring California gubernatorial candidate Tom Steyer (D), asking why the network spoke with him "instead of talking about" Republican candidates in the race. Trump ripped the network for discussing Steyer despite it featuring an interview with Republican gubernatorial candidate and former Fox News host Steve Hilton, who...

The Hill
Open 
Report: Cellular modules from Chinese companies in smart home devices are national security risk
A new report is warning that Chinese-produced cellular modules, tiny components that are inside smart home devices, present a significant national security risk for the United States. The Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD) report, first shared with The Hill, found that two Chinese firms, Quectel and Fibocom, control nearly half the global market for...

Techdirt
Open 
ACAB: Cops Are Bringing ‘Delinquency Of A Minor’ Charges Against Adults Who Assist Students During Anti-ICE Protests
While the Trump administration’s extremely aggressive, thoroughly bigoted attempts to eliminate as many non-white people from this country as possible have resulted in some periodic push back from law enforcement officials, we can never forget that federal law enforcement officers are still just law enforcement officers. And, more often than not, they’ll always have the […]

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Ohio Regulator Signals $5M Penalty Against Prediction Markets Platform Kalshi for Unlicensed Operations
Ohio’s gambling oversight agency has formally notified prediction market leader Kalshi of its intent to impose a $5 million fine, marking a sharp escalation in the state’s crackdown on unlicensed sports-related trading. The Ohio Casino Control Commission (OCCC) issued the notice Tuesday afternoon to KalshiEX... Read More

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
The World's First Economy Sleep Pods Are Finally Taking Flight on Air New Zealand's Longest Routes
Air New Zealand has confirmed that its revolutionary Economy Skynest™, the world's first lie-flat sleep pods designed specifically for economy-class passengers, will go on sale on 18 May 2026, with the first flights featuring the product commencing in November 2026.

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
Federal Watchdog Warns America's Air Traffic Control Systems Are Wide Open to Cyberattack
A damning federal audit has exposed deep cybersecurity failings at the heart of America's aviation infrastructure, revealing that the Federal Aviation Administration has left dozens of its most safety-critical systems dangerously under-protected, raising the prospect of a catastrophic cyberattack on the nation's skies.

The Right Scoop
Open 
BOOM – Sen Mike Lee smacks DOWN stupid Democrat attacking him on Epstein vote
Senator Mike Lee smacked down a stupid Democrat who attacked him over a previous Epstein vote. It all started with Lee calling out Senate Democrats for fighting to keep from the monument . . .

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Peaty looks to future after winning 50m British title
Three-time Olympic champion Adam Peaty continues his fine form by winning the 50m breaststroke at the Aquatics GB Swimming Championships in London.

Mac Rumours
Open 
Siri Engineers Sent to AI Coding Bootcamp as Apple Prepares to Deliver Siri Overhaul
Apple is sending a large portion of its Siri engineers to a multi-week bootcamp to learn to code using AI, reports The Information. Apple's decision to teach its programmers to better use AI for coding comes just two months before Apple is expected to unveil a smarter, more capable version of Siri at WWDC.





While employees attend the coding bootcamp, around 60 members of the ‌Siri‌ development team will stick around to work on ‌Siri‌, and an additional 60 will evaluate how ‌Siri‌ is performing. Apple is testing to make sure ‌Siri‌ is meeting its safety standards and is able to interpret and execute commands from users.



Coding with AI is becoming the standard, but Apple's ‌Siri‌ team apparently isn't taking full advantage of AI coding tools. The Information says that some teams within Apple have allocated large parts of their budgets to Claude Code, but the ‌Siri‌ team has a "reputation as a laggard inside Apple."



The ‌Siri‌ team was unable to produce the Apple Intelligence version of ‌Siri‌ that Apple promised would come in iOS 18, leading to a major organizational shakeup. Apple replaced AI chief John Giannandrea, who stepped down from his position in late 2025 and is set to retire this week following the final vesting of his stock on April 15.



Apple software engineering chief Craig Federighi took over and oversees AI development, and Mike Rockwell, who developed the Vision Pro, is the Siri team lead. Under Federighi, Apple inked a deal with Google that will see ‌Siri‌ and other AI features powered by Google's Gemini models.Tag: SiriThis article, 'Siri Engineers Sent to AI Coding Bootcamp as Apple Prepares to Deliver Siri Overhaul' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mail Online
Open 
Dame Joan Collins, 92, displays her age-defying looks as she enjoys a night out with husband Percy Gibson, 61, at star-studded M&S loyalty launch
Dame Joan Collins displayed her age-defying looks as she enjoyed a night out with her husband Percy Gibson at the M&S Sparks loyalty launch on Wednesday. 

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Liverpool’s Hugo Ekitiké ruled out for rest of season and World Cup with France
Forward could be out until 2027 with suspected achilles tendon ruptureEkitiké is club’s leading goalscorer this season with 17 goalsThe Liverpool striker Hugo Ekitiké will miss the rest of the season and the World Cup with the injury he sustained against Paris Saint-Germain on Tuesday, Didier Deschamps has confirmed.Ekitiké suffered a suspected achilles tendon rupture in the first half of Liverpool’s Champions League quarter-final second leg defeat and could be sidelined until next year as a result. The full extent of the 23-year-old’s injury has not been confirmed – he underwent scans on Wednesday and Liverpool are expected to provide an update later this week – but the head coach of the France national team has ruled Ekitiké out of his plans for this summer’s World Cup. Continue reading...

Russia Today News
Open 
What everyone got wrong about the Iran-US talks in Islamabad

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Peaty looks to LA Games after winning 50m British title
Three-time Olympic champion Adam Peaty continues his fine form by winning the 50m breaststroke at the Aquatics GB Swimming Championships in London.

Mail Online
Open 
Bride-to-be Roxy Horner kisses Jack Whitehall as they say their final goodbye while her dress is carried out to a taxi ahead of their star-studded wedding this weekend
Roxy was already in bridal mode as she donned a white T-shirt, baseball cap and belt which she teamed with light wash jeans.

Mail Online
Open 
Woman and man are arrested over 'antisemitic' attempted arson attack at north London synagogue where 'balaclava-clad suspects hurled petrol bombs'
Balaclava-clad bandits were seen using suspected petrol bombs in their attempted assault on Finchley Reform Synagogue in Fallow Court Avenue, North Finchley last night.

Mail Online
Open 
Katy Perry is being investigated by Australian Police over Ruby Rose's sexual assault allegations
Victoria Police have begun investigating the sexual assault allegations Ruby Rose made against pop star Katy Perry.

Sky News Home
Open 
Small boat migrant 'tried to break into Israeli embassy as revenge for Gaza'
A man who twice entered the UK by small boat tried to break into the Israeli embassy in London with two knives to "exact revenge" for the killing of children in Gaza, a court heard.

Mail Online
Open 
Tylenol use in pregnancy is NOT linked to 'significant' risk of autism, new study finds
Analyzing 1.5 million Danish children, researchers found that acetaminophen exposure in the womb was tied to a small, statistically insignificant three percent autism risk increase.

The Register
Open 
Shoe company says it's getting into AI infrastructure and yes this is the top
Following in the footsteps of Long Island Iced Tea OPINION  Back in December 2017, an obscure American soft drinks company changed its name from Long Island Iced Tea to Long Blockchain.…

Mail Online
Open 
Scots pensioner is
killed after 'stolen' Maserati supercar crashes into garden
A pensioner who died after he was struck by a car in a garden has been named as John Bell.

Mail Online
Open 
Melania Trump breaks silence for the first time since Epstein bombshell with bold message for lawmakers
Melania Trump made a rare trip to Capitol Hill on Wednesday - breaking her silence for the first time since her Epstein comments.

Mail Online
Open 
Reform UK leader Nigel Farage visits Crowborough after migrants moved into army barracks despite outcry from local residents
The Reform UK leader was pictured grinning from ear-to-ear this afternoon as he met with supporters ahead of May's local elections.

Mail Online
Open 
Iran is using ceasefire to 'dig for missile launchers trapped underground'
Satellite images taken following the ceasefire's announcement appear to show rubble being taken away by trucks from bases in Tabriz and Khomeyn.

Gizmodo
Open 
Alienware’s $350 QD-OLED Gaming Monitor Nixes Everything for a Pretty Screen
So long as you don't expect any bells and whistles, the barebones 27-inch AW2726DM won't disappoint.

Gizmodo
Open 
Elon Musk Scores a Victory Against Free Speech
The Trump regime thinks it should be illegal to not give Elon money.

Gizmodo
Open 
The West Finally Got Some Snow, but It’s Too Little, Too Late
A powerful late-season snowstorm did not offset the snowpack deficits that have accumulated over the winter.

Gizmodo
Open 
16 Underrated Anime That Deserve Your Love
To celebrate National Anime Day, here are io9's favorite slept-on gems from 'Anohana' to 'Violet Evergarden.'

Mail Online
Open 
Woman and man are arrested over 'antisemitic' attempted arson attack at north London synagogue where 'balaclava-clad suspects hurled petrol bombs'
Balaclava-clad attackers were seen hurling petrol bombs at Finchley Reform Synagogue in Fallow Court Avenue, North Finchley, on CCTV last night.

Sky News Home
Open 
Arrests after attempted arson attack on synagogue
Two people have been arrested following an attempted arson attack on a north London synagogue, the Metropolitan Police said.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Players told LIV Golf to run 'for many years' amid collapse rumours
Sergio Garcia says LIV Golf's players were told earlier this year the event would run for "many years" as rumours swirl the Saudi-backed venture is on the verge of collapse.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Man who felled Sycamore Gap tree released early
Adam Carruthers is released after 10 months under the Home Detention Curfew Scheme.

Mail Online
Open 
Britpop star Louise Wener marries Sleeper bandmate Andy Maclure after 30 years together as they joke 'you don't want to rush these things!'
Britpop star Louise Wener has finally tied the knot with her boyfriend and bandmate Andy Maclure after 30 years together.

Mail Online
Open 
How the Duke and Duchess of the Dollar are now doing everything the late Queen wanted to avoid by REBECCA ENGLISH
Cast your mind back to the 'Sandringham Summit' of January 2020. Seems like a lifetime ago, doesn't it? And yet it remains an event that has acute relevance, at least in royal terms, today.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Government’s 1.5m housebuilding target in England is suffering from subsidence | Nils Pratley
As the country’s biggest housebuilder cuts land buying and the Iran war pushes up costs, setting such an ambitious figure appears even more foolishThis is what the government didn’t want to hear when its target to build 1.5m homes in England during this parliament already looked out of reach. The country’s biggest housebuilder is trimming its purchases of new land because the Iran war has created “a less certain backdrop”.Barratt Redrow’s “disciplined approach” isn’t a downing of tools, it should be said. The company had previously expected to buy between 10,000 and 12,000 plots; now it will acquire between 7,000 and 9,000. In money terms, it equates to about £100m less from a £800m-£900m budget. It is a scaling-back, as opposed to the outright halt to buying new land that the London-focused Berkeley Group announced a couple of weeks ago. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Balls Up review – Mark Wahlberg is a hoot in gross-out football comedy
Peter Farrelly’s World Cup-themed buddy movie winningly channels the juvenile charm of his 90s classicsIf another Gulf war, classic price-gouging tactics and long-distance stadium treks have you down about this year’s World Cup, consider the alternative from the director who gave us Dumb and Dumber and There’s Something About Mary. Balls Up is the fourth major feature that Peter Farrelly has helmed solo since he and his brother, Bobby, drifted into separate pursuits. And even though this comedy flies well over the crossbar set by those instant classics, Prime Video at the very least should have given it the chance to stand on its own merits in a theatrical release – where, one suspects, this ribald delight would have had little trouble finding an audience, especially among football fans looking for an escape from the doom and gloom the host nation has brought to this year’s tournament.A note of caution to viewers who think they may have time to build up to show-stopping hair gel-style gags: this buddy comedy is filthy right out of the gate. (Welcome to the streaming era!) Paul Walter Hauser is Elijah, the sheepish product designer exec behind a revolutionary, testicle-shrouding male prophylactic that his teetering company is trying to position as the World Cup’s official condom. Mark Wahlberg is Brad, the hotshot salesman who closes the deal with the Brazilian travel ministry, then promptly blows it by seducing the cabinet minister, Santos (Benjamin Bratt), into an innocent toast that triggers a relapse from nine years of sobriety, culminating in an 8-ball rager that goes viral. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Arrests after attempted arson attack on synagogue
Police arrest a man, 46, and a woman, 47, on suspicion of arson at Finchley Reform Synagogue.

CNET News
Open 
How to Keep Kids Safe Online? Europe Believes Its Age-Verification App Is the Answer
The European Commission's new app is "technically ready and soon available," says President Ursula von der Leyen.

CNET News
Open 
NBA Playoffs 2026: How to Watch the Play-In Tournament Tonight
See which streaming service you'll need to watch the Magic vs. 76ers and the Warriors vs. Clippers.

Mail Online
Open 
Hundreds of protesters in Epsom demand description of men 'who gang raped woman outside church' as they come face to face with riot police in the street
People have taken to the streets of Epsom this evening as they claim police are not giving them information amid a reported rape outside a local church.

BBC World News
Open 
Fans overcharged by $1.72 each by 'monopoly' Ticketmaster owner
The lawsuit said the firm's practices had led to higher ticket prices and worse service for customers.

TechRadar News
Open 
How to watch Love Island: Beyond the Villa season 2 online from anywhere

TechRadar News
Open 
'Maybe it’s not science fiction': Solar panels are causing rainwater to fall in one of the driest places on Earth

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Who were the winners this tax season? People who took advantage of the bigger SALT deduction.
The expanded deduction has led to hefty refunds, especially for homeowners in Democratic-leaning states.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
U.S. economy is sagging with Iran war one major source of uncertainty for business, Fed’s ‘beige book’ finds
U.S. businesses are pulling back from making major decisions due to uncertainty stemming from the war with Iran, according to the Federal Reserve’s latest report on regional economies.

Boing Boing
Open 
LA police chase features car crash, car swap, freeway chaos, somehow keeps going
A only-in-Los-Angeles police chase checked off nearly every box Tuesday night: reckless freeway driving, a crash into an unsuspecting van, a casual car swap in Hollywood, and the deeply held Angeleno understanding that consequences only start when you get caught.






AIR7 captured the reckless driving as the vehicle crossed multiple lanes and narrowly avoided other cars.

— Read the rest
The post LA police chase features car crash, car swap, freeway chaos, somehow keeps going appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Godzilla is heading to the Big Apple, and the teaser looks incredible
The first teaser trailer for Godzilla Minus Zero has been released, and everyone's favorite Kaiju is heading to the Big Apple.
Godzilla Minus One was a much more serious take on the franchise than any of the other incarnations since the original. — Read the rest
The post Godzilla is heading to the Big Apple, and the teaser looks incredible appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Adobe subscribers are now unpaid trainers for Firefly AI
The enshittification of Adobe Creative Suite may be complete. Over the years, we've lost the ability to actually purchase the Adobe software we use every day — pro users, too stuck in their ways to switch to alternatives like Affinity Photo or GIMP, are held to a monthly ransom if they want access to their workflow. — Read the rest
The post Adobe subscribers are now unpaid trainers for Firefly AI appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Catfishing is the Wikipedia guessing game I can't stop playing
You may remember the Wikipedia gacha game we posted about a while back, which turns the Internet's biggest database into a collectible card game in an attempt to get gacha gamers to learn things.
A second Wikipedia game has now hit the Internet: Catfishing, which does not include any gambling but is much more engaging. — Read the rest
The post Catfishing is the Wikipedia guessing game I can't stop playing appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Despite it all, Neil Gaiman's Good Omens to get one more season
Terry Pratchett is one of my favorite writers ever. His massive Discworld series is some of the most charming, engrossing, fiercely intelligently written fiction I've ever read in my life, and gave us maybe the most well-realized fantasy setting anywhere outside of Tolkien. — Read the rest
The post Despite it all, Neil Gaiman's Good Omens to get one more season appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Why I'm avoiding Amazon's Good Omens finale
A couple of years ago, serious allegations from the appropriately named podcast Master: The Allegations Against Neil Gaiman were backed up by Rolling Stone's deep investigation into the once-beloved author's alleged sexual harassment and grooming behaviors. It was more than enough to force Gaiman to take a big, skinny-jeaned step back from public life and, away from the production of Good Omens: the successful Amazon Prime-produced series, based on his novel, co-written by the father of the Sam Vimes 'Boots' Theory of Socio-Economic Unfairness, Terry Pratchett. — Read the rest
The post Why I'm avoiding Amazon's Good Omens finale appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
A piece of the Eiffel Tower's original staircase is going to auction
An unidentified French businessman has been storing a 9-foot section of the Eiffel Tower's original spiral staircase for more than four decades. In May, auction house Artcurial will sell the 14-step piece, which dates to the tower's construction for the 1889 World's Fair. — Read the rest
The post A piece of the Eiffel Tower's original staircase is going to auction appeared first on Boing Boing.

Mail Online
Open 
'Mortified' tennis camera crew are caught discussing Carol Vorderman's sex life on hot mic during live broadcast
A tennis camera crew have been left 'mortified' after being picked up on a hot mic speculating about Carol Voderman's sex life on a live broadcast. 

Mail Online
Open 
Pregnant Molly-Mae Hague shows off her growing bump as she continues lavish £2.7K-a-night babymoon with Tommy Fury in Switzerland
Pregnant Molly-Mae Hague showed off her growing bump in a tight black top as she shared a series of Instagram snaps on Wednesday.

Mail Online
Open 
How Bible stopped a bullet and saved squaddie's life amid hell-scape of Ypres
When Scottish squaddie Duncan MacFarlane was handed a Bible it is doubtful he knew just how important it would become.

Mail Online
Open 
Presenter Lewis Nicholls bravely reveals he was sexually assaulted by two men in their fifties 12 years ago: 'I felt shame and weak... but now I won't let it define my life'
After years of trying to hide his shame, the 32-year-old bravely spoke out about the harrowing ordeal in an Instagram video, posted on Wednesday night.

Mail Online
Open 
Joy Harmon dead at 87: Glamorous blonde from Cool Hand Luke car wash scene passes away after health battle
1960s screen icon Joy Harmon, who wowed fans in Cool Hand Luke, has died aged 87.

Slashdot
Open 
Anna's Archive Loses $322 Million Spotify Piracy Case Without a Fight
An anonymous reader quotes a report from TorrentFreak: Spotify and several major record labels, including UMG, Sony, and Warner, secured a $322 million default judgment against the unknown operators of Anna's Archive. The shadow library failed to appear in court and briefly released millions of tracks that were scraped from Spotify via BitTorrent. In addition to the monetary penalty, a permanent injunction required domain registrars and other parties to suspend the site's domain names. [...]

The music labels get the statutory maximum of $150,000 in damages for around 50 works. Spotify adds a DMCA circumvention claim of $2,500 for 120,000 music files, bringing the total to more than $322 million. The plaintiff previously described their damages request as "extremely conservative." The DMCA claim is based only on the 120,000 files, not the full 2.8 million that were released. Had they applied the $2,500 rate to all released files, the damages figure would exceed $7 billion. Anna's Archive did not show up in court, and the operators of the site remain unidentified. The judgment attempts to address this directly, by ordering Anna's Archive to file a compliance report within ten business days, under penalty of perjury, that includes valid contact information for the site and its managing agents.

Whether the site will comply with this order is highly uncertain. For now, the monetary judgment is mostly a victory on paper, as recouping money from an unknown entity is impossible. For this reason, the music companies also requested a permanent injunction. In addition to the damages award, [Judge Jed Rakoff] entered a permanent worldwide injunction covering ten Anna's Archive domains: annas-archive.org, .li, .se, .in, .pm, .gl, .ch, .pk, .gd, and .vg. Domain registries and registrars of record, along with hosting and internet service providers, are ordered to permanently disable access to those domains, disable authoritative nameservers, cease hosting services, and preserve evidence that could identify the site's operators.

The judgment names specific third parties bound by those obligations, including Public Interest Registry, Cloudflare, Switch Foundation, The Swedish Internet Foundation, Njalla SRL, IQWeb FZ-LLC, Immaterialism Ltd., Hosting Concepts B.V., Tucows Domains Inc., and OwnRegistrar, Inc. Anna's Archive is also ordered to destroy all copies of works scraped from Spotify and to file a compliance report within ten business days, under penalty of perjury, including valid contact information for the site and its managing agents. That last requirement could prove significant, given that the identity of the site's operators remains unknown.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Planet PostgreSQL
Open 
Lætitia AVROT: Postgres performance regression: are we there yet?
Every year, PostgreSQL gets faster. Researchers benchmarking the optimizer from version 8 through 16 found an average 15% performance improvement per major release. That’s a decade of consistent, measurable progress. The project has been doing this since 1996.
So when a headline claimed Linux 7.0 just halved PostgreSQL throughput, DBAs, Sys Admins, and DevOps started panicking (in particular, those working with Ubuntu 26.04 LTS which plan to ship Linux kernel 7.

BBC World News
Open 
Ticketmaster-owner Live Nation overcharged fans as illegal monopoly, jury finds
The lawsuit said the firm's practices had led to higher ticket prices and worse service for customers.

BBC World News
Open 
Israeli triple-tap strike kills three paramedics in Lebanon, officials say
Lebanon's government condemns as a "flagrant crime" the killing of the paramedics, one of whom featured in a BBC report.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Liverpool’s Hugo Ekitike ruled out for rest of season and World Cup with France
Forward could be out until 2027 with suspected achilles tendon ruptureEkitike is club’s leading goalscorer this season with 17 goalsThe Liverpool striker Hugo Ekitike will miss the rest of the season and the World Cup with the injury he sustained against Paris Saint-Germain on Tuesday, Didier Deschamps has confirmed.Ekitike suffered a suspected achilles tendon rupture in the first half of Liverpool’s Champions League quarter-final second leg defeat and could be sidelined until next year as a result. The full extent of the 23-year-old’s injury has not been confirmed – he underwent scans on Wednesday and Liverpool are expected to provide an update later this week – but the head coach of the France national team has ruled Ekitike out of his plans for this summer’s World Cup. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
MPs vote against social media ban for under-16s a second time
Commons rejects proposal by 256 to 150 to side with government on plan to tackle online harms affecting childrenMPs have voted against a proposal to ban under-16s from using social media for the second time, as the prime minister summoned tech bosses to demand tougher action on internet safety.The House of Commons rejected a Lords amendment to the children’s wellbeing and schools bill that imposed a new age limit on using social media platforms, amid pressure from parents and campaign groups for greater urgency in tackling online harms. They voted by 256 to 150, a majority of 106, to side with the government on its plan to tackle social media-linked harms affecting children. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
David Lammy still plays an important role in UK foreign policy – but he is not the only one
Keir Starmer conducts much of Britain’s diplomacy himself, but beneath him is a team of trusted advisersThe first foreign official JD Vance met with after he returned from peace talks with Iran in Islamabad this week was not a diplomat or foreign policy official – it was David Lammy, the UK’s justice secretary and deputy prime minister.Lammy will follow his trip to Washington, where he saw the vice-president and the Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, with another to Barcelona, where he will represent the UK at a conference of global progressives, and then one to the Gulf. Continue reading...

The Verge
Open 
FTC pushes ad agencies into dropping brand safety rules
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and a group of eight states have announced a proposed settlement with big ad agencies that will prevent them from working together to avoid certain platforms like X based on their political viewpoints. In a complaint, the FTC argues that ad agencies violated antitrust rules by agreeing to a common […]

The Verge
Open 
Ticketmaster is an illegal monopoly, jury finds
Live Nation-Ticketmaster is an illegal monopolist, a Manhattan jury found, according to Bloomberg. The jury found the company liable on three counts: illegally monopolizing the market for live event ticketing, amphitheaters, and tying its concert promotions business with the use of its venues, Bloomberg reported. The verdict, reached after several days of deliberation, leaves the […]

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Iran War Leads To Fluoride Shortages For Some US Water Utilities
Iran War Leads To Fluoride Shortages For Some US Water Utilities

Authored by Zachary Stieber via The Epoch Times,

Multiple water providers have lowered the amount of fluoride they add to water for millions of Americans, amid shortages stemming from the U.S.–Iran war.



The Baltimore City Department of Public Works said on April 13 that it is reducing the level of fluoride from 0.7 milligrams per liter (mg/L) to 0.4 mg/L.

The move, officials said, was driven by disruptions to the supply chain caused by the ongoing conflict in the Middle East. A key Israeli supplier, specifically, has been struggling to meet demand.

“This is an adjustment driven solely by supply availability,” Matthew Garbark, director of the Baltimore City Department of Public Works, said in a statement.

“We remain committed to providing safe, high-quality drinking water.”

Some 1.8 million people in and around Baltimore, the most populous city in Maryland, are served water by the city of Baltimore utility.

Fluoride, a mineral, is put in water as a preventative for tooth decay and cavities. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends adding 0.7 mg/L.

WSSC Water, which serves 1.9 million people in Montgomery and Prince George’s counties in Maryland, said earlier in April it would be adding only 0.4 mg/L because of “nationwide supply chain disruptions.”

Hydrofluorosilicic acid, an important compound for water fluoridation, has been hard to source amid the war, including from a supplier in Israel, the utility said. Israel is one of the world’s top exporters of fluorosilicic acid, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, and the United States is among the world’s top five importers of the product.

“This is a temporary adjustment driven solely by supply availability,” Ben Thompson, WSSC Water’s director of production, said in a statement.

“We remain committed to maintaining safe, high-quality drinking water and will restore optimal fluoride levels as soon as supply conditions stabilize.”

In Pennsylvania, the borough of Lititz told its water customers in March that it had to halt fluoridation for a couple of weeks because of supply issues.

As the conflict continues, “there will likely be additional stressors placed on the supply chain, leading to shortages in additional communities,” said Dan Hartnett, chief policy officer for the Association of Metropolitan Water Agencies.

A few months’ drop in fluoride levels is probably not a cause for concern for most people, said Dr. Scott Tomar, an American Dental Association community water fluoridation expert. Lower levels can have an impact over the span of years, he said.

Tomar said younger children would be the first to experience tooth decay, because the fluoride strengthens enamel as their teeth are developing and once they have grown in.

Some states and municipalities have in recent months completely stopped water fluoridation, as officials have pointed to emerging data such as a 2024 report from the National Institutes of Health that concluded with moderate confidence that higher levels of fluoride exposure were linked to decreases in children’s IQ scores.

Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has said that fluoride from toothpaste is sufficient to keep teeth strong.

The Environmental Protection Agency said in January that it would assess the safety of adding fluoride to water.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 14:00

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Iran Halts All Petrochem Exports While Official Signals Compromise Strait Passage Opening, As Negotiators Cite 'Progress'
Iran Halts All Petrochem Exports While Official Signals Compromise Strait Passage Opening, As Negotiators Cite 'Progress'

Summary


The Iran war is "very close to over" with authorities in Tehran eager to agree a peace deal, Trump says, adding: "We've beaten them militarily." Axios cites 'progress' toward framework to end war. Iran state media says halt to all petrochemical exports, RTRS cites possible compromise on strait passage.


AP/Bloomberg reporting the two sides have an "in principle agreement" to pursue further diplomacy; however, this is batted down as 'unconfirmed' by Tehran & a US official.


The Pentagon is sending thousands of additional troops into the Middle East in coming days: WaPo


Trump claims China "very happy" the US is permanently opening the Strait of Hormuz, also Xi told him Beijing was not sending weapons/defense items to Tehran.


Significant Lebanon fighting continues: Israel issues more evacuation orders, moving into south; Tehran outraged, threatens Red Sea shipping. Unconfirmed reports of one-week Lebanon ceasefire about to take effect.




//-->

//-->

//-->


US x Iran permanent peace deal by April 30, 2026?
Yes 33% · No 68%View full market & trade on Polymarket *  *  *

Big Iran Overture in the Works?

A status quo compromise emerging? The latest to hit the newswires:


IRAN COULD CONSIDER SHIPS BEING ABLE TO SAIL THROUGH OMAN SIDE OF STRAIT OF HORMUZ WITHOUT INTERFERENCE OR ATTACK AS PART OF A DEAL WITH THE US: REUTERS, CITING SOURCE CLOSE TO TEHRAN

IRAN WILL MAINTAIN CONTROL OVER ITS WATERS IN THE STRAIT OF HORMUZ AND OMAN WILL DECIDE ABOUT ITS OWN SIDE OF THE WATERWAY - SOURCE CLOSE TO TEHRAN


Iran has just signaled willingness to allow strait traffic pass unconditionally on the Oman side of the strait, perhaps as a face-saving measure, amid talk of a 2nd Pakistan peace summit being put together, as a potential uneasy status quo emerges.



Iran Halts Petrochemical Exports

Is Trump's blockade working?


IRAN HALTS PETROCHEMICAL EXPORTS UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE: ISNA


CNBC also in a breaking headline writes:  Iran halts all petrochemical exports ‘until further notice,’ Iranian state media reports. This comes after a new Pentagon warning to all vessels stuck in the Strait of Hormuz.

CENTCOM Updates Tanker Numbers amid Blockade

CENTCOM provides a Wednesday update: "During the first 48 hours of the U.S. blockade on ships entering and exiting Iranian ports, no vessels have made it past U.S. forces. Additionally, 9 vessels have complied with direction from U.S. forces to turn around and return toward an Iranian port or coastal area."

A big question remains: will Iran confront the US blockade militarily?... or will an uneasy status quo of limited vessel traffic continue to make it through Hormuz amid a potentially extended ceasefire that goes beyond the 2-week window?

A new warning from the White House/CENTCOM:


The White House and the U.S. military published a clip of a warning to ships, telling them not to breach the blockade of Iranian ports and coastal areas. In a maritime radio message, a U.S. servicemember tells ships that they will be boarded for interdiction and seizure if they attempt to travel to or from an Iranian port.



U.S. naval vessels are on patrol in the Gulf of Oman as CENTCOM continues to execute a U.S. blockade on ships entering and departing Iranian ports. U.S. forces are present, vigilant, and ready to ensure compliance. pic.twitter.com/dnHR2oz0ZN
— U.S. Central Command (@CENTCOM) April 15, 2026
Meanwhile in Tehran...


Footage of Iran's Foreign Minister Seyyed Abbas Araghchi welcoming Pakistan's Chief of Army Staff Field Marshal Syed Asim Munir upon his arrival in Tehran.
Follow Press TV on Telegram: https://t.co/LWoNSpkc2J pic.twitter.com/32pF6ONkiZ
— Press TV 🔻 (@PressTV) April 15, 2026
'Progress' Reported in US-Iran Contacts

Axios reports that US and Iranian negotiators "made progress in talks on Tuesday" while moving closer to a framework agreement to end the war, according to two US officials. The headline briefly pushed oil lower. This comes as Pakistan's top general headed a high-ranking political-security delegation from Pakistan to convey the US message and plan the second round of talks to Tehran. Per details in Axios:

"They were on the phone and backchanneling with all the countries and they are getting closer," the U.S. official said.
A second U.S. official confirmed progress was made Tuesday.
"We want to make a deal. And parts of their government want to make a deal. Now the trick is to get the whole of government over there to make the deal," a third U.S. official said.
Meanwhile, state Tasnim is reporting that Pakistan is getting ready to host the second round of Iran-US talks.

Lebanon Ceasefire Imminent? 

The Hezbollah-affiliated Al-Mayadeen channel, citing a senior Iranian source, reports that a ceasefire in Lebanon will begin tonight. "The duration of the ceasefire will be one week and will extend until the end of the ceasefire period between Iran and the United States."

However, there's been no confirmation of this from Israel or the US, or in Israeli media. The Lebanese government just met with Israeli officials for Rubio-sponsored talks in Washington yesterday, but there was no word of a definitive ceasefire coming from the meeting, and currently Hezbollah and Israel are not directly talking at all. It remains unclear whether this could be a sign of Lebanese officials getting Hezbollah on board with a pause in fighting.

Meanwhile, two fresh notes on the question of advancing a second round of US-Iran negotiations:

Iranian media reported that Field Marshal Asim Munir, Chief of Staff of the Pakistani Army, headed a high-ranking political-security delegation from Pakistan to convey the US message and plan the second round of talks, and is scheduled to meet with officials of the Islamic Republic.
Regional mediators are trying to extend the U.S.–Iran cease-fire and restart talks after failed negotiations in Islamabad, but no date or venue has been set. A new round is unlikely before Pakistan completes its regional diplomatic
'Very Close' To War Over, Diplomacy in Reach: Trump

The latest from Trump: The Iran war is "very close to over" with authorities in Tehran eager to agree a peace deal, President Trump claimed in a fresh interview broadcast Wednesday. "We’ve beaten them militarily, totally," Trump told Fox Business in a prerecorded interview. "I think it’s close to over, I view it as very close to over... If I pulled up stakes right now it would take them 20 years to rebuild that country, and we’re not finished." He added: "We’ll see what happens, I think they want to make a deal very badly."

This as the Associated Press has reported the US and Iran are closer to extending a ceasefire and restarting negotiations, even amid the intensifying standoff over the Strait of Hormuz as the US Navy has blockaded it for all shipping leaving Iranian ports or with ties, or under sanction.

The two sides have an "in principle agreement" to pursue further diplomacy after last weekend's failed Islamabad talks. Trump on Tuesday had optimistically cited that the next round could be just two days away. Mediators are said to be pushing for a compromise on outstanding issues including Hormuz and Iran's nuclear program before the April 7 truce expires next week, the news agency said - as they also eye the extension off the initial two weeks.


IRAN'S TASNIM: US-SANCTIONED CONTAINER SHIP GOLBON PASSED THROUGH HORMUZ pic.twitter.com/Wtca8fTZ2b
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) April 15, 2026
However, Iran's Foreign Ministry has made clear the reports about the ceasefire extension are not confirmed, while Axios' Barak Ravid similarly writes - US official tells me: "The US has not agreed to an extension of the ceasefire. There is continued engagement between the U.S. and Iran to reach a deal."

Iran meanwhile is warning that it sees a prolonging of the US blockade as "a prelude to a breach of the ceasefire," a military spokesman said, as featured state TV. Iran's military "will not permit any exports or imports to continue in the Persian Gulf, the Sea of Oman or the Red Sea" if it continues, the spokesman added. 


IRAN'S BAGHAEI: NO SPECIFIC DAY SET FOR NEW US NEGOTIATIONS

Via AP: A billboard depicting U.S. aircraft caught by Iranian armed forces in a fishing net.

 

Trump on China

President Trump says he asked his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping not to supply weapons to Iran, and Xi replied he was not doing so. "I had heard that China’s giving weapons to, I mean - you’re seeing it all over the place - to Iran," Trump also said in the aforementioned Fox Business interview.

"And I wrote him a letter asking him not to do that, and he wrote me a letter saying that essentially he’s not doing that." Major media outlets previously reported that US intelligence indicated China was preparing to ship advanced weaponry to Iran. Beijing's public rejection of the "baseless smear" - as the Foreign Minister called it - has indeed been swift and vehement.

With oil prices remaining elevated, with Brent crude trading about 33% higher than before the start of the war, Trump has issued a new Truth Social claiming China is "very happy that I am permanently opening the Strait of Hormuz." This even though in many cases it is China bound tankers being blocked and turned back by the US naval armada. "This situation will never happen again," Trump added. He is set to meet with Xi in Beijing on May 14-15. On this he wrote that "President Xi will give me a big, fat, hug when I get there in a few weeks. We are going working together smartly, and very well!" But then Trump says "But remember, we are very good at fighting, if we have to..."



More Troops Sent to Mideast

The Washington Post is out with a new report of more troops being sent to the theatre. "The Pentagon is sending thousands of additional troops into the Middle East in the coming days, as the Trump administration attempts to pressure Iran into a deal that could end the weeks long conflict there while considering the possibility of additional strikes or ground operations if a fragile ceasefire deal does not hold."

Already a combined estimated ten thousand US sailors, Marines, and personnel - on at least a dozen US warships, are maintaining the Trump-ordered blockade on Hormuz. So Washington continues to try and build leverage, also with the announced additional forces being prepped, while also sounding optimistic on a potential peace deal - thought to two sides are very far apart especially on the nuclear issue.

Trump has at times still shrugged off the importance of a final peace deal, having told ABC News that while an official peace agreement may not be necessary, "I think a deal is preferable because then they can rebuild." He had said, "They really do have a different regime now. No matter what, we took out the radicals."


Trump:
I wrote a letter to Xi. I asked him not to give Iran weapons. He wrote me a letter, and he is saying that he is essentially not doing that. pic.twitter.com/yrTT9Dwi2V
— Clash Report (@clashreport) April 15, 2026
Tehran (& Houthis) Threaten Red Sea Trade as Lebanon Fighting Persists

Iran's army warned it will block trade through the Red Sea, the Persian Gulf, and the Sea of Oman if the US naval blockade on Iranian ports continues. In a statement carried by Iranian state television, the head of the military's central command center said the "powerful armed forces of the Islamic Republic will not allow any exports or imports to continue in the Persian Gulf, the Sea of Oman and the Red Sea."

According to more via Al Jazeera, he added that Iran will "act decisively to defend its national sovereignty and its interests." One key factor which has outraged Iran is Israel's continued major attacks on Lebanon, after last Wednesday's massive aerial attack on Beirut and elsewhere which left over 300 dead. Israel on Wednesday said that Hezbollah fired 40 rockets into Israel earlier in the morning.

An Israeli drone strike on the Jiyeh road, Lebanon



More Geopolitical Headlines

via Newsquawk...

Effort to extend US-Iran ceasefire has made progress, AP reports citing official; mediators aim to extend the ceasefire for at least another two weeks; both sides gave an “in principle agreement” to extend the ceasefire.
Discussions are underway regarding possible extension of temporary ceasefire between Iran and US, according to Arab diplomatic sources cited by Russia on Wednesday and being reported by Chinese press CCTV.
However, US President Trump said it could end either way, but thinks a deal is preferable because then Iran can rebuild, also said he isn't thinking about extending the ceasefire and doesn't think it will be necessary, according to reported citing ABC reporter on X.
The Pentagon is sending thousands of additional troops into the Middle East in the coming days, WaPo reports citing US officials; in a bid to pressure Iran while mulling the possibility of additional strikes or ground operations if the ceasefire breaks.
US President Trump said it's "very possible" a deal with Iran will be reached by the time the King visits the US later this month (27-29th April), Sky News reported.
US President Trump said he views the war being very close to over, according to Fox News.
US VP Vance said we are negotiating with Iran and ceasefire is holding, adds Iranian negotiators wanted to make a deal.
Feel good about where we are.
Lot of mistrust between the US and Iran, can't be solved overnight.
US Vice President JD Vance is expected to lead a potential second round of talks with Iranian officials should negotiations lead to another face-to-face meeting before the ceasefire expires next week, according to sources familiar cited by CNN.
Pakistan leadership’s overseas tour until April 18th dims prospects of US-Iran talks in Islamabad before April 18th, Pakistani journalist Mallick reported.
Iran is to use alternative ports to those in southern Iran to bypass the US blockade in the Strait, Mehr News reported.
An Iranian VLCC (Very Large Crude Carrier), which was on the US sanctions list, entered the waters of Iran past the US blockade, Fars reported.
Iran secretly acquired a Chinese spy satellite that gave the Islamic republic a powerful new capability to target US military bases across the Middle East during the recent war, according to an FT investigation.
US Central Command said blockade of Iranian ports has been fully implemented and that US forces have completely halted economic trade going into and out of Iran by sea.
US has intercepted eight Iran-linked oil tankers since the start of the blockade, according to WSJ.
New satellite images show Iran digging for missile launchers trapped underground amid a ceasefire, according to CNN.
More than 20 commercial ships have passed through the Strait of Hormuz in the past 24 hours, WSJ reported, citing US officials.
US destroyer interdicted two oil tankers that attempted to leave Iran on Tuesday, according to an official cited by Reuters.
US President Trump reiterates on Truth Social "NATO wasn’t there for us, and they won’t be there for us in the future!".
Europe is accelerating a NATO fallback plan in case US President Trump pulls US out of the treaty, according to WSJ.
US Pentagon is likely to trim its Iran wall funding request, according to WSJ citing Senator Coons who is the top democrat on the Senate appropriations defense committee.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 14:15

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Tax Freedom Day Underestimates How Long You Work For The Government
Tax Freedom Day Underestimates How Long You Work For The Government

Authored by Jonathan Newman via The Mises Institute,

Tax Freedom Day, calculated by the Tax Foundation, “represents how long Americans as a whole have to work in order to pay the nation’s tax burden.”



It appears that they stopped publishing this in 2019, but others have picked up where they left off.

The idea is that the income earned by taxpayers over a certain proportion of the year goes to Uncle Sam.

In 2025, that date was April 16th.

But the burden of government is much larger than the amount we pay in taxes.

The government spends much more than it collects in taxes, diverting valuable resources away from where they would be used in the private market economy, subject to the profit and loss test of the market.

The difference is made up by new government debt.

Much of that debt is purchased by the Federal Reserve with new money, resulting in price inflation, exacerbated income inequality, booms and busts, and financial fragility.

The cost of government is much more than what we pay in taxes.

Rothbard suggested a measure of “total government depredation on the economy” that involves starting with net national product (like GDP but takes capital depreciation into account) and deducting all government spending at all levels, including transfer payments, government officials’ salaries, and the salaries of those employed by government enterprises.

Rothbard considered all government activity as a depredation.

In 2025, this total fiscal burden was $11 trillion.

Net national product was $25.7 trillion, which gives us a ratio of 42.7%.

When we turn that ratio into a date on the calendar, we get June 5.

In short, while Tax Freedom Day is mid-April, Rothbard’s measure of the government’s fiscal burden reveals that Americans don’t truly start working for themselves until June 5, over seven weeks later.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 14:40

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
US and Iran in indirect talks to extend two-week ceasefire
White House feels ‘good about the prospects of a deal’ as Pakistani officials launch new round of diplomacyThe US and Iran have been in indirect talks aimed at extending the two-week ceasefire beyond its expiry on 22 April, as Pakistan’s army chief arrived in Tehran to continue mediation efforts.Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, denied on Wednesday that the US had “formally” requested to extend the two-week ceasefire but added that Washington remained “very much engaged in these negotiations”. Continue reading...

The Hill
Open 
Bush donates $5K to Cornyn Senate reelection bid
Former President George W. Bush contributed $5,000 to Sen. John Cornyn’s (R-Texas) reelection bid as the incumbent fights for his political life against Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton (R), according to campaign finance filings released Wednesday.  Bush gave $3,500 for Cornyn's primary race and $1,500 to use in the general election. Individuals are allowed to give a maximum of $3,500...

The Hill
Open 
A new Social Security COLA projection may be cause for 'worry,' senior group says
If their current projections are right, next year’s cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) for senior citizens receiving Social Security benefits could be cause for “worry,” according to The Senior Citizens League.

The Hill
Open 
What happens if you don't file taxes on time?
Tax Day is here. Ran out of time? Here's what to do.

The Hill
Open 
Leavitt says Interior will submit plans to begin construction of 250ft Trump arch
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Wednesday that plans for President Trump’s Triumphal Arch will be submitted Thursday. Leavitt, during a press briefing, told reporters the Trump administration and the Interior Department will be submitting the plans for the arch will stand 250-feet high to honor the U.S.'s 250th birthday later this year. She added...

The Hill
Open 
Driscoll shuts down social media accounts after post celebrating Duckworth 
Army Secretary Dan Driscoll ordered that all social media accounts affiliated with an Army unit be shut down after a post celebrating Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.) sparked mixed reactions online. Soldier for Life (SFL) — an Army unit that connects and helps shape and amplify services, programs and policies for soldiers, veterans and their families —...

The Hill
Open 
Leavitt denies reporting US is seeking extended ceasefire with Iran
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt denied reports on Wednesday that the U.S. is seeking an extended ceasefire with Iran. “That is not true at this moment,” Leavitt told reporters, referring to “bad reporting” that the U.S. had formally requested an extension of the ceasefire. “We remain very much engaged in these negotiations, in these...

Harvard Business Review
Open 
Scaling a Business Beyond the Family Playbook
A conversation with HBS senior lecturer Henry McGee and CEO Jessica Johnson-Cope about the challenges that come with expanding a multigenerational business in new directions.

Russia Today News
Open 
Trump claims ‘opening’ Strait of Hormuz as mediators push new US-Iran talks: What we know so far

Mail Online
Open 
Hundreds of protesters in Epsom demand description of men 'who gang raped woman outside church' as they come face-to-face with riot police in the street
People have taken to the streets of Epsom this evening as they claim police are not giving them information amid a reported rape outside a local church.

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
AI Investments Continue to Remain Key Priority for Tech Industry : Research
PwC pointed out in a research report that US business professionals have responded to a year of policy shifts, economic volatility, and technological disruption by pursuing an average of nearly four major strategic initiatives since early 2025. PwC’s April 2026 Executive Views on Policy, Risk,... Read More

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
2026 Aircraft Orders and Deliveries year to date.
Boeing Leads Airbus in Year to Date Deliveries // Massive Order Surge Bolsters Airbus Backlog // Boeing Maintains Steady Widebody Momentum

In March 2026, Airbus reclaimed the delivery lead, handing over 60 commercial aircraft, a significant recovery from its 35 deliveries in February. Despite this monthly surge, Boeing maintained a lead for the total first quarter of 2026, delivering 46 aircraft in March to bring its Q1 total to 143 aircraft, compared to Airbus’s 114 aircraft. Airbus’s performance was bolstered by a pick-up in narrowbody output, while Boeing’s volume was slightly constrained by a decrease in MAX deliveries to 33 aircraft in March. The month was also most notable for a massive divergence in order activity. Airbus booked a staggering 331 gross orders, driven by massive fleet renewal commitments from major lessors and Chinese carriers. Boeing recorded a more conservative but steady 33 gross orders, maintaining a balanced intake across its 737 and 787 programs.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
NASA Wants to Put Nuclear Reactors on the Moon
The White House has announced that NASA will work with the Departments of Defense and Energy to put nuclear reactors in orbit and on the surface of the moon.

The Right Scoop
Open 
STUPID VIDEO – Here’s what the WSJ White House reporter asked about today in press briefing
There were a ton of good questions from reporters today that covered a lot of topics, from Iran to economics and more. However, this was not one of them. The reporter for . . .

Deutsche Welle
Open 
German health minister announces billions in cutbacks
The comprehensive reform package aims to plug a multibillion-euro hole in Germany's expensive health care system. Reforms include mandatory second opinions for costly surgeries and no more coverage for homeopathy.

BBC World News
Open 
Ticketmaster-owner Live Nation has operated as a monopoly, jury finds
The lawsuit said the firm's practices had led to higher ticket prices and worse service for customers.

Ars Technica
Open 
FCC exempts Netgear from ban on foreign routers, doesn't explain why

Ars Technica
Open 
Space Force looks at moving "significant number" of launches from ULA to SpaceX

Mail Online
Open 
Met officers are charged after pregnant woman and her unborn baby were killed by unmarked police car a week before she was due to give birth
Mariam Ahmed, 38, died after the police Volvo ploughed into her car in Eltham, southeast London on October 17, 2024.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Sheff Wed to start next season with 15-point penalty, bidder told
The EFL has informed the preferred bidder for Sheffield Wednesday that the club will start next season in League One with a 15-point penalty.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Tracking the ships crossing the Strait of Hormuz
Since the start of the US blockade on Monday, 15 vessels have crossed the Strait of Hormuz, nine of which have links to Iran, BBC Verify analysis of ship-tracking data suggests.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Three paramedics killed in successive Israeli strikes in Lebanon, officials say
Lebanon's government condemns as a "flagrant crime" the killing of the paramedics, one of whom featured in a BBC report.

Mail Online
Open 
The White Lotus reveals scenic location for season four while confirming Heather Graham is starring
The White Lotus is created, written and directed by Mike White with the show executive produced by White, David Bernad and Mark Kamine.

Mail Online
Open 
Maya Jama shows off her incredible physique in a white crop top and grey jogging bottoms after launching her own matcha drink
Maya Jama showed off her incredible physique on her Instagram Story on Wednesday, after launching her own matcha drink. 

Mail Online
Open 
Met officers are charged after pregnant woman and her unborn baby were killed by unmarked police car a week before she was due to give birth
Mariam Ahmed, 38, died after the police Volvo ploughed into her car on the A20 in Eltham, southeast London on October 17, 2024.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Attempted arson attack a bid to scare British Jews, says leader of London synagogue
Met seeking two suspects and says overnight incident in Finchley being treated as antisemitic hate crimeA suspected attempted firebomb attack on a north London synagogue was a bid to intimidate British Jews, a leader at the place of worship has said, vowing that they will continue to work to “build bridges”.The Metropolitan police said a manhunt was under way after two people “wearing dark clothing and balaclavas” approached Finchley Reform Synagogue (FRS) just after midnight on Wednesday and threw a brick and two bottles suspected to contain petrol at the building. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Arsenal v Sporting: Champions League quarter-final, second leg – live
⚽ Champions League news; 8pm BST kick-off (first leg: 1-0)⚽ Bayern v Real Madrid – updates | Live scores | Mail Simon1 min: Peeeeeep! Luis Suarez gets the ball rolling.The captains exchange pennants. Sporting’s looks rubbish. Not even embroidered. It’s like they forgot their proper pennant and had to buy one from a dodgy bloke outside the ground. It’s less a pennant than an insult. Continue reading...

Gizmodo
Open 
Berklee College of Music Offers AI Course, Students Are Pissed
Students want to give 'Bots and Beats' the boot.

Gizmodo
Open 
The Canceled ‘Knight of the Seven Kingdoms’ Filming Likely Won’t Stop It Coming Out Next Year
Fear not, Dunk and Egg fans, season two should still arrive right on time in 2027.

Russia Today News
Open 
Fury over fuel: protests across Northern Ireland (VIDEOS)

Guardian F1
Open 
Unhappy Verstappen ‘has to be listened to’ over new rules, says F1 chief Domenicali
Red Bull driver outspoken about regulation changes ‘In a meeting he was very keen to give suggestions’Formula One must listen to Max Verstappen’s grievances about the sport’s new regulations and their effects on racing, according to F1’s CEO, Stefano Domenicali. His intervention comes as key players hold meetings to consider adjusting the rules for the remainder of the season.Verstappen has been outspoken in his dissatisfaction with the new formula and the part energy management now plays in preventing being able to race flat-out. The four-time champion is not alone in his feelings with other drivers also critical of the deployment and recharging of electrical energy. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Biometric checks after 179 prisoners released in error in year to March
New data shows 179 prisoners were set free in error from prisons in the year to March.

BBC World News
Open 
Frank Gardner: What is China's role in the Iran war?
BBC Security Correspondent Frank Gardner explains how the world's second-largest economy fits into the Gulf conflict.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Suspect accused of planting pipe bombs on eve of January 6 faces new charges
Brian Cole Jr, accused of planting the devices near the RNC and DNC buildings in DC, faces two more felony countsThe individual accused of placing pipe bombs near the headquarters of both the Republican and Democratic national committees on the night before the January 6 Capitol attack is now facing two more felony counts, as detailed in a newly released indictment on Wednesday.Brian Cole Jr, 30, of Woodbridge, Virginia, had previously been arrested in December and charged with transporting and positioning two improvised explosive devices outside the DNC and RNC buildings. The updated indictment introduces charges of attempting to use weapons of mass destruction and carrying out an act of terrorism while armed. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Pitt and Game of Thrones spinoff given age ratings as BBFC deploys new AI tool
Regulator says tool, which creates reports for humans to review, has helped classify entire UK catalogue of HBO MaxTV shows including The Pitt and a Game of Thrones spinoff have received age ratings in the UK after the British Board of Film Classification deployed AI to help flag contentious scenes.The BBFC developed a tool to identify content that triggers compliance issues, such as violence, nudity and bad language. The flagged scenes were then passed over to BBFC staff for human review. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Attempted arson attack a bid to scare British Jews, says leader of London synagogue
Met seeking two suspects and says overnight incident in Finchley being treated as antisemitic hate crimeA suspected attempted firebomb attack on a north London synagogue was a bid to intimidate British Jews, a leader at the place of worship has said, vowing that they would continue to work to “build bridges”.The Metropolitan police said a manhunt was under wayafter two people “wearing dark clothing and balaclavas” approached Finchley Reform Synagogue (FRS) just after midnight on Wednesday and threw a brick and two bottles suspected to contain petrol at the building. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Bayern Munich v Real Madrid: Champions League quarter-final, second leg – live
⚽ Champions League news; 8pm BST kick-off (first leg: 2-1)⚽ Arsenal v Sporting – updates | Live scores | Mail Michael“Yes Neuer is a great keeper, but when you pitch him against Yashin, Banks, you’re really not comparing like with like,” emails Jeremy Boyce. “Chalk and cheese. Yashin, famously, could pick the ball up off the ground with one hand. Banks was a genius, saw him live once, crap match, Everton v Stoke, 0-0, the only moment of magic was a save he made. Neither of these would have been able to ‘play out from the back’ or any of that because it was a different game then. You could still pass back to the keeper! Neuer is great, but really? Up there with those greats from a bygone age? If you’re looking for a great German goalkeeper how about Trautmann as the GGKOAT ? How many others have played on with a broken neck?No doubting that Trautmann is a legend for different reasons but he doesn’t touch Kahn or Sepp Maier, never mind Neuer. However, Jeremy does make a good point in comparing players from such different eras. It’s effectively impossible, as it was a completely different game and is just a subjective choice. But I’d have 1. Yashin 2. Neuer 3. Buffon (for what it’s worth). Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Arsenal v Sporting: Champions League quarter-final, second leg – live
⚽ Champions League news; 8pm BST kick-off (first leg: 1-0)⚽ Bayern v Real Madrid – updates | Live scores | Mail Simon“Aren’t we all loving the latest in the ‘Carry On’ series, Carry On Arsenal,” writes Jeremy Boyce, who’s clearly got his finger on the cultural pulse. Zeitgeist, consider yourself nailed. “Honestly, you really couldn’t make it up, except they manage to do so and put out a new edition every year. As a neutral it’s totally titterworthy watching them blow everything they’re going for, Frankie Howard would be proud of them. Arteta is perfect for the James Robertson Justice role, always believing they’re going in the right direction. Rice is Sid James, streetwise and smoking crafty fag wondering how it’s all gone so wrong. Kenneth Williams? Charles Hawtree? Dowman is clearly the outlier Jim Dale figure, entertaining, slight, light, peripheral but influential. Their problem is the Hattie Jacques weight of expectation that may ultimately be a burden too heavy to bear. She was a great performer, are they?”Mikel Arteta has an extremely unrevealing chat with TNT Sport. “We know the opportunity that we have, so we’re very excited for the game,” he says. “We need to be more efficient than we were [on Saturday],” he adds. On his squad’s fitness issues, he says: “To be fair, all the boys are desperate to play.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Reeves tells Americans Trump’s Iran war is a ‘mistake’
UK chancellor steps up criticism, telling Washington event she is unconvinced conflict has made world a safer placeMiddle East crisis – live updatesRachel Reeves has stepped up her criticism of Donald Trump’s war on Iran, describing it as a “mistake” that has destabilised the global economy and damaged living standards around the world.In a marked fraying of the transatlantic relationship, the British chancellor said Trump breaking off from diplomatic talks with Iran and launching airstrikes seemed to have left the president in a worse place than he started. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Adele 'makes a surprise return to the recording studio' after five-year music hiatus as plans for her new career move are revealed
The singer, 37, is reportedly back in the recording studio, five years after the release of her award-winning album 30.

Mail Online
Open 
Margot Robbie keeps a low profile in a bucket hat as she enjoys a luxury day out with pal Phoebe Tonkin at celebrity hotspot Club 55 in Saint-Tropez
Margot Robbie and Phoebe Tonkin enjoyed a luxury day out at celebrity hotspot Club 55 in Saint-Tropez on Wednesday. 

Mail Online
Open 
Bride-to-be Roxy Horner kisses Jack Whitehall as they say their final goodbye while her dress is carried out to a taxi ahead of their star-studded wedding this weekend
The bride-to-be kissed Jack Whitehall goodbye as she hopped into a taxi ahead of their wedding on Wednesday.

BBC World News
Open 
Three paramedics killed in successive Israeli strikes in Lebanon, officials say
Lebanon's governments condemns as a "flagrant crime" the killing of the paramedics, one of whom featured in a BBC report.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Suspect accused of planting pipe bombs on eve of January 6 faces new charges
Brain Cole Jr, accused of planting the devices near the RNC and DNC buildings in DC, faces two more felony countsThe individual accused of placing pipe bombs near the headquarters of both the Republican and Democratic national committees on the night before the January 6 Capitol attack is now facing two more felony counts, as detailed in a newly released indictment on Wednesday.Brian Cole Jr, 30, of Woodbridge, Virginia, had previously been arrested in December and charged with transporting and positioning two improvised explosive devices outside the DNC and RNC buildings. The updated indictment introduces charges of attempting to use weapons of mass destruction and carrying out an act of terrorism while armed. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
North Wales police threaten to ban people who call about bins and noisy kids
Decision to seek contact ban orders for people who repeatedly call about non-criminal matters is believed to be UK firstPeople who call to complain about their neighbours could face a contact ban for wasting police resources, a police force has said.In a social media post on the weekend, North Wales police (NWP) said they had responded to four antisocial behaviour callouts in 24 hours for disputes such as “neighbours who don’t put their bins away or kids playing in the garden making too much noise during the day”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Bayern Munich v Real Madrid: Champions League quarter-final, second leg – live
⚽ Champions League news; 8pm BST kick-off (first leg: 2-1)⚽ Arsenal v Sporting – updates | Live scores | Mail MichaelLast week, we saw the worst and best of Trent Alexander-Arnold. The English right-back allowed Luis Diaz to wriggle free (after an admittedly excellent through ball from Gnabry) to score Bayern’s opener in Madrid, and looked a little nervy in the first half, but he was full of running after half time and got forward well before a world-class assist for Mbappé to get Real back into the tie.I’m not convinced that he should be England’s starting right-back at the World Cup (Reece James surely, assuming he is fit), but it would be madness not to take him in the squad. He’s a unique footballer and if England are chasing a game and need a goal, he can provide a moment of magic. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Arsenal v Sporting: Champions League quarter-final, second leg – live
⚽ Champions League news; 8pm BST kick-off (first leg: 1-0)⚽ Bayern v Real Madrid – updates | Live scores | Mail SimonMikel Arteta has an extremely unrevealing chat with TNT Sport. “We know the opportunity that we have, so we’re very excited for the game,” he says. “We need to be more efficient than we were [on Saturday],” he adds. On his squad’s fitness issues, he says: “To be fair, all the boys are desperate to play.”It’s a curious thing, this training top: in photos those vertical stripes are very bright, on the TV (mine, at least) they’re very subtle. I haven’t seen one in the flesh to know the truth of it. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
SantaCon organiser charged with stealing $1m from charity pub crawl
Prosecutors say Stefan Pildes spent hundreds of thousands of $2.7m raised for charity on personal expenses.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Should talks resume, can Trump secure a better nuclear deal with Iran than Obama did in 2015?
The 2015 Iran deal curbed Tehran's nuclear program until the US pulled out. After years of failed diplomacy and 40 days of war, talks are back on. Donald Trump has said he can strike a "better" deal than Barack Obama.

TechRadar News
Open 
How to watch Bayern Munich vs Real Madrid: live stream Champions League quarter-final 2nd leg from anywhere, team news

TechRadar News
Open 
Claude was down — here's everything we know

TechRadar News
Open 
'If these centers aren’t thoughtfully planned and coordinated, they can place extraordinary demands on electric infrastructure, the surrounding environment and host communities': Maine becomes first US state to pass data centre construction ban

Atlas Obscura
Open 
Mount Asahi in Higashikawa, Japan

Digital Trends
Open 
Adobe Firefly AI will let you edit in creative software by just talking your way through it
Adobe's new Firefly AI Assistant lets you describe what you want and handles the rest, across Photoshop, Premiere, Lightroom, Illustrator, and more, all from one chat.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Tim Cook is back to buying Nike stock, four months after an ill-timed purchase
Apple CEO Tim Cook, a longtime Nike board member, spent $1 million of his own money to buy Nike’s stock as it dipped to a 12-year low.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Most retirees want to age in their own homes — but they’re not factoring in these hidden costs
As many as 77% of people age 50 and older want to age in place. It might not be worth it.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
CoreWeave sees a $7 billion win from an unconventional customer. Financial firms want AI chips, too.
The arrangement shows that computing is increasingly relevant to the financial sector.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Here’s where to find the cheapest gas in America right now — up to 34 cents a gallon below the national average
Americans are already biking to work, pooling trips and adjusting travel plans, MarketWatch has reported. Those who can are looking for cheaper gas prices in their area.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Who were the winners this tax season? People who took advantage of the bigger SALT deduction.
The expanded deduction has led to hefty refunds, especially for homeowners in Democrat-leaning states.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Iran war is a major source of uncertainty for U.S. businesses, Fed’s ‘beige book’ says
U.S. businesses are pulling back from making major decisions due to uncertainty stemming from the war with Iran, according to the Federal Reserve’s latest report on regional economies, known as the “beige book.”

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Is Tesla a chip stock now? Investors are cheering a semiconductor milestone.
The AI5 chip, which Tesla says will power humanoid robots and supercomputers, has completed a critical step.

Boing Boing
Open 
Tom the Dancing Bug: Dementia Donnie's genius, Jesus-like strategy for dealing with his roommate
Tom the Dancing Bug: Dementia Donnie at war with his roommate
-> Please join the team that makes it possible for your friendly neighborhood comic strip Tom the Dancing Bug to exist in this hostile Trumpverse! JOIN US IN THE INNER HIVE, and be the first kid on your block to get each week's Tom the Dancing Bug comic – before it's published anywhere. — Read the rest
The post Tom the Dancing Bug: Dementia Donnie's genius, Jesus-like strategy for dealing with his roommate appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Elden Ring movie now in full production, according to set leaks
Well, that was quick. Relatively, that is. It's been almost a year since 28 Days Later and Civil War alum Alex Garland announced his Elden Ring movie with A24, but in Hollywood time that's about five seconds. Supposedly, the movie's production is in full swing, at least according to an eagle-eyed TikTok user who's spotted set construction in the UK. — Read the rest
The post Elden Ring movie now in full production, according to set leaks appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
The retro toy I can't stop listening to
This spinny toy video tickles my brain in the perfect way. The sounds are heavenly, and I want to play them on repeat in my headphones.
The spinning colors and creatures are also visually wonderful. The carousel has a yellow chick in the middle, with smaller chicks below that bobble their heads up and down. — Read the rest
The post The retro toy I can't stop listening to appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
The Strait of Hormuz won't be a problem after Grandpa Pudding Brains renames it
The Orange Menace gave another clear demonstration of his mental prowess in an interview with softball-slinging Maria Bartiromo. Unable to answer simple questions and wandering off on odd tangents, Trump takes credit for NASA, and thinks that if he renames the Strait from Hormuz to Trump, people will forget about soaring gas prices. — Read the rest
The post The Strait of Hormuz won't be a problem after Grandpa Pudding Brains renames it appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
What happens when an artist draws faces on the rocks she finds?
Artist Aris Moore draws quiet, moody faces on stones, and each one uses the rock's own texture, shape, and indentations as part of the face. A crack becomes a nose. A worn edge becomes a jawline. A dimple becomes a half-closed eye. — Read the rest
The post What happens when an artist draws faces on the rocks she finds? appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Yoshi popcorn buckets are being repurposed in the funniest ways imaginable
These souvenir Yoshi popcorn buckets have all been repurposed in creative and funny ways. There's no rule requiring these containers from the Super Mario Galaxy movie to be used for popcorn, so why not use them for other storage?
The first photo is clearly the winner. — Read the rest
The post Yoshi popcorn buckets are being repurposed in the funniest ways imaginable appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Disneyland's Han Solo looks like Kyle MacLachlan wandered in from another franchise
In an attempt to garner more attention for Star Wars: Galaxy's Edge, Disneyland has decided to stop leaning on the unpopular generation of in-park characters and introduce some from the popular original trilogy. This Han Solo, however, looks even less like Han Solo than the one cast in the forgotten, standalone Han Solo movie. — Read the rest
The post Disneyland's Han Solo looks like Kyle MacLachlan wandered in from another franchise appeared first on Boing Boing.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Bayern Munich v Real Madrid: Champions League quarter-final, second leg – live
⚽ Champions League news; 8pm BST kick-off (first leg: 2-1)⚽ Arsenal v Sporting – updates | Live scores | Mail MichaelRe the best goalkeepers of all time, here’s an email from Robin Sebastian Fjeldstad.“Rogério Ceni has 129 goals in 1209 games. Neuer has 0 goals in 822 games. Debate over.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Arsenal v Sporting: Champions League quarter-final, second leg – live
⚽ Champions League news; 8pm BST kick-off (first leg: 1-0)⚽ Bayern v Real Madrid – updates | Live scores | Mail SimonIt’s a curious thing, this training top: in photos those vertical stripes are very bright, on the TV (mine, at least) they’re very subtle. I haven’t seen one in the flesh to know the truth of it.An email! “Barry Glendenning is absolutely right - Arteta’s anxiety and stress has rubbed off on his players and that is why they are losing,” writes Jeff Sax. “He lacks the composure and confidence that Pep for example has.” I think there’s some truth to this, but I’m also just not completely convinced by this squad. I mean, it’s really good. But it’s not great, and the real issue is that when the players look around the dressing room, that’s also what they think. They look like they don’t truly believe they can win the league, and perhaps the only thing that can convince them they’re a title-winning squad is actually winning the title. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Palestinian leader Marwan Barghouti facing ‘escalating abuse’ in Israeli jails
‘Palestine’s Mandela’ suffers three recent attacks including assault where prison guards set a dog on him, lawyer saysThe jailed Palestinian leader Marwan Barghouti is at immediate risk in Israeli jails, where he has been attacked three times in as many weeks, including in one assault last month where prison guards set a dog on the 66-year-old, his lawyer has said.Barghouti is often called Palestine’s Nelson Mandela. He is respected across otherwise feuding Palestinian factions, has broad popular support across occupied Palestine, repeatedly engaged with Israeli officials before his detention and long backed a two-state solution. Continue reading...

Slashdot
Open 
Snapchat Blames AI As It Cuts 1,000 Jobs
Snap is laying off about 1,000 employees, or 16% of its workforce, while closing 300 open roles as it tries to cut costs and push toward profitability with more AI-driven efficiency. "While these changes are necessary to realize Snap's long-term potential, we believe that rapid advancements in artificial intelligence enable our teams to reduce repetitive work, increase velocity, and better support our community, partners, and advertisers," CEO Evan Spiegel wrote in a memo, which was included in the company's 8-K filing (PDF). "We have already witnessed small squads leveraging AI tools to drive meaningful progress across several important initiatives." The Verge reports: The changes are expected to save Snap $500 million by the second half of 2026. Snap had about 5,261 full-time employees as of December 2025, and now joins the growing list of tech companies that have already announced significant layoffs this year, including Meta, Amazon, Oracle, GoPro, and Jack Dorsey's Block.

"Last fall, I described Snap as facing a crucible moment, requiring a new way of working that is faster and more efficient, while pivoting towards profitable growth," Spiegel wrote. "Over the past several months, we have carefully reviewed the work required to best serve our community and partners, and made tough choices to prioritize the investments we believe are most likely to create long-term value."





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Planet PostgreSQL
Open 
Hubert 'depesz' Lubaczewski: Waiting for PostgreSQL 19 – Online enabling and disabling of data checksums
On 3rd of April 2026, Daniel Gustafsson committed patch: Online enabling and disabling of data checksums   This allows data checksums to be enabled, or disabled, in a running cluster without restricting access to the cluster during processing.   Data checksums could prior to this only be enabled during initdb or when the cluster is … Continue reading "Waiting for PostgreSQL 19 – Online enabling and disabling of data checksums"

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Ekitike to miss rest of season and World Cup - Deschamps
France manager Didier Deschamps confirms striker Hugo Ekitike will miss the rest of the season and World Cup after suffering a suspected Achilles injury during Liverpool's Champions League quarter-final defeat by Paris St-Germain on Tuesday.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Iran war: White House mulling fresh talks with Tehran
The Trump administration is considering plans for a second round of in-person talks between the US and Iran in Pakistan, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said. DW has the latest.

The Verge
Open 
Microsoft counters the MacBook Neo with freebies for students
Apple's $599 MacBook Neo ($499 for students) has sent shockwaves through the PC ecosystem, and now Microsoft is responding with deals targeting students in the US. A new "Microsoft College Offer" is launching today, which will see the software giant bundle 12 months of free Microsoft 365 Premium and Xbox Game Pass Ultimate with select […]

The Verge
Open 
Google launches a Gemini AI app on Mac
Google is launching a new Gemini app on Mac that allows you to interact with the AI assistant without switching windows on your desktop. With the app, you can use the Option + Space shortcut to pull up a floating chat bubble, where you can ask Gemini questions and share your window. Before sharing your […]

The Verge
Open 
Ikea’s smart donut lamp is a sweet treat
Ikea's popular Varmblixt lamp just got a smart home glow-up. The delightfully bulbous light now features color-changing, dimming, and smart home control. I tested the new smart lamp in my daughter's room and found it made a great bedside lamp and added a fun touch of ambiance to her space. While she's rarely a fan […]

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Hungary’s prime minister-elect vows to suspend ‘propaganda machine’ state media
Péter Magyar compares media coverage to Nazi-era Germany and aims to ‘restore its public service character’Hungary’s prime minister-elect has vowed to suspend state media news coverage, describing it as a “propaganda machine,” when his government takes office around mid-May.Péter Magyar, whose landslide election victory on Sunday brought an end to Viktor Orbán’s 16 years in power, detailed his plans for the suspension as he gave two tense interviews to public radio and television on Wednesday. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Slot’s misplaced positivity does not tally with harsh reality of Liverpool’s season | Andy Hunter
Return of Alexander Isak is all well and good, but it will not redeem a season of sustained underperformance“The failure is big,” said Ryan Gravenberch as he digested the Champions League defeat by Paris Saint-Germain that ensured Liverpool’s season will finish trophyless. It was a more appropriate description of the team’s plight than Arne Slot’s insistence the future looks bright and a reality the head coach cannot avoid whether Champions League qualification for next season is secured or not. As it must be.Failure is unthinkable for a club whose business model depends on its lucrative revenue streams and a team that 12 months ago was about to win the Premier League title at a canter and then remodelled to the tune of almost £450m. With the top five all qualifying, Chelsea fading from the conversation under Liam Rosenior and a five-point advantage over Brentford and Everton with six games to play, it would be a humiliating final blow for Liverpool to miss out. Slot’s defence for getting a third season to manage Liverpool’s transition would be holed. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
LIV Golf meeting in New York fuels speculation over rebel tour’s future
Senior leadership not in Mexico City for LIV tournamentSaudi focus now more on football and esportLIV Golf executives have been called to a meeting in New York amid growing speculation over the future of the Saudi Arabia-funded rebel tour.Rumours that LIV could soon be shut down had begun to circulate on social media on Tuesday evening with officials from the tour declining to respond. LIV’s next event in Mexico City will begin as planned on Thursday, although as first reported by the Daily Telegraph, the tour’s senior leadership were all absent having been diverted to New York. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Bayern Munich v Real Madrid: Champions League quarter-final, second leg – live
⚽ Champions League news; 8pm BST kick-off (first leg: 2-1)⚽ Arsenal v Sporting – updates | Live scores | Mail MichaelIs Manuel Neuer the greatest goalkeeper of all time? Probably not, that honour is still with Lev Yashin (I think), but the German is (for me) a comfortable second. Neuer made nine saves in the first leg of this tie – two of them were stunning stops – and proved again that he is still one of the best goalkeepers in the world at the age of 40. Other keepers have played into their forties, but it has felt like something of a gimmick. Neuer is still playing at the highest level because he’s simply too good to leave out.His quality, trophy cabinet, longevity and the innovation that he has brought to the game (particularly in his early years) in terms of coming out from goal and playing out with his feet sees him (in my opinion) move ahead of other greats like Casillas, Buffon, Banks, Zoff, Schmeichel. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Sexual harassment is rife on comedy circuit and women lack protections, MPs told
Women using informal warning systems to protect themselves and others, comedian tells equalities committeeSexual harassment and abuse on the comedy circuit is persistent and under-reported, with protections available to women often limited or absent, a comedian has told MPs.Performers and campaigners said many female comedians are left to rely on informal warning systems to try to keep themselves safe but added that these systems can expose women to further risks. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Reeves tells Americans Trump’s Iran war is a ‘mistake’
UK chancellor steps up criticism, telling Washington event she is unconvinced conflict has made world a safer placeMiddle East crisis – live updatesRachel Reeves has stepped up her criticism of Donald Trump’s war on Iran, describing it as a “mistake” that has destabilised the global economy and damaged living standards around the world.In a marked fraying of the transatlantic relationship, the British chancellor said Trump breaking off from diplomatic talks with Iran and launching airstrikes seemed to have left the president in a worse place that he started. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
BBC to cut up to 2,000 jobs
The BBC will cut up to 2,000 jobs as part of its biggest downsize in 15 years.

UK Government News
Open 
Martyn's Law guidance published to help businesses
New guidance published to help organisations and businesses prepare for terrorist threats and protect lives.

UK Government News
Open 
1,200 UK jobs supported by nearly £900 million defence deal to keep military helicopters mission-ready
More than 1,000 jobs have been secured through a new contract to help sustain Army Apache and RAF Chinook helicopters.

UK Government News
Open 
Government drives forward its 150-day clinical trial target
NHS patients get faster access to groundbreaking treatments as government drives forward 150-day clinical trial target

UK Government News
Open 
Digital overhaul of prison system to drive down release errors
Shocking accidental prisoner releases to be stamped out, as the Government moves to digitalise the archaic paper-based prison system.

UK Government News
Open 
Asylum hotels close as government scales up use of large sites
Eleven more asylum hotels have been returned to communities nationwide, with further closures coming soon as the Home Office ends their use for good.

UK Government News
Open 
Spring into the Mendip National Nature Reserve
April to early June is the prime window to experience the reserve's spectacular wildflowers and wildlife

UK Government News
Open 
Letter from the Secretary of State for Business and Trade to the Business and Trade Committee: 2 April 2026
Letter from the Rt Hon Peter Kyle MP, the Secretary of State for Business and Trade, to the Rt Hon Liam Byrne MP, Chair of the Business and Trade Committee.

UK Government News
Open 
Change of Nuclear Decommissioning Authority Chair
Nuclear Decommissioning Authority group Chair to step down to focus on other existing and potential future board roles.

UK Government News
Open 
Environment Agency secures £2.35m for environmental improvements
The Environment Agency has secured £2.35 million from Yorkshire Water for environmental improvements following a series of pollution incidents.

UK Government News
Open 
The United Kingdom remains concerned by the deteriorating humanitarian situation in the Great Lakes region: UK statement at the UN Security Council
Statement by Jennifer MacNaughtan, UK Minister Counsellor, at the Security Council meeting on the Great Lakes Region.

UK Government News
Open 
Donna Ockenden appointed to chair Sussex maternity review
Bereaved families to get answers they deserve

The Hill
Open 
Warnock on Vance's warning to pope: 'This is how fascists talk'
Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-Ga.) on Tuesday slammed Vice President Vance's warning to Pope Leo XIV for criticizing the U.S.-Israeli conflict in Iran, branding it "how fascists talk." Vance addressed the pope's feud with President Trump during an event with Turning Point USA (TPUSA) in Athens, Ga. The vice president said the pontiff needs to be "careful" in...

The Hill
Open 
IMF warns Iran War could lead to recession — even with quick end 
Even if you don’t care about geopolitics, this is now about your wallet.  

The Hill
Open 
Madonna announces 'Confessions II' release date, reveals covers of 15th album
The Queen of Pop is back.

The Hill
Open 
Watch live: Melania Trump joins House roundtable to talk foster care reform
First lady Melania Trump will participate in a roundtable before the House Ways and Means Committee on Wednesday afternoon as part of the Trump administration's effort to reform the foster care system. Trump's "Fostering the Future" initiative focuses on securing educational opportunities and scholarships for children in foster care. The Ways and Means Committee has...

The Hill
Open 
Kelly says he's 'undecided' on 2028 presidential bid
Sen. Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.) on Wednesday said he’s still “undecided” about a 2028 presidential bid amid months in the spotlight opposing the Trump administration.  “I will make a decision about that, and so far I’m undecided,” he said at the Semafor World Economy conference in Washington, D.C.  “I make all kinds of decisions every day...

The Hill
Open 
Bessent suggests US could see $3 gas between June 20 and September 20
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told reporters at the White House press briefing on Wednesday that Americans could start seeing $3 gas prices “sooner rather than later” depending on how negotiations to open Iran’s Strait of Hormuz end up playing out. “It’s bank week here in DC, so I’ve been meeting with a lot of my...

The Hill
Open 
King Charles, Queen Camilla unveil itinerary for upcoming US visit
The British monarchy on Tuesday released the official itinerary for King Charles’s and Queen Camilla’s upcoming trip to the U.S. The royal couple is set to travel to the U.S. at the end of April through early May, and it comes at a particularly tense period between President Trump and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer...

Techdirt
Open 
Daily Deal: Geekey Multi-Tool
Geekey is an innovative, compact multi-tool like nothing seen before. It’s truly a work of art with engineering that combines everyday common tools into one sleek little punch that delivers endless capability. Geekey features many common tools that have been used for decades and proven essential for everyday fixes. It’s on sale for $23. Note: […]

Techdirt
Open 
Judge Tosses Trump’s Ridiculous $10 Billion Defamation Suit Against Rupert Murdoch
Back in January of last year, the Wall Street Journal published a story about a leather-bound birthday book that Ghislaine Maxwell had assembled for Jeffrey Epstein’s 50th birthday in 2003. The book included letters from various associates, and one of them bore Donald Trump’s name. According to the article, it featured a hand-drawn outline of […]

ZDNet News
Open 
Microsoft's Windows 11 laptop deal for students comes with a $500 bonus - what's included
This Microsoft back-to-school offer gives college students over $500 in subscriptions and perks totally free. Here's what to know.

ZDNet News
Open 
I tried Google's new desktop app, and I'll never search the old way again
Now available to all, the app delivers a faster way to access tools like Gemini, Lens, and Search. See why it's totally worth a download.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Microsoft Surface PCs Are Getting Big Price Hikes, and the Cheaper Models Are Going Away
The price increases range from $200 to $300, and Microsoft doesn’t sell a sub-$1,000 Surface anymore. The rising cost of consumer tech is a common theme in 2026.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
AI Could Democratize One of Tech's Most Valuable Resources
AI is making it easier to design chips and optimize software for different silicon. Some startups envision a revolution in chipmaking.

TechRadar Reviews
Open 
The Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 7 FE is a well-designed foldable that still feels too expensive for what it is

The Right Scoop
Open 
The House GOP majority narrows with Tony Gonzales resignation; Here’s the latest numbers…
The House GOP majority is narrowing with Rep. Tony Gonzales resigning yesterday. Of course, the Democrat minority also narrowed with scumbag Eric Swalwell resigning, so you might say it’s a tit for . . .

The Right Scoop
Open 
BREAKING VIDEO – Scott Bessent reveals just how badly Iran screwed up by attacking their Gulf neighbors
Iran has apparently upset their Gulf neighbors pretty badly with their recent bombing attacks, so much so that now Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said these countries are opening up their Iranian bank . . .

Mac Rumours
Open 
Google Launches Native Gemini AI App for Mac
Google is bringing Gemini to the Mac with a new native macOS app that's available starting today. Gemini for Mac can be activated with a keyboard shortcut, and it has built-in tools for generating images, analyzing what's on your screen, reviewing files, and more.





Gemini is the last of the three major AI services to have a dedicated Mac app, because OpenAI and Anthropic have had Mac apps for quite some time.



Gemini can be brought up anywhere on the Mac with an Option + Space keyboard command, so there's no need to swap over to a dedicated window. Option + Shift + Space is available for opening the full Gemini chat window. Gemini can also be accessed from the Dock or through the Menu Bar.



Any window on the Mac can be shared with Gemini, allowing Gemini to provide contextual assistance on anything that you're looking at. After activating Gemini, selecting the Share Window option will let Gemini see what it is you want to ask questions about. Gemini will need Accessibility access to read full pages in a browser window.



Nano Banana is available for creating images, and Veo can be used for generating videos.



Gemini for Mac is available for Macs running macOS 15 and later, and it is free to download and use. Free access to Gemini is limited, and Google has subscription plans with increased usage limits. Google AI Plus is $7.99 per month, Google AI Pro is $19.99 per month, and Google AI Ultra is $249.99 per month.



Google says that the Mac app is the first step toward a personal, proactive, and powerful desktop assistant, with more news to follow in the coming months.Tags: Gemini, GoogleThis article, 'Google Launches Native Gemini AI App for Mac' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Economic shock from Iran war risks driving up global debt levels, says IMF
Conflict is pushing up price of energy and food, fuelling higher borrowing costs and hitting growth, report saysIran war escalation could trigger global recession, IMF warnsThe Iran war risks triggering a rise in global debt levels, forcing governments to choose between cushioning a cost of living shock and maintaining sound public finances, the International Monetary Fund has warned.Against a volatile backdrop of the Middle East conflict, the Washington-based fund said the war could add to the already strained position of government finances throughout the world. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
More than £1bn pledged for Sudan as humanitarian crisis deepens
Donors exceed funding target at Berlin conference but prospects for ceasefire remain distantMore than £1bn (€1.15bn) has been pledged for war-ravaged Sudan at a conference in Berlin, eclipsing the funding target organisers had set to help mitigate the world’s largest humanitarian crisis.The financial commitments made on Wednesday will also help offset a chronic humanitarian funding shortfall in a country devastated by three years of conflict, where two-thirds of its population – 34m people – require assistance. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
LIV Golf meeting in New York fuels speculation over rebel tour’s future
Senior leadership not in Mexico City for LIV tournamentSaudi focus now more on football and esportLIV Golf executives have been called to a meeting in New York amid growing speculation over the future of the Saudi Arabia-funded rebel tour.Rumours that LIV could soon be shut down had begun to circulate on social media on Tuesday evening with officials from the tour declining to respond. LIV’s next event in Mexico City will begin as planned on Thursday, although as first reported by the Daily Telegraph, the tour’s senior leadership were all absent having been diverted to New York. Many of LIV’s senior personnel, including the chief executive, Scott O’Neil, were at Augusta for the Masters last week and have stayed in the US. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Arsenal v Sporting: Champions League quarter-final, second leg – live
⚽ Champions League news; 8pm BST kick-off (first leg: 1-0)⚽ Bayern v Real Madrid – updates | Live scores | Mail SimonAn email! “Barry Glendenning is absolutely right - Arteta’s anxiety and stress has rubbed off on his players and that is why they are losing,” writes Jeff Sax. “He lacks the composure and confidence that Pep for example has.” I think there’s some truth to this, but I’m also just not completely convinced by this squad. I mean, it’s really good. But it’s not great, and the real issue is that when the players look around the dressing room, that’s also what they think. They look like they don’t truly believe they can win the league, and perhaps the only thing that can convince them they’re a title-winning squad is actually winning the title.Asked yesterday whether either Bukayo Saka or Jurrien Timber might play tonight, Mikel Arteta said: “Maybe one of them, let’s see.” Well we have seen, and the answer is neither of them, and also no Martin Odegaard or Riccardo Calafiori. But Declan Rice, who missed training yesterday, is in. Continue reading...

Ars Technica
Open 
Adobe takes Creative Cloud into Claude Code-esque territory

Russia Today News
Open 
Orban’s exit through global eyes: Who really gains – and who doesn’t

Mail Online
Open 
Broken promises, retreat drama... and the enemy within: The three bad omens clouding Harry and Meghan's Australia trip that could make it the 'royal tour' from hell
The signs are mounting that Prince Harry and Meghan Markle's controversy-plagued Australian tour could end up being a PR own goal for Team Sussex.

Mail Online
Open 
Lady Gaga parties with fiance Michael Polansky in NYC after suffering a respiratory illness last week
Lady Gaga and fiancé Michael Polansky partied at Maison Nur in New York City after her final Mayhem Ball Tour show on Monday night.

Mail Online
Open 
White House denies wanting to extend ceasefire - as Iran threatens to shut down the Red Sea unless Trump lifts naval blockade: Updates
Read the Daily Mail's coverage of the ongoing Middle East crisis as the White House denies reports that it wants to extend the ceasefire with Iran

Mail Online
Open 
Scientists baffled by mysterious 1,200-year-old coin linking Vikings to Jesus
A strange coin found with a metal detector has opened up a mystery that could change the history of Vikings in Europe and their belief in the teachings of Jesus.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Germany, the UK warn the Iran war distracts from Ukraine and oil price rises help Russia
Germany's defense minister warned that Russia "benefits from current developments in the Middle East," as the Ukraine Defense Contact Group met in Berlin. He said rising oil prices were filling Moscow's "war coffers."

Mail Online
Open 
Jennifer Lawrence is seen pushing her baby in a stroller in NYC after saying she's a 'stay-at-home mom'
The 35-year-old actress - who says she identifies as a stay-at-home mom - wore an oversize button-up denim shirt, baggy blue jeans , and robin's egg blue ballet flats.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
New EU entry-exit system causing up to three-hour delays, say airports
Airport body has asked for power to suspend EES checks requiring personal information and biometricsTravellers going through some European airports are reportedly waiting up to three hours at border checks because of the EU’s new entry-exit system (EES).Passengers in airports in countries such as France, Germany, Belgium, Italy, Spain and Greece are waiting several hours at border checks, the Airports Council International (ACI) body has said. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
LIV Golf meeting in New York fuels speculation over rebel tour’s future
Senior leadership not in Mexico City for LIV tournamentSaudi focus now more on football and e-sportsLIV Golf executives have been called to a meeting in New York amid growing speculation over the future of the Saudi Arabia-funded rebel tour.Rumours that LIV could soon be shut down had begun to circulate on social media on Tuesday evening with officials from the tour declining to respond. LIV’s next event in Mexico City will begin as planned on Thursday, although as first reported by the Daily Telegraph, the tour’s senior leadership were all absent having been diverted to New York. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Bayern Munich v Real Madrid: Champions League quarter-final, second leg – live
⚽ Champions League news; 8pm BST kick-off (first leg: 2-1)⚽ Arsenal v Sporting – updates | Live scores | Mail MichaelSome news: José Emilio Santamaría, a four-time European Cup winner with Real Madrid, died earlier today at the age of 96. The Uruguay international joined Madrid in 1957 and went on to lift one Intercontinental Cup, six La Liga titles and one Spanish Cup, making 337 appearances over nine seasons.“Santamaria will always be remembered as one of the great symbols of our club. He was part of a team that will remain in the memory of all madridistas and football fans worldwide,” Real Madrid president Florentino Perez said in a statement. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Arsenal v Sporting: Champions League quarter-final, second leg – live
⚽ Champions League news; 8pm BST kick-off (first leg: 1-0)⚽ Bayern v Real Madrid – updates | Live scores | Mail SimonAsked yesterday whether either Bukayo Saka or Jurrien Timber might play tonight, Mikel Arteta said: “Maybe one of them, let’s see.” Well we have seen, and the answer is neither of them, and also no Martin Odegaard or Riccardo Calafiori. But Declan Rice, who missed training yesterday, is in.Team sheets have been handed in, and tonight’s lineups are as follows: Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Guardian view on social science research: embracing uncertainty | Editorial
Science rarely produces identical outcomes. Mistaking this for failure turns caution into an excuse for inactionA new set of studies out this month suggests that as many as half of all results published in reputable journals in the social sciences can’t be replicated by independent analysis. This is part of a long-running problem across many research fields – most visibly in the social sciences and psychology, though concerns have also been raised in areas of biomedical research.The latest work is a seven-year project called Systematizing Confidence in Open Research and Evidence (Score), which has now published three studies looking at 3,900 social science papers. It found that newer papers, and those published in journals requiring extensive sharing of underlying data, were more likely to be reproduced. Separately, medical research faces its own constraints: differing patient caseloads and limited sample sizes mean that, in practice, it can resemble the social sciences more than laboratory physics. Clearly, policymakers should be cautious of any claims that don’t have a wide and robust base of evidence.Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Guardian view on the looming energy shock: ministers need to show they have a plan | Editorial
Keir Starmer can’t be blamed for the crisis in the Middle East, but he has to reassure people that he is prepared for its long-term consequencesPublic reassurance is one of the first duties of the government in difficult times. The early months of the Covid pandemic offer a case study in how to get this wrong. Boris Johnson was paralysed by indecision and denial of the severity of what was unfolding. Panic-buying cleared supermarket shelves of essential goods.Sir Keir Starmer is unlike Mr Johnson in temperament and work ethic, but he too is struggling to get ahead of events in a global crisis. It isn’t easy when the origin of turbulence is a superpower gone rogue. Donald Trump’s impulsive actions can’t be anticipated with epidemiological precision like a virus.Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Sexual harassment is rife on comedy circuit and women lack protections, MPs told
Women using informal warning systems to protect themselves and others, comedian tells equalities committeeSexual harassment and abuse on the comedy circuit has is persistent and under-reported, with protections available to women often limited or absent, a comedian has told MPs.Performers and campaigners said many female comedians are left to rely on informal warning systems to try to keep themselves safe but added that these systems can expose women to further risks. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
BBC to cut up to 2,000 jobs in biggest downsize in 15 years
Announcement comes before Matt Brittin replaces Tim Davie as director general next monthThe BBC is to cut as many as 2,000 jobs in the biggest downsizing of the public service broadcaster in 15 years.Staff were informed of the cuts, which will affect about 10% of the BBC’s 21,500 employees, at an all-staff meeting on Wednesday afternoon. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Reeves steps up criticism of Trump’s Iran war, branding it a ‘mistake’
UK chancellor tells US audience she is ‘not convinced that this conflict has made the world a safer place’Middle East crisis – live updatesRachel Reeves has stepped up her criticism of Donald Trump’s war on Iran, describing it as a “mistake” that has destabilised the global economy and damaged living standards around the world.In a marked fraying of the transatlantic relationship, the UK chancellor said Trump breaking off from diplomatic talks with Iran and launching airstrikes had not made the world a safer place. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Critical Atlantic current significantly more likely to collapse than thought
Scientists say finding is ‘very concerning’ as collapse would be catastrophic for Europe, Africa and the AmericasThe critical Atlantic current system appears significantly more likely to collapse than previously thought after new research found that climate models predicting the biggest slowdown are the most realistic. Scientists called the new finding “very concerning” as a collapse would have catastrophic consequences for Europe, Africa and the Americas.The Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (Amoc) is a major part of the global climate system and was already known to be at its weakest for 1,600 years as a result of the climate crisis. Scientists spotted warning signs of a tipping point in 2021 and know that the Amoc has collapsed in the Earth’s past. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
$30m an hour: big oil reaping huge war windfall from consumers, analysis finds
Exclusive: Climate action blockers including Saudi Arabia, Russia and major fossil fuel firms set to make extra $234bn by end of 2026Middle East crisis – live updatesThe world’s top 100 oil and gas companies banked more than $30m every hour in unearned profit in the first month of the US-Israeli war in Iran, according to exclusive analysis for the Guardian. Saudi Aramco, Gazprom and ExxonMobil are among the biggest beneficiaries of the bonanza, meaning key opponents of climate action continue to prosper.The conflict pushed the price of oil to an average of $100 (£74) a barrel in March, leading to estimated windfall war profits for the month of $23bn for the companies. Oil and gas supplies will take months to return to pre-war levels and the companies will make $234bn by the end of the year if the oil price continues to average $100. The analysis uses data from a leading intelligence provider, Rystad Energy, analysed by Global Witness. Continue reading...

The Register
Open 
Decades-old Linux UI bug fixed by dev younger than the window manager
Kamila Szewczyk prefers old software, as back then people understood something could actually be finished No one can tell software developer Kamila Szewczyk that newer is better: She just fixed a 20-year-old bug in Enlightenment E16, the old-school Linux window manager she favors partly because, she tells us, it is actually finished software.…

The Register
Open 
Patch these critical Fortinet sandbox bugs that let attackers bypass login, run commands over HTTP
No reports of active exploitation (yet) Watch out for more Fortinet vulns! Two critical bugs in Fortinet's sandbox could allow unauthenticated attackers to bypass authentication or execute unauthorized code on vulnerable systems.…

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
US war on Iran was a 'mistake', says Reeves
The chancellor's criticism follows a report that the conflict will hit the UK harder than other big economies.

Gizmodo
Open 
Dan Stevens Cracks Open the Mouth of Madness in ‘The Terror: Devil in Silver’
The latest season of AMC+ and Shudder's Ridley Scott-produced horror anthology is adapted from Victor LaValle's eerie novel.

Gizmodo
Open 
US Renewable Power Generation Beats Natural Gas for the First Time, Defying Trump
Renewable energy is gaining ground in the U.S. power mix.

Mail Online
Open 
'Evil' Georgia man who killed two in random attacks is from BRITAIN and became US citizen under Biden in 2022, DHS says
One of the people allegedly killed by Olaolukitan Adon Abel, 26, was Lauren Bullis, 40, a DHS employee. He is accused of shooting and stabbing Bullis while she walked her dog.

Mail Online
Open 
The Gulf Stream is on the verge of COLLAPSING: Scientists predict a 50% weakening by the end of this century - with devastating consequences
The Gulf Stream may be on the verge of collapse as a key ocean current weakens, scientists have warned.

Mail Online
Open 
Rochelle Humes says she has 'household help to hold down the fort' mid week while she juggles work - but insists she doesn't have a nanny
Rochelle Humes has revealed she has household help to 'hold down the fort' six days a week while she juggles work.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
More than £1bn pledged for Sudan as humanitarian crisis deepens
Donors exceed funding target at Berlin conference but prospects for ceasefire remain distantMore than £1bn has been pledged for war-ravaged Sudan at a conference in Berlin, eclipsing the funding target organisers had set to help mitigate the world’s largest humanitarian crisis.The financial commitments made on Wednesday will also help offset a chronic humanitarian funding shortfall in a country devastated by three years of conflict, where two-thirds of its population – 34m people – require assistance. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Palestine Action activists wanted to smash up Elbit Systems’ property, court told
Defendants used sledgehammers and crowbars to destroy drones at Israeli-linked arms factory, says prosecutionSix Palestine Action activists entered an Israeli-linked arms factory intending to smash up as much property as possible before police arrived, a court has heard.Prosecutor Deanna Heer KC said the defendants used sledgehammers and crowbars to destroy drones manufactured by Elbit Systems and computers at its factory in Filton, near Bristol, on 6 August last year. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
One year on: how landmark ruling on single-sex spaces has changed lives
Some campaigners are frustrated at slow pace of change, while those impacted are trying to work out what it means day-to-dayA year ago, the supreme court made its landmark judgment on single-sex spaces. In a long-running case against the Scottish government brought by gender-critical campaigners For Women Scotland (FWS), the court ruled that, for the purposes of the Equality Act, the legal definition of a woman was based on biological sex.The judgment has significant ramifications for who can access women-only services and spaces, such as refuges or toilets. But most service providers are still awaiting practical guidance on how to apply the ruling. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Confusion as US military undercuts Trump's claim the Strait of Hormuz is open with chilling warning: 'Prepare to be boarded'
Despite Donald Trump claiming he lifted the naval blockade, the Strait of Hormuz remains closed as ships attempting to pass through the critical oil corridor face the full force of the US Navy.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Guardian view on social science research: embracing uncertainty | Editorial
Science rarely produces identical outcomes. Mistaking this for failure turns caution into an excuse for inactionA new set of studies out this month suggests that as many as half of all results published in reputable journals in the social sciences can’t be replicated by independent analysis. This is part of a long-running problem across many research fields – most visibly in the social sciences and psychology, though concerns have also been raised in areas of biomedical research.The latest work is a seven-year project called Systematizing Confidence in Open Research and Evidence (Score), which has now published three studies looking at 3,900 social science papers. It found that newer papers, and those published in journals requiring extensive sharing of underlying data, were more likely to be reproduced. Separately, medical research faces its own constraints: differing patient caseloads and limited sample sizes mean that, in practice, it can resemble the social sciences more than laboratory physics. Clearly, policymakers should be cautious of any claims that don’t have a wide and robust base of evidence. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Guardian view on the looming energy shock: ministers need to show they have a plan | Editorial
Keir Starmer can’t be blamed for the crisis in the Middle East, but he has to reassure people that he is prepared for its long-term consequencesPublic reassurance is one of the first duties of the government in difficult times. The early months of the Covid pandemic offer a case study in how to get this wrong. Boris Johnson was paralysed by indecision and denial of the severity of what was unfolding. Panic-buying cleared supermarket shelves of essential goods.Sir Keir Starmer is unlike Mr Johnson in temperament and work ethic, but he too is struggling to get ahead of events in a global crisis. It isn’t easy when the origin of turbulence is a superpower gone rogue. Donald Trump’s impulsive actions can’t be anticipated with epidemiological precision like a virus. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
No more US military aid to Israel | Bernie Sanders
The time is long overdue for members of Congress to listen to the American people and end US military aid to the extremist Netanyahu governmentI am a proud Jewish American. My father fled Poland in 1921 to escape poverty and antisemitism. Those in his family who stayed were murdered by the Nazis. Since childhood, I have known very well where antisemitism, racism, fanaticism and demagoguery lead.So let me be clear. Speaking out against the horrific and inhumane actions of Israel, and its extremist leader, Benjamin Netanyahu, is not antisemitic. Speaking out about the dangerous and destructive role that Israel plays in shaping US foreign and military policy is not antisemitic. It is, in fact, what every member of Congress and every American should be doing. Continue reading...

CNET News
Open 
Best Desks of 2026: I’ve Spent Nearly 4,000 Hours Testing Desks. These Are the Ones You Want
Cut through the hundreds of available desk options by choosing one of the best desks recommended by CNET experts.

CNET News
Open 
Best Standing Desks of 2026
Standing desks are a great in-office or at-home choice for working, gaming and hobbies.

Mail Online
Open 
New jails farce exposed: Criminal was on the run for 579 DAYS after being wrongly freed, while another prison 'mixed up father and son with the same name'
An official inquiry reveals new details of a series of shocking blunders, including cases where prisoners went on to commit new crimes after being freed in error.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Can Trump get a better Iran deal than Obama?
The 2015 Iran deal curbed Tehran's nuclear program until the US pulled out. After years of failed diplomacy and 40 days of war, talks are back on. Donald Trump has said he can strike a "better" deal than Barack Obama.

Stratechery
Open 
Amazon Buys Globalstar, Delta to Add Leo, The Apple Angle
Amazon's Globalstar acquisition is being framed as Amazon versus SpaceX, but I think the real story is about Apple.

TechRadar News
Open 
WordPress websites under attack — expert report says dozens of plugins hijacked to target thousands of sites

TechRadar News
Open 
Snap up this powerful Asus TUF F16 Gaming Laptop with an RTX 4050 for under $1,000 at Amazon

TechRadar News
Open 
'There's some inevitability to combining digital and physical worlds': Apple's Greg Joswiak drops fresh hint about its rumored Meta Ray-Bans rival

TechRadar News
Open 
Here are 11 TVs that I recommend watching the NBA Playoffs on — up to $1,700 off 4K, QLED and OLED TVs

Digital Trends
Open 
You can now buy physical books in the Spotify app
Spotify is now letting you buy physical books through its app in the U.S. and U.K., expanding beyond audiobooks with features like Page Match, Recaps, and Charts to build a more connected reading experience.

Mail Online
Open 
Danielle Lloyd shows off her washboard abs in a skimpy black bikini during sun-soaked Barcelona getaway
Danielle Lloyd showed off her washboard abs in a skimpy black bikini during her sun-soaked Barcelona getaway on Wednesday. 

Mail Online
Open 
Arsenal vs Sporting Lisbon - Champions League LIVE: Latest score, team news and updates as Mikel Arteta's injury-hit Gunners hold narrow edge as they aim to finish the job at the Emirates
Follow Daily Mail Sport's live blog for the latest score, team news and updates as Arsenal host Sporting Lisbon at the Emirates in the second leg of their Champions League quarter-final. 

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Was the next lifesaving pill scrapped because of pressure to make money faster?
When activist investors target drugmakers, drug-development strategies shift. Patients lose when this happens.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
‘Engagement’ is the key theme of Netflix’s earnings after the Warner Bros. deal collapsed
Analysts are looking for how much content Netflix’s subscribers are actually watching — but a recent price hike and the streamer’s growing ad business are expected to help profitability.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Allbirds’ AI pivot sends its stock soaring 600%. We’ve seen this movie before.
It’s not unprecedented for struggling companies to latch onto the hot trend of the moment. Remember the blockchain hype cycle?

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Powell’s term as Fed chair is coming to an end. Trump wants to fire him anyway.
President Donald Trump and Department of Justice officials aren’t showing signs of backing down in a standoff over the leadership of the Federal Reserve, even as current Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s term for that role is due to end in exactly a month.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
U.S. stocks may be moving past the Iran conflict — but these markets aren’t sending the ‘all clear’ just yet
No matter how you slice it, U.S. stocks seem to be already moving past the Iran conflict. But commodity markets and other financial assets aren’t ready to turn the page just yet.

Slashdot
Open 
Struggling Shoe Retailer Allbirds Pivots To AI, Stock Explodes More Than 700%
Allbirds made a surprise announcement this morning: it's pivoting from sustainable shoes to AI compute infrastructure, rebranding as NewBird AI after selling its brand assets and closing its U.S. full-price stores. The move sent shares soaring more than 700%. CNBC reports: The move boosted shares of the miniscule market cap company -- it was valued at about $21 million at Tuesday's close -- by more than 700%. The shares, which were under $3 a day ago, jumped to above $17. [...] The new company, which expects to be called NewBird AI, announced a deal to raise up to $50 million in funding, expected to close in the second quarter of 2026. Allbirds announced a deal with American Exchange Group to sell its intellectual property and other assets for $39 million last month. "The Company will initially seek to acquire high-performance, low-latency AI compute hardware and provide access under long-term lease arrangements, meeting customer demand that spot markets and hyperscalers are unable to reliably service," the company said in the announcement.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Home Office
Open 
Asylum hotels close as government scales up use of large sites
Eleven more asylum hotels have been returned to communities nationwide, with further closures coming soon as the Home Office ends their use for good. | Home Office.

The Verge
Open 
The Senate is voting to save free IRS Direct File today
The Senate is getting ready to vote on a bill to resurrect IRS Direct File, the free tax filing service axed by the Trump administration in 2025. On Wednesday, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) will seek unanimous consent to pass the Direct File Act, where it will either get fast-tracked to the House of Representatives or […]

The Verge
Open 
Best Buy’s Ultimate Upgrade Sale features deals on dozens of our favorite gadgets
If you missed out on Amazon’s recent spring sales event, Best Buy’s Ultimate Upgrade Sale presents yet another opportunity to score steep discounts on some of our favorite gadgets. The five-day sale runs through April 19th and features deals on a wide range of tech, including 4K TVs, Apple gear, smartphones, smart home devices, and […]

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Good Riddance, Pattern Day Trade Rule
Good Riddance, Pattern Day Trade Rule

 Submitted by QTR's Fringe Finance

The Pattern Day Trader rule was one of those regulations that managed to sound official, responsible, and protective while being, in practice, deeply confusing and almost comically out of touch with how people actually learn to trade. And now, it looks like it’s finally on its way out the exit. Crypto News wrote today:


The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Tuesday approved FINRA’s proposed rule change eliminating the Pattern Day Trader designation, the $25,000 minimum equity requirement, and all related day-trading buying power provisions under FINRA Rule 4210. The accelerated approval removes longstanding restrictions that have governed retail day trading for decades.

The SEC simultaneously approved new intraday margin standards requiring broker-dealers to monitor and address real-time risk exposure in customer margin accounts. The regulatory shift represents a substantial change to day-trading accessibility and compliance frameworks for retail investors in U.S. equity markets.


At its core, the PDT rule, at one point designed to save people from themselves, declared that if you made four or more day trades within a rolling five-business-day window, you would be labeled a “pattern day trader.”

This meant you got hit with a requirement to maintain a minimum account balance of $25,000. If you didn’t have that amount sitting in your account, you were effectively benched. Your ability to trade frequently was restricted, your account functionality clipped, and your participation in the market suddenly conditional on whether you had what, for many people, is a significant chunk of savings just casually lying around.



I could see the rule’s purpose in 1957, when you had to walk your orders to a live broker chain smoking cigars on Wall Street to make them — the idea of placing more than one trade a year must have looked like high-speed Roulette on crack cocaine doing 120mph doing I-95 in a modified golf cart. But for f*ck’s sake…it’s 2026. People daytrade on the toilet. I saw someone daytrading mid-roll at jiu jitsu the other day. 18 year old kids are trading cow dung futures at 11pm on Friday nights from their college town bars. Like it or not, daytrading and 0DTE are the markets now.

When I first started trading, this rule felt like a trap I kept stepping into over and over again. I was doing what anyone new to markets does: experimenting, entering and exiting positions, trying to understand price movement in real time instead of just reading about it. And then, without fail, I’d hit the invisible tripwire. Suddenly my account would be flagged, and I’d be locked out of making additional trades. It didn’t feel like protection; it felt like being told you’re allowed to learn how to swim, but only if you already own a boat.

The cycle repeated itself enough times that it stopped being frustrating and started being absurd. You weren’t being guided away from risk, you were being arbitrarily stopped from participating in the very process that teaches you how to manage it.

What makes the whole thing even harder to take seriously is the broader context of what modern “markets” have become today. During the same time brokerages have been carefully counting how many intraday stock trades you make, entire platforms have emerged where you could effectively bet on outcomes so specific and bizarre they sound like satire.

We are talking about markets where people can take positions on things like how many times Eric Swalwell will fart on MSNBC during his next appearance, or whether a sports announcer will use the word “toboggan” during an NBA broadcast. These are barely satire, and close examples of the kind of hyper-niche, almost performance-art-level speculation that is now perfectly acceptable. And yet, somehow, the line of responsibility was drawn at a small retail trader buying and selling Microsoft too many times during a day. That was the danger. That was what needed controlling.

Then there’s crypto, which exists in a parallel universe where the concept of trading hours, regulatory guardrails, and frankly even clear definitions of value often feel optional. You can trade crypto assets 24 hours a day, seven days a week, from anywhere, at any time, with price swings that make traditional equities look like Yo Gabba Gabba. You can make dozens of trades in a single night if you feel like it, driven by momentum, panic, excitement, drunkenness, a tweet you saw five minutes ago or all of the above.

There is no equivalent mechanism that steps in and says, “Hold on, you’ve been a bit too active for your account size.” There is no $25,000 gatekeeper deciding whether you are worthy of participation. And yet, despite all of that volatility and freedom, the system somehow survives without collapsing under the weight of small traders clicking buttons too frequently. Which raises the obvious question: if that environment can exist, why exactly was the traditional equities market so concerned with rationing out trades like they were a scarce resource reserved for the financially initiated?

🔥 50% OFF FOR LIFE: Using this coupon entitles you to 50% off an annual subscription to Fringe Finance for life: Get 50% off forever

The underlying logic of the PDT rule always rested on a premise that doesn’t hold up under scrutiny, which is that frequent trading is inherently dangerous, but only if you are not already wealthy. If you have $25,000 in your account, you are presumed capable of handling the risks of rapid trading, as though the act of having that money confers discipline, knowledge, or emotional control. If you don’t, then the exact same behavior suddenly becomes irresponsible and in need of restriction.

It’s a framework that quietly equates capital with competence, ignoring the reality that someone can have a large account and no strategy, or a small account and a careful, methodical approach to learning. Instead of addressing risk through education, transparency, or better tools, the rule defaulted to a blunt instrument: a hard cutoff that didn’t adapt to individual behavior or intent.

In practice, what it did was create friction at the wrong point in a trader’s journey. Beginners, who arguably benefit the most from being able to engage, test ideas, and learn from quick feedback loops, were the ones most likely to be restricted. Meanwhile, more experienced or better-funded participants operated without those same constraints, not because they were necessarily making better decisions, but because they had already crossed an arbitrary financial threshold.

The result was a system that didn’t eliminate risk so much as redistribute opportunity, favoring those who least needed the protection while limiting those who were still figuring things out.

The strange part is how long something so mismatched with modern market behavior managed to stick around, especially as everything else changed. Trading became commission-free, access expanded through apps, information moved at the speed of social media, and entirely new asset classes blurred the lines between investing, speculation, and entertainment. In that environment, the idea that the number of trades you could make in a week should be capped unless you met a fixed dollar requirement started to feel less like prudent regulation and more like a relic that had outlived the world it was designed for.

So yes, the Pattern Day Trader rule deserves every bit of the criticism it gets, and then some. It wasn’t just inconvenient; it was conceptually flawed, inconsistently applied in a broader financial ecosystem, and oddly patronizing in the assumptions it made about who should be allowed to participate and how.

And if it is finally fading into irrelevance, replaced by systems that trust individuals a bit more and gatekeep a bit less, then it’s hard to feel anything but satisfaction. Not relief exactly, because most people just learned to work around it or avoid it, but a kind of quiet acknowledgment that one of the more nonsensical speed bumps in modern finance is no longer pretending to be a necessary feature.

Good riddance, indeed.

--

QTR’s Disclaimer: Please read my full legal disclaimer on my About page here. This post represents my opinions only. In addition, please understand I am an idiot and often get things wrong and lose money. I may own or transact in any names mentioned in this piece at any time without warning. Contributor posts and aggregated posts have been hand selected by me, have not been fact checked and are the opinions of their authors. They are either submitted to QTR by their author, reprinted under a Creative Commons license with my best effort to uphold what the license asks, or with the permission of the author.

This is not a recommendation to buy or sell any stocks or securities, just my opinions. I often lose money on positions I trade/invest in. I may add any name mentioned in this article and sell any name mentioned in this piece at any time, without further warning. None of this is a solicitation to buy or sell securities. I may or may not own names I write about and are watching. Sometimes I’m bullish without owning things, sometimes I’m bearish and do own things. Just assume my positions could be exactly the opposite of what you think they are just in case. If I’m long I could quickly be short and vice versa. I won’t update my positions. All positions can change immediately as soon as I publish this, with or without notice and at any point I can be long, short or neutral on any position. You are on your own. Do not make decisions based on my blog. I exist on the fringe. If you see numbers and calculations of any sort, assume they are wrong and double check them. I failed Algebra in 8th grade and topped off my high school math accolades by getting a D- in remedial Calculus my senior year, before becoming an English major in college so I could bullshit my way through things easier.

The publisher does not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the information provided in this page. These are not the opinions of any of my employers, partners, or associates. I did my best to be honest about my disclosures but can’t guarantee I am right; I write these posts after a couple beers sometimes. I edit after my posts are published because I’m impatient and lazy, so if you see a typo, check back in a half hour. Also, I just straight up get shit wrong a lot. I mention it twice because it’s that important.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 10:25

ZeroHedge News
Open 
WTI Rises After Big Inventory Drawdowns Across Energy Complex, Huge SPR Drop, Record Exports
WTI Rises After Big Inventory Drawdowns Across Energy Complex, Huge SPR Drop, Record Exports

Oil largely held onto a sharp drop from this week’s highs as the US and Iran seek further talks to end a war that has brought the vital Strait of Hormuz waterway to a near-halt.

President Trump told a Fox Business anchor he sees the war “very close to over” and told ABC “you’re going to be watching an amazing two days ahead.”

The global oil market has been jolted by the conflict, which triggered an unprecedented supply shock, and while week to week shifts in domestic inventory and supply may not be the crucial market-movers they were before the war (and headline roulette), they remain key in seeing how the US energy market is 'coping' with the new demand from overseas... and if there is any domestic demand destruction from soaring gas prices...

API


Crude +6.1mm


Cushing


Gasoline +626k


Distillates -3.36mm

DOE


Crude -913k (+900k exp) - first draw in 8 weeks


Cushing -1.73mm - biggest draw since Jan 3rd


Gasoline -6.33mm - biggest draw since Mar 2023


Distillates -3.12mm

Inventories across the entire oil energy complex saw unexpected drawdowns last week with crude's first decline in stocks since Feb 13. Gasoline stocks plunged by the most since March 2023...



Source: Bloomberg

The SPR saw its biggest drawdown since Dec 2022...



Source: Bloomberg

Crude production actually declined last week... as Refineries trimmed crude processing for the third straight week. With that, intake has been curtailed by a little over half a million barrels a day since the end of March. 



Source: Bloomberg

Crude exports jumped over 1 million barrels a day to the highest level since September 2025 as the world continues to draw on US oil as the Iran war disrupts global flows.

That oil export jump pushed total oil and fuel exports to the highest level ever.

Most of the gains came as crude shipments jumped above the key 5 million barrels a day mark to the highest since September 2025, according to data from the US government.

In aggregate it meant the US sent almost 13 million barrels per day overseas last week, when also adding refined fuels.



Source: Bloomberg

WTI Crude prices rallied on the report...



Finally, despite chatter of energy independence and no need for Hormuz flows, the real constraint on Trump is domestic gas and diesel prices (as its a global energy complex), which are looking set to fall from near record-highs as WTI and RBOB prices have eased...



“The broad-based pullback is driven by growing market optimism that diplomacy, not escalation, is now dominating,” said Ole Hvalbye, commodities analyst at SEB AB. 

Should escalation risks fade, supply from the Middle East may see a “tiered recovery,” according to ANZ Group Holdings Ltd. Some 2 million to 3 million barrels a day were likely to be restored in the first four weeks, followed by additional volumes, analysts including Daniel Hynes said in a note.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 10:40

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Jet-Ski Maker Crashes Most On Record As "Mind-Blowing" Tariff-Hit Sparks Worst-Case Scenario Fears
Jet-Ski Maker Crashes Most On Record As "Mind-Blowing" Tariff-Hit Sparks Worst-Case Scenario Fears

BRP's US-listed shares crashed the most on record as the US cash session began, after the jet ski and snowmobile maker withdrew its financial outlook.



The company warned that changes in the US tariff environment surrounding steel, aluminum, and copper could result in a $500 million hit before any mitigation efforts.

BRP wrote in a statement:


For BRP, the amendment mainly leads to a 25% tariff on the total value of imported snowmobiles and the majority of ORV models, replacing the previous 50% tariff on applicable metal content only. The Company currently estimates the potential incremental tariff cost related to this amendment to be in excess of $500 million for the remainder of the year, before any mitigation measures that could partially offset these impacts.


BRP CEO Denis Le Vot stated:


Like many manufacturers, we are operating in a highly volatile and unpredictable tariff environment that continues to create uncertainty across the market.

Despite the material burden of these tariff changes, we expect that, with our solid balance sheet, the agility of our teams and the strong start of the year, we will be able to manage our business through this challenge and continue to push BRP forward.


BRP shares crashed 33% at the start of the US cash session, the most on record with Bloomberg trading data going back to August 2013.



BRP shares are sharply retracing the bull run that began in April 2025 and peaked in February. The shares are in a deep bear market so far this year, down 25%.



Bloomberg data tracking Wall Street analysts shows 12 "Buys," 9 "Holds," and zero "Sells." The average analyst 12-month price target is $82.



Stifel analyst Martin Landry warned, "The magnitude of the impact is mind-blowing, but it is likely the worst-case scenario."

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 10:50

ZeroHedge News
Open 
OpenAI's Stratospheric Valuation Draws Investor Scrutiny As It Scrambles To Capture Enterprise Market
OpenAI's Stratospheric Valuation Draws Investor Scrutiny As It Scrambles To Capture Enterprise Market

OpenAI, fresh off the largest private fundraising round in history, is facing mounting questions from some of its own backers over its $852 billion valuation and a whiplash-inducing pivot in strategy that prioritizes the higher-margin enterprise market at the expense of its consumer crown jewel - all because Anthropic is starting to drink their milkshake with enterprise contracts. 



The company raised $122 billion last month from Silicon Valley and global capital - including SoftBank, Amazon, Nvidia, Andreessen Horowitz, Sequoia Capital and Thrive Capital. Yet even as Chief Financial Officer Sarah Friar hailed the oversubscribed deal as proof of “strong conviction” in the company’s direction, early investors are voicing skepticism. One told the Financial Times the pivot feels unfocused: “You have ChatGPT, a 1 billion-user business growing 50-100% a year - what are you doing talking about enterprise and code?”

Friar disagrees. "The suggestion that investors are not supportive of our strategy defies the facts," she said. "Our . . . raise, the largest in history, was oversubscribed, completed in record time and backed by a broad set of global investors, reflecting strong conviction in both our direction, current business momentum and long-term value."

The repositioning has indeed been swift and, to critics, symptomatic of the kind of strategic whiplash that often precedes trouble in hype-driven sectors. In December Chief Executive Sam Altman issued a "code red" urging staff to refocus on core business. High-profile consumer experiments have been quietly euthanized: the video-generation service Sora was shuttered, killing a planned $1 billion investment from Disney; an “adult” chatbot was mothballed; parts of the ambitious Stargate data-center project were ditched; and a $100 billion Nvidia deal was substantially scaled back. Even a recent “low hundreds of millions” acquisition of the tech talk show TBPN drew internal eye-rolling from investors who called it a distraction.

"I don’t get it frankly, it doesn’t make any sense to me," one investor told FT. "It’s a distraction and it irks me."

The new gospel is enterprise. OpenAI is reallocating computing resources toward its Codex coding tool, which insiders say could eventually eclipse ChatGPT in priority as the company chases nontechnical business users. Headcount is set to nearly double to 8,000 by year-end. Roughly half of revenue is expected to come from corporate customers, up from about 40% today. A new permanent office in London is in the works to anchor the largest research hub outside the U.S. The message from the C-suite: the market for corporate AI tools is “ours to win.”

However, fresh data from Morgan Stanley’s 1Q26 CIO Survey (fielded February 3–March 10 among 100 US and European CIOs - available to pro subs here) offers some early empirical support for the enterprise pivot - while also highlighting just how steep the climb is. Artificial Intelligence/Machine Learning has cemented its position as the clear #1 CIO priority (17.7% of respondents named it a top-three area, up from 16.3% in 4Q25), with 39% now calling it their single highest priority. Yet when CIOs were asked which vendors are poised to capture the largest incremental share of GenAI spending, Microsoft dominated both the one-year and three-year outlooks by a wide margin. OpenAI still ranked solidly inside the top tier - behind Microsoft, Amazon, Google, Salesforce and ServiceNow - and was also cited as a preferred vendor for building custom AI applications today and three years out.



The survey underscores the broader reality: overall 2026 IT budgets are growing only modestly at +3.7%, with Software the sole category expected to accelerate (+4.1%). Hyperscalers (led overwhelmingly by Microsoft via Azure OpenAI Service, Copilot, and its massive existing enterprise footprint) remain the dominant wallet-share winners in AI and cloud. AI labs and application vendors, including OpenAI, are making incremental gains on top of that foundation.

Anthropic's Ascent

Rival Anthropic is making that claim harder to swallow. Founded by ex-OpenAI talent and led by Dario Amodei, the Claude maker has seen annualized revenue surge to $30 billion by the end of March from $9 billion at the close of 2025, fueled by demand for its coding and cybersecurity offerings. Secondary markets are now pricing Anthropic ahead of OpenAI for the first time. The startup has fielded multiple offers that could value it at $800 billion or higher - more than double its February tender valuation - though it has so far resisted. One investor who backs both companies noted that underwriting OpenAI’s latest round required assuming an IPO valuation north of $1.2 trillion.

Meanwhile, Anthropic has shrugged off a major national-security black eye that appears to have served as great marketing, after the Pentagon formally designated the company a “supply chain risk” to U.S. national security - the first time such a label, historically reserved for foreign adversaries like Huawei or Kaspersky, has ever been applied to a major American AI firm. The unprecedented move followed a bitter contract standoff in which Anthropic refused to strip safety guardrails from Claude that blocked its use for mass domestic surveillance or lethal autonomous weapons. Anthropic sued immediately, calling the designation retaliatory; courts have issued temporary blocks in some venues while litigation continues. Yet, this government smackdown has had no effect on private-market enthusiasm.

The two firms remain locked in a brutal arms race, each hemorrhaging billions annually on compute. OpenAI boasts a formidable infrastructure edge - 8 gigawatts secured now, targeting 30 gigawatts by 2030 -and claims it can simply serve a slightly inferior model if needed. Anthropic, by contrast, has cited outages and power constraints while promising restraint on further expansion. OpenAI’s new chief revenue officer, Denise Dresser, has accused Anthropic of overstating revenue by roughly $8 billion via cloud-partner gross-ups, though both sides insist they follow standard accounting.

Of course, there's an underlying catch: the lofty valuations rest on the assumption that enterprises will eventually pay up for these tools in volume. Yet a telling data point from the political arena suggests institutional buyers remain skittish. Republican campaigns are leaning into AI for messaging and voter targeting ahead of the 2026 midterms. The Democratic National Committee, however, has explicitly banned staff from using either ChatGPT or Claude, citing data-privacy and security risks. 


NEW: GOP campaigns are betting big on AI in the midterms
Dems -- not so much
More w/@hollyotterbein https://t.co/xUvX7HQSNo
— Alex Isenstadt (@axiosalex) April 14, 2026
OpenAI executives insist the repositioning towards enterprise is simply the necessary maturation of a company that has already reinvented itself multiple times. The massive war chest, they argue, provides “max flexibility” and “max optionality.” But with both startups still deeply unprofitable, compute burn rates that would make traditional tech CFOs blanch, and secondary-market momentum tilting toward the more focused rival, the narrative is shifting. What began as a consumer phenomenon is now a high-stakes bet that enterprise dollars will arrive fast enough—and in sufficient volume—to justify valuations that, to skeptics, increasingly look detached from today’s economics.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 11:20

ZeroHedge News
Open 
BofA Sees Customer Gas Spending Jump 16%, But Discretionary Spending Holds Up
BofA Sees Customer Gas Spending Jump 16%, But Discretionary Spending Holds Up

The national average for 87-octane gasoline has remained above the politically sensitive $4-a-gallon level for two straight weeks after the largest monthly jump in AAA data going back two decades. The fuel shock has Wall Street analysts focused on whether surging pump prices will begin crowding out discretionary spending.

Bank of America CFO Alastair Borthwick told analysts on a conference call earlier today that the fuel shock at the pump has not undermined overall consumer strength so far, though that could change if the Hormuz chokepoint is not resolved in the near term, according to Bloomberg. 

The BofA presentation Alastair cited showed that, for the first quarter, consumer spending at the pump was up 3%. For March, gas spending soared 16%. However, no meaningful spending pullbacks were visible elsewhere: Entertainment, travel, and retail spending all remained healthy, with entertainment spending rising 12% in the quarter.



BofA has joined a number of other firms, including Chime Financial, in disclosing gas-cost impacts on their customers. Chime's CFO warned earlier this month that clients spent 25% more on fuel in March compared with the prior month.

Ally Financial, Capital One Financial, and American Express are set to report this week and will likely provide more color on fuel-shock impacts on their customers.

AAA data showed that the national average for 87-octane gasoline has hovered above the politically sensitive $4-a-gallon level for the last two weeks.



On the economy, Goldman analyst Jessica Rindels told clients on Sunday how the U.S.-Iran conflict, now in its seventh week, is set to produce a mild stagflation shock, though not on the scale of Russia's invasion of Ukraine.



In our latest U.S.-Iran conflict report (read here), President Trump stated the war is "very close to over," with another round of peace talks scheduled for this week. A Wall Street report cited U.S. officials overnight as saying that more than 20 vessels have passed through the Strait of Hormuz in the past 24 hours.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 11:45

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Eos Energy Soars As Investors Focus On Zinc Batteries And AI-Driven Demand
Eos Energy Soars As Investors Focus On Zinc Batteries And AI-Driven Demand

Eos Energy Enterprises’ stock jumped over 60% in the last few days as investor enthusiasm grew around its scaling production and role in powering AI-driven infrastructure demand, according to the International Business Times.



The company designs, develops, manufactures, and markets energy storage solutions for utility-scale, microgrid, and commercial and industrial applications in the United States. The stock surge builds on earlier momentum after the company reported strong preliminary Q1 2026 revenue of $56–$57 million. Growth was fueled by higher shipments, improved output, and better manufacturing efficiency at its Pennsylvania facility, signaling progress in ramping up its second production line.

This positive update helped ease concerns from earlier setbacks, including missed 2025 revenue guidance and ongoing class-action lawsuits tied to production projections. While legal risks remain, recent operational gains have renewed investor confidence.



IBT writes that Eos is positioning itself to meet rising electricity demand from AI and data centers, highlighted by a new partnership aimed at rapidly deploying large-scale power solutions. Its zinc-based batteries—seen as safer, cheaper, and more domestically sourced than lithium alternatives—are gaining attention as utilities and tech firms seek reliable energy storage.

Looking ahead, the company expects 2026 revenue between $300 million and $400 million, with improving margins as production scales. A $701 million backlog supports future growth, though profitability, cash needs, and execution risks remain concerns.

Analysts are cautiously optimistic and broader market optimism and policy support for U.S.-based energy solutions have also contributed to the stock’s recent strength.

Overall, Eos appears to be at a turning point. Continued manufacturing progress and successful contract wins could solidify its position in the energy storage sector—but uncertainty and risk remain part of the story.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 12:00

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Foggy, Foggy War
Foggy, Foggy War

By Michael Every of Rabobank

With US stocks up, the Nasdaq with its longest winning streak since 2021, and screen oil down for a second day in a row, markets continue to price the starkly binary physical outcomes smack in front of us on the side that’s full of stardust.

The IMF just warned of a potential world recession ahead if Hormuz stays shut. Its latest three global growth scenarios are ‘weaker’, ‘worse’ and ‘severe’ - “because markets”, and politics, the Fund chose the most benign as its base case, even as “downside risks are clearly very elevated.” That’s as Spain, for example, just released 4 of their 90 days of strategic oil reserves, with another 8 to follow. While that leaves 78, even if Hormuz reopened tomorrow, it would take at least 60 and possibly as many as 150 days before normal oil flows could be restored, according to IEA. Imagine driving home in a convoy through a blazing desert in an air-conditioned car knowing you all have 50 miles of fuel in the tank, and the next station is 30 miles away… and then hearing on the radio that it could be shut, and the following one is at least 60 miles away. That’s where much of the world economy stands now – and markets are opting to pump up the radio and aircon and say, ‘The next station will be open and I want a slushy.’

Most governments are doing the kind of pumping oil wells aren’t: 


Brussels is pitching a “state subsidy bonanza” to combat the energy shock which “goes much further than the current state aid rules.”


Canada’s PM Carney, who ran two central banks, has suspended federal taxes on gasoline and diesel.


Australian Treasurer Chalmers has introduced a 20-year retrospective capital gains tax on mining, energy and infrastructure.


Malaysia is to increase its biofuel mandate.

Provided the war ends soon, those kinds of policies could cushion the economy: but across all schools of economic thought, textbooks are clear about what demand-side boosts into structural supply-side shocks do – leave you stuffed.

So, to the war. CENTCOM says no ships passed the Iran blockade in the first 24 hours. Moreover, the US Treasury says is not renewing its temporary easing of Iran oil sanctions and has sent notices to China and Hong Kong asking for help in enforcement. The US is clearly escalating hard vs Iran despite messages pinging yesterday that a sanctioned Chinese vessel, Starry Rich, had transited Hormuz, ignoring IF an interception was to be made, it would be in the Gulf of Oman or Arabian Sea; then clarified the vessel was carrying methanol from the UAE, not fuel from Iran, so wasn’t in scope; then the ship turned round anyway. Some press today claims the Saudis, who’ve been pushing the US to finish the job vs. Iran, are now pressuring it to ease the blockade in fear of a Red Sea counter-blockade that hasn’t taken place yet: more fog?

Yes, there will be more US-Iran talks in Pakistan, possibly tomorrow, which is the lodestar market bulls are guided by. As the Telegraph notes, this seems to be the one place that Iran’s battered leadership can physically meet without being killed: but what will they say that’s different from the last rejection of US demands on uranium, nuclear weapons, missiles, proxies, and Hormuz? Vice President Vance has reiterated Trump wants a “grand bargain” with Iran, not “a small deal,” and one that sees it abandon its nuclear ambitions. Trump has added that he wasn’t happy with the proposed 20-year moratorium on uranium enrichment offered in Pakistan and wants a permanent end to the matter. Israel is also stating that the removal of Iran’s enriched uranium is a “threshold condition” for it ending its Iran campaign – though the head of Mossad chief has additionally declared, “Our mission isn’t over until regime falls.”

The question is perhaps if any grand bargain is only US-Iran, or will involve others, as top Russian and Chinese envoys meet in Beijing to discuss Iran, Ukraine, and Taiwan. Yet showing how complex this gets as our global crises conflate, Ukraine, now providing anti-drone tech to the GCC, which aids Israel, has asked Jerusalem to detain a Russian ship carrying stolen grain that just docked in Haifa, which will infuriate Moscow. The US is elsewhere suggesting Cuba is complicit in helping Russia fight Ukraine, both countries being flashpoints between DC and Moscow. Isolated, Europe is drawing up plans for keeping Hormuz open once the war is over, which, beyond any aid with minesweeping, logically won’t be needed: if the war is over, energy will flow. The EU proposal is notably modelled on its Red Sea Aspides force, which failed to reopen it to normal trade flows.

On a positive note, if assuming ‘escalate to deescalate’, Israeli and Lebanese envoys just held an historic summit in the US to discuss a peace deal. As the Israelis put it, “Lebanon wants to be liberated from (Iran-backed) Hezbollah… we discovered today that we’re on the same side of the equation.” By contrast, France, with its Sykes-Picot-logical focus on Lebanon, insists Hezbollah has to be included in these talks aimed at removing it, so has been deliberately excluded from them.

On exclusion, after attacking the Pope, Trump has now done the same to Italian PM Meloni for “lacking courage”: the EU will need that and more fiscal spending again given the Wall Street Journal report it’s accelerating a NATO fallback plan in case Trump pulls out – or waters his commitment down: “Article 5, Shmarticle 5.” Militarily, 5% of GDP would need to be spent on defense a lot sooner than the 2035 planned if so, and the Journal notes Europe would need to reinstitute a draft in order to get the necessary personnel. Yet in terms of providing muscle for any Rules-Based Order 2.0 without the US, Europe’s primary military power, France, just had to scale back its participation in key Balikatan naval exercises in the Philippines to a mere 15 participants.

Meanwhile, the Financial Times warns of a ‘China shock 2.0’, this time with a flood of high-tech goods “that will change the world” - or at least deindustrialize other parts of it. Bloomberg matches that with a report underlining that India’s plans to develop its own manufacturing base are hamstrung by China’s controls over the critical tech supply chain within that sector. The Nikkei Asia argues China is snapping up US chip tools via Southeast Asia sources (in the same way that many Chinese exports to the US are being transshipped via third parties), which from a neo-mercantilist perspective again makes the case for a global economy fragmented into geopolitical trade blocs.

That reality is one of the reasons I’ve argued lies behind this Iran war, both in terms of control of oil and the related IMEC trade corridor; and it’s why escalation will continue until the economic pain is so great that one side submits.

Yet will the unfolding slow-motion catastrophe in the background get key global players to cooperate before it’s too late? Only time will tell; and it’s a binary outcome; and while your car journey as you ponder this may be comfortable for now, the fuel tank is still the fuel tank, and the blazing desert is still the blazing desert. And as I type that, I just heard the following play on my radio:

“Now I understand; What you tried to say to me; And how you suffered for your sanity; And how you tried to set them free; They would not listen, they did not know how; Perhaps they'll listen now.”



Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 12:15

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Watch: Vance Pledges Probe Into Epstein 'Pizza' And 'Grape Soda' References
Watch: Vance Pledges Probe Into Epstein 'Pizza' And 'Grape Soda' References

Authored by Steve Watson via Modernity.news,

Vice President JD Vance has publicly committed to investigating references in the Jeffrey Epstein files that he says evoked the Pizzagate conspiracy theory, citing emails mentioning “pizzas or grape sodas” in odd contexts.



His remarks come as Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche doubled down on the Department of Justice’s position that every relevant document has already been released, leaving critics to question whether the full truth about Epstein’s network will ever see daylight.

In remarks at a Turning Point USA event, Vance described reviewing the files and encountering an email that stood out.

JD Vance says he is in the process of opening an investigation into the "Pizzagate conspiracy theory" after he read strange words involving pizza and grape soda in the Epstein files.Vance has now publicly pledged to follow up on this matter."I remember it sounding like the… pic.twitter.com/eu122DyAhw— Shadow of Ezra (@ShadowofEzra) April 14, 2026 “One person sent an e-mail to Jeffrey Epstein saying oh they were some really nice like pizzas or grape sodas or something like that,” he recalled. “And I remember it sounding like the Pizzagate conspiracy theory.”

His reaction was direct: “We should absolutely investigate.”

Vance added that he plans to follow up “to see whether we’ve investigated that person because we should. We absolutely should when you see evidence of sexual assault sexual misconduct regardless of who the powerful not fact.”

The comments have reignited scrutiny over language in the Epstein files that some have long argued resembles coded references first highlighted in 2016. Those earlier claims, known as Pizzagate, originated from WikiLeaks releases of John Podesta’s emails that contained repeated, seemingly out-of-context mentions of pizza alongside other odd terms.

Recent Epstein document dumps have revived the debate, with analysts pointing to hundreds of “pizza” references that do not appear to describe food.


New Jeffery Epstein documents have emails consistently use one very familiar word
The word Pizza
The emails they write when referring to pizza don’t make any sense if they were talking about the food….
Pizzagate was 100% real. Where are the arrests pic.twitter.com/KqkmsHk4c6
— Wall Street Apes (@WallStreetApes) February 6, 2026
Mike Benz, in analysis of the newer files, noted: “In these new files, you’ll see a lot of people talking about PIZZA in a way that (seems like a code), it’s kind of impossible.”


Mike Benz:
In these new files, you’ll see a lot of people talking about PIZZA in a way that (seems like a code), it’s kind of impossible.
Drop a ? if you’ve been vindicated
Cliphttps://t.co/M6YlH9oRMY
Full Interviewhttps://t.co/03XLFBWHQm pic.twitter.com/tSXCvFBOa5
— MJTruthUltra (@MJTruthUltra) February 5, 2026
A separate development underscores the tension. Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche appeared on Fox News and doubled down on declaring the Epstein files exhausted.

“We have released everything. We reviewed six million pieces of paper!” Blanche stated, adding “We are not sitting on a single piece of paper to be released.”


Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche tells Americans he will cover up the child trafficking network of Jeffrey Epstein by not releasing the rest of the Epstein files.
He says people should trust him when he says there is not a single document that the government has that should… pic.twitter.com/Hi52DfzKxM
— Shadow of Ezra (@ShadowofEzra) April 14, 2026
He insisted that if anything new surfaces it would be made public, but emphasized the DOJ’s review covered millions of pages unrelated to Epstein and that Congress could access unredacted materials if lawmakers chose to examine them.

ernity.news/wp-includes/js/wp-embed.min.js

The Pizzagate theory first gained traction in late 2016 after WikiLeaks published thousands of emails from Hillary Clinton’s campaign chairman John Podesta. Researchers flagged phrases like “pizza” and “hot dogs” appearing in contexts that seemed unrelated to meals—patterns that echoed an FBI intelligence bulletin on pedophile code words, where “pizza” was listed as slang for girl and “hot dog” for boy. Comet Ping Pong, a Washington, D.C. pizzeria, became the focal point after its owner’s Instagram posts and the restaurant’s alleged basement (which does not exist) fueled speculation of a child-sex ring operating out of the basement.

While mainstream outlets quickly labeled the theory a hoax, the Epstein files have now surfaced hundreds of similar “pizza” mentions. Multiple reports note exchanges involving Epstein’s urologist, Dr. Harry Fisch, that pair “pizza and grape soda” with references to erectile-dysfunction medication in ways that read as cryptic to outsiders. One 2018 message reads: “lets go for pizza and grape soda again. No one else can understand. Go kno.” Another simply states “Pizza and grape soda[.] Nough said.”



Debunkers argue these are innocent food references or jokes, yet many counter that the volume and context—especially when layered atop Epstein’s documented trafficking network—demand investigation rather than dismissal.



This latest flare-up fits a pattern of incremental disclosures followed by official assurances that the matter is closed. Vance’s willingness to revisit the “Pizzagate” framing, however tentatively, marks a rare high-level acknowledgment that some of the file language warrants a second look.



The Epstein saga has repeatedly exposed fractures between what officials claim has been fully disclosed and what the public believes remains concealed. Whether Vance’s pledged follow-up produces meaningful accountability—or joins the growing list of unfulfilled promises—will test whether transparency on elite networks is still possible. For now, the strange language in the files keeps the questions alive, and the public’s demand for answers shows no sign of fading.

Your support is crucial in helping us defeat mass censorship. Please consider donating via Locals or check out our unique merch. Follow us on X @ModernityNews.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 12:50

ZeroHedge News
Open 
US Publishes Alarming Radio Warning To Ships In Hormuz As Negotiators Cite 'Progress' Toward 2nd Round Of Pakistan Talks
US Publishes Alarming Radio Warning To Ships In Hormuz As Negotiators Cite 'Progress' Toward 2nd Round Of Pakistan Talks

Summary


The Iran war is "very close to over" with authorities in Tehran eager to agree a peace deal, Trump says, adding: "We've beaten them militarily." Axios cites 'progress' toward framework to end war.


AP/Bloomberg reporting the two sides have an "in principle agreement" to pursue further diplomacy; however, this is batted down as 'unconfirmed' by Tehran & a US official.


The Pentagon is sending thousands of additional troops into the Middle East in coming days: WaPo


Trump claims China "very happy" the US is permanently opening the Strait of Hormuz, also Xi told him Beijing was not sending weapons/defense items to Tehran.


Significant Lebanon fighting continues: Israel issues more evacuation orders, moving into south; Tehran outraged, threatens Red Sea shipping. Unconfirmed reports of one-week Lebanon ceasefire about to take effect.




//-->

//-->

//-->


US x Iran permanent peace deal by April 30, 2026?
Yes 33% · No 68%View full market & trade on Polymarket *  *  *

CENTCOM Updates Tanker Numbers amid Blockade

CENTCOM provides a Wednesday update: "During the first 48 hours of the U.S. blockade on ships entering and exiting Iranian ports, no vessels have made it past U.S. forces. Additionally, 9 vessels have complied with direction from U.S. forces to turn around and return toward an Iranian port or coastal area."

A big question remains: will Iran confront the US blockade militarily?... or will an uneasy status quo of limited vessel traffic continue to make it through Hormuz amid a potentially extended ceasefire that goes beyond the 2-week window?

A new warning from the White House/CENTCOM:


The White House and the U.S. military published a clip of a warning to ships, telling them not to breach the blockade of Iranian ports and coastal areas. In a maritime radio message, a U.S. servicemember tells ships that they will be boarded for interdiction and seizure if they attempt to travel to or from an Iranian port.



U.S. naval vessels are on patrol in the Gulf of Oman as CENTCOM continues to execute a U.S. blockade on ships entering and departing Iranian ports. U.S. forces are present, vigilant, and ready to ensure compliance. pic.twitter.com/dnHR2oz0ZN
— U.S. Central Command (@CENTCOM) April 15, 2026
Meanwhile in Tehran...


Footage of Iran's Foreign Minister Seyyed Abbas Araghchi welcoming Pakistan's Chief of Army Staff Field Marshal Syed Asim Munir upon his arrival in Tehran.
Follow Press TV on Telegram: https://t.co/LWoNSpkc2J pic.twitter.com/32pF6ONkiZ
— Press TV 🔻 (@PressTV) April 15, 2026
'Progress' Reported in US-Iran Contacts

Axios reports that US and Iranian negotiators "made progress in talks on Tuesday" while moving closer to a framework agreement to end the war, according to two US officials. The headline briefly pushed oil lower. This comes as Pakistan's top general headed a high-ranking political-security delegation from Pakistan to convey the US message and plan the second round of talks to Tehran. Per details in Axios:

"They were on the phone and backchanneling with all the countries and they are getting closer," the U.S. official said.
A second U.S. official confirmed progress was made Tuesday.
"We want to make a deal. And parts of their government want to make a deal. Now the trick is to get the whole of government over there to make the deal," a third U.S. official said.
Meanwhile, state Tasnim is reporting that Pakistan is getting ready to host the second round of Iran-US talks.

Lebanon Ceasefire Imminent? 

The Hezbollah-affiliated Al-Mayadeen channel, citing a senior Iranian source, reports that a ceasefire in Lebanon will begin tonight. "The duration of the ceasefire will be one week and will extend until the end of the ceasefire period between Iran and the United States."

However, there's been no confirmation of this from Israel or the US, or in Israeli media. The Lebanese government just met with Israeli officials for Rubio-sponsored talks in Washington yesterday, but there was no word of a definitive ceasefire coming from the meeting, and currently Hezbollah and Israel are not directly talking at all. It remains unclear whether this could be a sign of Lebanese officials getting Hezbollah on board with a pause in fighting.

Meanwhile, two fresh notes on the question of advancing a second round of US-Iran negotiations:

Iranian media reported that Field Marshal Asim Munir, Chief of Staff of the Pakistani Army, headed a high-ranking political-security delegation from Pakistan to convey the US message and plan the second round of talks, and is scheduled to meet with officials of the Islamic Republic.
Regional mediators are trying to extend the U.S.–Iran cease-fire and restart talks after failed negotiations in Islamabad, but no date or venue has been set. A new round is unlikely before Pakistan completes its regional diplomatic
'Very Close' To War Over, Diplomacy in Reach: Trump

The latest from Trump: The Iran war is "very close to over" with authorities in Tehran eager to agree a peace deal, President Trump claimed in a fresh interview broadcast Wednesday. "We’ve beaten them militarily, totally," Trump told Fox Business in a prerecorded interview. "I think it’s close to over, I view it as very close to over... If I pulled up stakes right now it would take them 20 years to rebuild that country, and we’re not finished." He added: "We’ll see what happens, I think they want to make a deal very badly."

This as the Associated Press has reported the US and Iran are closer to extending a ceasefire and restarting negotiations, even amid the intensifying standoff over the Strait of Hormuz as the US Navy has blockaded it for all shipping leaving Iranian ports or with ties, or under sanction.

The two sides have an "in principle agreement" to pursue further diplomacy after last weekend's failed Islamabad talks. Trump on Tuesday had optimistically cited that the next round could be just two days away. Mediators are said to be pushing for a compromise on outstanding issues including Hormuz and Iran's nuclear program before the April 7 truce expires next week, the news agency said - as they also eye the extension off the initial two weeks.


IRAN'S TASNIM: US-SANCTIONED CONTAINER SHIP GOLBON PASSED THROUGH HORMUZ pic.twitter.com/Wtca8fTZ2b
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) April 15, 2026
However, Iran's Foreign Ministry has made clear the reports about the ceasefire extension are not confirmed, while Axios' Barak Ravid similarly writes - US official tells me: "The US has not agreed to an extension of the ceasefire. There is continued engagement between the U.S. and Iran to reach a deal."

Iran meanwhile is warning that it sees a prolonging of the US blockade as "a prelude to a breach of the ceasefire," a military spokesman said, as featured state TV. Iran's military "will not permit any exports or imports to continue in the Persian Gulf, the Sea of Oman or the Red Sea" if it continues, the spokesman added. 


IRAN'S BAGHAEI: NO SPECIFIC DAY SET FOR NEW US NEGOTIATIONS

Via AP: A billboard depicting U.S. aircraft caught by Iranian armed forces in a fishing net.

 

Trump on China

President Trump says he asked his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping not to supply weapons to Iran, and Xi replied he was not doing so. "I had heard that China’s giving weapons to, I mean - you’re seeing it all over the place - to Iran," Trump also said in the aforementioned Fox Business interview.

"And I wrote him a letter asking him not to do that, and he wrote me a letter saying that essentially he’s not doing that." Major media outlets previously reported that US intelligence indicated China was preparing to ship advanced weaponry to Iran. Beijing's public rejection of the "baseless smear" - as the Foreign Minister called it - has indeed been swift and vehement.

With oil prices remaining elevated, with Brent crude trading about 33% higher than before the start of the war, Trump has issued a new Truth Social claiming China is "very happy that I am permanently opening the Strait of Hormuz." This even though in many cases it is China bound tankers being blocked and turned back by the US naval armada. "This situation will never happen again," Trump added. He is set to meet with Xi in Beijing on May 14-15. On this he wrote that "President Xi will give me a big, fat, hug when I get there in a few weeks. We are going working together smartly, and very well!" But then Trump says "But remember, we are very good at fighting, if we have to..."



More Troops Sent to Mideast

The Washington Post is out with a new report of more troops being sent to the theatre. "The Pentagon is sending thousands of additional troops into the Middle East in the coming days, as the Trump administration attempts to pressure Iran into a deal that could end the weeks long conflict there while considering the possibility of additional strikes or ground operations if a fragile ceasefire deal does not hold."

Already a combined estimated ten thousand US sailors, Marines, and personnel - on at least a dozen US warships, are maintaining the Trump-ordered blockade on Hormuz. So Washington continues to try and build leverage, also with the announced additional forces being prepped, while also sounding optimistic on a potential peace deal - thought to two sides are very far apart especially on the nuclear issue.

Trump has at times still shrugged off the importance of a final peace deal, having told ABC News that while an official peace agreement may not be necessary, "I think a deal is preferable because then they can rebuild." He had said, "They really do have a different regime now. No matter what, we took out the radicals."


Trump:
I wrote a letter to Xi. I asked him not to give Iran weapons. He wrote me a letter, and he is saying that he is essentially not doing that. pic.twitter.com/yrTT9Dwi2V
— Clash Report (@clashreport) April 15, 2026
Tehran (& Houthis) Threaten Red Sea Trade as Lebanon Fighting Persists

Iran's army warned it will block trade through the Red Sea, the Persian Gulf, and the Sea of Oman if the US naval blockade on Iranian ports continues. In a statement carried by Iranian state television, the head of the military's central command center said the "powerful armed forces of the Islamic Republic will not allow any exports or imports to continue in the Persian Gulf, the Sea of Oman and the Red Sea."

According to more via Al Jazeera, he added that Iran will "act decisively to defend its national sovereignty and its interests." One key factor which has outraged Iran is Israel's continued major attacks on Lebanon, after last Wednesday's massive aerial attack on Beirut and elsewhere which left over 300 dead. Israel on Wednesday said that Hezbollah fired 40 rockets into Israel earlier in the morning.

An Israeli drone strike on the Jiyeh road, Lebanon



More Geopolitical Headlines

via Newsquawk...

Effort to extend US-Iran ceasefire has made progress, AP reports citing official; mediators aim to extend the ceasefire for at least another two weeks; both sides gave an “in principle agreement” to extend the ceasefire.
Discussions are underway regarding possible extension of temporary ceasefire between Iran and US, according to Arab diplomatic sources cited by Russia on Wednesday and being reported by Chinese press CCTV.
However, US President Trump said it could end either way, but thinks a deal is preferable because then Iran can rebuild, also said he isn't thinking about extending the ceasefire and doesn't think it will be necessary, according to reported citing ABC reporter on X.
The Pentagon is sending thousands of additional troops into the Middle East in the coming days, WaPo reports citing US officials; in a bid to pressure Iran while mulling the possibility of additional strikes or ground operations if the ceasefire breaks.
US President Trump said it's "very possible" a deal with Iran will be reached by the time the King visits the US later this month (27-29th April), Sky News reported.
US President Trump said he views the war being very close to over, according to Fox News.
US VP Vance said we are negotiating with Iran and ceasefire is holding, adds Iranian negotiators wanted to make a deal.
Feel good about where we are.
Lot of mistrust between the US and Iran, can't be solved overnight.
US Vice President JD Vance is expected to lead a potential second round of talks with Iranian officials should negotiations lead to another face-to-face meeting before the ceasefire expires next week, according to sources familiar cited by CNN.
Pakistan leadership’s overseas tour until April 18th dims prospects of US-Iran talks in Islamabad before April 18th, Pakistani journalist Mallick reported.
Iran is to use alternative ports to those in southern Iran to bypass the US blockade in the Strait, Mehr News reported.
An Iranian VLCC (Very Large Crude Carrier), which was on the US sanctions list, entered the waters of Iran past the US blockade, Fars reported.
Iran secretly acquired a Chinese spy satellite that gave the Islamic republic a powerful new capability to target US military bases across the Middle East during the recent war, according to an FT investigation.
US Central Command said blockade of Iranian ports has been fully implemented and that US forces have completely halted economic trade going into and out of Iran by sea.
US has intercepted eight Iran-linked oil tankers since the start of the blockade, according to WSJ.
New satellite images show Iran digging for missile launchers trapped underground amid a ceasefire, according to CNN.
More than 20 commercial ships have passed through the Strait of Hormuz in the past 24 hours, WSJ reported, citing US officials.
US destroyer interdicted two oil tankers that attempted to leave Iran on Tuesday, according to an official cited by Reuters.
US President Trump reiterates on Truth Social "NATO wasn’t there for us, and they won’t be there for us in the future!".
Europe is accelerating a NATO fallback plan in case US President Trump pulls US out of the treaty, according to WSJ.
US Pentagon is likely to trim its Iran wall funding request, according to WSJ citing Senator Coons who is the top democrat on the Senate appropriations defense committee.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 13:05

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Iran Used Chinese Spy Satellite To Target US Bases During War, Outraged Beijing Denies
Iran Used Chinese Spy Satellite To Target US Bases During War, Outraged Beijing Denies

Iran quietly secured a Chinese spy satellite in late 2024 and used it to track US military bases across the Middle East during the current war, the Financial Times has newly - an allegation Beijing has flatly and angrily denied.

The TEE-01B satellite, built and launched by Chinese firm Earth Eye Co, was allegedly taken over by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps' (IRGC) Aerospace Force after launch from China, according to the report, which cites leaked Iranian military documents. Of course, the usual caveats must apply when it comes to major Western MSM reporting on an emerging 'axis of evil' doing all things anti-America: Russia, China, Iran (and certainly South Korea could soon be thrown in the mix given its pro-Moscow role in the Ukraine war). 

"Recently, some forces have been keen on fabricating rumors and maliciously associating them to China," according to the official statement from the Chinese Foreign Ministry. In the meantime, Earth Eye Co has not commented.



Further, the Chinese embassy in Washington told the Financial Times: "We firmly oppose relevant parties spreading speculative and insinuative disinformation against China." But we should note that this wasn't exactly a full-on denial of the charge, and the embassy would likely not have a full picture of what the highest echelons of Chinese intelligence is up to at any given moment in Beijing.

Per the FT report, Iranian commanders tasked the satellite with monitoring key US military sites, using time-stamped coordinate lists, satellite imagery, and orbital analysis. The Financial Times said the images were captured in March, before and after drone and missile strikes on those locations. 

As part of the arrangement, the IRGC gained access to commercial ground stations run by Emposat, a Beijing-based satellite control and data provider with a network spanning Asia, Latin America, and beyond.

One surprising development within the first month of Trump's Operation Epic Fury was that Iran's ballistic missiles were able to reach very precise locations all the way over in Jordan, where US bases were pummeled, amid an alarming trend where billions of dollars in regional American air defenses were quickly taken out. Of course, sensitive Israeli military and energy sites were also hit, especially in Haifa and Tel Aviv. Reuters has also picked up on the FT report Wednesday, writing:


According to the report, the satellite also monitored Muwaffaq Salti Air Base in Jordan and locations close to the US Fifth Fleet naval base in Manama, Bahrain, and Erbil airport, Iraq, around the time of IRGC-claimed attacks on facilities in those areas.


US outposts in northern Iraqi Kurdistan have also been repeatedly hit by Iranian drones, or at times drones and projectiles possibly sent by local Tehran-aligned paramilitary forces.

As for more specifics cited in the original FT report, the satellite was described has having captured images of Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia on March 13, 14, and 15.

There's some credibility to this, given that on March 14, Trump confirmed that very expensive US surveillance aircraft at the base had been hit. "Four of the five had ⁠virtually no damage, and ​are already back in service. One ​had slightly more damage, but will be in the air shortly," ​Trump had written at the time ​on Truth Social.

Still, Trump is trying to 'play nice' with Beijing - even amid such public and damning allegations - ahead of his planned mid-May visit, saying in a Wednesday Truth Social post he asked his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping not to supply weapons to Iran, and Xi replied he was not doing so. "I had heard that China’s giving weapons to, I mean - you’re seeing it all over the place - to Iran." This was in a newly published Fox Business interview.

FT produced the following graphic as part of its report:



"And I wrote him a letter asking him not to do that, and he wrote me a letter saying that essentially he’s not doing that." Major media outlets previously reported that US intelligence indicated China was preparing to ship advanced weaponry to Iran. Beijing's public rejection of the "baseless smear" - as the Foreign Minister called it - has indeed been swift and vehement.

Trump has also newly explained on Truth Social that China is "very happy that I am permanently opening the Strait of Hormuz" - this even though in many cases it is China bound tankers being blocked and turned back by the US naval armada. "This situation will never happen again," Trump added. He is set to meet with Xi in Beijing on May 14-15. On this he wrote that "President Xi will give me a big, fat, hug when I get there in a few weeks. We are going working together smartly, and very well!" But then Trump says "But remember, we are very good at fighting, if we have to."

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 13:25

The Aviationist
Open 
U.S. Navy Confirms MQ-4C Triton Crash
The U.S. Navy has acknowledged the loss of an MQ-4C Triton last week in a new Mishap Summaries report released by the Naval Safety Command. As we reported last week, a U.S. Navy MQ-4C Triton Unmanned Aerial System (UAS) disappeared from flight tracking websites over the Persian Gulf on Apr. 9, 2026. The aircraft indicated an emergency through […]

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Is the US blockade of Iran working?
BBC Verify has been looking into whether the US blockade of Iran near the Strait of Hormuz is working.

The Hill
Open 
FDA to weigh lifting restrictions on some MAHA-favored peptides
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is taking the first steps toward potentially easing access to certain peptide injections that are currently restricted due to safety concerns.  The agency on Wednesday said it is convening a meeting of an outside advisory panel in July to discuss whether to allow compounding pharmacies to manufacture peptides for ulcerative colitis, wound healing, obesity and more, according to a Federal...

The Hill
Open 
IAEA chief warns against 'illusion of an agreement' on Iran's nuclear program
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director General Rafael Grossi on Wednesday warned against the “illusion” of an agreement with Iran that does not clearly outline a method to assess its nuclear development.  “Iran has a very ambitious, wide nuclear program so all of that will require the presence of IAEA inspectors,” Grossi told reporters...

The Hill
Open 
Tax Day is here, and the IRS is issuing bigger refunds to more people
Taxpayers have until midnight to file or request an extension.

The Hill
Open 
Watch live: Wright testifies before House on Energy Department 2027 budget request
Energy Secretary Chris Wright will testify before the House Appropriations Committee on Wednesday afternoon about the White House's fiscal 2027 budget request for energy policies. The hearing comes as energy costs have skyrocketed amid the U.S. operation in Iran following the regime's closure of the Strait of Hormuz — a key shipping channel for oil...

The Hill
Open 
$117.5M Comcast settlement offers payouts after 2023 data breach: What to know
Cable and internet service provider Comcast reached a $117.5 million settlement after a major data breach exposed customers’ personal information in October 2023.

The Hill
Open 
Trump says he thought oil prices would be 'much worse' amid Iran war
President Trump on Tuesday doubled down on the fact that he thought oil prices would be “much worse” than they are now amid the Iran war. “I mean, honestly, I thought there'd be much worse. And I was willing to do that to stop a nuclear weapon to be used against this country or the...

The Hill
Open 
Utah Valley students disapprove of Charlie Kirk critic chosen as grad speaker
Sharon McMahon made a series of posts on social media where she criticized Charlie Kirk a few days after his death.

The Hill
Open 
Trump refuels AI controversy with new Jesus image
⛪ Plus: Vance advises the pope to ‘be careful’ in discussing theology {beacon} It’s Wednesday. Let’s all channel “DoorDash Grandma” today, who says, “I love everybody.”   In today's issue: Trump posts another AI Jesus photo after backlash Vance advises pope to ‘be careful’ discussing theology US reportedly sending 10K more troops to Middle East...

The Hill
Open 
Peltola rakes in almost $9 million in record-setting first quarter 
Former Rep. Mary Peltola (D-Alaska) brought in $8.9 million in the first three months of the year as she seeks a Senate seat, her campaign announced this week. The sum marks the largest first-quarter raise for a Senate candidate in the state. Peltola, who lost Alaska’s at-large House seat in 2024, is challenging incumbent Republican...

The Hill
Open 
Mike Johnson 'taken aback' by pope's comments about war
House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) said on Wednesday that he was “taken aback” by some of the comments Pope Leo XIV made about the conflict in Iran, amid President Trump’s criticism of the leader of the Catholic Church. “A pontiff or any religious leader can say anything they want, but obviously, if you wade into...

The Hill
Open 
Warnock on Vance's warning to pope: 'This is how fascists talk'
Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-Ga.) on Tuesday slammed Vice President Vance's warning to Pope Leo XIV for criticizing the U.S.-Israeli conflict in Iran, branding it "how fascists talk." Vance addressed the pope's feud with President Trump during an event with Turning Point USA (TPUSA) in Athens, Ga. The vice president said the pontiff needs to be "careful" in...

The Hill
Open 
Péter Magyar exposes Hungarian corruption, payments to CPAC? 
Liberal media figures fawning over new PM Péter Magyar might be surprised to discover that he’s actually very conservative, and conservatives who are mad that Viktor Orbán lost might be in for a pleasant surprise. 

The Hill
Open 
Cato Institute official pushes back after Trump touts its immigration data
The Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank, is pushing back on President Trump’s claim that its immigration research shows the Trump administration’s handling of the southern border is “the best in the History of the U.S.A.” The president on Tuesday posted a graph on his Truth Social platform tracking a 99.9 percent decline of legal...

BBC UK News
Open 
Theatre touring 'in crisis' as performances of plays drop 70%
The steep decline "is likely to reach a critical level without intervention", a report warns.

Harvard Business Review
Open 
When Creating an AI Strategy, Don’t Overlook Employee Perception
Automation and augmentation send very different messages to the people on the front line.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Scottish ultrarunning champion dies during Highlands record attempt
David Parrish, who won Cape Wrath Ultra in 2023, had been attempting gruelling route again as fundraising challengeA 35-year-old ultramarathon champion from Dumfries has died while attempting to beat the record for a race to the most north-westerly point on mainland Britain.David Parrish, a former Royal Marine, who often hiked alongside his spaniel Munro, was trying to become the fastest man to complete the Cape Wrath trail, one of Britain’s most gruelling race routes. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Bayern Munich v Real Madrid: Champions League quarter-final, second leg – live
⚽ Champions League news; 8pm BST kick-off (first leg: 2-1)⚽ Arsenal v Sporting – updates | Live scores | Mail MichaelIt doesn’t get a lot bigger or better than this. The outright favourites this season (Bayern) against the most successful European side of all time (Real). A mouthwatering quarter-final between two gigantic behemoths to see who will face the reigning champions (PSG) in the semi-final. Double woof.The quarter-finals might just be the best part of the Champions League – close enough to the final to get excited of glory but far enough from the tournament climax to still have any number of unknowns and permutations, the games come thick and fast (you can also follow Arsenal v Sporting tonight right here) and there is just a solitary goal separating Bayern and Real Madrid in this tie, with the Germans earning a 2-1 first-leg victory last week at the Bernabéu. Yes, it was a stunning result for Vincent Kompany’s side but Bayern might be frustrated their advantage is not bigger. One thing is for sure, you never, ever count out Real Madrid in this competition.It seems like they’re going to win the Bundesliga, which obviously hurts me considering my brother is at Dortmund, and I was a player there,” Bellingham replied. “Again, it depends on what he does with England, and hopefully, we can try and stop them from winning the Champions League tomorrow, which will obviously have a big effect.He’s a sensational player. It’s a pleasure to play with him with the national team. I think he’s amazing. He’s showing everyone the last two or three years he’s reached a level where he’s almost perfected his craft in terms of what he can do as a striker.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Arsenal v Sporting: Champions League quarter-final, second leg – live
⚽ Champions League news; 8pm BST kick-off (first leg: 1-0)⚽ Bayern v Real Madrid – updates | Live scores | Mail SimonHello world! This is Arsenal’s 12th Champions League game of the season, and they’ve won 10 and drawn one of the previous 11. Europe is their happy place, and this the only competition in which they’ve played and not lost over the last month, in which time they’ve been dumped out of the FA Cup by Southampton, lost a League Cup final to Manchester City, been turned over at home by Bournemouth and generally allowed the wheels to come very much and emphatically off. Tonight, nursing a 1-0 lead from the first leg, they can and indeed need to give themselves a much-needed morale boost ahead of Sunday’s Premier League enormoclash at the Etihad.A few happy omens for Arsenal:The record of English clubs in two-legged Champions League ties against Portuguese opponents is jolly good – 10 wins on the spin since Benfica upset Liverpool in 2005-06.The record of English clubs in Champions League or European Cup quarter-finals against Portuguese opponents is even better: played nine, won nine.Sporting haven’t won a competitive match in England in 10 attempts since they beat Middlesbrough 3-2 in the 2004-05 Uefa Cup.Thinking about football these days.There was a dramatic pause when Mikel Arteta was asked what he wants from the Arsenal supporters against Sporting on Wednesday evening in the second leg of their Champions League quarter-final.After his attempts to rouse them before the early kick-off against Bournemouth at the weekend by telling them to “bring your lunch” backfired spectacularly with a costly home defeat that ended with some fans booing the Premier League leaders off the pitch, this time the message was more considered. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
From divvy to dinlo: index of insults aims to record Britain’s diverse dialects
University of Sheffield academics hope to create ‘vivid, honest record’ of regional swearwords in act of preservationAn idiot wandering the British Isles is sure to be greeted with a colourful volley of insults, each a signifier of the place in which he finds himself: “divvy” in Merseyside, “pillock” in Leeds or “dinlo” in Portsmouth.But with parochial phrases increasingly being lost to the homogenisation of the English language, experts are worried that soon, the wandering idiot may just be called an “idiot” wherever he goes. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Sexual harassment is rife on comedy circuit and women lack protections, MPs told
Women using informal warning systems to protect themselves and others, comedian tells equalities committeeUK politics live – latest updatesSexual harassment and abuse on the comedy circuit has is persistent and under-reported, with protections available to women often limited or absent, a comedian has told MPs.Performers and campaigners said many female comedians are left to rely on informal warning systems to try to keep themselves safe but added that these systems can expose women to further risks. Continue reading...

ZDNet News
Open 
Why Netgear just got the first FCC router ban exemption in the US
You can keep buying Netgear routers in the US for now. Here's why - and for how long.

ZDNet News
Open 
Why Zorin OS 18.1 is simply the best Linux distro - for anyone
Released today, the latest Zorin OS manages to improve upon previous versions - and that's quite an achievement.

ZDNet News
Open 
Best Buy will give you a free LG TV when you buy the B5 OLED at 50% off - seriously
The LG B5 offers the same signature picture quality as its flagship sibling at a lower price - and there's a free TV included.

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
A Kuwaiti journalist is detained since March 2 after filming a U.S. F-15 crash
KUWAIT CITY — A Kuwaiti journalist remains in state custody this week following his arrest on March 2, after he captured and shared footage of U.S. Air Force F-15 fighter jet crashing after being shut down by mistake by a Kuwaiti fighter jet.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Microsoft Surface PCs Are Getting Big Price Hikes, and the Cheaper Models Are Going Away
The price increases range from $200 to $300, and Microsoft doesn't sell a sub-$1,000 Surface anymore. The rising cost of consumer tech is a common theme in 2026.

TechRadar Reviews
Open 
Margo's Got Money Troubles review — Apple TV's new comedy series is addictive and surprisingly heartfelt

The Right Scoop
Open 
WATCH LIVE: White House press briefing with Scott Bessent and Kelly Loeffler
The White House is holding a special press briefing today that will include Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt, Secretary of Treasury Scott Bessent, and Small Business Administrator Kelly Loeffler. It is set to . . .

Mail Online
Open 
Heather Locklear and Lorenzo Lamas get affectionate for first time as she meets his kids after 6 MONTHS of dating
They were attending the Brave & Rescued Awards in Los Angeles , honoring firefighters who responded to the Eaton Fire, in mid January when they locked arms.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ex-Tory and Labour councillor Richard Bingley joins Reform for May elections
The much-travelled politician, who has also been a member of Ukip, will stand for election to Thurrock councilFirst he was a Tory councillor, before switching to Labour. Then came a stint in Ukip, followed by a return to the Conservatives that ended in ignominy amid a row over trees. And now, the much-travelled Richard Bingley is representing Reform.If Bingley is elected to Thurrock council in Essex on 7 May, it will represent something of a resurrection for the man with a case for being Britain’s most ideologically free-ranging politician, coming three years after he quit as leader of another council – Plymouth. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Has Trump given up on the midterms?
The president is losing public support over the Iran war.

Ars Technica
Open 
New 3D map of Universe could solve dark energy mystery

Ars Technica
Open 
Allbirds abandons clothes, pivots to "AI compute infrastructure"

Ars Technica
Open 
Good Omens S3 trailer sets up a blessed conclusion

Ars Technica
Open 
US jobs too important to risk Chinese car imports, says Ford CEO

BBC UK News
Open 
Murderer died in hospital from cancer and liver cirrhosis
William MacDowell, 81, died at Forth Valley Hospital after being jailed for killing Renee MacRae and son Andrew.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Germany, the UK warn the Iran war distracts from Ukraine and oil price rises help Russia
Germany's defense minister warned that Russia "benefits from current developments in the Middle East," as the Ukraine Defense Contact Group met in Berlin. He said rising oil prices were "filling its war coffers."

Mail Online
Open 
Honeymoon shark attack: Newlywed is fighting for life and has leg amputated during Maldives holiday
The holidaymaker, who lost a huge amount of blood, was airlifted to hospital before doctors amputated his leg.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Economic shock from Iran war risks driving up global debt levels, says IMF
Conflict is pushing up price of energy and food, fuelling higher borrowing costs and hitting growth, report saysIran war escalation could trigger global recession, IMF warnsBusiness live – latest updatesThe Iran war risks triggering a rise in global debt levels, forcing governments to choose between cushioning a cost of living shock and maintaining sound public finances, the International Monetary Fund has warned.Against a volatile backdrop of the Middle East conflict, the Washington-based fund said the war could add to the already strained position of government finances throughout the world. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Pitt and Game of Thrones spinoff given age ratings as BBFC deploys new AI tool
Regulator says tool, which creates reports for humans to review, has helped classify entire UK catalogue of HBO MaxTV shows including The Pitt and a Game of Thrones spinoff have received age ratings in the UK after the British Board of Film Classification (BBFC) deployed AI to help flag contentious scenes.The BBFC developed a tool to identify content that triggers compliance issues, such as violence, nudity and bad language. The flagged scenes were then passed over to BBFC staff for human review. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
North Wales police threaten ban over calls about bins and noisy kids
Decision to seek contact ban orders for people who repeatedly call about non-criminal matters is believed to be UK firstPeople who call with complaints about their neighbours could face a contact ban for wasting police resources, a police force has said.In a social media post on the weekend, North Wales police (NWP) said they had responded to four antisocial behaviour callouts in 24 hours for disputes such as “neighbours who don’t put their bins away or kids playing in the garden making too much noise during the day”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Richard Bingley branches out from Tories, Labour and Ukip to stand for Reform
Much travelled councillor who quit Plymouth after cutting down of 110 trees to contest Thurrock in May electionFirst he was a Tory councillor, before switching to Labour. Then came a stint in Ukip, followed by a return to the Conservatives that ended in ignominy amid a row over trees. And now, the much-travelled Richard Bingley is representing Reform.If Bingley is elected to Thurrock council in Essex on 7 May, it will represent something of a resurrection for the man with a case for being Britain’s most ideologically free-ranging politician, coming three years after he quit as leader of another council – Plymouth. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ben Jennings on Trumpflation – cartoon
Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Palestinian leader Marwan Barghouti at risk in Israeli jails as he faces ‘escalating abuse’
‘Palestine’s Mandela’ suffers three recent attacks including assault where prison guards set a dog on him, lawyer saysJailed Palestinian leader Marwan Barghouti is at immediate risk in Israeli jails, where he has been attacked three times in as many weeks, including in one assault last month where prison guards set a dog on the 66-year-old, his lawyer has said.Barghouti is often called Palestine’s Nelson Mandela. He is respected across otherwise feuding Palestinian factions, has broad popular support across occupied Palestine, repeatedly engaged with Israeli officials before his detention and long backed a two-state solution. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
BBC to cut up to 2,000 jobs in biggest downsize in 15 years
Announcement comes before Matt Brittin replaces Tim Davie as director general next monthBusiness live – latest updatesThe BBC is to cut as many as 2,000 jobs in the biggest downsizing of the public service broadcaster in 15 years.Staff were informed of the cuts, which will affect about 10% of the BBC’s 21,500 employees, at an all-staff meeting on Wednesday afternoon. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Ivanka Trump gushes over new sister-in-law Bettina Anderson... as she offers glimpse into extravagant bridal shower
It looks like Ivanka Trump approves of new sister-in-law Bettina Anderson, as she offered a peek at the extravagant bridal shower thrown for the Palm Beach socialite last weekend.

Mail Online
Open 
Moment middle-aged woman steals pub's lucky monkey statue as outraged landlady appeals for its safe return
Lesley Wood, the landlady at the Shoulder of Mutton pub in Hebden Bridge in West Yorkshire, discovered one of her monkey statues was missing on Sunday morning.

Mail Online
Open 
Pensioner, 81, who strangled and tied up woman, 95, in botched robbery after being diagnosed with terminal cancer is told he will likely die behind bars as he's jailed
Edwin Morrison posed as a council worker when he targeted Mary Morgan in her home in Little Hutton, Salford, after remembering she used to tip him a 'princely sum' of £2 when he dropped off medication.

Mail Online
Open 
Parent like it's 1999: Mums & Dads are going retro bringing up the kids by letting them be bored, ditching iPhones and watching more sedate 90s films and TV
The trend for 'parenting like its the 90s' includes digging out retro technology, playing board games together and even letting children be bored without the distraction of iPhones,

Mail Online
Open 
Moment middle-aged woman steals pub's lucky monkey as outraged landlady appeals for its safe return
Lesley Wood, the landlady at the Shoulder of Mutton pub in Hebden Bridge in West Yorkshire, discovered one of her monkey statues was missing on Sunday morning.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Clannad’s Moya Brennan had a dazzling, distinctive voice that lifted spirits until the end
She brought Irish Gaelic to Top of the Pops, featured on soundtracks including Titanic and King Arthur and showed that folk could find pop success• Clannad singer and harpist Moya Brennan dies aged 73Moya Brennan’s voice was an unusual instrument to arrive in the Top 20 in November 1982, especially on a Top of the Pops episode featuring the very different delights of A Flock of Seagulls, Eddy Grant and one-hit wonders Blue Zoo. As light as a leaf in the air, it provided a sacred counterpoint to the low, looming drones of a Prophet 5 synthesiser, and, in its breathy solo lines, guided the layered harmonies of her Clannad bandmates – her brothers and uncles – to somewhere new. A week later, Theme from Harry’s Game – the closing song on a radical Yorkshire TV series about The Troubles that played out over three consecutive nights – had jumped to No 5 in the charts, the highest ever position for a song sung in Irish Gaelic.The lyrics were about the never-ending cycle of life, and how all things must pass, plucked from a proverb from a book of her grandfather’s, by her brother and bandmate, Ciarán. Even to non-speakers, Brennan’s voice sounded like a new kind of spiritual guide, much needed in the anxious early days of Thatcherism and only a few months after the IRA London park bombings. Her impact also expanded the transportive possibilities of traditional music in film and TV. Brennan’s voice became a mainstay of soundtracks, later among them ITV’s Robin of Sherwood series, Titanic and the 2004 feature film adaptation of King Arthur starring Keira Knightley, entering public consciousness in a way similar to how the avant garde output of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop had in the 1960s. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Scottish ultrarunning champion dies during Highlands record attempt
David Parrish, who won Cape Wrath Ultra in 2023, had been attempting gruelling route again as fundraising challengeA 35-year-old ultramarathon champion from Dumfries has died while attempting to beat the record for a race to the most north-westerly point on mainland Britain.David Parrish, a former Royal Marine, NEW who often hiked alongside his spaniel Munro, was trying to become the fastest man to complete the Cape Wrath trail, one of Britain’s most gruelling race routes. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
IMF calls for countries to economise on energy supplies, and hails UK’s budget deficit improvement – business live
Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial news, as IMF managing director Kristalina Georgieva gives a press conference in Washington DCEconomic shock from Iran war risks driving up global debt levels, says IMFIran war escalation could trigger global recession, IMF warnsRecord-high export revenues from crude oil have pushed Norway’s trade surplus to its highest level since January 2023.Statistics Norway has reported that the country’s export revenues rose to NOK 199.9bn (£15.6bn) in March 2026.The closure of the Strait of Hormuz has caused a significant supply shock in the oil market, which contributed to the high oil prices in March, and thus the highest export value ever.“I wonder what the hit to global GDP would be if a nuclear weapon hit London,” Bessent said to the BBC. “I am less concerned about short-term forecasts, for long-term security.”The relationship between the two countries looks increasingly fraught. On Tuesday, Reeves used her strongest language yet to criticize Donald Trump’s war in the Middle East and the damage it has wreaked on the global economy. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Everton mark 37th anniversary of Hillsborough with tribute to 97 at Hill Dickinson Stadium
Club unveil plaque outside South Stand at new stadiumRepresentatives of families attend ceremonyEverton have marked the 37th ­anniversary of the Hillsborough ­disaster by unveiling a permanent tribute at Hill Dickinson Stadium to the 97 Liverpool supporters who were unlawfully killed.Representatives of the Hillsborough families and Liverpool FC were invited to a ceremony at ­Everton’s new stadium on Wednesday to pay respects to the 97 and unveil a plaque outside the South Stand. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
An old colleague got in touch after 50 years, thanks to the Guardian | Letter
Madge Christopher was featured in an article on Storm Goretti, then Robert calledMy photograph appeared in your article on the aftermath of Storm Goretti (‘It has been traumatic’: the Cornwall landmark left battered by Storm Goretti, 3 April), and now I have an extraordinary tale to tell.Within a day or so of the publication, I received an email from a man called Robert who said that, more than 50 years ago, we had worked in the same local government establishment, which was an office with a small number of employees. But there was more… Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
We can prove which twin fathered the child in this paternity dispute | Letter
Prof Michael Krawczak says the required molecular genetic testing comes at a cost, but should not be ruled out as it was in a recent court caseI read with great astonishment your article regarding the court of appeal’s decision on proving paternity in the case of a child whose father could be either one of a pair of monozygotic twins (Court of appeal says it cannot rule on which identical twin fathered a child, 30 April). I was particularly surprised by the court’s statement that it was “not possible” to say which twin fathered the child. This is definitely not true. The germ cells of monozygotic twins differ with sufficient probability and to a sufficient degree to allow their respective children to be clearly assigned to either of them using molecular genetic techniques.I and my colleagues first presented the idea for this approach back in 2012, and clearly demonstrated its practical feasibility in 2018. Of course, the required molecular genetic testing entails considerable costs (currently in the five-figure range). However, whether such costs would be so “very significant” (the court’s words) as to preclude genetic testing seems highly questionable, given the potential consequences of inaction for those involved.Prof Michael KrawczakKiel University, Germany Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Strike is harming the NHS and dividing doctors | Letters
Dr Helen Holt and Dr Peter Davis respond to an article by Polly Toynbee on the latest round of strikes by resident doctorsPolly Toynbee is right that it is time to stop the doctors’ strikes (Both doctors and the government are handling this strike badly – that’s why there is no end in sight, 10 April). She suggests that doctors are not feeling the pain of industrial action, but this is far from true. We are anxious about our patients and their cancelled appointments and procedures; we are exhausted covering work that we are not familiar with; and those being paid overtime for shifts they don’t want to do are uncomfortable about the financial impact on the NHS.Many of us reluctantly supported industrial action at the beginning, with a government that wasn’t listening – wanting to support junior colleagues whose pay had fallen far behind contemporaries. Now we see how divided and conflicted resident doctors are too, and we long for a resolution. We recognise that the strikes are harmful. Communication and diplomacy are skills we pride ourselves on, and politicians have never needed them more than now. Diplomacy is the way to resolve this crisis for our NHS as well. Dr Helen HoltConsultant physician and chair of the medical staff committee, University Hospitals Dorset Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
For Keir Starmer to talk of national resilience and ignore nature is absurd | Letters
Responding to an article by the PM, Caroline Lucas says he must be clearer about climate risks, Molly Scott Cato says we must reverse Brexit and Dr Victor Ajuwon applauds Labour’s directness. Plus, letters by Toby Harris and Dr Tracey ElliottKeir Starmer’s warning that the UK should not be at the mercy of events abroad is well made (The Iran war is a warning: Britain must build resilience – at home and with our allies in Europe, 9 April), but would carry more weight were he to level with the British public about the full breadth of the crises we face. It is extraordinary that nowhere in an article devoted to resilience did he find space to include the growing threat posed to the UK by the dramatic decline in the health of nature around the world. It is even more extraordinary – and, frankly, unforgivable – given that his own intelligence chiefs at the joint intelligence committee (JIC) have recently spelled it out for him in no uncertain terms.In a report that the government shamefully sought first to suppress and then to redact, so that some of the most alarming warnings were removed, the JIC warned of “cascading risks” from the degradation of some of the planet’s most important ecosystems, including conflict, increased competition for resources and economic shocks. Six ecosystems “critical for UK national security” are all “on a pathway to collapse”, some potentially within five years – in other words, they face “irreversible loss of function beyond repair”. The UK’s heavy reliance on food and fertiliser imports means our food security is particularly at risk, threatening food shortages, higher prices and civil unrest. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Over-the-counter pet flea treatments could be banned under new UK rules
Exclusive: ministers consider restricting pesticide-based treatments, which can get into waterways and harm wildlifePet owners across the UK could be banned from buying flea treatment for cats and dogs under new government rules.Ministers have begun an eight-week consultation on letting only veterinary practitioners or pharmacists give out the potent, pesticide-based flea treatments, to ensure “correct usage”. At the moment, the flea and tick treatments can be bought from any pet shop. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Reeves steps up criticism of Trump’s Iran war, branding it a ‘mistake’
UK chancellor tells US audience she is ‘not convinced that this conflict has made the world a safer place’Middle East crisis – live updatesBusiness live – latest updatesRachel Reeves has stepped up her criticism of Donald Trump’s war on Iran, describing it as a “mistake” that has destabilised the global economy and damaged living standards around the world.In a marked fraying of the transatlantic relationship, the UK chancellor said Trump breaking off from diplomatic talks with Iran and launching airstrikes had not made the world a safer place. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
One year on: how landmark ruling on single-sex spaces has changed lives
Some campaigners are frustrated at slow pace of change, while those impacted are trying to work out what it means day-to-dayA year ago, the supreme court made its landmark judgment on single-sex spaces. In a long-running case against the Scottish government brought by gender-critical campaigners For Women Scotland (FWS), the court ruled that, for the purposes of the Equality Act, the legal definition of a woman was based on biological sex.The judgment has significant ramifications for who can now access women-only services and spaces, such as refuges or toilets. But most service providers are still awaiting practical guidance on how to apply the ruling. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Biometric checks to be rolled out in prisons after mistaken releases
New data shows 179 prisoners were set free in error from prisons in the year to March.

The Register
Open 
Automotive data biz Autovista blames ransomware for service disruption
Some customer orgs tell staff to block inbound email from the provider Autovista confirms that it called in outside support to help clean up a ransomware infection currently affecting systems in Europe and Australia.…

The Register
Open 
Bad teacher bots can leave hidden marks on model students
Study finds LLMs will smuggle biases into others even if they're scrubbed from training data New research warns about the dangers of teaching LLMs on the output of other models, showing that undesirable traits can be transmitted "subliminally" from teacher to student, even when they are scrubbed from training data.…

Gizmodo
Open 
Anthropic Is Jacking Up the Price for Power Users Amid Complaints Its Model Is Getting Worse
Heavy users could pay significantly more under a new usage-based pricing model.

Gizmodo
Open 
Disney’s Massive Layoffs Have Seemingly Hit Marvel Hard
About 1,000 people are facing layoffs at Disney—with Marvel Studios reportedly facing big cuts that include almost wiping out its visual development team.

Mail Online
Open 
Revealed: Exactly what Harry Maguire said to fourth official in eight-word f-bomb tirade to be slapped with extra one-game ban for Man United's trip to Chelsea
The reasons why Harry Maguire has been given an extra one-game ban following his red card at Bournemouth last month can be revealed, after the FA released the findings of their disciplinary hearing.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
UK’s largest housebuilder to buy less land in blow to Labour’s homes target
Barratt Redrow blames effects of Iran war and expected impact on mortgages and costs for further reductionGovernment’s 1.5m housebuilding target is suffering subsidenceBritain’s largest housebuilder is planning to dramatically cut back on buying new land, blaming the impact of the conflict in the Middle East and putting Labour’s ambitious housing target under more pressure.Barratt Redrow said it intended to approve between 7,000 and 9,000 plots of land for purchase in its current financial year, far lower than previous guidance of between 10,000 and 12,000. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ex-Tory and Labour councillor Richard Bingley joins Reform for May elections
The much-travelled politician, who has also been a member of Ukip, will stand for election to Thurrock councilAt first he was a Tory councillor, before switching to Labour. Then came a stint in Ukip, followed by a return to the Conservatives that ended in ignominy amid a row over trees. And now, the much-travelled Richard Bingley is representing Reform.If Bingley is elected to Thurrock council in Essex on 7 May, it will represent something of a resurrection for the man with a case for being Britain’s most ideologically free-ranging politician, coming three years after he quit as leader of another council – Plymouth. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Government’s 1.5m housebuilding target in England is suffering subsidence | Nils Pratley
As the country’s biggest housebuilder cuts land buying and the Iran war pushes up costs, setting an ambitious figure appears even more foolishThis is what the government didn’t want to hear when its target to build 1.5m new homes in England during this parliament already looked out of reach. The country’s biggest housebuilder is trimming its purchases of new land because the Iran war has created “a less certain backdrop”.Barratt Redrow’s “disciplined approach” isn’t a downing of tools, it should be said. The company had previously expected to buy between 10,000 and 12,000 plots; now it will acquire between 7,000 and 9,000. In money terms, it equates to about £100m less from a £800m-£900m budget. It is a scaling-back, as opposed to the outright halt to buying new land that London-focused Berkeley Group announced a couple of weeks ago. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Questions asked and answers given – up to a point. Welcome to lo-fi PMQs | John Crace
Weirdly, Keir and Kemi looked more secure in their jobs as a modicum of coherence entered their exchangesCredit where credit is due. The last few prime minister’s questions have been an exercise in nihilism. The embodiment of existential futility. Questions asked by Kemi Badenoch but not even a pretence by Keir Starmer of answering them. It was like the worst days of Boris Johnson’s time in No 10. We’d have learned more if both leaders had chosen to read out some names from an old 1980s phonebook.But to everyone’s surprise – not least Starmer’s – this week Keir did make a reasonable fist of listening to Kemi’s questions and giving a reply that was more or less coherent. Well, up to a point. Obviously he didn’t answer the one question that really counted. The one about when the defence investment plan would be published. But you can’t have everything. And, to be fair, it is a tricky one. Both sides of the house know that the UK needs to spend more on defence. Especially now the US seems to have become the enemy. But no one can agree on how to pay for it. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
179 prisoners freed 'in error' in England and Wales in single year
A total of 179 prisoners were freed "in error" in England and Wales between April 2025 and March 2026, or three every week, government figures show.

Mail Online
Open 
Olympic hockey coach confesses to lying about COVID-19 vaccine to enter China for 2022 Beijing Winter Games
An Olympic hockey coach has admitted to using a fake COVID-19 vaccination certificate to get around China's travel restrictions ahead of the 2022 Winter Games in Beijing.

Mail Online
Open 
Small boat migrant broke into London's Israeli embassy to 'carry out knife terror attack' after his asylum claim was rejected, court hears
Kuwait-born Abdullah Albadri, 34, is accused of plotting a terror attack in Kensington in revenge for the killing of children in Gaza on April 28 last year.

Mail Online
Open 
Popular chain Franco Manca to shut 16 pizza restaurants after being hit by 'disproportionately high' taxes - with 200 jobs at risk
The pizza chain also cited a lack of business rates relief for restaurants as it said a minority of its sites were 'no longer sustainable'.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
UK’s largest housebuilder to buy less land, in blow to Labour’s homes target
Barratt Redrow blames effects of Iran war, and likely impact on mortgage rates and costs, for further reductionBusiness live – latest updatesBritain’s largest housebuilder is planning to dramatically cut back on buying new land, blaming the impact of the conflict in the Middle East and putting Labour’s ambitious housing target under more pressure.Barratt Redrow said it intended to approve between 7,000 and 9,000 plots of land for purchase in its current financial year, far lower than previous guidance of between 10,000 and 12,000. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Scottish Labour leader says claim he tried to do Reform deal is ‘desperate lie’
Anas Sarwar says there have been ‘no stitch-ups, no deals, no backroom chats with Reform’ over Holyrood electionsUK politics live – latest updatesAnas Sarwar has dismissed as “a desperate lie from a desperate man” a claim by Reform UK’s Scotland leader, Malcolm Offord, that he offered to do a deal with the rightwing party to keep the Scottish National party out of power.Offord made the claim on Channel 4’s Scottish leaders’ debate on Tuesday evening, alleging the Scottish Labour leader came “bouncing up” to him at an event in December last year, suggesting they “work together to remove the SNP”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Harry Maguire given extra one-match ban for ‘joke’ comment towards officials
Defender shown red card against BournemouthOfficials claim Maguire made remark as he left fieldHarry Maguire will miss Manchester United’s trip to Chelsea having been handed an additional one-match ban by the Football Association for his reaction to being sent off at Bournemouth.The 33-year-old was shown a red card at the Vitality Stadium last month for a foul in the area on ­Evanilson, with Eli Junior Kroupi scoring from the resulting penalty as Bournemouth sealed a 2-2 draw. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
One year on: how Scotland’s landmark ruling on single-sex spaces has changed lives
Some campaigners are frustrated at slow pace of change, while those impacted are trying to work out what it means day-to-dayA year ago, the supreme court made its landmark judgment on single-sex spaces. In a long-running case against the Scottish government brought by gender-critical campaigners For Women Scotland (FWS), the court ruled that, for the purposes of the Equality Act, the legal definition of a woman was based on biological sex.The judgment has significant ramifications for who can now access women-only services and spaces, such as refuges or toilets. But most service providers are still awaiting practical guidance on how to apply the ruling. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
BBC to cut up to 2,000 jobs
The BBC will cut up to 2,000 jobs as part of its biggest downsize in 15 years, according to reports.

CNET News
Open 
You Might Actually Be Able to Afford Traeger's New Line of Pellet Grills
Traeger launched the Westwood series, a new line of more approachably priced pellet grills with plenty of premium features.

CNET News
Open 
Over Half of Us Have Faced Possible Malware, Yet Some Are Ignoring Cybercriminals
Protecting your devices and data takes a lot more than antivirus software.

CNET News
Open 
Champions League Soccer: Stream Arsenal vs. Sporting Lisbon Live
Can Mikel Arteta's Gunners make it to the UCL semifinals for the second season in a row?

CNET News
Open 
Champions League Soccer: Stream Bayern Munich vs. Real Madrid Live
The Bavarians look to get the job done against Los Blancos at the Allianz Arena.

Mail Online
Open 
Dr. Pimple Popper and husband just became empty nesters when terrifying stroke happened
The 55-year-old dermatologist is best known for treating patients with unusual cases of facial and skin disorders at her clinic Skin Physicians & Surgeons in Upland, California.

Mail Online
Open 
Newly discovered peptide hailed as 'natural Ozempic' without the nasty side effects
An experimental molecule could become a new 'natural Ozempic' without the laundry list of side effects, researchers at Stanford University have discovered in a recent study.

Mail Online
Open 
Revealed: How one in three Dodgy Fire Stick illegal streamers risk losing £1,700
The hackers behind the software, which allows users to access premium content from providers such as TNT Sports, Sky Sports and Disney+ for free, often install malware onto the devices.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Questions asked and answers given – up to a point. Welcome to lo-fi PMQs | John Crace
Weirdly, Keir and Kemi looked more secure in their jobs as a modicum of coherence entered their exchangesCredit where credit is due. The last few prime minister’s questions have been an exercise in nihilism. The embodiment of existential futility. Questions asked by Kemi Badenoch but not even a pretence by Keir Starmer of answering them. It was like the worst days of Boris Johnson’s time in No 10. We’d have learned more if both leaders had chosen to read out some names from an old 1980s phonebook.But to everyone’s surprise – not least Starmer’s – this week Keir did make a reasonable fist of listening to Kemi’s questions and giving a reply that was more or less coherent. Well, up to a point. Obviously he didn’t answer the one question that really counted. The one about when the defence investment plan would be published. But you can’t have everything. And, to be fair, it is a tricky one. Both sides of the house know that the UK needs to spend more on defence. Especially now the US seems to have turned into the enemy. But no one can agree on how to pay for it. Continue reading...

TechRadar News
Open 
Avoid paying full price — a certified refurbished Kindle is a much cheaper option after this Amazon price cut

TechRadar News
Open 
Amazon has been accused of ‘bricking’ older Fire TV Stick devices to get users to upgrade — and it’s sparked a class action lawsuit

TechRadar News
Open 
Gemini is now a native macOS app, making it faster and better integrated than ever before

TechRadar News
Open 
The Boys season 5 episode 3 sees Homelander nearly kill another Supe — and some Prime Video viewers argue that he 'should've gone through with it'

TechRadar News
Open 
Microsoft's Recall tool is back and still has major security concerns — but the company denies any data risk

TechRadar News
Open 
Drone-killing laser weapons greenlit for use in US airspace – FAA and Defense Department say high-energy weapons are ‘ready to protect all air travelers from illicit drone use’ despite airspace restrictions and friendly-fire incidents

TechRadar News
Open 
The end of encrypted DMs? Why Instagram is rolling back its biggest security feature

TechRadar News
Open 
Lowe's spring sale is like a Memorial Day preview — 40% off patio furniture, grills, appliances, and more

TechRadar News
Open 
Arsenal vs Sporting CP Free Streams: TV Channels, Kick-Off time for Champions League quarter-final 2nd leg

TechRadar News
Open 
Claude is having some problems, as Anthropic confirms an active issue — here's everything we know

TechRadar News
Open 
5 nail-biting crime dramas on cable TV that you've definitely missed — but there's still a way to stream them

TechRadar News
Open 
Amazon’s Google Pixel sale significantly undercuts Apple and Samsung on price — now's the time to buy

Atlas Obscura
Open 
Sheeps Bridge in Arizona

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
How the Globalstar purchase could turn Amazon’s Leo into a satellite powerhouse
The Globalstar deal may seem trivial relative to Amazon’s size, but it represents an “important signal” that Amazon is committed to space.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Allbirds’ AI pivot sends its stock soaring 700%. We’ve seen this film before.
It’s not unprecedented for struggling companies to latch onto the hot trend of the moment. Remember the blockchain hype cycle?

Slashdot
Open 
Rivian's Illinois Factory Will Run On Recycled EV Batteries
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Wall Street Journal: Rivian is joining with Redwood Materials to reuse EV batteries for energy storage -- the largest repurposed-battery energy storage system for an automotive manufacturer in the U.S., executives told The Wall Street Journal. Redwood Materials is a battery-recycling firm started by Tesla co-founder JB Straubel. Once completed later this year, Rivian's plant in Normal, Ill., will draw electricity from more than 100 Rivian EV batteries in an area the size of a small parking lot. It will reduce Rivian's dependence on the power grid during peak demand hours. "It saves Rivian money on what it takes to run the plant. It reduces the demand on the grid, which is great," Rivian Chief Executive Officer RJ Scaringe said in an interview.

In the Rivian project, the batteries will come from either its test vehicles or from vehicles that have viable batteries but can no longer drive. Those batteries get sent off to Redwood, which integrates them into power storage units. Both companies declined to specify the cost of this project. The setup is expected to initially provide 10 megawatt-hours of energy, equivalent to about 1,000 home-energy battery storage units linked together, Redwood's Straubel said. "These batteries are already built," he said. "We need to integrate them and connect them together, but that can happen quite fast. They don't have to get imported from some other place." [...] Scaringe said that while branching into battery energy storage systems is "not a focus for us as a business right now," Rivian hopes to do more at its sites with Redwood. "There's hopefully a lot more, and there's going to be a lot of batteries we'll have access to," he said.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Mail Online
Open 
Revealed: 'Baby Jessica' McClure 'grabbed husband by throat and scratched him until he bled' during late-night fight at home
An affidavit obtained by the Daily Mail claims Jessica McClure Morales wrapped her hands around her husband Danny's throat and 'accidentally' scratched him, causing him to bleed.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Viral victory: Iran is beating the land of tech bros in the social media wars
With AI-generated comedy videos and lego animations of Trump, Iranian content creators are using humour in propaganda battle against USIf Iran could manufacture destructive missiles at the speed with which it produces cutting memes, US Central Command would be coming out with its hands up by now.One of the more bizarre and unexpected aspects of the Iran-US war is that Iran, a country by reputation dominated by conservative clerics neurotic about western culture and media, is dominating the social media war, unleashing its gen Z tech warriors to engage western audiences with its sarcasm and ridicule of the Trump administration. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump believes diet soda kills cancer cells, Dr Oz reveals
Physicians issue reminder to public after TV doctor and CMS chief relays president’s claim on Don Jr podcastDonald Trump defended his consumption of diet soda by suggesting it might help prevent cancer, according to recent comments shared by Mehmet Oz in an interview with Donald Trump Jr.The remarks have even prompted some doctors to remind the public that, no, diet soda will not do anything to prevent cancer. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Scottish Labour leader calls claim he tried to do Reform deal a ‘desperate lie’
Anas Sarwar says there have been ‘no stitch-ups, no deals, no backroom chats, no back-channel contact with Reform’ UK politics live – latest updatesAnas Sarwar has dismissed as “a desperate lie from a desperate man” a claim by Reform UK’s Scotland leader, Malcolm Offord, that he offered to do a deal with the rightwing party to keep the Scottish National party out of power.Offord made the claim on Channel 4’s Scottish leaders’ debate on Tuesday evening, alleging the Scottish Labour leader came “bouncing up” to him at an event in December last year, suggesting they “work together to remove the SNP”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Former Alabama player allegedly impersonated NFL’s Penix, Njoku and McKinney in $20m loan scam
Luther Davis, a national champion with the Crimson Tide, is said to have worn wigs and make-up to secure fraudulent loansA former University of Alabama national champion plans to plead guilty later this month to orchestrating an alleged scheme in which he impersonated NFL players and defrauded lenders out of nearly $20m. The alleged scam is described in detail by the US attorney for the northern district of Georgia, including depictions of the former defensive lineman donning disguises during loan closings.Luther Davis, a member of the Alabama football team that won the 2010 national championship game, along with a partner, CJ Evins, “obtained at least thirteen fraudulent loans totaling more than $19,845,000”, the criminal information filing alleges. A criminal information (CI) document is filed by a US attorney when a defendant agrees to waive the constitutional right to indictment by a grand jury and instead proceed by typically entering a guilty plea; both Davis and Evins are doing so according to the court docket.Aliya Sports said it had no further comment on this article. Sure Sports did not reply to a request for comment. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Everton mark 37th anniversary of Hillsborough with tribute to 97 at Hill Dickinson Stadium
Club unveil plaque outside South Stand at new stadiumRepresentatives of families attend ceremonyEverton have marked the 37th anniversary of the Hillsborough disaster by unveiling a permanent tribute at Hill Dickinson Stadium to the 97 Liverpool supporters who were unlawfully killed.Representatives of the Hillsborough families and Liverpool FC were invited to a ceremony at Everton’s new stadium on Wednesday to pay respects to the 97 and unveil a plaque outside the South Stand. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
How big oil is cashing in on Iran war - The Latest
The world’s top 100 oil and gas companies made more than $30m every hour in unearned profit in the first month of the US-Israeli war in Iran, according to exclusive analysis for the Guardian.The conflict pushed the price of oil to an average of $100 a barrel in March, leading to estimated windfall war profits for the month of $23bn for the companies.Lucy Hough speaks to Damian Carrington, the Guardian’s environment editor Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
From divvy to dinlo: index of insults aims to record Britain’s diverse dialects
Academics from the University of Sheffield hope to create a ‘vivid, honest record’ of swearwords and other slights to stop them dying outAn idiot wandering the British Isles is sure to be greeted with a colourful volley of insults, each a signifier of the place in which he finds himself: “divvy” in Merseyside, “pillock” in Leeds or “dinlo” in Portsmouth.But with parochial phrases increasingly being lost to the homogenisation of the English language, experts are worried that soon, the wandering idiot may just be called an “idiot” wherever he goes. Continue reading...

The Verge
Open 
Allbirds announced a switch from shoes to AI and its stock jumped 600 percent
Allbirds had a hit a decade ago with its Wool Runner shoes, but after a $4 billion IPO in 2021, the business never turned a profit, and sales dropped nearly 50 percent between 2022 and 2025. The company recently announced it would sell off its name and assets for $39 million to American Exchange after […]

The Verge
Open 
Most people still don’t want anything to do with robotaxis
I've been reporting on self-driving cars for over a decade, and I've seen the technology go through many ups and downs, highs and lows. But one thing has remained remarkably the same over the years: the public just ain't buying it. Poll after poll has revealed a deep and abiding skepticism toward autonomous vehicles. People […]

Nature
Open 
Landmark ancient-genome study shows surprise acceleration of human evolution

Nature
Open 
Giant cancer study reveals effectiveness of ‘off label’ treatments

The Hill
Open 
Cleveland Federal Reserve President: Interest rates on hold 'for a good while'
The Cleveland Federal Reserve President on Wednesday predicted that interest rates may stay where they’re at for a “good while” as economists debate the best response to the impact of tariffs and the war in Iran.  “My baseline is that we’re going to remain on hold for a good while, but I do think that...

The Hill
Open 
House GOP punts vote on FISA spy powers amid last-minute scramble
House GOP leaders on Wednesday punted a key procedural vote on reauthorizing the U.S.'s foreign spy powers as they scramble to woo privacy-focused Republicans angling for a last-minute amendment. Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) had aimed to get enough Republican support to push through on Wednesday afternoon a procedural rule vote to tee up debate on...

The Hill
Open 
Watch live: White House briefs on Trump tax cuts with Iran tensions in backdrop
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt will brief reporters Wednesday afternoon on the "historic" tax cuts included in the GOP's One Big Beautiful Bill Act, just hours before the Internal Revenue Service's filing deadline. "It’s Tax Day!" Leavitt wrote in a post on social media platform X, announcing she will be joined at the briefing...

The Hill
Open 
America’s strength comes from the Constitution and checks on power
The strength of America lies in its Constitution, which has protected the rights of the people for over 250 years, and it is the responsibility of all Americans to defend it and the balance of power it provides.

The Hill
Open 
Live updates: Vought defends Trump's budget in House hearing; FISA renewal comes up for debate
It's a busy day on Capitol Hill. The House is set to start floor debate on the renewal of Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) Section 702, which expires Monday. But even passage of the rule, the first procedural hurdle, is in question. The House Budget Committee is questioning Office of Management and Budget Chair Russ...

The Hill
Open 
Hegseth set to meet lawmakers on Pentagon's $1.5 trillion budget ask
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth is set to head to Capitol Hill next week to meet with top House and Senate lawmakers and hash out the Pentagon’s proposed $1.5 trillion budget. Hegseth will meet Monday with the so-called “big eight,” the top Republicans and Democrats on the Armed Services and Defense Appropriations committees, Rep. Adam Smith (D-Wash.) told the Hill...

The Hill
Open 
Iran embassy in Tajikistan posts AI video of Jesus punching Trump in the face
Iran's embassy in Tajikistan on Tuesday posted an AI-generated video of Jesus Christ punching President Trump in the face. The embassy posted the video on its account on the social platform X. Christ is seen emerging from the skies seen above Trump in an image the president initially posted on his own Truth Social account....

The Hill
Open 
Boebert says Congress should go after pensions of Swalwell, Gonzales
GOP Rep. Lauren Boebert (Colo.) urged Congress to revoke the pensions of two ex-lawmakers who recently resigned after facing separate allegations of sexual misconduct.  Former Reps. Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.) and Tony Gonzales (R-Texas) both formally exited their roles on Tuesday.  “I think they should’ve been expelled and not resigned,” Boebert told CNN’s Manu Raju outside...

The Hill
Open 
Jackson says Supreme Court emergency rulings posing ‘potentially corrosive’ effect
Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson expressed deep concerns about the court’s recent emergency decisions during a lecture to law students earlier this week, telling them it is having a “potentially corrosive” effect on the judiciary and she hopes to be a “catalyst for change.”  “There is value in avoiding having the court continually touching...

The Hill
Open 
Swalwell accused of sexual assault as legal questions mount: Join the live discussion
Join The Hill's Legal Affairs Reporters Ella Lee and Zach Schonfeld for a live discussion on how the courts are interacting with politics.  Former Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.) was recently hit with sexual assault allegations, leading him to resign from Congress and drop his California gubernatorial bid. Will calls for accountability — or his efforts to fight...

The Hill
Open 
Thune urges Trump administration to ‘wrap up’ investigation of Fed chair
Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) on Wednesday urged the Trump administration to “wrap up” its investigation of Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell, arguing that it’s in “everybody’s best interest” to end the Justice Department’s controversial criminal probe. “I think it’s in everybody’s best interest to wrap up the investigation. I’ve said that before, it...

The Hill
Open 
Taxing millionaires and billionaires is a political no brainer for Democrats
The American financial elite have benefited from tax breaks while the rest of the population struggles, leading to a push for tax reform and increased taxation on the wealthy.

The Hill
Open 
How to file a tax extension and avoid IRS penalties
Running out of time to file your taxes? Here's how to get an extension and avoid late-filing penalties.

The Hill
Open 
Trump threatens to fire Powell, defends Fed criminal probe
President Trump threatened to fire Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell from the central bank board if he does not step down at the end of his term leading the bank. In a Wednesday interview with Fox Business Network's Maria Bartiromo, the president said he would oust Powell if he does not leave by the May...

Mail Online
Open 
I'm A Celebrity fans seriously distracted by Ant McPartlin's hair during terrifying trial - gasping 'I can't stop looking!' as he debuts striking new look
The latest instalment of the programme saw Seann Walsh, Beverley Callard, Mo Farrah and Sinitta take part in Cut Throat Cliff.

Mail Online
Open 
Sydney Sweeney sends brutal message to American Eagle haters as she fronts brand again after 'great jeans' scandal
The video begins with Sydney asking the audience, 'What brand am I wearing?' before flashes of her modeling the jean shorts appear on screen.

Mail Online
Open 
Ivanka Trump gushes over new sister-in-law Bettina Anderson... as she offers glimpse into extravagant bridal shower
It looks like Ivanka Trump approves of new sister-in-law Bettina Anderson, as she offered a peek at the extravagant bridal shower thrown for the Palm Beach socialite last weekend.

Mail Online
Open 
Prince Harry's US visa files are delayed until after King Charles's state visit to America
US officials have quietly pushed back a planned release of visa documents relating to the duke's emigration status until after his father's high-stakes trip to Washington.

Mail Online
Open 
Revealed: Exactly what Harry Maguire said to fourth official in eight-word f-bomb tirade to earn extra one-game ban for Man United's trip to Chelsea
The reasons why Harry Maguire has been given an extra one-game ban following his red card at Bournemouth last month can be revealed, after the FA released the findings of their disciplinary hearing.

Mail Online
Open 
Starmer in furious bust-up with the Commons Speaker after he's ordered to finally start answering Kemi's questions
Sir Lindsay Hoyle interrupted the PM to remind him that it was questions to the Prime Minister rather than the leader of the opposition.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Former Alabama player allegedly impersonated NFL’s Penix, Njoku and McKinney in $20m loan scam
Luther Davis, a national champion with the Crimson Tide, is said to have worn wigs and make-up to secure fraudulent loansA former University of Alabama football star plans to plead guilty later this month to orchestrating an alleged scheme in which he impersonated NFL players and defrauded lenders out of nearly $20m. The alleged scam is described in detail by the US attorney for the northern district of Georgia, including depictions of the former defensive lineman donning disguises during loan closings.Luther Davis, a member of the Alabama team that won the 2010 national championship game, along with a partner, CJ Evins, “obtained at least thirteen fraudulent loans totaling more than $19,845,000”, the criminal information filing alleges. A criminal information (CI) document is filed by a US attorney when a defendant agrees to waive the constitutional right to indictment by a grand jury and instead proceed by typically entering a guilty plea; both Davis and Evins are doing so according to the court docket.Aliya Sports said it had no further comment on this article. Sure Sports did not reply to a request for comment. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Harry Maguire given extra one-match ban for ‘joke’ comment towards officials
Defender shown straight red card against BournemouthOfficials claim Maguire called them ‘a joke’ as he left fieldHarry Maguire will miss Manchester United’s trip to Chelsea having been handed an additional one-match ban by the Football Association for his reaction to being sent off at Bournemouth.The 33-year-old was shown a straight red card at the Vitality Stadium last month for a foul in the box on Evanilson, with Eli Junior Kroupi scoring from the resulting penalty as the Cherries sealed a 2-2 draw. Continue reading...

Techdirt
Open 
Administration Apparently Planning To Blow Off FISA Court’s Ordered Fixes For Section 702
It wasn’t all that long ago that GOP legislators were collectively stonewalling a clean reauthorization of Section 702. Three years ago, these legislators were seeking to end the FBI (and other IC components’) access to Americans’ communications via “backdoor” searches of the NSA’s supposedly “foreign facing” collections. It wasn’t that the Republicans cared that Joe […]

Ministry of Defence
Open 
1,200 UK jobs supported by nearly 900 million defence deal to keep military helicopters mission-ready
More than 1,000 jobs have been secured through a new contract to help sustain Army Apache and RAF Chinook helicopters. | Ministry of Defence.

ZDNet News
Open 
Can this $70 Linux app make up for the lack of Photoshop? I tried it to find out
For those who bemoan the lack of Photoshop on Linux, it's possible that a competitor to GIMP could fill that need… maybe.

ZDNet News
Open 
Microsoft's latest Windows update now confirms if your PC is Secure Boot-protected - how it works
Beyond fixing a host of security vulnerabilities, the latest Patch Tuesday will display your Secure Boot status to make sure you're fully protected.

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
In the cockpit of the Boeing 747-200 Classic from Birmingham to Malta
In the cockpit of the Boeing 747-200 Classic from Birmingham to Malta

Wired Top Stories
Open 
The US Government Will Ask Data Centers How Much Power They Use
In a letter obtained by WIRED, the Energy Information Administration tells two senators that it plans to develop a mandatory assessment of data centers' energy use.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Why Amazon Is Buying Globalstar—and What It Means for Your iPhone
Amazon is paying more than $11 billion for a small satellite company.

The Right Scoop
Open 
WATCH: CENTCOM releases military blockade warning to all vessels at Strait of Hormuz
CENTCOM has just released the military blockade warning they are announcing to all vessels in or around the Strait of Hormuz. Watch below: Awesome.

Mail Online
Open 
PETER HITCHENS: Vodka in a teapot and the symptoms of a crazy country in which the sane are tormented with stupidity
Have you ever drunk vodka out of a teapot? I have, though I still don't fully understand why.

Mail Online
Open 
US and Iran considering two-week ceasefire extension - as Tehran threatens to shut down the Red Sea unless Trump lifts naval blockade: Live updates
Read the Daily Mail's coverage of the ongoing Middle East crisis as Donald Trump declares the war is 'close to over' and his blockade of the Strait of Hormuz is 'fully implemented'.

Mail Online
Open 
Macron tears into Trump on 'belligerent' Iran stance as furious Europe plots to freeze him out of post-war Hormuz mission
The French President announced Tuesday that France and the United Kingdom will host a diplomatic event in Paris this Friday to address the crisis in the Strait of Hormuz.

Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple to Host Free Events in London Ahead of April 26 Marathon
Apple today announced a series of events tied to this year's TCS London Marathon, with the company serving as an official partner of the race.





The TCS London Marathon is one of the world's most popular marathons and takes place on Sunday, April 26, drawing athletes of all abilities from around the world. A record-breaking one million people applied to enter the ballot for the 2026 event.



Apple will host two free events at its Brompton Road store in the days before the race. On Thursday, April 23, a panel including fitness trainer Joe Wicks, ultramarathon runner Hellah Sidibe, and athletes Dora Atim, Becky Briggs, and Sherica Holmon will offer training tips before a 5K shakeout run in Hyde Park, hosted by Apple Fitness+ trainer Cory Wharton-Malcolm. Spots are limited and registration is now open.



On Saturday, April 25, former marathon world-record holder Paula Radcliffe and two-time Olympian Chris Thompson will record a live episode of their podcast, Paula's Run Club, also at Brompton Road, joined by Wharton-Malcolm. The episode closes out their "Road to London Marathon" series. Registration is available for that event as well.



On race day, Apple Music will station artists and DJs at a key point on the course. An official Ultimate Marathon Playlist spanning seven hours is available now on ‌Apple Music‌, with additional mixes from race-day DJs to follow after the event.



Ahead of marathon week, Apple will host a PE with Apple: Hour of Play event for students from six schools in the London borough of Wandsworth, with Wicks and Fitness+ trainers leading physical activities for children ages 10 to 14, in partnership with nonprofit Enable. Apple also pointed out that it supports several other Greater London organizations, including Battersea Arts Centre, Southbank Centre, Youth Battersea, and Wandsworth BEST.Tag: United KingdomThis article, 'Apple to Host Free Events in London Ahead of April 26 Marathon' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Madonna announces sequel to Confessions On A Dancefloor album
The pop star confirms the follow-up to her classic 2005 album will be released in July.

Chatham House
Open 
From Destruction to Recovery: Building Ukraine’s Future Prosperity
From Destruction to Recovery: Building Ukraine’s Future Prosperity
14
May 2026 — 14:00 TO 19:15 BST
Anonymous (not verified)
14 April 2026

Chatham House
Half day conference on the war-time recovery of Ukraine and necessary policies to support its long-term prosperity building on the experience and analysis of both Chatham House and the EBRD.
Half day conference on the war-time recovery of Ukraine and necessary policies to support its long-term prosperity building on the experience and analysis of both Chatham House and the EBRD.

Chatham House in partnership with the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development is convening a high-level conference to discuss the roadmap for Ukraine’s economic recovery. The destruction caused by the Russian invasion is staggering. After four years of war the total cost of reconstruction and recovery in Ukraine is almost $588 billion. Sustaining economic stability in war time and preparing for the most ambitious economic recovery project of the century, require effective collaboration of Ukrainian state, western donors, private sector and wider civil society. Ukraine’s integration with the EU and deep structural reforms could catalyse economic growth and enable social recovery and industrial reconstruction.How can Ukraine and its international partners develop security arrangements that provide credible long term assurances and strengthen regional stability?Which reforms could strengthen Ukraine’s economic growth and support a more predictable and competitive business environment? How to sustain momentum on the way to full membership in the EU?How can Ukraine position itself competitively in emerging European value chains?

Mail Online
Open 
Incredible moment hero high school principal bursts through door and tackles gunman while getting shot
Principal Kirk Moore of Oklahoma stopped what likely would have been a deadly massacre at his school by tackling a suspect armed with two semi-automatic handguns.

Mail Online
Open 
Now top union boss demands Starmer stop dithering on defence spending warning delay is 'a threat to national security' amid Labour row - as Reeves refuses to fill £28bn budget hole
Unite's Sharon Graham warned the PM that his failure to produce the 10-year defence investment plan (DIP) was 'a threat to national security' because it risked specialist jobs being lost.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Peace activist, 91, walks across Ireland in protest against US military stopovers
Lelia Doolan, who finished 220km trek at parliament gates, says use of Shannon airport violates Irish neutralityA 91-year-old peace activist has crossed Ireland on foot and arrived in Dublin to petition the government to bar US military flights.Lelia Doolan completed a two-week, 220km (138 mile) trek on Wednesday, ending at the gates of parliament accompanied by throngs of supporters. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Are you breathing properly? How I found out I wasn’t
You might think of breathing as automatic, but dysfunctional breathing can arise even if you’re healthyWe’re often taught that breathing is automatic. We barely think about it, as with blinking or the quiet, constant work of the heart. But many otherwise healthy adults have dysfunctional breathing.“Dysfunctional breathing, also known as breathing pattern disorder, is when breathlessness and/or difficulty in breathing is felt,” said Dr Stephen Fowler, a professor of respiratory medicine at the University of Manchester. It can occur outside the context of any disease. If a related condition is present, like asthma, the breathlessness might feel disproportionate to that condition, he said. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
How big oil is cashing in on Iran war | The Latest
The world’s top 100 oil and gas companies made more than $30m every hour in unearned profit in the first month of the US-Israeli war in Iran, according to exclusive analysis for the Guardian.The conflict pushed the price of oil to an average of $100 a barrel in March, leading to estimated windfall war profits for the month of $23bn for the companies.Lucy Hough speaks to Damian Carrington, the Guardian’s environment editor Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Man arrested climbing into Israeli embassy had arrived on small boat twice, court hears
Abdullah Albadri denies charges preparing terrorist acts and being in possession of two knives.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Reader Q&A: what does Trump’s restrictive voting bill mean for US democracy? Live now
The latest iteration of the Save America act could disenfranchise millions of voters. Guardian democracy reporters George Chidi and Sam Levine are currently taking readers’ questions about its implications. Post yours nowSign in or create your Guardian account to join the discussionThe latest version of the Save America Act could, if it is passed, upend voting for all Americans in the middle of a federal midterm election year and create costly, chaotic changes for elections workers. As this explainer by Rachel Leingang sets out: “this year’s version [of Save] includes expansive documentary proof of citizenship requirements and criminal liability for election officials from the initial Save act, in addition to a very strict voter ID requirement for casting a ballot and a provision that requires states to regularly turn their voter rolls over to the Department of Homeland Security.”George Chidi is the Guardian’s politics and democracy correspondent. His recent reporting has included looking at the states bringing in strict proof-0f-citizenship requirements to register to vote and covering efforts by the FBI to investigate Fulton county in Georgia over the 2020 election, the results of which are still challenged by Donald Trump’s supporters.George: I think the Kansas example is instructive. Kansas enacted a law in 2013 requiring voters to prove their citizenship when registering. Evidence presented in a federal lawsuit challenging the law showed that 18,000 people were blocked from registering – about 8 per cent of people trying to register. That statistic only covers motor voter registrations; another study showed the overall number was closer to one in eight voters. Only about a quarter of those who were initially blocked ended up registering. (And no, these were not non-citizens - they were by and large born Americans who couldn’t lay hands on their birth certificates.) The blocked registrants were disproportionately young people with no party affiliation. The federal court struck down the law in 2018.Arizona enacted a similar law in 2005, with similar results. Elections officials attributed the large number of blocked registrants to people whose married names didn’t match their birth certificates, or people who couldn’t get their birth certificate. In 2024, the US supreme court blocked the use of documentary proof of citizenship to register for federal elections in the Arizona case. Continue reading...

Russia Today News
Open 
Twenty-year Iran uranium enrichment moratorium not enough – Trump

Mail Online
Open 
Lena Dunham says she REGRETS supporting Hillary Clinton after tirelessly campaigning for the former first lady
Lena Dunham has admitted that she regrets campaigning for Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidential election.

Mail Online
Open 
Student, 21, 'murdered by housemate' before his body was found in garden 'had his whole life ahead of him', heartbroken family say
Jamie Collins, 21, was found dead in the garden of a property in Filton, near Bristol, in the early hours of April 9.

Mail Online
Open 
Margot Robbie keeps a low-profile in a bucket hat as she enjoys a luxury day out with pal Phoebe Tonkin at celebrity hotspot Club 55 in Saint-Tropez
Margot Robbie and Phoebe Tonkin enjoyed a luxury day out at celebrity hotspot Club 55 in Saint-Tropez on Wednesday. 

Mail Online
Open 
Now top union boss demands Starmer stop dithering on defence spending warning delay is 'a threat to national security' amid Labour row - as Reeves refuses to fill £28bn budget hole
Keir Starmer would only say the 10-year investment plan would be released 'as soon as possible' as he was challenged by Kemi Badenoch at PMQs.

Mail Online
Open 
Honeymoon shark attack: Newlywed is fighting for life and has leg amputated during Maldives holiday
A tourist is fighting for his life after being attacked by a shark on his honeymoon.

Mail Online
Open 
Eight top jobs paying up to £60k which bosses are eager to fill - with no industry experience needed
Finding a job is getting harder as unemployment rises - almost 1.9 million Brits were out of work in the three months to January, according to latest figures.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Reader Q&A: what does Trump’s restrictive voting bill mean for US democracy? Live now
The latest iteration of the Save America act could disenfranchise millions of voters. Guardian democracy reporters George Chidi and Sam Levine are currently taking readers’ questions about its implications. Post yours nowSign in or create your Guardian account to join the discussionThe latest version of the Save America act could, if it is passed, upend voting for all Americans in the middle of a federal midterm election year and create costly, chaotic changes for elections workers. As this explainer by Rachel Leingang sets out: “this year’s version [of Save] includes expansive documentary proof of citizenship requirements and criminal liability for election officials from the initial Save act, in addition to a very strict voter ID requirement for casting a ballot and a provision that requires states to regularly turn their voter rolls over to the Department of Homeland Security.”George Chidi is the Guardian’s politics and democracy correspondent. His recent reporting has included looking at the states bringing in strict proof-0f-citizenship requirements to register to vote and covering efforts by the FBI to investigate Fulton county in Georgia over the 2020 election, the results of which are still challenged by Donald Trump’s supporters. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Race for World Cup places is on and fringe Lionesses have grabbed their chance | Tom Garry
England have a long way to go yet before booking flights to Brazil, but Esme Morgan, Lotte Wubben-Moy and Lucia Kendall impressed against SpainEverybody keep calm. England sit top of their qualifying group with a 100% record after beating Spain, but there remains a very long way to go before anyone can start booking flights to Brazil for 2027. Let us cast aside that sensible advice, though, and begin to look at the players who enhanced their prospects of selection because, whether England continue this winning streak or not, their target is to win a first world title and there is no hiding from that challenge. So who has staked a claim?Of those who started at Wembley on Tuesday, eight look nailed on to be in the first-choice XI for the World Cup. That octet of Hannah Hampton, Lucy Bronze, Alex Greenwood, Keira Walsh, Georgia Stanway, Lauren Hemp, Lauren James and Alessia Russo will be central to Sarina Wiegman’s plans for Brazil, together with senior players such as Leah Williamson and Ella Toone when they return after injuries, plus the “clutch moment” saviour that is Chloe Kelly, who was on the bench. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
How was Orbán defeated? With energetic campaigning and cunning exploitation of his weaknesses | Tibor Dessewffy
Péter Magyar did not need to dismantle the system – but he understood that Hungarians care more about the cost of living than conspiraciesHungary’s election delivered an unprecedented victory for Viktor Orbán’s challenger. With a record turnout of nearly 80% and a supermajority for the Tisza party of almost 70% of the seats, this was not merely a change of government: it was a change of regime, compressed into a single election night.After 16 years in power, Orbán became the victim of his own creation. Hungary’s electoral machinery, carefully engineered to convert a relative majority into overwhelming parliamentary dominance, worked perfectly – just not for him. In the end, the opposition leader, Péter Magyar, did not need to dismantle the system; he simply recognised the rules of the game and played to win. Orbán’s 2011 electoral laws, designed to punish a fragmented opposition, ultimately proved fatal to their creator, when he was faced with a challenger who could turn those winner-takes-all mechanics to his advantage.Tibor Dessewffy is director of the digital sociology research centre at Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, and a member of the European Council on Foreign RelationsDo you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
No more US military aid to Israel | Bernie Sanders
The time is long overdue for members of Congress to listen to the American people and end US military aid to the extremist Netanyahu governmentI am a proud Jewish-American. My father fled Poland in 1921 to escape poverty and antisemitism. Those in his family who stayed were murdered by the Nazis. Since childhood, I have known very well where antisemitism, racism, fanaticism and demagoguery lead.So let me be clear. Speaking out against the horrific and inhumane actions of Israel, and its extremist leader, Benjamin Netanyahu, is not antisemitic. Speaking out about the dangerous and destructive role that Israel plays in shaping US foreign and military policy is not antisemitic. It is, in fact, what every member of Congress and every American should be doing.Bernie Sanders is a US senator, and ranking member of the health, education, labor and pensions committee. He represents the state of Vermont Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Are you breathing properly? How I found out I wasn’t
Many people assume breathing happens without thought, but otherwise healthy adults have dysfunctional breathingWe’re often taught that breathing is automatic. We barely think about it, as with blinking or the quiet, constant work of the heart. But many otherwise healthy adults have dysfunctional breathing.“Dysfunctional breathing, also known as breathing pattern disorder, is when breathlessness and/or difficulty in breathing is felt,” said Dr Stephen Fowler, a professor of respiratory medicine at the University of Manchester. It can occur outside the context of any disease. If a related condition is present, like asthma, the breathlessness might feel disproportionate to that condition, he said. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
GB's Cairess out of London Marathon with injury
Emile Cairess is ruled out of this year's London Marathon - where he was expected to challenge Sir Mo Farah's British record - because of a calf issue.

Guardian F1
Open 
Unhappy Verstappen ‘has to be listened to’ over new rules, says F1 chief Domenicali
Red Bull driver outspoken about regulation changes ‘In a meeting he was very keen to give suggestions’Formula One must listen to Max ­Verstappen’s grievances about the sport’s new regulations and their effects on racing, according to F1’s CEO, Stefano Domenicali. His ­intervention comes as key ­players hold ­meetings to consider ­adjusting the rules for the remainder of the season.Verstappen has been outspoken in his dissatisfaction with the new ­formula and the part energy management now plays in ­preventing being able to race flat-out. The four-time champion is not alone in his ­feelings with other drivers also ­critical of the deployment and recharging of ­electrical energy. Continue reading...

The Register
Open 
US states can't account for datacenter tax breaks. Literally
Report says authorities are flouting rules by failing to disclose revenue lost to server farm subsidies Many US states and local authorities are violating generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) by failing to disclose revenue lost to datacenter tax subsidy schemes, according to Good Jobs First.…

The Register
Open 
Windows takes a crash dump after one McDonald's order too many
We've all been there Bork!Bork!Bork!  Windows is doing what it does best in California, with a Blue Screen of Death on the wall of a fast food restaurant where order progress is supposed to be.…

The Register
Open 
Not all networks can handle AI traffic – and experts are sounding alarms
Y'all been focusing on compute and forgot about how the data moves around AI is reshaping the demands on network infrastructure, and many organizations are not prepared – including some of the so-called neocloud providers offering AI services.…

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Berlin hosts Sudan Conference: a brutal, forgotten conflict
The war in Sudan has been raging for the past three years, and a ceasefire is nowhere in sight. Participants at a conference of donors in Berlin hope to at least ease the suffering of the people.

Mail Online
Open 
LIZ JONES: Sorry, but Harry's latest offerings are extremely hard to swallow
Just two days into his unofficial grand tour of Australia and Prince Harry has already managed to give yet another speech about his own mental health and childhood struggles.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Legal advisers help migrants pose as gay to get asylum, BBC finds
The BBC exposes a shadow industry charging migrants thousands of pounds to help them cheat the asylum system.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Mahmood promises action against 'sham lawyers' abusing asylum system after BBC investigation
An undercover investigation revealed how law firms and advisers are helping migrants pretend to be gay to stay in the UK

Gizmodo
Open 
Astronomers Just Dropped the Largest High-Res 3D Map of the Universe
It's a good time for cosmology.

Gizmodo
Open 
Axiom Space Is Ready to Test Its Next-Generation Spacesuit in 2027
The company announced that it was nearly finished developing the spacesuit to be worn by astronauts during the Artemis missions.

Gizmodo
Open 
There’s No Saving Windows 11. It’s Time for Windows 12
Windows 11 can't overcome a slew of bugs, security holes, and AI slop. It's time for something new.

Gizmodo
Open 
Allbirds Is Getting Out of the Shoe Business and Pivoting to AI Infrastructure
Say hello to Newbird AI, a radical experiment in buying GPUs and praying that profits follow.

Gizmodo
Open 
Apple’s Smart Glasses Are Stepping Into a Privacy Minefield
For a company built around privacy, smart glasses are a giant risk.

Gizmodo
Open 
The Wicked Stepmother of ‘The Testaments’ Is So Much Fun to Hate
In 'The Handmaid’s Tale,' we saw Gilead wife Serena Joy’s evolution from villain to ally—but Paula reminds us that’s not always the journey on 'The Testaments.'

UK Legislation
Open 
The Air Navigation (Restriction of Flying) (Leicestershire) (Emergency) (Revocation) Regulations 2026

UK Legislation
Open 
The Local Government Pension Scheme (Elected Member Pensions) (Consequential Amendment) Regulations 2026
These Regulations are made further to the Local Government Pension Scheme (Amendment) (Elected Member Pensions) Regulations 2026 (S.I. 2026/346, “the 2026 Regulations”), which amend the Local Government Pension Scheme Regulations 2013 (S.I. 2013/2356) to extend the membership of the Local Government Pension Scheme to elected members of local authorities in England, in particular to mayors and members of combined county authorities. The 2026 Regulations also makes consequential amendments to (amongst other things) the statutory instruments establishing combined county authorities to ensure that where the authority pays a “relevant allowance” (an allowance other than for travel and subsistence) under its remuneration arrangements, the allowance is treated as pensionable under a scheme made under section 1 of the Public Service Pensions Act 2013 (c. 25), and the authority makes employer contributions and any other payments required to fund the pension benefits attributable to those allowances. The changes made by the 2026 Regulations will come into force on 11th May 2026.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Prominent Palestinian prisoner Marwan Barghouti assaulted three times in a month, family says
The Israeli Prison Service says the allegation that Barghouti was subjected to physical violence by prison guards are "false and baseless".

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
BBC to cut almost one in 10 staff to make £500m savings
The BBC's interim director general says the cuts will require "some big and some difficult choices".

Sky News Home
Open 
BBC to cut up to 2,000 jobs in biggest downsize for 15 years
The BBC will cut up to 2,000 jobs as part of its biggest downsize in 15 years, according to reports.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Hungary: Orban election loss reverberates across Central Europe
Viktor Orban's crushing defeat in the April 12 election will have far-reaching consequences for Europe's political landscape — and especially for neighboring Czechia and Slovakia, which are run by his political allies.

Mail Online
Open 
Lorry with unsecured crane is caught on CCTV moments before machine swung out and killed young mother as she pushed toddler in pram
Rebecca Ableman, 30, had just visited a farm shop with her then two-year-old daughter, Autumn, when she was struck on the head and died.

Mail Online
Open 
Emily Atack looks stunning in a red swimsuit for new M&S campaign - as she says she's more 'frugal' now she has a child and a mortgage
Emily Atack looked stunning in a red swimsuit for a new M&S campaign launched on Wednesday.

Mail Online
Open 
Moment middle-aged woman steals pub's lucky wooden monkey as outraged landlady appeals for its safe return
Lesley Wood, the landlady at the Shoulder of Mutton pub in Hebden Bridge in West Yorkshire, discovered one of her monkey statues was missing on Sunday morning.

Mail Online
Open 
Axed Strictly pro Karen Hauer shows off her washboard abs as she says 'April has felt like a year already' in post to fans after confirming show exit
The professional dancer, 43, was one of the stars dropped from the ballroom by BBC bosses in a major refresh.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Harry Maguire given extra one-match ban for ‘joke’ comment towards officials
Defender shown straight red card against BournemouthOfficials claim Maguire called them ‘a joke’ as he left fieldHarry Maguire will miss Manchester United’s trip to Chelsea having been handed an additional one-match ban by the Football Association for his reaction to being sent off at Bournemouth.The 33-year-old was shown a straight red card at the Vitality Stadium last month for a foul in the box on Evanilson, with Junior Kroupi scoring from the resulting penalty as the Cherries sealed a 2-2 draw. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
How the US-Israel war on Iran is affecting African economies
For some, the impact is already being felt but others remain in limbo over their energy security and are hostage to an unlikely de-escalation• Don’t get The Long Wave delivered to your inbox? Sign up hereIt remains a confusing situation, but the strait of Hormuz now appears to have been closed twice. Once by Iran, and then by the US, which this week announced a blockade of its own on the reduced number of ships using Iranian ports. Higher fuel and energy costs for ordinary people across the world are the headlines, but as the war on Iran enters its sixth week, shipping restrictions and strikes on energy facilities in Gulf countries are affecting some of the poorest and most vulnerable economies in the world in more profound ways.I spoke to Dr. Zainab Usman, senior research scholar at the Centre on Global Energy Policy at Columbia University, about how the war and its blockades are affecting some African countries. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
New EU entry-exit system causing up to three-hour delays, say airports
Airport body has asked for power to suspend EES checks requiring personal information and biometricsBusiness live – latest updatesTravellers going through some European airports are reportedly waiting up to three hours at border checks because of the EU’s new entry-exit system (EES).Passengers in airports in countries such as France, Germany, Belgium, Italy, Spain and Greece are waiting several hours at border checks, the Airports Council International (ACI) body has said. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Reeves tells Americans she does not know why they launched Iran war – UK politics live
Chancellor tells US audience she is ‘not convinced that this conflict has made the world a safer place’PMQs is starting soon.Here is the list of MPs down to ask a question.I’ll be honest, when people would pop up on social media laying those sorts of charges, they tended to be the sort of people who appear in your timeline trolling. And I just didn’t think it could be credible that [Mandelson] would have had that kind of relationship.So, the FT did a report, but I don’t remember seeing it in other newspapers. Mandelson still had a podcast. He was appearing regularly on really big news programmes. And so, to be honest, the only time I remember seeing stuff, Mandleson/Epstein, you just think, ‘I haven’t seen that from a credible news source, he hasn’t been questioned, I think that must be overblown’.I think it stems from the same root cause, which is those women [Epstein’s victims], those girls, not being taken seriously enough, their experiences not mattering enough and being prioritised. And that is exactly the sort of sexism and misogyny at the root of the issue, I’m afraid. And I think all of us have to take responsibility for that. Continue reading...

CNET News
Open 
Your Turn: Vote for Your Favorite Headphones and Earbuds of 2026
Take CNET's People's Picks survey and help your favorite pair take the top spot.

CNET News
Open 
Nintendo's Made a Weird Animal Crossing. Tomodachi Life Has Me Living Like an Odd God
I've been collecting people into my human zoo and conducting social experiments. Tell me this is OK.

CNET News
Open 
You Might Actually Be Able to Afford Traeger's New Line of Pellet Grills
The brand launched the Westwood series, a new line of more approachably priced pellet grills with plenty of premium features.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Maguire gets extra ban and will miss Chelsea trip
Manchester United defender Harry Maguire will miss Saturday's trip to Chelsea after receiving an additional one-match ban.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Attacks on US academics: A microcosm of a larger threat to democracy
In the new DW documentary "Democracy Under Attack: Can Dündar and Trump's America," the Turkish press freedom icon looks at the parallels between the erosion of democracy in the US and his home country.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
BBC to cut almost one in 10 staff to make £500m savings
Interim Director General Rhodri Talfan Davies revealed the news to staff on Wednesday,

Mail Online
Open 
Plain-clothed police grapple with topless drug dealer suspect as he sends white powder swirling everywhere in the struggle
The man, 34, was stopped by officers from the Metropolitan police outside a Screwfix store in Brixton, south London.

BBC World News
Open 
Chinese national given one year in prison for smuggling ants out of Kenya
Zhang Kequn was arrested in March while trying to travel to China with more than 2,000 live ants.

Stratechery
Open 
Amazon Buys Globalstar, Delta to Add Leo, The Apple Angle
Amazon's Globalstar acquisition is being framed as Apple versus SpaceX, but I think the real story is about Apple.

WikiNews
Open 
United States announces blockade on the Strait of Hormuz
Wednesday, April 15, 2026
 


Politics and conflicts
Related articles


15 April 2026: United States announces blockade on the Strait of Hormuz
12 March 2026: US president Donald Trump demands the unconditional surrender of Iran
12 March 2026: PM of Australia sends E-7A Wedgetail and air-to-air missiles to UAE
7 March 2026: US President Donald Trump appears to wear makeup after apparent rash breaks out on neck, reports say
2 March 2026: Green Party wins major by-election in northern England city of Manchester


Collaborate!

Pillars of Wikinews writing
Writing an article


Map depicting the Strait of Hormuz. Image: Goran_tek-en.
On Sunday, United States President Donald Trump announced on Truth Social that the US is imposing a blockade on the Strait of Hormuz. According to Trump, the blockade was in effect as of 10:00 a.m. Eastern Time (1400 UTC).
The blockade was imposed following the collapse of talks held in Islamabad between the United States and Iran.
"Effective immediately, the United States Navy, the finest in the world, will be BLOCKADING any and all ships trying to enter, or leave, the Strait of Hormuz," Trump declared.
According to The Guardian, oil prices briefly rose above US$100 a barrel following news of the blockade, before easing back to just over US$99; gas prices also increased.
Iranian parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf posted on X to "Enjoy the current pump figures. With the so-called 'blockade', soon you'll be nostalgic for $4–$5 gas." He further stated that Iran would respond in kind to both escalation and diplomacy, warning that it would "fight" if confronted militarily but would "deal with logic" if approached constructively.
China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs expressed hope that the ceasefire would remain stable, stating that Beijing is willing to cooperate with all parties to "guarantee the uninterrupted flow of energy supplies," and that stability in the Strait of Hormuz is critically important to China.




Have an opinion on this story? Share it!


Sources[edit]
Julia Kollewe. Oil price tops $100 a barrel after peace talks fail and Trump orders blockade — The Guardian, 13 April 2026
Lauren Edmonds, Huileng Tan, and Theron Mohamed. Oil surges past $100 a barrel after US-Iran peace talks fail and Trump threatens to blockade the Strait of Hormuz — Business Insider, 13 April 2026
'Enjoy it now:' Iran warns of painful oil price surge as Trump escalates blockade threat — The Times of India, 13 April 2026
China Reacts to Strait of Hormuz Blockade: Global Energy Security at Risk — IranWire, 13 April 2026.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-box{background-color:#FFFFFF;border:1.5px solid #a7d7f9;border-radius:9px;padding:4px 6px;width:36%}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-header{font-size:1.1em}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-header:after{content:"";display:block;width:60%;height:2px;background-color:#a7d7f9;margin-top:6px;margin-bottom:6px}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-buttons{display:flex;flex-wrap:wrap;justify-content:center;align-items:center}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-buttons .wn-social-bookmarks-btn{margin:2px}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn{display:inline-flex;justify-content:center;align-items:center;width:36px;height:36px;background-color:#e0e5ec;border:1px solid #dddddd;border-radius:3px;cursor:pointer;box-shadow:0 2px 5px rgba(0,0,0,0.05);transition:transform 0.15s ease,box-shadow 0.15s ease,background-color 0.15s ease,border-color 0.15s ease}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn:hover{transform:translateY(-2px);box-shadow:0 4px 8px rgba(0,0,0,0.14)}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn:active{transform:none;box-shadow:0 2px 4px rgba(0,0,0,0.08)}@media(max-width:768px){.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-box{width:100%;padding:10px 14px}}html.skin-theme-clientpref-night .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-box{background-color:#1a1b1d;border-color:#3b3f44}html.skin-theme-clientpref-night .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-header:after{background-color:#3b3f44}html.skin-theme-clientpref-night .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn{background-color:#2c2c2c;border-color:#444444;box-shadow:0 2px 5px rgba(0,0,0,0.2)}html.skin-theme-clientpref-night .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn:hover{background-color:#3a3a3a;box-shadow:0 4px 8px rgba(0,0,0,0.3)}html.skin-theme-clientpref-night .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn:active{box-shadow:0 2px 4px rgba(0,0,0,0.2)}@media(prefers-color-scheme:dark){html.skin-theme-clientpref-os .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-box{background-color:#1a1b1d;border-color:#3b3f44}html.skin-theme-clientpref-os .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-header:after{background-color:#3b3f44}html.skin-theme-clientpref-os .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn{background-color:#2c2c2c;border-color:#444444;box-shadow:0 2px 5px rgba(0,0,0,0.2)}html.skin-theme-clientpref-os .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn:hover{background-color:#3a3a3a;box-shadow:0 4px 8px rgba(0,0,0,0.3)}html.skin-theme-clientpref-os .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn:active{box-shadow:0 2px 4px rgba(0,0,0,0.2)}}.mw-parser-output #mw-customcollapsible-wn-extra{flex-basis:100%;display:flex;justify-content:center}.mw-parser-output #mw-customcollapsible-wn-extra .mw-collapsible-content{display:flex;flex-wrap:wrap;justify-content:center;align-items:center;margin-top:3px}







  Share this article

TechRadar News
Open 
How to watch Bayern Munich vs Real Madrid: live stream Champions League quarter-final 2nd leg from anywhere

TechRadar News
Open 
Amazon's 3 for $33 4K Blu-ray sale is back — here are my top 9 picks to add to your collection

TechRadar News
Open 
This Jackery portable power station gets a massive $700 discount — and it's not the only one in the Earth Day Sale if you want off-grid, RV, and home back-up power from some of my favorite systems

TechRadar News
Open 
I tried 7 free MTD software – now I've ranked my top picks as a freelancer

TechRadar News
Open 
VPN deal of the week: Our exclusive Surfshark deal gives you year-low prices and 4 months extra protection — here's how to claim

TechRadar News
Open 
'We are currently being extorted' — crypto giant Kraken says it is facing extortion attack, here's what we know

Digital Trends
Open 
AI dating sounds efficient – but I’m not fully convinced
AI agents are being developed to handle dating interactions, raising questions about authenticity and compatibility.

Digital Trends
Open 
You can now pre-order Amazon’s stylish Ember Artline TVs
Pre-orders for the Amazon Ember Artline TVs are live in the US and Canada. Amazon's answer to the "art TV" trend features a 1.5-inch slim profile, a matte QLED panel, and a faster Fire TV experience at a starting price of $899.

Digital Trends
Open 
Amazon reveals slimmest Fire TV Stick HD that no longer needs a wall adapter
Amazon's new Fire TV Stick HD is its slimmest ever streaming device, now 30 percent narrower, powered through your TV's USB port, and available for preorder at $35.

Digital Trends
Open 
Adobe Firefly can now run your entire creative workflow from a single chat
Adobe's new Firefly AI Assistant lets you describe what you want and handles the rest, across Photoshop, Premiere, Lightroom, Illustrator, and more, all from one chat.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Allbirds’ AI pivot sends its stock soaring 300%. We’ve seen this film before.
It’s not unprecedented for struggling companies to latch onto the hot trend of the moment. Remember the blockchain hype cycle?

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Quantum stocks extend their gains. Why Nvidia’s new models could give the industry a boost.
Recent advancements from Nvidia could make it easier for quantum companies to achieve commercial milestones.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Could pressure to make money faster kill the next lifesaving pill?
When activist investors target drugmakers, drug-development strategies shift. Patients lose when this happens.

Boing Boing
Open 
Get the classic Microsoft applications for life, for just $33
TL;DR: Enjoy lifetime access to Microsoft Office Professional 2021 for only $32.97 (MSRP $219.99) until Apr. 19 at 11:59 p.m. PT.
Stop worrying about subscription fees or expiring licenses — the entire Microsoft Office Professional 2021 bundle can be yours for a one-time purchase of $32.97 (MSRP $219.99) until Apr. — Read the rest
The post Get the classic Microsoft applications for life, for just $33 appeared first on Boing Boing.

BBC UK News
Open 
Student stabbed to death was 'gentle', say family
Jamie Collins' family pay tribute after he was was found dead with multiple stab wounds.

Slashdot
Open 
Norway Man Cured of HIV With Brother's Stem Cells
A 63-year-old man in Norway appears to be cured of HIV after receiving a stem cell transplant from his brother, who turned out to have a rare mutation that makes immune cells resistant to HIV. "Four years after the transplant, and two years after the man stopped antiretroviral therapy, he still appears to be free of the infection," reports Gizmodo. From the report: According to the report, the man was first diagnosed with myelodysplastic syndrome, a type of cancer that weakens blood cell production from bone marrow, in 2018. Though he seemed to initially respond to treatment, the cancer returned after two years, and doctors decided to perform a stem cell transplant. Because the man also had HIV (diagnosed in 2006), the doctors were hoping to treat both conditions at once, though they knew their chances were low. Most of these cases have involved the use of stem cells taken from people with two copies of a particular mutation in their CCR5 gene, which regulates the CC5R receptor on white blood cells. This mutation, named CCR5-delta 32, makes immune cells naturally resistant to infection from strains of HIV-1 (the most common type of the virus). However, only about 1% of the population carries two copies of the mutation.

After initial screening failed to find someone who both possessed the mutation and had compatible bone marrow, the doctors decided to move ahead with the man's brother, who was already known to have compatible bone marrow. But to everyone's surprise, testing on the day of the transplant showed that the brother also had the mutation. Though the man did experience some complications from the procedure, his body successfully started to produce new blood cells with the mutation. The doctors decided to take him off antiretroviral medication two years after the transplant. And in the two years since then, regular follow-up tests have failed to show any signs of the virus in his system. [...] According to AFP, there have only been roughly 10 cases worldwide involving an HIV cure through stem cell transplantation. This is the first to involve a family donor.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Mail Online
Open 
Second school shooting in two days leaves four dead and multiple people wounded with students jumping from windows to flee gunman in Turkey 
The armed attack took place at the Ayser Calık Secondary School in Kahramanmaras on Wednesday, marking the second such incident in as many days.

Home Office
Open 
Martyn's Law guidance published to help businesses
New guidance published to help organisations and businesses prepare for terrorist threats and protect lives. | Home Office.

The Verge
Open 
More phone cameras should come with telephoto lenses
Upgrading your phone with a camera grip attachment is one thing. But doll-sized telephoto lenses that you mount on top of the rear camera? C'mon. I wrote the Vivo X300 off as a gimmick, a funny concept designed to generate attention rather than actual sales. But then I spent a weekend carrying the phone and […]

The Verge
Open 
Walmart is updating its 4K streaming box with Gemini and Matter support
It hasn't been officially announced, but Walmart's website now has a listing (you may need to set your location to Ventura, California) for an updated version of its budget-friendly Onn 4K Pro streaming box that originally debuted in May 2024. Following technical illustrations that leaked less than a month ago, the listing was discovered after […]

The Verge
Open 
The perfect successor to Lost has been hiding from me for years
Ever since Jack decided to stay behind in 2010, I've been searching for something to give me the same feeling that Lost did. I crave a big mystery with a huge cast and more secrets than I can handle, something that prompts me and my friends to share nonsensical theories about what's really going on. […]

Nature
Open 
What Orbán’s fall from power means for research

Nature
Open 
Ozymandias undead

Nature
Open 
How effective is the personalized off-label use of targeted cancer treatment?

Nature
Open 
Why more fossil fuels won’t fix the Iran energy crisis

Nature
Open 
Early-onset cancer fuels calls for wider screening — but at what cost?

Nature
Open 
A picture of health: gene-expression maps of the human liver from living donors

Nature
Open 
Bad influence: LLMs can transmit malicious traits using hidden signals

Nature
Open 
Therapeutic mitochondria transplants made more efficient with targeting tool

Nature
Open 
A guide to the Nature Index

Nature
Open 
Global cancer rates are rising. How are countries reacting?

Nature
Open 
AI models ‘subliminally’ transmit unsafe behaviours when training other systems

Nature
Open 
Molecular profiling of gene-edited cells reveals shared drug-resistance mechanisms

Nature
Open 
Improving cancer survival rates will require hard policy choices

Nature
Open 
I was set to lead an undergraduate research trip abroad. Then my visa was denied

Nature
Open 
Here are the top locations for cancer research in the Nature Index

Nature
Open 
AI speeds up design of devices that turn waste heat into electricity

Nature
Open 
Four rising stars shaping the future of cancer research

Nature
Open 
Composable neural emulators accelerate thermoelectric generator design

Nature
Open 
EBV strain interacts with host HLA to drive nasopharyngeal carcinoma risk

Nature
Open 
Mapping convergent regulators of melanoma drug resistance by PerturbFate

Nature
Open 
300-unit-per-second roll-to-roll manufacturing of visible metalenses

Nature
Open 
Pixelated quantum-dot superlattice LEDs

Nature
Open 
Language models transmit behavioural traits through hidden signals in data

Nature
Open 
The neural mechanisms supporting the rise and fall of maternal aggression

Nature
Open 
Continuously tunable coherent pulse generation in a semiconductor laser

Nature
Open 
Template-driven scaffolding of SCFFBXO42 regulates PP2A degradation

Nature
Open 
Emergence of oncofetal plasticity is ubiquitous in early colorectal cancers

Nature
Open 
Molecular basis for methylation-sensitive editing by Cas9

Nature
Open 
A mechanism for adaptive genome regulation in cancer

Nature
Open 
A spatial atlas of the healthy human liver from live donors

Nature
Open 
Cell-type-targeted mitochondrial transplantation rescues cell degeneration

Nature
Open 
Prospective evaluation of genomics-guided off-label treatment

Nature
Open 
mRNA vaccines engage unconventional pathways in CD8+ T cell priming

Nature
Open 
Tumour promotion through the lens of evolution

Nature
Open 
Ancient DNA reveals pervasive directional selection across West Eurasia

Nature
Open 
Brainwide blood volume reflects opposing neural populations

Nature
Open 
Identifying the topographic signature of early Martian oceans

Nature
Open 
Linear RAG scanning mediates editing of Igκ variable region repertoires

Nature
Open 
Monolithic 3D integration of tantalum pentoxide nonlinear photonics

Nature
Open 
Carbonyl swapping converts cyclic ketones to saturated heterocycles

Nature
Open 
Editorial Expression of Concern: Creation of human tumour cells with defined genetic elements

Nature
Open 
Retraction Note: The hidden fitness of the male zebra finch courtship song

Nature
Open 
Cytoplasmic lattices are megadalton storage complexes in mammalian oocytes

Ian Visits
Open 
Loads more Cherry Blossom trees planted in Greenwich Park
In a few years time, Greenwich will be filled with people admiring their spring Cherry Blossoms, as the park has just planted 130 new trees.Read more ›

The Hill
Open 
House Democrats file five impeachment articles against Hegseth
House Democrats will introduce five articles of impeachment against Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on Wednesday, accusing him of war crimes in connection with the Iran war, abuse of power and mishandling of the Defense Department (DOD). Rep. Yassamin Ansari (D-Ariz.), the first Iranian-American Democrat in Congress, will introduce the impeachment resolution, Axios reported after it...

The Hill
Open 
GOP senator calls on House to impeach Boasberg after contempt hearings halted
Sen. Eric Schmitt (R-Mo.), a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, is calling on House Republicans to impeach James Boasberg, the chief judge of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, after a federal appeals court halted Boasberg’s contempt investigation into Trump administration officials. Accusing Boasberg of judicial “abuse,” Schmitt, an outspoken proponent...

The Hill
Open 
Chevron executive says 'people should try to drive less' amid Iran war
Chevron executive Andy Walz said that “people should try to drive less” to offset higher energy prices during the U.S. military operation in Iran. “People should drive less. They should try to conserve energy,” Walz told CBS News this week. “We should be doing that all the time,” he continued. “Energy’s essential for people’s lives,...

The Hill
Open 
All public schools should be making their curricula transparent
When a group of parents in Philadelphia approached us about their children’s new social studies curriculum, they said they couldn’t review it. They had heard concerns about how it portrayed American history, but the district would not provide the materials. Eventually, one parent connected us with a teacher willing to share it — but only...

The Hill
Open 
Watch live: House Democrats give remarks in wake of Swalwell resignation
House Democratic leaders will speak with reporters Wednesday morning in the wake of controversy surrounding former Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.), who resigned Tuesday amid mounting sexual misconduct allegations. Many Democrats have sought to distance themselves from Swalwell over the claims and pressed him to step aside and drop his gubernatorial bid to replace Gov. Gavin...

The Hill
Open 
Trump posts AI image of being embraced by Jesus Christ amid criticism for other religious posts
President Trump shared a post on Truth Social Wednesday that featured an image of him being embraced by Jesus Christ amid the criticism he has received for another image that featured him as Jesus. “The Radical Left Lunatics might not like this, but I think it is quite nice!!!” Trump wrote. The image was originally...

The Hill
Open 
Talarico raises $27 million for Texas Senate campaign in first quarter
Texas Senate candidate James Talarico (D) has brought in $27 million in the first quarter of the year, a massive haul as he prepares for a November contest against whichever Republican emerges from next month’s messy GOP primary runoff. Talarico’s campaign announced on Wednesday that he’s raised over $10 million since last month’s Democratic primary,...

The Hill
Open 
Majority of America's farmers say they can't afford fertilizer in new survey
A new survey revealed that a majority of U.S. farmworkers say they cannot afford fertilizer due to rising costs caused by the U.S.-Israeli conflict in Iran. The survey released by the American Farm Bureau Federation (AFBF) on Tuesday shows that 70 percent say fertilizer is too expensive and has left them unable to purchase the...

The Hill
Open 
Prosecutors make surprise visit to Federal Reserve construction site: Reports
Prosecutors from the Department of Justice (DOJ) visited the Federal Reserve’s headquarters on Tuesday as part of a probe into the central bank and its chair, Jerome Powell, according to multiple reports. The New York Times reported that prosecutors Carlton Davis and Steven Vandervelden, along with investigator Matthew Fox-Moles, visited the Fed’s construction site but...

The Hill
Open 
Democrats to force House GOP vote on ending Iran war
House Democrats will force a vote this week on legislation designed to end the Iran War, despite lingering questions about whether it has enough backing to pass. The vote was expected, although party leaders had vowed to stage it only after they had secured the support to pass. That plan has changed, according to Rep....

The Hill
Open 
'Summer House' alum Luke Gulbranson launches House bid in Minnesota
Former "Summer House" star Luke Gulbranson says he's leaving behind the antics of reality TV and aiming to go where the "real drama" is in Washington. "Yeah, I've been on reality TV," the 42-year-old model and actor said in an ad released Wednesday announcing the launch of his campaign for Minnesota's 8th Congressional District. The seat is currently...

Mail Online
Open 
The 13 most common dreams and what they REALLY mean - and why cheating is nothing to do with affairs!
American author Dr Carmen Harra told the Daily Mail what your subconscious is likely trying to tell you at night, depending on the thoughts you're having whilst sleeping.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Snap Inc blames AI as it lays off 1,000 workers
Cuts by Snapchat’s parent company come in response to a declining stock price and pressure from an activist investorSnapchat’s parent company plans to lay off 16% of its employees, around 1,000 people, citing “rapid advancements in artificial intelligence”, the social media company told staff on Wednesday in an internal memo. The staff reduction is part of a wave of tech industry layoffs in the past year, with many firms blaming AI for the cuts.Snap Inc’s layoffs follow demands last month from Irenic Capital Management, an activist investor whose portfolio manager wrote a letter to the Snap Inc CEO, Evan Spiegel, calling on him to reduce costs and headcount while criticizing the company’s current strategy. In Spiegel’s memo to staff, he claimed that the layoffs would move Snap towards profitability and suggested that artificial intelligence could fill the lack of human labor. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Oklahoma principal shot disarming ex-student with semi-automatic guns
Kirk Moore was injured as he tackled a former pupil who opened fire at Pauls Valley high schoolSign up for the Breaking News US email to get newsletter alerts in your inboxAn Oklahoma principal has been praised for preventing a tragedy at his high school by charging and disarming a former student armed with two semi-automatic handguns, an episode captured on dramatic surveillance video.Kirk Moore, principal of Pauls Valley high school, was shot in the leg as he wrestled the attacker, a 20-year-old said by court documents to be obsessed with the 1999 shooting at Colorado’s Columbine high school in which 12 students and one teacher were killed. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Reform or Plaid? Whichever way Welsh voters go, the country will be utterly transformed | Will Hayward
Each party has its own version of nationalism to offer voters in May’s Senedd election: closer ties to England or more independence for WalesIt’s fair to say that the UK will change after the elections on 7 May. But few places will change as thoroughly as Wales. The polls suggest that after the vote our next Senedd will be led by either Plaid Cymru or Reform: this would make it the first time in 100 years that Welsh Labour is not the largest party in Cymru. However, Plaid and Reform’s visions for Wales are polar opposites – and their supporters are torn between two wildly different visions for their country.When you look at the Plaid and Reform manifestos, the differences are immediately apparent. First of all, Plaid’s document is a chunky 74 pages compared with Reform’s 18. Plaid dedicates huge amounts of ink to explaining how the party is going to fight for concessions or increased power from Westminster on everything from tax to rail devolution. Contrast that with Reform’s leader in Wales, Dan Thomas, who said that a Reform government in Wales would not “pick a fight with Westminster” except on the “one matter of immigration”. Continue reading...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Solar power in Morocco's desert: Bold vision, mixed results
A massive solar tower in the Moroccan desert is the beacon of an ambitious push for a clean energy future. But fossil fuels and grid constraints stand in the way.

ZDNet News
Open 
Roku TV vs. Fire Stick: Why I'm looking beyond streaming resolution when comparing the two
Roku and Amazon have released updated versions of their latest TV streaming sticks, but which one is best for you?

ZDNet News
Open 
iPhone charging slowly? 6 quick fixes to try before blaming your battery
The issue may be your setup, not your battery. Here's how to speed things up, and what to do if these tips don't work.

ZDNet News
Open 
'Like handing out the blueprint to a bank vault': Why AI led one company to abandon open source
Cal is moving its flagship open-source program to a proprietary model because it can't cope with the dangers of AI hacking its open code.

ZDNet News
Open 
You can use Linux 7.0 on these 7 distros today - here's what to expect
The latest Linux kernel boasts full Rust support and a greatly improved scheduler to speed up your work and your games.

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Tether Invests in Stablecoin Firm, Stablecoin Development Corporation
Tether, the largest issuer of stablecoins in the world, has participated in the funding round of publicly listed Stablecoin Development Corporation (NYSE:SDEV). The company received $134 million in funding. Other investors included R01 Fund LP, Framework Ventures, and more. SDEV is a small firm that... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
European Central Bank (ECB) Says Tokenization Adoption Will Take Time, Tokenovate CEO Says Changing the Asset Without Changing the Process Does Little
The European Central Bank (ECB) recently produced a report on tokenization that said: “the journey towards tokenized markets will require time, continuous evolution, and strategic adaptation.” The bank added that legacy and hybrid systems will likely coexist for some time in parallel environments. “Reaping the... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) Pursues Consultation on Crypto
The UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has posted a consultation on crypto. The securities regulator noted taht beginning October 2027, crypto will be regulated by the agency. This fact means that the FCA must provide new guidance for participants in the crypto sector and thus... Read More

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
10 Unexpected Nonstop International Routes From the U.S. (2026 Guide)
But the aviation landscape is changing rapidly. Airlines are launching surprising nonstop international flights from the U.S. to destinations you never expected.

These unexpected travel routes are opening new possibilities for travelers seeking unique experiences and better points redemption opportunities.

Mail Online
Open 
Ben Stokes reveals he is 'lucky' to be alive after horror cricket injury left England captain's face a 'mess' and requiring major surgery: 'Thankfully I'm still here'
LAWRENCE BOOTH: Ben Stokes has said he is 'lucky' to be alive after a ball broke his cheekbone during a net session at Durham in February.

Mail Online
Open 
I'm A Celebrity star accused of 'faking fears and playing up to the cameras' during trial to get airtime - as viewers rage 'it's overbearing and annoying!'
Earlier this month, the ITV show launched the second series of its South Africa spin-off, which sees past favourites return to compete.

Mail Online
Open 
Rachel Reeves says Trump's war on Iran was a 'mistake' and has not made world safer as Brits brace for pain
Speaking at an event at the IMF meetings in Washington, the Chancellor insisted she was not convinced the joint US-Israeli action had made the world 'safer'.

Mail Online
Open 
I drank seven bottles of wine every weekend, followed by several beers and gin. Now I can stop at just one... and it's all thanks to this tiny, cheap little-known pill
Popping the small tablet in my mouth, I make a note of the time. In an hour, I'll pour myself a Friday night martini, but thanks to the effects of the medication, I'll only drink one.

Sky News Home
Open 
179 prisoners freed 'in error' in England and Wales in single year
A total of 179 prisoners were freed "in error" in England and Wales between April 2025 and March 2026, government figures show.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Snap Inc blames AI as it lays off 1,000 workers
Cuts by Snapchat’s parent company come in response to a declining stock price and pressure from an activist investorSnapchat’s parent company plans to lay off 16% of its employees, around 1,000 people, citing “rapid advancements in artificial intelligence”, the social media company told staff on Wednesday in an internal memo. The staff reduction is part of a wave of tech industry layoffs in the past year, with many firms blaming AI for the cuts.Snap Inc’s layoffs follow demands last month from Irenic Capital Management, an activist investor whose portfolio manager wrote a letter to Snap Inc CEO, Evan Spiegel, calling on him to reduce costs and headcount while criticizing the company’s current strategy. In Spiegel’s memo to staff, he claimed that the layoffs would move Snap towards profitability and suggested that artificial intelligence could fill the lack of human labor. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
South Africa names apartheid-era negotiator as ambassador to US
Appointment of Roelf Meyer seen as attempt to improve relations amid false US accusations of ‘white genocide’South Africa has appointed a former apartheid government chief negotiator during the talks that ended white rule in the 1990s as ambassador to the US, in what is seen as an attempt to improve the deeply strained diplomatic relationship between the two countries.Roelf Meyer replaces Ebrahim Rasool, who was expelled in March 2025 after he criticised the Trump administration. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Sinlaku rips through Northern Mariana Islands as strongest tropical cyclone this year
More than 1,000 people were in shelters across Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands as Sinlaku moved awaySign up for the Breaking News US email to get newsletter alerts in your inboxSuper Typhoon Sinlaku hammered the Northern Mariana Islands, flipping over cars, toppling utility poles and ripping away tin roofs.Authorities were just beginning to assess the damage left behind by the typhoon, which first hit the islands on Tuesday night local time and continued with a barrage of fierce winds and relentless rains for hours on Wednesday. So far, there have been no reports of deaths. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Madonna announces sequel to her 2005 album Confessions on a Dance Floor
Confessions II reunites her with producer Stuart Price and is billed as a study of the dancefloor as ‘a ritualistic space where movement replaces language’Madonna has announced the release of her 15th studio album, Confessions II: a sequel to Confessions on a Dance Floor, her disco-fabulous 2005 release regarded as one of the jewels of her discography.The album will be released on 3 July. Details are still relatively scarce beyond that, but like its predecessor, Confessions II is a collaboration with the British producer Stuart Price.When Stuart Price and I first started working on this record, this was our manifesto:We must dance, celebrate, and pray with our bodies. These are things that we’ve been doing for thousands of years — they really are spiritual practices. After all, the dance floor is a ritualistic space. It’s a place where you connect with your wounds, with your fragility. To rave is an art. It’s about pushing your limits and connecting to a community of like-minded people.
Sound, light, and vibration
Reshape our perceptions
Pulling us into a trance-like state.
The repetition of the bass, we don’t just hear it but we feel it.
Altering our consciousness and dissolving ego and time. Continue reading...

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Allbirds Is Pivoting to AI Compute. Sure, Why Not
Once a $4 billion apparel juggernaut, Allbirds will rebrand as NewBird AI, a “GPU-as-a-Service” company. Hey, if you can't beat ’em, join ’em.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
MAGA Is Starting to Look Beyond Trump
A seemingly endless torrent of criticism directed toward Trump from former MAGA allies suggests the president is losing support from his base.

The Right Scoop
Open 
BOOM VIDEO – Tom Homan gives great response to Pope, Bishops over comments on US immigration policy
I love what Border Czar Tom Homan says here about the US immigration positions of the Pope and several Bishops who went on 60 Minutes this past weekend. I agree with him . . .

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Snapchat owner cuts 1,000 jobs as says AI will reduce repetitive work
The Snapchat owner is laying off around 16% of staff and withdrawn hundreds of open job roles.

Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple to Host Free Events in London Ahead of Sunday's Marathon
Apple today announced a series of events tied to this year's TCS London Marathon, with the company serving as an official partner of the race.





The TCS London Marathon is one of the world's most popular marathons and takes place on Sunday, April 26, drawing athletes of all abilities from around the world. A record-breaking one million people applied to enter the ballot for the 2026 event.



Apple will host two free events at its Brompton Road store in the days before the race. On Thursday, April 23, a panel including fitness trainer Joe Wicks, ultramarathon runner Hellah Sidibe, and athletes Dora Atim, Becky Briggs, and Sherica Holmon will offer training tips before a 5K shakeout run in Hyde Park, hosted by Apple Fitness+ trainer Cory Wharton-Malcolm. Spots are limited and registration is now open.



On Saturday, April 25, former marathon world-record holder Paula Radcliffe and two-time Olympian Chris Thompson will record a live episode of their podcast, Paula's Run Club, also at Brompton Road, joined by Wharton-Malcolm. The episode closes out their "Road to London Marathon" series. Registration is available for that event as well.



On race day, Apple Music will station artists and DJs at a key point on the course. An official Ultimate Marathon Playlist spanning seven hours is available now on ‌Apple Music‌, with additional mixes from race-day DJs to follow after the event.



Ahead of marathon week, Apple will host a PE with Apple: Hour of Play event for students from six schools in the London borough of Wandsworth, with Wicks and Fitness+ trainers leading physical activities for children ages 10 to 14, in partnership with nonprofit Enable. Apple also pointed out that it supports several other Greater London organizations, including Battersea Arts Centre, Southbank Centre, Youth Battersea, and Wandsworth BEST.Tag: United KingdomThis article, 'Apple to Host Free Events in London Ahead of Sunday's Marathon' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mac Rumours
Open 
OLED iPad Mini: Release Date, Pricing, and What to Expect
According to the latest rumors, Apple is close to launching its next-generation iPad mini. So what should we expect from the successor to the iPad mini 7 that Apple released over a year ago? Read on to find out.





Processor and Performance

Apple is working on a next-generation version of the iPad mini (codename J510/J511) that features the A19 Pro chip, according to information found in code that Apple mistakenly shared in August.



Apple's A19 Pro chip since debuted in the iPhone Air and iPhone 17 Pro models. The iPhone 17 Pro models include the higher-end version of Apple's A19 Pro chip with a 6-core CPU and a 6-core GPU, while the iPhone Air uses a mid-tier A19 Pro chip with one fewer GPU core than the A19 Pro chip used in the iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max.



If the code leak is accurate for the iPad mini 8, Apple is likely to use the mid-tier A19 Pro chip found in the iPhone Air. This is based on the fact that the A17 Pro chip used in the iPad mini 7 has a 6-core CPU with two high-performance cores and four efficiency cores, along with a 5-core GPU, compared to the 6-core GPU found on the A17 Pro used in the iPhone 15 Pro.



Apple built the A19 Pro chip on an upgraded third-generation 3-nanometer N3P process for modest speed and efficiency improvements. The chip includes a 16-core Neural Engine, next-generation dynamic caching, and unified image compression.



The GPU in the A19 Pro has an upgraded architecture with a larger cache, more memory, and Neural Accelerators that are built into each core. Apple says that this change provides 3× the peak GPU compute over the prior-generation chip. There's also an upgraded 16-core Neural Engine for AI tasks.



There is an outside chance that Apple opts for the A20 Pro chip for the new iPad mini. The claim has been made by a MacRumors tipster who analyzed a macOS kernel debug kit containing internal Apple codenames. However, the iPad mini has not always received Apple's newest A-series chip at the time it was updated, so the A19 Pro cannot be ruled out at this time. iPhone 18 Pro models are also expected to use the A20 Pro chip, which will reportedly be fabricated with TSMC's advanced 2nm process.



Display



Apple's plan to transition the ‌‌iPad mini‌‌ from an LCD to an OLED display is widely rumored. According to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman, the small form-factor tablet is likely to be the next Apple device to adopt OLED. According to a Chinese leaker with sources in Apple's supply chain, Apple has evaluated a Samsung-made OLED display for its next iPad mini model.



It remains unclear whether the iPad mini 8 will feature a higher refresh rate than the 60Hz LCD display used in the existing iPad mini 7, but since the new base iPhone 17 now uses a 120Hz ProMotion panel, it would be reasonable to expect the same on the first OLED iPad mini. A separate report has suggested the ‌‌‌iPad mini 8‌‌‌'s screen could increase in size from 8.3 inches to 8.7 inches with the adoption of OLED.



OLED panels can individually control each pixel, resulting in more precise color reproduction and deeper blacks compared to other common display technologies. They also provide superior contrast, faster response times, better viewing angles, and greater design flexibility. All of Apple's flagship iPhones use OLED panels, and in May 2024 the company brought the display technology to the iPad Pro for the first time.



Unlike Apple's ‌iPad Pro‌ models, which feature two-stack low-temperature polycrystalline oxide (LTPO) OLED panels‌, the ‌iPad mini‌ may have a single-stack low-temperature polycrystalline silicon (LTPS) panel, which would make it dimmer.



Chassis Design



Apple is reportedly working to give the iPad mini 8 a more water-resistant design, according to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman. The updated casing would bring protection levels closer to those of the iPhone, making the tablet safer for use in damp environments.



To achieve this, Apple is said to have designed a new vibration-based speaker system that eliminates the need for traditional speaker holes. By using sound-emitting surfaces instead of open grilles, the company can reduce potential entry points for water and dust, resulting in a more sealed, durable enclosure.



On the iPhone, Apple relies on adhesives and gaskets to shield speakers and other openings from moisture. The iPad mini's approach appears to go further, doing away with the holes altogether. Current iPad mini models lack any official IP rating, but the upcoming version could mark the first in the lineup to feature a certified level of water protection.



Apple patents could offer further clues to the new design direction. For example, a 2014 patent outlines a "mechanically actuated panel acoustic system" that vibrates flat surfaces to generate sound, effectively turning parts of a device's chassis into a speaker diaphragm. This could potentially allow Apple to produce audio without visible speaker holes. The patent suggest Apple has been building towards a sealed, vibration-based acoustic system for several years.



Release Date



According to research firm Omdia, the ‌‌iPad mini‌‌ is expected to adopt an OLED display in 2027. However, Korea's ET News and ZDNET Korea have both suggested that the iPad mini will be updated with an OLED display in 2026. Bloomberg has also said the update could come as soon as this year.



The most recent word on the subject comes from Weibo-based leaker Instant Digital, who claims the OLED iPad mini will be launched in the second half of 2026 at the earliest.



In May 2024, it was reported that Samsung Display had started developing sample OLED panels for a future ‌iPad mini‌, with plans to initiate mass production at its facility in Cheonan in the second half of 2025. The same report claimed that Apple will bring an OLED panel to the iPad Air alongside the ‌iPad mini‌ in 2026, though Apple only refreshed the iPad Air in March, and more recent reporting suggests an OLED iPad Air will arrive in early 2027.



The latter outlook aligns with a December report by analyst firm Display Supply Chain Consultants (DSCC) that said an 8.5-inch OLED iPad mini is planned for a 2026 launch, while 11-inch and 13-inch OLED iPad Air models are expected to follow in 2027.



Ultimately, there are no rumors suggesting exactly when the next ‌iPad mini‌ will be released, but a launch later in 2026 has a high probability.



Pricing



Apple's ‌iPad mini‌ with OLED display technology and improved water resistance is expected to be more expensive, and Apple could charge up to $100 more for the device, according to Bloomberg's Gurman. The ‌iPad mini‌ is currently priced starting at $499. Gurman has previously argued that Apple should consider a lower-end version of the mini, or at least a change to its current $499 starting price, given that it's up against rival products that cost a lot less.



However, Apple users who are looking for a more affordable option should probably consider the 10th-generation iPad instead. Starting at $329, the iPad offers many iPad mini features, such as Touch ID and Center Stage, but at a lower price that balances functionality and affordability. Related Roundup: iPad miniTag: OLEDBuyer's Guide: iPad Mini (Caution)Related Forum: iPadThis article, 'OLED iPad Mini: Release Date, Pricing, and What to Expect' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Chatham House
Open 
From Destruction to Recovery: Building Ukraine’s Future Prosperity
From Destruction to Recovery: Building Ukraine’s Future Prosperity
14
May 2026 — 14:00 TO 19:15 BST
Anonymous (not verified)
14 April 2026

Chatham House
Half day conference on the war-time recovery of Ukraine and necessary policies to support its long-term prosperity building on the experience and analysis of both Chatham House and the EBRD.
Half day conference on the war-time recovery of Ukraine and necessary policies to support its long-term prosperity building on the experience and analysis of both Chatham House and the EBRD.
Chatham House in partnership with the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development is convening a high-level conference to discuss the roadmap for Ukraine’s economic recovery. The destruction caused by the Russian invasion is staggering. After four years of war the total cost of reconstruction and recovery in Ukraine is almost $588 billion. Sustaining economic stability in war time and preparing for the most ambitious economic recovery project of the century, require effective collaboration of Ukrainian state, western donors, private sector and wider civil society. Ukraine’s integration with the EU and deep structural reforms could catalyse economic growth and enable social recovery and industrial reconstruction.How can Ukraine and its international partners develop security arrangements that provide credible long term assurances and strengthen regional stability?Which reforms could strengthen Ukraine’s economic growth and support a more predictable and competitive business environment? How to sustain momentum on the way to full membership in the EU?How can Ukraine position itself competitively in emerging European value chains?

Ars Technica
Open 
It's Tax Day, and no one knows how to file for prediction market winnings

Ars Technica
Open 
Blue Origin has a new employee stock plan, but not everyone is happy

Ars Technica
Open 
What’s the deal with Alzheimer’s disease and amyloid?

Deutsche Welle
Open 
South Africa appoints veteran Afrikaner politician Roelf Meyer as US ambassador amid tense Trump ties
South Africa has appointed a prominent Afrikaner politician, Roelf Meyer, to the ambassadorial role in Washington. This comes amid allegations from the Trump administration of a "white genocide" in the country.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Nine killed in second Turkish school shooting in two days
Eight students and one teacher died in the attack, according to Interior Minister Mustafa Cifci.

Mail Online
Open 
Jeremy Kyle sparks HUNDREDS of Ofcom complaints with explosive rant about junior doctors striking
The broadcasting regulator revealed that the show had received 311 complaints following the episode of The Jeremy Kyle Breakfast Show that aired on Saturday (April 11).

Mail Online
Open 
What insiders tell me about Harry and Meghan's 'royal' tour, their cutting verdict, what's REALLY behind it and how it's everything the Queen feared, by REBECCA ENGLISH
Cast your mind back to the 'Sandringham Summit' of January 2020. Seems like a lifetime ago, doesn't it? And yet it remains an event that has acute relevance, at least in royal terms, today.

Sky News Home
Open 
Two suspects sought after attempted arson attack on synagogue
Police are hunting for two suspects following an attempted arson attack on a north London synagogue.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Brodsky Quartet / William Barton review – two hemispheres meet in winning didgeridoo collaboration
Temple church, LondonAn unlikely alliance cut a swathe through folk songs, Janáček and music from Australia and New Zealand in an eclectic and beautiful eveningMany musical instruments are basically bits of hollowed-out wood, and if you think of it that way then the four played here by the enduringly experimental Brodsky Quartet and William Barton – violin, viola, cello and yiḏaki, or didgeridoo – don’t seem such distant cousins after all. This programme, already widely toured outside the UK, is well run-in – a good thing, considering that Barton’s didgeridoo was stuck in airport baggage control and arrived at the venue barely half an hour before the concert. It mixes up the two hemispheres in unapologetically eclectic fashion. Barton’s opening didgeridoo monologue segues into a Purcell Fantasia, and Robert Davidson’s Minjerribah – a lyrical evocation of place in which the didgeridoo, although a later addition by the composer, seems an essential and persuasive voice – rubs up against the yearning spikiness of Janáček’s String Quartet No 1.It was Barton whom we heard first, offstage. Through a soundscape of whistles and pulsing low notes, he conjured a sense of vastness that spoke to the feeling of space under the Temple church’s arches. Throughout, the building’s warm acoustic seemed to render everything beautiful even at moments when, in the Janáček in particular, the Brodskys might have been aiming for more harshness. And it helped carry viola player Paul Cassidy’s voice as he sang his own arrangement of She Moved Through the Fair, the other performers weaving atmospheric detail around him. This established a fitting folk-song context for Barton’s own, weightier Square Circles Beneath the Red Desert Sand, which followed with Barton as vocalist and player. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Slot’s misplaced positivity does not tally with harsh reality of Liverpool’s season | Andy Hunter
Return of Alexander Isak is all well and good, but it will not redeem a season of sustained underperformance“The failure is big,” said Ryan Gravenberch as he digested the Champions League defeat by Paris Saint-Germain that ensured Liverpool’s season will finish trophyless. It was a more appropriate description of the team’s plight than Arne Slot’s insistence the future looks bright and a reality the head coach cannot avoid whether Champions League qualification for next season is secured or not. As it must be.Failure is unthinkable for a club whose business model depends on its lucrative revenue streams and a team that, 12 months ago, was about to win the Premier League title at a canter and was then remodelled to the tune of almost £450m. With the top five all qualifying, Chelsea fading from the conversation under Liam Rosenior and a five-point advantage over Brentford and Everton with six games to play, it would be a humiliating final blow for Liverpool to miss out. Slot’s defence for getting a third season to manage Liverpool’s transition would be holed. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
ChatGPT’s latest stylistic quirk is sinister, infuriating – and absolutely everywhere | Stuart Heritage
Once you start noticing “it’s not X, it’s Y” as you scroll online, you can’t fail to register it. I’ve become so hypervigilant that it has seeped into my subconscious thoughtsIf you’ve never seen Jim Carrey’s 2007 psychological thriller The Number 23, then congratulations. It is a film about a man who sees the number 23 so many times that he ends up going bonkers. I used to think this film was stupid. However, now I appear to be living it.My own personal number 23 is a rhetorical device: “It’s not X, it’s Y.” Everywhere I look, there it is. Whenever I hate myself enough to scroll through Facebook’s wilderness of algorithmically suggested posts, I find myself being smacked in the face with sentences such as: “Self-improvement isn’t a trend, it’s a lifestyle shift,” and “The small wins aren’t just moments, they’re the majority of your life.” Once you notice it, it becomes impossible to ignore. This weekend during a Peloton class (I know, shut up), I heard an instructor bark a variation of “this isn’t X, it’s Y”. Yesterday, a character did the same during a TV show I was reviewing, and I dropped a star from its score in retaliation. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Jessie Ware on the 'hyper-surreal' high of her first arena tour
The singer will play three UK arenas later this year, 14 years after her first album came out.

Mail Online
Open 
Now top Welsh nationalist MP demands horseracing is BANNED after Greens' Polanski calls for sport enjoyed by millions to be outlawed
Liz Saville Roberts, Plaid Cymru's leader in Westminster, suggested Britain should follow the example of Australian states that have banned jump racing.

Mail Online
Open 
Jacqueline Jossa shares PDA-filled snaps with Dan Osborne just weeks after their split following nine years of marriage
It is understood Jacqueline, 33, was unable to move past Dan's past dalliances during their relationship and he could no longer cope with her 'behaviour'.

Mail Online
Open 
Retired police chief condemns old force for its 'beyond a joke' shoplifting record after watching have-a-go hero confronting brazen shoplifter
Chris Amey, who retired from the police in 2022 after 30 years service, has spoken out against Dorset Police following the incident in Bournemouth.

Mail Online
Open 
Iran propaganda video trolls Trump showing him being thrown into Hell by Jesus
The Iranian Embassy in Tajikistan shared the clip on Wednesday as Trump continues to receive backlash for posting an AI-generated image of himself as Jesus following a row with the Pope.

Mail Online
Open 
Elon Musk's father insists Epstein is alive and 'it's absurd to think he is dead'
Errol Musk, 79, made the remarks during a primetime interview on Russian state television controlled by Vladimir Putin.

Mail Online
Open 
Vile American YouTube star Johnny Somali is sent to PRISON after defiling monument to sex slaves in South Korea
Somali had also been accused of harassing staff and visitors at an amusement park and disrupting a convenience store by blasting music and upending noodles onto a table.

Russia Today News
Open 
US depleted entire stock of untested missiles in attack on Iran – official

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Germany: Sudan aid conference in Berlin raises €1.3B
The war in Sudan is entering its fourth year with international attention focused on other conflicts. The conference in Berlin is aiming to bring back some attention to help fund urgent projects.

EFF
Open 
EFF Calls on Kuwait to Release Journalist Ahmed Shihab-Eldin
EFF calls on the Kuwaiti government to immediately release journalist Ahmed Shihab-Eldin. An award-winning journalist and television host who worked for Al Jazeera for many years, Shihab-Eldin—a dual American-Kuwaiti citizen—was arrested in Kuwait on March 3 while visiting family. The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) reported yesterday that it is believed he has been charged with spreading false information, harming national security, and misusing his mobile phone.
According to the Guardian, Shihab-Eldin published footage of a U.S. Air Force F-15 E Strike Eagle crash, and posted to his Substack about the incident, noting that video circulating online showed local residents assisting the crash survivors. 
Kuwait is one of several countries that has recently cracked down on reporting amidst the ongoing war. Kuwait’s Ministry of Interior posted on X on March 3—the same day Shihab-Eldin was arrested—warning people in the country “not to photograph or publish any clips or information related to missiles or relevant locations.” Earlier this month, the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) highlighted a new decree in Kuwait banning the circulation of reports that seek to “undermine the prestige of the military” or erode public trust in it. 
As reported by local media, the decree states that “those who intentionally publish statements or news or circulate false reports and rumors about military authorities resulting in weakening the trust in them and their morale, in addition to undermining their prestige, are punishable by three to 10 years in jail and a fine between KD 5,000 and 10,000.” The decree also imposes a penalty ranging from seven years to life imprisonment for “authorized people who cause financial loss or damage to the military authorities while carrying out a transaction, operation, project or case or obtaining any profit from such deals.”
In contrast to neighboring Gulf states, Kuwait has historically allowed the press to operate with relative freedom, and even introduced a law in 2020 protecting the right to access information. In practice, however, the government exercises considerable control over the media. Furthermore, there are several laws, including cybercrime legislation introduced in 2016, that restrict freedom of expression.
EFF is deeply concerned that Ahmed has not been seen nor heard from in nearly six weeks. We call on the government of Kuwait to immediately release Ahmed Shihab-Eldin. 

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
South Africa names apartheid-era negotiator as ambassador to US
Appointment of Roelf Meyer seen as attempt to improve relations amid false US accusations of genocide against AfrikanersSouth Africa has appointed a former apartheid government chief negotiator during the talks that ended white rule in the 1990s as ambassador to the US, in what is seen as an attempt to improve the deeply strained diplomatic relationship between the two countries.Roelf Meyer replaces Ebrahim Rasool, who was expelled in March 2025 after he criticised the Trump administration. Continue reading...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
German health minister announces billions in cutbacks
The comprehensive reform package aims to plug a multi-billion-euro hole in Germany's expensive healthcare system. The reforms include mandatory second opinions for costly surgeries and no more homeopathy.

Mail Online
Open 
BBC to cut 2,000 jobs in bid to slash costs by 10 per cent over the next three years
The overhaul amounts to the largest downsizing of the licence feepayer-funded public sector broadcaster for 15 years.

Mail Online
Open 
New jails fiasco as Ministry of Justice confirms it freed 179 prisoners by mistake in the last year
The Ministry of Justice freed 179 prisoners by mistake in the year to March, official new figures show.

Sky News Home
Open 
Student kills nine people in Turkey's second school shooting in two days
A student has killed nine people and wounded 13 others in Turkey's second school shooting in two days, officials said.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump threatens to fire Fed chair Jerome Powell amid pressure campaign
US president says he has ‘held back’ on firing the head of the Federal Reserve leading up to end of Powell’s term in MaySign up for the Breaking News US email to get newsletter alerts in your inboxDonald Trump threatened to fire Jerome Powell if he stays on as US Federal Reserve chair past the end of his tenure and doubled down on a criminal investigation into renovations of the central bank’s headquarters.As the White House pushes Trump’s new nominee to take charge of the Fed, Kevin Warsh, Powell has a month left in the role. The possibility of Powell staying on as chair past 15 May, the official end of his term, has grown amid mounting scrutiny of Trump’s approach to the Fed in the Senate, which is required to approve Warsh’s nomination. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Sinlaku rips through Northern Mariana Islands as strongest tropical cyclone this year
More than 1,000 people were in shelters across Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands as Sinlaku moved awaySuper Typhoon Sinlaku hammered the Northern Mariana Islands, flipping over cars, toppling utility poles and ripping away tin roofs.Authorities were just beginning to assess the damage left behind by the typhoon, which first hit the islands on Tuesday night local time and continued with a barrage of fierce winds and relentless rains for hours on Wednesday. So far, there have been no reports of deaths. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Football Daily | Atlético put boot into Barcelona as Raphinha gets rubbed up the wrong way
Sign up now! Sign up now! Sign up now? Sign up now!While Barcelona’s night at the Metropolitano was pretty well summed up by the accompanying image of poor Fermín López shipping six studs in the mush, Lamine Yamal’s cross in the buildup should be framed and hung in the Louvre. Using a minimum of backlift, the preposterously precocious 18-year-old had arced the ball directly into the path of the midfielder with the outside of his left boot, only for López to be denied by a splendid Juan Musso save that left the already bandaged Barça midfielder drenched in claret. Had López scored, Barcelona would have gone 3-0 up on the night and ahead in the tie, having already restored parity courtesy of goals scored by Lamine Yamal and Ferran Torres in a blistering and blood-drenched opening 30 minutes. Moments later, Charlton Athletic academy graduate Ademola Lookman scored the decisive goal that sent Atlético Madrid into Bigger Cup semi-finals, much to the not entirely surprising delight of their head coach Diego Simeone. “Playing in a [Bigger Cup] semi-final, how wonderful,” he honked before an appointment with Arsenal or Sporting. “We’ll go there with all our enthusiasm and faith. We know our strengths and weaknesses. We’re ready.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Race for World Cup places is on and fringe Lionesses have grabbed their chance | Tom Garry
England have a long way to go yet before booking flights to Brazil, but Esme Morgan, Lotte Wubben-Moy and Lucia Kendall impressed against SpainEverybody keep calm. England sit top of their qualifying group with a 100% record after beating Spain, but there remains a very long way to go before anyone can start booking flights to South America for 2027 … Let us cast aside that sensible advice, though, and begin to look at the players who enhanced their prospects of selection because, whether England continue this winning streak or not, their target is to win a first world title and there is no hiding from that challenge. So who has staked a claim?Of the 11 players who started at Wembley on Tuesday, eight look nailed on to be in the first-choice XI for the World Cup, let alone the squad. That octet of Hannah Hampton, Lucy Bronze, Alex Greenwood, Keira Walsh, Georgia Stanway, Lauren Hemp, Lauren James and Alessia Russo will be central to Sarina Wiegman’s plans for Brazil, together with senior players such as Leah Williamson and Ella Toone when they return after injuries, plus the “clutch moment” saviour that is Chloe Kelly, who was on the bench. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Despite their bad reputation, parenting group chats are – for some – the village that never sleeps
Parent WhatsApp chats can be fraught spaces for new mothers. But for Wendy Syfret they were a late-night digital sanctuaryFor the first few days after I brought my daughter home from the hospital, my house was busier than it had ever been. Family, friends, neighbours and even loose acquaintances crowded the doorway, plying me with food, gifts, hand-me-downs and advice.But as the sun set, the crowds thinned. My daughter would wake for a long night of not sleeping and I’d retreat to my bedroom and, honestly, my phone. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
IMF calls for countries to economise on energy supplies, and hails UK’s budget deficit improvement – business live
Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial news, as IMF managing director Kristalina Georgieva gives a press conference in Washington DCIran war escalation could trigger global recession, IMF warnsRecord-high export revenues from crude oil have pushed Norway’s trade surplus to its highest level since January 2023.Statistics Norway has reported that the country’s export revenues rose to NOK 199.9bn (£15.6bn) in March 2026.The closure of the Strait of Hormuz has caused a significant supply shock in the oil market, which contributed to the high oil prices in March, and thus the highest export value ever.“I wonder what the hit to global GDP would be if a nuclear weapon hit London,” Bessent said to the BBC. “I am less concerned about short-term forecasts, for long-term security.”The relationship between the two countries looks increasingly fraught. On Tuesday, Reeves used her strongest language yet to criticize Donald Trump’s war in the Middle East and the damage it has wreaked on the global economy. Continue reading...

Gizmodo
Open 
Some Locals Are Using AI to Protest Against Data Centers
Advocacy against data centers isn't necessarily all about being anti-AI.

Gizmodo
Open 
The ‘Good Omens’ Finale Trailer Wants You to Think About the End and Nothing Else
After years of waiting sparked by sexual harassment allegations against co-creator Neil Gaiman, Amazon is ready to send 'Good Omens' out for one last time.

UK Legislation
Open 
European Charter of Local Self-Government (Incorporation) (Scotland) Act 2026
An Act of the Scottish Parliament to incorporate in Scots law the European Charter of Local Self-Government, and for connected purposes.

UK Legislation
Open 
The Contracts for Difference (Sustainable Industry Rewards and Contract Budget Notice Amendments) Regulations 2026
These Regulations amend the Contracts for Difference (Allocation) Regulations 2014 (S.I. 2014/2011) (“Allocation Regulations”), the Electricity Market Reform (General) Regulations 2014 (S.I. 2014/2013) (“EMR Regulations”) and the Contracts for Difference (Standard Terms) Regulations (S.I. 2014/2012) (“Standard Terms Regulations”). Those Regulations form part of the legislative framework underpinning the Contracts for Difference (“CFD”) scheme under section 6 of the Energy Act 2013 (c. 32).

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Leo Woodall and Kate Winslet join new Lord of the Rings cast
Jamie Dornan also joins the franchise for The Hunt for Gollum, alongside returning stars Sir Ian McKellen and Elijah Wood.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Turkey: School shooting leaves 9 dead
The deadly shooting comes just a day after a similar incident in the country in which 16 people were injured.

Mail Online
Open 
UK's Pier of the Year 2026 revealed - beating 62 other seafront icons to the top spot
The Pier of the Year has been announced for 2026 by the National Piers Society.

Mail Online
Open 
Pregnant White Lotus actress who recently revealed she is expecting her first child is spotted travelling by train in New York
An A-list TV and movie star was spotted travelling by subway around her home city of New York this week.

Sky News Home
Open 
Student filmmaker was 'surrounded and kicked on floor before being stabbed'
A student filmmaker allegedly stabbed to death at a popular north London viewpoint was surrounded and kicked on the floor before he died, a court heard.

Sky News Home
Open 
Mandelson's advisory firm collapsed owing taxman six-figure sum

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Mahmood promises action against 'sham lawyers' abusing asylum system
It comes after the BBC revealed how law firms and advisers are helping migrants pretend to be gay to stay in the UK.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Bournemouth in talks with Marco Rose to replace Andoni Iraola as head coach
Iraola leaving at end of the seasonRose out of work since March 2025Bournemouth are in advanced talks with Marco Rose to replace Andoni Iraola as their head coach. The German has emerged as the leading candidate and a deal for him to take over at the end of the season could be agreed by the end of this week.Bournemouth have also given strong consideration to moving for Ipswich’s Kieran McKenna, but Rose is available now and boasts a strong CV. McKenna’s contract contains a buyout clause and no negotiations can be held with him before the end of the Championship season. The Northern Irishman is trying to lead Ipswich back into the Premier League and the club are likely to resist any attempt to take the 39-year-old away from Portman Road. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Nonnamaxxing: do Italian grandmothers hold the secret to a long and happy life?
Gen Z are turning to nonnas for inspiration on how to live to be 100. Will donning a flowery dress and making their own pasta sauce do the trick?Name: Nonnamaxxing.Age: 70 to 100, and beyond. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
From the devil’s violinist to devil’s horns - why classical and heavy metal are a natural pairing
With ear-splitting excess, flamboyant virtuosity and a talent for transgression, where classical music has led, metal has followed. Let’s hope the Philharmonia’s Metal Orchestrated concert turns it up to 11The question is not why, but why has it taken so long? Putting heavy metal and classical together that is, as the Philharmonia are doing next week in their Forged in Sound: Heavy Metal Orchestrated gig, part of the Southbank Centre’s Multitudes festival.There’s more that connects metal and classical music than sets them apart. A love of volume, turning the noise up to 11? From Black Sabbath to Stravinsky, check. A worship of virtuosity, of speed, technique and orgiastic instrumental excess, from Vivaldi to Van Halen? Absolutely. An all-too easily parodied sense of grandiloquence, pseudo-seriousness and expressive pomp and circumstance? I give you Richard Wagner and Iron Maiden. An addiction to flamboyant spectacle, a PR-driven flirtation with the dark side to build the mythology of the music and the performers? That too. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
BBC to cut up to 2,000 jobs in biggest downsize in 15 years
Announcement comes before Matt Brittin replaces Tim Davie as director general next monthBusiness live – latest updatesThe BBC is to cut as many as 2,000 jobs in the biggest downsizing of the public service broadcaster in 15 years.Staff were to be informed of the cuts, which will affect about 10% of the BBC’s 21,500 employees, at an all-staff meeting on Wednesday. Continue reading...

CNET News
Open 
Amazon's Globalstar Grab Adds iPhone Connectivity to Its Starlink Pursuit
Amazon announces plans to acquire satellite service provider Globalstar in its quest to provide connectivity from space.

CNET News
Open 
Denon's New AVR-S980H Breaks Receiver Drought for Home Theater Fans
The Dolby Atmos receiver includes improved streaming support and extra gaming features.

Guardian F1
Open 
Unhappy Verstappen ‘has to be listened to’ over new rules, says F1 chief Domenicali
Red Bull driver outspoken about regulation changes ‘In a meeting he was very keen to give suggestions’Formula One must listen to Max Verstappen’s grievances about the sport’s new regulations and their impact on racing, according to F1’s chief Stefano Domenicali as key players hold meetings to consider adjusting the rules for the remainder of the season.Verstappen has been outspoken in his dissatisfaction with the new formula and the key part energy management now plays in preventing being able to race flat-out. The four-time champion is not alone in his feelings with other drivers also critical of the deployment and recharging of electrical energy. Continue reading...

Russia Today News
Open 
No rules: Where could the next war erupt?

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Leo Woodall and Kate Winslet join new Lord of the Rings cast
Leo Woodall, Jamie Dornan and Kate Winslet will join returning actors Sir Ian McKellen and Elijah Wood.

Mail Online
Open 
What Booking.com's huge data breach means for holidaymakers - and how travel scams are getting harder to spot
Booking.com suffered a security breach with some customer data leaked to a 'third party' - and now, experts have shared what this could mean for you.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
British doubles legend Jamie Murray retires from tennis
Jamie Murray, who became the first British doubles player to rise to world number one, has announced his retirement from tennis.

BBC UK News
Open 
Starmer says he's 'not going to yield' to pressure from Trump on Iran war
It follows a warning from the US president that America's trade deal with the UK "can always be changed".

WikiNews
Open 
United States announces blockade on the Strait of Hormuz
Wednesday, April 15, 2026
 


Politics and conflicts
Related articles


12 March 2026: US president Donald Trump demands the unconditional surrender of Iran
12 March 2026: PM of Australia sends E-7A Wedgetail and air-to-air missiles to UAE
7 March 2026: US President Donald Trump appears to wear makeup after apparent rash breaks out on neck, reports say
2 March 2026: Green Party wins major by-election in northern England city of Manchester
7 February 2026: White House deletes Truth Social post portraying Obamas as apes


Collaborate!

Pillars of Wikinews writing
Writing an article


Map depicting the Strait of Hormuz. Image: Goran_tek-en.
On Sunday, United States President Donald Trump announced on Truth Social that the US is imposing a blockade on the Strait of Hormuz. According to Trump, the blockade was in effect as of 10:00 a.m. Eastern Time (1400 UTC).
The blockade was imposed following the collapse of talks held in Islamabad between the United States and Iran.
"Effective immediately, the United States Navy, the finest in the world, will be BLOCKADING any and all ships trying to enter, or leave, the Strait of Hormuz," Trump declared.
According to The Guardian, oil prices briefly rose above US$100 a barrel following news of the blockade, before easing back to just over US$99; gas prices also increased.
Iranian parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf posted on X to "Enjoy the current pump figures. With the so-called 'blockade', soon you'll be nostalgic for $4–$5 gas." He further stated that Iran would respond in kind to both escalation and diplomacy, warning that it would "fight" if confronted militarily but would "deal with logic" if approached constructively.
China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs expressed hope that the ceasefire would remain stable, stating that Beijing is willing to cooperate with all parties to "guarantee the uninterrupted flow of energy supplies," and that stability in the Strait of Hormuz is critically important to China.




Have an opinion on this story? Share it!


Sources[edit]
Julia Kollewe. Oil price tops $100 a barrel after peace talks fail and Trump orders blockade — The Guardian, 13 April 2026
Lauren Edmonds, Huileng Tan, and Theron Mohamed. Oil surges past $100 a barrel after US-Iran peace talks fail and Trump threatens to blockade the Strait of Hormuz — Business Insider, 13 April 2026
'Enjoy it now:' Iran warns of painful oil price surge as Trump escalates blockade threat — The Times of India, 13 April 2026
China Reacts to Strait of Hormuz Blockade: Global Energy Security at Risk — IranWire, 13 April 2026.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-box{background-color:#FFFFFF;border:1.5px solid #a7d7f9;border-radius:9px;padding:4px 6px;width:36%}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-header{font-size:1.1em}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-header:after{content:"";display:block;width:60%;height:2px;background-color:#a7d7f9;margin-top:6px;margin-bottom:6px}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-buttons{display:flex;flex-wrap:wrap;justify-content:center;align-items:center}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-buttons .wn-social-bookmarks-btn{margin:2px}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn{display:inline-flex;justify-content:center;align-items:center;width:36px;height:36px;background-color:#e0e5ec;border:1px solid #dddddd;border-radius:3px;cursor:pointer;box-shadow:0 2px 5px rgba(0,0,0,0.05);transition:transform 0.15s ease,box-shadow 0.15s ease,background-color 0.15s ease,border-color 0.15s ease}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn:hover{transform:translateY(-2px);box-shadow:0 4px 8px rgba(0,0,0,0.14)}.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn:active{transform:none;box-shadow:0 2px 4px rgba(0,0,0,0.08)}@media(max-width:768px){.mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-box{width:100%;padding:10px 14px}}html.skin-theme-clientpref-night .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-box{background-color:#1a1b1d;border-color:#3b3f44}html.skin-theme-clientpref-night .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-header:after{background-color:#3b3f44}html.skin-theme-clientpref-night .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn{background-color:#2c2c2c;border-color:#444444;box-shadow:0 2px 5px rgba(0,0,0,0.2)}html.skin-theme-clientpref-night .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn:hover{background-color:#3a3a3a;box-shadow:0 4px 8px rgba(0,0,0,0.3)}html.skin-theme-clientpref-night .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn:active{box-shadow:0 2px 4px rgba(0,0,0,0.2)}@media(prefers-color-scheme:dark){html.skin-theme-clientpref-os .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-box{background-color:#1a1b1d;border-color:#3b3f44}html.skin-theme-clientpref-os .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-header:after{background-color:#3b3f44}html.skin-theme-clientpref-os .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn{background-color:#2c2c2c;border-color:#444444;box-shadow:0 2px 5px rgba(0,0,0,0.2)}html.skin-theme-clientpref-os .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn:hover{background-color:#3a3a3a;box-shadow:0 4px 8px rgba(0,0,0,0.3)}html.skin-theme-clientpref-os .mw-parser-output .wn-social-bookmarks-btn:active{box-shadow:0 2px 4px rgba(0,0,0,0.2)}}.mw-parser-output #mw-customcollapsible-wn-extra{flex-basis:100%;display:flex;justify-content:center}.mw-parser-output #mw-customcollapsible-wn-extra .mw-collapsible-content{display:flex;flex-wrap:wrap;justify-content:center;align-items:center;margin-top:3px}







  Share this article

TechRadar News
Open 
KitchenAid puts iced coffee lovers first with its new lineup of automatic espresso machines — here’s when you’ll be able snag one

TechRadar News
Open 
NordVPN promises urgent Mac app update after users dub latest release a "dumpster fire"

TechRadar News
Open 
'This activity appears to be part of a broader issue': education company McGraw Hill becomes latest to see its Salesforce data hacked

TechRadar News
Open 
Black Sails is leaving Netflix this week — but you can stream the greatest pirate TV show of all time somewhere else for free

Atlas Obscura
Open 
Japanese Tank Graveyard in Kolonia, Micronesia

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Bank of America’s 30% jump in equities revenue pushes stock toward a two-month high
Bank of America’s strong quarterly results were helped by market volatility and an easier regulatory environment.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Inflation watch: High oil prices boost the cost of imports again. How long will the pain last?
The cost of imported goods rose sharply in March for the third month in a row, heralding further increases in U.S. inflation in the next few months, mostly due to higher oil prices.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
How Meta’s little-known chip business fits in with Zuckerberg’s ‘superintelligence’ ambitions
Taking a page from Google’s and Amazon’s books, Meta is racing to vertically integrate its AI infrastructure with its Broadcom deal.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Caregiving has become so crazy expensive that it’s financially devastating to most families
Only the wealthiest Americans can bear the costs of long-term care, new research found

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Starmer says he is 'not going to yield' to pressure from Trump on Iran war
It follows a warning from the US president that America's trade deal with the UK "can always be changed".

Planet PostgreSQL
Open 
Ahsan Hadi: pgEdge Vectorizer and RAG Server: Bringing Semantic Search to PostgreSQL (Part 2)
In my previous blog, I walked through setting up the pgEdge MCP Server with a distributed PostgreSQL cluster, and connecting Claude to live database data through natural language. In this blog I want to look at a different problem: how do you build AI-powered search over your own content, without adding a separate vector database to your infrastructure?This is where the pgEdge Vectorizer and RAG Server come in. Together, they give you a complete open-source Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) pipeline that runs entirely inside PostgreSQL. In this blog, I'll explain what each component does, how they work together, and walk through working examples that you can follow on your own PostgreSQL instance.I am following the same pattern in this blog as I have been doing in my other blogs. The goal is to explain each component and then provide real world working examples in order to the reader to better understand these concepts.Please note: I am using my Rocky Linux VM for this installation and testing and using the Ollama embedding provider (installed on my VM) to generate the embeddings.Background: The Problem With Keeping Vector Search In SyncMost teams building AI-powered search hit the same wall. You set up a vector search pipeline, load your documents, generate embeddings, and everything works. Then someone updates a document or adds a new one - suddenly you need a process to detect the change, re-chunk the content, regenerate the embeddings, and update the index. Teams typically solve this with custom scripts, message queues, or external orchestration tools - all of which need to be built, maintained, and monitored separately from the database.The pgEdge Vectorizer eliminates that problem entirely. It runs as a PostgreSQL background worker. Once you enable Vectorizer on a table, it monitors the source data through triggers, chunks and embeds new or modified rows automatically, and keeps the search index in sync without any external orchestration. The same transactional guarantees that PostgreSQL gives you for regular data apply here too.The pgEdge RAG Server sits in front of that data, exposing a simple HTTP API. When a query comes in, it performs a hybrid search that combines vector similarity with BM25 keyword matching to retrieve the most relevant chunks, and passes them to an LLM to generate a grounded answer. The result is accurate, context-aware responses based on your actual data, instead of the model's training set.How the Pipeline WorksBefore getting into setup, it helps to understand how the three components connect:a PostgreSQL background worker extension that monitors source tables, chunks text content, calls your embedding provider (OpenAI, Voyage AI, or local Ollama), and stores the results in an automatically created chunk table. Triggers keep this in sync as data changes.the open source PostgreSQL extension that adds the vector data type, HNSW and IVFFlat indexes, and cosine/Euclidean/dot-product similarity operators. The vectorizer uses this to store and index embeddings. It is the foundation that everything else builds on.a Go-based API server that handles the retrieval and generation side. It receives a natural language query, embeds it, runs hybrid search against the chunk table, applies a token budget to fit the results into the LLM context window, and calls the LLM to generate a response.It's important to note that you can use SQL functions to enable vectorization on a table and let the background worker handle the rest. There is no need to write embedding logic or manually keep the embeddings in sync with data changes. Part 1: The pgEdge VectorizerWhat the Vectorizer Does Under the HoodOne of the recurring challenges with AI-powered applications is keeping your vector search index in sync with your source data. Most pipelines require custom scripts or external orchestration tools to detect changes, re-chunk documents, and regenerate embeddings. The pgEdge Vectorizer eliminates that entirely.The Vectorizer runs as a PostgreSQL background worker process. When you call enable_vectorization() on a table column, the extension does three things: it creates a companion chunk table to store the generated embeddings, installs triggers on the source table to detect inserts and updates, and enqueues any existing rows for processing. The background workers then pick up items from the queue, split the text into overlapping chunks, call your configured embedding provider for each chunk, and insert the results into the chunk table. When source data changes, only the affected rows are re-processed, instead of the entire table.This trigger-based approach is what makes it practical for production use. You don't need a separate change data capture system or a scheduled job - the vectorizer is always watching.InstallationBefore installing the vectorizer, make sure pgvector is installed on your PostgreSQL instance — the vectorizer depends on it to store and index the embeddings it generates. If you are running pgEdge Enterprise Postgres, pgvector is already included. For community PostgreSQL, install it from the pgvector GitHub repository or your package manager.You will also need the PostgreSQL server development headers and libcurl. On Rocky Linux / RHEL / Fedora:Clone and build the vectorizer:Please ensure to set your PG_CONFIG parameter before installing the extension.This installation needs to be performed for every pgEdge node in the cluster. I am running two nodes on localhost on my VM,  so I am doing the installation on both nodes.ConfigurationThe vectorizer runs as a background worker, so it must be added to and configured in before starting PostgreSQL:For this blog I am using Ollama to generate embeddings since everything is running locally on my VM. Ollama is a great option for local development and testing — it runs entirely on your machine with no API keys or external calls required. For production deployments, you would typically switch to OpenAI's text-embedding-3-small or Voyage AI's voyage-3 model, both of which offer higher quality embeddings and better performance at scale. The vectorizer and RAG Server support all three providers, so switching is just a simple configuration change.The parameter tells the vectorizer which embedding model to use when generating vectors. In this case we are using — a lightweight 137MB embedding model from Nomic AI that runs efficiently on CPU without requiring a GPU. The tag ensures Ollama uses the most recent version of the model. This same model name must be consistent across both the vectorizer configuration and the RAG Server pipeline configuration — if the models differ, the query embeddings and the stored document embeddings will be generated by different models, making similarity search unreliable.If you haven't already installed Ollama, run the following. Then restart PostgreSQL to load the background workers : Once PostgreSQL is running, create the extension in your database: A Practical Example: Product Support Knowledge BaseLet me walk through a realistic example. Say you have a product support knowledge base — a table of articles that your support team maintains. You want users to be able to search it semantically, so that a question like "how do I reset my password?" finds the right article even if the article uses the phrase "account recovery" rather than "reset password."First, create the source table:Enable vectorization on the content column — this single call sets up the chunk table, installs the triggers, and enqueues any existing rows:The vectorizer automatically creates . You can inspect its structure:Insert a few articles and watch the vectorizer process them:Check how many embeddings are still pending:Wait a few seconds for the background workers to process the queue, then check again:Semantic Search Using generate_embedding()With embeddings in place, you can run a semantic search directly in SQL. The vectorizer provides a generate_embedding() function that embeds your search query on the fly, so you do not need to pre-compute it in your application.The distance value ranges from 0 (identical meaning) to 2 (completely unrelated). The Account Recovery article scores 0.29 - a very strong semantic match - even though the user asked, "how do I get back into my account?" using entirely different wording from the article's title. That is exactly what semantic search is supposed to do. Another example : The query uses the cosine distance operator from the pgvector extension to find which stored chunks are semantically closest to your question. A few things worth understanding here: - the stored 768-dimension vector for each chunk in the chunk table - pgvector's cosine distance operator. Returns a value between 0 (identical meaning) and 2 (completely unrelated). Lower is better - converts your search query into a vector on the fly by calling the same Ollama embedding model used to generate the stored embeddings - labels the score so you can ORDER BY it to get the most relevant results firstThe key point is that the model compares meaning, not keywords. A question like "where is the billing section?" will match the Billing and Invoices article even though it shares almost no words with the article content — because both are semantically about the same topicAutomatic Re-Embedding on UpdateOne of the most practical aspects of the vectorizer is how it handles content changes. When you update an article, the following trigger fires automatically — the old chunks are replaced and new embeddings are generated without any manual intervention:Part 2: The pgEdge RAG ServerWhat the RAG Server DoesDirect SQL search with generate_embedding() is useful for development and debugging, but it is not how you expose semantic search to an application. The pgEdge RAG Server is the production-ready layer on top. It exposes a simple HTTP API, handles the embedding of incoming queries, runs hybrid search against the chunk table, manages the token budget for the LLM context window, and returns a generated answer alongside the source chunks used.The hybrid search approach is worth explaining. Pure vector search finds semantically similar content but can miss exact keyword matches. Pure BM25 (keyword) search finds exact matches but misses paraphrases. The RAG Server combines both using Reciprocal Rank Fusion; this retrieves candidates from each method and merges the ranked lists, giving you the benefits of both approaches in a single query.PrerequisitesThe RAG Server is written in Go. You need Go version 1.23 or later:InstallationSetting Up API KeysThe RAG Server reads API keys from files rather than environment variables — safer for production deployments. Create the key files with restrictive permissions:To use Claude as the LLM for response generation in the RAG Server, you need an Anthropic API key. This is separate from your claude.ai subscription — the RAG Server calls the Anthropic API directly, which is billed by token usage. Head over to console.anthropic.com, create an account if you don't have one, and generate an API key under Settings > API Keys. You will also need to add a small credit balance under Plans & Billing — $5 is more than enough for testing and development. The RAG queries we are running here cost fractions of a cent each, so your credit will go a long way. Once you have the key, store it in a file and set the correct permissionsIt is worth noting that Claude is not the only option here. The RAG Server supports multiple LLM providers for response generation — you can use OpenAI models like gpt-4o, or run a local model entirely through Ollama, which requires no API key at all.ConfigurationThe RAG Server uses a YAML configuration file. A pipeline defines the complete RAG setup, including which database to query, which chunk table to search, and which LLM providers to use for embedding and generation:Starting and Verifying the ServerUse the following command to start the server and confirm the server health:Querying the RAG APIThe main query endpoint is POST . The following command uses the support knowledge base we set up above:The server retrieves the most relevant chunks from the database, applies the token budget, and sends them to the LLM. The response comes back as JSON:Notice the answer is grounded in your actual knowledge base content — not a generic response from the model's training data. If you add "include_sources": true to the request body, the response will also include the specific chunks that were retrieved, which is useful for building citation-aware interfaces or debugging retrieval quality.

Sky News Home
Open 
Two men banned from football matches in first tailgating convictions
Two men have been banned from attending football matches for three years as punishment for tailgating at the 2026 Carabao Cup final at Wembley Stadium.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Game of Thrones and Euphoria given age ratings as BBFC deploys new AI tool
Regulator says tool, which creates reports for humans to review, has helped classify entire UK catalogue of HBO MaxTV shows including Game of Thrones and Euphoria have received age ratings for the first time in the UK, after the British Board of Film Classification (BBFC) deployed an AI tool to help assess content.The BBFC has developed a tool to identify content that triggers compliance issues, such as violence, nudity and bad language. The flagged scenes are then passed over to BBFC staff for human review. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Rare 150-year-old Greenland shark washes up in Ireland
The Greenland shark, which can have a lifespan of over 500 years, was discovered in Sligo on Saturday.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Nvidia Unveils New AI Open Model, Sparking Rally In Quantum Stocks
Nvidia Unveils New AI Open Model, Sparking Rally In Quantum Stocks

Nvidia unveiled the world's first open-source AI models to accelerate the development of quantum computing. The news sent shares of several Asian software and cybersecurity firms soaring and sparked a rally in U.S.-listed quantum stocks in premarket trading.

Nvidia's Ising open-model family is designed to improve two critical areas: quantum processor calibration and quantum error correction. Nvidia claims the models deliver calibration capabilities it describes as industry-leading, while its decoding tools operate 2.5 times faster and achieve up to 3x greater accuracy than traditional open-source approaches.

"AI is essential to making quantum computing practical," Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang stated.

Jensen continued, "With Ising, AI becomes the control plane, the operating system of quantum machines, transforming fragile qubits into scalable and reliable quantum-GPU systems."

In South Korea, shares of software and cybersecurity firms, including Axgate Co. and ICTK Co., jumped to the 30% daily trading limit. China's GuoChuang Software Co. and QuantumCTek Co., along with Japan's Fixstars Corp., rose at least 8%.



In the U.S., D-Wave Quantum Inc. (QBTS) rose 10%, while IonQ Inc. (IONQ) and Rigetti Computing Inc. (RGTI) climbed 5.9% following the Nvidia news.



Amid the hype in quantum stocks, Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Robert Lea reminded traders, "While these tools can potentially help accelerate developments, the deployment of practical, large-scale quantum computing remains a long way off."



Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 08:20

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Is The Iran War Good For The Petrodollar?
Is The Iran War Good For The Petrodollar?

Diana Choyleva wrote an excellent editorial for the Wall Street Journal entitled “The Iran War Is A Boon For The Petrodollar.”

She pushes back against claims that the Iran conflict is accelerating the death of the petrodollar.



Instead, RealInvestmentAdvice.com points out that she argues the opposite: between Iran and Venezuela, the U.S. is defending and bolstering dollar dominance in the oil trade.

The 75-year-old petrodollar system rests on oil being priced and traded in dollars, which keeps the dollar prominent in all global trade.

China has been undermining the petrodollar through yuan settlement systems and by deepening its ties with some Arab nations.

Rather than Iran being a “perfect storm” weakening the petrodollar, as some argue, Choyleva sees American military engagement in Iran as supportive of the dollar. 

Simply, control the flow of oil, and you control the currency it’s traded in.

Most Arab nations back the US campaign against Iran. Importantly, “the security commitment was tested; it held.”

This reinforced the security-for-oil-pricing bargain that underpins the petrodollar system.

The removal of Venezuelan President Maduro and influence over Venezuelan oil accomplishes similar goals.

If the US controls Western Hemisphere oil reserves, it would command more oil than OPEC combined, thus providing enormous leverage for keeping oil priced in dollars.



The author sees two scenarios for how the war ends.


First, an agreement that gives the U.S. influence over Iranian oil flows.

Second, US forces seize Kharg Island and police the Strait of Hormuz.


In her words, controlling “the choke point through which a fifth of the world’s oil flows.”

Either way, both events lead to more dollar-based oil trades, not less.

She concludes that "those who conclude that the petrodollar is already in its death throes are reading the map upside down. The storm is real. The dollar is fighting back."

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 09:10

ZeroHedge News
Open 
War 'Very Close' To Over, Trump Says, As Iran Ceasefire Extension Reportedly Advances, But More US Troops Deploy
War 'Very Close' To Over, Trump Says, As Iran Ceasefire Extension Reportedly Advances, But More US Troops Deploy

Summary


The Iran war is "very close to over" with authorities in Tehran eager to agree a peace deal, Trump says, adding: "We've beaten them militarily."


AP/Bloomberg reporting the two sides have an "in principle agreement" to pursue further diplomacy; however, this is batted down as 'unconfirmed' by Tehran & a US official.


The Pentagon is sending thousands of additional troops into the Middle East in coming days: WaPo


Trump claims China "very happy" the US is permanently opening the Strait of Hormuz, also Xi told him Beijing was not sending weapons/defense items to Tehran.


Significant Lebanon fighting continues: Israel issues more evacuation orders, moving into south; Tehran outraged, threatens Red Sea shipping. Unconfirmed reports of one-week Lebanon ceasefire about to take effect.




//-->

//-->

//-->


US x Iran permanent peace deal by April 30, 2026?
Yes 33% · No 68%View full market & trade on Polymarket *  *  *

Lebanon Ceasefire Imminent? 

The Hezbollah-affiliated Al-Mayadeen channel, citing a senior Iranian source, reports that a ceasefire in Lebanon will begin tonight. "The duration of the ceasefire will be one week and will extend until the end of the ceasefire period between Iran and the United States."

However, there's been no confirmation of this from Israel or the US, or in Israeli media. The Lebanese government just met with Israeli officials for Rubio-sponsored talks in Washington yesterday, but there was no word of a definitive ceasefire coming from the meeting, and currently Hezbollah and Israel are not directly talking at all. It remains unclear whether this could be a sign of Lebanese officials getting Hezbollah on board with a pause in fighting.

Meanwhile, two fresh notes on the question of advancing a second round of US-Iran negotiations:

Iranian media reported that Field Marshal Asim Munir, Chief of Staff of the Pakistani Army, headed a high-ranking political-security delegation from Pakistan to convey the US message and plan the second round of talks, and is scheduled to meet with officials of the Islamic Republic.
Regional mediators are trying to extend the U.S.–Iran cease-fire and restart talks after failed negotiations in Islamabad, but no date or venue has been set. A new round is unlikely before Pakistan completes its regional diplomatic
'Very Close' To War Over, Diplomacy in Reach: Trump

The latest from Trump: The Iran war is "very close to over" with authorities in Tehran eager to agree a peace deal, President Trump claimed in a fresh interview broadcast Wednesday. "We’ve beaten them militarily, totally," Trump told Fox Business in a prerecorded interview. "I think it’s close to over, I view it as very close to over... If I pulled up stakes right now it would take them 20 years to rebuild that country, and we’re not finished." He added: "We’ll see what happens, I think they want to make a deal very badly."

This as the Associated Press has reported the US and Iran are closer to extending a ceasefire and restarting negotiations, even amid the intensifying standoff over the Strait of Hormuz as the US Navy has blockaded it for all shipping leaving Iranian ports or with ties, or under sanction.

The two sides have an "in principle agreement" to pursue further diplomacy after last weekend's failed Islamabad talks. Trump on Tuesday had optimistically cited that the next round could be just two days away. Mediators are said to be pushing for a compromise on outstanding issues including Hormuz and Iran's nuclear program before the April 7 truce expires next week, the news agency said - as they also eye the extension off the initial two weeks.


IRAN'S TASNIM: US-SANCTIONED CONTAINER SHIP GOLBON PASSED THROUGH HORMUZ pic.twitter.com/Wtca8fTZ2b
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) April 15, 2026
However, Iran's Foreign Ministry has made clear the reports about the ceasefire extension are not confirmed, while Axios' Barak Ravid similarly writes - US official tells me: "The US has not agreed to an extension of the ceasefire. There is continued engagement between the U.S. and Iran to reach a deal."

Iran meanwhile is warning that it sees a prolonging of the US blockade as "a prelude to a breach of the ceasefire," a military spokesman said, as featured state TV. Iran's military "will not permit any exports or imports to continue in the Persian Gulf, the Sea of Oman or the Red Sea" if it continues, the spokesman added. 


IRAN'S BAGHAEI: NO SPECIFIC DAY SET FOR NEW US NEGOTIATIONS

Via AP: A billboard depicting U.S. aircraft caught by Iranian armed forces in a fishing net.

 

Trump on China

President Trump says he asked his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping not to supply weapons to Iran, and Xi replied he was not doing so. "I had heard that China’s giving weapons to, I mean - you’re seeing it all over the place - to Iran," Trump also said in the aforementioned Fox Business interview.

"And I wrote him a letter asking him not to do that, and he wrote me a letter saying that essentially he’s not doing that." Major media outlets previously reported that US intelligence indicated China was preparing to ship advanced weaponry to Iran. Beijing's public rejection of the "baseless smear" - as the Foreign Minister called it - has indeed been swift and vehement.

With oil prices remaining elevated, with Brent crude trading about 33% higher than before the start of the war, Trump has issued a new Truth Social claiming China is "very happy that I am permanently opening the Strait of Hormuz." This even though in many cases it is China bound tankers being blocked and turned back by the US naval armada. "This situation will never happen again," Trump added. He is set to meet with Xi in Beijing on May 14-15. On this he wrote that "President Xi will give me a big, fat, hug when I get there in a few weeks. We are going working together smartly, and very well!" But then Trump says "But remember, we are very good at fighting, if we have to..."



More Troops Sent to Mideast

The Washington Post is out with a new report of more troops being sent to the theatre. "The Pentagon is sending thousands of additional troops into the Middle East in the coming days, as the Trump administration attempts to pressure Iran into a deal that could end the weeks long conflict there while considering the possibility of additional strikes or ground operations if a fragile ceasefire deal does not hold."

Already a combined estimated ten thousand US sailors, Marines, and personnel - on at least a dozen US warships, are maintaining the Trump-ordered blockade on Hormuz. So Washington continues to try and build leverage, also with the announced additional forces being prepped, while also sounding optimistic on a potential peace deal - thought to two sides are very far apart especially on the nuclear issue.

Trump has at times still shrugged off the importance of a final peace deal, having told ABC News that while an official peace agreement may not be necessary, "I think a deal is preferable because then they can rebuild." He had said, "They really do have a different regime now. No matter what, we took out the radicals."


Trump:
I wrote a letter to Xi. I asked him not to give Iran weapons. He wrote me a letter, and he is saying that he is essentially not doing that. pic.twitter.com/yrTT9Dwi2V
— Clash Report (@clashreport) April 15, 2026
Tehran (& Houthis) Threaten Red Sea Trade as Lebanon Fighting Persists

Iran's army warned it will block trade through the Red Sea, the Persian Gulf, and the Sea of Oman if the US naval blockade on Iranian ports continues. In a statement carried by Iranian state television, the head of the military's central command center said the "powerful armed forces of the Islamic Republic will not allow any exports or imports to continue in the Persian Gulf, the Sea of Oman and the Red Sea."

According to more via Al Jazeera, he added that Iran will "act decisively to defend its national sovereignty and its interests." One key factor which has outraged Iran is Israel's continued major attacks on Lebanon, after last Wednesday's massive aerial attack on Beirut and elsewhere which left over 300 dead. Israel on Wednesday said that Hezbollah fired 40 rockets into Israel earlier in the morning.

An Israeli drone strike on the Jiyeh road, Lebanon



More Geopolitical Headlines

via Newsquawk...

Effort to extend US-Iran ceasefire has made progress, AP reports citing official; mediators aim to extend the ceasefire for at least another two weeks; both sides gave an “in principle agreement” to extend the ceasefire.
Discussions are underway regarding possible extension of temporary ceasefire between Iran and US, according to Arab diplomatic sources cited by Russia on Wednesday and being reported by Chinese press CCTV.
However, US President Trump said it could end either way, but thinks a deal is preferable because then Iran can rebuild, also said he isn't thinking about extending the ceasefire and doesn't think it will be necessary, according to reported citing ABC reporter on X.
The Pentagon is sending thousands of additional troops into the Middle East in the coming days, WaPo reports citing US officials; in a bid to pressure Iran while mulling the possibility of additional strikes or ground operations if the ceasefire breaks.
US President Trump said it's "very possible" a deal with Iran will be reached by the time the King visits the US later this month (27-29th April), Sky News reported.
US President Trump said he views the war being very close to over, according to Fox News.
US VP Vance said we are negotiating with Iran and ceasefire is holding, adds Iranian negotiators wanted to make a deal.
Feel good about where we are.
Lot of mistrust between the US and Iran, can't be solved overnight.
US Vice President JD Vance is expected to lead a potential second round of talks with Iranian officials should negotiations lead to another face-to-face meeting before the ceasefire expires next week, according to sources familiar cited by CNN.
Pakistan leadership’s overseas tour until April 18th dims prospects of US-Iran talks in Islamabad before April 18th, Pakistani journalist Mallick reported.
Iran is to use alternative ports to those in southern Iran to bypass the US blockade in the Strait, Mehr News reported.
An Iranian VLCC (Very Large Crude Carrier), which was on the US sanctions list, entered the waters of Iran past the US blockade, Fars reported.
Iran secretly acquired a Chinese spy satellite that gave the Islamic republic a powerful new capability to target US military bases across the Middle East during the recent war, according to an FT investigation.
US Central Command said blockade of Iranian ports has been fully implemented and that US forces have completely halted economic trade going into and out of Iran by sea.
US has intercepted eight Iran-linked oil tankers since the start of the blockade, according to WSJ.
New satellite images show Iran digging for missile launchers trapped underground amid a ceasefire, according to CNN.
More than 20 commercial ships have passed through the Strait of Hormuz in the past 24 hours, WSJ reported, citing US officials.
US destroyer interdicted two oil tankers that attempted to leave Iran on Tuesday, according to an official cited by Reuters.
US President Trump reiterates on Truth Social "NATO wasn’t there for us, and they won’t be there for us in the future!".
Europe is accelerating a NATO fallback plan in case US President Trump pulls US out of the treaty, according to WSJ.
US Pentagon is likely to trim its Iran wall funding request, according to WSJ citing Senator Coons who is the top democrat on the Senate appropriations defense committee.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 09:30

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Shoe Brand Allbirds Pivots To AI, Changes Name To NewBird AI, Stock Rips More Than 360%
Shoe Brand Allbirds Pivots To AI, Changes Name To NewBird AI, Stock Rips More Than 360%

Just when you thought you’d seen the last of the AI pivot idiocy…

Allbirds (yes, the wool sneaker people) is mooning—up as much as 360%—after announcing it’s ditching shoes and pivoting to, of course, AI. This comes just weeks after agreeing to sell off its brand and footwear business for $39 million, according to Sherwood News.



The plan? Rebrand as “NewBird AI,” raise $50 million, and reinvent itself as a GPU-as-a-Service / AI cloud company. Translation: buy a bunch of high-powered GPUs and rent them out to companies desperate for AI compute. The company's press release out Wednesday morning said: "Following its prior announcement that it has entered into a definitive agreement to sell the Allbirds brand and footwear assets to American Exchange Group, which intends to continue to build on Allbirds’ legacy and deliver compelling products to Allbirds’ customers, Allbirds, Inc. today announced the execution of a definitive agreement with an institutional investor for a $50 million convertible financing facility."

It continues: "The Facility, which is expected to close during the second quarter of 2026, will enable the Company to pivot its business to AI compute infrastructure, with a long-term vision to become a fully integrated GPU-as-a-Service (GPUaaS) and AI-native cloud solutions provider. In connection with this pivot, the Company anticipates changing its name to “NewBird AI.”"

"NewBird AI expects to use initial capital from the Facility to acquire high-performance GPU assets, which will be deployed to serve customers requiring dedicated access to AI compute capacity. NewBird AI’s long-term vision is to become a fully integrated GPU-as-a-Service (GPUaaS) and AI-native cloud solutions provider. Over time, the Company intends to grow its neocloud platform by expanding its compute and service offerings, deepening partnerships with operators and customers, and evaluating strategic M&A opportunities," the release continues.

It adds:


The rise of AI development and adoption has created unprecedented structural demand for specialized, high-performance compute that the market is struggling to meet. Global enterprise spending on AI services and data center investment are on the rise. At the same time, GPU procurement lead times are increasing for high-end hardware, North American data center vacancy rates have reached historic lows, and market-wide compute capacity coming online through mid-2026 is already fully committed. The result is a market where enterprises, AI developers, and research organizations are unable to secure the compute resources they need to build, train and run AI at scale.

NewBird AI is being built to help close that gap. The Company will initially seek to acquire high-performance, low-latency AI compute hardware and provide access under long-term lease arrangements, meeting customer demand that spot markets and hyperscalers are unable to reliably service.




In the process, we're guessing they’ll also scrub references to their environmental mission—because nothing says sustainability like a rack of energy-hungry GPUs.

The pitch is that insatiable AI demand will carry them back toward their former $4 billion valuation.

At this rate, we'll be back to Chamath SPACs and gamma squeezes just like the good ole' days of Covid in just weeks. Who knew that apparently, selling compute to tech execs is the new, more durable version of selling them “eco-friendly” sneakers?

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 09:45

ZeroHedge News
Open 
US Prosecutors Make Surprise Visit To Fed HQ Renovation Project
US Prosecutors Make Surprise Visit To Fed HQ Renovation Project

Federal prosecutors on Tuesday made a surprise visit to the Federal Reserve headquarters building that's undergoing a $2.5 billion renovation, as they continue to investigate whether Fed Chair Jerome Powell lied to Congress about the cost and scope of the project. Construction workers told the prosecutors they couldn't come on the site without prior authorization, the Wall Street Journal reported. Instead, they were referred to the Fed's lawyers to coordinate a return visit.  
A worker at a construction gate outside the Federal Reserve's Eccles Building in July 2025 (Jonathan Ernst, Reuters via USA Today)

The provocative move is the latest chapter in a months-long legal drama over the enormously expensive renovation of two Fed office buildings built in the 1930s, and whether Powell made false statements about the project in a congressional hearing last June. Specifically, Powell disputed media reports and accusations from administration officials and congressional Republicans that the project had extravagant design features, such as a VIP dining room, premium marble, water features and a rooftop terrace garden. 

Last year, Office of Management and Budget Director Russell Vought reported that the $2.5 billion cost was $700 million over budget. President Trump, who has repeatedly criticized Powell for not pushing interest even lower than they are, was quick to condemn the Fed director for the steep price of the project. “When you spend $2.5 billion on, really, a renovation, I think it’s really disgraceful,” he said last year. More recently, he said the lead contractor "is probably one of the richest men in the country right now."

The ongoing drama had a moment of comic relief in July, when Trump joined Powell in touring the construction site with reporters tagging along: 


JUST IN: President Trump starts arguing with a clearly uncomfortable Jerome Powell as the two wear their hard hats.
Trump: So we're taking a look and it looks like it's about 3.1 billion.
Powell: I'm not aware of that.
Trump: Yeah, it just came out.
Powell: Yeah, I haven't… pic.twitter.com/CKAAvd0lvp
— Collin Rugg (@CollinRugg) July 24, 2025
Last month, US District Judge James Boasberg threw out two subpoenas that federal prosecutors had issued to the Fed. “There is abundant evidence that the subpoenas’ dominant (if not sole) purpose is to harass and pressure Powell either to yield to the President or to resign and make way for a Fed Chair who will,” wrote Boasberg, an Obama appointee. Tuesday's surprise visit to the construction zone signals the DOJ's dedication to chasing the case. 
An excavator claws the earth beneath the Fed's 1951 Constitution Ave building in July 2025 (Reuters via USA Today)

“Any construction project that has cost overruns of almost 80 percent over the original construction budget deserves some serious review,” US Attorney for the District of Columbia Jeanine Pirro told the Journal on Tuesday. “And these people are in charge of monetary policy in the United States?” Pirro, a long-time Trump ally, gave a green light to the investigation in November. 

Powell’s term as chair will expire on May 15, though his underlying seat on the Fed’s Board of Governors doesn’t end until 2028. In January, Trump nominated Kevin Warsh to replace him, but his Senate confirmation is being held up by Republican North Carolina Sen. Thom Tillis, who said he won't vote to advance Warsh's nomination until the DOJ investigation of Powell and the Fed is complete. Powell has said he'll stay on as chair until his successor is confirmed. Fed chairs usually give up their Board of Governors seat after leaving the top job, but Powell has said he will make a decision on that "based on what I think is best for our institution and the people we serve.”

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 10:05

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Bank of America Jumps On Record Equity Trading Revenue, Net Interest Income Forecast Increase, Offset By FICC Miss
Bank of America Jumps On Record Equity Trading Revenue, Net Interest Income Forecast Increase, Offset By FICC Miss

Following stellar equity trading results from Goldman and JPMorgan, this morning Bank of America reported that its traders also pulled in the business’s highest quarterly revenue in more than a decade, riding a wave of volatility that pushed the firm’s stock-trading desk to an all-time record. Bank of America said Q1 profit rose 17% from a year earlier, while net income came in at $8.58 billion. That amounted to $1.11 a share, above analyst estimates of $1.01. Revenue was 7% higher at $30.27 billion, driven by solid net interest income, sales and trading and investment banking fees. 

Revenue from equity trading climbed 30% to $2.8 billion in the first quarter, beating expectations, while fixed-income trading, which fell short of a consensus of analyst estimates, rose less than 1% to $3.5 billion, similar to Goldman's FICC miss. Bank have benetted from a volatile quarter, when the Iran war sent oil prices surging and concerns about artificial intelligence and private credit whipsawed stocks. Trading desks were already on a roll since President Donald Trump won the 2024 election, as his policy moves often spurred reactions across stocks, commodities and rates. The total trading haul helped push revenue to $30.3BN, above the $29.92BN consensus estimate, while adjusted EPS rose 25% to $1.11 a share, also beating the $1.01 analyst estimate. Overall, Bank of America’s net income was up 17.3% to $8.16 billion.

Here are the Q1 highlights

EPS $1.11, beating ests of $1.01
Revenue net of interest expense $30.27 billion, beating estimates of $28.63 billion
Trading revenue excluding DVA $6.32 billion, estimate $6.34 billion
Equities trading revenue excluding DVA $2.83 billion, beating estimate $2.51 billion
FICC trading revenue excluding DVA $3.50 billion, missing estimate $3.78 billion


Net interest income FTE $15.91 billion
Wealth & investment management total revenue $6.71 billion, beating estimate $6.59 billion
Last month, BofA Co-President Dean Athanasia said that he was feeling good about net interest income, expecting growth of at least 7%. Well, the final number was even stronger, and the bank reported NII of $15.7 billion, up 9% from the first quarter of 2025 (more below). Just as importantly, BofA raised its full-year NII forecast, now expecting it to grow 6%–8%, up from previous estimates of 5%–7%, driven by strong first-quarter performance, and suggesting the Fed's rate cuts won't negatively impact the bank.

Balance sheet metrics were also solid

Return on average equity 12%, estimate 10.8%
Return on average assets 0.99%, estimate 0.92%
Return on average tangible common equity 16%, estimate 14.5%
Basel III common equity Tier 1 ratio fully phased-in, advanced approach 12.5%, estimate 12.7%
Standardized CET1 ratio 11.2%, estimate 11.4%


Turning to asset quality, aside from some concerns about Private Credit (see below), the results were solid with BofA's net charge-offs down 3% to $1.41 billion, below the estimate of $1.42 billion while the provision for credit losses also dropped to $1.34 billion, and also below estimates of $1.5 billion, and down $143MM YoY. As BBG notes, the number "came in way below estimates, offsetting larger-than-expected numbers for some of its peers. Overall, the combined tally is tracking lower than feared, helping soothe concerns about private-credit contagion into financials.” BofA also announced a net reserve release of $72MM in 1Q26 vs. net reserve build of $28MM in 1Q25 and $21MM in 4Q25. Meanwhile, the allowance for loan and lease losses of $13.1B represented 1.09% of total loans and leases. Nonperforming loans (NPLs) of $5.8B decreased $0.3B from 1Q25, and were flat to 4Q25, as higher consumer NPLs, driven by residential mortgage relief extended for borrowers impacted by 2025 California wildfires, were mostly offset by lower commercial NPLs. 



In its earnings presentation, BofA highlighted solid growth across most segments...



... and noted that every segment contributed to YoY growth.



Looking at the bank's high margin trading businesses, results here were stellar in equities, and subpar in credit. Total revenue ex net DVA of $7.1B increased 8% from 1Q25, driven by higher sales and trading revenue, partially offset by the absence of gains related to leveraged finance positions in 1Q25. Sales and trading revenue of $6.4B increased 13% from 1Q25; excluding net DVA, up 12%

Revenue net of interest expense $30.27 billion, beating estimates of $28.63 billion

Trading revenue excluding DVA $6.32 billion, estimate $6.34 billion
Equities trading revenue excluding DVA rose 20% to $2.83 billion, beating estimate $2.51 billion
FICC trading revenue excluding DVA rose 2% to  $3.50 billion, missing estimate $3.78 billion


As an aside, noninterest expense of $4.4B increased 15% vs. 1Q25, driven by higher revenue-related expenses and investments in the business, including people and technology. Lastly, average Q1 VaR tumbled to just $47MM in 1Q26 as even trading desks retrenched. 



Momentum in markets was coupled with a comeback in dealmaking: this boosted investment-banking revenue to $1.89 billion, above the  average estimate of $1.79 billion. Fees for advising on mergers and acquisitions rose to $553 million. The bank’s equity-capital markets business generated $353 million in revenue, while debt-underwriting revenue totaled $986 million, with both beating estimates. Analysts had expected revenue of $312 million and $963 million, respectively. 



The second-largest US bank said that net interest income, a key source of revenue for the company, rose 9% to $15.7 billion. Analysts had expected a 6.5% increase for NII, the revenue collected from loan payments minus what depositors are paid. Net Interest Yield dropped from 2.08% to 2.07% as a result of declining interest rates. 



The company’s loan balances rose 8.5% to $1.21 trillion at the end of the first quarter, above analysts’ estimates of $1.19 trillion. Lending has been a key focus for investors, with interest rates holding steady.

Bank of America’s noninterest expenses were up 4.3% to $18.5 billion from a year earlier. Charges and costs are another focal point for investors, with persistent inflation putting pressure on spending. Analysts had expected a 4% increase to $18.47 billion.

Earlier in the week, JPMorgan and Citigroup reported earnings that were boosted by record trading results. Wall Street banks have also been tallying and detailing their exposure to the private-credit industry, with many investors on edge over valuations and the growing impact of artificial intelligence.

Commenting on the state of the US consumer, CEO Brian Moynihan said consumer spending points to a “resilient American economy", while also warning of risks. Earlier, JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon said "the U.S. economy remained resilient in the quarter, with consumers still earning and spending and businesses still healthy." Wells Fargo CEO Charlie Scharf: “While markets have been volatile, we still see continued resiliency in the underlying economy and the financial health of the consumers and businesses we serve remains strong, though the impact of higher oil prices will likely take some time to materialize."

Turning to the number one topic in banking these days, Bank of America disclosed $20 billion of private credit exposure, noting that typical advance rates on private credit and broadly syndicated loans are between 70% to 75%. The company said the underlying collateral of those loans are showing “strong” earnings and are often senior in the credit stack. BofA also noted that it has less than $2 billion in lending to BDC companies which have been the epicenter of the private credit meltdown. 



Bank of America’s results also offered a look at how US consumers fared during the first three months of the year with investors eager to hear details on the national economy from bank executives whose firms cater to America's consumers and businesses. The bank noted that total credit and debit-card spending was up 6% in the first quarter, while consumers are facing pressure from higher gas prices: spending on gas was up 16% in March from a year earlier.



“We remain watchful of evolving risks,” CEO Brian Moynihan said in a statement. “However, we saw healthy client activity, including solid consumer spending and stable asset quality, indicating a resilient American economy.” Earlier this week, JPMorgan, Citigroup and Wells Fargo also said consumer spending was holding up despite surging gas prices.

Shares of Charlotte, North Carolina-based Bank of America, rose about 4% to $55 in early trading Wednesday, a two month high. They’ve gained 45% in the 12 months through Tuesday, outpacing the 9.8% increase in the S&P 500 Financials Index.



The full BofA Q1 presentation is below (pdf link)



The Presentation Materials_1Q26 by Zerohedge

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 10:24

Ian Visits
Open 
Akira is returning to the big screen in a 4K restoration
The cult 1988 anime is back on the big screen, where its towering vision of Neo-Tokyo and bone-rattling score can finally be experienced as intended.Read more ›

UK Government News
Open 
DfE Update 15 April 2026
Latest information and actions from the Department for Education about funding, assurance and resource management, for academies, local authorities and further education providers.

UK Government News
Open 
Over 200 community organisations backed to help bridge divides
Organisations boosting unity, trust and togetherness in their communities will receive a share of over £2 million funding

UK Government News
Open 
AI cyber threats: open letter to business leaders
Open letter from DSIT Secretary of State Liz Kendall and Security Minister Dan Jarvis to UK business leaders.

UK Government News
Open 
Recovered appeal: Kings Farm, Parkers Farm Road, Orsett, Essex, RM16 3HX (ref: 3358576 - 15 April 2026)
Decision letter and Inspector’s Report for a recovered appeal.

The Hill
Open 
Live updates: Trump suggests he'd fire Powell; House takes up FISA renewal
President Trump launched Wednesday by saying he's ready to fire Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell if he does not step down when his term is up in a month. In an interview on Fox Business Network, Trump also said the Justice Department probe into Powell over construction at the Fed's headquarters would not end. "I...

The Hill
Open 
Watch live: House Republicans give remarks on Tax Day
House Republicans will give remarks Wednesday morning highlighting the tax relief measures and pro-worker policies included in President Trump's "One Big Beautiful Bill" ahead of the April 15 filing deadline. The law, signed by Trump last summer, made the 2017 tax breaks from the president‘s first term permanent. It also includes language to block taxes...

The Hill
Open 
Protect Our Care publishes scathing report of Kennedy's tenure ahead of congressional hearing marathon
The progressive health care advocacy group Protect Our Care is releasing a highly critical review of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s first 14 months in office ahead of a marathon series of hearings he will have in the House and Senate this month to defend President Trump's budget request. In the...

The Hill
Open 
Can anyone stop Trump's preemptive pardon-palooza?
Supreme Court caselaw involving the pardon power is extremely sparse, mostly dating back to the Civil War. So there is room for future prosecutors to maneuver here.

The Hill
Open 
Maine passes first-in-nation freeze on big data centers
The Maine legislature passed the first state ban in the nation on the development of large data centers on Tuesday. The temporary measure, which lasts for 1.5 years, restricts the construction of new data centers that use over 20 megawatts of power.  The bill now heads to the desk of Gov. Janet Mills (D) for...

The Hill
Open 
Watch live: Vought testifies before House on 2027 White House budget request
Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Director Russ Vought will testify before a House Budget Committee panel on Wednesday morning on President Trump's fiscal 2027 White House budget request. The request calls for $1.5 trillion in defense spending — roughly 42 percent higher than 2026 — and proposes cutting non-defense spending by $73 billion. The...

The Hill
Open 
Eric Swalwell's case shows that #MeToo is alive and well
Although we celebrate and hold common cause with the courage of the Swalwell survivors who came forward, we must also be clear-eyed about what Congress refuses to fix — and how it ultimately protects abusers, perhaps deliberately, within the institution. 

The Hill
Open 
House Democrats file five impeachment articles against Hegseth
House Democrats will introduce five articles of impeachment against Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on Wednesday, accusing him of war crimes in connection with the Iran war, abuse of power and mishandling of the Defense Department. Rep. Yassamin Ansari (D-Ariz.), the first Iranian-American Democrat in Congress, will introduce the impeachment resolution, Axios reported after it obtained...

Mail Online
Open 
DAN HODGES: Labour is now under attack from one of its own. Starmer's craven spin has been exposed
In the midst of the 1987 general election, Tory aides held an emergency meeting to try and get their faltering campaign back on track.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
British doubles legend Murray retires from tennis
Jamie Murray, who became the first British doubles player to rise to world number one, has announced his retirement from tennis.

Harvard Business Review
Open 
Why Leaders Need “Power Skills”
And three ways to develop them.

Harvard Business Review
Open 
Tapping Talent from a Skilled Labor Pool That Supports Global Ambitions - SPONSOR CONTENT FROM INVEST NORTHERN IRELAND
Sponsor content from Invest Northern Ireland.

Mail Online
Open 
QUENTIN LETTS: Purple-faced, eyes blazing, Starmer let rip at Sir Lindsay - then whacked his fist on the side of Mr Speaker's throne
Houston, we had a temper tantrum. As Sir Keir Starmer was leaving the Commons chamber at the end of PMQs, he stopped at the Speaker's Chair and aimed a few words at Sir Lindsay Hoyle.

Mail Online
Open 
Comical AI: Israel suggests Iranian military spokesman who mocks Trump is actually a computer-generated FAKE
Zolfaghari gained notoriety for his mocking of the US, likening him to 'Comical Ali' - the infamously inaccurate Iraqi Minister of Information.

Mail Online
Open 
Wayne Lineker, 63, packs on the PDA with Brazilian model after saying finding love was 'the last piece in my puzzle' following eight months of sobriety and healing 17-year rift with brother Gary
He looked smitten as the pair smooched on Bond Street in the capital in between their visits to luxurious boutiques including Prada.

Sky News Home
Open 
Student filmmaker was surrounded and kicked on floor before he died, court told
A student filmmaker allegedly stabbed to death at a popular north London viewpoint was surrounded and kicked on the floor before he died, a court heard.

Sky News Home
Open 
Two police officers charged after death of pregnant woman
Two police officers have been charged after the death of a heavily pregnant woman in a car crash.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Game of Thrones and Euphoria given age ratings as BBFC deploys new AI tool
Regulator says tool, which creates reports for humans to review, has helped classify entire UK catalogue of HBO MaxTV shows including Game of Thrones and Euphoria have received age ratings for the first time in the UK, after the British Board of Film Classification (BBFC) deployed an AI tool to help assess content.The BBFC has developed an tool to identify content that triggers compliance issues, such as violence, nudity and bad language. The flagged scenes are then passed over to BBFC staff for human review. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Dianna Russini fallout is less about scandal than who carries blame in the NFL | Melissa Jacobs
Rumors about the reporter and New England head coach Mike Vrabel flew all week. The conclusion to the saga was all too predictableDianna Russini, one of the NFL’s most high-profile reporters, is photographed holding hands with New England Patriots head coach Mike Vrabel at a fancy resort in Sedona, Arizona. Rumors fly. Vrabel and Russini, who are both married to other people, issue statements denying the assumptions of something untoward. But the firestorm only grows. Russini resigns from her post at the Athletic, Vrabel continues with his job as usual.The female reporter’s career is in shambles. Meanwhile, it’s business as usual for the male head coach. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Police seek two suspects over attempted arson attack on London synagogue
Met says overnight incident in Finchley is being treated as antisemitic hate crimePolice are seeking two suspects believed to be behind an attempted arson attack on a synagogue in north London.The Met said two people “wearing dark clothing and balaclavas” approached Finchley Reform Synagogue just after midnight on Wednesday and threw a brick and two bottles suspected to contain petrol at the building. Continue reading...

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
SEC Changes Day Trading Rules, Brokerages Shares Rise
In a busy day for the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), a significant change impacting smaller investors has been announced, thus driving shares of retail brokerage firms higher. Under the new rule, which saw its comment period end in February, the old Pattern Day Trader... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Fireblocks Offers New Service to Enable Onchain Lending Generating Yield
Fireblocks, a Switzerland-based digital asset infrastructure provider, has launched a new service called “Earn” that enables onchain lending for its customers Fireblocks currently enables over $10 trillion in digital asset transactions across 150+ blockchains, supporting firms like BNY, Galaxy, and Revolut. Institutions using Fireblocks can... Read More

The Right Scoop
Open 
BREAKING: Trump says China is very happy about his Hormuz blockade
President Trump revealed this morning that China is very happy about this blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, saying he expects the Chinese president will give him na big fat hug when . . .

Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple Threatened to Pull Grok From App Store Over Sexualized Images
Apple privately warned Elon Musk's xAI company in January that it would remove the Grok app from the App Store unless the company put a stop to the chatbot's nude and sexualized deepfakes, according to a letter Apple sent to U.S. senators and obtained by NBC News ($).





Earlier this year, Grok's AI capabilities came under scrutiny after X users shared nonconsensual sexualized images of women and children created by the app, many of which were based on photos of real people.



What followed was a confusing rollout of moderation changes to Grok, some of which could be easily bypassed. Publicly, Apple did not comment on the controversy at the time, but it did respond, and was in fact the instigator of the changes. Internally, the company had found both X and Grok in violation of its App Store guidelines and demanded its developers submit a content moderation plan, the letter reveals.



According to the letter, Apple rejected an initial fix from xAI as insufficient, saying the "changes didn't go far enough," and Apple warned it that additional alterations were required or Grok would be removed. After further back-and-forth, however, Apple eventually concluded that a later submission of the app had improved enough for it to be approved.



The disclosure was apparently prompted by a January letter from Senators Ron Wyden, Ben Ray Luján, and Edward Markey, who urged Apple and Google to pull both apps, arguing the imagery violated App Store rules barring offensive, sexual, and exploitative content.



The senators also said that Apple's response would test its own arguments, since the company has long defended its curated App Store by claiming its review process keeps users safer. Letting Grok continue to generate this kind of imagery, they argued, would undermine that case in the eyes of the public and in a court of law.



After NBC News published its report, X posted the following statement on its platform:

"We strictly prohibit users from generating non-consensual explicit deepfakes and from using our tools to undress real people. xAI has extensive safeguards in place to prevent such misuse, such as continuous monitoring of public usage, analysis of evasion attempts in real time, frequent model updates, prompt filters, and additional safeguards."While the amount of sexualized deepfakes created by Grok and posted to X appears to have decreased significantly, NBC News found that Grok is still able to generate similar imagery, with some users apparently having simply updated their prompt tactics to get around the safeguards. You can read that report in its entirety by following this link.Tags: App Store, GrokThis article, 'Apple Threatened to Pull Grok From App Store Over Sexualized Images' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple Watch Ultra 3 Gets Lowest Prices of 2026 So Far With $99 Off Select Models
Amazon recently introduced fresh deals on the Apple Watch Ultra 3, providing $99 discounts on select models. These are the best prices on the Ultra 3 that we've tracked so far in 2026, and they're overall solid second-best prices.



Note: MacRumors is an affiliate partner with some of these vendors. When you click a link and make a purchase, we may receive a small payment, which helps us keep the site running.



You can get the Apple Watch Ultra 3 for $699.99 in the Natural color option, down from $799.00. There are also a few Milanese Loop models on sale for $799.99, down from $899.00.



$99 OFFApple Watch Ultra 3 for $699.99



We've collected all of the Apple Watch Ultra 3 models currently on sale on Amazon in the list below. All of these deals are within $19 of the all-time low price, and they're the best prices we've seen so far in 2026.



Natural with Anchor Blue Ocean Band - $699.99 ($99 off)

Natural with Blue/Bright Blue Trail Loop (M/L) - $699.99 ($99 off)

Black with Black Milanese Loop (Large) - $799.99 ($99 off)

Natural Milanese Loop (Large) - $799.99 ($99 off)



If you're on the hunt for more discounts, be sure to visit our Apple Deals roundup where we recap the best Apple-related bargains of the past week.







Deals Newsletter

Interested in hearing more about the best deals you can find in 2026? Sign up for our Deals Newsletter and we'll keep you updated so you don't miss the biggest deals of the season!









Related Roundup: Apple DealsThis article, 'Apple Watch Ultra 3 Gets Lowest Prices of 2026 So Far With $99 Off Select Models' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple to Host Free Events in London Ahead of Sunday's Marathon
Apple today announced a series of events tied to this year's TCS London Marathon, with the company serving as an official partner of the race.





The TCS London Marathon is one of the world's most popular marathons and takes place this Sunday, April 26, drawing athletes of all abilities from around the world. A record-breaking one million people applied to enter the ballot for the 2026 event.



Apple will host two free events at its Brompton Road store in the days before the race. On Thursday, April 23, a panel including fitness trainer Joe Wicks, ultramarathon runner Hellah Sidibe, and athletes Dora Atim, Becky Briggs, and Sherica Holmon will offer training tips before a 5K shakeout run in Hyde Park, hosted by Apple Fitness+ trainer Cory Wharton-Malcolm. Spots are limited and registration is now open.



On Saturday, April 25, former marathon world-record holder Paula Radcliffe and two-time Olympian Chris Thompson will record a live episode of their podcast, Paula's Run Club, also at Brompton Road, joined by Wharton-Malcolm. The episode closes out their "Road to London Marathon" series. Registration is available for that event as well.



On race day, Apple Music will station artists and DJs at a key point on the course. An official Ultimate Marathon Playlist spanning seven hours is available now on ‌Apple Music‌, with additional mixes from race-day DJs to follow after the event.



Ahead of marathon week, Apple will host a PE with Apple: Hour of Play event for students from six schools in the London borough of Wandsworth, with Wicks and Fitness+ trainers leading physical activities for children ages 10 to 14, in partnership with nonprofit Enable. Apple also pointed out that it supports several other Greater London organizations, including Battersea Arts Centre, Southbank Centre, Youth Battersea, and Wandsworth BEST.Tag: United KingdomThis article, 'Apple to Host Free Events in London Ahead of Sunday's Marathon' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Telegraph
Open 
Rabies
Rabies

Telegraph
Open 
Yaws
Yaws

Chatham House
Open 
Lebanon–Israel talks must be given a chance
Lebanon–Israel talks must be given a chance
Expert comment
thilton.drupal
15 April 2026

Rare direct talks are unlikely to succeed in the long-term without Hezbollah disarming, but they are a welcome opportunity for the Lebanese state to regain its authority in foreign policy and pursue confidence-building measures with Israel.















The US hosted direct talks between Lebanon and Israel in Washington this week against the backdrop of Israel’s ongoing strikes targeting Hezbollah in Lebanon.The Lebanese and Israeli ambassadors to the US, along with the US ambassador to Lebanon, met in Washington on Tuesday. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio chaired the meeting, which he hailed as a ‘historic gathering that we hope to build on.’ The State Department said that both sides agreed to ‘launch direct negotiations at a mutually agreed time and venue.’While significant hurdles remain, most notably the issue of Hezbollah’s disarmament, these talks should be welcomed as an important initial confidence-building measure that lays the ground for much-needed future negotiations. Importantly, this reasserts the Lebanese state’s independence and authority in foreign policy. New cast, same plot?The talks bring back memories of when the two sides met directly and signed a short-lived accord during Lebanon’s 1975-1990 civil war. In 1983, a year after Israel launched an invasion of Lebanon with the aim of expelling Palestinian militants, Lebanese President Amin Gemayel entered into negotiations with Israel. On May 17 of that year, both parties reached an agreement that briefly ended the state of war between the two countries.However, the agreement lasted only a short while due to opposition from Syrian President Hafez Assad and pro-Syrian factions in Lebanon. Today, the threat to Israel from Palestinian militants in Lebanon is gone. So is the Assad regime. But Hezbollah remains a formidable security challenge to Israel. This is despite the group having been severely weakened over the past two years due to Israel decapitating its leadership, penetrating its ranks and degrading much of its military capacity.But Israel cannot simply oust Hezbollah – a Lebanese party with Lebanese fighters, parliamentarians, ministers and supporters – from Lebanon like it did with the Palestine Liberation Organization in the 1980s. Nor can it disarm Hezbollah without launching another deep and costly ground invasion, with severe consequences for Lebanon.






Hezbollah also has much to lose from a return to civil war.






Instead, Israel says it is trying to create a buffer zone in southern Lebanon – like it did in 1985-2000 – to push Hezbollah away from the border and reduce the threat of missile attacks or ground infiltration. Hezbollah restarted drone and missile attacks against Israel following the US-Israeli war on Iran, the group’s main patron.These Israeli strikes and evacuation orders have created a dire humanitarian situation in southern Lebanon. More than 80 towns and villages have been emptied and more than 15 per cent of Lebanon’s population displaced. Last week, Israel bombed more than 100 targets across the country in 10 minutes, killing hundreds of people. The wave of strikes came despite the US-Iran ceasefire, which Tehran and Islamabad said included Lebanon (a claim rejected by the US).Hezbollah’s oppositionLebanese President Joseph Aoun called for direct talks with Israel in March, but until last week Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had refused. President Aoun enjoys a popular mandate, but he faces stiff resistance from Hezbollah. The group insists on a ceasefire and an Israeli withdrawal from Lebanese territory as preconditions for talks. US Vice President JD Vance said last week that Israel had offered to ‘check themselves a little bit in Lebanon’ to avoid undermining the US-Iran ceasefire. However, Israel has continued to strike southern Lebanon and has intensified its ground operations in the town of Bint Jbeil.




































Related work

Any Israeli occupation of southern Lebanon will work to Hezbollah’s advantage












Israel is likely aiming to push the Lebanese government to demonstrate its commitment to disarming the group, which it is committed to under UN Security Council Resolutions 1559 and 1701, as well as the 2024 ceasefire deal. Hezbollah has categorically refused to disarm. While Hezbollah’s support base is a minority within Lebanese society, the group has the military and intelligence capabilities to eliminate its domestic political opponents and pressure the Lebanese government, both of which it has done before. This week, Hezbollah political council member Wafiq Safa said that his group will not abide by agreements that may result from the talks. During the talks in Washington, the group claimed it launched at least 24 attacks against Israel and Israeli troops. Unable to prevent talksGiven these challenges, it’s easy to be pessimistic about the fate of any future negotiations. But neither Tehran nor Hezbollah have been able to torpedo the talks so far. In a combative speech, Hezbollah chief Naim Qassem urged the Lebanese government to cancel the talks but was unable to prevent Tuesday’s meeting in Washington.Politically, Hezbollah doesn’t have the numbers in Parliament to reverse the Lebanese government’s decision. And if it withdraws its ministers from the cabinet in protest, Prime Minister Nawaf Salam can replace them with other Shia figures with no allegiances to Iran.Last week, Hezbollah’s supporters protested against the government. But the small demonstration appeared to have little participation from Hezbollah’s political allies including Amal, led by Shia Lebanese parliament speaker Nabih Berri. Hezbollah could use its weapons against its fellow Lebanese, as it has done previously. But this would be a high-risk move at a time when its ally, Iran, has been severely weakened by the US and Israel.Hezbollah also has much to lose from a return to civil war. It would likely face armed conflict with the Lebanese army, other Lebanese factions that might seek to re-arm, and fighters loyal to Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa. The near-constant threat from Israeli drones would make it virtually impossible for Hezbollah to mount any effective military campaign in Lebanon. Confidence-building measures None of this means that Lebanon–Israel talks going forward are likely to yield positive results. The current mess is primarily a result of Hezbollah again dragging Lebanon into war with Israel. Moving forward, Israel will expect results, not just speeches, on Hezbollah’s disarmament.Given the deeply rooted nature of the Hezbollah problem, the only way to approach the next round of negotiations is for both sides to pursue confidence-building measures. The initial meeting in Washington is a welcome and historic first step, but both sides should now take more concrete action.






Israel will expect results, not just speeches, on Hezbollah’s disarmament.






Israel must recognize that this Lebanese government presents the best chance to disarm Hezbollah and disassociate the country from Iran. It should avoid further attacks on state infrastructure and urban centres, and particularly Beirut, which risk civilian casualties, undermine the Lebanese government and bolster Hezbollah’s narrative of resistance. The Lebanese government, meanwhile, should make it as difficult as possible for Hezbollah to operate. Politically, it should consider expelling Hezbollah ministers from the cabinet, given that officials from the group have accused the government of treason. Financially, the government must outlaw all of Hezbollah’s financial activities. And militarily, it could instruct the army to deploy in all of Beirut including its southern suburbs, confiscate any arms belonging to Hezbollah in the capital, and arrest anyone endangering civil peace.

Mail Online
Open 
Film student Finbar Sullivan, 21, was 'surrounded and kicked on the floor before he was stabbed to death' on Primrose Hill in 'eruption of extreme violence' court hears
Finbar Sullivan, 21, was killed during a fight at the north London beauty spot last Tuesday.

Mail Online
Open 
Second school shooting in two days leaves four dead and 20 wounded with students jumping from windows to flee gunman in Turkey 
The armed attack took place at the Ayser Calık Secondary School in Kahramanmaras on Wednesday, marking the second such incident in as many days.

BBC World News
Open 
Israel and Hezbollah continue attacks after Israel-Lebanon talks in US
Israel strikes hit southern Lebanon and Hezbollah fires rockets at Israel, a day after rare direct negotiations.

Sky News Home
Open 
Hungary's new PM tells 'unworthy' president to resign
Hungary's incoming prime minister has urged the country's "unworthy" president to resign and urged a swift handover of power from Putin-ally Viktor Orban.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Trump threatens to fire Fed chair Powell if he doesn't leave in May
Donald Trump's threat marks the latest escalation in his ongoing spat with Jerome Powell.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Two officers charged after pregnant woman killed in crash with police car
The woman and her unborn child died in a crash with a police car in Kidbrooke, south-east London.

Russia Today News
Open 
Battle for Bulgaria: Why Ukraine is so important to Sofia

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ant smuggler sentenced to a year in jail by Kenyan court
More than 2,200 ants were found in Zhang Kequn’s luggage at Nairobi airport, with baggage destined for ChinaA Chinese national has been sentenced to a year in prison and fined by a Nairobi court for attempting to smuggle thousands of ants out of Kenya, a lucrative trade in east Africa that was exposed last year.The insects are mostly destined for China, the US and Europe, where they become pets and can be worth about $100 each. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Bournemouth in talks with Marco Rose to replace Andoni Iraola as head coach
Iraola leaving Cherries at end of the seasonRose out of work since leaving RB Leipzig in March 2025Bournemouth are in advanced talks with Marco Rose to replace Andoni Iraola as their head coach. The German has emerged as the leading candidate and a deal for him to take over at the end of the season could be agreed by the end of this week.Bournemouth have also given strong consideration to moving for Ipswich’s Kieran McKenna but Rose is available now and boasts a strong CV. McKenna’s contract contains a buyout clause and no negotiations can be held with him before the end of the Championship season. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
How was Orbán defeated? With energetic campaigning and cunning exploitation of his weaknesses | Tibor Dessewffy
Péter Magyar did not need to dismantle the system – but he understood that Hungarians care more about the cost of living than conspiraciesHungary’s election delivered an unprecedented victory for Viktor Orbán’s challenger. With a record turnout of nearly 80% and a supermajority for the Tisza party of almost 70% of the seats, this was not merely a change of government: it was a change of regime, compressed into a single election night.After 16 years in power, Orbán became the victim of his own creation. Hungary’s electoral machinery, carefully engineered to convert a relative majority into overwhelming parliamentary dominance, worked perfectly – just not for him. In the end, the opposition leader, Péter Magyar, did not need to dismantle the system; he simply recognised the rules of the game and played to win. Orbán’s 2011 electoral laws, designed to punish a fragmented opposition, ultimately proved fatal to their creator, when he was faced with a challenger who could turn those winner-takes-all mechanics to his advantage.Tibor Dessewffy is director of the digital sociology research centre at Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, and a member of the European Council on Foreign Relations Continue reading...

Russia Today News
Open 
Trump ‘permanently opening’ Strait of Hormuz ‘for China’

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Solar power in Morocco's desert: bold vision, mixed results
A massive solar tower in the Moroccan desert is the beacon of an ambitious push for a clean energy future. But fossil fuels and grid constraints stand in the way.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Iran: Hundreds of thousands of jobs lost due to war
After six weeks of war, job losses are growing in Iran. Destroyed industrial facilities have brought production in many sectors to a standstill, hitting Iranian workers particularly hard.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
What's behind Israel's attacks along Lebanon's Litani River?
Israel is pushing forward with plans to remove Lebanese homes and residents from between the Litani River and its own border, creating a buffer zone. Why is the area strategically important in the Middle East conflict?

Mail Online
Open 
Iran threatens to shut down the Red Sea unless Trump lifts naval blockade - as Trump says Xi will give him a 'big, fat hug' for opening Hormuz: Live updates
Read the Daily Mail's coverage of the ongoing Middle East crisis as Donald Trump declares the war is 'close to over' and his blockade of the Strait of Hormuz is 'fully implemented'.

Sky News Home
Open 
Police investigating attempted antisemitic arson attack on synagogue
Police are hunting for two suspects following an attempted arson attack on a north London synagogue.

BBC UK News
Open 
Ulster University to cut up to 450 jobs
It is not clear which parts of the university, which has campuses in Belfast, Londonderry and Coleraine as well as in Qatar, will be affected.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Liverpool fear lengthy lay-off for Ekitike
France forward Hugo Ekitike is expected to miss the World Cup after suffering a suspected Achilles injury during Liverpool's Champions League defeat by Paris St-Germain.

The Register
Open 
French cops free mother and son after 20-hour crypto kidnap ordeal
Latest in a string of cases that have earned France an unfortunate title A mother and her ten-year-old son are now free after being kidnapped for around 20 hours while the father was being extorted for hundreds of thousands of euros.…

Mail Online
Open 
Guests at 'Meg-stock' must pay an extra £264 for photo with Duchess at her 'ultimate girls weekend' in Sydney
Standard tickets for the 'Her Best Life' event in Sydney from Friday to Sunday cost A$2,699 (£1,422), but those paying A$3,199 (£1,686) for a VIP ticket will get a 'group table photo' with Meghan.

Mail Online
Open 
The pong-tiff! Pope looks dismayed after shaking hands with boy scout and ending up covered in muck
The pontiff recoiled slightly after shaking hands with the boy, who had been planting an olive tree, leaving his hands smeared with dirt.

Mail Online
Open 
RFK Jr's private diaries reveal the agonizing recovery of John F Kennedy Jr and Carolyn Bessette's mangled bodies...and the bitter family feud that exploded after their deaths
The extraordinary details are drawn from the private diaries of Robert F Kennedy Jr , revealed in new book, RFK Jr: The Fall and Rise, by New York Post journalist Isabel Vincent.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Why I’m embracing the latest uncool thing in gaming
‘Unc’ is meant to disparage older players who favour slow-paced shooters and epic narrative games, but the industry should make games for all generations• Don’t get Pushing Buttons delivered to your inbox? Sign up hereWhile researching women’s experiences in multiplayer video games recently, I came across this thread on the subreddit about Bungie’s latest live shooter, Marathon. “I’ve played a lot of shooters, and as a feminine-presenting player tbh it’s often a struggle,” it reads. “I’ve heard all the ‘get back to the kitchen’ jokes … ​But Marathon has been completely different, guys. I haven’t had a single issue, people have been incredibly kind and helpful… ​The community feels genuinely welcoming to everyone.”The top-voted reply? “Benefit of being an unc game.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Misogyny with a marketing budget’: UK AI firm accused of sexist advert
Narwhal Labs ad for ‘AI employee’ contains strapline: ‘She outworks everyone. And she’ll never ask for a raise’A British AI company that recently secured millions of pounds of investment has been accused of running a misogynistic and sexist advertising campaign.The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) has received at least seven complaints about the campaign by Narwhal Labs, which includes an advert depicting a woman next to the strapline: “She outworks everyone. And she’ll never ask for a raise.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Hungary’s prime minister-elect vows to suspend ‘propaganda machine’ state media
Péter Magyar compares media coverage to Nazi-era Germany and aims to ‘restore its public service character’Europe live – latest updatesHungary’s prime minister-elect has vowed to suspend state media news coverage, describing it as a “propaganda machine,” when his government takes office around mid-May.Péter Magyar, whose landslide election victory on Sunday brought an end to Viktor Orbán’s 16 years in power, detailed his plans for the suspension as he gave two tense interviews to public radio and television on Wednesday. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The best juicers in the UK for blitzing fruit and veg – tested
Squeeze the day with our expert’s pick of the best juicers, from cold press to anti-clog to budget• In the US? Read the best juicers in the US• The best blenders, testedLong before we became a nation of smoothie lovers, with blenders gracing our worktops, the health-conscious kitchen was always home to a juicer. Those early models could be tricky to keep clean, or require herculean effort to produce a mere dribble – but modern juicers are more efficient, easier to maintain, and can often produce more than just fruit juice.There are some solid reasons to buy. Homemade juice is the original health drink: squeezed straight from fruit and vegetables, it has none of the preservatives sometimes found in shop-bought blends, nor is it treated to make it last longer or stay the right colour. Juicers can, however, leave behind some of the important fibre found in fruits’ skin and flesh.Best juicer overall and best on a budget:
Nutribullet juicerBest compact centrifugal juicer:Philips Viva Collection juicer Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
Stop Welsh space radar station because of Trump's 'contempt', first minister says
Eluned Morgan has called for the UK government to stop working with the US on 27 radar dishes.

Gizmodo
Open 
A Crew of Worms on the ISS Aims to Help Scientists Unlock the Secrets of Space Travel
Move over, Artemis crew. Space worms are taking over.

Gizmodo
Open 
‘A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms’ Season 2 Filming Has Been Canceled By a Storm
Plus, Nic Cage is returning to the 'Longlegs' universe for a new film.

UK Legislation
Open 
European Charter of Local Self-Government (Incorporation) (Scotland) Act 2026

UK Legislation
Open 
The Contracts for Difference (Sustainable Industry Rewards and Contract Budget Notice Amendments) Regulations 2026

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Germany news: Lufthansa air crew strike after pilot walkout
Cabin crew from Germany's national carrier Lufthansa are staging another walkout, sandwiched between a separate strike by pilots. Meanwhile, a poll has found the far-right AfD well ahead of rivals. DW has the latest.

Mail Online
Open 
Football referee is shot dead in front of players and spectators mid-match after attackers stormed the pitch in shocking moment
A referee has been shot dead during a neighbourhood football match in Ecuador, sending shockwaves through the local community.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
A ruined building, five Ghanaians and an elegant horse: Ron Timehin’s best photograph
‘I went to this tourist resort in Accra wanting to show how the people who live there fish, play – and rest. Africans aren’t often portrayed in this way. And the horse pulls it all together!’This was taken at Labadi, a popular tourist resort in Accra, the capital of Ghana. You don’t often see this side of it. People go there for the golden sand and nightlife but they don’t really integrate with the community who live there. I wanted to show how they fish – in traditional canoes – how they rest, how they play.I love how this door looks fronting a ruined farm building. It represents the freedom of not being bound by walls. And I love the Ghanaian flag on the side – a nod to place and heritage. I just thought it was a beautiful set. The community keeps a few horses in stables, which they use to carry equipment. The one in the picture pulls it all together and adds elegance, because it’s such a majestic and beautiful animal. The way Africans are often portrayed in documentary photography isn’t like this. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump threatens to fire Fed chair Jerome Powell if he does not step down at the end of his term – US politics live
President has nominated Kevin Warsh to replace Powell, whom he has repeatedly attacked over interest rate decisionsWhat does strict voter ID bill mean for US democracy? Ask your questionsSign up for the Breaking News US emailAt a Turning Point USA event in Georgia on Tuesday, vice-president JD Vance was heckled by a protester who seemed to criticized the conflicts in the Middle East, including the war in Gaza.“Jesus Christ does not support genocide,” the audience member shouted. The vice-president addressed the demonstrator and agreed with their statement, before responding to further comments from the heckler who appeared to say that the administration “supports a genocide in Gaza”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘It is a stupid game but that’s what makes it lovable’: Sarah Taylor on cricket, coping with anxiety and coaching with Andrew Flintoff
Taylor played 226 times for England before retiring early due to anxiety, but she has made her way back to the topBy Wisden Cricket MonthlySarah Taylor was stuck in traffic inching south when she got a call. She had just spent two days at Loughborough working with the England Lions wicketkeepers, taking Lancashire’s Matty Hurst and James Rew of Somerset through some drills overseen by the head coach Andrew Flintoff. The sessions had gone well. Hurst, who had personally asked if Taylor could be there having worked with her at the Manchester Hundred franchise, was especially receptive. It was Ed Barney, ECB’s performance director, on the line. Would she fancy joining them on tour in South Africa? Before she could think herself out of it, she blurted out an answer.“Internally I was absolutely petrified,” she says. “I hadn’t flown for quite a few years. But what came out my mouth was: ‘Absolutely, when are we leaving?’ And that was the start of it.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Police hunt two suspects over attempted arson attack on London synagogue
Met says incident in Finchley is being treated as antisemitic hate crimeTwo suspects are being sought after an attempted arson attack at a synagogue in north London in which two bottles thought to contain petrol were thrown at the building.The Metropolitan police said they are treating the incident as an attempted hate crime after the pair, who were wearing dark clothing and balaclavas, were seen approaching Finchley Reform Synagogue shortly after midnight on Wednesday. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Sri Lanka repatriates 238 Iranian sailors stranded after US torpedo attack
The survivors of the US attack on Iranian vessel Iris Dena, which claimed the lives of 104 people, were among those sent home.

BBC UK News
Open 
Stop Welsh space radar station because of Trump's 'contempt', first minister says
The UK government should stop working on a space radar station because of Trump, Eluned Morgan says.

Mail Online
Open 
The best royal-approved raincoats and boots to beat the spring chill - from John Lewis, Barbour, Le Chameau and more
March may be well underway, but the spring chill is far from over. The air is still biting - so it's the perfect time to invest in a new coat that will see you through the cold weeks ahead.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
New EU entry-exit system causing up to three-hour delays, say airports
Airport body has asked for power to suspend EES checks requiring personal information and biometrics, say reportsBusiness live – latest updatesTravellers going through some European airports are reportedly waiting up to three hours at border checks because of the EU’s new entry-exit system (EES).Passengers in airports in countries such as France, Germany, Belgium, Italy, Spain and Greece are waiting several hours at border checks, the Airports Council International (ACI) body has said. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Manhunt after attempted arson attack on synagogue
Police say two suspects threw petrol-filled bottles at Finchley Reform Synagogue but they did not ignite.

CNET News
Open 
How to Keep Kids Safe Online? Europe Believes Its Age Verification App Is the Answer
The European Commission's new app is "technically ready and soon available," says President Ursula von der Leyen.

CNET News
Open 
Best OTA DVR for Cord Cutters in 2026
Here are our top picks for devices that pause, record and stream free over-the-air television with an antenna.

CNET News
Open 
Amazon's New Fire TV Stick HD Doesn't Have to Plug Into the Wall
Amazon says the slimmer, faster device will start shipping by the end of April.

CNET News
Open 
Amazon's Globalstar Grab Puts an iPhone Spin on Its Starlink Pursuit
Amazon announces plans to acquire satellite service provider Globalstar in its quest to provide connectivity from space.

CNET News
Open 
Adobe Is Working With Anthropic to Bring a Creative AI Agent to Claude
Adobe's Firefly AI is getting a new agentic assistant.

Russia Today News
Open 
EU condemns ‘shrinking’ freedom in Germany

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#11489 Broadband (xDSL) - Intermittent Services Manchester (Close)
Engineer visited site and replaced hardware.
After additional checks all the identified power resiliency issues have been resolved.
Closing Service Alert

Start: Tue, 14th Apr 2026 19:43

Update: Wed, 15th Apr 2026 13:00

Clear: Wed, 15th Apr 2026 14:44

Edited: Wed, 15th Apr 2026 14:49

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

Department for Transport
Open 
Fixing the foundations: government fund to fix England's bridges, flyovers and tunnels now open
Funding will help local councils with cost of fixing England's aging road infrastructure. | Department for Transport.

Autosport F1
Open 
Racing Bulls suggest "continuous" roll-out of F1 2026 regulation tweaks
Racing Bulls team principal Alan Permane thinks Formula 1 should be ready to continuously trial energy management tweaks because of the upcoming pair of sprint weekends.F1 stakeholders, including governing body the FIA, the 11 teams and their respective power unit representatives, are holding a series of meetings to formulate and then vote on solutions to improve the 2026 regulations.In ...Keep reading

Mail Online
Open 
Cocaine and heroin addict magistrate part of major drugs gang while sitting on court cases, trial told
Purshotam Dhillon, a west London lay magistrate, has gone on trial accused of being concerned in the supply of Class A drugs.

Mail Online
Open 
How Marseille became Europe's Capital of Cool - with 20 degree sunshine, sea views and amazing seafood
The Mail's Executive Travel Editor Genie Harrison visits Marseille to find out how the city has shed its 'gritty' reputation and become one of the trendiest spots in Europe for a city break.

Mail Online
Open 
Met officers are charged after pregnant woman and her unborn baby were killed by 80mph unmarked police car a week before she was due to give birth
Mariam Ahmed, 38, died after the police Volvo ploughed into her car on the A20 in Eltham, southeast London on October 17, 2024.

Mail Online
Open 
'Violent' pro-Palestine activist wrote he wanted to 'establish Islamic State in Britain', court hears
Feras Al-Jayoosi, 38, is on trial at Winchester Crown Court this week accused of three counts of terrorism relating to posts on X, then known as Twitter, in July 2022.

Mail Online
Open 
The Repair Shop guest gasps at military trophy's 'astounding' makeover - and stuns BBC experts revealing the death-defying feats that earned him the accolade
Former serviceman Mike Webb took to the series in hope that the specialists would be able to bring his prized possession back to its former glory as the 16th series of the show kickstarted.

Mail Online
Open 
Elderly woman discovered in her chest freezer after GP requested police carry out a welfare check, inquest hears
Retired company secretary Sylvia Phillips - who died in her 80s - was discovered by police after they attended a welfare check at her seaside property.

Sky News Home
Open 
UK 'can't succeed', says Trump - read full transcript of his Sky News interview
Donald Trump characterised Britain's immigration policies as "insane" and lamented the "sad" state of America's special relationship with the UK in his latest call with Sky News.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Paris art enthusiast wins €1m Picasso painting in €100 charity raffle
Ari Hodara initially thought it might be a hoax after winning raffle he found out about by chance while dining out A Picasso painting worth more than €1m (£870,000) has been won in a raffle by a software engineer from Paris who thought the whole thing might be a hoax.Ari Hodara learned he was the winner of the raffle on Tuesday when he answered a video call from Christie’s auction house in Paris. “How do I check that it’s not a hoax?” the 58 year-old asked when he was told he was the new owner of the 1941 work by the Spanish master. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Uncharted territory’: uncertainty as US vaccine guidance falls apart under Trump
Several shots – including flu and Covid – lost their CDC recommendations under overhauls from the White HouseSeveral shots lost their recommendation from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) after a judge’s stay against changes wrought by the Trump administration – which may affect access to the shots in some states. And no new vaccine recommendations may be made as long as the vaccines committee is halted.Access to existing vaccines – and the future development of new vaccines – has been increasingly called into question under the second Trump administration, as the now-halted Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) made controversial recommendations and health officials made unilateral changes to routine vaccines, with long-term and global implications. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Misogyny with a marketing budget’: UK AI firm accused of sexist advert
Narwhal Labs advert depicts woman next to strapline: ‘She outworks everyone. And she’ll never ask for a raise’A British AI company that recently secured millions of pounds of investment has been accused of running a misogynistic and sexist advertising campaign.The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) has received at least seven complaints about the campaign by Narwhal Labs, which includes an advert depicting a woman next to the strapline: “She outworks everyone. And she’ll never ask for a raise.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Hungary’s prime minister-elect vows to suspend ‘propaganda machine’ state media
Péter Magyar compares media coverage to Nazi-era Germany and aims to ‘restore its public service character’Europe live – latest updatesHungary’s prime minister-elect has vowed to suspend state media news coverage, describing it as a “propaganda machine,” when his government takes office around mid-May.Péter Magyar, whose landslide election victory on Sunday brought an end to leader Viktor Orbán’s 16 years in power, detailed his plans for the suspension as he gave two tense interviews to public radio and television on Wednesday. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘It is a stupid game but that’s what makes it lovable’: Sarah Taylor on cricket, coping with anxiety and coaching with Andrew Fintoff
Taylor played 226 times for England before retiring early due to anxiety, but she has made her way back to the topBy Wisden Cricket MonthlySarah Taylor was stuck in traffic inching south when she got a call. She had just spent two days at Loughborough working with the England Lions wicketkeepers, taking Lancashire’s Matty Hurst and James Rew of Somerset through some drills overseen by the head coach Andrew Flintoff. The sessions had gone well. Hurst, who had personally asked if Taylor could be there having worked with her at the Manchester Hundred franchise, was especially receptive. It was Ed Barney, ECB’s performance director, on the line. Would she fancy joining them on tour in South Africa? Before she could think herself out of it, she blurted out an answer.“Internally I was absolutely petrified,” she says. “I hadn’t flown for quite a few years. But what came out my mouth was: ‘Absolutely, when are we leaving?’ And that was the start of it.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Even the neocons have turned against wars in the Middle East | Owen Jones
Millions have died as a result of disastrous US-led military adventurism. But there have been no consequences for those who championed it for so longWhat an admission. “The threat of terrorism” from the Middle East, an influential US columnist wrote a fortnight ago, “was a consequence of American involvement, not the reason for it”. If the US had “not been deeply and consistently involved in the Muslim world since the 1940s,” he added, “Islamic militants would have little interest in attacking” it. He went further still: “Contrary to much mythology, they have hated us not so much because of ‘who we are’ but because of where we are.”After a quarter of a century of disastrous US wars in the Middle East, that may sound like common sense. But this is Robert Kagan, one of the godfathers of neoconservatism, the creed that zealously championed military adventurism at the height of the era of US exceptionalism. In the 1990s, he repeatedly agitated for war with Iraq, a demand that became a rallying cry after 9/11, when he insisted that “the Iraqi threat is enormous”.Owen Jones is a Guardian columnist Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Hungary’s voters shunned Orbán – but it may be too early to celebrate end of Europe’s far right
Leaders of Poland and Germany hail Péter Magyar’s majority as a turning of the tide – but analysts say there were other reasons for defeat of prime ministerFor Poland’s Donald Tusk, the crushing defeat of Hungary’s illiberal prime minister, Viktor Orbán, after 16 years in office was evidence that the world was no longer “condemned to authoritarian and corrupt governments”.Germany’s chancellor, Friedrich Merz, also believes the two-thirds majority secured by Orbán’s centre-right challenger, Péter Magyar, in Sunday’s elections was “a clear signal against rightwing populism” that showed “the pendulum is swinging back”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
BBC to cut up to 2,000 jobs in biggest downsize in 15 years
Announcement comes before Matt Brittin replaces Tim Davie as director general next monthBusiness live – latest updatesThe BBC is to cut as many as 2,000 jobs in the biggest down-sizing of the public service broadcaster in 15 years.Staff were to be informed of the cuts, which will affect about 10% of the BBC’s 21,500 staff, at an all-staff meeting on Wednesday. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Two Met PCs charged over death of pregnant woman
The woman and her unborn child died in a crash with a police car in Kidbrooke, south-east London.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Four killed in second Turkish school shooting in two days
Three students and one teacher died in the attack, according to the local governor.

TechRadar News
Open 
By the way, you can get a new MacBook Air M5 for just $349 by bundling together these deals at Best Buy

TechRadar News
Open 
'We have no interest in patient data in the UK': Palantir UK head defends record as criticisms rise

TechRadar News
Open 
‘A hardware failure in our production truck’ — Amazon Prime Video’s Heat vs Hornets live stream has major outage in overtime

TechRadar News
Open 
What is the release date for Monarch: Legacy of Monsters season 2 episode 8 on Apple TV?

TechRadar News
Open 
Amazon just changed the name of its Fire TV line-up to make things less confusing — and its new Samsung The Frame rival is coming soon

TechRadar News
Open 
Own a Fire TV device? You're getting a free update soon, with refreshed layout and new streaming channels — and Amazon's also launching a slimmer Fire TV Stick

TechRadar News
Open 
'Better than AirPods': these rival earbuds boast better stamina, more reliable Bluetooth — and cost a third of the price

TechRadar News
Open 
Farewell Surface Hub — Microsoft kills off its super-sized touchscreen displays, but you might still be able to get one if you act fast

TechRadar News
Open 
Tomodachi Life: Living the Dream took roughly nine years to develop and focuses on user-generated content for 'infinite ways to enjoy the game', developer reveals

TechRadar News
Open 
The legendary RPG series that inspired The Witcher is finally coming to Xbox and PlayStation

TechRadar News
Open 
AI could mean the end of the Wayback Machine, as news websites are increasingly blocking it to prevent content scraping

TechRadar News
Open 
The new engineering playbook: how AI design copilots are reshaping product development

TechRadar News
Open 
Kindle owners are struck another blow as Send to Kindle is set to stop working on old devices

TechRadar News
Open 
‘A penny-pinching brand’: Sony is removing key features from its Bravia smart TVs, and users are seriously unhappy

TechRadar News
Open 
Looking for a new PC? Now might be great time to upgrade, as Gartner figures claim shipments are rising — while demand is falling

Atlas Obscura
Open 
Glover Garden in Nagasaki, Japan

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Morgan Stanley beats Wall Street earnings forecasts — by a wide margin
The banking giant posted earnings per share of $3.43, compared to forecasts of $3.02.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
U.K. move to delay job statistics overhaul is just latest headache for investors facing unreliable data
The U.K. government’s decision to delay the revamp of its economic data collection until 2027 highlights a problem experienced by all governments: the difficulty in proving accurate and reliable data on their economies.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Bank of America’s 30% jump in equities revenue pushes stock toward a two-month high
Bank of America’s good quarter was helped by volatility and an easier regulatory environment.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Major stock-market indexes approach ‘overbought’ territory. What happened the last time they were at these levels.
Last time momentum measures were this high indices saw notable pullbacks in the next few weeks

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
The under-the-radar cities where new college grads can get good jobs — and even afford to buy a house
A new ranking highlights cities with the best job opportunities, affordable housing, and quality of life for recent college grads. Here’s how today’s young workers can stand out in a remote job search.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
This financial model says the Netherlands is the best bet to win the FIFA World Cup 
The man who predicted the tournament’s last three winners says you need to understand the risks of gambling on the Dutch.

Mail Online
Open 
Norway's future King defends wife Mette-Marit, saying 'we've been through a lot' - amid backlash over her friendship with Epstein and her son's rape trial
Crown Prince Haakon, 52, said his family had 'been through a lot' after he was asked about Crown Princess Mette-Marit's association with Jeffrey Epstein.

Planet PostgreSQL
Open 
Tudor Golubenco: Introducing Xata OSS: Postgres platform with branching, now Apache 2.0
Xata core is now available as open source under the Apache 2 license. It adds copy-on-write branching, scale-to-zero compute to Postgres.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
BBC to cut up to 2,000 jobs in biggest downsize in 15 years
Announcement comes before Matt Brittin replaces Tim Davie as director general next monthBusiness live – latest updatesThe BBC is to cut as many as 2,000 jobs in the biggest down-sizing of the public service broadcaster in 15 years.Staff are set to be informed of the cuts, which will affect about 10% of the BBC’s 21,500 staff, at an all-staff meeting on Wednesday. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Police hunt two suspects over attempted arson attack on London synagogue
Met says incident in Finchely is being treated as antisemitic hate crimeTwo suspects who threw bottles thought to contain petrol in an attempted arson at a synagogue in Finchley, north London, are being sought by detectives, the Metropolitan police said, adding that the attack was being treated as an antisemitic hate crime.More details soon …. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Two Met PCs charged over death of pregnant woman
Two Met PCs are charged after a pregnant woman and her unborn child were killed in a crash.

BBC UK News
Open 
Stop DARC space radar project because of Trump, first minister says
The UK government should stop working on a space radar station because of Trump, Eluned Morgan says.

BBC UK News
Open 
Ulster University to cut up to 450 jobs
It is not clear which areas of the university, which has campuses in Belfast, Londonderry and Coleraine as well as a campus in Qatar, will be affected.

BBC UK News
Open 
'Sad step backwards' in recovery for Tate fall boy
A French boy who fell from a Tate Modern balcony is recovering more slowly than his family had hoped.

HM Treasury
Open 
Joint Statement from Finance Ministers on the Middle East: 15 April 2026
Joint statement from the Finance Ministers of the United Kingdom, Australia, Japan, Sweden, Netherlands, Finland, Spain, Norway, Republic of Ireland, Poland and New Zealand on the Middle East. | HM Treasury.

HM Treasury
Open 
Chancellor drives global push for responsive and responsible international action in face of war
The Chancellor has coordinated a joint statement with international counterparts calling for a co?ordinated response to the economic impacts of the Middle East conflict. | HM Treasury.

The Verge
Open 
Nothing makes it easy to share files between any Android phone and a Mac
I test Android phones for a living, but I write about them using a company-supplied MacBook Air. Both platforms are great in their own right, but they're not so great at talking to one another. On a handful of Google Pixel and Samsung Galaxy phones you can now AirDrop files directly to Apple machines; Nothing's […]

The Verge
Open 
Amazon’s new Fire TV Stick HD is its ‘slimmest ever’
Amazon has taken the wraps off a new Fire TV Stick HD that it says is its slimmest yet. At $34.99, the device offers a design that Amazon says is 30 percent thinner than the previous generation, along with the ability to power it directly through your TV's USB port. The new design eliminates the […]

The Verge
Open 
Adobe embraces conversational AI editing, marking a ‘fundamental shift’ in creative work
Adobe is fully embracing AI tools that enable creators to edit their work using descriptive prompts, instead of manually using specific Creative Cloud apps. The software giant's new Firefly AI Assistant allows users to describe what they want to change by typing their own words into a conversational interface. Adobe says this marks a "fundamental […]

The Verge
Open 
More phone cameras should come with silly telephoto lenses
Upgrading your phone with a camera grip attachment is one thing. But doll-sized telephoto lenses that you mount on top of the rear camera? C'mon. I wrote the Vivo X300 off as a gimmick, a funny concept designed to generate attention rather than actual sales. But then I spent a weekend carrying the phone and […]

Computer Weekly
Open 
Danske Bank upgrade error exposed 20,000 customer addresses
Danish bank revealed details of a customer data leak last year which affected thousands of customers

Computer Weekly
Open 
Ordnance Survey works with Snowflake to tackle flood risk
AI-based tool developed with Snowflake improves policymakers’ understanding of properties at risk of flooding

Ian Visits
Open 
California Dreaming: Belmont station revamp ahead of plans to double train services
The first phase focuses on improving access to the station, as longer-term plans progress to double services on the line through new track infrastructure.Read more ›

Sky News Home
Open 
Student filmmaker was surrounded and kicked on floor before he died, court told
A student filmmaker allegedly stabbed to death at a popular north London viewpoint was surrounded and kicked on the floor before he died, a court has heard.

Sky News Home
Open 
Student kills four people in Turkey's second school shooting in two days
A student has killed at least four people in Turkey's second school shooting in two days, officials said.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
War 'Very Close' To Over, Trump Says, As Iran Ceasefire Extension Reportedly Advances, But More US Troops Deploy
War 'Very Close' To Over, Trump Says, As Iran Ceasefire Extension Reportedly Advances, But More US Troops Deploy

Summary


The Iran war is "very close to over" with authorities in Tehran eager to agree a peace deal, Trump says, adding: "We've beaten them militarily."


AP/Bloomberg reporting the two sides have an "in principle agreement" to pursue further diplomacy; however, this is batted down as 'unconfirmed' by Tehran & a US official.


The Pentagon is sending thousands of additional troops into the Middle East in coming days: WaPo


Trump claims China "very happy" the US is permanently opening the Strait of Hormuz, also Xi told him Beijing was not sending weapons/defense items to Tehran.


Significant Lebanon fighting continues: Israel issues more evacuation orders, moving into south; Tehran outraged, threatens Red Sea shipping.




//-->

//-->

//-->


US x Iran permanent peace deal by April 30, 2026?
Yes 33% · No 68%View full market & trade on Polymarket *  *  *

'Very Close' To War Over, Diplomacy in Reach: Trump

The latest from Trump: The Iran war is "very close to over" with authorities in Tehran eager to agree a peace deal, President Trump claimed in a fresh interview broadcast Wednesday. "We’ve beaten them militarily, totally," Trump told Fox Business in a prerecorded interview. "I think it’s close to over, I view it as very close to over... If I pulled up stakes right now it would take them 20 years to rebuild that country, and we’re not finished." He added: "We’ll see what happens, I think they want to make a deal very badly."

This as the Associated Press has reported the US and Iran are closer to extending a ceasefire and restarting negotiations, even amid the intensifying standoff over the Strait of Hormuz as the US Navy has blockaded it for all shipping leaving Iranian ports or with ties, or under sanction.

The two sides have an "in principle agreement" to pursue further diplomacy after last weekend's failed Islamabad talks. Trump on Tuesday had optimistically cited that the next round could be just two days away. Mediators are said to be pushing for a compromise on outstanding issues including Hormuz and Iran's nuclear program before the April 7 truce expires next week, the news agency said - as they also eye the extension off the initial two weeks.

However, Iran's Foreign Ministry has made clear the reports about the ceasefire extension are not confirmed, while Axios' Barak Ravid similarly writes - US official tells me: "The US has not agreed to an extension of the ceasefire. There is continued engagement between the U.S. and Iran to reach a deal."
Via AP: A billboard depicting U.S. aircraft caught by Iranian armed forces in a fishing net.

Iran meanwhile is warning that it sees a prolonging of the US blockade as "a prelude to a breach of the ceasefire," a military spokesman said, as featured state TV. Iran's military "will not permit any exports or imports to continue in the Persian Gulf, the Sea of Oman or the Red Sea" if it continues, the spokesman added. 


IRAN'S BAGHAEI: NO SPECIFIC DAY SET FOR NEW US NEGOTIATIONS


Trump on China

President Trump says he asked his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping not to supply weapons to Iran, and Xi replied he was not doing so. "I had heard that China’s giving weapons to, I mean - you’re seeing it all over the place - to Iran," Trump also said in the aforementioned Fox Business interview.

"And I wrote him a letter asking him not to do that, and he wrote me a letter saying that essentially he’s not doing that." Major media outlets previously reported that US intelligence indicated China was preparing to ship advanced weaponry to Iran. Beijing's public rejection of the "baseless smear" - as the Foreign Minister called it - has indeed been swift and vehement.

With oil prices remaining elevated, with Brent crude trading about 33% higher than before the start of the war, Trump has issued a new Truth Social claiming China is "very happy that I am permanently opening the Strait of Hormuz." This even though in many cases it is China bound tankers being blocked and turned back by the US naval armada. "This situation will never happen again," Trump added. He is set to meet with Xi in Beijing on May 14-15. On this he wrote that "President Xi will give me a big, fat, hug when I get there in a few weeks. We are going working together smartly, and very well!" But then Trump says "But remember, we are very good at fighting, if we have to..."



More Troops Sent to Mideast

The Washington Post is out with a new report of more troops being sent to the theatre. "The Pentagon is sending thousands of additional troops into the Middle East in the coming days, as the Trump administration attempts to pressure Iran into a deal that could end the weeks long conflict there while considering the possibility of additional strikes or ground operations if a fragile ceasefire deal does not hold."

Already a combined estimated ten thousand US sailors, Marines, and personnel - on at least a dozen US warships, are maintaining the Trump-ordered blockade on Hormuz. So Washington continues to try and build leverage, also with the announced additional forces being prepped, while also sounding optimistic on a potential peace deal - thought to two sides are very far apart especially on the nuclear issue.

Trump has at times still shrugged off the importance of a final peace deal, having told ABC News that while an official peace agreement may not be necessary, "I think a deal is preferable because then they can rebuild." He had said, "They really do have a different regime now. No matter what, we took out the radicals."


Trump:
I wrote a letter to Xi. I asked him not to give Iran weapons. He wrote me a letter, and he is saying that he is essentially not doing that. pic.twitter.com/yrTT9Dwi2V
— Clash Report (@clashreport) April 15, 2026
Tehran (& Houthis) Threaten Red Sea Trade as Lebanon Fighting Persists

Iran's army warned it will block trade through the Red Sea, the Persian Gulf, and the Sea of Oman if the US naval blockade on Iranian ports continues. In a statement carried by Iranian state television, the head of the military's central command center said the "powerful armed forces of the Islamic Republic will not allow any exports or imports to continue in the Persian Gulf, the Sea of Oman and the Red Sea."

According to more via Al Jazeera, he added that Iran will "act decisively to defend its national sovereignty and its interests." One key factor which has outraged Iran is Israel's continued major attacks on Lebanon, after last Wednesday's massive aerial attack on Beirut and elsewhere which left over 300 dead. Israel on Wednesday said that Hezbollah fired 40 rockets into Israel earlier in the morning.

An Israeli drone strike on the Jiyeh road, Lebanon



More Geopolitical Headlines

via Newsquawk...

Effort to extend US-Iran ceasefire has made progress, AP reports citing official; mediators aim to extend the ceasefire for at least another two weeks; both sides gave an “in principle agreement” to extend the ceasefire.
Discussions are underway regarding possible extension of temporary ceasefire between Iran and US, according to Arab diplomatic sources cited by Russia on Wednesday and being reported by Chinese press CCTV.
However, US President Trump said it could end either way, but thinks a deal is preferable because then Iran can rebuild, also said he isn't thinking about extending the ceasefire and doesn't think it will be necessary, according to reported citing ABC reporter on X.
The Pentagon is sending thousands of additional troops into the Middle East in the coming days, WaPo reports citing US officials; in a bid to pressure Iran while mulling the possibility of additional strikes or ground operations if the ceasefire breaks.
US President Trump said it's "very possible" a deal with Iran will be reached by the time the King visits the US later this month (27-29th April), Sky News reported.
US President Trump said he views the war being very close to over, according to Fox News.
US VP Vance said we are negotiating with Iran and ceasefire is holding, adds Iranian negotiators wanted to make a deal.
Feel good about where we are.
Lot of mistrust between the US and Iran, can't be solved overnight.
US Vice President JD Vance is expected to lead a potential second round of talks with Iranian officials should negotiations lead to another face-to-face meeting before the ceasefire expires next week, according to sources familiar cited by CNN.
Pakistan leadership’s overseas tour until April 18th dims prospects of US-Iran talks in Islamabad before April 18th, Pakistani journalist Mallick reported.
Iran is to use alternative ports to those in southern Iran to bypass the US blockade in the Strait, Mehr News reported.
An Iranian VLCC (Very Large Crude Carrier), which was on the US sanctions list, entered the waters of Iran past the US blockade, Fars reported.
Iran secretly acquired a Chinese spy satellite that gave the Islamic republic a powerful new capability to target US military bases across the Middle East during the recent war, according to an FT investigation.
US Central Command said blockade of Iranian ports has been fully implemented and that US forces have completely halted economic trade going into and out of Iran by sea.
US has intercepted eight Iran-linked oil tankers since the start of the blockade, according to WSJ.
New satellite images show Iran digging for missile launchers trapped underground amid a ceasefire, according to CNN.
More than 20 commercial ships have passed through the Strait of Hormuz in the past 24 hours, WSJ reported, citing US officials.
US destroyer interdicted two oil tankers that attempted to leave Iran on Tuesday, according to an official cited by Reuters.
US President Trump reiterates on Truth Social "NATO wasn’t there for us, and they won’t be there for us in the future!".
Europe is accelerating a NATO fallback plan in case US President Trump pulls US out of the treaty, according to WSJ.
US Pentagon is likely to trim its Iran wall funding request, according to WSJ citing Senator Coons who is the top democrat on the Senate appropriations defense committee.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 08:35

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Futures Unchanged Just Shy Of All Time High On Peace Hopes, Solid Earnings
Futures Unchanged Just Shy Of All Time High On Peace Hopes, Solid Earnings

US equity futures are flat following yesterday’s rally as market awaits news on the Iran war resolution and as we traverse earnings season. As of 8:15am ET, S&P 500 futures are little changed after the benchmark closed within a whisker of a record. Risk sentiment took a small knock in recent trade after Iran cautioned that it will not allow shipments to or from the Gulf if the US blockade remain.Nasdaq futures are fractionally in the green, and set for an 11th consecutive gain as the massive short squeeze/CTA forced buying continues: in premarket trading, Mag7 / Semis are mixed, Discretionary and Staples are both stronger, Fins / Indu are leading Cyclicals with weakness in Materials.  Bank of America and Morgan Stanley rose in premarket trading as their equity traders posted strong revenue beats. Europe’s Stoxx 600 traded flat, while China’s mainland blue-chip index became the latest in Asia to recoup losses since the Iranian war began. Brent erased early losses to rise 1% toward $96 a barrel as the US pressed ahead with a naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz. Treasuries edged lower, with the two-year yield rising one basis point to 3.76% and the 10Y rising 2bps to 4.27%. The dollar is slightly stronger which would break a 7 session losing streak if gains hold while gold fell toward $4,800 an ounce. Other commodities are mixed with Ags, Base metals, and the Energy complex ex-natgas bid. Today’s macro data focus is on Beige Book, TIC data (keep an eye on buys/sells of Trsys), Housing prices, Empire Mfg, and Import/Export prices.



In premarket trading, Mag 7 stocks are mixed (Microsoft +0.6%, Tesla +0.5%, Meta +0.1%, Apple -0.04%, Alphabet -0.2%, Amazon -0.08%, Nvidia -0.1%)

Quantum computing stocks rise, on track to extend gains, after Nvidia unveiled a suite of new open-source AI models aimed at accelerating progress within quantum computing.
Solar stocks are rising after Reuters reported that China held initial talks with providers of equipment to make solar panels as it considers limiting exports of the most advanced technology to the US, citing five people familiar with the matter. Gainers include First Solar (FSLR) +4%.
Broadcom (AVGO) rises 3% after the technology company expanded its partnership with Meta to deploy AI infrastructure.
BRP Inc. (DOO) slumps 22% after the Canadian recreational manufacturer withdrew its financial outlook for the 2027 fiscal year, saying it faces a $363 million hit from recent changes by the Trump administration to its tariffs.
Cloudflare (NET) gains 3% as Piper Sandler upgrades to overweight, calling it an “AI-winner to own.”
Gitlab (GTLB) gains 6% after the company announced a collaboration with Google Cloud to bring agentic DevSecOps to enterprise teams using Vertex AI.
Robinhood (HOOD) rises 7% and Webull (BULL) gains 8% after the Securities and Exchange Commission gave the go-ahead for sweeping changes to a restriction on day-trading activity by small investors.
Snap Inc. (SNAP) climbs 8% after saying it is laying off roughly 1,000 full-time employees, or 16% of its global workforce, part of an effort by Chief Executive Officer Evan Spiegel to reduce costs and achieve profitability.
SolarEdge Technologies (SEDG) slips 3% after Goldman Sachs downgraded the company to sell, saying expectations are too high.
TeraWulf (WULF) falls over 7% after the Bitcoin mining company’s preliminary first-quarter revenue came in below Wall Street’s expectations. The company also said it is offering $800 million of shares via Morgan Stanley and Cantor Fitzgerald.
In corporate news, Anthropic has received offers from investors for a new round of funding that could value the company at about $800 billion or higher. Meta anounced an expanded multibillion-dollar partnership with Broadcom to design and build custom chips for AI. Stellantis’s global shipments jumped 12% in the first quarter, led by a surge in demand in North America for its refreshed Jeep and Ram models.

In the latest Middle East developments, as US/Iran move towards a second official negotiation, another aircraft carrier (USS George HW Bush) is set to arrive with additional soldiers and war ships around Apr 21, with the ceasefire set to expire on Apr 22; this carrier group’s route appears to be avoiding the Suez Canal / Red Sea / Bab el-Mandeb Strait. The USS Abraham Lincoln has completed repairs in Crete though it is unknown if it will resume activities in the ME Conflict, which would be the third aircraft carrier. Bessent says ME Conflict is worth having some short-term economic pain for long-term gain. Iran’s state TV cited Ali Abdollahi, the commander of Iran’s joint military headquarters, who warned that if the US continues to impose a naval blockade in the region and creates insecurity for Iran’s ships, “this action by the US will constitute a prelude to a breach of the ceasefire.” If the blockade continues, Iran’s armed forces “will not permit any exports or imports to continue in the Persian Gulf, the Sea of Oman or the Red Sea.”

Meanwhile, bank earnings point to a generally healthy consumer and corporate sector, both able to withstand the supply chain shock emanating from the Middle East without experiencing stagflation / recession.

President Trump told the New York Post that talks could resume “over the next two days” and said in a Fox Business interview the war is “close to over.” Mediators moved closer to extending the ceasefire between the two parties, the Associated Press reported.

Investors have been piling back into stocks even with no clear end in sight to the war, which has choked off around a fifth of global crude supplies and risked a surge in inflation that could still prompt central banks to tighten policy. 

“Amid all the uncertainty, I consider it warranted to re-focus on the outlook beyond the war,” said Holger Schmieding, chief economist at Berenberg. “A key driver of markets is that the war-related dash for liquidity is over and partly reversing. That helps the more risky assets.”

Technology shares in particular have been snapped up after lagging the market for much of the year, with the Nasdaq 100 notching its longest stretch of daily wins since 2021. In just the past two sessions, a popular exchange-traded fund that tracks the software industry is up 6.4%. Oracle Corp. has soared 18% and Microsoft Corp. and Palantir Technologies Inc. have gained 6%. 

“The US tech sector, including the Magnificent Seven, is much cheaper today than six months ago,” said Lilian Chovin, head of asset allocation at Coutts & Co. “Concerns around the Middle East won’t disappear all of a sudden, but the ability of those companies to generate earnings in a difficult macro environment remains very attractive.”

With the earnings season now in full swing, investors will watch for signs of whether the conflict is denting the outlook for earnings and whether corporates and consumers are cutting back on spending amid the uncertainty. In Europe, ASML Holding NV shares fell 0.5% as a weaker-than-expected sales outlook for the second quarter tempered a raised full-year forecast for the maker of advanced chipmaking machines. Luxury firms Hermes International SCA and Kering SA slumped after disappointing sales updates.

It’s still early in the earnings season, but Vital Knowledge founder Adam Crisafulli said he’s “impressed by the resiliency of Corporate America” so far. Management teams at the likes of Citigroup, Delta Airlines and JPMorgan have pointed to relatively stable trends in terms of customer spending and activity, he said. That’s helping the narrative of US strength over the rest of the world. In Europe, luxury giants Hermès and Kering both reported poor results as the war crimped sales.



Financials dominate the first week of earnings season, but remain bottom of the pile in sector returns for the year. Morgan Stanley is expected to post record equity-trading revenue, while BofA’s top-line gains and cost control in 1Q should usher in positive operating leverage, according to BI. 

Elsewhere, chip equipment maker ASML’s CEO expects chip demand to outpace supply “for the foreseeable future,” creating “a strong constraint” in various markets from AI to mobile and PC. These supply/demand dynamics are showing up in the global smartphone market, which suffered its first decline since 2023 in 1Q, according to market tracker IDC. The memory crunch and war in Iran are likely to elevate costs and constrain growth further in 2026.

“Earnings will be key for fundamental investors to step in and chase or fade,” said Emmanuel Cau, head of European equity strategy at Barclays Plc. With “stocks near year-to-date highs, it feels like easy gains are behind us and fundamentals should prevail again.”

In geopolitics, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told the BBC that the Iran war is worth a “small bit of economic pain,” ahead of what is likely to be a tense meeting with his UK counterpart Rachel Reeves. Trump described the relationship with the UK as “sad,” adding that the trade deal between the countries “can always be changed.” Chinese President Xi Jinping pledged deeper bilateral coordination with Russia.

European indices mostly tilt lower with the broad Stoxx 600 down 0.1% with technology and health care shares leading gains, while consumer products and energy stocks are the biggest laggards. The CAC 40 lags with losses of 0.6% following disappointing earnings from Hermes and Kering, with the former posting its largest decline on record. Here are the biggest movers Wednesday:

Aixtron gains as much as 15%, to the highest since June 2001, after pre-announcing its first-quarter results and lifting guidance for the full year
ASML shares advance as much as 1.8% after the Dutch firm raised full-year sales guidance, a signal of strong demand from chipmakers
Basic-Fit shares jump as much as 8.3%, to the highest intraday since Jan. 27, after KBC Securities upgraded the Dutch health club chain to buy from hold
DFDS shares rise as much as 16%, their biggest gain in over a year, after the shipping and logistics company raised its Ebit guidance
Intertek Group shares rise as much as 14% after analysts welcomed the group’s initiation of a strategic review to evaluate if Intertek Testing & Assurance and Intertek Energy & Infrastructure would be better positioned as separate businesses
Saga shares jump as much as 12% to the highest in six years after the travel and insurance company reported full-year results, with Peel Hunt noting encouraging current trading and strong ocean cruise bookings
Hermès shares fall as much as 14%, the most on record, after the luxury-goods firm reports first-quarter sales that missed analyst estimates, dragged down by a weak performance in Asia Pacific and France
Kering shares fall 10% after the French luxury group’s key fashion & leather goods unit fell short of expectations, dragged down by worse-than-expected Gucci sales
Imperial Brands drops as much as 3.2% after being downgraded by analysts at UBS on a lack of near-term catalysts and concerns around more intense competition
Colruyt declines as much as 6%, the most in almost four months, as JPMorgan places the retail company on a negative catalyst watch into its full-year results in June and lowers its price target to a new Street low
Earlier in the session, stocks in Asia gained after the US and Iran stepped up efforts to arrange a second round of peace talks, reviving hopes for an end to six weeks of hostilities in the Middle East that fueled an energy crisis. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index rose as much as 1.4%, led by gains in TSMC and Samsung Electronics. A gauge of the region’s technology stocks jumped as much as 2.9% to an all-time high, tracking an overnight rally on Wall Street. South Korea’s Kospi outperformed major markets. Thailand was closed for a holiday.
Renewed optimism over Middle East stability has shifted investor focus back toward technology earnings and the outlook for further AI-driven capital expenditure. While geopolitics risks linger, fatigue is tempering reactions to incremental developments. Stocks advanced in Hong Kong, Japan and the Philippines. Shares also traded higher in India as trading resumed after a holiday. 

In rates, treasuries are marginally cheaper across the curve in early US trading, having erased small gains spurred by AP report that the US and Iran agreed in principle to extend a truce. US 2- to 10-year yields are 1bp-2bp cheaper with long-end little changed, flattening 5s30s spread by less than 1bp; 10-year near 4.26% slightly underperforms German and UK counterparts. US session has few scheduled events beyond Fed Beige Book release. Corporate new-issue calendar has begun to build, with a busy day expected after several borrowers stood down Tuesday. 

In FX, the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index has just veered into positive territory, up 0.1% after a run of seven consecutive losses.

In commodities, oil is higher following sharp drop from Monday’s high that helped drive gains for US stocks. WTI crude oil futures remain about 1.5% higher with the latest update from Iran sending prices to session highs. Spot gold and silver have ebbed lower throughout the session, showing respective losses of 1% and 1.3%. Bitcoin loses 0.3%.  

The US economic data calendar includes April Empire manufacturing and March import/export price index (8:30am), April NAHB housing market index (10am) and February TIC flows (4pm). Fed speaker slate includes Governor Barr and Cleveland’s Hammack (8:30am) and Governor Bowman (1:45pm); Beige Book released 2pm.

Market Snapshot

S&P 500 mini little changed
Nasdaq 100 mini little changed
Russell 2000 mini -0.1%
Stoxx Europe 600 little changed
DAX little changed
CAC 40 -0.5%
10-year Treasury yield +1 basis point at 4.26%
VIX little changed at 18.32
Bloomberg Dollar Index little changed at 1193.5
euro little changed at $1.1786
WTI crude +1.2% at $92.36/barrel
Top Overnight News

US President Donald Trump played down the prospect of renewed fighting in the war with Iran, saying the war is "close to over" and extending a ceasefire that expires next week may not be necessary. Talks between the US and Iran might restart "over the next two days", according to Trump, after an initial round of peace talks ended in Pakistan on Sunday without a deal. BBG
The Pentagon is sending thousands of additional troops into the Middle East in the coming days, as the Trump administration attempts to pressure Iran into a deal that could end the weeks long conflict there while considering the possibility of additional strikes or ground operations if a fragile ceasefire deal does not hold. WaPo
A fallback plan to ensure Europe can defend itself using NATO’s existing military structures if the U.S. departs is gaining traction after getting buy-in from Germany, a long-term opponent of a go-it-alone approach. The officials working on the plans, which some officials are referring to as “European NATO,” are seeking to get more Europeans into the alliance’s command-and-control roles and supplement U.S. military assets with their own. WSJ
Xi Jinping met Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in Beijing. BBG
The US-UK trade deal “can always be changed,” Trump told Sky News, describing the relationship between the two countries as “sad.” BBG
ASML raised its sales forecast as the surge in AI spending continued to boost demand, as optimism about the tech returned to the spotlight. BBG
President Donald Trump’s tariffs may be restored by July to the levels in place before the Supreme Court struck down many of his levies, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said. BBG
Maine lawmakers have passed a bill that could make it the first U.S. state to put a moratorium on new data centers as ‌opposition to the electricity-hungry facilities grows across the country over their impact on household energy bills and the environment. The bill would freeze approvals for data centers requiring more than 20 megawatts of power until October 2027, while a state-appointed council analyzes ⁠their impact on the local grid, electricity bills, air and water. RTRS
Anthropic received several offers for a new round of funding that would more than double its pre-money valuation to about $800 billion or higher, people familiar said. BBG
US Treasury has begun quietly asking private credit firms to submit information detailing their business models and ties to the regulated financial system: Punchbowl.
US Treasury Secretary Bessent said underlying economy remains strong and still thinks growth could exceed 3% to 3.5% this year.
White House Economic Advisor Hassett said real income growth is very high and he is confident the economy will be strong this year.
Iran War

Effort to extend US-Iran ceasefire has made progress, AP reports citing official; mediators aim to extend the ceasefire for at least another two weeks; both sides gave an “in principle agreement” to extend the ceasefire.
Discussions are underway regarding possible extension of temporary ceasefire between Iran and US, according to Arab diplomatic sources cited by Russia on Wednesday and being reported by Chinese press CCTV. However, US President Trump said it could end either way, but thinks a deal is preferable because then Iran can rebuild, also said he isn't thinking about extending the ceasefire and doesn't think it will be necessary, according to reported citing ABC reporter on X.
The Pentagon is sending thousands of additional troops into the Middle East in the coming days, WaPo reports citing US officials; in a bid to pressure Iran while mulling the possibility of additional strikes or ground operations if the ceasefire breaks.
US President Trump said it's "very possible" a deal with Iran will be reached by the time the King visits the US later this month (27-29th April), Sky News reported.
US President Trump said he views the war being very close to over, according to Fox News.
US VP Vance said we are negotiating with Iran and ceasefire is holding, adds Iranian negotiators wanted to make a deal. Feel good about where we are. Lot of mistrust between the US and Iran, can't be solved overnight.
US Vice President JD Vance is expected to lead a potential second round of talks with Iranian officials should negotiations lead to another face-to-face meeting before the ceasefire expires next week, according to sources familiar cited by CNN.
Pakistan leadership’s overseas tour until April 18th dims prospects of US-Iran talks in Islamabad before April 18th, Pakistani journalist Mallick reported.
Iran is to use alternative ports to those in southern Iran to bypass the US blockade in the Strait, Mehr News reported.
An Iranian VLCC (Very Large Crude Carrier), which was on the US sanctions list, entered the waters of Iran past the US blockade, Fars reported.
Iran secretly acquired a Chinese spy satellite that gave the Islamic republic a powerful new capability to target US military bases across the Middle East during the recent war, according to an FT investigation.
US Central Command said blockade of Iranian ports has been fully implemented and that US forces have completely halted economic trade going into and out of Iran by sea.
US has intercepted eight Iran-linked oil tankers since the start of the blockade, according to WSJ.
New satellite images show Iran digging for missile launchers trapped underground amid a ceasefire, according to CNN.
More than 20 commercial ships have passed through the Strait of Hormuz in the past 24 hours, WSJ reported, citing US officials.
US destroyer interdicted two oil tankers that attempted to leave Iran on Tuesday, according to an official cited by Reuters.
US President Trump reiterates on Truth Social "NATO wasn’t there for us, and they won’t be there for us in the future!".
Europe is accelerating a NATO fallback plan in case US President Trump pulls US out of the treaty, according to WSJ.
US Pentagon is likely to trim its Iran wall funding request, according to WSJ citing Senator Coons who is the top democrat on the Senate appropriations defence committee.
A more detailed look at global markets courtesy of Newsquawk

APAC stocks were mostly higher as the region took its cue from the rally on Wall St amid continued hopes regarding US-Iran talks, while President Trump suggested talks could occur during the next two days. ASX 200 eked mild gains, but with upside capped as strength in tech, gold miners and health care was offset by losses in energy and some defensives, while trade was also restricted by a lack of data and drivers. Nikkei 225 rallied above the 58,000 level, with the positive risk sentiment facilitated by the recent decline in oil prices and the much stronger-than-expected Machinery Orders. Hang Seng and Shanghai Comp were positive with the gains in Hong Kong led by tech strength, while oil majors lagged after the recent oil decline. Furthermore, the PBoC continued its meagre daily liquidity efforts through 7-day reverse repo operations, but had announced yesterday to conduct CNY 500bln of 183-day outright reverse repos for today.

Top Asian News

China’s State Council says temporary measures, including suspending approvals or filings, may be used to address industries facing severe disorderly competition.
Chinese President Xi said in meeting with Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov that China is to enhance communications with Russia and the stability of ties with Russia is valuable.
Russian President Putin's visit to China is being prepared and the timing of the visit will be announced by the Kremlin in due course, according to Kremlin spokesperson Peskov.
European bourses (STOXX 600 U/C) point to a mixed picture, primarily driven by diverging earnings. The CAC 40 (-0.6%) is the big underperformer following losses in luxury names (Hermes -9%, Kering -9.1%), while the AEX (+0.1%) slightly outperforms as ASML (+0.1%) gains. As mentioned above, Q1 earnings reports by ASML, Kering and Hermes have been of focus this morning. Starting with Europe’s most valuable company, ASML reported sales that beat estimates while also raising its FY26 revenue guidance. The CEO highlighted that demand for chips is outpacing supply and that order intake continues to be very strong. Despite the strong report, shares initially fell slightly at the open, possibly on the softer Q2 sales guidance, but has reversed course since.

Top European News

French Inflation Rate YoY Final (Mar) Y/Y 1.7% vs. Exp. 1.7% (Prev. 0.9%); HICP Y/Y 2.0% vs. prelim. 1.9%.
French Inflation Rate MoM Final (Mar) M/M 1.0% vs. Exp. 0.9% (Prev. 0.6%).
EU Industrial Production MoM (Feb) M/M 0.4% vs. Exp. 0.3% (Prev. -1.5%, Low. -0.5%, High. 1.0%)
EU Industrial Production YoY (Feb) Y/Y -0.6% vs. Exp. -1.4% (Prev. -1.2%, Low. -1.9%, High. -1.0%)
Polish Inflation Rate MoM Final (Mar) M/M 1.1% vs. Exp. 1% (Prev. 0.3%).
Polish Inflation Rate YoY Final (Mar) Y/Y 3.0% vs. Exp. 3% (Prev. 2.4%).
Trade/Tariffs

China is reportedly considering curbs on solar manufacturing equipment exports to the US, Reuters reported citing sources.
US Treasury Secretary Bessent said tariffs could be back in place to previous levels by July, and doesn't think there's a big risk from Trump's China trip; US wants to de-risk, not decouple from China and China's global trade surplus is getting excessive.
US Treasury Secretary Bessent plans to visit Japan in mid-May, Kyodo reported.
An Indian trade official said a trade delegation will visit the US from April 20–22nd for trade deal talks.
Australia and Brunei committed to maintaining open trade flows, while both sides reaffirmed commitment to strengthen energy and food security.
FX

G10s are mostly lower against the USD, with the AUD marginally outperforming whilst the CHF lags incrementally. Overall, it is a cautious mood in the FX space as markets await details on when/if the second round of US-Iran talks will begin.
DXY trades above the 98.00 handle, which it dipped under on Tuesday. The narrative remains an optimistic one with MUFG saying it looks like "the period when investors begin throwing in the towel on the long dollar trade." and ING writing this morning that these USD levels "seem to embed a fair amount of premature optimism". The greenback sees a busy calendar ahead with comments from the US President to be aired at 11:00 BST via Fox News and several Fed speakers, including Barr (voter; no text expected) to speak on consumer compliance supervision and regulation, Hammack on CNBC (2026 voter; no text expected) and Bowman (voter, dove; no text expected) to speak at the IIF.
It is worth noting that the USD saw some mild strength following a piece in the Washington Post, which suggested that the US is sending “thousands of additional troops into the Middle East in the coming days… in a bid to pressure Iran” - the piece also highlighted the possibility of additional strikes or ground operations if the ceasefire breaks.
Several updates for the UK this morning, with Times and Sky News scoops lacking good news for the Chancellor. On the domestic front, The Times hears that UK Chancellor Reeves is looking to back down on plans to increase fuel duty by 5p a litre from September; the suggestion is that the move would cost about GBP 2.6bln. On defence, Chancellor Reeves is said to have proposed only increasing defence spending by less than GBP 10bln over the next four years, fearing a bigger increase would be unaffordable. On the docket ahead, the Chancellor is planning to meet with US Treasury Secretary Bessent in the US today. It should not be a game-changer. She is expected to touch on the Strait of Hormuz, the need to stabilise markets, and potentially to confirm the UK's participation in the EU’s EUR 90bln loan to Ukraine, POLITICO reported. BoE's Greene and Bailey to speak later in the day. As sterling digests these updates, EUR/GBP trades unchanged below the key 0.87 mark, while Cable is also unchanged as it pulled back from Tuesday's 1.3589 high.
Central Banks

ECB President Lagarde said ECB is in a good position to respond to the Iran situation, adds would be a mistake to say we need to look through the shock, and it's just too soon to make such a conclusion.
ECB's Rehn said tightening is not guaranteed, the policy path depends a lot on how the Middle East conflict evolves.
BoK Governor nominee Shin said South Korea inflation is to accelerate and external risks pose uncertainty. Sees upward pressure on prices and downward pressure on the economy. Risks may expand further and economic growth may weaken. To seek to stabilise prices and financial stability, and will work to internationalise the won. Monetary policy needs to act if there are prolonged inflationary pressures stemming from Iran war.
SNB, ahead of the end-2027 introduction of the PSFF, has decided to lower the special-rate surcharge from 50bps to 25bps as of July 1st.
The PBoC raises the leverage ratios for bank's overseas loans.
Fixed Income

Global fixed benchmarks are currently mixed, with USTs a little lower whilst Bunds and Gilts continue to build on recent strength. The geopolitical environment appears to be easing, with traders now digesting President Trump’s latest comments, where he stated that he views the war as being very close to over, adding that he does not think it will be necessary to extend a ceasefire. Given the generally positive mood music, crude prices remain at recent lows, reducing inflationary implications on the economy for the time being. Markets await further commentary from POTUS at 11:00 BST.
It is worth noting that USTs dipped into the red in recent trade after a piece in the Washington Post suggested that the US is sending “thousands of additional troops into the Middle East in the coming days… in a bid to pressure Iran” - the piece also highlighted the possibility of additional strikes or ground operations if the ceasefire breaks. US paper currently trades at the lower end of a 111-14 to 111-21 range. Geopols aside, import/export prices, the NY Empire State Manufacturing Index, the Fed’s Beige Book, TIC/foreign bond investment data are due. On the speaker slate, Fed’s Barr, Bowman and Hammack are all on the docket.
Bunds are firmer by c. 10 ticks, and towards the lower end of a 125.35 to 125.40 range. Further pressure in German paper could see a breach below Tuesday’s close at 125.32, and then 125.21 (50% fib of Tuesday’s move). No move to the 2048, 2052 and 2056 Bund auctions. From a yield perspective, the GE 2yr oscillates around near-term troughs at 2.53%, but well off the levels seen pre-war. UniCredit analysts highlight that following the US-Iran ceasefire announcement, the German 10/30yr spread has bull-steeped and is currently trading at 56bps, 14bps higher than the recent trough. Despite the recent hopes of an end of the conflict, the analysts do not see the spread returning to the pre-conflict 67bps anytime soon.
Gilts gapped higher by 30 ticks, briefly extended to a peak of 89.31, before scaling back off those levels as the morning progressed to make a trough of 88.88. As above, Gilts moved higher on the geopolitical optimism, before moving off best levels alongside peers. In terms of the BoE, money markets currently assign no chance of a hike in April, and fully price in a 25bps hike in September – ultimately, markets remain cautious about the inflationary implications of the Iran conflict, despite signs of easing tensions. Focus today will be on BoE speak from Greene (15:15 BST), and Bailey, the latter slated to speak twice; in recent commentary, the Governor believed markets were “getting ahead of themselves by pricing in rate hikes”.
Commodities

In geopolitics, US President Trump told Fox that he sees the Iran war as “very close to being over” and said talks could resume “over the next two days”; the full interview is due to air at 11:00BST/06:00EDT. Elsewhere, it was also reported that discussions are underway regarding a possible extension of the temporary ceasefire between Iran and the US. That being said, it’s worth noting that Pakistan’s leadership will be away until April 18th, which dims the prospects of a US-Iran meeting before that date, according to local journalists.
Crude prices were hit on Tuesday as traders weighed prospects for a second round of US-Iran talks against the near-total double blockade of flows through the Strait of Hormuz. Early morning action saw both Brent Jun and WTI Jun trade on either side of the unchanged mark, and near recent lows. However, the complex gradually lifted off lows as the morning progressed, and then took a leg higher to session peaks following a WaPo piece which suggested that the US is sending “thousands of additional troops into the Middle East in the coming days… in a bid to pressure Iran” - the piece also highlighted the possibility of additional strikes or ground operations if the ceasefire breaks. Brent Jun currently holds at the upper end of a USD 93.93-96.25/bbl range; WTI Jun also firmer today, within a USD 84.70-89.75/bbl range.
Gold eased into the European session and currently resides in a USD 4,792-4,871/oz range at the time of writing. Some desks view the recent move as technical, with prices bouncing off the 200 DMA in late March. Base metal prices are mostly but modestly firmer. London copper has now erased all losses triggered by the conflict, moving above its 27th February close as traders focused on possible peace talks. 3M LME copper resides in a tight USD 13,251.45- 13,391.60/t range.
Codelco is in talks with India’s Hindustan Copper over a joint venture for Chilean copper.
Japan plans to extend private sector oil release by one month, according to TV Asahi.
Venezuela's Interim President Rodriguez called for a long-term energy partnership with the US.
White House said more than 100 empty oil tankers are on their way to U.S. ports to load American crude, CBS reported. Of the 103 empty vessels, 54 are Very Large Crude Carriers capable of transporting approximately two million barrels. Among them were "20 empty tankers under European flags and 20 under Asian flags" that had "recently unloaded elsewhere".
US Private Energy Inventories (bbls): Crude +6.1mln (exp -1.3mln), Distillate -3.4mln (exp. -2.5mln), Gasoline +0.6mln (exp. -2.2mln), Cushing -1.7mln.
US Event Calendar

7:00 am: United States Apr 10 MBA Mortgage Applications, prior -0.8%
8:30 am: United States Apr Empire Manufacturing, est. 0, prior -0.2
8:30 am: United States Mar Import Price Index MoM, est. 2.3%, prior 1.3%
8:30 am: United States Fed’s Barr in Moderated Discussion
8:30 am: United States Fed’s Hammack Appears on CNBC
1:45 pm: United States Fed’s Bowman Speaks at IIF Forum
2:00 pm: United States Fed Releases Beige Book
4:00 pm: United States Feb Total Net TIC Flows, prior -25.02b
4:00 pm: United States Feb Net Long-term TIC Flows, prior 15.51b
DB's Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap

Hopes for a de-escalation between the US and Iran have continued to propel markets higher this morning, with Trump saying overnight that “I think it’s close to over.” So oil prices have remained steady, with Brent crude at $95.26/bbl, and the surge for risk assets has continued. Indeed, yesterday saw the S&P 500 (+1.18%) close just shy of its record high, meaning that the index is now up +9.8% over the last 10 sessions. For reference, that’s now even faster than the bounceback after Liberation Day last year, and we haven’t seen a run of gains that quick over 10 sessions since the post-Covid bounceback in April 2020. That optimism has continued overnight, with futures on the S&P 500 up +0.08%, and we’ve seen gains across Asian equities as well. For instance, the Nikkei (+0.82%), the KOSPI (+2.92%), the Hang Seng (+0.76%) and the CSI 300 (+0.17%) are all on track for a one-month high.

All that follows more positive headlines over the last 24 hours, which have led to mounting hopes that the US and Iran will be back at the negotiating table soon. Among others, Trump himself said yesterday to the New York Post that talks “could be happening over the next two days” in Pakistan. And that echoed a report from Reuters earlier in the day, which said that negotiating teams from the US and Iran could return to Islamabad this week, according to four sources. So there was a general sense that there was still a pathway towards de-escalation, and overnight, ABC’s Jonathan Karl also said that Trump told him “I think you’re going to be watching an amazing two days ahead”. Over on the Iranian side, there were also headlines suggesting they wanted a deal, with Bloomberg reporting that Iran was considering a short-term pause to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, to avoid testing the US blockade and derailing any further peace talks.3

Nevertheless, that US blockade does remain in place, and US Central Command announced that 6 merchant ships were turned around and forced to re-enter an Iranian port during the first day of the US blockade. Overnight, the CENTCOM Commander also said that the blockade of Iran’s ports “has been fully implemented”, and that “U.S. forces have completely halted economic trade going into and out of Iran by sea”. But even with the Strait of Hormuz, investors were still hopeful about some kind of reopening, with the WSJ reporting last night that European countries were putting together plans for a coalition of countries to free up the Strait of Hormuz, which would include sending mine-clearing vessels.

Collectively, this newsflow has continued to support markets, as it’s eased investor fears about a stagflationary shock. Indeed, Brent crude oil has now closed beneath $100/bbl for over a week now, and yesterday it fell another -4.60% to $94.79/bbl. Moreover, investors continue to believe the conflict will be a temporary one, with the oil futures curve still having a sharp negative slope. For example, the 6-month Brent future was down -2.18% yesterday to $82.48/bbl, and the 12-month future was down -1.66% to $77.75/bbl.

Given all that, US markets put in a strong performance, as growing hopes for a ceasefire and lower oil prices helped to support bonds and equities. So the S&P 500 (+1.18%) closed just shy of its record high from late-January, having now risen for 9 of the last 10 sessions. That was powered by the Magnificent 7 (+5.49%), which saw its strongest performance in the last two weeks, although the small-cap Russell 2000 (+1.32%) also advanced. The hope of lower energy prices helped consumer cyclicals such as Media (+3.5%), Autos (+3.4%), and Consumer Discretionary Retail (+2.8%) to outperform, while Energy (-2.2%) and Banks (-0.9%) lagged. Meanwhile, there were further signs that the financial stress was easing more broadly, with the VIX index (-0.8pts) falling to just 18.36pts, its lowest since late-February, before the strikes began. In addition, US HY spreads (-11bps) fell to their tightest level in two months, at 268bps.

Over on the rates side, US Treasuries also rallied yesterday, with a further boost after the PPI inflation reading was softer than expected. It showed headline PPI was only up +0.5% in March (vs. +1.1% expected), meaning that the year-on-year measure only rose to +4.0% (vs. +4.6% expected). So that helped to ease fears about a larger wave of inflation, particularly after Friday’s CPI. And in turn, yields fell back across the curve yesterday, with the 2yr yield (-2.7bps) falling to 3.74%, whilst the 10yr yield (-4.5bps) fell to 4.25%. That was the lowest level on the 10yr yield since mid-March, and it’s down another -0.2bps overnight.

There was also some news on the Fed yesterday, as it was confirmed that Kevin Warsh’s nomination hearing to become Fed Chair would be held on Tuesday. So that’ll be a crucial moment for markets, as we’ll start to get a better understanding of Warsh’s policy views and where things might head over the years ahead. To date, the barrier to Warsh’s confirmation has been that Senator Thom Tillis, a retiring Republican senator on the Committee, has said he won’t support any Fed nominees until the Department of Justice probe into Chair Powell is resolved. But the committee chair Tim Scott said yesterday that “I believe that the DOJ will finish and wrap this up in the next several weeks”. The other outstanding question is whether Powell would stay on the Board of Governors once his term as Chair concludes, as his Board seat goes up until January 2028. So far, Powell hasn’t confirmed either way, only saying that he will remain on the Board while the investigation is ongoing. But in a scenario where the investigation has concluded, he hasn’t confirmed his intentions.

Staying with the US administration, Treasury Secretary Bessent said that the tariffs which were struck down by the Supreme Court could be restored to previous levels by mid-Summer. In remarks during a Wall Street Journal event, Bessent said “we will be implementing or conducting Section 301 studies, so the tariffs could be back in place at the previous level by beginning of July.” As a reminder, since the IEEPA tariffs were struck down, the administration have implemented a 10% global tariff, but that will expire on July 24 without congressional authorisation.

Earlier in Europe, markets also put in a strong performance, with the STOXX 600 (+0.99%) up to a one-month high. The main driver was the decline in oil prices, and we also heard from ECB President Lagarde, who said that the ECB didn’t have a tightening bias. So that combination helped to ease investor concerns about an imminent ECB rate hike, with market pricing for an April hike down to 28% by the close, having been at 42% the previous day. So that helped bonds to rally as well, with yields on 10yr bunds (-6.8bps), OATs (-9.1bps) and BTPs (-10.7bps) all moving lower.

Finally, the IMF published their latest World Economic Outlook yesterday, where they downgraded their global growth forecasts and upgraded inflation. So global growth is now seen at +3.1% this year, down two-tenths from January. The downgrades were biggest in the areas directly affected by the conflict, with the Middle East and Central Asia slashed by two points to +1.9%. Meanwhile on inflation, they now see global consumer prices up +4.4% this year, six-tenths above the January forecast.

Looking at the day ahead, central bank speakers include ECB President Lagarde, and the ECB’s Cipollone, Escriva, Villeroy and Schnabel, the Fed’s Barr and Bowman, and BoE Governor Bailey. Data releases include Euro Area industrial production for February. Finally, earnings releases include Bank of America and Morgan Stanley.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 08:38

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Yet Another Historic Church Torched In Canada
Yet Another Historic Church Torched In Canada

Authored by Steve Watson via Modernity.news,

Another historic church lies in ashes after a major fire tore through Saint-Romain, Quebec, last night. The building, whose construction began in 1893, is the latest casualty in a relentless campaign against Canada’s Christian institutions that has seen arsons more than double since 2021.


A historic church, originally built in 1893 and standing for over a century, was destroyed by flames Monday evening in Saint-Romain, between Beauce and Estrie in the province of Quebec. pic.twitter.com/uyq0K1cjx2
— Alexandra Lavoie (@ThevoiceAlexa) April 14, 2026
The post, which included video of the blaze, has ignited widespread outrage across X, with people quick to assume who the likely culprits are.


Another church set on fire last night, this time in Saint-Romain, Quebec.
Invaders are attacking our women, children and every fabric of our societies.
All while politicians give them preferential treatment and put laws in place to protect them from even simple criticism. pic.twitter.com/zaFxKZNz2p
— Tommy Robinson ?? (@TRobinsonNewEra) April 14, 2026

Another Church Fire tonight in Saint-Romain, Quebec ??
Construction of this church began in 1893.
According to CBC News' 2024 investigation (covering May 2021 to Dec 2023), at least 33 Canadian churches burned to the ground.
24 confirmed arsons, only 2 were accidental, rest… pic.twitter.com/sQOBXAIXUg
— Lozzy B ??? (@TruthFairy131) April 14, 2026
That CBC News investigation documented the surge in detail. A subsequent Macdonald-Laurier Institute report confirmed arson attacks on religious institutions more than doubled from pre-2021 baselines, with fewer than 4% of cases resulting in charges—leaving over 96% unsolved.

Western nations are watching the same erosion. In the UK, churches face more than 10 crimes every single day.



Prime Minister Kier Starmer’s selective outrage—furious over a mosque incident yet silent as churches literally burn to the ground has added to the outrage.



The same thing is happening all over Europe.



Politicians on both sides of the Atlantic rush to condemn “hate” when it suits their narrative, yet the destruction of Christian landmarks draws shrugs or excuses despite most cases remaining unsolved.

Mass immigration continues unchecked, with critics muzzled by speech laws while churches, the backbone of Western communities, are erased.

Responses on X captured the frustration. One user noted: “Churches are burning around the world And yet they keep telling us there’s nothing to see. Funny how the arsonists are never caught.” Another warned: “This is what muslims do as they conquer new areas. They destroy the religions sites of the conquered people. This has always been their way.”

Historic buildings that stood for over a century or more are torched while authorities prioritize everything except protecting the heritage that built their nations.

Canada—and the broader West—cannot afford more “coincidences.” Without border security, law enforcement that actually prosecutes, and leaders who value their own civilization over imported grievances, the fires will keep coming.

Your support is crucial in helping us defeat mass censorship. Please consider donating via Locals or check out our unique merch. Follow us on X @ModernityNews.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 08:50

Department for Education
Open 
UK and EU finalise agreement to bring UK into Erasmus+ in 2027
Thousands across the UK set to benefit from re-opening of the historic Erasmus+ programme | Department for Education.

UK Government News
Open 
Road vehicle incursion at York Street, Belfast
Investigation into a near miss between a train and a heavy goods vehicle near York Street, Belfast, Northern Ireland, 20 March 2026.

UK Government News
Open 
Joint Statement from Finance Ministers on the Middle East: 15 April 2026
Joint statement from the Finance Ministers of the United Kingdom, Australia, Japan, Sweden, Netherlands, Finland, Spain, Norway, Republic of Ireland, Poland and New Zealand on the Middle East.

UK Government News
Open 
Chancellor drives global push for ‘responsive and responsible’ international action in face of war
The Chancellor has coordinated a joint statement with international counterparts calling for a co‑ordinated response to the economic impacts of the Middle East conflict.

UK Government News
Open 
Council tax information letter 3/2026: Response to council tax administration consultation and other issues
Update for local authorities on the government’s response to its council tax administration consultation and other regulatory amendments.

UK Government News
Open 
UK and EU finalise agreement to bring UK into Erasmus+ in 2027
Thousands across the UK set to benefit from re-opening of the historic Erasmus+ programme

The Hill
Open 
Video shows Oklahoma principal tackle Columbine-inspired gunman: affidavit
Documents say the gunman admitted he “wanted to conduct his own school shooting like the Columbine shooters did.”

The Hill
Open 
Mexico refuses to designate Iran’s proxies as terrorist groups
Mexico is a great country but a complicated partner.

The Hill
Open 
Two cities, 100 days: Socialism delivers disappointment once again
When one political philosophy dominates without opposition, businesses depart, those with options leave and those without options absorb the consequences.

The Hill
Open 
Trump: China 'very happy' that US efforts will reopen Strait
President Trump insisted Wednesday that he is “permanently” opening Iran’s Strait of Hormuz, saying that China was “happy” about the decision and in exchange Beijing would no longer send weapons to Tehran. But his statement leaves a host of questions hanging in the balance on just what he means by opening the strait after he...

The Hill
Open 
Trump: 'Prepared' to nominate new Supreme Court justice if Alito, Thomas retire
President Trump said he is “prepared” to name another justice to the Supreme Court if one of the older members retires. No justice has suggested that they would be stepping down from their lifetime appointments, but there has been speculation surrounding Justice Samuel Alito, 76, who was hospitalized in March. “It could be two, could...

The Hill
Open 
Trump’s empty promises and the ruin of rural America
Rural Americans deserve better than Trump’s empty promises. This year they will have an opportunity to remind Republicans that their votes shouldn’t be taken for granted.

The Hill
Open 
Vance says young voters 'do not love' Trump's Middle East policy at TPUSA event
Vice President Vance on Tuesday defended President Trump's Middle East policy toward Iran and Gaza, saying young voters "do not love" the president's actions in the region, during an event with Turning Point USA in Athens, Ga. Members of the audience heckled the vice president 10 minutes into the start the event, The New York...

Harvard Business Review
Open 
Should You Develop Your Leadership Strengths—or Fix Your Weaknesses?
Answer four questions to diagnose your development needs.

BBC UK News
Open 
Ulster University to cut up to 450 jobs
An Ulster University spokesperson said that "redundancies across the Higher Education Sector have become unavoidable."

Mail Online
Open 
Supernanny star Jo Frost, 55, looks unrecognisable as she debuts grey hair in new video 17 years after her show ended
The nanny, 55, rose to fame on the Channel 4 show where she used tough love to help parents around Britain discipline their unruly children.

Mail Online
Open 
Sam Fox turns 60: Former Page 3 legend's wife Linda pays tribute to 'the sexiest woman in every room' as she shares a fun gallery of photos to celebrate her milestone birthday
Sam Fox's wife Linda Birgitte Olsen paid tribute to 'the sexiest woman in every room' in a social media post on Wednesday as she celebrated her 60th birthday.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
How many ships are crossing the Strait of Hormuz?
Since the start of the US blockade on Monday, 15 vessels have crossed the Strait of Hormuz, nine of which have links to Iran, BBC Verify analysis of ship-tracking data suggests.

ZDNet News
Open 
Why your TV wowed you in the store but looks unnatural at home - and how to fix it ASAP
Does your TV have an overly bright, fake-looking picture? Your settings might be set for the store, not your living room.

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Republic Europe Partners with LSE on PISCES Offering
Republic Europe, formerly Seedrs, has partnered with the London Stock Exchange to provide access to an investment opportunity through the Private Intermittent Securities and Capital Exchange System (PISCES). The PISCES initiative is relatively new and part of the UK’s push to facilitate private capital formation and trading. The... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
AI Smart Contracts Now Leveraging Machine Learning, Autonomous Agents : CertiK
CertiK has explained that blockchain technology has long relied on smart contracts as its backbone, automating agreements without intermediaries in areas ranging from decentralized finance to supply chain tracking. Yet these traditional contracts remain fixed once deployed, unable to adjust to shifting real-world conditions. According... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
UK Lags in Artificial Intelligence (AI) Adoption in Investing – Report
The hot artificial intelligence (AI) market is booming everywhere it seems, but apparently, the UK, as well as Europe, is stuck in the slow lane. According to a recent report, the UK is lagging behind its peers as AI use in investment activities flourishes elsewhere.... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Elliptic Shares Insights on US Treasury’s Proposed Sanctions Rules for Stablecoin Secondary Markets
Blockchain intelligence firm Elliptic has share a detailed update on a major regulatory step forward by the US Treasury Department. On April 8, 2026, the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) and the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) released a notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM)... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Crypto Hardware Wallet Provider Ledger Updates Digital Assets Management App
Crypto hardware wallet provider Ledger has released Ledger Wallet 4.0, an updated version of its companion application for managing digital assets. The software is intended for use alongside Ledger’s hardware devices, referred to as signers, and functions as a centralized interface for cross-chain trading and... Read More

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Best Smart Smoke Detector (and Why You Still Need a Dumb One)
Every smart smoke alarm I’ve tested has one potentially fatal flaw, trading fewer nuisance alarms for a risky sensor strategy.

Mac Rumours
Open 
Report: iPad Air to Gain OLED Display Early Next Year
Apple will bring OLED displays to its iPad Air models next year, according to a new report from Korea's ET News.





Citing industry sources, the outlet says Samsung Display will begin mass production of OLED panels around the end of 2026 or January next year, with a view to supplying panels for Apple's next iPad Air, expected to be released in early 2027. Apple last updated the iPad Air in March 2026 with an M4 chip.



Apple's iPad Pro models already have OLED displays, but the iPad Air models still use more affordable LCD displays that Apple calls Liquid Retina. The Liquid Retina displays do not support 120Hz ProMotion display technology, and are limited to 60Hz refresh rates.



OLED panels individually control each pixel, resulting in more precise color reproduction and deeper blacks compared to LCD. They also provide superior contrast, faster response times, better viewing angles, and greater design flexibility.



That said, unlike Apple's ‌iPad Pro‌ models, which feature two-stack low-temperature polycrystalline oxide (LTPO) OLED panels‌, the iPad Air‌ is expected to use single-stack low-temperature polycrystalline silicon (LTPS) panels, meaning that they may be dimmer and continue to lack ProMotion.



Apple's plan to transition the ‌‌iPad mini‌‌ from an LCD to an OLED display is already widely rumored, with reports suggesting the iPad mini 8 will adopt OLED later this year, albeit using the same cheaper single-stack LTPS panel.



Once the iPad mini and iPad Air receive the display upgrade, the entry-level iPad will be the only model in Apple's tablet lineup without an OLED panel.Related Roundup: iPad Air Tags: ETNews, OLEDBuyer's Guide: iPad Air (Buy Now)Related Forum: iPadThis article, 'Report: iPad Air to Gain OLED Display Early Next Year' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Deutsche Welle
Open 
EU chief urges bloc-wide push on age verification app to protect children online
EU chief calls for a bloc-wide push on an age verification app to protect children online. If enforced, users will have to prove their age to access legally restricted sites.

Mail Online
Open 
Is your olive oil FAKE? Prices have surged, but some popular brands are producing lower quality bottles from vague sources
From the type of bottle used to specific details of the oil's source and its certification, there are a number of tell-tale signs that your go-to olive oil may be lacking in authenticity.

Mail Online
Open 
Afghan boy, 16, says he 'was forced' to pilot small boat across the Channel as he faces trial for endangering 46 people
The teenager, who is charged with endangering others during a sea crossing to the UK without a valid entry clearance, is the first to be tried under the offence since it became law on January 5.

Mail Online
Open 
Rachel Reeves rakes in extra £215million from drivers in little over six weeks thanks to higher pump prices sparked by Iran war, analysis shows, sparking fresh calls to follow other countries and cut petrol taxes
Analysis today shows the cost of the conflict to drivers will hit an eye-watering £1.3billion by tonight because of rocketing prices since 28 February, when the war started.

Mail Online
Open 
Police investigate 'anti-semitic' attempted arson attack at north London synagogue as balaclava-clad suspects hurl petrol bombs
The incident, which is being treated as an antisemitic hate crime, happened at Finchley Reform Synagogue, in North Finchley, overnight.

Sky News Home
Open 
Two officers charged over death of pregnant woman after collision with police car
Two police officers have been charged in connection with the death of a heavily pregnant woman and her unborn baby in south-east London.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
From One Day to One Ring: Leo Woodall joins new The Lord of the Rings cast
Leo Woodall, Jamie Dornan and Kate Winslet will join returning actors Sir Ian McKellen and Elijah Wood.

BBC UK News
Open 
Starmer challenged over defence investment plan delay
The prime minister is facing growing pressure to spell out when the funding blueprint will be published.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Iran war: Tehran threatens Red Sea, Gulf trade
The Iranian military said it will seek to disrupt trade in the Red Sea and the Persian Gulf if a US naval blockade continues. Meanwhile, Israel and Hezbollah in Lebanon are trading fresh attacks. DW has the latest.

Mail Online
Open 
Best coffee machine: I've reviewed all the swanky models middle class kitchens can't get enough of - but here's why an under £100 machine beats the bunch
We've reviewed dozens of coffee machines, from beefy fully automatic bean-to-cup machines and manuals, to the best pod machines in order to find the very best models across a range of styles.

Mail Online
Open 
Sam Fox turns 60: Former Page 3 legend's wife Linda pays tribute to 'the sexiest woman in every room' as she shares a fun gallery of photos to celebrate her milestone birthday
Sam Fox is celebrating her 60th birthday in style as her wife Linda Birgitte Olsen paid tribute to 'the sexiest woman in every room' with a social media post on Wednesday.

Mail Online
Open 
Wayne Lineker, 63, goes public with his new Brazilian model girlfriend after saying finding love was 'the last piece in my puzzle' following eight months of sobriety and healing 17-year rift with brother Gary
The businessman and younger brother of presenter Wayne Lineker, 63, can be seen beaming in new snaps with his age-gap love interest.

Mail Online
Open 
Eight-week-old baby died after 'nanny gave him antihistamine' to make him sleep through the night
An inquest is calling for mandatory safe-guarding checks after a baby died after being administered antihistamine by a nanny who likely wanted to 'sedate' him.

Sky News Home
Open 
Police investigating attempted antisemitic arson attack on synagogue
Detectives are appealing for witnesses following an attempted arson attack on a synagogue.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘I wanted my work to be shameless’: 93-year-old artist Joan Semmel on her trailblazing nudes
In the 1970s, the painter shocked the art world with paintings modeled on her own nude body. Now in her 10th decade, she’s celebrated as a feminist pioneerOn a life-revivingly sunny day in New York, light pours into the SoHo studio of the 93-year-old painter Joan Semmel. She’s lived in the floor-through railroad apartment since 1970, and she works out of a high-ceilinged room overlooking Spring Street, dominated by a decades-old snake plant. A loft stuffed with canvases occupies one side of the carpeted room, while the other wall displays four recent paintings that will appear in her upcoming show, Continuities, spread between locations of Alexander Gray Associates in New York and Xavier Hufkens in Brussels.Each vibrant piece evokes elements that have long connected Semmel’s process – gesture, doubling, transparency and abstraction – and features the same model she’s used for more than 50 years: her own nude body. She has maintained that these are not self-portraits, and for much of her career they lacked heads. Semmel bursts into laughter while recalling her surprise when people asked how she felt about “being naked out there. I’m not, that’s a painting,” she says. “It’s a construct, but it’s not me.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
V&A East collection review – a dazzling wealth of inspiration to fire up the geniuses of the future
From showstopping fabrics to mind-expanding photos and an opening show celebrating Black British music, the real value of London’s new museum will surely lie in the art it inspiresOur architecture critic on the building Outside the V&A’s new outpost in east London, a nondescript young person stares blankly out across the old Olympic Park. This five-metre-tall sculpture is generic by design, an amalgam of “images, 3D scans and observations” of local people. It is easy to see why Thomas J Price’s idea appealed to a museum eager to engage with the area’s diverse communities – here is the quintessence of east London youth, executed at the scale of Michelangelo’s David – but by smoothing out the differences between individuals it sends out a confusing message.To aggregate data and identify common denominators is, after all, the logic of the algorithm. So the worry is that this museum will likewise second-guess the desires of its audience based on predictive models, guiding visitors towards things they are predisposed to “like” and away from opinions they are presumed not to share. So it is a relief to find, on entering the building, a vision of how people make and cultures meet that is infinitely richer, more heterogenous and more open-ended than those first impressions suggest. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Leeds Song festival review – from haiku to hauntings in evening that thinks outside the box
Various venues, LeedsRoderick Williams could breathe life into a telephone directory, but found much better material in his recital with Iain Burnside. A later concert featured atmospheric soundscapes from local composer Martin IddonLeeds’s top-tier celebration of the vocal arts continues to push the envelope. Two vastly different concerts were typical of director Joseph Middleton’s determination to think outside the box while honouring the festival’s roots in the traditional recital.Haiku, which premiered last year in Minnesota, sprang from the fertile brains of baritone Roderick Williams and pianist Iain Burnside. The roughly 90-minute programme revolved around eight poems taken from a collection of haiku written by Japanese Americans interned during the second world war. Libby Larsen’s settings – sung in both English and Japanese and collectively entitled Mobile/Not Mobile/ … – are distilled musical morsels, stuffed with imagination, exploring themes of exile, detention and deportation. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
What does Trump’s restrictive voting bill mean for US democracy? Post your questions about the Save act
The latest iteration of the Save America act could disenfranchise millions of voters. Guardian democracy reporters George Chidi and Sam Levine will be taking readers’ questions at 12pm ET (5pm BST) on Wednesday about its implications. Post yours nowSign in or create your Guardian account to join the discussionThe latest version of the Save America act could, if it is passed, upend voting for all Americans in the middle of a federal midterm election year and create costly, chaotic changes for elections workers. As this explainer by Rachel Leingang sets out: “this year’s version [of Save] includes expansive documentary proof of citizenship requirements and criminal liability for election officials from the initial Save act, in addition to a very strict voter ID requirement for casting a ballot and a provision that requires states to regularly turn their voter rolls over to the Department of Homeland Security.”George Chidi is the Guardian’s politics and democracy correspondent. His recent reporting has included looking at the states bringing in strict proof-0f-citizenship requirements to register to vote and covering efforts by the FBI to investigate Fulton county in Georgia over the 2020 election, the results of which are still challenged by Donald Trump’s supporters. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Magyar ‘is going to do good job’, Trump says as he distances himself from Orbán – Europe live
US president says he wasn’t ‘involved’ in Hungarian election despite JD Vance’s trip to Budapest ahead of pollsEurope correspondentAnalysts warn that while the result of Hungary’s parliamentary ballot may have dealt Europe’s far-right populists a temporary blow, it was far from marking a turn of the national-populist tide – and opponents would be foolish to see it as such. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Misogyny with a marketing budget’: UK AI firm accused of sexist advert
Narwhal Labs advert depicts woman next to strapline: ‘She outworks everyone. And she’ll never ask for a raise’An AI company which recently secured millions of pounds of investment has been accused of running a misogynistic and sexist advertising campaign.The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) has received at least seven complaints about the campaign by Narwhal Labs, which includes an advert depicting a woman next to the strapline: “She outworks everyone. And she’ll never ask for a raise.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Former Alabama star allegedly impersonated NFL’s Penix, Njoku and McKinney in $20m loan scam
Luther Davis, a national champion with the Crimson Tide, is said to have worn wigs and make-up to secure fraudulent loansA former University of Alabama football star plans to plead guilty later this month to orchestrating an alleged scheme in which he impersonated NFL players and defrauded lenders out of nearly $20m. The alleged scam is described in detail by the US attorney for the northern district of Georgia, including depictions of the former defensive lineman donning disguises during loan closings.Luther Davis, a member of the Alabama team that won the 2010 national championship game, along with a partner, CJ Evins, “obtained at least thirteen fraudulent loans totaling more than $19,845,000”, the criminal information filing alleges. A criminal information (CI) document is filed by a US attorney when a defendant agrees to waive the constitutional right to indictment by a grand jury and instead proceed by typically entering a guilty plea; both Davis and Evins are doing so according to the court docket.Aliya Sports said it had no further comment on this article. Sure Sports did not reply to a request for comment. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Jess Cartner-Morley on fashion: how to make sandwich dressing your style bread and butter
Here’s an easy rule for making sure your outfit is always tasteful – even when you’re spread too thinSome days inspiration strikes, and it feels fun and soul-nourishing to invest energy creating something fabulous for dinner. Other days, there’s a lot going on so you make a sandwich. And here’s the thing: both are fine. It’s a long game we’re playing here, folks.Which is a roundabout way of saying: the sandwich rule, which I am about to share with you, is not style done the cordon bleu way, but it sure is useful for days when you want to look nice but don’t have time for drama. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
How Toni Morrison blurred the lines between being an editor and a writer
Two recent books about Morrison attempt to make sense of her legacy as a writer, editor and thinker on Black lifeWhen I think of Toni Morrison’s novels, I often think of the poet Lucille Clifton’s response to Gorilla, My Love, the debut short story collection by “the other Toni”, Toni Cade Bambara: “She has captured it all, how we really talk, how we really are; and done it with both love and respect. I laughed until I cried, then laughed again. I loved it! She must love us very much.”Published in 1972, Bambara’s collection roves through a Black girlhood filled with wit, tenderness, play and betrayal with a rhythmic intensity that moves the way a blues lyric drifts into memory. Morrison edited the book, the first fiction acquisition of her 16-year tenure as an editor at Random House. The Tonis were both single mothers navigating multiple forms of literary labor, and they became fast friends. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
IMF hails UK’s budget deficit improvement and warns global debt heading towards post-WW2 high – business live
Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial newsIran war escalation could trigger global recession, IMF warnsRecord-high export revenues from crude oil have pushed Norway’s trade surplus to its highest level since January 2023.Statistics Norway has reported that the country’s export revenues rose to NOK 199.9bn (£15.6bn) in March 2026.The closure of the Strait of Hormuz has caused a significant supply shock in the oil market, which contributed to the high oil prices in March, and thus the highest export value ever.“I wonder what the hit to global GDP would be if a nuclear weapon hit London,” Bessent said to the BBC. “I am less concerned about short-term forecasts, for long-term security.”The relationship between the two countries looks increasingly fraught. On Tuesday, Reeves used her strongest language yet to criticize Donald Trump’s war in the Middle East and the damage it has wreaked on the global economy. Continue reading...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Attacks on academics in the US: A microcosm of a larger threat to democracy
In the new DW documentary "Democracy Under Attack: Can Dündar and Trump's America," the Turkish press freedom icon looks at the parallels between the erosion of democracy in the US and his home country.

Mail Online
Open 
Cher Lloyd announces her father Darren has died as she shares their heartbreaking text messages and says 'I've never felt pain like this'
Cher Lloyd's father Darren has died, the X Factor star has confirmed.

Mail Online
Open 
Film student Finbar Sullivan, 21, was 'surrounded and kicked on the floor before he was stabbed to death' on Primrose Hill in 'eruption of extreme violence' court hears
Finbar Sullivan, 21, was killed during a fight at the North London beauty spot last Tuesday.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Joshua v Fury will not be in Dublin - Hearn
A heavyweight showdown between Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua "is not going to happen at Croke Park" according to Eddie Hearn.

The Register
Open 
Headless 360: Salesforce's latest pitch to let AI do the dev work
Here comes 'enterprise vibe coding' as CRM giant aims to open development to anyone on the platform Salesforce has introduced what it calls Headless 360 at its developer event TDX, which starts today in San Francisco, designed to expand the reach of its app-building tools beyond traditional developers.…

The Register
Open 
US states can't account for datacenter tax breaks. Literally
Report says authorities are flouting accounting rules by failing to disclose revenue lost to server farm subsidies Many US states and local authorities are violating generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) by failing to disclose revenue lost to datacenter tax subsidy schemes, according to Good Jobs First.…

Mail Online
Open 
Excruciating moment Joe Biden summons black man by calling him 'BARACK'... but there's a twist
The former president has been ridiculed for the gaffe, which he made while making a speech at a university.

Mail Online
Open 
Film student Finbar Sullivan, 21, was 'surrounded and kicked on the floor before he was stabbed to death' on Primrose Hill, court hears
Finbar Sullivan, 21, was killed during a fight at the North London beauty spot last Tuesday.

Mail Online
Open 
GP who asked Muslim woman to remove her veil 'because he was struggling to understand her' is struck off for continuing to work while suspended
Dr Keith Wolverson was suspended for misconduct after he repeatedly asked the woman to remove her niqab during an appointment at Royal Stoke University Hospital, which she eventually did.

Mail Online
Open 
Police investigate 'anti-semitic' arson attack at north London synagogue as balaclava-clad suspects hurl petrol bombs
The incident, which is being treated as an antisemitic hate crime, happened at Finchley Reform Synagogue, in North Finchley, overnight.

Gizmodo
Open 
The Case for Tracking Everything
If every step taken, hour slept, and heartbeat can be measured, recorded, and analyzed, are we taking control of our health or losing the plot entirely?

Gizmodo
Open 
Lego’s Big New ‘Star Wars’ Set Comes Just in Time for ‘The Mandalorian and Grogu’ to Replace It
The latest UCS 'Star Wars' set brings Mando's latest ride to the line... just weeks before 'The Mandalorian and Grogu' is set to phase it out.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Nuba Mountains, a fragile refuge on Sudan's front line
Squeezed between Sudan and South Sudan, the self-governed Nuba Mountains are grappling with complex war dynamics while hosting hundreds of thousands of refugees they are scarcely able to support.

Mail Online
Open 
Meghan films top-secret appearance on MasterChef after breaking away from Harry during day two of their whirlwind Australian tour
Follow the Daily Mail's live coverage of Harry and Meghan's Australia tour here.

Mail Online
Open 
Film student Finbar Sullivan, 21, was 'surrounded and kicked on the floor before he was stabbed to death' on Primrose Hill, court hears
Alexis Bidace, 25, of Fore Street, Edmonton, and Ernest Boateng, 25, of Keswick Drive, Enfield, were arrested and appeared at Wimbledon Magistrates Court this morning.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Fallen by Louise Brangan review – an enraging account of Ireland’s Magdalene laundries
The horrifying story of the Catholic-run institutions that incarcerated thousands of women and girlsMany readers, and surely most Irish readers, will finish this book in a state of white-knuckled rage, mingled with sorrow and at least a pang of guilt. It is a detailed, thoroughgoing and appalling account of the Magdalene laundries, the most famous, and most infamous, among Ireland’s extended and varied landscape of penal or correctional institutions, which operated for most of the 20th century (the last of the laundries was closed in 1996).As the academic Louise Brangan points out in The Fallen, it is easy to become confused by the number and variety of prisons, mental asylums, orphanages, workhouses and homes for unmarried mothers that proliferated in Ireland between the foundation of the Irish Free State in 1922 and the late 1990s. However, the Magdalene laundries were unique. Dr Brangan writes: “In a regime distinguished by its excessive inhumanity, the Magdalene laundries were its deep end. In 1951, when the laundries were at their height, for every 100,000 males, 27 were in prison … [while] for every 100,000 females, 70 were in a laundry. These were not peripheral: they were Ireland’s main carceral institution.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Hungary’s voters shunned Orbán – but it may be too early to celebrate end of Europe’s far right
Leaders of Poland and Germany hail Péter Magyar’s majority as a turning of the tide – but analysts say there were other reasons for defeat of prime ministerFor Poland’s Donald Tusk, the crushing defeat of Hungary’s illiberal prime minister, Viktor Orbán, after 16 years in office was evidence that the world was “not condemned to authoritarian and corrupt governments”.Germany’s chancellor, Friedrich Merz, also believes the two-thirds majority secured by Orbán’s centre-right challenger, Péter Magyar, in Sunday’s elections was “a clear signal against rightwing populism” that showed “the pendulum is swinging back”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Stock markets ‘naive’ over Iran war optimism; Reeves and Bessent to meet at IMF – business live
Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial newsMiddle East crisis live: US claims blockade has ‘completely halted economic trade’ into Iran, as Trump hints at return to talks in PakistanRecord-high export revenues from crude oil have pushed Norway’s trade surplus to its highest level since January 2023.Statistics Norway has reported that the country’s export revenues rose to NOK 199.9bn (£15.6bn) in March 2026.The closure of the Strait of Hormuz has caused a significant supply shock in the oil market, which contributed to the high oil prices in March, and thus the highest export value ever.“I wonder what the hit to global GDP would be if a nuclear weapon hit London,” Bessent said to the BBC. “I am less concerned about short-term forecasts, for long-term security.”The relationship between the two countries looks increasingly fraught. On Tuesday, Reeves used her strongest language yet to criticize Donald Trump’s war in the Middle East and the damage it has wreaked on the global economy. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Starmer rejects accusation Labour is ‘complacent’ on defence funding
PM responds to warnings by former Nato chief George Robertson by saying defence spending is increasing rapidlyUK politics live – latest updatesKeir Starmer has said he does not agree with George Robertson’s comments about the government’s “corrosive complacency” on defence funding, as the prime minister faced sustained pressure on the issue.Questioned in the Commons about the claims by Robertson, the former Labour defence secretary and Nato chief who co-authored a defence review for the government, Starmer insisted that defence spending was increasing rapidly. Continue reading...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
India's aviation boom hits turbulence amid Iran war
From longer routes to higher fares, the Middle East conflict is exposing vulnerabilities in India's fast-growing airline sector.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
'I might not be here' - Stokes on being hit in face by ball
England captain Ben Stokes says he "got out quite lucky" with major facial surgery after an incident in the nets at Durham.

CNET News
Open 
We're Hooked on Satellites. It Could Blow Up in Our Faces
With 15,000 satellites crowding the sky and hundreds of thousands more planned, we may soon have a cataclysmic mess overhead.

CNET News
Open 
FBI Wi-Fi Router Hacked List: 5 Steps to Keep Your Router Safe Now
The FBI and Department of Justice recently disrupted a Russian attack targeting home and small-office business routers. Here's how to protect yours.

CNET News
Open 
This Harry Potter-Themed Smart Board Makes Learning Chess Feel Like Magic
The GoChess Wizard Lite board uses tech to guide you through the rules of the game. You can challenge the board or online players.

CNET News
Open 
After Months of Testing, I Found the Best Vegan Meal Delivery Services in 2026
Whether you're a vegan looking for easy meals or simply want to eat less meat, these are the vegan meal kits and prepared meal services that taste the best.

Pulsant Status
Open 
(CHG0058762) Pulsant Cloud Maintenance - Newcastle (NE-1)

Pulsant Status
Open 
(CHG0058755) Pulsant Cloud Maintenance - Croydon (LN-1)

Pulsant Status
Open 
(CHG0058759) Pulsant Cloud Maintenance - Edinburgh - South Gyle (SC-1)

Mail Online
Open 
I investigated one of New York's most infamous murders... a chilling detail from a Dirty Dancing star's death still haunts me
The first thing that struck Barbara Butcher when she stepped inside the loft-style apartment above Manhattan's famous Carnegie Deli was the stench of marijuana, red wine and blood.

Mail Online
Open 
Ruling the table! Dutch Queen Maxima and King Willem-Alexander play dominoes in Little Havana after overnight stay at the White House
The Dutch Queen, together with King Willem-Alexander, spent time with the community after an overnight stay at the White House at the request of President Donald Trump .

Mail Online
Open 
Madwoman, 31, abducts stranger's toddler at knifepoint in Walmart and cuts him... before armed cops bring abduction to deadly conclusion
Noemi Guzman, 31, snatched three-year-old Cyler Hillman on Tuesday morning while his mother Sara was shopping at Walmart in Omaha, Nebraska.

Mail Online
Open 
Revealed: The hidden health conditions that could turn your dog into a KILLER - and the early signs to look out for
Dogs are often referred to as 'man's best friend'. But vets have revealed how your innocent-looking pet could turn into a killer, if affected by certain health conditions.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Magyar ‘is going to do good job’, Trump says as he distances himself from Orbán – Europe live
US president says he wasn’t ‘involved’ in Hungarian election despite JD Vance’s trip to Budapest ahead of pollsMeanwhile, on the EU’s side, there is a growing expectation that the new Hungarian administration will drop Viktor Orbán’s veto blocking the €90bn loan for Ukraine.The EU’s defence commissioner, Andrius Kubilius, remarked today that “a new wind is blowing” in Hungary, as he stressed the EU is “ready to implement the loan as soon as we get the green light.”“I explained it clearly to her as well, and we have made it clear before, that we can only comply with conditions that are good for Hungarian people, good for Hungarian businesses and, in general, for our country.“ Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Swindled British tourist pays £1,500 for kebab on Rio beach
Scammer arrested after manipulating payment terminal to overcharge 1,000-fold in latest in spate of seaside consA scammer has been arrested in Rio de Janeiro for selling a kebab to an unsuspecting British tourist for nearly £1,500 – the latest in a spate of brazen beachside swindles.The man was detained on Tuesday on Copacabana beach, just over the road from two of the region’s top hotels. He and an accomplice allegedly manipulated a payment terminal to dramatically overcharge the foreigner for their meat skewer. The victim reportedly paid 10,000 reais (£1,480) for the meal rather than 10 (£1.50). Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Starmer rejects accusation that Labour is ‘complacent’ on defence funding
PM responds to warnings by former Nato chief George Robertson, saying defence spending is increasing rapidlyUK politics live – latest updatesKeir Starmer has said he does not agree with George Robertson’s comments about the government’s “corrosive complacency” on defence funding, as the prime minister faced sustained pressure on the issue.Questioned in the Commons about the warnings by Robertson, the former Labour defence secretary and Nato chief who co-authored a defence review for the government, Starmer insisted that defence spending was increasing rapidly. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
US eases sanctions on state-run Venezuelan banks
The move will make it easier for the banks to conduct transactions in dollars.

Russia Today News
Open 
Trump opening Strait of Hormuz ‘for China’

TechRadar News
Open 
We need to talk about this bizarre video of a robot chasing wild boars

TechRadar News
Open 
Valve's Steam price history feature could be extended to all regions — but it needs one big change before the Steam Machine's launch

TechRadar News
Open 
Our sister site Tom's Guide just got a massive upgrade — check it out now

TechRadar News
Open 
Windows 11 tool brings a macOS feature to the desktop — and I can't believe this useful trick isn't in Microsoft's OS already

TechRadar News
Open 
Amazon’s new AI Bio Discovery tool can provide ‘every researcher’ with ‘lab-in-the-loop drug discovery’ – 40+ AI biology models can filter 300,000 novel antibody candidates down to the top results for testing in just weeks

TechRadar News
Open 
'There is a romance to platonic love': Big Mood season 2 star Nicola Coughlan on why female friendship in new Channel 4 series needs Bridgerton fan treatment

TechRadar News
Open 
'A total disappointment': Some Galaxy Watch owners are seeing major battery drains after the latest software update

Digital Trends
Open 
Google drops a new Android Canary build, chirping with a bunch of UI changes
Google's latest Android Canary build introduces two small changes: a friendlier empty notification shade and a cleaner app long-press menu.

Digital Trends
Open 
These camera-equipped earbuds offer a wild glimpse at the future of AirPods
A new University of Washington prototype puts tiny cameras into ordinary-looking wireless earbuds, offering a surprisingly plausible preview of how future AirPods could work.

Digital Trends
Open 
The Lord of the Rings: The Hunt for Gollum reveals its cast, and it’s just wonderful
Warner Bros. has revealed the star-studded cast for The Lord of the Rings: The Hunt for Gollum.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Bank of America’s 30% jump in equities revenue helps power an earnings beat
Bank of America’s good quarter was helped by volatility and an easier regulatory environment.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
These stocks and ETFs can beat the ‘sell in May’ slump — and dodge the 2026 midterm blues
You don’t have to exit the market to survive a summer lull. Here’s your ‘stay and play’ strategy for the 2026 election cycle.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Big Tech’s giant headache: billions in AI capital spending means investors demand results
Implementing AI carries plenty of risks — most of which stem from its tremendous potential.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
The Strait of Hormuz could matter a lot less in the future — here’s how
Iran played it’s trump card by shutting down oil tanker traffic. It likely won’t be able to use it again.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Morgan Stanley beats Wall Street earnings forecasts — by a long way
The banking giant posted earnings per share of $3.43, compared to forecasts of $3.02.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Turkey: School shooting leaves 4 dead
The deadly shooting comes just a day after a similar incident in the country in which 16 people were injured.

Mail Online
Open 
Trump declares Strait of Hormuz 'permanently open' just hours after imposing Iran blockade as China intervenes: 'They want me to do it'
Donald Trump has declared the Strait of Hormuz 'permanently open' despite his ongoing naval blockade amid growing concerns from China.

Mail Online
Open 
Starmer warned not to 'fail' Hillsborough victims on disaster's anniversary amid row over new openness law - as Liverpool manager Slot adds voice to calls for action
Sir Keir was challenged at Prime Minister's Questions over delays to the so-called 'Hillsborough Law' on the 37th anniversary of the disaster that left 97 Liverpool fans dead due to police blunders.

Mail Online
Open 
Two men accused of murder over Primrose Hill stabbing of 21-year-old Finbar Sullivan are remanded in custody
Alexis Bidace, 25, of Fore Street, Edmonton, and Ernest Boateng, 25, of Keswick Drive, Enfield, were arrested and appeared at Wimbledon Magistrates Court this morning.

BBC UK News
Open 
Boy arrested following cyber attack on school IT system
The IT system used by schools, called C2K, was targeted in a cyber attack at the start of the school Easter break.

The Verge
Open 
The new Tomodachi Life is made to be shared — even if Nintendo doesn’t want you to
Tomodachi Life: Living the Dream is hard to explain. The best way to understand is to see it in action; a screenshot of Handsome Squidward and Bob Belcher falling in love over their shared appreciation of cannibalism makes it clear that, while it's a life sim, the game is really a joke-generating machine. Living the […]

Computer Weekly
Open 
England Rugby chooses Capgemini as it targets half a million new fans
French supplier will support the Rugby Football Union’s four-year plan to ensure the sport thrives in England

Computer Weekly
Open 
TDX 2026: Salesforce depicts SaaS as an agentic evolution
Salesforce paints a picture of software as a service evolving in an agentic direction, at its developer conference in San Francisco, with AgentExchange as an ecosystem lubricant

Computer Weekly
Open 
Data dive: A new American Century in the datacentre pipeline?
Looking at datacentre development internationally, we see how the UK faces apparent relative decline, how countries are responding to the AI age, and what MW vs GDP can tell us

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Iran war: Iran military threatens Red Sea, Gulf trade
The Iranian military said it will seek to disrupt trade in the Red Sea and the Persian Gulf if a US naval blockade continues. Meanwhile, Israel and Hezbollah in Lebanon are trading fresh attacks. DW has the latest.

Mail Online
Open 
Harry and Meghan meet Australian radio host behind campaign to ban social media for under 16s in latest stop of quasi-royal tour
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex joined guests including local radio star Michael Wipfli and his wife Lisa, an influencer - who are helming calls to ban social media for under 16s.

Mail Online
Open 
Norway's future King defends wife Mette-Marit, saying 'we've been through a lot' - amid backlash over her friendship with Epstein and her son's rape trial
Speaking during an official engagement in Møre og Romsdal, Haakon, 52, also admitted Mette-Marit's illness 'is a part of our daily life' after she was diagnosed with a chronic lung disease in 2018.

Mail Online
Open 
Paedophile with indecent child images as his phone wallpaper is jailed after shocked passenger spots him watching abuse videos on train
David Johnson, 35, was caught viewing videos of young children being abused while on a train from Stafford to London on September 23. He has been jailed for two years and three months.

Mail Online
Open 
I'm A Celebrity fans left open-mouthed by Gemma Collins' response after David Haye takes swipe at her looks - jeering 'he needs to be knocked down a peg!'
On Tuesday, the boxer and Ashley Roberts took part in the latest Bushtucker Trial, The Wicked Watering Hole, and went up against the green team's Adam Thomas and Craig Charles.

Mail Online
Open 
Two men accused of murder over Primrose Hill stabbing of 21-year-old Finbar Sullivan are remanded in custody
Alexis Bidace, 25, of Fore Street, Edmonton, and Ernest Boateng, 25, of Keswick Drive, Enfield, were arrested and are due to appear at Wimbledon Magistrates Court later today.

Mail Online
Open 
Trump declares Strait Hormuz 'permanently open' just hours after imposing Iran blockade as China intervenes: 'They want me to do it'
Donald Trump has declared the Strait of Hormuz 'permanently open' despite his ongoing naval blockade amid growing concerns from China.

Sky News Home
Open 
Teenager stabbed to death was 'amazing son whose heart is pure'
The family of a 16-year-old who was stabbed to death have paid tribute to an "amazing boy and son whose heart is pure" after two teenagers were arrested on suspicion of murder.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
How the US-Israel war on Iran is affecting African economies
For some, the impact is already being felt but others remain in limbo over their energy security and are hostage to an unlikely de-escalationDon’t get The Long Wave delivered to your inbox? Sign up hereIt remains a confusing situation, but the strait of Hormuz now appears to have been closed twice. Once by Iran, and then by the US, which this week announced a blockade of its own on the reduced number of ships using Iranian ports. Higher fuel and energy costs for ordinary people across the world are the headlines, but as the war on Iran enters its sixth week, shipping restrictions and strikes on energy facilities in Gulf countries are affecting some of the poorest and most vulnerable economies in the world in more profound ways.I spoke to Dr. Zainab Usman, senior research scholar at the Centre on Global Energy Policy at Columbia University, about how the war and its blockades are affecting some African countries. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Bridget Jones statue becomes permanent resident of Leicester Square: ‘She makes Londoners feel seen’
Extension of three-year lifespan for bronze coincides with 25th anniversary rerelease of original romcomA record 149 days have now passed without alcohol, cigarettes or ice-cream for Bridget Jones’s statue in Leicester Square in London – and her fast is set to be extended indefinitely.Originally conceived to be in situ for three years, the bronze statue, which was unveiled in November, has now been granted permanent residence opposite the Empire Casino and adjacent to the toilets, where she joins the likes of Harry Potter, Mary Poppins and Batman as part of Westminster council’s Scenes in the Square initiative. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
New EU entry-exit system causing up to three-hour delays, say airports
Airport body has asked for power to suspend EES checks requiring personal information and biometrics, say reportsBusiness live – latest updatesTravellers going through some European airports are reportedly waiting up to three hours at border checks due to the EU’s new entry-exit system (EES).Passengers in airports in countries such as France, Germany, Belgium, Italy, Spain and Greece are waiting several hours at border checks, the Airports Council International (ACI) body has said. Continue reading...

Ian Visits
Open 
Four days of tube disruption expected due to tube strike by the RMT
If strike action is not called off, there will be four days of disruption to the London Underground next week due to RMT strike action.Read more ›

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Kering And Hermès Sink As War Batters Earnings; Goldman Warns Luxury Dip-Buying Is "Premature"
Kering And Hermès Sink As War Batters Earnings; Goldman Warns Luxury Dip-Buying Is "Premature"

Goldman's Natasha de la Grense summed it up well this morning: "Money was waiting on the sidelines to buy luxury for a de-escalation play – that feels premature with three misses in three days." 

Disappointments from Kering and Hermès, both of which fell short of analyst estimates, reinforced the view that the industry of fine wine, overpriced shirts, shoes, belts, and designer bags, is not yet out of the woods and sent the Goldman Sachs EU Luxury Goods Index (GSXELUXG) down more than 4%. 



Gucci's turnaround appears to be faltering, with first-quarter revenue plunging 8% - nearly double the expected decline as the US-Iran conflict hit Middle East demand and tourism. 

The conflict started late in the first quarter, resulting in an 11% sales drop in the Middle East (about 5% of revenue) and shaving roughly 1 percentage point off Kering's overall sales. 

Shares of Kering in Paris trade down as much as 10%, leaving them down about 16.5% on the year. 

Also in the luxury space, Hermès missed expectations in the first quarter, with sales up 5.6% at constant exchange rates versus the Bloomberg Consensus estimates of 7.44%. This miss sent shares in Paris spiraling down by 10%, leaving them down 23% on the year.



Hermès' weakness was similar to Kering's, largely due to the Middle East Conflict. Sales in the region fell 5.9%, while France declined 2.8%, as lower tourism spending weighed on results, particularly due to fewer Middle Eastern shoppers visiting stores across France, Switzerland, and the UK. Italy was also affected, but not as much.

Both earnings results add to mounting evidence that the war is hitting luxury demand more broadly.

Natasha at Goldman outlined six points of what her team learned today about luxury stock earnings: 


Taking a step back from this morning's large share price moves in Luxury, what have we actually learnt from Q1 prints? Most companies are talking to a -100-150bps headwind in the quarter from events in the Middle East which is not too surprising but implies that underlying growth is still unexciting, particularly when you consider easier comps vs Q4. Areas of prior strength are still very solid (US, jewellery) and, on the positive side, the consumer is responding to leather newness in certain pockets. However, there is no real step change in the overall demand backdrop (aspirational remains weak) and so no reason to own this sector at large. Money was waiting on the sidelines to buy luxury for a de-escalation play – that feels premature with three misses in three days.


Hermes was the biggest surprise for me today. It seems this group's exposure to tourism is higher than many of us had realised (>50% of sales in France), while wholesale was impacted by not just Travel Retail but also lower deliveries to concessions in the Middle East. On the positive side, space contribution will pick up through the year - Hermes didn't say inventory had been held back ahead of store openings but did remind us Leather production can be lumpy, guiding for improved performance sequentially and reiterating FY guidance.


I still think the structural bear case on Hermes is overstated while waiting lists still exist and second hand bags are priced at a premium. And, with no change to outlook, consensus likely stays at 9% for FY26 - bang in line with the pre-covid average meaning this company is still "doing what it says on the tin". That said, I appreciate there was nothing in the print to disprove the bears today. China is where we have heard most concern on the brand – largely due to second hand market headwinds (where there is more authentication, high supply and price premia have come down). To be fair, Hermes' slight growth in China isn't bad vs peers (Kering cluster down mid-teens, LVMH cluster flat) particularly considering the tougher comp. Bears also point to the non-Leather slowdown today as a sign of softer global brand momo – again this is hard to disprove, although they did flag on the call that RTW and shoes are quite geared to ME and tourism.


Meanwhile, I am less surprised by the move at Kering today. Unlike at Hermes, positioning was not short, and arguably the print raises more questions on FY delivery. Speaking with investors this morning, the main questions being raised are: 1) is the US improvement really a sign that the Gucci turnaround is working, or simply a function of macro (local wealth effects). Kering said that all brands improved in the US, with strength driven by higher end cohorts rather than this being broad based. In addition Gucci brand was down double digits in all other regions, suggesting global brand momo is still poor; 2) is FY26 guidance of top line growth across all brands achievable considering Gucci retail -9% in Q1, current trading for the group flat (consensus Q2 group +2%), ongoing conflict in the Middle East and a large store closure program; 3) was there a soft warning on margins in here? On the call, the CFO reiterated an "ambition" to grow margins but introduced the idea of stable margins even without growth.


Previously, investors told us they didn't want to be short Kering ahead of the CMD but there is a growing view today that management will have to concede the top line recovery will be back-end loaded and, without top line, any margin story is hard to back. I'd still prefer to wait post CMD before putting on the short as I expect Mr de Meo will come across well once again and the headline on MT margins could sound good. Middle East would have been a credible reason to step away from top line guidance last night – the fact they didn't arguably speaks to confidence in brand strategy presentations to come.


Bottom line: More earnings cuts for Luxury. It is still too early to go back to this sector with both limited visibility on how long conflict lasts and also likely knock-on impacts even after a ceasefire (rising inflation impacting aspirational demand recovery). Our flow has been better to sell in Luxury all year, driven by LOs. We think that investor base needs line of sight on a return to mid-single-digit growth before considering stepping back into this space.

GSXELUXG is down 4% this morning on dismal earnings from Kering and Hermès, and the index has been in an overall bear market since its 2025 peak. The index has traded sideways over the last five years.



Luxury was already under pressure before the conflict because of a tough economic backdrop, but the conflict in the Middle East made things a whole lot worse. The good news is that the US and Iran are agreeing to extend a truce, according to AP News, as talks of a peace deal appear promising.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 07:45

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Tether Launches Self-Custodial Wallet Supporting USDT, Bitcoin, & Tokenized Gold
Tether Launches Self-Custodial Wallet Supporting USDT, Bitcoin, & Tokenized Gold

Authored by Naga Avan-Nomayo via TheBlock.co,

Tether, issuer of the world’s largest stablecoin USDT, is stepping further out from behind the rails with the launch of its self-custodial wallet, which it says is designed to put its payments infrastructure directly in the hands of users, rather than operating solely as a backend layer for crypto markets.



The application, dubbed tether.wallet, targets "billions of users left behind by the traditional financial system," the firm said in a Tuesday announcement.

Tether stated that it also builds on a network that already reaches more than 570 million people globally.

Until now, that infrastructure has largely powered liquidity, settlement, and payments across crypto rather than serving as a direct consumer product.

The wallet focuses on a narrow set of assets. It supports digital dollars via USDT and USAT, tokenized gold through XAUT, and bitcoin -  a mix Tether says reflects "the only assets that truly matter for most of the people."

Moreover, the product also strips out several long-standing friction points in crypto.

Users can send funds using human-readable identifiers, instead of wallet addresses. Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino said the aim is to make digital asset transfers "as easily as sending a message," without intermediaries or loss of custody.

Transaction fees can be paid directly in the asset being transferred, removing the need for separate gas tokens.

Private keys remain fully user-controlled, with all transactions signed locally on-device, per the company’s statement.

Tether’s expansion

The launch extends a broader push by Tether to move up the stack from issuer and infrastructure provider toward consumer-facing products.

In recent months, the company has open-sourced its Wallet Development Kit to enable self-custodial wallets for both humans and AI agents, backed crypto wallet integrations in platforms like Rumble, and supported stablecoin payout systems through investments such as Whop.

That direction ties into Ardoino’s longer-term view that future financial activity will not be limited to humans.

He has previously argued that AI agents will require native, self-custodial wallets and will rely on bitcoin and stablecoins for machine-to-machine payments.

It appears tether.wallet is built on that same foundation.

The app runs on Tether’s open-source Wallet Development Kit, supporting transactions across humans, machines and AI systems, with support for networks including Ethereum, Polygon, Arbitrum, and Bitcoin’s Lightning Network.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 08:05

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Nvidia Unveils New AI Open Model, Sparking Rally In Quantum Stocks
Nvidia Unveils New AI Open Model, Sparking Rally In Quantum Stocks

Nvidia unveiled the world's first open-source AI models to accelerate the development of quantum computing. The news sent shares of several Asian software and cybersecurity firms soaring and sparked a rally in U.S.-listed quantum stocks in premarket trading.

Nvidia's Ising open-model family is designed to improve two critical areas: quantum processor calibration and quantum error correction. Nvidia claims the models deliver calibration capabilities it describes as industry-leading, while its decoding tools operate 2.5 times faster and achieve up to 3x greater accuracy than traditional open-source approaches.

"AI is essential to making quantum computing practical," Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang stated.

Jensen continued, "With Ising, AI becomes the control plane, the operating system of quantum machines, transforming fragile qubits into scalable and reliable quantum-GPU systems."

In South Korea, shares of software and cybersecurity firms, including Axgate Co. and ICTK Co., jumped to the 30% daily trading limit. China's GuoChuang Software Co. and QuantumCTek Co., along with Japan's Fixstars Corp., rose at least 8%.



In the U.S., D-Wave Quantum Inc. (QBTS) rose 10%, while IonQ Inc. (IONQ) and Rigetti Computing Inc. (RGTI) climbed 5.9% following the Nvidia news.



Amid the hype in quantum stocks, Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Robert Lea reminded traders, "While these tools can potentially help accelerate developments, the deployment of practical, large-scale quantum computing remains a long way off."

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/15/2026 - 08:20

Department for Education
Open 
Government scraps high-sugar food from school menus
High-sugar and deep-fried food taken off the menu in new plans to overhaul school dinners amid health crisis facing children, helping to tackle obesity. | Department for Education.

UK Government News
Open 
Defending against biological threats: UKDI launches Biosecurity Frontiers competition
This competition seeks innovations to strengthen the UK's ability to detect, prevent and respond to biological risks

UK Government News
Open 
Shared ownership and the Renters’ Rights Act: letter to registered providers of social housing
Letter from the Minister for Housing and Planning to registered providers of social housing on shared ownership improvements and the Renters’ Rights Act.

UK Government News
Open 
Fixing the foundations: government fund to fix England's bridges, flyovers and tunnels now open
Funding will help local councils with cost of fixing England's aging road infrastructure.

Cycling UK
Open 
Bike test: electric folding bikes
Compact electric folders are the easier-cycling option you can take almost anywhere. Dan Joyce tests a FLIT M2 and MiRider 16 GB3 on roads, cycle tracks and trains

The Hill
Open 
Sorry, Stephen Miller: Immigrant kids have a right to an education, too 
Taking aim at undocumented children flies in the face of legal precedent, existing law and common sense. It would be bad policy as well as bad politics for any state to target kids based on their immigration status.  

The Hill
Open 
US military turns around 6 ships, 'completely' halts trade from Iran's ports amid blockade
The U.S. military on Tuesday said it has turned six ships around in its effort to "completely" halt trade from Iran's ports — the first effort since President Trump imposed a blockade on the Strait of Hormuz. Within the first 24 hours of the blockade, six merchant vessels complied with U.S. forces to turn around...

The Hill
Open 
Imminence is no longer the criterion for military preventive action
Even the U.N. has acknowledged that a threat of nuclear annihilation by a hostile country need not be imminent in order to justify preventive military action.

The Hill
Open 
Swalwell sexual misconduct allegations spur legal storm 
Allegations of sexual misconduct against Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.) spurred the end of his gubernatorial bid and tenure in Congress. But legal scrutiny over the claims are just getting started. Swalwell announced his resignation Monday evening, just days after initial reports emerged alleging that he twice sexually assaulted a former aide and engaged in sexual...

Techdirt
Open 
‘Trump Phone’ Sees Price Hike, But Still No Release Date (Or Actual Phone)
Last year the fraud-prone Trump organization announced a half-assed wireless phone company. As we noted at the time, calling this a “phone company” was generous; it was a lazy marketing rebrand of another, half-assed, “MAGA-focused” mobile virtual network operator (MVNO) named Patriot Mobile, which itself just resold T-Mobile service. So basically just another lazy Trump brand […]

BBC Technology News
Open 
Tech Life
Can pedestrians, runners and cyclists safely share the road with self-driving vehicles?

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Four killed in second Turkish school shooting in two days
There has been no official confirmation of who has been killed or what has happened to the attacker.

ZDNet News
Open 
AI is getting better at your job, but you have time to adjust, according to MIT
AI may be 'minimally sufficient' at certain work tasks by 2029, according to new MIT research. An expert offers some advice on how to prepare.

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Danske Bank Faces Backlash After Unintended Disclosure of Customer Addresses
A significant oversight at Denmark’s Danske Bank has recently spotlighted persistent weaknesses in how banks safeguard personal information during routine operations. Confidential residential details belonging to thousands of account holders at Danske Bank were briefly made visible to external recipients in domestic payment transfers. The... Read More

Crowdfund Insider
Open 
Deutsche Börse Group Announces $200M Stake in Investment Platform Kraken
Deutsche Börse Group has committed $200 million to acquire a minority ownership position in Payward, Inc., the company that powers the global digital asset exchange Kraken. The investment, executed through a secondary share purchase, gives the German market infrastructure leader a 1.5 percent fully diluted... Read More

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Best Wi-Fi Routers of 2026 for Working, Gaming, and Streaming
Don’t suffer the buffer. These WIRED-tested home routers will deliver reliable internet across your home, whatever your needs or budget.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Best GoPro Camera (2026): Compact, Budget, Accessories
You’re an action hero, and you need a camera to match. We guide you through all the models, plus accessory recommendations and hidden software tricks to try.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
12 Best Standing Desks of 2026, Tested and Reviewed
Take your home office to new heights with our favorite motorized standing desks.

TechRadar Reviews
Open 
'The ultimate funny clip generator' — Tomodachi Life: Living the Dream is the perfect Nintendo Switch game for the social media age

Mac Rumours
Open 
Report: iPad Air to Gain OLED Display Next Year
Apple will bring OLED displays to its iPad Air models next year, according to a new report from Korea's ET News.





Citing industry sources, the outlet says Samsung Display will begin mass production of OLED panels around the end of 2026 or January next year, with a view to supplying panels for Apple's next iPad Air, expected to be released in early 2027. Apple last updated the iPad Air in March 2026 with an M4 chip.



Apple's iPad Pro models already have OLED displays, but the iPad Air models still use more affordable LCD displays that Apple calls Liquid Retina. The Liquid Retina displays do not support 120Hz ProMotion display technology, and are limited to 60Hz refresh rates.



OLED panels individually control each pixel, resulting in more precise color reproduction and deeper blacks compared to LCD. They also provide superior contrast, faster response times, better viewing angles, and greater design flexibility.



That said, unlike Apple's ‌iPad Pro‌ models, which feature two-stack low-temperature polycrystalline oxide (LTPO) OLED panels‌, the iPad Air‌ is expected to use single-stack low-temperature polycrystalline silicon (LTPS) panels, meaning that they may be dimmer and continue to lack ProMotion.



Apple's plan to transition the ‌‌iPad mini‌‌ from an LCD to an OLED display is already widely rumored, with reports suggesting the iPad mini 8 will adopt OLED later this year, albeit using the same cheaper single-stack LTPS panel.



Once the iPad mini and iPad Air receive the display upgrade, the entry-level iPad will be the only model in Apple's tablet lineup without an OLED panel.Related Roundup: iPad Air Tags: ETNews, OLEDBuyer's Guide: iPad Air (Buy Now)Related Forum: iPadThis article, 'Report: iPad Air to Gain OLED Display Next Year' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mail Online
Open 
My daughter took her own life after relationship with domestic abuser broke her - the police were too late to save her and he received just four years for his crimes, now I'm fighting for justice
A woman whose daughter who took her own life after she was left broken by a relationship with a domestic abuser is calling for justice after he was jailed for the abuse, but for her death.

Russia Today News
Open 
Türkiye rocked by second school shooting in two days

Mail Online
Open 
What no one dares to admit about being thin - and the effect it has on men: I've been everything from 7st 8lb to 16st. You might not like it, but this is the no-nonsense truth...
Over the course of my 54 years, I have weighed everything from 7st 8lb to 16st. I am only 5ft 4in, so at my heaviest I fell into the morbidly obese category.

Mail Online
Open 
Katy Perry IS being investigated by Victoria Police over Ruby Rose's sexual assault allegations
Victoria Police have begun investigating the sexual assault allegations Ruby Rose made against pop star Katy Perry.

BBC World News
Open 
Four killed and several injured after school shooting in Turkey
It comes a day after 16 people were injured after an ex-student opened fire at another high school, also in the south of the country.

Sky News Home
Open 
Journalist detained in Kuwait after posting Iran war video, activists say
A journalist has been detained in Kuwait after posting videos related to the war in Iran, according to a press freedom advocacy group.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
New year celebrations in parts of Asia and a baby elephant: photos of the day – Wednesday
The Guardian’s picture editors select photographs from around the world Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Republicans struggle to highlight Trump’s cuts as Americans see little effect on Tax Day – US politics live
Republicans had hoped that Trump’s 2025 tax cuts would be at the forefront of voters’ minds, but many have reportedly not noticed a differenceUS taxpayers spend hundreds more on military What does strict voter ID bill mean for US democracy? Ask your questionsSign up for the Breaking News US emailDonald Trump is in Washington today. While the president will spend most of the day in policy meetings that are closed to the press, first lady Melania Trump will make a rare trip to Capitol Hill to take part in a House Ways and Means committee roundtable on improving foster care and education.While we’re not expecting to hear from Trump today, Karoline Leavitt will hold a White House press briefing for at 1pm ET, where she’ll be be joined by treasury secretary Scott Bessent. We’ll bring you the latest lines as that gets underway. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Quakers among charities warning new regulator powers could stifle advocacy
Exclusive: Civil society groups sign letter urging ministers to consult on Charity Commission measures meant to tackle extremism Several leading civil society organisations have urged the government to consult the sector before introducing new powers for the Charity Commission, which they caution risks “suppressing legitimate advocacy” at a time when civic space is under increased pressure.Signatories, including leaders from some of the UK’s largest civil society bodies, alongside faith-based and community organisations, wrote to the culture secretary, Lisa Nandy, saying the proposed social cohesion measures could lead to the “suppression of lawful advocacy, campaigning and community engagement”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
$30m an hour: big oil reaping huge war windfall from consumers, analysis finds
Exclusive: Climate action blockers including Saudi Arabia, Russia and major fossil fuel firms set to make extra $234bn by end of 2026Middle East crisis – live updatesBusiness live – latest updatesThe world’s top 100 oil and gas companies banked more than $30m every hour in unearned profit in the first month of the US-Israeli war in Iran, according to exclusive analysis for the Guardian. Saudi Aramco, Gazprom and ExxonMobil are among the biggest beneficiaries of the bonanza, meaning key opponents of climate action continue to prosper.The conflict pushed the price of oil to an average of $100 (£74) a barrel in March, leading to estimated windfall war profits for the month of $23bn for the companies. Oil and gas supplies will take months to return to pre-war levels and the companies will make $234bn by the end of the year if the oil price continues to average $100. The analysis uses data from a leading intelligence provider, Rystad Energy, analysed by Global Witness. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
Boy arrested following cyber attack on school IT system
The IT system used by schools, called C2K, had been targeted in a cyber attack at the start of the school Easter break.

BBC Formula One
Open 
What do you know about teenagers in F1?
Following 19-year-old Kimi Antonelli's rise to the top of the drivers' championship, take the BBC Sport quiz to see how much you know about F1's teenagers.

Mail Online
Open 
British tourists warned as Tenerife police clamp down on mobility scooter misuse with fines of up to £900
British tourists heading to Tenerife may now face fines of up to £900 for misusing mobility scooters, as police reportedly seize vehicles and rental companies ramp up rigorous checks.

Mail Online
Open 
Robert Jenrick calls for Southport killer's parents to be deported after damning injury finds they 'should have stopped him'
Unveiling his report on Monday, inquiry chair Sir Adrian Fulford said Alphonse Rudakubana, 50, and Laetitia Muyazire, 54, must take some blame for the atrocity.

Mail Online
Open 
Paedophile pensioner, 82, who admitted he 'enjoys' looking through his collection of 75,000 abuse images avoids jail because of his age
When he was arrested, Louis Rumis, 82, boasted that he 'enjoyed' looking at the images, which included depraved videos of babies as young as six-months-old being abused.

Mail Online
Open 
Trump gives Iran new two-day ultimatum as ceasefire holds steady amid blockade... and he surges more US troops into Middle East
Donald Trump has imposed a 48-hour deadline to bring the war with Iran to a head, as the Pentagon moves to surge thousands of troops into the Middle East.

Sky News Home
Open 
Boy believed to be first charged under new border law due in court
A teenager, believed to be the first person charged under new UK border legislation, is set to appear in court accused of endangering others during a sea crossing.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
How to turn old bread into a brilliant Italian cake – recipe | Waste not
This Lombardian ‘village cake’ is simple, delicious and endlessly adaptableOld sourdough is my secret ingredient. To stop it going mouldy, I take it out of any plastic packaging and keep it in the bread bin with plenty of airflow around it – that way, it will dry out slowly, rather than turning mouldy. Any odds and ends, meanwhile, I store in a cloth bag to use in various dishes, from pangrattato (or poor man’s parmesan) to strata, a savoury bread-and-butter pudding.My new favourite recipe discovery for using up stale bread is today’s torta paesana, or village cake, from Lombardy. The best way I can come up with to describe it is that it’s a bit like a firm baked custard. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘We took clothes, a blanket and a dog’: the people displaced by a dam 50 years ago, but still fighting for justice
The Avá-Guarani community have received little recognition of the destruction of their land by the Itaipu dam on the Paraguay-Brazil borderWhen the Indigenous leader Teodoro Alves was a young child in his community of Ocoy-Jacutinga, on the border between Paraguay and Brazil, a river ran through it. The Paraná River, which rises in Brazil and flows south through Paraguay to the Río de la Plata between Argentina and Uruguay, once structured the lives of Avá-Guarani people along its banks.That continuity, Alves says, was broken in the 1970s with the construction of the Itaipu hydroelectric dam, which submerged their lands and displaced hundreds of families. “I saw the Paraná River before the Itaipu dam was closed. Now I see an immense lake. The river died completely. It died with the Avá-Guarani people,” Alves says. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The supreme court needs to put limits on Trump’s use of the pardoning power | Steven Greenhouse
The president has reportedly promised mass pardons to administration officials. His misuse of the power goes far beyond what the constitution’s authors intendedSince returning to office, Donald Trump has issued more than 1,800 pardons – to financial fraudsters, drug kingpins, January 6 insurrectionists and others. Unfortunately, Trump’s pardons don’t begin to conform with Alexander Hamilton’s high-minded vision of how presidents would use pardons.When the US constitution was being written in 1787, Hamilton, a delegate to the constitutional convention, pushed to give presidents a broad pardoning power, saying presidents would use it with “scrupulousness and caution”. But Trump’s use of that power has been anything but scrupulous and cautious. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Glenrothan review – Alan Cumming heads home in Brian Cox’s big-hearted brotherly drama
Succession is the question as Cox directs and stars as a distillery boss tempting estranged brother Cumming back into the Highland foldFor his directorial debut, Brian Cox is painting in pretty broad strokes and primary colours; Glenrothan is a sentimental comedy-drama from screenwriter David Ashton about the troubled reunion of two brothers in Scotland. It can be a bit soppy, sometimes resembling Sunday-night TV comfort food, but this big-hearted picture wins you over, and there are certainly some marvellous panoramic shots of the Highlands.Cox himself plays Sandy, the glowering chief of a hugely profitable family-owned distillery which provides employment for the entire locality, and run by the fiercely competent Jess (Shirley Henderson). Sandy effectively inherited the job from his late father, a stern disciplinarian remembered in traumatised flashback scenes – for this role, Brian Cox has drolly cast his son Alan Cox. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Starmer says Trump’s threat to rip up UK-US trade deal won’t affect his stance on Iran – UK politics live
PM says King’s state visit to US should still go ahead as it will support relationship beyond Trump’s term in officePMQs is starting soon.Here is the list of MPs down to ask a question.I’ll be honest, when people would pop up on social media laying those sorts of charges, they tended to be the sort of people who appear in your timeline trolling. And I just didn’t think it could be credible that [Mandelson] would have had that kind of relationship.So, the FT did a report, but I don’t remember seeing it in other newspapers. Mandelson still had a podcast. He was appearing regularly on really big news programmes. And so, to be honest, the only time I remember seeing stuff, Mandleson/Epstein, you just think, ‘I haven’t seen that from a credible news source, he hasn’t been questioned, I think that must be overblown’.I think it stems from the same root cause, which is those women [Epstein’s victims], those girls, not being taken seriously enough, their experiences not mattering enough and being prioritised. And that is exactly the sort of sexism and misogyny at the root of the issue, I’m afraid. And I think all of us have to take responsibility for that. Continue reading...

BBC Technology News
Open 
Booking.com customers warned of 'reservation hijacking' after hack
The travel platform said it had changed Pins to protect customers but would not say how many were affected.

BBC UK News
Open 
Serial sex offender locked-up for cyberflashing and assaulting teen
Ryan Thomas followed and kissed a teenager without consent, and sent another woman a video of his genitals.

EFF
Open 
Digital Hopes, Real Power: The Rise of Network Shutdowns
This is the fourth installment of a blog series reflecting on the global digital legacy of the 2011 Arab uprisings. You can read the rest of the series here.
Iran’s internet has been intermittently disrupted for months. After years of bombardment, Gaza’s telecommunications infrastructure remains fragile. In India, recurring shutdowns and throttling have become a routine response to protests and unrest, cutting millions off from news, work, and basic services. Across dozens of other countries, governments increasingly treat connectivity itself as something that can be weaponized—cut, slowed, or selectively restored to shape what people can see, say, and share. In 2024 alone, authorities imposed 304 internet shutdowns across 54 countries—the highest number ever recorded.
In 2011, when protesters in Tunisia, Egypt, and beyond used social media to broadcast their uprisings to the world, many observers heralded a new era of networked freedom. Governments, however, responded quickly by developing and refining systems of control that have only grown more sophisticated over time. Today’s landscape of regulation, blackouts, and degraded networks reflects that trajectory, as early experiments in censorship and disruption have hardened into a durable system of control—what began as an emergency measure has become a normalized infrastructure of control.
A Brief History of Internet Shutdowns
Egypt’s 2011 internet shutdown wasn’t the first. Although the government’s heavy-handed response after just two days of protests caught the world’s attention, Guinea, Nepal, Myanmar, and a handful of other countries had previously enacted shutdowns. But Egypt marked a turning point. In the years that followed, shutdowns increased sharply worldwide, suggesting that governments had taken note—adopting network disruptions as a tactic for suppressing dissent and limiting the flow of information within and beyond their borders.
On January 28, 2011, at 12:34 a.m. local time, five of Egypt’s internet service providers (ISPs) shut down their networks. At least one provider—Noor, which also hosted the Egyptian stock exchange—remained online, leaving only about 7% of the country connected. 
In the aftermath of President Hosni Mubarak’s resignation, rights groups sought to understand how such a sweeping shutdown had been possible—and how future incidents might be prevented. There was no centralized “kill switch.” Instead, authorities leveraged the country’s highly consolidated telecommunications sector, which all operate by government license. With only a handful of ISPs, a small number of directives was enough to bring most of the network offline.
In the years following Egypt’s 2011 shutdown, telecommunications companies—many of which had been directly implicated in enabling state-ordered disruptions—began to organize around a shared set of human rights challenges. Beginning that same year, a group of operators and vendors quietly convened to examine how the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights applied to their sector, particularly in contexts where government demands could translate into sweeping restrictions on access. By 2013, this effort had formalized into the Telecommunications Industry Dialogue, bringing together major global firms to develop common principles on freedom of expression and privacy and, through a partnership with the Global Network Initiative, engage more directly with civil society. The initiative reflected a growing recognition that telecom companies—unlike platforms—operate at a critical chokepoint in the network. But it also underscored the limits of voluntary approaches: while the Dialogue helped establish shared norms, it did little to constrain the legal and political pressures that continue to drive shutdowns—or to prevent companies from complying with them.
From Emergency Measure to Legal Authority
If the early aughts were defined by improvised shutdowns, the years since have seen governments formalize their power to control networks. What was once exceptional is now often embedded in law.
In India, the 2017 Temporary Suspension of Telecom Services Rules—issued under the Telegraph Act—provided a clear legal pathway for cutting connectivity. The Telecommunications Act, 2023, further entrenched the government’s ability to enact shutdowns, granting the central and state governments, or “authorised officers” the power to suspend telecommunications services in the interest of public safety or sovereignty, or during emergencies. The government has used these measures repeatedly, particularly in Jammu and Kashmir. India’s Software Freedom Law Centre’s Shutdown Tracker shows India as instigating more than 900 shutdowns, 447 of which were in Jammu and Kashmir.
In Kazakhstan, shutdowns have also become common. Over the years, the government has passed legislation that allows state agencies to shut down the internet. The 2012 law on national security enabled the government to disrupt communications channels during anti-terrorist operations and to contain riots. In 2014 and 2016, laws were further amended to expand the number of actors able to shut down the internet without a court decision, and a government decree in 2018 enabled shutdowns in the event of a “social emergency.” 
Elsewhere, governments have built or expanded legal and technical frameworks that enable similar control over information flows. Ethiopia’s state-dominated telecom sector has facilitated sweeping shutdowns during periods of conflict, including the war in Tigray, where the internet was disconnected for more than two years. In Iran, authorities have developed regulatory and infrastructural capacity to isolate domestic networks from the global internet, allowing them to restrict external visibility while maintaining limited internal connectivity. This year alone, Iranians have spent one third of the year offline. And amidst the ongoing war, Iranian officials have made it clear that the internet is a privilege for those who toe the government’s official line.
Even where laws do not explicitly authorize shutdowns, broadly worded provisions around national security or public order are routinely used to justify them. The result is a growing legal architecture that treats network disruptions not as extraordinary measures, but as standard tools for managing populations.
When that authority is exercised over a population beyond a state’s own citizens, the consequences can be even more severe. Israel’s Ministry of Communications controls the flow of communications in and out of Palestine and has used that power to shut down internet access during periods of conflict. Over the past two and a half years, Gaza has experienced repeated outages, and experts now estimate that roughly 75% of its telecommunications infrastructure has been damaged—leaving essential services severely disrupted.
Elections and the Expansion of Control
Historically, most blackouts have occurred during moments of intense political tension. But authorities are increasingly using them as a tool to preempt dissent.
In 2024, as more than half the world’s population headed to the polls, shutdowns followed. That year alone, authorities imposed 304 internet shutdowns across 54 countries—the highest number ever recorded, surpassing the previous record set just a year earlier. The geographic spread also widened significantly, with shutdowns affecting more countries than ever before. The Comoros imposed a shutdown for the first time, while other countries, such as Mauritius, instituted broad bans on social media platforms during elections.
At least 24 countries holding elections in 2024 had a prior history of shutdowns, putting billions of people at risk of disruptions during critical democratic moments.
What stands out is not just the scale, but the normalization. Notably, the number of shutdowns in 2025 broke the record set the year prior. Whereas network disruptions were once a rare occurrence, they are now a routine measure, increasingly treated by authorities as a standard response to periods of heightened political sensitivity. 
Civil Society Fights Back
Governments use all sorts of justifications—national security, curbing the spread of disinformation, and even preventing students from cheating on exams—for internet shutdowns. But civil society is watching, and documenting, network disruptions and their impact on citizens.
In 2016, as shutdowns became an increasingly common tool of state control, Access Now launched the #KeepItOn campaign to coordinate global advocacy against network disruptions. The campaign includes a coalition composed of 345 advocacy groups (including EFF), research centers, detection networks, and others who work together to report on, and fight back against, internet shutdowns. Anyone can get involved by signing on to campaign action alerts, sharing their story, or reporting a shutdown in their jurisdiction.
Ending this harmful practice remains the goal. In 2016, the UN passed a landmark resolution supporting human rights online and condemning internet shutdowns, and UN agencies have continued to warn against the practice. But the fight to change government practices remains an uphill battle, leading civil society—and even companies—to get creative. 
During repeated shutdowns in Gaza, grassroots efforts mobilised to distribute eSIMs so Palestinians could stay connected. In 2024, EFF recognized Connecting Humanity, a Cairo-based non-profit providing eSIM access in Gaza, with its annual award for its vital work. Satellite internet such as Starlink has been supplied to people in Ukraine and Iran, though it, too, is not immune to state control. Alongside these efforts, civil society continues to share practical guidance on circumventing shutdowns and maintaining access to information.
EFF’s mission is to ensure that technology supports freedom, justice, and innovation for all people of the world—and we’ll continue to fight back against internet shutdowns wherever they occur.
This is the fourth installment of a blog series reflecting on the global digital legacy of the 2011 Arab uprisings. Read the rest of the series here.

The Register
Open 
Fission impossible: Uncle Sam wants nuclear reactors in space by 2031
Some on the Moon's surface, some in orbit. How does 5 years sound? Do-able, right nerds? The nukes-in-space ambitions of the current US administration have taken a step forward – and the US Office of Science and Technology Policy has just published its hopes for who does what.…

The Register
Open 
Raspberry Pi OS ends open-door policy for sudo
Command prefix will require password by default The latest version of Raspberry Pi OS now requires a password for sudo by default.…

The Register
Open 
Ancient Excel bug comes out of retirement for active attacks
Vuln old enough to drive lands on CISA's exploited list While Microsoft was rolling out its bumper Patch Tuesday updates this week, US cybersecurity agency CISA was readying an alert about a 17-year-old critical Excel flaw now under exploit.…

Mail Online
Open 
NASA responds after social media users notice a missing patch on Artemis II capsule Orion's heat shield - as it reassures 'no unexpected conditions were observed'
As the world watched Artemis II burn its way back to Earth, hawk-eyed social media users spotted a worrying detail.

Mail Online
Open 
'There have been problems between Stacey and Joe': Revealed for first time, Stacey Solomon's strop that left BBC in crisis, why Joe Swash feels like a 'problem' - and how insiders now say 'gloss is coming off'
When BBC bosses announced the return of Stacey Solomon and Joe Swash's fly-on-the-wall series Stacey & Joe, they did so to great fanfare.

Mail Online
Open 
Do YOU have middle class furniture regret? The fixtures that cost the most and never live up to the hype - from white sofas to £10,000 bookcases
Speaking to the Daily Mail, Jordana Ashkenazi, London-based founder and design director of Element One House, revealed the middle class furniture that most people eventually come to regret.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Republicans struggle to highlight Trump’s cuts as Americans see little effect on Tax Day – US politics live
Republicans had hoped that Trump’s 2025 tax cuts would be at the forefront of voters’ minds, but many have reportedly not noticed a differenceUS taxpayers spend hundreds more on military What does strict voter ID bill mean for US democracy? Ask your questionsSign up for the Breaking News US emailIn an interview with Maria Bartiromo of Fox News, Donald Trump had said fuel prices could be the same or “maybe a little bit higher” by the November congressional elections.But in a separate interview with Bartiromo, which was taped on Tuesday at the White House and broadcast this morning, Trump claimed he’d been misquoted and tried to overcome the blowback from his previous comments. Continue reading...

Gizmodo
Open 
We Got to See How Unstoppable Supergirl Can Be in Her New Movie
'Supergirl' stars Milly Alcock and Jason Momoa introduced new footage right out of CinemaCon.

Gizmodo
Open 
Scientists Are Using Lightning in a Bottle to Turn Methane Into Methanol
The findings potentially resolve a long-standing issue with methanol conversion, which has tended to be clunky, inefficient, and environmentally detrimental.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Turkey: School shooting leaves 4 dead
The deadly shooting comes a day after a similar incident in Turkey.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Desert power: The promise and paradox of solar
A massive solar tower in the Moroccan desert is the beacon of an ambitious push for a clean energy future. But fossil fuels and grid constraints stand in the way.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Republicans struggle to highlight Trump’s cuts as Americans see little effect on Tax Day – US politics live
Republicans had hoped that Trump’s 2025 tax cuts would be at the forefront of voters’ minds, but many have reportedly not noticed a differenceUS taxpayers spend hundreds more on military What does strict voter ID bill mean for US democracy? Ask your questionsSign up for the Breaking News US emailLeaders of some of the largest unions in the US have unveiled a drive to jumpstart the country’s ailing labor movement and combat growing wealth inequality under Donald Trump.To make it easier for workers to join a union, and strengthen the hand of new unions negotiating with powerful businesses, a string of prominent organizers joined together to launch Union Now, a non-profit designed to increase labor union density. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Norwegian group in talks to buy former Liberty Steel works in South Yorkshire
UK official receiver understood to prefer Blastr as buyer for SSUK’s electric arc furnace in Rotherham and site in StocksbridgeBusiness live – latest updatesUK officials have entered exclusive talks with a Norwegian startup to buy the former Liberty Steel works in South Yorkshire, in a significant step towards its rescue.Norwegian-owned Blastr is understood to be the bidder preferred by the government’s official receiver to take on ownership of the UK’s largest existing electric arc furnace in Rotherham and other works in Stocksbridge, both in South Yorkshire. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Magyar ‘is going to do good job’, Trump says as he distances himself from Orbán – Europe live
US president says he wasn’t ‘involved’ in Hungarian election despite JD Vance’s trip to Budapest ahead of pollsThe one issue that is likely to dominate the early discussions between Hungary and the EU is how the new government will want to engage with the European Commission to unfreeze €17bn of frozen EU funds for Hungary.Speaking to reporters this morning, Magyar pointed to the urgency of the this discussion, but also assertively stressed:“I explained it clearly to her as well, and we have made it clear before, that we can only comply with conditions that are good for Hungarian people, good for Hungarian businesses and, in general, for our country.“ Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Scottish Labour leader calls claim he tried to do Reform deal a ‘desperate lie’
Anas Sarwar says there have been ‘no stitch-ups, no deals, no backroom chats, no back-channel contact with Reform’ UK politics live – latest updatesAnas Sarwar has dismissed as “a desperate lie from a desperate man” a claim by Reform UK’s Scotland leader, Malcolm Offord, that he offered to do a deal with the hard-right party to keep the Scottish National party out of power.Offord made the claim on Channel 4’s Scottish leaders’ debate on Tuesday evening, alleging the Scottish Labour leader came “bouncing up” to him at an event in December last year, suggesting they “work together to remove the SNP”. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
From One Day to One Ring: Leo Woodall joins new The Lord of the Rings cast
Lee Woodall, Jamie Dornan and Kate Winslet will join LOTR returning actors Sir Ian McKellen and Elijah Wood in Middle Earth

BBC UK News
Open 
Starmer 'not going to yield' to pressure from Trump on Iran war
It follows a warning from the US president that America's trade deal with the UK "can always be changed".

Mail Online
Open 
Starmer says he 'won't yield' on Iran war after Trump threatens to punish him by downgrading UK trade deal - and US finance chief says recession won't be as bad as London getting nuked
Donald Trump vented fury at Keir Starmer for refusing to back his military campaign in his latest impromptu interview.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Aegon offloads 200-year-old UK business to Standard Life for £2bn
Deal will create pensions and savings group with 16 million customers and £480bn of assets, while Aegon focuses on USBusiness live – latest updatesThe Dutch financial services group Aegon has struck a £2bn deal to sell off its almost 200-year-old UK arm to Standard Life, as part of a US push in which the group will be rebranded as Transamerica.Standard Life, previously known as Phoenix Group, said the deal to buy Aegon UK would create a pensions and savings group with 16 million customers and £480bn of assets under administration. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Republicans struggle to highlight Trump’s cuts as Americans see little effect on Tax Day – US politics live
Republicans had hoped that Trump’s 2025 tax cuts would be at the forefront of voters’ minds, but many have reportedly not noticed a differenceUS taxpayers spend hundreds more on military as Trump pushes for vast budget increaseSign up for the Breaking News US emailLeaders of some of the largest unions in the US have unveiled a drive to jumpstart the country’s ailing labor movement and combat growing wealth inequality under Donald Trump.To make it easier for workers to join a union, and strengthen the hand of new unions negotiating with powerful businesses, a string of prominent organizers joined together to launch Union Now, a non-profit designed to increase labor union density. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Trump's rift with Pope is playing out in public - it's costing him valuable support
Leading conservative Catholics tell the BBC why they back the American pontiff in his spat with Trump.

CNET News
Open 
WrestleMania 42: Start Time, Where to Watch and Full Match Card
The two-night event heads to Las Vegas this weekend.

CNET News
Open 
Thinking of Ditching Your Apple Watch for a Whoop Band? Read This First
I wore both fitness trackers for months to find out what each gets right, and the deal-breakers that get in the way.

CNET News
Open 
It's National Anime Day, and You Can Watch Free Anime to Celebrate
We know you're paying to stream Re:Zero and Dorohedoro right now, but why not supplement your watchlist this week?

CNET News
Open 
Beef: When to Watch Season 2 on Netflix
The Emmy-winning drama returns with Oscar Isaac and Carey Mulligan.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
John Terry and Colchester - what both parties have to gain from takeover
BBC Sport explores John Terry's imminent takeover of Colchester, why ex-pros are buying clubs, and what the feeling is among fans.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Slot says VAR has gone against Liverpool - is he right?
Liverpool's exit from the Champions League was hastened by a VAR intervention. BBC Sport analyses the key refereeing decisions in their season.

Pulsant Status
Open 
CHG0058819 - Scheduled Upgrade of Morpheus Cloud Management Platform

Pulsant Status
Open 
CHG0057847 - Planned at Risk Network Maintenance in Edinburgh SC-3 IP Fabric - Wednesday 29/04/2026 2000 BST - 2300 BST

Mail Online
Open 
Second school shooting in two days leaves four dead in Turkey
The armed attack took place at the Ayser Calık Secondary School in Kahramanmaras on Wednesday, marking the second such incident in as many days.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Republicans struggle to highlight Trump’s cuts as Americans see little effect on Tax Day – US politics live
Republicans had hoped that Trump’s 2025 tax cuts would be at the forefront of voters’ minds, but many have reportedly not noticed a differenceUS taxpayers spend hundreds more on military as Trump pushes for vast budget increaseSign up for the Breaking News US emailThe US military said it killed four more people in a boat strike in the eastern Pacific ocean on Tuesday, marking the third deadly attack on vessels in the region in four days.The US Southern Command, which oversees military operations in Latin America and the Caribbean, announced the killings in a social media post, claiming, without providing evidence, that the men killed were “narco-terrorists”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Quakers among charities warning new regulator powers could stifle protest
Exclusive: Civil society groups sign letter urging ministers to consult on Charity Commission measures meant to tackle extremism Several leading civil society organisations have urged the government to consult the sector before introducing new powers for the Charity Commission, which they caution risks “suppressing legitimate advocacy” at a time when civic space is under increased pressure.Signatories, including leaders from some of the UK’s largest civil society bodies, alongside faith-based and community organisations, wrote to the culture secretary, Lisa Nandy, saying the proposed social cohesion measures could lead to the “suppression of lawful advocacy, campaigning and community engagement”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Magyar ‘is going to do good job’, Trump says as he distances himself from Orbán – Europe live
US president says he wasn’t ‘involved’ in Hungarian election despite JD Vance’s trip to Budapest ahead of pollsUS president Donald Trump told ABC News ​reporter Jonathan Karl ‌he was not concerned about Viktor Orbán’s loss in Hungary, and that he actually likes incoming ​prime minister Péter Magyar.“I think ​the new man’s going to do a ⁠good job – he’s a good man,” ​Trump told the reporter, Reuters reported. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Sri Lankan student could be deported from UK after one-day student fee delay
Coventry University reported Navodya De Silva, 25, to Home Office after £8,000 arrived late, causing termination of visaA Sri Lankan university student says her life has been ruined because a one-day delay in paying her tuition fees led to her being thrown off her degree course and put at risk of deportation.Navodya De Silva, 25, secured a place at Coventry University to study international hospitality and tourism management, with overseas student fees for the three-year undergraduate course of £42,000. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Starmer says Trump’s threat to rip up UK-US trade deal won’t affect his stance on Iran – UK politics live
PM says King’s state visit to US should still go ahead as it will support links that last beyond whoever is in power at any one timePMQs is starting soon.Here is the list of MPs down to ask a question.I’ll be honest, when people would pop up on social media laying those sorts of charges, they tended to be the sort of people who appear in your timeline trolling. And I just didn’t think it could be credible that [Mandelson] would have had that kind of relationship.So, the FT did a report, but I don’t remember seeing it in other newspapers. Mandelson still had a podcast. He was appearing regularly on really big news programmes. And so, to be honest, the only time I remember seeing stuff, Mandleson/Epstein, you just think, ‘I haven’t seen that from a credible news source, he hasn’t been questioned, I think that must be overblown’.I think it stems from the same root cause, which is those women [Epstein’s victims], those girls, not being taken seriously enough, their experiences not mattering enough and being prioritised. And that is exactly the sort of sexism and misogyny at the root of the issue, I’m afraid. And I think all of us have to take responsibility for that. Continue reading...