There is nothing else in the world like seeing Adele play London . Taking to Hyde Park’s BST (and looking absolutely dazzling) the pressure was on – she hasn’t played a headline concert in a year and a half – but, gazing out at the thousands of people singing along to her hit Hello, she was immediately at home. She gave nothing short of perfection during the two-hour spectacular and, while her vocals were always going to be other-wordly, it was her unadulterated joy to be back on stage that made the night so special. Bursting into tears within the opening lines, the superstar’s delight was palpable, as she told the audience: ‘I am so happy to be here’. It seemed like an understatement for what was a night filled with laughter and tears. She mixed it up with newer hits like I Drink Wine, before throwing it back for I’ll Be Waiting and Rumour Has It. The crowds, which included celebs like Tom Cruise , Ant and Dec, and James Corden , as well as her beloved … [Read more...] about Adele at BST Hyde Park review: A truly unforgettable homecoming for one of our greatest ever superstars
Honor 9 dual camera smartphone review
The hypocrisy of impeachment: How lawmakers’ stances on ousting a president changed from Clinton to Trump
For dozens of members of Congress, this is déjà vu. House Democrats are moving swiftly in their impeachment inquiry of President Donald Trump. As they do so, longtime Washington lawmakers have receded into their partisan corners, determined to convince the American people why now—and not decades ago—they're right about whether a sitting president might need to be removed from office. This time around, Democrats say the president has crossed the line and has committed impeachable offenses by pressuring a foreign leader to investigate a political opponent. Trump pressured Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in a July phone call to investigate former Vice President Joe Biden and his son for potential corruption, while invoking the names of his personal attorney Rudy Giuliani and Attorney General William Barr, in addition to withholding hundreds of billions of dollars in foreign military aid at the same time. Last time around, in the late 1990s, Republicans impeached President … [Read more...] about The hypocrisy of impeachment: How lawmakers’ stances on ousting a president changed from Clinton to Trump
Amazon blocks LGBTQ searches in UAE after political pressure
Amazon has bowed to pressure from the United Arab Emirates and restricted searches related to LGBTQ products in the country. The online retailer has blocked searches for more than 150 keywords such as “lgbtq” and “pride”, while searches for specific books about gay and transgender issues have also been restricted. Documents leaked to the New York Times showed that the Emirati government had given Amazon until Friday to comply with its order or face repercussions. The company said that while it supported gay and transgender rights, it always complied with local laws in the countries where it operates. Amazon has spent heavily to build a business in the UAE, acquiring the country’s biggest online retailer Souq.com in 2017 for $580m (£478m). Many other multinational tech giants have been forced to compromise on the values they claim to support to operate internationally. In 2016, Apple removed a lesbian couple from a Mother’s Day advert in some markets, and in 2019 Netflix … [Read more...] about Amazon blocks LGBTQ searches in UAE after political pressure
The UK has badly missed the mark on how to regulate Big Tech
Britain’s competition regulator, the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA), has not had a good 2020. The Government ignored its recommendations made last year for a new regulator for the audit industry , and has not acted on the agency’s calls for stronger consumer protection powers. Its warnings to businesses against raising prices during Covid were criticised by economists for potentially leading to shortages of things like food and PPE . And the CMA’s chairman, ex-MP Andrew Tyrie, was ousted last month in a coup by board members unhappy with Tyrie’s political, attention-seeking style. This week it released the final report in its study of the digital advertising market . In it, the CMA concluded that the digital advertising market was uncompetitively dominated by Google and Facebook – Facebook via its social media apps, and Google via the popularity of Youtube, Google Search, and the company’s network of advertising on third party websites. The report is … [Read more...] about The UK has badly missed the mark on how to regulate Big Tech
24-year-old law that built the internet is under threat
The executive order that Donald Trump signed against social media companies last week is unlikely to directly do much damage. The decree, prepared in a fit of anger after Twitter fact-checked two of the President’s tweets, seeks to remove a legal shield enjoyed by social media companies if they suppress content “in bad faith”. Although it may carry some political value, it clashes with how US courts have interpreted the law and is unlikely to stand up to any legal challenge. Most internet lawyers say it is not worth the paper it is written on. Despite this, Trump’s order, however rough, is potentially a turning point for something . The golden age for internet companies, in which they were largely unaccountable for the material that users hosted on their services, is coming to an end. The modern web – outside the US as much as in it – has been built on a 1996 law that is often misunderstood but has had immense consequences. Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, … [Read more...] about 24-year-old law that built the internet is under threat
Kwasi Kwarteng: Brexit is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity we must take advantage of
Has Kwasi Kwarteng gone too far already? The new Business Secretary has spent the first few days in the job busily playing down the widely-held perception that he is a Right-winger. He has distanced himself from the more extreme free-marketeer views he espoused in the 2012 pamphlet entitled Britannia Unchained, which outlined his vision for the country. As a newly elected MP, Kwarteng – along with Liz Truss, Dominic Raab, Priti Patel and Chris Skidmore – denounced the UK’s “bloated state, high taxes and excessive regulation”, and described British workers as “among the worst idlers in the world”. And, despite being appointed less than a month ago, he has already executed his first U-turn, abandoning a post-Brexit review of workers’ rights after he was attacked for wanting to water down protections. When we meet (virtually, of course), he is adamant that much of the criticism was baseless: “People say we want to abolish workers’ rights; nothing could be further from the … [Read more...] about Kwasi Kwarteng: Brexit is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity we must take advantage of
Time for the Tories to find their inner Maggie and embark on supply-side reforms
Love it or loathe it, Brexit means change: an opportunity to forge our own path, for better or worse, for richer or poorer. And so does the pandemic: it’s turned teleconferencing from something we’d see in sci-fi movies into an everyday staple, and made commuting to work as quaint and old-fashioned as bowler hats and Morris dancing. So we’re at a moment of change, a fork in the road, and the question is which route will we take? One of the best and biggest opportunities would be to give you and me more and better choices about what we buy, and who we buy it from, because having more firms constantly jostling and jockeying to offer us something that’s better, or cheaper, or more organic, or greener is one of the best and most reliable ways to drive up post-Brexit, post-pandemic living standards for all of us, every year. Even better, it would sharpen up British firms a treat, making our entire economy more competitive on the global stage, which is the only real long-term … [Read more...] about Time for the Tories to find their inner Maggie and embark on supply-side reforms
Kwasi Kwarteng: from ‘Britannia Unchained’ to shackling business
Damascene conversions happen all the time in politics. Winston Churchill was once a high-flying Liberal, but ended up as the mightiest Conservative Prime Minister. The Gang of Four split with the Labour party to form the SDP in the early 1980s. But sometimes strategic or ideological u-turns can happen almost by accident. The current Government, for example, is packed with free marketeers boasting impeccable libertarian credentials that are heading the most interventionist, high-spending administration since the Second World War. How did this happen? Partly it is the understandable result of Covid emergency measures. But it also appears to be influencing longer-term strategy. One of the most dramatic conversions may well be that of Kwasi Kwarteng, who was appointed as Business Secretary last month . Once known for his trenchant economic liberalism, as a co-author of the 2012 book Britannia Unchained , the newly-elevated cabinet minister's short tenure has been marked by a … [Read more...] about Kwasi Kwarteng: from ‘Britannia Unchained’ to shackling business
Online shoppers could be ‘manipulated’ to choose different products by algorithms
Consumers could be "manipulated" into choosing products by unregulated online shopping algorithms, the competitions watchdog said as it launched a probe into potentially misleading practices. The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) said it is concerned that consumers could be manipulated in their shopping choices or end up paying too much for products either by “deliberate or unintended” use of algorithms. It said that these algorithms could be used to personalise services and create search results that “can be manipulated to reduce choice or artificially change consumers’ perceptions”. This could be by using “nudges” on a website, such as the placement of the “buy” button, or could even go as far as “personalised pricing”, the CMA said. The effect of algorithms can be difficult for shoppers to detect, the regulator warned, although it did say that they also bring benefits by showing consumers search results they are more likely to be interested in. Kate Brand, director … [Read more...] about Online shoppers could be ‘manipulated’ to choose different products by algorithms
Britain can’t spend way to prosperity after Covid, Kwasi Kwarteng warns
Britain cannot spend its way to prosperity, the Business Secretary has warned amid a growing Tory debate over state spending in the run-up to the Budget in March. Kwasi Kwarteng, promoted to the Cabinet earlier this month, signalled that a squeeze on public spending is coming with the Government deficit, fuelled by Covid handouts, forecast to exceed £400 billion this month. Rishi Sunak, the Chancellor, is keen to rein in public spending and start setting out future tax rises in the Budget. But Tory backbenchers and several senior Government ministers are pushing for further public spending increases and believe this is the way to boost the economy in the wake of the pandemic. Speaking to The Telegraph , Mr Kwarteng insisted that a booming private sector was the way in which Britain will recover after the virus crisis. He said: "Let me be very clear – without a thriving private sector, we will not be able to afford good public services. Great public services rely on a … [Read more...] about Britain can’t spend way to prosperity after Covid, Kwasi Kwarteng warns