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  • LIGO, Virgo, KAGRA Spot Second Gen Black Holes

    LIGO, Virgo, KAGRA Spot Second Gen Black Holes

    In a new paper published today in The Astrophysical Journal Letters, the international LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA Collaboration reports on the detection of two gravitational wave events in October and November of last year with unusual black hole…

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  • England’s George Ford to start at fly-half against Australia

    England’s George Ford to start at fly-half against Australia

    England have gone with George…

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  • Getting Microsoft Dynamics 365 F&SCM Security Right the First Time: Proven Strategies to Mitigate Fraud Risk

    Getting Microsoft Dynamics 365 F&SCM Security Right the First Time: Proven Strategies to Mitigate Fraud Risk

    Security in Microsoft Dynamics 365 Finance & Supply Chain Management can be challenging, but it does not have to be. While understanding the Dynamics security models can present technical challenges, the challenges in getting…

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  • 14 alleged drug smugglers killed in US military strikes in Pacific ocean

    14 alleged drug smugglers killed in US military strikes in Pacific ocean

    The US military on Monday carried out strikes in the eastern portion of the Pacific ocean killing 14 alleged drug smugglers.

    This combination of screen grabs images from a video posted by US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on his X…

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  • Valerie Camillo: How new WTA chair will draw on experiences working with Dolly Parton

    Valerie Camillo: How new WTA chair will draw on experiences working with Dolly Parton

    Simon relinquished his dual role as chief executive and chairman in 2023 – which followed 18-time Grand Slam singles champion Martina Navratilova leading calls for change – and the transition of power is completed by the appointment of Camillo.

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  • James Webb telescope spots ‘Capotauro,’ a mysterious object so peculiar it will change cosmology no matter what it is

    Using the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), astronomers have spotted a very bright and mysterious object that could be a galaxy that emerged just 100 million years after the Big Bang, which would make it the universe’s earliest known galaxy, a…

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  • Our taekwondo journey is just beginning

    Our taekwondo journey is just beginning

    The Márton twins: Made in Spain

    When the sisters’ Hungarian parents, Zsolt and Barbara Márton, visited the Canary Islands in the early 2000s, they fell in love with the beautiful archipelago and chose to stay.

    There, they hoped their daughters…

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  • Hong Kong leader vows to nip chikungunya in the bud as 21 show symptoms

    Hong Kong leader vows to nip chikungunya in the bud as 21 show symptoms

    Hong Kong health authorities have identified 21 people showing mild symptoms of chikungunya fever who required blood tests, as the city’s leader pledged that his administration would go all out to prevent the viral disease from taking root…

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  • Info ministry rubbishes ‘completely fabricated’ report on Pakistani officials meeting CIA, Mossad for Gaza peace force – Dawn

    1. Info ministry rubbishes ‘completely fabricated’ report on Pakistani officials meeting CIA, Mossad for Gaza peace force  Dawn
    2. Report: International force to stabilize Gaza could include troops from Pakistan  The Times of Israel
    3. Pakistan’s…

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  • Gambling does not cause any ‘social ills’, lobbyist tells incredulous MPs | Gambling

    Gambling does not cause any ‘social ills’, lobbyist tells incredulous MPs | Gambling

    The boss of the UK’s main betting and gaming lobby group has told MPs that there is no “social ill with gambling” as she warned against imposing higher taxes on the sector in the November budget.

    Grainne Hurst, the chief executive of the Betting and Gaming Council, repeatedly made the statement to parliament’s Treasury select committee on Tuesday, where she also claimed that higher taxes would result in thousands of job losses and push punters into using hidden market services.

    Hurst made the comments as part of the gambling industry’s lobbying against calls to increase taxes on the sector – including on products seen as the most risky for creating problem gamblers, such as online casinos and the betting machines that fill high street adult gaming centres (AGCs).

    During an at-times testy session, the committee member John Glen said to Hurst: “This issue has become pertinent in the run-up to a budget because people and government [are] frustrated that the taxation of something that does have a significant social ill for those individuals isn’t properly addressed in our tax system.”

    Hurst responded: “I would disagree that there are social ills as a result of it. I think that it is properly taxed in the system … Our argument is that if you increase further any additional taxes on the industry … it will put jobs at risk, will put shops at risk, will put sports sponsorship at risk.”

    The committee’s chair, Meg Hillier, then checked that she had understood Hurst’s position correctly and asked: “Do you think there are any social ills associated with gambling?” The lobbyist replied: “No.”

    She later added that the industry does “everything that it possibly can in order to mitigate any harms that may be caused by our products”.

    Earlier, the committee heard evidence from a panel of experts who all argued that taxes should be increased on the riskiest gambling products, while maintaining lower taxes on more benign forms of betting such as punting on horse racing and playing bingo.

    Stewart Kenny, a founder of the bookmaker Paddy Power, now retired, said that he regretted “some of the things I did” while working in the sector, but that he had resigned from the group’s board in 2016 after 29 years because he did not believe the company was protecting problem gamblers enough.

    “When you open an account to have a bet on the next general election or Manchester United to win the Premiership … within 24 hours [bookmakers] send you free spins in the casino, to the online slots,” he told the committee. “It is rather like going into a bar for your first drink and having a shandy and the barman … says: ‘why not have a triple strength brandy on the house?’

    “So if we can disincentivize the bookmakers from sucking people from the least addictive product to the most addictive product, that I think is the most important [objective].”

    The chancellor, Rachel Reeves, is under huge scrutiny about what measures she will announce in her budget next month, with many observers expecting a range of tax rises.

    Taxing the betting industry has been floated as an area where the Treasury could raise significant revenue, but the industry has been fighting the proposals.

    Last week Betfred said it would close all 1,287 of its high street betting shops if Reeves raised taxes on the gambling industry, while earlier this month the company behind William Hill said it was considering closing up to 200 betting shops if Reeves raised taxes. The industry has also argued that higher tax rates would mean lower revenues collected from the sector.

    Kenny – along with fellow experts Theo Bertram, the director of Social Market Foundation, and the Carsten Jung, the interim associate director for economic policy at the Institute for Public Policy Research – told MPs the government could “significantly increase taxes on online gambling and increase revenue”.

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