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  • UK campaigners condemn ‘creepy’ digital billboards that can track viewers’ responses | Privacy

    UK campaigners condemn ‘creepy’ digital billboards that can track viewers’ responses | Privacy

    Digital billboards that can film viewers’ responses to adverts have been installed in hundreds of apartment blocks, in a move that civil liberty campaigners called “creepy as hell”.

    The supplier, 30Seconds Group, says the cameras allow them to track “occupant engagement” from residents who are a “captive audience” as they wait for lifts to their apartments.

    Potential advertisers are told: “With an average dwell time of 30 seconds, our screens provide ample time for viewers to absorb your message. This extended interaction allows for deeper engagement, making it an ideal platform for delivering impactful and memorable advertising content.”

    30Seconds Group said it was on course to install electronic noticeboards – all with cameras – in the communal areas of 1,000 buildings by the end of the year.

    The Residential Management Group, which is one of almost 50 property companies to have signed up, said the noticeboards improved communication with residents.

    In a statement to the Guardian, the group confirmed it had installed the billboards in 126 developments housing 50,000 people. However, it insisted that the cameras in its buildings were not activated.

    Conor Nocher, 32, has complained that part of the £209-a-month service charge for his studio flat in Colindale, north-west London, is being used to pay for a device that shows him unwanted adverts.

    He said: “Allowing crypto companies and alcohol and gambling to advertise within residential properties seems absurd and really inappropriate. There’s no ability to opt out. You’re stuck with it.”

    Nocher said he had not seen adverts for these types of products in his building, but images shared online of billboards elsewhere have shown promotions for drinks companies, a lottery syndicate, non-fungible tokens, a competition site and cage fighting.

    He is also wary about the presence of the camera in the billboards. “RMG say I’m not being spied on, but there are cameras in the devices, you can see them,” he said.

    “Even if it was at zero cost to residents I would still fight these tooth and nail, nobody wants to be spied on by 6ft garbage adverts in their own building.

    “In other buildings, residents are being tracked with the device, because the boss of 30Seconds Group says they are.”

    Jesse Liu, the managing director of 30Seconds Group, explained the company’s business model to the tech news site Business Cloud. He said: “Our strongest selling point is that we know who our audience is. All our displays are integrated with cameras so we can get the demographic data and also track the occupant engagement.”

    Liu said the devices had been installed in commercial and residential buildings in 20 UK cities – and that by the end of next year, it hoped they would be operational at 2,000 sites.

    A spokesperson for Places for People, the parent company of RMG, said residents were not being spied on because “none of the cameras are operational, the camera is pre-installed but not activated”.

    Emails to Nocher from RMG about the screens confirmed that the £800 installation costs and running costs were covered by residents’ service charges. The spokesperson said the annual running costs came to £2.60 per resident.

    They added: “Their primary purpose is to function as digital noticeboards, providing real-time updates in a cost-effective and environmentally responsible way.

    “The vast majority of the feedback has been positive, and the London fire brigade has praised the screens as being a useful tool to get information out to customers quickly and effectively.

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    “We take all customer feedback under advisement, yet feel that the screens are installed in a way that allows them to be non-invasive.”

    Nocher said: “I’ve talked to my neighbours about this and I haven’t found anyone who thinks these things are a good idea.”

    In an email to RMG, Nocher asked if residents had been consulted about the digital noticeboards. In reply, an associate director from the company said: “Residents were not formally consulted, nor is there a requirement for us to do so in this case.”

    The Places for People spokesperson said only that the owners of the building were consulted.

    It emerged last year that RMG was forced to remove two digital billboards supplied by the 30Seconds Group from the Grade II*-listed Park Hill flats in Sheffield after objections from residents.

    One of those involved in the discussions, who asked not to be named, said residents objected because the screens were visually “out of keeping” with the design of the flats, the displays of live news updates were “distressing” and they did not want “commercials as they walked in their doors”. They added: “People were also anxious about the cameras, even though we were told they were not activated.”

    Jake Hurfurt from Big Brother Watch, a civil liberties campaign group, said the digital noticeboards were “creepy as hell”.

    He added: “Billboards equipped with demographic scanning tech have no place in people’s homes. They are the height of surveillance capitalism.

    “We should all be able to move around the buildings we live in without being scanned against our will to monitor our personal characteristics or if we paid attention to an advert, and it is even more galling that residents of some buildings have to pay to be watched.”

    The 30Seconds Group has been approached for comment.

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  • This rare bone finally settles the Nanotyrannus mystery

    This rare bone finally settles the Nanotyrannus mystery

    For many years, paleontologists have debated whether the single skull used to define the species Nanotyrannus represented a true species or simply a young Tyrannosaurus rex. A new study in Science has now resolved this question. The research…

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  • On the Calculation of Volume III by Solvej Balle review – how to make a timeloop endlessly interesting | Fiction in translation

    On the Calculation of Volume III by Solvej Balle review – how to make a timeloop endlessly interesting | Fiction in translation

    The time loop story, in which characters repeatedly relive the same span of time, has become synonymous with the 1993 film Groundhog Day, but the idea has much older roots. In PD Ouspensky’s 1915 novel Strange Life of Ivan Osokin, the feckless…

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  • China Accuses Japan of Military Threat in Escalating Regional Tensions

    China Accuses Japan of Military Threat in Escalating Regional Tensions

    Tensions between China and Japan escalated after Tokyo accused Chinese fighter jets of aiming fire-control radar at Japanese military aircraft during Chinese carrier-based flight training east of the Miyako Strait. Japan denounced the radar…

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  • Samsung Launches One UI 8.5 Beta for Next-Level Ease of Use – Samsung Newsroom India

    Samsung Launches One UI 8.5 Beta for Next-Level Ease of Use – Samsung Newsroom India

    Latest version of One UI brings enhanced productivity, privacy and performance across the Galaxy ecosystem

    Samsung Electronics today announced the One UI 8.5 beta program, introducing new and…

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  • A Powerful Boost for SEO Reports

    A Powerful Boost for SEO Reports

    Highlights

    • Google is testing an AI tool in Search Console that builds reports from simple text prompts.
    • The AI applies filters, comparisons, and metrics automatically based on user instructions.
    • The feature simplifies reporting for beginners while…

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  • Tuesday briefing: Is next year’s XXL World Cup an expansion too far? | Sport

    Tuesday briefing: Is next year’s XXL World Cup an expansion too far? | Sport

    Good morning. Last week in Washington a lengthy and glitzy ceremony saw the draw taking place for the 2026 men’s Fifa World Cup, the largest edition of the tournament to date, to be staged across the US, Mexico and Canada next June and July. It…

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  • Powerful 7.5-magnitude earthquake strikes Japan's northeast – Reuters

    1. Powerful 7.5-magnitude earthquake strikes Japan’s northeast  Reuters
    2. Dozens injured after magnitude 7.5 quake strikes northern Japan  BBC
    3. Japan rattled by 7.5-magnitude earthquake, authorities warn of aftershocks  CNN
    4. Japan issues mega-quake…

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  • Indonesian President Subianto presented guard of honour upon arrival at Prime Minister’s House – Dawn

    1. Indonesian President Subianto presented guard of honour upon arrival at Prime Minister’s House  Dawn
    2. Indonesian President Subianto arrives in Islamabad on 2-day maiden visit  Dawn
    3. Pakistan, Indonesia sign accords on Halal trade, SMEs, education…

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  • Vattenfall and Cemvision sign new commercial agreement for near-zero-carbon cement

    Vattenfall and Cemvision sign new commercial agreement for near-zero-carbon cement

    Vattenfall and Cemvision have signed a commercial agreement for the supply of near-zero-carbon cement to be used in energy infrastructure projects across Europe. This collaboration marks an important step in reducing carbon emissions from onshore wind farms. Deliveries from Cemvision’s first industrial-scale production plant are scheduled to begin in 2028.

    Under this agreement, Cemvision’s innovative cement, Re-ment Massive, will be prioritised for use via subcontractors in Vattenfall’s onshore wind infrastructure projects across key markets. By using recycled materials and fossil free electricity, Cemvision’s technology has the potential to cut CO₂ emissions by up to 95 per cent* compared to conventional cement.

    “This agreement with Cemvision is accelerating a key market in the net-zero transition, and we’re proud to contribute to that shift,” says Ulrika Ritzén, Head of Onshore Wind at Vattenfall. “For Vattenfall, it means reducing carbon emissions from wind farms across Europe while optimising the economics of our projects. This collaboration strengthens our competitiveness and supports our long-term sustainability goals. We look forward to work closely with subcontractors and Cemvision to maximize the use of near-zero-carbon cement in our wind power projects.”

    Cemvision and Vattenfall signed already in 2024 a Letter of Intent to develop and supply near-zero-carbon cement. The commercial agreement brings the partnership to the next step.

    “This long-term agreement for the supply of our near-zero cement is a foundational step in transforming the cement market, and we are proud to take the partnership with Vattenfall to the next level. Our cement is one of the most cost-efficient ways to decarbonize construction. Moving from pilot to commercial action is how the transition becomes real. This agreement is the first binding signal, with many more to follow for Cemvision, underscoring climate leadership and the urgent need to scale up with our first full-scale production plant,” says Oscar Hållén, CEO of Cemvision.  

    As a founding member of the First Movers Coalition, Vattenfall is committed to integrating emerging technologies essential for the net-zero transition into its procurement. Vattenfall has pledged that 10 per cent of cement and concrete purchases should be near zero emission by 2030. This agreement makes it possible to reach at least 20 per cent by 2028. It also reinforces Vattenfall’s commitment to cut supply chain emissions by 50 per cent by 2030 through circularity and carbon-reduction measures in major projects, and to achieve net zero by 2040.

    Beyond onshore wind, this agreement with Cemvision creates opportunities to extend collaboration to other Vattenfall business areas.

    *The First Movers Coalition has a benchmark of maximum 184 kg CO₂e per tonne for near-zero-carbon cement which Re-Ment Massive will achieve already in 2028, according to Cemvision´s Life Cycle Analysis, by replacing limestone with recycled industrial by‑products. Re‑ment Massive has a future potential of reaching as low as 45 kg CO₂e per tonne, i.e. to reduce CO₂ emissions with up to 95% compared to traditional Portland cement, which emits approx. 850 kg CO₂e per tonne.

    For more information, please contact:
    Vattenfall’s Press Office, +46 8 739 50 10, press@vattenfall.com
    Victor Melander, Head of PR & Communication Cemvision, +46 70-7 88 39 55, 
    press@cemvision.se

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