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  • Handling of Epstein files is ‘outrageous’, say attorneys of his sex trafficking survivors | Jeffrey Epstein

    Handling of Epstein files is ‘outrageous’, say attorneys of his sex trafficking survivors | Jeffrey Epstein

    Survivors of Jeffrey Epstein’s sex trafficking operation have reacted to the voluminous – and possibly last – tranche of government-held investigative documents with calls for further accountability for the scheme’s alleged clients.

    “It…

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  • Iran rolls out 5 million-rial banknote, about $3.10 at market rate

    Iran rolls out 5 million-rial banknote, about $3.10 at market rate

    Iran is now enduring the country’s longest and most comprehensive internet disruption on record. Its impact has stretched far beyond blocked platforms and loading screens, pushing many businesses to a point of no return.

    Economists estimate Iran’s digital economy generates roughly 30 trillion rials (about $42 million) a day. While modest on paper, that figure represents the livelihoods of small and medium-sized enterprises that operate almost entirely online.

    The Tehran Chamber of Commerce estimates that at least 500,000 Instagram-based shops operate in Iran, supporting around one million jobs whose sales effectively drop to zero without internet access.

    The collapse began when the signal died

    Industry data reviewed by trade groups show daily losses running into billions of rials, with the Chamber reporting revenue declines of 50% to 90%. But some analysts say even those figures understate the damage.

    “Where does this figure even come from?” IT expert Amin Sabeti told Iran International. “These businesses operate on Instagram. When people have no access to Instagram, one hundred percent of their sales are gone.”

    Sabeti said the lack of precise data had itself become part of the crisis. “What we do know is that Instagram and WhatsApp are widely used by small businesses, and many have now lost customers completely,” he added. “For some people, their entire livelihood depended on these platforms.”

    In Iran, platforms such as Instagram, Telegram and WhatsApp function not only as messaging tools but as storefronts, marketing channels and payment gateways.

    Analysts estimate more than 40 million active users rely on them, making social media the backbone of e-commerce, especially for home-based businesses, informal retailers and women-led ventures.

    “In many cases, people have gone bankrupt because they had issued cheques that can no longer be covered,” Sabeti said. “The reality is that a large portion of online businesses that relied heavily on Instagram have been wiped out.”

    One Tehran-based online clothing seller told the news site Dideban Iran that her sales collapsed. After just one week of disruption, she laid off all her workers, shut down her workshop and sold her sewing machines. “I’m bankrupt,” she said.

    Another online seller said most digital businesses lack the reserves to survive even days without revenue. “When the internet goes,” the seller said, “whatever tiny capital we have disappears.”

    • Iranian Online Shop Building Sealed As Hijab Tensions Rise

    Silence from businesses

    Iran International contacted several large and small online businesses to ask about the impact of the blackout. None replied. Messages were not even seen — an absence that spoke louder than any quote.

    A few voices surfaced briefly on X. One user wrote that a friend who teaches languages online could no longer earn enough to cover monthly expenses. “Online business is not just online shops,” the post said. “Thousands of jobs depend on the internet, and they’ve been destroyed.”

    Another described producers already weakened by months of economic pressure. “In our industrial area, someone with 15 years of production experience is renting out his workshop as a spare-parts warehouse,” the post read. “Last year we had 13 workers. Now we have three.”

    Economists warn the damage will outlast restored connections. Prolonged shutdowns erode trust, deter investment and stall technological development. Many business owners say they have lost not only their capital but the will and the means to start again.

    Women, who make up a significant share of Iran’s home-based digital workforce, are among the most exposed. For many, online trade was the only viable entry into the economy. With that channel severed, unemployment follows quietly.

    “If this situation continues, it can really push the digital economy toward destruction,” said Reza Olfatnasab, head of the union of virtual businesses.

    • Crackdown On Online Businesses Intensifies In Iran

      Crackdown On Online Businesses Intensifies In Iran

    Numbers collide, blame follows

    As businesses slipped into silence, the argument over numbers intensified.

    Communications Minister Sattar Hashemi said recent outages were inflicting about 5,000 billion rials a day in direct losses on the core digital economy and nearly 50 trillion rials across the wider economy. Around 10 million people depend directly or indirectly on the sector, he said, adding that the average resilience of internet-based businesses is just 20 days.

    The hardline daily Kayhan dismissed those estimates as “fabricated figures,” accusing the communications ministry of deflecting responsibility and arguing that officials who failed to build a “secure and lawful” network should be held accountable.

    Industry bodies offered competing assessments. Analysts say the gap exposes a deeper problem than the shutdown itself: Iran lacks any transparent, standardized system to measure its digital economy.

    For many business owners, however, the debate over billions has already arrived too late. Their screens are dark, their messages unread and their income, whatever the final number, already gone.

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  • Harry Styles and Zoë Kravitz Test Out the LA Couple Lifestyle

    Harry Styles and Zoë Kravitz Test Out the LA Couple Lifestyle

    Harry Styles and Zoë Kravitz have been taking their couples style international. From Rome to Berlin and New York, they’ve mastered coordinating looks without veering matchy matchy: loose and easy denim, workwear separates, all things The Row….

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  • Jarrell Miller hairpiece punched off during fight

    Jarrell Miller hairpiece punched off during fight

    “Miller wins it by a hair.”

    That line of commentary had a meaning beyond Jarrell Miller’s split-decision win over Kingsley Ibeh at Madison Square Garden on Saturday.

    In an unusual moment on the undercard of the title fight between Shakur Stevenson…

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  • Donald Trump says Iran negotiating ‘seriously’ on nuclear weapons

    Donald Trump says Iran negotiating ‘seriously’ on nuclear weapons

    Unlock the White House Watch newsletter for free

    Donald Trump said Iran was negotiating “seriously” with the US over its nuclear programme as the president…

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  • Trump says India will buy oil from Venezuela

    Trump says India will buy oil from Venezuela

    U.S. President Donald Trump on Saturday said India will buy Venezuelan oil, helping to replace some of the Russian oil that the world’s third-biggest oil importer buys.

    “We’ve already made that deal, the concept of the deal,” Trump told reporters…

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  • Preparations begin for reopening of Gaza’s Rafah crossing, officials say | Gaza

    Preparations begin for reopening of Gaza’s Rafah crossing, officials say | Gaza

    Preparations to reopen Gaza’s main border crossing into Rafah began on Sunday though it was uncertain if any Palestinians would pass through it before the day’s end, officials have said.

    Before the war, the Rafah border crossing with Egypt was…

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  • No place for terrorists in Balochistan: CM Sarfraz – RADIO PAKISTAN

    1. No place for terrorists in Balochistan: CM Sarfraz  RADIO PAKISTAN
    2. Deadly gun and bomb attacks hit Pakistan’s Balochistan province  BBC
    3. More than 120 dead after multiple suicide and gun attacks in Pakistan, officials say  The Guardian
    4. ‘We will…

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  • PC Gamers Can Claim Awesome $25 Free Game, No Strings Attached

    PC Gamers can now grab a free game that is usually worth $25, where it’ll remain in your library until the end of time.

    Every week, the Epic Games Store offers a new freebie to pick up and add to your game library, with no strings attached.

    As…

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  • Scientists discover hidden geometry that bends electrons like gravity

    Scientists discover hidden geometry that bends electrons like gravity

    How can information move at incredible speeds, or electricity flow without wasting energy? Answering these questions has pushed scientists and technology companies toward quantum materials, whose behavior is governed by physics at the smallest…

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