When it comes to fashion weeks, there used to be four key cities: New York, London, Milan and Paris. While they remain titleholders, a host of other cities spanning everywhere from Berlin to Seoul and Lagos have been vying for the same…
Author: admin
-

How debutante Margaret Whigham shocked society by breaking her betrothal to wed a wealthy American – before finding infamy as the ‘dirty’ Duchess of Argyll
The dress has been spotlighted this week by the V&A Museum, which holds the gown and the accompanying veil in its collection, offering a welcome opportunity to revisit the trials and tribulations of Margaret’s life.
Born on 1 December 1912,…
Continue Reading
-

Atypical Depression Shows Distinct Genetic and Treatment Profile
ATYPICAL depression was shown to represent a clinically and biologically distinct subtype of major depressive disorder, according to a large genetically informed study linking symptom patterns to genetic risk profiles and differential…
Continue Reading
-

Nurgle infests the latest episode of Loremasters on Warhammer TV
© Copyright Games Workshop Limited 2026. GW, Games Workshop, Citadel, White Dwarf, Space Marine, 40K, Warhammer, Warhammer 40,000, the ‘Aquila’ Double-headed Eagle logo, Warhammer Age of Sigmar, Battletome, Stormcast Eternals, and all…
Continue Reading
-

Laurent Mekies reflects on ‘special moment’ of Red Bull running with new power unit in Barcelona
Laurent Mekies admitted that it was a “very special moment” for Red Bull to run with their own power unit for the first time during the Barcelona Shakedown, with the Team Principal adding that he is “proud” of the squad for the work that…
Continue Reading
-

Al-Maliki is defiant after Trump threatens to withdraw US support for Iraq
BAGHDAD — Former Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki expressed defiance Wednesday after U.S. President Donald Trump threatened to withdraw Washington’s support for Iraq if he returns to power.
“We reject the blatant American interference in…
Continue Reading
-
Israel steps up evictions of Palestinians from East Jerusalem – Reuters
- Israel steps up evictions of Palestinians from East Jerusalem Reuters
- Settlers Uproot 200 Olive Trees and Seize Motorcycle near Ramallah yaffaps.com
- Forced Self-Demolitions, Tree Uprooting, and Home Destruction Mark Escalation in Occupied West…
Continue Reading
-

UK media groups should be allowed to opt out of Google AI Overviews, CMA says | Digital media
Web publishers and news organisations could be given the power to stop Google scraping their content for its AI Overviews, under measures announced by the UK competition watchdog to loosen its grip on online search.
Media organisations have experienced a drop in click-through traffic to their websites – and therefore their revenue – since Google started posting AI summaries at the top of search results, which many people read without clicking through to the original journalism.
Sites have been unable to opt out of their content being scraped for those overviews without also withdrawing from traditional Google search, which, given the company’s market dominance, would hugely affect the visibility of their journalism.
On Wednesday, the Competition and Markets Authority proposed “a fairer deal” over how their content was used and launched a month-long consultation on allowing publishers to “be able to opt out of their content being used to power AI features such as AI Overviews or to train AI models outside of Google search”.
In the first measures to be announced under the UK’s new digital markets competition regime, the CMA also said Google would have to rank its search results fairly, including not uprating organisations with which it has commercial relationships or potentially punishing websites for speaking out against it. Google says it does not provide special treatment based on an organisation’s relationship with it.
News media organisations hope the changes will increase their leverage to get paid if their content is used in Google’s AI mode. However, there was disappointment that the CMA also announced it would wait a year to decide whether to take further action to ensure publishers receive fair and reasonable terms for their content.
Owen Meredith, the chief executive of the News Media Association trade body, welcomed the moves. He said the CMA had recognised Google was “able to extract valuable data without reward, harming publishers and giving the company an unfair advantage over competitors in the AI model market, including British startups”.
Google said: “Any new controls need to avoid breaking search in a way that leads to a fragmented or confusing experience.” But added that it was “working on ways to let news sites opt out of AI Overviews”.
The CMA is also expected to legally require Google to install “choice screens” to allow users to more easily switch to other search services on Android mobiles and introduce them on the Google Chrome browser.
This month a report from the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism found media executives around the world feared search engine referrals would fall by 43% over the next three years amid the rise of AI summaries and chatbots.
Google search is down 33% globally, according to data for more than 2,500 news sites sourced by Chartbeat, with lifestyle, celebrity and travel content more heavily affected than current affairs and news outlets.
Sarah Cardell, the CMA chief executive, said the moves would give UK businesses and consumers more control over how they interacted with Google search, unlock opportunity for innovation across the UK tech sector and “provide a fairer deal for content publishers, particularly news organisations, over how their content is used in Google’s AI Overviews”.
Ron Eden, Google’s principal for product management, said: “Our goal is to protect the helpfulness of search for people who want information quickly, while also giving websites the right tools to manage their content. We look forward to engaging in the CMA’s process and will continue discussions with website owners and other stakeholders on this topic.”
Continue Reading
-

Trump warns Iran ‘armada’ is heading its way and to agree nuclear deal
U.S. President Donald Trump speaks to reporters about the Israel-Iran conflict, aboard Air Force One on June 24, 2025, while traveling to attend the NATO summit in The Hague in the Netherlands.
Brendan Smialowski | Afp | Getty Images
U.S. President…
Continue Reading
-

Trump reiterates threat of military action with demand for Iran deal | Donald Trump News
DEVELOPING STORYDEVELOPING STORY,
Published On 28 Jan 2026
President Donald Trump has revived the threat that the United States is ready to launch a military attack against Iran as he…
Continue Reading
