2 months 2 weeks ago
ROBERT JENRICK: Lady Justice has long been depicted in a blindfold because justice must be immune to extraneous things such as race, sex and religion. That British principle is under threat.
2 months 2 weeks ago
The presenter, 59, is set to make his return to ITV after six years on Tuesday night, as he appears on Kate Garraway's Life Stories.
2 months 2 weeks ago
Three fire crews rushed to the scene shortly after 7.15pm on Monday, March 31 on the northbound A130 Sadlers Farm roundabout
Paige Ingram
2 months 2 weeks ago
The 27-year-old was sentenced to just six years probation during a hearing Monday in Oconto County, Wisconsin and faces a possible jail sentence if that probation is violated.
2 months 2 weeks ago
Hailey Bieber has broken her silence after unfollowing troubled husband Justin on Instagram - amid swirling rumors about the state of their marriage.
2 months 2 weeks ago
1990s incident response in 2025
Two Oracle data security breaches have been reported in the past week, and the database goliath not only remains reluctant to acknowledge the disasters publicly – it may be scrubbing the web of evidence, too.…
Thomas Claburn
2 months 2 weeks ago
Hospitality bosses yesterday warned the industry faces a £3.4billion hit over the next year - causing a 'chilling effect on investment and job creation'.
2 months 2 weeks ago
In a panel discussion during GPU Technical Conference a few weeks ago, Nvidia co-founder and chief executive officer Jensen Huang suggested to executives of several quantum computing companies that are calling their systems “computers” may be a misnomer and that a better tag might be “instruments.” …
D-Wave Pushes Back At Critics, Shows Off Aggressive Quantum Roadmap was written by Jeffrey Burt at The Next Platform.
Jeffrey Burt
2 months 2 weeks ago
Bruce66423 shares a report from the BBC: A former GCHQ intern has admitted risking national security by taking top secret data home with him on his mobile phone. Hasaan Arshad, 25, pleaded guilty to an offence under the Computer Misuse Act on what would have been the first day of his trial at the Old Bailey in London. The charge related to committing an unauthorised act which risked damaging national security.
Arshad, from Rochdale in Greater Manchester, is said to have transferred sensitive data from a secure computer to his phone, which he had taken into a top secret area of GCHQ on 24 August 2022. [...] The court heard that Arshad took his work mobile into a top secret GCHQ area and connected it to work station. He then transferred sensitive data from a secure, top secret computer to the phone before taking it home, it was claimed. Arshad then transferred the data from the phone to a hard drive connected to his personal home computer. "Seriously? What on earth was the UK's equivalent of the NSA doing allowing its hardware to carry out such a transfer?" questions Bruce66423.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
BeauHD
2 months 2 weeks ago
Philip Barantini posted a celebratory Instagram story saying 'We did it' as the four-part show continues to spark conversation on how to protect young boys from misogny on social media.
2 months 2 weeks ago
The 72-year-old former star of Baywatch star was not in attendance at the Saturday service held at the Bel Air Presbyterian Church according to TMZ on Monday.
2 months 2 weeks ago
Taiwanese authorities have accused 11 Chinese companies, including SMIC, of secretly setting up disguised entities in Taiwan to illegally recruit tech talent from firms like Intel and Microsoft. The Register reports: One of those companies is apparently called Yunhe Zhiwang (Shanghai) Technology Co., Ltd and develops high-end network chips. The Bureau claims its chips are used in China's "Data East, Compute West" strategy that, as we reported when it was announced in 2022, calls for five million racks full of kit to be moved from China's big cities in the east to new datacenters located near renewable energy sources in country's west. Datacenters in China's east will be used for latency-sensitive applications, while heavy lifting takes place in the west. Staff from Intel and Microsoft were apparently lured to work for Yunhe Zhiwang, which disguised its true ownership by working through a Singaporean company.
The Investigation Bureau also alleged that China's largest chipmaker, Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation (SMIC), used a Samoan company to establish a presence in Taiwan and then hired local talent. That's a concerning scenario as SMIC is on the USA's "entity list" of organizations felt to represent a national security risk. The US gets tetchy when its friends and allies work with companies on the entity list.
A third Chinese entity, Shenzhen Tongrui Microelectronics Technology, disguised itself so well Taiwan's Ministry of Industry and Information Technology lauded it as an important innovator and growth company. As a result of the Bureau's work, prosecutors' offices in seven Taiwanese cities are now looking into 11 Chinese companies thought to have hidden their ties to Beijing.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
BeauHD
2 months 2 weeks ago
Her own MAGA fairytale may have hit the skids after her split from Donald Trump Jr, but Kimberly Guilfoyle was beaming with pride this weekend as her younger brother Tony's wedding in Ireland.
2 months 2 weeks ago
The 60-year-old actress, known for her role as Charlotte York in the hit HBO show, recalled filming the scene for the first episode of Season 5. And she has now described it as 'mortifying.'
2 months 2 weeks ago
Glitter, real name Paul Francis Gadd, was ordered last year to pay £508,800 damages to a woman he abused when she was aged 12.
2 months 2 weeks ago
The stars were out in force for the premiere of the second season of Doctor Who in London on Monday.
2 months 2 weeks ago
The Labour PM used an international summit in London to demand greater action against criminal gangs profiting from trafficking large numbers of people, including across the Channel.
2 months 2 weeks ago
The Prime Minister said he would look at any policies to tackle illegal migration if they were cost-effective and did not breach international law.
2 months 2 weeks ago
OpenAI plans to release a new open-weight language model -- its first since GPT-2 -- in the coming months and is seeking community feedback to shape its development. "That's according to a feedback form the company published on its website Monday," reports TechCrunch. "The form, which OpenAI is inviting 'developers, researchers, and [members of] the broader community' to fill out, includes questions like 'What would you like to see in an open-weight model from OpenAI?' and 'What open models have you used in the past?'" From the report: "We're excited to collaborate with developers, researchers, and the broader community to gather inputs and make this model as useful as possible," OpenAI wrote on its website. "If you're interested in joining a feedback session with the OpenAI team, please let us know [in the form] below." OpenAI plans to host developer events to gather feedback and, in the future, demo prototypes of the model. The first will take place in San Francisco within a few weeks, followed by sessions in Europe and Asia-Pacific regions.
OpenAI is facing increasing pressure from rivals such as Chinese AI lab DeepSeek, which have adopted an "open" approach to launching models. In contrast to OpenAI's strategy, these "open" competitors make their models available to the AI community for experimentation and, in some cases, commercialization.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
BeauHD
2 months 2 weeks ago
Former United States Ambassador to Denmark Carla Sands on Monday urged the country's leaders to shift their strategy for dealing with President Donald Trump.