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Updated 2025-12-21 01:15
The Startup Wife by Tahmima Anam review – a deft take on tech times
A witty investigation into the misogyny and bro culture of the world of startups and social media appsFrom John Carreyrou’s award-winning Bad Blood: Secrets and Lies in a Silicon Valley Startup to Reeves Wiedeman’s WeWork shakedown Billion Dollar Loser, the real-life stories coming out of startup land are so far-fetched that you could be forgiven for thinking there’s no ground left for invention.So what role can fiction play in this world with no boundaries – between home and work, love and business, purpose and profit? Tahmima Anam’s fourth novel attempts to answer this by taking inspiration from her experience as executive director of ROLI, a music technology startup founded by her husband. Continue reading...
Inside Kissinger’s secret trip to China – podcasts of the week
The Guardian’s Vincent Ni tells the story of a clandestine mission in The Documentary. Plus: more My Dad Wrote a Porno, and a bingeable, ballet-themed mysteryThe Documentary: When Kissinger went to China (from 12 Jun)
Act giving AFP powers to monitor An0m devices did not become law until after FBI operation began
Police say they used ‘appropriate legislative powers’ during Operation Ironside but a lawyer representing people charged says legal concerns remainThe Australian federal police have clarified the legal basis for a wide-ranging operation that ensnared hundreds of people using compromised encrypted devices developed by an FBI informant.The An0m devices were released in October 2018 by a convicted narcotics importer who was working for the FBI. Continue reading...
The touch of a button that broke the internet | Brief letters
Cricket privilege | The Queen at Oxford | Nightingale torment | Breaking the internetWhile it’s good to see the England team wearing anti-discrimination T-shirts (Ollie Robinson Twitter racism storm obscures ECB’s decades of inaction, 9 June), perhaps the England and Wales Cricket Board should be wondering why the whole team is made up of white players. There are thousands of black and Asian cricketers in the UK; what stops them making it into the national team? Perhaps not enough of them attend the private schools where many of the players of the last few years have been educated. Privilege wins out again.
Global banking regulators call for toughest rules for cryptocurrencies
Growth of crypto-assets threatens financial stability and could increase risks faced by banks, they warnGlobal regulators have said cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin should come with the toughest bank capital rules to avoid putting the wider financial system at risk should their value collapse suddenly.The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, which consists of regulators from the world’s leading financial centres, is proposing a “new conservative prudential treatment” for crypto-assets that would force banks to put aside enough capital to cover 100% of potential losses. Continue reading...
A billionaire buying bits of BT needn’t ring alarm bells | Nils Pratley
Move for 12% stake by Altice’s Patrick Drahi could be a good thing, though only time will tellA vote of confidence in the company? That’s always a board’s default spin on events when a billionaire buys a large stake, purrs politely about management but is slightly mysterious about his long-term intentions. The pitch is rarely convincing because billionaires are not generally the type to sit back and simply collect a stream of dividends. They tend to want something.It’s too soon to be confident about the motives behind Patrick Drahi of Altice’s purchase of a 12.1% stake in BT, worth £2bn. But, on this occasion, the non-threatening interpretation may be correct. Or, at least, it looks the most likely line for a while. Continue reading...
World’s biggest meat producer JBS pays $11m cybercrime ransom
Brazil-based company paid ransom in bitcoin after ransomware attack shut down operations across worldJBS, the world’s biggest meat processor, has paid an $11m (£7.8m) ransom after a cyber-attack shut down operations, including abattoirs in the US, Australia and Canada.While most of its operations have been restored, the Brazilian-headquartered company said it hoped the payment would head off any further complications including data theft. Continue reading...
Rose Callaghan: the 10 funniest things I have ever seen (on the internet)
We asked professional funny people what makes them laugh, and where we can find it online. Here are Rose Callaghan’s tipsHello, I’m comedian and internet aficionado Rose Callaghan. I have ADHD and am what many would consider “underemployed” so obviously spend most of my time on the internet arguing with people on Twitter and watching TikToks.I live and breathe the internet and unfortunately/sadly haven’t been able to stop posting since I first created an account on LiveJournal in the year 2002. Continue reading...
El Salvador becomes first country to adopt bitcoin as legal tender
Lawmakers voted in favor of President Nayib Bukele’s proposal as some experts call it ‘political marketing’El Salvador has become the first country in the world to adopt bitcoin as legal tender after its congress approved President Nayib Bukele’s proposal to embrace the cryptocurrency in an effort to promote “financial inclusion”, investment and economic development.Bukele, a media-savvy former mayor of the capital, San Salvador, who was elected president in a landslide victory two years ago, is known for his love of technology and his fondness for attention-grabbing stunts. Continue reading...
Biden withdrawing Trump orders that sought to ban WeChat and TikTok
President also orders new commerce department review of security concerns posed by those apps
Fastly says single customer triggered bug behind mass internet outage
Flaw was introduced in May and lay dormant until a customer updated their settings, firm saysAn internet blackout that knocked out some of the world’s biggest websites on Tuesday was ultimately caused by a single customer updating their settings, the infrastructure provider Fastly has revealed.A bug in Fastly’s code introduced in mid-May had lain dormant until Tuesday morning, according to Nick Rockwell, the company’s head of engineering and infrastructure. When the unnamed customer updated their settings, it triggered the flaw, which ultimately took down 85% of the company’s network. Continue reading...
Major internet outage ‘shows infrastructure needs urgent fixing’
Experts say outage shows internet services too centralised and lack resilienceOne of the world’s biggest web outages should act as a “wake-up call” that internet infrastructure has become dangerously over-centralised and lacks resilience, security experts have warned.An unexplained configuration error at a single infrastructure provider, Fastly, which handles 10% of the world’s internet traffic, was enough to render major websites and services inoperable for almost an hour on Tuesday morning. Continue reading...
Internet outage: which websites and services were hit by Fastly issue
From retailers such as Amazon to government information portals, the service interruption took its tollThe internet outage caused by a fault with cloud computing service Fastly took down thousands of websites in multiple countries, affecting governments and businesses in sectors ranging from media to online retail and telecoms.The interruption was relatively brief, lasting slightly more than an hour in most cases and occurring mid-morning UK time, before many people in the US will have woken up. Continue reading...
Apple’s new ‘private relay’ feature to be withheld in China
Privacy protection is latest effort by the company to cut down tracking of users by advertisers and other third partiesApple’s new privacy feature designed to obscure a user’s web browsing from internet service providers and advertisers will not be available in China, Saudi Arabia or Belarus, the company has said.It was one of a number of privacy protections Apple announced at its annual software developer conference on Monday, the latest in a years-long effort by the company to cut down on the tracking of its users by advertisers and other third parties. Continue reading...
Ratchet & Clank: Rift Apart review – an unbelievably gorgeous sci-fi caper
PlayStation 5; Insomniac Games/Sony
What caused the internet outage that brought down Amazon, Reddit and Gov.uk?
Problem at content delivery network provider Fastly is part of growing need for speed online
Massive internet outage hits websites including Amazon, gov.uk and Guardian
Technical problem traced to network run by Fastly brings some sites down entirely
Hundreds arrested in global crime sting after underworld app is hacked
European and Australian police join forces with FBI to seize weapons, drugs and $148m in cashThe FBI set up its own encrypted platform used by hundreds of criminals around the world, in an “unprecedented” sting operation that led to more than 800 arrests in 18 countries, law enforcement officers have said.The operation by the FBI and Australian and European police, ensnared suspects in Australia, Asia, Europe, South America and the Middle East involved in the narcotics trade. Continue reading...
How the FBI and Australian police gained a front seat view of underworld workings in 90 countries
Police in Australia and the US struck a blow to organised crime, resulting in hundreds of arrests. Now, an FBI affidavit reveals how authorities were able to pull it offIt was mid-2018 when a convicted narcotics importer met with FBI agents from San Diego and made them a tantalising offer: in exchange for a possible reduction in the importer’s sentence on other charges, would the bureau like a backdoor into the encrypted communications of a vast network of international organised crime groups?The importer had invested a “substantial amount” of money in developing an encrypted device which could be used by criminals around the world to avoid the detection of police. Continue reading...
Revert to type: how Goa’s last typewriter repair shop defied the digital age
Luis Abreu once thrived on servicing India’s many typewriters but computers are eclipsing his tradeIn Goa’s capital, Panaji, on Rua São Tomé, not far from the main post office, is a shop that offers packaging services. For a small fee, they will wrap your parcel in a sheet of muslin sewn with precise stitches to protect its contents from being damaged in the post.It started as a sideline to the main business of the store, but now it is the main earner for Luis Francisco Miguel de Abreu as he struggles to maintain one of the last typewriter repair shops in this Indian state. Continue reading...
DoJ reclaims millions paid to hackers after attack that hobbled US pipeline
Operation to recover cryptocurrency from Russia-based hacking group is first undertaken by new ransomware taskforceThe US Justice Department has recovered the majority of a multimillion-dollar ransom payment to hackers after a cyberattack that caused the operator of the nation’s largest fuel pipeline to halt its operations last month, officials said Monday.The operation to recover the cryptocurrency from the Russia-based hacker group is the first undertaken by a specialized ransomware taskforce created by the Biden administration, and reflects what US officials say is an increasingly aggressive approach to deal with a ransomware threat that in the last month has targeted critical industries around the world. Continue reading...
WWDC 2021: Apple unveils iOS 15, ‘focus mode’ and iCloud+ – as it happened
All of Apple’s latest hardware and software updates from its worldwide developers conference
China blocks cryptocurrency Weibo accounts in ‘judgment day’ for bitcoin
Several popular accounts on Twitter-like service are closed down, displaying message saying account ‘violates laws and rules’China has stepped up its crackdown on bitcoin trading and mining, blocking a slew of cryptocurrency-related accounts on the Twitter-like Weibo platform over the weekend.More actions are expected, including linking illegal crypto activities in China more directly with the country’s criminal law, according to analysts and a financial regulator. Continue reading...
Microsoft blocks Bing from showing image results for Tiananmen ‘tank man’
Company blames ‘human error’ after users in US, Germany, Singapore and France reported no results shown on the crackdown’s anniversaryMicrosoft has blamed human error after its search engine, Bing, blocked image and video results for the phrase “tank man” – a reference to the iconic image of a lone protester facing down tanks during the 1989 protests in Tiananmen Square – on the 32nd anniversary of the military crackdown.Users reported that no results were shown for the search query in countries including the US, Germany, Singapore, France and Switzerland, according to Reuters and Vice News. Continue reading...
White House says Republicans increased offer on Biden infrastructure deal by $50bn – as it happened
Tell us how work emails have been affecting your life
We would like to hear your experiences of after-hours contact from your employer, and how you manage work-life boundariesTrade union Prospect is calling for the government to grant employees a legally binding “right to disconnect” that would ban bosses from “routinely emailing or calling” outside of set working hours. This comes after a similar labour law took effect in France in 2017.With work-life boundaries having been tested by the pandemic, we would like to hear from you about how work emails have affected your life. Continue reading...
UK and EU investigate Facebook over unfair use of data in digital advertising
Joint inquiry to consider if Facebook stifles competition on Marketplace and Dating platformsUK and EU regulators are investigating Facebook over whether it is abusing its dominance in digital advertising.It marks the first time the regulators have coordinated on a major inquiry since Brexit, and strikes at the core of Facebook’s revenues, which rely heavily on selling advertising on its platform. Continue reading...
Amazon fired him – now he’s trying to unionize 5,000 workers in New York
Christian Smalls is taking on the fiercely anti-union colossus , convinced that a union of only Amazon workers is the smartest way to rally Amazon employeesChristian Smalls has taken on the biggest challenge of his life. Still smarting from when Amazon fired him last year, the 32-year-old is spearheading an effort to unionize more than 5,000 workers at four Amazon facilities in Staten Island, including a giant warehouse.Smalls is taking a highly unusual route in pursuing this goal; he has founded an independent union, the Amazon Labor Union, convinced that a new union comprising only Amazon workers is the smartest way to rally Amazon employees behind a union after the crushing defeat of an effort to unionize an Amazon warehouse in Alabama earlier this year. Continue reading...
Tongue-in-cheek tales from 19th-century India – podcasts of the week
Meera Syal and Jennifer Saunders star in Audible’s new spoof, Raj! Plus: a tense history lesson in GunPlot, and Unearthed offers gripping plant-themed talesRaj!
Facebook will end special treatment for politicians after Trump ban – report
Reported change comes after the Facebook oversight board said that the same rules should apply to all usersFacebook is reportedly planning to end a policy that effectively exempts politicians from content moderation rules.The Verge reported on Thursday that the network is expected to announce its new policy on Friday. The change comes as Facebook faces increased criticism for allowing world leaders and politicians to use its platform to spread misinformation, quash criticism and harass opponents. Continue reading...
Apple uses more suppliers from China than Taiwan for first time, data shows
The tech giant has become more, not less, dependent on the US’s superpower rival in recent years, according to analysisApple used more suppliers from China last year than it did from Taiwan for the first time, highlighting the difficulty the United States government will have in persuading companies to become less reliant on its superpower rival.Despite Donald Trump’s trade war against China, the tech company had 51 suppliers based in China and Hong Kong in 2020, according to a Nikkei Asia analysis of the annual Apple supplier list released last week. Continue reading...
Elon Musk’s Baby Shark tweet sparks share surge
Shares in Samsung Publishing – a leading investor in the creator of the viral shark video – jump by 6%Elon Musk has once again proved his ability to move markets with a casual aside about internet culture, as a comment about the viral “Baby Shark” YouTube video sparked a surge in the share price of a South Korean company.In response to a clip posted by the official Twitter account of the animated comedy series South Park about viral internet memes battling each other, the Tesla boss tweeted to his 56.3 million followers: “Baby Shark crushes all! ” Continue reading...
US meatpacking plants get back on stream after crippling cyber-attack
Experts warn ‘no one is out of bounds’ after ransomware attack halts production at JBS, which supplies more than fifth of US beefMeat-processing factories in the US run by the world’s largest company in that field are coming back on stream on Wednesday after a ransomware attack – as experts warned all corporate and local government leaders to be on the alert.A cyber-attack on the meat processor JBS had forced it to halt all US operations while it scrambled to restore functionality. The attack, like other recent hacks, is believed to have originated in Russia. Continue reading...
Netflix reportedly plans push into video games market
Streaming company said to have approached game industry executives with project at early stageApple, Microsoft, Sony and Google have all tried to create a “Netflix for games”, offering unlimited access to a library of titles for a flat monthly fee. But a growing number of reports suggest they may be about to face stiff competition from the streaming company itself.Netflix has been approaching senior game industry executives about joining it to lead the creation of a subscription games service, according to reports from the tech news site the Information and Reuters. Continue reading...
Sound Heap review – one podcast to spoof them all
Available online
Amazon US customers have one week to opt out of mass wireless sharing
Critics raise transparency fears over plan to turn all smart home devices into ‘mesh network’
I need a real person from BT to answer my urgent call
An elderly neighbour’s alarm system is linked to a landline, but it is out of orderMy 97-year-old neighbour has an alarm system supplied by social services linked to her landline. She has a fob she can press to summon help if she has a fall.The problem is that her landline is out of order. I reported the fault to BT but found it impossible to speak to a real person. The automated system confirmed there was a fault on her line and promised an engineer would call – but only before midnight on a date four days away. Continue reading...
Romeo and Juliet remixed: how technology can change storytelling
With the touch of a button, a Sydney Opera House audience rewrites Shakespeare as it is performed in front of themOn Sunday, as part of the Sydney Opera House’s UnWrapped series, a group of dancers “remixed” Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet by way of an Australian storytelling technology, Omelia. A product built to shuffle characters and events and generate narrative possibilities in real time, dancers using it brought a new version of the classic tragedy to life. The one-off production, R+J RMX, was filmed for the Opera House’s streaming platform.The “remix” was interactive: audience members were sent to a website where they could restructure the play with the touch of a button, while on stage narrators and dancers ran through numerous renditions of the story. Continue reading...
Digital forensics experts prone to bias, study shows
Participants found more or less evidence on hard drive depending on what contextual information they hadDevices such as phones, laptops and flash drives are becoming increasingly central to police investigations, but the reliability of digital forensics experts’ evidence has been called into question.A study found that experts tended to find more or less evidence on a suspect’s computer hard drive to implicate or exonerate them depending on the contextual information about the investigation that they were given. Continue reading...
How we made Short Circuit, by Steve Guttenberg and John Badham
‘A producer said: “Great – but can he dance?” So we got him to move like John Travolta in Saturday Night Fever’The second I read the script, about a robot becoming self-aware after being struck by lightning, I put it down and said: “This is a hit.” It was a timeless story about an underdog, a friendship and being an outsider. It also had John Badham as director who had done Saturday Night Fever and War Games. He knew how to make a movie like this work. It felt like a piece that was going to be around a long time and I grabbed it with both hands. Continue reading...
Work is where your laptop is: meet the globetrotting digital nomads
Worldwide shift to flexible and home working in pandemic has led to rise of new kind of backpacker
Data isn’t oil, whatever tech commentators tell you: it’s people’s lives | John Naughton
The pervasive metaphor likening information to crude obscures the reality of surveillance capitalismThe phrase “data is the new oil” is the cliche du jour of the tech industry. It was coined by Clive Humby, the genius behind Tesco’s loyalty card, who argued that data was “just like crude. It’s valuable, but if unrefined it cannot really be used. It has to be changed into gas, plastic, chemicals, etc to create a valuable entity that drives profitable activity; so must data be broken down, analysed for it to have value.”It turned out to be a viral idea: marketers, tech companies, governments, regulators and the mainstream media went for it like ostriches going after brass doorknobs (as PG Wodehouse might have put it) and it rapidly attained the status of holy writ. Continue reading...
‘Without books, we would not have made it’: Valeria Luiselli on the power of fiction
The Mexican author won the Dublin literary award last week for Lost Children Archive. She reflects on how reading and writing have helped her through the pandemicI read an article the other day about a computer program that writes fiction. You feed it a few lines, tell it the genre – science fiction, horror – and it produces the rest. And it’s not bad at it. It writes in full grammatical sentences; comes up with metaphors and analogies; emulates a writer’s particular style and so on. The author of the article, who seemed a little too thrilled about the existence of this diabolical toy from the depths of Silicon Valley says, at some point, that this “tool” was going to be the “salvation” for writers who dislike writing, which, according to him, is nearly all writers. I want to say to this writer: you are wrong. And to this robot that writes fiction I want to say … well I don’t want to say anything to it because, you know, robots are robots.Fiction is one of the most pleasurable of human activities. It’s one of the most difficult, yes; but when it is driven by a deep desire, it is one of the most pleasurable. Fiction is also something quite like a bodily intuition, or an embodied knowledge, something we feel when our minds are able to pierce through the mesh of the present, and imagine someplace/something other. At times, when we try to peer into that other place what we see is too painful, shocking or simply abysmal. But we have to look at it anyway, and make something of it, make something with it. The word fiction, in fact, comes from the Latin fingere, which means “to shape, to form”, and originally, “to mould something out of clay”. Fingere implies the action of making, or rather, giving form. It is not inventing something that is not true, but giving shape to something that was already there. Fiction requires a combination of insight, hindsight and foresight. In other words, it requires experience. Continue reading...
‘It’s like a rocket ship’: videos show coalminers behind the wheel of an electric car
An Australian engineer-turned climate activist hosts Coal Miners Driving Teslas, a YouTube and Twitter channel heavily spiced with unbridled swearingWhat happens when you take an electric car into a town full of petrolheads and coalminers, and film them planting their steel-capped boots on the accelerator?“Fuck me … it’s like a rocket ship,” says one miner, who usually spends his time driving V8s or manoeuvring a giant coal scoop. Continue reading...
Russian SolarWinds hackers launch email attack on government agencies
Microsoft says group targeted more than 15o American and foreign organisations using USAid accountThe state-backed Russian cyber spies behind the SolarWinds hacking campaign launched a targeted phishing assault on US and foreign government agencies and thinktanks this week using an email marketing account of the US Agency for International Development (USAid), Microsoft has said.The effort targeted about 3,000 email accounts at more than 150 organisations, at least a quarter of them involved in international development, humanitarian and human rights work, the Microsoft vice-president Tom Burt wrote in a blogpost on Thursday. Continue reading...
Streaming should be the future for theatre | Letters
Livestreams change the game for those who can’t access live theatre, writes Richard Lee, while John Warburton thinks all National Theatre productions should be broadcast by the BBCLarry Elliott’s optimistic article (Covid pandemic might unlock doors to golden age for the arts, 23 May) rightly points out the place of technology as the key driver for cultural change. Already in the vanguard by committing to stream every production is the Young Vic, tentatively supported by the Almeida, and hopefully underpinned by the National Theatre at Home service.These change the game for those who can’t access live theatre, with captioning, audio description and literally “being there” when you can’t make it. Beats me why every show isn’t getting a livestream, given that audiences for this year, and possibly for some time, will be reduced through social distancing. I love live events, but as bits of me fail, the words are never clearer than through subtitles and headphones, the moves and expressions never more detailed than in close-up, and what better way to break down the metropolitan stranglehold and give regional theatres an equal footing, as the Leicester Curve and its peers are promising? Continue reading...
Police find bitcoin mine using stolen electricity in West Midlands
Officers expected to discover a cannabis farm when they raided building on industrial estatePolice have discovered a cryptocurrency operation that used stolen electricity to mine bitcoin in the West Midlands.Officers from West Midlands police raided a building in an industrial estate on 18 May expecting to find a cannabis farm, but instead stumbled upon the cryptocurrency scheme. No arrests have been made. Continue reading...
Twitter lists paid-for ‘Blue’ subscription service on app stores
Appearance in Apple and Android stores signals long-rumoured launch may be imminentTwitter has listed a new paid-for “Twitter Blue” service on app stores, suggesting the social media company may launch its long-rumoured subscription service soon.Mobile phone app stores showed the service, although its expected features did not yet appear to be available. Continue reading...
Apple TV 4K 2021 review: faster chip, fancy iPod-like remote
Future-proofed Apple smart TV upgrade has widest selection of streaming apps but is super priceyThe second-generation Apple TV 4K gets a faster processor and future-proofed specs, but is really all about its new iPod-inspired Siri remote. And it all comes at a price.Costing £169, the Apple media-streaming box is very much at the top of the market despite being £10 cheaper than its predecessor, with direct competitors priced between £50 and £130. But the Apple TV 4K offers something most others cannot: full integration with all of the iPhone-maker’s services including Siri, iTunes, TV+, Music, Fitness+ and the AirPlay 2 streaming system. Continue reading...
Miriam Margolyes meets pensioners in their prime – podcasts of the week
Growing Old Disgracefully sees the actor meet over-70s ripping up the rulebook. Plus: Moya Lothian-McLean investigates how slavery continues to intersect with British societyGrowing Old Disgracefully
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