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Updated 2025-11-03 07:03
Taylor Swift reappears on Spotify, but her music is credited to Lostprophets
The pop star is back on the streaming service after pulling her music, but something odd has happenedThis is weird: Taylor Swift was briefly back on Spotify. With just one song, from her 2012 album Red. And with the copyright attributed to paedophile former rock star Ian Watkins and his band, Lostprophets. Continue reading...
Just Cause 3 review – a ridiculously enjoyable but stuttering ride
The latest instalment in the brash action series provides a whole Mediterranean country to blow up – but there are problems in paradiseJust Cause 3 introduces its protagonist Rico Rodriguez as a “dictator removal specialist” who then punches the flying missile he’s standing on. The series has always been gargantuan, explosive and delightfully daft, but from its opening sequence this sequel ups the ante.This time round, Rico returns home to liberate Medici, 400 square miles of Mediterranean splendour oppressed by cartoon despot Di Ravello who thinks nothing of torching his own people in a quest for world domination. Don’t expect any kind of political subtext though: the plot is forgettable and any moral message is clouded by the indifference shown towards Rico’s endless collateral damage. Medici is a place where you casually board a civilian’s boat miles from land and throw them overboard while quipping: “It’s a good day for a swim”. The game is knowingly ridiculous and more fun for it, its mantra amounting to Homer on a prison trolley yelling: “Must kill Di Ravello, wee!”. Continue reading...
Apps of the month: December 2015
Apple’s streaming music service comes to Android; there’s a United Nation’s app making it easy to donate to children around the world, and the Firefox browser is now available on Apple iOS devices Continue reading...
Can you do ‘real work’ on an iPad?
It’s time to stop the snobbishness about how superior a ‘proper computer’ isWhat constitutes “real work”? Anyone who has dug a ditch by hand would say that certainly qualifies, but when it comes to computing and screens, the distinction becomes more difficult. Since the introduction of the iPad in 2010, the insistence among some that what gets done on an iPad is not “real work”, while stuff done on a computer with a keyboard running some flavour of Windows is, has become gradually more hilarious.What stopped people from doing “real work” on the first iPad? According to various comments after its introduction, the lack of Photoshop; no access to the file system; no USB port for flash memory drives, or a spinning hard drive capable of storing 160GB, or a physical keyboard. Then there was the lack of computer-aided design/manufacturing programs, and the absence of Microsoft Office. How could you do “real work” in the modern age without touching Office?
Can internet access go truly global?
As Facebook turns to drones, Google is pushing ahead with balloons in the quest to bring the internet to everyone – but is it really going to work?Founder, E-MAGINE Continue reading...
What are Facebook and other social media doing about Donald Trump?
US presidential candidate is using TV coverage and the power of the social web to publicise his campaignThe US woke up on Friday to the news that Donald Trump was a full 20 percentage points ahead of Ted Cruz, his nearest rival, for the Republican nomination, and a good 16 percentage points higher than America’s top political analysts thought he would be.Running on a platform of “making America great again”, his campaign has been noteworthy for Trump’s egregious widespread insults and total fabrications, on a gargantuan scale. The most recent of which was him claiming to have seen “thousands of Muslims” dancing in the streets of New Jersey after 9/11. No evidence exists of this, because it never happened. Continue reading...
Surveillance must increase after terror attacks, say 2016 candidates
Hillary Clinton, Donald Trump and others say new monitoring is needed following violence in Paris and San Bernardino – but they disagree on detailsPresidential candidates from both parties came together at the weekend to call for beefed-up government surveillance programs in the wake of recent terrorist attacks in Paris and San Bernardino, California.The candidates did not agree, however, on what kind of surveillance – new dragnet metadata collection, tools to fight encryption or some even more powerful capability – was needed. Continue reading...
Jeep Renegade: car review | Martin Love
It may be an all-American icon, but the new baby Jeep is built by Fiat in Italy – and that’s no bad thingPrice: £16,995
Kinesis Racelight T2: bike review | Martin Love
A top-class winter trainer that will keep you on the road all season at a bargain priceKinesis might be one of the biggest names in bikes you’ve never heard of. The US firm makes frames for everyone from Raleigh to Trek and Kona. It also builds and sells its own complete bikes. As you can imagine with such a huge firm, when it comes to economies of scale, Kinesis really can undercut the market. And at £657, its Racelight T2 must be the steal of the season.For many cyclists the sleek black bike has become a winter specialist, ideally suited to gruelling cold-weather rides. It has a durable alloy frame, comfortable ‘anti -roadshock’ hourglass seatstays, carbon forks, rack mounts, twin bottle cages and clearance for wider tyres. All coupled with quality components from Shimano. Plus, and this seals the deal – it comes with mudguards (probikekit.co.uk). Continue reading...
UberPool: ‘Why at peak time in London does no one want to share a cab – or at least with me?’
Taxi app Uber is allowing customers to save cash and cut traffic by sharing rides with strangers – a system already working in New York and Paris. We sent our writer on a testIt’s Friday night and not only am I ready for the weekend, I’m ready for the future. Unfortunately, I soon realise, the future is not quite ready for me.It’s the first day of UberPool in London, the urban taxi service’s new shared-cab facility, in which passengers save 25% of the normal fare by selecting the “pool” option on their Uber phone app. It means a journey can be shared by up to three passengers going in the same direction, thus cutting not just the price but also, in theory, congestion. Continue reading...
Time travel: take a peek at the future of transportation - in pictures
As part of our future of transportation series, we asked you for sketches and designs of a futuristic mode of transportation, from air to sea, that might exist 50 to 100 years from now. We’ve created a gallery below to feature some of your ideas. We are still taking submissions, so send us your drawings here Continue reading...
On the road: Audi RS3 Sportback – car review
The stop-start engine wakes up, roars and goes back to sleep, like a narcoleptic lion
Fitness trackers enjoy healthy sales despite lack of evidence they work
Soaring Christmas sales for Fitbit and Jawbone are, on the face of it, good for UK’s obesity crisis. But there are concerns about privacy and effectivenessOne of this year’s most popular Christmas presents looks like being a device that purports to help reverse the effects of festive overindulgence – the fitness tracker.
Uber fundraising drive values firm higher than General Motors
Financing plans for company behind taxi-hailing app push value to $63bn outstripping the US car manufacturer’s $56bn worthUber Technologies, the company behind the rapidly growing taxi-hailing app, could be valued at more than $60bn (£40bn) after its latest fundraising round.The San Francisco-based car-booking company hopes to raise as much as $2.1bn in new cash, Bloomberg reported. It has filed paperwork in Delaware detailing the financing plans, which would value the business at $62.5bn. This would exceed General Motors, the US carmaker behind the Chevrolet, Cadillac and Vauxhall brands, whose market value is $55.6bn. Continue reading...
Quiz: What gaming age are you?
Do you play like a trigger-happy teenager or a button-bashing pensioner? Continue reading...
Faber boss says future of book publishing is mobile
Stephen Page also says publishers must ‘understand mobile’ and put smartphone communication at the centre of thinkingThe chief executive of publisher Faber & Faber has challenged the book publishing industry to respond to the rapid increase in smartphone use, particularly by young readers.
Tech house of the future: take a look around
Smart ovens, living carpets, robot butlers and beds that remind you to have sex – then make themselves. Welcome to your home of tomorrowGrab the keys and get set to unpack your boxes. It’s time to move into the future. But before you cross the threshold and command your robo-butler to get the kettle on, take a moment to stand back and admire this feat of engineering.First off, traditional clay bricks are out. Future houses are likely to be eco-friendly, eschewing CO²-heavy manufacturing processes. Your home might incorporate building blocks constructed from natural cement churned out by bacteria (1), or be fashioned from fungi – indeed several companies including MycoWorks and EvocativeDesign are exploring the potential of mushroom-based materials. Alternatively, if retro-chic is your thing, super-insulating straw-bale panels appear to be in for a renaissance, while new developments with aerogels also promise a well-insulated abode. Continue reading...
Bird's eye view: the best quadcopters tried and tested
Whether you’re a beginner, keen to get into racing, a photography buff or just curious about a possible new hobby, there’s a drone to suit you. We try out some of the best with the UK’s top FPV drone pilot“I hate the word drone,” says James Bowles, aka JAB1a, the best drone pilot in the country. He’s acknowledging the less than warm reputation they enjoy, as death-dealing instruments of war and surveillance.
Flight of the quadcopters - video
James Bowles, one of the UK’s leading FPV drone pilots, shot some footage on the tiny aircrafts’ on-board cameras to accompany his trial of six popular models.Read his verdict here. Continue reading...
Is there an app for that? In San Francisco, the answer is often no
Silicon Valley has delusions of grandeur and should concentrate on problems closer to homeIt’s something of a running joke in San Francisco that there are so many startups designed to meet the needs of twentysomething, freshly dropped out of college wannabe startups: food delivery to your door (SpoonRocket, DoorDash, Instacart), laundry delivery to your door (Rinse, Sudzee, Instawash), marijuana to your door (Eaze, MediThrive, the Green Cross), car parking from your door (Luxe, ZIRX). A rich variety of chores outsourced to some poorly paid service worker. Does this sound like the future?Given how many niche startups there are for this shut-in generation, and how many entrepreneurs and developers move to San Francisco, it’s slightly surprising there isn’t a service to help with the move itself. Ever since some Europeans got lost a few hundred years ago and controversially claimed parts of North America, there has been a westward drift, culturally and economically. Continue reading...
Chatterbox: Friday
The place to talk about games and other things that matterIt’s Friday! Yay! Continue reading...
Coldplay hold back A Head Full of Dreams album from Spotify
New release available on Apple Music and other subscription services as band makes stand against free on-demand streaming
Telcos and security agencies exempted from data breach rules in draft bill
Legislation proposes telecommunications companies, federal police and other agencies not be made to tell people their data has been stolenAustralian law enforcement agencies and telcos that suffer certain types of data breaches are likely to be exempt from rules requiring them to notify the people affected, under a draft bill.The federal government published on Thursday an exposure draft of mandatory data breach laws that would compel Australian companies – and in some circumstances overseas companies they pass data on to – to notify customers in the event their personal data has been exposed. Continue reading...
Yahoo's 'seemingly permanent decline': is this the end for the once-mighty firm?
Critics are charging once celebrated CEO Marissa Mayer with failing to pick a direction for the tech company, and questioning whether it can ever recoverIs Yahoo approaching its final yodel? The tech company is reportedly in talks to spin off its core business, as well as whether to finally divest its remaining stake in Chinese e-commerce company Alibaba, the latter fabulously lucrative, the former … well, not so much.The lion’s share of the blame for what ad industry analyst Brian Wieser called a state of “seemingly permanent decline” in a note to investors this week is falling on its once celebrated CEO, Marissa Mayer. Continue reading...
A dating site for Disney fans? It's a whole new world …
Mouse Mingle gives users chance to find partner who might be the Belle to their Beast - with Mickey playing cupidJasmine and Aladdin, Belle and the Beast, Carl and Ellie, Lady and the … you get the picture; Disney couples have set the standard for relationship goals for decades.They (probably) never fight over what to watch on the television; never have arguments about putting the toilet seat down; never end up screaming at each other in the supermarket. Continue reading...
Paris climate summit: hackers leak login details of more than 1,000 officials
Private data including emails, usernames and phone numbers of 1,415 delegates posted online by Anonymous in protest against arrests of activistsHackers have leaked the private login details of nearly 1,415 officials at the UN climate talks in Paris in an apparent act of protest against arrests of activists in the city.Anonymous, the hacktivist movement, hacked the website of the summit organisers, the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), and posted names, phone numbers, usernames, email addresses, and secret questions and answers onto an anonymous publishing site. Continue reading...
From robo-toys to mechanical bears: your future carers may be robots
Japanese firms are betting on robots to look after our ageing populations in the futureRobot carers will be the next big thing coming out of Japan, if Toyota, Honda and other firms ploughing money into robo-helpers are to be believed.From robotic toys that simulate pets for companionship, to big mechanical bears that can physically carry you between beds and wheelchairs – all with a friendly smile – the robots aren’t only coming to take your jobs, but to take care of older people too. Continue reading...
Pixar co-founder warns virtual-reality moviemakers: 'It's not storytelling'
Ed Catmull says he’s open to being proved wrong by new generation of VR creators: ‘I think they should keep running the experiments’Pixar Animation co-founder Ed Catmull has warned that virtual reality technology may not be the revolution in storytelling that some of its evangelists have claimed.“It’s not storytelling. People have been trying to do [virtual reality] storytelling for 40 years. They haven’t succeeded. Why is that? Because we know that if they succeed then people would jump on it.” Continue reading...
Max Schrems demands Facebook stop EU to US data transfer due to snooping
Updated complaints to Irish, German and Belgian watchdogs call for Facebook to stop transferring EU citizens’ data to US following Safe Harbour collapseThe Austrian privacy campaigner Max Schrems is demanding that Ireland, Germany and Belgium stop Facebook from transferring EU citizens’ data to the US.After successfully prompting the European Court of Justice to invalidate the Safe Harbour agreement, which governed the privacy of EU citizens’ data transferred to the US until October, Schrems is attempting to force through the consequences of the court’s decision. Continue reading...
New Star Wars teasers tap Google Cardboard for virtual-reality story
Lucasfilm works with Google and Verizon on latest teaser for The Force Awakens film under the title Jakku Spy, using ‘real sets’ from upcoming movieA long time ago in a galaxy far, far away ... there weren’t 721 different ways to get teasers on the upcoming Star Wars: The Force Awakens film. But those days are gone.Lucasfilm’s latest tactic to raise anticipation for the new movie is a series of virtual-reality videos under the title Jakku Spy, released through the official Star Wars app. Continue reading...
Chatterbox: Thursday
The place to talk about games and other things that matterIt’s Thursday! Continue reading...
Technology to wear: shine a light to show how you feel
The award-winning Halo device builds on selfie culture to allow you to express your moodSocial media might be all about putting yourself in the spotlight, but a wearable device aims to make it a physical reality, too.After working on indoor lighting projects, Nan Zhao, a PhD student in the Responsive Environments Group at MIT Media Lab in Cambridge, Massachusetts, was inspired to create Halo in an effort to wrestle lighting away from architecture and marry it to individuals. The resulting device contains 180 independently programmed LEDs that can change the colour and pattern of the hoop’s light, reflecting your mood, movement levels and the weather around you by syncing the information via an app. Continue reading...
Elon Musk calls for carbon price to halve the transition time to clean energy
Businessman and innovator says a scheme similar to the one Australia abandoned would make a huge difference in tackling climate changeOne of the world’s greatest innovators, Elon Musk, says the key to tackling climate change and driving clean energy innovation is a carbon price very similar to the one Australia abolished.
The Guardian view on the Chan-Zuckerberg foundation: a truly generous gesture | Editorial
Good intentions can’t guarantee good results as the new breed of venture philanthropists are learning. But three cheers for generosityWho could quibble with the decision by Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and his wife Priscilla Chan to celebrate the birth of their daughter by donating almost all of their private fortune – $45bn – to a new philanthropic foundation? Quite a lot of people, it turns out, are not quite dazzled by what, in the global league of success, amounts to voluntary impoverishment. There is some justice to the criticism: the ambition and scale of contemporary philanthropy can raise some very particular problems of transparency, accountability and unintended consequences.Mark Zuckerberg – who has already given away more than $1bn – knows that from experience. Five years ago, he pledged $100m to the StartUp:Education foundation. It was in support of a cross-party alliance to transform Newark’s dire public schools. After five tumultuous years, the project is still going, but it is smaller in its purpose and wider in its focus. The possibilities of a top-down revolution were more or less defeated by Newark’s disfiguring poverty. Now it embraces social workers, physical and mental health and even the quality of school meals. It was an object lesson in the limitations of philanthropy. Doing good is not the same as doing business. Continue reading...
Facebook shares: what's behind Mark Zuckerberg's 'hacker philanthropy'?
The tech billionaire was already one of the essential figures of our age. Now, with his $45bn pledge, he’s being seen as a generational Superman. But does a state-like level of spending run the risk of making him a ‘chequebook dictator’?Mark Zuckerberg drives a Volkswagen Golf. He pays himself an annual salary of a dollar. In 2006, at the age of 22, he turned down a billion times that for Facebook. In 2010, when his then-girlfriend (now wife) Priscilla Chan moved in to his home, he posted an update offering their crockery and appliances because they had “2x everything”. He dresses in grey T-shirts and hoodies.As quiet a life as Zuckerberg and Chan lead in some respects, they are in others fairly conspicuous. And on Tuesday they took an extraordinary action in the most visible way possible. Via an open letter to their new daughter Max (posted, obviously, on Facebook) the Chan Zuckerbergs announced that they would be donating 99% of their Facebook shares to charity during their lifetime. A missive featuring a bullet-pointed mission statement and the phrase “personalised learning tools” may lack the gooey warmth that little Max might have been entitled to expect, but no one can deny its potential impact: at current values, the family’s donation is worth more than $45bn. Continue reading...
The playlist: hip-hop – Junglepussy, Wiki, Tink and more
Junglepussy’s free album could be one of 2015’s best, Wiki unleashes a track from Lil Me, Tink kicks you to the kerb and A$AP Rocky’s out to lunchJunglepussy’s free album is a late contender for one of the best hip-hop releases of 2015. Distorted vocals are accompanied by lines about making porn to watch while eating popcorn. It’s unlike anything that’s come out this year and builds on Junglepussy’s reputation as one of Brooklyn’s best rappers. Continue reading...
Will Zuckerberg and Chan's $45bn pledge change philanthropy?
Today’s tech billionaires blur the line between philanthropist and entrepreneur. Time will tell if Facebook’s CEO and his wife will succeed in doing good – but by then they might have changed the act of giving foreverIt seems fitting that on the day that the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History unveiled its Giving in America exhibit — with Bill Gates and Warren Buffett presiding — Mark Zuckerberg, the CEO of Facebook, and his wife Priscilla Chan, made a claim for the inauguration of a new chapter in the history of philanthropy, one dominated by the mushrooming fortunes of Silicon Valley.In a post on Facebook to their newborn daughter Max, the couple announced that they would turn over 99% of their Facebook shares — with a current value of around $45bnn — “during our lives” to advance a mission of “advancing human potential and promoting equality for all children in the next generation”. This is a big deal, one of the largest philanthropic pledges ever made. But how much of a rupture it represents in the tradition of modern US philanthropy isn’t entirely clear. The Smithsonian might not need to add another display case just yet. Continue reading...
Google accused of spying on students in FTC privacy complaint
EFF says Google is tracking and mining student browsing data without asking for consent, despite promise of privacyUS privacy campaigner the Electronic Frontier Foundation has accused Google of spying on students and logged a complaint with US regulator the Federal Trade Commission.
CNN to enter learning market with online English language service
Broadcaster aiming at international market seeking to learn ‘business-level’ EnglishCNN is to enter the learning market with the launch of an international online English language learning service.The international arm of the news organisation is to launch the new business, CNN Learn English, after striking a deal with learning company Papagei.com. Continue reading...
Xbox 360 at 10: what are your memories of Microsoft's wonder console?
Launched 2 December 2005 in Europe, Xbox 360 is one of the greatest consoles of all time. Tell us your favourite moments from a decade of HD gamingAs incredible as it may seem to some veteran gamers, the Xbox 360 is now 10 years old. Launched on 22 November in the US and 2 December in Europe, Microsoft’s second console arrived at a time in which HD televisions were just about taking off, and broadband internet connections were accelerating. Consequently, while the PlayStation 3 floundered in development hell, it was the 360 that brought in a new era of high-definition, highly connected play.It was the Xbox 360 that really brought seamless social gaming to the console space. Although previous consoles had included internet connectivity, Microsoft made Xbox Live the centre of the gaming experience, providing players with intuitive online multiplayer experiences, as well as the ability to chat with friends as they played. The arrival of the Gamerscore and achievement points also brought a new high-score metric to gaming, giving owners a chance to compare themselves with their mates, and providing developers with a new way to get players really exploring their worlds. Continue reading...
Dead or Alive and otaku culture: why sensitivity is not the same as censorship
The absence of a western release of the latest in the salacious and skimpily-clad beach volleyball series has caused controversy – but this is not about free speechTen years ago, Japanese video game publisher Tecmo had a brilliant money-spinning idea. It decided to take the female characters from its successful fighting game series Dead or Alive and put them into a beach volleyball simulation set on a tropical island. There would be a lot of bikinis and thanks to a then cutting edge graphics engine, a lot of bounce physics. Dead or Alive Xtreme Beach Volleyball sold hundreds of thousands of copies. A new gaming franchise was born.But now that same franchise is in trouble. Kind of. Continue reading...
Chatterbox: Wednesday
The place to talk about games and other things that matterIt’s Wednesday Continue reading...
Mark Zuckerberg and his wife pledge 99% of their Facebook shares to charity – video
In a promotional video filmed shortly before the birth of their first daughter, Max, the Facebook chief and his wife, Priscilla Chan, discuss their decision to donate 99% of their Facebook shares to charity over the course of their lifetimes. The couple will invest the worth of their shares – valued at about $45bn – into their joint charitable venture, the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative. Speaking about the project, Zuckerberg says they feel they have a “basic moral responsibility” to “tilt their investments” towards making the world better for their daughter Continue reading...
Mark Zuckerberg and Priscilla Chan announce baby girl – and $45bn charity initiative
In a Facebook post to newborn child Max, the Facebook CEO says he will administer the initiative himself using 99% of shares in company’s stockThe Zuckerbergs announced two births on Tuesday: a baby girl, and to one of the world’s biggest charities.That sterling spoon you might have been considering for Mark Zuckerberg’s new baby may no longer be the most exciting gift to the Facebook billionaire’s daughter: after revealing his wife, Priscilla Chan, had given birth to their first child, Max, Zuckerberg announced the creation of a charity organization called the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative. Continue reading...
'American Isis Twitter scene' reveals social media's power to radicalise
Study examines thriving hierarchy of ‘nodes’, ‘amplifiers’ and ‘shout-outs’ among Isis supporters on Twitter, where a suspended account is a ‘badge of honour’Islamic State sympathisers in America prefer Twitter to any other social media platform and use avatars of black flags, green birds and lions – including the Detroit Lions NFL team – in their online propaganda, a study has shown.Having a Twitter account suspended has become a “badge of honour” among US-based Isis supporters, researchers found, and they are adopting increasingly sophisticated techniques to circumvent the authorities in a “never-ending cat-and-mouse game”. Continue reading...
Are Christmas fairy lights really ruining your Wi-Fi?
Internet in the home lives and dies by the strength of your Wi-Fi, but lots of things cause interference. Here’s why, and what to do about itThe UK’s telecoms regulator Ofcom has warned that Christmas lights can slow down your Wi-Fi, but is it really time for those lights to stay in the box? Continue reading...
Thom Yorke: YouTube steals art 'like Nazis during second world war'
The Radiohead frontman hits out at video-sharing site’s supposed double standards over ad-blocking: ‘Artists don’t get paid, but if YouTube don’t get a profit out of it, it’s not fair’Thom Yorke has shared his views on YouTube, suggesting that the corporation, along with parent company Google, have “seized control” of art in the same way Nazi Germany did during the second world war.Yorke, who famously called Spotify “the last desperate fart of a dying corpse”, shared his thoughts on the video-sharing service during an interview for Italian newspaper La Repubblica. Continue reading...
Blake Cahill: my five predictions for marketing in 2016
From wearable devices that interact with the internet of things to immersive video experiences, the global head of digital at Philips looks to marketing in 2016Marketers look to the future. Every year, new players, products and consumer habits come to the fore, the industry evolves, adapts and what was once cutting edge best-practice becomes sub-standard. It looks like next year is shaping up to be full of surprises.Seeds have been planted over the past 18 months that will start bearing fruit – from the rise and rise of wearable technology, to mobile payments and even virtual reality. There’s no guarantee exactly which trends will develop during the year but the sooner you change your thinking, the longer you’ll have to adjust and stay ahead of the game. Continue reading...
Warning that Christmas fairy lights can slow your Wi-Fi
Watchdog finds festive angle as it launches app to test home broadband speed and releases findings that millions of British homes still lack high-speed accessFairy lights on Christmas trees could cause slower Wi-Fi speeds, the UK regulator Ofcom has warned, as it launched a new app to test coverage in homes.
SBS employee sentenced over drunken Facebook threat to 'kill police for Allah'
Nicholas Rabone Hogan’s lawyer says post was ‘ill-advised’ satire but magistrate says it was ‘reckless and irresponsible’ and gives two-year good behaviour bondAn SBS employee who drunkenly posted a threat to murder police in the name of Allah has been given a two-year good behaviour bond in a Sydney court.Nicholas Rabone Hogan, 32, posted the threat to Facebook just hours after the funeral of the murdered NSW police accountant Curtis Cheng on 16 October, Newtown local court heard during sentencing on Tuesday. Continue reading...
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