call_end

    • chevron_right

      Rule Breakers review – rousingly feelgood real life story of Afghan girls’ robotics team

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 17 November, 2025 • 1 minute

    This story of emancipated young women escaping draconian social strictures brims with enthusiasm and features a cameo from Phoebe Waller-Bridge

    Based on a true story, Bill Guttentag’s rousing drama attests to the resilience of women who dare to dream despite draconian social strictures. The film follows Roya Mahboob (Nikohl Boosheri), a trailblazing coach and businesswoman in Stem (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) who assembles a robotics team of Afghan girls for international competitions. The young dreamers hail from different walks of life but they all share the same zest for engineering. They face the same dangers too; in a country where women are not encouraged or even allowed to pursue higher levels of education, their quest for medals sees opposition from their own families as well as public scorn from conservatives.

    Rule Breakers is at its most thrilling during the competition sequences, which splice together real-life documentary footage of the events with fictional re-enactments. (There’s even an appearance from Phoebe Waller-Bridge as a host.) A breathless enthusiasm thrums through the film, as the camera swirls around the young competitors, all energised by their love for science. These spaces are portrayed as a haven that encourages camaraderie rather than competitiveness, and in a world divided by military conflicts and war, they offer a utopiian vision of international collaboration and solidarity.

    Continue reading...
    • chevron_right

      FCA’s first deputy CEO calls for stronger grip on vital tech firms

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 17 November, 2025

    Sarah Pritchard suggests City regulator will make use of oversight powers amid growing number of outages

    The City watchdog has said the UK needs to “strengthen” its grip on foreign tech firms providing critical services to banks, amid growing concerns over outages and cyber-attacks.

    Sarah Pritchard, who was appointed the Financial Conduct Authority’s (FCA) first deputy chief executive this summer, said there had been “very frequent reminders” of how important it was for the banking sector to have “good, strong operational resilience and cyber controls”.

    Continue reading...
    • chevron_right

      How Google’s DeepMind tool is ‘more quickly’ forecasting hurricane behavior

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 16 November, 2025

    ‘Less expensive and time consuming’ model helps with fast and accurate predictions, possibly saving lives and property

    When then Tropical Storm Melissa was churning south of Haiti, Philippe Papin, a National Hurricane Center (NHC) meteorologist, had confidence it was about to grow into a monster hurricane.

    As the lead forecaster on duty, he predicted that in just 24 hours the storm would become a category 4 hurricane and begin a turn towards the coast of Jamaica. No NHC forecaster had ever issued such a bold forecast for rapid strengthening.

    Continue reading...
    • chevron_right

      Father of teen whose death was linked to social media has ‘lost faith’ in Ofcom

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 15 November, 2025

    Ian Russell says watchdog lacks ‘urgency’ and is not willing to use its powers ‘to the extent required’

    The father of Molly Russell, a British teenager who killed herself after viewing harmful online content , has called for a change in leadership at the UK’s communications watchdog after losing faith in its ability to make the internet safer for children.

    Ian Russell, whose 14 year-old daughter took her own life in 2017, said Ofcom had “repeatedly” demonstrated that it does not grasp the urgency of keeping under-18s safe online and was failing to implement new digital laws forcefully.

    Continue reading...
    • chevron_right

      Big content is taking on AI – but it’s far from the David v Goliath tale they’d have you believe | Alexander Avila

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 15 November, 2025

    Deals between media conglomerates and tech companies serve both sets of interests, while leaving artists by the wayside

    The world’s biggest music company is now in the AI business. Last year, Universal Music Group (UMG), alongside labels including Warner Records and Sony Music Entertainment sued two AI music startups for allegedly using their recordings to train text-to-music models without permission.

    But last month, UMG announced a deal with one of the defendants, Udio, to create an AI music platform. Their joint press release offered assurances that the label will commit to “do what’s right by [UMG’s] artists”. However, one advocacy group, the Music Artists Coalition, responded with the statement : “We’ve seen this before – everyone talks about ‘partnership’, but artists end up on the sidelines with scraps.”

    Alexander Avila is a video essayist, writer and researcher

    Continue reading...
    • chevron_right

      Don’t argue with strangers… and 11 more rules to survive the information crisis

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 15 November, 2025

    Feeling overwhelmed by divisive opinions, endless rows and unreliable facts? Here’s how to weather the data storm

    We all live in history. A lot of the problems that face us, and the opportunities that present themselves, are defined not by our own choices or even the specific place or government we’re living under, but by the particular epoch of human events that our lives happen to coincide with.

    The Industrial Revolution, for example, presented opportunities for certain kinds of business success – it made some people very rich while others were exploited. If you’d known that was the name of your era, it would have given you a clue about what kinds of events to prepare for. So I’m suggesting a name for the era we’re living through: the Information Crisis.

    Continue reading...
    • chevron_right

      Scrapping green subsidies is short-termist sabotage – and as usual the consumer will pay | Camilla Born

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 14 November, 2025 • 1 minute

    Weaning ourselves off gas is the only way to reduce energy bills long term. Cutting support for this is exactly the ‘sticking-plaster politics’ Labour promised to end

    After years of painfully high energy bills, diminishing household budgets and stalled investment, this year’s budget, on 26 November, should be the moment when the government finally starts to confront why the UK’s energy system is so expensive. And yet, if recent briefings suggesting that Labour will dramatically scale back the heat pump subsidy for households are to be believed, it is now repeating exactly the same mistakes as its predecessors.

    People want relief from painful energy bills. In the long term, electrification is the only way to provide this. In practice, that means switching from gas boilers to heat pumps, shifting from petrol cars to electric vehicles: boosting access to technologies that are modern, cheaper to run, and are already becoming mainstream. At present, our energy system protects the legacy gas-based system, subsidising supply and penalising demand in ways that keep gas artificially cheap and electricity artificially expensive, even when electric technologies cost less to operate.

    Camilla Born is the CEO of Electrify Britain, a campaigning organisation founded by EDF and Octopus Energy

    Continue reading...
    • chevron_right

      AI firm claims it stopped Chinese state-sponsored cyber-attack campaign

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 14 November, 2025

    Anthropic says hackers used its software to attack financial firms and government agencies around world

    A leading AI company claims to have stopped a China-backed “cyber espionage” campaign that was able to infiltrate financial firms and government agencies with almost no human oversight.

    US-based Anthropic, said its coding tool, Claude Code, was “manipulated” by a Chinese state-sponsored group to attack 30 different entities around the world in September, achieving a “handful of successful intrusions”.

    Continue reading...
    • chevron_right

      People in the UK: have you received good or bad financial advice from an AI chatbot?

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 14 November, 2025

    We want to hear people’s experiences of getting money advice from generative AI chatbot tools

    Tech companies are pumping billions into the growth of artificial intelligence, with OpenAI this month signing a $38bn (£29bn) cloud computing deal with Amazon as part of a $3tn datacentre spending spree.

    But as people increasingly use AI chatbots – such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Google’s Gemini, Microsoft’s Copilot, Meta AI and Perplexity – for advice and task completion, some observers have concerns about misinformation, hullicinations and irresponsible advice.

    Continue reading...