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China launches tax investigations into Apple iPhone maker Foxconn

China launches tax investigations into Apple iPhone maker Foxconn

Tax audits and land use probes follows company founder announcing his run for Taiwan presidencyBusiness live – latest updatesChina’s tax authorities have launched multiple investigations into the company that makes the iPhone, months after its billionaire founder announced he would run in Taiwan’s presidential elections.Foxconn is facing tax audits of its operations in China, as well as investigations into land use in two Chinese provinces, according to reports by local media. Continue reading...

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Their kids died after buying drugs on Snapchat. Now the parents are suing

Their kids died after buying drugs on Snapchat. Now the parents are suing

Suit claims app features like disappearing messages and geolocating users make kids easy targets for dealersHanh Badger was working from home the morning of 17 June 2021. She went to the kitchen to grab a second cup of coffee and noticed her daughter’s bedroom door was still shut. Badger found Brooke, 17, pale and motionless in bed.Soon, the sheriff arrived and immediately administered Naloxone, a nasal spray that reverses the effects of an opioid overdose. But Badger, a pharmacist, was confused. Brooke was a talented student who couldn’t wait to begin college that fall. Continue reading...

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‘I can’t kill a wolf but will happily watch a Sim drown’: murder and morality in video games

‘I can’t kill a wolf but will happily watch a Sim drown’: murder and morality in video games

From being unable to harvest ‘little sister’ characters but happy to kill others freely, to playing the Legend of Zelda as a vegan – gaming ethics are complex and highly personalI can kill foxes but I can’t kill wolves. Not in real life, obviously – in real life I send emails eight hours a day – but in The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom, where every animal is an arrow away from becoming a fortifying meal. Shoot a wolf and you’ll be rewarded with a thick red slab of raw prime meat, but I can’t do it, I just can’t do it, even though they often attack me in packs. They...

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The east German town at the centre of the new ‘gold rush’ … for lithium

The east German town at the centre of the new ‘gold rush’ … for lithium

Refining the metal – which is essential for electric car batteries – in Europe would ease the EU’s precarious reliance on ChinaIt has been called the new gold rush – a rush to catch up with China in producing and refining the materials needed in everything from computers to cars: but has it come too late to save Europe’s car industry?Deep inside a former East German town lies the first fruits of the EU’s grand plan to “de-risk” and wean itself off dependency on imports for the green revolution. In Bitterfeld-Wolfen, 140km south-west of Berlin, an Amsterdam-listed company is...

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Waitrose turns to AI to create recipes for successful food products

Waitrose turns to AI to create recipes for successful food products

The supermarket has used data from menus, online cuisine and social media posts to shape its Japanese rangeUnder fake pink cherry blossom, guests sipped House of Suntory cocktails and picked at plates of chicken karaage, prawn gyoza and cauliflower tempura from a kaitenzushi-style conveyor belt … This was the London launch of Waitrose’s new Japanese range.But without knowing it, and even if you live hundreds of miles away, your food choices may have had a hand in shaping the supermarket’s 26-dish Japan Menyū range. That is because it was developed with input from Tastewise, an artificial...

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‘Without the telcos, there is no Netflix’: the battle between streamers and broadband

‘Without the telcos, there is no Netflix’: the battle between streamers and broadband

An explosion of data use on platforms like Google and Amazon in the last decade has led to massive infrastructure costs. Is the era of cheap all-you-can-watch content about to end?• Don’t get TechScape delivered to your inbox? Sign up for the full article hereThe writers and actors strikes in Hollywood have largely focused on streamers like Netflix paying more for the work the artists contribute to the services. On the tech side of things, meanwhile, a similar fight is brewing.Far from the Hollywood picket lines, telecommunications executives are looking at booming broadband use largely...

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Australia’s internet providers are ditching email, to the disgust of older customers

Australia’s internet providers are ditching email, to the disgust of older customers

‘This screws us royally,’ says one disgruntled iiNet user as internet service providers such as Telstra and TPG curtail email accounts for customersFollow our Australia news live blog for latest updatesGet our morning and afternoon news emails, free app or daily news podcastAfter 30 years, Simon* is facing the prospect of moving.“I think we’ve been using their products since we built the house,” he says. “We’ve gone through dial-up and then eventually there was an ADSL connection.”Sign up for Guardian Australia’s free morning and afternoon email newsletters for your daily news...

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‘Into brain and the heart’: how China is using apps to woo Taiwan’s teenagers

‘Into brain and the heart’: how China is using apps to woo Taiwan’s teenagers

Lifestyle and shopping apps are the latest weapons in Beijing’s information war against its neighbourAriel Lo spends a couple of hours most weeks sharing anime art and memes on Chinese apps, often chatting with friends in China in a Mandarin slightly different from the one she uses at home in Taiwan.“People use English on Instagram, and for Chinese apps they use Chinese phrases. If I am talking to friends in China, I would use them,” Lo said as she picked up a bubble tea at a street market in central Taichung city. Continue reading...

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Meet the artists reclaiming AI from big tech – with the help of cats, bees and drag queens

Meet the artists reclaiming AI from big tech – with the help of cats, bees and drag queens

AI’s potential is huge and terrifying. But a new generation of artists is starting to find new uses for the technology, as well showing its many limitationsWhen I visited the Victoria and Albert Museum in London in early June, a fabulous drag cabaret was in full swing. Across seven small screens and a large wall projection, a rotating cast of performers in an array of bold looks danced and lip-synced their hearts out to banger after banger. Highlights included Freedom! 90 by George Michael, Five Years by David Bowie and Beyoncé’s Sweet Dreams.Then the whole thing started again. And again...

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A decade after a disastrous launch, is Apple Maps finally good?

A decade after a disastrous launch, is Apple Maps finally good?

Engineers’ work on cycling and public transit have transformed the app – but rural directions remain a sticking pointIn October 2022, New York City officials unveiled a new bike lane on Schermerhorn street, one of the most dangerous and heavily trafficked streets in downtown Brooklyn and somewhere I had always avoided on my bike. Unless I was a religious reader of transportation department press releases (I’m not), I would have no way of knowing the lane existed – except that very same morning, my Apple Maps app sent me on the new Schermerhorn bike lane, instead of hurtling down Dean...

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Nokia to axe up to 14,000 jobs to cut costs

The Finnish telecoms giant reported a fall in sales due to slowing demand for 5G equipment.

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Face search company Clearview AI overturns UK privacy fine

Controversial firm, which acts as a search engine for faces, wins appeal against a watchdog.

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The incredible power of blue LEDs

LEDs dominate lighting systems but their efficiency rests on the tricky production of blue light.

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Microsoft Activision: What does deal mean for gamers?

Call of Duty might be an Xbox exclusive one day, but not for at least 15 years.

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FTX thief cashes out millions during Bankman-Fried trial

Chunks of the stolen $470m in cryptocurrency have been laundered every day since the trial began

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Clubs promoting NFTs pose 'risk' to fans, MPs warn

A committee of MPs say artists and sport clubs' reputations are at risk if they promote NFTs.

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Amazon takes on Microsoft as invests billion in Anthropic

The company is in a race among big tech firms to exploit the potential of artificial intelligence.

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Microsoft's new Call of Duty deal set for approval

The revised offer "opens the door" to the deal being cleared, the UK competition watchdog says.

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Arm: UK chip designer to the world in $54.5bn market return

The firm's shares were priced at the top of the range that had been indicated to prospective investors.

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France halts iPhone 12 sales over radiation levels

Apple has been told it must recall every iPhone 12 sold in the country if it cannot fix the problem.

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Apple forced to ditch lightning charger in new iPhone

Apple confirms new iPhone 15 will have a common USB-C charging port after EU forces it into the change.

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US government sues Elon Musk's SpaceX over hiring policy

The US Department of Justice says rocket firm discriminated against refugees and asylum seekers.

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Donald Trump breaks silence on Musk's X after Georgia arrest

Mr Trump's first post on the platform formerly called Twitter since January 2021 includes his mugshot.

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Quiz: Can you spot which images were made using AI?

Test your skills at detecting AI-generated images with Bitesize's monthly AI or real quiz.

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Onlyfans, Twitch and Snapchat rules 'impenetrable'

Ofcom says popular platforms' terms of service are very long and difficult to understand.

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