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Tech May 12, 2026

Android and iPhone Users Can Now Send End-to-End Encrypted Texts

Android and iPhone users can now send end-to-end encrypted text messages to each other, thanks to t…
The Era of End-to-End Encrypted Messaging At long last, Android and iPhone users will be able to send each other end-to-end encrypted text messages. On Monday, end-to-end encrypted messaging is starting to roll out in beta for conversations between iPhone and Android users running the most up-to-date software. What is End-to-End Encryption? End-to-end encrypted (e2ee) messaging is an important privacy feature that makes users far less susceptible to surveillance by hackers, governments, or the companies that make these communication platforms. When these messages are sent between devices, they’re encrypted while in transit, making it near impossible for anyone else to intercept and read the message. The Challenges of Cross-Platform Messaging Until now, messages sent between iPhone and Android devices could not be end-to-end encrypted, even though iMessage has been encrypted since its launch in 2011, and Android users have been able to communicate among themselves via e2ee since 2021. Over the years, iOS and Android users have had clunky communications — Android users can’t use Apple’s proprietary iMessage, but Apple refused to support RCS messaging, a more sophisticated upgrade to decades-old SMS texting, since 2020. The Impact of RCS Messaging Now the industry-standard texting protocol, RCS brings features like typing indicators, read receipts, emoji reactions, longer message lengths, and encryption to text messages. But Apple didn’t support RCS until 2023, once it finally caved due to regulatory pressure. Google had urged Apple to support RCS texting to make communication between their devices more seamless — this was such an issue that people sincerely thought about “green bubble stigma,” referring to the color of the message bubbles that iPhone users receive from Androids. The Future of Secure Messaging End-to-end encrypted RCS messaging has only begun to roll out in beta, so users may not have access just yet. If a conversation between Google and Apple devices is encrypted, the users will see a lock icon that indicates that the chat is protected.
#Android #iPhone #End-to-End Encryption
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Sports May 11, 2026

Arsenal's Premier League Title Hopes Boosted by Late Win Against West Ham

Arsenal secured a late win against West Ham, bringing them closer to their first Premier League tit…
The Gunners' Title Hopes RevivedArsenal's victory against West Ham has put them in a strong position to claim their first Premier League title in 22 years. The match was marked by a dramatic late equalizer for West Ham, which was subsequently overturned by a VAR decision.The VAR ControversyThe VAR decision was a turning point in the match, with many players and fans questioning the outcome. Mikel Arteta praised the referee's decision, stating that it was a difficult job and that the correct call was made.The Pressure on Manchester CityManchester City's hopes of catching up to Arsenal are dwindling, with the team needing a win against Crystal Palace to keep their title hopes alive. Pep Guardiola's side faces a tough run-in, with matches against Bournemouth and Aston Villa.The Road to the TitleArsenal's next match is against Burnley, and Mikel Arteta is focused on taking it one game at a time. The team's fans have endured a long wait for a title, and Arteta's side will be looking to deliver.
#Arsenal #Premier League #West Ham
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Entertainment May 11, 2026

Michael Pennington, Shakespeare and Star Wars actor, dies aged 82

The actor Michael Pennington, known for his Shakespearean work and his role in the original Star Wa…
The Life and Legacy of Michael Pennington The actor Michael Pennington, known for his Shakespearean work and his role in the original Star Wars trilogy, has died aged 82, his agent has said. Shakespearean Career and Achievements Pennington, who is listed as an honorary associate artist with the Royal Shakespeare Company, also founded and ran the English Shakespeare Company alongside the theatre director Michael Bogdanov. He played Hamlet, Mercutio and Macbeth, as well as King Lear, Richard II and Henry V. He appeared as Coriolanus, Timon of Athens, Angelo, Leontes and Jack Cade across a 60-year career. He directed Twelfth Night in the UK, Tokyo and Chicago and the Hamlet Project for the National Theatre Bucharest. Tributes and Reflections His fellow actor Miriam Margolyes remembered him as an “old friend, from Cambridge days, a very fine actor, brilliant, wise, clear”. She said: “I am sad beyond measure,” adding: “Bless your dear memory, old chum.” Giving the 2004 British Academy Shakespeare lecture, Pennington described how he had first developed a fascination with the playwright’s work. “Like trying to establish the moment when one first stood up and walked, it is hard for many of us to remember when Shakespeare first entered our lives; but my own memory is extremely precise. Shakespearean verse hit me like a hammer when I was 11. Impact on Theatre and Film Pennington had a long-running association with Bogdanov, who cast him as the lead in Seán O’Casey’s The Shadow of a Gunman in 1980, and in Tolstoy’s Strider: The Story of a Horse, three years later. He worked with Dame Judi Dench and her husband, Michael Williams, starring in King Lear together in the 1970s, among other productions. Alongside his stage work, Pennington appeared in more than 70 onscreen productions – including the third instalment in the original Star Wars trilogy, Return of the Jedi, as the Death Star commander Moff Jerjerrod. Cause of Death and Final Tribute Pennington’s agent, Lesley Duff, said: “After a long and wonderful life and career, Michael Pennington died peacefully in the early hours of Thursday 7 May at Denville Hall.”
#Michael Pennington #Shakespeare #Star Wars
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Economy May 11, 2026

California Eyes Billionaire Tax as Food Benefit Cuts Loom

As food benefit cuts loom in the US, Californians are considering a billionaire tax to mitigate the…
The Looming Food Benefit Cuts With food benefit cuts looming in the US, single mother Greer Dove is among those who will be severely impacted. She relies on the federal government's Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program (SNAP) and a local food bank in California's Marin County to feed her eight-year-old daughter with special needs. The Impact of the OBBBA Cuts President Donald Trump's One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), passed in June, cut SNAP benefits by over $186bn over the next 10 years. This could lead to more than 3 million people nationwide, and 665,000 recipients in California, losing food benefits. The Proposed Billionaire Tax California's proposed billionaire tax seeks to impose a one-time 5 percent tax on the assets of the state's more than 200 billionaires to make up for the funding gap created by the OBBBA. The tax is expected to raise $100bn, with 10 percent going towards making up for the retrenchment in food benefits. The Data Analysis Over 5.3 million people in California receive food benefits, the most of any state. 72,000 immigrants in California lost benefits in April. Nearly 600,000 recipients will be screened for work eligibility starting June. SNAP rolls have shrunk by 3.3 million nationally in the six months from July 2025 to January 2026. The Impact Analysis The cuts have already led to a 51 percent drop in SNAP rolls in Arizona, which has begun implementing the OBBBA cuts. In California, the rolls of Calfresh shrank by 288,000 or 6 percent from July 2025 to February 2026. The Prediction The billionaire tax faces opposition from tech entrepreneurs, who argue it will lead to a flight of capital and innovation from the state. However, experts say there is little academic evidence that such taxes cause the wealthy to leave at a notable scale.
#California #Billionaire Tax #Food Benefits
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Politics May 11, 2026

Suspect Pleads Not Guilty to Attempted Assassination of US President Trump

Cole Allen, the man who burst into the White House ballroom firing shots last month, has pleaded no…
The Attempted Assassination Cole Allen, a 31-year-old man, has pleaded not guilty to a charge of attempting to assassinate United States President Donald Trump. He made a similar plea to other charges, including assault on a federal officer and firearms offences, as he appeared in Washington federal court on Monday. Court Proceedings Allen did not speak during the court proceedings, as his attorney entered the plea on his behalf. Prosecutors allege that Allen fired a shotgun at a Secret Service agent and stormed a security checkpoint in a foiled attack aimed at killing Trump and other members of his administration at a White House Correspondents’ Dinner. The Charges Attempting to assassinate US President Donald Trump Assault on a federal officer Firearms offences The Incident The incident occurred last month when Allen burst into the White House ballroom firing shots. The attack was foiled, and Allen was apprehended by the Secret Service. The Investigation The investigation into the incident is ongoing, with prosecutors working to gather evidence and build a case against Allen. The attempted assassination has raised concerns about the security of the White House and the safety of the President and his administration.
#Donald Trump #White House #US President
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Sports May 11, 2026

Maldini's Legacy Haunts Struggling Milan as Champions League Dreams Fade

AC Milan's form has collapsed with just seven points from their last eight games, leaving their Cha…
The Collapse of a European GiantThere were more than seven minutes left to play in a crucial end-of-season match, yet San Siro was already half empty. Milan's Ultras had deserted the Curva Sud to prepare a post-game protest, but even the more forgiving parts of the club's fanbase could not be bothered to stay until the end of another humiliating defeat. Their team was losing 3-0, at home, to Atalanta, and it hardly even felt a surprise.With this loss, inevitable as it now appeared, the Rossoneri had collected just seven points from their last eight games. Only three teams in Serie A had done worse over the same stretch. Two of those – Verona, and Pisa – have been relegated. The third, Lecce, are perilously close to joining them.The Maldini Factor and Management DecisionsWatching their beleaguered team struggle to get the ball out from the back against Atalanta's persistent press, fans started to sing for Paolo Maldini. One of the all-time great defenders, he won seven Serie A titles and five Champions Leagues as a player, extending the legacy of success begun by his father, Cesare.Appointed as a director for sporting strategy and development by Milan's then owners, Elliott Management, in 2018, Maldini was promoted to technical director a year later. He played a central role in player recruitment, helping build the team that won Serie A in 2021-22 – the club's first Scudetto for 11 years.Maldini's position was initially confirmed after RedBird Capital bought Milan in 2022. But he was fired one year later, despite having just overseen a fourth-place finish. The Rossoneri had just finished fourth, and Maldini spoke about a need for further squad investment to stay competitive at the highest level. But Milan's most expensive signing of the previous summer, Charles De Ketelaere, had been a flop, and their new CEO Giorgio Furlani said the objective given to him by RedBird was to get the club "living within our means."The Summer Investment and Early PromiseThe appointment of Massimiliano Allegri this summer was supposed to get things back on track. Here was a man defined by Italy's sporting press as a "guarantee" of Champions League football. An aggressive summer transfer window followed, headlined by the arrival of Luka Modric, and featuring significant outlays on the likes of Christopher Nkunku, Ardon Jashari, Samuele Ricci, Koni De Winter, Adrien Rabiot and Pervis Estupiñán.With no European distractions, Milan looked well equipped for a strong domestic campaign. Up until March, they delivered. The performance to beat Inter was classic Allegri, controlling the game while surrendering possession. Estupiñán scored before half-time, and Milan barely gave their opponents a sniff after that. This had been the mode all season: just win, it does not need to be pretty.The Tactical Breakdown and Player IssuesBut the problem with focusing always on the outcome is that you have nothing to fall back on once that part goes wrong. Milan's form early this season was built on the performances of talented individuals – Modric, certainly, but also Rabiot and especially Christian Pulisic, who had eight goals and two assists in the league, despite missing five games, by the end of December.Allegri's innovation was to move the American inside to operate as a centre-forward. He pulled the same trick with Rafael Leão after the Portuguese returned from a calf injury. Both thrived at first, but as their goals tailed off, Milan have struggled to replace them. Too many square pegs forced into round holes? Or is the picture a little more nuanced? Both Pulisic and Leão have been affected by physical issues as the season progressed.Atalanta were excellent, pressing selectively and executing ruthlessly. Giacomo Raspadori, signed from Atlético Madrid in January, brought a typically high-energy bustle behind the attack and it was his blocked shot that rebounded to Éderson inside the box for the opener. Nikola Krstovic, in the No 9 role, pinned his man expertly before laying the ball off to Davide Zappacosta to make it 2-0 before half-time.Fan Protests and Management ResponseWhat stood out in these moments was the clarity of purpose: each player performing the role they are best suited to and understanding what was required. The contrast with Milan's disjointed assembly of talents was stark. Absent the injured Modric, there was no glue to bind them together.Ultras had already made their feelings known before kick-off with a protest outside the ground then a choreography in the Curva Sud, using their bodies and mobile phone flashlights to spell out the letters "G.F. OUT" – Furlani's initials. Reporters saw a pair of fans attempt a protest, holding up shirts with Maldini's name on the back in front of the section where executives sit, but stewards ushered them away.By leaving early, they almost missed an improbable turnaround. Milan pulled a goal back in the 88th minute, Strahinja Pavlovic heading home from a Ricci free-kick. Nkunku, on as a second-half substitute, then won and converted a penalty. Suddenly the deficit was down to one goal. In the seventh minute of injury time, Matteo Gabbia almost equalised, flashing a header wide from another set-piece.Uncertain Future for Italian Football's PowerhouseMilan exist in a different orbit, still fourth in the table, even if their grip on a Champions League spot looks very loose indeed. It feels absurd to say it now, but before this miserable run they were the team keeping the Serie A title race alive. They were the last team to beat Inter, since crowned as champions, on 8 March. The gap between them, with mocking symmetry, was seven points.The layers to these decisions are complex, each party with their own version of how working relationships grew strained. But Maldini's assessment resonated with fans who want to see their team fight for trophies. Milan finished second in 2023-24 but fell all the way to eighth last season, and now find themselves once again struggling to maintain their position among Europe's elite.With the season approaching its conclusion, the question remains whether this is merely a temporary setback or a sign of deeper structural issues at the club. The contrast between the clear, purposeful football of Atalanta and Milan's disjointed performance suggests that tactical clarity may be as much a problem as player quality or management decisions.
#AC Milan #Paolo Maldini #Serie A
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Entertainment May 11, 2026

John of John by Douglas Stuart Review: A Father-Son Story of Repression and Queer Identity in the Outer Hebrides

Douglas Stuart's new novel 'John of John' explores the complex relationship between a gay son retur…
The Lead: A Tale of Repression and Hidden DesiresThere's a common greeting in the Outer Hebrides: the lineage-establishing "Who do you belong to?" By the time this question is posed to 22-year-old gay Harris islander John-Calum Macleod, or Cal, in Douglas Stuart's new novel, there is a sense that Cal is his father John's beyond the ordinary claims of blood – the latter's sway containing undercurrents of domineering ownership.The Novel's Core Themes: Repression and Self-Denial in a Conservative CommunityThe book opens with the two conducting a strange ritual over the phone, performed regularly ever since Cal moved to Edinburgh to study textiles: John, a precentor, reads to Cal in Gaelic from the New Testament and has him sing back "with the full power of his belief". The verse John recites – which prefigures the novel's themes of repression and self-denial – urges the faithful to guide the errant and to stay vigilant against temptation. After receiving Cal's assent, John orders him to return home, ostensibly because Cal's maternal grandmother, Ella, is sick. Though John lives with Ella in her croft house, she is his ex-wife's mother and thus not his responsibility.Set within a tight-knit Free Presbyterian community of farmers, weavers and fishers in what appears to be the 1990s, John of John tells the story of Cal's uneasy homecoming. It's a reprise of the parable of the prodigal son and an ardent exploration of the half-lives of queer men condemned to love, pine and suffer in silence. Intimate yet epic in scale, it contains equal parts pastoral drama, tale of familial fracture, love story and inquiry into various forms of loneliness: the loneliness that can reside between fathers and sons, between lovers, between man and God, and between a small place and the big world.Character Analysis: Complex Relationships and Hidden TruthsJohn disapproves of Cal's appearance, his sartorial choices and his long, "flame-coloured" hair, disturbed "by the confused signal they were sending, the strange tension between the masculine and the feminine". Cal's disinclination to be "saved" creates a rift between them that later erupts in violence. Meanwhile, childhood friend and hookup partner Doll gives Cal the brush-off, cross that he's been away for so long. Wearied by his ultraconservative environment, where connection feels out of reach, Cal takes a fancy to his dad's sole friend, confirmed bachelor Innes MacInnes. Cal is struck by Innes's "gentleness, his benevolence – which Cal had never appreciated before, which, if he were honest, he would have said he found boring, unsexy in younger men".This, however, can never be the merry May-December romance Cal wishes it to be. Innes and John are lovers, we learn fairly early on, and it is this pair's tortured relationship since their teenage years – kept secret from everyone, including Cal – that forms the novel's centre of gravity. Masters of discretion, John and Innes are, to townsfolk, neighbouring sheep farmers. The first time we see them alone together, at Innes's, they go through the motions of a long-established routine, allowing themselves to draw close only after John has made sure each room is empty and they are really alone. Later, as John prepares to leave, Innes loudly seeks his assistance over an unspecified "two-man job", "all in case someone should find out and ask what exactly John Macleod was doing upstairs in the MacInnes house at such an ungodly hour".Literary Context: Stuart's Evolution as a StorytellerThe novel tries their bond in ways small and big. Aside from the difficulty of Cal, there is the matter of John's other liaison with a married man, and the tenancy of Ella's house soon to be transferred to Cal's mother. Innes floats the idea of John moving in with him but intuits "how, even under the threat of homelessness, a life together with him seemed no consolation at all". John is a man tormented by the idea of his own depravity: "He loved God. He loved Innes. He loved God and God hated how he loved Innes." At one point he entertains the possibility of Innes, Cal and himself being a family, but even in fantasy, the thought of Cal being gay, like him, remains unimaginable: "They would live like this every day, be useful, peaceful, happy on their land, looking forward to the day Cal married a local girl and filled their croft with grandchildren."The novel is outstandingly canny and wrenching on self-contempt, on the toilsome art of deceit, and on the contradictions we all contain, as well as the friction that can exist between the personal and the collective. As secular values gain ground, there is the suggestion that John and Innes living together could deal a death blow to their local congregation, leaving us wondering whether John and Cal will – or can – come out to one another. Amid all this, Stuart finds the space to touch on crofter subservience to absentee landowners, the scorn and prejudice of mainlanders, and the place of the Western Isles within the English imagination.Critical Reception: A Complex but Ultimately Rewarding ReadJohn of John is certainly enthralling, but the ambient Weltschmerz and the characters' frequent self-pity can be draining. Stuart's first two novels, the Booker-winning Shuggie Bain and its follow-up, Young Mungo, were feats of heartfelt, operatic storytelling, composed as though in defiant response to our age of irony and subtlety. Despite their occasionally miserabilist tenor, the emotions felt guileless and real, whether Shuggie's love for his doomed, alcoholic mother, Agnes; Jodie's for her brother Mungo; Mungo's for his birdkeeping neighbour James or his own doomed, alcoholic mother, Maureen. The impoverished Glaswegian milieus where they were set – marked by Thatcherite ruination, homophobia, sexual predation and sectarian strife – made for sobering reading; but these were novels so lavishly and graciously imagined, so very moving, that you gladly faced up to their gloom.Here Stuart leans heavily on melodrama and sensationalism as a shortcut to tragedy. Towards the end, the novel is eventful to a fault and surfeited with pathos: we have a pregnancy; an attempted shotgun wedding ("What in the world of Thomas Hardy?" says Cal); a death and a momentous departure from the island. While this book will not appeal to those with a low tolerance for excess, diehard romantics will find much to love; I see Cal, John and Innes – knottily entangled and imperfectly endearing – being cherished with readerly devotion. And that is no small feat.
#Douglas Stuart #John of John #Book Review
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Sports May 11, 2026

Arsenal's Late Drama: Trossard's Goal and VAR Controversy Reshaping Title Race

Arsenal secured a dramatic 1-0 win over West Ham, extending their Premier League lead to five point…
The Title Race Tightens: Arsenal Survives Late Drama to Extend LeadArsenal cleared arguably the most dangerous remaining obstacle in their path to the Premier League title by the skin of their teeth as Leandro Trossard’s late goal secured a dramatic 1-0 win at West Ham United to restore their five-point lead on Sunday. The victory was not without controversy, as the Gunners survived a massive scare in stoppage time when a Callum Wilson equalizer was ruled out by VAR, sparking debate over the biggest call in Premier League history.Trossard's Decisive Strike and the 'Biggest VAR Call' in HistoryThe visitors were living dangerously at the London Stadium, but Trossard guided home a low shot from Martin Odegaard’s pass in the 83rd minute to spark delirium amongst the Arsenal fans and despair in the home ranks. The drama was far from over, however. With time almost up, West Ham substitute Callum Wilson slammed a shot through a forest of legs and over the line, only for the referee to consult VAR. The goal was disallowed for a foul by substitute Pablo on Arsenal keeper David Raya, a decision described by Sky Sports pundit Gary Neville as the "biggest VAR call in the history of the Premier League." Goal Scorer: Leandro Trossard (83rd minute) Disallowed Goal: Callum Wilson (Stoppage time) Key Incident: VAR overturns goal for foul by Pablo Statistical Implications: The Five-Point Gap and Remaining ScheduleArsenal’s victory has significant mathematical implications for the season finale. With 79 points from 36 games, Arsenal now sits five points ahead of Manchester City, who have 74 points and a game in hand. The data suggests a clear path for Arteta’s side, who require only two more wins to clinch the championship.West Ham's Relegation Scare and Arsenal's Psychological EdgeFor West Ham, the defeat is a bitter pill to swallow, leaving them staring at relegation. They could find themselves four points from the safety zone with two games left if Tottenham Hotspur beat Leeds United on Monday. The psychological impact of the late VAR drama cannot be understated; while Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta looked aghast during the review, the relief of escaping with three points could provide a crucial mental boost for the title run-in.A Path to History: Arsenal's Final Two GamesIf Arsenal do go on to lift the title, the incident in stoppage time will be a footnote in a season-long slog with Manchester City. However, the team is now in a commanding position to end a 20-year wait for a top-flight trophy. The mathematical reality is simple: Arsenal will be crowned champions if they win their last two games at home to Burnley and away to Crystal Palace on the final day.
#Arsenal #West Ham #Premier League
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Sports May 11, 2026

Arsenal Clinch Dramatic Win Over West Ham with Trossard's Late Goal

Arsenal secured a thrilling win over West Ham thanks to Leandro Trossard's 83rd-minute goal, which …
The Match Turning Point Arsenal's Leandro Trossard scored a crucial goal in the 83rd minute to give his team a 1-0 lead over West Ham. The match was intense, with West Ham pushing hard for an equalizer in the final minutes. The VAR Controversy In the 95th minute, West Ham's Callum Wilson appeared to score an equalizing goal, but it was disallowed after a lengthy VAR review. The decision was made after referee Chris Kavanagh determined that Pablo had fouled Arsenal goalkeeper David Raya. The Impact on the Premier League Title Race The win keeps Arsenal in contention for the Premier League title, with Manchester City's 3-0 win over Brentford on Saturday increasing the pressure on the Gunners. The result means Arsenal are now closer to securing the top spot. The Key Moments Leandro Trossard scores the winning goal in the 83rd minute. VAR disallows West Ham's late equalizer. Manchester City's win over Brentford puts pressure on Arsenal. The Future Outlook Arsenal will look to continue their momentum in the remaining matches, while West Ham will aim to regroup and secure a Premier League spot. The title race is heating up, and Arsenal's dramatic win has kept them in the running.
#Arsenal #West Ham #Premier League
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