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Sports May 14, 2026

Hearts Win but Celtic's Late Drama Sets Up Scottish Premiership Title Showdown

Hearts secured a win over Falkirk, but Celtic's late equalizer against Motherwell has set up a thri…
The Thrilling Title Chase Hearts have turned heads well beyond Scotland with their superb title challenge yet the vagaries of football mean that falling short now will prove so horrendously painful. One point. So easy to say, so fiendishly difficult to achieve. Hearts' Professional Win Over Falkirk In this win over Falkirk, Hearts were as perfectly professional as has been the case for the vast majority of this season. Two goals to the good at half-time, they were never likely to be headed from there. The Impact of Celtic's Late Drama Celtic's late, late show at Motherwell is what takes this title thriller to game 38 of 38. Hearts took acclaim and legitimately so from this fantastic crowd at full time. What price a title party next? It will all be decided in a game for the ages in the east end of Glasgow. The Title Showdown Hearts will travel to Celtic Park with their fate in their own hands but in opposition to a dominant club, for whom domestic success comes as second nature. Hearts' players could be legends by Saturday afternoon. The Prediction The task in the second half of this fixture was a simple one, to see out an unbeaten home league season and leave Celtic with the questions to answer. Celtic, after all, suffered last-day heartache and also under Martin O'Neill in 2005.
#Hearts #Celtic #Scottish Premiership
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Environment May 14, 2026

xAI’s Mississippi Data Center Runs Nearly 50 Untethered Gas Turbines, Skirting State Regulations

Elon Musk’s xAI is operating about 46 natural‑gas turbines at its Mississippi data center, exploiti…
Deployment of Mobile Gas Turbines at xAI’s Mississippi FacilityElon Musk’s artificial‑intelligence venture xAI has installed nearly 50 natural‑gas turbines at its data center in Mississippi. The turbines sit on flatbed trailers, a classification that the state currently treats as “mobile,” allowing them to bypass standard air‑pollution regulations for a year.Permit Gaps and Turbine Count Reveal Regulatory LoopholeState permits have been granted for 15 turbines only.A Greater Memphis Chamber press release noted that about half of the 35 turbines operating in May 2025 would stay on site.Local reporting now shows xAI is running 46 turbines.Potential Air‑Quality Deterioration and Legal RamificationsThe NAACP, representing nearby residents, filed a lawsuit alleging the emissions worsen an already polluted region. The Southern Environmental Law Center argues that, despite the “mobile” label, federal law still treats trailer‑mounted power plants as stationary sources subject to regulation.Future Legal Battles and Regulatory Scrutiny LikelyThe plaintiffs have asked the court for an injunction to halt the turbines. If successful, xAI may be forced to obtain full permits or dismantle the units, setting a precedent for how mobile power generators are regulated nationwide.
#xAI #Elon Musk #Mississippi
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Tech May 13, 2026

Anthropic Targets Small Businesses with AI-Powered Tools

Anthropic has launched Claude for Small Business, a suite of AI-powered tools designed for small bu…
Anthropic's Strategic Shift Towards Small Businesses Anthropic is expanding its AI offerings to cater to smaller companies, launching Claude for Small Business, a new suite of services designed for customers who are not large enterprises but rather local businesses like hardware stores or coffee shops. The Event Details: Claude for Small Business The new bundle of features is available via a toggle within Claude Cowork, Anthropic's task-automation platform for business users. By enabling this feature, paying users gain access to automated services including bookkeeping functions, business insights, and generative tools for ad campaigns. The suite also includes integrations with software products like QuickBooks, Canva, DocuSign, HubSpot, and PayPal. The Data Analysis: Small Business Impact Small businesses account for 44% of U.S. GDP. They employ nearly half of the private-sector workforce. There are 36 million small businesses in the U.S., making up the backbone of the economy. The Impact Analysis: Changing AI Adoption Landscape Anthropic's move signals that the AI platform wars are expanding downmarket, with the next major battleground for user acquisition being the 36 million small businesses. This shift is driven by the realization that while large enterprises have been early adopters of AI, smaller and mid-sized businesses are now increasingly adopting AI systems. The Prediction: Future Outlook Anthropic plans to aggressively promote its new features with a coast-to-coast promotional tour, starting in Chicago and hitting 10 cities in total. At each stop, the company will offer a free AI training workshop available to 100 local small business leaders. This strategic effort aims to position Anthropic ahead of its competitor, OpenAI, which launched Enterprise ChatGPT and ChatGPT Business at the end of 2023.
#Anthropic #AI #Small Business
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Lifestyle May 13, 2026

Marisol Mendez’s Bull‑Costume Portrait Challenges Bolivian Gender Norms

Bolivian photographer Marisol Mendez captures a half‑naked woman in a bull costume to explore mascu…
The Portrait That Merges Masculine Power and Feminine VulnerabilityThe Guardian features Marisol Mendez’s striking photograph of Marta Salinas, a Bolivian theatre actor, standing nude in a bull costume. The work confronts traditional Bolivian representations of women by foregrounding masculine traits—ambition, competitiveness, and the symbolism of the bull—while celebrating bodily autonomy.The Creation of the Bull‑Costume PhotographConceived in 2019, the image emerged from Mendez’s dream of a half‑woman, half‑animal figure in a field. Drawing on the waka tokori dance, which reenacts Bolivian bullfighting where men only taunt the bull, she used the bull as a symbol of masculinity. The setting—a fruit‑and‑bee farm outside Cochabamba—was suggested by Mendez’s mother, who acted as chauffeur and logistical support.Photographer: Marisol Mendez (Bolivia)Subject: Marta Salinas, theatre actor (Bolivia/Argentina)Series: Madre – a study of womanhood and archetypesPrize: 2026 Saltzman‑Leibovitz prize winnerExhibition: Photo London, Olympia, until 17 May 2026Cultural Resonance of Gender Fluidity in Bolivian ArtThe photograph challenges the media’s habit of portraying Bolivian women in strictly feminine roles. By presenting a nude figure who embraces masculine energy, Mendez questions the automatic labeling of such women as “lesbian” and pushes for nuance in gender representation. The work also references the influence of US photographer Ryan McGinley, whose non‑sexualized nudes inspired Mendez’s approach.What Lies Ahead for Mendez and the Madre SeriesWith the Saltzman‑Leibovitz prize spotlighting her practice, Mendez is poised to expand the Madre series internationally. Upcoming shows, such as the Photo London exhibition, will introduce broader audiences to her interrogation of archetypes like the Virgin Mary versus Mary Magdalene. Critics anticipate that her blend of personal narrative, cultural critique, and bold visual language will continue to shape contemporary discourse on gender and identity in Latin American photography.
#Marisol Mendez #Marta Salinas #Saltzman-Leibovitz prize
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Business May 13, 2026

Meta Sued by California County for Profiting from Illegal Scam Ads

Santa Clara county in California has sued Meta Platforms, alleging it profited from Facebook and In…
The Lawsuit Against Meta California’s Santa Clara county has sued Meta Platforms, alleging it has profited from Facebook and Instagram ads promoting scams in violation of California’s false advertising and unfair business practices laws. Allegations of Tolerating Fraudulent Advertising The lawsuit – filed on Monday in Santa Clara county superior court on behalf of all California residents – accuses the social media giant of tolerating fraudulent advertising on a global basis. The suit seeks restitution, civil damages and an order prohibiting Meta from engaging in unfair business practices. Revenue from High-Risk Scam Ads Citing leaked internal documents first reported by Reuters last year, the complaint alleges that the company earned as much as $7bn in annual revenue from so-called “high-risk” scam ads which show clear signs of being fraudulent. Meta's Response and Defense Meta said it intends to defend itself against the claim. “This claim relies on Reuters reporting that distorts our motives and ignores the full range of actions we take to combat scams every day,” said a Meta spokesperson, Andy Stone. “We aggressively fight scams on and off our platforms because they’re not good for us or the people and businesses that rely on our services.“ The Impact on Users and the Legal Proceedings In the suit, Santa Clara alleges that Meta materially contributed to an epidemic of fraud by allowing middlemen to sell accounts to place ads that were protected against enforcement, and targeting scam ads at users who had clicked on similarly bogus offerings in the past. The county will retain full control over decisions involving the case, and outside law firms will only be paid if the county wins.
#Meta #Facebook #Instagram
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World Wide May 13, 2026

The Paradox of the 'Ceasefire': Israel's Escalation in Gaza Post-Iran Conflict

Despite a US-mediated agreement halting joint strikes against Iran, Israel has intensified its mili…
The Shift in Strategic Focus: From Iran to GazaIsrael has pivoted its military strategy, redirecting its firepower from Iran back to the besieged Gaza Strip following the suspension of joint US-Israel strikes. This strategic shift marks a significant escalation in the ongoing conflict, as the Israeli military shifts its primary operational focus back to the Palestinian enclave after a period of targeting Iranian assets.The ACLED Report and Rising ViolenceConflict monitor ACLED has documented a clear uptick in hostilities in the region. The report indicates that Israel has carried out 35 percent more attacks in April compared to March. This surge in activity suggests that despite the cessation of joint bombing campaigns against Iran, the intensity of the war in Gaza has not diminished.Quantifying the Surge: 35% Increase and CasualtiesAttack Frequency: A 35% increase in Israeli attacks in April versus March.Palestinian Casualties: 120 Palestinians killed since the US-Israel war on Iran halted on April 8, representing a 20 percent increase compared to the previous five weeks.Total Toll Since Ceasefire: Approximately 850 Palestinians have been killed since the ceasefire took effect.Israeli Casualties: At least 4 Israeli soldiers have been killed by Palestinian armed groups during the same period.The 'Ceasefire' Illusion: Ground Reality vs. Political DeclarationThe situation on the ground contradicts the political narrative of a truce. While a “ceasefire” agreement mediated by the US and Qatar aimed to halt major fighting, Israeli forces have not withdrawn from the territory. The military continues to occupy more than half of Gaza’s territory, demolishing buildings and ordering residents out.“It stopped in the announcement, but in reality and on the ground, the war has not stopped,” said Lafi al-Najjar, a blind Palestinian whose son was killed in an attack on April 28. Living in a shelter in the ruins of Khan Younis, al-Najjar represents the civilian reality of a population living under severe restrictions on aid and in damaged structures.The Enduring Conflict: A War Without a PauseThe conflict shows no signs of abating. With Hamas fighters maintaining de facto control and Israeli forces continuing their ground invasion and air campaign, the region remains volatile. The simultaneous escalation in Lebanon further complicates the security landscape, indicating that the broader regional war remains a persistent threat despite the temporary suspension of strikes against Iran.
#Gaza #Israel #Iran
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Health May 13, 2026

US Suicide Forum Fined £950,000 After 160 UK Deaths Amid Regulatory Failures

A US-based internet suicide forum linked to over 160 UK deaths has been fined £950,000 by Ofcom, wi…
The Regulatory Response to Deadly Online ContentA nihilistic internet suicide forum implicated in over 160 UK deaths has been fined £950,000 by the online regulator in its latest attempt to shut it down. Ofcom said the US-based website remains accessible in the UK despite over a year of warnings. Online safety campaigners have accused the regulator of taking an "interminable" amount of time to act.The Samaritans, mental health campaigners and the Molly Rose Foundation, have repeatedly raised concerns about the site – which promoted a particular poison – which has remained accessible despite it being cited in multiple coroners' reports regarding the deaths of UK citizens.Molly Rose was set up in the memory of Molly Russell, a 14-year-old who took her own life after descending into a vortex of negative online content, including about suicide. Its chief executive, Andy Burrows, welcomed the fine and a separate move that could block UK internet access to the site, but said it was "appalling that it has been left to bereaved families and campaign groups to press Ofcom into action".Legal Action Under the Online Safety ActOfcom has been trying to get the site to obey British laws criminalising intentionally encouraging or assisting suicide since last spring. It had some success with the site being blocked last July and then a mirror site being taken down in November. But it is now taking action because the site can be "used by people in the UK, including without a VPN, and presents a material risk of significant harm".The fine is being levied under the Online Safety Act which also allows Ofcom to seek a court for an order requiring internet service providers to block UK access to the site. It is preparing an application to have its connections effectively cut "if our concerns are not fully addressed and there continues to be an ongoing breach".It accused the provider of "serious and deliberate contraventions" and said the fine reflected the "the risk of fatal harm to people in the UK posed by the content present on the service".Human Cost and Family AdvocacyOn Wednesday, the forum was unavailable but its operator posted a page that said it was advocating for "the right to access lawful information without government overreach" and quoted Mark Twain: "Censorship is telling a man he can't have a steak just because a baby can't chew it."The Molly Rose Foundation and Together with Families and Survivors to Prevent Online Suicide Harms said coroners had warned the UK government 65 times about risks of further deaths from the forum "and a substance it promotes, glorifies and instructs for use as a suicide method". Adele Zeynap Walton, the sister of Aimee Walton who took her life after accessing suicide forums, said the wait for action had been agonising."While we've waited further lives have been lost and we've had to fight every step," she said, speaking on behalf of Families and Survivors to Prevent Online Suicide Harms. "We feel let down by the process and Ofcom's slow response to this threat to life."Regulatory Challenges and Future ActionsBurrows said: "Molly Rose Foundation submitted detailed evidence which showed scores of vulnerable young people remained at risk while Ofcom's investigation dragged on … There are real questions about why it has taken so long for the regulator to act against a forum linked to at least 164 UK deaths."Ofcom said it has "engaged extensively" with the forum provider and that last summer the forum geoblocked mirror sites in the UK and later removed information on a landing page promoting ways to circumvent the block."We share the urgency about the extreme harms that sites such as this can cause, and understand the anger felt towards them by those who have been so personally affected," a spokesperson said. "It is vital that we ensure our enforcement action is thorough, and this can take time, as is the case for any enforcement agency."Preventive Measures and Support Resources"Lucas was 16. Vlad 17. Aimee 21. Grace, Hannah and Tom 22. Immy 25. Adam 28 and Claire 41," the campaign groups said in a report last year. "They were drawn into a dark world that was allowed to exist online and continues to exist through the use of a VPN. We believe our loved ones suffered coercion, grooming, instruction on how to end their lives. Most accessed a poison that was allowed to cross borders or was readily available domestically."Suzanne Cater, director of enforcement at Ofcom, said the forum had "caused unimaginable pain and suffering … and no punishment can undo that harm"."The provider of this forum knows it's used to share illegal content encouraging and assisting suicide on their site," she said. "While they've responded to our enforcement action by making some changes to the accessibility of their service in the UK, this is not good enough and the changes they've made were not consistently applied or effective to reduce the risk of harm. Given the ongoing risk of harm, we are using all powers available to us to protect the public."
#Ofcom #Online Safety Act #Molly Russell
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Entertainment May 13, 2026

Carla Simón: Filmmaking Through Family, Loss and the Legacy of Aids

Spanish filmmaker Carla Simón discusses her approach to creating deeply personal films that explore…
The Lead: Carla Simón's Unique Approach to Family DramaFamily reunions in European arthouse cinema are almost always unhappy events, on a scale of strife that ranges from simmering resentment to spectacular score-settling. Carla Simón, however, has a rare gift: she makes you leave the cinema with renewed faith that having relatives and keeping in touch with them may actually be a wonderful thing.No film-maker working in Europe now is as capable of turning birthday gatherings, garden parties or poolside barbecues into thrillingly sprawling canvases of human virtue and vice as this 39-year-old rising star. From a riotous water fight in the Berlinale Golden Bear-winning farming drama Alcarràs to a foul-mouthed dinner table singalong in her new film Romería, Simón directs kinship meetings with the attention to detail that other film-makers may invest in action sequences or dance routines.The Event Details: Romería and the Journey to Self-DiscoveryAmong the tricks Simón employs, she explains, is to ensure her actors only read the script once before the camera starts rolling, so they have to improvise to fill the gaps. She takes her casts to parties, for walks and on shopping trips, and if there are disagreements on the way, so much the better. The ultimate secret sauce, though, is to ignore WC Fields's notorious advice and always work with children and animals."I never get bored of working with kids," she says. "When you are only working with adult actors, shooting becomes more like executing an idea that you have in your mind, and I think that is not interesting. With children, you always have this feeling that that things are going to happen in front of the camera by chance. It keeps things alive."Her new film Romería, meaning "pilgrimage" in Spanish, dives deeper into the story of the biological parents she barely got to know. Eighteen-year-old Marina travels to her relatives in Vigo, in north-western Galicia, purportedly to find the death certificate of her biological father, which she needs to study film-making in Barcelona. The initial reaction is warm, but family is a room with dark corners and locked closets.The Personal Journey: Aids, Loss and Family SecretsSimón's fascination with freewheeling scenes of family life was undoubtedly honed through her own biography. Born in Barcelona in 1986, her father died when she was three and her mother when she was six. Both of them succumbed to Aids. She was 12 when her adoptive mother told her that her parents had been infected with the autoimmune disease through their use of drugs.All of her first three films have been strongly autobiographical: Summer 1993 tells the story of a six-year-old girl who moves to an unspecified location countryside to live with her aunt after the death of her mother, while 2022's Alcarràs is specifically set in the Catalan peach-growing community of her adoptive family.In the film, a cache of letters written by her late mother opens up a portal to the time when her parents met and discovered love – for each other, the Atlantic Ocean and drugs. The letters, Simón explains, are real. "She wrote to her friends and family while she lived in Vigo. Her Catalan is full of mistakes, because teaching Catalan was banned under the Franco regime. But they are the most important thing that I have from my mother, because suddenly I can hear her talking."The Impact Analysis: Spanish Cinema and the Legacy of AidsSpanish cinema has a track record in making films where child actors take centre stage: Ana Torrent's spell-binding turn as a young girl obsessed with the Frankenstein tale in Víctor Erice's 1973 film The Spirit of the Beehive is considered an all-time great performance by a minor, and Simón describes it as "a very, very important film for me".During the transition period after Franco's rule, Madrid gave birth to la movida, a countercultural movement that celebrated lifestyles that had been banned under military rule. "All these kids who were raised under Franco and religious oppression, suddenly freedom arrived and they embraced it", Simón says. "They didn't think much about the future or the consequences of what they were experimenting with. And then the drugs came in."When we talk about this generation in Spain, people sometimes use words like shame and blame, but I feel that's really unfair: people like my parents just had bad luck.The Future Direction: Beyond Family in Simón's Next ProjectHalfway through Romería there is a stylistic shift, from the Eurorealism she favoured in her previous works toward something more magical-realist: there is a mysterious cat you might expect to encounter in a Miyazaki film, and an unforgettable dance number set to Vigo punk rocker's Siniestro Total's song Bailaré Sobre Tu Tumba ("I'll Dance on Your Grave")."These three films I've made are kind of a cycle, because they all talk about my family, adoptive and biological. But since I became a mother a few years ago, I feel that my place in the family changed. When you have kids you feel it's a new period in your life, so I feel like maybe doing something that has nothing to do with my family."Her next film, she confides, is going to be a flamenco musical.
#Carla Simón #Romería #Spanish cinema
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Business May 13, 2026

Vistry Warns of Significantly Lower Profits as Iran Conflict Fuels UK Housing Uncertainty

UK housebuilder Vistry announced that first‑half profits will be markedly lower after the US‑Israel…
Vistry warned that its first‑half adjusted pre‑tax profit will be "significantly lower" than the prior year, citing the fallout from the US‑Israeli war on Iran. The warning sent the stock down 10.5%, its lowest level in nearly 15 years, and prompted a company‑wide operational review led by new CEO Adam Daniels. Vistry’s Profit Warning Amid Middle East Conflict The housebuilder, owner of Bovis Homes, Countryside and Linden Homes, updated investors hours before its AGM, stating that heightened macro‑economic uncertainty has altered the outlook since the March update. While sales volumes remain above last year, buyer caution has risen sharply due to the conflict. Financial Fallout: Share Drop and Profit Forecasts Key financial signals include: Share price fell 10.5% in early trading, reaching a 15‑year trough. First‑half profit expected to be "significantly lower" than 2025. Adjusted pre‑tax profit for 2026 projected to sit in the "middle of the range" of analyst forecasts. Company halted its share‑buy‑back programme to prioritise debt reduction. Ripple Effects on the UK Housing Market and Supply Chain The conflict has introduced upward pressure on building‑material costs and labour wages, pressures Vistry expects to persist into the second half of the year. To mitigate, Vistry is negotiating with suppliers and offering larger buyer incentives, actions that further compress margins. Industry analysts, such as Anthony Codling of RBC Capital Markets, note that while execution risks remain high, the update reflects a broader slowdown in UK housing activity. Outlook: Operational Review and Path to Recovery CEO Adam Daniels has launched a company‑wide operational review, with findings slated for September. The firm anticipates a partial recovery in the second half of the year, aiming for profits flat with 2025 levels and a return to a more stable growth trajectory thereafter.
#Vistry #Adam Daniels #UK housing market
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