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Business Apr 28, 2026

Australia's News Bargaining Incentive: A $250M Test of Tech Giant Accountability

The Australian government has unveiled a new News Bargaining Incentive (NBI) scheme, imposing a 2.2…
The LeadPrime Minister Anthony Albanese has unveiled a contentious new regulatory framework designed to force digital giants like Google and Meta to financially support Australian journalism. The government's News Bargaining Incentive (NBI) scheme proposes a 2.25% levy on platform revenues, aiming to raise up to $250 million annually. However, the tech sector has responded with fierce opposition, arguing that the policy is a 'digital services tax' that ignores the value they already provide to publishers.The Mechanics of the News Bargaining IncentiveThe NBI replaces the previous Morrison government's code, which Labor claims is no longer effective. The core of the new legislation targets platforms with annual Australian revenue exceeding $250 million or those with a significant user base: 5 million users for social media services and 10 million for search websites. This definition currently captures TikTok, Google, and Meta.Levy Rate: 2.25% of local revenues.Exemption Mechanism: Platforms can avoid the levy by signing commercial deals with publishers.Incentive: Deals receive offsets against the levy of up to 170%, with excess carried forward.Financial Impact and Revenue TargetsThe government projects the NBI will generate substantial revenue for the local media sector, potentially reaching $250 million per year. This is a significant increase from previous agreements, which saw $250 million spread over three years. The model aims to ensure that revenue is distributed based on the number of journalists employed by outlets, rather than arbitrary market value.The Power Imbalance in the Digital EconomyThe core argument for the levy is the perceived imbalance in bargaining power. Communications Minister Anika Wells stated that platforms should not be allowed to exploit the work of journalists to boost profits without compensation. Meta has pushed back, asserting that news organizations voluntarily post content because they receive value from the traffic. Former ACCC chair Allan Fels supports the move, arguing that the delay in accountability has entrenched this imbalance.Future Outlook and Political RisksThe legislation faces significant hurdles, including potential diplomatic friction with the United States. President Donald Trump has pledged to defend American platforms from additional taxes globally. Furthermore, the current draft excludes AI platforms like OpenAI, despite their growing use of news data. While the government argues this is a separate policy issue, the exclusion highlights a gap in the regulatory framework as technology evolves.
#Australia #Meta #Google
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Entertainment Apr 28, 2026

Sheffield Folk Singer Jim Ghedi Scores Major Film Amid Class Divide in Music Industry

Sheffield folk singer Jim Ghedi, known for his working-class perspective in music, has been tapped …
The Lead: From Sheffield Pub to Hollywood Film ScoreLast year, Jim Ghedi was having a chicken dinner at his mother's house in Sheffield when he checked his phone. A director had started following him on Instagram, and as a joke, Ghedi messaged him saying he wanted to do his next film score. To his surprise, the director, Michael Sarnoski, responded immediately, offering him the job to score the forthcoming A24 production "The Death of Robin Hood," starring Hugh Jackman and Jodie Comer.The Breakthrough: A Working-Class Folk Musician's Unexpected Hollywood OpportunityDespite having never scored a film before, Ghedi was given the gig. He bonded instantly with Sarnoski through video calls and a shared love of Steeleye Span, and ended up writing the songs and score. He describes the finished material as "quite doomy, earthy and dark" but also "quite light and orchestrated." Ghedi was invited out to LA to work on the project there, but instead chose to stay rooted in Sheffield. Even so, he had moments of impostor syndrome, acknowledging that "it's very rare for someone like me, and where I'm from, to get those kinds of opportunities."The Musical Journey: From Hip-Hop to Folk with Working-Class RootsGhedi, 35, was given a guitar when he was eight and quickly became a skilled player, but his teenage years were lit up by hip-hop and punk. The lyrical output of hip-hop proved formative for him. "Hearing people talk about being raised by a single mum was like, whoa," he recalls. "Here's someone artistically talking about something that I'm also experiencing in my life." Then came the revelatory discovery of Bert Jansch. "It was the first time I'd heard someone who played an acoustic guitar and it was not pretty," he says. "It was really heavy and aggressive."The Class Divide: Folk Music's Middle-Class DominanceWhile Ghedi favours metaphor and nuance rather than state-of-the-nation-style delivery, class is central to his music and ethos. "When I was younger, I was really naive and I tried to assimilate," he recalls. "But I realised: I need to own where I'm from. I'm not trying to be a spokesperson, but the folk scene is very middle class. The divide and the drop-off is huge, and in some ways, the disparity is worse now than when I started."The Future Outlook: Authenticity Over Commercial SuccessGhedi's trajectory to landing a huge project such as "The Death of Robin Hood" is a rare but heartening one. Despite having a memorable time working on the film, with a team on whom he heaps praise, he appears resolutely unmoved by the idea that he now needs to play any kind of game. "As long as I stick to focusing on creativity, nothing else matters," he says. "Whether I'm playing to 10 people in a room or 1,000, it's the same for me."
#Jim Ghedi #Folk Music #The Death of Robin Hood
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Environment Apr 28, 2026

Urban Peregrines Expand Their Menu in Stevenage

A newly established breeding pair of peregrine falcons in Stevenage are hunting a surprisingly wide…
The first resident breeding pair of peregrines in Stevenage – VDT (male, born 2023) and VSR (female, born 2024) – have settled on the concrete cliffs of Vista Tower and are already demonstrating a diverse hunting repertoire, even targeting nocturnal waterbirds.The First Breeding Pair Takes Up Urban TerritoryAndy Day and the author met in an Asda car park and followed the birds to Vista Tower, a 50‑metre‑high block where the falcons nest. Their presence marks the first successful summer territory establishment in the town, although Stevenage hosts wintering peregrines.Feather Evidence Reveals a Broad Prey SpectrumCollected feathers from 46 different species.14 of those were waders, including lapwing, golden plover, jack snipe, whimbrel and oystercatcher.Image documentation shows feathers from 13 wading species found beneath the nest.The raptors are pulling prey from pavement cracks and drain grates, indicating they hunt both pigeons and larger waterbirds, sometimes at night under streetlights.Quantifying the Prey: Species Count and Seasonal TrendsThe high species count underscores a shift in urban predator diet, likely driven by the Stevenage‑Hitchin Gap migration corridor that funnels nocturnal migrants over the town.Urban Raptors Reshaping City EcosystemsThis predation pressure adds a new top‑down dynamic to Stevenage’s urban wildlife, potentially influencing pigeon populations and the survival rates of migrating waders that use the town as a stop‑over.What Lies Ahead for Stevenage’s Skyline PredatorsIf the pair continues to thrive, we can expect a more permanent raptor presence, prompting city planners to consider nesting platforms and mitigation measures for vulnerable migratory birds.
#Stevenage #Peregrine Falcon #Urban Wildlife
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Entertainment Apr 28, 2026

Having Spent Life Seeking Review: Kae Tempest’s Earnest Exploration of Trauma and Transition

The Guardian’s review finds Kae Tempest’s second novel a painfully earnest meditation on trauma, ge…
The Review’s Core VerdictThe Guardian concludes that Kae Tempest’s Having Spent Life Seeking is an intensely earnest work that oscillates between lyrical beauty and exhausting melodrama. The novel’s raw honesty about trauma and gender transition is commendable, but its relentless intensity and occasional verse‑like prose leave many readers yearning for more nuanced interiority.Tempest’s Narrative Choices and Prose StyleSet in the stark seaside town of Edgecliff, the story follows Rothko Taylor, a recently released prisoner navigating homelessness, addiction, and a gender transition. Tempest structures the narrative around a long flashback that interweaves past abuse, a teenage romance with Dionne, and present‑day struggles. The prose is deliberately lyrical, often bordering on verse, which the reviewer argues can feel both beautiful and glib, especially when describing gritty realities such as jail life or self‑harm.Flashback‑driven structure links past trauma to present identity.Lyrical language aims to “wrest beauty from the jaws of gritty realism”.Critique: the verse‑like style sometimes undermines emotional depth.Pricing, Publication, and Market PositionThe novel is published by Jonathan Cape and retails at £18.99. Positioned as a “heart‑breaking, soul‑building” debut, the book targets both literary‑fiction readers and those seeking authentic trans narratives. Its price places it within the mid‑range of contemporary literary releases, suggesting a modest commercial expectation rather than a bestseller push.Implications for Trans Representation in Contemporary FictionTempest’s work adds to a growing, though still limited, catalogue of trans‑authored novels that foreground gender transition as a central theme. By foregrounding Rothko’s struggle for bodily autonomy and emotional connection, the novel challenges mainstream publishing’s often tokenistic treatment of trans stories. However, the review notes that the reliance on trauma tropes risks reinforcing a narrow view of trans lives as primarily defined by suffering.What Readers Can Expect from Future Trans NarrativesThe review suggests that while Having Spent Life Seeking may not be a flawless literary achievement, it signals a demand for more nuanced, varied trans perspectives. Future works are likely to move beyond trauma‑centric plots toward richer character development, diverse genre experimentation, and deeper explorations of everyday trans experiences.
#Kae Tempest #Having Spent Life Seeking #Jonathan Cape
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Politics Apr 28, 2026

UK to Appeal High Court Ruling on Palestine Action Ban

The UK government is set to appeal a High Court ruling that deemed the ban on Palestine Action as a…
The UK's Appeal Against the High Court Ruling The United Kingdom is set to appeal the High Court’s landmark ruling that the government’s ban on Palestine Action was illegal. The two-day hearing, which begins on Tuesday at the Court of Appeal in London, comes after top judges described the proscription of the direct-action group as a terrorist organisation as “disproportionate” in February. Background of the Palestine Action Ban Palestine Action was founded in 2020 by Huda Ammori, a Briton of Palestinian and Iraqi descent and former Extinction Rebellion activist Richard Barnard. The group’s stated mission is to target companies associated with the Israeli military. Since the UK banned Palestine Action last summer, thousands of Britons have participated in a coordinated campaign of civil disobedience, with more than 2,700 people arrested under terror laws for holding up signs reading, “I oppose genocide. I support Palestine Action.” The Impact on Supporters and Human Rights Concerns Although the government’s case suffered a blow at the High Court, the proscription remained in place amid the appeals process – and it is still illegal to show support for the group. The fate of those arrested remains uncertain. London’s Metropolitan Police announced that it was unlikely to arrest supporters in the aftermath of the High Court ruling, but reversed that policy weeks later. Earlier this month, more than 200 protesters were arrested in central London and last week, celebrities and scholars, including the novelist Sally Rooney, climate activist Greta Thunberg and Israeli historian Ilan Pappe, signed a letter in which they declared support for Palestine Action – a move that also risks arrests. Human Rights Concerns and Criticisms Rights groups condemned the UK’s ban on the group as an unprecedented overreach and urged the government not to appeal. In its annual report, Amnesty International said the UK “continued to use counterterror laws to restrict peaceful protests against the genocide in Gaza and ban the organisation Palestine Action [as] arms exports to Israel continued.” Proscribing the group put it on par with armed groups such as ISIL and al-Qaeda. Last month, Human Rights Watch wrote, “When the state blurs the line between activism and terrorism, it is not defending security, it is undermining freedom.” The Future Outlook It is unclear when the Court of Appeal might hand down its judgment. At the time of publishing, Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood, who is leading the case against Palestine Action, had not responded to Al Jazeera’s request for comment.
#UK #Palestine Action #High Court
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Politics Apr 28, 2026

Bahrain Revokes Citizenship of 69 Alleged Iran Sympathizers

Bahrain’s Ministry of Interior stripped 69 individuals of their citizenship, accusing them of suppo…
Mass Revocation Targets Alleged Iran SympathizersBahrain announced on Monday that it had revoked the citizenship of 69 people, labeling them as supporters of Iranian strikes and collaborators with foreign entities. The decree, issued by King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa, claims the individuals are of "non‑Bahraini origin" and have acted against national security.Scope of the Crackdown in Numbers69 citizenships withdrawnAll subjects described as having "non‑Bahraini origin"Revocations followed Iranian attacks that began on 28 February 2026The Bahrain Institute for Rights and Democracy called the action "dangerous" and a breach of international law, noting that the identities of those stripped remain undisclosed.Regional Repercussions Amid Ongoing ConflictThe revocations come after Tehran launched missile and drone strikes on Gulf states, including a hit on a U.S. naval base in Bahrain. Iran halted its attacks on 9 April 2026 after a Pakistan‑brokered ceasefire, but diplomatic negotiations continue.Implications for Bahrain’s Shia Community and International NormsHeightened suspicion toward Bahrain’s Shia majority, who have long accused the government of marginalisation.Potential escalation of domestic unrest, recalling the 2011 Arab Spring protests.Increased scrutiny from human‑rights organisations regarding due process and statelessness.International observers warn that mass denationalisation could set a precedent for punitive citizenship policies in the region.Looking Ahead: Policy Trajectory and Diplomatic OutlookAnalysts predict Bahrain may use citizenship revocation as a deterrent against perceived foreign influence, while seeking to balance internal stability with external pressure from allies. Ongoing ceasefire talks and broader Iran‑Israel‑U.S. negotiations will likely shape whether Bahrain eases its stance or adopts further security‑driven measures.
#Bahrain #Iran #King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa
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World Wide Apr 28, 2026

Thousands Detained in Poor Conditions by RSF in Sudan's El-Fasher

Thousands of people, including 20 doctors, over 1,470 civilians, and 907 military personnel, are be…
The Detention Crisis in El-Fasher Thousands of people remain detained in poor conditions by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) in el-Fasher in western Sudan, according to a local NGO. The Scale of Detention The Sudan Doctors Network said on Monday that 20 doctors, more than 1,470 civilians, and 907 military personnel are being held in “dire” conditions in multiple detention facilities in the city. 20 doctors detained Over 1,470 civilians detained 907 military personnel detained Conditions in Detention Centers The NGO said in a statement that the RSF is reportedly committing “severe violations” inside the detention centers in el-Fasher, “including killings during torture and interrogation, as well as ethnically motivated killings”. The group reports that 370 women and 426 children are among those held in facilities including Shalla Prison, a children’s hospital, and cargo containers. Humanitarian Crisis The detention centers have faced a cholera outbreak since early February, with poor environmental conditions, a lack of clean water, and malnutrition making the spread of diseases more rampant. The capture of the doctors, alongside a “critical” shortage of medical supplies, has debilitated the health sector, the NGO warned. The Background of the Conflict Sudan descended into conflict three years ago when a rivalry between army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and RSF commander Mohamed Hamdan “Hemedti” Dagalo exploded into all-out war. The RSF and the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) have been fighting a vicious civil war since April 2023, which has killed hundreds of thousands and displaced millions to create the “world’s worst humanitarian crisis”, according to the United Nations.
#Sudan #RSF #El-Fasher
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Sports Apr 27, 2026

NFL Draft 2026: Rams Reach for Stafford's Successor, Cowboys Retool

The 2026 NFL draft saw several key picks, including the Los Angeles Rams selecting quarterback Ty S…
The Rams Reach for Stafford's Successor The Los Angeles Rams delivered a shock in the 2026 NFL draft, selecting Alabama quarterback Ty Simpson at pick No. 13. This move was unexpected, even to their head coach, Sean McVay, who seemed less than enthusiastic during the post-pick press conference. Simpson had started just 15 games in college and was considered a fringe first-round prospect. Cowboys Retool While the Rams made a surprising pick, the Dallas Cowboys focused on retooling their team. Although specific details of their picks are not provided, the Cowboys were active in the draft, aiming to strengthen their roster for the upcoming season. Jets Add Juice The New York Jets also made notable picks in the 2026 NFL draft. At pick No. 2, they selected David Bailey, LB, Texas Tech, and at pick No. 16, they added Kenyon Sadiq, TE, Oregon. These selections are part of the Jets' strategy to add talent and depth to their squad. The Draft in Numbers First round: 32 picks, including notable selections like Fernando Mendoza, QB, Indiana, to the Las Vegas Raiders and Jeremiyah Love, RB, Notre Dame, to the Arizona Cardinals. Compensatory picks were also made throughout the rounds, adding more talent to various teams. The Impact Analysis The 2026 NFL draft has significant implications for the teams' future performance. With key players like Ty Simpson joining new teams, the dynamics of the league are expected to shift. The success of these picks will be closely watched in the upcoming season. The Prediction As the NFL season approaches, all eyes will be on the new draftees to see how they adapt to their teams. The Rams, Cowboys, and Jets are among those looking to make a strong impact. The 2026 season promises to be exciting, with fresh talent and new strategies on display.
#NFL #NFL Draft 2026 #Los Angeles Rams
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Science Apr 27, 2026

Unlocking the Inner Lives of Dinosaurs Through Bird Skulls

Scientists are studying bird skulls to gain insights into the inner lives of long-extinct dinosaurs…
The Lead Scientists are now probing the inner lives of long-extinct dinosaurs like T rex by studying the skulls of birds, their direct descendants. This approach may provide clues about the behavior and cognitive abilities of these prehistoric creatures. Exploring the Connection Between Birds and Dinosaurs T rex is often depicted as more brawn than brains, but researchers are hoping to explore whether there might be telltale hints of advanced capabilities in the skull, opening up the potential to probe the lived experience of dinosaurs like T rex. Prof Steve Brusatte, a palaeontologist at the University of Edinburgh, is working with an international team of researchers to explore such possibilities. The Science Behind the Study “We can’t put T rex through those tests,” said Prof Steve Brusatte. “But if there are some distinctive features of the brain that maybe tell you with 95% confidence that the animal with that kind of brain is capable of that kind of behaviour today, then we can at least make predictions about these fossils.” The Evolutionary Link Birds are direct descendants of theropod dinosaurs and share many characteristics with them. In fact, a six-day-old quail embryo has a pelvis that looks just like the hips of a theropod like T rex. By studying the brains and behavior of birds, scientists can make educated guesses about the cognitive abilities of their dinosaur ancestors. The Future of Dinosaur Research While the approach may be a long shot, it could provide a new window into the lives of long-extinct creatures. As Brusatte notes, “Birds are survivors. They are adaptable, they evolve quickly, they change quickly.” By studying birds and their connection to dinosaurs, researchers can gain a deeper understanding of the evolution of life on Earth.
#Steve Brusatte #University of Edinburgh #Birds
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