Plans to police ‘legal but harmful’ content threaten free speech, peers warn
The House of Lords Communications and Digital Committee has called on the Government to change its proposals to tackling some online harms.
The House of Lords Communications and Digital Committee has called on the Government to change its proposals to tackling some online harms.
The judge said Dymock had been an ‘active and committed proponent for right wing neo-Nazi extremism’.
Andrew Dymock, who carved a swastika into his girlfriend’s buttock, was found guilty by an Old Bailey jury in June of 15 charges.
The findings of hundreds of marine samples, from the Middle Jurassic should allow new research that was not possible before.
The John Muir Trust and Mountaineering Scotland has been trying to contact the internet giant about the issue.
The Bank of England said the increasing reliance on cloud services could pose a threat to financial stability.
The dispute is part of a larger effort by the EU to force Google and other tech companies to compensate publishers for content.
Finance ministers from the Group of 20 major economies have endorsed a global minimum corporate tax of at least 15%.
Twitter has published new figures around online conversations about the health crisis.
The complaint filed in a US federal court represents the fourth major antitrust lawsuit filed against Google by government agencies across the US.
Supporters using third party sites have been warned they will ‘in all probability, be left chasing a refund’.
The former president has been joined by other plaintiffs in the lawsuit.
The Institute of Directors want plans for companies to use two auditors to be tested further before being rolled out under Government plans.
Which? investigation finds advertisers seizing prime spots for paid health card, driving licence and visa services, even though some are free.
Trevor Cooper considers the problem of rental deposit disputes