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Nato chief urges ‘thoughtful diplomacy’ after US treasury secretary’s jibe at Denmark

about 13 hours ago
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Donald Trump has landed in Switzerland for the Davos global gathering as Nato’s secretary general said “thoughtful diplomacy” was the only way to deal with growing transatlantic tensions, remarks that came shortly after the US treasury secretary had dismissed Denmark as an irrelevance.The US president’s threats to seize Greenland, a largely self-governing part of Denmark, risk tearing the transatlantic alliance apart, while his promise to impose tariffs on European nations who oppose him could trigger a trade war with the EU.Speaking at the World Economic Forum in the Swiss town on Wednesday, Nato’s Mark Rutte said that there were “tensions at the moment” but that talks, and a concerted drive to bolster Arctic security, were the only ways forward.He dismissed fears that the Greenland crisis could unravel the 76-year-old alliance, and pushed back at repeated comments from Trump casting doubt on whether its European members would help to defend the US if asked, saying: “They will.”Speaking on the sidelines of the forum, the US treasury secretary, Scott Bessent, earlier dismissed Denmark as “irrelevant” and brushed aside claims that European investors, such as Denmark’s pension funds, might pull out of the US market.

Bessent said the size of Denmark’s investment in US Treasury bonds, “like Denmark itself, is irrelevant … It is less than $100m [£75m],I’m not concerned at all,”He described as “inflammatory” statements on Tuesday by the French president, Emmanuel Macron, who said Europe preferred “respect to bullies” and “the rule of law to brutality”, and Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, who promised an “unflinching” tariff response,“If this is all President Macron has to do when the French budget is in shambles, I would suggest he focuses on other things for the French people,” Bessent said,He urged leaders in Davos not to show “reflexive anger” and “bitterness”.

Trump, whose arrival in Davos was delayed by a “minor electrical issue” with his presidential jet, was expected to face a tough reception from angry European leaders in the ski resort but said overnight that he thought “we will work something out”,Von der Leyen said on Wednesday that the EU had to get faster and stronger in a world now defined by “raw power”,The spat between allies over Greenland would only embolden geopolitical rivals, she said,“The shift in the international order is not only seismic, but it is permanent,” von der Leyen told the European parliament,“While many of us may not like it, we must deal with the world as it is now … We need a departure from Europe’s traditional caution.

”The commission chief, who is not due to meet Trump in Davos, said Europe was “at a crossroads”, adding that the 27-nation bloc “prefers dialogue and solutions – but we are fully prepared to act, if necessary, with unity, urgency and determination”.Trump has repeatedly said the US needs to take control of Greenland for “national security”, despite the US already having a military base on the island and a bilateral agreement with Denmark allowing it to massively expand its presence there.The Finnish president, Alexander Stubb, told a Davos audience that he believed a diplomatic solution could be found.There were “curveballs flying in different types of directions”, he said, but: “I think at the end of the day, we’ll find an off-ramp.”Trump has threatened to impose a 10% tariff on imports from Denmark, Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, the UK, the Netherlands and Finland unless they drop their objections to his Greenland plans, prompting EU leaders to consider retaliation.

The commission’s deputy chief spokesperson, Olof Gill, said on Wednesday that the EU was continuing trade conversations with Washington at the “technical and political levels” because “it is time for engagement not escalation”.But the European parliament is expected on Wednesday to suspend ratification of a EU-US trade deal sealed in July.Other options include a package of tariffs on €93bn (£80bn) of US imports or the bloc’s “big bazooka”, its “anti-coercion instrument”.Separately, the governor of California, Gavin Newsom, responded to Bessent’s claim that he was smug, self-absorbed and economically illiterate.Newsom said: “I’m in his head.

”Newsom – a plausible candidate to be the Democratic candidate in 2028 – picked out the Canadian prime minister, Mark Carney, von der Leyen and Macron for praise, telling reporters: “I was very pleased to hear Prime Minister Carney’s remarks yesterday, the EU president’s remarks were powerful, and Macron’s.”
technologySee all
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Ed Zitron on big tech, backlash, boom and bust: ‘AI has taught us that people are excited to replace human beings’

His blunt, brash scepticism has made the podcaster and writer something of a cult figure. But as concern over large language models builds, he’s no longer the outsider he once wasIf some time in an entirely possible future they come to make a movie about “how the AI bubble burst”, Ed Zitron will doubtless be a main character. He’s the perfect outsider figure: the eccentric loner who saw all this coming and screamed from the sidelines that the sky was falling, but nobody would listen. Just as Christian Bale portrayed Michael Burry, the investor who predicted the 2008 financial crash, in The Big Short, you can well imagine Robert Pattinson fighting Paul Mescal, say, to portray Zitron, the animated, colourfully obnoxious but doggedly detail-oriented Brit, who’s become one of big tech’s noisiest critics.This is not to say the AI bubble will burst, necessarily, but against a tidal wave of AI boosterism, Zitron’s blunt, brash scepticism has made him something of a cult figure

3 days ago
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Deactivate your X account – you won’t miss it when it’s gone | Letter

As a past follower of Marie Le Conte (AKA the Young Vulgarian) on X, I read her column on leaving the platform with interest, complete empathy and self-reflection (To anybody still using X: sexual abuse content is the final straw, it’s time to leave, 12 January).I joined X – or rather, Twitter – in 2007 after reading a Guardian article on the five next hit websites. Needless to say, most of the others have been forgotten. I was bored in my uni halls and it sounded the most interesting.In those days one could sit and watch the global feed – every tweet being posted in the world – with notable seconds between posts

3 days ago
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‘Still here!’: X’s Grok AI tool accessible in Malaysia and Indonesia despite ban

Days after Malaysia made global headlines by announcing it would temporarily ban Grok over its ability to generate “grossly offensive and nonconsensual manipulated images”, the generative AI tool was conversing breezily with accounts registered in the country.“Still here! That DNS block in Malaysia is pretty lightweight – easy to bypass with a VPN or DNS tweak,” Grok’s account on X said in response to a question from a user.Grok’s ability to allow users to create sexually explicit images, including images of children, has created a global outcry over recent weeks, with regulators and politicians around the world launching investigations. Indonesia and Malaysia became the first two countries to announce blocks on the technology, with Malaysia’s regulatory body saying last Sunday it had “directed a temporary restriction” on access to Grok, effective as of 11 January 2026. Officials in the Philippines have said they too plan to ban the technology

4 days ago
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‘We could hit a wall’: why trillions of dollars of risk is no guarantee of AI reward

Will the race to artificial general intelligence (AGI) lead us to a land of financial plenty – or will it end in a 2008-style bust? Trillions of dollars rest on the answer.The figures are staggering: an estimated $2.9tn (£2.2tn) being spent on datacentres, the central nervous systems of AI tools; the more than $4tn stock market capitalisation of Nvidia, the company that makes the chips powering cutting-edge AI systems; and the $100m signing-on bonuses offered by Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta to top engineers at OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT.These sky-high numbers are all propped up by investors who expect a return on their trillions

5 days ago
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He called himself an ‘untouchable hacker god’. But who was behind the biggest crime Finland has ever known?

Tiina Parikka was half-naked when she read the email. It was a Saturday in late October 2020, and Parikka had spent the morning sorting out plans for distance learning after a Covid outbreak at the school where she was headteacher. She had taken a sauna at her flat in Vantaa, just outside Finland’s capital, Helsinki, and when she came into her bedroom to get dressed, she idly checked her phone. There was a message that began with Parikka’s name and her social security number – the unique code used to identify Finnish people when they access healthcare, education and banking. “I knew then that this is not a game,” she says

5 days ago
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China blocks Nvidia H200 AI chips that US government cleared for export – report

Suppliers of parts for Nvidia’s H200 have paused production after Chinese customs officials blocked shipments of the newly approved artificial intelligence processors from entering China, according to a report.Reuters could not immediately verify the report, which appeared in the Financial Times citing two people with knowledge of the matter. Nvidia did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment made outside regular business hours.Nvidia had expected more than one million orders from Chinese clients, the report said, adding that its suppliers had been operating around the clock to prepare for shipping as early as March.Chinese customs authorities this week told customs agents that Nvidia’s H200 chips were not permitted to enter the country, Reuters reported

5 days ago
politicsSee all
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Gwyn Jones obituary

about 8 hours ago
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People in Newark: share your views on Robert Jenrick defecting to Reform UK

about 12 hours ago
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Keir Starmer to visit China with British business leaders next week, say reports

about 16 hours ago
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Starmer should resist calls to match Trump ‘tweet-for-tweet’, says Miliband

about 16 hours ago
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Nigel Farage apologises for 17 breaches of MPs’ code of conduct

about 16 hours ago
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Love, actually? Starmer’s ‘keep calm’ approach to Trump comes under strain

1 day ago