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War prompts Europeans to switch holidays away from eastern Mediterranean

2 days ago
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Holidaymakers who had planned to visit the eastern Mediterranean this summer are moving their trips to the west and the Caribbean because of the US-Israel war on Iran, travel companies have said.Travellers from the UK and mainland Europe are increasingly swapping their holiday destinations away from Cyprus, Turkey and Greece towards Italy, Spain, Malta and Croatia, as the region around the Middle East grapples with flight cancellations and airspace closures.Tui, Europe’s biggest holiday operator, said demand had risen sharply in recent days for holidays in Spain, Portugal, Greece and Cape Verde this summer as customers opted for “familiar, easy‑to‑reach locations”.“While we are seeing some cancellations in the affected areas, these are currently outweighed by customers choosing to amend their plans instead,” Neil Swanson, a director at Tui, said.Jonathon Woodall-Johnston, of Hays Travel, the holiday agency that took on some of the collapsed Thomas Cook high street stores, added that demand was growing particularly strongly for trips to Italy, Malta and Croatia.

More people were also looking across the Atlantic for their summer holiday, they said, in an attempt to avoid travel disruption.Swanson said: “We’re seeing particularly strong demand for our direct long‑haul flying to the Caribbean, especially the Dominican Republic and Jamaica.”Mark Duguid, of the Surrey-based holiday operator Kuoni, said interest in the Caribbean was “off the charts” for trips in the coming weeks.“Everything has just been squeezed,” he said.“What we’ve seen is huge increases in flight prices, because the seats remaining are limited – we are talking about seats going up by £1,000 a person for an economy seat, which then prices the holiday out of the market for many customers.

”A week ago, the least expensive round-trip flights from London to Antigua and Barbuda for the last week in March cost £720, according to price tracking data from Google.This has since risen by 27% to £917.It comes as the tourism industry begins to count the cost of conflict in the Middle East.Shares in On the Beach, the online holiday agent, fell by as much as 13% on Thursday after it suspended its annual profit guidance because of the “unknown” duration and outcome of the war and its long-term impact on travel.It told investors it had already experienced a “significant slowdown” for bookings to destinations such as Turkey, Cyprus and Egypt.

On the Beach said there had also been a slowdown in bookings for Greece, where tourism is the cornerstone of the country’s economy.However, Tui said it had seen strong demand for Greek holidays in recent days.Other travel operator shares have fallen since the US-Israel attack on Iran, with shares in easyJet and Jet2 down by 16% and 10%, respectively.The rival online agent Loveholidays, which had been tipped to be the London Stock Exchange’s first big listing of 2026, is now reportedly preparing to delay its flotation, according to the Financial Times.Meanwhile, the Middle East’s tourism industry has been wiped out by the conflict, with the Foreign Office advising against travel to the United Arab Emirates, Jordan, Qatar, Bahrain and Oman.

British Airways has cancelled its seasonal Abu Dhabi route from Heathrow until “later this year”, and the low-cost airline Wizz Air told Bloomberg it was reallocating about half of its Middle East capacity, about 25 to 30 daily flights, to European leisure and city destinations such as Croatia, Spain, Portugal and Italy until September.The disruption means the Middle East’s tourism sector is losing $600m (£448m) a day in visitor spending, according to estimates from the World Travel & Tourism Council, the global trade body.Before the conflict, the body estimated that international visitors would spend about $207bn in the Middle East this year.The region’s tourism industry has grown rapidly in recent years and some of its most famous sites and hotels have been affected by the war.Iran struck the world-famous Fairmont hotel in Dubai, and debris from an intercepted drone caused a fire at the city’s famous luxury hotel, the Burj Al Arab, and Dubai’s international airport.

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Meta and Google trial: are infinite scroll and autoplay creating addicts?

It was as “easy as ABC”, claimed the lawyer prosecuting a landmark social media harm case against Meta and Google which heard closing arguments this week. The defendants were guilty, said Mark Lanier, of “addicting the brains of children”. Not true, replied the tech companies. Meta insisted providing young people with a “safer, healthier experience has always been core to our work”.Features such as autoplay videos, infinite scrolling and constantly chirruping alerts woven into the fabric of online platforms were central to the six-week trial in Los Angeles, which has been compared to the cases against tobacco companies in the 1990s

2 days ago
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New study raises concerns about AI chatbots fueling delusional thinking

A new scientific review raises concerns about how chatbots powered by artificial intelligence may encourage delusional thinking, especially in vulnerable people.A summary of existing evidence on artificial intelligence-induced psychosis was published last week in the Lancet Psychiatry, highlighting how chatbots can encourage delusional thinking – though possibly only in people who are already vulnerable to psychotic symptoms. The authors advocate for clinical testing of AI chatbots in conjunction with trained mental health professionals.For his paper, Dr Hamilton Morrin, a psychiatrist and researcher at King’s College in London, analyzed 20 media reports on so-called “AI psychosis”, which describes current theories as to how chatbots might induce or exacerbate delusions.“Emerging evidence indicates that agential AI might validate or amplify delusional or grandiose content, particularly in users already vulnerable to psychosis, although it is not clear whether these interactions can result in the emergence of de novo psychosis in the absence of pre-existing vulnerability,” he wrote

2 days ago
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Fake rooms, props and a script to lure victims: inside an abandoned Cambodia scam centre

It is as if you have walked into a branch of one of Vietnam’s banks. A row of customer service desks, divided by plastic screens, with landline phones, promotional leaflets and staff business cards. A seated waiting area and a private meeting room. All of it features the OCB bank’s logo, or its trademark green colour.This is not a genuine bank branch, however

3 days ago
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Apple cuts China App Store commission fees after government pressure

Apple announced late on Thursday it would lower the commission fees collected in its App Store in mainland China. The move follows pressure from regulators in the tech company’s second-largest market, as well as global scrutiny of its payment requirements.Fees for in-app purchases and paid transactions will be lowered to 25% from 30% starting on Sunday, Apple said in a statement on its blog for developers.“Apple is making changes to the App Store in China following discussions with the Chinese regulator,” the company’s announcement reads. “As of March 15, 2026, changes will be made to the commission rates that apply to the China mainland storefront of the App Store on iOS and iPadOS

3 days ago
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Anthropic-Pentagon battle shows how big tech has reversed course on AI and war

The standoff between Anthropic and the Pentagon has forced the tech industry to once again grapple with the question of how its products are used for war – and what lines it will not cross. Amid Silicon Valley’s rightward shift under Donald Trump and the signing of lucrative defense contracts, big tech’s answer is looking very different than it did even less than a decade ago.Anthropic’s feud with the Trump administration escalated three days ago as the AI firm sued the Department of Defense, claiming that the government’s decision to blacklist it from government work violated its first amendment rights. The company and the Pentagon have been locked in a months-long standoff, with Anthropic attempting to prohibit its AI model from being used for domestic mass surveillance or fully autonomous lethal weapons.Anthropic has argued that giving in to the DoD’s demands to permit “any lawful use” of its technology would violate its founding safety principles and open up its technology for potential abuse, staking an ethical boundary that others in the industry must decide whether they want to cross

3 days ago
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AI toys for young children must be more tightly regulated, say researchers

It was all going well. Charlotte, five, was chatting with an AI soft toy called Gabbo at a London play centre about her family, her drawing of a heart to represent them and what makes her happy. She even offered a couple of kisses to the £80 toy with a face like a computer screen.It was when she declared: “Gabbo, I love you”, that the fluent conversation came to an abrupt halt.“As a friendly reminder, please ensure interactions adhere to the guidelines provided,” said Gabbo, awkwardly crashing into its guardrails

4 days ago
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Mother’s Day UK recipes: three delicious ideas to make for your mum from Ravinder Bhogal

3 days ago
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Noma chef resigns amid allegations of physical abuse of staff

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