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Minister accused of being too close to big tech after rise in meetings

3 days ago
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A senior cabinet minister has been accused of being too close to big tech after analysis showed a surge in his department’s meetings with companies such as Google, Amazon, Apple and Meta since Labour came to power.According to Guardian analysis of publicly available data, Peter Kyle met people close to or representing the sector 28 times in a six-month period.That was more than one meeting every week on average, and nearly 70% more often than his predecessor as science and technology secretary, Michelle Donelan.The findings have brought renewed criticism from those who believe Kyle has used his position to push the sector’s agenda even in the face of concerns about online safety and protections for the creative industries.UKAI, a trade body representing the UK’s artificial intelligence industry, said smaller players were being squeezed out as a consequence of the government’s focus on big tech.

“Our concern is that there is a huge imbalance between a handful of global players who are able to influence directly what No 10 is thinking about on policy, and the thousands of other businesses that make up the AI industry across the UK,” said Tim Flagg, the UKAI chief executive.“Our voice is not being heard but the economic growth that the government seeks will come from these companies.”Labour has put the technology sector at the heart of much of what it is promising to do in government.Keir Starmer said in a speech earlier this year that artificial intelligence could “turbocharge growth”, and the prime minister is now pursuing a tech-focused trade deal with the US, having last week agreed a range of tariff reductions.Kyle has been at the centre of the government’s outreach to the sector, calling those who work in it “the bold people building a new future for Britain”.

A Labour source said the figure showed Kyle was “clearly working nearly 70% harder than his predecessors”.They added: “He is meeting many more inventors, investors and innovators as well as technology companies, victims, campaigners, academics and scientists.That’s the job.And it is a privilege to do it.”Some in the creative sector blame Kyle for piloting controversial proposals to allow AI companies to circumvent copyright protections and use creative material to train their tools.

The Guardian revealed last month that ministers had drawn up concessions to those plans after a backlash from some of the UK’s best-known artists, including Elton John and Paul McCartney.On Wednesday, ministers sought to block a Lords amendment to the data bill that would have required AI companies to disclose their use of copyright-protected content.Some in Labour circles now believe Kyle has become so close to the industry he is supposed to monitor that he will be moved in the next reshuffle, possibly to replace Bridget Phillipson as education secretary.Victoria Collins, the Liberal Democrats’ science and technology spokesperson, said: “Peter Kyle has rightly got a reputation for being too close to big tech – unable to defy his friends at Meta and X when it comes to standing up for our kids’ online safety or the rights of British creatives.Kyle rubbing shoulders with so many big US tech bros, instead of our great UK startups trying to get their foot in the door, shows he’s missing a trick.

”Caroline Dinenage, the Conservative chair of the culture, media and sport select committee, said: “It’s great that [Kyle] is taking a keen interest in the growth of this sector,But he needs to ensure he’s hearing balanced voices from across the high-performance business sectors the UK economy depends upon, to avoid irrevocable unintended consequences of advancing at the expense of others,”A spokesperson for the science and technology department said: “As the department for technology, we make no apologies for regularly engaging with the sector – one that employs nearly 2 million people in the UK,Regular engagement with technology companies of all sizes is fundamental to delivering economic growth and transforming our public services,”Information published by the government shows that from July 2024 until December 2024 – the most recent period for which there is data – Kyle held meetings with people representing or advocating for technology companies 28 times.

Google, Amazon and Microsoft were present at five of those meetings, the data shows, while Meta attended four.Five of Kyle’s meetings, all in early August, were to discuss online disinformation and how it had contributed to the spread of violence during that summer’s riots.But apart from that, almost every one was to discuss “investment”, “opportunities”, or both.In August Kyle met all four of those companies, and others from the industry, to discuss AI regulation.This year he has met AI companies several times, according to documents obtained under freedom of information rules by the website tech.

eu.Those meetings include three with the US AI company Anthropic, as well as a two-day flurry of meetings in February during which he saw executives from OpenAI, the chip designer Arm, Google DeepMind, ElevenLabs and Synthesia.Many of those meetings were also attended by Matt Clifford, the prime minister’s adviser on AI, who has been criticised for carrying out his role while also holding shares in dozens of AI companies.Earlier this year the Guardian revealed that the government was delaying its plans to regulate the AI sector.Last September, Kyle met Tony Blair in a meeting designed to “discuss [his department’s] priorities”.

However, information obtained by Politico last week under freedom of information laws shows Blair used that meeting to suggest Kyle meet the Ellison Institute of Technology, which is funded by Larry Ellison, the billionaire tech mogul who also funds the Tony Blair Institute.Kyle was also involved in watering down proposals from a Labour backbencher to ban addictive smartphone algorithms aimed at young teenagers.
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Anglian Water fined record £1.42m for contaminating water supply

Anglian Water has been fined a record £1.42m for contaminating the water supply.The company, which covers the east of England, received the fine at Northampton crown court after a prosecution brought by the Drinking Water Inspectorate (DWI) for failures that affected 1.3 million people.An investigation found that between June and December 2021 the company used unapproved materials in five drinking water tanks at four sites across its network

about 19 hours ago
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UK Peppa Pig toy firm says trading ‘uncertain’ as US-China shipments on hold

A British manufacturer that makes Peppa Pig and Fireman Sam toys has said trading with the US remains “uncertain” after it paused shipping Chinese-made products to the country because of Donald Trump’s tariffs.London-listed Character Group said on Friday that it had put shipments from China to the US “on hold” in April after the White House announced hefty levies for imports of Chinese-made goods.The company also withdrew its guidance for the current financial year last month, as a result of the introduction of tariffs by the US.Sales of Character’s products in the US, including stretchy action figures in the Heroes of Goo Jit Zu collection, represented 20% of the group’s revenues in the last financial year, which ended on 31 August 2024. The company said “substantially all” of its products sold in the US were manufactured in China

about 19 hours ago
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She earned $20 doing laundry for a friend. Now this entrepreneur washes 7,000lb a month

The first time Hyacinth Tucker did someone else’s laundry, she earned $20. “I didn’t think of it as a business. This was just another side hustle,” she said. It was 2022 and the Maryland-based army veteran needed money.She was going through a divorce, and Covid had staunched the flow of income from the event facilities she owned, so she had taken to driving for Uber and pet-sitting

about 20 hours ago
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King Charles’s wealth swells to match Rishi Sunak and Akshata Murty on UK rich list

King Charles’s personal fortune increased to £640m in the past year, making him as wealthy as the former prime minister Rishi Sunak and his wife, Akshata Murty, according to the Sunday Times rich list.The 76-year-old monarch, who acceded to the throne in 2022, recorded a £30m increase in wealth and ranks joint 238th on the list of the UK’s wealthiest people and families.The estimate of the king’s wealth is based on personal assets, including the investment portfolio he inherited from his late mother and private estates at Sandringham and Balmoral, and does not include the crown estate.Charles is now estimated to be worth considerably more than the late Queen Elizabeth II, whose wealth was put at £370m in 2022.However, an investigation by the Guardian in 2023 estimated that King Charles’s fortune could be almost £2bn

1 day ago
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Foreign states should not be co-owners of UK newspapers | Nils Pratley

‘We are fully upholding the need to safeguard our news media from foreign state control while recognising that news organisations must be able to raise vital funding,” said Lisa Nandy, the culture secretary, alighting on 15% as the limit for foreign state ownership of a UK newspaper company.She is obviously right that it is harder for companies to raise money if a pool of potential capital – state-controlled sovereign wealth funds and their like – are off-limits. No wonder some media owners lobbied for a percentage higher than the 5% that was being considered by the previous government as a tweak to last year’s legislation that set the cap at zero.But she is naive if she thinks 15% will ensure “minimal risk” of foreign state influence. That is not how the world works: 15% is a hefty foot in the door

1 day ago
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Wealthy Britons avoiding more tax than previously thought, spending watchdog says

Wealthy individuals in Britain could be avoiding more tax than had been thought, the government’s spending watchdog has said, after a dramatic fall in the number of penalties being issued to the super-rich.In a report urging ministers to redouble their efforts to secure more of the money owed by wealthy people to the exchequer, the National Audit Office (NAO) said billions of pounds was going unpaid each year.It said that HMRC had greatly increased the additional tax revenue it was collecting from wealthy individuals by tackling non-compliance, but that additional steps were required to ensure rich people paid their fair share.It comes as Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, faces renewed pressure to find extra money for public services and defence, amid warnings that she could be forced to raise taxes in the autumn budget.Nick Williams, an ex-No 10 senior economic adviser, who left his post last month, said on Thursday Reeves’s spending plans were “not credible” and needed to be reassessed

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Tory MP claims £1,100 for purchase of freely available Who’s Who books

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Starmer digs himself into a hole in Tirana while Tories froth about a flag | John Crace

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UK asking other countries to host ‘return hubs’ for refused asylum seekers, Starmer confirms – as it happened

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Author denied UK visa unable to attend premiere of play based on his memoir

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MP to launch bill to target superyachts, private jets and fossil fuel producers

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Taxi driver in France charged with stealing from David Lammy and his wife

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