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UK economy beats forecasts with 0.3% growth in November; Ofwat investigating South East Water over outages – business live

Newsflash: The UK economy has returned to growth, and more vigorously than expected.UK GDP expanded by 0.3% in November, new data from the Office for National Statistics shows, after shrinking a little in October.That’s faster than expected; City economists had expected growth of just 0.1%In another boost, September’s growth figures have been revised higher, showing that the economy didn’t shrink that month after all

about 3 hours ago
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South East Water boss in line for £400,000 bonus despite outages

The boss of the company that has left thousands of households in Kent and East Sussex without water for days is in line for a £400,000 long-term bonus regardless of his performance, if he resists calls for him to resign over the outages.David Hinton, the chief executive of South East Water, is to receive the payout if he stays on until July 2030.Hinton is facing calls to give up his right to the previously unreported “service award”. The payment, which was disclosed in the company’s annual report, is not performance-related, meaning that as long as he remains, Hinton will receive it whatever the company’s record on water supplies or pollution.South East Water has faced immense pressure after 30,000 households in Kent and East Sussex endured days of water supply failures in November and again in January

about 6 hours ago
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Grok AI: what do limits on tool mean for X, its users, and Ofcom?

Elon Musk’s X has announced it will stop the Grok AI tool from allowing users to manipulate images of people to show them in revealing clothing such as bikinis.The furore over Grok, which is integrated with the X platform, has sparked a public and political backlash as well as a formal investigation by Ofcom, the UK’s communications watchdog.Here is a guide to what X’s announcement means for the social media platform, its users and Ofcom.The social media platform said on Wednesday it had implemented “technical measures” to stop the @Grok account on X from allowing the editing of images of real people so that they appear to be in revealing clothing such as bikinis. Before this, users had been able to ask @Grok to manipulate images, with the results being published on the platform

about 3 hours ago
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‘Not regulated’: launch of ChatGPT Health in Australia causes concern among experts

A 60-year-old man with no history of mental illness presented at a hospital emergency department insisting that his neighbour was poisoning him. Over the next 24 hours he had worsening hallucinations, and tried to escape the hospital.Doctors eventually discovered the man was on a daily diet of sodium bromide, an inorganic salt mainly used for industrial and laboratory purposes like cleaning and water treatment.He bought it over the internet after ChatGPT told him he could use it in place of table salt because he was worried about the health impacts of salt in his diet. Sodium bromide can accumulate in the body causing a condition called bromism, with symptoms including hallucinations, stupor and impaired coordination

about 4 hours ago
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Tension at the tennis: inside the high-stakes world of racket stringing

Underneath Rod Laver Arena, a group of tennis specialists cut and twist and weave – intently focused on their preparation for the action on the blue court a few metres above their heads. In the lead-up to the Australian Open, these experts maintain a consistent workload, training their muscles and technique, ready to peak as if they were the athletes taking to the courts themselves. But they won’t step on the court – their unique domain is tennis rackets. Racket stringing, specifically, and as the Yonex string team leader, Jim Downes, has learned over his 30-year stringing career, “it’s a high demand job”.The world’s top tennis players are, unsurprisingly, “very particular” about how their rackets are strung, Downes says, referring to how tight or loose the strings that crisscross the frames are pulled

about 4 hours ago
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Canada cleared of US allegations they rigged skeleton qualifying for Winter Olympics

Canada’s skeleton team have been cleared of allegations they rigged a qualifying event for the Winter Olympics and denied rival athletes from qualifying for next month’s Games.USA’s Katie Uhlaender, a five-time Winter Olympian in skeleton, accused the Canadian team of deliberately pulling four of its six athletes from a race in Lake Placid, New York, last weekend in order to make it harder for athletes from other countries to qualify. The reduced field meant fewer qualifying points were available and Uhlaender, who won the event, did not secure her place at this year’s Games, which will take place in Milan-Cortina, Italy. Uhlaender claims Joe Cecchini, the head coach of Canada’s skeleton team, told her he had come up with the scheme.However, the International Bobsleigh & Skeleton Federation (IBSF) said it would take no action after investigating the allegations

about 5 hours ago
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California attorney general investigates Musk’s Grok AI over lewd fake images

about 22 hours ago
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Elon Musk’s stubborn spin on Grok’s sexualized images controversy

about 22 hours ago
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X ‘acting to comply with UK law’ after outcry over sexualised images

about 23 hours ago
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Young people, parents and teachers: share your views about Grok AI

1 day ago
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Use of AI to harm women has only just begun, experts warn

1 day ago
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Crypto coin firm touted by Eric Adams denies allegations of ‘rug pull’ scam

1 day ago

Sadiq Khan to urge ministers to act over ‘colossal’ impact of AI on London jobs

about 5 hours ago
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Sadiq Khan is to warn in a major speech that artificial intelligence could destroy swathes of jobs in London and “usher in a new era of mass unemployment” unless ministers act now.In his annual Mansion House speech, the London mayor will say the capital is “at the sharpest edge of change” because of its reliance on white-collar workers in the finance and creative industries, and professional services such as law, accounting, consulting and marketing.Khan will argue that “we have a moral, social and economic duty to act” to ensure that new jobs are created to replace those that will disappear, with entry-level and junior jobs the first to go.In the speech on Thursday night, the mayor plans to highlight research that suggests 70% of skills in the average job will have changed by 2030.However, he also sees huge potential benefits from AI for public services and productivity across the economy, arguing “AI could enable us to transform our public services, turbocharge productivity and tackle some of our most complex challenges”.

However, he will warn the assembled business leaders that if the technology is used recklessly, it will “usher in a new era of mass unemployment”,He will say there is a clear choice: “Seize the potential of AI and use it as a superpower for positive transformation and creation or surrender to it and sit back and watch as it becomes a weapon of mass destruction of jobs,”City Hall is launching a London taskforce on AI and the future of work, with expertise from the government, businesses and the AI sector, to assess the potential impact of the technology on London’s jobs market,It will also offer free AI training for Londoners,More than half of workers in London expect AI to affect their jobs in some way in the next 12 months, according to City Hall polling.

Across the UK, up to 3m low-skilled jobs in trades, machine operations and admin roles could disappear by 2035 because of automation and AI, according to a November report by the charity National Foundation for Educational Research.However, many experts and analysts have expressed mixed views on how many jobs AI could replace.Anthropic, the US AI developer behind the Claude chatbot, released a report on Thursday on the economic impacts of AI that found an increasing share of job types can use AI for at least a quarter of their work.However, it offered a mixed picture on whether AI agents could actually replace human labour, finding that AI has a lower success rate on complex tasks and those requiring a university education.“Human collaboration and judgment remain essential for knowledge-intensive work,” it said.

The financial research firm Forrester released its own study on the same topic, which found that AI and automation would have a “more modest impact than expected” on US jobs through to 2030.The problem, it said, was that companies were “over-automating roles due to AI hype”, which, it said, may lead to costly reversals and reputational damage in the future.“Many companies announcing AI-related layoffs do not have mature, vetted AI applications ready to fill those roles, highlighting a trend of ‘AI washing’ – attributing financially motivated cuts to future AI implementation,” it said.Khan will argue in his Mansion House speech that the UK and others have been too slow to respond to new technology in the past and that the growth of social media has led to a youth mental health crisis, a surge in online abuse and a dangerous rise in misinformation.Separately, Susan Langley, the mayor of the City of London, said on Thursday morning she had noticed that some finance workers were wary of coming to London from abroad because they worried about their safety.

However, she told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “The City of London is one of the safest cities in the world.There’s this perception that you’re going to step out of your office and be swept away in a tsunami of crime.“It’s completely wrong.Competition for investment is really fierce at the moment, and I think any kind of unfounded negative sentiment that’s being pushed out there really risks undermining the UK on the global stage, and we just can’t let it happen.”