Josh O’Connor: the shape-shifting star who became cinema’s most wanted


OpenAI signs $38bn cloud computing deal with Amazon
OpenAI has signed a $38bn (£29bn) deal to use Amazon infrastructure to operate its artificial intelligence products, as part of a more than $1tn spending spree on computing power.The agreement with Amazon Web Services means OpenAI will be able to use AWS datacentres, and the Nvidia chips inside them, immediately.Last week, OpenAI’s chief executive, Sam Altman, said his company had committed to spending $1.4tn on AI infrastructure, amid concerns over the sustainability of the boom in using and building datacentres. These are the central nervous systems of AI tools such as ChatGPT

Women must be warned of home birth risks and have access to skilled midwives, experts say
Women must be given clearer warnings on the potentially fatal dangers of giving birth at home and should only be aided by experienced midwives, experts have said.Maternity services worldwide are dealing with an increase in the number of women with more complex pregnancies. Many are choosing to have their baby in a familiar environment, in the comfort and privacy of their own home. Some choose a home birth because having their first baby in hospital was “deeply traumatic” and they are reluctant to repeat the experience.But access to safe, reliable and unrestricted home birth services is patchy, and varies enormously depending on where you live, experts say

Primark owner ABF could split fashion business from food division
The owner of Primark is considering splitting the fashion retailer from its food division, which contains Twinings and Kingsmill, amid a “challenging external backdrop”.Associated British Foods (ABF) said it was considering splitting off Primark from its food arm, which includes sugar production and grocery brands, “with a view to maximising long-term value”.The group has launched a strategic review, carried out with the help of the advisory firm Rothschild & Co, with the backing of its largest shareholder, the Weston family’s Wittington Investments.The company said the family, which owns 59% of ABF, remained “committed to maintaining majority ownership of both businesses”. The family sat in sixth position on the 2025 Sunday Times Rich List, with its wealth valued at nearly £18bn

City watchdog ‘nakedly’ siding with lenders on car finance redress, MPs say
The City regulator has “nakedly taken the side of lenders” in its planned compensation scheme for car loan victims and has been “patently influenced” by concerns over profits, a group of cross-party MPs have claimed.The All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) on Fair Banking joined a growing chorus of critics concerned about the Financial Conduct Authority’s (FCA) proposed redress scheme, which is meant to compensate borrowers who were overcharged as a result of commission arrangements between lenders and car dealers.The APPG’s latest report has accused the regulator of buying into “doom-mongering” by lenders who claim that a large compensation bill would risk spooking investors and causing lasting damage to the UK economy.That was at the expense of car loan victims who they said were due up to £15.6bn, rather than the £8

Experts find flaws in hundreds of tests that check AI safety and effectiveness
Experts have found weaknesses, some serious, in hundreds of tests used to check the safety and effectiveness of new artificial intelligence models being released into the world.Computer scientists from the British government’s AI Security Institute, and experts at universities including Stanford, Berkeley and Oxford, examined more than 440 benchmarks that provide an important safety net.They found flaws that “undermine the validity of the resulting claims”, that “almost all … have weaknesses in at least one area”, and resulting scores might be “irrelevant or even misleading”.Many of the benchmarks are used to evaluate the latest AI models released by the big technology companies, said the study’s lead author, Andrew Bean, a researcher at the Oxford Internet Institute.In the absence of nationwide AI regulation in the UK and US, benchmarks are used to check if new AIs are safe, align to human interests and achieve their claimed capabilities in reasoning, maths and coding

Starmer was briefed on Mandelson’s Epstein links before appointing him, say civil servants
Keir Starmer was briefed on details of Peter Mandelson’s relationship with Jeffrey Epstein before he decided to make him US ambassador, senior civil servants have said.The prime minister received a Cabinet Office report that contained “a summary of reputational risks” associated with appointing Lord Mandelson, including his “prior relationship with Jeffrey Epstein” and past resignations as a Labour minister.Chris Wormald, the cabinet secretary, told MPs that the report contained “direct extracts from media reporting and notes a general reputational risk” arising from making the appointment.Speaking at the foreign affairs select committee, he said the “judgment about whether to make the appointment or not” had ultimately been one for Starmer.Mandelson’s longstanding friendship with Epstein, which continued after the disgraced financier was convicted of soliciting prostitution from a minor, was a matter of public record before his appointment was made

In Grok we don’t trust: academics assess Elon Musk’s AI-powered encyclopedia

Ducking annoying: why has iPhone’s autocorrect function gone haywire?

Apple reports record iPhone sales as new lineup reignites worldwide demand

Meta reports mixed financial results amid spree of AI hiring and spending

Oakley Meta Vanguard review: fantastic AI running glasses linked to Garmin

‘History won’t forgive us’ if UK falls behind in quantum computing race, says Tony Blair