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UK MPs warn of repeat of 2024 riots unless online misinformation is tackled

about 17 hours ago
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Failures to properly tackle online misinformation mean it is “only a matter of time” before viral content triggers a repeat of the 2024 summer riots, MPs have warned.Chi Onwurah, the chair of the Commons science and technology select committee, said ministers seemed complacent about the threat and this was putting the public at risk.The committee said it was disappointed in the government’s response to its recent report warning social media companies’ business models contributed to disturbances after the Southport murders.Replying to the committee’s findings, the government rejected a call for legislation tackling generative artificial intelligence platforms and said it would not intervene directly in the online advertising market, which MPs claimed helped incentivise the creation of harmful material after the attack.Onwurah said the government agreed with most of its conclusions but had stopped short of backing its recommendations for action.

Accusing ministers of putting the public at risk, Onwurah said: “The government urgently needs to plug gaps in the Online Safety Act (OSA), but instead seems complacent about harms from the viral spread of legal but harmful misinformation.Public safety is at risk, and it is only a matter of time until the misinformation-fuelled 2024 summer riots are repeated.”MPs said in a report titled Social Media, Misinformation and Harmful Algorithms that inflammatory AI images had been posted on social media platforms in the wake of the stabbings, in which three children died, and warned AI tools have made it easier to create hateful, harmful or deceptive content.In its response published by the committee on Friday, the government said new legislation was not needed and that AI-generated content is already covered by the OSA, which regulates material on social media platforms.It said introducing further laws would hamper its implementation.

However, the committee pointed to testimony from Ofcom in which an official at the communications regulator said AI chatbots are not 100% captured by the act and further consultation with the tech industry was needed.The government also declined to act immediately on the committee’s recommendation to create a new body to tackle social media advertising systems that allow “the monetisation of harmful and misleading content”, including a website that spread misinformation about the name of the Southport murderer.In its response, the government said it “acknowledges the concerns” about the lack of transparency in the online advertising market and would continue to review the regulation of the industry.It added that an online advertising workforce was hoping to increase transparency and accountability in the sector, particularly relating to illegal ads and protecting children from harmful products and services.Addressing the committee’s demand for further research into how social media algorithms amplify harmful content, the government said Ofcom was “best placed” to decide whether research should be undertaken.

Responding to the committee, Ofcom said it had undertaken work into recommendation algorithms but recognised the need for further work across wider academic and research sectors.The government also rejected the committee’s call for an annual report to parliament on the state of misinformation online, arguing it could expose and hinder government operations to limit the spread of harmful information online.The UK government defines misinformation as the inadvertent spread of false information, while disinformation is the deliberate creation and spread of false information to create harm or disruption.Onwurah singled out the responses on AI and digital advertising as specifically concerning.“In particular, it’s disappointing to see a lack of commitment to acting on AI regulation and digital advertising,” she said.

“The committee is not convinced by the government’s argument that the OSA already covers generative AI, and the technology is developing at such a fast rate that more will clearly need to be done to tackle its effects on online misinformation.“Additionally, without addressing the advertising-based business models that incentivise social media companies to algorithmically amplify misinformation, how can we stop it?”
sportSee all
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Premier League team news: predicted lineups for the weekend action

Saturday 12.30pm TNT Sports 1 Venue City GroundReferee Chris Kavanagh This season G6 Y20 R0 3.33 cards/gameSubs from Gunn, Victor, Murillo, Boly, Zinchenko, Sangaré, Douglas Luiz, McAtee, Domínguez, Awoniyi, Kalimuendo, Hudson-Odoi, Bakwa, Hutchinson, Igor JesusDoubtful Wood (knee)Injured Aina (hamstring, Dec)Suspended NoneForm DLLDLL Leading scorer Wood 2Subs from Slonina, Jörgensen, James, Hato, Acheampong, Santos, Buonanotte, Fofana, Guiu, Estêvão, George, Mheuka, Gittens, WalshDoubtful Neto (knock), Fernández (knee)Injured Palmer (groin, Dec), Badiashile (muscle, Dec), Delap (hamstring, Dec), Essugo (thigh, unknown), Colwill (knee, unknown)Suspended Mudryk (indefinite)Form WWDLLW Leading scorer Caicedo, Fernández 3Saturday 3pm Venue Amex StadiumReferee Craig Pawson This season G4 Y9 R1 2.5 cards/gameSubs from Steele, McGill, Veltman, Coppola, Boscagli, De Cuyper, Milner, Watson, Rutter, Tzimas, KostoulasDoubtful Gómez (thigh), Mitoma (knock), Veltman (calf)Injured March (knee, Dec), Gruda (knee, unknown), Hinshelwood (ankle, unknown), Webster (knee, unknown)Suspended NoneForm LWLDWD Leading scorer Welbeck 2Subs from Ramsdale, Schär, Lascelles, Krafth, Willock, Ramsey, Miley, Osula, MurphyDoubtful Joelinton (groin), Osula (ankle)Injured Hall (hamstring, Nov), Wissa (knee, Nov), Livramento (Knee, Dec)Suspended NoneForm LDWDLW Leading scorer Woltemade 3Saturday 3pm Venue Turf MoorReferee Tim Robinson This season (Championship) G2 Y11 R0 5.5 cards/gameSubs from Hladky, Weiss, Sonne, Roberts, Delcroix, Ekdal, Worrall, Humphreys, Pires, Ugochukwu, Mejbri, Bruun Larsen, Edwards, Trésor, Broja, Barnes, Banel, Flemming, AgyeiDoubtful Anthony (thigh), Foster (dead leg)Injured Beyer (hamstring, unknown), Roberts (achilles, unknown), Amdouni (ACL, unknown)Suspended NoneForm WLLDLL Leading scorer Anthony 4Subs from Perri, Meslier, Bijol, Bornauw, Justin, Tanaka, Gruev, Harrison, James, Piroe, NmechaDoubtful Perri (thigh), James (ankle), Okafor (adductor)Injured Gnonto (groin, Nov), Gray (hip, Nov)Suspended NoneForm LDLWDL Leading scorer Okafor 2Saturday 3pm Venue Selhurst ParkReferee Jarred Gillett This season G5 Y15 R1 3

about 16 hours ago
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‘Illusion of democracy’: Ben Sulayem’s last rival exits FIA presidential race

The FIA has been accused of presenting an “illusion of democracy” in an uncompromising broadside from the last remaining challenger to Mohammed Ben Sulayem as he formally announced his attempt to succeed the organisation’s incumbent president was over. Tim Mayer, a former FIA senior steward, also condemned Formula One’s governing body for lacking transparency and threatening the sport’s future.The 59-year-old American, who was sacked from his FIA role last year, had been standing as a candidate against Ben Sulayem but on Friday in Austin acknowledged the incumbent would run unopposed because of the way FIA electoral regulations are composed.“There will be only one candidate, the incumbent,” Mayer said. “That’s not democracy – that’s the illusion of democracy

about 16 hours ago
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‘Inspiring’ Lewis Moody will make it a day of emotion at Leicester-Bath clash

Emotions are bound to run high at Welford Road on Saturday, and not just because Bath are in town to renew one of the great rivalries in English rugby.Not even because Leicester’s round-four date with the reigning champions is a repeat of last season’s final, a little over four months ago, when Johann van Graan’s side resisted a fierce Tigers fightback at Twickenham to claim their first league title in 29 years.The emotion for Leicester fans, in particular, will be generated by an appearance from Lewis Moody, the former England flanker, who revealed this month he has been diagnosed with motor neurone disease. Moody spent 14 seasons with the East Midlands club, amassing 223 appearances and scoring 32 tries. Perhaps it is less well remembered that he was a two-club man who finished his career at Bath, finally forced to retire due to injury in 2012

about 17 hours ago
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Your Guardian sport weekend: Premier League returns, F1 in the US and World Cup cricket

Here’s how to follow along with our coverage – the finest writing and up-to-the-minute reportsThe opening Ashes Test in Perth on 21 November is drawing ever closer, but first England touch down across the Tasman for a limited-overs tour of New Zealand, beginning in Christchurch on Saturday with the first of three T20s. White-ball cricket as a warm-up for the greatest Test series of them all might seem curious but the T20 World Cup in India and Sri Lanka follows hot on the heels of the Ashes. England’s last visit to Asia this year saw them lose 10 out of 11 matches, including seven from eight in India, but Harry Brook’s side are targeting the trophy he helped them win in Australia in 2022. Brook is back to lead the side after being rested last month in Ireland, where Jacob Bethell became England’s youngest men’s captain, aged 21, and guided them to a 2-0 T20 series win. When they last had a full complement, England became the first Test nation to score 300 in a men’s T20, with Phil Salt and Jos Buttler flaying South Africa’s bowlers to all parts at Emirates Old Trafford

about 18 hours ago
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‘Great day for the region’: York join Toulouse in 14-team Super League

York Knights’ owner, Clint Goodchild, believes the club’s historic promotion to the Super League for the first time is a watershed moment for the whole of North Yorkshire, after they and Toulouse were granted admission to the top flight in 2026 and London Broncos missed the cut.The Knights will play in rugby league’s highest division for the first time since 1986 after they were selected by an independent panel alongside Toulouse to join the top 12 from Thursday’s IMG gradings and expand the Super League to 14 teams for the first time in more than a decade.Bradford Bulls, who finished 10th in those gradings, replace Salford Red Devils from this year’s 12-team lineup. The Knights, who were playing in League 1 as recently as 2018, and Toulouse have joined the Bulls among the elite after both dominated on the field throughout 2025.Goodchild, who bought the club in 2022, said York and the wider area were long overdue such success after the Knights became the first ­professional sporting team from there to play in a top division in almost 40 years

about 19 hours ago
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The beautiful stroll: England’s seniors take walking football to world stage

There’s no running in walking football – at least, not officially. Yet as England’s over-70s took on their final training match before competing in the World Nations Cup in Spain next week, the pace felt anything but pedestrian.Voices echoed across the pitch, sweat beading on foreheads. One man even earned a red card for grabbing another player’s arm and denying him a goal-scoring opportunity. For a sport defined by restraint, it’s surprisingly full-blooded

about 21 hours ago
cultureSee all
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Jimmy Kimmel on the Republicans: ‘So much greed and hypocrisy and duplicity’

about 19 hours ago
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Laurence Fox’s libel claim over racism accusations to go to retrial

about 22 hours ago
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Blue plaque to be unveiled at home of Thomas the Tank Engine creator

1 day ago
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Jimmy Kimmel: ‘Trump’s inner circle knows how dangerous the incessant misinformation from Fox News can be’

2 days ago
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Jimmy Kimmel on Trump posting about unflattering Time cover: ‘He just couldn’t help himself’

3 days ago
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Artists plan nationwide US protests against Trump and ‘authoritarian forces’

3 days ago