H
sport
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

Sale squad’s ‘honest’ meeting with owners has reset ambitions, says Sanderson

about 22 hours ago
A picture


Alex Sanderson has said an “honest” meeting of Sale’s owners, players and coaches this week has set their intention for the Boxing Day encounter with Harlequins and beyond,The Sharks are seventh in the Prem table, with two wins from seven, and were soundly beaten by Northampton at Franklin’s Gardens last Saturday,Their most recent Prem victory came against Newcastle on 10 October, and the director of rugby knows they need to start winning to have any chance of reaching the playoffs for a fourth straight season,“It wasn’t a crisis meeting, but honest – about what kind of team we want to be,” Sanderson said,“Not an inconsistent one, a one week on, one week off team.

Those teams don’t reach semi-finals, don’t reach finals.“We’ve got this opportunity now, at home, in front of our families [against Quins].We talked about families watching, your kids watching.Does it matter? Does it [defeat] hurt enough? Real deep questions around that.We’ve delved into that.

”Both sides will have a point to prove at CorpAcq Stadium on Friday: “dented pride” as Sanderson put it.Harlequins were thrashed by Bristol at Twickenham last Saturday, conceding 40 points, while Sale leaked 47 against rampant Saints on the same day.Sanderson said the pre-Christmas meeting with the owners, Simon and Michelle Orange, established minimum requirements for the squad given the level of investment: Sale’s most recent accounts showed an annual loss of £8m.“The owners came in to say: ‘This isn’t going to stop.’ They’re supporting the players financially and will continue to do that … The understanding is that if they’re financially supporting the club, the minimum they ask for is a performance based around effort.

Everyone can try hard, can’t they?“They came in to show solidarity and to tell the players that nothing’s going away in terms of support.It wasn’t an ultimatum but just: ‘Understand we’re all in this together.’ I thought that was quite a powerful thing.”Sanderson welcomes the England fly-half George Ford back to face Harlequins after a groin strain with Bevan Rodd, Joe Carpenter and Rekeiti Ma’asi-White also returning to action.“There’s a few big hitters that could come into the frame,” Sanderson said.

“They are going to be a massive boost for us, not just in terms of experience, but how they drive standards which weren’t there last weekend.We need a response.”
technologySee all
A picture

Former EU commissioner and activists barred from US in attack on European tech regulators

The state department has barred five Europeans from the US, accusing them of leading efforts to pressure tech firms to censor or suppress American viewpoints, in the latest attack on European regulations that target hate speech and misinformation.Secretary of state Marco Rubio said the five people targeted with visa bans – who include former European Commissioner Thierry Breton – have led “organized efforts to coerce American platforms to censor, demonetize, and suppress American viewpoints they oppose.”“These radical activists and weaponized NGOs have advanced censorship crackdowns by foreign states – in each case targeting American speakers and American companies,” Rubio said in an announcement.In recent months, Trump officials have ordered US diplomats to build opposition to the European Union’s landmark Digital Services Act (DSA), which is intended to combat hateful speech, misinformation and disinformation, but which Washington says stifles free speech and imposes costs on US tech companies.Late on Tuesday night, Breton posted on social media: “Is McCarthy’s witch hunt back?”Tuesday’s move is part of a Trump administration campaign against foreign influence over online speech, using immigration law rather than platform regulations or sanctions

2 days ago
A picture

Elon Musk, AI and the antichrist: the biggest tech stories of 2025

Hello, and welcome to TechScape. I’m your host, Blake Montgomery, wishing you a happy and healthy end of the year. I myself have a cold.Today, we are looking back at the biggest stories in tech of 2025 – Elon Musk’s political rise, burst and fall; artificial intelligence’s subsumption of the global economy, all other technology, and even the Earth’s topography; Australia’s remarkable social media ban; the tech industry’s new Trumpian politics; and, as a treat, a glimpse of the apocalypse offered by one of Silicon Valley’s savviest and strangest billionaires.At the close of 2024, I wrote that Elon Musk’s support of Donald Trump had made him the world’s most powerful unelected man

3 days ago
A picture

Activist group says it has scraped 86m music files from Spotify

An activist group has claimed to have scraped millions of tracks from Spotify and is preparing to release them online.Observers said the apparent leak could boost AI companies looking for material to develop their technology.A group called Anna’s Archive said it had scraped 86m music files from Spotify and 256m rows of metadata such as artist and album names. Spotify, which hosts more than 100m tracks, confirmed that the leak did not represent its entire inventory.The Stockholm-based company, which has more than 700 million users worldwide, said it had “identified and disabled the nefarious user accounts that engaged in unlawful scraping”

4 days ago
A picture

Chinese robotaxis due in London next year as Lyft and Uber reveal tie-ups

Chinese robotaxis are due to be on the streets of London next year after the US ride-hailing companies Lyft and Uber announced tie-ups with Beijing-based Baidu to deploy its self-driving technology.Lyft is the third firm to announce plans to introduce self-driving taxis to the UK capital next year, after Uber and Waymo, the main operator of robotaxis in the US.Its ride-hailing services are the major rival to Uber’s in the US and Canada, and this year Lyft expanded into Europe after acquiring the Freenow app in the summer.While Uber had signed a deal to work with Baidu in the summer in other global markets, it had not until now said that the Chinese tech company’s Apollo Go cars were planned for London. It had previously announced its services would be operated with self-driving technology from the UK-US firm Wayve

4 days ago
A picture

MPs question UK Palantir contracts after investigation reveals security concerns

UK MPs have raised concerns about the government’s contracts with Palantir after an investigation published in Switzerland highlighted allegations about the suitability and security of its products.The investigation by the Zurich-based research collective WAV and the Swiss online magazine Republik details Palantir’s efforts, over the course of seven years, to sell its products to Swiss federal agencies.Palantir is a US company that provides software to integrate and analyse data scattered across different systems, such as in the health service. It also provides artificial intelligence-enabled military targeting systems.The investigation cites an expert report, internal to the Swiss army, that assessed Palantir’s status as a US company meant there was a possibility sensitive data shared with it could be accessed by the US government and intelligence services

4 days ago
A picture

Extremists are using AI voice cloning to supercharge propaganda. Experts say it’s helping them grow

While the artificial intelligence boom is upending sections of the music industry, voice generating bots are also becoming a boon to another unlikely corner of the internet: extremist movements that are using them to recreate the voices and speeches of major figures in their milieu, and experts say it is helping them grow.“The adoption of AI-enabled translation by terrorists and extremists marks a significant evolution in digital propaganda strategies,” said Lucas Webber, a senior threat intelligence analyst at Tech Against Terrorism and a research fellow at the Soufan Center. Webber specializes in monitoring the online tools of terrorist groups and extremists around the world.“Earlier methods relied on human translators or rudimentary machine translation, often limited by language fidelity and stylistic nuance,” he said. “Now, with the rise of advanced generative AI tools, these groups are able to produce seamless, contextually accurate translations that preserve tone, emotion, and ideological intensity across multiple languages

5 days ago
politicsSee all
A picture

Welsh first minister vows to keep Labour ‘most successful democratic party on the planet’

2 days ago
A picture

U-turn on inheritance tax for farmers ‘snuck out’ to avoid scrutiny, say Tories

2 days ago
A picture

Ministers raise inheritance tax threshold for farms after backlash

3 days ago
A picture

Deputy leader Lucy Powell says Labour must ‘stick to manifesto’ over EU customs union, in implicit rebuke to Streeting – as it happened

3 days ago
A picture

Reform council’s plan to shut eight care homes ‘a betrayal of local people’

3 days ago
A picture

Reform plan to cap aid at £1bn would damage UK’s international influence, critics warn

3 days ago