From early positivity to cursing on court: how the Djokovic-Murray partnership ended | Tumaini Carayol
Woolworths is cutting prices from Wednesday. Expect more supermarket competition – but not an all-out price war
Woolworths is cutting prices on hundreds of products from Wednesday, raising hopes the supermarket sector is entering a new period of intensifying competition, colloquially known as a price war.But after a bruising period for the supermarket sector, marked by allegations of price-gouging during a cost-of-living crisis, shoppers may be sceptical of seeing any relief.Is the era of fast-rising grocery prices and supercharged supermarket profits really coming to an end?Australia’s big supermarket chains, Coles and Woolworths, suffered dramatic hits to their reputation over the past 18 months, as public anger about grocery prices and concerns about the treatment of agricultural suppliers sparked government and regulatory inquiries.Research house Roy Morgan noted earlier this year that the supermarket giants had become some of the most distrusted brands in Australia amid “allegations of price hikes and profit-driven strategies”.Woolworths, the country’s biggest chain, fared worse than Coles – in public perception and sales – because of a particularly combative appearance before a parliamentary inquiry and a high-profile industrial strike at some of its warehouses that left shelves empty in the lead-up to Christmas
Thames Water CEO says crisis ‘decades in the making’; US inflation hits four-year low – as it happened
MPs then turn to the BBC’s recent (revealing) documentary into the Thames Water crisis.Q: Why did CEO Chris Weston tell the BBC that “I won’t know how it got this way”, after 10 months at the company? What’s his analysis today?Weston replies that he has a pretty clear idea now, and was also pretty clear then, but questions the value of “talking about it publicly and pointing the finger” [in which case, why allow TV cameras into the company?!].Weston tells the EFRA committee there are “many authors” responsible.He says:I’m clear how we got here. This has been decades in the making, the crisis we face at Thames
Trump strikes a blow for AI – by firing the US copyright supremo
Hello, and welcome to TechScape. Sometimes it helps me to write by thinking about how a radio broadcaster or television presenter would deliver the information, so I’m your host, Blake Montgomery. Today in tech news: questions hover over the automation of labor in the worker-strapped US healthcare system; and drones proliferate in a new conflict: India v Pakistan, both armed with nuclear weapons. But first, how fights over AI and copyright take very different shapes in the UK and US.The United Kingdom is in the throes of a debate over whether to compensate artists’ for the use of their copyrighted work in the creation of generative artificial intelligence technology
House of Lords pushes back against government’s AI plans
The government has suffered another setback in the House of Lords over its plans to let artificial intelligence firms use copyright-protected work without permission.An amendment to the data bill requiring AI companies to reveal which copyrighted material is used in their models was backed by peers, despite government opposition.It is the second time parliament’s upper house has demanded tech companies make clear whether they have used copyright-protected content.The vote came days after hundreds of artists and organisations including Paul McCartney, Jeanette Winterson, Dua Lipa and the Royal Shakespeare Company urged the prime minister not to “give our work away at the behest of a handful of powerful overseas tech companies”.The amendment was tabled by crossbench peer Beeban Kidron and was passed by 272 votes to 125
Nat Sciver-Brunt starts England captaincy reign but Edwards is power behind throne
England’s 16-0 whitewash at the hands of Australia earlier this year sparked widespread calls for change. On Tuesday, as the new captain Nat Sciver-Brunt gave her first press conference since she was appointed last month, the curtain finally rose just enough to give the public a tantalising glimpse at a very new-look England setup.Twenty-four hours previously, the head coach, Charlotte Edwards, and the newly chosen national selector (whose identity is yet to be revealed) had sat down to select England’s squad to face West Indies in the series beginning on 21 May – without Sciver-Brunt’s input.Edwards, Sciver-Brunt revealed, has taken the decision to remove her new skipper from all formal selection committees. “My views are heard pre-meeting,” Sciver-Brunt said
Golf ball ‘rollback’ up in air with PGA of America ‘vehemently against’ plans
With golf still trying to extricate itself from one civil war, another looms on the horizon. The PGA of America has reiterated its stance against the rollback of the golf ball, with its chief executive stating the organisation is “vehemently against” plans put forward by the sport’s rule-makers.The R&A and USGA announced in late 2023 that all professionals will be required to use a modified golf ball from 2028. The changes would apply to amateurs from 2030. It has long been the view of many that hitting distances for leading players have become problematic, an issue that renders many traditional courses obsolete in elite competition
Arts groups for people of color steel themselves after Trump’s NEA cuts: ‘They poked the bear’
Nick Offerman and Megan Mullally: ‘Our secret? We really like each other – which I highly recommend’
My cultural awakening: Queer As Folk helped me to come out
From The Wedding Banquet to Kylie Minogue: your complete entertainment guide for the week ahead
The Guide #190: From Dope Thief to Families Like Ours, here’s what to watch on every streamer
Jimmy Kimmel on the first US pope: ‘The pope-mobile is now a Ford F-250 with truck nuts’