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New Zealand have lost the power to strike fear in opponents’ hearts | Michael Aylwin

about 10 hours ago
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Do we still care about grand slam tours? If so, the headlines might read that New Zealand’s first attempt at one in 15 years has fallen at the third attempt out of four.But as the All Blacks hung their heads at the end and the English went wild with celebration all around, it is reasonable to think the grand slam was the last thought on their minds.More pressing will be the 25 unanswered points they conceded in the middle of the match, which will echo to the 17 they conceded last Saturday at Murrayfield.On that occasion they summoned the composure to prevail.This time, they were up against a stroppy England team who are increasingly enjoying the directive to be in an opponent’s face from start to finish.

This, as has been pointed out increasingly, is not a great All Blacks team.They would have to be to handle a side like England on their own patch, once they find the wind in their sails.Which is not to say England are great either, but they do seem to be building an enviable pool of riches in a number of departments.It would require a really good team to beat them here in this mood.Neither of these sides are the best in the world.

That conversation has been put to bed for the foreseeable, South Africa continuing to sweep all before them, even with 14 men.They won in Paris against the mighty France last Saturday, playing most of the match with 14, after one 6ft 8in forward struggled to get low enough to tackle an opponent more or less sitting on the ground at the point of impact.It was the same again on Saturday in Rome.The Springboks, it seems, can win in any number of ways with any number of players on the field.The rest are jockeying for position in the distance.

New Zealand started the game second in World Rugby’s rankings, England in fourth.The former will stay where they are, but England now move ahead of Ireland, those three separated by less than half a ranking point.That feels about right.No ridiculous reds in this game, but there were a couple of contentious yellows, one for each side.Codie Taylor’s offence at the start of the second half was in itself clearly deliberate, the hooker dislodging the ball as he lay on the deck after a tackle, but England were hardly in a try-threatening position.

The hosts scored their second try in his absence, to move into the lead for the first time.What should haunt the All Blacks more is the way they comfortably outplayed England in the opening quarter to go 12-0 ahead, only to fall away as their hosts kept coming.One thing New Zealand can do, and you sense always will, is play with ball in hand as naturally as they breathe.Has there ever been a time when they have not had at least one player who plays beyond the dreams of most mortals?Sign up to The BreakdownThe latest rugby union news and analysis, plus all the week's action reviewedafter newsletter promotionMuch has been made of their sometime match-winners, Damian McKenzie (last week) and Beauden Barrett, but they are too inconsistent to be ranked up there.Barrett suffered from a masterclass in game management by George Ford.

No, Will Jordan is the man.England came at New Zealand from the off and very nearly made it tell early, but Sam Underhill, ferocious tackler that he is, does not quite have the ball at his command like an All Black.Instead, New Zealand rode the early assault and struck with aplomb, two tries in five minutes.Both exposed English failings in their defence out wide.Leicester Fainga’anuku’s first was well taken, but it was Jordan’s imperious outside break, in the buildup to Taylor’s try, that was the highlight of the first quarter.

He scored New Zealand’s third too, in the final quarter, their first points in 48 minutes, picking a killer line off McKenzie.It moves him level with Barrett on 45 Test tries for the All Blacks.Doug Howlett is at the top of that list with 49.Jordan is only 27.We can safely say the record will be his before long.

Not even out of the question he clinches it next Saturday in Cardiff.He is the latest All Black with access to a dimension denied almost everyone else, but these days he languishes there on his own.The rest lack a certain authority, which used to come with the black jersey, as if part of its fabric.Losing a game such as this one, after a commanding opening quarter, will hurt, although one suspects the 43-10 loss to the Springboks in Wellington a couple of months ago is the one that really puts them in their place.Scott Robertson, their coach, twisted in discomfort as he tried to explain this defeat and the concomitant inference that the All Blacks do not strike the fear in opponents they used to.

And his homeland does not appreciate that,No successful grand slam? That is the least of their concerns,
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Zip wires, darts, wild swimming: why shopping centres are trying new ways to bring in customers

There was a time when the most active thing to do at a shopping centre was jostle to the front of the queue at Primark. These days, however, developers are bringing in sport and health-related activities from zip wires to cricket, football, rock climbing and even wild swimming to draw in consumers and use space no longer wanted by retailers.While the trend for competitive socialising, such as crazy golf, darts or bowling is well established and gyms are commonplace in shopping centres, landlords are getting more creative and adventurous in the type of activity they are offering as they battle lacklustre interest in physical shopping.The activities are varied: Toca Social hosts diners watching and playing football in three shopping malls. US group Five Iron, which blends hi-tech golf simulators and coaching with a bar, has signed up for the first of at least 10 UK sites, at Broadgate in central London

about 17 hours ago
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About 1m Ford diesel cars sold in UK with defective emissions controls, court told

About a million Ford diesel cars were sold in the UK with serious defects in components supposed to curb toxic exhaust emissions, the high court has been told.The highly polluting vehicles were produced and sold between 2016 and 2018 after Ford’s engineers became aware of the issues, and many were never formally recalled or fixed, lawyers said.The claims came in evidence submitted in the legal action on behalf of 1.6 million diesel vehicle owners against five car manufacturers, including Ford, for allegedly using “defeat devices” to cheat emissions tests for nitrogen oxides (NOx).Parts of the emissions control systems as calibrated by Ford were discovered to become less effective when “poisoned” by sulphur in fuel during driving, the court heard

about 23 hours ago
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AI firm claims it stopped Chinese state-sponsored cyber-attack campaign

A leading artificial intelligence company claims to have stopped a China-backed “cyber espionage” campaign that was able to infiltrate financial firms and government agencies with almost no human oversight.The US-based Anthropic said its coding tool, Claude Code, was “manipulated” by a Chinese state-sponsored group to attack 30 entities around the world in September, achieving a “handful of successful intrusions”.This was a “significant escalation” from previous AI-enabled attacks it monitored, it wrote in a blogpost on Thursday, because Claude acted largely independently: 80 to 90% of the operations involved in the attack were performed without a human in the loop.“The actor achieved what we believe is the first documented case of a cyber-attack largely executed without human intervention at scale,” it wrote.Anthropic did not clarify which financial institutions and government agencies had been targeted, or what exactly the hackers had achieved – although it did say they were able to access their targets’ internal data

1 day ago
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People in the UK: have you received good or bad financial advice from an AI chatbot?

Tech companies are pumping billions into the growth of artificial intelligence, with OpenAI this month signing a $38bn (£29bn) cloud computing deal with Amazon as part of a $3tn datacentre spending spree.But as people increasingly use AI chatbots – such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Google’s Gemini, Microsoft’s Copilot, Meta AI and Perplexity – for advice and task completion, some observers have concerns about misinformation, hullicinations and irresponsible advice.A survey this year from KPMG and the University of Melbourne found that 80 percent of people in the UK believe AI regulation is required.We want to hear from people who have asked chatbots for financial advice. Have you asked AI tools for help with money, debt or personal finance? Were you recommended anything unexpected, or unsuitable? What was the financial result? Do you have concerns?You can tell us about askng AI tools for financial advice herePlease include as much detail as possible

1 day ago
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Conor Benn overpowers Chris Eubank Jr to seal dominant rematch victory

Conor Benn, who has been through notoriety, shame and a chastening defeat, finally gained a large measure of sweet relief when he totally outclassed and beat up his diminished old rival Chris Eubank Jr over 12 one-sided rounds on Saturday night. Benn came close to sealing the knockout he craved in the last minute of the fight when he twice dropped Eubank Jr heavily.A shuddering combination from Benn had an initially delayed reaction but the right hand that smashed into the side of Eubank Jr’s head finally sent him toppling to the canvas. He rose to his feet but was soon down again as Benn threw punch after punch at his wilting and shrunken frame. Eubank Jr staggered to his feet just before the referee completed his count

about 6 hours ago
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Texas trooper sent home after confronting South Carolina player during game

A Texas trooper who confronted South Carolina’s Nyck Harbor after the player’s touchdown on Saturday was sent home from the game, according to the state’s Department of Public Safety.Harbor scored on an 80-yard reception in the second quarter and entered the tunnel after the score, appearing to walk off a leg injury. As he and three of his teammates, including running back Oscar Adaway III, were walking back to the field, the trooper walked in between Harbor and Adaway and bumped into them.The trooper pointed at Harbor and Adaway, appearing to admonish them. Harbor was quickly pushed away by a teammate as they continued make their way towards the field

about 7 hours ago
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AI slop tops Billboard and Spotify charts as synthetic music spreads

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UK firms can win a significant chunk of the AI chip market | John Browne

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EU investigates Google over ‘demotion’ of commercial content from news media

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Anthropic announces $50bn plan for datacenter construction in US

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Waymo announces that its robotaxis will drive freeways for the first time

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A tax roadmap for electric cars | Letters

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