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’Bigger than a bow’: Women’s Rugby World Cup organisers take aim at online hate

about 15 hours ago
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Women’s Rugby World Cup organisers have said there is no room for online hate in the game after Wales back-row Georgia Evans was sent abuse for wearing a bow in her hair.Yvonne Nolan, the competition director of England 2025, also hailed the sport’s community response after Evans released a statement last week saying she had been labelled “childish” for her regular gameday look and told it was not one “of a rugby player”.It sparked fan support during Wales’s loss to Fiji on Saturday with volunteers setting up a ribbon-making station and 1,200 worn by supporters during the final pool game.Nolan pointed towards the formal process the tournament has in place which sees a partnership with the Signify Group using technology to remove abusive comments.“We do have a social media monitoring protection tool and that is action based,” Nolan said.

“It monitors, takes down and if it reaches the right level we aim for prosecution.That is a deterrent and an action-based impact.But it is important to say, this is a drop in the ocean.This is a societal issue.“For me the biggest impact at the weekend was watching that spontaneous volunteer-led ribbon station process.

Spontaneously self-policing society is saying we won’t tolerate that, there is no place for that in our game.We don’t need a formal process to make that happen.That is us coming together as a rugby community to say it is not welcome in our sport.In our sport you can be who you want to be.For me that is the most powerful tool that we have and will affect social change.

”Speaking after Wales’s defeat in Exeter, Evans outlined the impact of the abuse,“It’s tough because when we sign up to this as a professional athlete, you sign up for the scrutiny of your performance and what people think of you, I can take that as an athlete,” she told the BBC,“But there is no space for derogatory comments, for hate or for any kind of abuse on social media,Sign up to The BreakdownThe latest rugby union news and analysis, plus all the week's action reviewedafter newsletter promotion“It’s bigger than a bow, it’s bigger than the game and it’s bigger than myself … the support has been absolutely incredible,We haven’t put the performance in that we would have liked and we haven’t come away with what we wanted.

I’m heartbroken but heartwarmed at the same time by every single person who chose to wear a bow.”Wales are out of the competition after three losses in the pool stage.
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CBI boss calls for Reeves to tear up Labour’s pledge not to raise tax

The boss of the Confederation of British Industry has suggested the chancellor should tear up Labour’s manifesto pledge not to raise taxes on working people, in a significant intervention before the budget.Rachel Reeves is widely expected to present a package of tax rises in her 26 November statement to offset deteriorating economic forecasts. However, the chancellor has been hamstrung by Labour’s promise not to increase the three main revenue-raisers for the Treasury: income tax, national insurance and VAT.In a surprise move in the debate about how to raise extra revenue, the CBI’s chief executive, Rain Newton-Smith, says the “time for tinkering is over”.Writing in the Guardian, the head of the longstanding lobby group representing many of the UK’s largest companies warns the chancellor against “slavish adherence” to tax promises made in the run-up to last year’s general election

about 11 hours ago
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Drilling down into the case for North Sea oil | Letters

Nils Pratley (Oil and gas imports are a problem. Labour should rethink its North Sea stance, 2 September) cites Offshore Energies’ estimate that offshore jobs are being lost at a rate of about 1,000 a month. What this and a similar estimate by the shadow energy minister, Andrew Bowie, of 400 job losses every fortnight up to 2030, misses is that this is less than half the rate of job losses under the Tories between 2013 and 2023. During this time, they continued to invest in new oil and gas fields and 227,000 workers lost their jobs all the same. That’s a rate of 436 a week

about 11 hours ago
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The women in love with AI companions: ‘I vowed to my chatbot that I wouldn’t leave him’

Experts are concerned about people emotionally depending on AI, but these women say their digital companions are misunderstoodThe Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more.A young tattoo artist on a hiking trip in the Rocky Mountains cozies up by the campfire, as her boyfriend Solin describes the constellations twinkling above them: the spidery limbs of Hercules, the blue-white sheen of Vega.The Guardian’s journalism is independent

about 16 hours ago
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Meta hid harms to children from VR products, whistleblowers allege

A group of six whistleblowers have come forward with allegations of a cover-up of harm to children on Meta’s virtual reality devices and apps. They say the social media company, which owns Facebook and Instagram, and offers a line of VR headsets and games, deleted or doctored internal safety research that showed children being exposed to grooming, sexual harassment and violence in its 3D realms.“Meta knew that underage children were using its products, but figured, ‘Hey, kids drive engagement,’ and it was making them cash,” Jason Sattizahn, one of the whistleblowers who worked on the company’s VR research, said in a statement. “Meta has compromised their internal teams to manipulate research and straight-up erase data that they don’t like.”Sattizahn and the other whistleblowers, all current or former Meta employees, have disclosed these findings and a trove of documents to Congress, according to the Washington Post, which first reported the allegations

1 day ago
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Ashes not on Adil Rashid’s mind as England plot path to T20 World Cup

The way the ball is coming out of Adil Rashid’s hand this summer – those gyroscopic leg‑breaks and googlies still so utterly seductive – there is a case for Ben Stokes to flick him a WhatsApp message that reads simply: “Ashes?”It was enough to persuade Rashid’s best friend, Moeen Ali, to return to the fray in 2023, an SOS answered initially with an LOL. Looking ahead to the Ashes tour this winter Rashid, even aged 37 and having not fizzed down a red ball for six years (no barrier these days), would surely enhance the squad.For a start, Rashid is unquestionably the finest leg‑spinner England have produced in the past 50 years: a stellar career spanning nearly two decades that has returned 512 first‑class wickets, 427 in international cricket, and delivered two World Cup wins along the way. Oh, and an MBE.To watch Rashid bowl to South Africa during the recent one‑day international series was to take in a master at work – utter control of a skill that takes years to perfect

about 11 hours ago
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AFL finals: where the Brisbane v Gold Coast semi-final will be won and lost

Brisbane have been here before. The reigning premiers are in their seventh consecutive AFL finals series and twice in that stretch have faced a straight-sets exit. The concern will be that on both of those occasions, in 2019 and 2021, the Lions were unable to lift themselves from a qualifying final defeat and were bundled out at the semi-final stage.The Lions have grown up since then to become an AFL heavyweight and after four straight finals victories last year were finally rewarded with a premiership. Brisbane must now stare down a new challenger to their crown as Gold Coast take their club-first finals campaign into a second week after a rousing elimination final win

about 12 hours ago
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‘The Mother Teresa of Aussie supermarkets’: meet the woman cataloguing grocery deals on TikTok

2 days ago
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Drawings reveal Victorian proposal for London’s own Grand Central station

3 days ago
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Blur’s Dave Rowntree: ‘People think music was better in the old days, to which I say: bollocks!’

3 days ago
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Gems review – dazzling technique elevates LA Dance Project’s contemporary ballet trilogy

4 days ago
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The Guide #207: How Britain embraced The Simpsons, America’s true first family

4 days ago
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From On Swift Horses to David Byrne: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

4 days ago