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AstraZeneca boss Pascal Soriot’s pay rises to £17.7m

Pascal Soriot, the chief executive of Britain’s largest pharmaceutical company, received a 6.4% pay rise last year, taking his total remuneration to £17.7m.The AstraZeneca boss is in line for a further increase this year, potentially making him the UK’s highest-paid chief executive once again.Soriot received a salary of £1

about 8 hours ago
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Oil prices hit seven-month highs as tensions rise before US-Iran talks

Oil prices have reached seven-month highs, as traders reacted to heightened tensions between the US and Iran ahead of nuclear talks this week.US crude futures rose to $67.28 a barrel on Monday, while Brent crude touched its highest level since 31 July at $72.50 a barrel. Prices fell back late in the session, but were up again on Tuesday morning, approaching Monday’s highs

about 12 hours ago
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Meta agrees $60bn deal with chipmaker AMD despite AI bubble fears

The owner of Facebook has agreed to buy $60bn (£44.5bn) of artificial intelligence chips from the US semiconductor company Advanced Micro Devices despite fears over the vast sums being spent on the AI industry.Meta, which also owns Instagram and WhatsApp, has clinched the five-year deal in which it will also buy 10% of the chip company.AMD signed a similar pact with OpenAI last year, which was hailed as a vote of confidence in its chips and software, significantly boosting its stock price.A recent series of chip supply agreements underscores the AI industry’s appetite for processors

about 8 hours ago
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Police AI chief admits crime-fighting tech will have bias but vows to tackle it

A police chief has admitted artificial intelligence used to boost crime fighting will contain bias but pledged to combat the risks.Labour wants a dramatic expansion of police use of AI within England and Wales, with police chiefs also believing it could help keep law enforcement up to date with new criminal threats.Alex Murray told the Guardian that a new national police AI centre would recognise the risks of bias and minimise them.Bias in use of AI in policing could result in instances where algorithms – often trained on historical data reflecting past human prejudices – systematically produce unfair outcomes, such as overtargeting minority communities or misidentifying individuals based on race, gender, or socioeconomic status.Murray, the director of threat leadership with the National Crime Agency, and the national lead for AI, said: “Once you’ve recognised and minimised [bias], how do you train officers to deal with outputs to ensure that it is further minimised?“If you talk about live facial recognition or predictive policing, there will be bias, and you need to get in the data scientists and the data engineers to clean the data, to train the model appropriately, and then to test it

about 15 hours ago
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US hockey was bathed in a golden Olympic glow. Then Donald Trump and Kash Patel stepped in | Beau Dure

Keeping politics at arm’s length for the US men’s hockey team’s gold-medal matchup with Canada was always going to be difficult.The game fell on the 46th anniversary of the Miracle on Ice, when an underdog group of US college players upset the mighty Soviet Union team against the backdrop of the cold war. But the US team who took the ice on Sunday were no plucky band of amateurs making a stand for democracy against authoritarianism – a point underscored when the US and Canada met last year in the 4 Nations Face-Off. Canadian fans booed the Star-Spangled Banner and the US players, either unaware of, or unsympathetic to, Canadian desires to be neither the 51st US state nor the USA’s opponent in a scorched-earth trade war, dropped the gloves to fight their opponents as soon as the game commenced.Sunday’s game, though, was played with the utmost sportsmanship – and not just because Olympic rules punish fighting harshly

about 6 hours ago
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‘I felt tears welling in my eyes’: our readers’ Winter Olympics highlights

The magic, joy, tension, camaraderie and superhuman composure on show in Italy captivated readersMy favourite moment of the Winter Olympics was Johan Olav-Botn winning gold in the men’s individual biathlon, just a month after the death of his teammate and close friend, Sivert Bakken. Olav-Botn displayed superhuman composure – a prerequisite for anyone competing in biathlon – and he did not shut out the thought of his friend when under the highest pressure. Olav-Botn said that he “felt I was racing with him” on his last lap. To remain skiing and shooting, let alone standing, with that in mind is a feat of mental fortitude worthy of any Olympic gold. I felt tears welling in my eyes when he skied past the finish line and shouted: “Sivert, we did it!” Max Sundsbo, 22, LondonThe superb snow sports commentary from Ed Leigh and Tim Warwood

about 7 hours ago
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The Breakdown | Six Nations half-term report: France are flying while England’s decline is steep

about 11 hours ago
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If you think politics shaped these Winter Olympics, just wait until LA 2028

about 11 hours ago
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Australia beat India by six wickets in first women’s cricket one-day international – as it happened

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US basketball player Jarred Shaw escaped execution in Indonesia, but his prison ordeal continues

about 12 hours ago
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‘Resilience is the biggest lesson’: Raducanu is ready for revival after setbacks

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‘Landmark moment’: Emma Lawrence to become first woman to call NRL games

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The Breakdown | Six Nations half-term report: France are flying while England’s decline is steep

about 11 hours ago
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Les Bleus have variety and gifted youngsters but, by contrast, Steve Borthwick’s men are predictable and flawedFrance (15 points) Three games played, three bonus-point victories banked and the title at their mercy,If they claim another four-try win at Murrayfield on Saturday week, they will secure the crown with a round to spare, setting up a rousing grand slam opportunity in Paris,Above all else, though, Les Bleus have illuminated this year’s championship with their pace and attacking grace, not least “King” Louis Bielle-Biarrey who has been spectacularly good,How many other sides in the world, aside from South Africa, can also interchange their second-row and midfield pairings without missing a beat? Or casually whistle up gifted youngsters such as Fabien Brau-Boirie, Émilien Gailleton and Gaël Dréan who all look instantly to the manner born,When you factor in the squad’s collective ability with and without the ball – to date France have scored the most tries, 18, and conceded the fewest, five – the future looks dazzlingly bright.

Scotland (11pts) The script has previously been a familiar one,Bask in the rosy glow of beating England, only to come crashing to earth in their next game,This time, finally, they have broken that pattern and still have their destiny in their own hands,France are due an off day and do not always prosper at Murrayfield while, before last Saturday afternoon, more than a few people would have backed them to cause problems in Dublin on the final weekend,The message will be simple: attack as smartly and accurately as they did in their Calcutta Cup fever dream and maintain the defensive organisation that has so far enabled them to concede just six tries in three games.

And, of course, keep Finn Russell fit.The quick‑thinking restart that helped to bail his team out against Wales was merely the latest example of his whirring creative brain.A shoutout, too, for Kyle Steyn and Rory Darge who lead the way, respectively, for defenders beaten and turnovers won in this year’s championship.Ireland (9pts) Sometimes a bad day can crystallise everything.Ireland were nowhere near it in their opener in Paris, so much so that Andy Farrell angrily questioned his side’s “intent” after the game.

Having dodged another bullet at home to Italy, the game against England last Saturday was something of a defining occasion,And how brilliantly Ireland responded, delivering perhaps their most compelling performance in a couple of years,Suddenly, Jamison Gibson‑Park looked 25 again, instead of 35, Stuart McCloskey underlined his status as one of the best midfielders in the tournament, and the Irish back-row collectively refound their mojo,With two home games to finish, against Wales and Scotland, a top-half finish beckons, even if the title proves beyond their reach,England (5pts) Where to start? Maybe with the stark statistics that reflect the steepness of England’s decline.

In only three games, they have coughed up 58 turnovers – their highest number at this stage of a Six Nations tournament in 24 years – of which 32 are listed as unforced errors.Alongside 73 points and nine tries conceded in their past two defeats, against Scotland and Ireland inside eight days.Before the tournament started Steve Borthwick was encouraging English supporters to cross the Channel for a potentially memorable final weekend in Paris.On Saturday, by contrast, English fans could be seen streaming out of the ground before the end.Among other things it reflected the widening gap between the good game England are talking and the overly predictable, flawed one they are actually playing.

To go 17-0 and 22-0 behind inside the first quarter against the Scots and the Irish in successive weeks is unprecedented and worrying,Defeat in Italy – once unthinkable – is no longer out of the question,And if England are no better in Rome and Paris, what then?Italy (5pts) Rassie Erasmus predicted before this tournament that Italy would finish in the top half and, not for the first time, the World Cup-winning Springbok guru was ahead of the game,Italy have not only beaten Scotland but were also agonisingly close to defeating Ireland in Dublin,Their 33-8 loss against a fine French team in Lille on Sunday, too, was a much closer contest than the scoreline might suggest.

If their centre Tomas Menoncello was English he would be a nailed‑on starter for years to come while the Azzurri scrum has been as effective as any other in the competition.At home against a slightly jittery England with the crowd roaring them on, Louis Lynagh running hard, Exeter’s Andrea Zambonin soaring in the lineout and the Cannone brothers tackling everything that moves? Erasmus was correct: Steve Borthwick’s side can expect a proper examination.Wales (1pt) Everything is relative, in life and sport, and, given the off-field turbulence in Welsh rugby right now, the near miss at home against Scotland on Saturday was a decent response after a distinctly tough start.There remains a long way to go but Aaron Wainwright, Eddie James and Louis Rees-Zammit all rank highly for post-contact carrying metres and the collective desire under Steve Tandy was apparent against the Scots.Rhys Carré’s close-range strength has been another plus and, to date, they have registered more tries and points than Italy.

Unfortunately, they are also conceding more than six tries per game on average, which is not going to win many Tests.That said, their final home fixture, against Italy, should be fiercely contested if they have anything left in the tank physically.And if they can beat the Azzurri they could conceivably finish ahead of England.This is an extract taken from our weekly rugby union email, the Breakdown.To sign up, just visit this page and follow the instructions.