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Microsoft workers occupy HQ in protest against company’s ties to Israeli military

3 days ago
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Dozens of Microsoft employees occupied the company’s east campus in Redmond, Washington to protest against what they say is the use of its software by the Israeli military to carry out operations in Gaza and enable the surveillance of Palestinians.Less than a week after the company said it was launching an independent investigation into the use of its Azure software, current and former staff occupied a space they declared the “Free Zone”, holding placards that read “Join The Worker Intifada – No Labor for Genocide” and “Martyred Palestinian Children’s Plaza”.The protests, organised by the No Azure for Genocide group, has demanded Microsoft divest from Israel.Earlier this year, employee Joe Lopez interrupted a speech by CEO Satya Nadella at the annual developer conference.“Satya, how about you show how Microsoft is killing Palestinians,” said Lopez.

Demonstrator Hossam Nasr said on Tuesday they had decided to escalate their actions because there had been no adequate response from Microsoft.He felt personally motivated to speak out more vigorously after the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) carried out the targeted killing of the high-profile Al Jazeera journalist Anas al-Sharif, one of five members of the media who was killed earlier this month in the operation.“I watched him report on Gaza relentlessly, through starvation, through extermination campaigns, through bombing.He was the voice of the business.He was intentionally targeted,” said Nasr, 26, who worked for Microsoft for three years but was fired last year after organising a vigil for Palestine outside the company’s offices.

“It happened the same week news came out from the Guardian that Microsoft is storing mass surveillance data collected from calls from Palestinians.”Earlier this month, the Guardian, Israeli-Palestinian publication +972 Magazine and Hebrew-language outlet Local Call, revealed Israel’s military surveillance agency, Unit 8200, was making use of Azure to store countless recordings of mobile phone calls made by Palestinians living in the West Bank and Gaza.The company said it was not aware “of the surveillance of civilians or collection of their cellphone conversations using Microsoft’s services”.The protest at Microsoft comes against the backdrop of increased warnings from organisations such as the UN about “widespread starvation, malnutrition and disease” in Gaza.The Gaza health ministry has estimated at least 62,000 Palestinians have been killed since the IDF launched its operations in the aftermath of Hamas’s 7 October attacks.

Nasreen Jaradat, 29, a Microsoft employee, said: “Every single second that we wait, things are worse and worse in Palestine.”She added: “People are getting hungrier and hungrier.More and more people are being bombed and maimed.It’s time for us to escalate, however we can.”The protest ended after about two hours when police told the demonstrators to leave and said they would be arrested for trespassing.

A Microsoft spokesperson said the group of demonstrators “was asked to leave, and they left”.The spokesperson said it had nothing to add to a statement made last week about an inquiry it had undertaken into allegations Azure was being used to surveil Palestinians.“Based on these reviews, including interviewing dozens of employees and assessing documents, we have found no evidence to date that Microsoft’s Azure and AI technologies have been used to target or harm people in the conflict in Gaza,” it said.Microsoft employs as many as 47,000 people at Redmond.While some took the flyers handed out on Tuesday by the activists and read them, others continued to tuck into their lunches in the restaurants that surrounded the square.

One 28-year-old employee who was watching the protests said he sympathised with the demonstrators but did not think they would have much impact.“I don’t think it will,” said the man, who asked not to be named.The demonstrators say their efforts are part of a process to educate people.“I think we are inspiring conversation among the people who work at Microsoft to feel more comfortable talking about this with each other and about how their work is contributing to genocide,” said another employee, Julius Shan, 28.People are still learning how the company is linked to genocide, he said.

“But that’s the nature of learning new information.”
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Wes Streeting’s row with pharma firms grows as they reject NHS drug pricing offer

A row between Wes Streeting and pharmaceutical companies has intensified after drugmakers rejected the health secretary’s latest offer on NHS drug pricing.The two sides failed to reach agreement by a midday deadline on Friday, meaning the mechanism under which the health service claws back some of the money it pays for medicines will continue at a rate the industry said was “unsustainable” and could ultimately disadvantage patients.At the heart of the dispute is the voluntary scheme for branded medicines pricing, access and growth (VPAG), under which pharma companies agree the amount of revenues from drug sales to the NHS they have to pay back.The two sides have been in acrimonious negotiations for months after the government raised the rate last December unexpectedly to almost 23% for 2025 for newer medicines.It is understood that Streeting had made an ultimatum that if the industry did not accept his latest “generous” offer on pricing then the arrangement would continue unamended and on Friday that scenario came to pass

about 14 hours ago
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‘Hopelessly insolvent’: how ‘saviour of steel’ Sanjeev Gupta’s global empire unravelled

A disparate collection of steelworks in Australia, the UK, Romania and the Czech Republic at the start of the year had two things in common: they were part of the metals empire of Sanjeev Gupta, and they had fallen silent.The idling plants were emblematic of the tycoon’s struggles. Born in India before starting a commodities trading business at university, Gupta was once nicknamed the “saviour of steel” for his plans to turn around struggling plants. Yet things looked very different this week, as he finally lost control of one of his key UK businesses.London’s high court ruled on Thursday that Speciality Steel UK (SSUK), a key operating subsidiary, should enter compulsory liquidation as it was “hopelessly insolvent”, with debts of several hundred million pounds but only £650,000 in its account

about 15 hours ago
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Government to cover pay and pensions at collapsed South Yorkshire steelworks

Workers at the UK’s third-largest steelworks, in South Yorkshire, have been assured that they will receive their pay for August as well as unpaid pension contributions after a government-appointed special manager took over the collapsed company.Liberty Steel’s main British business, Speciality Steel UK (SSUK), was put into administration on Thursday afternoon after a high court judge ruled that it was insolvent and that its owner, the metals tycoon Sanjeev Gupta, had no prospects of repaying debts of several hundred million pounds.The judge approved an application by the government’s official receiver, a representative tasked with winding up insolvent companies, to appoint special managers from the advisory company Teneo. A Teneo senior managing director was in court on Thursday, and made contact with Liberty Steel executives immediately after the hearing.Concerned union leaders representing SSUK’s 1,450 workers met the special managers last night, seeking assurances particularly on pay and pensions, as well as on when operations could restart at sites including Rotherham and Stocksbridge in South Yorkshire, after a year without work

about 18 hours ago
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OnlyFans owner paid $701m in dividends as platform readies for potential sale

The owner of OnlyFans was paid $701m (£523m) in dividends last year as the subscription service best known for offering adult content positions itself for a potential multibillion-dollar sale.The payment to Leonid Radvinsky, the Ukrainian-American entrepreneur behind the streaming platform, adds to the more than $1bn in dividends he has already received from the business as he profits from connecting porn stars and celebrities more directly with their audiences.OnlyFans accounts show it paid $497m in dividends to its parent, Fenix International, which is owned by Radvinsky, in 2024, up from $472m in its 2023 financial year. The business paid a further $204m to its owner in five tranches over the course of December to April.The UK-based company reported revenue of $1

about 21 hours ago
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Block Elon Musk’s bid to supply UK home energy, Ed Davey urges

Elon Musk’s company, Tesla, should have its application to supply energy to UK homes blocked on national security grounds, Ed Davey has told ministers.The Liberal Democrat leader argued that giving the electric car manufacturer a foothold in the British energy market would be “a gravely concerning move considering Elon Musk’s repeated interference in UK politics”.Tesla has a clean energy arm and applied in July for a licence to supply power to British homes.If the licence is granted by the regulator, Ofgem, the US company could be competing with big UK domestic energy suppliers such as British Gas and Octopus as soon as next year.In a letter to the energy secretary, Ed Miliband, Sir Ed cited comments by Musk on social media appearing to encourage violent riots in the UK last summer, and accused the Tesla CEO of “peddling misinformation to millions”

about 24 hours ago
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Trump officials urge Fed to remove governor after she refuses to quit

The Trump administration is ratcheting up pressure on the Federal Reserve to remove governor Lisa Cook, after the economist declared she had “no intention of being bullied” into stepping down.Cook, who was appointed to the US central bank’s powerful board of governors by Joe Biden, has been accused by Donald Trump’s officials of committing mortgage fraud. The allegations are unconfirmed.The US president has waged an extraordinary war on the Fed’s independence, breaking with precedent to demand interest rate cuts and urge its chair, Jerome Powell, to resign. Trump promptly called on Cook to quit on Wednesday

1 day ago
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Federal Reserve set to cut interest rates – but still Trump won’t be happy

about 8 hours ago
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Wall Street jumps after US Fed’s Powell signals possible rate cut – as it happened

about 13 hours ago
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Trump says Intel has agreed to give US government a 10% stake

about 7 hours ago
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Elon Musk and X reach tentative settlement with laid-off Twitter staff

about 12 hours ago
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‘Pressure is a privilege’: Braxton Sorensen-McGee on being New Zealand’s youngest star

about 6 hours ago
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England to ring changes and ‘get everyone started’, says John Mitchell

about 6 hours ago