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Instagram to alert parents if teens repeatedly search self-harm terms

2 days ago
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Instagram will start alerting parents if their kids repeatedly search for terms clearly associated with suicide or self-harm,The announcement on Thursday comes as Instagram’s parent company, Meta, is in the midst of two trials over harms to children,A trial under way in Los Angeles questions whether Meta’s platforms deliberately addict and harm minors,Another in New Mexico seeks to determine whether Meta failed to protect kids from sexual exploitation on its platforms,The alerts will only go to parents who are enrolled in Instagram’s parental supervision program.

The company said it already blocked such content from showing up in teen accounts’ search results and directs people to helplines instead,Thousands of families – along with school districts and government entities – have sued Meta and other social media companies claiming they deliberately design their platforms to be addictive and fail to protect kids from content that can lead to depression, eating disorders and suicide,Meta executives, including Mark Zuckerberg, have disputed that the platforms cause addiction,During questioning at the Los Angeles trial last Wednesday, Zuckerberg said he still agreed with a previous statement he made that the existing body of scientific work had not proved that social media caused mental health harms,The head of Instagram, Adam Mosseri, took the stand a week earlier and also pushed back on the science behind social media addiction, denying that users could be “clinically addicted”.

Mosseri described children’s high usage of Instagram as “problematic use” – similar to “watching TV for longer than you feel good about”,Psychologists do not classify social media addiction as an official diagnosis, but researchers have documented the harmful consequences of compulsive use among young people, and lawmakers around the world have repeatedly voiced concern about social networks’ addictive potential,Instagram’s new alerts will be sent via email, text or WhatsApp, depending on the parent’s contact information available, as well as a notification through the parent’s Instagram account,Setting up parental supervision on Instagram requires both the teen and their parent to agree by sending an invite through the platform,Teens must be in the 13 to 17 age range, and only one parent is allowed to supervise their child’s account.

“Our goal is to empower parents to step in if their teen’s searches suggest they may need support.We also want to avoid sending these notifications unnecessarily, which, if done too much, could make the notifications less useful overall,” Meta said in a blogpost.Meta said it was also working on similar notifications to parents about their children’s interactions with artificial intelligence.“These will notify parents if a teen attempts to engage in certain types of conversations related to suicide or self-harm with our AI,” Meta said.“This is important work and we’ll have more to share in the coming months.

”Advocacy groups say these sorts of tools don’t do enough to protect teens on social media, however.“Parents should not be fooled into thinking that Instagram is safe for their children,” Josh Golin, the executive director of Fairplay, said in a statement.“Meta is shifting the burden to parents rather than fixing the dangerous flaws in how it designs its algorithms and platforms,” Golin said.“All children deserve to be protected, regardless of whether their parents have enrolled in and utilize Meta’s supervision tools.If a product is not safe for teens to use without parental intervention, it shouldn’t be marketed to teens at all.

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Trump’s Iran strikes accelerate the world’s drift from dollar dominance | Heather Stewart

Donald Trump’s attack on Iran, with its puerile Pentagon nametag Operation Epic Fury, is another show of violent force from a bullish administration.Aside from unleashing fresh instability across the Middle East, the strikes add to the sense of a US operating with little regard for international law or global norms – as with Trump’s on-off tariff regime, and the attack on Venezuela.In the financial sphere, that is only likely to add weight to an incremental but historic shift away from the global dominance of the US currency and towards a more complex world that may be less to Washington’s liking.The trade-weighted dollar, measured against a basket of global currencies, has lost 7% of its value over the past year despite strong US economic growth and soaring stock prices on Wall Street. That partly reflects the outlook for inflation, and therefore interest rates, but also perhaps a more nebulous sense that the US policy framework is not as solid and predictable as it may once have been

about 15 hours ago
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Young fashion fans help UK charity shops thrive on struggling UK high streets

Young people inspired by secondhand fashion websites such as Vinted and Depop are helping charity shops thrive despite rising energy and employment costs.Save the Children’s retail sales rose 3% last year, helped by a surge in December when the charity rang up 11% more than the same month a year before, raising more than £1m for its causes.Ian Matthews, the charity’s director of retail and communities, said it saw a “big spike”, with sales continuing to be pretty strong in January.It did better than the charity industry’s average of 1.4% last year, according to the Charity Retail Association (CRA), which was itself ahead of the wider retail industry’s 1

about 16 hours ago
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AI-resistant ‘halo’ stocks drive UK and EU markets to record highs

Investors have a new mantra as they prepare for AI to shake up the global economy – the Halo trade.Interest in Halo – short for “heavy assets, low obsolescence” - has risen as investors seek out companies with tangible, productive assets, which might be insulated from AI disruption, such as energy and transport infrastructure companies.While US mega-cap tech companies have had a rough start to 2026, the Halo trade helped to push UK and EU stock markets to record levels by the end of February.Goldman Sachs reported this week that its basket of more than 100 big-spending companies had outperformed a similar grouping of capital-light firms by 35% since 2025, as “asset intensity becomes a key driver of valuations and returns”.“After more than a decade of under‑investment (particularly in Europe), corporates are shifting decisively back toward physical assets,” Goldman analysts told clients

about 19 hours ago
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Square Mile strikes back: how the City of London is fighting disinformation about crime

“Just visit London and you’ll see that it’s filled with crime,” the tech billionaire Elon Musk said as he was beamed into Tommy Robinson’s far-right rally in the UK capital last September.The comments by the SpaceX and Tesla boss, part of a roving speech that was later condemned by the UK government, added to a growing wave of anti-London disinformation that has spread in recent months. That includes Donald Trump’s notorious comments of London “no-go zones” and Nigel Farage’s warnings against wearing jewellery after 9pm in the West End.But the panic over antisocial behaviour and petty crime plaguing the capital has burst out of rightwing circles and social media platforms and into City boardrooms and diplomatic meetings, raising the hackles of state officials and influential financial sector bosses who fear that, if left unchecked, trade, recruitment and business investment could suffer.“Nobody’s saying ‘it means that I won’t invest in the City’,” said Susan Langley, the City of London’s mayor

1 day ago
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Harrods faces legal action over £1-a-head dining charge not going to staff

Harrods is facing legal action over its addition of a £1-a-head cover charge to diners’ bills that does not go to workers, in a test case that could lead to changes at a string of upmarket restaurants.Legislation, which came into force in October 2024, requires business owners to hand over all tips and service charges to staff. Some restaurants, including those at Harrods, add a mandatory cover charge as well as an optional service charge and only pass on the latter to their workers.An employment tribunal case involving 29 Harrods restaurant workers backed by the United Voices of the World (UVW) union is to be heard in September. Workers argue that the cover charge functions in practice as a service charge and so should be distributed to them and not kept by Harrods

2 days ago
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Paramount Skydance wins Warner Bros Discovery bid after Netflix walks away from deal

Paramount Skydance has beaten Netflix to take over Warner Bros Discovery’s storied Hollywood studios and streaming business after the streaming giant refused to increase its bid.The $110bn deal ends a high-stakes bidding war between the two media companies, but the takeover still faces regulatory hurdles and a backlash from critics worried about a rightward tilt in US media.David Ellison, chairman and CEO of Paramount, said: “From the very beginning, our pursuit of Warner Bros Discovery has been guided by a clear purpose: to honor the legacy of two iconic companies while accelerating our vision of building a next-generation media and entertainment company.”In a statement on Thursday evening, the Netflix co-chief executives Ted Sarandos and Greg Peters said: “At the price required to match Paramount Skydance’s latest offer, the deal is no longer financially attractive.”Netflix was given four business days to beat Paramount’s revised offer but quickly decided against doing so

2 days ago
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OBR a backseat driver with out-of-date maps, thinktanks tell Rachel Reeves

about 6 hours ago
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Waiting on a tariff refund after Trump’s duties were struck down? Don’t bother | Gene Marks

about 11 hours ago
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US military reportedly used Claude in Iran strikes despite Trump’s ban

about 9 hours ago
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Datacentre developers face calls to disclose effect on UK’s net emissions

about 10 hours ago
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Strongman Samson takes India past West Indies to set up England semi-final

about 8 hours ago
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US Half Marathon Championship ends in chaos as lead runners guided in wrong direction

about 8 hours ago