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Trump move for Venezuela’s resources likely to weaken economic might of US | Heather Stewart

about 12 hours ago
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The word “loot” entered the English language from Hindi in the late 18th century, as the rapacious East India Company plundered its way across the subcontinent.It was a trading company, not a state – but it had the imprimatur of the English crown and its own large private army, mingling commerce and military force and opening the way for British imperial dominance of India.Donald Trump’s dead-of-night raid on Venezuela last week was the act of a government, not a corporation.But it harked back to a more brazen age, when looting a continent for its resources at the point of a cannon was regarded as a legitimate activity for an English gentleman.The US president made no effort to disguise the fact that the main motivation for the snatching of Nicolás Maduro was taking control of Venezuelan oil reserves on behalf of the fossil fuel companies that helped bankroll Trump’s re-election.

He did gesture at Maduro’s illegitimacy – the deposed president was widely accepted to have lost Venezuela’s presidential election in 2024.But handing power to Maduro’s deputy, with no timeline for a democratic transition, makes a nonsense of any claim to be fulfilling the aspirations of the Venezuelan people.Trump had already wielded US economic power particularly blatantly in trade negotiations over the first 12 months of his second term, using the threat of tariffs to bully and cajole rivals and supposed allies alike – including the UK.Last weekend’s events made clear he was also prepared to seize resources using military force, apparently with the intention of allowing favoured corporate allies (oligarchs, as we would call them in a Russian context) to exploit them.It sets a deeply alarming precedent, in terms of what Trump himself may feel emboldened to do, with a string of other targets apparently in his sights, and what rival powers even less concerned about international law could now venture, in pursuit of economic dominance.

Just as Trump’s music tastes are stuck in the days of his youth – he still likes a boogie to YMCA – his conception of what factors make the US economically successful feels hopelessly outdated.The global oil market is already well supplied, and the US has anyway become a significant net exporter since the shale boom, insulating its economy from the global energy price rises that hit Europe hard after the Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.There are some concerns about whether US hard-to-extract shale oil is economic at the current, relatively low oil price of less than $60 (£44) a barrel for the US West Texas Intermediate benchmark, however.Yet Trump appears to want to drive that price lower.He is unlikely to succeed any time soon anyway: Venezuelan oil is heavy, making it expensive to produce and refine; and analysts believe it will take many years, and billions of dollars, to increase output significantly.

As the Washington-based Institute of International Finance put it last week: “While medium- to long-term upside to Venezuelan supply exists, the balance of risks points to a gradual and conditional recovery rather than swift normalisation, with the potential for renewed setbacks if political or policy frictions intensify.”Instead of oil, the resource bottlenecks that most concern today’s corporations are in the raw materials required for the mass electrification of energy, as the world shifts to net zero (something Trump rejects, of course) – copper, aluminiumand lithium – not to mention staple foods such as cocoa and coffee, of which prices have been jacked up by global heating.Similarly, while Trump hoped his muscular trade policy would lead to a wave of reshoring, restoring US dominance in sectors such as carmaking and steel, manufacturing employment has continued to decline, with the sector shedding more than 200,000 jobs over two years.Slashing government grants for scientific research and attacking big US universities on culture war grounds appears unlikely to nourish the innovation widely seen as a key to US economic success.And rival countries hit hard by US tariffs are being pushed together, with the EU finally giving provisional agreement last week to the tortuously negotiated trade agreement with Mercosur, the South American bloc that includes Brazil and Argentina.

While Trump fantasises about bringing back metal bashing, the US’s great economic rival China is continuing to innovate in the fields of electric cars and cut-price solar panels, at the leading edge of the transition away from fossil fuels.Between January and May last year alone China added enough wind and solar capacity to power a country as large as Turkey or Indonesia.The Chinese AI company DeepSeek is reportedly preparing to release the next iteration of its large language model next month – a move that could spark alarm in Silicon Valley if, like its predecessor, it appears to outperform US equivalents at a fraction of the cost.Trump’s attempt at looting Venezuela’s resources is a raw exercise of military muscle, and there may be more – perhaps worse – to come.But by unleashing anarchy abroad and trashing the rule of law at home, he is more likely to undermine US economic power than enhance it.

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Robots that can do laundry and more, plus unrolling laptops: the standout tech from CES 2026

This year will be filled with robots that can fold your laundry, pick up objects and climb stairs, fridges that you can command to open by voice, laptops with screens that can follow you around the room on motorised hinges and the reimagining of the BlackBerry phone.Those are the predictions from the annual CES tech show in Las Vegas that took place this week. The sprawling event aims to showcase cutting-edge technology developed by startups and big brands.Many of these fancy developments will be available to actually buy, moving from outlandish concepts to production devices, although some are still limited to costly prototypes.The rise of the humanoid robot continues, with the show floor filled with myriad prototypes, some of which operated autonomously rather than being remotely controlled or performing set routines this year

2 days ago
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No 10 condemns ‘insulting’ move by X to restrict Grok AI image tool

Downing Street has condemned the move by X to restrict its AI image creation tool to paying subscribers as insulting, saying it simply made the ability to generate explicit and unlawful images a premium service.There has been widespread anger after the image tool for Grok, the AI element of X, was used to manipulate thousands of images of women and sometimes children to remove their clothing or put them in sexual positions.Grok announced in a post on X, which is owned by Elon Musk, that the ability to generate and edit images would be “limited to paying subscribers”. Those who pay have to provide personal details, meaning they could be identified if the function was misused.Asked about the change, a Downing Street spokesperson said it was unacceptable

2 days ago
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X UK revenues drop nearly 60% in a year as content concerns spook advertisers

UK revenues at Elon Musk’s X fell by almost 60% in a year as advertisers pulled their spending over concerns about the social media platform’s content.News of the plummeting financial performance comes after X switched off the image creation function on its AI tool Grok for the vast majority of users after a widespread outcry about its use to create sexually explicit and violent imagery.In the UK, the social media site recorded a 58.3% fall in revenues from £69.1m in 2023 to £28

2 days ago
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Spotify no longer running ICE recruitment ads, after US government campaign ends

Spotify is no long running advertisements for the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), the streaming service has confirmed, after the Trump administration campaign ended in late 2025.“There are currently no ICE ads running on Spotify,” the Swedish company said in a statement. “The advertisements mentioned were part of a US government recruitment campaign that ran across all major media and platforms.”Since April, the government ads have also run on Amazon, YouTube, Hulu and Max among other streaming companies, with the aim of recruiting more than 10,000 deportation officers by the end of 2025.Previously, Spotify said that the ads, which encouraged US listeners to “fulfil your mission to protect America” and offered $50,000 in signing bonuses, did not “violate our advertising policies”

2 days ago
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UK ministers considering leaving X amid concern over AI tool images

UK ministers are considering leaving X as a result of the controversy over the platform’s AI tool, which has been allowing users to generate digitally altered pictures of people – including children – with their clothes removed.Anna Turley, the chair of the Labour party and a minister without portfolio in the Cabinet Office, said on Friday that conversations were happening within the government and Labour about their continued use of the social media platform, which is controlled by Elon Musk.The government has come under mounting pressure to leave X after the site was flooded with images including sexualised and unclothed pictures of children generated by its AI tool, Grok.Turley told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “X, first and foremost, has to get its act together and prevent this. It has the powers to do this, and we need to make sure there are firm consequences for that

3 days ago
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Grok turns off image generator for most users after outcry over sexualised AI imagery

Grok, Elon Musk’s AI tool, has switched off its image creation function for the vast majority of users after a widespread outcry about its use to create sexually explicit and violent imagery.The move comes after Musk was threatened with fines, regulatory action and reports of a possible ban on X in the UK.The tool had been used to manipulate images of women to remove their clothes and put them in sexualised positions. The function to do so has been switched off except for paying subscribers.Posting on X, Musk’s social media network, Grok said: “Image generation and editing are currently limited to paying subscribers

3 days ago
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Game On: the Swiss sports brand using hi-tech and chutzpah to challenge Nike and Adidas

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Trump move for Venezuela’s resources likely to weaken economic might of US | Heather Stewart

about 12 hours ago
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Behind the Somali daycare panic is a mother-and-son duo angling to be top Maga influencers

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Elon Musk’s X threatened with UK ban over wave of indecent AI images

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Ashes calamity has trashed McCullum’s credibility. It’s time to call on Alec Stewart | Mark Ramprakash

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Jess Hull steers Australia to relay gold at world cross-country championships in US

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