Month: October 2021

Facebook’s chief executive has denied claims that the company prioritises profit over the safety of its users. Mark Zuckerberg was responding to Frances Haugen’s claims that, left alone, Facebook would “continue to make choices that go against the common good – our common good”. Ms Haugen – a former product manager at the tech giant
0 Comments
Boris Johnson has branded levelling up “the greatest project that any government can embark on” in his closing speech at the Conservative Party’s annual conference. In his keynote address marking the end of the four-day event, the prime minister pledged that his top team will “get on with our job of uniting and levelling up
0 Comments
Jane Lynch, Ramin Karimloo and Jared Grimes will join the previously announced Beanie Feldstein  in the upcoming Broadway revival of Funny Girl, the Michael Mayer-directed production set to begin previews at the August Wilson Theatre this spring. “I grew up to the Broadway cast album of Funny Girl,” said the five-time Emmy-winning Lynch, who will
0 Comments
Details have emerged about a new cyber espionage campaign directed against the aerospace and telecommunications industries, primarily in the Middle East, with the goal of stealing sensitive information about critical assets, organizations’ infrastructure, and technology while remaining in the dark and successfully evading security solutions. Boston-based cybersecurity company Cybereason dubbed the attacks “Operation Ghostshell,” pointing
0 Comments
Naturally, the older a poem is, the more famous it tends to be. Someone like Byron has had centuries for his work to sink into the public consciousness; a poet like Dylan Thomas only a few decades. This is why, when I was researching the most famous poems in order to write this article, they
0 Comments
The L.A. Law sequel series being developed by Arrow and Trollhunters producer Marc Guggenheim is moving forward at ABC, bringing Guggenheim one step further to returning to the world of courtroom dramas. Guggenheim, a former lawyer, has long expressed an admiration for the original L.A. Law, which ran from 1987 to 1994. The new version will apparently see
0 Comments
Play video content TMZ.com ’15 Minutes of Shame’ documentary subject Emmanuel Cafferty says he was canceled after fidgeting with his fingers got misinterpreted as him throwing up the “white power” hand gesture … and he says his life’s been derailed ever since. Cafferty joined “TMZ Live” Tuesday … 16 months after he was unceremoniously axed
0 Comments