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- Un simple et superbe (ou stupide) lecteur de flux. Par
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Sep 05, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Hugo Lowell, Victoria Bekiempis and agencies)
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Judge grants Trump’s request for special master to handle seized documents
Federal court at least partially accepts the ex-president’s bid for official to set aside materials potentially subject to privilege protectionsA federal judge has granted Donald Trump’s request to have a “special master” appointed to review documents the FBI seized from his Mar-a-Lago estate that could be subject to privilege protections in the investigation into his unauthorized retention of government secrets.The request was granted on Monday morning, a court filing showed. The court temporar
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Sep 05, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Dan Milmo Global technology editor)
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Instagram owner Meta fined €405m over handling of teens’ data
Penalty follows investigation into Instagram setting that allowed teenagers to set up accounts that displayed contact detailsInstagram owner Meta has been fined €405m (£349m) by the Irish data watchdog for letting teenagers set up accounts that publicly displayed their phone numbers and email addresses.The Data Protection Commission confirmed the penalty after a two-year investigation into potential breaches of the European Union’s general data protection regulation (GDPR). Continue reading...
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Sep 05, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (John Crace)
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Radon Liz romps home in a pyrrhic victory
Tory MPs’ hopes of her transformation into a plausible leader were dashed by Truss’s robotic acceptance speechO brave new world, that has such people in’t. Or not. William Shakespeare clearly had never imagined a clusterfuck on this scale. Given the state of the country right now, he would be in need of a long lie down. It would take more than a few prayerful tweets from Justin Welby to sort this one out.On the road outside the Queen Elizabeth II conference centre, a few environmental protesters
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Sep 05, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Caitlin Cassidy)
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Doomscrolling linked to poor physical and mental health, study finds
The tendency to be glued to bad news can spark a ‘vicious cycle’ that interferes with our lives, researcher saysThere’s no shortage of bad news in the media to “doomscroll”, from a global pandemic to the war in Ukraine and an impending climate crisis, but new research suggests the compulsive urge to surf the web can lead to poor mental and physical health outcomes.Doomscrolling is the tendency to “continue to surf or scroll through bad news, even though that news is saddening, disheartening or d
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Sep 05, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Lucianne Tonti)
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No snags, no spills, no sweating: how to wear vintage clothes without ruining them
With the right reinforcements and under the right circumstances, you can wear an antique garment without wearing it outToo precious to put on? How to decide whether to wear an antique garmentGet our weekend culture and lifestyle emailOnce you have decided it’s OK to wear an item of vintage clothing, there are a few things worth keeping in mind that can help extend the garment’s life.Given that all wear might damage the item, a risk-averse mindset is a good approach. Continue reading...
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Sep 05, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Josh Halliday North of England correspondent)
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‘I have gone right off them’: can Truss keep the Tories’ fragile coalition together?
Cost of living crisis poses a threat to seats the Conservatives won from Labour in 2019In the 1980s they called it “magic Manton” – the tiny pit village, in the heart of the Nottinghamshire coalfields, that churned out so much coal it set national records. It went to war with Margaret Thatcher in 1984 and lost, closing 10 years later at the expense of 1,400 jobs.Today the village is unrecognisable. Workers wearing hi-vis vests walk to the area’s biggest employers, Wilko and B&Q, whose huge
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Sep 05, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Jim Waterson)
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Comedy impartiality back on the radar of BBC’s enemies
Daily Mail devotes front page to outrage at comedian Joe Lycett’s interview with Laura Kuenssberg When Liz Truss and Joe Lycett turned up to film the first edition of the BBC’s new flagship political interview show, the future prime minister probably expected to be the one making the headlines.Instead the Daily Mail decided that the real story of Laura Kuenssberg’s interview with Truss was the mocking reaction of comedian Lycett, who marked the end of the Sunday morning chat by shouting “Woo, yo
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Sep 05, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Letters)
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Ethical food choices will determine Earth’s future | Letters
Henry Scutt, Tamsin Blaxter and Valerie James respond to Thomasina Miers’ article about responsible farming and lab-grown foodThomasina Miers is right to raise the important role that grazing animals have to play in the restoration of our ecologically depleted countryside (Eating meat isn’t a crime against the planet – if it’s done right, 1 September). But it does not follow that animal protein could ever make up a meaningful part of a sustainable average diet in industrialised countries like th
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Sep 05, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Guardian Staff)
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Unexpected insight into Britain’s new prime minister | Brief letters
Puzzle prediction | Leather soup | Sticky question | Cost of dying | Marguerite Patten’s marmalade Is there a correlation between the answer to Monday’s word wheel in your print edition (egomaniac) and the announcement of the new prime minister? If so, I may look to the puzzle in future for an insight into notable events.Vanessa PoultonGlastonbury, Somerset• Re tips from Helen Dunmore’s The Siege (Letters, 2 September), my clearest memory from that book is the woman finding a small leather purse
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Sep 05, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Kate Connolly in Berlin)
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Germany to delay phase out of nuclear plants to shore up energy security
Last two working plants were due to be mothballed but will be used as emergency reserve into 2023 after Russia cuts off gasGermany is to temporarily halt the phase out of two nuclear power plants in an effort to shore up energy security after Russia cut supplies of gas to Europe’s largest economy.The economy minister, Robert Habeck, announced on Monday that the power plants, Neckarwestheim in Baden Württemberg and Isar 2 in Bavaria, are to be kept running longer than planned in order to be used