Business
SafetyMode Letter to MPs: AI Firm Warns Against ‘False Choice’ on Child Smartphone Safety
A British artificial intelligence company founded by one of the architects of fintech unicorn Tide has written to every Member of Parliament warning that the political debate over children’s smartphone use has descended into a “false choice” between blanket bans and unrestricted access.
SafetyMode, the London-headquartered child safety technology firm led by Tide founder George Bevis, has used the parliamentary intervention to press ministers to consider a third path, arguing that on-device technology can give parents meaningful control without locking children out of the digital economy altogether.
The timing is not accidental. The letter lands in Westminster postbags days after a landmark American court ruling found that several of Silicon Valley’s largest platforms had knowingly engineered addictive products for young users, a judgment that has sharpened the appetite among legislators on both sides of the Atlantic for tougher action.
In Britain, the political mood music has shifted markedly over the past eighteen months, with cross-party support building for tighter restrictions on under-16s. Yet SafetyMode’s pitch to MPs is that the conversation has narrowed prematurely.
“Right now, the entirety of the conversation around social media and phone safety seems to pretend all we can achieve is either to open the floodgates entirely or to ban them completely, losing all benefits these technologies may offer,” the company writes in its letter, copies of which have been seen by Business Matters.
The firm, founded by Mr Bevis alongside Bertie Aspinall and product specialist Dan Barker, has spent the past two years developing what it claims is one of the most sophisticated parental control platforms on the market. Unlike rival products that route children’s data through cloud servers, SafetyMode’s technology runs artificial intelligence directly on the device, filtering harmful content in real time while keeping personal information off external servers.
The product was built in partnership with parenting forum Mumsnet, whose research underpins much of the company’s commercial thesis. More than 90 per cent of parents surveyed told Mumsnet that current smartphones are not safe enough for children, while 86 per cent expressed concern about the impact of devices on their child’s mental health and attention span.
Speaking to Business Matters, Mr Bevis said the political class risks reaching for the bluntest available instrument. “We are at a turning point in how society views children and smartphones. There is clear agreement that there is a problem, but the solutions being discussed are too narrow. Regulation matters, but it takes time, and it cannot be the only answer.”
Mr Aspinall, the firm’s co-founder, struck a more pointed note. “The courts, governments, schools and parents all recognise the risks. But companies at the heart of this won’t fix it themselves. So the question becomes, what do we do next? On the one hand is regulation. But if we want to protect children now, the answer is simple. You build safety into the device itself and put control back in the hands of parents.”
The company’s technology has been designed to read context rather than merely scan for prohibited keywords, identifying when conversations turn abusive, sexualised or otherwise damaging, even when those exchanges would slip past conventional filters.
For now, SafetyMode is available only on Android handsets. The firm has been openly critical of Apple, arguing that the Cupertino giant’s restrictions on third-party developers prevent meaningful parental controls being built for iPhone users, a complaint that echoes broader regulatory scrutiny of Apple’s walled garden in both Brussels and Washington.
There is also an industrial strategy dimension to the company’s lobbying. SafetyMode is positioning Britain as a potential global hub for what it calls the “safe tech for kids” movement, arguing that ministers could combine child protection with a fresh wave of innovation, investment and skilled job creation if they chose to back domestic firms developing protective technologies.
Whether MPs will be receptive remains to be seen. Backbench pressure for outright restrictions on under-16s using social media has hardened in recent months, and Whitehall has shown limited appetite for technological solutions that depend on parental engagement. But with the American courts now exposing platform behaviour in unprecedented detail, the case for action of some kind appears unstoppable.
The question Mr Bevis and his colleagues are putting to Parliament is whether that action should empower parents or simply slam the door shut.
Business
Watch Out For The Four – Weekly Blog # 938
A. Michael Lipper is a CFA charterholder and the president of Lipper Advisory Services, Inc., a firm providing money management services for wealthy families, retirement plans and charitable organizations. A former president of the New York Society of Security Analysts, Mike Lipper created the Lipper Growth Fund Index, the first of today’s global array of Lipper Indexes, Averages and performance analyses for mutual funds. After selling his company to Reuters in 1998, Mike has focused his energies on managing the investments of his clients and his family. His first book, MONEY WISE: How to Create, Grow and Preserve Your Wealth (St. Martin’s Press) was published in September, 2008. Mike’s unique perspectives on world markets and their implications have been posted weekly at Mike Lipper’s Blog since August, 2008.
Business
Tata Steel shares jump 2% to fresh record high: What’s driving the gains?
The first notice dates back to July 3, 2025 when the company received a demand letter from Jajpur’s Office of Deputy Director of Mines, raising a demand of nearly Rs 1,903 crore in connection with the revised assessment of the shortfall in dispatch of minerals from Tata Steel’s Sukinda Chromite Block. The company filed a writ petition at Orissa’s High Court in August that year.
Later on October 3, the company received another demand letter worth Rs 2,411 crore in connection with assessment of shortfall in dispatch of chrome ore from the block, following which it filed another writ petition.
In the latest update to the case, Tata Steel said it believes that the High Court has quashed the demand letters issued by the authority as they are contrary to the conclusions and directions passed by the court.
Tata Steel share price
The shares of the company jumped over 2% to hit a fresh 52-week high of Rs 218.24 apiece on Tuesday. The stock has gained around 12% in one month, and nearly 19% in 2026 so far.
The shares of the company have rallied more than 52% in one year. In the longer term, the stock gained 100% in three years and 123% in five years.
Nomura on Indian steel sector
Meanwhile, international brokerages remain bullish on India’s steel sector. Nomura in its latest note highlighted that Indian steel prices recorded a mild correction last week, but remain near elevated levels. Despite the correction, India’s HRC spot margin in April so far has still held strong at Rs 36,700 per tonne, up by over Rs 1,580 per tonne from March 2026, remaining well above the median margin level observed over the past two years, the domestic brokerage said.
Margin expansion has been supported primarily by higher steel prices, while input costs have remained largely stable on a sequential m-o-m basis, it added. “We maintain our positive outlook for the India steel sector, and believe global factors, especially China, should have a limited impact on the earnings potential of major steel players, in our view. Our bullish stance on the India steel sector is underpinned by improving domestic price momentum despite global headwinds,” Nomura further said, maintaining its ‘Buy’ ratings for Tata Steel, JSW Steel, Jindal Steel and Lloyds Metals.
Jefferies’ top steel picks
Jefferies on the other hand said that China’s falling steel production and exports will likely lift margins of the Indian players. China’s steel exports, after hitting new record highs in 2025, have declined 9% year-on-year in the January-March quarter of 2026. “Improving steel market balance in China, driven by supply rationalization, should be positive for Asian steel spreads,” it said.
The international brokerage noted that Indian steel prices are up around 20% this year so far, outpacing the 10% rise in China’s export steel prices in the same period. This increase is supported by the implementation of a 12% safeguard duty in December 2025. “India steel prices are now broadly in-line with landed imports from China and can move higher if China’s export prices rise further. A mean reversion in Asian conversion spreads could potentially drive Indian steel prices up by a further 13% to Rs 65,800 (spot: Rs 58,000),” it added.
Assuming Indian steel prices hover in the range of Rs 55,500-56,000 in FY27-28, which is 3-4% below spot prices, Jefferies expects JSW Steel and Tata Steel to post a strong 30-45% YoY EBITDA growth in FY27. Its FY27-28 EPS estimates for the two companies are 5-28% above the Street expectations. “While a prolonged Middle East conflict could weigh on domestic steel demand and pose some downside risk to near-term earnings, we note that Tata Steel and JSW Steel’s earnings are more sensitive to price movements than volumes. A 1% decline in volumes translates into a 2% EPS impact, whereas a 1% increase in steel prices drives an 5-8% EPS upgrade,” it said.
Overall, Jefferies has a ‘Buy’ call on the shares of JSW Steel, Jindal Stainless, Shyam Metallics & Energy and Tata Steel.
Goldman Sachs’ top steel picks
Goldman Sachs called steel the “next global growth driver”. In its latest note, the international brokerage highlighted that India has the unique distinction of being the only major country in the world that both produces and consumes iron ore. “This vertical integration in iron ore begets structural competitive cost advantage and India has consistently the lowest cost of production among the major steel producing regions,” it said, listing out strong steel consumption, growth, cost competitiveness, better returns and market cap dominance as the key reasons why the Indian ferrous sector looks appealing.
JSW Steel is one of Goldman’s top picks in the sector, due to its focus on capacity growth, debt reduction and operating leverage benefits. It has a ‘Buy’ call on the stock with a target price of Rs 1,490 apiece, which implies an upside potential of nearly 19% from the stock’s previous closing price of Rs 1,255.70 apiece on NSE.
Goldman Sachs also has a ‘Buy’ call on the shares of Shyam Metallics due to its diversified business model, while holding ‘Neutral’ rating for Tata Steel and Jindal Steel, along with a ‘Sell’ call on NMDC due to concerns on volume growth and increasing competition.
(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)
Business
Carnarvon’s Gnulli Festival pushes ahead amid cancellations
A new festival is set for Carnarvon next month as other events in regional WA have pulled the plug due to high fuel costs and cyclone damage.
Business
Musk v Altman: Why the tech billionaires and former friends are now facing off in court
The battle between the AI big hitters has largely played out on social media. Now it is coming to the courtroom.
Business
Form 144 Nano Dimension Ltd. For: 28 April

Form 144 Nano Dimension Ltd. For: 28 April
Business
(VIDEO) Russian Superyacht Linked to Putin Ally Sails Through Blockaded Strait of Hormuz
DUBAI — A $500 million Russian superyacht linked to sanctioned billionaire Alexey Mordashov, a close ally of President Vladimir Putin, successfully transited the heavily restricted Strait of Hormuz over the weekend, becoming one of the few private vessels to navigate the critical waterway amid an ongoing U.S.-Iran blockade that has crippled global oil shipping.

The 142-meter (465-foot) luxury yacht Nord departed a marina in Dubai on Friday evening, April 24, 2026, crossed the strait on Saturday morning and arrived at Al Mouj Marina in Muscat, Oman, early Sunday, according to marine tracking data from MarineTraffic and VesselFinder. The vessel’s passage through one of the world’s most tense maritime chokepoints has raised questions about selective enforcement of restrictions and highlighted Russia-Iran ties during the conflict.
- Nord*, one of the largest superyachts in the world, features 20 staterooms, a swimming pool, helipad and even a submarine. It flies the Russian flag and was re-registered in Russia after Western sanctions following Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine. While Mordashov is not the officially listed owner, corporate records and widespread reporting link the vessel to the steel magnate, whose fortune exceeds $20 billion and who has faced U.S. and European sanctions for years.
The transit comes as commercial shipping through the Strait of Hormuz — which normally carries about one-fifth of global oil and liquefied natural gas — has plummeted to a fraction of normal levels since February. Iran has imposed severe restrictions in response to U.S. and Israeli military actions, while the United States has enforced a blockade on Iranian ports. U.S. Central Command has redirected dozens of vessels, and private shipping largely avoids the route due to security risks.
It remains unclear exactly how Nord obtained permission to pass. Iran’s ambassador to Moscow stated days earlier that Tehran would grant exceptions for Russian ships without charging duties, signaling deepening bilateral cooperation. Some analysts suggest the yacht may have used lanes closer to Iranian waters patrolled by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, effectively bypassing the main U.S.-enforced blockade zone.
Mordashov, the majority shareholder of Russian steel giant Severstal, maintains a low public profile but ranks among Putin’s inner circle of trusted oligarchs. His yacht’s bold journey has drawn sharp commentary online, with some calling it a symbol of elite privilege amid global disruption and others viewing it as a diplomatic signal between Moscow and Tehran.
The incident underscores the selective nature of enforcement in the region. While commercial tankers and cargo ships face detours around Africa or long delays, luxury vessels with powerful backers appear able to thread the needle. Maritime security experts note that superyachts often operate with enhanced private security and diplomatic clearances that ordinary shipping lacks.
Broader implications for energy markets are significant. The restricted flow through Hormuz has already driven world oil prices above $110 per barrel, contributing to inflationary pressures and supply concerns worldwide. Australia, heavily dependent on imported fuel, continues to grapple with its own diesel shortages partly linked to these disruptions.
U.S. officials have not publicly commented on the Nord‘s passage. The Biden administration, now succeeded by the Trump administration in this scenario, had vowed to maintain pressure on Iran while keeping the strait open for international commerce. Critics argue the yacht’s successful transit exposes gaps in the blockade’s effectiveness.
Russia has maintained relatively warm relations with Iran throughout the conflict, supplying drones and other military technology while benefiting from discounted Iranian oil. The superyacht episode may represent a small but visible gesture of reciprocity. Iranian state media has remained silent on the crossing, consistent with its general opacity on maritime exceptions.
For Mordashov, the voyage highlights the resilience of sanctioned Russian elites. Despite travel bans and asset freezes in the West, his yacht continues to operate in international waters, often berthing in friendly ports across the Middle East and Asia. Similar vessels owned by other oligarchs have faced seizures in Europe, but Nord has largely evaded such fates by staying clear of Western jurisdictions.
Maritime tracking platforms showed minimal other traffic in the strait during the same period. Most commercial operators continue rerouting via the Cape of Good Hope, adding thousands of nautical miles and weeks to journeys. Insurance premiums for vessels attempting Hormuz have skyrocketed, making the route economically unviable for all but the most determined or protected operators.
The event has sparked heated discussion on social media and in geopolitical circles. Some commentators frame it as a propaganda win for Russia and Iran, demonstrating that the blockade is not absolute. Others see it as a practical reminder that luxury and connections can trump geopolitics even in wartime.
As tensions in the Gulf persist, shipping analysts expect continued volatility. Diplomatic efforts for de-escalation remain stalled, with no immediate breakthrough in sight. For now, the safe arrival of Nord in Oman serves as a striking anomaly in an otherwise paralyzed strategic waterway — a $500 million reminder that in the world of superyachts and sanctions, some rules still bend for the connected.
The superyacht’s journey adds another layer to the complex web of alliances, sanctions and maritime power plays defining the 2026 Middle East crisis. While global commerce suffers, symbols of elite mobility continue to move, testing the limits of blockades and international resolve.
Business
'Emergency handbrake' needed on sickness benefits, Blair think tank says
The Tony Blair Institute says people with conditions like anxiety should get employment support instead of cash benefits.
Business
ASML: Potential Bull Trap As AI Super Cycle Continues – Reiterate Hold
ASML: Potential Bull Trap As AI Super Cycle Continues – Reiterate Hold
Business
Premier, gas chiefs blast 'superficially attractive' export levy
Woodside and Inpex joined Roger Cook in lambasting a proposed LNG windfall tax today, warning it could kill major projects and destroy Australia’s reputation as a stable investment destination.
Business
Vedanta demerger can create value in the long term
Analysts believe investors would benefit from staying invested over the long term, as clear business structures, improved transparency on debt allocation, and better price discovery could enhance overall shareholder value. The last date to buy the stock to avail the demerger benefits is April 29.
The demerger will result in the separation of Vedanta into five listed entities-Vedanta Aluminium, Vedanta Power, Vedanta Oil & Gas, Vedanta Iron & Steel, and a residual Vedanta, which will retain zinc, copper and other base-metal businesses. Under the scheme, shareholders will receive one share each in the four newly-listed companies for every one Vedanta share held, while the residual Vedanta entity will continue to remain listed.
AgenciesVolatility seen around record date of may 1
The demerger is expected to unlock meaningful valuation upside for Vedanta shareholders. Before the demerger, after applying holding-company discounts and adjusting for consolidated debt, Axis Securities values Vedanta as a whole at about ₹572 per share. Post-demerger, the combined valuation is expected to rise by 14% to ₹650 per share.
The value goes up after demerger because businesses like aluminium, and oil & gas will be listed separately, making it easier for investors to judge their true worth and compare them with similar companies. At the same time, the remaining Vedanta company will still have steady income and regular dividend potential from its stake in Hindustan Zinc, which helps support its valuation.
ICICI Direct expects the demerger to be a value unlocking event for the company with its high growth aluminium & power businesses expected to fetch better valuations compared with the current structure of being part of a listed conglomerate entity.
On April 30, Vedanta’s stock price is expected to adjust for the demerger and trade in the range of around ₹300-325 per share. The remaining demerged entities are likely to be listed within 1-2 months following the record date.One of the key points of the demerger is the sharp reduction in debt for Vedanta since it will be distributed across the demerged entities. After the demerger, Axis Securities estimates Vedanta to have net debt of ₹13,892 crore, 24% of total net debt. The aluminium business is expected to carry the largest portion of net debt of around ₹29,246 crore, accounting for more than 50% ₹57,358 crore of group net debt as of December 2024. Vedanta Power will carry 12% of net debt, Vedanta Iron & Steel 7% and Vedanta Oil & Gas 6%.
-
Fashion4 days agoWeekend Open Thread – Corporette.com
-
Tech18 hours agoRegister Renaming | Hackaday
-
Crypto World3 days agoHyperliquid $HYPE Rally Builds Momentum as AI Sector Enters Prove-It Phase
-
Politics6 days agoMaking troops accountable for war crimes threatens US alliance, ex-SAS colonel warns
-
Politics6 days agoDisabled people challenge government SEND proposals over segregation concerns
-
Business4 days agoPatterson-UTI Energy, Inc. (PTEN) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript
-
Business6 days agoRolls-Royce Voted UK’s Most Iconic Trade Mark as IPO Register Hits 150
-
Crypto World7 days ago
Five Value Stocks with Recovery Potential in 2026: PayPal (PYPL), Nike (NKE), and More
-
Sports2 days agoIPL 2026: Ruturaj Gaikwad registers slowest fifty of the season, enters all-time unwanted list | Cricket News
-
Politics14 hours agoDrax board avoid their own AGM, accused of greenwashing & environmental racism
-
Crypto World7 days agoNew York sues Coinbase, Gemini over prediction market offerings
-
Politics6 days agoStarmer handler McSweeney to be dragged from shadows by Foreign Affairs Committee
-
Politics6 days agoZack Polanski responds to home secretary’s taser threat
-
Politics6 days ago
Wings Over Scotland | How To Get Away With Crimes
-
Entertainment7 days ago
Sydney Sweeney cameo cut from “The Devil Wears Prada 2”, source explains why (exclusive)
-
Business6 days agoHCL Tech share price tank over 9% after weak Q4. JPMorgan, HSBC & 3 others cut target price
-
Crypto World7 days agoCrypto’s great hope in Senate’s Clarity Act still has a path to survive tight calendar
-
Politics6 days ago‘Iran is still a nuclear threat’
-
Fashion7 days agoKilkenny Design New Beauty Arrivals for Spring 2026
-
Sports5 days agoTim Bradley names the current best in the world: “Better than Inoue and Usyk”

You must be logged in to post a comment Login