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Brazil, Mexico Provide Safe Haven Amid Middle East Tumult: Charts

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Coffey to depart as Claremont FC CEO

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Coffey to depart as Claremont FC CEO

Claremont Football Club has announced that longstanding chief executive Darcy Coffey will depart Tigerland at the end of the month.

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Usana Health Sciences CIO Benedict Peter sells $88,258 in stock

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Usana Health Sciences CIO Benedict Peter sells $88,258 in stock

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TLT Is Having Its Worst Day In 2026

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Stocks Little Changed After Fed Decision

So far, this bond fund hasn’t suffered a bigger blow this year.

Popularly known as TLT, the iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF, a long-duration bond fund, is down 1.4% today.

This would be its worst single day percentage decline in 2026. The last time it fell by more than today was on Dec. 1, 2025, when it fell 1.6%, according to Dow Jones Market Data.

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US Temporarily Identifies Alibaba and Baidu as Companies Supporting China’s Military

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US Temporarily Identifies Alibaba and Baidu as Companies Supporting China’s Military

The Pentagon listed Alibaba, BYD, Baidu, and TP-Link Technologies Co. as companies providing support to the Chinese military. This designation highlights concerns over these firms’ alleged involvement or assistance in military activities, emphasizing increasing scrutiny of Chinese technology companies amid geopolitical tensions.


Recent reports have highlighted the involvement of several Chinese tech giants, including Alibaba and Baidu, in activities that may support China’s military ambitions. These firms are said to provide cloud computing services, data analytics, and artificial intelligence technologies that could be utilized for military purposes. U.S. officials have expressed concerns that such collaborations could enhance China’s military capabilities and undermine international security.

The scrutiny arises amid rising tensions between the United States and China, with the U.S. government actively monitoring Chinese companies that operate in sensitive sectors. Alibaba and Baidu, two of China’s leading technology firms, are accused of offering services that might facilitate military logistics, intelligence, and surveillance systems. These allegations come despite the firms’ public commitments to adhere to regulations and international standards.

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In response, U.S. policymakers are considering restrictions aimed at limiting the technological support provided to Chinese military endeavors. Experts emphasize the importance of transparency and regulation in preventing dual-use technologies from aiding military development. The situation underscores ongoing concerns about the intersection of technology, security, and international diplomacy, as both nations navigate a complex landscape of competition and cooperation.

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First Plane Carrying Stranded Aussies Is on Its Way to Australia From the Middle East

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Emirates airplane

The first plane carrying Australians who have been stranded in the Middle East is on its way to Australia.

The news comes as thousands of Australians remain stranded in the region amid the ongoing conflict between the United States, Israel, and Iran.

First Plane Carrying Stranded Australians on Its Way to Australia

According to Sky News, Flight EK414 departed shortly after 9 a.m. AEDT. It is the first commercial flight that has been able to bring Aussies back to Australia since the conflict began.

It is expected to arrive in Sydney later tonight.

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The report notes that there are 24,000 Australians who have been stranded in the United Arab Emirates.115,000 have been stranded in the Middle East region.

The Australian government has received heavy criticism regarding its handling of stranded Australians as the conflict in the region rages on.

“Unfortunately, I continue to get reports from them about the government just being flat-footed,” Shadow foreign minister Ted O’Brien said to Sky News.

He added, “They are struggling to get the right responses from the government, which is indicative of the government’s overly quiet and slow response in the lead-up to the conflict.”

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Australians Narrate Their Experience Escaping the Middle East

Some Australians who have managed to escape to safer ground have shared their experiences with ABC News.

An expat living in Dubai named Richard recounted how he had to book a limousine to guarantee a safe passage to Oman. However, it was denied entry at the border.

He and his partner had to board an overcrowded bus full of scared passengers just to get to Oman. When they got there, taxi rides were being quoted for as high as $8,000.

Another family shared their experience of having to pay thousands in dollars for alternative flights that were ultimately cancelled.

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“The airlines were hiking prices, knowing they could double their profit from people desperate and in need,” Simon Cass told ABC News.

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Is Your Facebook Down? Thousands Report Account Errors Before Service Is Restored

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X, Formerly Twitter, Offers Valuable Insights Into Self-Reported Chronic Pain Using Machine Learning: Study

Thousands of Facebook users experienced unexpected service downtime on the afternoon of March 3, causing frustration and confusion across the platform.

Downdetector data showed reports of issues surged rapidly, peaking at over 10,000 complaints as users struggled to access their accounts.

Users Encounter Error Messages

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During the outage, many users saw the message: “Your account is currently unavailable due to a site issue. We expect this to be resolved shortly. Please try again in a few minutes.”

While the alert indicated a temporary technical problem rather than account-specific issues, it offered little reassurance to those locked out, according to USA Today.

What Facebook Users Said About the Recent Outage

On Reddit, some users said that Facebook was undergoing extreme slowness when they loaded the page. Others thought that they were banned on the platform.

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“I’m getting that same error, but my wife isn’t. It seems to only be impacting certain users. The site is very slow for her, but it does still work,” one user wrote.

“Can confirm, I am also facing this issue. Seems to be a PC only problem for me though, as I can use Facebook app on phone and using my phone’s browser just fine. Doesn’t seem to be an account problem on my end,” another concerned user said.

Downdetector Shows Rapid Spike and Recovery

Real-time tracking from Downdetector highlighted the disruption’s scale, with complaints climbing sharply before gradually declining later in the evening. By 8:30 p.m. ET, reports had dropped to roughly 150, signaling that most issues were resolved.

The quick drop in complaints suggests a backend fix implemented by Facebook’s technical team, although the company has not publicly explained the cause.

Outages of this magnitude are often caused by server misconfigurations, software deployment errors, or infrastructure-related issues.

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Service Restored, But Reliance Remains

While Facebook’s services have largely returned to normal, the temporary blackout shows the platform’s importance for communication, business operations, and community engagement. Even brief outages can disrupt advertising campaigns, social interactions, and online workflows.

Meanwhile, TikTok faced an unexpected outage due to another Oracle outage. According to Tech Times, some content creators said that there were lags when they tried to post videos on their accounts.

Originally published on Tech Times

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Deloitte appoints new senior partner for the South West and Wales

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Andrew Wright has taken up the role from Dave Tansley

Dave Tansley and Andrew Wright of Deloitte.(Image: Chris Fairweather/Huw Evans Agency)

Professional advisory firm Deloitte has appointed Andrew Wright as its new practice senior partner for the South West and Wales. Mr Wright, who has close to 30 years of experience at the firm, will lead a combined team of 2,300 people, succeeding Dave Tansley.

He joined the firm 1996 and became a partner in 2012. He leads Deloitte’s audit business in Bristol and Cardiff and is also part of the national Deloitte Private leadership team and the global audit transformation group. In his new role Mr Wright will oversee the firm’s strategic direction across the South West and Wales.

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He takes over the role from Dave Tansley, who has led the firm in the South West and Wales for the past two years. Mr Tansley will continue his work as partner at Deloitte leading key initiatives until his retirement in May.

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During his two year stint as practice senior partner, Mr Tansley spearheaded the firm’s move into its new Bristol headquarters in the Halo Building in Finzel’s Reach, which has consolidated its position as a leading employer in the region. He also accelerated the growth of the firm in Wales, including its Cardiff Delivery Centre.

Mr Wright said: “The South West and Wales stands on the cusp of a vibrant future, powered by innovation in advanced manufacturing, clean energy, and a thriving digital economy, offer unparalleled opportunities for sustainable economic growth.

“My career has been rooted in the south West and Wales, and I know first-hand the depth of talent, expertise and potential that we have here. I am committed to developing that talent, and ensuring that we continue to make a tangible impact to our clients, people and communities.

“I want to thank Dave for his exemplary leadership. He has fostered a real sense of collaboration across the firm, leaving a strong foundation for future growth.”

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Mr Tansley, partner, Deloitte, said: “This role has provided an exciting last chapter as I close out my 32-year career with the firm. It has been immensely rewarding to support the growth of our people and witness the enthusiasm and expertise that they bring to sector-leading projects across the region.”

Ian Howse, senior partner, Wales, and Sam Hart, office senior partner for Bristol, will continue to lead their respective offices.

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X Will Suspend Creators Who Fail to Add AI Labels to Videos Depicting ‘Armed Conflict,’ War Content

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X, Formerly Twitter, Offers Valuable Insights Into Self-Reported Chronic Pain Using Machine Learning: Study
X, Formerly Twitter, Offers Valuable Insights Into Self-Reported Chronic Pain Using Machine Learning: Study

X has revealed that it will suspend creators who fail to properly label AI-generated content on videos posted on the platform, particularly if they depict “armed conflict” or war-related content.

The policy change aims to properly label content generated by artificial intelligence and avoid spreading misinformation on the platform.

X to Suspend Creators Failing to Add AI Labels to Videos

X’s head of product, Nikita Bier, has shared a new post that reveals the latest policy change on the platform’s content moderation, which says that all creators who fail to label AI videos will be suspended.

According to Bier, the suspension applies to AI-generated videos depicting armed conflict or war-related content on the platform. The X executive said that the platform wants to “maintain the authenticity of content on Timeline,” especially amidst global conflict.

“During times of war, it is critical that people have access to authentic information on the ground. With today’s AI technologies, it is trivial to create content that can mislead people,” said Bier.

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Creators who post AI-generated videos without the proper labeling will face a 90-day suspension on their first offense, and subsequent violations will bring heftier fines, as well as possible removal from the program.

Only Applies to Creators Under the Revenue Program

Bier explained that this only applies to creators who are under the “Creator Revenue Sharing” program, and these are creators who are monetized from posting content on X.

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The executive revealed that the AI-generated content could be flagged by the likes of posts receiving a Community Note, which clarifies that it contains AI-made aspects. Bier also revealed that they will actively monitor posts and aim to detect metadata from generative AI tools.

It is known that X recently faced massive complaints over Grok AI’s deepfake scandal earlier this year as it allowed users to generate AI photos without limitations. This led to a fiasco where explicit content spread throughout the platform and sexualized many users.

Originally published on Tech Times

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Alibaba’s Qwen AI division head becomes latest exec to leave this year

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Alibaba’s Qwen AI division head becomes latest exec to leave this year


Alibaba’s Qwen AI division head becomes latest exec to leave this year

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Founders from 22 ambitious Northern firms join GC Angels scheme to ‘widen access to venture capital’

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Programme aims to support under-represented founders

Members of the second cohort of the Venture Forward accelerator programme

Members of the second cohort of the Venture Forward accelerator programme(Image: The Growth Company)

Ambitious firms from across the North have won backing from a venture capital project that helps under-represented founders to prepare for their first institutional investment round. GC Angels, the VC investment arm of The Growth Company, has announced the second cohort of its Venture Forward accelerator programme.

The scheme is delivered by GC Angels’ investment managers and aims to give founders the skills they need to win their first VC investment in the next 12 months. The first programme, which ran between October and December last year, saw five of the 30 participating founders win investment within two months of the project finishing.

The second cohort will see another 22 “high-potential businesses” from across the North take part in an eight-week programme in Leeds including one-to-one mentoring, practical fundraising guidance and direct access to investors. Once GC Angels has completed the programme, it will offer up to £500,000 to “standout founders” to help them scale up their businesses.

GC Angels says it has been “prioritising founder diversity in its recruitment” for the latest cohort. It says some 55% of founders in Cohort 2 are from an ethnic minority background while 55% are female founders – “significantly higher than industry averages and reflective of the programme’s mission to widen access to venture capital”.

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Some 23% of founders involved are from Manchester, with 23% from Stockport and 14% from Leeds. They work in areas from construction and e-commerce to sports and agriculture technology.

Marc Shirman, GC head of equity investment, said: “The success of our first cohort demonstrated both the scale of underrepresented talent across the North and the clear need for targeted early-stage support. It was great to work with these founders and to invest in five of them, playing a critical role in their growth journey.

“The quality of applications for Cohort 2 was exceptionally strong, allowing us to continue building a cohort that reflects the diversity and ambition of the region. Venture Forward goes beyond just preparing founders to pitch, giving them insight into investor thinking, boosting confidence, and creating connections that result in real investment.”

The Northern businesses joining the latest cohort

  • vox ANN: Founders Daniel Bottomley, David Bilsborough, Tom Crompton, Rob Tong
  • Biosecure ID Limited: Founders Natalie Tyler, Yogesh Prasad
  • Oaysa: Founder Mark Collier
  • KitchenAI: Founder Gavin Mackay
  • Sineco: Founder Ben Etches
  • APIMS: Founders Simon Hall, Sarah Speake, Khalil Ibrahimi
  • Liaura: Founder Hugh Shepherd
  • Pathways Open: Founders Amanda MacCannell, Sandeep Sharda
  • Cocoon Digital: Founders Emma Thornton, Nicolas Lagoutte
  • Topic Hero Ltd: Founder Dr. Primal Rayan
  • Laika Family: Founder Hanna Latif-Walmsley
  • SportTrack.ai: Founders James Davies
  • Xerogrid Ltd: Founders Alison Butterworth, Ian Emberton
  • LetPlant Technology: Founder Tolu Salami
  • ND Axon: Founder Michael Jakubiak
  • The JADE App: Founders Kamila Malavia, Dhaval Malavia
  • FLAG-Me: Founders Lisa Riste, Leigh Wharton
  • GET RUDE: Founders Nancy Scotford, Peter Walker, Martin Gozdnik
  • Classhoppa: Founders Olivia Cooley-Dawes, Siobhan Fox
  • Clareo Health: Founders Leroy Tonge, Navya Sharma, Priya Mangat
  • Building Impact Tech: Founder Renée Preston
  • Gynomics: Founder Dora Marcec
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