TV
LIVE STREAMING 24 JAM – KOMPAS TV
Halo, Sahabat KompasTV! Untuk pengalaman menonton yang lebih menyenangkan dan lebih baik, silakan ubah kualitas videomu ke 1080p HD!
Untuk pengguna laptop/PC/Smart TV: dari menu setting (ikon gerigi) di kanan bawah layar YouTube-mu, Lalu pilih QUALITY dan mode quality ke 1080p.
Bagi pengguna smartphone: dari menu setting (ikon titik tiga) di kanan atas layar YouTube-mu, lalu pilih QUALITY dan pilih ke mode quality ke 1080p.
===============
Sahabat KompasTV, jangan lupa like, comment, dan subscribe channel YouTube KompasTV, juga aktifkan lonceng notifikasi agar tidak ketinggalan update mengenai isu-isu terkini di Indonesia.
Jangan lewatkan live streaming KompasTV 24 jam non stop di https://www.kompas.tv/live. Agar tidak ketinggalan berita-berita terkini, terlengkap, serta laporan langsung dari berbagai daerah di Indonesia, yuk subscribe channel youtube KompasTV. Aktifkan juga lonceng supaya kamu dapat notifikasi video terbaru dari KompasTV.
Sahabat KompasTV juga bisa memperoleh informasi terkini melalui website: www.kompas.tv
Media sosial KompasTV:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/KompasTV
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kompastv
Twitter: https://twitter.com/KompasTV
TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@kompastvnews
#kompastv #livestreaming
source
TV
ChuChu TV Classics – Head, Shoulders, Knees & Toes Exercise Song + More Popular Baby Nursery Rhymes
Don’t miss out on the awesome and fun-filled musical journey with ChuChu and friends! Watch them bust out their fitness routine in the “Head, Shoulders, Knees and Toes” song, play with their umbrella buddies in the “Rain, Rain Go Away” song, catch naughty Johny sneaking to the kitchen to eat sugar in the “Johny Johny Yes Papa” song, learn how to stay safe with King Humpty Dumpty, sing along to the ABCs in the “Phonics Song”, and learn about sharing and caring from the sheep at the farm in the “Baa Baa Black Sheep” song. And that’s just the tip of the iceberg! This is a must-see experience for you and your kids.
ChuChu TV is now available on all major music streaming platforms. You can now listen to your favorite ChuChu TV songs anytime, anywhere.
Listen on Spotify ► https://orcd.co/npnkjdp
Listen on Apple Music ► https://music.lnk.to/NkiCKW
Listen on Amazon Music ► https://music.amazon.com/albums/B0BZZJBFF7?ref=AM4APC_AL_P_en_US_B00LP2FTLC_L7KKQQr
Listen on YouTube Music ► https://music.youtube.com/channel/UC7fk9tVVNRZAjhjps2O4Ygg?si=wAXe-rmmwVnILxyN
Check out our popular playlists to keep your little ones engaged and learning non-stop!
Click here for brand new songs with Baby Taku & Friends ► https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLV-cxl3VSwWEYTEMUd3RSzrTZq2q1hVnW
Click here for Baby songs compilations! ► https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLV-cxl3VSwWEdz04xWv32x5G4XTBVOUfX
Click here for Classic Nursery Rhymes! ► https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLV-cxl3VSwWHa83pPHIealm1vg0Cdp3aZ
ChuChu TV creates entertaining and educational videos for toddlers globally. Their lovable characters aid in developing cognitive skills, memory, recognition, and more. Click here to Subscribe to our channel – https://bit.ly/32NxN7y
Copyright © ChuChu TV® Studios LLP. All Rights Reserved!
#ChuChuTV #NurseryRhymes #BabySongs
source
TV
Seven alleges 13 women have made complaints about former Sydney reporter Robert Ovadia, court hears | Seven Network
The Seven Network has alleged that 13 more women came forward with complaints about the conduct of Robert Ovadia since the senior reporter was sacked in late June, the federal court has heard.
In documents filed in the court late on Thursday, Ovadia’s lawyers argued their client’s conduct did not amount to sexual harassment or serious misconduct and alleged he was unlawfully sacked.
Ovadia was accused of creating edited photos and a caricature of “Person A” and sending them to that person, an act which did not constitute sexual harassment, the documents claimed.
He also allegedly sent a photo copied from the internet of a flaccid penis to “Person B” which was not of a sexual nature and did not amount to sexual harassment, the documents further claimed.
“No reasonable employer could have formed form the view that the conduct amounted to sexual harassment, the photo was not conduct of a sexual nature,” the statement of claim said.
The veteran Sydney reporter was stood down in June while Seven conducted an internal investigation into allegations of “inappropriate behaviour”.
Two weeks later the 51-year-old was sacked, and he said the allegations were “malicious”.
“Yes I’ve been sacked and there will be more to say about that in the appropriate forum at the appropriate time,” Ovadia told Guardian Australia at the time.
Ovadia has maintained the allegations are false and hired workplace lawyer John Laxon of Sydney’s Laxon Lex Lawyers to represent him.
He filed a wrongful dismissal claim against the Seven Network and Seven West Media’s news and editor-in-chief, Anthony De Ceglie.
At the first case management hearing on Thursday, counsel for Seven, Vanja Bulut, said the defendants had email evidence of complaints about Ovadia’s conduct from another 13 women.
“Subsequent to the applicant’s dismissal, 13 more females have come forward with complaints in relation to his conduct, and they’re now subject to investigation,” Bulut told federal court justice Elizabeth Raper.
“The applicant has been put on notice of that. That is, my instructors have written to our learned friend’s instructors, setting out the additional allegations that have come to light subsequent to the dismissal and to the extent that those allegations are recorded in documents.”
Bulut said the conduct that had come to light “does provide a basis to summarily terminate” and Seven will rely on the additional allegations to defend its case.
Barrister Andrew Gotting, for Ovadia, argued his client had been sent some information, but it had been redacted and lacked detail.
“That redaction has occurred without the consent of the applicant,” Gotting said. “There is much material that is being relied upon, apparently for the purpose of resisting a contractual claim, that has not been provided to the applicant.”
Gotting asked the court to order that Seven file its evidence first. “Where there are allegations of serious misconduct, the onus falls on the employer,” he said. Raper denied that request.
Bulut opposed Ovadia’s request for mediation, saying Seven “sees no benefit in the mediation”.
But Raper ordered the parties to attend mediation at a date to be determined in October before a judicial registrar and said they must all attend in person. An earlier Fair Work Commission mediation, which failed, was conducted by video link.
If successful, the mediation may result in the case being settled before trial.
Raper ordered that the respondents file and serve their defences to the statement of claim by 12 September and the applicant to file and serve any reply by 12 October.
The proceedings have been listed for case management on 10 February 2025.
After the hearing, Ovadia told Guardian Australia: “The claims are baseless and Seven has never provided evidence despite repeated requests. Even today, no evidence to support any of this – just a dirty tactic and headline to bully me away from defending myself.”
TV
Black Mirror: Huge ensemble cast announced for season 7 as sequel episode revealed
Prepare for more mind-bending and dystopian telly in 2025 – because Black Mirror is returning with a starry cast for season seven.
In news confirmed this week, Netflix has announced a huge list of names for the forthcoming season, and teased a follow-up to a fan-favourite episode from season four.
Charlie Brooker’s acclaimed sci-fi anthology series, which speculatively explores society’s relationship with technology, is returning with names including Crazy Rich Asians actor Awkwafina, former Doctor Who star Peter Capaldi, The Crown’s Emma Corrin, Insecure’s Issa Rae, Girlfriends star Tracee Ellis Ross and IT Crowd actor Chris O’Dowd.
In news shared during Netflix’s fandom-focused Geek Week, other names announced include Patsy Ferran, Paul Giamatti, Lewis Gribben, Cristin Milioti, Billy Magnussen, Jimmy Simpson, Milanka Brooks, Osy Ikhile, Rashida Jones, Siena Kelly, Rosy McEwen, Paul G. Raymond and Succession actor Harriet Walter.
The new season is also teased to include a follow-up to “USS Callister”, a much-loved opening episode for season four, which aired in 2017.
“USS Callister” followed a troubled computer programmer named Robert Daly (Jesse Plemon) who has a desire to possess his co-workers, by stealing their DNA, feeding it into his computer, and introducing digital clones of them into the world of the USS Enterprise of Space Fleet, where Daly gives himself a Captain Kirk-like vibe as Captain Robert Daly.
Teasing the news at Netflix’s Geek Week, the show’s creator Charlie Brooker told fans they would recognise a “certain spaceship from one of our episodes reappearing”.
He continued: “We’ve done a sequel for the first time in Black Mirror history. Normally, I kill off all the characters at the end of an episode, and I kept some of ’em alive. I’m growing as a human.”
So far, we know that the forthcoming season will consist of six episodes and air on Netflix sometime in 2025.
Watch Apple TV+ free for 7 days
New subscribers only. £8.99/mo. after free trial. Plan auto-renews until cancelled
Watch Apple TV+ free for 7 days
New subscribers only. £8.99/mo. after free trial. Plan auto-renews until cancelled
Brooker told fans the show was going “back to basics” and channelling the “OG Black Mirror”.
“You can expect a mix of genres and styles,” Brooker said. “We’ve got six episodes this time, and two of them are basically feature-length. Some of them are deeply unpleasant, some are quite funny, and some are emotional.”
“We have evolved to a place where it’s kind of OG Black Mirror this season,” he said. “So it’s all sci-fi, techno-dystopia.”
In a cryptic and glitchy video shared on X/Twitter, the Black Mirror account teased the names of the cast as well as directors and writers from previous episodes.
In true Black Mirror style, the caption read: “TCKR_Confidential_NotForDistribution.mp4” as a series of analogue computer images and “loading” messages flash on the screen.
The first two seasons of the series aired on Channel 4 in 2011 and 2013 respectively, before it was acquired by Netflix, where it returned with its latest four seasons.
TV
🔴24/7 LIVE Cat TV: Birds and Squirrels for Cats to Watch😺 Forest Clowns on the Ground
TV for cats, dogs, parrots, budgies and all nature lovers. Non-stop streaming of little birds and Eurasian Red Squirrels.
Welcome to a world inhabited by:
Eurasian Red Squirrel (Sciurus Vulgaris)
Great Spotted Woodpecker (Dendrocopos Major)
Great Tit (Parus Major)
Eurasian Blue Tit (Cyanistes Caeruleus)
Eurasian Siskin (Carduelis Spinus)
Common Blackbird (Turdus Merula)
Chaffinch (Fringilla Coelebs)
Eurasian Magpie (Pica Pica)
Bullfinch (Pyrrhula pyrrhula)
Eurasian Jay (Garrulus Glandarius)
Pre-recorded video from Finland by Red Squirrel Studios
Note: link changes when stream crashes/restarts!
source
TV
More cuts and a merger with Channel 4: the BBC contemplates its radical future | BBC
Within days of her appointment as culture secretary, Lisa Nandy met one of the few prominent BBC presenters who is not currently embroiled in a scandal: Hacker T Dog, the puppet star of CBBC.
“Hacker, I don’t know if you remember but you once met my little boy and made him cry,” Nandy told the troublesome terrier at the BBC’s Salford studios last month. “So I’m afraid I am announcing today that I am shutting the BBC down.”
“Hooray! It worked!” replied the dog.
Watching this exchange between two Wiganers was the BBC’s director general, Tim Davie, who will be hoping for a slightly different outcome from his future negotiations with Nandy.
He now faces the single challenge that will define his legacy at the corporation: whether he can strike a deal with the government over the long-term financial future of the BBC.
Negotiations over the future of the licence fee – and whether it is retained in its current form or replaced with a subscription model or funded by a new tax – are expected to begin in January and last two years, with a deal needing to be in place by the end of the current royal charter in 2027.
Labour’s election victory – and Keir Starmer’s vague commitment to the licence fee – suggested the clouds may be parting for the BBC after 14 years of cuts by Tory-led governments.
Yet one BBC insider warned “don’t count your chickens yet”, as the political threat is replaced by an acknowledged threat of irrelevance with 500,000 households a year cancelling their TV licence. As a result, there is a growing acceptance that extreme thinking might be required to secure public service broadcasting.
One radical suggestion is to consider merging Channel 4, which was threatened with privatisation by the Conservatives, with the BBC to create a public service television powerhouse. Two television industry sources have said that the BBC discussed a merger as part of the next round of licence fee negotiations.
Such a move would combine two publicly controlled broadcasters, add £1bn of revenue to the BBC’s balance sheet, and could enable Channel 4’s profits to subsidise other parts of the BBC.
Phil Redmond, the veteran television executive who created Brookside and Hollyoaks for Channel 4, is a proponent of a merger. He said that, in the face of declining youth audiences, a deal between the BBC and Channel 4 would secure the long-term future of public service broadcasting in the UK: “Reforming the BBC has to include reforming Channel 4. The big debate is not about who is sitting in what desk in what building.”
He said it could enable cost-cutting at Channel 4 and free up its budget to be spent on commissioning new programmes. “You could get rid of a lot of the technical side, the admin, HR, finance, all that stuff can go. The only thing you’d keep is the sales team for a while,” he added.
Another commercial television executive said they had heard the BBC has looked at a merger with Channel 4 under which the commercial channel would operate as a semi-independent entity under BBC Studios, the corporation’s for-profit subsidiary.
They said this could be similar to how the BBC owns UKTV, the parent company of Dave, and such a move could “soothe” independent production companies worried about the commercial broadcaster’s longtime financial future. Channel 4 could then act as a talent incubator for British formats created by BBC Studios that could then be sold around the world.
A BBC spokesperson said: “We do not recognise what you’ve put to us. There are no ongoing discussions regarding the acquisition of Channel 4 and nor are we developing a proposal to do so.”
A government source also said a merger of the two public service broadcasters was “not a proposal we are currently considering”.
Another radical idea for the future of the BBC is mutualisation, with all licence fee payers given a stake in the broadcaster on a model similar to the Co-operative Group or a building society. Nandy proposed such a scheme during her 2020 leadership campaign, saying it would allow licence fee payers to “decide the trade-offs that the BBC must make to secure its future” while ensuring the organisation is protected from meddling by politicians withholding funding or appointing board members.
The BBC could also ask the government to pick up the bill for the World Service. This used to be subsidised by the Foreign Office as a tool of British soft power but the cost was largely lumped on to licence fee payers as part of coalition-era cuts. Yet convincing the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, to hand over hundreds of millions of pounds for overseas broadcasting would be a tough ask, given the government’s messaging about difficult decisions.
The BBC’s overall audience remains enormous, especially among older age groups, but the future is less rosy. A growing number of young people barely engage with the broadcaster’s content, undermining the long-term case for a universal licence fee.
Less than half of British 16- to 24-year-olds watch any linear television in a given week, according to the latest Ofcom research, raising questions about how long the BBC can maintain dozens of separate television and radio channels – and when it should start to close outlets and lump everything on its digital offering.
This combination of financial pressure and changing audience habits could force Davie and Nandy to envisage a radically different BBC, doing less with less but still acting as a hub for British public service television output. In a sign of the times, this week the BBC began experimenting with using artificial intelligence to produce transcriptions of BBC Sounds content – while also preparing for a further round of human job cuts in the autumn.
The hope for the BBC is that Nandy accepts warnings from the British media industry about the existential threat it is facing. The playwright James Graham, responsible for the hit show Sherwood, last week told the Edinburgh television festival that the UK is being too complacent about the future of the BBC and other public service broadcasters: “We will miss them, if they ever go.”
-
News2 days ago
You’re a Hypocrite, And So Am I
-
Sport1 day ago
Joshua vs Dubois: Chris Eubank Jr says ‘AJ’ could beat Tyson Fury and any other heavyweight in the world
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
‘Running of the bulls’ festival crowds move like charged particles
-
News1 day ago
Israel strikes Lebanese targets as Hizbollah chief warns of ‘red lines’ crossed
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
Quantum ‘supersolid’ matter stirred using magnets
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
Ethereum is a 'contrarian bet' into 2025, says Bitwise exec
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
Sunlight-trapping device can generate temperatures over 1000°C
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
Bitcoin miners steamrolled after electricity thefts, exchange ‘closure’ scam: Asia Express
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
Cardano founder to meet Argentina president Javier Milei
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
Dorsey’s ‘marketplace of algorithms’ could fix social media… so why hasn’t it?
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
Low users, sex predators kill Korean metaverses, 3AC sues Terra: Asia Express
-
Sport1 day ago
UFC Edmonton fight card revealed, including Brandon Moreno vs. Amir Albazi headliner
-
Technology1 day ago
iPhone 15 Pro Max Camera Review: Depth and Reach
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
How one theory ties together everything we know about the universe
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
How to unsnarl a tangle of threads, according to physics
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
How to wrap your mind around the real multiverse
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
Nuclear fusion experiment overcomes two key operating hurdles
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
CertiK Ventures discloses $45M investment plan to boost Web3
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
DZ Bank partners with Boerse Stuttgart for crypto trading
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
RedStone integrates first oracle price feeds on TON blockchain
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
Bitcoin bulls target $64K BTC price hurdle as US stocks eye new record
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
SEC asks court for four months to produce documents for Coinbase
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
‘No matter how bad it gets, there’s a lot going on with NFTs’: 24 Hours of Art, NFT Creator
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
Blockdaemon mulls 2026 IPO: Report
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
Coinbase’s cbBTC surges to third-largest wrapped BTC token in just one week
-
Politics3 days ago
Trump says he will meet with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi next week
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
Why this is a golden age for life to thrive across the universe
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
Hyperelastic gel is one of the stretchiest materials known to science
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
How to wrap your head around the most mind-bending theories of reality
-
Technology3 days ago
Can technology fix the ‘broken’ concert ticketing system?
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
A new kind of experiment at the Large Hadron Collider could unravel quantum reality
-
Politics1 day ago
Labour MP urges UK government to nationalise Grangemouth refinery
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
Maxwell’s demon charges quantum batteries inside of a quantum computer
-
News1 day ago
Brian Tyree Henry on voicing young Megatron, his love for villain roles
-
Technology3 days ago
Would-be reality TV contestants ‘not looking real’
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
Quantum time travel: The experiment to ‘send a particle into the past’
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
Physicists are grappling with their own reproducibility crisis
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
2 auditors miss $27M Penpie flaw, Pythia’s ‘claim rewards’ bug: Crypto-Sec
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
$12.1M fraud suspect with ‘new face’ arrested, crypto scam boiler rooms busted: Asia Express
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
‘Everything feels like it’s going to shit’: Peter McCormack reveals new podcast
-
Science & Environment1 day ago
UK spurns European invitation to join ITER nuclear fusion project
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
A tale of two mysteries: ghostly neutrinos and the proton decay puzzle
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
Decentraland X account hacked, phishing scam targets MANA airdrop
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
CZ and Binance face new lawsuit, RFK Jr suspends campaign, and more: Hodler’s Digest Aug. 18 – 24
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
Beat crypto airdrop bots, Illuvium’s new features coming, PGA Tour Rise: Web3 Gamer
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
Memecoins not the ‘right move’ for celebs, but DApps might be — Skale Labs CMO
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
Telegram bot Banana Gun’s users drained of over $1.9M
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
VonMises bought 60 CryptoPunks in a month before the price spiked: NFT Collector
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
Vitalik tells Ethereum L2s ‘Stage 1 or GTFO’ — Who makes the cut?
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
Ethereum falls to new 42-month low vs. Bitcoin — Bottom or more pain ahead?
-
Business1 day ago
How Labour donor’s largesse tarnished government’s squeaky clean image
-
News1 day ago
Church same-sex split affecting bishop appointments
-
Technology1 day ago
Fivetran targets data security by adding Hybrid Deployment
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
Elon Musk’s SpaceX contracted to destroy retired space station
-
News1 day ago
Freed Between the Lines: Banned Books Week
-
MMA1 day ago
UFC’s Cory Sandhagen says Deiveson Figueiredo turned down fight offer
-
MMA1 day ago
Diego Lopes declines Movsar Evloev’s request to step in at UFC 307
-
Football1 day ago
Niamh Charles: Chelsea defender has successful shoulder surgery
-
Football1 day ago
Slot's midfield tweak key to Liverpool victory in Milan
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
The physicist searching for quantum gravity in gravitational rainbows
-
Fashion Models1 day ago
Miranda Kerr nude
-
Fashion Models1 day ago
“Playmate of the Year” magazine covers of Playboy from 1971–1980
-
News4 days ago
Did the Pandemic Break Our Brains?
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
How Peter Higgs revealed the forces that hold the universe together
-
Science & Environment1 day ago
Odd quantum property may let us chill things closer to absolute zero
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
Quantum forces used to automatically assemble tiny device
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
Rethinking space and time could let us do away with dark matter
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
ITER: Is the world’s biggest fusion experiment dead after new delay to 2035?
-
News3 days ago
Italy braces for rain as 21 killed in Europe floods
-
Business3 days ago
Glasgow to host scaled-back Commonwealth Games in 2026
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
Liquid crystals could improve quantum communication devices
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
Time may be an illusion created by quantum entanglement
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
How the weird and powerful pull of black holes made me a physicist
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
X-ray laser fires most powerful pulse ever recorded
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
Being in two places at once could make a quantum battery charge faster
-
Science & Environment1 day ago
We may have spotted a parallel universe going backwards in time
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
Arthur Hayes’ ‘sub $50K’ Bitcoin call, Mt. Gox CEO’s new exchange, and more: Hodler’s Digest, Sept. 1 – 7
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
Treason in Taiwan paid in Tether, East’s crypto exchange resurgence: Asia Express
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
Leaked Chainalysis video suggests Monero transactions may be traceable
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
Journeys: Robby Yung on Animoca’s Web3 investments, TON and the Mocaverse
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
Louisiana takes first crypto payment over Bitcoin Lightning
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
Are there ‘too many’ blockchains for gaming? Sui’s randomness feature: Web3 Gamer
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
Crypto whales like Humpy are gaming DAO votes — but there are solutions
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
Help! My parents are addicted to Pi Network crypto tapper
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
Crypto scammers orchestrate massive hack on X but barely made $8K
-
Science & Environment1 day ago
A single atom could drive a piston in a quantum engine
-
Science & Environment1 day ago
Tiny magnet could help measure gravity on the quantum scale
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
Why we need to invoke philosophy to judge bizarre concepts in science
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
Jupiter’s stormy surface replicated in lab
-
Science & Environment2 days ago
Future of fusion: How the UK’s JET reactor paved the way for ITER
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
SEC sues ‘fake’ crypto exchanges in first action on pig butchering scams
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
Fed rate cut may be politically motivated, will increase inflation: Arthur Hayes
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
Binance CEO says task force is working ‘across the clock’ to free exec in Nigeria
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
Elon Musk is worth 100K followers: Yat Siu, X Hall of Flame
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
Bitcoin price hits $62.6K as Fed 'crisis' move sparks US stocks warning
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
Bitcoin bull rally far from over, MetaMask partners with Mastercard, and more: Hodler’s Digest Aug 11 – 17
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
‘Silly’ to shade Ethereum, the ‘Microsoft of blockchains’ — Bitwise exec
-
CryptoCurrency1 day ago
ETH falls 6% amid Trump assassination attempt, looming rate cuts, ‘FUD’ wave
-
Business1 day ago
Thames Water seeks extension on debt terms to avoid renationalisation
-
Politics1 day ago
The Guardian view on 10 Downing Street: Labour risks losing the plot | Editorial
You must be logged in to post a comment Login