Financial Times
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Editors | Roula Khalaf |
---|---|
Country | United Kingdom |
First issue date | 1888 |
Political alignment | Economic liberalism |
Circulation | 168,958 (Print); 740,000 (Digital) (as of October 2019) |
Owners | Financial Times Group |
Nikkei Inc. | |
Music groups | The Wall Street Journal |
The Guardian | |
ft. com | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 3037586 |
About Financial Times
The Financial Times is an English-language international daily newspaper owned by Japanese company Nikkei, Inc. , headquartered in London, with a special emphasis on business and economic news.
More Palestinian teens freed amid hopes hostage deal can be extended
... Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman told the Financial Times that the group would need to locate dozens of hostages held in Gaza by other groups in order to secure an extension...
Booker Prize 2023 shortlist: Who are the six authors hoping to win tonight?
... The Financial Times described The Bee Sting as " generous, immersive, sharp-witted and devastating; the sort of novel that becomes a friend for life"...
Sam Altman in talks to rejoin OpenAI board, say reports
... According to reports by Bloomberg and the Financial Times, the artificial intelligence company is exploring various options, including bringing Mr Altman back in his former position or as a board director...
Apple to bridge message divide - but keeps green bubbles
... The Financial Times in early November that Google and other firms had written to the European Commission, urging it to declare Apple s iMessage a core service that should be interoperable with rivals like WhatsApp...
What could be in the 2023 King's Speech?
... The Financial Times that a planned bill to overhaul the UK s audit and corporate governance regimes won t feature in the speech...
Home Secretary Suella Braverman wants to restrict use of tents by homeless
... " According to the Financial Times, The paper reported that sources had said the plans being considered are for two clauses to be inserted in the new criminal justice bill, which applies to England and Wales...
What China wants from Israel-Hamas war
... US officials apparently pressed Mr Wang to " urge calm" with the Iranians, reported the Financial Times...
Rachel Reeves denies claims of plagiarism in new book
... The Financial Times said its reporters had spotted more than 20 examples of apparent plagiarism in the book, including entire sentences and paragraphs...
Coronavirus: YouTube bans "are medically unsubstantiated' content
YouTube coronavirus has forbidden-related content that does not follow The World -health-organization-guidelines
YouTube has advised any prohibited coronavirus-related content, which directly contradicts The World Health organization (WHO).
Google says its own service, it will remove anything that it deems "medically unjustified".
Chief executive Susan Wojcicki said the media giant wanted to stamp out "false information on The Platform ".
The Move follows YouTube to ban.
Ms. Wojcicki made the remarks on Wednesday in her first interview since the global coronavirus lockdown began.
"So people say, 'Vitamin C to Take, take turmeric, we heal them,' these are examples of things that would be a violation of our policies," she told CNN.
“Nothing that would be against World Health Organization recommendations is a violation of our policies. "
Ms. Wojcicki added YouTube had seen a 75% increase in the demand for news from the "authoritative" sources.
last week, Facebook users had read, or jointly false Covid-19 information would be observed, a pop-up warning urging you to visit the website of The Who announced.
the Facebook-owned users stopped forwarding messages already shared More Than four times of the larger community to More Than one chat at a Time .
The Secretary of state for education praised the reaction of Social Media and technology companies with the prohibition of false information about coronavirus.
"I applaud The Work you have done," said Oliver Dowden said, the Digital, culture, media and Sport Select Committee on Wednesday.
But he urged them to take the wrong information faster, during "out of hours" times, such as evenings and weekends.
miscellaneousIt comes, as some of the largest UK news media, including the Daily Telegraph and The Guardian , criticised Google for failing to be transparent about their approach to the filtering of advertising, in addition to coronavirus-related content,
brands, the filter blacklist to prevent their ads next to stories keywords like "coronavirus" and "pandemic".
Such filters are already widely used to avoid, as a car manufacturer ads appear next to stories about the road traffic accidents, for example.
But now some of the media, allegedly, content, frustrated that it is "harmless", such as uplifting human interest stories, are also to be prevented from running these ads.
It is estimated, keyword-ad-blocking could cost the British newspaper industry $50m (£40m) over The Next year.
And Digital Minister John Whittingdale discussed the issue with publishing houses and advertising agencies earlier this month.
Google told the Financial Times it was "in ongoing discussions in terms of how it can help the industry in this difficult Time ."
coronavirus pandemic, youtube, fake news
Source of news: bbc.com