The Guardian

Latest news, sport, business, comment, analysis and reviews from the Guardian, the world's leading liberal voice

China has long sought to control women’s bodies. Increasingly, they’re making their own choices

More women are rejecting state pressure over their reproductive choices, amid the devastating legacy of the one-child policy

Ever since the founding of the People’s Republic of China in 1949, women’s bodies have been the business of the state. In the 1950s, labour for state-controlled work units was organised according to women’s menstrual cycles. Then for decades, there was the one-child policy.

Across vast swathes of the country the policy was enforced with a brutal severity. As well as fines for additional children, women were forced to have abortions and subjected to forced sterilisations.

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Auckland sits near an active faultline, new research suggests, so what next for New Zealand’s biggest city?

The city is exempted from earthquake building rules due to its northerly location, but a study of the Mangatangi Fault has thrown that into question

A fault line south of New Zealand’s most populated city, Auckland, is active and could trigger a devastating earthquake new research shows, dispelling the region’s long-held belief it was largely immune from intense seismic activity.

The research has also raised questions over the recent decision to exempt Auckland from earthquake building regulation.

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Slashdot

News for nerds, stuff that matters

Euro-Office 1.0 Arrives To Open-Source Infighting: 'Compatibility Is Not Sovereignty'

An anonymous reader quotes a report from ZDNet: If digital sovereignty is important to you, and it certainly is in the European Union (EU), then you'll be pleased to know that EuroOffice, a new open-source browser-based office suite alternative to Microsoft 365 and Google Workspace, has officially reached its first stable release. A coalition of EU-based companies, including Nextcloud, Ionos, and other Euro-Stack participants, is positioning Euro-Office as a cornerstone of European digital sovereignty. However, The Document Foundation (TDF), LibreOffice's steward, accuses the project of reinforcing Microsoft's document lock-in, which TDF argues isn't friendly to open standards.

Setting aside the open-source politics for the moment, here's what Euro-Office brings you. The release went live on June 9. It is, however, not a stand-alone office suite. As the software's backers explain in a FAQ, "Euro-Office is more of an integration component. It merely handles document editing itself. Storage, as well as navigation, permissions, and sharing logic, have to be offered by a platform it is integrated in, like Proton Docs, Nextcloud Hub, or OpenProject." So, while you can install Euro-Office on your own Linux server, you'll need to integrate it yourself. If you're not a Linux expert, however, don't give up hope. Some companies have already released packaged, ready-to-install Euro-Office stacks, including Nextcloud Hub 26 Spring, Ionos' Nextcloud Workspace, and Office.eu. These initial deployments are web-based rather than standalone desktop suites.

The goal, organizers say, is to give European organizations a way to host their office suite on EU infrastructure under EU law, while maintaining an experience familiar to Microsoft Office users. Specifically, Euro-Office is meant to be "a solution for editing documents, spreadsheets, and presentations, developed as a true sovereign community collaboration of over a dozen different organizations." TDF's main objection is that Euro-Office's decision to default to Microsoft's OOXML format undercuts its claims of European digital sovereignty, since OOXML remains closely tied to Microsoft Office behavior and control. "Compatibility is not sovereignty," TDF warned, saying a European-branded suite that saves files in OOXML by default "is de facto an ally of Microsoft in its content lock-in strategy."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Found Photograph

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Found Photograph

Found Photo Booth Photograph

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Found Photo Booth Photograph

The Past Slips In

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

The Past Slips In

Found Ektachrome Slide -- The Sirkka Sopanen Collection

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Found Ektachrome Slide -- The Sirkka Sopanen Collection

Found Slide -- Richard Gere -- Ira Richolson Collection

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Found Slide -- Richard Gere -- Ira Richolson Collection

The Register

Biting the hand that feeds IT — Enterprise Technology News and Analysis

Claude is ready for its corporate close-up

Enterprises that have watched Claude claw its way toward mass appeal over the past few months of capacity challenges and pricing realignment should take a closer look at Anthropic's offerings, according to International Data Corporation (IDC). The tech consultancy has been tracking Anthropic's moves over the past six months and says that the AI biz is taking credible steps toward making itself an enterprise AI provider. "Currently, no frontier model company is mature enough to be evaluated as an enterprise AI provider on its own," IDC said in a recent report. "But Anthropic is running at full speed to get there before its competitors." The report is titled "The Transformation of Anthropic (and What to Do About It)," and advises enterprises to revisit their LLM and agent evaluations with an eye toward seeing whether Anthropic might work out as a reliable technology provider. Enterprises, IDC says, remain largely unsold on Anthropic's Claude models, with only 19 percent using them extensively and 25 percent actively evaluating them. OpenAI and Google are better represented in enterprises, with about 42 percent and 38 percent of organizations using their respective products, per IDC's FERS Survey, March 2026. According to The Information, about 86 percent of Anthropic’s 2025 revenue was projected to come from enterprise sales. OpenAI, the report claims, derives just 40 percent of its revenue from business sales, though that figure ($5.2 billion) represented a higher dollar amount than Anthropic's business revenue ($3.9 billion) at the time. That was back in January, only two months after Anthropic began shifting enterprises away from seat-based pricing toward usage-based pricing. Since then, IDC says Anthropic has taken a series of steps to make itself more credible as an enterprise AI provider. "This conclusion might not be obvious: From January through May 2026, Anthropic produced well over 100 public interactions, including official announcements, release notes, blog posts, X posts, partner announcements, hiring news, policy moves, and press-covered transactions," the report says. These initiatives, such as the launch of the Claude Partner Network, have expanded distribution, bolstered brand perception, facilitated future growth, enhanced "stickiness" (aka lock-in), strengthened enterprise support, addressed the needs of specific industries, demonstrated innovation, and shored up the compute supply necessary to deliver services at scale. According to IDC, the enterprise ecosystem commonly focuses on a vendor-neutral, multi-LLM strategy. Nonetheless, the biz argues that the company has made its technology visible enough that Claude is increasingly coming up in conversations among IT decision makers. "Anthropic's transformation has just started, but the direction is clear enough for CIOs and CISOs to pay attention and reassess where Claude fits in a multi-LLM or an agentic AI Strategy," the IDC report says. ®

MetaFilter

The past 24 hours of MetaFilter

Happy Foot Sad Foot

Happy Foot Sad Foot began as a sign for a podiatry clinic in Silver Lake, Los Angeles, but became a landmark and legend as locals (half seriously, half joking) endowed it with prophetic powers-- like how the musician Beck and his friends regularly consulted it when deciding whether to go out carousing. The sign's folklore eventually found its way into three novels as well as a music video, a documentary film, and an animated TV show. MeFi's dreamyshade tells the story of the sign, the people and the businesses of the neighborhood in a Wikipedia article that she wrote with affection for the city where she grew up. [via mefi projects]

dreamyshade has extended the story of Happy Foot Sad Foot into a fascinating rundown of anthropomorphism in art, time-based media and more, but rather than just repeat it here, hop over to her comment on the project!