The Guardian

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

Does spending £60m on a young player pay off in the Premier League?

Liverpool paid £60m for the 20-year-old defender Jérémy Jacquet. Previous deals in the league suggest it is a risk

By WhoScored

As Premier League teams get younger and transfer fees get bigger, we are seeing players with little experience commanding huge prices. Jérémy Jacquet’s £60m move to Liverpool makes him the fourth most expensive player aged 20 or younger in Premier League history. Spending so much money for a defender with just 36 appearances in France’s top flight looks like a risk, but how have players Jacquet’s age fared after big moves?

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Trump waters down criticism of UK’s Chagos Islands deal after call with Starmer

US president says deal, which he previously described as act of ‘great stupidity’, was ‘best’ PM could make

Donald Trump has watered down his criticism of the UK’s plan to hand the Chagos Islands back to Mauritius, saying the deal was the “best” Keir Starmer could make.

The US president had described ceding sovereignty of the British Indian Ocean Territory, which includes the Diego Garcia military base, as an “act of great stupidity” only last month. He also claimed the deal was one of many “national security reasons” why the US should acquire Greenland.

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France v Ireland: Six Nations 2026 opener – live

Six Nations match updates, 8.10pm GMT kick-off in Paris
Sign up for The Breakdown | Follow on Bluesky | Mail Lee

For those who are interested, here are the officials for the match:

Referee: Karl Dickson (England)

Assistant Referees: Angus Gardner (Australia), Jordan Way (Australia)

TMO (Television Match Official): Ian Tempest (England)

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The way, the Trump and the lies: prayer breakfast displays US right’s devil’s pact

Trump might not embody Christian values yet is the religious right’s chosen instrument to turn the tide against liberal, godless America

They had come to say a prayer for the father, the son and the holy ghost.

The father was Donald Trump, who, despite sending federal militias to roam Minneapolis, threatening to invade Greenland and telling lies by the dozen, remains the lord and saviour of the religious right.

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Resignations, denials and excuses: Epstein fallout hits some harder than others

While the US president’s many mentions in the Esptein files seem to have no consequences, in the UK Starmer could be the first world leader to fall

All around Europe, the political and business elite are facing an inquest on what blinded so many to think it was permissible to consort with a known child sex offender. As the 3m emails and 1,800 photos released on Friday by the US Department of Justice start to percolate across the continent and through to national media, questions about the moral fibre of this elite are starting to be asked at markedly different levels of intensity.

Squirming businessmen, bankers, politicians, royals, academics, tech bros and partners in law firms have become entangled in Jeffrey Epstein’s interlocking circles of money, power and sex. It seems there was no one in a position of power that Epstein was not in email contact with, and that there was little limit to what this networking elite was prepared to do in return for a gift, a contact or an invite to a sexually charged party. Elon Musk was right when in July 2025 he tweeted – only to quickly delete it – that “so many powerful people want that list suppressed”.

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Calls to halt UK Palantir contracts grow amid ‘lack of transparency’ over deals

Opposition MPs urge Labour to pause public contracts with the US tech firm after attempts to examine deals blocked

Labour should halt public contracts with the US tech company Palantir, opposition politicians have said, amid growing concern at the lack of government transparency over dealings with the company and Peter Mandelson.

Since 2023, Palantir has secured more than £500m in contracts with the NHS and the Ministry of Defence (MoD), while it employed Global Counsel, the lobbying firm founded by Mandelson. Emails released by the US Department of Justice show Mandelson sought help from Jeffrey Epstein to find “rich individuals” as clients.

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Iran is betting that Trump does not have a plan for regime change

Although weakened by airstrikes, sanctions and domestic unrest, Tehran is surprisingly bullish before talks with US

When it comes to Iran and Donald Trump, there is so much bluff, backed by military hardware, that the truth rarely makes an appearance.

It appears that a bullish Iran is going into negotiations with the US on Friday adopting maximalist positions that do not seem greatly different to those it adopted in the five rounds of talks before the negotiations were abruptly halted by the surprise Israeli attack on Iran last June.

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Bonobos can play make-believe much like children, study suggests

An ape was able to identify the location of imaginary objects in pretend scenarios, researchers find

Whether it’s playing at being doctors or hosting a toy’s tea party, children are adept at engaging in make-believe – now researchers say bonobos can do it too.

While there have been anecdotal reports of apes using imaginary objects, including apparently dragging pretend blocks across the floor, experts say it is possible such instances have other explanations.

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‘Stark warning’: pesticide harm to wildlife rising globally, study finds

Toxicity from farm chemicals increased for most species groups between 2013 and 2019, with insects worst affected

Ecological harm from pesticides is growing globally, a study has found, with bugs, fish, pollinators and land-based plants among six species groups hit hardest.

Insects suffered the greatest increase in harm from synthetic farm chemicals between 2013 and 2019, the study shows, with “applied” toxicity rising by 42.9%, followed by soil organisms, which faced an increase of 30.8%.

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‘Part of our biological toolkit’: newborn babies can anticipate rhythm in music, researchers find

Brain activity suggests newborns can detect and predict patterns relating to rhythm, study says

Newborn babies can anticipate rhythm in pieces of music, researchers have discovered, offering insights into a fundamental human trait.

Babies in the womb begin to respond to music by about eight or nine months, as shown by changes in their heart rate and body movements, said Dr Roberta Bianco, the first author of the research who is based at the Italian Institute of Technology in Rome.

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Sargasso

Hopeloos Genuanceerd

Closing Time | Kronos Quartet – Oh Mother, The Handsome Man Tortures Me

Het vermaarde Kronos Quartet spelt hier een traditioneel Irakees liedje: ‘O moeder, die knapperd martelt me’. Gearrangeerd inn samenwerking met Lev Zhurbin (a.k.a. Ljove).

Er bestaat een anekdote dat het Kronos Quartet het lied op 22 oktober 2006 speelde tijdens een concert op de George Washington Universiteit als protest tegen de oorlog in Irak (in 2003 door de VS en UK onder valse voorwendselen begonnen):

En toen het Kronos Quartet de vorige avond optrad aan de George Washington University, introduceerde de eerste violist een Iraaks volkslied met een bondige veroordeling van het Amerikaanse beleid (bron).

In 2018 kwam het Kronos Quartet met het programma ‘Music for Change: The Banned Countries’. Het programma was een protest tegen Trumps presidentiële decreten die vanaf 2017 de toegang tot de Verenigde Staten beperkten voor mensen uit landen met een overwegend islamitische bevolking. Met muziek uit de ‘verboden’ landen: Iran, Irak, Libië, Somalië, Soedan, Syrië, Jemen, Azerbaijan, Egypte, Libanon, Palestina, Afghanistan en Mali.

Helaas daar geen opname van kunnen vinden. De boodschap moge duidelijk zijn:  Het Kronos Quartet krijgt de rimpelingen van Amerikaans buitenlands beleid natuurlijk niet glad gestreken. Maar de muziek uit getroffen landen importeren kan altijd.

Meer van het Kronos Quartet bij Sargasso hier en daar.

 

The Register

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

Substack says intruder lifted emails, phone numbers in months-old breach

Contact details were accessed in an intrusion that went undetected for months, the blogging outfit says

Newsletter platform Substack has admitted that an intruder swiped user contact details months before the company noticed, forcing it to warn writers and readers that their email addresses and other account metadata were accessed without permission.…

Asia-based government spies quietly broke into critical networks across 37 countries

And their toolkit includes a new, Linux kernel rootkit

A state-aligned cyber group in Asia compromised government and critical infrastructure organizations across 37 countries in an ongoing espionage campaign, according to security researchers.…

Rijnmond - Nieuws

Het laatste nieuws van vandaag over Rotterdam, Feyenoord, het verkeer en het weer in de regio Rijnmond

Met deze 'Rotterdamse' app kan je zien of iets in de winkel uit Amerika of Europa komt

Komt een product in de supermarkt uit Europa of Amerika? Volgens de Rotterdamse vrienden Xander en Gerben vinden steeds meer mensen die informatie belangrijk. Daarom ontwikkelden zij een app om erachter te komen. De app, BrandSnap, wordt bij actuele gebeurtenissen vaker gedownload: “Met zoiets als Groenland zien wij een piek.”

Slashdot

News for nerds, stuff that matters

Anthropic Launches Claude Opus 4.6 as Its AI Tools Rattle Software Markets

Anthropic on Thursday released Claude Opus 4.6, its most capable model yet, at a moment when the company's AI tools have already spooked markets over fears that they are disrupting traditional software development and other sectors.

The new model improves on Opus 4.5's coding abilities, the company said -- it plans more carefully, sustains longer agentic tasks, handles larger codebases more reliably, and catches its own mistakes through better debugging. It is also the first Opus-class model to feature a 1M token context window, currently in beta.

On GDPval-AA, an independent benchmark measuring performance on knowledge-work tasks in finance, legal and other domains, Opus 4.6 outperformed OpenAI's GPT-5.2 by roughly 144 Elo points. Anthropic also introduced agent teams in Claude Code, allowing multiple agents to work in parallel on tasks like codebase reviews. Pricing remains at $5/$25 per million input/output tokens.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

VK: Voorpagina

Volkskrant.nl biedt het laatste nieuws, opinie en achtergronden

Forum voor Democratie geboycot in meerdere gemeenten vanwege extreemrechtse kandidaten

Nog niet eerder bewezen: apen kunnen fantasiespelletjes doen

Rechts-radicale ideeën een ‘gevaarlijke cocktail’ met zijn wapens? Nee, zegt D., hij is ‘een liefhebber van militaria’

Behance Featured Projects

The latest projects featured on the Behance

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kottke.org

Jason Kottke's weblog, home of fine hypertext products

Keep the Meter Running With Mouhamadou Aliy & Zohran Mamdani

In addition to his great series Subway Takes, Kareem Rahma does another series called Keep the Meter Running where he hops into NYC cabs, interviews the drivers, and asks them to take him to their favorite places. In the run-up to the NYC mayoral election last year, Rahma jumped into a cab driven by Mouhamadou Aliy, who wanted to pick up his friend along the way to his favorite spot. That friend was now-mayor Zohran Mamdani, who tells the story of how the two of them protested & went on a hunger strike together. It’s a great conversation and video…I watched a snippet of it on Instagram (I missed it last year) and had to track down the whole thing: I’m sorry, how can you not vote for this guy? The real deal, indeed — and voters could tell. There are so many politicians, particularly on the left, who talk a good game, push all the right buttons, and then they sputter or freeze or about-face when the rubber meets the road. It feels hollow; no wonder voters and activists find it hard to get behind the calculation of politicians who they know, deep down, are just saying certain things to get a vote. At least with Republicans, they tell you they’re going to run the country into the ground and then they go out and try to do it.

Tags: food · interviews · Kareem Rahma · Mouhamadou Aliy · NYC · politics · taxis · video · Zohran Mamdani

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