Floppy disks and vaccine cards: exhibition tells tale of privacy rights in UK
Is the Silvertown tunnel a bridge to the future or a step backwards?
From high above the Thames, the distinctive portals of the new Silvertown tunnel are clearly visible: a black arch on the North Greenwich peninsula, a green conical building a mile across the water in Newham.On Monday, tens of thousands of cars and lorries will start passing between them, almost directly below the cable car built by Boris Johnson, as if on a mysterious ley line that induces London mayors to embark on unloved transport projects.The Silvertown tunnel, a 0.9-mile, £2.2bn project in what is already one of the most polluted parts of the capital, does not appear an obvious choice to be championed by the occupant of City Hall, Sadiq Khan – better known for expanding the ultra-low emission zone (Ulez) to improve air quality
Sobering stuff: UK alcohol industry reels from impact of Trump tariffs
To some extent, the US owes its very existence to the Welsh.Up to 18 of the 56 signatories of the 1776 Declaration of Independence claimed Welsh heritage, depending on which source you believe, including one delegate who was born in Llandaff.That is why Donald Trump’s “Liberation Day”, when he imposed “reciprocal” tariffs on nearly every country in the world, was such a sobering moment for the Welsh whisky maker Penderyn Distillery.In 2014, during a Nato summit in the UK, the distillery presented Barack Obama with a bottle of Penderyn Independence, celebrating America’s escape from colonial rule.Now that particular special relationship is hanging by a thread
Australia’s social media ban is attracting global praise – but we’re no closer to knowing how it would work
The smash hit Netflix show Adolescence, which explores a teenage murder fuelled by social media and toxic masculinity, has renewed calls for social media bans in some countries. One of the show’s stars this week said the UK should follow Australia’s lead in banning children aged under 16 from social media platforms.The ban has been praised in the US and UK, and is described as “world-leading” by the Australian government. Time magazine this week praised the prime minister, Anthony Albanese, for a “remarkable” policy that was “politically uncontroversial” on the basis that both major parties supported it.Left unsaid was all the criticism raised by mental health groups, LGBTQ+ groups and other campaigners during the rushed process to pass the bill in parliament last year
TikTok ban deadline looms in US amid last-minute takeover bids
Once again, the future of TikTok in the US is at stake. After a years-long tussle over whether or not to ban the app in the country, the deadline for the company to divest or sell its assets to a non-Chinese owner is up again on 5 April. Donald Trump has said his administration is “very close” to a deal for the app.A handful of potential buyers have said they’re interested in the tremendously popular social media app and various news reports have floated other types of deals, including an investment from the Trump-friendly venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz or a bid from Amazon. The president signed an executive order in January to postpone a ban-or-divest deadline until April; earlier this week he said he would “like to see TikTok remain alive”
County cricket opening day: Cox stars for Essex v Surrey, Yorkshire skittled and more – as it happened
The first day of the cricket season in early April isn’t supposed to feel like this. T-shirts, ice-creams, arm-crispingly warm. At Chelmsford, where nearly 2,500 came through the turnstiles, feet in the queue before half past nine, the champions were in town.But Surrey, seeking their fourth title on the bounce, didn’t have things their way against Essex. They lost the toss on a flat pitch, and first Paul Walter, then Jordan Cox, batted with a bounce and a song
Lando Norris: ‘You don’t have to have a killer instinct to be world champion’
McLaren driver is determined to succeed as a nice guy in F1 but don’t mistake his kindness for a lack of fightHis credentials as a potential Formula One world champion have been questioned but Lando Norris is unperturbed. With an almost startling level of honesty, highly unusual in the sport, the British driver has considered conventional wisdom and its implications and rejected it. That he wants to win is in no doubt but he will not allow his sense of self to be subsumed at the altar of success at all costs.“I feel like there is a very prescribed version of how people say a world champion needs to be – overly aggressive,” he says in his McLaren team’s hospitality on a chilly day in Suzuka before this weekend’s Japanese Grand Prix. “I want to win a championship
Thousands of churches face financial blow after VAT changes on repair works
John Richards obituary
Stephen Colbert on Trump tariffs: ‘America is finally free from the tyranny of being able to buy stuff from other countries’
‘No agenda’ in Guardian investigation of Noel Clarke, high court hears
Prudence Skene obituary
Stephen Colbert on Trump administration’s deportations: ‘It’s goodbye, habeas corpus’