↩ Accueil

Vue lecture

We Asked Roblox’s C.E.O. About Child Safety. It Got Tense.

This week the company announced that it would require users to undergo an A.I.-powered age estimation process in order to chat with others on the platform. Will this change reassure parents?

© Photo Illustration by The New York Times

  •  

Europe scrambles to respond to US plan for Ukraine and ‘aggressive timeline’ – Europe live

American diplomats said Donald Trump was trying to achieve peace ‘with an incredible sense of momentum’

German Bild tabloid is also reporting that Merz is expected to hold a phone call not only with Zelenskyy, but also with the US president, Donald Trump.

Mind you: there’s been no official confirmation yet.

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Thomas Peter/Reuters

© Photograph: Thomas Peter/Reuters

© Photograph: Thomas Peter/Reuters

  •  

The most shocking thing about beauty products for kids? Where the demand is coming from | Morwenna Ferrier

A new brand flogging face masks for four-year-olds is disturbing, but it’s worth asking why children are asking for these products in the first place

As a newish mother, I am only too aware of the myriad ways we have failed our children. And then I came across a new skincare company aimed at four-year-olds. It’s early days for Rini, whose sole product is now a Korean-made hydrating facial mask. A healing ointment and daily barrier cream are allegedly in the works, too. If you were under any illusions as to the mask’s purpose, it is infused with vitamin B12 – which, according to various skincare sites, improves elasticity and skin texture – with a clear peel-on application process modelled online, Patrick Bateman-style, by a preschooler.

On the one hand, I appreciate that children put all sorts on their faces – face paint, stickers, poo, toothpaste, kitchen cleaner, a sibling’s blood, and that’s just in this last week alone – and that their faces will occasionally need to be cleaned. And while it’s entirely plausible that some parents will be moved watching their child dip their delicate toes into the world of Korean beauty, I’m marginally more concerned by the strains of strep and croup doing the rounds at my two-year-old’s childcare (I am also worried about my six-year-old’s health, but if this company is anything to go by, he’s probably beyond help).

Morwenna Ferrier is the Guardian’s fashion and lifestyle editor

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Undefined Undefined/Getty Images

© Photograph: Undefined Undefined/Getty Images

© Photograph: Undefined Undefined/Getty Images

  •  

Adam Zivo: Japan’s Iron Lady shows how Canada should handle China

Japan’s first female prime minister Sanae Takaichi, a hardline conservative, has taken a hawkish stance on China since being elected last month. In one of her first parliamentary speeches, she affirmed, in unusually explicit terms, Japan’s commitment to militarily defending Taiwan from any future Chinese invasion, instigating a diplomatic meltdown from Beijing. Read More
  •  

Avi Benlolo: Shame on Toronto for flying Palestinian flag at City Hall

On October 7, Hamas murdered 1,200 innocent people in one of the most barbaric massacres on the planet in recent decades. Many of these murders were committed by military fatigue wearing terrorists with the Palestinian flag sown into the sleeve of their uniform. The beheading of young children; the burning of entire families huddled together in fear; the shooting of the elderly in the back and the heinous misogynistic rape of young girls — these crimes against humanity were all done under the flag of "Palestine." Read More
  •  

Opinion: Canada has lost control of its immigration system — and Canadians know it

Recent polling shows that more than half of Canadians now believe immigration levels are too high — double the number from just three years ago. One-third think immigration increases crime, and six in 10 say too many newcomers fail to adopt Canadian values. These are not the views of a suddenly intolerant country. They reflect a public losing confidence in a system that no longer seems to protect their safety or the integrity of Canadian citizenship. Read More
  •  

Starc showed Australia they didn’t need the Big Three – the Big One would do | Geoff Lemon

With no Cummins and Hazlewood, Boland off the boil and Doggett on debut, the veteran quick notched a career-best seven for 58 to dominate the opening stanza in Perth

When an Ashes series finally begins and the interminable prognosticating reaches its end, it is customary to discover anew that all of the talk is just talk. So it was for all of us who have offered opinions on the absence of Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood, and how losing two champion fast bowlers would drastically weaken the Australian side. Instead, it only gave space to their remaining colleague to dominate the first stanza of the Perth Test on his own. In barely a session, Mitchell Starc turned the Big Three into the Big One.

Scott Boland was off the boil – it didn’t matter. Brendan Doggett was on debut, chipping in around the edges – it didn’t matter either. Starc has now notched a career best in consecutive innings: six for nine in Kingston back in July, followed by seven for 58 here.

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Darrian Traynor/Getty Images

© Photograph: Darrian Traynor/Getty Images

© Photograph: Darrian Traynor/Getty Images

  •