0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Should you send Facebook all your nude photos?The social media company suggests that sending it naked pictures is the best way to protect yourself from revenge porn. But can it be trusted?
Tax rises needed 'to prevent NHS misery'Taxes are going to have to rise to pay for the NHS if the UK is to avoid "a decade of misery" in which the old, sick and vulnerable are let down, say experts.The Institute for Fiscal Studies and Health Foundation said the NHS would need an extra 4% a year - or £2,000 per UK household - for the next 15 years.It said the only realistic way this could be paid for was by tax rises.
Water resistant sunscreen claims ‘meaningless’, says Which?Water-resistant sunscreen products work much less well after they have been worn in the sea, a consumer group has warned ahead of the summer holiday season.Which? tested two products claiming to be water resistant and found the sun protection factor (SPF) dropped by up to 59% after 40 minutes in salt water.Cancer Research UK welcomed the study, warning no sunscreen is 100% effective.But a group representing sunscreen makers called the research alarmist.Current UK tests allow manufacturers to claim a sunscreen is water resistant if the SPF drops by as much as 50% after two 20-minute periods of immersion.The tests are carried out using tap water.However, Which? said its more rigorous tests in salt water, chlorinated water and fast moving water - conditions typically found on holidays - exposed "serious flaws" in the testing regime.
Cut out alcohol and bacon to slash cancer risk, say researchers
'The Mediterranean diet is gone': region's children are fattest in EuropeThe diet Greece, Spain and Italy are famous for - rich in fruit, vegetables, fish and olive oil – is supposedly the healthiest in the world, but obesity is rocketingFor kids in Greece, Spain and Italy, the Mediterranean diet is dead, according to the World Health Organisation, which says that children in Sweden are more likely to eat fish, olive oil and tomatoes than those in southern Europe.Sweets, junk food and sugary drinks have displaced the traditional diet based on fruit and vegetables, fish and olive oil, said Dr Joao Breda, head of the WHO European office for prevention and control of noncommunicable diseases.
The long read: The trouble with charitable billionairesMore and more wealthy CEOs are pledging to give away parts of their fortunes – often to help fix problems their companies caused. Some call this ‘philanthrocapitalism’, but is it just corporate hypocrisy?
Samsung will pretend to break millions of TVs during Champions League finalSamsung is to trick millions of people into believing their TVs have broken as part of a controversial new ad campaign.In the middle of many of the UK's most popular shows – including the Champions League final and Coronation Street – Samsung will show a short ad that is specifically calculated to trick people into believing their TVs have broken down. Screens will initially begin to flicker and then shut off entirely, in a way indistinguishable from a really broken TV set.The ads will begin on Friday evening, when they will still be relatively short. But they will eventually become even longer – eight seconds of a 30 second ad spot – and will cut right into the middle of the Champions League final when it airs on Saturday evening.
GDPR: What do the endless privacy policy emails mean?
Google in court over ‘clandestine tracking’ of 4.4m iPhone users
GDPR quiz: How will data privacy law affect you?