The drivers who helped build Uber’s success are now trying to build something different
Ride Nuff, a driver-founded London taxi app, is challenging Uber with a flat-fee model. Oxford research suggests the frustration behind it is real.
Ride Nuff, a driver-founded London taxi app, is challenging Uber with a flat-fee model. Oxford research suggests the frustration behind it is real.
Southeast Asia is central to the future of the Belt and Road—but not on China’s terms. Governments across the region are engaging with infrastructure while carefully hedging against dependence in an increasingly unstable global system.
China’s Belt and Road is moving beyond infrastructure into rule-making and governance. As global systems fragment, Beijing is building the financial, legal, and institutional frameworks needed to keep its network operating under pressure.
The Belt and Road Initiative is no longer built for open global trade. War in Ukraine and the Iran conflict have exposed how easily land corridors and maritime chokepoints can be disrupted, forcing China to redesign the system for resilience rather than speed.
AI is no longer just improving intelligence. It is making execution cheap. Once code, prototypes and workflows can be produced quickly and at low cost, the real constraint shifts upward: judgment, trust, workflow design, permissions and control over real-world systems. From Anthropic and GitHub to legal AI and NHS workflow tools, the pattern is already visible.
A war driven shock in energy and fertiliser markets is colliding with the debt burden of food importing states. The danger is not simply higher prices. It is that many governments no longer have the financial capacity to absorb them, even though the sums needed to prevent mass hunger are trivial by the standards of the advanced world.
Anthropic’s Mythos has been sold as a frightening leap in frontier AI. The public evidence suggests something narrower but still serious: a stronger cyber model, a harder policy problem, and a clearer shift from consumer AI toward control over software and infrastructure.
The latest US Iran talks show that the real obstacle is no longer just the nuclear file. It is whether diplomacy can survive when one side is openly threatening blockade and strikes on critical infrastructure.
Dario Amodei’s warning is larger than the future of programmers. The chief executive of Anthropic is describing a world in which frontier AI firms do not merely build tools, but become the hidden cognitive infrastructure beneath work, knowledge, and decision making.
Europe’s aviation system is discovering that fuel was never just a commodity. It was a geopolitical dependency. As disruption around Hormuz deepens, airlines are warning in different ways about supply risk, rising costs, shrinking visibility, and a summer market under strain.
The UN has now voted to call the transatlantic slave trade the gravest crime against humanity. Britain abstained. The United States voted against. That matters because Britain’s wealth was not built only after slavery was challenged. It was built in large part while Britain was one of the paramount powers carrying enslaved Africans across the Atlantic.
The White House says another round of talks with Iran may happen in Pakistan, but no date has been set and the first Islamabad meeting ended without agreement. Tehran says it is open to dialogue, but not to dictated terms.
Donald Trump’s threat to blockade the Strait of Hormuz sounds like a display of naval dominance. In reality it looks more like a thin, dangerous, legally unstable interdiction plan stretched across a vast maritime space, with too few clearly available ships and too much risk of confrontation with Asian powers.
In the Iranian account, the attempted American passage into the Persian Gulf was not a clean naval transit but a failed show of force staged in the shadow of the Islamabad talks, detected early,...
The Islamabad talks failed not because diplomacy was impossible, but because Tehran saw the United States as a power asking for sovereign concessions in an atmosphere shaped by war, coercion, reversals, and deep mistrust. The ceasefire still appears to hold, but the diplomacy behind it has already broken down.
The Iran war did not suddenly break a healthy British economy. It hit a country that had already entered 2026 with weak growth, sticky inflation, poor productivity, and an energy system that still transmits global gas stress into household bills, business costs, and market confidence.
The first AI boom rewarded those who could copy a successful formula and pour in more compute. The next phase looks harsher. The durable advantage may belong to the labs that can combine computing power, research concentration and real algorithmic invention.
The ceasefire may have softened the rhetoric, but it did not restore the Strait of Hormuz as a normal trade artery. With physical cargoes scarce, shipping constrained, and Asia still exposed, oil costs have surged to record highs not seen since the 1970s in real market terms.
The ceasefire did not restore normal transit through Hormuz. It produced a rationed, militarised passage regime in which insurance costs, sanctions risk, legal ambiguity and Iranian discretion matter more than the formal language of de-escalation.
The Iran war did not end dollar power. It exposed the cost of overusing it. The United States still sits at the centre of global finance, but repeated weaponisation of the dollar system is teaching rivals, sanctioned states and even wary partners to hedge, diversify and route around it.
At Halsmere Studios in South London, students say strong management and pastoral care have built trust by word of mouth. That success reveals the deeper truth about Britain’s student housing market: the best run blocks can still thrive, even as the wider model leaves growing pressure for everyone else.
From the 1953 coup to the destruction of the nuclear deal, from sanctions and assassination to the killing of Iran’s Supreme Leader during a period of active mediation, the record looks very different from Tehran than it does from Washington. The distrust is not ideological. It is historical.
Pakistan’s prime minister said the new two week U.S. Iran ceasefire covered Lebanon, and Reuters reported that Iran insisted on Lebanon’s inclusion. But in Israel’s own media, the story immediately fractured: Ynet reported senior security sources saying Lebanon was included, while Netanyahu’s office declared the opposite.
The Pakistan brokered ceasefire between Washington and Tehran is being sold as a narrow diplomatic success. In reality it is something more consequential: proof that the old Gulf trade model, built around unquestioned passage through the Strait of Hormuz under American protection, has already begun to fail.
This legal analysis examines whether reported strikes on a school, health facilities and a bridge in Iran, together with Donald Trump’s reported threats to destroy bridges and power plants, engage the core prohibitions of the law of armed conflict. The strongest present case is not genocide, but serious questions of war crimes, civilian object protection, proportionality, precautions, and unlawful threats against essential civilian infrastructure.
Maria Zakharova’s outburst was propaganda, but it exposed a deeper truth by accident. Germany is not simply buying more weapons. It is rebuilding the administrative, fiscal, industrial, and strategic machinery that makes military power normal again at the centre of Europe.
As Trump threatens wider war and Pakistan’s mediation channel stalls, an overlooked essay by former Iranian foreign minister Mohammad Javad Zarif now reads like the clearest public outline of the kind of settlement Tehran could eventually accept.
The quoted Brent price is no longer the whole story. The real stress is in the physical oil market, where buyers are paying far more for prompt barrels they can actually secure, ship and refine, and Britain is exposed to the inflation that follows.