FlashFeed

Bellingham covered his mouth talking to Ayew – no red card shown
⚽ Sport

Bellingham covered his mouth talking to Ayew – no red card shown

England midfielder Jude Bellingham was not shown a red card after covering his mouth while speaking to Ghana's Jordan Ayew during a match. The referee determined the gesture did not constitute a sending-off offence. FIFA rules on players covering their mouths during on-pitch communication have been a subject of ongoing debate.

Drug charges against Olympic skier Bode Miller to be dropped
⚽ Sport

Drug charges against Olympic skier Bode Miller to be dropped

A pair of misdemeanor drug charges against Olympic gold medalist alpine skier Bode Miller will be dropped, according to his attorney. No further details about the circumstances of the charges or the reason for their dismissal were provided by the source.

💡
How 1970s Tourism Transformed Bali Beyond Recognition
💡 Did You Know

How 1970s Tourism Transformed Bali Beyond Recognition

In the 1970s, Bali's southern coastline was rapidly transformed by a tourism boom that brought hotels, parking lots, and nightlife hotspots catering to young travellers from North America, Europe, and Australasia. This wave of mass tourism collided with the island's centuries-old social and religious order. The piece explores what survived of traditional Balinese culture amid that upheaval.

📈
Spravia CEO: Apartment Prices Are Negotiable, Developers' Margins Aren't the Only Issue
📈 Business

Spravia CEO: Apartment Prices Are Negotiable, Developers' Margins Aren't the Only Issue

Tomasz Konarski, CEO of Spravia, argues that Polish buyers' creditworthiness depends on many factors beyond flat prices, which he notes can be negotiated — as evidenced by the gap between asking and transaction prices. He says public debate over housing affordability focuses too narrowly on developer profit margins while ignoring other drivers. Konarski's comments come amid ongoing public frustration over soaring apartment prices in Poland.

🌍
Putin Agrees to Peace Talks but on Terms Kyiv Rejects
🌍 World

Putin Agrees to Peace Talks but on Terms Kyiv Rejects

Vladimir Putin has expressed willingness to hold peace talks, but only on terms Ukraine considers unacceptable. For the first time, Kyiv is also putting forward its own negotiating conditions. Both sides believe they are winning the war, making any compromise extremely difficult to achieve.

💻
Orbital data centers move closer to reality but face networking hurdles
💻 Technology

Orbital data centers move closer to reality but face networking hurdles

Driven by unprecedented AI demand, some tech companies are seriously exploring launching data centers into orbit as terrestrial projects face mounting challenges including land scarcity, cooling needs, power and water consumption, and local opposition. While orbital data centers could complement ground-based campuses, advocates acknowledge that networking latency — a problem already solved on land — re-emerges as a critical obstacle in space. Enormous technical hurdles remain before the concept becomes operational.

🎬
Ella Bruccoleri talks Mary Bennet, romance with Tom and possible Season 2
🎬 Entertainment

Ella Bruccoleri talks Mary Bennet, romance with Tom and possible Season 2

Ella Bruccoleri, who plays Mary Bennet in BritBox's "The Other Bennet Sister," revealed she read "Pride and Prejudice" for the first time only when preparing for the lead role. In the interview she discussed Mary's romantic storyline with Tom and addressed the possibility of a second season. The article contains spoilers from Season 1.

🔬
'Biotech Barbie' Cathy Tie Wants Parents to Edit Their Embryos With CRISPR
🔬 Science

'Biotech Barbie' Cathy Tie Wants Parents to Edit Their Embryos With CRISPR

Journalist Jenny Kleeman investigates entrepreneur Cathy Tie in a BBC podcast, exploring Tie's controversial mission to let parents edit human embryos using CRISPR gene-editing technology. Tie, who calls herself "Biotech Barbie," wants to remove the biological lottery from reproduction and place genetic choices in parents' hands. Her work raises deep ethical questions about the rise of so-called designer babies.

🏥
Could We Actually End All Respiratory Infections?
🏥 Health

Could We Actually End All Respiratory Infections?

An Intercept Fund blog post argues that eliminating all respiratory infections — including influenza, COVID-19 and the common cold — is a realistic and achievable goal. The authors point to emerging technologies such as inhaled vaccines and improved air filtration as key tools for achieving this. The essay calls for significantly greater investment in airborne disease prevention.

Caitlin Clark exits Fever game in third quarter with back injury
⚽ Sport

Caitlin Clark exits Fever game in third quarter with back injury

Indiana Fever star Caitlin Clark left Wednesday's game against the Phoenix Mercury in the third quarter due to an apparent back issue and did not return to the court. No further details about the severity of the injury were immediately provided by the team.

💡
Chief Joseph's 1877 Surrender: The Last Stand of the Nez Percé
💡 Did You Know

Chief Joseph's 1877 Surrender: The Last Stand of the Nez Percé

On 5 October 1877, a Nez Percé leader on horseback faced five U.S. soldiers on the Montana prairie and surrendered, ending a months-long, hundreds-of-miles flight from the U.S. Army. The tribe had been fleeing forced relocation, fighting off pursuit across rugged terrain. His surrender speech — "From where the sun now stands, I will fight no more forever" — became one of American history's most quoted.

🌍
Magnitude 7.5 Quakes Hit Venezuela, Topple Buildings in Caracas
🌍 World

Magnitude 7.5 Quakes Hit Venezuela, Topple Buildings in Caracas

Venezuela was struck by two powerful earthquakes, including one of magnitude 7.5, causing buildings to collapse in Caracas. The capital's main airport sustained significant damage. Official casualty figures have not yet been confirmed.

📈
Polish Family Foundation After 3 Years: Expert Calls for Reform
📈 Business

Polish Family Foundation After 3 Years: Expert Calls for Reform

Tax lawyer Andrzej Nikończyk argues that Poland's family foundation, after three years in operation, needs rethinking. He believes the institution should serve broader investment goals beneficial to the whole economy, not just the founder's descendants. Nikończyk calls for regulatory changes to reflect this wider purpose.

💻
TechRadar Editor's Top Nintendo Switch 2 Games After Hundreds of Hours of Play
💻 Technology

TechRadar Editor's Top Nintendo Switch 2 Games After Hundreds of Hours of Play

A TechRadar Gaming editor has spent hundreds of hours with Nintendo Switch 2 since launch week, testing a wide range of titles. Standout picks include first-party entries Mario Tennis Fever and Mario Kart World, alongside the port Cyberpunk 2077 Ultimate Edition. The editor also highlights underrated titles Kunitsu-Gami: Path of the Goddess and Raidou Remastered: The Mystery of the Soulless Army. Several games are discounted during Amazon Prime Day.

🎬
BlazBlue: Central Fiction Gets New DLC Character 10 Years After Launch
🎬 Entertainment

BlazBlue: Central Fiction Gets New DLC Character 10 Years After Launch

Arc System Works has announced a new playable DLC character for its 2015 2D fighting game BlazBlue: Central Fiction, a full decade after its original release. The announcement was made during the studio's 2026 showcase via a brief teaser trailer, with no specifics about the character revealed. The full character reveal is scheduled for EVO 2026 this weekend. Producer Riku Ozawa credited the game's passionate global fanbase for making the new development possible.

🔬
6-Year-Old Boy Discovers 1,300-Year-Old Sword in Norwegian Field
🔬 Science

6-Year-Old Boy Discovers 1,300-Year-Old Sword in Norwegian Field

Six-year-old Henrik Refsnes Mørtvedt stumbled upon a rusty piece of metal sticking out of the ground during a school trip in Norway. Archaeologists confirmed it is a sword approximately 1,300 years old, making it a priceless historical artefact. The extraordinary find has delighted both historians and the boy's family.

🏥
Obesity rising fastest among young adults, driven by cost of living, pandemic and junk food
🏥 Health

Obesity rising fastest among young adults, driven by cost of living, pandemic and junk food

Obesity cases are growing fastest among young adults, according to health experts. The key drivers identified are the rising cost of living, the long-term effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, and a boom in the availability of unhealthy food. The trend challenges the assumption that obesity is primarily a problem affecting older age groups.

💡
Newton Doubted Gravity – How an Invisible Planet Proved Him Right
💡 Did You Know

Newton Doubted Gravity – How an Invisible Planet Proved Him Right

In the late 17th century, Isaac Newton himself found universal gravitation troubling, calling it "an absurdity" that one body could act on another across a vacuum. Yet the mathematics of his gravitational law later allowed astronomers to predict the existence of Neptune — the "invisible planet" — purely from anomalies in Uranus's orbit. Neptune's discovery in 1846 became one of science's greatest predictive triumphs.

Iran Gets Extra Day to Enter US Before Egypt Match in Seattle, Must Leave Same Day
⚽ Sport

Iran Gets Extra Day to Enter US Before Egypt Match in Seattle, Must Leave Same Day

Iran's national football team has been granted one extra day to enter the United States ahead of their match against Egypt in Seattle, but must still leave the country on the day of the game itself. Coach Amir Ghalenoei had previously flagged serious preparation problems caused by the entry restrictions. The conditions remain highly restrictive and limit the team's ability to train and acclimatise before the fixture.

🌍
Sweden Debates Criminalizing Dissuasion from Gender Transition
🌍 World

Sweden Debates Criminalizing Dissuasion from Gender Transition

A heated public debate has erupted in Sweden over whether it should be made a criminal offence to dissuade transgender people from undergoing gender correction procedures. The controversy centres on the boundaries of free speech versus the protection of transgender individuals' rights. The issue has sharply divided Swedish society and politicians.

📈
Japan's Kioxia to Offer US Depositary Shares in Spring 2027
📈 Business

Japan's Kioxia to Offer US Depositary Shares in Spring 2027

Japanese chipmaker Kioxia Holdings plans to offer US depositary shares in spring 2027, aiming to capitalise on surging investor demand for AI and semiconductor exposure. The company hopes the global semiconductor rally will support a strong valuation. Kioxia is positioning itself to attract American institutional and retail investors.