There are growing fears that promising growth companies won’t actively consider listing in London, and that the current drip-drip of companies moving to New York may become a flood.
Why have humans – who need sleep and make mistakes – when we could have computer models which simulate the very best of us able to operate 24/7?
Demanding the right to profit from promoting it while refusing to pay the costs is clearly indefensible.
It is hard to see how he will manage to reconcile freedom of speech on the internet with the requirement to prevent legal but harmful content.
Problems and risks such as the significant rise in online scams haven’t yet been adequately addressed.
It would be easy to write off the attitude of both as ‘only little earthlings pay taxes’, but the current taxation system allows them to get away with it.
Voters across the political spectrum are united in their wish to see more done here.
The UK has a lot to learn from the recent regulatory punch-up between Facebook and the Australian government.
Japan, Korea, Taiwan and now China, have all invested heavily in new technologies – through government support for new industries.
Likewise, if a cruise ship wants proof of vaccination before you board, it should have the right to. Here’s why.
State action to regulate social media is unproblematic in principle, but deeply problematic in practice – and the law of unintended consequences applies.
The Government’s tendency to take more responsibility, rather than devolving it to local networks, is at the root of many of the scheme’s problems.
It will give the CMA almost unlimited powers to prosecute big tech companies. The Bill is a signal to stop investing in Britain.