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The ‘French Oscars’, under fire, brace for a Polanski showdown

With France’s film industry in the midst of a belated #MeToo awakening, the annual César Awards have set the stage for a showdown with feminist groups by handing Roman Polanski’s latest film the lion's share of nominations.

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Britain starts setting up 'first internet watchdog'

The British government said Wednesday it plans to allow its broadcast regulator to police the internet and issue substantial fines when social media giants fail to remove "online harm".

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Israel awaits 'pragmatic' Abbas heir, but may be disappointed

Israel has pitched the controversial US Middle East peace plan as an offer for a future, "pragmatic" Palestinian leader, saying it was always going to be rejected by president Mahmud Abbas.

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Google and EU battle in court over €2.4 billion anti-trust fine

Google and the EU battled in court Wednesday as the search engine giant tried to persuade judges that it was unfairly accused of ill-treating rivals of its Shopping service.

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A telescope with a car-sized camera is going to change astronomy

You may think we know exactly what's in our solar system–considering we've identified celestial bodies billions of lightyears away from our solar system and have even sent space probes outside of it–but you'd be wrong.We've identified over 800,000 objectsin our solar system, but a massive telescope that is nearing completion could help us identify millions more. The Large Synoptic Survey Telescope, which is being built in Chile and also known as the Rubin Observatory, is supposed to be completed within a few years. Once it is, we'll be able to do what is being calledan "inventory of smaller bo...

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Israel blasts UN list of settlement-linked firms

Israel on Wednesday rejected as "shameful" the UN's publication of a list of 112 companies that do business in settlements, while the Palestinians cheered its long-delayed release as a "victory for international law".

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Destructive far right out to shatter German politics

The city of Erfurt, a quiet, chocolate-box town of around 200,000 inhabitants, is an unlikely epicentre for an earthquake that is shaking German politics to its post-war foundations.

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America's European allies no longer believe Trump's 'apoplectic' threats

European allies are no longer taking angry threats from President Donald Trump all that seriously.

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Hackers could shut down satellites – or turn them into weapons

Last month, SpaceX became the operator of the world’s largest active satellite constellation. As of the end of January, the company had 242 satellites orbiting the planet with plans to launch 42,000 over the next decade. This is part of its ambitious project to provide internet access across the globe. The race to put satellites in space is on, with Amazon, U.K.-based OneWeb and other companies chomping at the bit to place thousands of satellites in orbit in the coming months.

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Howzat! Record crowd expected for Trump at India cricket ground

More than 100,000 people are expected to pack into the world's biggest cricket stadium later this month when it is formally opened during a visit to India by US President Donald Trump, officials said.

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Pope voices 'outrage' over Amazon exploitation

Pope Francis on Wednesday pleaded for social justice and environmental respect for the Amazon basin, but failed to recommend the controversial idea of married priests.

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WHO chief sees chance to stop virus, warns of 'grave' threat

The death toll in China from the new coronavirus epidemic jumped on Wednesday, as the chief of the World Health Organization urged countries to work together against the "grave threat" posed by the outbreak.

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Air pollution costs $2.9 trillion a year: NGO

The global cost of air pollution caused by fossil fuels is $8 billion a day, or roughly 3.3 percent of the entire world's economic output, an environmental research group said on Wednesday.

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