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Posted May 30, 2025 at 3:51 AM EDT 0 Comments

Posted May 30, 2025 at 3:51 AM EDT 0 Comments

The Verge3 days ago

The EU age verification app will launch in July.
The app is described as a temporary solution until the EU rolls out a Digital Identity Wallet with age-checking features next year, aiming to support the enforcement of rules that require online platforms to protect minors. The app will allow users to verify their age without giving personal information to platforms, and was briefly mentioned on Tuesday when the EU Commission announced its probe into major porn sites.

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Alpha Kappa Alpha Charters New Chapter In The United Kingdom
Alpha Kappa Alpha Charters New Chapter In The United Kingdom

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Alpha Kappa Alpha Charters New Chapter In The United Kingdom

Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc. is exporting a Black American tradition to the U.K. It officially charted the first AKA chapter in the country, which will be known as Alpha Delta Alpha Omega Chapter, on Friday. It is the 19th chapter of AKA's international mission. Technically, there was a precursor to the AKA's presence in London with the former Tau Sigma Omega Chapter, which was dissolved in 2006. AKA inaugurated the new chapter in London on Friday. Alpha Delta Alpha Omega Chapter includes 25 professional women who work in fields like real estate, finance, medicine and business. 'History has been made across the pond!' the sorority wrote in an Instagram post. 'Congratulations to the charter members of Alpha Delta Alpha Omega Chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Incorporated® on your official chartering in London, United Kingdom!' Before its official induction, the interest group was titled the Royal Pearl Society. They have been working with local organizations to help communities in need this past year, according to Watch the Yard. The group spearheaded initiatives such as the distribution of 350 Childhood Hunger Power Packs, assembling over 200 Blessing Bags, organizing an eight-week entrepreneurship training program for women, investing over £3,000 in Black-owned businesses and volunteering over 200 hours. 'These women are already making an enormous difference in and around London,' Carrie J. Clark, AKA's International Regional Director. 'They are an amazing group of servant leaders who I am confident will expand Alpha Kappa Alpha's legacy of service in the Greater London area for years to come.' Alpha Delta Alpha Omega Chapter will keep focusing on similar initiatives after its official induction. They plan on organizing activities like distributing children's books by Black authors, as well as collecting professional attire for women re-entering the workforce. Although sororities are an American tradition, AKA established international chapters early on, according to their website. The first one to be established overseas was the AKA chapter in Liberia, which was chartered in 1954. AKA then opened another international chapter in Nassau, Bahamas, in 1963, in the U. S. Virgin Islands in 1978, and in Germany a year later. Other countries with international chapters include Japan, South Korea, Canada, South Africa and more. The sorority has led global initiatives like efforts to reduce poverty in sub-Saharan African countries, building schools in South Africa after apartheid and service missions to support women and children in Liberia. The organization now counts over 365,000 members across 13 countries and post Alpha Kappa Alpha Charters New Chapter In The United Kingdom appeared first on Blavity.

Tennis highlights rock, but Ben Shelton and Frances Tiafoe want what Carlos Alcaraz is having
Tennis highlights rock, but Ben Shelton and Frances Tiafoe want what Carlos Alcaraz is having

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

Tennis highlights rock, but Ben Shelton and Frances Tiafoe want what Carlos Alcaraz is having

ROLAND GARROS, PARIS — They are two of the biggest showmen in tennis. One is an artist. The other is a decathlete / quarterback hybrid who has somehow landed on a tennis court and made it his home. Cue the ridiculously sharp-angled drop shots, the flying smashes, the howitzer forehands on the full run. The folks who craft tennis highlight reels had plenty of material to work with from the start of the fourth-round battle between Carlos Alcaraz and Ben Shelton at the French Open. Advertisement Alcaraz, 22, already has four Grand Slam titles and appears destined for many more. He's been No. 1 in the world and has a 7-4 record against the player who holds that spot now, Jannik Sinner. The challenge for Shelton is to get some of that, to go with what he already has: 150 mph serves, tons of energy, plenty of extant highlights and loads of box office appeal. There's a reason that TNT, the U.S. broadcaster for the tournament, has his coach and father Bryan Shelton wired up during his matches. There are moments when he seems so close to the top table, and others when he seems as far away as his ranking, No. 13, suggests he is. He saves his best stuff for the Grand Slams, but he probably should be winning events just below them more often than he is now. After a 7-6(8), 6-3, 4-6, 6-4 defeat, he said that this was the closest he had felt to Alcaraz, who has won all three of their matches. 'The most pressure that I thought that I've applied, the most comfortable that I felt in the baseline exchanges, the best I've hit my open-stance backhand when he's put pressure there,' Shelton said. 'I don't want to be disrespectful and just be, like, 'yeah, I'm right there,' but I feel like I am close to starting to win some matches like that, give guys a run for their money more often, and have these deeper runs more consistently.' He didn't have to look far for company in that mission. As Shelton was winning some battles but losing his war, Frances Tiafoe, a compatriot with similar star appeal, was making his latest play for Grand Slam bonafides. He rammed past Germany's Daniel Altmaier on his way into a first French Open quarterfinal. Tiafoe will play Lorenzo Musetti, the No. 8 seed who outlasted Holger Rune in an exhibition of clay-court pattern play and cat-and-mouse tennis while Tiafoe and Shelton were debriefing on what had gone down. Shelton's exit from the French Open Sunday was filled with camaraderie and smiles and hugs and plenty of good feels. It was also eerily similar to his exit at the last Grand Slam, the Australian Open. That one came at the hands of Sinner, in the semifinals. In that match, Shelton served for the first set at 6-5, only to have Sinner raise his level, pull off the break and deprive Shelton of the early edge. In this one, Shelton stayed even with Alcaraz through the first 12 games and almost 90 percent of the tiebreak that followed them. He had three set points, one of them on his serve. Advertisement On all three, Alcaraz was just that bit better, forcing a backhand into the net from Shelton on the American's best chance. Then Alcaraz clinched the set, by doing something that only one or two other players on the planet might be able to do. Shelton has developed a nasty slice backhand that bounces somewhere between an opponent's ankles and the middle of their shins. It normally forces them to play a defensive shot in reply. Not Alcaraz. He produced a kill shot with his racket almost to the ground, generating so much velocity and topspin on the ball that Shelton never had a chance. He'd played Alcaraz to a draw for nearly 70 minutes, and come away from it looking up at a mountain that grown taller and steeper than when he had started the climb. The one time he did gain an edge, by breaking Alcaraz's serve to go up 3-1 in the third set, Alcaraz grabbed it right back. He did so in the very next game, by winning one of those points destined for YouTube. Shelton, sprinting to his left, knifed a forehand cross court on an angle so sharp that most players would have watched it on its way, protractor in hand. Not Alcaraz. From five feet outside the doubles alley, the defending champion slid into a backhand drop shot, and placed the ball just over the net. Shelton ran for it, only to break into a wide smile when he realized he had no hope of getting there. Alcaraz pulled back to 3-3, won the next three games and went two sets up. He thought he was somewhere between 15 and 40 minutes away from getting on with the rest of his evening and his tournament. Time to move. Shelton had other thoughts. He broke Alcaraz once more, stealing the third set with a nifty blocked backhand return of serve that was a sign of progress for a player who has struggled in that department in the past. But Alcaraz soon yanked back the momentum again and took care of business in four, his evening delayed by three-quarters of an hour after a fun-filled afternoon. Advertisement 'We entertain the people,' Alcaraz said on court after his win. 'For me it's great having Ben around.' He would say that. The reasons to be bullish on Shelton remain. He's just 22, in his third full season on the tour. He didn't play tennis with any level of seriousness until he was about 13 and in middle school. Alcaraz had an agent and was already being talked about as a next, next, next big thing at that age. Shelton barely played junior tennis outside Florida and didn't leave the country, for tennis or even a holiday, until he qualified for the Australian Open six months after he dropped out of college as the NCAA men's individual champion in the summer of 2022. He's gotten very good, very quickly. But he knows there's a sizeable gulf between him and the top. He's 1-9 against Alcaraz, Sinner and Djokovic combined, his sole victory coming against Sinner in 2023, before the Italian became the all-conquering world No. 1 he is now. Shelton still has plenty of road for his own transformation. 'I'm not a complete clay-court player yet, I'm not a finished product,' he said in a news conference last week, after his first-round win over Lorenzo Sonego which took five sets. 'There's still things we talk about that need to improve for me to be playing at the top and giving myself opportunities to win tournaments. Even though I am making some deep runs in clay-court events now and I have a title on clay, there's just a lot of things that I'm continually trying to improve and work on,' he said. That work isn't limited to clay, and it's work Shelton is willing to do. He's a huge fan and friend of Tiafoe, but he doesn't want to sign for his career right now. Tiafoe is 27 with a horde of fans and a career of highlights, but he has struggled with motivation at times. He thought he'd have a big title by now, that he'd have the trophies to match his fame. Advertisement That's what everyone told him would happen when he shot into the top 30 at 19. He said after his win over Altmaier that he doesn't believe there is a gulf between him and the top players, that he can still win the biggest tournaments out there, even though he only has only one win against Sinner and one against Alcaraz, each coming three years ago. He's taken Alcaraz closer to the brink than Shelton ever managed, going up two sets to one against him at last year's Wimbledon. Alcaraz snuck his way to the fourth set that day, then turned on the afterburners in the fifth. 'That's not really my concern, playing the best guys in the world,' he said after Sunday's win. 'I don't fear them. I don't really feel like their level is so much better than mine. I know what I can do on a given day.' So maybe he will this tournament. Maybe Shelton will one day. Win or lose, there will be plenty of highlights as they try to climb higher still.

Europe's Moonshot Moment: New Industry Report Suggests Now is Europe's Time to Lead in Global Software
Europe's Moonshot Moment: New Industry Report Suggests Now is Europe's Time to Lead in Global Software

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timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Europe's Moonshot Moment: New Industry Report Suggests Now is Europe's Time to Lead in Global Software

Boardwave and McKinsey & Company release analysis that identifies five priority interventions to unlock growth opportunities to scale and retain global software companies LONDON, June 1, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Europe's software sector has a 'once-in-a-generation' opportunity to lead the next wave of global technology innovation – if it can overcome a persistent scale-up barrier. The joint report by Boardwave, the European software leadership network, and McKinsey & Company is to be released today. Titled Europe's Moonshot Moment: Scaling the European Tech Sector, the report - based on 100+ interviews and analysis of some of Europe's most senior technology leaders - calls for a coordinated push to transform the continent's strength in talent, innovation, and capital into enduring, global outcomes. The new research argues that conditions are aligning to create a breakout moment for the region's tech ecosystem. A Scaling Challenge but the Window Is Open The report finds that while Europe has matured as a tech hub with over 280 software companies generating more than €100 million in annual recurring revenue (ARR), too many still stall at the €30 million ARR mark. This bottleneck prevents promising companies from becoming global players, but this isn't due to a lack of the right ingredients. Europe has world-class talent, rising early-stage investment, and growing institutional support. What's needed is mobilisation: a collective effort across founders, investors, corporates, and governments to convert momentum into scale. From Fragmented Success to Continental Scale The report identifies five priority interventions to unlock growth: Expand late-stage 'scale-up' funding to help companies leap from €30M to €100M ARR Accelerate repeat founder ecosystems, turning exits into new ventures Boost cross-border mobility of go-to-market talent to scale sales and marketing Ignite enterprise demand for European software through procurement and incentives Strengthen public-private partnerships to de-risk innovation in strategic tech sectors "We're witnessing a real belief in the UK and Europe's ability to build the next generation of global champions. European tech stands at a pivotal moment, armed with talent, capital, and ambition. There's a sense of optimism and urgency across the ecosystem right now and it has everything it needs to succeed, but what's missing is coordinated scale," said Phill Robinson, CEO and co-founder of Boardwave. "Europe's technology landscape is shifting faster than at any point in the last two decades. The analysis in this report shows Europe already holds the essentials to create the world's next generation of software champions: deep talent pools, vibrant founder networks, and a rapidly maturing capital base," commented Ruben Schaubroeck, Senior Partner from McKinsey & Company. "Tectonic shifts – such as the rise of generative AI or the re-shoring of strategic supply chains – are opening new corridors of opportunity in Europe. The report offers founders, investors, and boards a common map and advice to harness today's tailwinds with urgency and turn Europe's strength into a wave of €1-billion-plus success stories." Europe's Momentum Is Building Several forces are converging to create what the report calls a "moonshot moment":- New technologies like generative AI are lowering barriers to global scale- Policy shifts are opening cross-border pathways, like the proposed "28th regime"- European success stories, such as Mistral, Celonis and Spotify, are inspiring the next wave- Public and private initiatives are expanding capital access and entrepreneurship support One of the most powerful enablers of scale, the report finds, is connection: between founders, talent, capital, and institutions. "We need to act as one innovation ecosystem, not 27 different ones," said Robinson. "That's what makes this Europe's moonshot moment. If we connect and act now, we can lead. And not just in Europe, but globally." About Boardwave Boardwave is Europe's leading network for ambitious software leaders. With over 2,200 members - founders, CEOs, NEDs, and Chairs - we provide the connections, insights, and support to help leaders scale smarter and faster. Our free membership unlocks tailored events, expert-led content, and direct access to top investors, advisors, and industry About McKinsey & Company McKinsey is a global management consulting firm committed to helping organisations accelerate sustainable and inclusive growth. They work with clients across the private, public, and social sectors to solve complex problems and create positive change for all their stakeholders. They combine bold strategies and transformative technologies to help organisations innovate more sustainably, achieve lasting gains in performance, and build workforces that will thrive for this generation and the This research is independent and reflects the views of the authors. It was not commissioned by any business, government or institution. 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