
Samuel Montgomery
Articles
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Feb 16, 2025 |
msn.com | Samuel Montgomery |Benedict Smith |Joe Barnes
Microsoft Cares About Your PrivacyMicrosoft and our third-party vendors use cookies to store and access information such as unique IDs to deliver, maintain and improve our services and ads. If you agree, MSN and Microsoft Bing will personalise the content and ads that you see. You can select ‘I Accept’ to consent to these uses or click on ‘Manage preferences’ to review your options and exercise your right to object to Legitimate Interest where used.
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Feb 16, 2025 |
msn.com | Samuel Montgomery |Benedict Smith |Joe Barnes
Microsoft Cares About Your PrivacyMicrosoft and our third-party vendors use cookies to store and access information such as unique IDs to deliver, maintain and improve our services and ads. If you agree, MSN and Microsoft Bing will personalise the content and ads that you see. You can select ‘I Accept’ to consent to these uses or click on ‘Manage preferences’ to review your options and exercise your right to object to Legitimate Interest where used.
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Jan 17, 2025 |
aol.co.uk | Samuel Montgomery
The looming ban on TikTok in the US presents a watershed moment for those trapped in a dopamine loop of doom-scrolling “brain rot,” psychologists have said. Brain rot, the colloquial term for cognitive deterioration from excessive consumption of low-quality online content, particularly the endless feed of short videos revolutionised by TikTok, was voted Oxford Dictionary’s Word of the Year for 2024.
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Jan 16, 2025 |
yahoo.com | Samuel Montgomery
The US remains “very confident” that “loose ends” will be tied up in time for the ceasefire deal to start on Sunday, Antony Blinken has said. The Israeli cabinet will convene on Friday morning to approve the Gaza hostage and ceasefire deal, according to Israeli media. Benjamin Netanyahu had delayed his security cabinet’s vote on the ceasefire deal after accusing Hamas of trying to “extort last-minute concessions”.
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Jan 13, 2025 |
yahoo.com | Samuel Montgomery
South Korea’s impeached president has received a pay rise despite being holed up inside a guarded compound after his botched martial law declaration. Yoon Suk Yeol’s salary is set to increase by 3 per cent to 262.6 million won (£147,000), in line with the standard for government officials, even though he could be arrested this week.
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