FT Exclusive: Critics say Apple is reaping the marketing rewards of its privacy policy launched with the new iOS 14.5 iPhone, but failing to actually enforce it. What is going on? on.ft.com/2T7JzHi
The iOS 14.5 iPhone launched in April came with a feature called App Tracking Transparency, which enables users to stop apps from collecting personal data used by third parties on.ft.com/2T7JzHi
It has been found that third parties use workaround methods to continue tracking iPhone owners that opt out of sharing on.ft.com/2T7JzHi
The lack of enforcement of these privacy protections, despite the promise of it, could open up Apple to a flurry of lawsuits from distraught customers, experts say on.ft.com/2T7JzHi
Apple's situation has been compared to that of Google, which in 2018 came under fire when it continued to track users’ location even after they clicked a toggle expressly saying not to. Read the full story: on.ft.com/2T7JzHi
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Dr Anthony Fauci, head of the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, has been accused of downplaying the possibility that Covid-19 emerged in a lab in Wuhan, China. But what is his story? And how has he responded to the claims? on.ft.com/3inU3wF
The 80-year-old is one of America’s most respected doctors. Having advised every president since Ronald Reagan, he achieved renown in the scientific world for his work on HIV in the 1980s on.ft.com/3inU3wF
In the Trump administration, Fauci became a well-known public figure for often standing against claims made by the US president over the severity of the pandemic on.ft.com/3inU3wF
Have you been feeling ‘significantly more stressed’ in lockdown? Fear not: a new scientific argument is gaining traction, claiming we may be able to harness our stress for the good ft.com/content/1d615d…
While we know much about the negatives of stress – from heart disease to burnout – mindset studies suggest we can alchemise our hormone response to stress to our advantage ft.com/content/1d615d…
Methods such as ‘reappraising’ can make us feel more in control over our reactions under pressure – looking back to realise we’ve coped with similar, or worse things in the past for example ft.com/content/1d615d…
The global population of billionaires has risen more than fivefold in the past 20 years, with the largest fortunes rocketing past $100bn.
And economic stimulus driven by the pandemic has made the wealthiest even wealthier. What’s the story? on.ft.com/3eS59Yv
As Covid-19 worsened during 2020, central banks injected $9tn into economies worldwide. Much of that went into financial markets – and from there into the net worth of the ultra-rich.
Globally, billionaires’ total wealth rose by $5tn to $13tn that year on.ft.com/3eS59Yv
Ruchir Sharma, chief global strategist at Morgan Stanley Investment Management, has been tracking the wealth of the world’s billionaires, identifying not only how it is generated but which nations could be most at risk from anti-wealth revolts on.ft.com/3eS59Yv
Despite expectations that London offices will be less busy once Covid-19 is over, investors are ready to pour as much as £45bn into that market. What is going on? on.ft.com/3ooTun6
Property executives, investors and analysts believe that Covid-19 will push up demand for flexible, open-air facilities with high rents whereas other spaces will become obsolete ft.com/content/d6b8d4…
So far they seem to be right: the average rent agreed on new leases for high-quality offices in the City was £83 per square foot in the first three months of 2021, up from £75 in the previous period ft.com/content/d6b8d4…
Thousands of people, possibly millions, have vanished from memory in North Korea – but there’s a group of activists, lawyers and cyber experts in Seoul who are building a digital database to locate them and, one day, hold someone accountable ft.com/content/c93451…
Talking to the FT, Lee Han-byeol recalls her favourite memory of her brother, who was apprehended trying to flee North Korea – the last certain sighting of him. ‘He really adored me. I hope I can see his face again.’ ft.com/content/c93451…
North Korea’s mass disappearances date back to the country's beginnings. During the months-long occupation by the north in 1950, 90,000 South Koreans are estimated to have been abducted – some for slave labour, others for their specialist skills ft.com/content/c93451…
Russia will withdraw from the International Space Station (ISS) in 2025 as Moscow seeks to build its own and turns to China for co-operation on.ft.com/3dzPLj4
Russia’s decision to leave the ISS would sever one of the most prominent and long-lasting areas of collaboration between Moscow and Washington ft.com/content/a15185…
The US and Russia jointly launched the ISS in 1998 in what was seen as a major step to rebuild ties between the cold war adversaries that had spent more than four decades competing with each other for extraterrestrial supremacy ft.com/content/a15185…