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Co-op offers members £10 discount on shopping after cyber attack

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EPA Co-op storeEPA

Retailer Co-op is to offer its members £10 off a minimum shop of £40 following disruption caused by a recent cyber attack.

The grocery chain said it had not yet completely recovered from being targeted by hackers last month, which resulted in a significant amount of customer data being stolen.

Although the offer appears generous, one analysts said the majority of customers do not spend £40 or more per shop, so it would not appeal to many people.

The one-off deal, which runs from Wednesday for a week, is open to existing Co-op members, and a shoppers wanting to sign up, but not to staff.

A Co-op source said since stock levels had returned to normal over the past few weeks, there had been a strong pick-up in sales.

The offer was to show that the Co-op was “on the front foot” ahead of summer trading, the source told the BBC.

But retail consultant Catherine Shuttleworth said the offer indicated that members may have started to shop elsewhere and was an effort from Co-op to try to get them back.

Co-op said if members spend £40 or more in store, they will get £10 off their shop.

Easy to redeem?

“You’d be pushed to spend that in a Co-op – the average shop would be between £10 and £15. It’s a very high threshold for a convenience business,” added Ms Shuttleworth.

She said the chain was trying to show commitment to its frequent shoppers, but suggested the business was “not going to be huge redemptions on that offer”.

Ms Shuttleworth said members would probably appreciate practical help on securing their data more.

In some rural areas such as Skye in Scotland, the Co-op is the main shop – albeit with a choice of other smaller retailers.

But the majority of Co-op stores are in urban areas with more competition.

‘Near to full recovery’

The retailer said it was “very near to making a full and complete recovery” from the recent cyber attack and added its 2,300 stores were returning to usual trading.

During the attack, which came to light in May, hackers got into Co-op’s technology networks and stole past and present member data.

The retailer shut down its systems to restrict the damage, and managed to continue to trade, but there is still some behind-the-scenes disruption, the source said.

Customers complained of empty shelves as the incident disrupted deliveries of fresh stock.

Co-op said its offer was a “gesture of appreciation” to its 6.5 million members.

The BBC understands that Co-op is not planning to offer any fraud prevention or identity monitoring.

Ms Shuttleworth estimated that the cyber-attack would have cost Co-op “millions of pounds” in lost sales.

She said the offer was “a call to customers to come back”, and for Co-op to show that it was open for business.

“If you can’t manage to get what you want, you go elsewhere,” she added.

Costco set to open first stand-alone gas station

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(NewsNation) — Costco is planning to open its largest and first stand-alone gas station in Mission Viejo, Calif., a suburb of Los Angeles.

The announcement comes after the company expanded its gas stations’ operating hours to 10 p.m. for several of its warehouses earlier this year.

The project will involve the demolition of a former Bed Bath & Beyond store to make room for the 40 fuel pumps. The gas station will be built about two miles away from an existing Costco warehouse.

As many as nine fuel truck deliveries are expected each day, with more than 9,500 vehicles stopping to fill their tanks between 5 a.m. and 10 p.m.

Construction is expected to begin in the fall, and the gas station is expected to open in the spring of 2026.

JPMorgan and $800 Million Advisor Tangle in Court Over Client Contacts

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JPMorgan and $800 Million Advisor Tangle in Court Over Client Contacts

Meta is making all Facebook videos reels

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Meta is making a change to how sharing videos works on Facebook. Right now, you can share videos as a video from the post composer or as a reel, and both have different sharing workflows. In “the coming months,” however, “all videos on Facebook will be shared as reels,” according to a blog post.

“Facebook remains a home for all types of video – short, long, and Live,” Meta says. “We will gradually roll out these changes globally to profiles and Pages over the coming months to help you create, share and discover reels more easily on Facebook.”

Meta also plans to remove the length restrictions for reels on Facebook – right now, they’re limited to being 90 seconds long, per a support page.

Additionally, Meta will rename the Video tab to be the Reels tab. “We still value a variety of topics and lengths on Facebook, and this update won’t change what videos we recommend to you, which are personalized based on your interests,” the company says.

The changes to Facebook videos follow Mark Zuckerberg saying this year that he wanted to make Facebook “way more culturally influential than it is today” and to get back to “some OG Facebook.” The company introduced a new full-screen mobile video player for Facebook last year. Meta has also pushed reels in a big way on Instagram, and as of January, reels on that platform can be up to three minutes long.

Apologetic Henry Ruggs III speaks at Hope for Prisoners event

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Former Raiders wide receiver Henry Ruggs III, on special release from prison Tuesday night, spoke at a Hope for Prisoners event in Las Vegas and apologized to the family of a woman he killed in a car crash nearly four years ago.

Ruggs drove his sports car at speeds up to 156 mph in the city on Nov. 2, 2021, slamming into a vehicle that killed driver Tina Tintor and her dog, Max. Tintor was 23.

Ruggs was asked at the event what he would say to Tintor’s family.

“One, I wish I could turn back the hands of time,” he said in a video taken by the Las Vegas Review-Journal. “I would love for them to meet the real Henry Ruggs and not the one that was escaping from something. I sincerely apologize for not only being a part of that situation, but the fact my face is always in the news, it’s always in the newspaper. So they have to constantly be reminded of the situation, be reminded of me.”

Ruggs, a former first-round draft pick, pleaded guilty in May 2023 to felony DUI causing death and misdemeanor vehicular manslaughter. He was sentenced in August 2023 to a 3- to 10-year prison sentence.

Gigi Hadid on Anne Burrell Death

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Gigi Hadid is reflecting on her bond with a late friend. 

Shortly after Anne Burrell died in her home at age 55 on June 17, the supermodel shared a heartwarming tribute to the Food Network star, who she teamed up with for the cooking competition series Beat Bobby Flay in 2023. 

In a photo from their joint TV appearance posted to her Instagram Story June 17, Gigi—wearing a maroon sweater and her hair pulled back in a sleek ponytail—sat a table next to Anne, who sported a V-neck shirt, patterned scarf and bleached blond mohawk. As Anne appeared to speak, the model smiled warmly at her. 

“I am heartbroken to hear of the loss of the Great Anne Burrell,” Gigi wrote atop the image. “As a longtime fan, getting to share this day with her was a dream come true.”

The 30-year-old went on to describe just how special their time together was, recalling that they were able to “beat Bobby,” “hang” and “eat” during the shoot.

“I wish we could have done it again,” Gigi continued. “She was awesome.”

The Guests in Residence founder added, “Rest in Peace Legend.”



Indonesia issues highest alert as Mount Lewotobi Laki Laki erupts

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One of Indonesia’s most active volcanoes spewed a huge ash cloud more than 11 kilometres into the sky on Tuesday after officials issued the country’s highest alert.

Mount Lewotobi Laki-Laki, erupted at 17:35 local time (10:35 BST), the country’s volcanology agency said, sending the vast cloud above the tourist island of Flores.

A 7km exclusion zone was in place around the crater of the 1,584m (one mile) high twin-peaked volcano. There were no immediate reports of damage or casualties.

The volcano erupted multiple times in November, killing nine people and forcing thousands to flee. The ash cloud also forced flight cancellations.

Geology agency head Muhammad Wafid said no one should carry out any activities within 7km of the eruption, and warned of potential lahar floods – a type of mud or debris flow of volcanic materials – if heavy rain occurs.

Residents were also urged to wear face masks to protect themselves from volcanic ash.

The National Disaster Mitigation Agency meanwhile said that at least one village had been evacuated, and ash rain was reported in several others outside the exclusion zone.

A spokesman called on residents around the volcano “to evacuate to safe locations” as tremors were still being detected, which indicated ongoing volcanic activity.

Lewotobi Laki-laki’s last eruption was in May, when authorities also raised the level to the most severe.

Laki-Laki, which means “man” in Indonesian, is twinned with the calmer but taller 1,703m named Perempuan, the Indonesian word for “woman”.

Tucker Carlson, Ted Cruz get in heated back and forth over Iran

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Tucker Carlson and Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) got into a fiery exchange on Tuesday over the senator’s support for President Trump and his posturing toward Israel in its escalating conflict with Iran.

The conservative media personality on Tuesday released a clip from the interview — set to be released in full on Wednesday — in which he grills Cruz on details about Iran and its demographic makeup. When Cruz does not know the answers Carlson is seeking, the host blasts the senator for failing to know the details of “the country you seek to topple.”

“How many people live in Iran, by the way?” Carlson asked.

“I don’t know the population,” Cruz responded.

“At all?”

“No, I don’t know the population,” Cruz said.

“You don’t know the population in the country you seek to topple?” Carlson retorted.

When Cruz asked Carlson the same question back, the journalist responded quickly: “92 million,” adding, “How could you not know that?”

“I don’t sit around memorizing population tables,” Cruz responded.

The conversation grew increasingly heated from there, as Carlson argued the numbers are “kind of relevant because you’re calling for the overthrow of the government.”

“Why is it relevant whether it’s 90 million or 80 million or 100 million — why is that relevant?” Cruz responded before pushing back against Carlson’s suggestion that he doesn’t “know anything about the country.”

Carlson then offered another trivia question: “What’s the ethnic mix of Iran?”

Cruz said the country is Persian and “predominantly Shia,” at which point Carlson cut in, asking, “What percent?”

The two men then began shouting over each other.

“Okay, this is cute-” Cruz said when Carlson cut him off to say, “You don’t know anything about Iran.”

“So, I’m not the Tucker Carlson expert on Iran-,” Cruz said.

“You’re a senator who’s calling for the overthrow of a government, and you don’t know anything about the country,” Carlson said, shouting over the senator.

“No, you don’t know anything about the country,” Cruz shot back. “You’re the one who claims they’re not trying to murder Donald Trump. You’re the one who can’t figure out if it was a good idea to kill General Soleimani, and you said it was bad.”

Carlson pushed back on Cruz’s initial claim, saying, “No, I’m not saying that. I’m saying you don’t believe they’re trying to murder Trump.”

“Yes, I do,” Cruz exclaimed, cutting in.

“Because you’re not calling for military strikes against them in retaliation,” Carlson said, suggesting Cruz would be if he “really” believed they were trying to kill the president.

When Cruz retorted that “we are carrying out military strikes today,” Carlson pressed the senator on his use of the word “we.”

“You said Israel was,” Carlson said to which Cruz clarified that the U.S. is supporting Israel’s efforts but that Israel is carrying out the strikes.

“You just said ‘we’ were,” Carlson said. “This is high stakes. You’re a senator. If you’re saying the United States government is at war with Iran right now, people are listening.”

The Hill has reached out to Cruz’s office for additional comment.

Carlson, a long-time supporter of the president’s, has found himself at odds with the commander-in-chief over their conflicting viewpoints on the best approach in the Middle East.

After Israel launched a missile offensive against Iran last week, Carlson called Trump “complicit” in the escalation and warned the president’s legacy was on the line depending on “what happens next.”

Carlson has for years been a critic of Republican leaders, diplomats and others who have advocated for military intervention in the Middle East.

He last week railed against so-called “warmongers,” including his former colleagues at Fox and those in the party who he says are nudging Trump toward a needless war.

“The real divide isn’t between people who support Israel and people who support Iran or the Palestinians,” Carlson wrote on social media last week. “The real divide is between those who casually encourage violence, and those who seek to prevent it.”

But Trump hit back, telling reporters, “I don’t know what Tucker Carlson is saying. Let him go get a television network and say it so that people listen.”

The president went a step further later on Monday, dubbing the former prime time host turned internet commentator, “kooky Carlson” and insisting “IRAN CAN NEVER HAVE A NUCLEAR WEAPON,” in a post on his Truth Social account.

SEC and Swiss Regulators Strike Deal, Reopening U.S. Market to Swiss Advisors

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SEC and Swiss Regulators Strike Deal, Reopening U.S. Market to Swiss Advisors

Senate confirms Trump’s FCC pick, Olivia Trusty

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The Senate confirmed Republican Olivia Trusty to serve on the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) on Tuesday, installing another nominee by President Donald Trump and ending the brief lack of quorum at the agency. The vote was 53-45, with Sen. John Fetterman (D-PA) being the only Democrat to vote in her favor.

Trusty will join Republican Chair Brendan Carr and Democratic Commissioner Anna Gomez on the panel, with two seats remaining empty. Trump has yet to select other nominees for the roles. No more than three commissioners on the independent agency are allowed to be from the same party, though Gomez had expressed doubt that Trump may nominate another Democrat to the agency. Former Republican Commissioner Nathan Simington endorsed his chief of staff, Gavin Wax, a MAGA loyalist who once said Trump’s return to office would be a “time for retribution,” after announcing he’d be stepping down from his post.

Trusty was a longtime staffer for Sen. Roger Wicker (R-MS), who previously served as the top Republican on the Commerce Committee, which oversees the FCC and related issues. Commerce Committee Ranking Member Maria Cantwell (D-WA) said in a letter to Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD), Monday, she opposed Trusty’s confirmation largely due to concern with the Trump administration’s actions. “Although I respect the nominee’s professional background, when I spoke in support of Ms. Trusty’s nomination in Committee on April 30, I explained that my support was not absolute,” Cantwell wrote. “Since then, the Trump Administration has pursued a series of concerning policies, leading me to oppose Ms. Trusty’s nomination.”

Cantwell said she’s concerned that Trusty’s nomination was not paired with a Democratic one, which would be “consistent with longstanding practice,” she wrote. She pointed to Trump’s attempted firing of two Democratic commissioners at the Federal Trade Commission, another agency created to be independent from the president and whose commissioners the Supreme Court has said cannot be fired without cause. “I remain seriously concerned that this Administration will try to illegally terminate Democratic Commissioner Anna Gomez, refuse to nominate any Democratic replacements, and then operate the Commission on a strictly partisan basis,” Cantwell wrote.

“These are not normal times”

Gomez similarly praised Trusty’s experience and welcomed her to the panel. “I have known Olivia for years and have been very impressed with her strong background in communications policy, which will be a great asset to this agency,” Gomez wrote in a statement.

“In normal times, there’d be little reason to oppose the confirmation of a candidate as qualified as Trusty. But these are not normal times.” Matt Wood, VP of policy and general counsel of nonpartisan group Free Press Action, said in a statement. “Trusty’s confirmation gives Carr the majority he needs to radically reshape the media sector in Trump’s image, including offering policy favors to large broadcasters in exchange for their unwavering loyalty to the president.”