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tv   The Papers  BBC News  March 20, 2018 10:45pm-11:00pm GMT

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to an purpose. give that to an organisation to use it in a way which others would want. the problem isi which others would want. the problem is i think the second part is going to swa p is i think the second part is going to swap it. which is it was used for donald trump. it will all be about my modem. if it wasn't about to jumping somebody else have these newspapers would make the same headline out of this. it is that bit that they are all going wild about. i think it should be overran. the thing they should be wild about is this organisation called facebook has let down the customers big—time. there are going wild about it. people are getting very exercised about it on both sides. at the atlantic, we've got a millennial generation and people are casual about sharing their data and putting every aspect of their lives on facebook, twitter, on instagram. because they think there is no harm asa because they think there is no harm as a result of it. what seems to be the case here is that people are making huge amounts of money out of it, facebook through advertising, there are gateway companies that use global research and global science research organisation run by haemorrhage in diversity, no relation between him and cameras as
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analytical before they came knocking and got the data from him. 270,000 different protocols which lead to all the friends of those 270,000 people and that is why we get 50,000 profiles being harvested and being used possibly to target messages towards the to do trump supporters. lets us show you the ft. they are making the point that it is notjust in britain that there is pressure on facebook. it is us regulators as well. the us have actually asked the same thing before a committee, and expanding yourself. something henry has just expanding yourself. something henry hasjust said i think, onto something here which is this will lead towards a generation of millennial, understanding their data is their own. it's valuable. and i think over a period of time you mightjust get people making a decision to sell their data for money, so decision to sell their data for money, so they get the money not facebook. or they get the money not twitter. or whoever. do you think people on so some idiot generally, then a bit naive about the way they data is used as my almost putting your whole life on something like facebook. absolutely. i'm amazed at
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just how much people are prepared to share with others. how casually they are prepared to accept friends, people just soliciting a relationship out of nowhere. i'm quite careful about who i accept whether it is almaden, facebook or instagram. partly use facebook these days. when it comes to apps and i think people share rose via an app, i think they got paid if you dollars for it. i'm very careful because it does warn you that you are agreeing to share audio data, give this app permission to tap into almost everything about you. and remember store cards and loyalty cards. harvesting data. in a store can work out if you buy lots of green vegeta bles out if you buy lots of green vegetables and you buy apparel, it sta rts vegetables and you buy apparel, it starts to build a profile of what you are. i'm sure you do buy lots of green vegetables, don't you? targeted ads to pop up on your timeline. it it's a bit creepy.
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let's go also to the ft, nhs pay cap. well, isn't this good news. that at last we can say to nurses who have deserved this for a long time, over three years at 6.5%, that is the headline. it is not that in a year. it is 615% over three years. it is about inflation, isn't it? —— 6.5% over three years. acumen relation to that, you get 6.5. the only downside of this will be that some of the public sector who possibly as not as deserving as nurses will turn and say, me too. he makes it sound so trivial. i'm not trivial in the slightest, but with great respect a local full for the assisted walks into a comp offer a0 hours a week, in my view, is not as deserving of a pay rise as a nurse working in a any at 3am. might be something you would never get over
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in the morning. that is not the point. for once can we understand that in the public sector not everybody is the same. as goes to another story about nurses in the telegraph. henry, misconduct cases against nurses may be held in secret. what is this about?” against nurses may be held in secret. what is this about? i think you will be very alarmed by this development because the nursing and midwifery council was to replace" commerce midwifery council was to replace" commerce in an adversarial fitness of practise processes with a system in which most cases will be heard going postal orders". what they're tried to encourage is for people, nurses in this tasty fess up if they have made a mistake and not try to cover up have made a mistake and not try to coverup their have made a mistake and not try to cover up their mistakes because what we have seen time and again following successive inquiries is that errors people have made and could have been learned from, why they are being repeated because people are worried about losing their jobs. people are worried about losing theirjobs. hopefully this will also be the case for doctors, too. even though if you are the victim or your child is a victim of this, you'll wa nt child is a victim of this, you'll want to see blood and justice. digby, and of the story on the front pages of the telegraph. quite disturbing. david knott is a surgeon
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who has become very distinguished for his work in syria. he is a hackers may have led war crimes... by hackers may have led war crimes... by the way, you said but hackers may have led war crimes... by the he y, you said but hackers may have led war crimes... by the he y, yea said of the eli??? fee. iii}. ifi. ffilfif elf ff? 2lf1f=f and he computer screen elsewhere. and he actually held on an operation in a bunker in syria. incredible. it ta kes bunker in syria. incredible. it takes every box. it is technology in the best way. what he is saying, we must be careful he is alleging this, but he is saying somebody hacked that while he was going on, and they therefore got the gordon as of the hospital in the bunker. weeks later it uses the words "weeks later" they think russian aircraft, except possibly russian in the piece. big bunker busting bomb destroys the hospital. they could only have copy location on board next through this. —— they could only have gotten the
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location awkwardness through this. doctor using technology for all the right reasons, might have led to hacking through the bad side of technology. into the destruction of the hospital. it is distressing. particularly for him because a very red guy who has been to aleppo himself and been underground and taking the same risks as those doctor he is helping remotely thousands of miles away from the safety a nd thousands of miles away from the safety and comfort of britain. they call him the indiana jones of surgery. call him the indiana jones of surgery. he is building hugely high esteem. trying to save lives and inadvertently maybe has led to the loss of lives. he is not going to be able to do this any more. it means people on the ground who would stand to be held by someone mike m, ones who are going to to pay the ultimate price. this is an interesting story in the mirror. a clinic, and assisted dying, suicide clinic in the mirror called it. it could be set up on our doorstep. if there is
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a vote in favour of a law change there. yes, if there is a vote. the headlines looks like his is going to happen in the morning. the other side of the english channel. actually is coming up for a vote in may. while they are going to vote for is a consultation period of 18 months. until there is a long way to 90, months. until there is a long way to go, and at the same time one student and independent legislator do this. it is not part of the united kingdom although they have british passports. interesting point in the story, switzerland is the only place by the way where you can do this for money in that way. but the mirror also carry a pole. is it right to give people the choice to end their lives on assisted dying? there also saying who is yes and who is no, not a problem. matt coles i'm sorry, just opinions. the idea is that here are some people who say yes it
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should happen and come up by the way what is the problem with it happening and guernsey. other people say it should not happen. wrong word goal, but it is the rehearsed arguments about religion, about ethics and morals. crucially about quality of life. and also there are people who in their lives or have to choose to end their wives several months before they otherwise might have because they have got to be well enough to get onto a plane and go over, and it cost £10,000. rudy's dad, henry? increasingly toward legislation like this where people with safeguards built in, if they feel they can no longer cope with the conditions of life, that they are suffering, then perhaps to allow them to do that. and i'm with you. of course the counter arguments are that this could be abused. family waiting there to get rid of one for the money. people, especially young men, kill themselves in the most catastrophic ways everything will day. i think the location is not the
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point. by the location is interesting to a newspaper is because... it brings it closer to home. also there is a union flag flying over it and all the rest. that is the interesting part of the story. it awakens again... you're not sure it is actually going to happen. it might, but not yet. the headlines are running as if it will happen in the morning. it is important to add the privy council still has the power to block it in this country. uk plc as it were, privy council has the authority to block it. let's look at our last the story of the evening. this is the very sad story about the northern white rhino, about to face extension because the last mail, sudan, has sadly died. sudan, the name, not the country. this is the inevitable pun. the shame that he was the last mail and he is a5 years old. died of natural causes, well, he was actually euthanized. he could no
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longer stand up, he was in great pain. the only two other northern white rhinos are female, his daughter and granddaughter. so they have got some dna from him and they are trying to keep the species alive but the problem is they cannot use it on his doctor or his granddaughter because of species diversity. but they are going to try to grow a rhinoceros in a test tube. that actually is something i can't get my mind around. that actually is something i can't get my mind aroundlj that actually is something i can't get my mind around. i think what they're doing, they're going to use it... matt in the telegraph has a cartoon about the same subject. the readers in the morning will stevens on the front page, to rhinos standing and looking at an ipad. one says to the other "is this a dating app for northern white rhinos. i haven't swiped right yet also. " we should say you have a tie with elephants. i do. species are here before us. and there is real danger to them. we can all but this is the last item on the news. i don't
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understand why, but at the end of the day these fellows, elephants, are the day these fellows, elephants, a re close the day these fellows, elephants, are close to extension and parts of the world simply because of human beings want in their ivory. and for no other reason. that right. we really have got to get on top of this. by the way, rhinos are close behind them. absolutely, only 35,000 left. they are wonderful creatures. and they are big guys,. there the second biggest mammal, land mammal. digby and henry, thank you very much indeed. that's it for the papers tonight. don't forget you can see the front pages of the papers online on the bbc news website. it's all there for you, seven days a week at bbcdot.uk/papers, and if you miss the programme any evening you can watch it later on bbc iplayer. thank you and good evening to you.
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another cold night with a widespread frost tonight. but to get spring under way across the country, for some of you it was an absolute cracker. scotland and northern ireland in particular, blue skies overhead lead to debut full day. a bit more cloud across parts of england attending the odds are here and there. stayed dry in northampton. those two shots, you can almost switch them around until tomorrow because as the clear skies moved away south into tonight in england and wales, clouds gathering in the atlantic said in to bring milderair in the atlantic said in to bring milder air but great conditions for some. by the end of the night, maybe a bit of rain. more so will stay dry, evening showers across the south, clear away, think we're skies and plummeting temperatures to take us and plummeting temperatures to take us towards dawn. temperatures tonight, not as low across western scotla nd tonight, not as low across western scotland and northern ireland as the cloud increases, but a colder night for england and wales. —1a maybe minus seven degrees into the morning. —— minus four. sunniest in
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the morning, with clear blue for quite a few before the cloud thickens from the north. more than half of the country, many star trek and bright. —— many start try and break. many will push their way south. odd splash in eastern scotland, most will be dry here in a few showers into northern england and north wales by the end of the day. we're skies into eastern scotla nd day. we're skies into eastern scotland and towards the southeast, you'll see double—figure temperatures on that wednesday afternoon. may be around 12 or 13 in aberdeenshire. up to around 11 in the southeast. we finished on a reasonably mild note. for some of you a bit of a struggle, but much milderair you a bit of a struggle, but much milder air vent. it takes us printed thursday before temperatures dropped as deluded into friday. all throughout we have got wins coming into the atlantic. it would never be as cold as it were last weekend. on thursday you want to see over clouds and patchy rain. sometime towards the east of the country, boosting temperatures between two of the country, boosting temperatures between talk and 1a degrees. in the west it will stay a bit cloudier,
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great conditions into the afternoon with strong dual force winds. outbreaks of rain in northern ireland and western scotland. it moves ireland and western scotland. it m oves over ireland and western scotland. it moves over the country through the night and into friday. clearing the way for the southeast. sunshine and showers to seven enes the price of the country on friday. heavy with felons under. more persistent rain. temperatures still holding up at around 8—11dc. this is bbc news. i'm ben brown. the headlines at 11:00: the british company accused of influencing the us presidential election by using facebook data, suspends its ceo. an raf engineer has died after a red arrows hawkjet crashed in anglesey. the pilot survived and is receiving medical care. heading home — 23 russian diplomats leave their embassy, ordered out of the uk in the wake of the salisbury poisoning. a new report on parental leave says
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the men are not taking much of it and leave looking after the children with mum. we will ask whether we will ever reach a point where mums and dads treat parenting the same.

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