All posts tagged: Sue

Immortal by Sue Lynn Tan

Immortal by Sue Lynn Tan

Sue Lynn Tan’s Immortal immerses readers into a richly imagined world where mortal resilience clashes with divine indifference. As a standalone novel set in the Daughter of the Moon Goddess universe, it explores themes of power, loyalty, and forbidden attraction, all while painting an intricate picture of Tianxia, the Immortal Realm, and the mortal kingdom caught in between. With a mix of lyrical prose, layered characters, and a plot that simmers with tension, Immortal invites both admiration and critical examination. Though it earns its place among Tan’s most celebrated works, it’s not without its flaws. Plot Overview: A Mortal’s Quest Against Immortal Odds At its core, Immortal by Sue Lynn Tan chronicles the journey of Liyen, a fragile yet determined heir to the kingdom of Tianxia. Poisoned by betrayal and saved by an enchanted lotus stolen by her grandfather, Liyen ascends the throne amidst peril. The theft enrages Queen Caihong, ruler of the Immortal Realm, who dispatches the formidable God of War to exact punishment. In a bid to protect her people and sever Tianxia’s …

Ex-Starmer aide Sue Gray gets House of Lords consolation prize – POLITICO

Ex-Starmer aide Sue Gray gets House of Lords consolation prize – POLITICO

In her old life, she led the investigation into lockdown-busting parties in Tory Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s Downing Street at the height of the Covid pandemic. But Gray became a lightning rod for internal criticism in the wake of Labour’s victory, with colleagues blaming her for a myriad of issues including communications failures, the slow appointment of ministers and low pay for special advisers. She quit the job in October and was replaced by Morgan McSweeney, a close political aide of Starmer seen as helping propel him to power. A promised job of envoy to the nations and regions was not taken up. As a member of the House of Lords, Gray — who gained a reputation as a fear-inducing Whitehall ethics investigator before taking on the Labour job — will be entitled to claim a daily attendance allowance, shape legislation and grill ministers. Under the U.K.’s political system, prime ministers can appoint life peers to the House of Lords. Labour is in the process of thinning the thinning the ranks of peers eligible to …

Keir Starmer Gives Life Peerage To Former Chief Of Staff Sue Gray

Keir Starmer Gives Life Peerage To Former Chief Of Staff Sue Gray

Sue Gray, the civil servant who investigated Partygate and went on to become Sir Keir Starmer’s chief of staff, who has been made a life peer, Downing Street said 5 min read20 December 2024 Keir Starmer has nominated former chief of staff Sue Gray for a life peerage, Downing Street announced on Friday. Gray, the former senior civil servant who led an investigation into parties held in Downing Street during the pandemic, played a key role in Labour’s preparations for government. She resigned as the Prime Minister’s chief of staff in October, however, before being replaced by Morgan McSweeney. It emerged prior to her resignation that her £170,000 annual salary was larger than the PM’s. Gray was one of thirty people to be nominated for peerages by Starmer. The Prime Minister put forward former Welsh first minister Carwyn Jones, ex-Labour shadow cabinet minister Thangam Debbonaire and Labour’s former general secretary David Evans to join the House of Lords.  Former Labour MPs Luciana Berger, Kevin Brennan and Lyn Brown are also on the list. Starmer has previously set out …

Sue Perkins Apologises After Accidentally Misgendering Emma D’Arcy

Sue Perkins Apologises After Accidentally Misgendering Emma D’Arcy

Sue Perkins has apologised after accidentally misgendering Emma D’Arcy while presenting from the red carpet of the House Of The Dragon season two premiere. On Monday night, the former Great British Bake Off host interviewed the House Of The Dragon cast at a London screening, with one clip in particular capturing people’s attention. A widely-shared clip showed Sue using feminine pronouns to refer to Emma, who is non-binary, while interviewing their co-star Matt Smith. “Aren’t they brilliant?” the Emmy winner responded, later adding: “They are absolutely brilliant and you’re in for a real treat with Emma this year, I think.” With several media outlets having picked up on the clip, Sue quickly responded on X (formerly Twitter). “It was a shitty mistake,” she began, claiming she “had loads of stuff going on in my earpiece” and therefore “wasn’t as focussed as I should have been”. “No excuses though,” Sue continued. “These things matter and I feel terrible about it. Am a massive fan of their work and would never want to be disrespectful.” When one …

Alabama Groups Can Sue Over Threat of Prosecution for Helping With Abortion Travel

Alabama Groups Can Sue Over Threat of Prosecution for Helping With Abortion Travel

MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — A federal judge on Monday said abortion rights advocates can proceed with lawsuits against Alabama’s attorney general over threats to prosecute people who help women travel to another state to terminate pregnancies. U.S. District Judge Myron Thompson denied Attorney General Steve Marshall’s request to dismiss the case. The groups said Marshall has suggested anti-conspiracy laws could be used to prosecute those who help Alabama women obtain an abortion in another state. The two lawsuits seek a legal ruling clarifying that the state can’t prosecute people for providing such assistance. Alabama bans abortion at any stage of pregnancy with no exceptions for rape and incest. While Thompson did not issue a final ruling, he said the organizations “correctly contend” that the attorney general “cannot constitutionally prosecute people for acts taken within the State meant to facilitate lawful out of state conduct, including obtaining an abortion.” “Alabama can no more restrict people from going to, say, California to engage in what is lawful there than California can restrict people from coming to Alabama …

TikTok, ByteDance sue to block US law seeking sale or ban of app

TikTok, ByteDance sue to block US law seeking sale or ban of app

In August 2022, according to the lawsuit, CFIUS stopped engaging in meaningful discussions about the agreement and in March 2023 CFIUS “insisted that ByteDance would be required to divest the US TikTok business”. CFIUS is an interagency committee, chaired by the US Treasury Department, that reviews foreign investments in American businesses and real estate that implicate national security concerns. Biden could extend the Jan 19 deadline by three months if he determines ByteDance is making progress. In 2020, then-President Donald Trump was blocked by the courts in his bid to ban TikTok and Chinese-owned WeChat, a unit of Tencent, in the United States. Trump, the Republican candidate challenging Democratic President Joe Biden in the Nov 5 US election, has since reversed course, saying he does not support a ban but that security concerns need to be addressed. Source link

Arizona pro-Palestinian protesters sue, argue authorities violated their religious freedom

Arizona pro-Palestinian protesters sue, argue authorities violated their religious freedom

(RNS) — A group of Arizona religious leaders and activists is taking the state to court, arguing authorities violated protesters’ religious rights in arresting them during a pro-Palestinian demonstration in November. In a motion filed last week, four defendants argued that Arizona’s Free Exercise of Religion Act, a state law that resembles the federal Religious Freedom Restoration Act, protects their right to demonstrate. They are seeking dismissal of trespassing charges against them. “Defendants’ protest was a sincere exercise of religious expression which is burdened by this prosecution,” the motion reads. “FERA protects the free exercise of religion in Arizona not only against purposeful discrimination, but as here, against the government using a law to prosecute that is of general applicability that substantially burdens any individual’s religious exercise.” The case centers on a demonstration that took place outside the Tucson offices of RTX, formerly known as Raytheon Technologies, a major U.S. defense contractor. Since the outbreak of the Israel-Hamas war in October, pro-Palestinian activists have staged multiple protests outside various offices of RTX, which produces missiles …

Artists Sue Google Over Its AI Image Generator

Artists Sue Google Over Its AI Image Generator

The latest forte in the generative AI battleground. Patent Pending Google has become the latest target in the fight to protect copyright from AI data scraping, and this time, the group of artists suing the search behemoth has receipts. Filed in the Northern District of California, the suit brought by photographer Jingna Zhang and illustrators Sarah Andersen, Hope Larson, and Jessica Fink takes Google to task for alleged copyright infringement after using datasets that include their works and those of “billions” of other people. As the lawsuit details, the plaintiffs discovered that their work was part of Google’s Imagen image generator’s initial training data after Google released a paper about it in 2022 that noted it had used the publicly-available LAION-400M dataset. This “Large-Scale Artificial Intelligence Open Network,” as the name suggests, contains some 400 million images and captions to help train image generators — including, as the artists note in their suit, their copyrighted work. Just a few months after Imagen was released in beta to a select group of users, Andersen and a …

8 Daily Newspapers Sue OpenAI and Microsoft Over A.I.

8 Daily Newspapers Sue OpenAI and Microsoft Over A.I.

Eight daily newspapers owned by Alden Global Capital sued OpenAI and Microsoft on Tuesday, accusing the tech companies of illegally using news articles to power their A.I. chatbots. The publications — The New York Daily News, The Chicago Tribune, The Orlando Sentinel, The Sun Sentinel of Florida, The San Jose Mercury News, The Denver Post, The Orange County Register and The St. Paul Pioneer Press — filed the complaint in federal court in the U.S. Southern District of New York. All are owned by MediaNews Group or Tribune Publishing, subsidiaries of Alden, the country’s second-largest newspaper operator. In the complaint, the publications accuse OpenAI and Microsoft of using millions of copyrighted articles without permission to train and feed their generative A.I. products, including ChatGPT and Microsoft Copilot. The lawsuit does not demand specific monetary damages, but it asks for a jury trial and said the publishers were owed compensation from the use of the content. The complaint said the chatbots regularly surfaced the entire text of articles behind subscription paywalls for users and often did …

“Conspiracy of disinformation”: Hunter Biden plans to sue Fox News over false bribery allegations

“Conspiracy of disinformation”: Hunter Biden plans to sue Fox News over false bribery allegations

Hunter Biden intends to sue Fox News over its airing of bribery allegations against him that are rooted in claims from a discredited Russian agent, NBC News reported Monday. President Joe Biden’s son has been a fixture at the right-wing media outlet, where on-air personalities have regaled viewers with tales of Hunter’s past drug addiction and forays with sex workers. It has also aired claims, from Republican lawmakers and others, that Hunter’s business dealings in Ukraine — where he sat on the board of a state oil company — benefited his father. The arrest of an FBI informant appeared to show that the corruption claims against Hunter Biden are rooted in Russian disinformation. In February, special counsel David Weiss, who has been investigating Biden and charged him with gun and tax crimes, revealed in a charging document that the informant, Alexander Smirnov, had “admitted that officials associated with Russian intelligence were involved in passing a story about [Hunter Biden].” Republican lawmakers who are seeking to impeach President Biden had earlier latched on to those claims, …