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Reform UK government would replace top civil servants with policy ‘believers’ | Reform UK

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A Reform UK government would expect to dismiss the top civil servant in every government department and replace them with people seen as more likely to implement the party’s priorities, the Guardian has learned.

Senior Reform figures have concluded that the current crop of permanent secretaries, the lead civil servant in each department, are not up to the necessary standard. Some would be replaced by outsiders, and others by existing officials viewed as more suitable.

The plan has prompted warnings that a shift towards a less stable and more politicised civil service could result in the loss of significant expertise and of institutional memory, and would make government less effective.

Nigel Farage’s party has promised it will enact a radical programme. One senior member said this would be modelled on the second Trump administration, with a focus on making change via executive orders rather than legislation, where possible.

Reform has already said it would look at appointing outside experts to become ministers. It is understood that as well as making some into peers, so they could sit in the House of Lords, others considered for ministerial jobs would be lined up for winnable Commons seats.

While the party has received a series of big donations in recent months, including £12m from the crypto investor Christopher Harborne, it is expected that donors would be ruled out for ministerial roles.

The influx of money has allowed Reform to expand its teams working on new policies and preparation for government. This process thus far has had limited input from Farage, with insiders saying the party leader is focusing on May’s elections across England, Scotland and Wales.

A number of other countries have senior officials who are politicised and change with governments, notably the US. In the UK, existing rules allow ministers to fast-track outsiders into the civil service as “exceptional appointments” on two-year terms.

But unions and experts said Reform’s plans risked hampering the work of ministers rather than improving it.

“An ideological purge does not make for good government,” said Dave Penman, the general secretary of the FDA, the union for senior civil servants. “You would lose experience and institutional memory, but you would also send a message to the rest of the civil service that they are not trusted.

“Every civil servant knows they have to serve the government of the day. It’s absolutely clear – you serve or you go. There is no real evidence that the civil service would get in the way.

“How do you expect to bring in the brightest and the best if you then throw them under a bus? This would attract believers, but not necessarily the best people. And it shouldn’t be about what people believe. It’s about what they can do.

“Another problem is that as soon as you have political picks, when you change the minister they will want their own pick as well. In the last 10 years we have had whole football teams of secretaries of state. If you changed the permanent secretary every time, it would be a massive churn, and very disruptive.”

Alex Thomas, from the Institute for Government thinktank, said there was an obvious argument for civil servants to be set a clear direction.

He went on: “The question is what is effective. A blanket dismissal of the whole of the top of civil service would be removing an enormous amount of experience, expertise, and knowledge of how to make government do its job.

“If the intent is shock and awe, I would be surprised if it works. The history of government reform shows that people who succeed are those who galvanise, find allies and work with the system, rather than going to war with it.”

Reform UK was contacted for comment.



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Variety writer slams Colbert’s final season as celebrity-fueled ego trip

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The final season of “The Late Show With Stephen Colbert” was ripped as “not very good TV” and out of touch with everyday Americans as the host has been flattered by a parade of celebrities in a column, Thursday, from entertainment outlet Variety.

CBS announced in July that it had canceled “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert” and that it would officially go off the air in May 2026. Liberal critics have accused CBS and Paramount of ending the show to appease President Donald Trump and receive approval for a long-planned merger between Paramount Global and Skydance Media.

Since then, there has been a variety of celebrities reading poetry or literally singing Colbert’s praises as he prepared to bid goodbye to his show, as noted in Daniel D’Addario’s piece, “Stephen Colbert’s Long ‘Late Show’ Goodbye Has Gone From Resistance to Ego Trip.”

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Colbert on The Late Show

A writer at Variety blasted “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert” host Stephen Colbert for making his final season feature a series of guests who sing his praises. (CBS Photo Archive/Getty)

“What has ended up making it to air has been an increasingly puffy tribute to the show’s own host. The endless bouquets being tossed Colbert’s way have started to make the studio smell a bit cloying,” he wrote, noting various recent guest appearances such as actor John Lithgow reading a poem toasting Colbert, song tributes from Bette Midler and Jimmy Fallon, and actress Drew Barrymore recreating her famous striptease from years before on another show to reveal a t-shirt saying, “We [Heart] Stephen.”

“The show’s focus on its own host’s misfortune has become outsized and a bit dramatic, especially because so many other institutions are in crisis: With everything else going on in the world, we have to go through a monthslong celebration-of-life for a comedian whose job is coming to an end?” D’Addario wrote.

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Bette Midler and Stephen Colbert

Stephen Colbert’s career has been hailed by a parade of celebrity guests in his final season on his current show, such as Bette Midler.  (Screenshot/CBS)

“Colbert deserved better treatment from CBS, but watching one person beam while receiving laurel after laurel doesn’t make the argument for his show’s relevance, as it’s frankly not very good TV, and — for this relentlessly political host — not in touch with the concerns of people who have been turning to ‘The Late Show’ for its political perspective,” the writer argued.

In one final barb, the author suggested that while Colbert’s public-facing career is likely far from over, “When that day comes, won’t it feel like an anticlimax, after we’ve already spent the better part of a year celebrating him?” D’Addario asked.

When reached for comment, Christian Toto, host of the “Hollywood in Toto” podcast, responded to the opinion piece by saying it “stunned me.” 

He added, “It’s possible that stories like this are meant to warn Colbert that he’s hurting his legacy and future impact, allowing him to course correct before it’s too late. Variety, like most entertainment news outlets, leans aggressively to the Left. Criticizing Colbert like this is a no-no on that front.”

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Late night host Stephen Colbert

Many have speculated that Stephen Colbert’s public-facing career is far from over. (Scott Kowalchyk/CBS via Getty Images)

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Fox News Digital contacted Paramount, which owns CBS and Colbert’s show, and did not receive an immediate reply.

Fox News’ Lindsay Kornick contributed to this report.



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Trump says ‘many countries’ will send warships to Hormuz amid Iran blockade | US-Israel war on Iran News

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United States President Donald Trump has said “many countries” will dispatch warships to keep the Strait of Hormuz open, without offering details about which states are on board.

This comes as the waterway that carries a fifth of global oil and liquefied natural gas remains effectively closed on the 15th day of the US and Israel’s war on Iran.

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Writing on Truth Social on Saturday, Trump said nations “especially those affected by Iran’s attempted closure” of the strait would be sending warships “in conjunction with the United States of America, to keep the Strait open and safe,” naming China, France, Japan, South Korea and the United Kingdom among those he hoped would contribute.

In the post, Trump asserted that the US had “already destroyed 100% of Iran’s Military capability,” while conceding in the same breath that Tehran could still “send a drone or two, drop a mine, or deliver a close range missile” along the waterway.

He pledged that in the meantime, the US would be “bombing the hell out of the shoreline, and continually shooting Iranian Boats and Ships out of the water,” promising to get the strait “OPEN, SAFE, and FREE.”

US Energy Secretary Chris Wright told US news outlet CNBC last week that the US was not ready to do escorts for ships through the strait itself.

Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi clarified that the strait was only closed to “tankers and ships of enemies and their allies,” not all shipping, while Mohsen Rezaee, a member of Iran’s Expediency Discernment Council, an influential body close to the supreme leader, said, “No American ship has the right to enter the Gulf.”

Two Indian-flagged tankers carrying liquefied petroleum gas crossed the strait safely on Saturday morning, Rajesh Kumar Sinha, special secretary of India’s Ministry of Ports, Shipping and Waterways, said.

Iran’s ambassador to India, Mohammad Fathali, confirmed that Tehran had granted Indian vessels a rare exemption, the result of direct talks between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian on Thursday.

A Turkish-owned vessel was similarly allowed through earlier this week after Ankara negotiated passage directly with Tehran, with 14 more Turkish vessels still awaiting clearance.

The US is reinforcing its presence in the region, with some 2,500 Marines and the USS Tripoli amphibious assault ship en route to the Middle East following a request by CENTCOM approved by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth.

Al Jazeera’s Kimberly Halkett, reporting from the White House, said Iran’s most powerful remaining weapon was not military but economic, adding that the threat of damage alone to US ships is paralysing the strait and the goods that flow through it.

“That is why we see the US president suggesting this coalition needs to be broadened,” Halkett said.

The closure is also threatening global food security, according to the Center for Strategic and International Studies. The strait is a critical conduit for LNG exports, the primary feedstock for the nitrogen-based fertilisers used to grow the staple grains and cereals that provide more than 40 percent of global caloric intake.

India, facing a critical cooking gas shortage, has invoked emergency powers to protect 333 million LPG-dependent homes.

UN humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher has warned that “millions of people are at risk” if humanitarian cargo cannot pass safely through the strait.

Hegseth dismissed suggestions that the Pentagon had been caught off guard by the strait’s closure on Saturday. “We have been dealing with it, and don’t need to worry about it,” he said.

At least 1,444 people have been killed in Iran since the war began on February 28, with Lebanon’s death toll also mounting and Gulf states facing sustained drone and missile fire.

Andreas Krieg of King’s College London’s School of Security Studies described Trump’s coalition call to Al Jazeera as “a desperate move in an information campaign to calm markets.” Krieg said there was no quick military solution to reopening the strait, as all Iran needed to do was strike occasionally to keep insurers away.

“It doesn’t seem like they had a plan for the Strait of Hormuz to be closed, and it seems like a desperate move in an information campaign to calm markets and that something magical will happen to open the straits short of actually engaging with the Iranian regime,” he said.

Sending naval vessels without a diplomatic agreement, he said, would only expose “very, very expensive military vessels to very cheap but potentially very effective projectiles”.



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The Iranian moment: A leap into the unknown | US-Israel war on Iran

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Since the 1920s, Iran has lived through two defining political moments that have reflected two distinct civilisational identities. They have shaped not only the country’s internal character but also its relationship with the wider world.

Today, with the Islamic republic under unprecedented strain, a third Iranian moment may be approaching.

Modernity on the shah’s terms

The first Iranian moment was the reign of the Pahlavi monarchy, which began in 1925 with Reza Khan Pahlavi, an army officer, being instated to the throne and ended in 1979 with the outbreak of the Iranian Revolution. It was built around a particular vision of Iran: secular, modernising, and firmly anchored in the dominion of the Western-led camp during the Cold War.

Tehran recognised Israel after it was created in 1948, supplied oil to Western markets, and served as Washington’s chosen guardian of the Gulf. The shah projected power across a region fraught with ethnic and sectarian rivalries, leading a country that posed a challenge to its Arab neighbours, but also served as a model of state-driven development.

Central to the Pahlavi project was a deliberate attempt to anchor the monarchy’s legitimacy not in Islam, but in the Persian imperial past. Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi consciously linked his rule to the ancient Achaemenid Empire — the dynasty of Cyrus and Darius that forged the first great Persian civilisation in the fifth century BC.

The grandiose celebrations of 1971 at the ruins of the ancient capital of Persepolis, marking 2,500 years of Persian monarchy, were the most theatrical expression of this claim: a declaration that the Pahlavi throne was not a modern construction but the inheritor of an unbroken imperial tradition. In doing so, the shah sought to place himself above religion — a king of kings in a lineage older than Islam itself.

Yet beneath the surface of modernisation and imperial grandeur, the monarch was nakedly authoritarian. SAVAK, the feared secret police, was synonymous with torture and repression. When the mass protests of 1978 and 1979 erupted, every geopolitical partnership the shah had cultivated proved worthless.

No foreign ally moved a muscle to save him. A monarch that had prioritised strategic utility over popular legitimacy found himself entirely alone. The first Iranian moment ended not with a war, but with a revolution — and the lesson went unlearned by those who followed.

The Islamic republic

From the ashes of the shah’s rule emerged something genuinely novel: the Islamic Republic of Iran, founded under Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini’s doctrine of velayat-e faqih — the guardianship of the Islamic jurist. It became only the second Shia state since the Safavid Empire (1501-1736), which had itself made Twelver Shiism Iran’s defining identity.

The new republic was built on the premise that Islamic principles should govern not just religious life, but also politics, economics and even social life. The public sphere was to be controlled, morality enforced, and Iran’s cultural identity explicitly de-Westernised.

Where the Pahlavis had embraced the United States and Israel, the Islamic republic constructed its identity in explicit opposition to both. Its foreign policy became defined by resistance: support for Hezbollah in Lebanon, Hamas in Gaza, the Houthis in Yemen, and Shia militias across Iraq and Syria — a web of proxies Tehran called the “axis of resistance”. This eventually caused the ongoing crisis in Iran’s neighbourhood.

In terms of economic governance, the regime looked eastwards, aspiring to a model not unlike China’s: authoritarian in politics, state-directed in economics, independent of Western institutions.

That independence came at an enormous price. More than 3,600 different sanctions have been imposed on the republic — a cumulative siege that devastated the lives of ordinary Iranians. The decline of the regional influence of Iran emerged following two major shocking events: the Arab Spring, which raised questions about the credibility of Iran’s claim of defending the oppressed, and the October 7 attacks, which set up Iran as a potential military target for Israel.

Three major armed conflicts scarred its existence: the Iran-Iraq War of 1980–1988, in which hundreds of thousands died; the 12-day war involving Israel and the United States in June 2025; and the ongoing conflict beginning on February 28.

Each war deepened the siege mentality at the core of the regime’s identity — the conviction that today’s Iran is perpetually encircled and its very survival is under threat.

Moment of precarity

One can understand, in retrospect, how the first moment ended. The Pahlavi monarchy lost its domestic legitimacy, and its foreign patrons looked away. The revolution followed. But the trajectory of the second Iranian moment is far less clear — and that opacity is itself a source of regional and global anxiety.

The Islamic republic today is neither the confident revolutionary power it was in the 1980s, nor a stable religious state capable of indefinitely managing its contradictions. Mass protests over the past two decades have raised social, economic and political questions about the nature of the social contract that the Islamic republic offers.

Simultaneously, its regional influence is declining, its nuclear programme has brought about direct military confrontation, and its economy – devastated by sanctions and endemic corruption – cannot deliver the prosperity needed to buy popular acquiescence.

There are several scenarios for what happens next. The regime could survive in its current form. A reformed Islamic republic might retain its Shia theological identity, while abandoning its most confrontational postures, though such a transition would require a political class willing to negotiate, and an opposition capable of receiving and holding onto power responsibly; neither condition is clearly present.

There is also a more turbulent scenario: fragmentation, civil conflict and a power vacuum. This cannot be ruled out in a country that encompasses Persians, Azeris, Kurds, Arabs, and Baluchis, held together increasingly by coercion alone.

Iran’s next chapter will not be written by foreign powers alone, or by the clerical establishment alone, or by the protest movement alone. It will emerge from the collision of all these forces — internal and external, historical and immediate.

This new Iranian moment is a leap into the unknown: for Iranians most of all, but also for the region and the world that will feel its consequences. Precarious and perplexed, Iran stands at the edge. What lies beyond remains to be seen.

The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial stance.



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‘Israel targeting Iran’s security forces may aim to encourage uprising’ | Protests

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Quotable

Alex Vatanka, director of the Iran Program at the Middle East Institute, says Israeli strikes on Iranian security forces may be aimed at weakening the regime’s ability to suppress protests, though the broader goal remains unclear.



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Iran uses sea mines to halt Strait of Hormuz shipping

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A former U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) official said Iran is holding the world’s energy supply hostage using “World War I-style” tactics.

Iran has responded to U.S. and Israeli strikes by halting shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, a vital artery for global oil. The regime is using sea mines, which it has reportedly stockpiled by the thousands, to make traversing the strait difficult and deadly.

“This is a nightmare more than 30 years in the making,” former CENTCOM Communications Director Col. Joe Buccino (Ret.) said Saturday on “Fox & Friends Weekend.”

“What you just indicated there on your wall is a World War I-style of combat that Iran is waging,” he added.

IRANIAN DRONE STRIKES SHUT DOWN QATAR LNG PRODUCTION FACILITIES, AS ENERGY PRICES SURGE

Trump monitors military operation against Iran.

President Donald Trump sits at a table monitoring military operations during Operation Epic Fury against Iran at the White House in Washington, D.C., on March 2. (The White House via X/Anadolu via Getty Images)

The mines can detonate either on the surface of the water or below, with an explosion that would likely tear a hole through a ship’s hull, potentially sinking or disabling it. Buccino said that while the United States possesses superior high-end technology, the mines are an effective threat.

“These mines are a tool of really psychological warfare. We don’t know how many are out there. We don’t know where they are. And that creates fear and shuts down flow through the Strait of Hormuz,” he said.

Buccino said the mines are becoming a difficult problem because the U.S. Navy has “decommissioned” most of its mine-clearing ships. He warned that Iran is likely aware of this and is “exploiting a gap” in U.S. naval assets.

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Hormuz vessels

Oil tankers and cargo ships line up in the Strait of Hormuz as seen from Khor Fakkan, United Arab Emirates, Wednesday, March 11, 2026. (AP Photo/Altaf Qadri)

Disruptions in the strait have sent oil prices surging. President Donald Trump said Friday on the “Brian Kilmeade Show” that the U.S. would be willing to escort vessels through the strait “if we needed to.”

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On Friday, Trump announced the U.S. struck military locations on Kharg Island, a hub of Tehran’s oil infrastructure in the Persian Gulf. Writing on Truth Social, the president stated:

“Moments ago, at my direction, the United States Central Command executed one of the most powerful bombing raids in the history of the Middle East, and totally obliterated every MILITARY target in Iran’s crown jewel, Kharg Island.”

Thick columns of smoke billow above buildings in Tehran after explosions rocked the city.

Plumes of smoke rise following reported explosions in Tehran, Iran, on March 2. (Sohrab/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images)

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Trump noted the U.S. purposefully avoided targeting the island’s oil infrastructure but warned that could change if Iran continues to disrupt shipping.

Iran’s new supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, released a statement Thursday vowing the Strait of Hormuz will remain closed until the war ends and demanding that U.S. military bases be removed from the region.



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OpenClaw AI Agent Flaws Could Enable Prompt Injection and Data Exfiltration

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Ravie LakshmananMar 14, 2026Artificial Intelligence / Endpoint Security

China’s National Computer Network Emergency Response Technical Team (CNCERT) has issued a warning about the security stemming from the use of OpenClaw (formerly Clawdbot and Moltbot), an open-source and self-hosted autonomous artificial intelligence (AI) agent.

In a post shared on WeChat, CNCERT noted that the platform’s “inherently weak default security configurations,” coupled with its privileged access to the system to facilitate autonomous task execution capabilities, could be explored by bad actors to seize control of the endpoint.

This includes risks arising from prompt injections, where malicious instructions embedded within a web page can cause the agent to leak sensitive information if it’s tricked into accessing and consuming the content.

The attack is also referred to as indirect prompt injection (IDPI) or cross-domain prompt injection (XPIA), as adversaries, instead of interacting directly with a large language model (LLM), weaponize benign AI features like web page summarization or content analysis to run manipulated instructions. This can range from evading AI-based ad review systems and influencing hiring decisions to search engine optimization (SEO) poisoning and generating biased responses by suppressing negative reviews.

OpenAI, in a blog post published earlier this week, said prompt injection-style attacks are evolving beyond simply placing instructions in external content to include elements of social engineering.

“AI agents are increasingly able to browse the web, retrieve information, and take actions on a user’s behalf,” it said. “Those capabilities are useful, but they also create new ways for attackers to try to manipulate the system.”

The prompt injection risks in OpenClaw are not hypothetical. Last month, researchers at PromptArmor found that the link preview feature in messaging apps like Telegram or Discord can be turned into a data exfiltration pathway when communicating with OpenClaw by means of an indirect prompt injection.

The idea, at a high level, is to trick the AI agent into generating an attacker-controlled URL that, when rendered in the messaging app as a link preview, automatically causes it to transmit confidential data to that domain without having to click on the link.

“This means that in agentic systems with link previews, data exfiltration can occur immediately upon the AI agent responding to the user, without the user needing to click the malicious link,” the AI security company said. “In this attack, the agent is manipulated to construct a URL that uses an attacker’s domain, with dynamically generated query parameters appended that contain sensitive data the model knows about the user.”

Besides rogue prompts, CNCERT has also highlighted three other concerns –

  • The possibility that OpenClaw may inadvertently and irrevocably delete critical information due to its misinterpretation of user instructions.
  • Threat actors can upload malicious skills to repositories like ClawHub that, when installed, run arbitrary commands or deploy malware.
  • Attackers can exploit recently disclosed security vulnerabilities in OpenClaw to compromise the system and leak sensitive data.

“For critical sectors – such as finance and energy – such breaches could lead to the leakage of core business data, trade secrets, and code repositories, or even result in the complete paralysis of entire business systems, causing incalculable losses,” CNCERT added.

To counter these risks, users and organizations are advised to strengthen network controls, prevent exposure of OpenClaw’s default management port to the internet, isolate the service in a container, avoid storing credentials in plaintext, download skills only from trusted channels, disable automatic updates for skills, and keep the agent up-to-date.

The development comes as Chinese authorities have moved to restrict state-run enterprises and government agencies from running OpenClaw AI apps on office computers in a bid to contain security risks, Bloomberg reported. The ban is also said to extend to the families of military personnel.

The viral popularity of OpenClaw has also led threat actors to capitalize on the phenomenon to distribute malicious GitHub repositories posing as OpenClaw installers to deploy information stealers like Atomic and Vidar Stealer, and a Golang-based proxy malware known as GhostSocks using ClickFix-style instructions.

“The campaign did not target a particular industry, but was broadly targeting users attempting to install OpenClaw with the malicious repositories containing download instructions for both Windows and macOS environments,” Huntress said. “What made this successful was that the malware was hosted on GitHub, and the malicious repository became the top-rated suggestion in Bing’s AI search results for OpenClaw Windows.”



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LIVE: Real Madrid vs Elche – La Liga | Football News

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Protests erupt in Cuba as US restrictions spark food, energy shortages | Protests News

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Authorities say a local communist party office was lit on fire during rare antigovernment demonstration on the island.

Protesters in central Cuba have torched a local communist party office, as conditions on the island continue to deteriorate under severe restrictions from the United States meant to squeeze the economy.

Authorities said on Saturday that five people were arrested amid what the government called “vandalism acts” in the city of Moron.

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“What began peacefully, after an exchange with the authorities in the area, degenerated into vandalism against the headquarters of the municipal committee of the Communist Party,” the state-run newspaper Invasor said of the incident.

Unverified videos of the incident show protesters breaking into the office and throwing stones at a burning building. Shouts of “liberty” could be heard in one of the videos, according to the news agency Reuters.

Other government buildings were also reportedly damaged overnight. No injuries have been confirmed so far, though the details of the protest and its aftermath remain unclear.

The human rights group Justicia11 said that gunfire was heard in the area and a man may have been shot, but a state-run news outlet, Vanguardia de Cuba, meanwhile, denied those reports.

Protests are relatively rare in Cuba, given the threat of government repression. But in recent weeks, Cubans have expressed growing frustration with food and electricity shortages.

Some have taken to banging pots and pans at night — a protest tradition called “cacerolazo” — to express anger over the lack of food. Students, meanwhile, at the University of Havana held a sit-in on Monday after their classes were suspended due to energy restrictions.

Economic conditions on the island, already strained, have worsened since United States President Donald Trump cut off its access to oil as he seeks to topple the government in Havana, a longtime target of US ire.

Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel said on Friday that he had held talks with US officials and that no petroleum shipments have arrived in Cuba for three months.

Trump ordered an end to transfers of Venezuelan oil and funds to Cuba after the US carried out an attack on Venezuela on January 3. That attack culminated in the abduction of former Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, who had maintained friendly relations with Cuba.

On January 29, Trump upped the ante, issuing an executive order that effectively severed Cuba’s ability to import fossil fuels from other countries. The order threatened economic penalties against any country that supplied Cuba with oil, whether directly or indirectly.

Cuba’s ageing energy grid, however, largely relies on fossil fuel, as do everyday tools like cars and generators.

During remarks earlier this month, Trump said that Cuba would be “next” after the US war against Iran concludes.

“Cuba’s at the end of the line,” Trump told a group of Latin American leaders at his estate, Mar-a-Lago, on March 7.

“As we achieve a historic transformation in Venezuela, we’re also looking forward to the great change that will soon be coming to Cuba.”



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Data brokers hid opt-out pages from Google after Senate probe

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If you have ever tried to opt out of a data broker site, you know the drill. You search. You scroll. You click through layers of legal jargon. Then you wonder if they even want you to find the exit door. Now we know the answer.

A U.S. Senate investigation found that several major data brokers placed code on their opt-out pages that blocked search engines from indexing them. In practical terms, that meant you could not easily find the page where you ask them to stop selling your data.

After pressure from Sen. Maggie Hassan, four companies have now removed that code.

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Which data brokers hid their opt-out pages?

The companies named in the report include:

  • Comscore
  • IQVIA Digital
  • Telesign
  • 6sense Insights

These firms collect and sell personal information for marketing, analytics or identity verification. That data can include browsing behavior, device details, location history and in some cases highly sensitive identifiers.

List of company "no index" codes

A U.S. Senate investigation found major data brokers used no index code to hide opt-out pages from Google, making it harder for people to stop the sale of their personal data.   (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

An earlier investigation by The Markup and CalMatters found that dozens of brokers used “no index” code to hide opt-out instructions from Google search results. Some removed the code after reporters reached out. However, Sen. Hassan’s office later found that the four companies above still had opt-out pages blocked from search engines. They have since removed the code.

MAKE 2026 YOUR MOST PRIVATE YEAR YET BY REMOVING BROKER DATA

One more company, Findem, has not removed the no-index code from its “Do not sell or share my personal information” page, according to the report. The company later said an email from the senator’s office did not reach its CEO due to spam filtering and that its privacy channels are actively monitored. The Committee report noted this lack of action raises serious concerns about responsiveness to privacy requests and about whether opt-out rights are being made truly accessible.

We reached out to all five companies for comment. A spokesperson for 6sense provided the following statement:

“6sense takes privacy transparency seriously and has always fully indexed our Privacy Center, where individuals may exercise their opt-out rights in compliance with applicable laws. For a period of time, we included a “no index” directive on the Privacy Policy page to reduce spam volume to privacy request email aliases and protect the integrity of request handling systems. Once the issue was raised by the Committee, that code was immediately removed. Our Privacy Center opt-out page has remained indexed, and our Privacy Policy has always been accessible and prominently visible on our web properties, as well as directly linked in our publicly available data broker registrations. We regularly review our security and privacy practices to meet evolving regulatory requirements, and our commitment has been independently validated annually through ISO/IEC 27001:2022, ISO/IEC 42001:2023, and SOC 2, Type II certifications.”

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Woman on computer doing brain training session

6sense said it takes privacy transparency “seriously.” (iStock)

Why hidden data broker opt-out pages matter for your privacy

Opt-out pages are not a courtesy. In many states, they are required by law. When companies hide those pages from search engines, they make it harder for you to take control of your own information. And that matters. The more complicated the process feels, the more likely people are to give up halfway through. Meanwhile, data broker breaches have been expensive and damaging. Committee calculations estimate that identity theft tied to four major data broker breaches cost U.S. consumers more than $20 billion. That is not a minor privacy slip. That is real money, real consequences and real stress for families trying to clean up the mess.

Why scammers care about your data

When detailed personal information falls into the wrong hands, it fuels scams that feel alarmingly real. Criminal networks can use data like Social Security numbers, home addresses and phone numbers to create highly customized emails, texts and phone calls. The more accurate the details, the more convincing the scam. That is one reason data broker breaches are not just a privacy issue. They are a consumer protection issue.

Sen. Maggie Hassan’s investigation is part of her broader effort to combat scams, which now account for nearly half a trillion dollars in losses annually and have grown into one of the world’s largest illicit industries. She has also opened inquiries into the roles that satellite internet providers, online dating platforms, AI companies and federal agencies play in preventing fraud.

Maggie Hassan runs for reelection

The investigation was led by Democratic Sen. Maggie Hassan of New Hampshire. (Sen. Maggie Hassan reelection campaign)

What this means for your personal data and privacy

Here is the uncomfortable truth. Your personal data likely sits in dozens, maybe hundreds of databases you have never heard of. You did not sign up. You did not click agree. But your information still travels through a vast marketplace. Even when opt-out forms exist, finding and completing them can feel like a part-time job. And since the U.S. still lacks a comprehensive federal privacy law like Europe’s GDPR, rules vary by state. So yes, the opt-out pages are now easier to find for these companies. But the bigger system remains largely intact.

How to opt out of data brokers and protect your information

You cannot erase yourself from the internet overnight. However, you can reduce your exposure.

1) Search your name regularly

Type your full name and city into Google. Look for data broker listings. Many include an opt-out link buried in the privacy policy.

2) Use state privacy tools if available

California residents can use a free state-run tool called DROP at privacy.ca.gov/drop/ to request deletion from more than 500 registered brokers. Other states are rolling out similar systems.

3) Submit opt-out requests directly

Visit the privacy or “Do not sell my information” page on broker sites. Follow instructions carefully and keep confirmation emails.

4) Consider a data removal service

Data removal services can automate opt-out requests across dozens of brokers. They are not perfect, but they save time. Check out my top picks for data removal services and get a free scan to find out if your personal information is already out on the web by visiting Cyberguy.com.

5) Lock down core accounts

Use strong, unique passwords stored in a password manager. Check out the best expert-reviewed password managers of 2026 at Cyberguy.com. Also, turn on two-factor authentication (2FA) for financial email and social accounts. That way, even if your data circulates, criminals have a harder time breaking in.

The larger problem with the data broker industry

The data broker industry is legal. It operates in plain sight. Yet most people have no idea how many companies trade in their information. Until Congress passes a national privacy law, oversight will remain patchwork. That leaves you to chase down your own records one company at a time. Transparency should not require a Senate investigation.

Kurt’s key takeaways 

This story is about more than hidden code. It is about control. When companies quietly block search engines from indexing opt-out pages, they tilt the playing field. After public scrutiny, those pages are easier to find. That is a step forward. Still, your data continues to move through an ecosystem designed to profit from it. So the real question is not whether opt-out pages appear on Google.

How much of your personal life are you comfortable leaving in the hands of companies you have never heard of? Let us know by writing to us at Cyberguy.com.

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