From Reuters Daily Briefing
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By Robert MacMillan, Reuters.com Weekend Editor
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- Connections: Fighting between Israel and Hezbollah forces in Lebanon will test the chances of any interim agreement to end the U.S. and Israeli war on Iran. Israel will keep forces in southern Lebanon, an official said, challenging the terms of the putative peace deal. Locals are returning to find their villages destroyed.
- Segues: Hard work vaulting countless roadblocks went into getting the interim U.S.-Iran deal together, and there’s a lot more to accomplish to turn it into a permanent agreement. While its backers call it the deal of the century, Tehran’s adversaries say it’s a curse.
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- Love on the rocks: Donald Trump used to call her “a fantastic leader and person” and a “beautiful young woman.” Now ties have deteriorated. In their latest salvo, Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni denied that she had begged the president for a photo of them together, leading Italy’s foreign minister to cancel a visit to the U.S.
- Cad on the tracks: Prosecutors are investigating a WhatsApp group in which tram drivers in Milan exchanged comments on images of female passengers captured by onboard security cameras.
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- Feed me: The federal energy regulator ordered electric-grid operators to consider new protocols to quickly connect large energy users such as artificial-intelligence data centers without raising costs and the risk of blackouts. It also said it would no longer automatically consider cumulative environmental impacts in its rulemaking.
- I need you, the bots need you: AI will lead to labor shortages rather than replacing human workers, Jeff Bezos said. His remarks come as companies cut thousands of jobs while investing in AI. Space companies are talking with insurers about covering AI data centers on satellites orbiting the earth, a way to bypass earth’s power constraints.
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- Get off their backs: Turkey’s coach said harsh criticism of the team’s World Cup defeat at the hands of Australia is demoralizing younger players and that “they have been affected by how overboard some of the reactions have been.” Paraguay’s coach said much the same thing. “You can shoot at me but not at them.”
- Heat and hops: TV ad presenters like them, but fans aren’t crazy about enforced hydration breaks during World Cup matches, despite the ridiculous heat in some of the venues. Tartan Army fans visiting from Scotland nearly emptied Boston of beer. “Do they ever sleep?” asked the general manager of the Sam Adams Tap Room. “Do they ever get tired?” And I love this story about the “translation cameras” that Philadelphia police are using during the matches.
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