News Headlines - 17 April 2015
▽IMF Official Sees Greek Bailout Needing Several More Weeks of Talks - WSJ
Negotiations over fresh emergency financing for Greece are likely to take several more weeks, even though the cash-needy government in Athens requires a deal to help it meet a big increase in debt payments due in June, a senior International Monetary Fund official said Friday.
▽UK jobless rate falls to 5.6%, lowest since 2008 | The Guardian
The Conservatives welcomed news of the drop in the jobless rate to 5.6% as well as the number of people in work hitting a record of more than 31m... But wage growth eased – the latest evidence that much of the labour market recovery is yet to translate into higher living standards.
▽How Google found itself ‘on the wrong side of history’ - FT.com
This week, the results of that failure were apparent as Mr Almunia’s no-nonsense Danish successor, Margrethe Vestager, unveiled a formal complaint against Google, marking the most significant tech case since Brussels took on Microsoft a decade ago.
▽Zuckerberg: an unequal internet better than no internet - Telegraph
Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg has spoken out in defence of Internet.org, after a group of Indian technology and internet companies pulled out of the initiative, claiming it threatened the principle of "net neutrality".
▽No bones about it, there were cannibal cavemen in Somerset | The Times
Researchers from the Natural History Museum have analysed the prehistoric remains found in Gough’s Cave, and found that not only was there definitively cannibalism, but it was very extensive and very methodical.