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29 Jul 2025   
  
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'It breaks my heart' - Hampton's tribute to grandpa who died before Euros
England goalkeeper Hannah Hampton pays tribute to her grandfather who died two days before the Lionesses' triumphant Euro 2025 campaign. 
© 2025 BBCWorld 3:05am 

Show of Mancunian grit could be making of India captain Gill
The defiance shown by Shubman Gill with the bat and in his leadership in the fourth-Test draw against England could be the making of him as India's captain. 
© 2025 BBCWorld 3:05am 

Red panda twins born in zoo breeding programme
The cubs were born a year after mother Xiao, 10, and 10-month-old father Flint were introduced. 
© 2025 BBCWorld 3:05am 

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Sewage spill caused deadly train derailment in Germany, police say
The train driver, another rail employee and one passenger died, while 41 people were injured, prosecutors say. 
© 2025 BBCWorld 3:05am 

'We could hear the screams': Inside one of the UK's most abusive cults
Survivors share their stories in a new podcast about one of the UK's most abusive cults. 
© 2025 BBCWorld 3:05am 

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'Kelly is more than the next Beckham' - the Lioness shifting the culture
With a hop, skip and a thwack, Chloe Kelly scored the winning penalty in the Euro 2025 final - and changed the landscape of English football. 
© 2025 BBCWorld 3:05am 

Watch: 'Never seen anything like this' - wildfires burn across southern Europe
Greece and Turkey are among the countries battling wildfires as temperatures spike in southern Europe. 
© 2025 BBCWorld 3:05am 

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North Korean hackers ran a ‘laptop farm’ out of Arizona woman’s home
In 1924, an innocuous American house might’ve hidden a speakeasy, slinging illegal booze to thirsty patrons during Prohibition. In 2020, you might’ve found the same house hiding dozens of Bitcoin miners. But in 2024, an American house hid a data center run by hackers operating it remotely from North Korea—and the US resident who took the job to keep it ticking is going to prison. After a federal investigation and arrest, Christina Chapman will serve 8.5 years in prison, followed by three years of supervised release and paying back hundreds of thousands of dollars in restitution, if possible. Chapman was certainly not unaware of the illicit nature of her activities—”I can go to federal prison for falsifying federal documents,” one of her chat logs correctly notes—but she is arguably, at least partially, a victim herself. 50-year-old Chapman was searching for a remote job that would allow her to take care of her mother who was battling cancer, according to a letter sent to the judge, when she found the opportunity that would result in her arrest. That job was essentially to be a facilitator for yet more remote workers, in reality North Korean agents posing as Americans in hundreds of US companies, stealing both funds and secrets. Through a combination of identity theft and remote access tools like VPNs and proxies, these agents posed as remote workers while operating out of a coordinated operations center in the isolated and heavily sanctioned hermit country. The FBI estimates that the fraud netted $17 million USD by the time it unraveled. United States Department of Justice Ars Technica reports that Chapman’s job was to be the “warm body” on American soil. In addition to receiving and forwarding paychecks, she would take possession of company-issued laptops, sometimes operating them manually out of her home, sometimes sending them to yet more middlemen in China to be passed on to North Korea. When the FBI finally arrested her, there were more than 90 laptops in her home, open and running on racks, operating as an ad hoc data center. Prosecutors said the hackers, employed under false identities, worked for “a top-5 national television network and media company, a premier Silicon Valley technology company, an aerospace and defense manufacturer, an iconic American car manufacturer, a high-end retail chain, and one of the most recognizable media and entertainment companies in the world.” Many were Fortune 500 companies, like Nike. North Korea has a long history of sophisticated hacking, including massive malware operations and directed attacks at other countries and Western corporations. The most visible to ordinary people is probably the infamous hack of Sony Pictures in 2014, apparently carried out in retaliation for the comedy movie The Interview, which depicts a fictional version of North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un. But more recent attacks have focused on lucrative ransomware and deep intelligence operations. The rise of generative “AI” tools has fueled a sophisticated campaign of applying for and receiving jobs posing as remote workers from other countries. There’s a growing list of people who have discovered that their new coworker wasn’t who they pretended to be. Chapman was effusive in her letter to the federal judge before sentencing, thanking the FBI for their work even though it resulted in a lengthy prison stay. “I had been trying to get away from the guys that I was working with for awhile and I wasn’t really sure how to do it… While this wasn’t the ideal way to get away from them, it did indeed get me away from them and I am thankful.” 
© 2025 PC World 2:55am 

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Newcastle open talks to sign Southampton's Ramsdale
Newcastle have opened talks to sign England and Southampton goalkeeper Aaron Ramsdale but discussions remain at an early stage. 
© 2025 BBCWorld 3:05am 

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Top stories, breaking news, live reporting, and follow news topics that match your interests 
© 2025 BBCWorld 3:05am 

Nigeria kidnappers kill 38 hostages even after ransom paid
They were put to death despite ransoms being paid for their release, a local official told the BBC. 
© 2025 BBCWorld 3:05am 

Woman who let child drive car must do unpaid work
Footage on social media showed the girl driving barefoot and in bad weather on the road in Aberdeenshire. 
© 2025 BBCWorld 3:05am 

What makes England's Euro 2025-winning manager Wiegman so successful?
Sarina Wiegman led England to back-to-back European Championship titles after the Lionesses beat Spain on penalties. So what makes the Dutchwoman so successful? 
© 2025 BBCWorld 3:05am 

Who are the winners and losers in US-EU trade deal?
Carmakers, consumers and European solidarity - a look at who is up and who is down due to the latest tariffs. 
© 2025 BBCWorld 3:05am 

England's Lucy Bronze played entire Euros with fractured leg
England defender Lucy Bronze's middle name is Tough, which perfectly encapsulates her Euro 2025 performances as the defender tells BBC Sport she played the whole tournament with a fractured tibia. 
© 2025 BBCWorld 3:05am 

Pro-Ukraine hacker group claims responsibility for Russian airline cyber-attack
The Kremlin says reports of a cyber-attack on Russia's national carrier Aeroflot are "worrying". 
© 2025 BBCWorld 3:05am 

Thailand and Cambodia agree to 'immediate ceasefire'
US President Donald Trump threatened to pause tariff negotiations until the hostilities stopped. 
© 2025 BBCWorld 3:05am 

Emergency pleas for strike doctors to work blocked by union
NHS England says 18 requests have been rejected, but the doctors' union says hospitals are stretching staff too thinly. 
© 2025 BBCWorld 3:05am 

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