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Spain secures opt-out from new Nato spending goal, says Sánchez

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Green   来源:Africa  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:A decade ago, the state's police were seen as weak, according to Mr Ganapathy.

A decade ago, the state's police were seen as weak, according to Mr Ganapathy.

Other Kneecap gigs scheduled this summer - including at the Eden Project in Cornwall and Plymouth Pavilions - were cancelled after footage from a 2023 gig appeared to show a band member saying: "The only good Tory is a dead Tory. Kill your local MP."The Belfast trio has since

Spain secures opt-out from new Nato spending goal, says Sánchez

Sir David Amess and Jo Cox.Now, 2000trees festival has confirmed it has no plans to remove Kneecap from its line-up.A spokesperson for the festival said: "If their recent shows in London are anything to go by, this promises to be one of the most memorable headline sets we've ever had at 2000trees.

Spain secures opt-out from new Nato spending goal, says Sánchez

"You may have even seen Kneecap at 2000trees before, this will be their third visit after all. But headlining the main stage this summer is going to be something else entirely."We will all be there in the pit with you for one of the most exciting, fun and historic sets you'll see this summer."

Spain secures opt-out from new Nato spending goal, says Sánchez

The BBC contacted 2000trees to ask if it has any security concerns in relation to Kneecap's performance, or is putting additional measures in place, and is awaiting a response.

Kneecap was formed in 2017 by three friends who go by the stage names of Mo Chara, Móglaí Bap and DJ Próvaí.Nearly 300 members of the House of Lords disagree.

They think AI firms should be forced to disclose which copyrighted material they use to train their tools, with a view to licensing it.Sir Nick Clegg, former president of global affairs at Meta, is among those broadly supportive of the bill, arguing that asking permission from all copyright holders would "kill the AI industry in this country".

Those against include Baroness Beeban Kidron, a crossbench peer and former film director, best known for making films such as Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason.She says ministers would be "knowingly throwing UK designers, artists, authors, musicians, media and nascent AI companies under the bus" if they don't move to protect their output from what she describes as "state sanctioned theft" from a UK industry worth £124bn.

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