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      No big North Sea fossil fuel country has plan to stop drilling in time for 1.5C goal

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Tuesday, 12 March - 09:00

    UK, Germany, Netherlands, Norway and Denmark have failed to align oil and gas policies with Paris pledges, say campaigners

    None of the big oil and gas producers surrounding the North Sea plan to stop drilling soon enough to meet the 1.5C (2.7F) global heating target, a report has found.

    The five countries – the UK, Germany, the Netherlands, Norway and Denmark – have failed to align their oil and gas policies with their climate promises under the Paris agreement, according to the campaign group Oil Change International.

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      Norwegian king has pacemaker implanted after illness in Malaysia

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Saturday, 2 March - 13:39


    Palace says King Harald had implant due to low heart rate after being admitted to hospital during holiday

    Norway’s King Harald V has had a temporary pacemaker implanted at a hospital in Malaysia after he became ill while on holiday there, the royal household said.

    “The pacemaker was implanted due to a low heart rate. The decision was made earlier today, and the procedure was successful,” the palace said, adding that the king was doing well but still required rest.

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      TV tonight: Martin Compston and pal head to Scandinavia for a Norwegian Fling

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Friday, 23 February - 06:20


    The Line of Duty actor and Phil MacHugh go skiing and meet the country’s youngest MP. Plus: The Great Escape: The True Story. Here’s what to watch this evening

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      ‘You lied to us’: did the real-life saga behind Free Willy change the story for orcas in captivity?

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Saturday, 10 February - 12:00

    Thirty years after the film highlighted their plight, thousands of whales and dolphins remain performing in entertainment parks

    Anyone who grew up in the 1990s may well remember this movie scene: a 3.6-tonne orca leaping to freedom over a harbour wall and swimming off into the sunset with his family. It was the closing scene of Free Willy, a film that captured the hearts of a generation, telling the story of an orphaned boy racing against time to free a killer whale from captivity before the creature is destroyed.

    It was 30 years ago this month that the film was released in the UK and it went on to spawn three sequels and a TV series. But it also helped to expose the dark side of orcas in captivity – not least the real-life story of Keiko , the whale who played Willy. Rescuing him took many years and millions of dollars – and even then the ending was not one that would have made the movie screens.

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      Weather tracker: Storm Ingunn hits Norway with hurricane-force winds

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Friday, 2 February - 08:12 · 1 minute

    Schools closed and bus thrown off road in most powerful storm for decades, while snow ends dry spell in Himalayas

    This week brought the strongest storm so far of the 2023-24 European season, as Storm Ingunn slammed into Norway on Wednesday with hurricane-force winds. A deep, multi-centred area of low pressure intensified as it moved eastwards towards Scandinavia, displaying signs of possible sting jet activity as it approached the Norwegian coast. A sting jet is a narrow channel of very strong winds – often more than 100mph – that can form when low pressure systems strengthen rapidly, with these winds descending from upper levels towards the surface.

    The storm deepened to a lowest central pressure of 940hPa on Wednesday evening, approaching Norway’s official low pressure record of 938.5hPa, set in 1907. The storm is the most powerful Norway has seen in decades, with sustained winds equivalent to those from a Category 1 hurricane. Gusts of 80-100mph were widespread along the west coast during Wednesday afternoon and overnight, with the Norwegian Meteorological Society announcing on Thursday a strongest confirmed gust of 115mph at Sklinna Lighthouse on the island of Heimøya, to the north of Trondheim. Some reports from the Faroe Islands suggest that gusts there could have reached up to 155mph, but these numbers are unconfirmed at the time of writing.

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      www.theguardian.com /environment/2024/feb/02/weather-tracker-storm-ingunn-hits-norway-with-hurricane-force-winds

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      Floating sauna rescues motorists whose Tesla plunged into Oslo fjord

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Thursday, 1 February - 18:01


    People on sauna boat pull the motorists from the water before their vehicle is lifted out

    Two motorists whose car plunged into the freezing Oslo fjord escaped unharmed when a floating sauna came to their rescue, Norwegian police have said.

    A video clip filmed by witnesses and obtained by Agence France-Presse on Thursday appears to shows the vehicle, a Tesla, partially submerged in the water, with its occupants sitting on the roof.

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      Jon Fosse Receives Nobel Prize in Literature

      news.movim.eu / TheNewYorkTimes · Thursday, 5 October, 2023 - 18:54


    Long a favorite to receive the award, Fosse has found acclaim for work that explores mortality and religion, and radiates serenity.
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      Norway has had it with Meta, threatens $100K fines for data violations

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Tuesday, 18 July, 2023 - 16:52

    Norway has had it with Meta, threatens $100K fines for data violations

    Enlarge (credit: NurPhoto / Contributor | NurPhoto )

    Meta's data privacy woes in Europe continue as Norway has announced an immediate ban on "behavioral advertising" on Facebook and Instagram. Until Meta makes some big changes, it will be fined $100,000 daily for Norwegian user privacy breaches, the Norwegian Data Protection Authority, Datatilsynet, said yesterday.

    "Meta tracks in detail the activity of users of its Facebook and Instagram platforms," Datatilsynet's press release said. "Users are profiled based on where they are, what type of content they show interest in, and what they publish, amongst others. These personal profiles are used for marketing purposes—so called behavioral advertising. The Norwegian Data Protection Authority considers that the practice of Meta is illegal and is therefore imposing a temporary ban of behavioral advertising on Facebook and Instagram."

    Norway has not banned the apps. Its ban is focused on restricting data collection for behavioral advertising and starts August 4. The temporary ban could drag on for three months unless Meta takes remedial action sooner.

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      Sharp Rise in Piracy Rates Across Sweden, Denmark, Finland & Norway

      news.movim.eu / TorrentFreak · Wednesday, 24 May, 2023 - 20:26 · 4 minutes

    dataface Mediavision has been tracking citizens’ piracy habits across the Nordic countries since 2010. The company’s annual report for Spring 2023, based on a survey conducted in March, has just been released.

    With Sweden, Denmark, Finland and Norway under the spotlight once again, Mediavision’s pan-Nordic consumer survey aims to measure unlicensed content consumption among 15 to 74-year-old respondents, across categories including movies and TV shows, and access to both via pirate IPTV services.

    Overall Piracy Rates Increase

    With no obviously positive news to distract, poor figures across all four countries take center stage.

    Denmark, a country with an overall movie and TV show piracy rate of 11% in 2014, now has an overall rate of 20%, up from the 13% reported in Mediavision’s survey in 2022.

    With an overall rate of just 8% in 2014, increases over the years led to a 13% overall rate for Finland in 2022. A four point rise over the past 12 months pushes Finland’s overall movie and TV show piracy rate to 17%.

    Since 2014, overall unlicensed consumption of movies and TV shows, in both Norway and Sweden, adopted a broadly U-shaped curve. With reducing piracy rates indicating signs of progress in the middle, high rates of piracy seen in 2014 are back on display in 2022, and then some.

    Image: Mediavision Nordic Piracy Report (Spring 2023) mediavision-nordic-overall-2022

    Overall movie and TV show piracy rates for Norway now stand at 22% versus 18% last year, with Sweden at 25% and 20% respectively. Mediavision reports that in all four countries, the usual suspects are driving the increases.

    Young People Push Up Piracy

    Technologically adept and hungry for content, young people often make a disproportionate contribution to piracy rates. Through various programs, rightsholders have reached out to kids of all ages, hoping to encourage negative attitudes towards piracy from an early stage.

    From kindergarten copyright classes in the United States, to a current project in Denmark that will pay teens to assist with piracy research, most things have been tried.

    Mediavision’s latest study reveals that piracy increases are being driven by young people in the 15 to 24-year-old group, across all four countries. The concern for rightsholders lies in piracy’s monthly reach, which was unacceptably high last year and is now considerably worse.

    According to last year’s report, 29% of young Danes engaged in movie and/or TV show piracy. The latest figures show a leap to 46%, a figure that puts Denmark on equal footing with Finland, where rates rose to 46% from the 27% reported last year.

    Norway’s increase, from 38% last year to 51% this year, is slightly less steep, leaving Sweden with the surprise upper hand.

    Image: Mediavision Nordic Piracy Report (Spring 2023) mediavision-young-2023

    The eight percentage point increase attributed to young Swedes in this year’s survey is less than any of its regional neighbours. Unfortunately, Sweden’s last set of results in 2022 indicated that 45% of its young people engaged with piracy, a figure that has now risen to 53%. That suggests that every second young person in Sweden today is a pirate

    Access to Pirate IPTV Services

    Mediavision’s Spring 2022 survey found that across Sweden, Denmark, Finland & Norway, just under 0.9 million households subscribed to an illegal IPTV service.

    With the largest population, Sweden accounted for more than 40% (380,000) of IPTV-equipped households across the region. With 230,000 subscribed homes, Norway was runner-up, with Finland (155,000) and Denmark (125,000) taking the remaining spots. Taking population into account, Norway’s 10% share beat Sweden’s 9% into second place.

    Following the release of these figures last year, entertainment companies warned that use of pirate IPTV services was on the increase in the Nordic region. According to the latest survey, the prediction was spot on.

    Image: Mediavision Nordic Piracy Report (Spring 2023) mediavision-IPTV-2023

    The latest figure of 1,150,000 households represents a 29% increase over the 890,000 households reported in 2022. With 490,000 and 255,000 households respectively, Sweden and Norway are the leading consumers of IPTV by volume, pushing Denmark (220,000) and Finland (190,000) into third and fourth place. By share, Sweden and Norway tie with 11% each, leaving Denmark (9%) and Finland (7%) to complete the set.

    And Now The Good News

    In contrast to the gloomy picture painted by the latest survey, other recent reports published by Mediavision signal positive trends in legal content consumption.

    “Online video in Finland is on the rise. During this spring, subscribing SVOD households have passed 1.5 million, corresponding to a penetration of 61 percent. This equals an annual growth of 8 percent in subscribing households,” the company notes .

    In Sweden, where piracy habits are on the rise, legal consumption is going in the same direction.

    “Today, over 90 percent of households in Sweden pay for some form of media subscription,” another Mediavision report begins. Despite rising interest rates, inflation and increased financial anxiety, there is no sign of a slowdown in paid media.

    “On the contrary, Mediavision’s latest analysis measures a new record level for households’ total media expenditure. Households pay the most for TV and streaming subscriptions,” Mediavision reports .

    Denmark’s situation also appears less gloomy than its piracy rates suggest. After adding half a million in 2022, there are now over four million paid VOD subscriptions in Denmark, from a total population of less than six million.

    Mediavision also notes that around three million subscriptions in the Nordics are shared accounts, paid for by the subscriber but enjoyed for free by others. With further sharing crackdowns looming on the horizon, the question is whether legal platforms or pirate sites stand to reap the most benefits.

    Mediavision’s Nordic Piracy Report 2023 is available from TTVK ( pdf )

    From: TF , for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.