The country’s internet regulator has announced that Australian internet users are prohibited from accessing a number of websites that used artificial intelligence to produce child sex exploitation material.
ESafety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant announced on Thursday that the three “nudify” sites withdrew from Australia following an official warning.
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According to Grant’s office, the websites had been featured in prominent cases of AI-generated child sex abuse imagery involving Australian school students and had been receiving about 100, 000 visits a month from Australians.
According to Grant, “nudify” services, which use artificial intelligence to create images of real people to appear naked, have had a “devastating” impact in Australian schools.
We took enforcement action in September because this provider failed to implement safeguards to stop children from being exposed to child sexual exploitation material, and they even used marketing features like “any girl,” with options for “schoolgirl” image generation and features like “sex mode,” Grand said in a statement.
The development comes after Grant’s office issued a formal warning to the British-based company that runs the sites in September and threatened civil penalties of up to 49.5 million Australian dollars ($33.22 million) if it didn’t implement measures to stop image-based abuse.
According to Grant, Hugging Face, a hosting service for AI models, has taken additional steps to comply with Australian law, including changing its terms of service to mandate account holders take steps to reduce the risks of platform misuse.
Australia has been at the forefront of international efforts to stop under-16s from using social media and stop them from downloading deep-fake apps.
With the rapid expansion of platforms that can produce photo-realistic material with the click of a mouse, AI has become increasingly popular for creating non-consensual sexually explicit images.
Just days after the most recent pageant, legal drama has taken the place of the Miss Universe competition, whose owners are facing fraud charges in Thailand and a Mexican drug and weapons trafficking investigation.
Since 2022, Thai mogul Anne Jakkaphong Jakrajutatip and her business, JKN Global, have owned the Miss Universe Pageant, which was once owned by US President Donald Trump.
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After avoiding a court hearing in Bangkok this week over a $ 30 million legal dispute with a JKN Global investor, Jakrajutatip is wanted there. According to Thai media, the Bangkok South District Court announced on Wednesday that it had issued an arrest warrant for Jakrajutatip, whose whereabouts are still unknown.
According to the Associated Press news agency, Jakrajutatip and JKN Global have been dealing with significant balance sheets since 2023 when the business began to make payments to investors in vain. The business reportedly owes about 3 billion baht ($92.63 million) in Thailand as a result of its bankruptcy court filing in 2024, according to the Associated Press.
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) of Thailand earlier this year fined Jakrajutatip and JKN Global for publishing “false or misleading information” in the business’s financial statement.
According to the SEC statement, JKN Global did not fully disclose to investors that it had agreed to sell 50% of its stakes in the Miss Universe Pageant to Mexican businessman Raul Rocha Cantu and his business Legacy Holding Group USA Inc. in October 2023.
Despite the sanction, Jakrajutatip is still a shareholder despite having left all of her positions with the company, according to AP. Additionally, she skipped earlier this month’s most recent Miss Universe contest in Bangkok.
According to the AFP news agency, Cantu is facing other legal issues in Mexico, where prosecutors announced on Wednesday that he was being looked into for alleged arms, drug, and fuel trafficking between Mexico and Guatemala.
Cantu has not yet been formally named, according to the AFP, but the prosecution has charged 13 people in connection with the case.
According to officials, the worst fire in 63 years in Hong Kong tore through a number of high-rise buildings on Wednesday afternoon, killing at least 44 people.
In Tai Po, firefighters are still battling the blaze and reaching out to those who are trapped inside.
Authorities said they had contained the fire in four buildings by early on Thursday morning, but firefighters were still putting out work on three more than 16 hours after the fire started.
What should I know:
What transpired in Hong Kong?
On Wednesday, around 2:51 p.m. (06:51 GMT) local time, an apartment building in Hong Kong’s Tai Po neighborhood caught fire.
The bamboo scaffolding outside one of the buildings caught fire. This kind of scaffolding, which is made of bamboo poles that workers use to perform repairs, burns quickly. When the scaffolding caught fire, the flames quickly spread to nearby towers, the structure, into the building, and then up to the scaffolding.
Due to ongoing renovation work, which also caught fire, causing it to spread more quickly, the blocks were also covered in green construction netting all the way to the rooftops.
The fire quickly grew, according to local media: It had reached a level four alarm by 3: 34 p.m. (07: 34 GMT), and by 6: 22 p.m. (10: 22 GMT), the highest level of alarm in Hong Kong.
The fire in Hong Kong’s Sham Shui Po district was the city’s deadliest fire since at least August 1962, when 44 people died in a fire there. In November 1996, a fire at the Garley Building on Nathan Road in Kowloon claimed the lives of 41 people and inflicted 81 injuries.
Due to the extreme risk of fire caused by dry weather, Hong Kong has been in a higher fire alert since Monday.
A building at the housing estate Wang Fuk Court is sprayed with smoke as flames burn bamboo scaffolding.
What was the beginning of the fire?
In Hong Kong’s Tai Po district, the fire started at Wang Fuk Court, a housing complex.
Eight high-rise buildings totaling 1, 984 apartments are housed in the 1983 complex. Seven of the buildings were reportedly impacted by the fire, according to local media reports. Four of those have since been controlled, according to the report.
Around 300,000 people live in Tai Po, a suburb of Hong Kong close to the border with mainland China. It is a component of the government’s program for subventioning home ownership.
According to property records, Wang Fuk Court has been the subject of significant renovations, involving a $42.43 million project.
[Tyrone Siu/Reuters] [Wang Fuk Court, housing estate in Tai Po, Hong Kong, November 26, 2025]
What caused the fire to spread so quickly, and how?
Because it started on the bamboo scaffolding around the building and spread to the green netting that covered the structures, the fire quickly spread.
Once the bamboo and green netting caught fire, the flames spread to many floors and up the tower’s exterior.
Within a few seconds, nearby buildings started to burn as a result of the explosion. The renovation work’s windows and open areas were likely to cause the flames to spread more quickly.
Officials claim that the fire erupted from control because the exact cause is still being investigated, but that the flammable scaffolding, building materials, and tall, tightly packed towers all contributed to it.
[Tyrone Siu/Reuters] A drone view shows thick smoke and flames rising from the housing complex Wang Fuk Court.
Additionally, according to police, they discovered styrofoam and other protective materials on the windows and the outside of the buildings, as well as sand and other protective materials on the exteriors.
According to Eileen Chung, senior superintendent at the Hong Kong Police Force, “we have reason to believe that those in charge of the company were grossly negligent, which led to this accident and the fire spreading uncontrollably, resulting in significant casualties.”
Two directors of a construction company, as well as an engineering consultant, are being detained by police. They are both between the ages of 52 and 68.
Around 2 a.m. on Thursday (18:00 GMT, Wednesday), police said they had detained them in the Tai Po, Ngau Tau Kok, and San Po Kong districts.
Wong, 71, responds to claims that his wife was stranded in Wang Fuk Court. [Tyrone Siu/Reuters]
How many people have passed away or are missing?
Authorities have confirmed the deaths of 44 people, including a firefighter, in the past. There are still about 279 missing people. The Hong Kong Hospital Authority informed CNN that at least 66 people had been admitted to hospitals as of 8am (GMT). 17 of those listed as critical were 24 as serious, and 24 were not.
In a hospital, four people died. In community centers, about 900 people have sought shelter.
What has recently happened on the ground?
In Hong Kong, it is now 9:42 AM (12:00 GMT), and according to local reports, firefighters are still battling the blaze.
The deputy director of fire services, Derek Armstrong Chan, claimed that extreme heat had prevented firefighters from entering some upper-floor apartments earlier, according to a report from the South China Morning Post. He added that crews “keep trying” to reach them.
Additionally, he added that “our frontline personnel are in increased danger as the debris and scaffolding of the affected building fall down.”
He claimed that the rescue and firefighting operation was “more difficult” because it was dark overnight.
It will also present additional danger and difficulties to our operation in the hours of darkness, and the fire scene’s temperature is still very high at this time. We are therefore having trouble getting to the upper floors of two buildings.
More than 1,200 fire and ambulance personnel were dispatched to the site, according to officials from the Hong Kong Fire Services Department. Some residents of the area have resumed their jobs and studies.
[Tyrone Siu/Reuters] A firefighter is present at the scene.
According to a new report, Russian “shadow vessels” are using false flags to deceive Russian authorities over its conflict in Ukraine.
According to a report released on Thursday by the Helsinki-based Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air (CREA), 113 Russian vessels flown a false flag in total over the first nine months of this year, transporting roughly 11 million tonnes of oil worth $4. 7 billion ($5.4 billion).
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According to report co-author Luke Wickenden, “Russian shadow tankers sailing under false flags are now growing alarmingly frequently.”
“False-flagged vessels alone traveled through the Danish Straits to transport 1.4 billion euros ($1.6 billion) of Russian crude oil and oil products” in September.
To avoid being scrutinized, Russia’s secretive shadow fleet transports prohibited goods, particularly oil, under non-Russian flags.
Every ship operating in international waters is required to fly a flag that grants it legal authority to conduct its operations there.
Countries are able to fly their flag and grant their nationality under the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea.
Some nations offer open registries that permit the use of their flag by foreign-owned or controlled vessels, a practice that some shippers favor due to lower registration costs and regulatory burdens.
As of the end of September, CREA reported that 96 sanctioned vessels had flown a false flag at least once this year.
According to the think tank, 85 vessels have at least two flag changes registered within the United States Department of Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) or the United Kingdom, in total.
At least 10 Russian ships were registered in their fleet in September 2025, according to CREA, for a total of 162 shadow vessels, compared to the six flag registries that had not flagged a Russian ship prior to Moscow’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
“We also see that shadow vessel operators are exploiting the capacity limitations of economically weak nations to use their flags and existing regulations to obtain passage rights to deliver blood oil,” said co-author Vaibhav Raghunandan, urging the EU and the UK to change their flagging policies and practices.
According to CREA, its report was based on information from the maritime safety platform Equasis, including vessel ownership and flag registry records.
It claimed to have cross-referenced the data with the global shipping industry database GSIS (Global Integrated Shipping System).
More evasive methods
The findings from the Center for a New American Security in Washington, according to Rachel Ziemba, an adjunct senior fellow at the organization.
On the back of increased pressure from the EU and China’s plans to block so-called “zombie vessels,” which use the registration numbers of retired vessels, Ziemba claimed Moscow had used “more evasive techniques.”
“There is an open question about enforcement,” Ziemba said, despite the US and the EU’s continued implementation of new sanctions on Russian oil.
Countries would need to target vessels, intermediaries, and buyers in order to significantly reduce Russia’s oil sales, she said, as sanctions enforcement becomes more difficult as a result of the growing illicit trade.
According to Ziemba, “but that comes with costs,” suggesting that China, a major buyer of Russian oil, might launch retaliations against nations that enacted tougher sanctions.
Most Thais don’t eat pork, so Bangkok, Thailand, is smothered in it, seasoned with sugar and cloves, deep fried, or served with zingy chilli mince.
However, a $3 billion market that is almost entirely fueled by domestic pig farmers may soon face fierce competition from the US’s third-largest producer, the United States, which produces hogs for the first time.
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Some details have surfaced in the Thai government’s preliminary trade agreement with the US, despite the still-untold fine print.
To reduce its $45.5 billion trade deficit with Thailand, which President Donald Trump claims unfairly disadvantages US producers, Washington has a 10-item wish list of goods that it wants to import duty-free.
Pork, corn, soya beans, some fruits, and some vegetables are included in the list.
The White House revealed some of the many restrictions to its trade agreement, which set the tariff rate for Thailand’s exports to the US at 19%, shortly after Trump met Thailand’s caretaker prime minister, Anutin Charnvirakul, on the sidelines of the ASEAN summit in Malaysia last month.
The White House cites Thailand’s commitment to “expediting access” for US meat and poultry products as well as its commitment to “address and prevent barriers to US food and agricultural products in the Thai market.”
The industry may not survive a flood of less expensive, subventioned US pork, which is fed up with ractopamine, a livestock additive that is prohibited in many nations, including Thailand, according to Thai pig farmers.
[Lauren DeCicca/Getty Images] The entrance of a grocery store on January 8, 2022
Nothing less than the kingdom’s food security is in danger, according to Worawut Siripun, Thailand’s deputy secretary-general, if US pork is allowed into the country without taxes.
Producers will stop raising pigs and will not be able to survive. Worawut, who owns about 10,000 pigs, told Al Jazeera, “The risks are not only for farms that are facing falling pig prices.”
“Affected by these are also those who grow feed crops, as well as veterinary drug sellers, producers of animal feed, and traders of animal feed. Everyone has an impact during the production cycle.
Trump had demanded that Thailand sign a protracted ceasefire agreement before engaging in trade talks with the country.
Thailand has suspended truce talks in the weeks following Anutin’s meeting because of alleged Cambodian violations of the terms of the deal.
Farmers and livestock producers are anticipating increased competition, despite conflicting information about whether tensions with Cambodia have stifled Thailand’s trade negotiations with its biggest export market.
Thailand’s pork industry has overcome difficulties, ranging from swine flu outbreaks to illegal imports from Vietnam and China.
However, it is expensive, primarily as a result of the government’s price controls on corn and soya used to feed pigs and other livestock. The measures are intended to protect the nation’s crop farmers, a crucial voting bloc.
The country’s pig farmers have low margins, just like the majority of Thailand’s agricultural producers.
On January 8, 2022, butchers chop up pork at the Bangkok Noi wholesale market [Lauren DeCicca/Getty Images]
In Thailand, according to Worawut, “feed is more expensive than US, where it is less expensive,” both imported and locally produced feed materials.
Farmers who raise corn and other feed products are also getting ready for difficult times.
Thailand announced earlier this month that it would remove a 20 percent tariff and reduce its annual corn import cap, which would have previously been set at about 50 000 tonnes.
In the upcoming weeks, prime minister Anutin is expected to dissolve parliament and declare new elections.
He has vowed to run for office despite criticism that he has already lied to Washington before a comprehensive trade agreement has been agreed upon.
Trump administration officials have already made announcements regarding a deal to avoid paying taxes on US digital services companies, the sale of billions of dollars worth of US-made aircraft, and other things.
Due to the difficult economic conditions, Anutin’s bargaining position has weakened.
On December 28, 2019, during a street festival in Bangkok, a woman looks at a roasted pork stall. [Mladen Antonov/AFP]
The National Economic and Social Development Council’s economic growth forecast for 2026 was cut to 1.2 percent on Monday, down from the region’s expected 2 percent expansion this year. This is by far the weakest performance among Southeast Asia’s leading economies, despite this year’s expected growth rate of 2%.
The main political opposition party has demanded that the government pause the negotiations and consult with local stakeholders as a third round of trade talks with the US is drew to a halt following the suspension of the Thailand-Cambodia peace deal.
Weerayut Karnchuchat, the People’s Party’s deputy leader in Thailand’s largest parliament, said, “This is a crucial moment.”
By the end of 2025, the minister of commerce has stated that negotiations will be over. That leaves roughly two months. Eight weeks of stakeholder hearings should be held, especially for those who are directly affected, such as corn farmers.
Thailand should take stock and assess whether regional rivals with full US trade agreements, such as Cambodia, Vietnam, and Malaysia, are satisfied with the outcomes and whether Thailand is offering too much, he continued.
The return of Trump and his trade war has had a difficult year for many midsized businesses, with demand falling across numerous US-exposed supply chains.
From lightbulbs to electrical wires, orders for everything from US-exporting factories are rerouting in Thailand.
Durian farmer and middleman Tipok Lertwattanaweerakul reported seeing a reduction in his profit margins.
As well as boosting protections for steel and lumber workers, Canada will offer more assistance in helping the steel and lumber industries deal with American tariffs and establish a domestic market.
In a press conference on Wednesday, Prime Minister Mark Carney gave an overview of the new strategy.
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According to Carney, Ottawa will reduce the quota for steel imports from nations without a free trade agreement to 20% from the level of 50 percent in 2024.
Countries that have signed a free trade agreement (FTA) with Canada will see their quotas reduced from 100% to 75% in 2024. The US and Mexico, who are bound by the US-Canada-Mexico free trade agreement, are not included in this.
Additionally, Canada will implement border controls to combat steel dumping and impose a global 25% tariff on targeted imported steel-derivative products.
In a bid to stop the importation of foreign steel into Canada, Ottawa established a quota for steel imports in July at 50% of the 2024 level.
According to a government official, the regulations are being made to make it easier for Canadian-produced steel to enter the country.
More than 23 000 people directly work in the steel industry, which contributes more than 4 billion dollars ($2.8 billion) to the country’s gross domestic product (GDP). However, one of the two industries that has been hardest hit by US President Donald Trump’s 50% tariffs on Canadian steel imports is in it.
After the Trump administration’s hike last month, Trump has increased steel tariffs by 50%, and softwood lumber, which has long been subject to US tariffs, is currently taxed at 45 percent.
Carney claimed that the decades-long effort to establish a more stable economic relationship between Canada and the US is now over.
As a result, many of our weaknesses have developed. More than 75% of our exports were made in the United States last year. All of our exports of lumber and steel are bound for a single market, according to Carney, 90 percent of which are exported in aluminum and 90 percent of the world.
Beginning in the first half of 2026, Ottawa will work with railroad companies to reduce the cost of moving Canadian steel and lumber across provinces.
By lowering freight costs, “we will make it more affordable to transport Canadian steel and lumber across the country,” said Carney.
The government announced that it would support local steel and lumber use in home construction, as well as financial aid for businesses that are dealing with labor shortages, a shortage of money, and restructuring operations.
Trump tensions
After the Ontario provincial government ran television advertisements in US markets praising Trump’s tariffs and citing a speech by former US President Ronald Reagan, Trump abruptly ended trade talks with Canada last month.
Carney stated that he would attend the FIFA World Cup 2026 tournament’s final draw on December 5 in Washington. He claimed he had spoken with Trump at that time and that he had only spoken with the president briefly on Tuesday.
When the United States wants to re-engage in those discussions, Carney said, “We are ready to re-engage.”
Carney’s announcement comes as US businesses are under more pressure as a result of Trump’s tariffs.