Mark Zuckerberg staying at helm of Meta for many years 'makes sense', says Nick Clegg
Succession at the tech giant has been in the headlines recently – but Zuckerberg has shown no sign of giving up the reins.
Succession at the tech giant has been in the headlines recently – but Zuckerberg has shown no sign of giving up the reins.
Varadkar virtually met representatives of Facebook on 30 September.
The social media giant said the Data Protection Commission told it the key mechanism it uses to transfer data to the US “cannot in practice be used”.
The Brexit Party and the Greens have also both seen gains.
The Data Protection Commissioner has launched a statutory inquiry into Facebook’s password storage breach.
A good day for Corbyn and Goldsmith but a bad one for May, Clegg and Salmond.
Taoiseach Enda Kenny has send his congratulations, and said he’s looking forward to building on their “very close relationship”.
We’re in London ahead of the UK general election on Thursday. Here’s what we’ve found out so far.
The Lib Dem leader declined.
There are some remarkable similarities between British and Irish politics as voters in the UK prepare to vote on 7 May, writes Seamus Conboy.
In a closely-fought race it appears neither the Conservatives nor Labour will emerge victorious on 7 May.
Ched Evans was released on Friday after serving half of his five-year sentence
All three party leaders have pulled out of Prime Minister’s Questions to head north.
In the aftermath of the the airplane crash in Ukraine, the politician claims the host nation should be changed.
Someone calling you out on your typo = mortifying. Someone ILLUSTRATING said typo = let us die.
The British Prime Minister hopes to negotiate fundamental changes in his country’s membership of the European Union.
A damaging political revelation? Probably not.
Polls for a number of British papers show Nigel Farage’s party enjoying 14 per cent of the vote, an all-time high.
The 33rd annual conference of European liberals will be taking place in Dublin next month.
Meanwhile a senior police officer who was at Hillsborough today claimed fans made the police’s job harder amid calls for him to resign.
Did they really say that? TheJournal.ie’s review of the week in words.
However, the Taoiseach said that any financial tax that is not introduced in London will not be accepted in Dublin.
Alex Salmond and Nick Clegg have taken to Irish airwaves to express strong views about the issue of Scottish independence ahead of the British-Irish Council summit today.
The 17th council summit gets underway in Dublin this afternoon, where the main issue on the table will be economic developments.
Nick Clegg will meet with President Michael D Higgins during a visit to Dublin tomorrow.
Ian Paisley Jr and Nigel Dodds tell the House of Commons that Ireland will face further pressure to raise the 12.5 per cent rate.
The opposition said he lost but the prime minister insisted he was defending his country’s interests over his veto of the EU deal.
David Cameron will defend using his veto to the House of Commons – which his deputy prime minister said was “bad for Britain”.
Clegg had been due to meet with president Michael D Higgins and Tánaiste Eamon Gilmore in Dublin tomorrow.
Nick Clegg will be among the first international dignitaries to visit Michael D Higgins when he takes office.
The House of Commons will this evening debate the public release of all 40,000 documents relating to the Hillsborough disaster.
The phone hacking scandal that has engulfed Rupert Murdoch’s media empire has spread to the US.
The assistant commissioner of the Metropolitan Police will be grilled on why he chose not to reopen inquiries in 2009.
Emails discovered in 2007 and handed over to investigators last month claim corruption among police guarding the Royals.
The UK is considering creating ‘people’s banks’ by distributing shares in certain banks to members of the public.
Wind farms on Ireland’s west coast will also be on the agenda.
The British prime minister and deputy prime minister were meeting patients at the hospital when the doctor accosted the accompany TV crew over hygiene.
Video: Obama wasn’t deterred from continuing his toast by the British national anthem, but seems to have realised something was amiss when he was the only one raising his glass.