Author: Fahim journalist

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  • Wage

    Salary Floor Rises Again: What the Minimum‑Wage Increase Means for Workers and Small Biz

    Australia’s Fair Work Commission has green‑lit a 3.75 % minimum‑wage increase starting 1 July 2025, lifting the national pay floor to AUD 24.95 per hour (AUD 946.10 per 38‑hour week). This move follows similar wage‑hike waves worldwide—from Ohio’s minimum‑wage increase 2025 in the U.S. Midwest to Malaysia’s rising salary benchmarks—reflecting a broader push toward a living wage standard. In a…

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  • ban

    Styrofoam Outlawed? What Virginia’s Ban Means for Restaurants and Consumers

    In a sweeping environmental move, Virginia has become the latest state to phase out single-use polystyrene containers, colloquially known as Styrofoam. The statewide Virginia Styrofoam ban is being implemented in stages, beginning with large restaurant chains and expanding to all vendors by 2026. This legislation marks a pivotal moment in the Commonwealth’s environmental policy and…

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  • GDPR

    UK GDPR 2.0? Parliament’s New Moves to Modernize Privacy Laws

    The United Kingdom formally retained the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) after Brexit, rebranding it as UK GDPR. Yet, in 2025, Westminster finds itself revisiting the legislation in a bid to balance digital innovation with privacy safeguards—and to ensure continued data‑adequacy with the EU. Dubbed “UK GDPR 2.0,” the new bill amends several core provisions, from consent…

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  • tax

    Digital Tax Shelved: Canada Backs Down Under U.S. Trade Pressure

    In a surprising about-face, Canada has decided to pause its planned implementation of the Digital Services Tax (DST) following mounting diplomatic pressure from the United States. The repeal of digital services tax legislation—at least temporarily—marks a significant shift in Canada’s approach to taxing digital multinationals such as Amazon, Google, and Meta. While Ottawa had long…

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  • Age-Verification Law

    Age-Verification Law in Porn: Texas & Beyond

    Understanding Age-Verification Laws in Pornography In the digital age, access to online content has become easier than ever. However, with this ease comes the responsibility of ensuring that certain types of content, like pornography, are only accessible to those who are legally allowed to view it. This is where age-verification laws come into play. These laws aim to prevent minors from accessing adult content, and they have been a topic of significant debate and legislative action across various jurisdictions. Age-verification laws are regulations that require websites hosting adult content to confirm the age of their users before granting them access. The goal is to ensure that only individuals who are legally considered adults can view such material. These laws vary by country and sometimes even by state or province within a country.…

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  • June Nonfarm Payrolls

    Hiring Holds Steady: What June Nonfarm Payrolls Reveal About the U.S. Job Engine

    As the U.S. economy edges into the second half of 2025, all eyes were on the June Nonfarm Payrolls Report, released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) on July 3. With inflation cooling modestly and interest rate cuts still up for debate, this jobs report serves as a vital barometer for economic resilience. Employers…

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  • Silver

    Is Silver the New Gold? Investors Brace for a July Rally

    As inflation concerns linger, interest rate decisions loom, and global economic uncertainty continues to simmer, investors are eyeing one asset with renewed curiosity—silver. The precious metal, often overshadowed by its glitzier counterpart, gold, is making headlines once again. Financial analysts, precious metal strategists, and even vocal market commentators like Robert Kiyosaki have forecast a potential…

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  • Trump Mobile

    Trump Mobile Goes Live: MAGA’s Bold Move into Wireless Tech

    In a move that has drawn both applause and scrutiny, former U.S. President Donald Trump has officially entered the mobile telecommunications industry. Launching under the name Trump Mobile, the new MVNO (mobile virtual network operator) claims to offer “patriotic connectivity” through a MAGA-branded smartphone called the T1, with services aimed at politically conservative Americans. More…

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  • Summer Surge

    Why the U.S. Can’t Shake COVID: Inside the 2025 Summer Surge

    In 2025, just as Americans prepared for backyard barbecues, cross-country travel, and crowded concerts, a familiar threat returned: COVID-19. This year’s Summer Surge caught many off guard, especially as vaccination fatigue, relaxed mandates, and new subvariants collided. Hospitals from Texas to Maine report rising admissions, testing centers are seeing increased foot traffic, and the CDC…

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  • July 4 travel

    Weather vs. Wanderlust: July 4 Travel Faces a Stormy Forecast

    Independence Day traditionally marks the peak of summer travel in the United States. AAA projects over 72 million Americans will take to planes, trains, and highways during the July 4 holiday stretch in 2025—a new record. Yet forecasters warn that an emerging tropical disturbance in the Gulf of Mexico and an unstable jet stream across the Midwest…

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