Paris to sue Airbnb over ‘illegal ads’
The fine could amount to €12.5m ($14m, £11m) for the 1,000 ads the city says break French law.
The fine could amount to €12.5m ($14m, £11m) for the 1,000 ads the city says break French law.
A research hub to help the steel industry drastically cut carbon emissions by 2040 is being set up.
A research hub to help the steel industry drastically cut carbon emissions by 2040 is being set up.
The bank has apologised for “intermittent issues” with online banking and promised an urgent fix.
Some Lloyds customers had faced “intermittent issues” with online banking services.
Prices will rise for 1.8 million customers as E.On becomes the first supplier to react to Ofgem’s new cap.
Declines in construction and car manufacturing contributed to the slowdown, official figures show.
Redditors flooded the site with snarky posts after reports of funding from Chinese tech giant Tencent.
People on such contracts get worse working hours and are paid less than other workers, the TUC says.
StockX founder Josh Luber says entrepreneurs just need to put “one foot in front of the other”.
Andrew Michael was 17 when he used his mother’s credit card without her knowledge to launch a successful IT company.
A handful of Asian countries allow parents to take legal action against their children who fail to support them.
The chancellor is facing tricky spending decisions, says the Institute for Fiscal Studies.
Brexit may mean buying your favourite brand could cost you more. Here’s why.
The retail tycoon made a £15m bid on Friday but administrators say the cafe chain is worth more.
The firm is facing legal action after helping to raise money for Malaysia’s state development fund.
“We’re coming for you,” the pensions secretary warns company bosses who mismanage pension schemes.
The Scottish government resurrects a £10m prize to help commercialise clean energy technology.
The prolonged uncertainty of the “Brexit fog” seems to be leaving its mark on prosperity.
Victims of these scams lost an average of £11,145 each last year, with the total rising, Action Fraud says.
How is the world’s biggest trade fair for sweets adapting to a growing backlash against sugar?
Merebeth Veit has invented a job for herself that satisfies the two loves of her life, animals and travel.
The Irish backers of Seaborne Freight – which owned no ships – have pulled out of the deal.
Fifty years since the Boeing 747’s first flight, BBC Rewind looks back on how the jumbo jet changed aviation and global travel.
The Daily Telegraph says Sir Philip paid the female employee £1m after groping and kissing her.
Eliza Walter works at an art gallery, but in her spare time she makes sustainable jewellery.
The UK’s competition watchdog will decide shortly whether to give the green light to the proposed tie-up.
Racing faces its biggest financial crisis in 18 years, being forced to close down due to equine flu.
The Sports Direct owner confirms a bid for the cafe chain, which has about 121 outlets still open.
Although people ended up happier, the government hoped it would help the unemployed to find work.