Recommended Posts

Went with the Mrs to vote earlier on as I'd taken the day off of work. I think technically my daughter decided for me as I think at the tender age of 6 she's a better decision maker than those listed on the ballot paper.

  • Like 1

Went with the Mrs to vote earlier on as I'd taken the day off of work. I think technically my daughter decided for me as I think at the tender age of 6 she's a better decision maker than those listed on the ballot paper.

 

My 20 month old would be able to make a more informed decision than me, so +1 with you on that.

I voted for the Green Party. Down here in the south-west, you didn't really have much of a choice if you're left-wing. Take a look at the ballot paper I had...

 

post-151617-0-05081200-1400775500.jpg

 

Eight parties to choose from, seven of them right-wing. Most of them are summed up in the Political Compass...

 

uk2010.php

 

The two not in that chart are An Independence from Europe and the English Democrats; the former is basically UKIP formed by an MEP who was deselected as a UKIP candidate, and the latter is the political wing of the English Defence League, a group who arguably verges on terrorism.

To be honest I don't want to leave the EU completely, but I'm not happy with the current state of affairs.

I'm the same; that's partially why I voted Green. Obviously I put policies first and I chose based on that.

 

...well, sort of. On both Vote for Policies and Vote Match (who are both seemingly being hammered with traffic right now), the Lib Dems came out top for me (the Greens were 2nd), but if the past four years have proven anything, it's that they're good at lying and they'll happily betray their voters to get even the tiniest sniff of power.

I voted UKIP.

 

I think our country needs something different to the usual Connies and Labourers that do nothing but squabble with each other.

Even if they're only in for one term, it'll show the others that they need to be realistic to what the people are saying, not what their friends in Europe are saying.  The only thing I am put off by is UKIP's automatic no to Europe.  Even though I would vote no, there should still be a referendum.

 

No to Euro because they make such stupid laws sometimes.

Like driving lights on cars...  I had a hire car once that the driving lights were brighter than the dipped lights.  Plus, in the middle of the day when the sun is shining bright, why do we need lights to see the vehicle?  It dazzles me sometimes, which is surely dangerous?

 

However, there have been a couple of Euro laws that I have supported, but can't even remember what they are.

 

And I hope we'll still be able to enter in the Eurovision!

I found it hard to vote in this election, I'm a huge car person as well as technology person so I didn't want to vote green even though a lot of their non-transport policies made sense. 

Could you elaborate on the technology part, please? I didn't see anything in the Green Party's policies that made them seem anti-technology. On the car front, yes, they do come off a little anti-car with the reduction of speed limits in their transport policy, but their main focus seems to be on improving public transport to the point where people would choose that over driving themselves. On the flipside though, they'd want to abolish the car/road tax too and instead bring in "a purchase tax on new cars that reflects their emissions", which makes sense in my eyes; it's how road tax currently works, but it'd only affect anyone buying new cars and it'd give an extra incentive to buy electric cars, which are now arguably at the point where they're suitable enough for daily use for most drivers, with the initial cost still being the biggest hurdle.

For those of you in the UK, who are you voting for in the European elections and why?

 

I still can't make my mind up!

I voted on Thursday and I voted for the Green Party.

 

I don't trust UKIP, Labour, Liberal and would never vote for the harmony party or the b.n.p.

 

I have lost trust in the Conservatives,

 

They did not do half of what they said they would do with respect to their manefesto.

 

Also the policies invented by the boring git Ian Duncan-Smith, the man that lives in a posh house on his fathers property and the tax payers pay his rent are disgusting.

 

He disgusts me, another reason I have lost trust in the Conservatives.

 

All the political party's are run by and contain posh boys and girls.

 

So it's snouts at the troff's.

I voted for the Green Party. Down here in the south-west, you didn't really have much of a choice if you're left-wing. Take a look at the ballot paper I had...

 

attachicon.gif10344022_10152207788777830_303907356_o.jpg

 

Eight parties to choose from, seven of them right-wing. Most of them are summed up in the Political Compass...

 

uk2010.php

 

The two not in that chart are An Independence from Europe and the English Democrats; the former is basically UKIP formed by an MEP who was deselected as a UKIP candidate, and the latter is the political wing of the English Defence League, a group who arguably verges on terrorism.

What you did was against the law, you are lucky you're not up in front of the beak.

 

you can go to prison for what you did and that is not for voting Green.

Lib dems and look on the bright side at least we're not France who have the National Front in the lead...

 

Edit: It's not against the law to take a selfie in a voting booth or a picture of your ballot IT IS however illegal to take a photo of someone ELSE voting and who they voted for, it's just certain papers twisted it around.

What you did was against the law, you are lucky you're not up in front of the beak.

 

you can go to prison for what you did and that is not for voting Green.

 

 

Edit: It's not against the law to take a selfie in a voting booth or a picture of your ballot IT IS however illegal to take a photo of someone ELSE voting and who they voted for, it's just certain papers twisted it around.

What Lovell said. Also, that picture wasn't taken in a voting booth; it was taken in my bedroom (notice the keyboard in the background on the right?). My family is registered for postal voting rather than going to a polling station on election day.

What Lovell said. Also, that picture wasn't taken in a voting booth; it was taken in my bedroom (notice the keyboard in the background on the right?). My family is registered for postal voting rather than going to a polling station on election day.

You should not advertise it on the internet, you give people the impression you are ignoring the law.

 

Also go vote, rather than postal voting, 07:00 to 20:00 is loads of time.

 

Postal fraud is rife.

Yorkshire and the Humber have declared. Six seats, three to UKIP, two to Labour, one to the Tories. UKIP gained two, Labour gained one, the Tories lost one, the Lib Dems and the BNP (thankfully) lost their sole seats each.

 

South West England (my region) should be coming up next; Nick Robinson said earlier that the Tories might actually come fifth down here.

South West England have declared. Six seats, two each to UKIP and the Tories, one to Labour, and one to the Greens. Tories lost one, the Lib Dems lost their sole seat, Labour and the Greens gained one each.

 

Even though UKIP came out top down here, I'm glad there's a Green MEP too. :)

I voted on Thursday and I voted for the Green Party.

 

I don't trust UKIP, Labour, Liberal and would never vote for the harmony party or the b.n.p.

 

I have lost trust in the Conservatives,

 

They did not do half of what they said they would do with respect to their manefesto.

 

Also the policies invented by the boring git Ian Duncan-Smith, the man that lives in a posh house on his fathers property and the tax payers pay his rent are disgusting.

 

He disgusts me, another reason I have lost trust in the Conservatives.

 

All the political party's are run by and contain posh boys and girls.

 

So it's snouts at the troff's.

But, out of interest, why did you think they would?

Did you not look up what the tories did in the 80s and 90s? Why did you think they'd be any different now, with a leader that hailed thatcher?

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Posts

    • Meta announces a major leadership change at WhatsApp by Pradeep Viswanathan Meta has announced a major leadership change at WhatsApp, with Will Cathcart stepping down after seven years of leading the world's largest messaging platform. CRED CEO and founder Kunal Shah will take over as the next global head of WhatsApp. CRED is an Indian fintech company focused on creditworthy consumers. As part of the transition, Meta is also making a minority investment in CRED through its Series H funding round. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said Will Cathcart will remain at Meta and move into a new role focused on building new products from the ground up. Cathcart led WhatsApp during a major growth phase, helping the app reach more than 3 billion users worldwide. He also played a key role in expanding WhatsApp’s business offerings while keeping privacy and end-to-end encryption central to the product. Meta’s Chief Product Officer, Chris Cox, said Kunal Shah was selected after a search for a leader who understands WhatsApp’s global scale and future potential. In a leaked internal memo, Cox described Shah as a “serial founder” and one of India’s most respected entrepreneurs, adding that he brings “entrepreneurial energy” and a strong product mindset to the role. As part of the Series H funding round, CRED is raising ₹8,550 crore, or about $900 million, in a round led by Meta. The funding values CRED at ₹43,239 crore, or about $4.5 billion, on a post-money basis. It is important to note that this investment will not give Meta access to CRED customer information. Kunal posted the following on X regarding his new role at Meta: Although Kunal Shah will be stepping away from his operating role as CRED CEO, he will retain his personal shareholding in the company.
    • It wouldn't be hard for me to turn off my TV, if I had one. For one thing, I never scroll Instagram. The only reason I have an account is because Meta created one when it merged the account systems for its various services.
    • OpenAI's new GPT-5.5-Cyber tops Claude Mythos 5 in vulnerability benchmark by Pradeep Viswanathan OpenAI today announced a major expansion of Daybreak, a cybersecurity initiative designed to help defenders find, validate, and fix software vulnerabilities earlier in the development process. The availability of powerful AI models has definitely changed the cybersecurity landscape by making vulnerability discovery much faster. However, the bigger bottleneck for the industry is now patching those vulnerabilities. Impacted software teams need to validate the discovered issues, understand their impact, develop fixes, test them, and deploy patches. Back in March, OpenAI launched a preview of Codex Security, which uses agentic reasoning with automated validation to discover high-impact issues and actionable fixes specific to the codebase. Since then, it has scanned more than 30 million commits across over 30,000 codebases; more than 70,000 findings were marked as fixed by human reviewers, while over 500,000 findings were automatically determined to be fixed. Now, OpenAI is releasing an updated Codex Security plugin that can run deep scans, review recent code changes, generate security reports, trace attack paths, validate findings, and create codebase-specific patches for human review. It can also triage findings from existing scanners, advisories, bug bounty reports, and ticketing systems. OpenAI says the plugin can export results to vulnerability management systems and integrate with workflows using SARIF files, CodeQL queries, the Codex CLI, and the Codex app. Back in May, OpenAI announced the preview of GPT-5.5-Cyber, a new model built on top of the recently released GPT-5.5, designed for specialized cybersecurity work. Today, OpenAI launched the full version of GPT-5.5-Cyber through a limited release for verified defenders. On CyberGym, GPT-5.5-Cyber scored 85.6%, compared with 81.8% for GPT-5.5 and 83.8% for Claude Mythos 5. It also scored 39.5% on ExploitGym, compared with 25.95% for GPT-5.5, and 69.8% on SEC-bench Pro, compared with 63.1%. OpenAI also announced the new Daybreak Cyber Partner Program, which will allow security vendors and service providers to use GPT-5.5 with Trusted Access for Cyber in their products and services. Accenture, Akamai, Cisco, Cloudflare, CrowdStrike, IBM, Palo Alto Networks, Proofpoint, SentinelOne, Wiz, Zscaler, and others were listed as initial partners for this program. OpenAI is also launching Patch the Planet with Trail of Bits, HackerOne, Calif, researchers, and maintainers. More than 30 open-source projects have committed to participate, including cURL, Go, Python, Sigstore, and pyca/cryptography.
    • AMD confirms 26.6.2 FSR driver breaks on many Windows PCs by Sayan Sen Earlier today AMD released a major graphics driver update as it brings support for FSR 4.1 to Radeon RX 7000 series GPUs. The new update, version 26.6.2, also brings support for Assassin's Creed Black Flag Resynced and more. And while the driver technically supports Windows 10 version 21H2 and newer, the tech giant has confirmed that there is a major issue with the new driver on non-Windows 11 PCs as it fails to launch properly on such systems. The error message says, "The version of AMD Software that you have launched is not compatible with your currently installed AMD graphics driver." Therefore on the surface it looks like a compatibility problem. AMD has also confirmed that the device manager will display the yellow bang or yellow exclamation sign alongside your GPU under the Display adapters dropdown. Here is what the Radeon team's official advisory recommends to affected users: "Users Running Windows 10 and AMD Software: Adrenalin Edition 26.6.2 May Encounter Yellow Bang in Device Manager Affecting AMD Radeon RX Series Graphics ... Our Engineers are currently investigating this issue and will provide a fix once it is available. Affected users may revert to AMD Software: Adrenalin Edition 26.6.1 as a temporary workaround." As such you should revert back to the previous 26.6.1 driver which was released earlier this month. In case you were looking to play Assassin's Creed Black Flag Resynced and DOOM: The Dark Ages | Revelations you will probably have to wait a while if you want the driver to support those games officially. You can find the support article here on Microsoft's website.
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Month Later
      nates earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Almohandis earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Rookie
      dorf went up a rank
      Rookie
    • First Post
      mike_rumble earned a badge
      First Post
    • Dedicated
      tuben earned a badge
      Dedicated
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      508
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      208
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      100
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      89
    5. 5
      neufuse
      71
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!