Google to change privacy policy after investigation by UK data watchdog

Updated 30 January 2015
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Google to change privacy policy after investigation by UK data watchdog

PARIS: Search engine Google has agreed to better inform users about how it handles their personal information after an investigation by Britain’s data protection regulator found its privacy policy was too vague.
The Information Commissioner’s Office said in a statement that it required Google to sign a “formal undertaking” that it would make the changes by June 30 and take further steps in the next two years.
The ICO investigation stems from a privacy policy implemented by Google in March 2012 that consolidated some 70 existing privacy policies into one and pooled data collected on individual users across its services, including YouTube, Gmail and its social network Google+.
Regulators in Spain and France have fined Google 900,000 euros ($1.02 million) and 150,000 euros respectively over the privacy policy, small penalties relative to Google’s scale.
Google’s annual revenue in 2013 was $55.52 billion.


Elie Saab stages show at Paris Fashion Week

Updated 58 min 43 sec ago
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Elie Saab stages show at Paris Fashion Week

DUBAI/ PARIS: Lebanese designer Elie Saab showcased his latest collection at Paris Fashion Week on Saturday, as part of a packed schedule of international luxury labels.

The designer’s Fall/Winter 2026-2027 collection was inspired by New York with billowing ballgowns printed with Central Park-themed florals and more fitted, business chic looks seen on the runway.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by ELIE SAAB (@eliesaabworld)

The “Elie Saab woman immerses herself in the 90s New York art scene. Intellectual and seductive, her look embraces downtown power tailoring and uptown florals with a twist,” the fashion house said in its show notes.

The showcase was held on the same day as the likes of Hermes, Vivienne Westwood and Balenciaga, among other labels.

In a Paris Fashion Week that still has Chanel and Louis Vuitton to come, Hermes made a case that luxury at its most persuasive doesn’t shout.

Models emerged from luminous circular openings in the walls, like figures stepping through a full moon, and walked a raised, winding catwalk above vegetation.

It was theatrical, but never gimmicky.

The set did exactly what creative director Nadege Vanhee wanted: it knocked you off balance.

Vanhee, who has led Hermes womenswear since 2014, titled the fall-winter collection “Entre chien et loup” — the French expression for dusk, that uneasy moment when you can’t tell a dog from a wolf.

Her show notes invoked Hecate, the torch-wielding goddess of darkness, though the clothes were less mythological than muscular — precise, body-conscious, built to move.

Leather dominated. Fluid overcoats with enormous Tuscan sheepskin collars.

Zip-front mini dresses in inky blue that opened to reveal contrasting shirts beneath.

An orange ostrich-leather jumpsuit, belted at the waist, that merged biker attitude with Hermes refinement.

Paris Fashion Week is delivering a forceful reminder of why it remains a capital of fashion, with blockbuster celebrity front rows, boundary-pushing design, and collections that are tackling big ideas about power, craft and the female body.

Oprah Winfrey turned heads at both Stella McCartney and Chloé. Sissy Spacek, Julia Garner and Lil Yachty claimed front-row seats at Loewe.