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Recent Editions
Human Times
North America
U.S. law enforcement is probing allegations from former Meta Platforms contractors suggesting that company personnel have gained access to WhatsApp messages, contradicting the company's assertions that the service hosts private and encrypted communications. The claims, which highlight alleged “unfettered” access to chats, are being investigated by special agents from the U.S. Department of Commerce, and echo similar allegations raised in a 2024 whistleblower complaint to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. The ongoing inquiry has not been publicly disclosed until now.
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Human Times
UK
Asda has confirmed that 53,000 staff were underpaid after errors in its payroll system caused by a flawed IT upgrade. The issue affected holiday and sick pay calculations between February 2024 and May 2025 following the rollout of "Project Future IT." Executive chairman Allan Leighton said the supermarket had identified the mistakes during a system review. Asda will repay all affected current and former employees, with interest, and return money previously clawed back from overpaid staff. The problems followed the retailer’s complex separation of IT systems from former owner Walmart, which was marked by delays and technical failures. Asda has linked the disruption to weaker trading performance and said external experts have since validated fixes to prevent a repeat.
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Human Times
Europe
The economic wing of Chancellor Friedrich Merz's centre-right Christian Democratic Union (CDU), the Mittelstands- und Wirtschaftsunion (MIT), has criticised what it calls "lifestyle part-time" - a reference to "not people who need to reduce their hours to take care of children, or sick relatives or pursue education. It's about people who just want more free time," MIT spokeswoman Juliane Berndt explained to Deutsche Welle. "With a four-day week and an exaggerated work-life balance, prosperity cannot be maintained," Merz said in early January. He also complained that Germans call in sick for work too often, and suffer from a lack of work ethic.
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Human Times
Middle East
The General Federation of Workers of the Sultanate of Oman (GFOW) has initiated field visits to labour unions and private companies to boost union membership and enhance workplace dialogue. This programme, in collaboration with the Ministry of Labour and the Oman Chamber of Commerce and Industry, began in North Al Batinah Governorate. Ibrahim Al Ghuraibi, acting director of the federation's Union and Labour Services Department, said: "The goal is to engage workers on the ground and explain how labour unions protect rights." The initiative also aims to provide legal support for establishing unions and addressing labour-related queries.
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