🇫🇷🇪🇺 BoursoBank, la plus grande banque en ligne française avec près de 9 millions de clients, a décidé d’intégrer Wero, le service européen de paiement instantané, après avoir longtemps résisté.
📱 Wero permet d’envoyer et de recevoir de l’argent gratuitement et en quelques secondes simplement avec un numéro de téléphone, sans besoin d’IBAN, entre la France, l’Allemagne, la Belgique et d’autres pays européens.
💶 Le déploiement commencera fin 2026 pour les virements par téléphone, puis en 2027 avec les paiements par QR code et les demandes de remboursement.
👦 BoursoBank sera la première banque française à rendre Wero accessible aux mineurs dès 10 ans, grâce à son offre jeunes déjà existante.
https://t.co/gGYmLuzaMN
Pour Czechia 🇨🇿
La réponse remonte à 2016 où Prague adresse une note à l'ONU pour faire reconnaître "Czechia" comme nom court officiel en anglais.
L'objectif est de disposer d'un nom + simple à utiliser dans le tourisme & la promotion internationale.
https://t.co/64aIhATp5W
Pour Republic of Korea.
South Korea est un nom d'usage, mais pas le nom officiel de l'État.
Séoul ne se présente donc pas seulement comme “la Corée du Sud”, mais comme l’État coréen légitime.
Un choix avec une visée politique , dans le contexte des deux Corées 🇰🇷🇰🇵
"Danny Ocean" es tendencia por su presentación en la inauguración del Mundial de la FIFA 2026.
Primer venezolano de la historia en formar parte de la Ceremonia Inaugural de un Mundial de Futbol.
🇻🇪🇻🇪🇻🇪🇻🇪
🏆 Referee announced for 2026 #SuperCup!
We're pleased to share that Somali referee Omar Artan will officiate the highly anticipated match between PSG and Aston Villa in Salzburg.
🚨Leaders from Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates will be invited to participate in a G7 session in France next week to discuss the Middle East war, @EmmanuelMacron said.
Next Tuesday's summit session will focus on the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, which has "a real impact on our economies" due in particular to soaring fuel prices, and on "negotiations on Iran"
Having lived in both cities really opens your eyes to the good, the bad, and the ugly.
Londoners love to bang on about their gloriously messy diversity: one evening you’re tucking into Ethiopian injera, the next you're demolishing Korean fried chicken, all while joining a perfectly civilised queue at the bus stop as if it were a national virtue. Even as the Tube quietly reeks of last night’s kebab, you adapt. You learn to position yourself on the platform like a pro so the doors spit you out right by the exit. You discover the secret 3am bakery knock on the Bermondsey Beer Mile for warm croissants fresh from the night shift. You revel in the wildest people-watching on earth. The dry, self-deprecating banter never wilts in the miserable rain, while free museums and wild parakeets in the parks remind you why the chaos is worth it.
Londoners will, if pressed, quietly admit the other side: Bank (or Monument-Bank) station is a labyrinth from hell - especially after a few drinks - where you wander in circles like a confused hamster. Everything civilised shuts annoyingly early. Eye-watering rents condemn you to mouldy flats shared with flatmates well into your thirties. The grey weather tests your soul daily. And that famous politeness sometimes feels like the only glue holding the whole glorious mess together.
Paris, by contrast, seduces its long-term residents with an entirely different set of intimate charms. Parisians adore the village-like rhythm: morning baguette rituals, sacred two-hour lunches where eating at your desk is for philistines, and cafés that turn a simple espresso into a daily ceremony. The dense, walkable beauty means every errand can feel like a postcard within the Périphérie at least - the suburbs are another matter. The Métro (when it’s not on strike) is mercifully punctual, and the effortless chic and fierce respect for work-life boundaries make you feel vaguely civilised. Food is treated with near-religious reverence, and that golden light on the Seine can forgive almost anything.
But the initiated also know the sharper edges. The bureaucracy is a soul-crushing hamster wheel. Apartments are so tiny and charming they come with antique plumbing that sings opera at 3am. Prices make your bank account wince. Parisians maintain a social reserve where smiling at strangers or attempting small talk is viewed as slightly suspicious and vaguely American. Dog mess turns pavements into an obstacle course. The overnight "parfum de Paris" (that unmistakable whiff of pee) lingers in the Métro. The summer humidity without air-conditioning is suffocating. And the occasional strike can turn the city into performance art.
Still, both places have this magical way of making you forgive the rain, the rudeness, and the eye-watering prices. Where else can you drift out of a free museum straight into a sunset that makes you feel briefly, gloriously immortal? London thrills you with its restless, anything-goes energy. Paris seduces you with its stubborn, elegant beauty.
Locals will moan about both cities endlessly… yet somehow never quite manage to leave. It's less about choosing the "better" city and more about which beautiful madness speaks to your soul. In the end, you just have to pick your flavour of beautiful madness.
Me? I choose Paris.
⚠️ Sur demande du procureur, la DGCCRF a mené une enquête pour pratique commerciale trompeuse concernant un dysfonctionnement affectant certaines manettes Joy-Con de la console Nintendo Switch 1 lancée en mars 2017.
En savoir plus⤵️
https://t.co/a0UD6jDVZo
@eurovisionfn Eurovision YouTube channel had 20.1% decrease compared to 2025 event.
Peak concurrent viewership reached just over 1.3 million, down 8% from the Eurovision 2025 live stream.
But nice try.
🔵 En ce 4 juin, les températures sont parfois 5 à 7°C sous les moyennes de saison dans le sud. En toute logique, les cartes virent au bleu foncé ! Étrangement, ça ne génère pas autant de polémiques et d'insultes que le rouge quand il fait chaud...
@UnderSecPD “Foreign bureaucrats directed at American speech.”
We were discussing a German court ruling involving a German citizen in Germany. The rest appears to have been added for dramatic effect.
Scott Pelley issues new statement after being fired by CBS for opposing their pro-MAGA bias:
“New management has instructed me to inject falsehoods and bias into a politically sensitive story. I’ve been told to include assertions that are unverified. To date, in every case, I have managed to ignore these instructions or refuse them.
Recently, politicians have been invited to choose correspondents for interviews on the broadcast. Giving politicians control over 60 Minutes interviews is not how this is done.
Finally, incompetence and unprofessionalism in the new management have wreaked havoc. In a case involving one of my stories, the entire program came within 19 minutes of not getting on the air at all.”
The world has 195 recognised countries.
64 of them id go to prison or be killed for being gay.
That’s 32% of the world where it’s illegal and punishable by death for being who I am.
So talk to me about why we shouldn’t have pride.
This is fake news. This tweet summarizes the article from a Greek fansite speculating, based on the questions asked. No results have been published or leaked. Please do your research and don't follow these fansites tweeting blindly.