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3 votes
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Swedish retirees demand fairer pensions for women – The Old Lady Patrol's protest against the country's pension system enters its tenth year
5 votes -
White House launching $5 billion program to speed US coronavirus vaccines
3 votes -
Australia is quitting coal in record time thanks to Tesla
5 votes -
Norway wants to raise taxes on its aquaculture industry, which could provide a model for how to better manage the marine environment
4 votes -
Once praised for its generous social safety net, Denmark now collects troves of data on welfare claimants
10 votes -
The temptation of high oil prices is shaking Norway's climate commitments
3 votes -
The incredible disappearing doomsday
2 votes -
Joko Widodo wants local governments to ditch Visa, Mastercard
4 votes -
Swedish court has given Greta Thunberg and climate activists the go-ahead to proceed with a class action lawsuit against the government for insufficient climate policy
11 votes -
The incredible tantrum venture capitalists threw over Silicon Valley Bank
5 votes -
Covid backlash hobbles US public health and future pandemic response
8 votes -
How Californians are weaponizing environmental law
9 votes -
Bergen is gearing up to open the world's longest purpose-built pedestrian and bicycle tunnel – 2.9km tunnel takes 30-45 minutes to walk through
8 votes -
Giant California greenhouse signals a big bet on cannabis legalization
4 votes -
Activists block Norway's energy ministry, protesting against wind turbines built on land traditionally used by the Sámi indigenous people
4 votes -
Google Adsense is bringing a bunch of policy changes that affect how your sites are monetized
Yesterday, Adsense support sent an email to their users regarding their upcoming policy changes. This primarily affects how subdomains are monetized. Going forward, your subdomains inside the...
Yesterday, Adsense support sent an email to their users regarding their upcoming policy changes. This primarily affects how subdomains are monetized. Going forward, your subdomains inside the primary domains in the "Sites" section (www, etc.) won't be allowed, any existing ones will be removed and their rules will be merged with the primary domain (such as example.com).
Furthermore, what constitutes a "Site" will also change henceforth. You can only add a primary domain (such as example.com) and the subdomains which are listed on the public suffix list (such as github.io, blogspot.com, etc.). Thus, your own subdomains (such as xyz.example.com or www.example.com) won't be allowed in Adsense.
I don't know what they will achieve by doing this considering they already vet and audit each site before approving them for adsense? In any case, other alternatives to Adsense exist such as Propeller Ads, CJ Affiliate, etc. for those affected by this move but I don't know their efficacy.
3 votes -
Denmark should aim to reduce beef and dairy production by introducing a farming emissions tax in order to reach its ambitious climate targets
3 votes -
European Commission contacted Swedish authorities after it emerged they were planning to deport a 74-year-old British woman with severe Alzheimers
4 votes -
Yale academic suggests mass suicide for Japan’s elderly
5 votes -
War and subsidies have turbocharged the green transition
4 votes -
Twitter restricted in Turkey in aftermath of earthquake
8 votes -
Beijing needs to junk its economic playbook
4 votes -
Pakistan blocks Wikipedia for 'blasphemous content'
5 votes -
Finland has passed a new, progressive rights law which makes it substantially easier for trans people to change their legal gender
9 votes -
British Columbia embarks on bold experiment to decriminalize hard drugs - Possession of small amounts of fentanyl, heroin, cocaine and other hard drugs will be allowed in Canada’s westernmost province
10 votes -
California fires back at other Western states with its own Colorado River plan
9 votes -
US citizens can now sponsor refugees directly. Here’s how to apply.
9 votes -
Norway's fossil fuel bonanza stokes impassioned debate about how best to spend its 'war profits'
4 votes -
Government refuses to fund UK students at new medical school despite ‘chronic’ doctor shortage
6 votes -
Norway's golden generation of athletes proves the value of sport as a public good – commitment to making the “joy of sport” available to all is producing world-class talent
3 votes -
Brazil and Argentina to start preparations for a common currency
10 votes -
Denmark has managed to anger the Evangelical Lutheran Church and hundreds of thousands of Danish voters – all because of a public holiday
6 votes -
Brazil launches first anti-deforestation raids under Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva bid to protect Amazon
8 votes -
UK government to block Scottish gender bill
8 votes -
US government approves use of world’s first vaccine for honeybees
10 votes -
Sweden and France could be set to join forces to build new nuclear power stations in the Nordic nation
5 votes -
Four of out every five cars registered in Norway last year was an electric car, according to data released by the Norwegian Road Federation
9 votes -
Battle for the nation's soul – Norway faces debate about gas and oil wealth
8 votes -
Critical incidents being declared across English hospitals
14 votes -
Japan to invest in nuclear energy in major policy shift
8 votes -
YouTube moderation bots will start issuing warnings, 24-hour bans
10 votes -
The artificial island of Lynetteholm is meant to protect the Danish capital from floods and provide housing – but critics accuse the project of greenwashing
4 votes -
US President Joe Biden signs marriage equality bill into law
16 votes -
Thousands of women in Greenland, including some as young as twelve, had a contraceptive device implanted in their womb, often without consent
16 votes -
South Koreans are getting a year younger, parliament rules
12 votes -
Protesters openly urge Xi Jinping to resign over China Covid curbs
25 votes -
Climate activist Greta Thunberg joined hundreds of other youth activists to file a lawsuit against the Swedish government over its alleged inaction on climate change
3 votes -
Astronomer incorrectly suspended from Twitter by automatic moderation
6 votes -
In Finland, where forests cover around 75% of land, the EU's upcoming biodiversity strategy has sparked outrage in the forestry industry, as well as the government
6 votes