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Harry and Meghan bought coveted Sussex.com from UK businessman who fought off other interest for 30 years

Prince Harry and his wife Meghan Markle reportedly bought the domain for their controversial new Sussex website from a British tech businessman Neil Agate, The Sun has reported. According to the outlet, Agate, born in Sussex but currently resides in the US, registered the domain in 1995 and held on to it for almost 30 years until it was purchased by Prince Harry, 39, and Markle, 42, for an undisclosed amount.
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nme.com
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Live Nation and Ticketmaster look to enforce laws against touts and scalping websites
current interest in their operations within US politics in recent months, the company gave a statement that set out five key proposals to improve the regulation of the ticketing business.“If there’s any chance of improving ticketing for fans and artists, we all need to focus on the facts,” began Live Nation’s statement.“In the last few weeks alone,” it went on, “we’ve submitted more than 35 pages of information to provide greater context and transparency to policymakers on the realities of the industry.“These include the fact that this industry is more competitive than ever, Ticketmaster has actually lost market share since the 2010 merger, not gained it; and that venues set and keep most of the fees associated with tickets and are increasingly taking an ever-larger share.”Live Nation stressed that it supported an industry-wide move to “all-in pricing”, where ticketing platforms declare the price of a ticket including all and any fees upfront. This would arguably need to be achieved through regulation to ensure companies that voluntarily adopt all-in pricing aren’t disadvantaged by looking more expensive in advertising and search engine listings.President Joe Biden recently called on ticketing companies to limit such fees, often called “junk fees”, that are added to ticket prices which he said “can easily add hundreds of bucks to a family’s nights out”.The company also suggested the primary problem in the ticketing market was touts.
dailystar.co.uk
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National Rail, TfL, and hundreds of other websites down in major internet outage
Downdetector.On top of that, Roblox, Skype, Amazon and Google Meet have also faced issues, says Twitter user IconJen.Faulty websites are issuing users with 'Error 500' messages, leaving them unable to login.Cloudflare said: "Cloudflare is investigating wide-spread issues with our services and/or network."Users may experience errors or timeouts reaching Cloudflare’s network or services."The tech company claims to have now identified the issue and is working on a fix.UPDATE 08:21: Cloudflare says it has now issued a fix for the problem and is 'monitoring the results'. It is unclear how long it will take to have an effect on the broken websites, but it appears that Cloudflare has been forced to 're-route' some of its global services in response to the issue.Cloudflare is used by more than 26 million sites and processes more than 1 billion IP addresses every single day.It acts as the main 'pathway' between a website and its users, meaning every time you visit a Cloudflare website you have to go through its servers.It's used by big websites to protect themselves against malicious traffic and make the browsing experience smoother and more secure.This is why if Cloudflare experiences an outage, you can sometimes still access parts of a website but not the full content, which is delivered by Cloudflare rather than the host. 
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