A Regent’s Park mansion known as “London’s White House” has been bought by an American tech billionaire in what could be the second-most expensive property deal in British history.
The unnamed buyer, one of an influx of rich US businessmen buying London homes in recent months, has spent £139 million on the Holme, negotiating a £111 million discount from its Saudi owner.
In purchases like these, super-rich buyers in London typically also base their “private offices” — or work premises — in their mansions, allowing them to pay a reduced rate of 5 per cent stamp duty, rather than a full residential rate for foreign buyers of 17 per cent, saving millions of pounds in tax. It is not known whether he did so in
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has outlined the social media giant's AI ambitions for 2025, stating that the company's upcoming large language model (LLM), Llama 4, w
The European Union will give tech and social media companies a “stress test” to see how they handle misinformation ahead of Germany’s election next month
In normal times, Inaugurations are gossipy affairs where the worst, and perhaps most fun, impulses of the political media get put on full display. We comment on
On January 24, 2025, Coinbase's Chief Legal Officer, Paul Grewal, expressed frustration over ongoing legal battles impacting the co