Euro 2024 hosts Germany to play Scotland in opening match | Football News

Italy face a tough task in defending their title, drawn in Group B, where they will face Spain, Croatia and Albania.

Hosts Germany will face Scotland in the opening match of Euro 2024 in Munich while defending champions Italy have been drawn in the same group as Spain.

The Germans, three-time winners, will kick off the one-month tournament on June 14 with the final on July 14 in Berlin’s Olympic stadium.

The draw was held on Saturday at the Elbphilharmonie concert hall in Hamburg, one of the 10 host cities of the tournament.

Germany will also face Hungary and Switzerland in Group A.

Italy face a tough task in defending their title, drawn in Group B with Spain, Croatia and Albania.

France and the Netherlands will face each other again after coming through the qualifying campaign in the same group, drawn in Group D alongside Austria and the winner of playoff A.

England, beaten finalists in Euro 2020, are in Group C alongside Denmark, Slovenia and Serbia.

Group E sees Belgium take on Romania, Slovakia and the winners of playoff B while Group F features Portugal, Turkey, the Czech Republic and the playoff C winners.

The hosts qualified automatically, and 20 teams have advanced through the European qualifiers. Three teams are still unknown and will come through the playoffs in March.

The top two in each of the six Euro 2024 groups proceed to the round of 16 along with the four best third-placed finishers.

In the semifinal playoffs on March 21, Poland will face Estonia and Wales will take on Finland in path A.

In path B, Israel will play against Iceland while Bosnia and Herzegovina will face Ukraine.

In path C, Georgia will take on Luxembourg and Greece will play against Kazakhstan.

The playoff finals will be on March 26.

The draw ceremony was disrupted by unexplained noises that competed for attention with the team names being read out on stage.

The interruption, which seemed to sound like sexual noises, was clearly heard for several minutes on the ceremony broadcast from a concert hall in Hamburg.

UEFA Director of Competitions Giorgio Marchetti noted the noise in his commentary before continuing with the draw for the last six places for lower-ranked teams in the 24-nation tournament lineup. The noises continued sporadically until the draw was completed.

Similar noises disrupted a BBC live broadcast of an English football game in January between Wolves and Liverpool. It turned out to be a prank use of a mobile phone next to the studio.

The groups are as follows:

  • Group A: Germany, Scotland, Hungary, Switzerland
  • Group B: Spain, Croatia, Italy, Albania
  • Group C: England, Denmark, Slovenia, Serbia
  • Group D: France, Austria, Netherlands, playoff winner A
  • Group E: Belgium, Romania, Slovakia, playoff winner B
  • Group F: Portugal, Turkey, Czech Republic, playoff winner C

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Heavy snowfall shuts down air, rail links in southern Germany | News

Flights grounded at Munich airport, Bayern Munich’s home match against Union Berlin also called off.

Heavy snowfall overnight has paralysed air and rail connections in the southern German state of Bavaria, leaving thousands of travellers stranded.

All flights were grounded at Munich Airport, a key regional and international hub, until 6am (05:00) GMT on Sunday, the airport said. Air traffic had initially been suspended until noon (11:00 GMT) on Saturday.

“Passengers are strongly advised not to travel to the airport today [Saturday] and to check the status of their flight with their airline before travelling to the airport tomorrow,” airport authorities said.

German airline Lufthansa noted the knock-on effect of the closure of Munich airport, saying that many other airports in Germany, including the one in Frankfurt “are affected with limited flight operations”.

The severe weather, which is expected to continue, also disrupted rail services in Bavaria, with the main railway station in the capital, Munich, brought to a virtual standstill.

Regional and long-distance services to and from the main transport hub were temporarily suspended, including connections with the Austrian cities of Salzburg and Innsbruck. Passengers on some trains in Munich and Ulm had to spend the night on trains.

The railway assumed that the restrictions would continue throughout Saturday. “We recommend postponing journeys to and from Munich,” said a spokesperson quoted by the dpa news agency.

Bayern Munich’s match cancelled

Bayern Munich’s home match against Union Berlin was called off because of heavy snowfall on Saturday.

“Even if it had been possible to get the pitch at the Allianz Arena in a condition that would have allowed the match to go ahead by the afternoon, safety risks and the traffic situation made cancellation unavoidable,” the club said in a statement.

“Snow falling from the roof at the Allianz Arena poses an incalculable risk for spectators. In addition, it is almost impossible to get to the stadium,” it added.

Underground services, buses and trams also initially stopped running in the Bavarian capital. There were numerous accidents on the roads in southern Bavaria, most of which police said resulted in property damage, dpa said.

The German Weather Service expected heavy snowfall to continue in the south, southeast and parts of the north of the state.

Many smaller roads outside of built-up areas were heavily snow covered or blocked by fallen trees as the removal of traffic obstructions continued.

Police in Lower Bavaria, the region northwest of Munich, said they responded to 350 incidents related to snow and ice between Friday night and early Saturday, some of which led to minor to moderate injuries.

Parts of the neighbouring state of Baden-Wurttemberg also received up to 40cm (15.7 inches) of snowfall overnight, causing trees to topple and block roads.

According to police, a 54-year-old driver died when his vehicle spun and collided with a van on Friday evening in the town of Emmingen-Liptingen. The driver of the van was uninjured.

In Austria and Switzerland, the new snowfall led officials to raise the alarm about the danger of avalanches. The provinces of Tyrol and Vorarlberg in western Austria raised their avalanche warnings to the second-highest level after the region received up to 50cm (20 inches) of snow overnight.



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Germany’s Lufthansa Airlines to Offer NFT Loyalty Rewards, Let Flyers Indulge in Web3

Germany’s Lufthansa airline is planning to soon let its flyers collect rewards in the form of non-fungible tokens (NFTs) and engage with Web3. Lufthansa is rolling out a new loyalty programme, that will let flyers collect reward points in the form of NFTs trading cards. From business lounge vouchers, to free miles and frequent traveler statuses, these NFT trading cards offered by Lufthansa will unlock a plethora of facilities for the travelers. The name of this new loyalty programme has been decided as ‘Uptrip’ and the NFTs that are part of this programme are based on the eco-friendly Polygon blockchain.

Lufthansa will allow eligible flyers to connect their digital wallets in order to mint, transfer, and trade these Uptrip NFT cards.

The NFT cards being offered are divided into different categories, including cities, aircrafts, as well as Specials.

“Users will be able to choose from hundreds of cards of Cities (Lisbon, New York, Rio de Janeiro, Singapore and more), Airplanes (Airbus A320, Boeing 747, Embraer 190) and Specials (fly on New Year’s eve, cross the North Pole, etc). Since the soft launch over 20,000 users have registered and over 200,000 trading cards have been issued,” the Lufthansa Innovation Hub said in a statement on the Polygon website.

The Lufthansa Group is a major European airline company, with over 38 million members in its Miles and More reward programme. Its decision to explore Web3 could hence onboard millions to the digital assets sector.

“Web3 is in an early stage of development. Curiosity is high. But, we also encounter questions and hesitation – which is where Uptrip hits a nerve. We make it possible for people to access this new technology,” a report by Zycrypto quoted Kristian Weymar, Director of New Business Lufthansa Innovation Hub as saying.

The Uptrip app has been made available on both, Google Play Store as well as Apple’s App Store.

This however, is not the first time that a major airlines player has decided to venture into the digital assets sector. Back in May this year, Japan’s prominent Air Nippon Airways (ANA) launched its own online marketplace for the trade, sale, and purchase of NFTs themed around aeronautics.

In April last year, Emirates airline from the UAE had also jumped on the metaverse and NFT wagon.


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German Intelligence Unit BND to Use Dog-Themed NFTs to Fish for Cyber Talent: Details

A collection of dog-themed NFTs have been launched by the German intelligence unit, Bundesnachrichtendienst (BND), hoping to attract promising cyber talent from among the public. The BND’s NFT collection will be a gate pass to enter a blockchain-based treasure hunt. People who manage to fare well in this difficult virtual test, could get an entry ticket into cyber services. A total of 999 NFTs have been decided to be part of this initiative.

The name of this collection is ‘Dogs of BND’ and all of the NFTs from this collection will be inspired by BND’s guard and security dogs. Each NFT will also bring along varied intelligence roles, making these digital collectibles unique, the official BND website said.

Unlike usual NFT collections, the collectibles from ‘Dogs of BND’ will not be up for sale on any NFT marketplace. Instead, these NFTs will serve as collectibles only, acquired by finding a character string posted on Instagram.

These strings will eventually connect to an Ethereum address, via which participants will be able to mint an NFT.

“Any person who has a cryptocurrency digital wallet (crypto-wallet / digital wallet / e-wallet) that supports Ethereum-based tokens has the opportunity to secure an NFT image. Since the external platform used does not allow NFTs to be offered completely free of charge, the NFT images have a symbolic price of 0.000001 ETH or $0.0019 (roughly Rs. 0.16),” the website noted.

People who are proficient in their cyber knowledge will be able to mint the NFT at the end of the so-called “treasure hunt” and prove their mettle.

“The Federal Intelligence Service reserves the right to disqualify participants who manipulate or attempt to manipulate the competition or otherwise violate these conditions of participation,” the website added.

The BND will be reserving 12 NFTs from this collection, to link with more difficult challenges and gift them as prizes.


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Texas museum to return stolen Roman bust after woman bought it for $35

The Roman bust of Nero Claudius Drusus Germanicus that made headlines last year for being a $35 Goodwill find with a regal past, will be returned to Germany after it concludes its display run at the San Antonio Museum of Art.

A spokesperson with the Texas art museum confirmed to Fox News Digital that Sunday, May 21, will be the last day visitors can see the historic marble statue.

The centuries-old sculpture, which is reportedly modeled after Germanicus, a Roman military commander and politician who died around 9 BC in Germania – European tribal lands that were situated around the Rhine River, Vistula River, Danube River, North Sea, Baltic Sea and more – will be returned to the Pompejanum Museum in Aschaffenburg, Germany.

Art historians believe the bust of Germanicus may have been crafted between 1 BC and 1 AD, according to the San Antonio Museum of Art.

Centuries after its estimated construction, the museum reports that art history experts were able to trace the statue back to King Ludwig I of Bavaria (Aug. 1786 to Feb. 1868), who had the bust installed in the courtyard of the Pompejanum – a Roman-style villa he commissioned and had built in the 1840s as a replica of Pompeii.

Today, the Pompejanum is a tourist attraction that welcomes visitors who pay admission fees set by the Bavarian Administration of State-Owned Palaces, Gardens and Lakes.


A Roman bust of Nero Claudius Drusus Germanicus is being returned to Germany after it was bought for $35 in a Texas Goodwill store.
San Antonio Museum of Art via AP

The San Antonio Museum of Art obtained the bust from Laura Young, a Texas-based art collector who reportedly purchased the bust from a Goodwill thrift store in Austin in 2018.

In a press release, the art museum noted that it’s currently not known how the bust ended up in Texas, but authenticators with the international auction house Sotheby’s and the Bavarian Administration of State-Owned Palaces, Gardens and Lakes, have confirmed the statue’s ties to Ludwig I.

The San Antonio Museum of Art told Fox News Digital that the marble bust of Germanicus had been purchased by Ludwig I through a “legitimate art market in Italy” and that very reason is why the statue will be returned to the Pompejanum in Aschaffenburg, Germany, instead of Rome.


Visitors will still be able to see the bust at the San Antonio Museum of Art until May 21.
San Antonio Museum of Art

“The German State was the last legal owner of the portrait, which was in the collection of the Bavarian King Ludwig I by 1833,” the museum wrote in an emailed statement.

Germany reportedly lost possession of the marble bust after World War II and art history experts suspect the statue may have been stolen by a soldier after Allied forces bombed Aschaffenburg in January 1944, which “seriously damaged the Pompejanum,” according to the San Antonio Museum of Art.

The museum reports that the bust could have been taken by someone in the U.S. Army between the 1940s and 1990s since the military branch had stations set up in Aschaffenburg until the end of the Cold War.


The bust will be brought back to the Pompejanum in Aschaffenburg, Germany — where it may have been stolen from after bombing in 1944.
San Antonio Museum of Art

The Bavarian Administration of State-Owned Palaces, Gardens and Lakes restored the Pompejanum in 1960 and opened it to the public in 1994.

Visitors who wish to see the Germanicus bust before it’s sent back to Germany on May 21, can find it at the San Antonio Museum of Art at 200 West Jones Avenue from Tuesdays through Sundays.

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ChatGPT Could Be Blocked ‘In Principle’ in Germany if Needed, Data Protection Chief Says

Germany could follow in Italy’s footsteps by blocking ChatGPT over data security concerns, the German commissioner for data protection told the Handelsblatt newspaper in comments published on Monday.

“In principle, such action is also possible in Germany,” Ulrich Kelber said, adding that this would however fall under state jurisdiction. However, he did not outline any current plans to take such action.

Kelber said that Germany has requested further information from Italy on its temporary ban, which prompted Microsoft-backed OpenAI to take ChatGPT offline in the country.

Last week, Italy’s data protection agency said it had opened a probe into OpenAI’s ChatGPT chatbot over a suspected breach of the artificial intelligence application’s data collection rules.

The agency also accused ChatGPT, which is financially supported by Microsoft, of failing to check the age of its users. The app is supposed to be reserved to people aged 13 and above.

The agency said in a note it had provisionally restricted chatbot’s use of Italian users’ personal data.

OpenAI did not immediately respond to an emailed request for a comment.

Since its release last year, ChatGPT has set off a tech craze, prompting rivals to launch similar products and companies to integrate it or similar technologies into their apps and products.

The Italian agency alleged “the absence of any legal basis that justifies the massive collection and storage of personal data in order to ‘train’ the algorithms underlying the operation of the platform”.

It is estimated to have reached 100 million monthly active users in January, just two months after launch, making it the fastest-growing consumer application in history, according to a UBS study published last month.

© Thomson Reuters 2023


Smartphone companies have launched many compelling devices over the first quarter of 2023. What are some of the best phones launched in 2023 you can buy today? We discuss this on Orbital, the Gadgets 360 podcast. Orbital is available on Spotify, Gaana, JioSaavn, Google Podcasts, Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music and wherever you get your podcasts.
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Strike over pay paralyzes rail, air travel in Germany

BERLIN — Trains, planes and public transit systems stood still across much of Germany on Monday as labor unions called a major one-day strike over salaries in an effort to win inflation-busting raises for their members.

The 24-hour walkout also affected cargo transport by rail and ship, as workers at the country’s ports and waterways joined the strike.

Many commuters opted to drive, causing delays on the roads, while those who could worked from home.

Unions are seeking a pay increase of at least 10.5% and have dismissed offers from employers of 5% in two stages plus one-off payments. 

High inflation also seen elsewhere last year has hit many workers hard, said Ulrich Silberbach of the Civil Service Federation.

“We have recorded drops in real wages and these need to be balanced out,” he told reporters in Berlin, adding that some of his union’s members in larger cities are having to apply for state benefits to afford rent.


Trains are parked near the central train station in Frankfurt, Germany, on March 27, 2023.
AP

Workers protest at Munich’s main train station during a nationwide strike called by the German trade union in Munich, Germany, on March 27, 2023.
REUTERS

Silberbach said that he hoped employers would increase their offer in upcoming talks — otherwise, unions might have to consider an open-ended strike.

Rail company Deutsche Bahn called the union’s demands exaggerated and warned that millions of commuters would be affected.

“Thousands of companies that normally send or receive their goods by rail will also suffer,” Deutsche Bahn spokesman Achim Strauss said. “The environment and the climate will also suffer in the end. Today’s winners are the oil companies.”


A man walks on a platform at the main train station in Frankfurt, Germany during the strike on March 27, 2023.
AP

Railroad signals turned to red near the tracks in Berlin, Germany on March 27, 2023.
AP

Train tickets that couldn’t be used because of the disruption will remain valid and travelers should check the company’s website for updates, he said.

Labor strikes are a regular occurrence in Germany and normally end in a compromise deal between unions and employers.

The walkout already caused disruption and delays Sunday, as travelers scrambled to reach their destinations early.

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Gov’t idiocy at work, FDA’s dumb plan on smokes and other commentary

From the right: Gov’t Idiocy at Work

“Cities are rapidly inventing new job titles,” reports City Journal’s Steven Malanga, and the “hottest (pun intended)” is “chief heat officer” — whose task is to “enumerate the impact of heat on the local population” and “seek ways to mitigate it.” One popular idea among CHOs: plant trees to boost shade. And one term “you’re unlikely to hear” from them: “air conditioning,” though “warm-weather-related deaths dropped precipitously over the last century” thanks to AC. The problem: “Air conditioning demands electricity” often powered by fossil fuels or nuclear energy, “two unseemly phrases” in government circles. Yet “the biggest threat” is the loss of AC due to rising prices and outages made more likely by government climate actions. Don’t worry: “Your local CHO is coming soon to plant more trees.”

Libertarian: FDA’s Dumb Plan on Smokes

The Food and Drug Administration “wants to prevent smoking-related deaths by making cigarettes less appealing,” notes Reason’s Jacob Sullum. It “plans to ban menthol cigarettes and limit nicotine content” even as it’s “determined to make vaping products, the most promising harm-reducing alternative to cigarettes, less appealing to smokers.” Its policies contain a “condescending assumption that African Americans are helpless to resist menthol’s minty coolness” and “would spur black-market activity” while encouraging smokers “to smoke more”; its vaping stand “is hard to reconcile with its acknowledgment that vaping has great potential to reduce smoking-related disease and death.” Seems the FDA “learned nothing from the country’s unhappy experience with the war on drugs.”

Conservative: Germany Says the F-Word — Fracking

“Germany’s energy crisis is a crisis of choice, or rather a crisis of two choices, the second following directly from the first,” explains The Wall Street Journal’s Joseph C. Sternberg. The Ukraine war already has it rethinking the second choice, to rely on Russia for natural-gas imports. “But Germany is as dependent as it is on foreign fuel only because of the first decision Berlin made: not to tap the country’s substantial domestic gas reserves,” put off-limits by the 2017 ban “on dubious safety grounds” of “the fracking techniques that could reach most of Germany’s gas.” Polling shows just 27% support, though “‘only’ 56% of respondents opposed fracking outright, with the remaining 17% undecided. This after voters have been bombarded for years with antifracking messages.” In fact, Germany’s “perceived resource poverty is more a form of learned helplessness than a geological reality.”

Pundit: My Stealthy, Sexist CNN Suspension

“It came to my attention in July that I had been punished under old CNN leadership — kept off air since January,” writes Mary Katharine Ham at her MK Hammer Time Substack, “for tweeting about Jeffrey Toobin,” who’d left his webcam on while masturbating during a video call with colleagues. “I was never informed of my punishment until it was rescinded recently by new management,” and Toobin “was off air for eight months; I was off for seven. One month was the difference between punishment for” his repugnant action “versus commenting on the inadvisability of” masturbating “at work.” Oh, and: “I was also told I wasn’t informed of the network’s displeasure because I had just had a baby and someone in the old leadership thought I might be a ‘loose cannon.’”

Culture desk: Must You Tip Everyone?

“Everyone wants a tip now. Do you have to give them one?” asks Recode’s Sara Morrison. “Tipflation is everywhere,” with tips “requested at automatic car washes,” for retail purchases, “even for smoothie-making robots, usually through those touchscreen tablets a lot of businesses use.” Thanks to “social pressure” and “a pandemic that accelerated the adoption of contactless digital payment methods, those tablets have become ubiquitous, and so have the tip requests.” Research finds “just the act of asking people to leave a tip can be enough to push some people into doing so.” After all, we all want “to avoid the awkwardness and the guilt of” declining. But take it from the expert: Lizzie Post, Emily Post’s great-great-grandchild, says “there’s nothing wrong with saying no.”

— Compiled by The Post Editorial Board

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