at helping its struggling streaming division, disney+. the service has been losing money in the face of strong competition from rival companies. now on bbc news, click. this week. ..as we re working towards the metaverse, we re at interpol to see how they re planning to keep it safe. we look at new software that s helping doctors perform delicate brain surgery. lara s thrown her weight around again. watch it! i ve got super strength. yes, that s definitely more powerful. and get ready to feel old. i never thought in my 205 i d be romanticising technology from when i was 13. over the last 20 or so years, we ve seen how difficult the internet and the web has been to police. it s bigger than any one country, and you can base your business in any one of them, depending on whose laws you want to adhere to. and it s opened up more ways for us to cause each other harm. disinformation, bullying, fraud. you name it, and you can do it online. so when it comes to the next generation of
children, some as young as five years old, are working in dangerous conditions throughout the night and pickers are earning as little as $1 a day, while huge profits are made by giants in the business. this investigation reveals who the real masters of the perfume industry are. ..and how they are falling short of the human rights commitments that they re promoting publicly. ..as we expose for the first time the use of child labour in the supply chains of some of the world s most luxurious fragrances. egyptian jasmine blooms just after sunset. in order to catch the fragrance, the flower needs to be picked before it withers in the sun s heat. heba s family is one of thousands of pickers that have to start work in the middle of the night. the pickers have to strain their eyes to find the flowers and fight through mosquitoes and pesticides, as they gather as much jasmine as possible. basmalla s eyes have started to cause her pain, and today her mother, heba, is taking herto egypt
in the perfume industry. children, some as young as five years old, are working in dangerous conditions throughout the night and pickers are earning as little as $1 a day, while huge profits are made by giants in the business. this investigation reveals who the real masters of the perfume industry are. ..and how they are falling short of the human rights commitments that they re promoting publicly. ..as we expose for the first time the use of child labour in the supply chains of some of the world s most luxurious fragrances. egyptian jasmine blooms just after sunset. in order to catch the fragrance, the flower needs to be picked before it withers in the sun s heat. heba s family is one of thousands of pickers that have to start work in the middle of the night. the pickers have to strain their eyes to find the flowers and fight through mosquitoes and pesticides, as they gather as much jasmine as possible. basmalla s eyes have started to cause her pain, and today her mother, he
designed to assist those who need to do labour intensive manual tasks. these guys work ii hour shifts and this would generally be pretty heavy work. they can only wear the exoskeleton for eight hours of that but, if you watch them lifting, it does look pretty effortless. it aims to not only support up to 30kg of weight, but also, to make the user lift more ergonomically, both of which should protect the area most likely to get injured in a place like this the lower back. we are the biggest tech retailer in the country, so, therefore, using tech in oursupply chain is kind of important to us. you can see the work that we do here, particularly on loading trailers, can be quite manual. so, therefore, anything that we can do to make thatjob easier for those colleagues has got to be a great thing to do. the instinct is to walk like a robot, but you don t actually need to. i like the sounds it makes. exoskeleton whirs
at the weekend, just 10% of all petrol stations were fully supplied with fuel. now roughly 16% are fully stocked up. before the rush on fuel, that figure would be closer to a0%. the government and the industry want motorists to fill up their tanks normally, but what does that mean? according to the petrol retailers association, before the crisis began, a driver would typically spend between £25 and £30 on fuel per visit. during this long weekend, it s been way over that, double that, if not more. if we can just get back to that £25 to £30, then i think we re going to see the equilibrium, the balance between supply and demand start to improve every day as we go forward into this weekend. the problems at our forecourts since the start of last weekend have highlighted a weakness in oursupply chain. the challenge now for government and business is to make sure there are enough deliveries