Business
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Fishermen's app: 'We can go direct to the consumer'
The app that's allowing Africa's fishermen to sell their catches directly to restaurants.
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'Poor' British Steel pensions advice reviewed by police
Tata employees claim they have been mis-sold advice about moving from the British Steel Pension Scheme.
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UK retail sales fall in December
Official figures show retail sales volumes fell by 1.5% in December, a sharper fall than expected.
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Carpetright shares crash on profit warning
Shares in the retailer nearly halve after it suffers a "sharp deterioration" in UK trade.
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HSBC to pay $101.5m to settle currency rigging probe
Financial giant HSBC agrees to pay $101.1m, confirming it misused client information for its own profit.
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Switch on, switch off
As cars become more automated, some experts worry that we are becoming complacent drivers.
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How the zipper became a million dollar idea
The BBC's Aaron Heslehurst explains how the zipper became a million dollar idea.
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ATM shake-up could leave many without cash, consumer group warns
People in remote areas could be left with little or no access to cash, says consumer group Which?
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Flexible working
The mother who had to give up her job to fit in childcare
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Fighting for flexible working hours
Less than half of parents feel flexible working is an option in their workplace.
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Uber agrees investment deal with SoftBank
Founder Travis Kalanick is set to sell more than $1bn worth of shares, according to reports
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Santander boss named in GRG scandal
Nathan Bostock was responsible for controversial RBS division during scandal, MPs are told.