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Podcast directory

Podcast directory

Programme: Morning Money at 7:00 X
Topic: Apps X
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Morning Money: Maurice Smith on the changes to BBC iPlayer and the TV licence fee.

Nigel Cassidy

Original Broadcast: Morning Money at 7:00

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New TV licensing rules are making it illegal to use the BBC iPlayer app to watch the corporation's programmes without paying the licence fee. Up to now, only live content has been covered by the £145.50 annual licence, with online viewers having to confirm they have paid before they can watch a live feed of BBC channels. This policy is being extended to the catch-up service. Media Commentator Maurice Smith joined the show to discuss further.

Guests: Chris Bailey,Maurice Smith


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Morning Money: Mobile bank Mondo becomes the latest UK digital bank to gain a licence

Nigel Cassidy

Original Broadcast: Morning Money at 7:00

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CEO of challenger bank Mondo, Tom Blomfield, talks about his mobile banking platform and its new digital banking licence.

Guests: Mike Ingram,Tom Blomfield


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Morning Money: Is social media the new broadcast medium?

Sarah Lowther

Original Broadcast: Morning Money at 7:00

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50 million people have watched the Olympic Games on Snapchat since the Opening Ceremony a week and a half ago. At the same time, there have also been rumours that Apple will bring Twitter onto the Apple TV platform allowing users to watch NFL games that the social network will stream. So are social platforms turning into broadcast vehicles, and why are they taking this route? That's the question Share Radio's Joe Aldridge put to Oliver Smith, Senior Reporter at The Memo.

Guests: Chris Bailey,Joe Aldridge,Oliver Smith


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Morning Money: Would you pay someone else to do your washing? Lorenzo Franzi of Zipjet explains.

Nigel Cassidy

Original Broadcast: Morning Money at 7:00

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Recent research reveals that a normal British household spends 264 hours a year doing washing. So what's the alternative? Zipjet hopes that you would want to pay someone else to do it. The startup is thinking big: It's announced a 3-month pilot partnership with Persil (Unilever) picking up, washing, and delivering clothes back to customers. Co-founder of Zipjet, Lorenzo Franzi, joined the team to discuss the plan...

Guests: Emma Wall,Lorenzo Franzi


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Morning Money: Is employee negligence the biggest cyber threat to companies?

Nigel Cassidy

Original Broadcast: Morning Money at 7:00

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IBM has created a new app to determine whether or not a company's systems have been compromised by cybercriminals. But industry experts say the real threat to companies' cybersecurity is simply worker negligence. Colin Tankard, Managing Director of data security providers Digital Pathways, explained the biggest worries for companies.

Guests: Robert Van Egghen,Colin Tankard


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Morning Money: Pokemon Go, video games, and how cyber criminals can use them to steal your data

Sarah Lowther

Original Broadcast: Morning Money at 7:00

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Walking onto a firing range, falling off a cliff, or walking into a lamppost are the more obvious risks to the latest Pokémon Go craze, which is bringing augmented reality onto the streets of the globe. But there are the hidden mobile gaming threats associated with not just Pokemon, but Minecraft, and other games: business attacks, social engineering, and accessing valuable data. Chris Boyd, a researcher at internet and PC security firm Malwarebytes explained further.

Guests: Chris Boyd,Chris Bailey


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Morning Money: What does LinkedIn bring to the table for Microsoft?

Sarah Lowther

Original Broadcast: Morning Money at 7:00

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Microsoft looks set to buy professional networking site, LinkedIn. But does the deal make sense from a tech perspective? Martin Garner from CCS Insight, which provides market analysis for companies in the mobile and wireless sector, gave his view on the deal, as well as discussing Apple and its latest Siri announcement.

Guests: Chris Bailey,Martin Garner


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Morning Money: Danny Bartlett of Wayra looks ahead to the Diversity Tech Summit

Nigel Cassidy

Original Broadcast: Morning Money at 7:00

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In 2015, during London Technology Week, Wayra UK launched startupDNA, the first research study to reveal the social makeup of Britain’s start-up ecosystem. The Diversity Tech Summit is designed to bring together key individuals to pursue a diversity agenda and meet the challenges outlined in the startupDNA executive summary. Danny Bartlett, from Wayra UK, joined Share Radio to talk on the summit.

Guests: Steve Clarke,Rachel Winter,Danny Bartlett


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Morning Money: Oliver Smith looks at Apple's new smaller iPhone

Sarah Lowther

Original Broadcast: Morning Money at 7:00

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Apple has released a new iPhone model, which is the smallest of its current range. Oliver Smith, Senior Tech reporter at The Memo, discusses the reasons behind the release of a smaller, cheaper model. So is it worth purchasing or should you wait for the release of the iPhone 7 later in 2016?

Guests: Chris Bailey,Oliver Smith


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Morning Money: Professor Michael Mainelli on cyber-catastrophe reinsurance

Sandra Kilhof

Original Broadcast: Morning Money at 7:00

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Michael Mainelli, Executive Chairman of Z/Yen, talks to Sandra Kilhof and Sara Sjölin about his report on cyber-catastrophe reinsurance.

Guests: Sara Sjölin,Michael Mainelli


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