About a third of these foreign students are from China, and more than 700 are Indian.
Instead, it is currently stuck in limbo, ping-ponging between the House of Lords and the House of Commons.The bill states that AI developers should have access to all content unless its individual owners choose to opt out.
Nearly 300 members of the House of Lords disagree.They think AI firms should be forced to disclose which copyrighted material they use to train their tools, with a view to licensing it.Sir Nick Clegg, former president of global affairs at Meta, is among those broadly supportive of the bill, arguing that asking permission from all copyright holders would "kill the AI industry in this country".
Those against include Baroness Beeban Kidron, a crossbench peer and former film director, best known for making films such as Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason.She says ministers would be "knowingly throwing UK designers, artists, authors, musicians, media and nascent AI companies under the bus" if they don't move to protect their output from what she describes as "state sanctioned theft" from a UK industry worth £124bn.
which includes Technology Secretary Peter Kyle giving a report to the House of Commons about the impact of the new law on the creative industries, three months after it comes into force, if it doesn't change.
Mr Kyle also appears to have changed his views about UK copyright law.Mai says that banning Russian LNG exports to Europe and closing the refining loophole in Western jurisdictions would be "important steps in finishing the decoupling of the West from Russian hydrocarbons".
According to Mr Raghunandan from CREA, it would be relatively easy for the EU to give up Russian LNG imports."Fifty percent of their LNG exports are directed towards the European Union, and only 5% of the EU's total [LNG] gas consumption in 2024 was from Russia. So if the EU decides to completely cut off Russian gas, it's going to hurt Russia way more then it's going to hurt consumers in the European Union," he told the BBC.
Experts interviewed by the BBC have dismissedthat the war with Ukraine will end if Opec brings oil prices down.