Andrew Orlowski
Andrew Orlowski is a columnist at the Daily Telegraph. He tweets at @AndrewOrlowski
Why do we need a privacy elite?
The world has conformed to Silicon Valley’s way of doing business
AI and the great data robbery
Silicon Valley has stolen huge amounts of original material in order to “train” its GPT models
The misanthropic history man
Yuval Noah Harari has become an intellectual superstar, but his predictions have become wilder and sillier
NIMBYs are the real revolutionaries
Think tank-driven Street Votes policy risks trampling on middle-class dreams by bringing high-density housing to peaceful neighbourhoods
A license to cheat
The abuse of artificial intelligence systems threatens the integrity of our education system
Most Read
American strategy in Iran is wiser than it seems
President Trump’s intervention will leave the world safer than it was
Saint Nicola
Nicola Sturgeon wants sympathy for her husband’s crimes—but after years spent avoiding awkward questions, her latest reinvention may be the hardest sell yet.
The lonely death of Henry Nowak
We must draw lessons from a horrendous and disgraceful case
Rewatching the English
English identity has become too surreal and discomfiting to define
The establishment is still living in an immigration fantasy land
It is influential left-wingers, not the broader public, who have deluded themselves on mass migration
Wrestling with realignment
Labour will use the Irish Sea border as an excuse to realign with the EU’s rules
Literary freedom is in the gutter
The disappearance of a praiseful review for a “cancelled” writer is as disturbing as it is bizarre
Trump: the imprudent king
The President has so far achieved the opposite of what he promised
The missing variable in the masculinity crisis
The literature on masculinity ignores the most obvious factor of all: a steady, civilisational fall in testosterone
Why does Labour hate our pubs?
The government has to stop taxing the hearts of our communities out of business
Jams, jellies and EU insanity
From toast to tungsten, the EU is an enemy of innovation
The right does not need religion
We should not mourn the end of the Quiet Revival
Warm home, wrong decision
Ministers are once again choosing the most politically convenient response to rising energy costs, not the most effective one
