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Benefit change 'sees 6% move home'
About 6% of social housing tenants in Britain affected by changes to benefits partly designed to cut under-occupancy have moved home, research suggests.
Mandatory porn site age checks urged
The UK's video-on-demand regulator calls for a change to the law to make overseas pornographic websites add age verification checks.
'20% would spurn' gay wedding invite
About one in five British adults would turn down an invitation to a gay wedding, new research by the BBC suggests.
30m financial policies to be probed
Regulators are to investigate 30m financial policies - including pensions and endowments - over fears customers are subjected to "unfair" conditions.
Germany offers UK eurozone backing
The EU must ensure non-eurozone countries are legally protected in the event of further integration, the finance ministers of Germany and the UK say.
Nurse arrested again over poisoning
A male nurse is arrested again in connection with the poisoning of patients at Stockport's Stepping Hill Hospital.
PROFILE: The Sun is a daily national "red top" tabloid newspaper and the biggest-selling newspaper in the UK. Famous for its "Page 3" girls and catchy banner headlines, it is published by News Group Newspapers of News International, a subsidiary of Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation. While throwing it's considerable mass influence behind Tony Blair's New Labour, politically, the paper's stance was less clear under Prime Minister Gordon Brown with numerous editorials critical of Brown's policies and often more supportive of those of then Conservative leader David Cameron. On election day (6 May 2010), The Sun urged its readers to vote for David Cameron's "modern and positive" Conservatives in order to save Britain from "disaster". Profile extracted from Wikipedia and used under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.