
EU Set to Offer Shields for Exporters Under Carbon Border Levy
The European Commission, the bloc's executive, will say on Wednesday that it wants to use the revenues generated by the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism to support production at risk of being relocated to third countries with laxer environmental rules, according to a draft document seen by Bloomberg News.
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Miami Herald
an hour ago
- Miami Herald
U.S. tariff letters delayed, being sent Monday to first 12 countries
July 5 (UPI) -- President Donald Trump said letters will now go out on Monday to 12 countries with a final "take it or leave it" offer on tariff negotiations, pushing the date forward by two days. Trump did not name the 12 countries, adding that news would be made public on Monday. The president told reporters earlier in the week the letters would start going out on Friday but has since postponed the date. "I signed some letters and they'll go out on Monday, probably twelve," Trump told reporters aboard Air Force 1. "Different amounts of money, different amounts of tariffs." A 90-day pause instituted in April on Trump's so-called reciprocal tariffs of different sizes expires on July 9. A separate 10% "baseline" U.S. tariff on all countries is unrelated. The letters are expected to be sent by July 9, Trump told reporters this week. The pause was meant to give countries time to negotiate a deal with the Trump administration, but only a few have been finalized to date. Several other nations and the European Union have said they are not close. Britain and the United States came to an agreement at the end of June. American officials earlier this week announced a deal with Vietnam. Japan has said a deal with the United States on tariffs remains "unlikely," while European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said the three-month window was not long enough to properly negotiate a comprehensive agreement. This week, South Korean President Lee Jae Myung said negotiations on a tariff deal with the United States were "not very easy." "They'll range in value from maybe 60% or 70% tariffs to 10% and 20% tariffs, but they're going to be starting to go out sometime tomorrow," Trump told reporters earlier in the week, confirming the 90-day pause would end as scheduled. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said last month the deadlines are flexible in his understanding and that he expects negotiations to continue with the possibility of further deals getting done before Labor Day. Copyright 2025 UPI News Corporation. All Rights Reserved.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Tally lets you design great free surveys in 60 seconds
This article is republished with permission from Wonder Tools, a newsletter that helps you discover the most useful sites and apps. Subscribe here. Psychologists now know exactly what makes someone cool. Turns out, the definitions are universal 3% mortgage rates aren't dead—housing market sees 127% increase in buyers taking over old loans There's a reason your Sam's Club rotisserie chicken looks different Tally is the best free tool for creating surveys. They're better-looking and more flexible than Google Forms, and they're just as easy to create in 60 seconds. Use it for any kind of survey, whether you're getting feedback from clients or students, collecting RSVPs, or gathering ideas. Get Started: Pick a template or a blank page. Add questions: multiple choice, open text, ranking, or many others. You can ask respondents to upload a file or make a payment. To enhance your design, add text blocks, images, or videos between questions. Free. 99% of the features are available without paying. I haven't upgraded because the free offering is so complete. . Based in Belgium, the company complies with Europe's strict GDPR rules. Its software respects people's privacy. Easy. No complicated menus or settings. As this 30-second video demo illustrates, you can just start typing on a blank page and press ' / ' to add a question from a list of options. For non-techies it's easier than Typeform, Survey Monkey or Qualtrics. Flexible. Works for any kind of form, quiz or survey. Tally is superb for feedback, market research, even selling something, as in these templates: Flexible design. Incorporate video, images or descriptions to create the feel of a readable page that's less bureaucratic than traditional forms. Add a cover image and logo. The forms look great, like Notion pages. They're less generically corporate than Microsoft Forms or Google Forms. Easily shareable. Email your survey, share a link to it—as I did above—or embed it within a site. Connect Tally to other tools. Check a box to easily share whatever data your form collects to Google Sheets, Notion, Slack, or Airtable. These simple integrations help you analyze responses easily. Shortcut: type ' in your browser bar to start a new form, if you're logged in. Aim for 5 to 8 questions. That's the survey sweet spot requiring just 5 to 10 minutes of a respondent's time. Learn from other good surveys. Check examples of others using Tally, a pack of survey templates for growth, and lessons from newsletter surveys cited by Dan Oshinsky's excellent Inbox Collective. Incorporate , sending people to a question based on a prior answer. I tested that in my new Wonder Tools feedback survey above. That ensures people only see questions relevant to them. Use to categorize or summarize text replies. AI can help spot patterns. That's useful when you have hundreds of responses to analyze. First make a copy of survey data, stripping out names and private info. Prompt Claude or ChatGPT for step by step analysis, not all in one shot. With Gemini AI enabled in Google Sheets, ask for AI analysis of responses saved in a sheet. Customize this template I made. Invite people to sign up. Offer programming choices. Spread questions over multiple pages for a clean look. Let anyone provide quick input. Select candidates. Find someone to help you out. 1. Pick a relevant to your project (or start with a blank page).2. Click 'Use this template.'3. Customize the questions.4. Grab the link.5. Share it via email, on social or on a site.6. Return to Tally to see people's responses. . See how many people are accessing your form, where they're coming from, what devices they're using, how long they're spending on your form and where they're dropping off if they don't complete your questions. . If you're experimenting with question wording, you can now roll back to prior versions. . Developers can now build new Tally integrations and automations. Limited visualization options. For charts or detailed visuals, you'll need a different tool. No AI summaries or adaptation. Google Forms can now summarize responses for you with AI assistance. Tally doesn't yet have that capability. New tools like Parliant and BetterFeedback can even adapt questions based on prior responses. Typeform AI helps word questions for you. No mid-range subscription. You can use most Tally features for free, but the pro price of $29/monthly is a big jump for premium features. These include customized confirmation emails, custom domains, and unlimited team collaboration. You can also accept large file uploads (over 10mb) and remove Tally branding. I'm fine with the free plan, which includes unlimited forms and question types. Tally has published its own comparisons with other tools. But here's my take on other good survey tools to consider the next time you're making a form. Free & Fast: works with your existing Google account. It's functional for registration forms or simple feedback surveys, but its features and design have stagnated over the past decade. Elegant and Professional: presents questions one by one, making it less overwhelming for survey respondents than traditional survey tools. It remains superb for multiple reasons. It's expensive, though, and the advanced features are complex. Flexible and Easy: now lets you embed surveys export data to multiple places. They're more flexible than Survey Monkey or Microsoft Forms, which have the stiff design feel of enterprise tools made for mass-market feedback. Premium for Businesses: is another premium alternative for businesses. You can customize fonts and colors, and integrate a form into your CRM or any database. Or trying make an AI agent. For DIY flexibility: works well both for forms and documents. That helps you organize survey responses within existing docs. For team : , like Coda, lets you create forms with responses that flow directly into tables. That helps you sort, filter, analyze and share results efficiently. For preference ranking: is another specialized survey tool I've used and recommend for stack rankings—assessing customer preferences. Ask people to compare a series of paired options to help set priorities. Live polling: is what I prefer for quick live polling during events. This article is republished with permission from Wonder Tools, a newsletter that helps you discover the most useful sites and apps. Subscribe here. This post originally appeared at to get the Fast Company newsletter: Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Ex-ECB Official Urges Europe to Back Euro Stablecoins or Risk Losing Financial Power
Stablecoins are growing fast. Most of the $255 billion sector is currently concentrated in U.S. dollar-backed tokens, which account for $241 billion of that total, according to data. Former European Central Bank board member and chair of Société Générale, Lorenzo Bini Smaghi, has said that the imbalance could sideline Europe in the next phase of global finance. Writing in the Financial Times, Bini Smaghi noted that the European Union already has the Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) law, which forces issuers to back tokens with cash and high-grade sovereign bonds. The bloc also runs a pilot regime for trading on distributed ledgers. Yet the euro barely features in today's stablecoin market because banks and policymakers shy away from the new technology, he wrote. Société Générale, it's worth adding, launched its own euro-backed stablecoin back in 2023. Last month, it also launched a U.S. dollar-backed one. He says the hesitation risks European monetary sovereignty. If consumers and companies adopt dollar stablecoins for everyday payments and savings, deposits could drain from euro-area banks to US-linked platforms. That shift would erode the ECB's grip on money flows and blunt its ability to steer rates or calm markets, Bini Smaghi added. He argued that regulators should lean in, not block progress. By sponsoring euro-pegged tokens and coordinating standards, the ECB could modernize cross-border payments and help unify Europe's capital markets. Should Europe stay on the sidelines, 'it will be accepting its marginalization in the future of global finance,' he wrote.