-
Warnings issued over connecting to public WiFi networks in France
Lack of encryption and risk of connecting to ‘fake networks’ leave users at risk of hacking attempts
-
France impacted by EU approval for €3 tax on small parcels from outside the union
Tax could coincide with separate French fees for parcels says Finance Ministry
-
Winegrowers outraged by €0.01 bottle of wine in French supermarket
Lidl claims labelling error but local farmers’ union says it threatens local production
Decipher Breton rock riddle and win €2,000
More than 2,000 emails from around the world have flooded in after a mairie requested help to solve a riddle carved on a seaside granite bolder.
People across Asia, Chile, Russia, the US, and much of Europe contacted Plougastel mairie in Finistère, Brittany, with theories on deciphering the hundred or so characters and pictograms.
One part dates to the 1920s and another to 1786.
The rock can be reached only at low tide. It has been called the mystère Champollion, after the Frenchman who decoded the Rosetta Stone.
Véronique Martin, from the mairie, said: “I thought it would only be of interest in France but it has gone worldwide.
Whoever gives the best translation wins a €2,000 prize, with a jury of academics ready to rule on replies.”
