Here are the business stories making the headlines across Scotland and the UK this morning.
Meta investigated over AI having 'sensual' chats with children
A US senator is opening an investigation into Meta after a leaked document reportedly showed the tech giant's artificial intelligence (AI) was permitted to have "sensual" and "romantic" chats with children.
The internal document, obtained by Reuters, was reportedly titled "GenAI: Content Risk Standards".
A Meta spokesperson told the BBC: "The examples and notes in question were and are erroneous and inconsistent with our policies, and have been removed."
Click here to read more.
Football steward sacked for crude memes about Sturgeon wins £8,000
A football club steward has won more than £8,000 after he was sacked for accidentally sending a colleague a rude mocked-up image of Nicola Sturgeon and Russell Brand.
Gennaro Romano won a claim of unfair dismissal against Norwich City after he was sacked for mistakenly forwarding the crude pictures on WhatsApp.
An employment tribunal heard the Championship club’s academy boss, Neil Hunter, received two images from Romano out of the blue. One mocked-up image featured Brand with the former first minister and the other was with Diane Abbott, the MP. Both included rude messages.
Read the full story on The Times website.
Soho House bought for £2bn as Ashton Kutcher joins board
Private members' club chain Soho House has been snapped up for $2.7bn (£2bn) by a consortium involving Hollywood actor turned investor Ashton Kutcher.
The group opened its first club in London in 1995, and now has 46 Soho Houses in Europe, North America and Asia, as well a string of other up-market hospitality businesses.
It is widely regarded as being a popular haunt of A-list celebrities, and one of its London venues was reportedly where Prince Harry and Meghan Markle had their first date.
Monzo to take on Tesco and Asda with mobile phone service
Monzo is exploring harnessing its brand to offer a mobile phone service to its 12 million-plus account holders.
The online bank is in talks with mobile operators about using one of their networks to offer a Monzo-branded service.
Such a tie-up would put the company in competition with a number of other so-called mobile virtual network operators (MVNOs), including Tesco, Asda, Sky and giffgaff.