Updated: Thu 28 Nov 07:46:24 GMT 2024

BBC World News
Open 
US and China swap three prisoners each in exchange
The exchange was reportedly months in the making, and included the release of at least one Chinese citizen in US custody.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Bashir strikes late to keep sluggish England in hunt against New Zealand
New Zealand 319-8 after being put in to start first TestKane Williamson falls just short of ton on return to sideThe night before this series opener saw a reunion for the New Zealand side that first beat England back in 1978, with David Gower, though not in that touring team, providing an English voice on the panel. When Geoffrey Boycott’s seven-hour 70 came up, Gower joked that it was “seriously fucking rapid” by his old mucker’s standards – before apologising for his use of the word rapid.What followed from England on the opening day at Hagley Oval was not exactly breakneck either; Ben Stokes winning the toss, electing to bowl, and his side labouring through just 83 overs. And yet the cricket was still hugely engrossing for the 8,000 or so lucky souls who lined the grass banks of this gorgeous boutique venue. By stumps, with Kane Williamson top scoring on 93 and showing those hands are no less Oil-of-Olay-soft for missing the 3-0 series win in India, the hosts finished with 319 for eight and honours felt even. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Slot praises Liverpool academy talents for their role in ‘special’ Real Madrid win
Kelleher, Jones and Bradley ‘outstanding’, says manager‘It is a fair result,’ says Real manager Carlo AncelottiArne Slot hailed a statement Liverpool win against the team that have tormented them in the Champions League and said the basis for it came from the club’s academy players. The manager watched Alexis Mac Allister and Cody Gakpo score the goals in a 2-0 win against Real Madrid, which moved Liverpool back to the top of the table with a blemish-free record after five games.It was the goalkeeper Caoimhín Kelleher, the right-back Conor Bradley and the midfielder Curtis Jones who stood out as Liverpool finally got a result against the 15-time European champions. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
All That Matters by Chris Hoy review – a champion’s shattering diagnosis
The Olympic medal-winner describes his treatment for cancer and reflects on lessons learned through sportIn a state of shock, Hoy – who is now 48 – went home with his wife, Sarra, to digest their new reality. The couple have two young children so, until they knew the treatment plan, they decided to keep the news to themselves aside from close friends and family. Hoy continued with his usual work commitments: talks, sports punditry and a weekly podcast. A few weeks later, he would begin a course of chemotherapy in a bid to stop the cancer spreading further.It is hard to fathom, given all that has happened, quite how Hoy found the time and wherewithal to record his experiences in a memoir, written with the journalist Matt Majendie. While the process may have been cathartic, there is clearly more to it than that. There is a thread of gratitude in the book that runs far deeper than performative celebrity humility. All That Matters is, above all, Hoy’s love letter to his family and a keepsake for his children, who are too young to fully comprehend what is happening but will likely have questions further down the line. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Russia-Ukraine war live: Moscow launches ‘massive strike’ on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure
Explosions heard in Odesa, Kropynytskyi, Kharkiv, Rivne and Lutsk as Russia targets power gridReuters has a quick snap that there are power cuts in Ukraine’s southern region of Mykolaiv as a result of Russia’s missile attack. It cited regional governor Vitaliy Kim.Zhitomir and Chernihiv region have ended their air alarms in Ukraine. Continue reading...

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#8770 Managed Hosting - Zen Cloud Platform Maintenance (Close)
Confirmed functioning service. Incident Closed.

Zen regrets any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Wed, 27th Nov 2024 09:00

End: Wed, 27th Nov 2024 14:00

Clear: Thu, 28th Nov 2024 06:37

Edited: Thu, 28th Nov 2024 06:37

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#8774 Managed Hosting - Zen Cloud Platform Maintenance (Close)
Confirmed functioning service. Incident Closed.

Zen regrets any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Wed, 27th Nov 2024 19:00

End: Wed, 27th Nov 2024 20:00

Clear: Thu, 28th Nov 2024 06:37

Edited: Thu, 28th Nov 2024 06:37

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

F1 Technical
Open 
Business: Williams will continue its partnership with Duracell
With the sport approaching the final leg of the 2024 F1 season, Williams have announced a multi-year extension to its Formula 1 partnership with Duracell.

Telegraph
Open 
Shoaib Bashir rewards Ben Stokes’ faith on day one of England’s tour of New Zealand
Ben Stokes was Mr Grumpy in Pakistan but there was a hint of a smile back on his face at the end of the first day of the Test series against New Zealand after his side kept in touch with New Zealand despite being below their best.]]>

Telegraph
Open 
Budget hits consumer confidence in run-up to Christmas
Households are becoming more concerned about the state of the economy, new data shows, after Rachel Reeves’s Budget sparked warnings over the risk of a UK recession. ]]>

Telegraph
Open 
Ukraine’s energy infrastructure ‘under massive enemy terror attack’
Russia launched a “massive” missile and drone attack against Ukraine overnight, targeting energy infrastructure across the country, Kyiv’s energy minister said.]]>

Mail Online
Open 
Fans savage 'terrible' new song featuring Kim Kardashian and Kanye West's nepo babies North and Chicago
Kanye West's daughters were the surprise stars of his new music video for Bomb when he released the video on Wednesday.

Mail Online
Open 
Black Friday scams: Five tricks shoppers must watch out for
From hacking into your online accounts to selling knock-off products, these are the ways criminals will target bargain-hunting shoppers.

Mail Online
Open 
The old-school car scam that's made a comeback - and is said to be fleecing drivers out of £750m a year
A new report estimates that around one in fifty second-hand motors have been tampered with to artificially inflate the perceived value.

Mail Online
Open 
My new Sim-only mobile deal is free (kind of) - make sure you don't stumble into the out of contract trap, says LEE BOYCE
What often happens is the mobile phone contract comes towards an end, we leave it too late to shop around or get tempted into an 'upgrade'.

Mail Online
Open 
My landlord is demanding I pay a share of their £3,600 service charge: Is this normal in a rental agreement?
My landlord lives in the property with his partner and had me sign a tenancy agreement when he accepted my offer on a rental platform.

Mail Online
Open 
The TikTok diet! Study finds nearly half the UK population base their meals on what influencers eat
It was once custom to wade through the pages of a cookbook to discover new recipes and worldwide food trends. Today, the process looks different, thanks to the plethora of food content videos online.

Mail Online
Open 
Internet pioneer who founded one of the world's most popular websites is found dead in his office just HOURS after 4am mystery email
Marshall Brian II, 63, an educator and the founder of HowStuffWorks, was found dead in his office at North Carolina State University on November 20.

BBC World News
Open 
Watch: Students safe after school bus catches fire in Australia
The driver and all students were safely evacuated after the bus caught fire during the morning school run.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Air pollution linked to 1.5 million deaths per year — study
A new Lancet study has linked heart and respiratory illnesses to air pollution from forest fires and controlled burning of cropland. China, India, Nigeria and Indonesia were among the worst-hit countries.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Russia-Ukraine war live: Moscow launches ‘massive strike’ on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure
Explosions heard in Odesa, Kropynytskyi, Kharkiv, Rivne and Lutsk as Russia targets power gridZhitomir and Chernihiv region have ended their air alarms in Ukraine.Maksym Kozytskyi, governor of Ukraine’s western Lviv region, reports on the Telegram app that energy infrastructure in the region has been attacked by Russia Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Identity and incredible life story of missing man found 25 years after he disappeared when sister spotted his photo in news article
The long-lost man who went missing 25 years ago and was reunited with his family after he turned up in a hospital was traveling the US in a van when he vanished - until he was found in April.

Mail Online
Open 
Neighbour who blasted Bob Marley music to 'mock' homeowner is reported to police for non-hate crime incident
The person's black neighbour told North Wales Police the incident that happened between June 2023 and 2024 and playing Bob Marley (pictured) was 'racial prejudice'.

Mail Online
Open 
Hannah Kobayashi's devastated sister claims 'someone was controlling' her before Hawaii woman's mysterious disappearance
Sydni Kobayashi, the sister of missing Hawaii woman Hannah Kobayashi revealed cryptic text messages her family received may have been sent by someone else.

Mail Online
Open 
Celebrated actor Timothy West died in care home aged 90, inquest hears
Timothy West (pictured) passed away aged 90 surrounded by family and friends at Signature at Wandsworth care home in Wandsworth Common, south London on November 12.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
David Cameron changes mind to back assisted dying bill
Lord Cameron previously opposed assisted dying but says the current bill "is about shortening death".

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Unite pushes judicial review on winter fuel cuts
Unite claims the government broke procedure by cancelling payments for 10 million pensioners.

Mail Online
Open 
The tumultuous love affair of Prince George, son of George V, and Kiki Preston - the Roaring Twenties party girl and notorious drug addict nicknamed 'The Girl with the Silver Syringe'
He was the prince of hearts who wooed the ladies throughout the 1920s. And she was Kiki - known as The Girl with the Silver Syringe - a woman who was mad, bad, and dangerous to know.

Mail Online
Open 
Can you guess who wore these stunning stilettos? Match the shoe to the royal...
Get ready to put your style knowledge to the test as we take you through the most memorable high-heel moments in royal history.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Peacock Promo Codes: Get 75% Off Subscriptions
For a limited time, save 75% on a Peacock Premium subscription when you enter our promo code at checkout.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
20% Off Brooks Promo Code & Deals for November 2024
Enjoy 20% off your first order with a Brooks coupon code, plus top November discounts and holiday deals on our favorite Brooks running shoes.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Top Blue Apron Coupon 50% | November 2024
Enjoy 50% off your first four meals with this Blue Apron Coupon. Save more with the latest Blue Apron deals this November.

BBC Technology News
Open 
Uber probed by US regulator over subscription plan
The ride-hailing giant says it received inquiries from the FTC about Uber One cancellation procedures.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Feeling blue: how denim built America – in pictures
Originally used as workwear for back-breaking jobs, these vintage images show the fabric’s role in dragging the US out of the Great Depression Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Conclave review – Ralph Fiennes shines as papal election results in high-camp gripper
Fiennes is broodingly compelling as a potential English pope caught up in murky Vatican intrigue around choosing the next pontiffWho knew that the laborious process of democracy, of simply voting over and over again, could be so exciting and so amusing? Edward Berger’s drama is adapted with masterly flair by screenwriter Peter Straughan from the Robert Harris pageturner; Ralph Fiennes is on sumptuous form as the deeply troubled Cardinal Lawrence at the centre of a murky Vatican plot. The result is a high-camp gripper, like the world’s most serious Carry On film.Fiennes’ character is Italian in Harris’s book, but Straughan makes him an Englishman: an unquiet soul who is theoretically on the verge of becoming the first English pope since Adrian IV, although no one is so vulgar or nationalistic as to point that out. With the ailing pope in extremis, Cardinal Lawrence arrives at His Holiness’s death bed to find other ambitious cardinals, who have all cultivated an opaque, unreadable manner of cordially respectful friendship with each other, now manoeuvring to be considered the successor in the imminent conclave, or election. In this blue chip supporting cast Stanley Tucci plays Bellini, the liberal; Sergio Castellitto is pugnacious, reactionary Tedesco, a racist bigot; John Lithgow is Tremblay, whose blandly emollient manner is misleading; Lucian Msamati is the bullish Adeyemi; and Carlos Diehz is Benitez, an unknown figure who to everyone’s polite consternation had been created Cardinal Archbishop of Kabul without anyone realising. Yet all of these men are upstaged by the late pontiff’s confidante Sister Agnes, shrewdly played by Isabella Rossellini. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Who will be Ireland’s next taoiseach? With only one day to go, it’s still wide open | Justine McCarthy
With a housing emergency and the cost of living weighing heavily on voters’ minds, anything could happen at the polls on FridayIn Easter, 1916, his epic poem about the failed Dublin rebellion that eventually led to Irish independence, William Butler Yeats declared: “A terrible beauty is born.” The same might be said about the marriage of convenience between Ireland’s old civil war enemies, Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael, as they attempt to recreate their history-making coalition government.The two parties are now in power alongside the Greens, but this time round their mission is to stop the main opposition, Sinn Féin, entering government as part of a three-way coalition in the Republic after Friday’s general election. Instead, their preference would be to coalesce with Labour, because of voter resistance to climate-change measures.Justine McCarthy is an Irish journalist and the author of An Eye on Ireland: Writings from a Changing Nation Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘In the distance I see tiny glowing silhouettes sprinkled like salt’: birdwatching on Devon’s Exe estuary
The spectacular estuary is a haven for thousands of migrant birds each winter, and perfect to explore on foot and by boatThe Christmas market doesn’t know what’s hit it. At 8.30 on a mid-November morning Exeter is a whirl of white, a city half-blinded by tumbling flakes. Four market workers, caught out by this overly authentic addition to the festive decor, are busy shovelling the ground in front of the bao stalls and craft gin chalets. Above them, the cathedral’s medieval towers stand tall and cold in the heaven-filling flurry. Winter has arrived in Devon with bells on.I’m here to catch a train to see some birdlife. A breakfast blizzard wasn’t part of the plan, but sometimes these things don’t go as expected. The city’s Queen Street has turned into a real-life snow globe – Narnia with sandwich shops – yet the little two-carriage train I’m catching trundles into Exeter Central bang on time. I find a window seat and settle in. Snowy rooftops roll by. Somewhere, an estuary lies in wait. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Can you take a clean cruise holiday and which vessels are the worst emitters?
In a booming sector where the biggest ships have doubled in size since 2000, pressure is growing to make cruising a greener, more sustainable way to travelRead more in this seriesToxic, filthy and cheap, the sludge-like substance known as heavy fuel oil has powered the shipping industry since the 1960s. What is perhaps less well known is that this same substance is still used to power more than half of cruise ships today, making what many choose as an alternative to flying one of the most environmentally damaging ways to travel.The good news is that the industry, under pressure from environmentalists and new regulations, is adopting new technologies, energy saving designs and studying alternative fuels. Continue reading...

Slashdot
Open 
PFAS and Microplastics Become More Toxic When Combined, Research Shows
A University of Birmingham study reveals that PFAS and microplastics have a synergistic effect that significantly increases their toxicity. "The study's authors exposed water fleas to mixtures of the toxic substances and found they suffered more severe health effects, including lower birth rates, and developmental problems, such as delayed sexual maturity and stunted growth," reports The Guardian. From the report: The enhanced toxic effects raise alarm because PFAS and microplastics are researched and regulated in isolation from one one another, but humans are virtually always exposed to both. The research also showed those fleas previously exposed to chemical pollution were less able to withstand the new exposures. The findings "underscore the critical need to understand the impacts of chemical mixtures on wildlife and human health," wrote the study's authors, who are with the University of Birmingham in the United Kingdom.

Researchers compared a group of water fleas that had never been exposed to pollution with another group that had been exposed to pollution in the past. Water fleas have high sensitivity to chemicals so they are frequently used to study ecological toxicity. Both groups were exposed to bits of PET, a common microplastic, as well as PFOA and PFOS, two of the most common and dangerous PFAS compounds. The mixture reflected conditions common in lakes around the world.

The study's authors found the mixture to be more toxic than PFAS and microplastics in isolation. They attributed about 40% of the increased toxicity to a synergy among the substances that makes them even more dangerous. The authors theorized the synergy has to do with the interplay in the charges of microplastics and PFAS compounds. The remainder of the increased toxicity was attributed to simple addition of their toxic effects. Fleas exposed to the mixture showed a "markedly reduced number of offspring," the authors said. They were also smaller at maturation and showed delayed sexual growth.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

CNET News
Open 
Why You Should Think Twice About Eating Leftover Rice
Fried rice syndrome is real. Here's why you might want to cook rice everyday instead of reheating leftovers.

CNET News
Open 
Best Black Friday Deals Live Now: Score Big Savings on TVs, Laptops, Home Goods and More
CNET's team of shopping experts found the best deals so you can take advantage of amazing savings on smart home tech, laptops, headphones, and so much more.

CNET News
Open 
Helix Dusk Luxe Mattress Review 2024: A Comfortable Pillow-Top Bed
Sleep experts at CNET have pushed the Helix Dusk Luxe to its limits. Read this review to see if it’s the right fit for you.

Ian Visits
Open 
Tate Britain’s uneven but captivating look at the 1980s
An exhibition about the 1980s starts in the 1970s and ends in the 1990s, such are the vagaries of trying to tell the story of a single decade that refuses to obey the rules of calendar boundaries.Read more ›

This article was published on ianVisits

SUPPORT THIS WEBSITE
This website has been running now for just over a decade, and while advertising revenue contributes to funding the website, but doesn't cover the costs. That is why I have set up a facility with DonorBox where you can contribute to the costs of the website and time invested in writing and research for the news articles.It's very similar to the way The Guardian and many smaller websites are now seeking to generate an income in the face of rising costs and declining advertising.Whether its a one-off donation or a regular giver, every additional support goes a long way to covering the running costs of this website, and keeping you regularly topped up doses of Londony news and facts.If you like what your read on here, then please support the website here.Thank you

The Register
Open 
China starts building world's largest fully steerable radio telescope
120-meter colossus expected to be online in 2028 – around the same time the Square Kilometer Array A 120-meter diameter radio telescope is under construction in China and, once built, will be the world’s largest fully steerable device of its kind, according to the Chinese Academy of Science (CAS).…

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Some early Belfast flights cancelled over fog
Seven early-morning flights due to depart from Belfast City Airport are off due to fog.

Sky News Home
Open 
Two people with less than six months to live reveal contrasting views on assisted dying
Warning: This article contains references to suicide.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Third of NI adults visit porn sites, Ofcom finds
Ofcom report finds NI adults are more likely to look at porn online than in any other part of the UK.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Massive attack’ on Ukraine’s power network under way, says minister
Emergency power cuts being brought in across the country amid missile alerts and freezing temperaturesRussia-Ukraine war – live updatesUkraine’s power infrastructure was “under massive enemy attack” on Thursday, the country’s energy minister said, after a nationwide air raid alert was declared due to incoming missiles.“Once again, the energy sector is under massive enemy attack. Attacks on energy facilities are taking place across Ukraine,” German Galushchenko said in a Facebook post. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Fire crews on scene at north London takeaway blaze
About 100 firefighters and 15 engines are tackling a fire at a takeaway and flats in Holloway.

Sky News Home
Open 
Two people with less than six months to live have contrasting views on assisted dying
Warning: This article contains references to suicide.

Russia Today News
Open 
NATO-Russia struggle is bigger than ‘Cold War 2.0’ – top general

BBC Technology News
Open 
Uber questioned by US regulator over subscription plan
The ride-hailing giant says it received inquiries from the FTC about Uber One cancellation procedures.

Mail Online
Open 
Putin's secret daughter, 21, 'lives under pseudonym while hiding in West during his bloody war with Ukraine'
Elizaveta has reportedly been a student at the Paris School of Management and Arts during the war in Ukraine - but may not be there any more

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Blast site neighbours must sign waivers to go home
Residents who want to return to their homes inside a police cordon are being asked to sign forms.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Ukraine updates: Russia attacks energy infrastructure
An air raid alert has been declared across Ukraine amid reports of a cruise missile attack by Russia. The Ukrainian energy minister said that the country's energy infrastructure was targeted. DW has the latest.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Woman sent thousands in fines over mystery truck
Hilary Parker is facing fines for a truck she knows nothing about that is registered to her home.

Sky News Home
Open 
'Death isn't like a video game where you pop back up': The case for and against assisted dying
Warning: This article contains references to suicide.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Unite pushes judicial review on Winter Fuel cuts
Unite claims the government broke procedure by cancelling payments for 10 million pensioners.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Major fire breaks out at Holloway takeaway
About 100 firefighters and 15 engines are tackling a fire at a takeaway and flats in Holloway.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Surprise solar surge in Pakistan shocks experts and grid
Pakistan has grown its solar energy capacity by an astounding amount in a remarkably short space of time. The shock surge has given residents the power to survive blackouts, but it threatens to disrupt the grid.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Biden administration claims win with Hezbollah-Israel ceasefire – but will it hold?
Peace is shaky at best, as Israel will still strike targets in Lebanon and a power transition looms in the USThe Biden administration has claimed the long-awaited ceasefire between Hezbollah and Israel as a diplomatic triumph achieved under tremendous pressure during a lame-duck period with a hostile Donald Trump administration waiting in the wings.Speaking from a lectern in the Rose Garden of the White House, Joe Biden called the result “historic” and said that it “reminds us that peace is possible”. It would return civilians to their homes, he said, and had “determined this conflict will not be just another cycle of violence”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Shoaib Bashir strikes late to keep sluggish England in the hunt against New Zealand
England win toss; New Zealand 319-8 on day one of first TestKane Williamson falls just short of ton on return to sideThe night before this series opener saw a reunion for the New Zealand side that first beat England back in 1978, with David Gower, though not in that touring team, providing an English voice on the panel. When Geoffrey Boycott’s seven-hour 70 came up, Gower joked that it was “seriously fucking rapid” by his old mucker’s standards – before apologising for his use of the word rapid.What followed from England on the opening day at Hagley Oval was not exactly breakneck either; Ben Stokes winning the toss, electing to bowl, and his side labouring through just 83 overs. And yet the cricket was still hugely engrossing for the 8,000 or so lucky souls who lined the grass banks of this gorgeous boutique venue. By stumps, with Kane Williamson top scoring on 93 and showing those hands are no less Oil-of-Olay-soft for missing the 3-0 series win in India, the hosts finished with 319 for eight and honours felt even. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Massive attack’ on Ukraine’s power network under way, says minister
Emergency power cuts being brought in across the country amid missile alerts and freezing temperaturesUkraine’s power infrastructure was “under massive enemy attack” on Thursday, the country’s energy minister said, after a nationwide air raid alert was declared due to incoming missiles.“Once again, the energy sector is under massive enemy attack. Attacks on energy facilities are taking place across Ukraine,” German Galushchenko said in a Facebook post. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Czech billionaire closes in on deal to buy Royal Mail
Daniel Kretinsky is understood to have offered a series of concessions to the UK government.

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#8775 Broadband (xDSL) - Broadband Platform Maintenance (Close)
Confirmed functioning service. Incident Closed.

Zen regrets any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Thu, 28th Nov 2024 01:00

End: Thu, 28th Nov 2024 02:00

Clear: Thu, 28th Nov 2024 06:33

Edited: Thu, 28th Nov 2024 06:33

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#8697 Routing & Core Network - Core Network Maintenance - Romford (LNROM) (Close)
Confirmed functioning service. Incident Closed.

Zen regrets any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Wed, 27th Nov 2024 23:00

End: Thu, 28th Nov 2024 06:00

Clear: Thu, 28th Nov 2024 06:34

Edited: Thu, 28th Nov 2024 06:34

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#8789 Routing & Core Network - Emergency Maintenance - WSDOU (Glasgow Douglass), NSLNG (Aberdeen Lochnagar), LSEWE (Ewell), SSNOR (North Bristol), LSORP (Orpington), SSBED (Bedminster), LWWAT (Watford), LCCAR (Carlisle) and MYSHI (Shipley) Exchanges (Close)
Confirmed functioning service. Incident Closed.

Zen regrets any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Wed, 27th Nov 2024 00:00

End: Tue, 26th Nov 2024 06:00

Clear: Thu, 28th Nov 2024 06:34

Edited: Thu, 28th Nov 2024 06:34

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#8729 Shared Linux Hosting - cPanels SSL Certificates (Close)
Confirmed functioning service. Incident Closed.

Zen regrets any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Thu, 14th Nov 2024 15:00

Clear: Thu, 28th Nov 2024 06:34

Edited: Thu, 28th Nov 2024 06:34

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#8717 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Maintenance - NEBA-Bishop Auckland (Close)
Confirmed functioning service. Incident Closed.

Zen regrets any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Thu, 28th Nov 2024 00:05

End: Thu, 28th Nov 2024 06:00

Clear: Thu, 28th Nov 2024 06:35

Edited: Thu, 28th Nov 2024 06:35

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#8720 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Maintenance - SDHYWRD-Haywards Heath, SDLTTLH-Littlehampton (Close)
Confirmed functioning service. Incident Closed.

Zen regrets any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Thu, 28th Nov 2024 00:05

End: Thu, 28th Nov 2024 06:00

Clear: Thu, 28th Nov 2024 06:35

Edited: Thu, 28th Nov 2024 06:35

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#8718 Broadband (xDSL) - Planned Maintenance - LSKIN-Kingston Upon Thames (Close)
Confirmed functioning service. Incident Closed.

Zen regrets any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Thu, 28th Nov 2024 00:05

End: Thu, 28th Nov 2024 06:00

Clear: Thu, 28th Nov 2024 06:36

Edited: Thu, 28th Nov 2024 06:36

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

F1 Technical
Open 
Monza secures its long-term future on the F1 calendar
Monza has secured a contract extension with Formula One which means that the Italian Grand Prix will remain on the calendar until at least 2031 inclusive.

Telegraph
Open 
Shoaib Bashir rewards Ben Stokes’ faith on day one of England’s tour of New Zealand
Ben Stokes was Mr Grumpy in Pakistan but the smile was back at the end of the first day of the Test series against New Zealand after his side kept in touch with New Zealand despite being below their best.]]>

Digital Trends
Open 
NASA’s rocket fireplace will ‘blow your guests away’
Why would you want to sit in front of an old-fashioned log fireplace when you can enjoy a virtual one featuring four rocket engines instead?

Mail Online
Open 
Black Friday 2024 UK deals live: The best early offers on big-name brands as this year's biggest shopping event kicks off
Black Friday 2024 LIVE: The best and latest UK deals and sales from brands including Amazon, Apple and Boots handpicked and price-checked by shopping experts.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
'Hardest decision of my career': MPs wrestle with vote choice
As Friday's assisted dying bill vote approaches, MPs explain how they are approaching their decision.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
'I might be dead before a decision is made'
Nik is worried assisted dying could lead to coercion - but Elise, who has cancer, wants the choice.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
What is assisted dying and how could the law change?
A proposed law would let terminally ill people in England and Wales choose to end their life.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
TV tonight: a hilarious drag queen comedy set in Middlesbrough
Phil Dunning’s Smoggie Queens is full of laughs and love. Plus: the Jackal continues to elude MI6. Here’s what to watch this evening10.10pm, BBC Three“Cheers queers!” Phil Dunning’s comedy about an LGBTQ+ group of friends in Middlesbrough is side-splittingly funny. He plays Dickie, a fabulous if foul-mouthed drag queen whose friends are “drag” Mam (Mark Benton), “hun” Lucinda (Alexandra Mardell), lager-guzzling Sal (Patsy Lowe) and newbie Stewart (Elijah Young). In the first episode Dickie is dumped and amid the endless laughter there is also a lot of tenderness. Hollie Richardson Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
UK government failing to list use of AI on mandatory register
Technology secretary admits Whitehall departments are not being transparent over way they use AI and algorithmsNot a single Whitehall department has registered the use of artificial intelligence systems since the government said it would become mandatory, prompting warnings that the public sector is “flying blind” about the deployment of algorithmic technology affecting millions of lives.AI is already being used by government to inform decisions on everything from benefit payments to immigration enforcement, and records show public bodies have awarded dozens of contracts for AI and algorithmic services. A contract for facial recognition software, worth up to £20m, was put up for grabs last week by a police procurement body set up by the Home Office, reigniting concerns about “mass biometric surveillance”.The Department for Work and Pensions has been using generative AI to read more than 20,000 documents a day to “understand and summarise correspondence” after which the full information is then shared with officials for decision-making. It has automated systems for detecting fraud and error in universal credit claims, and AI assists agents working on personal independence payment claims by summarising evidence. This autumn, DWP started deploying basic AI tools in jobcentres, allowing work coaches to ask questions about universal credit guidance in an attempt to improve the effectiveness of conversations with jobseekers.The Home Office deploys an AI-powered immigration enforcement system, which critics call a “robo-caseworker”. An algorithm is involved in shaping decisions, including returning people to their home countries. The government describes it as a “rules-based” rather than AI system, as it does not involve machine-learning from data. It says it brings efficiencies by prioritising work, but that a human remains responsible for each decision. The system is being used amid a rising caseload of asylum seekers who are subject to removal action, now at about 41,000 people.Several police forces use facial recognition software to track down suspected criminals with the help of artificial intelligence. These have included the Metropolitan police, South Wales police and Essex police. Critics have warned that such software “will transform the streets of Britain into hi-tech police line-ups”, but supporters say it catches criminal suspects and the data of innocent passersby is not stored.NHS England has a £330m contract with Palantir to create a huge new data platform. The deal with the US company that builds AI-enabled digital infrastructure and is led by Donald Trump backer Peter Thiel has sparked concerns about patient privacy, although Palantir says its customers retain full control of the data.An AI chatbot is being trialled to help people navigate the sprawling gov.uk government website. It has been built by the government’s digital service using OpenAI’s ChatGPT technology. Redbox, another AI chatbot for use by civil servants in Downing Street and other government departments, has also been deployed to allow officials to quickly delve into secure government papers and get rapid summaries and tailored briefings. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Gittens for England? Dortmund winger adds another stunner
While former Borussia Dortmund star Jude Bellingham was enduring a torrid Champions League night at Anfield, another Englishman currently at the Bundesliga club was lighting up the competition.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
'Mbappe fell flat when needed' - why Real Madrid are in trouble
Real Madrid record a third loss in the Champions League as Kylian Mbappe struggles to impress, are they really at risk of being eliminated?

Sky News Home
Open 
Man awarded more than 400 million dollars after 'invasive erectile dysfunction shots'
A man has been awarded $412m (£325m) in damages after a US clinic gave him "invasive erectile dysfunction shots" that caused him irreversible harm.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Firefighters tackle blaze at takeaway in north London
Around 100 firefighters and 15 engines are tackling a fire at a takeaway with flats above in Holloway.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Police investigate five people for enabling Al Fayed's sexual abuse
The Metropolitan Police says it believes several people may have helped or enabled Mohamed Al Fayed's sexual offences.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Novels about serial killers and loyal dogs voted Waterstones books of 2024
Booksellers chose true-crime inspired Butter by Asako Yuzuki as book of the year, while Ross Montgomery’s fun adventure I Am Rebel took the children’s prizeA novel about a serial killer and a children’s book about a dog are the books of 2024, according to Waterstones booksellers.Butter by Asako Yuzuki, translated from Japanese by Polly Barton, has been voted book of the year, while I am Rebel by Ross Montgomery has been named children’s book of the year. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The message to Democrats is clear: you must dump neoliberal economics | Joseph Stiglitz
The party must return to its progressive roots. A new economy is needed with new rules and new rolesAs the shock of Donald Trump’s victory sinks in, pundits and politicians are mulling what it means for the future of the US and global politics. Understanding why such a divisive, unqualified figure won again is crucial for the Democrats. Did they go too far left and lose the moderate Americans who make up a majority? Or did centrist neoliberalism – pursued by Democratic presidents since Bill Clinton – fail to deliver, thus creating a demand for change?To me, the answer is clear: 40 years of neoliberalism have left the US with unprecedented inequality, stagnation in the middle of the income spectrum (and worse for those below), and declining average life expectancy (highlighted by mounting “deaths of despair”). The American Dream is being killed, and although President Joe Biden and Vice-President Kamala Harris distanced themselves from neoliberalism with their embrace of industrial policies, as representatives of the mainstream establishment, they remained associated with its legacy. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
This society lauded a police officer who lied and cheated and ruined lives. At last, a reckoning | George Monbiot
As a ‘spy cop’, Bob Lambert betrayed a string of innocent women. The official inquiry must ask harsh questions of him – and the stateIt’s the testimony we’ve long been waiting for. On Monday, at the undercover policing inquiry, the man whose cruel and disgusting deceptions have come to epitomise the “spy cops” scandal will be questioned. Many of us are hoping for answers, not least because his story suggests a closing of ranks across the British establishment. Even if you think you’ve heard it all, some of the details in this column will take your breath away.Bob Lambert worked for the Metropolitan police’s Special Demonstration Squad (SDS) in the 1980s and 1990s, first as an undercover cop infiltrating environmental and animal rights protests, then as operational controller of the squad, supervising other spy cops doing similar work. In the course of his undercover assignments, while posing as a radical activist called Bob Robinson, he deceived four unsuspecting women, innocent of any crime, into starting relationships. He stole his identity from a dead child.George Monbiot is a Guardian columnist Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Posh olive oil, tinned fish and even salt are now du jour, says Waitrose
As sales of premium varieties rise the upmarket grocer details how chic-looking pantry staples are now middle-class status symbolsForget designer fashion and jewellery, trendy versions of pantry staples such as extra virgin olive oil, balsamic vinegar and tinned fish have become middle-class lust objects for home cooks, according to a new report.A food cupboard stocked with chic glass bottles, jars and decorative tins (in the front row at least) has become a status symbol, according to Waitrose’s annual food and drink report. Continue reading...

CNET News
Open 
Safe Guard Your Home This Holiday Season With Up to 70% off SimpliSafe Home Security Systems
Take advantage of these dramatic Black Friday deals on SimpliSafe products, whether you're home for the holidays or planning on traveling.

CNET News
Open 
The Top 6 Alarm Clocks of 2024
We've tested alarm clocks -- a whole collection -- to identify the best one to help kickstart your day. These are the best options.

CNET News
Open 
DreamCloud Premier Memory Foam Mattress Review 2024: A Closer Look at an Upgraded All-Foam Bed
Hunting for an all-foam mattress? Here's what to know about the upgraded DreamCloud Premier.

Ian Visits
Open 
Cycling rates in London rose by a quarter over the past five years
Cycling in London continues to increase in popularity, having jumped by over a quarter in the past five years.Read more ›

This article was published on ianVisits

SUPPORT THIS WEBSITE
This website has been running now for just over a decade, and while advertising revenue contributes to funding the website, but doesn't cover the costs. That is why I have set up a facility with DonorBox where you can contribute to the costs of the website and time invested in writing and research for the news articles.It's very similar to the way The Guardian and many smaller websites are now seeking to generate an income in the face of rising costs and declining advertising.Whether its a one-off donation or a regular giver, every additional support goes a long way to covering the running costs of this website, and keeping you regularly topped up doses of Londony news and facts.If you like what your read on here, then please support the website here.Thank you

The Register
Open 
India spending $170M to take its tax system paperless by rebuilding three legacy systems
Let's see how this goes India has decided to rebuild the platforms it offers citizens to process their taxes and make the system paperless.…

The Register
Open 
Microsoft informed of yet another antitrust probe by US authorities
Investigation is apparently sweeping, but keen on info about AI, security, and cloud The US Federal Trade Commission appears to have launched an antitrust investigation into Microsoft.…

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
New Zealand close on 319-8 v England: first men’s cricket Test, day one – as it happened
Kane Williamson made 93 and Shoaib Bashir took four wickets as the Crowe-Thorpe trophy got off to an entertaining start Right, anthems sung, players out. Chris Woakes has the ball. Cricket imminent.“Why is Bashir playing instead of Leach?” harrumphs Paul McIntyre. Well, because he’s England’s first-choice spinner in all conditions, as Ben Stokes put it in Pakistan last month. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Bashir takes four as England chip away at NZ
Shoaib Bashir takes 4-69 as England chip away at the New Zealand batting on the opening day of the first Test in Christchurch.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Police investigate five people for enabling Al Fayed sexual abuse
The Metropolitan Police says it believes several people may have helped or enabled Mohamed Al Fayed's sexual offences.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
'Massive strike' on Ukraine's energy sector, says minister
A nationwide air raid alert was sounded early on Thursday because of the 'threat of missile danger'.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Taiwan conducts air drill amid China pressure
Taiwan staged an air defense exercise as tension simmers over President Lai Ching-te's upcoming Pacific trip. The Taiwanese Defense Ministry also reported two Chinese balloons near the island.

BBC World News
Open 
The families fleeing Delhi to escape deadly smog
Some people are choosing to move out of Delhi to escape the Indian capital's poisonous air.

BBC World News
Open 
Mexico leader responds to Trump claim she agreed to stop migration
President Claudia Sheinbaum says Mexico's position is not to close borders, and to respect human rights.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Air raid alert across Ukraine as multiple explosions reported
The alert was sounded in the early hours of Thursday morning because of 'threat of missile danger'.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
A Single Point Of Failure
A Single Point Of Failure

Submitted by Ahmed Bin Sulayem, Kimberly Process Chair 2024

The global diamond industry once again finds itself at a crossroads, and while the need to curb conflict diamonds and ensure ethical sourcing remains paramount, the European Union's proposal for a single diamond control node in Antwerp raises serious concerns about sovereignty and efficiency, while undermining the integrity of the Kimberley Process (KP).

In a statement issued by the Diplomatic Service of the European Union, my comments made during the KP Plenary meeting in my capacity as the KP Chair were described as “regrettable” and that the Kimberley Process had “failed, for a third year in a row, to address the implications of Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine on the global rough diamond sector.”

As an organization, the KP serves a very specific function – to unite administrations, civil societies, and industry in reducing the flow of conflict diamonds. It has no mandate to endorse political sanctions against sovereign nations. As a process that has proven its purpose and function, particularly by identifying all diamonds at source, the EU should first ask themselves why now they wish to displace an operation they have trusted for a generation with a less effective proposal that is untried, untested, and unrequired. It should also question why its position has isolated itself within the global diamond community, which increasingly sees its proposal as a play for hegemony over the holistic needs of the industry.  

Contrary, the KP’s decentralized solution is overwhelmingly supported by industry members, KP observers, including the World Diamond Council, civil society, and numerous Belgian stakeholders, many of whom are afraid to speak out in fear of reprisal. As the Kimberley Process Chair, I have consistently voiced my concern about this centralized approach. Not only does it disrupt the established KP framework, a decentralized network of 59 nodes, (60 if you include recently onboarded Uzbekistan), that has functioned effectively for over two decades, but worse, undermines the trust and collaboration that has upheld the equitable participation and sovereignty of all member states.

Conversely, the single-node model imposes a Eurocentric lens on the global diamond trade by placing disproportionate burdens on African producers, requiring them to channel their diamonds through Antwerp for verification before accessing G7 markets. This not only adds logistical and financial costs but also undermines the ability of African nations to self-regulate and manage their own natural resources. In other words, the EU’s agenda can only be seen to be self-serving as a way of preserving its relevance in an industry that overwhelmingly rejects supervision and bureaucracy in favour of decentralised collaboration.

Frankly, it is disheartening to see that despite vocal opposition from African nations, including Botswana, Namibia, and Angola, and the concerns raised by the African Diamond Producers Association (ADPA), Europe remains deaf and committed to its single-node concept, setting a troubling precedent reminiscent of its imperial past. Even in terms of practical efficiency, this centralised approach creates a single point of failure, making the system vulnerable to corruption, bottlenecks, and inefficiencies; vulnerabilities for which Antwerp already has a demonstrable track record.

And what logic selects Antwerp? Not consensus. Not its track record.

Belgium, and specifically Antwerp, was long considered the heart of the global diamond trade. However, this glittering reputation is tarnished by a history of corruption, smuggling, and ethical breaches. The Monstrey Case exposed a network of 220 corrupt diamond dealers, of which 107 were charged for large-scale forgery, including fraudulent Kimberley Process certificates and money laundering. Other notable cases include Agim De Bruycker - the long-standing Antwerp Federal Police Commissioner and Head of the Diamond Squad, who was arrested twice and served a custodial sentence for similar charges.

If one were to choose some paradigm of efficiency, Antwerp is hardly a strong candidate, leading to the conclusion that the choice was made at a geopolitical level for the benefit of the few. This isn’t to say that any location is perfect. Any single location is, by its nature the wrong choice. The argument for a decentralized system based on transparency, versus blindly trusting the EU for certification, is just common sense. Even when taking a step back from the diamond industry specifically, the current global political climate, with its shift towards nationalism and self-determination, further underscores the need for a decentralized approach. As former European Central Bank President Mario Draghi aptly stated, the future of competitiveness lies in embracing decentralization and empowering individual nations.

Throughout its twenty-four-year history, the KP has proven its effectiveness in curbing conflict diamonds and promoting ethical sourcing, while its tried and tested processes have the capacity to adapt and improve, ensuring that all nations have the right to self-regulate their natural resources. Additionally, the UAE's proof-of-concept KP certification platform, which was showcased at the KP Plenary in Dubai, is a testament to the potential for innovation within the existing framework. It demonstrates that technology can be leveraged to enhance transparency and traceability without compromising sovereignty or imposing undue financial and logistical burdens. In this, I look forward to working with the KP family to build a future where all stakeholders, particularly Africa’s producing nations, continue to have a voice and benefit equitably from their natural resources.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 11/27/2024 - 22:30

ZeroHedge News
Open 
The Top States Where Americans Are Looking to Buy Homes Heading Into 2025
The Top States Where Americans Are Looking to Buy Homes Heading Into 2025

A new study has revealed where Americans are most likely to buy a home heading into the end of 2024. Highland Cabinetry conducted a comprehensive analysis of all 50 U.S. states to determine where homebuying is most preferred.

The study utilized search data from Google’s Keyword Explorer Tool to gauge interest and incorporated additional factors such as home sale prices, mortgage rates, average rent, and home value changes over the past year. Data was sourced from the U.S. Census Bureau, Business Insider, Zillow, and others.

A preference score was then assigned to each state, combining these metrics to create a comparative ranking.

California emerges as the most sought-after state for homebuyers, boasting a preference score of 75.8. Despite its high average home sale price of $782,695, the Golden State saw the largest home value decrease at 2.8% over the past year. Coupled with over 5.6 million searches for terms like “buy a house,” this drop signals growing interest in the state as a potential investment opportunity. However, California remains the priciest state to rent, with average monthly rent at $1,870, presenting challenges for renters but opportunities for landlords.

Texas and Ohio stand out for their affordability. Texas, with a preference score of 55.8, recorded nearly 4.8 million home-buying searches and offers one of the lowest average home sale prices at $303,352. Monthly rent in Texas is relatively low at $1,290, making it an attractive choice for both buyers and renters.

Ohio, ranked eighth with a score of 51.1, is the cheapest state to rent, with an average monthly rent of $949. It also boasts the lowest home sale price among the top states at $221,816, combined with a 3.5% rise in home values, signaling strong investment potential.



Florida, New York, and New Jersey round out the top states for homebuying interest. Florida’s reasonable home prices, averaging $396,318, and moderate rent costs of $1,525 earned it a score of 62.2, while New York secured second place despite its high mortgage rates and modest home value growth, according to Highland Cabinetry.

New Jersey, with a significant 5.2% increase in home values and one of the lowest mortgage rates at 4.84%, remains a strong competitor, though its average home sale price of $508,430 places it in the mid-range.

While California leads in overall interest, states like Texas and Ohio highlight the appeal of affordability. The findings suggest that prospective buyers balance various factors, including potential long-term value, cost of living, and market trends.

A Highland Cabinetry spokesperson emphasized the importance of looking beyond upfront costs: “If you're considering purchasing a home, look beyond just the price tag. While states with declining home values, like California, may seem attractive, remember to weigh other factors such as mortgage rates, average rent, and potential long-term value growth."

They concluded: "A state with a modest initial investment can become a hidden gem if its home value trends upward, offering a better return in the long run. Diversifying your search can help you spot opportunities that align with your financial goals and lifestyle needs.”

Tyler Durden
Wed, 11/27/2024 - 23:00

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Did Trump Just Solve The Border Crisis: Mexican President "Agreed To Stop Migration Through Mexico" Trump Claims
Did Trump Just Solve The Border Crisis: Mexican President "Agreed To Stop Migration Through Mexico" Trump Claims

Did Trump solve the border crisis two months before even being sworn in as the 47th president?

Two days after surprising markets - and sending the peso plummeting - by announcing he would enact 25% import duties on Mexican goods if the country doesn't stop the flow of drugs and migrants across the border.

tariffs on Mexican goods in response to the flood of drugs across the porous southern border, best known for allowing millions of illegal immigrants to enter the US in the past four ears, Trump's unexpected gambit may have already paid off.

In a post on Truth Social network, Trump announced that after a "wonderful" conversation with Mexican president Claudia Sheinbaum, she "agreed to stop Migration through Mexico, and into the United States, effectively closing our Southern Border."



He added that the two also talked about "what can be done to stop the massive drug inflow into the United States" concluding that it was a "very productive" conversation which of course, it would be, if indeed Trump - who again is still two months away from inauguration - managed to solve the US border crisis just 48 hours after using targeted tariffs as a bargaining chip.

While it remains to be confirmed on the Mexican side if Trump's recollection of the conversation is accurate, Trump's announcement comes just hours after the legacy media reported that Mexico would take on a more aggressive posture, with the AP reporting that Sheinbaum had suggested that "Mexico could retaliate with tariffs of its own" and that while she was willing to engage in talks on the issues, drugs were a U.S. problem.

"One tariff would be followed by another in response, and so on until we put at risk common businesses," Sheinbaum said, referring to U.S. automakers that have plants on both sides of the border.

She said Tuesday that Mexico had done a lot to stem the flow of migrants, noting "caravans of migrants no longer reach the border." However, Mexico's efforts to fight drugs like the deadly synthetic opioid fentanyl - which is manufactured by Mexican cartels using chemicals imported from China - have weakened in the last year.

Amusingly, Sheinbaum also said Mexico suffered from an influx of weapons smuggled in from the United States, and said the flow of drugs "is a problem of public health and consumption in your country's society" which judging by the libs ongoing reaction to Trump's victory is pretty much spot on.

As noted, there is still no official confirmation or full context of the agreement from President Sheinbaum's side, but the market certainly reacted with the peso surging, and almost wiping out all losses from the past 48 hours after Trump's first unveiled his 25% tariff threat.



If confirmed, this would be the second time Trump has managed to convince Mexico to suspend migrants from crossing its territory to enter the US. Back in 2018, former President Andrés Manuel López Obrador - a charismatic, old-school politician - developed a chummy relationship with Trump. The two were eventually able to strike a bargain in which Mexico helped keep migrants away from the border - and received other countries' deported migrants - and Trump backed down on similar threats.

While Sheinbaum, who took office Oct. 1, has been seen as a stern leftist ideologue trained in radical student protest movements, and appeared less willing to pacify or mollify Trump, it seems she too has capitulated just 48 hours after Trump unveiled what was coming.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 11/27/2024 - 23:17

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Ukraine war: Yemen's Houthis to fight for Russia?
Yemeni men could start fighting for Russia in its war against Ukraine, according to the Financial Times. Does this mark a further escalation in hostilities?

Gizmodo
Open 
An Orca Pod Off Mexico Has Learned to Kill Enormous Whale Sharks
Marine biologists documented the never-before-confirmed behavior among orcas living in the Southern Gulf of California.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
What’s going on with fluoride? – podcast
The conversation about fluoride’s health benefits has exploded recently after a US federal toxicology report, court ruling and independent scientific review all called for updated risk-benefit analysis. Ian Sample hears from Catherine Carstairs, professor of history at the University of Guelph in Canada, about how attitudes to fluoridation have evolved, and Oliver Jones, professor of chemistry at RMIT University in Australia, about where the science stands todayClips: the New York Sun, Columbia Pictures‘The science of fluoride is starting to evolve’: behind the risks and benefits of the mineral Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
MPs’ big assisted dying moment, and the people watching every move – Politics Weekly UK
As MPs prepare to vote on a bill that would, for the first time, pass assisted dying into UK law, what are the arguments on either side? The Guardian’s John Harris speaks to two campaigners: Liz Carr, an actor and disability activist who believes the bill would endanger many marginalised groups, and Mark Mardell, a broadcaster who thinks the legislation doesn’t go far enough. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Sinn Féin optimistic but breakthrough unlikely in Irish election
Mary Lou McDonald’s party has risen to second place in the polls but analysts say the chances of victory are slimSinn Féin, the former political wing of the IRA, is hoping to stage a last-minute revival in the Irish general election after polls put it ahead of the party led by the taoiseach, Simon Harris.Ahead of Friday’s election, the party leader, Mary Lou McDonald, has said she sees a path to victory, after polls this week showed Harris’s centre-right Fine Gael dropping from first to third place and the progressive, populist, leftwing Sinn Féin moving into second behind Fine Gael’s government coalition partner, Fianna Fáil. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
David Lammy to appoint envoy to support Britons detained abroad
After Guardian reporting, foreign secretary looks at cases of thousands who need consular help each yearDavid Lammy has said he plans to appoint an envoy to deal with “complex detention cases” involving Britons abroad and give them a legal right to consular access.After the Guardian’s reporting on detained Britons, the foreign secretary said he had been “looking hard” at the thousands of cases a year involving people who require consular assistance. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘We’ve heard these promises before’: is this the end of the line for Irish fishing?
Devastated by quota changes post-Brexit, fishers are pinning all their hopes on Ireland’s politicians as they head into a general electionWords and pictures by Finbarr O’ReillyGale force winds gusting across the North Atlantic Ocean kicked up thick spumes of spray from the heaving swell soon after the Ocean Crest and Carmona trawlers left the main Irish fishing port of Killybegs in County Donegal. No other boats were fishing in the area when the storm swept over Ireland’s north-west coast. This was February, and the window for catching migrating mackerel was quickly closing but the two trawlers had yet to fill their quotas.“This weather is about the limit of what we can fish in,” said skipper Gerard Sheehy as the nose of the Ocean Crest plunged into the trough of a swell, sending a wall of white water crashing over the hull and wheelhouse windows, momentarily obscuring the view before the vessel tilted back upwards into an oncoming wave.Skipper Gerard Sheehy (centre) with his crew aboard the Ocean Crest in February Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Madness review – Colman Domingo’s slick, smart conspiracy thriller gets better and better
Colman Domingo is a charismatic presence in this expertly crafted cat-and-mouse story about a TV host caught up in far-right machinations – which really gains heft as it goes onJust because you’re paranoid doesn’t mean they’re not out to get you. Words I have lived by since I first saw them on a badge at a Camden market stall when I was 14. And here I am, still alive to tell you about it. Makes you think, doesn’t it?It is the guiding principle behind all successful conspiracy thrillers, and The Madness has taken it to heart. Our hero is CNN-ish TV host and media pundit Muncie Daniels (Colman Domingo), who is on the brink of being offered his own show and all coming right with his world, professionally at least, and so takes a little break in the Poconos mountains to try to start his novel before fame interferes. Never do this, kids. You can write your book just as well in the safety of your own home as in a picturesque but isolated cabin, and there is less chance of coming across a murder scene in a sauna if you do. Alas, poor Muncie and his discovery of bits of his neighbour strewn across the polythene-sheeted floor of just such an amenity. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘By 8pm it is time to head home’: whatever happened to the big night out?
This week, the chief executive of a major bar group suggested 3pm is the new 9pm. Why have we stopped drinking and dancing the night away on a Friday and Saturday night?The atmosphere in the club is friendly, people generally aren’t drunk, and since it’s dark inside, it could just as well be 4am instead of 4pm. Welcome to the daytime rave, where you can dance, meet people and still be curled up on the sofa afterwards in time for Newsnight. It’s a home from home for Joyce Harper, who says she has been “a big clubber my whole life. In the 1990s, I used to go religiously twice a month and we’d stay up all night. We were knocked out for days and always felt terrible. I realised, as I’ve got older and wiser, the importance of sleep.”Last week she was at a day rave at the London club Fabric, and the week before that at Ministry of Sound. “I am aiming to do two a month at the moment,” says Harper, who is professor of reproductive science at University College London, as well as a podcaster and author. She’s 61 but, she adds, “For any age, staying up all night has so many disadvantages – obviously all the effects on sleep, but also things like getting home, having to wait for the first train.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The great abandonment: what happens to the natural world when people disappear?
Across the globe, vast swathes of land are being left to be reclaimed by nature. To see what could be coming, look to BulgariaAbandonment, when it came, crept in from the outskirts. Homes at the edge of town were first to go, then the peripheral grocery stores. It moved inward, slow but inexorable. The petrol station closed, and creeper vines climbed the pumps, amassing on the roof until it buckled under the strain. It swallowed the outer bus shelters, the pharmacies, the cinema, the cafe. The school shut down.Today, one of the last institutions sustaining human occupation in Tyurkmen, a village in central Bulgaria, is the post office. Dimitrinka Dimcheva, a 56-year-old post officer, still keeps it open two days a week, bringing in packages of goods that local shops no longer exist to sell. Once a thriving town of more than 1,200, Tyurkmen is now home to fewer than 200 people. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Long wait for NHS mental healthcare has ‘stark consequences for children’s life chances’
Consultant psychiatrist on why early intervention is key and why delays are unacceptableOne in three consultant child psychiatrist posts in England are vacant, analysis showsOne in three child and adolescent consultant psychiatrist posts in England are vacant, according to a “shocking” analysis laying bare the workforce crisis that experts say is fuelling “unacceptable” long waits for NHS care. Dr Elaine Lockhart, a consultant paediatric liaison psychiatrist who works in NHS child and adolescent mental health services (CAMHS), describes the frustrating but rewarding daily battle to meet the soaring demand and to help those most in need.At a time when children’s mental health is supposed to be a public policy priority, waiting times for children’s and adolescent mental health services are unacceptably long. Some children wait more than two years to be treated. And that delay can have stark consequences for their mental health and their life chances. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Four killed and flights cancelled as heavy snowfall blankets Seoul
South Korea’s capital has been hit by some of the heaviest snowfall in a century, with dangerous conditions wreaking havoc on transportSouth Korea grappled with heavy snowfall for a second day on Thursday, with dozens of flights cancelled, ferry operations suspended and at least four people reported dead in a bitter winter, though conditions showed signs of easing.Thursday’s snowfall was the third-heaviest in capital Seoul since records began in 1907, the Yonhap news agency said, citing city data. The previous day broke all snowfall records for November. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Iran says it could end ban on possessing nuclear weapons if sanctions reimposed
Comments made after nuclear inspectorate board passed motion censuring Iran for building uranium stockpileThe nuclear debate inside Iran is likely to shift towards the possession of its own weapons if the west goes ahead with a threat to reimpose all UN sanctions, the country’s foreign minister has said.Seyed Abbas Araghchi said in an interview that Iran already had the capability and knowledge to create nuclear weapons, but said they did not form part of its security strategy. He also said Tehran was prepared to keep supplying arms to Hezbollah in Lebanon. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
One in three consultant child psychiatrist posts in England are vacant, analysis shows
Child and adolescent mental health services have highest vacancy rates of any psychiatric specialismConsultant psychiatrist on why early intervention is key and why delays are unacceptableOne in three child and adolescent consultant psychiatrist posts in England are vacant, according to a “shocking” analysis laying bare the workforce crisis that experts say is fuelling “unacceptable” long waits for NHS care.The number of children and young people requiring mental healthcare has soared in recent years, but many face lengthy delays before they can access treatment. Some are deteriorating to a dangerously severe state of mental ill-health while they wait. Continue reading...

The Register
Open 
After missing the AI boom – badly – Samsung shuffles the C-Suite
Memory and foundry businesses get new leaders as Chaebol seeks to enter HBM heaven Generative AI has created a once-in-a-generation surge in memory sales and semiconductor production – which Samsung Electronics has managed to flub, leading to a Wednesday announcement that it's named new senior leadership for its memory and foundry businesses.…

CNET News
Open 
This 25,000-mAh Pocket-Size Power Bank Is 20% Off for Black Friday
Save money with this Black Friday deal on the Denvix PowerX power bank, which can recharge five iPhones or a MacBook up to full, and it fits into (somewhat large) pockets.

CNET News
Open 
Amazon Just Slashed Jabra Earbuds By as Much as 67% for Black Friday
If you're looking for some new earbuds or headphones, these Black Friday bargains won't miss.

CNET News
Open 
Today's NYT Mini Crossword Answers for Thursday, Nov. 28
Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for Nov. 28.

CNET News
Open 
Safe Guard Your Home This Holiday Season With Up to 70% off SimpliSafe Home Security Systems
Take advantage of these dramatic Black Friday deals on SimpliSafe products whether you're home for the holidays or planning on traveling.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Germany sees dramatic rise in measles cases
Fatal diseases like measles and Hepatitis B are on the rise in Germany, despite accessible vaccines. Anti-vaccine social media, the COVID-19 pandemic and imported cases are thought to be behind the drastic increase.

Sky News Home
Open 
Man awarded more than 400 million dollars after "invasive erectile dysfunction shots"
A man has been awarded $412m (£325m) in damages after a US clinic gave him "invasive erectile dysfunction shots" that caused him irreversible harm.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
South Korea: At least four dead in heavy snowfall
The capital Seoul saw the third heaviest snowfall since records began, with more than 40 cm of snow piling up in parts of the city. More than 140 flights were canceled as a result.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Thousands return to southern Lebanon amid uneasy ceasefire
Displaced people make their way home despite volatile situation and warnings from Israeli militaryMiddle East crisis – live updatesThousands of people displaced from war-torn southern Lebanon have begun returning home after a ceasefire between Israel and the Lebanese militia Hezbollah took effect on Wednesday, amid fears on both sides of the border about whether the truce would hold.Israel heavily bombed the capital, Beirut, and the south of the country throughout Tuesday, killing 42 people, until the truce began at 4am local time, while Hezbollah fired rockets into Israel, triggering air raid sirens. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Mexican leader responds to Trump claim she agreed to stop migration
President Claudia Sheinbaum says Mexico's position is not to close borders, and to respect human rights.

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
Nolinor Aviation airplane lands on two legs at Mirabel airport
A charter airplane carrying 87 passengers and crew landed at Mirabel airport without deploying one of its landing gear, according to the Transportation Safety Board of Canada (TSB).

Telegraph
Open 
New Zealand vs England, first Test: Visitors continue to fight back on day one

The Hill
Open 
Zuckerberg met with Trump at Mar-a-Lago
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg met with President-elect Trump on Wednesday at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida, where he’s been hosting political meetings, according to Stephen Miller, the incoming deputy chief of policy. “Mark Zuckerberg, like so many business leaders, understand that President Trump is an agent of change, an agent of prosperity, and so business leaders,...

The Hill
Open 
Newsom pardons former San Quentin inmate who became Pulitzer Prize finalist
California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) pardoned a Pulitzer Prize finalist who spent more than two decades imprisoned at San Quentin on Wednesday. Earlonne Woods gained recognition from Newsom after creating “Ear Hustle,” the first podcast ever recorded and produced entirely behind bars. "Ear Hustle," which airs on Apple podcasts, Spotify and other streaming platforms, has...

Sky News Home
Open 
One man is proving central to Ireland's election - and he isn't Irish
The closely-fought Irish general election campaign has entered its final day, as concern over the economic threat posed by Donald Trump becomes an electoral theme.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
US man awarded $1m after 27 years wrongfully jailed
Michael Sullivan lost his mother and four siblings while behind bars and says the money will "never make up the years" he lost.

Russia Today News
Open 
US believes Russian nuclear strike ‘unlikely’ – Reuters

Digital Trends
Open 
Life found on Ryugu asteroid sample, but it’s not as exciting as it sounds
A recent discovery made by scientists working with a sample of rock from outer space highlights one of the huge challenges that such work involves.

Sky News Home
Open 
Killer still at large on 20th anniversary of banker's doorstep murder as police reject 'callous' handling of unsolved shooting
A murder detective has dismissed concerns Scotland’s top police officer is "callous" for refusing to meet the family of a banker gunned down on his doorstep 20 years ago today.

Sky News Home
Open 
'I'm going to bury you myself': Man charged with threatening to kill Donald Trump
A man has been charged with threatening to kill Donald Trump.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ukraine war briefing: US urges Zelenskyy to lower conscription age to 18
Biden administration readying another $725m in arms for Kyiv; Zelenskyy to approve tax increases for defence funding. What we know on day 1,009 Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Latest sign of struggling industry as car production falls for eighth month in a row - industry data
UK car production has slowed, according to industry figures, in the latest sign of a struggling sector.

Boing Boing
Open 
Here's how this pen upgrade saved my butt at work
TL;DR: Spending $140 on the SyncPen 4 might have saved me from getting fired at work—check out what I thought about it here.
I'm going to be honest. I'm the type of person who doesn't own an actual notebook. I just go through life hoping that whatever paper I jot my ideas or notes down on will miraculously stay in the same place. — Read the rest
The post Here's how this pen upgrade saved my butt at work appeared first on Boing Boing.

Sky News Home
Open 
'Death isn't like a video game where you pop back up': The case for and against assisted dying
Warning: this article contains references to suicide.

ZDNet News
Open 
I ditched my AirPods Pro for these $20 off Nothing earbuds (and don't regret it)
The Nothing Ear sees meaningful audio upgrades while retaining a design language and price point that's hard to beat. Plus, they're on sale for Black Friday.

ZDNet News
Open 
Best Buy will sell you a Nintendo Switch: Mario Kart Deluxe bundle for $225 - but act fast
The highly-prized gaming console bundle is a notable doorbuster this Black Friday, with in-store pickups only at Best Buy. Luckily, you've got options - for now.

ZDNet News
Open 
LG's bizarre 27-inch TV-in-a-suitcase is $650 off on Amazon now - and it's tempting me
The LG StanbyMe Go is one of the wildest TVs I've seen recently, and its Black Friday price makes it even more compelling.

ZDNet News
Open 
Best Black Friday TV deals 2024: 80+ expert-selected deals on QLED, OLED, & more
I'm a TV reviewer, and I handpicked tons of Black Friday deals live now from my favorite brands, including Samsung, Sony, and LG.

ZDNet News
Open 
One of the best Android smartwatches I've used is not a Google or Samsung (and it's $100 off)
Most smartwatches last a day or two between charges, but Mobvoi's TicWatch Pro 5 Enduro doubles that for a competitive $245 price during Black Friday.

ZDNet News
Open 
The 2-in-1 laptop I recommend to most people is not a Dell or Lenovo (and it's $360 off)
The HP Envy x360 2-in-1 has a great display, well-optimized hardware, and most importantly, a low price tag. Even better, it's 37% off for a limited time.

ZDNet News
Open 
My favorite ultraportable laptop for work is not a ThinkPad or MacBook (and it's $350 off)
The Asus Vivobook S 15 is a fantastic ultraportable laptop with fast performance and a brilliant OLED screen. It's on sale for Black Friday.

ZDNet News
Open 
Hulu's Black Friday deal is back: Get 1 year of Hulu for $0.99 a month, but sign up soon
Hulu's Black Friday deal drops the price of a monthly subscription to the streaming service from $7.99 to $0.99 a month for your first year. Don't miss out.

Slashdot
Open 
Denmark Will Plant 1 Billion Trees, Convert 10% Farmland Into Forest
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Associated Press: Danish lawmakers on Monday agreed on a deal to plant 1 billion trees and convert 10% of farmland into forest and natural habitats over the next two decades in an effort to reduce fertilizer usage. The government called the agreement "the biggest change to the Danish landscape in over 100 years." Under the agreement, 43 billion kroner ($6.1 billion) have been earmarked to acquire land from farmers over the next two decades, the government said.

Danish forests would grow on an additional 250,000 hectares (618,000 acres), and another 140,000 hectares (346,000 acres), which are currently cultivated on climate-damaging low-lying soils, must be converted to nature. Currently, 14.6% of land is covered by forests. [...] In June, the government said livestock farmers will be taxed for the greenhouse gases emitted by their cows, sheep and pigs from 2030, the first country to do so as it targets a major source of methane emissions, one of the most potent gases contributing to global warming.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

CNET News
Open 
This Black Friday, Snag a Pair of Soundpeats Earbuds for as Low as $21
With discounts ranging up to $35 and additional savings to be found, this Black Friday deal is the time to grab yourself a great pair of earphones on Amazon.

CNET News
Open 
Black Friday Steal: Anker Portable Coolers Hit All-Time Low Prices
Perfect for any adventure, these Black Friday deals will get you Anker's excellent portable coolers at the lowest price yet.

CNET News
Open 
Drink Up This 50% Black Friday Discount on LifeStraw Portable Water Filters
Safely quench your thirst anywhere with this compact LifeStraw Water Filter for only $10.

CNET News
Open 
Save 30% on All Satechi Products Sitewide With This Limited-Time Coupon Code
Satechi's Black Friday deals slash the cost of USB-hubs, stands and other tech gadgets by a mighty 30%.

CNET News
Open 
This 25,000mAh Pocket-Sized Power Bank Is 20% off for Black Friday
Save money with this Black Friday deal on the Denvix PowerX power bank which can recharge five iPhones or a MacBook up to full...and it fits into (somewhat large) pockets.

CNET News
Open 
Today's NYT Connections: Sports Edition Hints and Answers for Nov. 28, #66
Here are some hints — and the answers — for Connections: Sports Edition No. 66 for Thursday, Nov. 28.

CNET News
Open 
Today's Wordle Hints, Answer and Help for Nov. 28, #1258
Here are some hints and the answer for Wordle No. 1,258 for Thanksgiving, Nov. 28.

CNET News
Open 
Today's NYT Connections Hints, Answers and Help for Nov. 28, #536
Here are some hints — and the answers — for Connections No. 536 for Thanksgiving, Nov. 28.

CNET News
Open 
Today's NYT Strands Hints, Answers and Help for Nov. 28, #270
Here are some hints — and the answers — for the Nov. 28 Strands puzzle, No. 270.

Flightradar24
Open 
Nuuk Airport opens its new 2200m runway
Just months after Nuuk Airport (GOH | BGGH) unveiled its new terminal, Greenland’s capital is inaugurating its new 2200m runway, a major shift in the country’s aviation landscape. The new, lengthened runway will enable large jets to land in Nuuk for the first time. Prior to this, all international jet flights operated out of Kangerlussuaq […]
The post Nuuk Airport opens its new 2200m runway appeared first on Flightradar24 Blog.

Sky News Home
Open 
First new treatment for asthma attacks in 50 years hailed as 'game-changer'
The first new treatment for asthma attacks in 50 years has been hailed as a "game-changer" by doctors and patients.

Techdirt
Open 
Nintendo, Palworld, A GTA 5 Mod, And An Injunction For The Japanese Market
We’re waiting for the lawsuit in Japan between Nintendo, The Pokémon Co., and Pocketpair, the developers of the hit game Palworld to really get going. In the meantime, the public commentary is filling the information void, including commentary from IP experts. The suit revolves around a series of patents the plaintiffs hold that cover a […]

Mail Online
Open 
10 genius beauty hacks from Rihanna, Selena Gomez, and more of our favorite celebs that are worth trying
From Rihanna's perfect red pout to Selena Gomez's precise eyebrows, Daily Mail rounds up 10 celebrity beauty hacks to include in your routine.

Mail Online
Open 
Paul Dickenson dead at 74: BBC Sport commentator who covered Jessica Ennis-Hill's gold medal triumph at London 2012 dies... as tributes pour in for the 'amazing man' and 'legendary' broadcaster
Dickenson, who specialised in athletics and covered every Summer and Winter Olympic Games between 1992 and 2014, passed away at his home on Tuesday.

Mail Online
Open 
Hillary Clinton sparks wild 2028 speculation with social media announcement
Speculation is percolating about whether Hillary Clinton may run for president in 2028.

Mail Online
Open 
Rolling Stones star Ronnie Wood, 77, is overshadowed by glamorous wife Sally Humphrey, 46, as she wears a bohemian cut-out gown at the Tusk Conservation Awards
The musician, 77, and Sally, 46, appeared smitten as they stepped out linking one another at The Savoy Hotel on Wednesday.

Mail Online
Open 
Jocelyne Wildenstein, 84, claims she has NEVER had plastic surgery and 'hates Botox' despite dramatic facial transformation and doctors claiming she has had multiple facelifts
The Swiss socialite, 84, was famed for her dramatic transformation - but always claimed her looks were natural.

Mail Online
Open 
Murder suspect arrested over the killing of Steven Lawrence more than 20 years ago has now been jailed over a serious crime order breach
Jamie Acourt, 48, a former suspect in the racist murder of Stephen Lawrence has found himself behind bars after displaying a 'flagrant disregard' for the law and breaching a court order.

Mail Online
Open 
Isle of Skye shotgun rampage accused 'had problem controlling his anger', court hears
A man accused of murder had 'a long-standing problem controlling his anger' and a deep resentment against two men, a court has heard.

Mail Online
Open 
Motorhead's Lemmy 'will have his ashes stored at VERY famous London strip club - where he was a regular'
The Motorhead rocker, whose real real name was Ian Kilmister, died in 2015 aged 70 with his remains sent to his friends and also to some of his favourite locations.

Mail Online
Open 
Zoe Ball could be joining Netflix as she weighs up new career options after announcing she will be stepping down from BBC Radio 2
The DJ and presenter, 54, announced she was quitting her breakfast show earlier this month to 'focus on family' as she handed over the reigns to her 'bestie' Scott Mills.

Mail Online
Open 
ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS: Do all the different styles of moustache have names?
Over the years, moustaches have been categorised into various styles, often influenced by cultural trends, historical figures and unique characteristics.

Mail Online
Open 
CHRISTOPHER STEVENS reviews Rage Against The Regime: Iran on BBC2: Terrifying testimonies of Iranian exiles living in fear for their lives
Have we started? Are you filming already? I'm not ready, please wait while I sit down . . . OK. Now we can begin.

Mail Online
Open 
Millions of asthma patients could see their lives transformed within three years with a 'game-changer' treatment
Test studies found that an antibody injection was significantly more effective at stopping attacks than current steroid treatments, given to patients when blue 'response' inhalers are insufficient.

Mail Online
Open 
Britain looks increasingly isolated after signalling backing for controversial international arrest warrant for Israel's PM Benjamin Netanyahu over Gaza crimes
Britain looked increasingly isolated over its backing for a controversial arrest warrant for Benjamin Netanyahu after France joined other countries in dismissing it yesterday.

Mail Online
Open 
Revealed: The exact amount of time the average Briton spends scrolling on their smartphone each day - with women clocking up 33 minutes more than men
A new study has revealed that the average Briton spends four hours and 20 minutes online every day, with women clocking up 33 minutes more than men.

Mail Online
Open 
Experts reveal the natural sounds which relax you - and those that can send your stress levels soaring
In a study, 68 volunteers listened to three three-minute soundscapes.

Mail Online
Open 
Experts reveal the natural sounds which relax you - and the one's that can send your stress levels soaring
The research lends support for anyone who is a firm believer in the curative powers of a walk in the countryside or through a forest.

The Hill
Open 
Trump says he had a 'very productive conversation' with Mexico’s president
President-elect Trump said he had a “very productive” conversation with Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum. “Just had a wonderful conversation with the new President of Mexico, Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo,” Trump posted Wednesday to his Truth Social site. “She has agreed to stop Migration through Mexico, and into the United States, effectively closing our Southern Border.” “We...

The Hill
Open 
Mulvaney says threats toward Trump picks is something he’s never seen: ‘Sad result of the heightened rhetoric’
Former White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney said he's never seen the type of threats that President-elect Trump's nominees are facing, noting that it's a "sad result of the heightened rhetoric." Mulvaney joined NewsNation’s Mike Viqueria on Wednesday for "The Hill" to discuss the threats against nominated officials and his time in Trump’s first...

The Hill
Open 
Bannon changes tune on Musk, says he’s ‘impressed’
President-elect Trump’s former political strategist, Steve Bannon, appears to have changed his tune on tech billionaire Elon Musk, saying he’s “impressed” with the new Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) co-chair. Bannon said Wednesday on his “War Room” podcast that he credited Musk with Trump’s election victory and recalled his recent interview with Puck News. “I...

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Arabica Futures Surge Into Blue-Sky Breakout As Traders Panic: "We Might Not Have Enough Coffee"
Arabica Futures Surge Into Blue-Sky Breakout As Traders Panic: "We Might Not Have Enough Coffee"

Arabica coffee futures blasted through March 1977 highs into blue sky breakout territory as traders panicked about global supply fears originating in Brazil, the world's top producer. 

Arabica beans trading in New York hit $3.26 per pound on Wednesday, exceeding the $3.08 high last reached in March 1977. Bean prices have jumped 123% since September 2023. 



On Monday, we outlined that adverse weather conditions in Brazil spooked agricultural traders as bean stockpiles are being quickly drained ahead of next season. 

Carlos Santana Jr., a Brazil-based commercial director at trader Ecom Group, told Bloomberg, "There are about eight months before the start of the next season, and the percentage of coffee sold by Brazilian growers is very high."

"We might not have enough coffee to get to the next season," Santana warned. 

Rabobank analyst Carlos Mera pointed out, "The rally is due to a number of complex circumstances," including concerns about Brazil's output next year, plus shipping and logistical challenges. 

Mera added that the European Union's deforestation rules and bean front-loading ahead of a potential trade tariff war are other factors pressuring bean prices higher. 

Citi commodity strategist Arkady Gevorkyan told clients, "Coffee's bull run [is] likely to continue near term," adding, "We revise up our three-month target for Arabica coffee to $US3.10 a pound, and note a significant upside risk skew to this forecast as supply from Brazil and Vietnam could still underperform."

Here is Gevorkyan's full comment to clients about the bull run in coffee prices:


We revise up our 3M target for Arabica coffee to $3.10/lb, and note a significant upside risk skew to this forecast as supply from Brazil and Vietnam could still underperform. Coffee is up 57% YTD, making it one of the best performing commodities. Such a bull run has been fueled by unfavorable weather in key producing regions in Brazil damaging crops as well as support from the roasting switching demand driving Robusta demand from Vietnam. We project a consecutive three-year deficit in balances will switch to a surplus in 2025 and expect ICE coffee to trade rangebound. We also upgrade our base case 2025 forecast to $2.80/lb, while prices should normalize at $2.65/lb in 2026 (see Figure 1). Nevertheless, we note the large uncertainty on the health of Brazilian crops after the adverse weather and general production issues poses the possibility of falling into a structural deficit.




Vietnam, a major producer of the cheaper Robusta bean, has also faced adverse weather conditions, impacting harvest outputs. In London, Robusta bean prices are currently around $5,200 per metric ton, down from a record high of $5,829 observed in mid-September.

"The increased costs of hedging — due to higher margin calls — and the possibility of producer defaults have contributed to panic buying recently," analysts at coffee trader Sucafina SA wrote earlier this week. 

Price action here reminds us of the cocoa squeeze earlier this year... 

Anyone know if oil trader Pierre Andurand is buying Arabica coffee futs? He dabbled with cocoa.  

Tyler Durden
Wed, 11/27/2024 - 21:00

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Financialization & Missed Boats: When Mythology Papers Over Reality
Financialization & Missed Boats: When Mythology Papers Over Reality

Authored by David Bahnsen via The American Institute for Economic Research,
Executive Summary
Despite its ubiquitous use in modern America, the term ‘financialization’ is deeply misunderstood. Evidence shows the concept’s meaning often changes in different contexts. In some instances it serves as a relatively benign catch-all term for anything construed as a “greater role for the financial sector in the economy.” Others have described financialization as a “mismatch between the public interest and Wall Street interest.” In some instances, it is misunderstood as the simple pursuit of profit. 
As the term ‘financialization’ has gotten more mileage in recent years, critics have seized on the ambiguity of the word to wage class warfare and attack capital markets, which are little understood. Among the most heavily criticized institutions and actions in the financial sector are the following: hedge funds, private equity, high-frequency trading, stock buybacks, dividends, and banks.
Key Points
This paper explores how the term ‘financialization’ has been employed - and explains why it should not be confused with mere financial sector activity—and demonstrates how its critics have done the following:
Inadequately defined the term
Used a critique of the financial sector to disguise rank-class envy
Failed to understand the nature of markets and the primacy of resource allocation
Demonized instruments of financial markets that have been overwhelming positives for economic growth
Proposed policy initiatives that would unilaterally do more harm than good
Failed to see the most egregious actors in that which distresses them: excessive government debt and excessive monetary policy
Introduction
The term ‘financialization’ has received significant attention in recent years and is seeing far greater use in the vernacular of policymakers and thought leaders. The term is used in different ways by different parties, and a plethora of agendas exist behind these discussions. What’s clear is that there is growing interest in the role of financial markets in the broader economy.
While a treatment of financialization that embraces nuance is difficult in our time, no treatment will be coherent without nuance. The different uses, agendas, and contexts matter, and using vocabulary to poison a well is easy to do in this discussion, and also counterproductive. This essay explores the underlying concerns behind financialization, and seeks to more accurately describe what market forces do while addressing misconceptions about ‘financialization’ and free markets.
Conscious effort is required to avoid the laziness embedded in the label to paper over a class warfare argument. At the same time, advocates of robust capital markets concede that financial activities exist that offer limited productive value. In other words, it is entirely possible (and, indeed, will be the position of this paper) that what is often referred to as ‘financialization’ is no such thing at all, and is rather a misguided attack on all capital markets. And yet, it is also entirely possible (and the thesis of this essay) that a consortium of policies has facilitated what can be called financialization, and these policies should be rebuffed as contrary to the aim of a productive economy which facilitates maximum opportunity for flourishing.
In this nuance, we find the tragic irony of this contemporary debate. A growing movement, increasingly bipartisan, hostile to various activities in financial markets, has identified the wrong targets for critique. In so doing they not only have demonized healthy and vital components of an innovative economy but have missed the culprits who do warrant our attention. The reasons for this misidentification of cause and effect vary from a weak understanding of financial market reality to more severe ideologically driven errors. When the critics of financialization show a weak understanding of the problems they seek to solve, their proposed solution can only be flawed, incomplete, and misguided. Activities pejoratively referred to as financialization that are healthy and useful need to be defended. Likewise, activities, policies, and incentives that pollute the engines of a healthy economy need to be criticized. In short, a lot is on the line in this contemporary discussion.
The first section of this paper seeks to define what financialization is and what it is not. Upon establishment of a clear definition, analysis is needed to determine what is negative and what is positive. Once defined, an objective assessment of the causation of this phenomenon is in order.
After clarifying what financialization is, it will be useful to note the dangers of class warfare in the debate. This essay strives for an intellectually honest critique of any economic development or policy disposition that is weighing on the cultivation of prosperity. It does not seek to exploit or incite class envy. Nor does it seek to utilize demonization as a substitute for argument.
Critics of financialization, or at least those prone to using the term, have concerns about economic productivity and how resources are currently allocated. A basic refresher in how markets work and how resources are most efficiently allocated will be a useful foundation for this study.
In a similar vein to how class warfare underlies many misguided attacks on financial markets, a vigorous defense of profits is paramount to this discussion. Financial activity that hurts the common good is fair game for our scrutiny; an activity that is criticized merely because of its profitability is not. This essay will explore why corporate profits are vital in a prosperous society.
There exists a lengthy list of expected targets of criticism, even beyond the abstract and poorly defined “Wall Street.” Specific vehicles, institutions, and activities such as private equity, hedge funds, high-frequency trading, both commercial and investment banking, the payment of dividends, the buyback of corporate stock, and passive ownership of public equity all receive the ire of today’s market critics. In each case, their concerns ring hollow, incomplete, or woefully inaccurate.
An abundance of policy solutions now circulate seeking to remedy various conditions described herein. Eliminating bad solutions and embracing good solutions, all the while considering expected trade-offs, must be our aim. Unfortunately, many proposed remedies must be considered worse than the disease, and for this reason, also deserve our attention.
Likewise, it behooves us to consider the positive innovations in financial markets, fruits of a market economy and society ordered in liberty, that have demonstrably improved conditions for prosperity and flourishing. It does critics of finance no good to analyze that which is prima facie problematic without also looking at the clear positive results that robust financial markets have made possible.
And finally, we must look at that which is truly responsible for downward pressure on economic growth and productivity. Critics of financial markets so often reach over dollar bills to pick up pennies, concerning themselves with benign activities that present nothing more than a cosmetic concern, while ignoring the substantial and measurable negative impact of excessive government indebtedness, an obese regulatory state, an inefficient tax system, and most ignored of all, monetary policy that substantially misallocates resources.
Re-orienting our understanding of this subject will promote a cogent direction in economic policy and better move us towards the proper aim of financial markets—human flourishing.
What ‘financialization’ is, and isn’t
‘Financialization’ can mean different things in different contexts, but it generally carries negative overtones. The definition matters because, for some (including the author), there is a ‘financialization’ phenomenon that warrants significant criticism. But upon closer scrutiny, the actions most often described as ‘financialization’ warrant no such criticism. A coherent definition also allows for precision in what is being scrutinized and criticized, while failure to define the term properly risks generating an inadequate critique of what should be criticized, and a wrongheaded critique of that which should not.
There is an abstract but fair context in which financialization is a catch-all term for a “greater role for the financial sector in the economy.” At that level, it is a reasonably benign description and does not necessarily indicate any malignant effects on the economy as a whole or specific economic sectors. Here ‘financialization’ simply describes a scenario whereby capital markets activity becomes more prominent.
Other conceptions of financializations, however, are explicit in their condemnation of the manner in which financial markets re-allocate capital in ways that increase profits to owners of capital but without paying heed to what such critics’ conceptions of social justice or equality. An example of this is an American Affairs article that views financial actors as tools of “market worship” which, its author claims, undermines a just and responsible society.
A more particular definition of financialization might incorporate the influence or power of financial markets in overall economic administration. If we referred to the ‘technologization’ of society we would more likely be referring to a greater use of technology than increased power for technology elites, but it seems fair to allow for the inclusion of both—some increase of use and some increase of power.
Regardless, however, of what sector of the economy is having a new noun made out of its description, greater use of that sector is not self-evidently problematic. It may even be an obvious improvement (“medical sophistication”). Indeed, one could argue that influence or power is expected when greater utility is found in a particular segment of the economy. Whether it be consumer appetites or just general product novelty, the influence of various segments of the economy ebb and flow quite organically around their use, relevance, and capability. A generic increase in the use of financial services and accompanying influence lacks the specificity necessary to identify it as problematic.
As the term ‘financialization’ has gotten more mileage in recent years, those concerned with its allegedly malignant impact have taken advantage of the ambiguity, complexity, and mystery of capital markets (real or perceived) and present them as a malignant force. In this sense, class envy is a more likely description for much of what is described as financialization. It is therefore incumbent upon us to break down the ambiguity of where financial sector activity might be putting downward pressure on productivity, and where the term is being used only for its well-poisoning virtues.
Because financialization involves some basis for warranted criticism, mere financial sector activity is not the same as financialization. Likewise, increasing financial sector profits should not be considered the same as financialization. Critics are fair (prima facie) to suggest that if such profits come at the expense of other sectors, and at the price of total economic growth, then there may be a problem. However, the mere accumulation of financial sector profits is not financialization unless, in a zero-sum sense, such profits result from a decline in total profits and productivity. This will be a tough burden to overcome.
Is financialization the same thing as securitization, i.e., manufacturing financial products (securities) around other aspects of economic activity and streams of cash flow? Does the economy suffer when more components of economic life are securitized, meaning, capitalized, traded, valued, priced, and institutionally owned and monitored? Does securitization distract from organic economic activity, product innovation, and customer service? Or does it facilitate more of the above, mitigate risk, and enhance price discovery? Does securitization invite profits into the financial sector, while benefiting the public good by opening new markets for healthy activities (i.e. auto loans, inventory receivables, debtor financing, and more)? Is a critic of financialization willing to say that securitization enhances economic opportunity and activity, but still must be viewed skeptically because of the enhanced profits it produces for the financial sector?
Some have said that financialization produces a “mismatch between the public interest and Wall Street interest.” This may be getting closer, if we believe that scenarios exist where the production of goods and services that make people’s lives better are contrary to the wishes of Wall Street (i.e. our nation’s financial markets). Do those who invest, steward, trade, and custody capital do better when that capital is put to work for the public or against the public? It would be a high burden of proof to suggest that the financial sector at large (distinct from an individual actor) has interests disconnected from the broad economy.
The above listed distinctions and clarifications should make critics of Wall Street be more careful in framing their critiques of the financial sector. Confusing the financial services sector by giving the public exactly what it wants for working against public interest is a profound mistake. Close analysis of this dynamic reveals that what Wall Street is often being criticized for is not working against the public interest, but rather giving the public exactly what it wants too liberally. From subprime mortgages to exotic investments, many products and services may prove to be bad ideas, but they can hardly be called things that “Wall Street” distributed to “Main Street” against the latter’s will.
Nor should financialization’s problems be confused with the mere pursuit of profit. To the extent that critics of the profit motive exist, their philosophical objections are hardly limited to the financial sector. The productive pursuit of profits in a market economy is a good thing, and this judgment does not exclude the financial sector. The profit motive is not a problem in ‘financialized’ or in ‘non-financialized’ enterprises. Economic activity intermediated by financial instruments does not suddenly take on a different character. Rather, the problem is where more productive activities are substituted for less productive activities. If the production of goods and services towards the meeting of human needs is replaced by non-productive ‘financializing’, a problem exists that requires attention.
As we shall see, such ‘financialization’ does, indeed, exist. However, the culprits behind such are never the ones targeted by financialization’s loudest critics[1].
Class warfare by any other name
Associating Wall Street with greed and callous disregard for the public is not new. While Hollywood portrayals of Wall Street in the 1980s and 1990s focused more on hedonism and a general profligate culture, there has been a multi-decade distrust of “money changers” and various representatives of the financial markets of America. “Wall Street” has the disadvantage of being nebulous. It has not been known in a geographical context for a century, and its linguistic shorthand for capital markets is ill-defined and understood. What it is, though, is an easy target of the envious. It suffers from the lethal combination of being affiliated with riches and success, while at the same time lacking a clear definition. This tandem allows for an all-out class warfare on the very concept of Wall Street without any need for nuance or specificity.
Greed, arrogance, corruption, and disregard for the common good ought to be repudiated regardless of the industry in which they occur. These character components are common traits in fallen mankind, not unique to the financial sector. The particular disdain felt for Wall Street is really class envy that receives intellectual and moral cover from the widespread impoverished understanding of what our financial markets and the actors within them do.
We thus need a sober separation of the envy of wealth and success from a granular understanding of the work being done in any sector of the economy. A middle-class worker may believe a Hollywood A-list actor is grotesquely overpaid, or they may be jealous of the generous compensation that such an elite group of professionals enjoys, but demonizingall “acting” or “entertaining” makes no sense. Reasonable people can hold different subjective opinions about the talent of a given celebrity, but analyzing their theatrical or cinematic skills is hardly enhanced when buried underneath an intense jealousy of their compensation.
The same dynamics unleashed by envy and lack of knowledge applies to Wall Street and particularly the scrutiny of financialization’s role in driving or hindering economic productivity. That such a dynamic is common should not allow it to stand. Our economy either has a problem with financial sector activity in itself hindering productivity, or it doesn’t. We either need policy reforms to limit the use, power, and influence of financial markets, or we do not. The reality of this discussion is that those components of the modern economy that have most distorted and hindered economic growth are not as easily demonized as Wall Street, because bad policy, bad ideas, and the folly of central planning do not fall into a class envy narrative. A vital ingredient in our task is correctly identifying that class warfare is part of the ‘financialization’ critique.
Resource allocation and productivity
Getting to the core of this issue becomes possible once we accept that financialization, properly understood, is the substitution of productive activity with non-productive activity.. Financial markets involve the intermediation of capital in facilitating transactions, but they do much more. When one speaks of financial markets taking from another part of the market, what does that mean? How can we identify when this is occurring? What should we do about it?
Much of the problem comes down to not knowing what a market is.  If markets were created by the state, or imposed by a third party, one could argue that the financial sector is negatively impacting markets.  But a market is not imposed or created by the state or any other disinterested third party. A market is two people transacting. Embedded in market transactions are all sorts of realities about the human person.  Humans make choice and act individually.  They have subjective tastes and preferences, have reason, are fallible, have a high regard for self-preservation, and tend to pursue what they regard as their self-interest.
Given that humans are also social beings, most market activities also involve some degree of social cooperation.  Our transactions with one another often take place in the context of a community.  Our transactions often involve access to goods and services for entire communities. Steve Jobs did not make the iPhone for his childhood friend; he made it to scale distribution globally. Some products are purposely more limited in scope and appeal. The complexity and inter-connectedness of markets cause us to forget that markets are actions of mutual self-interest between free people.
When we hold to the fundamental basics of the market we are in a better place to consider where a financial sector may enhance the facilitation of our market objectives. Likewise, when we forget what a market is, we are more likely to be tempted by the allure of third-party actors to intervene, oversee, regulate, plan, and control the economic affairs of mankind. We forget that a market is grounded fundamentally on human actions at our peril.
In the context of free men and free women making a market together, negotiating the terms of trade, commerce, use of labor, and other conditions of economic activity, we can see both individually and cooperatively where financial markets can be a powerful tool of facilitation. Currency facilitates divisibility in exchange at the simplest and historically earliest of levels. Trading a herd of cattle for water presented challenges; trading with a currency to allow for settling accounts without impossible barter exchange values changed the world. Currency rationalizes exchange and facilitates more of it.
But it still must be said: the currency is not the end, but the means to the end. The financial instrument that facilitates the accumulation of water or cattle of whatever the goods or services may be is a mere tool. The resources being allocated, traded, pursued, exchanged, and acquired—enhances productivity and quality of life—are separate from the financial instrumentation. This intermediary functionality of money is a feature, not a bug. At the most basic of levels, it was the initial function of financial markets to drive resource allocation and free exchange.
It would be disingenuous to assert that all we mean, today, by financial markets is its intermediary function in exchange. Currency remains a vital part of economic activity and for much of the same reasons it was thousands of years ago. While the discussion of the financial sector facilitation of resource allocation begins with currency and it evolves, the fundamental function does not. When capital is made available for projects, the goods and services underlying the capital are still paramount. The use of debt or equity to entice support of a project invites a risk-reward trade-off, and creates a new “market,” but it does so towards the aim of an underlying market. Will customers like this product, or not? Will this entrepreneur execute? Is this cost of capital appropriate for this endeavor? Financial markets represent the pursuit of a return on capital, and yet, the return that capital rationally pursues comes from an underlying good or service.
Forgetting these points leads to economically ignorant conversations where you hear critics of financial markets suggest that we must stop talking about “cash flows” and “financial engineering,” and start focusing more on productive activity, customer satisfaction, and innovation. Where are “cash flows” from, if not the sales of goods and services? When financial activity is considered in the prospects of a business, or even for macroeconomic impact, it is all in the context of a “means to an end” – the instrumentation of finance to generate wealth-building activities. Financial resources (debt capital, equity capital, deposit funds, working capital, etc.) are evolved tools for driving resource allocation.
Our capital markets have matured and fostered innovation because, like our culture, they embrace and help us calibrate risk-taking. Devoting a significant amount of financial resources to a risk-taking enterprise is inappropriate for a person of limited means with certain obligations and monthly cash flow needs, lacking the capital to absorb losses. But the great projects that enhance our quality of life represent the risk of failure. Bank depositor money has only a limited capacity for loss absorption; a widow’s retirement savings might have no capacity for loss absorption; but money pooled and targeted for equity investment contains the risk-reward character suitable for investment. That our financial markets have developed, further, into more complex structures for both debt and equity, as well as various securitized options, does not alter this basic fact: Money is a mere instrument in allocating resources.
Have financial markets in the economy over the last five decades put downward pressure on capital expenditures, as we are often told? Quite the contrary, the empirical support is overwhelming that the evolution of capital markets enhanced capital expenditures over the last fifty years. The trendline was broken after the global financial crisis, but the upward trajectory of capital expenditures is indisputable.
Likewise with “non-residential fixed investment,” the so-called business investment component of how Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is measured, we see a steady increase in tandem with financial markets evolution. A post-crisis interruption of trendline growth will be better explained shortly, but fundamentally business investment has stayed robust as financial markets have innovated, grown, and evolved.
Perhaps an increased role of financial markets in the economy has not hurt capital expenditures or investment into new goods and services (i.e. R&D, factories, inventories, machinery, etc.), but has siphoned off profits from other sectors. Those making that specious claim carry the burden of proving it, but the empirical evidence is not up for debate. As the financial sector has become a modestly higher percentage of GDP, total national income has risen, making obsolete the fact that the financial sector’s portion of that income has risen, too.
The claim that profits from trade and production have been replaced with profits from financial activity is incoherent at best and patently false at worst. Profits inside the financial sector are tangential to the underlying activity of resource allocation. The financial sector is certainly capable of incorrectly allocating resources. Inherent to risk capital is the possibility of loss. Do financial markets allocate capital, subject to the trade-offs of risk and reward, more resourcefully and efficiently thanthe alternatives?.
What are those alternatives? One option is significantly limited access to capital markets, thereby limiting the instruments available for economic output. Another option is to meet capital needs with an expanded role for the state instead of using private capital. Again, the contest is between robust financial markets, declining financial markets, and greater governmental allocation of resources. These are the options on the table, and this is so because of what a market is. Markets allocate resources based on the decisions of people operating in their self-interest. Condemning financial markets for easing the operation of natural processes hampers economic growth and invites crony corruption.
In defense of profits
The topic of corporate profits is integral to discussions of financialization. Financial markets critics worry that profits have become problematic, and that ‘financialization’ is to blame. For our purposes, it is reasonable to ask if we are concerned with how profits are generated, or if we are concerned with what is being done with profits. 
Many critics of financial markets claim that its profits are not connected to social productivity. This implies the existence of “socially unproductive” profits. Support for this view seems reasonable if we are talking about the profitability of certain unwholesome activities—strip clubs, online pornography, so much of the mindlessness of a gaming technology culture, etc.
But is the sentiment of “socially unproductive profits” putting a burden on profit makers and profit-seekers that is unfair?  The general objective of meeting the needs of humanity through a profitable delivery of goods and services is unobjectionable. Profits become problematic when they are ill-gotten (fraud, theft, corruption), and yes, many would concede that profits from legal but also immoral activities warrant discussion.  Yet the burden of creating fruitful and uplifting profit-creating activities belongs to the people in the market place and the associations and communities that constitute civil society – not the state. When undesirable activities occur, it is not the profit pursuit behind the activity that is the problem, but rather the problem itself. The last concern we should have with hired hitmen is their financial aspiration!
Concerns about “socially unproductive profits” is a category error that lacks a limiting principle. The creation of “socially productive” profits by disinterested third parties via intervention, cronyism, or some other form of central planning has to be read in the context of its trade-offs. The unintended consequences unleashed in this vision for society are catastrophic. It is not the burden of financial markets to resolve the tension that can exist between worthy social aims and profit-seeking activities. It is also untrue that financial markets exacerbate this tension. Because markets reflect the values, aims, interests, and intentions of free human beings, the financial resources behind these market-making endeavors will reflect the values of the people engaged in them. Demonizing the profit motive per se misidentifies the appropriate solution of moral formation and strong mediating institutions.
The financialization critique of profits is built on class envy and economic ignorance (not how profits are created, but what is being done with them). Robust financial markets allow for optionality that supports flexibility, choice, and future decision-making (for example, dividends, stock buybacks, and investing in corporate growth). Risk-taking owners receiving profits incentivizes future investment, promotes facilitates cash flow needs for investors, and enables consumption that satisfies other producers, and makes possible charitable bequests and other activities. Nothing in the prior sentence is possible without presupposing the existence of a profit. Optionality in what to do with profits is vital. The assumption that only the reinvestment of profits into more hiring, wage growth, further inventories, or other forms of business investment are appropriate is short-sighted, arrogant, and lacks factual evidence. Yes, some reinvestment of profits is generally warranted for the sustainability of a business. Many more mature companies reach a free cash flow generation that does not require additional capital reinvestment, but many do. Decisions around profit allocation are impacted by competitive pressures, company culture, investor desires, and other complexities.
What is not complex is that profits are the sine qua non of the entire discussion. Financial markets are a tool in generating profits whose very distribution is the subject of this discussion, and financial markets provide greater possibilities for how those profits are distributed. Profits themselves are not problematic, and in no way do financial markets “financialize” what is done with those profits. Optionality should be heralded, not condemned.
The usual bogeymen
At the heart of the modern crusade against financial markets are objects of ire: the institutions, innovations, and categories that become convenient targets for those who lament the role of the financial sector in the economy. As previously noted, these complaints are often reducible to rank class warfare. However, accepting the concerns at face value allows us to analyze many financial market innovations. This assessment should result in gratitude for capital markets, not condemnation. The following list is just an overview.
Private Equity
Perhaps no component of financial markets has become more caricatured and demonized than what is known as “private equity.” The words carry more connotation than just “equity ownership of companies that are not publicly traded.” The private equity industry is large, powerful, and dynamic, and has become a vital part of the American economy. To critics, this is something to bemoan. An objective analysis comes to a very different conclusion.
At its core, private equity represents professional asset managers serving as general partners, putting up some equity capital themselves (in amounts that can be majority ownership or often very limited), raising further equity capital from professional investors as limited partners, and taking ownership positions in companies. While the ownership is usually a majority position, it is almost always intended to be temporary (assume 5-7 years as a median hold period), and is very often financed with debt capital on top of the equity the general and limited partners put in.
The targets being acquired may be distressed companies whereby some enterprises have suffered deterioration and distress, and the hope is that new capital, management, and strategy may right the ship. But often the targets are highly successful companies that have achieved a certain growth rate and strong brand, but require additional growth capital to scale, more professional or seasoned management, or some synergistic advantage that a strategic partner can bring. And beyond the objective of “repaired distress,” and “growth and scale,” there is often an exit strategy for founders and early investors who can monetize what they have built by selling to new investors who could have any number of strategic or financial considerations in the acquisition (roll-ups, ability to introduce greater operational efficiency, etc.). Motives and objectives of buyers and sellers vary across private equity, and the industry’s growth and success have facilitated a highly specialized, niched, and diversified menu of private equity players.
There are various arguments made against the industry that are sometimes at odds with one another (they return too much capital to the owners compared to workers; but also, the returns are terrible and the industry is a sham). Opponents see private equity as either too risky, too opaque, too illiquid, too conflicted, or too unsuitable for the common good of society. Each concern deserves analysis.
First, the notion that private equity returns are terrible ought to be the greatest encouragement to the cottage industry of those concerned about private equity. If the returns on invested capital coming back to private equity investors were terrible, or even subpar, in any market known to mankind this industry would self-destruct over time. Sponsors would not be able to raise money. Limited partners would find other alternatives for the investment of their capital. Even acquisition targets (who generally carry some skin in the game) would seek better buyers out of their self-interest. Could some constituency of “sucker” leave some lights on longer than one might expect? Sure. But as a growing, thriving, popular institution in capital markets, private equity would evaporate if it were not generating returns that satisfied its investors. This strikes rational market students as obvious. Now, the range of return outcomes has historically been much wider for private equity managers than public equity managers, and the delta between top-performing managers and bottom-performing managers is much wider in private markets than in public markets. This is an advantage to the space, as skill is more predominantly highlighted, and noteworthy advantages are more statistically compelling, purging the space of poor performers and attracting more capital to diligent asset allocators. But no rational argument exists for why the largest, most sophisticated investors on the planet (institutional investors, pension funds, sovereign wealth, endowments, and foundations) would maintain exposure to private equity strategies with either inappropriate fees or inadequate results. If one believed that private equity was damaging to economic growth or the public good, poor investment results would be the ally of their cause.
Second, opacity and illiquidity are features, not bugs. Entrepreneurial endeavors are not straight lines. Businesses routinely face headwinds, cyclical challenges, unforeseen circumstances, and interruptions to strategy. Likewise, investors routinely face emotional ups and downs, sentiment shifts, and volatility of temperament. That a reliable capital base exists in private equity which prevents the latter (investor sentiment) from damaging the former (the realistic time frame needed for a business to succeed) is a huge advantage to the structure of private equity. Of course, some investors’ circumstances render illiquidity unsuitable for them. The solution is not to strip the illiquidity advantage and patient capital that it presents from private equity, but rather for free and responsible investors to exercise agency, and not invest where not suitable. Private equity provides a highly optimal match between the duration of capital and the underlying assets being invested.
Opacity is similarly beneficial. The better way to say this is that public markets suffer from the curse of transparency, meaning that competitors, the media, and all sorts of interested parties with any kind of agenda, are made privy to the deepest of details of the company’s financials, disclosures, and circumstances. For clarity, this is a trade-off that publicly traded companies accepted for other advantages to being public, but it is just that—a trade-off. All things being equal, there is no reason that a business would want the world to know its trade secrets, and financial dynamics in near real-time, let alone challenges and obstacles, especially not its competitors. The opacity of being private is not a negative; it is a tautology (when a company is private, it is private).
Finally, there is the concern that private equity is a negative force for workers. Specifically, the argument goes that private equity’s pursuit of operational efficiencies, the use of debt to fund the acquisition itself and subsequent growth, and the period promised to investors for an exit, all pit the interests of capital against the workers. There is, however, a fatal flaw in this argument, and that concerns the empirical data. Private equity-owned businesses employ 12 million people in the United States, a 34 percent increase from just five years ago. Eighty-six percent of private equity-owned businesses employ less than 500 people, and half of all companies with private equity sponsorship employ less than 50 people[2].
Interestingly, the National Bureau of Economic Research[3] found that where net job losses did occur (three percent after two years of a buyout and 6 percent after five years), it was predominantly in public-to-private buyouts and transactions involving the retail sector. Put differently, 20 percent or more job losses were highly likely had a public retail company failed, but a “take private” transaction minimized those losses. The same study found that private equity buyouts lead to the rapid creation of new job positions and “catalyze the creative destruction process as measured by both gross job flows and the purchase-and-sale of business establishments.” In other words, those who claim private equity leads to worse circumstances for laborers must establish that the jobs lost would not have been lost anyway.
That investors are not driven by the employee headcount is a given, similar to workers who are not driven by the ROI for investors. The argument for free enterprise is that there is a reasonable correlation of interest between all these parties and that the natural and organic tension between labor and capital is healthy and best managed by market forces. Demonizing this specific facet of financial markets (private equity) for possessing the same embedded tension as all market structures are selective, dishonest, and unintelligible.
Private equity defenders need not avoid the facts of failure. Private equity-backed businesses do sometimes (albeit rarely) fail. The reason is that businesses often do fail. The dynamic nature of market forces, changes, trends, consumer preferences, macroeconomic conditions, cost of capital, competitive forces, manager skill, and company strategy all lead to the very real possibility of failure, or what we learn as children to call “risk.” That private equity is not immune to risk is not a criticism. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, 20 percent of small businesses fail in the first year, 30 percent fail by the second year, and 50 percent by the fifth year[4].  Small business suffers a high rate of failure (and attendant job losses) because small business is hard. A more stringent regulation of small business or vilifying small business, though, would seem absurd to most reasonable people.
What about the argument that private equity uniquely increases risk by its use of debt?  As we will see, there is a large actor in the American economy whose use of debt is threatening workers and the general welfare, but that actor is not the private equity industry. The capital structure of a business ought to be optimized to drive a healthy and efficient operation. Sub-optimal use of debt creates credit risk for lenders, and because debt is senior to equity in the capital structure, it threatens the entire solvency of the equity investors. In other words, ample incentives exist to prevent reckless debt use from doing damage. What is paramount, though, is that risk-takers suffer when there is a failure. Private equity works against the socialization of risk, but it doesn’t eliminate the existence of risk.
The private equity industry has added trillions of dollars to America’s GDP over the last four decades, employed tens of millions of people, added monetization and liquidity to founders and entrepreneurs, and created access to capital for talented operators who make the goods and services that enhance our quality of life. No part of this warrants skepticism or ire.
Hedge Funds
Similar criticisms exist for the hedge fund industry as private equity, in that many without skin in the game feel the fee structures and performance results are underwhelming. Again, it bears repeating that for the anti-hedge fund crowd, this outcome would be ideal. Indeed, over-priced and under-performing strategies have no chance of surviving over time. Some return-driven, self-interested investors must find something compelling within the hedge fund industry that keeps them returning for more.
That objective is a risk and reward exposure not correlated to the beta of traditional stock and bond markets. Idiosyncratic strategies may involve various arbitrage opportunities and the pursuit of mispriced securities and relationships, but the fee level and performance reflect an entirely different characteristic than that offered by broad stock and bond markets. This is not unknown to the investors of hedge funds but it is the entire point. Correlation is cheap (i.e. index funds), and non-correlation comes at a cost. Top-performing managers and strategies command a fee premium, and sub-par managers lose the Darwinian battle for assets. Market forces have a funny way of sorting this out, without the commentary of disinterested third-party critics.
Sebastian Mallaby’s masterful More Money than God: Hedge Funds and the Making of a New Elite[5] pointed out that hedge funds privatized gains and losses in the events of the 2008 global financial crisis, whereas the banking system allowed the socialization of losses even as gains had been privatized. Put differently, the banking system inherently poses systemic risks, risks that can be (and should be) mitigated and monitored. The hedge fund industry, though, represents an ecosystem of capital allocation, price discovery, information sharing, and profit-seeking, all with highly privatized risk and reward (as it should be).
Hedge fund criticism is always reducible to concerns the critics have with individual hedge fund operators (political, persona, etc.), or rank class warfare. That an alternative investment world exists where idiosyncratic trades can be executed, contrarian themes pursued, and various knobs of risk turned up and down (often with leverage and hedging) is an overwhelming positive to American enterprise.
High-Frequency Trading
High-frequency trading (so-called) has become a popular scapegoat for the anti-financial markets crowd. Advancements in digital technology have enabled complex algorithms to trade large blocks of shares of stock in nanoseconds. Those who have invested in this technology and infrastructure have bet on the ability of technology to identify opportunities and deliver value through speed and execution. Banks, insurance companies, and institutional investors can buy large blocks of stock quickly. Human decisions are disintermediated in favor of computers, and those utilizing high-frequency trading are accepting the trade-off that algorithms, speed, and execution will offer advantages over the cost of losing human interaction.
A trade-off is just that: a trade-off. The benefit of technological advancements in the trading of our capital markets has been unprecedented levels of speed and liquidity, which has meant dramatically lower costs of execution. Across our public stock and bond markets, trading costs are virtually zero, and bid-ask spreads are nil.
The advantages of high-frequency trading are obvious. But what about the disadvantages, and not merely the loss of human interaction the principal is now exposed to? Does this innovation pose the possibility of systemic risk, enhanced volatility, and system errors in our financial markets? Again, a better question would be: does high-frequency trading represent an exacerbation of those risks relative to what existed before it? Volatility, a mismatch of buyers and sellers, trading errors, and any number of market realities existed before high-frequency trading, and exist today (albeit with a bare minimum of instances of actual damage done). Market-making is a complicated business, and there is no question that high-frequency trading facilitates the making of a market (matching buyers and sellers, in this case at light speed). Opportunities for manipulation are highly regulated, and the net benefits from this innovation have spread to all market participants in greater liquidity, improved price discovery, and diminished trading costs.
Banks
From the days of the 1946 film It’s a Wonderful Life, the notion of a bank failure has been the subject of public fear and trepidation—and for good reason. Banks exist to hold customer deposits, facilitate customer payments from those deposits, and generate a profit by lending out those deposits at a positive net interest margin (i.e. the spread between interest paid to depositors and the interest collected on money lent out). Banks have largely been in the business of residential mortgage lending, but also handle 40 percent of commercial real estate lending in America[6]. Hundreds of billions of dollars of small business loans are also processed by commercial banks, funded by the capital base of the banks, which is largely depositor-driven.
That the banking business model effectively amounts to short-duration funding (i.e. bank deposits) being matched to long-duration loans (i.e. mortgages and business loans) is a theoretical flaw that is intended to be remedied by (a) Capital reserves, (b) Diversification, and (c) Quality underwriting. Liquidity issues can still surface when banking assets (the money they have lent out) prove to be longer duration than its liabilities (the money it owes its depositors back). Capital requirements mitigate if not fully eliminate, this risk, yet admittedly favor large banks to regional banks due to the disproportionate impact these requirements have.
Nevertheless, our financial markets, largely through trial and error and the lessons of experience, have increasingly presented the banking system as a store of value and a medium for payment processing, with engines of risk and opportunity increasingly coming from other aspects of financial markets. Banks still have a vital role to play in lending needs. Bank failures are increasingly rare, and competition has created ample optionality for the products and services banks offer (i.e. mortgages, credit cards, business loans, etc.).
Mergers & Acquisitions
Straight out of the class warfare playbook is the belief that investment bankers are money changers with no productive economic aim who are looking to squeeze money out of good and productive companies. Concerns about excess corporate deal activity are not limited to those who bemoan investment banking. Consider the words of one of the most highly regarded investment bankers of the last 75 years, Felix Rohatyn, atop his perch at Lazard in 1986:
In the field of takeovers and mergers, the sky is the limit. Not only in size, but in the types of large corporate transactions, we have often gone beyond the norms of rational economic behavior. The tactics used in corporate takeovers, both on offense and on defense, create massive transactions that greatly benefit lawyers, investment bankers, and arbitrageurs but often result in weaker companies and do not treat all shareholders equally and fairly … In the long run, we in the investment banking business cannot benefit from something that is harmful to our economic system.[7]
Like under-performing hedge funds or poor execution from high-frequency trading, the cure for bad Mergers and Acquisitions (M&A) is M&A. Markets will not support premiums irrationally paid for acquisitions (over time), and boards will not tolerate management eroding value through bad mergers (over time). Bad deals will happen, and good deals will happen, and short-sighted investment bankers will be incentivized to promote deals that do not represent good financial, strategic, or social sense. And yet, to not have access to robust merger and acquisition opportunities is to take away optionality in capital markets that are desperately needed. Competitive forces evolve over time in ways that can combine the embedded strengths of one company with the embedded strengths of another, creating value. The diversification of talent and subject matter expertise, properly channeled, is a huge benefit to our complex enterprise system and has allowed for the pairing of tremendous talent and corporate ecosystems that have created trillions of dollars of wealth. The simplicity of casting aspersions on all mergers and acquisitions because of the cases where some transactions proved ill-conceived is dangerous and harms economic opportunity. While it is incumbent on corporate management, company boards, and especially shareholders to resist unattractive M&A (that is, those with skin in the game), access to such innovation of capital markets is a vital part of our free enterprise system.
Dividends
Though not yet as demonized as stock buybacks, the return of corporate profits to minority owners via dividends is viewed as an example of ‘financialization’—as the favoring of owners of capital over the workers who help create corporate profits. Of course, these two things are not mutually exclusive. Owners are only paid dividends with after-tax profits, and profits are only realized after workers are paid. Dividends represent a substantial incentive to feed equity capital into businesses and therefore facilitate capital formation. The dividends then cycle through the hands of the risk-takers into their consumption desires or reinvestment aspirations. Any argument against dividends is an argument against profits, and an argument against profits is an argument against a market economy.
When we look at companies that failed after paying out dividends and buying back stock, the conclusion that it was a net loss to society requires an assumption of facts not supported by the evidence.  That company not returning cash or buying back shares but continuing to invest in a failed business is what would have eradicated value.  Cash to shareholders via share purchases or dividends allowed those owners to re-deploy capital in better businesses. And since dividends and share buybacks can only take place with after-tax profits, we are not talking about companies eroding the capital base of the company to pay them, but rather the allocation of profits after the fact.
Stock buybacks
Like dividends, share buybacks with after-tax corporate profits is a form of capital return to shareholders. As a professional dividend growth investor, I have ample reasons for believing dividend payments are a superior mechanism for the interests of shareholders. But the idea that share buybacks are inherently dangerous, short-sighted, or anti-worker, is demonstrably false. Once again, we are not talking about eroding the capital base of a company, but rather how to return capital to the owners of a business when that capital is enhanced by profit creation. Because many employees in public companies are paid via stock issuance (restricted shares, stock options, etc.), stock buybacks offset the theoretical expense that this form of executive compensation represents.
Examples exist of companies buying back stock at what is later revealed to be a high stock price, later running into cyclical challenges with the company operations, and having less cash to work through those times than they otherwise would have. All cases of a business challenge not perfectly predicted ahead of time are exposed to this risk. It does not address the underlying issue of share buybacks. If a company knew that it would later face an existential crisis and suffer a cash crunch, using the after-tax profits to pay down debt, pay bonuses to workers, or do anything other than increase reserves, would be unwise. This is not a unique burden for share buybacks, but rather a general challenge for businesses that are not guaranteed a perpetual path of easy profits.
Markets often provide incentives for corporate managers to use share buybacks more favorable to their compensation metrics than other forms of capital return. This is problematic. But it is a problem that must be addressed by those who bear risk, among managers, boards, and shareholders. The state has not proven itself a model capital allocator. For government to put its thumb on the scale of how companies allocate their capital is to invite distortion, corruption, and flawed information into economic calculation.
Passive ownership/indexing
Finally, there is the so-called passive ownership dilemma.  An enormous increase in the popularity of low-cost index funds has led to a wide disintermediation of ownership across public equity markets.  Passive stakes are voted on by non-beneficial owners like Blackrock and Vanguard. As the intermediaries who are legal owners, their agendas may conflict with the agendas of their customers. This issue can be solved in one of two ways: (1) Investors themselves will determine that their chosen intermediary is voting or operating in a way that does not serve their interests, and either choose a different intermediary or investment option; (2) Passive equity facilitators and managers will present innovations and options to solve for this tension.
The growth of passive/index strategy and the perceived power it gives these asset managers is a worthy conversation. It does not negate the substantial advantage of low-cost ownership and easy liquidity and access to public markets for investors, but it warrants attention and alteration to ensure that investors are receiving the best representation that achieves the highest returns on investment. Nevertheless, that attention and innovation are sure to be found in a combination of both #1 and #2 in the previous paragraph, and not by limiting the advent of passive equity ownership vehicles.
Cures that are worse than the disease
Opponents of financial sector growth have argued that the public interest calls for a variety of draconian measures to curtail freedom in capital markets. Introducing friction in financial sector activity by limiting its growth, protecting other economic actors, or generally reallocating capital in a way that central planners find more advantageous for the public good would accomplish this objective. All of these ideas carry unintended (or sometimes intended) consequences that would be counter-productive to the aim of economic growth.
A policy proposal to both suggest and critique is a special transaction tax on various stock and bond transactions in American public markets. Progressive politicians have taken advantage of the public popularity of this rhetoric (a “Wall Street tax”) to suggest that “free money” can be found by removing it from ‘financialization’ and into the coffers of the federal government for some spending initiative (Medicare for All, the Green New Deal, etc.). What is never understood, or otherwise is completely ignored, is that this money is not free. It comes out of financial transactions. This means that it becomes an additional cost to be borne by the private economy. The price may be paid by smaller investors who would incur greater trading costs, or it may be paid with less net money received in a particular transaction, leading to a less productive outcome over time for market actors rationally allocating resources. Regardless, it is not “free.”
Nor should we forget, it is not likely to work. Large institutions have resources outside of the United States for trading capital. Such a money grab would leave higher costs for smaller investors and sophisticated investors would pursue global options that avoid such a burden. Incentives matter, and the unintended consequences here would not curtail excesses in financial markets while raising money for other social aims. Rather, it would move money offshore, empower global competitors, and damage those who are not the target of the policy.
Some have suggested that making debt interest cost non-deductible would remove incentives to take on debt, thereby protecting workers in the case of companies exposed to excessive leverage. Of course, lowering the business income tax rates also better protects workers, and so removing a tool used to reduce that tax burden is simply the inverse when it comes to workers. Driving tax obligations higher does not protect workers. To the extent the policy succeeded in limiting debt, astute commentators might wonder what those costs would be. What is the debt being used for and what uses of capital would now be sacrificed if this policy suggestion prevailed? Will companies have less working capital, less liquidity, and be more susceptible to an equity sale (where job losses would be more likely, not less)? These expensive policy proposals have failed to count the costs, and in this case, the cost would be monumental. More than likely, the loss of deductibility of the debt would just be priced into the market rate of the loans, leaving less interest income for the lenders and banks, not a higher after-tax interest expense for the borrowers. In other words, it would be ineffective at best, and distortive at worst.
Various other proponents of de-financializing the economy suggest that increased tax rates would do this, including matching the tax rate on capital to the tax rate on income. The present tax policy is inefficient, but not for the reasons suggested by critics. Presently, a long-term capital gain of $100,000 creates a tax burden on the entire $100,000 in the tax year it was realized. However, a loss of $100,000 only allows for a $3,000 deduction in the year it was realized. This law was passed in 1977 but has not been updated for inflation. Furthermore, when a gain of $100,000 on capital is realized (real estate, stock, etc.), if their holding period was 10, 20, or 30 years, a significant part of the nominal gain was eroded by inflation, leaving the real gain to be a fraction of the total nominal gain. However, the capital gain tax is paid on the entire nominal gain.
Fundamentally, taxes on investment income are “double taxes”—as the money was already taxed when it was first earned (i.e. income), and now is facing additional tax when it is being invested (capital gains or dividends). But if that basic fact does not trouble the anti-finance constituency, the notion of matching income rates to investment tax rates can surely be done by lowering earned income tax rates. An increase in investment tax rates stifles capital formation, disincentivizes risk-taking, freezes capital in static projects, and impairs economic growth. If one wants to make a “fairness” argument for equal rates between tax on capital and labor, that fairness is already stretched in that the tax on capital represents a second tax on the same dollar. But if they persist in the fairness argument, lower ordinary income rates will likely be an agreeable solution for those wanting to protect capital formation.
From transaction taxes, to greater scrutiny of private equity, to changing the tax rules on debt or investment income, to various regulatory burdens on financial actors—no proposed solution from the anti-financial crowd serves workers or the cause of public interest. Rather, these and other proposed policy solutions invite hidden costs (and some that truly are not hidden), build state power, and damage broad prosperity.
Monetary and fiscal policy getting a pass
This concluding section can reasonably be called a tragedy. As was established in our early pursuit of a definition of ‘financialization,’ there is, indeed, an unattractive phenomenon that sub-optimally allocates resources. This ‘financialization,’ however, is not a by-product of more profitable investment banks, larger private equity managers, or increased technological capacity in capital trading. This ‘financialization’ where less productive activities take precedence over more productive ones is not created by Wall Street. Rather, the culprits are the very forces that the anti-finance critics are so often looking to play savior: the governmental tools of fiscal and monetary policy. In other words, the regulatory state, Congress, and the Federal Reserve are actors involved in this discussion, but not as fixers. The modern critics of finance have failed to identify the root causes of ‘financialization’ and in so doing have not only enabled the damage to continue but have invited them to do far greater damage, still.
No single factor has put greater downward pressure on economic growth than the explosion of government indebtedness, particularly, the ratio of that debt to the overall economy.
Common ground exists with those worried about diminished economic productivity and what that means to workers, and indeed, all economic actors. That common ground has not parlayed into shared despair over the growth of government spending, the growth of government debt, and the crowding out of the private sector both represent.
Furthermore, post-financial crisis monetary policy has been a series of gigantic monetary experiments that have served to do the very thing that critics of financial sector activity profess opposition to. Defenders of interventionist monetary policy may claim that it served to stimulate the economy post-crisis and to reflate the corporate economy as the household sector de-leveraged in the aftermath of the housing bubble. Yet even the most zealous defenders of that trade-off could not argue that such a monetary framework came at no cost. That cost was a substantial increase in real financialization.
The fiscal components are easy to identify. Government debt represents dollars extracted from the private sector either in the present or future tenses. A Keynesian would argue that such debt when used for productive projects like the Hoover Dam adds to GDP (a positive multiplier). However, present debt explosions have not been to build a Hoover Dam. Post-crisis spending exploded above the trendline, well before the 2020 COVID pandemic. The spending response to COVID created a huge outlay of expense, unfortunately as the pandemic subsided and all pandemic-related expenditures were completed, expenditures resumed far above the trendline, and far above the level of economic growth.
The federal government is doing what Goldman Sachs, Blackstone, and JP Morgan have never done—removing resources from the productive portion of the economy to the non-productive. It is outside the scope of this paper to evaluate what government spending projects ought to be. One can believe that current spending priorities are legitimate without believing they are productive. Some cost of government is necessary, and that funding will come from the private sector. However, when the cost of funding the government grows exponentially quicker than its revenue sources, and when the level of debt accumulates to the absolute levels it has, and with the annual debt funding costs it has, then declining productivity is the ultimate result.
Economic growth pulled into the present means less economic growth in the future. In the current debt predicament, this is not even economic growth pulled forward, but rather the accumulation of seemingly endless transfer payments. This extraction of wealth from the private sector to fund income replacement does not produce anything nor build anything. A real GDP growth rate that has declined from over +3% to below +2% measures the impact on economic output.
The monetary component of this strikes at the heart of resource allocation. If the Federal Reserve was tasked with holding interest rates at a natural rate, it would be at that level where economic activity would be most “natural”—where the interest rate was neither incentivizing nor disincentivizing economic activity. For 14 of the last 16 years, the Fed held the interest rate at or near zero percent, well below the natural rate in all but the most extreme crisis years out of 2008. That artificially low cost of capital extended the lifeline of many over-levered economic actors, and in the early years of post-crisis economic life likely facilitated some productive reflation. Yet over time, the perpetual zero-bound rate target encouraged economic actors to bypass the production of new goods and services for financial engineering. Incumbent assets in the economy—real estate or equity stock already in existence—could be bought and levered with little financial risk, with the low cost of leverage intensifying returns for these economic actors. Such activity was far more attractive than the creating new projects, sinking capital into new ideas, and innovating with one’s capital at the risk of loss. The zero-bound was a substitute for new goods and services, and it has taken a toll on productive economic investment.
Likewise, a prolonged unnaturally low rate facilitated ongoing resources into sub-optimal assets, keeping “zombie” companies alive where a natural cost of capital would have expedited their demise. While seemingly generous in its impact, the real cost of this process is in the resources that do not work their way to innovation, new growth, and new opportunities. Overly accommodative monetary policy extends the lifeline of those whose time has come and gone preventing fresh ideas from receiving the capital and human resources they need to breathe life into the economy. It fosters malinvestment, distorts economic calculation, and wreaks havoc on economic growth.
The twin towers of fiscal and monetary policy are powerful economic levers. On one hand, the fiscal tool crowds out the private sector and inhibits innovation by taking from the growth of the future to fund excessive spending today. On the other hand, the monetary tool uses the cost of capital to manipulate economic activity, ignoring the diminishing return and obvious distortions created by their efforts.
If one is looking for a malignant financialization, they have found it, and Wall Street is nowhere near the scene of the crime.
Conclusion
Critics of financialization have:
Ambiguously or inadequately defined the term,
Used a critique of the financial sector to disguise class envy,
Failed to understand the nature of markets and the primacy of resource allocation,
Demonized instruments of financial markets that have been overwhelming positives for economic growth,
Proposed policy initiatives that would unilaterally do more harm than good, and
Worst of all, failed to see the most egregious actors in that which distresses them: Excessive government debt and excessive monetary policy
An optimal vision for the economy does not favor the financial sector over the “real economy,” nor does it pit the financial sector against the real economy. Rather, an optimal vision sees financial markets as capable instruments in advancing the economic good and public interest. A large public bureaucracy cannot improve the economic lot of workers, and diminished financial markets cannot optimally allocate resources to the real economy.
The need of the hour is better price discovery, starting with the price of money. The cost of capital as a tool of manipulation in the hands of our central bank has facilitated ‘financialization’ and hampered productive economic activity. The tools of modern finance can advance the cause of prosperity when we limit distortions in economic decision-making, maximize the availability of resources in the sector of the economy most equipped to utilize those resources productively, and remove impediments to growth.
Human beings are capable of great things. Advanced financial markets enhance those capabilities and build opportunities for the future.
Download the Paper here

Tyler Durden
Wed, 11/27/2024 - 21:30

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Thanksgiving Dinner Will Be 19% More Expensive This Year Than Before Biden Was Elected
Thanksgiving Dinner Will Be 19% More Expensive This Year Than Before Biden Was Elected

Each year the American Farm Bureau Federation releases a price survey of classic items found on the Thanksgiving dinner table. This year, the average cost of feasting stands at $54.33, which is less than last year but still constitutes a $8.64 increase from before the pandemic.

The most expensive item by far is the turkey, which this year costs an average of $25.67 and is an increase of $4.87 from pre-pandemic levels. While most ingredients have increased somewhat, sweet potatoes, fresh cranberries and whipping cream have dropped in value.

2024 marks the second consecutive year that the average price of a Thanksgiving dinner in the United States has decreased.

However, as Statista's Anna Feck reports, this does not erase the increases seen between 2020 and 2022, when the meal rose from an average of $46.90 to $64.05 thanks to the impacts of inflation on food prices and farmers’ costs.



You will find more infographics at Statista

The AFBF discovered regional differences in the average cost of a Thanksgiving meal, with the most affordable prices found in the South at $56.81 and the most expensive in the West at $67.05.

The shopping list of the survey includes all ingredients and foods in quantities sufficient to serve a family of 10 (though quite frankly we question the serving sizes that implies). Volunteers checked prices in grocery stores in all 50 states and Puerto Rico for the Farm Bureau.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 11/27/2024 - 22:00

UK Legislation
Open 
The Cottam Solar Project (Correction) Order 2024
This Order corrects errors identified in the Cottam Solar Project Order 2024 (S.I 2024/943), which granted development consent under the Planning Act 2008, following a request under paragraph 1(5)(a) of Schedule 4 to that Act.

UK Legislation
Open 
The State Pension Debits and Credits (Revaluation) Order (Northern Ireland) 2024
This Order corresponds to an Order (S.I. 2024/1208) made by the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions under sections 148AD(2) and (3) and 189(1) and (4) of the Social Security Administration Act 1992 (c. 5).

UK Legislation
Open 
The State Pension Revaluation for Transitional Pensions Order (Northern Ireland) 2024
This Order, which corresponds to an Order (S.I. 2024/1209) made by the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions under sections 148AC(3) and 189(1) and (4) of the Social Security Administration Act 1992 (c. 5) (“the 1992 Act”), specifies the “revaluing percentage” as 33.9 per cent.

UK Legislation
Open 
The Occupational Pensions (Revaluation) Order (Northern Ireland) 2024
This Order, which corresponds to an Order (S.I. 2024/1174) made by the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions under paragraph 2(1) of Schedule 3 to the Pension Schemes Act 1993, specifies appropriate revaluation percentages. The percentages specified are relevant to the revaluation of benefits under occupational pension schemes, as required by section 80 of, and Schedule 2 to, the Pension Schemes (Northern Ireland) Act 1993. The lower revaluation percentage introduced by the Pensions (No. 2) Act (Northern Ireland) 2008 (c. 13 (N.I.)) does not apply to pensionable service before 6th April 2009.

UK Legislation
Open 
The Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act 2024 (Commencement No. 1 and Savings and Transitional Provisions) Regulations 2024
These Regulations bring into force certain provision in the Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act 2024 (c. 13) (“the Act”) on 1st January 2025. These are the first commencement Regulations made under the Act.

UK Legislation
Open 
The Franchising Schemes (Franchising Authorities) (England) Regulations 2024
These Regulations bring into effect paragraphs (b) to (g) of section 123A(4) of the Transport Act 2000, such that the types of authorities listed in those paragraphs are included within the meaning of “franchising authority” for the purposes of Part 2 of that Act (local transport).

Mail Online
Open 
I miscarried twins after five rounds of IVF. Now I fear childhood sexual abuse has cost me the chance to have a baby: TV presenter CHARLIE WEBSTER bravely breaks her silence
Broadcaster Charlie Webster suffered terrible childhood abuse, yet went on to great success as a sports presenter. But she fears the scars of her past may have scuppered her chance of having a baby.

Mail Online
Open 
For decades I judged women who griped about wanting to be thin. Now I'm using weight loss jabs, and I've made a startling revelation, says LUCY CAVENDISH
Delicious cassoulets, potato dauphinoise, creme brulee...I have always loved food. I feel people who don't enjoy eating, don't enjoy life. And yet, recently, I have become one of those picky eaters.

Mail Online
Open 
I dare not tell my friend why we school mums all loathe her stay-at-home husband: AMANDA BLAKE
'Do you know why the other mums don't like me?' my friend, Jill, asked bluntly. I knew exactly why - but how could I tell her they thought her stay-at-home husband was a lecherous creep?

Mail Online
Open 
Revealed, the truth about porch pirates: Mail investigation exposes the sneaky way 'smartly dressed' doorstep package thieves work, how to tell if you're a target, the time they strike... and how to foil them
23 million packages go missing every year - and as Black Friday approaches it's getting worse. So how long before thieves run off with yours?

Mail Online
Open 
I made a promise to Wayne Rooney because of the extraordinary thing he did for me one night, reveals KATIE HIND. Because of his behaviour, I've had to break it...but it reveals the kind of man he is
My heart was racing as I rummaged through my gold clutch bag. My phone had disappeared as I was sitting in a London hotel bar. Please let it be in my bag, I prayed.

Mail Online
Open 
STEPHEN GLOVER: Why is this Government so breathtakingly bad? Because Starmer is confused, incoherent - and tragically miscast as PM
Why is this Government so breathtakingly bad that even many who voted Labour are now regretting it? This is a question I often ask myself.

Mail Online
Open 
I had two harrowing experiences in toilets that made me certain pushing gender-neutral loos on women is despicable. But the views of my bosses made me quit my council job
The sexual assault - sudden and menacing - had happened abroad in a unisex toilet at a restaurant more than three decades earlier.

Mail Online
Open 
RANGERS CONFIDENTIAL: Major blow as key January transfer target is ruled off-limits to leave hole in defence
RANGERS CONFIDENTIAL: Captain James Tavernier is now 33 and has flitted in and out of the starting XI in recent weeks. Dutchman Neraysho Kasanwirjo has also deputised.

Mail Online
Open 
How Arne Slot aced the biggest night of his career thanks to a 'perfect' performance from Liverpool's rising star
LEWIS STEELE AT ANFIELD: Liverpool overcame their hoodoo against Real Madrid to topple the 15-time champions of Europe with a convincing win last night.

Mail Online
Open 
The five key issues Ruben Amorim must fix at Man United as he promises his players will 'suffer'
CHRIS WHEELER: Old Trafford will welcome Ruben Amorim for his first home game on Thursday, but don't expect Man United's new head coach to get carried away on a wave of emotion.

Mail Online
Open 
Daily guide to what the stars have in store for YOU - November 28, 2024
OSCAR CAINER: As Mars slows to turn retrograde, by honouring our true feelings, we can find ways to share warmth and generosity.

Mail Online
Open 
Jennifer Garner shares shock Thanksgiving heartache in emotional post
Jennifer Garner announced the death of her dog, a golden retriever named Birdie, in a heartbreaking Instagram post Wednesday.

Sky News Home
Open 
Human remains found 44 years after couple vanished
​​​​​​​Human remains have been found 44 years after a couple from New York vanished.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Trump talks migration with Mexico leader amid tariff threat
Donald Trump said he had a "wonderful conversation" with Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum and that she had agreed to "stop" US-bound migration.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Assisted dying: a historic vote comes to parliament - podcast
Deputy political editor Jessica Elgot explains how the assisted dying bill came to the House of Commons this week, and how MPs are feeling about their vote. Dr Lucy Thomas speaks about her experience in palliative care and her fears if MPs vote the bill throughOn Friday, MPs will vote on the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) bill – a once-in-a-generation vote on whether those with terminal illnesses should have the right to an assisted death. The right, in other words, to end one’s own life with the help of medical professionals.As the Guardian’s deputy political editor Jessica Elgot explains, it would be a monumental social change, and has been compared to previous reforms on abortion, the death penalty and equal marriage. Yet with just a day to go, it is not at all clear which way the vote will go. Indeed, Helen Pidd hears from MPs in parliament, some of whom are still unsure whether they will support or oppose the bill. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Lammy plays down criticism of Chagos Islands deal
The UK foreign secretary dismisses criticism of the agreement as "politicking" before elections.

The Register
Open 
No, Broadcom did not just end VMware's flagship VCDX certification program
Sure, it sent an email and FAQ saying it had – but that was a mistake, you see Broadcom has made an embarrassing mistake: sending an email in which it mistakenly announced the end of its VMware Certified Design Expert (VCDX) certification.…

ZDNet News
Open 
I use this tablet more than my iPad Pro, and it costs a fraction of the price
This Blackview Tab 90 is the mobile entertainment device most people should buy for Black Friday.

ZDNet News
Open 
This portable battery station can power your home for two weeks - and it's $1,300 off right now
The Jackery Explorer 2000 Plus can pull in sunlight and distribute power across your home, and you can save hundreds on one for Black Friday.

ZDNet News
Open 
This fantastic HP work laptop is almost $1,000 off for Black Friday - and I'm a fan
Black Friday is two days away, and early deals are showing up. Over at B&H, the HP Envy Multi-Touch has received a big discount.

ZDNet News
Open 
This portable fog machine turned out to be more useful than expected - and it's on sale for Black Friday
Add drama to photos and videos, ambiance to parties, mystery to plays or presentations. The Lensgo Smoke B's possibilities are limitless - and it's 20% off on Amazon.

ZDNet News
Open 
One of the best soundbars I've tested is not made by Bose or Sonos (and it's $500 off)
The LG S95TR soundbar delivers immersive audio quality and has loads of unique features, and you can get it for $500 off at LG's online store.

ZDNet News
Open 
The 40+ best Black Friday 2024 deals for robot vacuum: Sales are live now
As a robot vacuum reviewer and dog owner, I'm always looking for great deals. Luckily, I've found some of the best robot vacuum and cordless vacuum discounts this week through Black Friday.

ZDNet News
Open 
This tiny phone accessory gives you a thermal vision superpowers, and it's $70 off right now
It might seem like a gimmicky device, but this little gadget is now a must-have in my toolbox. It's on sale now for $70 off this week.

ZDNet News
Open 
This Sony Bravia is the best TV you've never heard of - and it's on sale for Black Friday
I've seen the best TVs of 2024, and last year's Sony X90L remains one of my top picks. Both Amazon and Best Buy have discounted every screen size for Black Friday.

ZDNet News
Open 
I replaced my TV with this long-throw projector, and it's absolutely worth it - especially for $340 off
Xgimi's Horizon Ultra projector is the best home theater system I've tested in a while, and it's more accessible than ever during Black Friday.

ZDNet News
Open 
The best Black Friday 2024 Kindle deals: Shop sales available now
Black Friday is two days away, but we found discounts on Kindle e-readers, including a Kindle Paperwhite, you can shop right now.

ZDNet News
Open 
One of the best earbuds I've listened to are not by Bose or Apple (and are $80 off for Black Friday)
The Denon PerL earbuds retain the same ultra-high-quality sound as their Pro sibling but are almost half the price. This Black Friday discount takes another half off of that.

ZDNet News
Open 
I ditched my AirPods Pro for these discounted Nothing earbuds (and don't regret it)
The Nothing Ear sees meaningful audio upgrades while retaining a design language and price point that's hard to beat. They're on sale for Black Friday.

ZDNet News
Open 
My favorite MagSafe accessory will satisfy any Apple user - and it's 25% off for Black Friday
The Ugreen Nexode 100W charging station is powerful enough to keep my MacBook Pro topped up, offers fast wireless charging for the iPhone, and has ports to spare.

ZDNet News
Open 
Best Black Friday TV deals 2024: 80+ expert-selected deals on QLED, OLED, & more
I'm a TV reviewer, and I handpicked tons of Black Friday deals live now for my favorite brands, including Samsung, Sony, and LG.

CNET News
Open 
Black Friday Just Slashed ZeroWater Filters by 25% if You Grab Them Now
Stock up on ZeroWater filters this Black Friday before prices jump back up or you'll end up paying way more later.

CNET News
Open 
This Top-Notch Soundcore Speaker Hits a Record Low for Black Friday
You can snag the Soundcore Motion X600 for just $130 at Amazon's Black Friday sale -- a $70 discount.

CNET News
Open 
Grab This 140-Watt Anker Power Bank at Its Lowest Price Yet
This Black Friday deal drops Anker's 140-watt power bank to its lowest price yet.

CNET News
Open 
Costco Membership Deal: Get $45 Free Credit and Do All Your Holiday Shopping
As we start the holiday shopping season, StackSocial has an amazing Black Friday deal on a Costco membership.

CNET News
Open 
Give the Gift of Tech Nostalgia With Grid Studio's 20% Off Black Friday Sale
Grid Studio creates unique art pieces that celebrate vintage tech and right now you can pick one up at a discount.

CNET News
Open 
Amazon Black Friday Deals: 55+ Discounts Worth Shopping From Samsung, Breville, Apple and More
Whether you need a new tablet, laptop, TV or even a Dyson vacuum, these are the discounts to shop at Amazon for Black Friday.

CNET News
Open 
Best Black Friday Mattress Deals: Save Now and Get a New Mattress Before the Holiday Guests Arrive
Black Friday deals are here, and you can score plenty of great bargains on the best mattresses. Here are our picks of the best deals you should shop.

CNET News
Open 
This Black Friday Snag a Pair of Soundpeats Earbuds for as Low as $21
With discounts ranging up to $35 and additional savings to be found, this Black Friday deal is the time to grab yourself a great pair of earphones on Amazon.

CNET News
Open 
Don't Overlook Your Student Loan Payments Over the Holidays. Do This Instead
You may be tempted to skip your payments to make more room for gifts and fun, but doing so will cost you more interest.

CNET News
Open 
6 Easy Ways to Mess Up the Turkey (and How to Avoid Them)
A bona fide turkey expert told us the six biggest turkey mistakes people make on the big day.

CNET News
Open 
Best Christmas Gifts 2024: 63 Ideas to Clear Your Holiday List
It’s Black Friday week, which means it’s time to find the best Christmas gifts. No matter who you’re shopping for, we rounded up dozens of recommendations from our gifting experts that are sure to please.

BBC UK News
Open 
'It felt like squatting': The people forced to live without flooring
Pia Honey is campaigning for social housing to come with flooring as standard.

BBC UK News
Open 
Government to review Post Office-style prosecutions
The government is to review the oversight of private prosecutions, after the Post Office Horizon scandal.

UK Government News
Open 
6th UK-Taiwan Energy Dialogue
The UK and Taiwan co-hosted the 6th UK-Taiwan Energy Dialogue on 21 November 2024. It is a crucial platform for bilateral cooperation on energy and climate.

Adam Curry
Open 
Curry & The Keeper - November 27th 2024 Episode 115 - "Drippy Juice"
Curry & The Keeper - November 27th 2024 Episode 115 - "Drippy Juice"

BBC UK News
Open 
Michael Kiwanuka on the 'wake-up call' that changed his music
The musician says winning the Mercury Prize helped put an end to his "desperate" search for approval.

F1 Technical
Open 
564 people continue to work on the Hungaroring ahead of its complete revamp
When entering the Hungaroring paddock next year, the Formula 1 circus will find themselves in very different surroundings to 2024. F1Technical's senior writer Balazs Szabo highlights the key facts revolving around the renovation of the Hungaroring.

The Hill
Open 
Trump says he's planning 'large-scale' ad campaign on fentanyl crisis
President-elect Trump announced plans to launch a “large-scale” ad campaign on Wednesday with the goal of educating Americans on the effects of fentanyl. “I will be working on a large scale United States Advertising Campaign, explaining how bad Fentanyl is for people to use - Millions of lives being so needlessly destroyed. By the time...

The Hill
Open 
Trump says he had a ‘very productive conversation’ with Mexico’s president
President-elect Trump said he had a “very productive” conversation with Mexico’s President, Claudia Sheinbaum. “Just had a wonderful conversation with the new President of Mexico, Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo,” Trump posted Wednesday to his Truth Social site. “She has agreed to stop Migration through Mexico, and into the United States, effectively closing our Southern Border.” “We...

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Biden Asks Congress To Authorize $24BN More To Spend On Ukraine
Biden Asks Congress To Authorize $24BN More To Spend On Ukraine

Authored by Dave DeCamp via AntiWar.com,

The Biden administration has asked Congress to approve $24 billion in additional spending on Ukraine as it’s working to ramp up the proxy war as much as possible during President Biden’s final weeks in office.

POLITICO Pro obtained a request from the White House’s Office of Management and Budget that asked Congress to include additional Ukraine spending in a continuing resolution that’s expected to be voted on next month. Two congressional aides said Congress received the proposal on Monday.
Image source: US Air Force

The request asks for $8 billion for the Ukraine Security Assistance initiative, a form of military aid that allows the US to purchase weapons for Ukraine, and $16 billion to replace US military equipment that’s been sent to Ukraine.

The money to replenish US weapons would allow the Biden administration to use the remaining Presidential Drawdown Authority for Ukraine, which allows the US to ship weapons directly from US military stockpiles. The administration is looking to rush arms shipments to Ukraine throughout the rest of the transition period.

If Congress agrees to the request, it would bring total US spending on the proxy war, according to publicly available data, to about $210 billion.

Earlier this year, President Biden signed a foreign military aid bill into law that included $61 billion for Ukraine. Before that, the US spent at least $125 billion on the conflict.

US officials have told The Washington Post that the Biden administration is trying to put Ukraine in the best position possible before President-elect Donald Trump might push for an end to the war.

US officials acknowledged that within a few months, Ukraine could be pushed into negotiations and could end up ceding territory. "Biden’s reversal of his previous policies on mines and missiles was intended in part to give Ukraine the strongest possible hand as it enters those potential talks," The Washington Post wrote.


🚨#BREAKING: Joe Biden has asked congress for another $24 billion for Ukraine…
…while #WNC looks like this TODAY. pic.twitter.com/8TLS7yspKe
— Matt Van Swol (@matt_vanswol) November 26, 2024
"The change of direction also caps a long-standing pattern, as Biden has often resisted upgrading Kyiv’s weaponry for fear of escalation with Russia, only to relent a few months later," the report added.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 11/27/2024 - 19:25

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Historians Debate Ukraine War As WWIII Risk Mounts: Niall Ferguson Vs Scott Horton
Historians Debate Ukraine War As WWIII Risk Mounts: Niall Ferguson Vs Scott Horton

Watch the debate replay below (or on YouTube)


https://t.co/Rq7jRVhabg
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) November 27, 2024
* * *

Despite Trump’s promises to bring a swift end to the war in Ukraine by negotiating with Russia, the war has escalated to a dangerous inflection point with long-range U.S., British, and French missiles being deployed deep in Russian territory and talks of deploying NATO troops in Ukraine. That… and anonymous officials in the New York Times saying what is impossible to believe:

"Several officials even suggested that Mr. Biden could return nuclear weapons to Ukraine that were taken from it after the fall of the Soviet Union. That would be an instant and enormous deterrent. But such a step would be complicated and have serious implications," the newspaper wrote.

Amid the chaos, ZeroHedge will be hosting preeminent historians Sir Niall Ferguson and Scott Horton to debate the history of the conflict and U.S. policy in the region. They will be joined by the Hoover Institute's Peter Robinson (if you’ve seen a Thomas Sowell interview, it was probably his).

Join us at 7pm ET right here on the ZeroHedge homepage (as well as Twitter/X and YouTube channels) for an epic matchup that you won’t find anywhere else.

Ferguson is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution and at the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at Harvard University. He’s written over a dozen books on geopolitical and monetary history.

Horton is the founder of the Libertarian Institute and recently published his book, Provoked, on the history of the war in Ukraine and decades of rising tensions between the U.S. and Russia.

We hope you’ll join us on the eve of Thanksgiving. Recent war context included below:

***

Nukes for Ukraine?!

Days ago, The NY Times revealed that US and European officials have discussed a range of options they believe will deter Russia from taking more Ukrainian territory, including the possibility of providing Kiev with nuclear weapons. "US and European officials are discussing deterrence as a possible security guarantee for Ukraine, such as stockpiling a conventional arsenal sufficient to strike a punishing blow if Russia violates a cease-fire," the report said.

The article then stated, "Several officials even suggested that Mr. Biden could return nuclear weapons to Ukraine that were taken from it after the fall of the Soviet Union."

Former Russian president and current deputy chairman of the Security Counsel Dmitry Medvedev has responded by pointing out that if the West actually went forward with transferring nukes to Ukraine, this would be seen as tantamount to an attack on Russia. He explained that this is a key aspect of Russia's newly expanded nuclear doctrine.
Image source: Presidency of Russia

In a Telegram post on Tuesday, Medvedev specifically referenced the recent NY Times report, and said: "Looks like my sad joke about crazy senile Biden, who’s eager to go out with a bang and take a substantial part of humanity with him, is becoming dangerously real."

Medvedev then stressed that "giving nukes to a country that’s at war with the greatest nuclear power" is so absurd that Biden and any of his officials considering it must have "massive paranoid psychosis."

His biggest and most specific threat came as follows: 

"The fact of transferring such weapons may be considered as the launch of an attack against our country in accordance with Paragraph 19 of the ‘Basic Principles of State Policy on Nuclear Deterrence’," Medvedev wrote.

Talk of NATO Troops

Prominent French publication Le Monde on Monday followed by saying serious discussions over injecting Western troops into the war have intensified in the last days: 

As the conflict in Ukraine enters a new phase of escalation, discussions over sending Western troops and private defense companies to Ukraine have been revived, Le Monde has learned from corroborating sources. These are sensitive discussions, most of which are classified – relaunched in light of a potential American withdrawal of support for Kyiv once Donald Trump takes office on January 20, 2025.

Britain is once again at the forefront of urging NATO's deeper involvement in the war, which threatens at any moment to explode into WW3 among nuclear-armed powers. Enter Keir Starmer... in the hawkish footsteps of Boris Johnson:

However, it was relaunched in recent weeks thanks to the visit to France of the UK prime minister, Keir Starmer, for the November 11th commemorations. "Discussions are underway between the UK and France on defense cooperation, particularly with a view to creating a hard core of allies in Europe, focused on Ukraine and wider European security," confided a British military source to Le Monde.

Jean-Noël Barro's aforementioned words about 'no options' ruled out appears to have been a reflection on these continued 'sensitive' conversations.

There have been more reports of US-supplied ATACMS launches on Russian territory since their initial use last week:


Looks like Khalino airbase in Kursk, where Russia launches drones to attack Ukraine, just got a taste of ATACMS. The guy in the video seems pretty impressed! pic.twitter.com/ui8r0je74p
— Maria Avdeeva (@maria_avdv) November 25, 2024

Tyler Durden
Wed, 11/27/2024 - 19:44

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Electric Revenge: Texas Sues BlackRock And Others For 'Conspiring' To Quash Coal, Sending Energy Prices Soaring
Electric Revenge: Texas Sues BlackRock And Others For 'Conspiring' To Quash Coal, Sending Energy Prices Soaring

Texas is leading a new lawsuit with 10 other red states against BlackRock, Vanguard and State Street for allegedly breaking antitrust law by colluding to suppress coal - causing electricity prices to spike.



"Competitive markets — not the dictates of far-flung asset managers — should determine the price Americans pay for electricity," wrote Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton in the complaint.


The Republican-led states, including West Virginia and Montana, are asking the court to bar the three largest US investment firms from using their stock in coal companies to vote on shareholder resolutions and take other steps in a way that restrains output and limits market competition. -Bloomberg


The complaint, filed in Tyler, Texas, is one of the highest profile lawsuits targeting companies that promote environmental, social and governance goals, or ESH.

"Over several years, the three asset managers acquired substantial stockholdings in every significant publicly held coal producer in the United States, thereby gaining the power to control the policies of the coal companies. Using their combined influence over the coal market, the investment cartel collectively announced in 2021 their commitment to weaponize their shares to pressure the coal companies to accommodate "green energy" goals," the complaint continues.

"Blackrock, Vanguard, and State Street utilized the Climate Action 100 and the Net Zero Asset Managers Initiative to signal their mutual intent to reduce the output of thermal coal, which predictably increased the cost of electricity for Americans across the United States."

The 'cartel' is accused of "deliberately and artificially constricting supply," which "increased prices and enabled investment companies to produce extraordinary revenue gains."

The other states involved in the lawsuit are Alabama, Arkansas, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, West Virginia and Wyoming.


🚨BREAKING: Texas Sues BlackRock, State Street, and Vanguard for Illegally Conspiring to Manipulate Energy Markets, Driving Up Costs For Consumers
Texas will not tolerate the illegal weaponization of the financial industry in service of a destructive, politicized… pic.twitter.com/WrpftEr0cJ
— Attorney General Ken Paxton (@KenPaxtonTX) November 27, 2024

"Texas will not tolerate the illegal weaponization of the financial industry in service of a destructive, politicized 'environmental' agenda. BlackRock, Vanguard, and State Street formed a cartel to rig the coal market, artificially reduce the energy supply, and raise prices," said Paxton in a statement. "Their conspiracy has harmed American energy production and hurt consumers. This is a stunning violation of State and federal law."
The lawsuit follows years of investigation by GOP officials, who have taken aim at Wall Street's efforts to force a green agenda.

Specifically, the lawsuit accuses BlackRock, Vanguard and State Street of using their shareholdings in Peabody Energy Corp, Arch Resources, Inc. and others to press management to cut their carbon emissions starting in 2021 - at the height of the ESG boom, Bloomberg reports.

The firms also joined activist groups such as Climate Action 100+ and the Net Zero Asset Managers Initiative in which they formed "a syndicate and agreed to use their collective holdings of publicly traded coal companies to induce industry-wide output reductions."


The suit repeatedly refers to allegations that BlackRock, Vanguard and State Street have the power through their large shareholdings to constrain the supply of coal, which significantly diminishes competition in the market and produces “cartel-level profits” for the firms.

Climate-finance coalitions are “voluntary associations and therefore don’t include any form of collusion and coercion, so it’s hard to see a legal basis for this claim,” said Lisa Sachs, director of sustainable investment at Columbia University Law School. But “coal-financed politicians are now using the bully pulpit to scare financial institutions, which won’t in any way benefit the coal sector and will harm the constituents these AGs purport to represent.” -Bloomberg


That said, the firms have since reversed course - with State Street announcing in February that it quit Climate Action 100+ because its requirements were inconsistent with the firm's "independent approach" to shareholder voting. Vanguard left the Net Zero Asset Managers Initiative in 2022, however BlackRock and State Street remain members of the group.

Plaintiffs in the Texas lawsuit acknowledge the departures, but say that they don't "change the reality that defendants’ holdings threaten to substantially reduce competition in violation of Section 7 of the Clayton Act."

The case is Texas v. BlackRock, 24-cv-00437, US District Court, Eastern District of Texas (Tyler).

Tyler Durden
Wed, 11/27/2024 - 20:00

ZeroHedge News
Open 
In The Beginning, There Was Pax Americana
In The Beginning, There Was Pax Americana

Authored by Lorenzo Maria Pacini,

We often speak of the collective West, Hegemon, Seapower and Civilization of the Sea in relation to the United States of America. It is necessary to understand well what is the origin of this geopolitically determinant power for the world order.



He who wins the war, dictates the rules

Let us make clear at once an empirically incontrovertible factual truth: He who wins the war, dictates the rules of the post-war order. Whoever wins, writes history. Whether we like it or not, the defeated never had much decision-making power (which is not to say that they could not organize well to retaliate and return to power – but that is another matter).

World War II ended with the victory of the United States of America as the first, undefeated and predominant power. From there followed an expansion of U.S. influence toto orbe terrarum in all respects (cultural, economic, military, political).

The twentieth century was the “American century.” Almost the whole world took the shape the U.S. wanted to give it. The second half of the century was marked by the low-tension conflict of the Cold War, which ended-if it really did-with the collapse of the Soviet political system in the USSR and the beginning of the unipolar phase of American global domination. That period aroused much optimism in the West for a new world order, marking the end of the military and ideological rivalry of the 20th century. Two possibilities were on the horizon: a system based on balance of power and egalitarian sovereignty, or a U.S.-led liberal hegemony based on the values of democracy. The first approach evoked perpetual conflict, while the second promised lasting peace and global stability.

U.S. hegemony, already dominant in the transatlantic region after World War II, was seen as a model of peace and prosperity. However, the collapse of the Soviet Union removed the justification for a world order built on the balance of power, pushing the United States toward a mission of recognized hegemony to prevent the rise of new rivals. American supremacy, as declared by Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, was deemed “indispensable to ensure global stability.”

This was the Pax Americana: the U.S. would ensure a period of prosperity and global peace – as early as the end of WWII – by extending control over the entire world. A peace for America was equivalent to a peace for the globe; a war for America would mean war for the entire globe. The stated goal of building a peaceful world often justified imperialistic approaches, revealing the contradictions of the hegemonic project.

Set this paradigm as an axiom of reasoning in international relations and geopolitical programming, lo and behold, everything acquired new meaning. The world had been formatted and the “control room” was now in Washington.

The time of ideologies

It was the time of ideologies. In the “short century” everything had changed rapidly. The great world chessboard was constantly being shaken and reshuffled. The clash between the Western bloc and the Eastern – or Soviet – bloc characterized all concepts of each country’s politics in an extremely powerful way.

In the 1990s, two visions dominated the debate on world order: that of Francis Fukuyama and that of Samuel Huntington. Fukuyama in his famous book The End of History, envisioned a future in which liberal democracy and capitalism would triumph universally, leading to perpetual peace under the leadership of the United States: he argued that economic interdependence, democratic reforms, and shared institutions would unite the world around common values, which were, of course, American values. Any other model of civilization would have been beside the point, because History was finished, there would be nothing left to write about. In contrast, Huntington, wrote The Clash of Civilizations, in which he predicted that the world would be fragmented into distinct cultural blocs based on civil, religious and economic identities. Individualism and human rights, according to him, were peculiar to the West and not universal. His theorizing assumed a future marked by conflicts between civilizations, fueled by the decline of Western hegemony and the emergence of alternative powers, particularly in Confucian and Islamic societies.

The influence of Fukuyama’s ideas shaped post-Cold War Western politics, justifying the expansion and exceptionalism of Pax Americana. Exceptionalism that has been one of the U.S.’s most pragmatic “values”: there are rules and only we can break them, when we want, how we want and without having to account to anyone.

History, however, does not have only one actor: other countries, such as Russia, have chosen to be fascinated by Huntington’s proposal – confrontational, certainly, but not already “final.” In Russia, this debate has deep roots, linked to the historical rivalry between Westernists and Slavophiles. In the 1990s, Russia initially tried to move closer to the West, but the West’s failure to include it reinforced the idea of a distinct Russian civilization, culminating in Vladimir Putin’s view that no civilization can claim to be superior.

A matter of ideologies, indeed, a low-profile but very high-value battle in which the steps of the new century that was beginning would be defined. These divergences highlighted the tension between universalist aspirations and distinctive cultural identities, defining the geopolitical conflicts of the 21st century.

Building Pax Americana at any cost

Washington promoted a world order based on the Pax Americana, a liberal hegemony that reflected the success of the peaceful and prosperous transatlantic system created by the United States during the conflict with the Soviet Union. It proposed to extend this model globally, citing as examples Germany and Japan, transformed from militaristic and imperialist nations into “peaceful”-or, rather, defeated-democracies under U.S. influence. But the success of these transformations had been made possible by the presence of a common adversary, Russia, and the history of Latin America suggested that U.S. hegemony was not always synonymous with progress and peace.

Charles Krauthammer described the post-Cold War period as a “unipolar moment,” characterized by American dominance, where the new Hegemon dictated the rules and the others had little choice. Although he recognized that a multi-participant set-up (today we can say “multipolarism”) would inevitably return, he believed it was necessary to exploit unipolarity to ensure temporary peace, avoiding a return to turbulent periods. There was a weakness, however: the United States was unlikely to voluntarily relinquish its dominant role, preferring instead to counter any threat by force, fueled by an obsession with its own historical greatness. It is a missile issue: whoever has it bigger, wins. Let us not forget that the U.S. invented the strategic concept of deterrence precisely by virtue of the atomic weapon it held, throwing the world into a climate of constant fear and risk in which we still live today.

It is equally true that many Americans wished for a dismantling of the U.S. empire, proposing a less interventionist foreign policy focused on domestic challenges: abandoning the role of superpower would allow the United States to strengthen its society by addressing economic, industrial and social issues. Walter Lippmann argued that a mature great power should avoid global crusades, limiting the use of power to preserve internal stability and coherence. Sort of like a “good hegemon.” But this has not been the case.

The notion of “good hegemon” has been criticized for the risk of corruption inherent in power itself. John Quincy Adams warned that the search for enemies to fight could turn the United States from a champion of freedom into a global dictator. Similarly, President Kennedy, in his 1963 speech at American University, opposed a Pax Americana imposed by arms, calling instead for a genuine and inclusive peace that would promote global human progress, which he called “The Peace of All Time.” An ideal that has faded into the oblivion of collective memory.

American hegemony is the sine qua non for having a Pax Americana. The universalism that characterizes this hegemony admits of no discounts. Inequality among global powers has been exploited as a pivot to increase U.S. profits and administrative expansion at the expense of weaker countries. Neoliberally speaking, there is no error in this. Everything is very consistent. The struggle of the strongest to destroy all the smallest. Not only the one who produces and earns the most wins, but the one who can maintain the power to produce and earn the most wins.

A hegemonic system needs internal stability without which it cannot subsist. A kingdom divided in itself cannot function. This applies to economics as well as politics. It is essential that the ideological paradigm does not change, that power can always be understood and transmitted, from leader to leader, as it has been successfully established. Because the “peace” of the ancient Romans was a peace given by the maintenance of political control to the very ends of the empire, which only came about through a solid military administration.

The Americans did not invent anything. To really control (realpolitik) one must have military control. In front of an atomic bomb, reasoning about political philosophies is worth little. The U.S. knows this very well and its concept of Pax has always been unequivocally based on military supremacy and the maintenance of it.

Something changed when with the first decade of the 2000s new poles, new civilization-states, began to appear that promoted alternative models of global life. The U.S. began to see its power wane, day by day, until today, where the West is worth less than the “rest of the world,” the U.S. no longer has its “exclusive” status, and we are not even so sure that it is then so strong that it can control the globe. The geometries change again. What Pax for what borders of what empire?

Is Trump ready to give up his Pax?

The crux of the question is, if imperialistic military supremacy is what has allowed the U.S. to maintain its dominance and this dominance is precipitating today, will the newly elected U.S. President Donald Trump really be ready to compromise the Pax Americana?

We are talking about a polymorphous compromise:


Economically, he would have to accept the end of the dollar era and downsize the U.S. market on comparison with sovereign global currencies. Practically throw a century of global financial architecture in the trash.


Politically, accept that it is possible to think otherwise and do otherwise. Politics is not just American “democracy.” There are so many possibilities, so many different models, so many futures to be written according to other scripts.


Militarily, it means stopping with the diplomacy of arrogance and threats, accepting that we cannot arbitrarily decide how to deal with anyone and stop aiming missiles at the flags of other states.


Most complicated and risky of all, all this means giving up peace within the United States. If the balances of power implemented externally are broken, those internally begin to falter and the organism undergoes remodeling.

Giving up the Pax Americana as it has been known does not mean that alternatives do not exist. The concept of “pax” is broad and can be interpreted differently by the American school. Taking this step, however, involves giving up a “tradition” of global power, having to go through the collapse of the entire U.S. domestic system and then rebuilding an alternative.

Make America Great Again will mean what? Restoring American hegemony in the world, or rebuilding America?

Tyler Durden
Wed, 11/27/2024 - 20:30

The Verge
Open 
Mark Zuckerberg had dinner with Donald Trump at Mar-a-Lago

Mail Online
Open 
The 2024 Quiz Of The Year Part Two - Can you answer CRAIG BROWN's 12 questions?
1) Russell Brand claims that on April 28 something happened to him which changed his life. What?

TechRadar News
Open 
NYT Wordle today — answer and hints for game #1258, Thursday, November 28

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Rodri aiming to defy odds and make his Manchester City comeback this season
City said Spaniard would not play again this campaignIt would be ‘positive not to give up the season’Rodri is targeting a comeback this season despite the Manchester City midfielder having previously been ruled out until next year due to a serious knee injury.The Spaniard suffered ACL ligament damage in September’s 2-2 draw with Arsenal at the Etihad Stadium. After undergoing surgery City announced he would not be available until next season. Continue reading...

Russia Today News
Open 
Berlin confirms sanctions against Russian news crew

The Register
Open 
India spending $170M to take its tax system paperless by rebuilding three legacy systems
Let's see how this goes India has decided to rebuild the platforms it uses for handle tax matters and make its system paperless.…

ZDNet News
Open 
The TCL Q65 98-inch TV is almost 50% at Amazon for Black Friday
Looking to pick up a quality big-screen TV without spending a fortune? Amazon is offering the 98-inch TCL Q65 for just $1,600, saving you almost 50% on one of the already most affordable big-screen TVs.

ZDNet News
Open 
Grab the 55-inch Samsung Odyssey Ark for 40% off at Amazon for Black Friday
The 55-inch Samsung Odyssey is the ultimate gaming monitor. And right now you can save $1,200 on one at Best Buy, but you'll have to hurry because a deal this good means stock might not last.

ZDNet News
Open 
Save $350 on the 75-inch Amazon Fire TV Omni for Black Friday
The Amazon Fire TV Omni supports Dolby Atmos and HDR10, and you can save $350 on the 75-inch model right now at Amazon.

ZDNet News
Open 
This Nintendo Switch bundle is just $335 at Amazon for Black Friday
Black Friday sales are officially underway. And if you have a gamer on your shopping list, you can grab this Nintendo Switch bundle with Mario Kart 8 Deluxe and 3 months of Nintendo Online for just $335 at Amazon. But you'll have to hurry, Nintendo deals don't last long.

ZDNet News
Open 
Grab a PlayStation 5 Slim disc console for 15% off at Amazon for Black Friday
If you've been waiting for the right moment to pick up a PS5 Slim, you can get a disc-based version for $76 off right now at Amazon during their Black Friday sale event.

ZDNet News
Open 
Level up your PS5 with this PlayStation VR2 bundle for $250 off before Black Friday
The PS VR2 headset allows players to experience games in a new way. This bundle, which includes Horizon Call of the Mountain, is just $350 at Amazon ahead of Cyber Week.

Slashdot
Open 
Data Broker Leaves 600K+ Sensitive Files Exposed Online
A security researcher discovered an unprotected database belonging to SL Data Services containing over 600,000 sensitive files, including criminal histories and background checks with names, addresses, and social media accounts. The Register reports: We don't know how long the personal information was openly accessible. Infosec specialist Jeremiah Fowler says he found the Amazon S3 bucket in October and reported it to the data collection company by phone and email every few days for more than two weeks. [The info service provider eventually closed up the S3 bucket, says Fowler, although he never received any response.] In addition to not being password protected, none of the information was encrypted, he told The Register. In total, the open bucket contained 644,869 PDF files in a 713.1 GB archive.

Some 95 percent of the documents Fowler saw were labeled "background checks," he said. These contained full names, home addresses, phone numbers, email addresses, employment, family members, social media accounts, and criminal record history belonging to thousands of people. In at least one of these documents, the criminal record indicated that the person had been convicted of sexual misconduct. It included case details, fines, dates, and additional charges. While court records and sex offender status are usually public records in the US, this exposed cache could be combined with other data points to make complete profiles of people -- along with their family members and co-workers -- providing everything criminals would need for targeted phishing and/or social engineering attacks.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Slashdot
Open 
Senators Say TSA's Facial Recognition Program Is Out of Control
A bipartisan group of 12 senators has urged the TSA inspector general to investigate the agency's use of facial recognition technology, citing concerns over privacy, civil liberties, and its expansion to over 430 airports without sufficient safeguards or proven effectiveness. Gizmodo reports: "This technology will soon be in use at hundreds of major and mid-size airports without an independent evaluation of the technology's precision or an audit of whether there are sufficient safeguards in place to protect passenger privacy," the senators wrote. The letter was signed by Jeffrey Merkley (D-OR), John Kennedy (R-LA), Ed Markey (D-MA), Ted Cruz (R-TX), Roger Marshall (R-Kansas), Ron Wyden (D-OR), Steve Daines (R-MT), Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), Bernie Sanders (I-VT), Cynthia Lummis (R-WY), Chris Van Hollen (D-MD), and Peter Welch (D-VT).

While the TSA's facial recognition program is currently optional and only in a few dozen airports, the agency announced in June that it plans to expand the technology to more than 430 airports. And the senators' letter quotes a talk given by TSA Administrator David Pekoske in 2023 in which he said "we will get to the point where we require biometrics across the board." [...] The latest letter urges the TSA's inspector general to evaluate the agency's facial recognition program to determine whether it's resulted in a meaningful reduction in passenger delays, assess whether it's prevented anyone on no-fly lists from boarding a plane, and identify how frequently it results in identity verification errors.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Five ways to avoid being ripped off on Black Friday
Experts tell us how to work out if a deal is a genuine bargain or could leave you out of pocket.

Mail Online
Open 
What Raya is REALLY like: Inside the A-list dating app where you can match with the stars - as Charlize Theron is rumoured to have opened an account
Since it was launched in 2015, Raya has attracted Hollywood stars, Grammy winners, and Olympians. But, in the nearly 10 years since, has 'Illuminati Tinder' lost its sheen.

Mail Online
Open 
DAILY MAIL COMMENT: Kemi Badenoch's promising vision on migration
For three decades, our political elite has allowed mass migration on a historic scale, changing forever the social and cultural landscape of this country.

Mail Online
Open 
The 2024 Quiz Of The Year Part Two - Can you answer CRAIG BROWN's 13 questions?
1) Russell Brand claims that on April 28 something happened to him which changed his life. What?

Mail Online
Open 
Women will 'soon' make up the majority of doctors in UK, says medical regulator
A General Medical Council report reveals that the workforce is close to reaching 'parity' between male and female medics.

Mail Online
Open 
Brits are getting life admin done while on the toilet, survey indicates - including banking, the weekly shop and even dating apps
It may be the smallest room in the house but it appears to be one of the top destinations for getting all important life admin done.

Mail Online
Open 
Motorcycle gang member who planted a pipe bomb under rival's father's van amid a feud is jailed
A tattooed biker who planted a pipe bomb under the van of a rival's father's amid a motorcycle gang feud has been jailed.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
FTC’s latest case against Microsoft represents Lina Khan’s last swing against Big Tech
The move by Khan, who has less than two months remaining in office before the Trump administration takes over, is one last attempt to rein in Big Tech.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ukraine war briefing: US urges Zelenskyy to lower conscription age to 18
Biden administration readying another $725m in arms for Kyiv; Zelenskyy to approve tax increases for defence funding. What we know on day 1,009 A senior official in Joe Biden’s administration has told the Associated Press that the US is urging Ukraine to quickly increase the size of its military by drafting more troops and lowering the conscription age to as young as 18. The official, speaking to the Associated Press on the condition of anonymity, said on Wednesday the outgoing Democratic administration wants Ukraine to lower the mobilisation age from 25 to help expand the pool of fighting age men available.The Biden administration is preparing another urgent weapons package for Ukraine, this time worth $725m, two US officials said on Wednesday. It is predicted to include land mines, drones, Stinger anti-air missiles, and Himars ammunition, including GMLRS rockets with cluster warheads. The formal notification to Congress of the weapons package could come as soon as Monday, one official said. It is much more than the US president’s recent use of his presidential drawdown authority (PDA), which allows him to use weapons stocks to help allies in an emergency. Recent PDA announcements have typically ranged from $125m to $250 million. Biden has an estimated $4bn to $5bn in PDA already authorised by Congress that he could use before Donald Trump takes over on 20 January.Volodymyr Zelenskyy is due on Thursday to sign Ukraine’s 2025 budget, which calls for the country’s first wartime tax increases. The finance minister, Serhiy Marchenko, said Ukraine hoped tax increases would generate additional budget revenues of 141bn hryvnia (US$3.39bn). The prime minister, Denys Shmyhal, said record sums would be directed to weapons production and purchases including modernising Ukraine’s defence industry and buying drones.There was no word on whether South Korea will supply arms to Ukraine after Kyiv’s defence minister, Rustem Umerov, met with the South Korean president, Yoon Suk Yeol, in Seoul on Wednesday. Yoon’s office said the two sides agreed to continue to share information on North Korean troops in Russia and North Korean-Russian weapons and technology transfers, while closely coordinating with the US. Umerov briefed other South Korean officials on the status of the Russia-Ukraine war and expressed hope that Kyiv and Seoul would strengthen cooperation, the statement said. Umerov predicted a “tangible strengthening of security for our peoples and regions”.Russia’s rouble has plunged to its lowest rate against the dollar since the early weeks of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in the wake of new western sanctions and growing geopolitical tensions, Pjotr Sauer writes.Donald Trump has picked Keith Kellogg to serve as special envoy for Ukraine and Russia – a newly conceived role given the ongoing war, Gloria Oladipo writes. Kellogg served as a national security adviser to the former vice-president Mike Pence, then acting security adviser to Trump himself after Michael Flynn had to resign. Kellogg has said he would emphasise getting the two countries to the negotiating table.Russia’s sabotage of western targets may prompt Nato to consider invoking its article 5 mutual defence clause, Bruno Kahl, head of Germany’s foreign intelligence service, has warned. The BND chief, speaking in Berlin on Wednesday, said he expected Moscow to further step up its hybrid warfare.Nordic and Baltic states and Poland said on Wednesday that they would in the coming months step up support for Ukraine, including to its defence industry, and invest in making more ammunition available. “We are committed to strengthening our deterrence, and defence, including resilience, against conventional as well as hybrid attacks, and to expanding sanctions against Russia as well as against those who enable Russia’s aggression,” the leaders of Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Latvia, Norway, Poland and Sweden said in a statement.The head of the EU executive, Ursula von der Leyen, called for more defence spending in Europe over the next five years, as her top team was voted in by a wafer-thin majority in the European parliament. The EU faces acute challenges, including the war in Ukraine, the return of Donald Trump and the climate crisis, all against a backdrop of deepening fears of economic decline as von der Leyen starts her second term. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Canada leaders agree to unite against Trump tariff threat amid reports of retaliatory measures
Deputy PM says ‘we need to be smart, strong and united’ after meeting on threat by US president-elect of a blanket 25% tax on imports from Canada Canada’s federal government and the premiers of the 10 provinces have agreed to work together against a threat by US president-elect Donald Trump to impose sweeping tariffs on Canadian imports, with one official saying the country was already examining possible retaliatory measures.“We agreed that we need to be smart, strong and united in meeting this challenge,” deputy prime minister Chrystia Freeland told reporters on Wednesday after a virtual meeting with the premiers called by the prime minister, Justin Trudeau. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
New Zealand v England: first men’s cricket Test, day one – live
Live updates from the 10pm GMT start in ChristchurchAustralia’s mission improbable: crack Bumrah’s geniusRight, anthems sung, players out. Chris Woakes has the ball. Cricket imminent.“Why is Bashir playing instead of Leach?” harrumphs Paul McIntyre. Well, because he’s England’s first-choice spinner in all conditions, as Ben Stokes put it in Pakistan last month. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Voters air frustrations ahead of Irish general election
Voters in the Republic of Ireland go to the polls on Friday for the country's general election.

UK Government News
Open 
UK–ASEAN Trade Mission connects UK-Indonesia women entrepreneurs
The trade mission facilitated business-to-business opportunities between UK and women-led Indonesian companies in sectors such as textiles and apparel.

Mail Online
Open 
Liz Hatton dies aged 17: Cancer-battling photographer seen hugging Kate 'went out in a blaze of glory' after 'unbelievably brave' fight, her heartbroken family reveal
Liz Hatton died at her home in Harrogate, North Yorkshire, at the age of just 17, less than a year after being diagnosed with an incurable desmoplastic small round cell tumour.

Mail Online
Open 
The true price to pay? Labour's inheritance tax raid on farmers could hit five times as many businesses as Rachel Reeves claimed
The tax raid on farmers will hit five times as many businesses as Rachel Reeves has claimed, valuers said last night.

Mail Online
Open 
Senior cop who killed great-grandmother is suspended WITHOUT pay - as he fights jail time over fears for his safety
NSW Police confirmed Senior Constable Kristian White had been suspended from the force without pay in a statement on Thursday.

Mail Online
Open 
Fury as Labour were warned MONTHS ago by Vauxhall owners that electric car targets threatened Luton factory
Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds told the Commons that the boss of Stellantis, which owns Vauxhall, first warned him just 10 days after the election in mid-July.

Mail Online
Open 
Killer uncle who groomed then murdered his schoolgirl niece, 15, makes bid for freedom despite never revealing where he dumped her body
Stuart Campbell, now 66, who is serving a life sentence for the murder of his 15-year-old niece Danielle Jones, has made a second bid for his release despite refusing to reveal where her body is.

Mail Online
Open 
I'm A Celebrity fans claim Ant McPartlin 'STILL hates' Dean McCullough as they spot another snub after a string of tense moments between the pair
Dean, 32, was once again chosen to take on the latest trial during Monday's show, but in a surprise twist, conquered his fears to earn a respectable 10 stars for camp.

Mail Online
Open 
Judy Garland's Wizard of Oz ruby slippers are set to go under the hammer for £2m - after being stolen by mobster
The magical footwear is expected to sell for upwards of £2million when it goes under the hammer at Heritage Auctions in Dallas on December 7.

Mail Online
Open 
Bryson DeChambeau finally completes insane golf challenge at his luxury mansion after two weeks of trying
Bryson DeChambeau has completed an incredible golf feat after just over two weeks of trying. The 31-year-old is a two-time US Open champion, but on November 13 embarked on a new challenge.

Mail Online
Open 
DAN MCLAUGHLIN: Kamala Harris's problem is an open secret. So why DO suicidal Democrat elites refuse to admit it?
Democrats aren't ready to admit that they have a problem. Until they do, they won't find the solution. And it won't come from California, or any place that looks like it.

Mail Online
Open 
ALAN MENDOZA: Kemi Badenoch's speech was brave and serious - and one so many Britons will agree with
In her first major policy speech since being elected, she chose to tackle that most thorny of political issues, mass migration - and she did not disappoint.

Mail Online
Open 
Lorraine Kelly takes a savage swipe at her ITV colleague Richard Madeley as she hosts Have I Got News For You
The chat show host, 64, joined comedian team captains Paul Merton and Ian Hislop along with comedian Maisie Adam and journalist Matt Chorley.

Mail Online
Open 
Ant and Dec reveal MAJOR change to I'm A Celebrity that might see campmates go without basic hygiene products and even BANNED from using the toilet
On Wednesday's episode of Unpacked, the hosting duo announced the campmates would be split into teams of four and each given a cash card.

Mail Online
Open 
'Men get sexy, we get haggard!' Halle Berry, 58, discusses her frustration with beauty standards and reveals her mission to redefine ageing
Halle Berry has shared that she 'wishes' someone would say something other than 'you're so pretty'.

Mail Online
Open 
EDEN CONFIDENTIAL: Bun fight! Gail Bakery tycoon Gail Mejia attacks rival Yotam Ottolenghi
RICHARD EDEN: behind the genteel facade, its co-founder Gail Mejia is seething that one of her most celebrated former employees, Yotam Ottolenghi, has 'lifted' her blueprint for success.

Mail Online
Open 
Bridget Phillipson urges teachers not to take part in pro-Palestine demonstrations at schools TODAY
The Education Secretary - Bridget Phillipson - last night urged teachers not to take part in pro-Palestine demonstrations at schools today.

Mail Online
Open 
Winner of a Jacob Elordi impersonator competition insists he doesn't look like the Aussie hunk : 'I'm just tall'
A winner of a Jacob Elordi impersonator competition has claimed he doesn't actually look like the Hollywood hunk.

Mail Online
Open 
Slowthai's friend 'forced himself on woman and raped her at house party after rapper's gig', court hears
A woman has described how the friend of Grammy-nominated rapper Slowthai (Pictured with wife Anne Marie outside Oxford crown court) forced himself upon her at a house party, a court heard. 

Mail Online
Open 
Glad you're not here! More parents are jetting off alone on holiday without their children, poll reveals
Perhaps it's no surprise that more couples with younger children are choosing to jet off abroad without their families.

Mail Online
Open 
MATT RIDLEY: Labour's car industry wrecking policy might cut global emissions by 0.016%. How the Chinese must be laughing at us!
MATT RIDLEY: The miserable news that Stellantis, the owner of Vauxhall, is considering laying off 1,100 workers from its van-manufacturing plant is a hammer blow to Luton.

Mail Online
Open 
Pictured: 'Loving' mother, 74, killed when she was hit by a 'sports car that mounted the footpath while a youth, 18, was behind the wheel'
The family of 'loving' Mary Kinsey, 74, from Felixstowe, East Suffollk have paid tribute after she was killed by a sports car driven by an 18-year-old that mounted the pavement.

Mail Online
Open 
Conor McGregor dropped from ANOTHER brand: Wetherspoon takes shamed MMA star's stout off tap in the wake of his civil rape case loss
The pub chain has confirmed it has taken the shamed fighter's Forged Irish Stout off its taps at all of its seven boozers in the Republic of Ireland.

Mail Online
Open 
Texas college student dies eating her favorite meal on first date after restaurant changed menu
Alison Pickering, 23, died after eating the mahi-mahi at Newton's Saddlerack in Texas on May 4, 2023, even though she had eaten the meal before without any problems.

Mail Online
Open 
Soho's famed Groucho club was a byword for debauchery, drug taking and sex romps in its heyday - and now it's been shut down by police
The Groucho Club, which has been forced to close after its licence was suspended due to an alleged 'association with serious crime ', was famed for its hedonism in the Nineties and Noughties.

Mail Online
Open 
How Kemi Badenoch will change the Tories immigration policy as she declares Britain is 'not a hotel - it's our home' in first major policy speech as Conservative Party leader
Kemi Badenoch last night signalled a tough new Tory approach to immigration as she declared Britain is 'not a hotel - it's our home'.

Mail Online
Open 
Brits face paying more for their morning coffee - as the price of beans jump to their highest level in nearly 50 years
The price of arabica coffee on global commodity markets jumped to $3.18 a pound (£2.50) - the highest since 1977.

Mail Online
Open 
'Nanny state' SNP plans to cut national speed limit from 60mph to 50mph will result in much longer car journeys
The national speed limit is set to be slashed to 50 miles per hour on all of Scotland's single carriageway roads under 'nanny state' proposals by SNP ministers.

Mail Online
Open 
How listening to natural sounds such as birdsong cuts stress - while traffic noise increases it
The research lends support for anyone who is a firm believer in the curative powers of a walk in the countryside or through a forest.

Mail Online
Open 
The unassuming Welsh hideout of FBI's most wanted: Fugitive 'terrorist' kept low profile in remote village where he drove seven-year-old Seat and ate vegan food while on the run over 2003 San Francisco double bombing
To the handful of neighbours with whom he shared a wooded hillside above the stunning Conwy Valley with views into the foothills of Snowdonia, he was known as Danny.

Mail Online
Open 
Dolph Lundgren, 67, reveals he's now cancer free after doctors said he only had '2 to 3 years' to live
Dolph Lundgren shared some incredibly heartwarming news to kick off the holiday season. The Expendables star, 67, took to Instagram to announce he is now cancer-free after a nine-year battle.

Mail Online
Open 
Prison worker, 33, who was caught with cocaine and heroin amid secret relationship with a gangster inmate avoids jail
A prison worker caught with class A drugs after investigators discovered she was in a relationship with a gangster inmate has avoided jail.

Mail Online
Open 
Father of Egypt yacht crewman tells of how his son 'sent out a distress signal before boat sank': Two British survivors are named
The yacht is understood to have been carrying 31 tourists and 13 staff when it was hit by a large wave near Marsa Alam in Egypt on Monday, causing it to capsize

Mail Online
Open 
The professional gangs running Britain's Beggar Junctions: How 'aggressive' groups 'work in shifts' to hassle drivers out of hundreds every day
Groups of beggars are already operating in Manchester, Walsall and in central London, 'intimidating' motorists, leaving some fearing for their safety.

Mail Online
Open 
EPHRAIM HARDCASTLE: Mark Carney, ex-governor of the Bank of England, endorsed Rachel Reeves as 'a serious economist'
As Chancellor Rachel Reeves is accused of fashioning a CV which might not be completely accurate, what does one of her former famous backers make of it all?

Mail Online
Open 
How women are renting their Uber Eats delivery accounts to illegal immigrant men for hundreds of pounds to help them avoid right-to-work and criminal record checks
EXCLUSIVE: Users of the popular food delivery app have complained of drivers not matching their profile picture, with many promised a female driver only for a man to turn up instead.

Mail Online
Open 
It's grey Britain! UK weather warning map reveals area where thick fog will blanket today - as Met Office issues alert
A yellow weather warning has been issued for northern Ireland and parts of England as patches of fog form overnight with temperatures plummeting below zero.

Mail Online
Open 
'Asbos for dogs' will drive us out our homes! Furious owners say they will move if London council enforces plan to ban pets off leads in parks
EXCLUSIVE: Dog owners have hit back at 'ridiculous' plans to introduce 'dog Asbos' in a London borough and said they will be flouting any restrictions and leaving the area if they're ever enforced.

Mail Online
Open 
Ariana Grande's incredible transformation from red-haired teen to tanned pop princess - as fans express concern over super slim star in Wicked role
Ariana Grande has burst back into the spotlight after the highly-anticipated release of the film adaptation of Broadway musical Wicked last Friday. 

Mail Online
Open 
Can YOU spot the supermarket showstoppers: One of these party look duos is designer - the other is an amazing bargain. They fooled our fashion experts so can you guess...and could your friends?
Christmas party season is almost here - and I'll let you in on a fashionable secret: this season you can find a truly showstopping outfit in the supermarket.

Mail Online
Open 
I'm A Celeb is dragged into a fix row as disgruntled viewers claim producers have ALREADY picked a winner after they were favoured more than other campmates during latest episode
Fans of the show are convinced that the broadcaster have already picked this season's winner after one camp mate appeared to have been favoured.

Mail Online
Open 
Mexican President vows to stop migration through Mexico into the U.S. 'effective immediately,' Trump says
The President of Mexico Claudia Sheinbaum has vowed to stop illegal migration through Mexico into the U.S. 'effective immediately,' Donald Trump announced.

Telegraph
Open 
New Zealand vs England, first Test: Score and latest updates from day one

The Hill
Open 
GOP Rep. Van Orden willing to 'pay more for guacamole' if it means getting rid of fentanyl
Republican Rep. Derrick Van Orden (Wis.) said he is willing to “pay more for guacamole” under President-elect Trump’s tariff plan if it means getting rid of fentanyl across the country. Van Orden joined CNN’s Boris Sanchez on Wednesday and was asked how the GOP plans to implement the tariff plan and its mass deportation agenda...

The Hill
Open 
Trump says he's planning 'large scale' ad campaign on Fentanyl crisis
President-elect Trump announced plans to launch a “large scale” ad campaign on Wednesday with the goal of educating Americans on the effects of fentanyl. “I will be working on a large scale United States Advertising Campaign, explaining how bad Fentanyl is for people to use - Millions of lives being so needlessly destroyed. By the...

Mac Rumours
Open 
AirPods Pro 2 Get Massive $95 Discount for Black Friday, Available For Just $153.99
Black Friday is almost here, and Amazon has one of the best deals of the year available to purchase right now. You can get the AirPods Pro 2 (USB-C) for just $153.99, down from $249.00.



Note: MacRumors is an affiliate partner with Amazon. When you click a link and make a purchase, we may receive a small payment, which helps us keep the site running.



This sale beats the previous all-time low price by nearly $40 and is overall one of the best deals we're tracking for Black Friday 2024. The AirPods Pro 2 were updated in 2023 with USB-C, and also feature Active Noise Cancellation, Apple's H2 chip, and Spatial Audio.



$95 OFFAirPods Pro 2 for $153.99



You can find all the Apple Black Friday Deals currently available in our dedicated post. For everything else, we're keeping track of all of the season's best Apple-related deals in our Black Friday roundup, so be sure to check back throughout the month for an updated list of all the most notable discounts you'll find for Black Friday 2024.







Deals Newsletter

Interested in hearing more about top deals as we head into the holidays? Sign up for our Deals Newsletter and we'll keep you updated so you don't miss the biggest deals of the season!









Related Roundup: Apple DealsThis article, 'AirPods Pro 2 Get Massive $95 Discount for Black Friday, Available For Just $153.99' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
First new asthma attack treatment in 50 years
Around two million asthma and COPD attacks each year could be treated with the drug, a study suggests.

TechRadar News
Open 
Black Friday coupon scams are on the rise: here's how to avoid dodgy discount codes this sale season

Digital Trends
Open 
There’s a new Samsung Galaxy S25 spec leak, and it’s a bit disappointing
The Samsung Galaxy S25 line isn't going to arrive for another couple of months, but we just got a good look at what to expect for specs.

Digital Trends
Open 
35 early Black Friday deals for 2024: TVs, laptops, headphones
Black Friday will be here soon enough. We've picked out all the best early deals, whether you're looking for a laptop, TV, or something else.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump’s picks for new administration are focus of bomb threats and ‘swatting’
Pete Hegseth, Elise Stefanik and Matt Gaetz are among those who were either confirmed or reported to be targetedUS politics – live updatesPete Hegseth, Donald Trump’s defense secretary pick, was among several cabinet nominees and appointees of the president-elect’s incoming administration who were targeted with bomb threats and so-called “swatting” on Wednesday, the Guardian has learned.Elise Stefanik, a Republican congresswoman of New York and Trump’s pick for US ambassador to the United Nations, who has emerged as a hard-right loyalist of Trump in the last few years, was the subject of a bomb threat, her office said. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
'Hands on the trigger': Hezbollah vows to continue resistance despite ceasefire
Hezbollah has vowed to continue its resistance to Israel after the ceasefire came into effect.

Gizmodo
Open 
Why Do Fans Think Nessarose Could Be Wicked Part Two‘s Big Villain?
And does this make the house the hero in The Wizard of Oz?

Mail Online
Open 
Ladbroke Grove shooting second arrest: Man, 32, detained on suspicion of attempted murder after an eight-year-old girl was seriously hurt when gunman opened fire
A second man has been arrested on suspicion of attempted murder after an eight-year-old girl was seriously hurt in a shooting in Southern Row, Ladbroke Grove, West London.

Mail Online
Open 
Tractor at centre of flooding storm gets back to work after driver, 57, was arrested for speeding through flooded town and devastating businesses
A tractor used to drive through a flooded town centre causing scenes of carnage, was back to work in a field yesterday, after the farmer believed to have been behind the wheel was arrested. 

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Czech billionaire set to clinch deal to buy Royal Mail
Daniel Kretinsky is understood to have offered a series of concessions to the UK government.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
US to Introduce New Restrictions on China’s Access to Cutting-Edge Chips
The new limits, which are expected to be announced Monday, are intended to slow China’s ability to build large and powerful AI models.

Boing Boing
Open 
Beachcomber finds century-old casket and skeleton
A Chesapeake Bay beachcomber found most of a casket that contained most of a skeleton.
A Maryland Beachcomber found the remains of a coffin and a person partially submerged in the Chesapeake Bay. After law enforcement took a look, the Beachcomber decided to dig it up, afraid vandals or nature would destroy the grave. — Read the rest
The post Beachcomber finds century-old casket and skeleton appeared first on Boing Boing.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Democrats win California House seat from Republican incumbent – as it happened
This live coverage is ending now, thanks for following along. You can read the latest on Democrats winning a California house seat here: Democrat Derek Tran ousts Republican rival in key California House seatLeavitt wrote that the threats transpired Tuesday night and Wednesday morning, and included bomb threats and swatting, which refers to false reports of a crime to prompt police raids on a person’s home.Law enforcement “acted quickly,” wrote Leavitt, adding that “President Trump and the entire Transition team are grateful for their swift action.”
Leavitt did not say who specifically was targeted. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Liz Hatton dies aged 17: Cancer-battling photographer seen hugging Kate 'went out in a blaze of glory' after 'unbelievably brave' fight, her heartbroken family reveal
Liz Hatton passed away in the early hours yesterday at her home in Harrogate, North Yorkshire, at the age of just 17, less than a year after being diagnosed with an incurable desmoplastic small round cell tumour.

The Register
Open 
Salt Typhoon's surge extends far beyond US telcos
Plus, a brand-new backdoor, GhostSpider, is linked to the cyber spy crew's operations The reach of the China-linked Salt Typhoon gang extends beyond telecommunications giants in the United States, and its arsenal includes several backdoors – including a brand-new malware dubbed GhostSpider – according to Trend Micro researchers.…

ZDNet News
Open 
The Apple M4 MacBook Pro is already $250 off at B&H. Here's how to get the deal
The MacBook Pro M4 hasn't even been out for a month, but B&H already has a $250 off sale ahead of Black Friday.

ZDNet News
Open 
The best QLED TV I've tested got an upgrade, up to $2,000 off at Amazon for Black Friday
The TCL QM8 delivers excellent picture quality, great sound, and a dedicated picture mode at an affordable price -- and it's on sale during Amazon's Black Friday event.

ZDNet News
Open 
The most immersive gaming speaker system I've ever tested is $120 off for Black Friday
The SteelSeries Arena 9 can connect with up to three devices simultaneously, making it an excellent choice for multi-use media spaces. And you can save $120 when you buy it at Amazon during their Black Friday sale event.

ZDNet News
Open 
The best Mini LED TV I've tested isn't made by LG or TCL, and it's on sale for Black Friday
Hisense's flagship Mini LED TV, the U8N, is a solid pick for gamers and entertainment buffs alike. And right now during Best Buy's Black Friday sale event, you can save up to $1,100 on an excellent smart TV.

ZDNet News
Open 
The best Black Friday soundbar and speaker deals: Save on Bose, Sonos, Beats, and more
Black Friday is almost here, and we found the hottest deals already live on soundbars, subwoofers, rear, and Bluetooth speakers from Bose, Sonos, Beats, Sony, and more.

Slashdot
Open 
Tornado Cash Sanctions Overturned By US Appeals Court
A U.S. federal appeals court ruled that sanctions against Tornado Cash, a crypto transaction anonymization service, must be abandoned, stating that its immutable smart contracts do not constitute "property" under U.S. law and that the Treasury overstepped its authority. The ruling is available here (PDF). CoinDesk reports: The decision answers a controversial privacy debate on whether the government -- via a sanctions list maintained by the U.S. Treasury Department -- has a right to target the technology because it's associated with criminals. The ruling reversed a district court's August ruling that had sided with the government's pursuit of what it had characterized as a "notorious" crypto-mixing service.

OFAC had sanctioned Tornado Cash last year, contending that it was a vital tool used by bad actors including North Korea's Lazarus Group to launder crypto tokens pilfered from platforms and games such as Axie Infinity. Coinbase (COIN) and others had sued the government, claiming it had overreached. Paul Grewal, chief legal officer of crypto exchange Coinbase, cheered the ruling in a Tuesday post on X, calling it a "historic win for crypto." "These smart contracts must now be removed from the sanctions list and U.S. persons will once again be allowed to use this privacy-protecting protocol," Grewal wrote. "Put another way, the government's overreach will not stand." "We readily recognize the real-world downsides of certain uncontrollable technology falling outside of OFAC's sanctioning authority," the judges said, referencing the ineffectiveness of a law that was established well before the world moved online. "But we must uphold the statutory bargain struck (or mis-struck) by Congress, not tinker with it."

Tornado Cash's TORN token has since rallied 500%, passing the $20 mark.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Slashdot
Open 
Google Opens AI Campus In London
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer inaugurated London's first Google-funded AI Campus in Camden, aiming to equip young people with AI and machine learning skills. Reuters reports: The center, based in Camden, an area which Starmer represents in parliament and which is also home to Google's future offices in Kings Cross, has already started a two-year pilot project for local students. An first cohort of 32 people aged 16-18 will have access to resources in AI and machine learning and receive mentoring and expertise from Google's AI company DeepMind, the tech giant said. The students will tackle real-world projects connecting AI to fields such as health, social sciences and the arts at the campus, which has been established in partnership with the local authority, Google said.

Google's UK and Ireland managing director Debbie Weinstein announced 865,000 pounds ($1.10 million) of funding for an AI literacy program across the UK. The money will be used by charities Raspberry Pi Foundation and Parent Zone to help train teachers with an aim of reaching over 250,000 students by the end of 2026, she said.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

CNET News
Open 
Black Friday Nintendo Switch Deals: Over 30 Amazing Deals Across Console Bundles, First-Party Titles and Controllers
Now's the time to check out these epic deals on Nintendo Switch, console accessories and popular games featuring fan favorites Mario, Princess Peach and more.

CNET News
Open 
Best Mattress to Buy on Amazon in 2024
If you need a new mattress, Amazon offers convenience and fast shipping. Here are the best options, based on our rigorous testing.

CNET News
Open 
Best Tennis Balls of 2024
We've found the best tennis balls, whether you're a tennis novice or seasoned pro.

CNET News
Open 
Gifts to Assemble? My Top Electric Screwdriver Set Is Now 20% Off for Black Friday
Get ready for the holidays -- or fixing things around the house during the downtime -- with this Hoto cordless screwdriver, now on sale for just $40.

CNET News
Open 
Klipsch ProMedia Heritage 2.1 Desktop Speaker System Hits Its Lowest Black Friday Price Yet
This follow-up to Klipsch's highly popular ProMedia computer speakers from 2004 just took a Black Friday price dive.

CNET News
Open 
SSDI November 2024: The Last Round of Checks Has Arrived
The last round of SSDI payments is on the way. We'll lay out when you'll get yours.

CNET News
Open 
Black Friday Just Slashed ZeroWater Filters Down 25% if You Grab Them Now
Stock up on ZeroWater filters this Black Friday before prices jump back up, or you'll end up paying way more later.

CNET News
Open 
Save $50 on a TP-Link Outdoor Security Camera With This Black Friday Deal
Score this Black Friday deal and save 42% on a smart home security camera that will help keep your home and packages safe.

CNET News
Open 
Best Black Friday Headphone Deals 2024: Up to $150 Off AirPods, Beats, Sony and More
This list of the best Black Friday headphones deals highlights hundreds of dollars in savings on items from Bose, JBL, Apple and more.

CNET News
Open 
How to Use Double XP Tokens in Black Ops 6 and Warzone
After the double XP weekend concludes, Black Ops 6 players need to find another way to keep leveling up fast. Here's how to use your shiny new double XP tokens.

CNET News
Open 
Best Adjustable Bed Frames and Bases of 2024
Improve your sleep and enjoy the zero-gravity experience with the best adjustable bed bases, reviewed by our CNET sleep experts.

CNET News
Open 
This Top-Notch Soundcore Speaker Hits a New Record-Low for Black Friday
You can snag the Soundcore Motion X600 for just $130 at Amazon's Black Friday sale -- a $70 discount.

CNET News
Open 
Best Internet Providers in West Valley City, Utah
There are a few good internet service providers in West Valley City. CNET has found the best internet in the city, including the fastest and most affordable options.

CNET News
Open 
We Found the Best iPad Deals: Up to $400 Off iPad Pro, iPad Air, iPad Mini and Accessories Right Now
Keep your wallet safe this Black Friday with iPads down to just $200.

CNET News
Open 
The 5 Best Black Friday Deals on Running Gear, According to a Marathoner
Running can get expensive. Here are some Cyber Week deals that will help you save some cash.

CNET News
Open 
Best Black Friday AirPods Deals: Top 15 Apple Headphone Deals From Best Buy, Amazon and More
Black Friday has created deep discounts on Apple headphones, from the premium AirPods Max to the previous-gen AirPods 2 and various Beats models.

CNET News
Open 
Grab This 140W Anker Power Bank at Its Lowest Price Yet
This Black Friday deal drops Anker's 140W power bank to its lowest price yet.

CNET News
Open 
Costco Membership Deal: Get $45 Free Credit and To Do All Your Holiday Shopping
As we start the holiday shopping season StackSocial has an amazing Black Friday deal on a Costco membership.

CNET News
Open 
Save an Incredible $500 on the OnePlus Open Foldable Phone This Black Friday
If you've been looking to upgrade to a quality foldable, this Black Friday deal is hard to beat.

CNET News
Open 
I Stream All My Channels, Anywhere, With This Roku Stick That's Just $20 for Black Friday
Traveling for the holidays doesn't have to mean leaving your favorite streaming channels at home. My go-to streaming stick gets a big discount for Black Friday.

EFF
Open 
One Down, Many to Go with Pre-Installed Malware on Android
Last year, we investigated a Dragon Touch children’s tablet (KidzPad Y88X 10) and confirmed that it was linked to a string of fully compromised Android TV Boxes that had also multiple reports of malware, adware, and a sketchy firmware update channel. Since then, Google has taken the (now former) tablet distributor off of their list of Play Protect certified phones and tablets. The burden of catching this type of threat should not be placed on the consumer. Due diligence by manufacturers, distributors, and resellers is the only way to tackle this issue of pre-installed compromised devices making their way into the hands of unknowing customers. But in order to mitigate this issue, regulation and transparency need to be a part of the strategy. 
As of October, Dragon Touch is not selling any tablets on their website anymore. However, there is lingering inventory still out there in places like Amazon and Newegg. There are storefronts that exist only on reseller sites for better customer reach, but considering Dragon Touch also wiped their blog of any mention of their tablets, we assume a little more than a strategy shift happened here.
We wrote a guide to help parents set up their kid’s Android devices safely, but it’s difficult to choose which device to purchase to begin with. Advising people to simply buy a more expensive iPad or Amazon Fire Tablet doesn’t change the fact people are going to purchase low-budget devices. Lower budget devices can be just as reputable if the ecosystem provided a path for better accountability.
Who is Responsible?
There are some tools in development for consumer education, like the newly developed, voluntary Cyber Trust Mark by the FCC. This label would aim to inform consumers of the capabilities and guarantee that minimum security standards were met for an IoT device. However, the consumer holding the burden to check for pre-installed malware is absolutely ridiculous. Responsibility should fall to regulators, manufacturers, distributors, and resellers to check for this kind of threat.
More often than not, you can search for low budget Android devices on retailers like Amazon or Newegg, and find storefront pages with little transparency on who runs the store and whether or not they come from a reputable distributor. This is true for more than just Android devices, but considering how many products are created for and with the Android ecosystem, working on this problem could mean better security for thousands of products.
Yes, it is difficult to track hundreds to thousands of distributors and all of their products. It is hard to keep up with rapidly developing threats in the supply chain. You can’t possibly know of every threat out there.
With all due respect to giant resellers, especially the multi-billion dollar ones: tough luck. This is what you inherit when you want to “sell everything.” You also inherit the responsibility and risk of each market you encroach or supplant. 
Possible Remedy: Firmware Transparency
Thankfully, there is hope on the horizon and tools exist to monitor compromised firmware.
Last year, Google presented Android Binary Transparency in response to pre-installed malware. This would help track firmware that has been compromised with these two components:

An append-only log of firmware information that is immutable, globally observable, consistent, auditable. Assured with cryptographic properties.
A network of participants that invest in witnesses, log health, and standardization.

Google is not the first to think of this concept. This is largely extracting lessons of success from Certificate Transparency. Yet, better support directly from the Android ecosystem for Android images would definitely help. This would provide an ecosystem of transparency of manufacturers and developers that utilize the Android Open Source Project (AOSP) to be just as respected as higher-priced brands.
We love open source here at EFF and would like to continue to see innovation and availability in devices that aren’t necessarily created by bigger, more expensive names. But there needs to be an accountable ecosystem for these products so that pre-installed malware can be more easily detected and not land in consumer hands so easily. Right now you can verify your Pixel device if you have a little technical skill. We would like verification to be done by regulators and/or distributors instead of asking consumers to crack out their command lines to verify themselves.
It would be ideal to see existing programs like Android Play Protect certified run a log like this with open-source log implementations, like Trillian. This way, security researchers, resellers, and regulating bodies could begin to monitor and query information on different Android Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs).
There are tools that exist to verify firmware, but right now this ecosystem is a wishlist of sorts. At EFF, we like to imagine what could be better. While a hosted comprehensive log of Android OEMs doesn’t currently exist, the tools to create it do. Some early participants for accountability in the Android realm include F-Droid’s Android SDK Transparency Log and the Guardian Project’s (Tor) Binary Transparency Log.
Time would be better spent on solving this problem systemically, than researching whether every new electronic evil rectangle or IoT device has malware or not.
A complementary solution with binary transparency is the Software Bill of Materials (SBOMs). Think of this as a “list of ingredients” that make up software. This is another idea that is not very new, but has gathered more institutional and government support. The components listed in an SBOM could highlight issues or vulnerabilities that were reported for certain components of a software. Without binary transparency though, researchers, verifiers, auditors, etc. could still be left attempting to extract firmware from devices that haven’t listed their images. If manufacturers readily provided these images, SBOMs can be generated more easily and help create a less opaque market of electronics. Low budget or not.
We are glad to see some movement from last year’s investigations. Right in time for Black Friday. More can be done and we hope to see not only devices taken down more swiftly when reported, especially with shady components, but better support for proactive detection. Regardless of how much someone can spend, everyone deserves a safe, secure device that doesn’t have malware crammed into it.

Mail Online
Open 
Double killer tells jury 'I hope you suffer a brain injury' as he's found guilty of murdering his kind-hearted neighbour who took pity on him 
Brian Whitelock, 57, tragically killed 71-year-old Wendy Buckney with a kitchen knife, broken table leg and and wooden shelving during a sustained assault in her own home.

Mail Online
Open 
Retired academic, 90, died in car crash after mixing up accelerator and brake pedals - as coroner calls for elderly motorists to have fitness to drive checked
A coroner has called for elderly motorists to have their fitness checked to drive formally after a retired academic died from injuries sustained in a car crash where she mixed up the foot pedals.

BBC World News
Open 
Uniqlo does not use Xinjiang cotton, boss says
It is the first time the CEO of the chain's owner, Fast Retailing, has directly addressed the issue.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Fans fume at missing Jason Donovan in Rocky Horror
Fans said they would not have booked if they had known the star would not be appearing.

UK Government News
Open 
First patients benefit from cutting-edge UK scanner to transform drug discovery and diagnose serious illnesses earlier
New total-body scanner supports patients through earlier diagnoses and treatment while aiding new medicines discovery.

UK Government News
Open 
Unpaid carers supported by £22.6 million investment in innovation
£22.6 million invested in innovative projects across the country to support unpaid cares as well as people with care needs.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Two companies drop Conor McGregor after jury rules against him in rape case
Company behind Proper No 12 whiskey drops MMA starWoman won claim against him for damages in rape caseTwo companies have cut ties with Conor McGregor after a civil court jury in Ireland ruled last week that he must pay nearly €250,000 ($257,000) to a woman who accused the mixed martial arts fighter of raping her.Proximo Spirits, the owner of Irish whiskey brand Proper No 12, will no longer feature McGregor’s name or image on the drink. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Guardian view on the Lebanon ceasefire: a lasting regional peace must go through Gaza | Editorial
The US-brokered agreement is a breakthrough for suffering civilians. But a deal on Netanyahu’s terms offers scant hope to PalestiniansUnsurprisingly, Joe Biden struck an upbeat, optimistic note on Tuesday as he announced a US-brokered ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hezbollah. “It reminds us that peace is possible,” said Mr Biden, as the deal brought to an end the 14-month conflict, during which close to 4,000 people lost their lives and hundreds of thousands were displaced.For the outgoing American president, who has signally failed to restrain Israel’s excesses after the heinous Hamas massacre of 7 October 2023, the agreement amounts to a valedictory breakthrough after months of weak and ineffective diplomacy. More importantly, it affords the suffering people of Lebanon some respite, after a bombing campaign and ground invasion that paid scant regard to the appalling impact on civilian lives. For the 60,000 citizens of Israel forced to flee the country’s northern border region by Hezbollah rockets, there is the prospect of a return home after spending more than a year in displacement camps.Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Guardian view on closing the Bibby Stockholm: a parable of failed asylum policy | Editorial
Labour has restored some decency and pragmatism to asylum policy. The next step is courage in changing the terms of debateAs a place of accommodation, the Bibby Stockholm had only a minor function in UK asylum policy, but it loomed large as an emblem of that policy’s dysfunction. The barge moored at Portland in Dorset held 400 men at maximum capacity. The last of them disembarked this week, marking the end of the vessel’s service as a Home Office incarceration facility.The total number of people in the UK waiting for asylum claims to be processed is around 85,600. Taking one barge out of the equation doesn’t reduce overall numbers. But it does indicate progress towards the more rational approach that Labour promised in contrast to ostentatiously punitive Conservative methods.Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

Techdirt
Open 
Biden FCC Boss Rosenworcel To Step Down, Can’t Be Bothered To Express Alarm At What Comes Next
We’ve noted how Trump’s win means that Brendan Carr (R, AT&T) will now be in charge of the nation’s top telecom and media regulator. We’ve also made it very clear his tenure will involve dismantling whatever’s left of FCC broadband consumer protection, killing remaining media consolidation limits, and threatening to pull the broadcast licenses of […]

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Doorstep Murder police 'open minded' 20 years on
Dad-of-two and banker Alistair Wilson was shot at his home in Nairn 20 years ago.

Telegraph
Open 
Liverpool blitz Real Madrid to stake claim as best team in Europe
It is only late November, no trophies are handed out at this time of year, but there is little doubt that Liverpool are the best team in Europe right now.]]>

Telegraph
Open 
‘In Europe a foul, in England a goal’: Aston Villa rue last-minute heartbreak
There was little doubt, once the Spanish referee had disallowed it and his VAR colleagues had agreed, that the disputed Morgan Rogers goal for Aston Villa would prompt a long list of grievances about the state of the modern game.]]>

Telegraph
Open 
New Zealand vs England, first Test: Score and latest updates from day one
New Zealand’s morning, England bowling too short and giving too many easy scoring opportunities to batsmen looking to play positively. Both sides would have bowled first, a potential misread of a grassy pitch that has not really shown much seam movement.]]>

The Hill
Open 
Ohio AG appeals court decision blocking 6-week abortion ban
Ohio’s attorney general said Wednesday he would appeal an October injunction that prohibited state officials from enforcing a six-week abortion ban, according to The Associated Press. Republican Dave Yost filed a notice of appeal Friday seeking to overturn a ruling that upheld state voters' amendment to enshrine abortion rights. “It is up to the courts...

The Hill
Open 
Russia to US: Halt 'spiral of escalation' over Ukraine
Russia on Wednesday warned the U.S. to stop what it said was a “spiral of escalation” over Ukraine as Washington moves to quickly supply Kyiv with more weapons as the Biden administration winds down. “The signal is very clear and obvious — stop, you should not do this anymore, you do not need to supply Kiev with...

The Hill
Open 
Americans' opinion of Republican Party on the rise
Americans’ opinion of the Republican Party is on the rise, according to a new poll from The Economist/YouGov. In the poll, 45 percent of Americans said they feel “favorable” toward the Republican Party, up 6 points from an Economist/YouGov poll in late October, when 39 percent said they felt favorable toward GOP. The number of...

The Hill
Open 
Biden blocks new mining at major Western coal hub
{beacon} Energy & Environment Energy & Environment   The Big Story Biden blocks new coal mining at federal hub The Biden administration is blocking new coal mining on public lands at a major center for the fossil fuel. In recent days, the Biden administration has released two decisions on the future of mining in the Powder River...

The Hill
Open 
Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire begins under international watch
Welcome to The Hill's Defense & NatSec newsletter {beacon} Defense &National Security Defense &National Security   The Big Story Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire goes into effect A ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah took effect early Wednesday morning, after the Israeli and Lebanese governments approved a U.S. proposal to halt the fighting. © AP Ahead of the truce's...

The Hill
Open 
US tells Ukraine to 'look hard' at lowering draft age in Russia war
The United States is urging Ukraine to “look hard” at removing policy mandates that limit the nation to drafting soldiers aged 25 and up, a senior administration official told The Hill on Wednesday. They’ve suggested lowering the age to 18, which would expand their manpower in the fight against its Russian adversaries. The official said...

The Hill
Open 
Mel Gibson gives thanks for release of US man held by China
Actor Mel Gibson applauded U.S. officials on Wednesday for securing the release of American Mark Swidan, who has been detained in China since 2012. “He was wrongfully detained there for a crime he did not commit and spent over a decade in prison in horrible conditions and his release was procured,” Gibson said in a...

Mac Rumours
Open 
iOS 18.1 and Beyond: Siri's Apple Intelligence Features
With Apple Intelligence, Apple is aiming to make Siri smarter than ever before. The personal assistant is going to be able to learn more about you, do more in apps, and hand over the reins to a smarter virtual assistant when needed.





Some new ‌Siri‌ features are available now, while some won't be coming until 2025. This guide highlights everything that's new with ‌Siri‌ thanks to ‌Apple Intelligence‌.



Updated Siri Design

‌Siri‌ has a refreshed design on devices that support ‌Apple Intelligence‌. Rather than the small wavelength that used to show when activating ‌Siri‌, there's now a pink/purple/blue/orange variegated glow that wraps around the entire iPhone, with the colors shifting as ‌Siri‌ listens to a command.





Better Language Understanding

‌Siri‌ can better understand conversational language and requests, so if you stumble over your words or change your mind mid-sentence, ‌Siri‌ can still follow what you're saying.





‌Siri‌ is also able to maintain context between requests, so you can refer to something in a previous request, and ‌Siri‌ will understand what you're talking about. So if you use ‌Siri‌ to create a calendar event, you can then just ask "What will the weather be like there?" and ‌Siri‌ knows where "there" is.



Improved Voice

‌Siri‌ has a new, more natural sounding voice.



Type to Siri

There is a built-in Type to ‌Siri‌ feature so you don't need to speak to ‌Siri‌ to interact with the personal assistant. To use it, double tap on the bottom of the ‌iPhone‌ or iPad to bring up a text bar, and then from there, just type in your request.





Type to ‌Siri‌ can be used in the same way as speaking to ‌Siri‌, and ‌Siri‌ is able to provide information without speaking aloud. It is a useful feature for public situations where you're not able to speak and do not want to have ‌Siri‌ speaking back to you.



iOS 18.1: How to Type to Siri



Siri on the Mac

While this guide focuses on the ‌iPhone‌ and the ‌iPad‌, the new, smarter ‌Siri‌ is also available on the Mac. Type to ‌Siri‌ can be enabled in the Settings app, and it can be assigned to a shortcut, such as pressing the Command button twice.



Apple Product Knowledge

Apple taught ‌Siri‌ about all of its products, so if you want to know how to use a feature or how to complete a task, you can ask ‌Siri‌ for help. ‌Siri‌ can provide step-by-step directions on using ‌iPhone‌, ‌iPad‌, and Mac features.





ChatGPT Integration (iOS 18.2)

In iOS 18.2, ChatGPT integration is available with ‌Siri‌. If a user asks something that ‌Siri‌ is not capable of handling, ChatGPT can provide a response instead, so long as the user gives permission.





‌Siri‌ can tap into ChatGPT, and then relay ChatGPT's response with no need to switch apps or use other tools.



The ‌Siri‌ ChatGPT integration can essentially be used to do anything you can do with the ChatGPT app or ChatGPT on the web, it's simply an easier way to get to ChatGPT.



Object Identification

For anything on your screen, such as an image, you can ask ‌Siri‌ a question about it. If you have a photo of a plant, for example, asking "What is this?" will prompt ‌Siri‌ to send a screenshot over to ChatGPT, and ChatGPT will attempt to provide context.





This works with images on the web, your photos, the something you're viewing through the Camera app, text, and more.



ChatGPT can be used to describe a scene, which is useful for people who might have issues with sight. Opening the Camera app, activating ‌Siri‌, and asking "What is this?" will provide a detailed description of whatever is in front of you.





The option to send images to ChatGPT from screenshots is distinct from the ‌Siri‌ onscreen awareness feature that Apple plans to implement in the future.



Info From Documents

For emails, documents, PDFs, and more, ChatGPT can provide a summary. When you ask "Can you summarize this?" ‌Siri‌ will send a screenshot or the entire document, which includes full PDFs. It's a useful feature for getting a quick overview of the content of a long document.





For long PDFs or documents, you'll want to tap on the arrows to make sure the full document is sent to ChatGPT rather than just a screenshot.



Rather than asking for a summary, you can instead ask a specific question about a document. If you're looking at an insurance policy, you can ask "What are the limits of this policy?" or "What are the exclusions?" to get more tailored information.



Checking Spelling and Grammar

If you've written an email, rather than selecting it and using Writing Tools to check it for spelling and grammar errors, you can ask ‌Siri‌ to take a look, and ‌Siri‌ will send a screenshot to ChatGPT. "Can you look this over for errors?" works as a command for this feature.





ChatGPT can also be used for rewriting and refining what you've written, but note that this is not the same as Apple's own Writing Tools.



Generating Text and Images

ChatGPT can generate text from scratch based on prompts that it is given. You can, for example, ask ‌Siri‌ to ask ChatGPT to write a poem or compose a polite letter to a friend, and ChatGPT will create something from scratch.





Some sample requests you can use:



Write me a poem about Apple

Create a song about Google

Help me write a letter to my friend

Write three paragraphs about orange cats

Write me a social media post about Thanksgiving

Rewrite this to be more concise

Create a bedtime story about a dragon



If you have ChatGPT write something for you, you can tap on the copy icon to copy it to the clipboard to paste it into Notes, Messages, a document, or an email.



You can also create images. Using the Dall-E 3 engine, ChatGPT can make realistic AI-generated images, something that can't be done with ‌Apple Intelligence‌. For image requests, it's easiest to tell ‌Siri‌ to "Tell ChatGPT to make an image of [thing you want an image of]," because if you just ask ‌Siri‌ to make an image or generate an image, it will often bring up web images.





Answering Questions

One of the best use cases for ChatGPT through ‌Siri‌ is getting answers for queries that are just a bit too complex for ‌Siri‌. Questions that ‌Siri‌ can't handle will be handed over to ChatGPT with your permission, but you can also force ‌Siri‌ to use ChatGPT instead of the internal ‌Siri‌ engine by amending questions with "Ask ChatGPT."





For example, a question about what battery an Xbox controller uses will source Wikipedia and not ChatGPT, but specifically "Ask ChatGPT what battery an Xbox controller uses" will prompt ‌Siri‌ to present the question to ChatGPT.





ChatGPT's answers can sometimes be more informative. Asking ‌Siri‌ how to replace eggs in a recipe just gives you alternatives, but ChatGPT's answer for the same question provides the amount of an ingredient you might want to add to equate to an egg.



Some example queries that ‌Siri‌ will automatically consult ChatGPT on:



What are five types of edible mushrooms in North Carolina?

What should I pack for a beach trip in winter?

What are must see places in Paris?

What should I do this weekend?

I want a recipe for banana bread

Give me instructions on cutting a mango

When is avocado season?

Suggest good songs for a quiet Friday night

What's a good indoor activity to do when it's raining?



Other Things You Can Ask ChatGPT To Do



Write code

Debug code

Get help with homework

Do calculations, translations, conversions, and more

Generate gift ideas

Come up with names for businesses, pets, characters, and more

Create trivia questions or riddles

Plan trips

Create meal plans

Get recipes for ingredients you have

Generate jokes

Suggest movies, TV shows, and books based on specific parameters

Summarize TV shows and movies

Generate drawing/writing prompts



While ‌Siri‌ can do all of these things with ChatGPT's help, the lack of continuity with the ‌Siri‌ version of ChatGPT makes it difficult to complete tasks that are not one-off requests. Creating a meal plan, for example, works better with the actual ChatGPT interface because you can have more of a conversation rather than relying on a single request.



ChatGPT Settings and Privacy

ChatGPT integration has to be turned on, and after that, each request requires user permission. There is an option to turn off the extra permission by toggling off the "Confirm ChatGPT Requests" option.



The toggle can be accessed by opening up the Settings app, choosing ‌Apple Intelligence‌, and then tapping on ChatGPT. With the feature disabled, ‌Siri‌ will not ask each time before sending information to ChatGPT.



‌Siri‌ will, however, always ask permission before sending a file to ChatGPT even with the confirm requests feature turned off.



As for privacy, no login is required to use ChatGPT, and neither Apple nor OpenAI log your requests. But if you sign in with a paid account, ChatGPT can keep a copy of requests.



ChatGPT - Free vs. Paid

ChatGPT integration includes a limited number of requests that use ChatGPT-4o, the latest version of ChatGPT, for free. After those are used up, ChatGPT integration uses 4o Mini, which is less advanced and takes up less resources.





ChatGPT Plus subscribers get more ChatGPT-4o requests. ChatGPT Plus is priced at $20 per month, and ‌iPhone‌ users who don't already have ChatGPT Plus can sign up right from the ‌Apple Intelligence‌ section of the Settings app.



Apple users essentially have access to ChatGPT's basic plan, so requests that use advanced capabilities reset every 24 hours. With this plan, two images per day can be generated.



ChatGPT vs. Apple Intelligence

There is overlap between what's possible with ‌Apple Intelligence‌ and what you can do with ChatGPT integration, but there are some distinctions. ‌Apple Intelligence‌ has Writing Tools for rewriting and editing what you've already written, but ChatGPT can write content from scratch.



Image Playground, Image Wand, and Genmoji allow you to generate images, but ‌Apple Intelligence‌ won't generate realistic looking images. Instead, styles are limited to those that look animated or sketched. ChatGPT will generate lifelike images, though.



‌Apple Intelligence‌ can be used to summarize documents, but only when you select text and select the Summarize option from Writing Tools. ‌Apple Intelligence‌ can't answer more specific questions about PDFs and documents, so ChatGPT does have an edge for that kind of query.



ChatGPT Limitations

When you ask ChatGPT a question through ‌Siri‌, you need to make sure to read the answer right away because it doesn't stay on the screen long. Apple does not keep a record of it, either.



If you're logged into ChatGPT, there is a history in your OpenAI account, but if you're not logged in, there's no way to save information that you've received from ChatGPT, and there's no log.



Other Chatbots

Apple has only added ChatGPT integration right now, but support for Google Gemini is planned in the future.



Siri Apple Intelligence Features Coming Next Year

There are several ‌Siri‌ features that are still in development, with Apple planning to add these capabilities to ‌Siri‌ next year. Timing isn't concrete yet, but rumors suggest we'll see them in iOS 18.4 in the spring.



Personal Context

‌Siri‌ will be able to keep track of your emails, messages, files, photos, and more, learning more about you to help you complete tasks and keep track of what you've been sent.



Show me the files Eric sent me last week.

Find the email where Eric mentioned ice skating.

Find the books that Eric recommended to me.

Where's the recipe that Eric sent me?

What's my passport number?



Onscreen Awareness

‌Siri‌ will be able to tell what's on your screen and complete actions involving whatever you're looking at. If someone texts you an address, for example, you can tell ‌Siri‌ to add it to their contact card. Or if you're looking at a photo and want to send it to someone, you can ask ‌Siri‌ to do it for you.



Deeper App Integration

‌Siri‌ will be able to do more in and across apps, performing actions and completing tasks that are just not possible with the personal assistant right now. We don't have a full picture of what ‌Siri‌ will be capable of, but Apple has provided a few examples of what to expect.



Moving files from one app to another.

Editing a photo and then sending it to someone.

Get directions home and share the ETA with Eric.

Send the email I drafted to Eric.



The Next Siri Phase

After all of the ‌Siri‌ ‌Apple Intelligence‌ features have been implemented in iOS 18, Apple plans to unveil the next-generation ‌Siri‌, which will rely on large language models. An LLM version of ‌Siri‌ is already in development, and it will be able to better compete with chatbots like ChatGPT.



LLM ‌Siri‌ will be able to hold ongoing conversations, and it will be more like speaking with a human. Large language model integration will let ‌Siri‌ perform more complex tasks, and in the future, ‌Siri‌ likely won't need to rely on ChatGPT.



The updated version of ‌Siri‌ will replace the current version of ‌Siri‌ in the future. Apple is expected to announce LLM ‌Siri‌ in 2025 alongside the introduction of iOS 19, but the update likely won't launch until spring 2026.



Apple Intelligence Privacy

‌Apple Intelligence‌ was designed with privacy in mind, and many requests are handled on-device. All personal context learning, for example, is done with on-device intelligence and nothing leaves your ‌iPhone‌ or ‌iPad‌.



For requests that need the processing power of a cloud server, Apple is using Private Cloud Compute on Apple silicon machines to handle complex tasks while preserving user privacy. Apple promises that data is not stored and is used only for user requests.



Apple Intelligence Compatible Devices

‌Apple Intelligence‌ is available on the iPhone 15 Pro, the ‌iPhone 15‌ Pro Max, all iPhone 16 models, the iPad mini with A17 Pro chip, all iPads with an Apple silicon chip, and all Macs with an Apple silicon chip.



Read More

We've shared detailed guides on ‌Genmoji‌ and ‌Image Playground‌ already, plus we have an overall guide on the full set of ‌Apple Intelligence‌ features and a guide for the general features coming in iOS 18.2.



Genmoji in iOS 18.2

Image Playground in iOS 18.2

Apple Intelligence Image Wand: All the New Features in iOS 18.2

Everything You Need to Know About Apple Intelligence

Everything New in the iOS 18.2 Beta



Release Date

iOS 18.2 and iPadOS 18.2 with ‌Image Wand‌ integration will be coming in December, with Apple likely planning for a December 9 software release.Related Roundups: iOS 18, iPadOS 18Related Forums: iOS 18, iPadOS 18This article, 'iOS 18.1 and Beyond: Siri's Apple Intelligence Features' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

ZeroHedge News
Open 
ZeroHedge Debate: Niall Ferguson, Scott Horton Clash Over The Ukraine War
ZeroHedge Debate: Niall Ferguson, Scott Horton Clash Over The Ukraine War

Watch live here at 7pm ET on X...


https://t.co/Rq7jRVhabg
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) November 27, 2024
... or YouTube (subscribe to our channel):



***

Despite Trump’s promises to bring a swift end to the war in Ukraine by negotiating with Russia, the war has escalated to a dangerous inflection point with long-range U.S., British, and French missiles being deployed deep in Russian territory and talks of deploying NATO troops in Ukraine. That… and anonymous officials in the New York Times saying what is impossible to believe:

"Several officials even suggested that Mr. Biden could return nuclear weapons to Ukraine that were taken from it after the fall of the Soviet Union. That would be an instant and enormous deterrent. But such a step would be complicated and have serious implications," the newspaper wrote.



Amid the chaos, ZeroHedge will be hosting preeminent historians Sir Niall Ferguson and Scott Horton to debate the history of the conflict and U.S. policy in the region. They will be joined by the Hoover Institute's Peter Robinson (if you’ve seen a Thomas Sowell interview, it was probably his).

Join us at 7pm ET right here on the ZeroHedge homepage (as well as Twitter/X and YouTube channels) for an epic matchup that you won’t find anywhere else.

Ferguson is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution and at the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at Harvard University. He’s written over a dozen books on geopolitical and monetary history.

Horton is the founder of the Libertarian Institute and recently published his book, Provoked, on the history of the war in Ukraine and decades of rising tensions between the U.S. and Russia.

We hope you’ll join us on the eve of Thanksgiving. Recent war context included below:

***

Nukes for Ukraine?!

Days ago, The NY Times revealed that US and European officials have discussed a range of options they believe will deter Russia from taking more Ukrainian territory, including the possibility of providing Kiev with nuclear weapons. "US and European officials are discussing deterrence as a possible security guarantee for Ukraine, such as stockpiling a conventional arsenal sufficient to strike a punishing blow if Russia violates a cease-fire," the report said.

The article then stated, "Several officials even suggested that Mr. Biden could return nuclear weapons to Ukraine that were taken from it after the fall of the Soviet Union."

Former Russian president and current deputy chairman of the Security Counsel Dmitry Medvedev has responded by pointing out that if the West actually went forward with transferring nukes to Ukraine, this would be seen as tantamount to an attack on Russia. He explained that this is a key aspect of Russia's newly expanded nuclear doctrine.
Image source: Presidency of Russia

In a Telegram post on Tuesday, Medvedev specifically referenced the recent NY Times report, and said: "Looks like my sad joke about crazy senile Biden, who’s eager to go out with a bang and take a substantial part of humanity with him, is becoming dangerously real."

Medvedev then stressed that "giving nukes to a country that’s at war with the greatest nuclear power" is so absurd that Biden and any of his officials considering it must have "massive paranoid psychosis."

His biggest and most specific threat came as follows: 

"The fact of transferring such weapons may be considered as the launch of an attack against our country in accordance with Paragraph 19 of the ‘Basic Principles of State Policy on Nuclear Deterrence’," Medvedev wrote.

Talk of NATO Troops

Prominent French publication Le Monde on Monday followed by saying serious discussions over injecting Western troops into the war have intensified in the last days: 

As the conflict in Ukraine enters a new phase of escalation, discussions over sending Western troops and private defense companies to Ukraine have been revived, Le Monde has learned from corroborating sources. These are sensitive discussions, most of which are classified – relaunched in light of a potential American withdrawal of support for Kyiv once Donald Trump takes office on January 20, 2025.

Britain is once again at the forefront of urging NATO's deeper involvement in the war, which threatens at any moment to explode into WW3 among nuclear-armed powers. Enter Keir Starmer... in the hawkish footsteps of Boris Johnson:

However, it was relaunched in recent weeks thanks to the visit to France of the UK prime minister, Keir Starmer, for the November 11th commemorations. "Discussions are underway between the UK and France on defense cooperation, particularly with a view to creating a hard core of allies in Europe, focused on Ukraine and wider European security," confided a British military source to Le Monde.

Jean-Noël Barro's aforementioned words about 'no options' ruled out appears to have been a reflection on these continued 'sensitive' conversations.

There have been more reports of US-supplied ATACMS launches on Russian territory since their initial use last week:


Looks like Khalino airbase in Kursk, where Russia launches drones to attack Ukraine, just got a taste of ATACMS. The guy in the video seems pretty impressed! pic.twitter.com/ui8r0je74p
— Maria Avdeeva (@maria_avdv) November 25, 2024

Tyler Durden
Wed, 11/27/2024 - 11:46

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Why Trump's Election Case Was Dismissed 'Without Prejudice'
Why Trump's Election Case Was Dismissed 'Without Prejudice'

Authored by Sam Dorman via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

District of Columbia Judge Tanya Chutkan dismissed the election interference case against President-elect Donald Trump on Nov. 25, bringing an end to a highly contentious prosecution and raising questions about whether the charges could once again surface.
Special counsel Jack Smith prepares to speak about an indictment against former President Donald Trump in Washington on Aug. 1, 2023. Drew Angerer/Getty Images

Chutkan’s dismissal was entered “without prejudice,” which means the charges can hypothetically be brought against Trump at a later date.

Special Counsel Jack Smith based his request for a dismissal on longstanding Department of Justice (DOJ) policy that says prosecution of a sitting president would violate the constitution. Smith’s motion added that “although the Constitution requires dismissal in this context, consistent with the temporary nature of the immunity afforded a sitting President, it does not require dismissal with prejudice.”

Analysts say it’s unlikely, however, that Smith’s indictment would be filed again given that the statute of limitations will run out before the expected end of Trump’s second term in 2029.

“The fact is that asking the judge to dismiss the case without prejudice is common practice,” John Shu, a constitutional law expert who served in both Bush administrations, told The Epoch Times. “The government wants to keep all of its options open, even if those options are remote or if it’s likely that the options will expire because of the statute of limitations.”

Smith’s reference to temporary immunity was about a type of immunity that was separate from what the special counsel’s office and Trump’s attorneys were debating in recent months. That litigation focused on immunity that stemmed from the Supreme Court’s decision in Trump v. United States.

That decision held that presidents enjoy varied levels of immunity from criminal prosecution for actions they engage in during their tenure, including for former officeholders like Trump.

Smith’s argument about the DOJ’s longstanding policy, by contrast, focused on the prosecution of a sitting president. Smith added that his request for dismissal was “not based on the merits or strength of the case against the defendant.”

Shu told The Epoch Times that Smith’s motion pointed to an attempt by him to preserve other future prosecutions.

“Smith and the DOJ are not just thinking about the current case, they’re thinking about future cases,” he said. “They still want to keep the option open of prosecuting in the future—not Trump but, in the future, some former president, even though the Supreme Court made that significantly harder with its presidential immunity opinion.”

In her opinion explaining the dismissal, Chutkan said her decision was consistent with Smith’s interpretation of Trump’s immunity while in office. She also said that dismissing without prejudice was appropriate in this case because “there is no indication of prosecutorial harassment or other impropriety underlying the [motion to dismiss].”

Even if Trump left office early and the prosecution resumed, it’s unclear how successful it would be.

The Supreme Court’s decision on Trump v. United States arose from an appeal of Smith’s prosecution, which has been mired in a delayed pre-trial process since he brought the initial indictment last year. Chutkan’s court was headed towards deliberations over how that decision applied more specifically to Trump’s actions.

Besides the immunity issue, Trump also sought to challenge the case on statutory grounds and the legitimacy of Smith’s appointment as special counsel.

The latter issue is the subject of an appeal by Smith in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit, which is reviewing Florida Judge Aileen Cannon’s decision that constitutional issues surrounding Smith’s appointment meant his classified documents case against Trump should be dismissed.

Smith filed a motion on Nov. 25 to dismiss his appeal as it related to Trump but sought to leave it in place for two other defendants involved. The 11th circuit granted Smith’s motion on Nov. 26. Also on Nov. 26, Smith’s team filed a brief defending Smith’s appointment as legal.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 11/27/2024 - 18:30

The Verge
Open 
Microsoft says it’s built an Xbox game store on Android but can’t launch it

BBC World News
Open 
How vital is a company's CEO?
Boeing, Nike and Starbucks have changed their bosses, but how much difference can one person make?

TechRadar News
Open 
Quordle today – hints and answers for Thursday, November 28 (game #1039)

TechRadar News
Open 
NYT Strands today — hints, answers and spangram for Thursday, November 28 (game #270)

TechRadar News
Open 
NYT Connections today — hints and answers for Thursday, November 28 (game #536)

Digital Trends
Open 
10 great shows to watch on Thanksgiving
For those not interested in watching football this holiday season, these 10 TV shows on streaming are guaranteed to pair well with Thanksgiving dinner.

Digital Trends
Open 
Black Friday security camera deals 2024: Save big on Arlo, Blink, and more
We've picked out all the best early Black Friday security camera deals including discounts on Arlo, Blink, and many more. We have buying advice here too.

Digital Trends
Open 
Fiio DM13 review: Get ready to fall in love with CDs all over again
It's time to pull your dusty CD towers from your basement and give them the love they deserve with the Fiio DM13, a modernized take on the CD walkmans of old.

Digital Trends
Open 
HOT HOT HOT Black Friday air fryer deals: Cuisinart, Ninja and more up to 47% off
Take a look at these Black Friday air fryer deals if you want one for your kitchen. You should hurry with your purchase though, as these prices won't last long!

Deutsche Welle
Open 
US slaps sanctions on Venezuelan officials
Washington says President Nicolas Maduro falsely claimed victory in the July elections and that opposition leader Edmundo Gonzalez is the president-elect.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Aston Villa rue ‘soft’ decision as Rogers denied late winner against Juventus
The initial three minutes of stoppage time in the second half had been and gone when Morgan ­Rogers thought he had snatched Aston Villa another famous against a European superpower with surely the final kick.Teun ­Koopmeiners conceded a cheap foul on halfway, providing Youri Tielemans with one last chance to pump the ball into the box. Diego Carlos rose to challenge the ­Juventus goalkeeper Michele Di Gregorio in pursuit of the high ball, but it skidded between his gloves and ran free at the back post, allowing Rogers to hook into an empty net. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Colombia-led operation seizes world record 225 tonnes of cocaine, and uncovers new Australia trafficking route
Operation Orion, a cooperative operation between 62 countries, finds some of the record haul on a new drug route being used by a ‘narco submarine’Colombian authorities working with dozens of other countries have seized 225 tonnes of cocaine in the space of six weeks, a global record for any single anti-narcotics operation, finding some of that haul on a “narco submarine” travelling on a new drug trafficking route to Australia.In the six-week Operation Orion, law enforcement agencies and other organisations from 62 countries halted six semi-submersible vessels stuffed with cocaine and confiscated 1,400 tonnes of drugs in total, including more than 1,000 tonnes of marijuana. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Diddy denied bail for THIRD time ahead of sex trafficking trial
Sean 'Diddy' Combs has been denied bail for a third time ahead of his sex trafficking trial.

BBC World News
Open 
Why Russia's Africa propaganda warrior was sent home
A shadowy operative appears to overstep his mark in the battle for Russian influence in Africa.

BBC World News
Open 
Uniqlo boss says firm does not use Xinjiang cotton
It is the first time the CEO of the chain's owner, Fast Retailing, has directly addressed the issue.

BBC Technology News
Open 
Do 'much, much more' on age verification, social media firms told
The regulator finds a fifth of children are pretending to be adults, potentially exposing them to harm.

Russia Today News
Open 
Western Europe ‘at war’ with Russia – ex-MI6 chief

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Martínez holds up Juventus before Rogers denied late Aston Villa winner
The initial three minutes of stoppage time in the second half had been and gone when Morgan ­Rogers thought he had snatched Aston Villa another famous against a European superpower with surely the final kick.Teun ­Koopmeiners conceded a cheap foul on halfway, providing Youri Tielemans with one last chance to pump the ball into the box. Diego Carlos rose to challenge the ­Juventus goalkeeper Michele Di Gregorio in pursuit of the high ball, but it skidded between his gloves and ran free at the back post, allowing Rogers to hook into an empty net. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Record 225 tonnes of cocaine seized on new Australia trafficking route in joint effort
Operation Orion, a cooperative operation between 62 countries, busted narco submarines carrying drugsColombian authorities have seized 225 tonnes of cocaine in the space of six weeks, a global record for any single anti-narcotics operation, finding some of that haul on a “narco submarine” travelling on a new drug trafficking route to Australia.In the six-week Operation Orion, law enforcement agencies and other organisations from 62 countries halted six semi-submersible vessels stuffed with cocaine and confiscated 1,400 tonnes of drugs in total, including more than 1,000 tonnes of marijuana. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Reddit overtakes X in popularity of social media platforms in UK
Discussion platform takes fifth place in rankings and is the fastest growing large social media platform in the UKReddit, the American online discussion platform, has overtaken X to become the fifth most popular social media platform in the UK, according to the communications watchdog.Ofcom said Reddit, where users post on discussion threads within topic-based communities, was visited by 22.9 million UK adults in May this year, compared with 22.1 million on X. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Prisoners denied dignity while receiving NHS care, watchdog finds
Health Services Safety Investigation Body reveals difficulties inmates have when they leave jail for treatmentA female inmate remained handcuffed to a male prison officer while she had a mammogram, in an example of prisoners being denied their dignity while receiving NHS care, a watchdog has revealed.The incident is highlighted in a report by the Health Services Safety Investigation Body (HSSIB) into the difficulties prisoners can face when they leave jail to see a GP or visit a hospital. Continue reading...

Ars Technica
Open 
Man suffers chemical burn that lasted months after squeezing limes

The Register
Open 
Salt Typhoon's surge extends far beyond US telcos
Plus, a brand-new backdoor, GhostSpider, is linked to the cyber-spy crew's operations The reach of the China-linked Salt Typhoon gang extends beyond American telecommunications giants, and its arsenal includes several backdoors, including a brand-new malware dubbed GhostSpider, according to Trend Micro researchers.…

ZDNet News
Open 
The Kindle Oasis e-reader is 50% off for Black Friday - and I wouldn't think twice about it
You can pick up the global version of the Kindle Oasis for $135 off ahead of Black Friday this week.

ZDNet News
Open 
Best Black Friday gaming PC deals 2024: Live sales on prebuilt PCs, GPUs, monitors, and more
Black Friday PC deals are live! Whether you're looking for a prebuilt PC or want to build your own customized rig, holiday discounts from top gaming brands like Alienware and HP are out now.

ZDNet News
Open 
You can buy Samsung's Frame TV at up to $1,300 off for Black Friday - multiple sizes in stock
The popular artwork-inspired Samsung TV can be had for a steep discount during Black Friday week.

ZDNet News
Open 
This $18 Roku HD streaming device is my impulse purchase for Black Friday
An easy plug-and-play system and a bevy of streaming services make the discounted Roku Express a no-brainer for my holiday shopping cart.

ZDNet News
Open 
The 45+ best Black Friday phone deals of 2024: Save on iPhones, Samsung, and more sales
Black Friday is just two days away, and we've rounded up the top phone deals from Amazon, Best Buy, Verizon, and more.

Slashdot
Open 
The World's First Unkillable UEFI Bootkit For Linux
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Over the past decade, a new class of infections has threatened Windows users. By infecting the firmware that runs immediately before the operating system loads, these UEFI bootkits continue to run even when the hard drive is replaced or reformatted. Now the same type of chip-dwelling malware has been found in the wild for backdooring Linux machines. Researchers at security firm ESET said Wednesday that Bootkitty -- the name unknown threat actors gave to their Linux bootkit -- was uploaded to VirusTotal earlier this month. Compared to its Windows cousins, Bootkitty is still relatively rudimentary, containing imperfections in key under-the-hood functionality and lacking the means to infect all Linux distributions other than Ubuntu. That has led the company researchers to suspect the new bootkit is likely a proof-of-concept release. To date, ESET has found no evidence of actual infections in the wild.

Still, Bootkitty suggests threat actors may be actively developing a Linux version of the same sort of unkillable bootkit that previously was found only targeting Windows machines. "Whether a proof of concept or not, Bootkitty marks an interesting move forward in the UEFI threat landscape, breaking the belief about modern UEFI bootkits being Windows-exclusive threats," ESET researchers wrote. "Even though the current version from VirusTotal does not, at the moment, represent a real threat to the majority of Linux systems, it emphasizes the necessity of being prepared for potential future threats." [...] As ESET notes, the discovery is nonetheless significant because it demonstrates someone -- most likely a malicious threat actor -- is pouring resources and considerable know-how into creating working UEFI bootkits for Linux. Currently, there are few simple ways for people to check the integrity of the UEFI running on either Windows or Linux devices. The demand for these sorts of defenses will likely grow in the coming years.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

CNET News
Open 
Best PS5 Black Friday Deals: Over 50 Price Cuts Across Consoles, Next-Gen Games, VR and Accessories
Enjoy big savings on Sony's console and plenty of first-party titles to keep you busy over the holidays.

CNET News
Open 
Best Buy Black Friday Deals Are Already Here: These Are the Best 73 Deals We Found So Far
Mere hours from Turkey Day, the Black Friday deals at Best Buy are here, hot and hype-worthy. Shop hundreds of bargains on tech, home goods and more.

CNET News
Open 
Low-Income Internet Guide: How to Qualify for Free or Discounted Internet
With the end of the Affordable Connectivity Program in May, millions of households are grappling with higher internet costs. These plans and subsidies can help.

CNET News
Open 
Remember the Marie Callender's Burnt Pie Thanksgiving Lady? Here's an Update
A year after the cremated Thanksgiving calamity, we check in with the real-life cook behind that famous pumpkin pie.

CNET News
Open 
Burnt Marie Callender's Pie Became a Thanksgiving Meme: Here's What Really Happened
A grandmother's disastrous Thanksgiving dessert went viral. Turns out she baked it at 700 degrees.

CNET News
Open 
Amazon Black Friday Deals: We Found the 54 Deals Worth Shopping This Holiday Season
On the hunt for the best Black Friday deals? Check out our top picks from Amazon's Black Friday sale, including epic bargains on TVs, tablets, kitchen appliances and more.

CNET News
Open 
Put the 20% You Save on This Meater Plus Black Friday Deal Toward Perfectly Cooked Meat
A good cooking probe will tell you when your grilled food is ready better than eyeballing it. The Meater Plus is 20% off right now.

CNET News
Open 
Black Ops 6 Double XP Weekend Live Now, Prop Hunt Returns
A surprise double XP event will help boost player levels as gamers return to Stakeout 24/7 and Prop Hunt playlists.

CNET News
Open 
25 Best Meal Kit and Food Subscription Deals for Black Friday
Meal kits, snack boxes, coffee clubs and wine subscriptions. We found the most delicious Black Friday food delivery deals to knock out some gifting pronto.

CNET News
Open 
This Mini Lantern Is Great for Camping or Emergencies and It's 25% Off for Black Friday
The BioLite Alpenglow Mini lanterns are perfect for camping, emergency bags or during power outages, and they're 25% off for Black Friday.

CNET News
Open 
YouTube TV vs. Hulu Plus Live TV: Which Top TV Streaming Service Is for You?
These two premium live TV options let let you watch your favorite shows without cable. Here's how to choose between them.

CNET News
Open 
Credit Cards, Debit, BNPL or Payment Apps: What's the Best Way to Pay on Black Friday?
If you're planning to shop holiday sales, make sure you pick the right payment method.

CNET News
Open 
Best Full Mattress for 2024
Looking for a step up from a twin mattress but don't have space for a queen? Check out our expert-reviewed picks for the best full mattress.

CNET News
Open 
Does 'Moana 2' Have a Post-Credits Scene?
The musical sequel includes a bonus clip.

CNET News
Open 
Best Black Friday Apple Deals 2024: We Found Spectacular Discounts on MacBooks, iPads, AirPods and More
Black Friday is among the few times a year you can get really good deals on Apple's best products. You'll want to shop them while you can.

CNET News
Open 
Watch Out for Risky Store Credit Card Offers This Weekend
Store credit cards are more likely to harm your finances than help them, according to these experts.

CNET News
Open 
Grab 120 Reusable Cable Ties for 50% Off Before This Deal Expires
Organize your items, prepare for a move, secure holiday gifts and more with this set of 120 reusable cables for 50% off at Amazon.

CNET News
Open 
Protect Your Privacy: Essential Settings to Modify on Roku, Apple TV, and More
You can actually turn off certain features across streaming devices like your Roku or Fire TV Stick to help keep prying eyes out.

CNET News
Open 
Walmart Black Friday Sale: 55+ of the Hottest Deals on Devices, Appliances, Fitness Gear and More
From Apple to Ninja, these are the best bargain finds at Walmart, according to CNET shopping experts.

CNET News
Open 
I Control My Philips Hue Lights Lights With This Must-Have Tiny Device, and It's Not My Phone
Once you see everything this little puck can do, you'll want one, too.

CNET News
Open 
Best Cooling Comforters of 2024
If you find yourself overheating at night, a cooling comforter may be just what you need. Check out our top picks, curated by our CNET sleep experts.

CNET News
Open 
Black Friday Deal: This Jackery Solar Generator Kit Is a Massive $3,200 Off
If you had your eye on the Jackery Solar Generator 2000 Plus Kit, you're in luck with this Black Friday discount.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
'Something special brewing at Slot's remarkable Liverpool'
Arne Slot's Liverpool machine hits top gear to outclass Real Madrid and show something special is stirring at Anfield.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Billionaire Larry Ellison helped give a high school student $10 million to play football for Michigan — and gave us a glimpse behind the NIL curtain
Many universities give out NIL deals worth millions of dollars to some of their athletes, but we rarely find out who the individuals are behind the money

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Record 225 tonnes of cocaine seized on new Australia trafficking route in joint effort
Operation Orion, a cooperative operation between 62 countries, busted narco submarines carrying drugsColombian authorities, in a joint operation with 61 other countries, have uncovered a new drug trafficking route to Australia using “narco-submarines”, seizing 225 tonnes of cocaine, in a new global record for any single anti-narcotics operation.In the six-week Operation Orion, law enforcement agencies halted six semi-submersible vessels stuffed with cocaine and confiscated 1,400 tonnes of drugs in total, including more than 1,000 tonnes of marijuana. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Doctors hail first breakthrough in asthma and COPD treatment in 50 years
Results of trial of benralizumab injection could be ‘gamechanger’ for millions of people around the worldDoctors are hailing a new way to treat serious asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease attacks that marks the first breakthrough for 50 years and could be a “gamechanger” for patients.A trial found offering patients an injection was more effective than the current care of steroid tablets, and cuts the need for further treatment by 30%. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
The Papers: 'Tories failed on migration' and 'cops target Al Fayed network'
Kemi Badenoch's first major speech as Conservative leader and more Al Fayed claims lead the papers.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Gakpo caps Liverpool win over Real Madrid as Mbappé is denied from spot
Arne Slot’s Liverpool reboot has its latest dividend. His team continue to boast the only 100% record in the Champions League group stage and this was not just another victory, it was a swatting aside of the holders, a statement of intent.Real Madrid have hurt Liverpool more than any other opponent in Europe. In four of the previous seven seasons, they have ended their hopes – most agonisingly in the finals of 2018 and 2022. Continue reading...

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
Delta Investigating Reported Stowaway
The stowaway apparently hid inside the aircraft’s restrooms, drawing attention from flight attendants before landing in Paris.

Telegraph
Open 
Emi Martinez save earns Aston Villa point against Juventus – but winless run rolls on
Seven games now without victory for Unai Emery’s Aston Villa and, while the famous European opponents still come to Villa Park and the night games retain their sense of occasion, this is starting to feel like an awkward kind of slump. ]]>

Telegraph
Open 
New Zealand vs England, first Test: Atkinson and Carse send openers packing

Telegraph
Open 
Liverpool blitz Real Madrid to stake claim as best team in Europe
It is only late November, no trophies are handed out at this time of year, or so the old adage goes, but there is little doubt that Liverpool are the best team in Europe right now.]]>

The Hill
Open 
Trump nominees targeted in series of threats
Multiple nominees and appointees tapped to serve in President-elect Trump’s incoming administration were targeted with threats this week, with at least four officials reporting bomb threats at their homes ahead of the Thanksgiving holiday. Karoline Leavitt, who will serve as White House press secretary after the inauguration, said “several” of Trump’s Cabinet picks were the subject of bomb threats...

The Hill
Open 
Here are the Trump picks targeted with threats
Several appointees and nominees picked to be a part of President-elect Trump’s upcoming administration were targeted with threats this week, just days ahead of the Thanksgiving holiday. Trump’s incoming White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement on Wednesday that “several” of the president-elect’s Cabinet choices were targeted with “swatting” calls and bomb...

The Hill
Open 
Ohio AG appeals court decision blocking 6-week abortion ban
Ohio’s attorney general said Wednesday he would appeal an October injunction that prohibited state officials from enforcing a six-week abortion ban, according to The Associated Press.  Republican Dave Yost filed a notice of appeal Friday seeking to overturn a ruling that upheld state voters' amendment to enshrine abortion rights.  “It is up to the courts...

The Hill
Open 
TikTok throttles beauty filters
Welcome to The Hill's Technology newsletter {beacon} Technology Technology   The Big Story TikTok rolls out restrictions on beauty filters TikTok will restrict the use of some appearance effects for users under 18 after teens and parents in a new study expressed concerns about the impact of beauty filters. © Getty Images The restrictions will...

The Hill
Open 
State Department downgrades travel advisory for China
The State Department on Wednesday downgraded its travel advisory for China, shortly after the White House announced it had secured the release of three Americans as part of a prisoner swap with Beijing. The travel advisory was updated to a Level 2 “exercise increased caution,” down from a Level 3 “reconsider travel,” according to the...

The Hill
Open 
Evening Report — Trump Cabinet picks face bomb, swatting threats
Plus: X gets involved in the Infowars {beacon} Evening Report Wednesday, November 27 © Greg Nash, The Hill Trump Cabinet picks face bomb, swatting threats Several of President-elect Trump’s Cabinet picks have been targeted with threats over the last week, including four with reported bomb threats at their homes ahead of the Thanksgiving holiday, The...

The Hill
Open 
Trump taps Jay Bhattacharya to lead NIH, rounding out health team
Click in for more news from The Hill {beacon} Health Care Health Care   The Big Story Trump picks Dr. Jay Bhattacharya to lead NIH The nomination completes the president-elect's selections for top public health roles in his forthcoming administration. © Getty President-elect Trump has finished choosing top health leaders for his next administration after...

The Hill
Open 
GOP Rep. Steel concedes in California House race
Rep. Michelle Steel (R-Calif.) has conceded defeat in her reelection bid against Democrat Derek Tran to represent California’s 45th Congressional District.  Steel’s race is one of two that Decision Desk HQ, which partners with The Hill, hasn’t called yet, but Tran declared victory Monday. The apparent win for Tran is a flip for Democrats that...

The Hill
Open 
DOGE's day in the House
Welcome to The Hill's Business & Economy newsletter {beacon} Business & Economy Business & Economy   The Big Story  Musk, Ramaswamy headed for Capitol  House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) has announced plans to host Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy, the co-leads of the newly established “Department of Government Efficiency” (DOGE), at the Capitol next week....

The Hill
Open 
Americans' view of Republican Party on the rise
Americans’ views of the Republican Party are on the rise, according to a new poll from The Economist/YouGov. In the poll, 45 percent of Americans said they feel “favorable” towards the Republican Party, up 6 points from an Economist/YouGov poll in late October, when 39 percent said they felt favorable towards GOP. The numberr of...

Nature
Open 
Fossilized poo and vomit show how dinosaurs rose to rule Earth

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Niall Ferguson, Scott Horton To Debate Ukraine War Tonight In ZeroHedge Exclusive
Niall Ferguson, Scott Horton To Debate Ukraine War Tonight In ZeroHedge Exclusive

Watch live here at 7pm ET (subscribe to our YouTube):



Twitter/X link to follow...

***

Despite Trump’s promises to bring a swift end to the war in Ukraine by negotiating with Russia, the war has escalated to a dangerous inflection point with long-range U.S., British, and French missiles being deployed deep in Russian territory and talks of deploying NATO troops in Ukraine. That… and anonymous officials in the New York Times saying what is impossible to believe:

"Several officials even suggested that Mr. Biden could return nuclear weapons to Ukraine that were taken from it after the fall of the Soviet Union. That would be an instant and enormous deterrent. But such a step would be complicated and have serious implications," the newspaper wrote.



Amid the chaos, ZeroHedge will be hosting preeminent historians Sir Niall Ferguson and Scott Horton to debate the history of the conflict and U.S. policy in the region. They will be joined by the Hoover Institute's Peter Robinson (if you’ve seen a Thomas Sowell interview, it was probably his).

Join us at 7pm ET right here on the ZeroHedge homepage (as well as Twitter/X and YouTube channels) for an epic matchup that you won’t find anywhere else.

Ferguson is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution and at the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at Harvard University. He’s written over a dozen books on geopolitical and monetary history.

Horton is the founder of the Libertarian Institute and recently published his book, Provoked, on the history of the war in Ukraine and decades of rising tensions between the U.S. and Russia.

We hope you’ll join us on the eve of Thanksgiving. Recent war context included below:

***

Nukes for Ukraine?!

Days ago, The NY Times revealed that US and European officials have discussed a range of options they believe will deter Russia from taking more Ukrainian territory, including the possibility of providing Kiev with nuclear weapons. "US and European officials are discussing deterrence as a possible security guarantee for Ukraine, such as stockpiling a conventional arsenal sufficient to strike a punishing blow if Russia violates a cease-fire," the report said.

The article then stated, "Several officials even suggested that Mr. Biden could return nuclear weapons to Ukraine that were taken from it after the fall of the Soviet Union."

Former Russian president and current deputy chairman of the Security Counsel Dmitry Medvedev has responded by pointing out that if the West actually went forward with transferring nukes to Ukraine, this would be seen as tantamount to an attack on Russia. He explained that this is a key aspect of Russia's newly expanded nuclear doctrine.
Image source: Presidency of Russia

In a Telegram post on Tuesday, Medvedev specifically referenced the recent NY Times report, and said: "Looks like my sad joke about crazy senile Biden, who’s eager to go out with a bang and take a substantial part of humanity with him, is becoming dangerously real."

Medvedev then stressed that "giving nukes to a country that’s at war with the greatest nuclear power" is so absurd that Biden and any of his officials considering it must have "massive paranoid psychosis."

His biggest and most specific threat came as follows: 

"The fact of transferring such weapons may be considered as the launch of an attack against our country in accordance with Paragraph 19 of the ‘Basic Principles of State Policy on Nuclear Deterrence’," Medvedev wrote.

Talk of NATO Troops

Prominent French publication Le Monde on Monday followed by saying serious discussions over injecting Western troops into the war have intensified in the last days: 

As the conflict in Ukraine enters a new phase of escalation, discussions over sending Western troops and private defense companies to Ukraine have been revived, Le Monde has learned from corroborating sources. These are sensitive discussions, most of which are classified – relaunched in light of a potential American withdrawal of support for Kyiv once Donald Trump takes office on January 20, 2025.

Britain is once again at the forefront of urging NATO's deeper involvement in the war, which threatens at any moment to explode into WW3 among nuclear-armed powers. Enter Keir Starmer... in the hawkish footsteps of Boris Johnson:

However, it was relaunched in recent weeks thanks to the visit to France of the UK prime minister, Keir Starmer, for the November 11th commemorations. "Discussions are underway between the UK and France on defense cooperation, particularly with a view to creating a hard core of allies in Europe, focused on Ukraine and wider European security," confided a British military source to Le Monde.

Jean-Noël Barro's aforementioned words about 'no options' ruled out appears to have been a reflection on these continued 'sensitive' conversations.

There have been more reports of US-supplied ATACMS launches on Russian territory since their initial use last week:


Looks like Khalino airbase in Kursk, where Russia launches drones to attack Ukraine, just got a taste of ATACMS. The guy in the video seems pretty impressed! pic.twitter.com/ui8r0je74p
— Maria Avdeeva (@maria_avdv) November 25, 2024

Tyler Durden
Wed, 11/27/2024 - 11:46

ZeroHedge News
Open 
What Ails America... And How To Fix It
What Ails America... And How To Fix It

Authored by Jeffrey Sachs via CommonDreams.org,

When a nation is very sick, we need multiple and overlapping remedies...



America is a country of undoubted vast strengths—technological, economic, and cultural—yet its government is profoundly failing its own citizens and the world. Trump’s victory is very easy to understand. It was a vote against the status quo. Whether Trump will fix—or even attempt to fix—what really ails America remains to be seen.

The rejection of the status quo by the American electorate is overwhelming. According to Gallup in October 2024, 52% of Americans said they and their families were worse off than four years ago, while only 39% said they were better off and 9% said they were about the same. An NBC national news poll in September 2024 found that 65% of Americans said the country is on the wrong track, while only 25% said that it is on the right track. In March 2024, according to Gallup, only 33% of Americans approved of Joe Biden’s handling of foreign affairs.

At the core of the American crisis is a political system that fails to represent the true interests of the average American voter. The political system was hacked by big money decades ago, especially when the U.S. Supreme Court opened the floodgates to unlimited campaign contributions. Since then, American politics has become a plaything of super-rich donors and narrow-interest lobbies, who fund election campaigns in return for policies that favor vested interests rather than the common good.

Two groups own the Congress and White House: super-rich individuals and single-issue lobbies.

The world watched agape as Elon Musk, the world’s richest person (and yes, a brilliant entrepreneur and inventor), played a unique role in backing Trump’s election victory, both through his vast media influence and funding. Countless other billionaires chipped into Trump’s victory.

Many (though not all) of the super-rich donors seeks special favors from the political system for their companies or investments, and most of those desired favors will be duly delivered by the Congress, the White House, and the regulatory agencies staffed by the new administration. Many of these donors also push one overall deliverable: further tax cuts on corporate income and capital gains.

Many business donors, I would quickly add, are forthrightly on the side of peace and cooperation with China, as very sensible for business as well as for humanity. Business leaders generally want peace and incomes, while crazed ideologues want hegemony through war.

There would have been precious little difference in all of this with a Harris victory. The Democrats have their own long list of the super-rich who financed the party’s presidential and Congressional campaigns. Many of those donors too would have demanded and received special favors.

Tax breaks on capital income have been duly delivered by Congress for decades no matter their impact on the ballooning federal deficit, which now stands at nearly 7 percent of GDP, and no matter that the U.S. pre-tax national income in recent decades has shifted powerfully towards capital income and away from labor income. As measured by one basic indicator, the share of labor income in GDP has declined by around 7 percentage points since the end of World War II. As income has shifted from labor to capital, the stock market (and super-wealth) has soared, with the overall stock market valuation rising from 55% of GDP in 1985 to 200% of GDP today!

The second group with its hold on Washingtons is single-issue lobbies.

These powerful lobbies include the military-industrial complex, Wall Street, Big Oil, the gun industry, big pharma, big Ag, and the Israel Lobby. American politics is well organized to cater to these special interests. Each lobby buys the support of specific committees in Congress and selected national leaders to win control over public policy.

The economic returns to special-interest lobbying are often huge: a hundred million dollars of campaign funding by a lobby group can win a hundred billion of federal outlays and/or tax breaks. This is the lesson, for example, of the Israel lobby, which spends a few hundred million dollars on campaign contributions, and harvests tens of billions of dollars in military and economic support for Israel.

These special-interest lobbies do not depend on, nor care much about, public opinion. Opinion surveys show regularly that the public wants gun control, lower drug prices, an end of Wall Street bailouts, renewable energy, and peace in Ukraine and the Middle East. Instead, the lobbyists ensure that Congress and the White House deliver continued easy access to handguns and assault weapons, sky-high drug prices, coddling of Wall Street, more oil and gas drilling, weapons for Ukraine, and wars on behalf of Israel.

These powerful lobbies are money-fueled conspiracies against the common good. Remember Adam Smith’s famous dictum in the Wealth of Nations (1776): "People of the same trade seldom meet together, even for merriment and diversion, but the conversation ends in a conspiracy against the public, or in some contrivance to raise prices."

The two most dangerous lobbies are the military-industrial complex (as Eisenhower famously warned us in 1961) and the Israel lobby (as detailed in a scintillating new book by historian Ilan Pappé).

Their special danger is that they continue to lead us to war and closer to nuclear Armageddon. Biden’s reckless recent decision to allow U.S. missile strikes deep inside Russia, long advocated by the military-industrial complex, is case in point.

The military-industrial complex aims for U.S. “full-spectrum dominance.” It’s purported solutions to world problems are wars and more wars, together with covert regime-change operations, U.S. economic sanctions, U.S. info-wars, color revolutions (led by the National Endowment for Democracy), and foreign policy bullying. These of course have been no solutions at all. These actions, in flagrant violation of international law, have dramatically increased U.S. insecurity.

The military-industrial complex (MIC) dragged Ukraine into a hopeless war with Russia by promising Ukraine membership in NATO in the face of Russia’s fervent opposition, and by conspiring to overthrow Ukraine’s government in February 2014 because it sought neutrality rather than NATO membership.

The military-industrial complex is currently—unbelievably—promoting a coming war with China. This will of course involve a huge and lucrative arms buildup, the aim of the MIC. Yet it will also threaten World War III or a cataclysmic U.S. defeat in another Asian war.

While the Military-Industrial Complex has stoked NATO enlargement and conflicts with Russia and China, the Israel Lobby has stoked America’s serial wars in the Middle East. Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu, more than any U.S. president, has been the lead promoter of America’s backing of disastrous wars in Iraq, Lebanon, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, and Syria.

Netanyahu’s aim is to keep the land that Israel conquered in the 1967 war, creating what is called Greater Israel, and to prevent a Palestinian State. This expansionist policy, in contravention of international law, has given rise to militant pro-Palestinian groups like Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Houthis. Netanyahu’s long-standing policy is for the U.S. to topple or help to topple the governments that support these resistance groups.

Incredibly, the Washington neocons and the Israel Lobby actually joined forces to carry out Netanyahu’s disastrous plan for wars across the Middle East. Netanyahu was a lead backer of the War in Iraq. Former Marine Commander Dennis Fritz has recently described in detail the Israel Lobby’s large role in that war. Ilan Pappé has done the same. In fact, the Israel Lobby has supported U.S.-led or U.S.-backed wars across the Middle East, leaving the targeted countries in ruins and the U.S. budget deep in debt.

In the meantime, the wars and tax cuts for the rich, have offered no solutions for the hardships working-class Americans. As in other high-income countries, employment in U.S. manufacturing fell sharply from the 1980s onward as assembly-line workers were increasingly replaced by robots and “smart systems.” The decline in the labor share of value in the U.S. has been significant, and once again has been a phenomenon shared with other high-countries.

Yet American workers have been hit especially hard. In addition to the underlying global technological trends hitting jobs and wages, American workers have been battered by decades of anti-union policies, soaring tuition and healthcare costs, and other anti-worker measures. In high-income countries of northern Europe, “social consumption” (publicly funded healthcare, tuition, housing, and other publicly provided services) and high levels of unionization have sustained decent living standards for workers. Not so in the United States.

Yet this was not the end of it.

Soaring costs of health care, driven by the private health insurers, and the absence of sufficient public financing for higher education and low-cost online options, created a pincer movement, squeezing the working class between falling or stagnant wages on the one side and rising education and healthcare costs on the other side.

Neither the Democrats nor Republicans did much of anything to help the workers.

Trump’s voter base is the working class, but his donor base is the super-rich and the lobbies. So, what will happen next? More of the same—wars and tax cuts—or something new and real for the voters?

Trump’s purported answer is a trade war with China and the deportation of illegal foreign workers, combined with more tax cuts for the rich. In other words, rather than face the structural challenges of ensuring decent living standards for all, and face forthrightly the staggering budget deficit, Trump’s answers on the campaign trail and in his first term were to blame China and migrants for low working-class wages and wasteful spending for the deficits.

This has played well electorally in 2016 and 2024, but will not deliver the promised results for workers in the long run. Manufacturing jobs will not return in large numbers from China since they never went in large numbers to China. Nor will deportations do much to raise living standards of average Americans.

This is not to say that real solutions are lacking. They are hiding in plain view—if Trump chooses to take them, over the special interest groups and class interests of Trump’s backers.

If Trump chooses real solutions, he would achieve a strikingly positive political legacy for decades to come.


The first is to face down the military-industrial complex. Trump can end the war in Ukraine by telling President Putin and the world that NATO will never expand to Ukraine. He can end the risk of war with China by making crystal clear that the U.S. abides by the One China Policy, and as such, will not interfere in China’s internal affairs by sending armaments to Taiwan over Beijing’s objections, and would not support any attempt by Taiwan to secede.


The second is to face down the Israel lobby by telling Netanyahu that the U.S. will no longer fight Israel’s wars and that Israel must accept a State of Palestine living in peace next to Israel, as called for by the entire world community. This indeed is the only possible path to peace for Israel and Palestine, and indeed for the Middle East.


The third is to close the budget deficit, partly by cutting wasteful spending—notably on wars, hundreds of useless overseas military bases, and sky-high prices the government pays for drugs and healthcare—and partly by raising government revenues. Simply enforcing taxes on the books by cracking down on illegal tax evasion would have raised $625 billion in 2021, around 2.6% of GDP. More should be raised by taxation of soaring capital incomes.


The fourth is an innovation policy (aka industrial policy) that serves the common good. Elon Musk and his Silicon Valley friends have succeeded in innovation beyond the wildest expectations. All kudos to Silicon Valley for bringing us the digital age. America’s innovation capacity is vast and robust and an envy of the world.

The challenge now is innovation for what? Musk has his eye on Mars and beyond. Captivating, yet there are billions of people on Earth that can and should be helped by the digital revolution in the here and now. A core goal of Trump’s industrial policy should be to ensure that innovation serves the common good, including the poor, the working class, and the natural environment. Our nation’s goals need to go beyond wealth and weapons systems.

As Musk and his colleagues know better than anybody, the new AI and digital technologies can usher in an era of low-cost, zero-carbon energy; low-cost healthcare; low-cost higher education; low-cost electricity-powered mobility; and other AI-enabled efficiencies that can raise real living standards of all workers. In the process, innovation should foster high-quality, unionized jobs—not the gig employment that has sent living standards plummeting and worker insecurity soaring.

Trump and the Republicans have resisted these technologies in the past. In his first term, Trump let China take the lead in these technologies pretty much across the board. Our goal is not to stop China’s innovations, but to spur our own. Indeed, as Silicon Valley understands while Washington does not, China has long been and should remain America’s partner in the innovation ecosystem. China’s highly efficient and low-cost manufacturing facilities, such as Tesla’s Gigafactory in Shanghai, put Silicon Valley’s innovations into worldwide use … when America tries.

All four of these steps are within Trump’s reach, and would justify his electoral triumph and secure his legacy for decades to come. I’m not holding my breath for Washington to adopt these straightforward steps. American politics has been rotten for too long for real optimism in that regard, yet these four steps are all achievable, and would greatly benefit not only the tech and finance leaders who backed Trump’s campaign but the generation of disaffected workers and households whose votes put Trump back into the White House.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 11/27/2024 - 16:20

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Exxon Pours Cold Water On Trump's "Drill, Baby, Drill" Plans
Exxon Pours Cold Water On Trump's "Drill, Baby, Drill" Plans

Contrary to expectations for a self-defeating flood of new energy production under the second Trump admin, Exxon’s Upstream President Liam Mallon said that oil and gas producers in the US will not raise output significantly in the coming years despite calls from President-Elect Donald Trump to “drill, baby, drill."

“I think a radical change is unlikely because the vast majority, if not everybody, is primarily focused on the economics of what they’re doing,” Mallon said on Tuesday at a conference in London, according to Bloomberg.

Trump is expected to open up federal lands for more oil and gas drilling, in part to execute on Scott Bessent's "3-3-3 plan" which envisions boosting US oil production by an addition 3 million barrels per day (from the current record 13.3 million), but much of the land in the country’s largest oil and gas producing state, Texas, is private. Still, there’s plentiful federal land in neighboring New Mexico which includes the oil- and gas-rich Permian Basin.

“If those rules were substantially changed, you would be able to drill more, assuming you have the quality and met your economic threshold,” Mallon said. “But I don’t think we’re going to see anybody in the drill, baby, drill mode. I really don’t.”

Exxon’s European rival TotalEnergies is also skeptical of Trump’s vow to open US taps.

“Maybe he has a magic recipe to push them to drill like mad,” TotalEnergies CEO Patrick Pouyanne said at the conference. He cited US producers’ commitment to return cash to shareholders and said “it’s not only decisions by politicians” that drive American output.

The US is pumping more than 13 million barrels of crude a day, exceeding every other nation and up almost 45% in the past decade. With a surplus looming next year, the global oil market is watching to see at what rate American explorers drill new wells. Many of the biggest US operators are taking a long-term approach to production, weighing when to bring certain wells online against their overall inventory. Many have throttled their output to maximize shareholders returns (i.e. higher prices) over total production (higher volumes).

Mallon’s comments mark the second time since the election that the largest US oil company has diverged from Trump’s policies. CEO Darren Woods discouraged the president-elect from withdrawing the US from the Paris climate pact, arguing that it’s better to participate and push for “common sense” carbon-cutting policy.

Mallon reinforced Woods’s recent remarks supporting the US Inflation Reduction Act, which Trump has characterized as Washington’s “green new scam.” Some IRA incentives — including tax credits for capturing carbon, producing hydrogen and making sustainable aviation fuel — are particularly popular with oil companies.

“Our position on the IRA is very good,” Mallon said. “We strongly believe in what it is, what it stands for and the incentives it’s providing.”

Tyler Durden
Wed, 11/27/2024 - 16:40

ZeroHedge News
Open 
How Trump Voters Learned To Love, And Turn Out, The Mail-In Ballot
How Trump Voters Learned To Love, And Turn Out, The Mail-In Ballot

Authored by Philip Wegmann via RealClearPolitics,

In the spring, James Blair, political director for the Trump campaign, called a meeting in West Palm Beach. The occasion: Marc Elias had changed the world.



It was Elias who had petitioned the Federal Election Commission at the beginning of the year to allow a George Soros-funded political action committee to coordinate with campaigns. And the Democratic super lawyer had won. A nine-page advisory opinion followed in March. For the first time, the FEC ruled that federal candidates could coordinate with outside organizations. And now politics would change forever.

Blair sensed opportunity. All he had to do, the reason he gathered the most loyal MAGA captains of the biggest grassroots armies around a conference table inside Trump campaign headquarters last April, was convince them to accept a little heresy. The political director had to teach them to love the mail-in ballot.

Trump had taught his base to hate mail balloting, a practice he blamed for his loss in 2020. Now Blair was urging the former president’s most faithful followers to embrace what was previously verboten. According to sources inside the room that day, the conversion did not go smoothly.

Charlie Kirk, founder of Turning Point USA, balked. A confidant of the Trump family, Kirk and his lieutenant Tyler Bowyer were allegedly “horrified” by the idea of pushing absentee ballots for fear of alienating MAGA diehards. Ned Ryun, CEO of American Majority Action, insisted absentee ballots were half the battle, arguing that Republican hopes would languish in long lines on Election Day without them. One source described the mood that day as “snippy.”

Turning Point spokesman Andrew Kolvet dismissed that characterization and told RealClearPolitics the organization was making plans as early as 2022 to “hammer home” the early vote.

“There were skeptics,” Blair said in retrospect. Without singling anyone out, he told RCP that “less sophisticated” operatives on the right still subscribed to “this theory that ‘well, if the votes come in early, then [Democrats] know how many they need to cheat.’” His counter-argument as he showed the grassroots the math: “No, once a vote is banked, that’s good.”

This was easier said than done, as Trump had hardwired a deep distrust into the minds of millions of Republicans by arguing that anything other than same-day voting was synonymous with fraud. “We have to get rid of mail-in ballots,” Trump said during his January victory speech after winning the Iowa caucuses. As he began his easy march through the GOP primary field, Trump added, “Once you have mail-in ballots, you have crooked elections.”

Data alone would not be enough to convince the base to abandon that belief. Only Trump could change their minds. “He had to create the permission structure for his voters,” Blair explained, “which is that voting early, whether by mail or in person, can be a pathway to victory, not to defeat.”

Clearing a primary field of Republican challengers too afraid to attack him was one thing. Unseating an incumbent president would be another. Enter Susie Wiles.

She came from Florida, just like Blair, where Republicans had built majorities for decades despite being outnumbered by Democrats on registered voter rolls. As campaign co-chair, she had just helped Trump brush aside the primary challenge of Florida’s own governor. Then Wiles looked to the general election, directing Blair to draft a memo outlining a new Trump way to win. In short, they planned to export the Florida model.

They laid out the data, pointed to successful case studies, and ran sophisticated election simulations. But the final argument that changed Trump’s mind? “Look, sir,” the former president was told, according to sources familiar with the discussions, “people are really excited to vote for you, and they want to vote for you as soon as they have the chance to vote.” On the evening of April 19, in characteristic all caps, Trump did something very uncharacteristic: He reversed himself and blessed the mail ballot. Wrote the former president on his social media website Truth Social:

ABSENTEE VOTING, EARLY VOTING, AND ELECTION DAY VOTING ARE ALL GOOD OPTIONS. REPUBLICANS MUST MAKE A PLAN, REGISTER, AND VOTE!

Once the green light was given, the Trump machine kicked into another gear. They would still drive turnout on Election Day, but they would work just as hard to bank votes in advance. This has an obvious tactical advantage. Every supporter who cast their ballot early represented one less voter the campaign had to spend time and resources on getting to the polls on November 5. All campaigns do this. But the FEC decision that allowed federal candidates to coordinate with outside groups, the one ushered in by liberal lawyer Marc Elias, turbocharged everything. Tim Saler, chief data consultant for the Trump campaign, took full advantage.

Saler was the analytical brain behind the GOP’s ground game juggernaut. Despite all the massive reporting from the Associated Press to the New York Times suggesting the opposite, he insisted in an interview with RCP that Trump actually had one. “It was not outsourced at all,” Saler said of the get-out-the-vote apparatus. “It was coordinated.”

Flashback to Florida. Many of the groups inside Trump headquarters, almost a dozen in total, were already planning their own canvassing programs. Some had more experience than others.

Turn Out for America, a political action committee bankrolled by conservative billionaire Dick Uihlein, was on board from the beginning and widely considered among Trump operatives as “the gold standard.”

American Majority Action, Ryun’s group, had just run two pilot programs the year before, one in Louisiana and another in Virginia. Ryun was convinced Republicans could win by banking votes. “We had faith in what they did,” said a source with direct knowledge of the Trump operation. The newest addition: Turning Point Action.

Kirk and Bowers leveraged their influence with millions of conservative students to create a turnout machine. “Turning Point will just need to keep evolving,” a Trump operative said of the newest edition while stressing that their efforts were welcome and helpful.

America PAC, the Elon Musk upstart that would eclipse all the rest in spending, would come later.

Saler loves them all and says each did good work. Ahead of Election Day, the first order of business was making sure the assorted groups “did no harm.” Under the new FEC paradigm, and for the first time, the campaign could communicate priorities, coordinate strategy, and share best tactics. Hence the second priority discussed at the West Palm Beach meeting: A data-sharing agreement.

“There was a real misnomer, or just a false attack, that we didn’t have a field program,” Saler said of the idea “that our field program had been farmed out.” The campaign already had in-house volunteers, a program called Trump Force 47, that fanned out to all 50 states and knocked on millions of doors on its own. What the new coordination rules provided for was the creation of the outside armies fanning out to each of the seven battleground states in search of the all-important low-propensity voter.

“The president’s coalition is more rural, lower propensity, and more down scale,” Saler explained. “Think a 35-year-old man who turns a wrench in small-town, central Wisconsin, who never engages face-to-face with anybody in politics.”

To turn out a coalition like no other, Saler had to assemble an apparatus like no other. The campaign would be at the center. They shared targeting priorities with the outside groups, who then sent their people into the field to find and identify Trump voters, building a real-time data loop. They didn’t just go where other GOP presidential campaigns had been in years past. Because of the new canvassing rules, Trump HQ could send outside groups, not just to big population centers, but door to door even in the most rural areas. On front porches, outside grocery stores, and everywhere in between, canvassers sought out the MAGA faithful, registered them to vote, and pushed them to do it early.

“The president is a unique character in American history; He is the champion of the forgotten man and woman,” Saler said before adding that the campaign was just as unique. “We also didn’t forget them.” In the moment, though, skepticism abounded. Some Republicans, many of them on the outside looking in, questioned the wisdom of relying so heavily on mercenary doorknockers ahead of what was sure to be a make-or-break election. Even Ben Shapiro was worried. In an October interview, Shapiro warned the former president that he was hearing mixed reviews about the ground game. Was his campaign up to the job? Trump avoided the question. In the final stretch, no one had a definitive answer.

A team of rivals, meanwhile, was working on his behalf in pursuit of low-propensity voters.

A staple on the college circuit, Kirk focused on the youth vote while directing his organization’s political arm, Turning Point Action, to decamp from campus and field an army of more than a thousand paid doorknockers across each of the swing states in pursuit of low-propensity voters overall. A spokesman denied that there was any hesitation about registering voters for absentee ballots. Instead, the organization modeled its early-vote strategy off of the Democratic playbook while making accommodations for lingering concerns over mail-in ballots.

The emphasis was on early voting, but if a voter preferred to cast their ballot in person on Election Day, the organization was ready to drive them to the polls. Explained Turning Point spokesman Andrew Kolvet, “We only care about getting ballots in the box.”

At times, the organization took “low propensity” to the extreme. Scott Presler, a conservative activist who partnered with Turning Point in Pennsylvania, courted a normally apolitical and untapped constituency: the Amish. 

That community’s aversion to politics wasn’t the chief obstacle. It was the calendar. “Get this,” he told RCP, “Amish get married on Tuesdays in November.” Otherwise, they generally match the voter profile of a normal social conservative, he reported. Armed with that information, Presler parachuted into rural farming communities west of Philadelphia and north of Pittsburgh with absentee and mail-in ballot applications.  

While Turning Point and their partners earned praise for that kind of innovation, elsewhere, some questioned the efficiency of their organization. One Turning Point intern attracted online criticism when he bragged in a social media post that he knocked on just 500 doors over the course of nine weeks, a seemingly low number. Another paid Turning Point Action employee, currently under contract in Wisconsin through November, told RCP that management had set a daily goal of just 10 voter contacts.

“We set out on a mission to chase low-prop and first-time voters across the country,” Kirk wrote in a social media post the week after the election. Across four states (Arizona, Michigan, Nevada, and Wisconsin), according to their internal numbers, Turning Point Action had helped no less than 300,000 low-propensity voters cast their votes. “Mission accomplished,” he wrote.

American Majority Action took a more traditional approach with Ryun at the helm. The hard-nosed operative, who helped former Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker become just the second state executive to survive a recall 13 years prior, had raised and deployed as many grassroots armies in the time since. The difference this time? Ever since the “Red Wave” fizzled in the 2022 midterms, Ryun had been on a one-man crusade to force Republicans to embrace absentee and early voting in earnest.

After running two successful pilot programs in state races, he was convinced the GOP could take the approach national. Trump supporters would learn to love the mail-in ballot, he was convinced, once they won with it. Toward that end, American Majority picked four targets: Arizona, Nevada, North Carolina, and Wisconsin. They hired 1,600 staff, drilling into each canvasser two numbers: Seven and nine. Between seven and nine is how many times a single low-propensity voter, on average, must be contacted before they will return a mail-in ballot. A blunt Ryun calls it “targeted harassment.”

According to an after-action report, the group made more than 11 million phone calls in support of Trump and sent just shy of four million texts to voters in each of their four target states. They knocked on nearly 2 million doors.

On the eve of the election, Ryun wrote in an op-ed for “American Greatness” that Republicans had experienced their fair share of growing pains. It would take time for the GOP to catch up to Democrats on the early voting front, but overall, the conservative movement earned a passing grade: “A solid B to B+ level with lots of room for growth.”

America PAC was the last big group to arrive. Elon Musk endorsed Trump after the first assassination attempt, and while Republicans welcomed the many millions of dollars from the world’s richest man, the political novice attracted his fair share of scrutiny. His group planned to compete in all seven battleground states. They initially hired just a handful of vendors to execute a one-size-fits-all, top-down strategy.

By the end of the summer, though, Musk fired his initial team and hired Genera Peck and Phil Cox, veterans of the defunct DeSantis campaign, to put together a national plan with individual directors in each of the battleground states. They took a tailored approach, and by the end, Musk lent his celebrity to the Pennsylvania campaign, a state he often told voters was the key to the whole election. His group spent north of $200 million, a deep war chest that lent itself to sending canvassers nearly everywhere.

The scope of all of this was relatively new territory. Few national, grassroots organizations previously had the resources and expertise to chase votes across multiple states concurrently. Each additional battleground added another level of complexity and difficulty. But it wasn’t all top-down. A patchwork of groups supplemented the work in the individual swing states.

Motivated by the frustration that the right had “yielded voter registration to the left,” former Georgia Sen. Kelly Loeffler launched “Greater Georgia” in the Peach State. The group identified tens of thousands of conservative Georgians and helped get them registered to vote. Another state-specific get-out-the-vote engine to the north: PA Chase. Founded by Cliff Maloney, that organization canvassed throughout Pennsylvania in search of low-propensity voters in need of a mail-in ballot. “We’re finally catching up to the Democrats,” Maloney said of his efforts before Election Day. “This is straight out of their playbook, right?

In this way, the Trump campaign and its allies chased the low-propensity voter. And it worked. He not only swept each swing state on his way to becoming just the second president in history to win non-consecutive terms, but Trump also won the popular vote, something Republicans haven’t achieved since 2004. Said Saler of the electorate that returned the former and future president to the Oval Office, “He created them.” Many were first-time voters. Some voted only for him. Now every Republican operative involved in planning for the midterms and the next general election is focused on one question: How to keep these voters in the GOP fold? It will likely include a heavy emphasis on the early vote.

Trump World, even in victory, sees the mail-in ballot as a pragmatic necessity, not an ideal way to vote. “Look, they’re not perfect, and if we could just do away with them, we probably would, but that’s not the world we live in,” Blair said. “They exist. So, it is what it is.”

For his part, Ryun has become their biggest apostle of early voting and the mail-in ballot. After Republicans won big, he isn’t in a hurry to see the GOP set them aside. “I’m telling you, this works, and this should be our game planning forward,” he said, before adding that a more pressing question for the right was discerning which groups did real work and which did little more than gobble up donor dollars.

“There are some vaporware organizations, like Turning Point, that I’m afraid were not as effective as they could have been because they were on a journey of self-discovery in politics,” Ryun said. “My concern for the future is, how do we make sure that some of these voters who turned out for Trump-only become consistent Republican voters.”

A Turning Point spokesman dismissed that criticism. Said Kolvet, “We’re not in the business of getting down in the mud.” The results, he said, speak for themselves. “The campaign, which knows the data and accomplishments well, knows how successful our program was,” the spokesman concluded.

Republicans will have their work cut out for them in the midterms. They have historically underperformed whenever Trump is not on the ballot. The coordination between federal candidates and outside groups – that the FEC allowed at the insistence of Democrats like Elias – will not change. It was central to a Trump victory.

“Thank you, Marc,” quipped Saler, the Trump data consultant who helped engineer the former, and future, president’s comeback. “We appreciate you.”

Tyler Durden
Wed, 11/27/2024 - 17:00

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Chinese Automakers Are Dethroning Their Once-Dominant Japanese Competitors
Chinese Automakers Are Dethroning Their Once-Dominant Japanese Competitors

China is doing the unthinkable and dethroning once dominant Japanese automakers, who are struggling to compete in China.

China is the world's largest car market and domestic brands are dominating with a surge of electric vehicles. Chinese companies are also expanding into Southeast Asia, challenging the long-standing dominance of brands like Toyota, Honda, and Mitsubishi, according to w new report by Bloomberg.

Between 2019 and 2024, Japanese automakers experienced the steepest market share declines in China, Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia, and Indonesia, according to Bloomberg's analysis of sales and registration data.



Japanese automakers are losing ground across Asia, with all six tracked by Bloomberg experiencing declines in China. Even Toyota, the global leader in car volume, has seen its sales stagnate. In Southeast Asia, a traditional stronghold for Japanese brands, market share has dropped sharply.

In Thailand and Singapore, Japanese carmakers now control just 35% of the market, down from over 50% in 2019, while streets once dominated by Nissan and Mazda are increasingly filled with Chinese brands.



The Bloomberg profile notes that Toyota remains competitive in some segments, like pickups, but the broader outlook is troubling for automakers once renowned for efficiency and reliability. Their slow pivot to fully electric vehicles puts them at risk of falling behind in a market driven by advanced battery technology and smart software.

Although Chinese automakers face high tariffs in Europe and the U.S., the erosion of Japanese dominance in Asia could signal wider challenges ahead.

Toyota’s stronghold in Southeast Asia is supported by regional production of gasoline cars with larger engines, appealing to local preferences. In 2023, Thailand and Indonesia accounted for nearly 10% of Toyota's 11 million global vehicle output. However, other Japanese brands, like Nissan, are struggling.



Nissan’s outdated lineup and lack of hybrids contributed to profit losses and production cuts, with its presence in Jakarta now fading.

Meanwhile, Chinese automaker BYD has rapidly gained traction in Indonesia, ranking as the sixth top-selling brand just months after delivering its first vehicles. Its $40,000 Seal EV is proving especially popular.

Japan's global auto production share has dropped from over 20% two decades ago to 11%, while China has surged to dominate, now accounting for nearly 40% of worldwide car manufacturing. Chinese automakers are leveraging their expertise in low-cost batteries and flexible supply chains to expand into Southeast Asia, the Middle East, and Africa, further challenging Japan's dominance in these markets.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 11/27/2024 - 17:20

ZeroHedge News
Open 
US To Deepen Footprint In Lebanon As Part Of Ceasefire Deal
US To Deepen Footprint In Lebanon As Part Of Ceasefire Deal

Via Middle East Eye

The US is set to deepen its footprint in Lebanon as part of a ceasefire deal aimed at ending more than a year of fighting between Israel and Hezbollah. According to details of the agreement shared with Middle East Eye by current and former US and Arab officials, the 60-day ceasefire will see all Israeli forces withdraw from Lebanon in phases, with Hezbollah moving north of the Litani River.

The deal which was announced late Tuesday is broadly based on UN Security Council Resolution 1701, which ended the 2006 war between Israel and Hezbollah and was supposed to see the Lebanese army and the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (Unifil) deployed to southern Lebanon.

As per the deal, the Lebanese army, with assistance from Unifil, will be deployed to the south to ensure that Hezbollah does not re-enter the area between the Israeli border and the Litani.
Via Reuters

"By day 60 there will be no Israeli or Hezbollah troops in southern Lebanon," a senior Arab official told Middle East Eye. 

The agreement, which seeks to end more than a year of fighting that has claimed more than 3,700 lives in Lebanon, will also see the US deploy technical military advisers to Lebanon and see Washington provide additional funds to the Lebanese army.

The US will also provide oversight on Hezbollah's withdrawal and a military official - likely from Central Command (Centcom) - will head an international committee that will coordinate with hundreds of soon-to-be-deployed French soldiers as part of a beefed-up UN peacekeeping mission.

A senior US official told MEE that Israel will not be granted the right to attack Lebanon based on any suspicious movements. Israel will have to report any movement it deems suspicious to the international committee, which in turn will inform the Lebanese army to take the necessary action.

If the Lebanese army fails to act after receiving a complaint regarding suspicious activities south of the Litani or in any Lebanese area, Israel will consider the agreement void and resume its attacks on Lebanon.

The US is not expected to deploy additional troops on the ground. Instead, the pending ceasefire is set to expand the 10,000-strong Unifil peacekeeping mission. Hundreds of French soldiers are expected to deploy to Lebanon as part of Unifil, according to the former US and Arab official. 

The agreement will also deepen the US's ongoing efforts to support the Lebanese military. The US started funding the Lebanese army in 2005 after a protest movement prompted the withdrawal of Syrian troops from the country.

In the last 20 years, Washington has been the army's largest donor, giving more than $2.5bn in support to the military, which is seen as a national institution that crosses sectarian and political divides.

The sources told MEE that the army has already recruited 1,500 troops and seeks to bring on board roughly 3,500 more in the next four months. 
Via Middle East Eye (MEE)

The US will also beef up training, equipment and reimbursement funds to the army. Washington is also speaking with Saudi Arabia and Qatar about providing funds to the Lebanese forces to pay additional salaries. Qatar already provides funds to the cash-strapped Lebanese army, pledging $60m in 2022 to support soldiers' salaries.

Lebanon was in the midst of a disastrous financial crisis before Hezbollah began launching missiles and drones at Israel on 8 October 2023 in solidarity with Palestinians under attack in Gaza.

The ceasefire will also include a renewed commitment to several other UN Security Council resolutions, including 1559 and 1680, which call for the disarmament of Hezbollah. 

Unlike other Lebanese armed groups, Hezbollah kept its weapons after the 1975-90 civil war so it could continue to fight against Israel's occupation of south Lebanon. Though Israel mostly withdrew in 2000, it continues to occupy the Shebaa Farms, which Hezbollah says are Lebanese.

Hezbollah's year-long attacks have displaced around 60,000 Israelis from their homes in northern Israel. Meanwhile, Israeli bombardment and the ground invasion launched in October have forced more than a million people in Lebanon to flee.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 11/27/2024 - 17:40

ZeroHedge News
Open 
"Significant Uptick" In M&A Rumors Observed In News Cycle Ahead Of 2025 
"Significant Uptick" In M&A Rumors Observed In News Cycle Ahead Of 2025 

Goldman Sachs analysts have noted a "significant uptick" in merger and acquisition rumors in the press over the past six weeks. The investment bank forecasts positive M&A growth trends over the next 12 months, signaling a potential rebound in dealmaking activity. 

Analysts Matt Michon and Hannah Taylor penned a note Wednesday to clients about the surge in M&A headlines.

"In the last six weeks, there has been a significant uptick in M&A "rumours" relative to the prior three-quarters so hopefully an encouraging sign that corporate activity is picking-up...!" they said. 

The list of companies below is part of the desk's M&A monitor, which shows "potential M&A situations reported through the press" and also "highlighted in blue are those with news updates since our last note." A list of failed M&A approaches was also recorded. 

Most recent M&A headlines... 











Failed M&A approaches. 



In a separate but recent note, Goldman analysts James Yaro and Richard Ramsden told clients that internal leading indicators "forecast 20% M&A growth over the next twelve months."   



The latest remarks from the FOMC Minutes suggest that Fed officials are leaning toward a more gradual interest rate-cutting cycle. One that could certainly provide relief to corporates... 

Tyler Durden
Wed, 11/27/2024 - 18:00

The Verge
Open 
Google Chat’s new huddles make it even more like Teams and Slack

The Verge
Open 
Microsoft is being investigated by the FTC over antitrust concerns

The Verge
Open 
FTC changes its telemarketing rules to cover growing ‘tech support scam’ calls

The Verge
Open 
The discontinued Steam Deck LCD is on sale

TechRadar News
Open 
This color manipulation attack reveals significant flaws in AI image handling

TechRadar News
Open 
2 of the best Lego Star Wars specials will be available to stream for free on YouTube soon

TechRadar News
Open 
Can't find the right Spotify playlist? Let Gemini do it for you

Digital Trends
Open 
Black Friday GE Ice Maker deals 2024: Save 25% and get your ice already
We've picked out all the best Black Friday GE Ice Maker deals right now, and we also have some great advice if you're buying one.

Digital Trends
Open 
Echo Show 15 (1st Gen) vs. Echo Show 15 (2nd Gen): What’s new on the updated smart display?
The Echo Show 15 (2nd Gen) makes some big improvements over its predecessor, but is a worth an upgrade? Here's what to know before making a purchase.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Maeda saves point for Celtic against Club Brugge after Carter-Vickers error
There were spells in this game when it looked a question of how many Club Brugge fancied winning by. As Cameron Carter-Vickers stroked home an embarrassing own goal to send the Belgians in front, Celtic were in a state of panic.Celtic have no cause to care that they snatched a point. Indeed, Brugge’s profligacy should be of no concern whatsoever to Brendan Rodgers. This draw, earned courtesy of Daizen Maeda’s glorious strike, leaves Celtic on course to reach the playoff round of the Champions League. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Robbie Williams says people from the 90s shouldn't be shamed for how they think and feel
Robbie Williams has said people from the 90s "shouldn't be held accountable for how we think and we feel now".

Gizmodo
Open 
Protect Your Digital Life This Black Friday with an Unbeatable VPN Deal!
Private Internet Access is one of the most renowned VPNs in the United States. And this Black Friday, you can enjoy a discount of up to 83% (plus up to 4 months free).

Gizmodo
Open 
The Brief History of Doctor Who‘s Forced Regenerations
As the BBC prepares to bring Patrick Troughton's final story to color, we take a look back at the show's approach to a grim aspect of Time Lord society.

Gizmodo
Open 
Best Black Friday VPN Deals 2024: Save Up to 84% Today!
It's time — Black Friday is here! No need to wait any longer. If you're looking to get a VPN, we've got the best deals for Black Friday 2024.

Sky News Home
Open 
Teenager who hugged Princess of Wales dies aged 17 after pursuing photography bucket list
A teenage photographer who met the Princess of Wales while pursuing a photography bucket list after being diagnosed with a rare form of cancer has died.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Maeda saves point for Celtic against Club Brugge after Carter-Vickers error
There were spells in this game when it looked a question of how many Club Brugge fancied winning by. As Cameron Carter-Vickers stroked home an embarrassing own goal to send the Belgians in front, Celtic were in a state of panic. The stars were in stripes.Celtic have no cause to care that they snatched a point. Indeed, Brugge’s profligacy should be of no concern whatsoever to Brendan Rodgers. This draw, earned courtesy of Daizen Maeda’s glorious strike, leaves Celtic on course to reach the playoff round of the Champions League. This was an outcome which proved the beauty of football; Brugge’s style and swagger were ultimately matched by Celtic’s desire not to lose. No wonder Rodgers cut a contended figure afterwards, even if his claim that Celtic were the better second-half team was highly dubious. Eight points from five outings is a strong return. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Mohamed Al Fayed may have raped and abused more than 111 women, say police
Scale of the criminality would make Fayed, who died last year at the age of 94, one of Britain’s most notorious sex offendersPolice believe Mohamed Al Fayed may have raped and abused more than 111 women over nearly four decades, with his youngest victim said to have been just 13 years old.The scale of the criminality would make Fayed, who died last year at the age of 94, one of Britain’s most notorious sex offenders, and raises urgent questions about how he got away with his crimes. Continue reading...

Wired Top Stories
Open 
16 Best Gifts for Men, Manly Men, and Menly Man Men (2024)
When you need something that's as unnecessarily masculinized as you can get for the Man™ in your life, we have you covered.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
US to Introduce New Restrictions on China’s Access to Cutting-Edge Chips
The new limits, which are expected to be announced Monday, are intended to slow China's ability to build large and powerful AI models.

BBC World News
Open 
Israelis survey damage and mull return to north as ceasefire begins
The deal has triggered discussions of what it would take for people displaced by Hezbollah attacks to return.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Liz Hatton, teen photographer who inspired Kate, dies aged 17
Photographer Liz Hatton, 17, from Harrogate, died on Wednesday, her mother confirms.

ZDNet News
Open 
One of the most durable Android phones I've tested just hit its lowest price for Black Friday
The Doogee S200 has a quad-core processor, a 20-day battery (on standby), and even a 100-megapixel camera. Right now, it's on sale for 21% off.

ZDNet News
Open 
One of the best cheap Android phones I've tested is not a Samsung or Motorola (and it's on sale)
Although the Oukitel C50 isn't made by the most popular brand, its great battery life and a big 90Hz display make it feel like it should be twice the price. It's even more affordable this holiday season.

ZDNet News
Open 
This Samsung OLED TV for $600 off is one of the best deals I've seen on Black Friday
Samsung's S90C OLED TV is one of the highest-rated TVs of the past year. I've personally tested it, and I consider it one of the best high-end TVs for the money - especially with this Black Friday deal.

ZDNet News
Open 
The best Black Friday Kindle deals: Shop sales available now
Black Friday is just two days away. I found discounts on Kindle e-readers, like a Kindle Paperwhite deal you can shop right now.

ZDNet News
Open 
The Apple Watch Ultra 2 is a near-perfect smartwatch for me - and it's $80 off for Black Friday
With a handful of hardware improvements and several changes to the software, the Ultra 2 delivers the most premium smartwatch experience. Right now, it's on sale for $719 during Black Friday.

ZDNet News
Open 
Amazon is selling every iPhone 16 model for one cent this Black Friday - here's how the deal works
It's very much one of those 'too good to be true' offers for most people, but for the right customer, the one-cent iPhone dream can be realized with this Boost Mobile promo.

ZDNet News
Open 
Best Black Friday laptop deals 2024: 31 live deals organized by RAM, storage, and more
With Black Friday just two days away, we gathered 31 of the best laptop deals from Apple, Dell, Lenovo, and more for all budgets.

ZDNet News
Open 
The Lenovo laptop I recommend for hybrid workers is more than $1,600 off for Black Friday
Lenovo's ThinkPad X1 Carbon is a pro-level laptop with a lightweight design and near-bezel-less display. For Black Friday week, it's more than 50% off.

ZDNet News
Open 
Why I travel with Bose's QuietComfort Ultra instead of the Sony XM5 headphones - and they're on sale
I tested Bose's flagship headphones and its closest competitor, the Sony WH-1000XM5, back to back. Here's my argument to buy the former.

ZDNet News
Open 
How I bought the Meta Ray-Bans for 20% off on Black Friday - and got an Amazon gift card too
Consistent feature updates, a rare discount, and a free $90 Amazon gift card make the Meta Ray-Ban smart glasses a no-brainer purchase for me this holiday season.

ZDNet News
Open 
This LG OLED TV is my No. 1 pick for best picture quality, and it's $1,100 off for Black Friday
The LG G4 OLED TV has the best color I've ever seen. While I don't prefer the remote or the built-in software, the picture quality is so stunning that I'd just connect a high-end streaming box.

ZDNet News
Open 
Apple's M2 MacBook Air is just $749 for Black Friday - and I can't find a better laptop deal
Apple's MacBook Air set the standard for portability, and right now it's on sale for $749 for Black Friday -- the lowest price we've seen for the model yet.

ZDNet News
Open 
The 50+ best Black Friday PlayStation 5 deals 2024: Deals available now
Black Friday lands in just two days, and it's the perfect time to find deals on everything from console preorders and bundles to games and accessories for the PS5 gamer on your holiday shopping list.

Slashdot
Open 
Former Android Leaders Are Building an 'Operating System For AI Agents'
The Verge's Wes Davis reports: A new startup created by former Android leaders aims to build an operating system for AI agents. Among them is Hugo Barra, Google's former VP of Android product management, who says the new company -- named "/dev/agents" -- will revisit the leaders' "Android roots."

"We can see the promise of AI agents, but as a developer, it's just too hard to build anything good," /dev/agents cofounder and CEO and Google's former Android VP of engineering David Singleton told Bloomberg. He said the industry needs "an Android-like moment for AI."

The company is working on a cloud-based "next-gen operating system for AI agents" intended "for trusted agents to work with users across all of their devices," Singleton wrote in a post on X. He said that AI agents will "need new UI patterns, a reimagined privacy model, and a developer platform that makes it radically simpler to build useful agents."





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Slashdot
Open 
FTC Launches Broad Microsoft Antitrust Investigation
The FTC has opened a broad antitrust investigation into Microsoft, including of its software licensing and cloud computing business. Bloomberg first reported the news. Reuters reports: The probe was approved by FTC Chair Lina Khan ahead of her likely departure in January. The election of Donald Trump as U.S. president and the expectation he will appoint a fellow Republican with a softer approach toward business, leaves the outcome of the investigation up in the air.

The FTC is examining allegations that the software giant is potentially abusing its market power in productivity software by imposing punitive licensing terms to prevent customers from moving their data from its Azure cloud service to other competitive platforms, sources confirmed earlier this month. The FTC is also looking at practices related to cybersecurity and artificial intelligence products, the source said on Wednesday.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

CNET News
Open 
16 Best Black Friday Streaming Deals: Hulu for $1, Peacock for 75% Off, and More
Stream all your favorite shows and movies without busting your budget, thanks to big discounts on Max, Hulu, Paramount Plus and more.

CNET News
Open 
Amazon's Black Friday Sale Has a Fantastic Deal on My Favorite Car Battery Jump Starter
This Powrun P-One battery pack can revive my car battery without all the trouble of traditional jumper cables.

CNET News
Open 
This Small Eufy Anker SmartTrack Card Is 44% Off for Black Friday
With the Eufy Anker SmartTrack Card, you can track your wallet wherever you are. Take advantage of this Black Friday deal and save money now.

CNET News
Open 
The Best Portable iPhone Charger I've Ever Owned Has Some Great Deals for Black Friday
This little battery pack is my tried-and-true charger, and you can get great deals on it in multiple colors for Black Friday, some for as low as $30.

CNET News
Open 
Best Over-Ear Headphones for 2024
Need the best over-ear headphones? Our CNET experts compiled a range of options for different preferences and budgets.

CNET News
Open 
Black Friday Laptop Deals 2024: Up to $1,300 Off, Until Time Runs Out
On the hunt for the best Black Friday laptop deals? Look no further. We've scoured hundreds of deals to highlight the only laptops we'd recommend for work, gaming, school or anything else.

CNET News
Open 
I Found Black Friday Tablet Deals Up to $400 Off, Including Apple iPads, Samsung Tablets and More
CNET experts have searched high and low to find the best tablet deals from Apple, Android and more, so you don't have to.

CNET News
Open 
Best Internet Providers in Winter Haven, Florida
Pickings may be slim in the City of 100 Lakes, but with Spectrum, Frontier and T-Mobile on the map, most households can find a reliable connection.

CNET News
Open 
Best Mattress for Adjustable Beds in 2024
Enjoy customizable firmness or positioning with an adjustable bed. Our CNET sleep experts have tested and hand-picked the best options for you.

CNET News
Open 
Best Black Friday Deals Live Now: Shop Over 80 Amazing Offers on Top Tech, Small Appliances and More
CNET's shopping experts have gathered the most impressive deals in one place so you can score scorching hot savings on must-haves like laptops, TVs and everything else on your wish list.

CNET News
Open 
Grab My Favorite Coffee Mug Warmer for 25% Off in This Black Friday Deal
I've gotten every penny's worth since I bought this mug warmer at full price, and now it's just $15.

Mail Online
Open 
I'm A Celeb star Melvin Odoom fumes 'it's a lone man situation' as he slams Dean McCullough for not pulling his weight around the camp - before the Irish DJ does a disappearing act
Melvin fumed that he was all alone to complete his task and took Dean to town on his lack of co-operation.

Mail Online
Open 
I'm A Celeb campmates GK Barry and Reverend Richard Coles share their bizarre funeral plans as jungle friendship continues to blossom
The singer and priest, 62, and the TikTok star, 25, whose real name is Grace Keeling, have formed an unlikely friendship amid the ITV show.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Relentless Liverpool beat Real Madrid in thriller
Watch as Liverpool finally end their Real Madrid curse with a brilliant 2-0 win to maintain their 100 per cent record in the Champions League at Anfield.

Sky News Home
Open 
Sean 'Diddy' Combs denied bail by judge as he awaits sex trafficking trial
The rapper Sean 'Diddy' Combs has been denied bail again by a judge as he awaits trial on sex trafficking charges.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Fears misinformation behind drop in contraception
Lily Lesh says she has never had the implant after being "scared off" by social media.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Championship roundup: Leeds return to top, Portsmouth game hit by power cut
Leeds 3-0 Luton, Middlesbrough 0-1 BlackburnPompey v Millwall postponed after lights go outLeeds United moved back to the top of the Championship with a comfortable 3-0 victory over Luton Town at Elland Road.Sam Byram gave the home side an early lead when he reacted quickest to volley into the far corner after seeing his initial shot blocked. Joel Piroe made it 2-0 from close range in first-half injury-time after Pascal Struijk’s header from a corner was parried by Thomas Kaminski. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Black Friday is a startling reminder of how many companies we have thoughtlessly given our email to | James Colley
It’s the result of a system designed to weaponise our brain chemistry against us – oh, we shouldn’t buy that, but what if we did?I procrastinated starting this article. I was all set up and ready to begin writing when I received an email from a store I’ve never visited with a great deal on items I do not need and cannot afford, even with an outrageously good discount.Philosophically, I am not a materialist. Practically, I really enjoy things, and the having of them. Sorry, another quick delay as I look at this $550 chess board. Seems a little extravagant but when you consider the savings, it would be silly not to have it.James Colley is the head writer of the ABC’s Gruen and Question Everything as well as the author of The Next Big Thing published by Pantera Press Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Swedish PM says Baltic sea now ‘high risk’ after suspected cable sabotage
Regional leaders meet after undersea telecoms cables severed, while Chinese ship remains at anchor nearbyThe Swedish prime minister, Ulf Kristersson, has said the Baltic sea is now a “high risk” zone as he met Nordic and Baltic leaders days after a suspected sabotage attack on undersea cables.The Swedish prime minister declined to speculate on who may have been responsible for the severing of two fibre optic telecoms cables in the Baltic last week. A Chinese ship – the Yi Peng 3 – that sailed over the cables about the time they were severed has remained anchored in the Kattegat strait between Sweden and Denmark since 19 November. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Mohamed Al Fayed may have raped and abused more than 111 women, say police
Scale of the criminality would make Fayed, who died last year at the age of 94, one of Britain’s most prolific sex offendersPolice believe Mohamed Al Fayed may have raped and abused more than 111 women over nearly four decades, with his youngest victim said to have been just 13 years old.The scale of the criminality would make Fayed, who died last year at the age of 94, one of Britain’s most prolific sex offenders, and raises urgent questions about how he got away with his crimes. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Ex-PM David Cameron backs assisted dying bill
Lord Cameron previously opposed assisted dying but says the current bill "is about shortening death".

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Billionaire Larry Ellison helped steer $10 million to a Michigan high-schooler — and gave us a glimpse behind the NIL curtain
Many universities now facilitate NIL deals worth millions, but we rarely find out who the sources are behind the money.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Why Trump foes can’t block day-one tariffs on China, Mexico and Canada
President-elect Donald Trump has already begun to captivate financial markets with his unorthodox negotiating style, as evidenced by the reaction to his Monday night threat to impose 25% tariffs on Mexico and Canada and a surcharge tariff of 10% on China.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
This could be one of the biggest box-office weekends since ‘Barbenheimer.’ Why? ‘MoGlicked.’
Movie fans are expected to flock to ‘Wicked,’ ‘Gladiator II’ and ‘Moana 2’ this weekend

TechRadar Reviews
Open 
Amazon Kindle Paperwhite Signature Edition 2024 review: faster, brighter, and that's all there is to it

Mail Online
Open 
President-elect Trump's granddaughter Kai gives rare, behind-the-scenes look inside Trump Force One
Rich wood panelling, plush silk pillows and fresh fruit on-demand, Donald Trump's granddaughter, Kai Trump, posted a rare behind-the-scenes tour of the president-elect's luxurious plane.

Mail Online
Open 
Now Keir Starmer's climate advisers say we will need to change diets and fly less - after PM insisted climate goals wouldn't hit Britons
New targets mean the UK's emissions should be cut to 81 per cent of 1990 levels by 2035.

Mail Online
Open 
Anger as civil servants working on Labour's crusade to reach Net Zero rack up millions of air miles
Civil servants behind the crusade to reach Net Zero have flown more than three million miles this year, it has emerged.

Mail Online
Open 
Esther Rantzen attacks Wes Streeting's 'vocal opposition' to assisted dying laws - as she makes last-ditch appeal to MPs ahead of crucial vote on bill
The terminally-ill broadcaster, 84, also took aim at some critics of the proposed legislation for 'distorting facts' and asked them to 'be honest' about their motivations.

Mail Online
Open 
Met Police launch criminal probe after identifying more than five people who allegedly assisted Mohamed Al Fayed in carrying out sexual abuse - as 90 new victims come forward
Scotland Yard is investigating a number of people accused of enabling Mohamed Al Fayed's decades of sexual abuse - as 90 new victims have come forward.

Mail Online
Open 
I'm A Celeb star Coleen Rooney takes a brutal swipe at husband Wayne and admits she feels 'more pressure' since he became a football manager - as back home his team takes a 6-1 hammering!
The former footballer, 39, is currently the head coach of Plymouth Argyle after retiring from the game in 2017.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Fans fume over Jason Donovan Rocky Horror no-show
Fans said they would not have booked if they had known the star would not be appearing.

BBC UK News
Open 
Police investigate more people over Al Fayed abuse
The Metropolitan Police says it believes several people may have helped or enabled Mohamed Al Fayed's sexual offences.

XKCD
Open 
Neutrino Modem

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Russia’s sabotage of western targets ‘could trigger Nato defence clause’
German intelligence chief warns continued hybrid warfare by Moscow increases risk of alliance invoking Article 5Russia’s acts of sabotage against western targets may eventually prompt Nato to consider invoking the alliance’s Article 5 mutual defence clause, the head of Germany’s foreign intelligence service has warned.Speaking at an event of the German Council of Foreign Relations (DGAP) think tank in Berlin on Wednesday, BND chief Bruno Kahl said he expected Moscow to further step up its hybrid warfare. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
DB Cooper is named as Richard McCoy Jr by expert who says he has airtight proof
YouTube investigator Dan Gryder said investigators are looking to make a DNA match to the man he believes is responsible for the infamous hijacking.

Mail Online
Open 
Met Police launch criminal probe after identifying five people who allegedly assisted Mohamed Al Fayed in carrying out sexual abuse - as 90 new victims come forward
Scotland Yard is investigating a number of people accused of enabling Mohamed Al Fayed's decades of sexual abuse - as 90 new victims have come forward.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Lib Dem leader Ed Davey in bid for Christmas No 1
The party leader has teamed up with the Bath Philharmonia's Young Carers' Choir to release a charity single.

Sky News Home
Open 
Ed Davey aiming for Christmas number one with charity single
Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey has released a charity single in an attempt to claim the Christmas number one spot.

Sky News Home
Open 
People who may have 'enabled' Mohamed al Fayed to carry out alleged sexual abuse under investigation
Detectives have launched a new investigation into more than five people suspected of helping Mohamed al Fayed commit widespread sexual abuse over almost 40 years.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Animal rights pub name row 'undermines real issues'
Critics respond to PETA's suggestion The Sly Old Fox should change its name because its derogatory.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Police investigate more people over Al Fayed abuse
The force says it believes these people may have helped or enabled Mohamed Al Fayed's sexual offences.

Mail Online
Open 
WWE star Trish Stratus, 48, flaunts incredible physique in daring bodysuit 25 years after making wrestling debut
Former WWE superstar Trish has stripped down for the cover of Inside Fitness magazine. The 48-year-old proved that she's still in perfect shape by posing in a daring bodysuit.

Mail Online
Open 
Katie Holmes' daughter Suri Cruise spotted in NYC on college break ahead of Thanksgiving with actress mom
The 18-year-old, whose father is global movie star Tom Cruise , is currently studying at the prestigious arts university Carnegie Mellon in Pittsburgh. Tom is said to be sending money for her tuition.

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
Musk Attacks F-35, Says Modern Jets Only Help Pilots Get Laid
Elon Musk has attacked many organizations over the last decade that he believes waste billions of taxpayer dollars. This week, his attacks turned to the F-35 program, even saying all jets requiring pilots in jets are now obsolete and only still exist to help them get laid.

Telegraph
Open 
Liverpool outclass Real Madrid in Champions League final dress rehearsal – latest reaction
It is only late November, no trophies are handed out at this time of year, but there is little doubt that Liverpool are the best team in Europe right now.]]>

Telegraph
Open 
Aston Villa denied late winner over Juventus by VAR – latest reaction
It is seven games now without victory for Unai Emery’s Aston Villa and, while the famous European opponents still come to Villa Park and the night games retain their sense of occasion, this is starting to feel like an awkward kind of slump]]>

Telegraph
Open 
New Zealand vs England, first Test: Atkinson strikes early after tourists win toss and bowl

The Hill
Open 
Johnson to host Musk, Ramaswamy at Capitol ahead of DOGE work
House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) will host Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy, the co-leads of the newly established "Department of Government Efficiency" (DOGE), at the Capitol on Dec. 5, he announced Wednesday. “Looking forward to hosting @elonmusk and @VivekGRamaswamy next week on Capitol Hill to discuss major reform ideas to achieve regulatory rescissions, administrative reductions,...

The Hill
Open 
Democrat calls for sanctions over violent clashes in Pakistan
Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) denounced Pakistan’s chief of army staff Wednesday for allegedly killing citizens and confiscating death records from medics in an effort to subdue growing protests in the nation’s capital.  “Horrified by reports of an attempted cover-up of the alleged killings of peaceful protesters by Asim Munir's regime in Pakistan,” Khanna wrote on...

The Hill
Open 
Musk accuses Trump whistleblower Vindman of 'treason,' says 'he will pay'
Elon Musk on Wednesday suggested retired Army Lt. Col Alexander Vindman "committed treason" and "will pay" after the former Trump impeachment witness accused the tech billionaire and close Trump ally of being unwittingly used by Russia. "Vindman is on the payroll of Ukranian oligarchs and has committed treason against the United States," Musk wrote on...

The Hill
Open 
5 key takeaways from Israel-Lebanon ceasefire brokered by US
President Biden’s announcement Tuesday of a ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah in Lebanon marked a significant foreign policy achievement weeks before he leaves office. The halt in fighting provides desperately needed calm for Israeli and Lebanese civilians along the border — and a chance to return to abandoned communities — after nearly 14 months of...

The Hill
Open 
Here are the Trump picks targeted with threats
Several appointees and nominees picked to be in the upcoming President-elect Trump’s administration were targeted with threats this week, just days ahead of the Thanksgiving holiday. Trump’s incoming White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement on Wednesday that “several” of the president-elect’s Cabinet choices were targeted with “swatting” calls and bomb threats....

The Hill
Open 
Ohio AG appeals court decision blocking 6-week abortion ban
Ohio’s attorney general said on Wednesday he would appeal an October injunction that prohibited state officials from enforcing a six-week abortion ban, according to the Associated Press.  Republican Dave Yost filed a notice of appeal on Friday seeking to overturn a ruling that upheld state voter’s amendment to enshrine abortion rights. “It is up to...

The Hill
Open 
Russia to US: Halt 'spiral of escalation' over Ukraine
Russia on Wednesday warned the U.S. to stop what it said was a “spiral of escalation” over Ukraine as Washington moves to quickly supply Kyiv with more weapons as the Biden administration winds down. “The signal is very clear and obvious — stop, you should not do this anymore, you do not need to supply Kiev with...

The Verge
Open 
Baldur’s Gate 3 has yet another big patch on the way

Digital Trends
Open 
Black Friday deal: Samsung Galaxy Watch FE for $160
The Samsung Galaxy Watch FE is on sale now at Samsung bringing it down to $160. You can even save an extra $50 with the right trade-in.

Digital Trends
Open 
Disk Drill vs. DMDE: best no-subscription data recovery app
If you've lost photos, videos, or other important files but don't want a data recovery subscription, one of these apps could be the perfect solution.

Digital Trends
Open 
5 great war movies to stream on Thanksgiving
These war movies are all fairly serious, but might be just what the doctor ordered following a heavy Thanksgiving meal.

Digital Trends
Open 
Should you buy the WH-1000XM5 or WF-1000XM5 deal for Black Friday?
I have both the WH-1000XM5 and the WF-1000XM5 for ANC bliss. Which should you buy on Black Friday?

Digital Trends
Open 
These are the best Dewalt Black Friday deals on tools, accessories, and more
These DeWalt Black Friday deals have it all and will get your power tool collection pumping.

BBC UK News
Open 
Teen with cancer who inspired Kate dies
Photographer Liz Hatton, 17, from Harrogate, died on Wednesday, her mother confirms.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
France says Netanyahu is immune from ICC warrant as Israel is not member of court
Claim comes after Paris signalled it would fulfil obligations as signatory to Rome statute after arrest warrant issuedThe French government has claimed that Benjamin Netanyahu has immunity from arrest warrants issued by the international criminal court for war crimes on the grounds that Israel is not an ICC member.The claim came soon after Netanyahu’s cabinet agreed to a French-backed ceasefire in Lebanon and is in contrast to Paris’s attitude towards last year’s ICC war crimes warrant issued against Vladimir Putin, another leader of a non-member country. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Maeda saves point for Celtic against Club Brugge after Carter-Vickers error
There were spells in this game when Club Brugge resembled a reincarnation of 1970 Brazil. As Cameron Carter-Vickers bundled home an embarrassing own goal to send the Belgians in front, it looked a matter of how many they would choose to score. The stars were in stripes. Celtic do not often suffer in this manner on their own turf.Celtic have no cause to care that they rather snatched a point. Indeed, Brugge’s profligacy should be of no concern whatsoever to Brendan Rodgers. This draw, earned courtesy of a glorious Daizen Maeda strike, leaves Celtic perfectly on course to reach the playoff round of the Champions League. This was an outcome which rather proved the beauty of football; Brugge’s style and swagger was ultimately matched by Celtic’s desire not to lose. Celtic continue to show they can compete when stakes are raised beyond their domestic domination. As the minutes ticked down, it was Celtic who looked the more likely team. Given what had come before, that was a wild scenario. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ruud van Nistelrooy set to succeed Steve Cooper as Leicester manager
Cooper sacked last Sunday after defeat by ChelseaLeicester are 16th in table, one point above drop zoneRuud van Nistelrooy is poised to become the new Leicester City manager, making an almost immediate return to the Premier League after leaving Manchester United.Van Nistelrooy, a United hero, is expected to succeed Steve Cooper, who was sacked last Sunday. His last game was a home defeat against his predecessor, Enzo Maresca, now in charge of the high-flying Chelsea. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Martínez holds up Juventus before Rogers denied late Aston Villa winner
About 15 minutes before this match Emiliano Martínez was introduced on to the pitch for a touch of grandstanding, to commemorate the Argentinian becoming the first goalkeeper to win the Yashin Trophy twice. Then, about an hour later, Martínez exhibited quite why he is held in such high esteem, not that Aston Villa supporters required a reminder. Martínez’s fantastic, impulsive save to thwart Francisco Conceição midway through the second half denied Juventus the chance to seize the lead. Goalline technology showed Martínez kept the ball out by a few millimetres, a shaving of the starry Champions League ball remaining on and not over the Villa goalline.Juventus, regulars on this stage compared to Villa, got the point they probably deserved. The Juventus captain, Manuel Locatelli, stuck out a left boot to prevent John McGinn from converting a Leon Bailey cutback and in the first half Lucas Digne rattled the crossbar with a free-kick from the edge of the box. For Villa, a draw against the Serie A team will surely be seen as credible, but Unai Emery’s side are now winless in seven matches. The last time Villa went seven games without a win was under Dean Smith four years ago, when they – just about – escaped relegation, when McGinn and Ezri Konsa, an unused substitute here, were in the starting lineup. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Gakpo caps Liverpool win over Real Madrid as Mbappé is denied from spot
Arne Slot’s Liverpool reboot has its latest dividend. His team continues to boast the only 100% record in the Champions League group stage and this was not just another victory, it was a swatting aside of the holders, a statement of intent.Real Madrid have hurt Liverpool more than any other opponent in Europe. In four of the previous seven seasons, they have ended their hopes – most agonisingly in the finals of 2018 and 2023. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Rage Against the Regime: Iran review – these stories of resistance are utterly astonishing
From the woman who risked her freedom by disguising herself as a man to watch football, to the separatist who had to abandon his family after urging a crowd to throw off the Islamic Republic – this is essential viewingMeytham Ale Mahdi was working for the National Steel Group in 2018 when Iran’s economy collapsed and unemployment reached 60%. As wages went unpaid for months and life became increasingly impossible, Mahdi did what so many Iranians have done during 45 years of authoritarian rule: he took to the streets. The protests spread across the country and expanded into an organised strike movement. The hunger for change in Iran was, once again, insatiable.Then came the crackdown. Mahdi was arrested, interrogated and forced to confess that he was a separatist leading the riots. He was ordered to tell the workers to stop striking. But when he returned to the protests, the fear he had experienced in the interrogation room evaporated. Mahdi smiles as he recalls the speech he made that day: “Together we can stand against all the powers. We are like raindrops, but together we turn into the sea.” After he spoke those words, he never went home again. In exile, he scrolls through photos of his children, who were seven and nine when he fled Iran five years ago. “Is there any suffering greater than this?” he asks. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Constituencies that elected Reform UK candidates blighted by poor roads, report finds
Exclusive: absence of good transport links now an emblem of areas that feel ‘left behind’ and failed by major parties, report claimsEvery constituency that elected a new Reform UK candidate at the general election has experienced long delays to road improvement schemes and resulting congestion, a report has found, in a possible clue to the growing appeal of populist parties.A series of other places where Nigel Farage’s party is now polling well are also lacking transport infrastructure, the report added, as well as a perception among locals that decisions were being made in London that made their lives more difficult could push them to abandon major parties. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Russia’s sabotage of west may prompt Nato defence clause
German intelligence chief warns of Russian ‘direct military confrontation’ with Nato if the Kremlin steps up warfareRussia’s acts of sabotage against Western targets may eventually prompt Nato to consider invoking the alliance’s Article 5 mutual defence clause, the head of Germany’s foreign intelligence service has warned.Speaking at an event of the German Council of Foreign Relations (DGAP) think tank in Berlin on Wednesday, BND chief Bruno Kahl said he expected Moscow to further step up its hybrid warfare. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Plus-size travel influencer melts down as she issues fresh demand for free extra seats for fat fliers
Jaelynn Chaney has long preached about the need for bigger seats on airplanes, as she claims major air transportation companies continuously shrink seats to jam in more passengers.

Mail Online
Open 
Gladiator II director Ridley Scott's shooting method is 'lazy' and is 'a bit rush, rush, rush'... claims the film's OWN cinematographer!
John Mathieson gave a reflective interview speaking of how the director had 'changed' and was now 'quite impatient' on set adding this had had a negative impact on the finished product.

Mail Online
Open 
Jill Biden makes a very naughty pitstop on Nantucket shopping trip with daughter Ashley
Jill Biden's shopping spree in Nantucket on Wednesday included a stop in Ladybird Lingerie, know for its 'beautiful yet comfortable lingerie.'

Mail Online
Open 
I'm A Celeb star Coleen Rooney takes a brutal swipe at husband Wayne and admits she feels 'more pressure' since he became a football manager - as back home his team take a 6-1 hammering!
The former footballer, 39, is currently the head coach of Plymouth Argyle after retiring from the game in 2017.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Flawless Liverpool beat Real Madrid in thriller
Watch as Liverpool finally end their Real Madrid curse with a brilliant 2-0 win to maintain their 100 per cent record in the Champions League at Anfield.

Mail Online
Open 
I'm A Celebrity's Tulisa gets only five stars during brutal Bushtucker Trial as viewers wonder if she's 'talking in slow motion' after failing to answer basic questions
As the singer, 36, received the highest number of votes, she was nominated to take on the day's Bushtucker Trial titled: 'Shock Around The Clock.'

Mail Online
Open 
Drone spotted just '250 metres away from British warship HMS Queen Elizabeth' days after the unmanned aircrafts hovered over airbases: Criminal probe launched
Lord Coaker confirmed a criminal investigation is now underway after drones were seen tailing HMS Queen Elizabeth near Hamburg, Germany last week

Mail Online
Open 
TV botox doctor who starred on Channel Five reality show '10 Years Younger in 10 days' appears in court accused of sexually assaulting woman in his apartment
Dr Tapan Patel, 52, appeared before Westminster magistrates' court charged with assaulting a female by penetration with a part of a body or thing.

Mail Online
Open 
QUENTIN LETTS at PMQs: Sir Keir became peevish with Kemi, his right eyebrow shooting skywards like a leaping salmon
PMQs was lively. The political tide is racing, the sea's swell is rising and Labour's new matelots are starting to look a little aquamarine around the gills.

Mail Online
Open 
Alec Baldwin's neighbor makes wild claim about disgraced star as he's blasted for latest anti-American rant
Alec Baldwin's latest inflammatory comment about Americans enraged New Yorkers - including one of Baldwin's neighbors, who disclosed what he's really like.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Kelleher makes brilliant penalty save to foil Mbappe
Watch as Liverpool goalkeeper Caoimhin Kelleher saves Kylian Mbappe's penalty to keep Liverpool ahead in their victory against Real Madrid in the Champions League.

Gizmodo
Open 
You Won’t Believe It But The Galaxy Z Fold6 Is Nearly Free on the Official Samsung Site
It's hard to believe just how big the discount is.

Gizmodo
Open 
The Rock Is A-OK With Spontaneous Movie Theater Singalongs
Other audience members may object, but the star of Moana 2 won't mind if you break into song while watching his movie.

Gizmodo
Open 
This Smart Meat Thermometer Is at a Black Friday Low Price, Get It in Time for Thanksgiving
Save 20% on the Meater Plus smart Bluetooth meat thermometer for a limited time.

Gizmodo
Open 
Amazon Offers Nearly 50% Off on This Heated Eye Massager for Black Friday, Most Popular Christmas Gift
The soothing Renpho Eyeris 1 is just $50 after Amazon's 42% Black Friday discount and the extra 5% on-page coupon.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Aston Villa 0-0 Juventus: Champions League – live reaction
Champions League updates from the 8pm GMT kick-offLive scoreboard | Liverpool v Real Madrid | Email JohnA pair of stats, via Sky.Aston Villa manager Unai Emery has beaten Juventus twice before in the UEFA Champions League, winning with Sevilla in 2015 and Villarreal in 2022. No manager has ever beaten Juve with three different teams in the competition.Juventus have only won three of their last 15 away matches against English sides in European competition (D3 L9), while this will be their first such trip since losing 0-4 to Chelsea in the UEFA Champions League in November 2021.Juventus are unbeaten under Motta, with the best defensive record in Serie A. Things haven’t yet quite clicked at the other end, but early in the project the direction of travel feels encouraging and Thuram has established himself as a key player in midfield: tactically disciplined, defensively solid, but with the licence to get into the final third and create. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Liverpool 2-0 Real Madrid: Champions League – live reaction
Champions League updates from the 8pm GMT kick-offLive scoreboard | Aston Villa 0-0 Juventus | Email MichaelThis is not the only game tonight, of course. Join John Brewin for the tantalising encounter that is Villa v Juventus.Gareth Bale is a pundit tonight for TNT. Presenter Laura Woods points out that the Welshman’s record at Anfield is not the best: Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Democrats win California House seat from Republican incumbent – US politics live
Democrat Derek Tran has flipped California’s 45th congressional district after weeks-long countDemocrats criticize Harris for ‘self-congratulatory’ review of election lossLeavitt wrote that the threats transpired Tuesday night and Wednesday morning, and included bomb threats and swatting, which refers to false reports of a crime to prompt police raids on a person’s home.Law enforcement “acted quickly,” wrote Leavitt, adding that “President Trump and the entire Transition team are grateful for their swift action.”
Leavitt did not say who specifically was targeted. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
New Zealand v England: first men’s cricket Test, day one – live
Live updates from the 10pm GMT start in ChristchurchGet in touch! Share your thoughts in an email to SimonRight, anthems sung, players out. Chris Woakes has the ball. Cricket imminent.“Why is Bashir playing instead of Leach?” harrumphs Paul McIntyre. Well, because he’s England’s first-choice spinner in all conditions, as Ben Stokes put it in Pakistan last month. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ex-supreme court president backs assisted dying law change
Exclusive: David Neuberger, who ruled on high-profile assisted dying cases, believes tight terms of bill cannot be expanded in courtsThe former president of the supreme court who ruled on the most high-profile assisted dying cases has declared his support for the law change, as MPs backing the bill say they believe they have the numbers for Friday’s historic vote to pass.David Neuberger, who ruled against high-profile assisted dying applications including Debbie Purdy in 2009 and Tony Nicklinson in 2015, told the Guardian he believed the status quo was failing “the fundamental aims of the law – to respect people’s right of personal autonomy, and to protect the vulnerable”. Continue reading...

Wired Top Stories
Open 
The Apple AirPods Pro Are The Cheapest We've Ever Seen
We just found the best Black Friday deal on the best earbuds for iPhone owners.

Ars Technica
Open 
What fossilized dino feces can tell us about their rise to dominance

Sky News Home
Open 
David Cameron comes out in support of assisted dying bill
David Cameron has become the first former prime minister to come out in support of the assisted dying bill.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Gakpo doubles Liverpool's lead against Real Madrid
Watch as Cody Gakpo doubles Liverpool's lead against Real Madrid with a header in the Champions League.

The Register
Open 
T-Mobile US takes a victory lap after stopping cyberattacks: 'Other providers may be seeing different outcomes'
Funny what putting more effort and resources into IT security can do Attackers - possibly China's Salt Typhoon cyber-espionage crew - compromised an unnamed wireline provider's network and used this access to try to break into T-Mobile US systems multiple times over the past few weeks, according to its Chief Security Officer Jeff Simon. …

Mail Online
Open 
Tractor at centre of flooding storm gets back to work after driver, 57, was arrested for speeding through flooded town and devastating businesses
A tractor used to drive through a flooded town centre causing scenes of carnage, was back to work in a field today, after the farmer believed to have been behind the wheel was arrested. 

Mail Online
Open 
Tennessee's most expensive home that sits on 383 stunning acres sells for $42.5m
After more than a year of strategic marketing, the Tennessee destination sold for an astounding $42.5 million - marking a new record for the most expensive residential real estate sale in the state.

Mail Online
Open 
Tube drivers are handed inflation-busting pay hikes - after Sadiq Khan caved in to union barons' demands to stop London Underground strikes
The RMT union hailed a 'substantial victory' after its members were given a 4.6 per cent pay hike with no strings attached such as reform of working practices.

Mail Online
Open 
Emma Weymouth, 38, oozes glamour as she joins her husband Ceawlin Thynn, 50, at the Tusk Conservation Awards in London
The Marchioness of Bath, 38, stunned in a chic ensemble as she arrived at The Savoy Hotel in London for the annual 2024 Tusk Conservation Awards on Wednesday evening.

ZDNet News
Open 
The 25+ best Black Friday smartwatch and fitness tracker deals 2024: Sales are live now
Black Friday is almost here, but you don't have to wait to find deals on smartwatches and fitness trackers from brands like Apple, Samsung, Garmin, Fitbit, and more.

ZDNet News
Open 
The best wall-mounted space heater I've ever used is marked down for Black Friday
Looking to add warmth to a room, basement, or garage this winter? This Dreo space heater works like a champ, and it's on sale now.

ZDNet News
Open 
The AirPods Max just got a record low price for Black Friday
The popular AirPods Max, Apple's only over-ear headphone, just got a record-low discount for Black Friday.

ZDNet News
Open 
The 20+ best Black Friday Apple Watch deals 2024: Record discounts live now
I've been keeping my eyes peeled, tracking the best Black Friday Apple Watch deals. Don't miss out on discounts for the Apple Watch Ultra 2 and the new Series 10, and even the best prices yet on the SE (2nd Gen) and Series 9.

ZDNet News
Open 
This LG OLED TV is my No. 1 pick for best picture quality, and it's 32% off for Black Friday
The LG G4 OLED TV has the best color I've ever seen. While I don't prefer the remote or the built-in software, the picture quality is so stunning that I'd just connect a high-end streaming box.

ZDNet News
Open 
Best Black Friday laptop deals 2024: 31 live deals organized by RAM, storage, and more
With Black Friday just a few days away, we gathered 31 of the best laptop deals from Apple, Dell, Lenovo, and more at all price points.

ZDNet News
Open 
The best thermal camera smartphone accessory I've tested is 23% off for Black Friday
It might seem like a gimmicky device, but this little gadget is now a must-have in my toolbox. It's on sale now for 70$ off.

Slashdot
Open 
Hacker In Snowflake Extortions May Be a US Soldier
An anonymous reader quotes a report from KrebsOnSecurity: Two men have been arrested for allegedly stealing data from and extorting dozens of companies that used the cloud data storage company Snowflake, but a third suspect -- a prolific hacker known as Kiberphant0m -- remains at large and continues to publicly extort victims. However, this person's identity may not remain a secret for long: A careful review of Kiberphant0m's daily chats across multiple cybercrime personas suggests they are a U.S. Army soldier who is or was recently stationed in South Korea.

Kiberphant0m's identities on cybercrime forums and on Telegram and Discord chat channels have been selling data stolen from customers of the cloud data storage company Snowflake. At the end of 2023, malicious hackers discovered that many companies had uploaded huge volumes of sensitive customer data to Snowflake accounts that were protected with nothing more than a username and password (no multi-factor authentication required). After scouring darknet markets for stolen Snowflake account credentials, the hackers began raiding the data storage repositories for some of the world's largest corporations. Among those was AT&T, which disclosed in July that cybercriminals had stolen personal information, phone and text message records for roughly 110 million people. Wired.com reported in July that AT&T paid a hacker $370,000 to delete stolen phone records.

On October 30, Canadian authorities arrested Alexander Moucka, a.k.a. Connor Riley Moucka of Kitchener, Ontario, on a provisional arrest warrant from the United States, which has since indicted him on 20 criminal counts connected to the Snowflake breaches. Another suspect in the Snowflake hacks, John Erin Binns, is an American who is currently incarcerated in Turkey. Investigators say Moucka, who went by the handles Judische and Waifu, had tasked Kiberphant0m with selling data stolen from Snowflake customers who refused to pay a ransom to have their information deleted. Immediately after news broke of Moucka's arrest, Kiberphant0m was clearly furious, and posted on the hacker community BreachForums what they claimed were the AT&T call logs for President-elect Donald J. Trump and for Vice President Kamala Harris. [...] Also on Nov. 5, Kiberphant0m offered call logs stolen from Verizon's push-to-talk (PTT) customers -- mainly U.S. government agencies and emergency first responders. Kiberphant0m denies being in the U.S. Army and said all these clues were "a lengthy ruse designed to create a fictitious persona," reports Krebs.

"I literally can't get caught," Kiberphant0m said, declining an invitation to explain why. "I don't even live in the USA Mr. Krebs." A mind map illustrates some of the connections between and among Kiberphant0m's apparent alter egos.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

CNET News
Open 
When Are Stores Open on Black Friday? Holiday Hours for Target, Walmart and More
The best in-person bargains can sell out fast, so check out when the major retailers open their doors and you can beat the crowds.

CNET News
Open 
Best Black Friday Deals Under $25: 25+ Tech, Smart Home and Other Products Under $25
Gift generously this holiday season without breaking the bank, by scoring tons of Black Friday finds for $25 or less, all vetted by our shopping experts.

CNET News
Open 
EcoFlow's Rapid Wireless Power Bank and Kickstand Is at a New Low Price for Black Friday
With its Qi2 15-watt wireless charging technology, this power bank can charge your devices two times faster than Qi1, and right now it's 43% off for Black Friday.

CNET News
Open 
Amazon Black Friday Deals: I Found the 54 Deals Worth Shopping This Holiday Season
On the hunt for the best Black Friday deals? Check out our top picks from Amazon's Black Friday sale this holiday season.

CNET News
Open 
The Motorola Razr Is Back in Paris Hilton's Hot Pink and It's $200 Off for Black Friday
This is a good deal for the new 2024 Razr Plus as well as the standard Razr. Even if the discounted price tag is too steep, last year's models are on sale for much cheaper.

CNET News
Open 
Nab the iOttie Car Phone Mount for 22% Off With This Black Friday Deal
Need a new car phone holder? If you have an iPhone, be sure to check out the iOttie phone holder, on sale right now for Black Friday.

CNET News
Open 
Our Favorite Espresso Machine Is Now $200 Off for Black Friday
This Breville espresso machine does it all, from grinding to making exceptional shots.

CNET News
Open 
10 Items From Ace Hardware That Make Great Gifts
Ace Hardware may be your go-to for tools and home projects, but it's also a great place to find holiday gifts for loved ones from high-quality brands.

CNET News
Open 
Black Friday AirPods Deals: Top 15 Apple Headphone Deals From Amazon, Walmart and More
Tons of Apple headphones are discounted right now, from the premium AirPods Max to the previous-gen AirPods 2 and even various models from Beats.

CNET News
Open 
OnePlus Pad 2 Just Hit a Record Low Price With This Black Friday Deal
Save $100 and get the OnePlus Pad 2 for the lowest ever price during the OnePlus Black Friday sale. Plus, score a free case or pair of earbuds.

CNET News
Open 
Step Up to Next-Level Espresso With the Breville Infuser Machine, 42% Off for Black Friday
You don't need to break the bank to get a high-quality espresso machine. The Breville Infuser is just $350 -- one of the best deals we've ever seen on the stainless steel machine.

CNET News
Open 
Score the Latest Amazon Fire Tablet for 45% Off With This Unbeatable Black Friday Deal
Act fast to get the Amazon Fire Tablet HD 8 while it's at an all-time low price during the retailer's Black Friday sale.

CNET News
Open 
16 Best Black Friday Streaming Deals: Hulu for $1, 75% Off Peacock and More
Stream all your favorite shows and movies without breaking the bank thanks to big discounts on Max, Hulu, Paramount Plus and more.

CNET News
Open 
The Cooktop Burner That Saved Us During a Kitchen Remodel Is 23% Off for Black Friday
It seems like magic, but my love of this portable cooktop burner is real. And now you can get a good deal on it for Black Friday.

CNET News
Open 
For a DIY Security System, SimpliSafe Offers the Perfect Black Friday Deal
Get a massive 70% off a security system with surprisingly few restrictions on this broad discount.

CNET News
Open 
Amazon's Black Friday Sale Has A Fantastic Deal on My Favorite Car Battery Jump Starter
This Powrun P-One battery pack can revive my car battery without all the trouble of traditional jumper cables.

CNET News
Open 
Snag This Bluetooth-Enabled Rubik's Cube for 25% Off During Amazon's Black Friday Sale
We've found a major Black Friday deal on a Bluetooth Rubik's cube. No, really, they're making smart Rubik's cubes now.

CNET News
Open 
3 Best Stainless Steel Frying Pans in 2024
Bring out the chef in you by adding these top-quality steel pans and skillets to your kitchen.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
New Zealand v England: first men’s cricket Test, day one – live
Live updates from the 10pm GMT start in ChristchurchGet in touch! Share your thoughts in an email to SimonSo the debutants can chill out for a while: Jacob Bethell is unlikely to be batting this morning, and Nathan Smith is unlikely to bowl. Meanwhile, an email!“I loved the idea of Moneyball and using recognised but under appreciated metrics of genuine impact, but also love the adrenaline-fuelled gut-feeling selection policy of Bazball,” says Tom van de Gucht. “But rather than, as Harry Hill would say, ‘Which one is better, there’s only one way to find out, Fiiiiigghghhhht!’ I’d genuinely love to know how much the data crunching has progressed and is still going on behind the scenes. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Democrats win California House seat from Republican incumbent – US politics live
Democrat Derek Tran has flipped California’s 45th congressional district after weeks-long countTrump’s picks for new administration are focus of bomb threats and ‘swatting’Leavitt wrote that the threats transpired Tuesday night and Wednesday morning, and included bomb threats and swatting, which refers to false reports of a crime to prompt police raids on a person’s home.Law enforcement “acted quickly,” wrote Leavitt, adding that “President Trump and the entire Transition team are grateful for their swift action.”
Leavitt did not say who specifically was targeted. Continue reading...

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Inflation may reach these levels on Trump tariffs on Canada, Mexico, chart shows
Trump’s threatened tariffs on Canada and Mexico may boost inflation in the U.S., but there’s still “huge uncertainty” around macroeconomic forecasts, according to Deutsche Bank Research.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Kohl’s has a new CEO, but not enough of the things its shoppers depend on
When Kohl’s Corp. on Monday announced it was getting a new chief executive next year, investors got suspicious. On Tuesday, the department-store chain confirmed those suspicions, reporting results that missed expectations and sending shares sharply lower.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Billionaire Larry Ellison helped give a high school student $10 million to play football for Michigan — and gave us a glimpse behind the NIL curtain
Many universities give out NIL deals worth millions of dollars, but we rarely find out who the individuals are behind the money

BBC World News
Open 
Displaced Lebanese head for homes as fragile truce appears to hold
Thousands are returning south as the Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire takes effect despite warnings it is not yet safe.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Van Nistelrooy set to be appointed Leicester boss
Ruud van Nistelrooy is set to be appointed as Leicester City's new boss, replacing Steve Cooper, who was sacked earlier this week.

TechRadar Reviews
Open 
Amazon Kindle Paperwhite review: faster, brighter, and still the best Kindle

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Mum told partner 'I'm sick of you hitting me' before suicide, manslaughter trial hears
Ryan Wellings’ alleged violence to Kiena Dawes led to her taking her own life, a court hears.

Mail Online
Open 
Prince William reveals Prince Louis, six, has a very loud new hobby - and jokes he spends his 'entire life' with 'fingers in my ears'
The Prince of Wales, 42, made the comments as he attended the 2024 Tusk Conservation Awards at the Savoy Hotel in London on Wednesday evening.

Techdirt
Open 
Brendan Carr Makes It Clear That He’s Eager To Be America’s Top Censor
When Donald Trump announced that he was appointing current FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr to be the next chair of the FCC, it was no surprise. Nor was it a surprise that Trump tried to play up that Carr was a “warrior for free speech.” Commissioner Carr is a warrior for Free Speech, and has fought […]

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
New Zealand v England: first men’s cricket Test, day one – live
Live updates from the 10pm GMT start in ChristchurchGet in touch! Share your thoughts in an email to SimonRight then, the British TV coverage has started and a coin toss should be incoming.Ali’s been a busy little bee, there not being much else to do in New Zealand except write about cricket, and here’s his bit on a reenergised and refocused Ben Stokes:Come rain or shine, New Zealand cricketers tend to wear a smile on their faces. But this week there is a palpable glow around the place, that remarkable clean sweep in India, coupled with victory for the women’s team in the T20 World Cup, still fresh in the memory. Hagley Oval is sold out for the first Test against England, folks drawn to its inviting grass banks.English cricket has felt a little less cheery by contrast, be it their women’s team flunking that latest shot at a global title, the continuing culture war as the sale of the Hundred teams gathers pace, or the men’s Test side having lost in Pakistan to reopen the debate about the merits of so-called Bazball. Ben Stokes seemed to embody the mood in Pakistan, his return from a hamstring injury resulting in what he calls one of his toughest trips. A burglary back at home added to the stress levels and nearly forced an early flight back, only for his wife, Clare, to persuade him otherwise. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘It’s a sleepy little place’: disbelief in north Wales after dramatic arrest of US terror suspect
Daniel Andreas San Diego had been a fugitive from the FBI for two decades before he was found in Maenan villageMaenan, in north Wales, is not a place where very much happens. But earlier this week armed police descended on this tiny settlement, leaving neighbours in “disbelief”.They learned that a man they had sometimes seen near his home on the outskirts of the woods was in fact one of the FBI’s most wanted men. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Nicole Appleton, 49, is joined by older sister Natalie, 51, as All Saints star pulls on a shimmering red evening gown to support ex-boyfriend Robbie Williams at the European premiere of Better Man
Nicole and Natalie Appleton commanded attention in eye-catching ensembles as they arrived at the Better Man premiere in Leicester Square on Wednesday.

Mail Online
Open 
Shocking moment double killer freed early from life sentence because judge said he was 'low risk' is arrested after murdering kind-hearted neighbour who took pity on him
Brian Whitelock, 57, tragically killed 71-year-old Wendy Buckney with a kitchen knife, broken table leg and and wooden shelving during a sustained assault in her own home.

Sky News Home
Open 
Murdered girl's sister calls for removal of time limit to appeal lenient jail sentences
The sister of a teenage girl who was brutally murdered 11 years ago has launched a petition to remove the 28-day time limit to launch an appeal against a murder sentence under the Unduly Lenient Sentence (ULS) scheme.

Telegraph
Open 
New Zealand vs England: Score and latest first Test updates from day one

Telegraph
Open 
Aston Villa vs Juventus: Lucas Digne hits bar as hosts push for opener

Telegraph
Open 
Liverpool vs Real Madrid: Kelleher saves Mbappe penalty to keep hosts ahead

The Hill
Open 
Johnson on threats against Trump nominees: 'This is dangerous and unhinged'
House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) said Wednesday the threats against President-elect Trump’s nominees and appointees are “dangerous and unhinged” and called on President Biden and other Democratic Party leaders to condemn the incidents. “This year, there was not just one but TWO assassination attempts on President Trump," Johnson said in a Wednesday post on social...

The Hill
Open 
The lame-duck Congress will be a disaster for Team Trump 
Congress is currently in a lame duck session, with a continuing resolution set to expire on Dec. 20, 2024, and Republicans should resist any attempts to do anything more than a short-term CR that ends on Jan. 20, 2025, to avoid handcuffing an incoming Trump administration.

The Hill
Open 
NATO chief: Ukraine not in strong position to negotiate with Putin
NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte said on Wednesday that Ukraine is not in a strong enough position to begin negotiating an end to the war with Russia and said any deal struck must “prevent the Russians from getting what they want.” In an interview with Fox News’s Brian Kilmeade, Rutte stressed the importance of striking a...

The Hill
Open 
Johnson to host Musk, Ramaswamy at Capitol ahead of DOGE work
House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) will host Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy, the co-leads of the newly established "Department of Government Efficiency" (DOGE), at the Capitol on Dec. 5, he announced Thursday. “Looking forward to hosting @elonmusk and @VivekGRamaswamy next week on Capitol Hill to discuss major reform ideas to achieve regulatory rescissions, administrative reductions,...

The Hill
Open 
Make contraception, IVF available to families
What questions are more important to healthy families than when and how to begin their family?

The Hill
Open 
Trump nominees targeted in series of threats
Multiple nominees and appointees tapped to serve in President-elect Trump’s incoming administration were targeted with threats this week, with at least four officials reporting bomb threats at their homes ahead of the Thanksgiving holiday. Karoline Leavitt, who will serve as White House press secretary after the inauguration, said “several” of Trump’s Cabinet picks were the subject of bomb threats...

The Hill
Open 
Democrat calls for sanctions over violent clashes in Pakistan
Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) denounced Pakistan’s chief of army staff on Wednesday for allegedly killing citizens and confiscating death records from medics in an effort to subdue growing protests in the nation’s capital.  “Horrified by reports of an attempted cover-up of the alleged killings of peaceful protesters by Asim Munir's regime in Pakistan,” Khanna wrote...

Mac Rumours
Open 
iPhone 17 Pro Already Rumored to Have These 8 New Features
While the iPhone 17 Pro and iPhone 17 Pro Max are not expected to launch for 10 more months, there are already plenty of rumors about the devices.



An imaginative iPhone 17 Pro concept based on rumors

Below, we recap key changes rumored for the iPhone 17 Pro models so far:



Aluminum frame: iPhone 17 Pro models are rumored to have an aluminum frame, whereas the iPhone 15 Pro and iPhone 16 Pro models have a titanium frame, and the iPhone X through iPhone 14 Pro have a stainless steel frame. The back of the devices will supposedly have a new "part-aluminum, part-glass" design.

Rectangular camera bump: On a related note, the devices are expected to have a "larger rectangular camera bump" made of aluminum.

A19 Pro chip: iPhone 17 Pro models are expected to use Apple's next-generation A19 Pro chip, which will reportedly be manufactured with TSMC's newer third-generation 3nm process. Like usual, expect modest year-over-year performance gains and power efficiency improvements compared to the current iPhones.

Apple-designed Wi-Fi 7 chip: At least one iPhone 17 model is rumored to get a Wi-Fi 7 chip designed by Apple rather than Broadcom.

24-megapixel front camera: All four iPhone 17 models are said to feature an upgraded 24-megapixel front-facing camera, whereas all iPhone 16 models are equipped with a 12-megapixel front-facing camera.

48-megapixel rear Telephoto camera: An upgraded 48-megapixel Telephoto camera is rumored for the iPhone 17 Pro models, up from the 12-megapixel Telephoto camera on iPhone 16 Pro models.

12GB of RAM: An increased 12GB of RAM was initially rumored exclusively for the iPhone 17 Pro Max, but later the iPhone 17 Pro as well. This upgrade should help to improve the performance of Apple Intelligence and multitasking. All four iPhone 16 models have 8GB of RAM.

A smaller Dynamic Island for iPhone 17 Pro Max: A change rumored exclusively for the iPhone 17 Pro Max is a "much narrowed Dynamic Island," as a result of Apple adopting a "metalens" for the Face ID system.Bookmark our iPhone 17 roundup to stay up to date with more rumors over the coming months.Related Roundup: iPhone 17This article, 'iPhone 17 Pro Already Rumored to Have These 8 New Features' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mac Rumours
Open 
Video Review: A Month With the iPad Mini 7
It's been just over a month since Apple released the iPad mini 7, refreshing its smallest tablet with a new Apple Intelligence-capable A17 Pro chip. MacRumors videographer Dan Barbera has been using the ‌iPad mini 7‌ as a replacement for the iPad Pro for the last several weeks, and he has some thoughts to share on Apple's latest iPad.



Subscribe to the MacRumors YouTube channel for more videos.

For a travel companion alongside a MacBook Pro or a MacBook Air, the 8.3-inch iPad mini is the ideal size. It fits well into a bag, but in a pinch, it also tucks into a coat pocket. On a flight, it's a good size for content consumption like watching movies or TV shows, but it's a hard to get work done on such a small screen.



Apple doesn't make a small keyboard for the ‌iPad mini‌, so unless you have a third-party accessory like a Bluetooth keyboard, typing needs to be done with the on-display keyboard. Adding a keyboard does help the situation, but you're still working with a smaller-sized display.



For playing games, using social media apps, checking email, and browsing the web, the ‌iPad mini‌ is perfect. The A17 Pro chip means that it's ideal for any mobile game you want to play, and even though the small screen might be a downside, it's powerful enough for Final Cut Pro. The A17 Pro supports Apple Intelligence, plus there's 8GB RAM, so you get all of the latest AI features. With support for the Apple Pencil Pro, note taking, drawing, and sketching are great on the ‌iPad mini 7‌.



The ‌iPad mini‌ is essentially almost as powerful as Apple's other, larger iPads, and it is just as capable, so there's little compromise other than screen size when choosing it. It's a great travel companion and daily use tablet, but it might be frustrating if you need something to use to get work done.Related Roundup: iPad miniBuyer's Guide: iPad Mini (Buy Now)Related Forum: iPadThis article, 'Video Review: A Month With the iPad Mini 7' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Judge Upholds Missouri's Ban On Transgender Procedures For Children
Judge Upholds Missouri's Ban On Transgender Procedures For Children

Authored by Bill Pan via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

A Missouri judge has upheld the state’s law that bans transgender procedures for children.

In a ruling handed down on Monday, Judge R. Craig Carter of the Circuit Court of Cole County, Missouri, said the challenge failed to substantiate multiple arguments, including that there exists a medical consensus on whether using drugs and surgeries to treat adolescent gender dysphoria is ethical.
A view of the Missouri State Capitol building's south entrance in Jefferson City, Missouri. Austin Alonzo/The Epoch Times

“Regarding the ethics of adolescent gender-affirming treatment, it would seem that the medical profession stands in the middle of an ethical minefield, with scant evidence to lead it out,” Carter wrote.

“States do have abiding interest in protecting the integrity and ethics of the medical profession.”

The law in question, officially known as the Save Adolescents from Experimentation (SAFE) Act, forbids health care providers from prescribing puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones or performing transgender surgeries for individuals younger than 18. Those who were already prescribed the so-called “gender-affirming” medications prior to Aug. 28, 2023, may continue to receive them.

The law also gives patients 15 years after their treatment ends or 15 years after their 21st birthday, whichever is later, to file a civil lawsuit against the medical provider. Patients who are harmed—defined as infertility caused by transgender procedures—may be awarded a minimum of $500,000 with no maximum, and the burden of proof is on the medical provider.

Missouri Gov. Mike Parson signed the law in June 2023, saying that children lack the capacity to provide informed consent for irreversible treatments they might regret later in their lives.

“These decisions have permanent consequences for life and should not be made by impressionable children who may be in crisis or influenced by the political persuasions of others,” Parson said at the time.

The Challenge

The law faced a legal challenge in July 2023, just before it took effect in August. A coalition of LGBT activists, health care providers, and three Missouri families of gender-dysphoric children sued the state, arguing that the SAFE Act violates parental autonomy—the fundamental right of parents to seek and follow medical advice to safeguard their children’s health and well-being.

“The Act’s prohibition on providing evidence-based and medically necessary care for transgender adolescents with gender dysphoria stands directly at odds with parents’ fundamental right to make decisions concerning the care of their children, particularly when it aligns with the adolescent’s liberty interests and right to autonomy in healthcare,” their complaint read.

Carter rejected that argument, saying that the state is acting reasonably to shield children from treatments that could severely disrupt their natural growth, even if the treatments are initiated by parents.

“There is a good reason that state and federal law does not allow minors to make certain decisions, and it stands to reason that parents might be statutorily prevented from taking a child to a care clinic and having a son or daughter undergo these medical and surgical treatments,” he wrote.

The case went through a nine-day trial in September. Among the witnesses testifying for the states were Chloe Cole, a California woman who had her breasts removed at the age of 15 and has since spoken publicly about her regrets; and Jamie Reed, who testified that a St. Louis children’s gender clinic treated many patients without first giving them proper mental health evaluations.

“Her testimony does not arise from any ideological or other bias,” Carter wrote of Reed. “In fact, she is married to a transgender individual.”

The Missouri chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and Lambda Legal, which argued the case against the state, said in a joint statement that they are “extremely disappointed” in this decision and will appeal.

“The court’s findings signal a troubling acceptance of discrimination, ignore an extensive trial record and the voices of transgender Missourians and those who care for them,” they said in a joint statement.

Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey welcomed the ruling.

“The state has a role to play to determine what systems need to be in place to protect the kids and ensure that the adults and the patients understand the lack of science and medicine behind certain recommended procedures,” he said on X.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 11/27/2024 - 14:45

ZeroHedge News
Open 
China Releases 3 Detained Americans In Rare Prisoner Swap
China Releases 3 Detained Americans In Rare Prisoner Swap

In what could be an effort of China to make nice with Trump before he returns to the Oval Office (or at least aiming to slightly improve relations during the final days of Biden), the Chinese government has released three American citizens from prison who were deemed by Washington as wrongfully detained. 

The White House confirmed on Wednesday that the three - Mark Swidan, Kai Li and John Leung - are returning home. All of them had already served years in detention. "Soon they will return and be reunited with their families for the first time in many years," the Biden White House said in a statement.
White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan & Chinese President Xi Jinping in August. via Politico

Li and Leung had both been accused of espionage, while Swidan was convicted on drug charges and faced a possible death sentence.

Politico is reporting that it was the result of a prisoner swap for unidentified Chinese citizens in US custody. An unnamed admin official said it was part of "years of work" by US diplomats and the State Department’s Office of the Special Presidential Envoy for Hostage Affairs.

"President Biden brought this up when he met with President Xi in Peru two weeks ago and Jake Sullivan brought this up when he was in Beijing [in September] and Secretary Blinken also pushed for this really hard in September at UNGA with [Chinese Foreign Minister] Wang Yi," the official described.

Li had immigrated from China, after which he founded an export company, but upon visiting Shanghai in 2016 he was detained by Chinese police, having been accused of giving state secrets to the FBI. He received a ten-year long prison sentence.

Leung had been sentence to life in prison after authorities accused him of having worked for US intelligence since 1989. As for Swidan, reports offer the following details: 


Chinese police arrested Swidan, a native of Texas, in November 2012 for allegedly manufacturing and trafficking narcotics despite what the San Francisco-based prisoner release nonprofit Dui Hua Foundation has described as an absence of substantive evidence. A court in Guangdong province —after a 5½-year trial—sentenced Swidan to death with a two-year reprieve in January 2020. The court upheld that sentence last year. The U.N. declared Swidan a victim of “arbitrary detention” in 2020.


US officials hope that this rare swap with China will pave the way for negotiations toward further releases of Americans in Chinese custody.

Mark Swidan spent over a decade in Chinese prison...
Image source: Fox News/Swidan Family

Both countries routinely spy on the other, and people in positions from academia to technology to engineering sometimes come under suspicion of espionage by either side. Stealing trade secrets and sensitive technology has been a pattern in recent years, especially by the Chinese side.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 11/27/2024 - 15:05

ZeroHedge News
Open 
'Conservative' Outfits Are 'Scouring' Because Journalists Won't
'Conservative' Outfits Are 'Scouring' Because Journalists Won't

Authored by Michael Chamberlain via RealClearPolicy,

The other day I acquired a new title: “Scourer.” My organization, Protect the Public’s Trust (PPT), was among the groups mentioned in a Politico article the outlet’s X account promoted as “Conservative outfits are scouring feds’ emails.”



I know “scouring” isn’t meant as a compliment, but I’m happy to take it that way. As stated in the article, PPT has made more than 1,600 Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests of the Biden-Harris administration. We’ve done so because the journalists and watchdog groups so enthusiastic about policing the Trump administration seem to have decided sometime around January 20, 2021, that their vigilance was no longer needed.

I have no issue with how I and PPT were portrayed in Robin Bravender’s report, but the piece’s framing and marketing were a bald attempt to whip up fear inside the Beltway of a Trump II purge of the bureaucracy. Bravender quoted the overwrought words of the Environmental Protection Network’s Jeremy Symons: “This abuse of the FOIA system is to intimidate civil servants and pave the way for hit lists in the event that Trump takes office.” 

I can only speak for PPT, but that’s certainly not something we’ve focused on. We’ve found that there are more than enough conflicts and ethics problems with Biden-Harris political appointees to keep us busy. Our work mentions career civil servants when necessary, but PPT doesn’t target them and we keep no lists.

Career bureaucrats should not be above scrutiny, however. Transparency is not for certain classes of government employees. Civil servants must be accountable to the people who pay their salaries … and who elect their boss.

Symons told Bravender that the Trump administration would seek “excuses to get rid of anybody of significance and importance, so that the only people left in the agency are political hacks that are loyal to the president.”

No doubt, that would be bad. But, as long as we’re being reductive, wouldn’t it be just as bad to countenance “political hacks” who actively oppose the president? Those hacks would be flouting the will of the majority that elected the president and thus subverting “our democracy.”

The article states that the FOIAs “are causing concern among government employees and their allies.” That government employees have or need allies means they have adversaries, which, whatever their personal politics, civil servants shouldn’t have. Presidents serve at the pleasure of the electorate. Political appointees serve at the pleasure of the president. Career bureaucrats serve at the pleasure of … whom?

It recently surfaced, thanks to a whistleblower, that in the aftermath of Hurricane Milton, a career FEMA supervisor in Florida directed workers to avoid houses with Trump signs. That certainly sounds like a situation in need of scouring.

All federal employees, appointed or career, work for the taxpayers. They use taxpayer-provided resources to spend taxpayer-provided money. There is nothing sinister about insisting that the taxpayers have the right to know what they are getting for the salaries they pay and the resources they provide.

There was a time when scouring legally obtained public documents was also known as journalism – a noble and necessary role in a functioning republic. Journalists could and sometimes did shine light into the career bureaucracy. Few seem interested in doing that anymore, so it falls to others – some of whom journalists ascribe politics they dislike. That’s the price of abandoning the field.

But since there will be a second Trump administration, we can expect journalists and erstwhile “watchdogs” to rediscover their curiosity. Maybe “scouring” will no longer be a term of derision.

For our government to function for the maximum benefit of the American people, transparency is paramount. And nobody in government should be immune to scrutiny.

Michael Chamberlain is the Director of Protect the Public’s Trust, a watchdog organization focused on ethics and transparency.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 11/27/2024 - 15:25

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Biden Ramps Up Pressure On Ukraine To Lower Conscription Age From 25 To 18
Biden Ramps Up Pressure On Ukraine To Lower Conscription Age From 25 To 18

The Ukrainian military accepts voluntary enlistments from those 18 and older. However, in stark contrast to Americans' experience with military drafts, Ukraine had long exempted men under 27 from being conscripted. The country's legislature last April finally moved to lower the minimum draft age to 25.

Last spring on one of his many visits to Ukraine, hawkish Senator Lindsey Graham expressed shock upon learning that men in their early 20s in Ukraine cannot be drafted. "I would hope that those eligible to serve in the Ukrainian military would join. I can’t believe [conscription age starts] at 27," he said at the time. "You’re in a fight for your life, so you should be serving — not at 25 or 27." 

When President Volodymyr Zelenskiy soon after this statement signed a bill into effect to lower the mobilization age for combat duty from 27 to 25, this took some of the pressure off for the time being.
AFP/Getty Images

This debate has now been renewed as President Biden, on his way out of office, is ramping up the pressure on Kiev to drastically change things.

The Associated Press reports Wednesday:


President Joe Biden’s administration is urging Ukraine to quickly increase the size of its military by drafting more troops and revamping its mobilization laws to allow for the conscription of troops as young as 18.

A senior Biden administration official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the private consultations, said Wednesday that the outgoing Democratic administration wants Ukraine to lower the mobilization age to 18 from the current age of 25 to help expand the pool of fighting-age men available to help a badly outnumbered Ukraine in its nearly three-year-old war with Russia.

The official said “the pure math” of Ukraine’s situation now is that it needs more troops in the fight.


As the outgoing Biden administration is asking Congress to soon approve billions more for Ukraine, this conscription age change policy could serve as the quid pro quo being requested of Kiev from Washington, in order to keep the billions in arms and aid flowing.

The AP further cites an official who says the Ukrainians "believe they need about 160,000 additional troops, but the U.S. administration believes they probably will need more than that."


To the last Ukrainian: "White House presses Ukraine to lower draft age to meet manpower needs against Russia. President Joe Biden’s administration is urging Ukraine to quickly increase the size of its military by drafting more troops and revamping its mobilization laws to allow… pic.twitter.com/N4m052LV8d
— Ivan Katchanovski (@I_Katchanovski) November 27, 2024
In the early days of the war, some US hawks admitted their view is that Ukraine would be willing to "fight to the last person" as long as the US continued to provide the weapons. These politicians don't seem to actually care about Ukrainians and their future in making remarks like this.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 11/27/2024 - 15:45

The Verge
Open 
The best Black Friday phone deals I’d actually recommend to real people

Russia Today News
Open 
Trump names pick for special envoy to Ukraine

Russia Today News
Open 
NATO struggles with Russia over the new world order – top general

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
New Zealand v England: first men’s cricket Test, day one – live
Live updates from the 10pm GMT start in ChristchurchGet in touch! Share your thoughts in an email to SimonIf you’re only as good as your last game, New Zealand are phenomenal and England concerning. But Christchurch is not Rawalpindi and nor is it Mumbai, and at the risk of stating the obvious these will be different teams in a different situation. Since they wrapped up a 3-0 series win at the Wankhede at the start of the month New Zealand have left out Will Young, who scored 244 at 48.80 in India and was named player of the series, and Ajaz Patel, who took 15 wickets in those three games, bringing back old-timers Tim Southee and Kane Williamson as well as a debutant seamer in Nathan Smith. Meanwhile since the loss that condemned them to a 2-1 series defeat in Pakistan last month England have gone from three spinners to one, given Ollie Pope the gloves and brought in a debutant of their own in No3 Jacob Bethell, veteran of 20 first-class games. If this isn’t quite a clean slate it is at least a slate that requires only minor washing up.There seems to have been a lot of interesting Test cricket happening over the last couple of months, and I’m looking forward to a bit more. Welcome! Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ruud van Nistelrooy set to succeed Steve Cooper as Leicester manager
Cooper sacked last Sunday after defeat to ChelseaLeicester are 16th in table, one point above drop zoneRuud van Nistelrooy is poised to become the new Leicester City manager, making an almost immediate return to the Premier League after leaving Manchester United.Van Nistelrooy, a United hero, is expected to succeed Steve Cooper, who was sacked last Sunday. His last game was a home defeat against his predecessor, Enzo Maresca, now in charge of high-flying Chelsea. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘There are worse places to hide’: Armed police arrest wanted man in north Wales
Daniel Andreas San Diego had been a fugitive from the FBI for two decades before he was found in Maenan villageMaenan, in north Wales, is not a place where very much happens. But earlier this week armed police descended on this tiny settlement, leaving neighbours in “disbelief”.They learned that a man they had sometimes seen near his home on the outskirts of the woods was in fact one of the FBI’s most wanted men. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Counter-terrorism police arrest seven in London raids connected to PKK
Kurdish Community Centre in Haringey among properties being searched by officers investigating banned groupUK-based Kurdish advocacy groups have condemned the arrest of seven people by counter-terrorism police in London as part of an investigation into the banned Kurdistan Workers’ party, known as the PKK.Four men aged 23, 27, 56 and 62, and two women aged 31 and 59, were arrested at separate addresses during dawn raids in the capital on Wednesday and remain in custody, the Metropolitan police said. A 31-year-old man was arrested Wednesday afternoon in west London. All are yet to be charged. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Mining company employees KNEW about cracks in a dam before it collapsed - killing 19 people and flattening a town, court hears
The disaster unleashed more than 50million cubic metres of toxic waste into the River Doce on 5 November 2015, killing 19 people as well as the unborn child of a survivor

Mail Online
Open 
Rock singer says he's a man again 11 years after coming out as trans woman
Mina Caputo said on Instagram on Wednesday that he is reclaiming his original name - Keith - because his 'gender dysphoria has been cured.'

The Aviationist
Open 
Unauthorised Drones Continue to Plague U.S. Air Force Bases in the UK
A comprehensive look at how the situation, which an anonymous U.S. official said appears to be coordinated and not the work of hobbyists, has unfolded so far. Since Nov. 20, 2024, U.S. Air Force bases in the south east of the United Kingdom have been dealing with nighttime incursions of unidentified uncrewed aerial systems (UASs) […]
The post Unauthorised Drones Continue to Plague U.S. Air Force Bases in the UK appeared first on The Aviationist.

TechRadar News
Open 
This hidden iOS 18 feature could save your holiday road trip

TechRadar News
Open 
The OpenAI Sora protest is just a taste of what’s coming in 2025 – here’s what needs to change

Digital Trends
Open 
This Dell Inspiron 16 is perfect for work, and it’s $350 off right now
Dell has a great discount on its popular Dell Inspiron 16. Down to just $600, it sports a great looking touchscreen and more.

Digital Trends
Open 
Kia PHEVs’ electric range will double to 60 miles
Kia is aiming to double the electric range of its PHEVs in a couple of years.

Digital Trends
Open 
30 early Black Friday deals for 2024

Mail Online
Open 
Moment police clash with protesters after arresting seven Kurdish terror suspects in London
Chants of 'Free Kurdistan' and 'shame on you' were heard as police officers formed a line and scuffled with protestors in ugly scenes outside the Kurdish community centre in Haringey.

Gizmodo
Open 
Forget Bose And LG: The Sonos Beam Gen 2 Soundbar Is at a Record Low on Amazon
Elevate your audio experience with Sonos today.

Gizmodo
Open 
The Cuisinart Portable Patio Heater at a Black Friday-Exclusive Low Price Will Warm Your Winter
Stay toasty through the fall and winter with a Cuisinart Outdoor Patio Heater for 33% off

BBC UK News
Open 
Bake Off winner 'completely overwhelmed' after final
After speaking about her ADHD, Georgie said people contacted her to say they "felt seen".

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
What are tariffs and why is Trump levying them on Canada, Mexico and China?
Trump is now laying ground for a trade war with the country’s largest trading partnersTrump’s tariff threat sets stage for bitter global trade warThere are still more than 50 days left until Donald Trump takes office, but he has already laid the ground for a trade war that could shake the global economy.Trump announced on Monday that he will sign an executive order placing a 25% tariff on all imports from Canada and Mexico, along with an additional 10% tariff on imports from China, in purported retaliation for drugs and migrants crossing US borders. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ruud van Nistelrooy set to succeed Steve Cooper as Leicester manager
Cooper sacked last Sunday after defeat to ChelseaLeicester are 16th in table, one point above drop zoneRuud van Nistelrooy is poised to become the new Leicester City manager. The Dutchman is primed for an almost immediate return to the Premier League after leaving Manchester United.Van Nistelrooy, a United hero, is expected to succeed Steve Cooper, who was sacked last Sunday. His last game was a home defeat against his predecessor, Enzo Maresca, now in charge of high-flying Chelsea. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Direct Line rejects Aviva takeover offer of £3.3bn
Insurer rebuffs move as ‘highly opportunistic’ and follows dismissal of offer from Belgian firm Ageas in FebruaryDirect Line has rejected a £3.3bn takeover offer from its bigger UK rival Aviva, the second time it has rebuffed a suitor this year.Aviva, the UK’s largest insurer, said it offered 250p a share, made up of cash and Aviva shares, in a non-binding proposal on 19 November. This was rejected by Direct Line on Wednesday, which has declined to engage further with Aviva. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
I watched my marathon-running husband of 30 years die in agony after he was diagnosed with incurable cancer - it is cruel to let others suffer as he did
Widow Lisa Jackson, 53, from Worthing, West Sussex, is backing the Assisted dying Bill after watching her husband Graham Williams die in agony from mesothelioma in 2021, aged 58.

Mail Online
Open 
'It was awkward that he gave me so many compliments': Find out if it was a match on this week's Blind Date
Every week, FEMAIL asks two singletons to report back from their blind date. This week it's Nikie, 44, and Mark, 45, but will romance be on the cards for these two hopefuls?

Mail Online
Open 
As Posh Spice roars off in a Ferrari... Why shouldn't a woman splash out on a supercar!
Tatler's former car critic SOPHIA MONEY-COUTTS will defend Posh's right to own a supercar - indeed every woman's right to treat herself to one this Christmas - to the death.

Mail Online
Open 
Cheating husband, 31, who killed his 'mistress' and their unborn baby after she refused to have an abortion is jailed for 27 years
Filmon Andmichaen, 31, was sentenced to life imprisonment for the 'callous and cowardly' murder of Liwam Bereket.

Mail Online
Open 
Romeo Beckham gives fans a glimpse at his trip to New York City with dad David and girlfriend Kim Turnbull as they visit coffee shops and café's on Times Square
The former Inter Miami II footballer, 22, shared an album of snippets from his recent trip to the Big Apple.

Mail Online
Open 
Mother of schoolgirl who took her life amid claims she was being cyber-bullied 'utterly heartbroken' after coroner ruled it was 'banter'
Nicola Harteveld, whose 14-year-old daughter Megan Evans was found dead amid claims she had faced online abuse, said the coroner's ruling 'blurred the lines' between bullying and banter.

BBC World News
Open 
Bomb threats made against Trump cabinet nominees
Police are investigating a wave of incidents which happened on Tuesday night and Wednesday morning.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Canon Promo Codes and Deals: Up to $700 Off
Save up to $700 on cameras, $300 on lenses, and more with today’s Canon deals for new and refurbished tech.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Wayfair Coupons: Up to 80% Off November 2024
Get 10% off with Wayfair promo code, up to 80% off furniture, and more top coupons for November.

Ars Technica
Open 
Teaching a drone to fly without a vertical rudder

Ars Technica
Open 
Found in the wild: The world’s first unkillable UEFI bootkit for Linux

Mail Online
Open 
Miracle of house completely demolished by Storm Bert as neighbours reveal the home has stood empty since 'lovely' owner died four years ago
The building was ripped open by the weekend storm that tore through parts of the UK at speeds of up to 82mph.

Mail Online
Open 
Retired academic, 90, died in car crash after mixing up accelerator and break pedals - as coroner calls for elderly motorists to have fitness to drive checked
A coroner has called for elderly motorists to have their fitness checked to drive formally after a retired academic died from injuries sustained in a car crash where she mixed up the foot pedals.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Missing hiker found alive after more than five weeks in wilderness
Experienced hiker Sam Benastick was reported missing 19 October in a rugged, remote part of Canada

ZDNet News
Open 
I found the AirTags that Android users have been waiting for (and they're on sale for Black Friday)
Chipolo's latest One and Card trackers are perfect for keys and wallets that can go missing. The four-pack bundle gets a price drop ahead of Black Friday and Cyber Week.

ZDNet News
Open 
The best money management app I've tested is 50% off for the first year
When Mint shut down, I needed a new money app to budget and track my finances. The best alternative I tested - and the one I've been using since - is on sale during Black Friday.

ZDNet News
Open 
The best Black Friday soundbar and speaker deals: Save on Bose, Sonos, Beats, and more
Black Friday is almost here, and we found the hottest deals on soundbars, subwoofers, rear, and Bluetooth speakers from Bose, Sonos, Beats, Sony, and more.

ZDNet News
Open 
The 20+ best Black Friday tablet deals
Looking check off items on your holiday shopping list? We found the best Black Friday tablet deals from Apple, Samsung, Microsoft, and more that are live now.

ZDNet News
Open 
This rugged Android smartphone with ultra-wideband is 51% off during Black Friday
Ultra-wideband (UWB) is a feature that has many potential benefits for Android owners. This phone has it, and it's on sale now.

ZDNet News
Open 
This wet/dry vacuum can clean almost anywhere, and it's 35% off for Black Friday
The Tineco Floor One Stretch S6 wet and dry vacuum cleaner can lay flat to reach under most pieces of furniture with ease, and you can save $209 on it through Black Friday.

ZDNet News
Open 
The 14 best tech stocking stuffers people will actually want (and they're all on sale for Black Friday)
I test out nifty tech gadgets all year long. Here are my 14 favorite products that make perfect stocking stuffers for the upcoming holiday season, and they're all on sale for Black Friday.

ZDNet News
Open 
Best Black Friday streaming deals 2024: Huge discounts are live for nearly all popular platforms
Stream your favorite content with these Black Friday deals live now on Hulu, Peacock, Max, and more.

Slashdot
Open 
Leica Just Recorded the Highest Revenue in Its Entire 100-Year History
PetaPixel: Leica Camera announced that its 2023/2024 fiscal year saw it achieve the highest revenue in the entire history of the company. It saw 14% growth to 554 million euros ($586.3 million) over last year's already spectacular 485 million euros.

Last winter, Leica announced that it had set a sales record for the 2022/23 financial year and it has shattered that achievement now in 2024. The company says it was able to build on its successful business and sustain the growth of its earnings. The biggest driver of the company's success remains unchanged: cameras. While Leica has bolstered its business with its Mobile Imaging segment (smartphone technology and partnerships), the core of its business remains stand-alone cameras and the support of photography.

Specifically, Leica says that the most potent revenue driver this year was the Leica Q3. However, it did not elaborate on sales numbers for this camera. 2024 is the best fiscal year so far in the almost 100-year history of the company and Leica says that this result confirms its "strategic alignment" of the Leica Camera Group as it continues to foster its core business as well as expansions into other markets.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Slashdot
Open 
LinkedIn Posts Are Now Mostly AI-Written, Study Shows
More than half of longer English posts on LinkedIn are likely generated by AI, according to research from AI detection firm Originality AI. The company analyzed nearly 9,000 public posts over 100 words published between 2018 and 2024, finding AI usage surged 189% after ChatGPT's launch in early 2023, Wired reported Wednesday.

LinkedIn, which also offers AI writing tools to premium subscribers, told Wired that it does not track AI-generated content levels but maintains "robust defenses" against low-quality and duplicate posts.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

CNET News
Open 
Secure Your Home From Anywhere With This $99 Smart Lock Deal for Black Friday
The Ultraloq U-Bolt Pro is one of the best smart locks of 2024, and right now, you can snag it for $80 off.

CNET News
Open 
The 8 Best On-Ear Headphones for 2024: Sony, Beats, Sennheiser and More
Are tiny earbuds or full-size over-ear headphones not your vibe? Here are the best on-ear headphones for 2024. We found the best, wired and Bluetooth models.

CNET News
Open 
I Upgraded My Cheap TV With the Roku Streaming Soundbar, on Sale for Black Friday
A combo soundbar and streaming device helped turn my lemon of a TV into something so much better.

CNET News
Open 
Upgrade Your Graphics Card and Save Up to $130 With These Nvidia Black Friday Deals
Power up your PC with these hot Black Friday Nvidia graphics card deals.

CNET News
Open 
Black Friday Deals Under $100: Top 36 Deals in Tech and Home Goods From Big-Name Brands
Score unbeatable bargains on top brands -- from Samsung and Beats to Keurig and Philips -- all for $100 or less.

CNET News
Open 
Best Internet Providers in Trenton, New Jersey
Trenton residents -- and even visitors -- will find this list of top ISPs a useful guide to broadband options.

CNET News
Open 
Best Board Game Deals: Save Big While Stocking Up on Games for Kids and Adults
With Black Friday deals all around there are discounts on many popular board games out right now.

CNET News
Open 
Amazon Slashes Price on Beats Pill Bluetooth Speaker to Lowest Ever for Black Friday
Score this improved portable speaker for just $100 at Amazon with a special Black Friday deal.

CNET News
Open 
Best Christmas Gifts 2024: 63 Ideas to Clear Your Holiday List
For Black Friday, our gifting experts uncovered the best of the best when it comes to Christmas gifts. No matter what your budget is, we’ve got you covered.

CNET News
Open 
Best Internet Providers in Virginia Beach, Virginia
There may be plenty ISPs in Virginia Beach, but we've found the best across multiple categories.

CNET News
Open 
Best Home Ellipticals in 2024
Tested by our experts, these ellipticals are the top picks for stepping up your home gym.

CNET News
Open 
I'm Ignoring Black Friday Hype This Year. Should You Skip It Too?
I'm all for a great deal. But the mega sale isn't worth it for me anymore.

CNET News
Open 
Samsung's 32:9 Super Ultrawide Monitors Get Massive Discounts on Black Friday
This deal includes the OLED and non-OLED models.

CNET News
Open 
When are Stores Open on Black Friday? Holiday Hours for Target, Walmart and More
The best in-person bargains can sell out fast, so check out when the major retailers open their doors and you can beat the crowds.

CNET News
Open 
Best Black Friday Deals Under $25: 25+ Tech, Smart Home and More Products Under $25
Gift generously this holiday season without breaking the bank by scoring tons of Black Friday finds for $25 or less, all vetted by our shopping experts.

CNET News
Open 
30 Best Black Friday Deals Under $50: Big Savings on Tech and Home Gadgets
Need more than TVs and laptops? Pick up some great discounts in tech, smart home, kitchen tools and more.

CNET News
Open 
EcoFlow's Rapid Wireless Power Bank and Kickstand Is at a New Low Price for Black Friday
With its Qi2 15-watt wireless charging technology, this power bank has the ability to charge your devices two times faster than Qi1, and it's currently 43% off for Black Friday.

CNET News
Open 
My Favorite Outdoor Wireless Headphones Are Even More Affordable for Black Friday
Shokz are my all-time favorite headphones for outdoor use, and you can get them on Amazon for 30% off thanks to Black Friday.

CNET News
Open 
Big Holiday Deals Are Here! Jump On These Offers Now to Save
The biggest shopping day of the year is just around the corner, and steep discounts on home, kitchen, electronics, and other categories are online now.

CNET News
Open 
Try These 5 Hiding Spots for Your Apple AirTags
If you're having trouble figuring out where you should put your AirTags, consider one of these locations.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Democrats criticize Harris for ‘self-congratulatory’ review of election loss
Top campaign staff also under fire for saying party has to ‘dominate the moderate’ in Pod Save America appearanceUS politics – live updatesSome Democratic figures have accused Kamala Harris’s campaign of being self-congratulatory after a series of recent public appearances from the candidate and her senior staff in which they declined to admit making any errors that could have contributed to her defeat.Some of the criticism was aimed at Harris herself, following a video call to thank campaign donors in which the vice-president expressed pride in her failed race for the White House. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Liz Hatton dies aged 17: Cancer-battling photographer seen hugging Kate 'went out in a blaze of glory' after 'unbelievably brave' fight, her heartbroken family reveal
Liz Hatton passed away in the early hours of today at her home in Harrogate, North Yorkshire, at the age of just 17, less than a year after being diagnosed with an incurable desmoplastic small round cell tumour.

Sky News Home
Open 
Abandoned Cold War military base rediscovered buried under 100ft of ice
NASA scientists have rediscovered a long-lost "city" buried under 100ft of ice, 58 years after it was abandoned as a US base during the Cold War.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Thanksgiving flight delayed? Remember: You’re probably entitled to an automatic refund.
Bad weather will challenge many travelers this Thanksgiving. Here’s what you need to know about getting a refund when your flight is delayed or changed.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Pony AI’s Nasdaq debut signals possible thaw in U.S. stock-market listings by Chinese companies
Chinese companies had been avoiding stateside IPOs due to geopolitical tensions, but now they have fresh reason to consider U.S. markets.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Many promises get made during political campaigns. Trump needs to rethink his.
Trump’s economic choices will breathe new life into stocks — or smother them.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Trump’s economic picks form a ‘team of rivals.’ What it means for tariffs and more.
President-elect Donald Trump has assembled what might be called a team of rivals on economic policy. But investors should look no further than Trump himself when it comes to a key part of his agenda: tariffs.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Oil prices end mixed as attention turns to OPEC+ decision on crude production
U.S. and global benchmark crude prices settled mixed after a cease-fire between Israel and Iran-backed Hezbollah eliminated much of the remaining risk premium around a wider Middle Eastern conflict.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Yield on 10-year Treasury ends at lowest in a month despite rebound in Fed’s preferred inflation gauge
Treasury yields fall after pre-Thanksgiving economic data points to resilience, gradual Fed rate cuts in 2025

Mail Online
Open 
Prince William rocks a navy suit as he meets music legends at the Tusk Conservation Awards - and his beloved beard is longer than ever
The Prince of Wales, 42, looked smart in a navy suit as he arrived for the event at the Savoy Hotel, beaming as he greeted guests.

Mail Online
Open 
Moment police clash with protesters after arresting six Kurdish terror suspects in London
Chants of 'Free Kurdistan' and 'shame on you' were heard as police officers formed a line and scuffled with protestors in ugly scenes outside the Kurdish community centre in Haringey.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Watch highlights from Mishal Husain's career as she leaves BBC
The Today programme co-presenter has covered major stories at the broadcaster for over two decades.

Russia Today News
Open 
UK MPs and public figures call to ‘halt escalation in Ukraine’

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Lyse Doucet: Nowhere else on Earth are so many children fleeing war
The BBC's Lyse Doucet writes about the horrific effects of the 19-month civil war in Sudan.

Sky News Home
Open 
Lost Cold War 'city under the ice' rediscovered 'like never before'
NASA scientists have rediscovered a long-lost "city" buried under 100ft of ice, 58 years after it was abandoned as a US base during the Cold War.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Danni Wyatt-Hodge sets England run landmark in T20 win over South Africa
2nd T2o: England, 204-4, bt South Africa, 168-6, by 36 runsWyatt-Hodge first English woman to 3,000 T20I runsDanni Wyatt-Hodge celebrated becoming the first English woman to bring up 3,000 runs in T20 internationals with a blistering 78 from 45 balls, while Nat Sciver-Brunt brought up a third consecutive half-century, as England sealed the T20 series with a 36-run win.England amassed a mammoth 204-run total against October’s World Cup finalists – just the fourth time they have surpassed 200 in the format – and the series win will go some way to restoring confidence among a group of players who were bruised by the vocal criticism of their own premature World Cup exit. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ex-supreme court president backs assisted dying law change
Exclusive: David Neuberger, who ruled on high-profile assited dying cases, believes tight terms of bill cannot be expanded in courtsThe former president of the supreme court who ruled on the most high-profile assisted dying cases has declared his support for the law change, as MPs backing the bill say they believe they have the numbers for Friday’s historic vote to pass.David Neuberger, who ruled against high-profile assisted dying applications including Debbie Purdy in 2009 and Tony Nicklinson in 2015, told the Guardian he believed the status quo was failing “the fundamental aims of the law – to respect people’s right of personal autonomy, and to protect the vulnerable”. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Lyse Doucet: Nowhere else on Earth are so many children on the run
The BBC's Lyse Doucet writes about the horrific effects of the 19-month civil war in Sudan.

Russia Today News
Open 
Imran Khan supporters call off protest after crackdown – media

BBC World News
Open 
The Lebanon ceasefire is a respite, not a solution for the Middle East
What the latest developments mean for Iran's position - and for the prospect of peace in Gaza

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#8789 Routing & Core Network - Emergency Maintenance - WSDOU (Glasgow Douglass), NSLNG (Aberdeen Lochnagar), LSEWE (Ewell), SSNOR (North Bristol), LSORP (Orpington), SSBED (Bedminster), LWWAT (Watford), LCCAR (Carlisle) and MYSHI (Shipley) Exchanges (New)
Zen Engineers are carrying out Emergency Maintenance on the following exchanges -
WSDOU (Glasgow Douglass), NSLNG (Aberdeen Lochnagar), LSEWE (Ewell), SSNOR (North Bristol), LSORP (Orpington), SSBED (Bedminster), LWWAT (Watford), LCCAR (Carlisle) and MYSHI (Shipley).

Services are considered at risk for the duration of the maintenance window.

Start: Thu, 28th Nov 2024 00:00

End: Fri, 29th Nov 2024 06:00

Edited: Wed, 27th Nov 2024 19:52

Status: Partial

Maintenance: Emergency

Telegraph
Open 
The best American fridge freezers for large households, reviewed by experts

Telegraph
Open 
Aston Villa vs Juventus: Score and latest updates from Champions League

Telegraph
Open 
Liverpool vs Real Madrid: Asencio clears ball off the line to deny hosts opening goal

The Hill
Open 
Fox host: Podcasters like Rogan have 'earned' seats in White House briefing room
Fox News host Will Cain said popular podcasters like Joe Rogan have “earned” seats in the White House briefing room. When discussing the potential for a shake-up in the James S. Brady Press Briefing Room, "Fox & Friends Weekend" co-host Cain said it is “pretty exciting, there might be a White House press briefing seat...

The Hill
Open 
How a Democrat's postelection chat with a Trump supporter provided invaluable insights
A doctor in Ohio found solace in an unexpected inconvenience when his car broke down, and he was able to have a meaningful conversation with a local tow truck driver who had voted for Donald Trump, gaining invaluable insights into his beliefs and his own.

The Hill
Open 
Trump’s planned recess appointments are likely to be ruled unconstitutional
The Trump transition team's plan to install controversial nominees in Cabinet jobs may be blocked by the conservative Supreme Court, as the conservative justices believe that use of recess appointments to avoid Senate advice and consent is a perversion of the constitutional order.

The Hill
Open 
Johnson on threats against Trump nominees: 'This is dangerous and unhinged'
House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) said Wednesday the threats against President-elect Trump’s nominees and appointees are “dangerous and unhinged” and called on President Biden and other Democratic Party leaders to condemn the incidents.  “This year, there was not just one but TWO assassination attempts on President Trump," Johnson said in a Wednesday post on social...

The Hill
Open 
Hyundai recalls more than 200K cars, SUVs over faulty rearview cameras
Hyundai recalled more than 226,000 vehicles due to issues with the rearview camera, according to documents filed with the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. "Due to a damaged printed circuit board, the rearview camera image may fail to display," according to the website's summary of the recall. "As such, these vehicles fail to comply with...

The Hill
Open 
The lame duck Congress will be a disaster for Team Trump 
Congress is currently in a lame duck session, with a continuing resolution set to expire on Dec. 20, 2024, and Republicans should resist any attempts to do anything more than a short-term CR that ends on Jan. 20, 2025, to avoid handcuffing an incoming Trump administration.

The Hill
Open 
Menendez asks judge to toss conviction, grant new trial over improper evidence shown to jury
Former Sen. Bob Menendez (D-N.J.) has asked a federal judge to throw out his corruption conviction and grant a new trial after it was revealed that jurors were accidentally shown improper evidence while deliberating. Menendez's attorney Adam Fee wrote in court filings that the "serious breach" makes a new trial "unavoidable." "Without doubting that the...

The Hill
Open 
NATO chief: Ukraine not in strong position to negotiate with Putin
NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte said on Wednesday that Ukraine is not in a strong enough position to begin negotiating an end to the war with Russia and said any deal struck must “prevent the Russian from getting what they want.” In an interview with Fox News’s Brian Kilmeade, Rutte stressed the importance of striking...

The Hill
Open 
Chuck Todd: Trump tariffs are a 'guacamole tax'
NBC News’s Chuck Todd warned Wednesday that President-elect Trump’s plans for tariffs will likely increase the cost of avocados, calling it a "guacamole tax." “If this slaps on, it’s a guacamole tax. We get most avocados in this country … from Mexico. If you enjoy guacamole, be prepared to pay a higher tax for it...

Mac Rumours
Open 
iPhone 17 Pro Already Rumored to Have These 8 New Features
While the iPhone 17 Pro and iPhone 17 Pro Max are not expected to launch for 10 more months, there are already plenty of rumors about the devices.





Below, we recap key changes rumored for the iPhone 17 Pro models so far:



Aluminum frame: iPhone 17 Pro models are rumored to have an aluminum frame, whereas the iPhone 15 Pro and iPhone 16 Pro models have a titanium frame, and the iPhone X through iPhone 14 Pro have a stainless steel frame. The back of the devices will supposedly have a new "part-aluminum, part-glass" design.

Rectangular camera bump: On a related note, the devices are expected to have a "larger rectangular camera bump" made of aluminum.

A19 Pro chip: iPhone 17 Pro models are expected to use Apple's next-generation A19 Pro chip, which will reportedly be manufactured with TSMC's newer third-generation 3nm process. Like usual, expect modest year-over-year performance gains and power efficiency improvements compared to the current iPhones.

Apple-designed Wi-Fi 7 chip: At least one iPhone 17 model is rumored to get a Wi-Fi 7 chip designed by Apple rather than Broadcom.

24-megapixel front camera: All four iPhone 17 models are said to feature an upgraded 24-megapixel front-facing camera, whereas all iPhone 16 models are equipped with a 12-megapixel front-facing camera.

48-megapixel rear Telephoto camera: An upgraded 48-megapixel Telephoto camera is rumored for the iPhone 17 Pro models, up from the 12-megapixel Telephoto camera on iPhone 16 Pro models.

12GB of RAM: An increased 12GB of RAM was initially rumored exclusively for the iPhone 17 Pro Max, but later the iPhone 17 Pro as well. This upgrade should help to improve the performance of Apple Intelligence and multitasking. All four iPhone 16 models have 8GB of RAM.

A smaller Dynamic Island for iPhone 17 Pro Max: A change rumored exclusively for the iPhone 17 Pro Max is a "much narrowed Dynamic Island," as a result of Apple adopting a "metalens" for the Face ID system.Bookmark our iPhone 17 roundup to stay up to date with more rumors over the coming months.Related Roundup: iPhone 17This article, 'iPhone 17 Pro Already Rumored to Have These 8 New Features' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Russia Reveals 2 Dead, Radar Site Damaged, After US-Supplied Missiles Struck Kursk
Russia Reveals 2 Dead, Radar Site Damaged, After US-Supplied Missiles Struck Kursk

The Russian Investigative Committee announced Wednesday that is has opened a formal probe into a 'terrorist act' launched from Ukraine which resulted in the deaths of two Russians in the Kursk region. "A criminal case has been initiated over the deaths of two individuals in Russia's Kursk Region after the Ukrainian military struck the area with ATACMS missiles on November 23," a statement in Moscow-funded media said.

Crucially this is the first time Russian authorities have acknowledged that the US-supplied long range system has killed Russians. It is a rare and unexpected admission, and is likely geared toward showing the Russian population and Moscow's allies that it faces an existential threat from NATO.
Fragment of a U.S.-made ATACMS missile on Russian soil. Via Russian Defense Ministry

"On November 23, Ukraine attacked the positions of an S-400 air defense system division with five ATACMS missiles in the Kursk Region, three missiles were shot down and two reached their target," according to the Russian Defense Ministry.

The statement further acknowledged that a radar station was damaged and that soldiers were injured.

"A criminal case has been opened against Ukrainian militants involved in the shelling of civilians in the Fatezh district of the Kursk Region," the Russian investigative committee said.

There have been at least two rounds of attacks on Russian territory with US-made ATACMS since Washington gave the greenlight for Kiev to use them last week. According to more details in Russian media:


Last Saturday, Ukrainian forces fired US-provided ATACMS ballistic missiles at an air-defense battery stationed a few kilometers from Bolshoye Zhirovo, according to a Russian military report.

Another ATACMS strike followed on Monday, the Defense Ministry reported on Tuesday. In both cases, some of the weapons were intercepted, but others caused damage on the ground and injured military personnel.


And BBC has observed of the escalation, "But Monday's strike on an S-400 air-defense missile battalion at Lotarevka northwest of Kursk on Saturday could be seen as more serious. The S-400 is considered the closest Russian equivalent of the US Patriot missile system."


Pantsir anti-air system and a remnant of a shot down ATACMS missile on the same image from Kursk: pic.twitter.com/aBSMpZ4tjO
— Bashkarma🇺🇸🌏🇷🇺 (@Karmabash) November 26, 2024
Photos have also been published showing debris from the US missiles. Russia's defense ministry says it is now preparing a significant 'retaliation' for these latest attacks, at a moment ground forces are still trying to repel Ukrainian forces' occupation of Kursk oblast.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 11/27/2024 - 13:05

ZeroHedge News
Open 
"Reimagining" The Resistance: Lawfare Warriors Express Regret But Not Remorse After Election
"Reimagining" The Resistance: Lawfare Warriors Express Regret But Not Remorse After Election

Authored by Jonathan Turley,

Below is my column on Fox.com on the new effort to “reimagine” the resistance to Trump, including the recognition of the failure of lawfare. While some figures on the left are expressing doubts over the efficacy of weaponizing the legal system, it is doubtful that we have seen the end of it. They are only regretting that it did not work. The center of gravity of lawfare will now likely shift to the states and Democratic attorneys general and District Attorneys. “Reimagination” is rarely a form of self-examination, let alone self-criticism. That is evident in some of the most recent writings of lawfare warriors. They are like wandering Ronin samurai, warriors who lost not just their master but their purpose. What they seem to lack most, however, is principle. Whatever “reimagining” occurs, it should start with a recognition that lawfare was an abuse of the legal system for political ends.



Here is the column:

The reaction to the reelection of Donald Trump in the media has ranged from histrionic to outright hysteria. MSNBC analyst and former Sen. Claire McCaskill wept openly on television as CBS News anchor John Dickerson got choked up on national television in an interview on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, still struggling to discuss the news days after the election.

However, arguably the most perplexing responses came a few days ago when the New York Times ran a column from one of the advocates of the lawfare used against Trump since 2016.

Yale Law Professor Samuel Moyn has long been a favorite of the New York Times as part of what I have previously described as a counter-constitutional movement in higher education. As I discuss in my book, The Indispensable Right, Moyn and others have insisted that the constitution itself may be the problem with America.

In a previous New York Times op-ed, “The Constitution Is Broken and Should Not Be Reclaimed,” Moyn and Harvard Professor Ryan D. Doerfler called for liberals to “reclaim America from constitutionalism.”

While the New York Times publicly condemned a U.S. senator for writing about the use of the National Guard to stop violent protests (as would be done at both the White House and the Capitol), it has published a long line of figures who have engaged in violent or extremist rhetoric from the left.

However, this particular column may be worth the ink and hypocrisy needed to publish it. The New York Times long lionized those who brought raw partisan prosecutions against Trump and his allies, including efforts to cleanse ballots to deny citizens the opportunity to vote for the man who just won the popular vote.

Moyn’s column “Liberals Bet They Could Beat Trump With the Law, regrets the lawfare, not because it distorted the law and weaponized the legal system, but because it did not work.

He even quotes Benjamin Wittes, who helped create the Lawfare website, which was used, in Moyn’s words, “to hem in Mr. Trump.” Wittes wrote, “I have no interest in recriminations.” Perhaps, but the public does.

The election—which handed both houses of Congress and the White House to the GOP—was arguably the largest verdict in history. However, it was not necessarily a verdict for Trump as much as it was against the lawfare and advocacy journalism that had been used openly for years.

After all, the “Let’s Go Brandon!” movement developed at the start of the Biden Administration and was as much a criticism of the media and political establishment as it was Joe Biden —  a type of “Yankee Doodling” of the governing elite.

For years, these figures ignored the “recriminations” of some who objected to using the legal system for political purposes, particularly in the New York cases.

To his credit, Moyn now admits that “the more uncomfortable truth is that our search for political salvation primarily through the law has backfired.”

However, he remains remarkably uncritical of such tactics in the first place. Instead, he insists that these losses were due to simply “legalistic tactics.” Some of us call that the law.

Moyn plays Shakespeare’s Othello in claiming to be “one that lov’d not wisely but too well.” The problem, he explains to the fragile Times readership is that they “rooted their opposition to Mr. Trump in the law since his first month in office.” He even refers to efforts early on to block Trump’s immigration policies.

As soon as Trump came into office, he faced an acting Attorney General, Sally Yates, who ordered the department to stand down and not assist the new president in his immigration orders. I wrote at the time that the order was an outrageous and partisan act by Yates, who was planning on leaving in a matter of days.

While I criticized the initial Trump orders as poorly crafted (perhaps due to the lack of legal support) and in need of revision, I noted that he was likely to prevail on his claimed underlying authority. He ultimately prevailed after revising the orders. Yet, the New York Times and other publications again lionized Yates for an act that some of us view as unprofessional and arguably unethical.

The problem with the lawfare campaign is that it did not just treat the law as an extension of politics, but treated the public as chumps. A large part of the public saw these cases for what they were: the use of motivated judges in favorable jurisdictions for political advantage.

These same figures claim to be “saving democracy.”

The result was that liberals convinced many citizens that democracy was at risk . . . from them. What they saw was efforts at ballot cleansing to remove Trump and other Republicans from the ballots. They saw raw lawfare in New York courts. They saw Kamala Harris and other Democrats supporting an unprecedented system of censorship that one court called “Orwellian.”

Liberals continue to ignore that obvious disconnection despite the polls showing that they were increasingly viewed as the threat. Voters in swing states felt that Trump is more likely to protect democracy than Kamala Harris, who was running on a “save democracy” platform. One poll asked whether Trump or Harris “would do a better job” of “defending against threats to democracy,” 43% picked Trump, while 40% picked Harris. Likewise, free speech registered as one of the greatest concerns for voters in this election after years of censorship and blacklisting from the left.

Now, one of the academics who previously said that we have to reimagine our democracy and trash our constitution is advising that the election left “a Democratic Party in dire need of reimagining.”

There is a point where “reimagining” everything from the police to democracy becomes less of an exercise of self-evaluation than self-delusion. What many figures like Moyn are not willing to admit is that what Democrats attempted to do with lawfare was wrong and that the public rejected it … and them.

*  *  *

Jonathan Turley is the Shapiro professor of public interest law at George Washington University and the author of “The Indispensable Right: Free Speech in an Age of Rage.”

Tyler Durden
Wed, 11/27/2024 - 13:25

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Celebrations Across Lebanon As Ceasefire Holds, Thousands Return To Homes In South
Celebrations Across Lebanon As Ceasefire Holds, Thousands Return To Homes In South

Celebrations have broken out across Lebanon as the ceasefire between Hezbollah and Israel has held since early this morning. Heavy traffic returned to Beirut, after months of constant aerial bombings mainly of the southern suburbs.

A main north-south highway, the Sidon-Tyre highway, has been jammed with cars as Lebanese civilians from the southern region can finally return to their homes. "Enough wars, tragedies and catastrophes," Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati said, hailing the ceasefire deal.

"Today begins the thousand-mile road to reconstruct what was destroyed, and to continue to strengthen the role of the legitimate institutions, led by the military, who we place great hopes in to enforce authority on the country," Mikati told the population in a televised speech.



"Our people have the right to return to their land and towns to live in peace," he said. As part the ceasefire deal the government will surge some 10,000 national soldiers to the south to help it hold.

Israel is saying that Hezbollah's capabilities have been set "back many years" and is hoping to return some 80,000 of its citizens to the north, as they've been evacuated for over a year of fighting.

"In the next 60 days, we will see if the goal of the war in the north, as defined, is being realized," Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said Wednesday. Hezbollah rocket and drone fire was daily up to this point. 

President Joe Biden in his initial remarks Wednesday from the Rose Garden asserted "Let’s be clear: Israel did not launch this war. The Lebanese people did not seek that war either, nor did the United States." He then declared the following: 


How many of Hezbollah’s senior leaders are dead, including its longtime leader Nasrallah?  And Israel has — and Israel has destroyed Hezbollah’s terrorist infrastructure in southern Lebanon as well, including miles of sophisticated tunnels, which were prepared for an October 7th-style terrorist attack in northern Israel.  


Biden also emphasized to the American people that no US troops will be deployed as part of the US-supervised peace committee. "You know, there will be no U.S. troops deployed in southern Lebanon.  This is consistent with my commitment to the American people to not put U.S. troops in combat in this conflict," he said.


UNHCR welcomes the ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon. We hope it can put an end to violence, destruction and immense suffering.
Heavy traffic observed across 🇱🇧 since early morning today as displaced people finally started returning after months of forced displacement. pic.twitter.com/vwiTby0cw6
— UNHCR Lebanon (@UNHCRLebanon) November 27, 2024
"Instead, we, along with France and others, will provide the necessary assistance to make sure this deal is implemented fully and effectively."

He expressed hope that the ceasefire might be expanded to include the Gaza Strip. He vowed that in the coming days the US "will make another push with Turkiye, Egypt, Qatar, Israel, and others" for a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip after nearly 14 months of war.

He said this will be a push for the release of the remaining hostages and for "an end to the war without Hamas in power."


On the morning of the ceasefire we get access to inspect the devastation in the suburbs of Beirut, Lebanon. pic.twitter.com/wMVsTnFIoi
— Craig Murray (@CraigMurrayOrg) November 27, 2024
Iran also praised the ceasefire deal, and that it is holding. "We welcome the ceasefire in Lebanon. After the oppression and criminal bombings by the Zionist regime, tonight the people are experiencing peace," Iranian parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said.

Ghalibaf praised that Hezbollah "never allowed even an inch of their land to fall into enemy hands." He added: "We hope this peace will also be established in Gaza. However, the claim by the criminal Netanyahu that his focus is on Iran is nonsense."

Tyler Durden
Wed, 11/27/2024 - 13:45

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Is Reviving Keystone XL More Than Just A Pipe Dream?
Is Reviving Keystone XL More Than Just A Pipe Dream?

Authored by Riley Donovan via The Epoch Times,

Both Alberta Premier Danielle Smith and U.S. President-elect Donald Trump want to revive the long-dead cross-border Keystone XL pipeline project, but is that feasible?



A major challenge in resuscitating the project will be ginning up enough political will and corporate determination to wade through the legal and regulatory requirements to begin construction, not to mention tackling the growing anti-fossil fuel advocay across the continent.

Former owner TC Energy terminated the project in June 2021. The pipeline system is now part of the spinoff company South Bow, and that adds to the challenges of resurrecting the Keystone XL expansion.

On Nov. 12, California water solutions company Cadiz announced the purchase of 180 miles of 36-inch steel pipe from the terminated Keystone XL project. The pipe will be transported from where it is stored in North Dakota and repurposed to pump groundwater from deep under the Mojave Desert into major water networks in the Southwestern United States.

The timing of the purchase announcement, just a week after the U.S. election, indicates that the pipe was going to be sold off regardless of whether or not pro-energy Republicans came to power with a mandate to reduce regulatory burden on fossil fuel projects.

Trump has promised to reinstate the project on his first day in the White House. The last time he attempted to revive Keystone XL was in 2017, when he issued a permit reversing the Obama administration’s rejection of the project in 2015. The project was first proposed in 2008 by TC Energy, then called TransCanada.

The Trump administration saw Keystone XL as an opportunity to boost economic growth. The pipeline would have run 1,947 kilometres from Hardisty, Alta., to Steele City, Neb., and have the capacity to carry 830,000 barrels of crude oil per day from Western Canada’s oilfields to American Gulf Coast refineries.

The goal was to get the pipeline built quickly. What followed was years of wading through legal quagmire, finally cut short by the Biden administration’s decision to axe the project in 2021.

In November 2018, Montana judge Brian Morris issued an order blocking construction of the Keystone XL permit pending further study of environmental impacts. In February 2019, the same judge denied a request to green-light the construction of worker camps for the project.

In response, the Trump administration revoked its first permit and issued a second one in March 2019. Things were looking up for proponents of the project until Morris revoked a key water-crossing permit, suspending construction efforts. The U.S. Supreme Court upheld that decision in July 2020, and the final nail was driven into the coffin when the newly elected Biden administration killed the project in January 2021.

Risks

Issuing a pipeline permit is easy—navigating the labyrinthian legal process that follows is the hard part. If the Trump administration issues yet another Keystone XL permit next year, the legal battle could be initiated once more with another round of lawsuits from environmental groups.

With lengthy delays comes the additional possibility that the project may be cancelled before construction begins, if Trump’s last term is followed by a Democratic administration that is less supportive of large fossil fuel projects.

Since Keystone XL is a project on both Canadian and American soil, reviving it would require political will on both sides of the border. The federal government in Canada had been supportive of the project, but the main proponent was Alberta. Premier Smith’s government would probably not have to contend with the same legal hurdles as the Trump administration. It would, however, have to make the potentially difficult decision of whether to back the project with taxpayer funds as former Alberta Premier Jason Kenney’s government did.

In a March 2020 announcement that was largely overshadowed by the pandemic, the Kenney government declared that it would provide a $1.5 billion equity investment in the Keystone XL project, explaining that the pipeline was “expected to be completed and in service in 2023”.

Kenney described the move as “a wise and prudent investment” that would eventually yield a net return of over $30 billion. After the pipeline was cancelled the following year, the Alberta government reported that the investment had resulted in a loss of $1.3 billion.

A similar situation has been playing out with the federal government’s decision to buy the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project from Kinder Morgan Canada for $4.5 billion in 2018. The purchase has come under fire for overruns, with the estimated cost of building the pipeline rising significantly from $12.6 billion in 2020 to $30.9 billion in 2023.

The controversy continues now that the project is up and running. According to a Nov. 8 report by the Parliamentary Budget Officer, the pipeline might be worth between $29.6 billion and $33.4 billion, while the cost of building it came in at $34.2 billion. Selling the project, which the government has long promised to do, may therefore mean a financial loss.

‘De-risking the Project’

The precedent set by the Kenney government’s investment in Keystone XL and subsequent loss, as well as the cost overruns and delays after Ottawa’s purchase of the Trans Mountain pipeline, puts Smith in a difficult situation in regard to embarking on a similarly high-risk investment.

Smith said on Nov. 25 that her government is looking to get more Alberta oil and gas to the United States in ways that would carry less risk than investing directly in a cross-border project.

“Maybe de-risking the project involves having an American partner, an American pipeline company, partner with our companies here,” she told reporters during an event at the Leduc No. 1 oil discovery site south of Edmonton.

“We just don’t think the best way of doing it is putting government dollars into it, but we think there are other things we can do to change the risk profile.”

Two major factors would need to come together to get the Keystone XL project started up again: renewed corporate enthusiasm and sufficient political will on the part of the United States and Alberta governments to tolerate the risk of another failed attempt.

Even if these factors come together, the project would need to successfully run the legal gauntlet of environmental challenges and then complete construction before a potential future fossil fuel-skeptical Democratic administration comes to power.

Despite the many challenges, the reinvigorated enthusiasm around Keystone XL could signal a period of renewed cooperation between Alberta and the United States stemming from a shared worldview on the energy industry.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 11/27/2024 - 14:05

The Verge
Open 
Belkin recalls its BoostCharge Pro power bank due to fire risk

The Verge
Open 
Kobo’s color e-reader is a far better deal than Amazon’s new Kindle Colorsoft

BBC UK News
Open 
Highlights from Mishal Husain's career as she leaves BBC
The Today programme co-presenter has covered major stories at the broadcaster for over two decades.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Bombshell police report details alleged Bolsonaro plot to stage rightwing coup
Former president accused of leading role in apparent scheme to overturn 2022 election defeat by rival LulaBrazil’s former president, Jair Bolsonaro, has moved a step closer to jail after a federal police investigation laid bare what it called a murderous authoritarian plot to explode the country’s democratic system with a military coup that the far-right populist allegedly helped mastermind.Bolsonaro has repeatedly denied involvement in an attempt to overturn the result of the 2022 presidential election, which he narrowly lost to his leftwing rival Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Direct Line rejects Aviva takeover offer of £3.3bn
Insurer rebuffs move as ‘highly opportunistic’ and follows dismissal of offer from Belgian firm Ageas in FebruaryDirect Line has rejected a £3.3bn takeover offer from its bigger UK rival Aviva, the second time it has rebuffed a suitor this year.Aviva, the UK’s largest insurer, said it offered 250p a share, made up of cash and Aviva shares, in a non-binding proposal on 19 November. This was rejected by Direct Line on Wednesday, which has declined to engage further with Aviva, according to the statement. Continue reading...

The Aviationist
Open 
Suspicious Drone Spotted Near HMS Queen Elizabeth Aircraft Carrier During Port Call In Germany
HMS Queen Elizabeth was in Hamburg, Germany, when a drone visit raised suspicions about the China co-owned Tollerort container terminal. The Royal Navy’s HMS Queen Elizabeth arrived in Hamburg, Germany, on Nov. 18, 2024, for a five-day visit leading to a major defense agreement between United Kingdom and Germany. While it was at the entrance […]
The post Suspicious Drone Spotted Near HMS Queen Elizabeth Aircraft Carrier During Port Call In Germany appeared first on The Aviationist.

The Aviationist
Open 
French Rafale Refuels A400M Cargo in Unconventional Buddy Refueling
The A400M acted as a surrogate for the E-2D Hawkeye, which the French Navy is acquiring, during the tests of the new NARANG air-to-air refueling pod for the Rafale M. The French Directorate General of Armaments (DGA) shared on LinkedIn an interesting photo showing an unconventional buddy refueling operation, where the usual receiver and tanker […]
The post French Rafale Refuels A400M Cargo in Unconventional Buddy Refueling appeared first on The Aviationist.

TechRadar News
Open 
You can now ask Claude to mimic your writing style

TechRadar News
Open 
Your Apple ID is not suspended – how to avoid the latest dangerous phishing scam

TechRadar News
Open 
IoT devices across the world targeted by major new botnet

Digital Trends
Open 
The huge Samsung G9 Gaming Monitor is $1,230 off, but it’s still not cheap
The Samsung 57-inch Neo G9 Gaming Monitor is the ultimate gaming monitor and it's currently on sale right now and with a free 27-inch monitor included.

Digital Trends
Open 
Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League price plummets to $4 in Steam Autumn Sale
Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League just got a dramatic 95% price cut during the Steam Autumn Sale, cutting the price down to under $5.

Digital Trends
Open 
This 24-inch monitor is just $70 in Dell’s Black Friday sale
Dell has reduced the price of its 24-inch monitor during Black Friday sales. Here's why you need it.

Digital Trends
Open 
Windows 11 remains the driver of growth in PCs, not AI
As of now, AI-integrated notebooks have had a limited impact on the overall market

Digital Trends
Open 
Best early Black Friday generator deals: Gas and solar generators at up to 56% off
Every family needs a generator, whether as a backup power source or for outdoor adventures. Check out the amazing discounts from Black Friday generator deals.

Digital Trends
Open 
A forgotten Apple patent reveals the original idea for the Vision Pro
An Apple patent from 2008 has resurfaced, and it looks and sounds a whole lot like the Vision Pro.

Digital Trends
Open 
Ex-Google employees say we need ‘an Android-like moment for AI’
A team of former Google employees, led by Hugo Barra, have launched a startup to develop an operating system for AI agents in the same vein as Android.

Digital Trends
Open 
Best Black Friday Apple AirTags deals 2024: Save on AirTag bundles, accessories, and more
We've picked out all the best Black Friday Apple AirTags deals currently available ahead of the big day, and we also have some great buying advice.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Staff suspended at paedophile head's former school
The suspensions were confirmed in a letter sent to parents from governors.

BBC UK News
Open 
Protest arrests after seven detained over links to Kurdish rebel group PKK
Police issued a call for calm following protests at a Kurdish community centre being raided.

Gizmodo
Open 
Creeping Icelandic Lava Flow Threatens Popular Tourist Spot
The recent eruption hasn't disrupted air travel, and in fact, some plane passengers had a fantastic view.

Gizmodo
Open 
Three Men Die After Google Maps Reportedly Told Them to Drive Over an Unfinished Bridge
In this case, incorrect instructions from the web mapping application seem to have proved fatal.

Gizmodo
Open 
Another Day, Another Price Drop: The Galaxy Watch Ultra Is Now $189, Down From $649
It’s like getting gift after gift: Samsung is making this premium smartwatch more accessible than ever before.

Gizmodo
Open 
This $139 Robot Vacuum Is All You Need, Don’t Waste $1,000 on Something That Doesn’t Work
Roborock is a trusted brand, and the Q5 Pro is an excellent choice.

Gizmodo
Open 
Black Friday: Dyson Is Still 10x More Expensive Than an Average Hair Dryer But It Is 1,000x More Effective
This is probably the smarter investment you can make in your hair care routine.

Gizmodo
Open 
Arcane‘s Wild Overseas Censorship Edits Have Fans in Hysterics
Putting the LOL in League of Legends.

Gizmodo
Open 
TikTok Announces Plan to Block Some Beauty Filters for Minors
"By fostering a culture of authenticity, respect and support, we can create a digital world where everyone feels empowered to be their true self," the company said.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Protest arrests after six detained over links to Kurdish rebel group PKK
Police issued a call for calm following protests at a Kurdish community centre being raided.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Israel to appeal against ICC warrants for Netanyahu and Gallant
Israel's prime minister and former defence minister strongly deny allegations of war crimes in Gaza.

Russia Today News
Open 
Diversity training increases hostility and division – study

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Jeremy Bowen: The Lebanon ceasefire is a respite, not a solution for the Middle East
What the latest developments mean for Iran's position - and for the prospect of peace in Gaza

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
New York City found in contempt over conditions in city jails
Despite 2015 settlement and consent decree, judge says conditions have worsened over the last decadeA federal judge found New York City in contempt on Wednesday over conditions in its city jails, saying things have only worsened in the nine years since the city settled accusations of abuse and violence.The judge, Laura Taylor Swain, in Manhattan issued a written ruling finding the city in contempt over 18 separate contempt claims. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Democrats criticize Harris for ‘self-congratulatory’ review of election loss
Top campaign staff also under fire for saying party has to ‘dominate the moderate’ in Pod Save America appearanceSome Democratic figures have accused Kamala Harris’s campaign of being self-congratulatory after a series of recent public appearances from the candidate and her senior staff in which they declined to admit making any errors that could have contributed to her defeat.Some of the criticism was aimed at Harris herself, following a video call to thank campaign donors in which the vice-president expressed pride in her failed race for the White House. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Danni Wyatt-Hodge sets England run landmark in T20 win over South Africa
2nd T2o: England, 204-4, bt South Africa, 168-6, by 36 runsWyatt-Hodge first English woman to 3,000 T20I runsDanni Wyatt-Hodge celebrated becoming the first English woman to bring up 3,000 runs in T20 internationals with a blistering 78 from 45 balls, while Nat Sciver-Brunt hit a third consecutive half-century, as England sealed the T20 series with a 36-run win against South Africa.England amassed a mammoth 204-run total against October’s World Cup finalists – just the fourth time they have surpassed 200 in the format – and the series win will go some way to restoring confidence amongst a group of players who were bruised by the vocal criticism of their own premature World Cup exit. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Pep Guardiola did not intend to ‘make light of self-harm’ when explaining cut
Manchester City manager cut his nose with nail at gameIlkay Gündogan describes team’s form as ‘inexplicable’Pep Guardiola has said he did not intend to “make light of the very serious issue of self-harm” when he answered a question relating to a cut he made on his nose during Manchester City’s 3-3 draw with Feyenoord.Guardiola was asked about the cut after City threw away a three-goal lead in their Champions League tie on Tuesday. He said: “From my finger … with my nail. I want to harm myself.” He then laughed and got out of his chair to leave the press conference. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Aston Villa v Juventus: Champions League – live
Champions League updates from the 8pm GMT kick-offLive scoreboard | Liverpool v Real Madrid | Email JohnA pair of stats, via Sky.Aston Villa manager Unai Emery has beaten Juventus twice before in the UEFA Champions League, winning with Sevilla in 2015 and Villarreal in 2022. No manager has ever beaten Juve with three different teams in the competition.Juventus have only won three of their last 15 away matches against English sides in European competition (D3 L9), while this will be their first such trip since losing 0-4 to Chelsea in the UEFA Champions League in November 2021.Juventus are unbeaten under Motta, with the best defensive record in Serie A. Things haven’t yet quite clicked at the other end, but early in the project the direction of travel feels encouraging and Thuram has established himself as a key player in midfield: tactically disciplined, defensively solid, but with the licence to get into the final third and create. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Ladbroke Grove shooting  second arrest: Man, 32, detained on suspicion of attempted murder after an eight-year-old girl was seriously hurt when gunman opened fire
A second man has been arrested on suspicion of attempted murder after an eight-year-old girl was seriously hurt in a shooting in Southern Row, Ladbroke Grove, West London.

Mail Online
Open 
Mrs Brown's Boys star Brendan O'Carroll claims making a racist joke on set 'was a GOOD thing' for the BBC because it showed they 'don't take any messing'
The Irish actor, 69, became embroiled in a racism row after he 'implied' the N-word in

Mail Online
Open 
Horrifying moment windshield cleaner is brutally torn apart by crocodile after falling into lagoon
A father-of-two who was reported missing by his family was killed by a crocodile in central Mexico

Mail Online
Open 
David Lammy hits out at 'politicking' over Chagos Islands as he plays down claims Labour's sovereignty deal is collapsing after new Mauritian PM joins Donald Trump allies in voicing concerns
The Foreign Secretary insisted the sovereignty pact was a 'very good deal' as he played down claims it was on the verge of an embarrassing collapse.

Mail Online
Open 
Outrageous response of swimming pool after mom reported hairy man in child's bikini using female changing room
The incident happened in July 5 of this year at Commonwealth Place in Saanich, British Columbia, and has since sparked a storm of controversy.

Mail Online
Open 
Terrifying moment monkey knocks over man carrying child and hijacks pushchair
In a video shared to social media, a parent can be seen pushing a stroller while holding a toddler in his arms when a mischievous monkey appeared at Shoushan Zoo in Taiwan.

Mail Online
Open 
Mother, 26, died after nurses missed signs she was suffering from a fatal bleed and diagnosed her with an infection, inquest hears
Charlotte Roscoe, 26, visited Royal Bolton Hospital in Farnworth, Greater Manchester, in January complaining of 'chest pains.'

Mail Online
Open 
Forklift operator narrowly dodges death after container crashes on top of him
The horrific ordeal happened in the early hours of the morning on November 25 - leaving the 37-year-old worker in hospital, where he is said to be in a stable condition.

Mail Online
Open 
Moment police clash with protesters after arresting six Kurdish terror suspects in London
Chants of 'Free Kurdistan' and 'shame on you' were heard as police officers formed a line and scuffled with protesters in ugly scenes outside the Kurdish community centre in Haringey.

Mail Online
Open 
Shocking moment rat interrupts groom's heartfelt wedding vows to his bride after falling from trees
Tamara Alsawaf-Valli is a Texas-based bride who has shared the hilarious moment a rat crashed her wedding and fell from the trees above while her spouse was reading his heartfelt vows.

Mail Online
Open 
Boyband legend looks unrecognisable as he surprises theatre-goers by performing the group's biggest hit in New York
Boyband legend looked unrecognisable on Tuesday as he surprised theatregoers in New York by performing NSYNC's biggest hit on stage. 

Mail Online
Open 
Hundreds of mourners turn out for funeral of rioter Peter Lynch after he killed himself in jail cell while serving two year jail term over asylum seeker hotel protest
The 61-year-old grandfather, Peter Lynch, was found unresponsive in his cell at HMP Moorland on October 19.

Mail Online
Open 
Elon Musk blasts Ben Stiller with shock slur after actor said 'woke' Hollywood is killing 'edgier' comedy
The 53-year-old - who was named as co-head of Donald Trump's Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) - took to his X platform to take a shot at the 58-year-old actor.

Mail Online
Open 
Mother-of-two, 29, left with wonky nipples after a botched boob job in Turkey says she 'knew it wasn't right' when she woke up from surgery
Stacey paid £3,500 to travel to Turkey and have her boob job - but ended up paying a much greater price when the stitches became infected and she lost contact with her doctor

Boing Boing
Open 
More 'More Cowbell'
SNL's famed "More Cowbell" sketch is in the news because people need to remember something funny.
LIKE BOING BOING BUT NOT THE ADS? CLICK HERE TO GO AD-FREE!
Two interesting pieces of news hit my feed today, both about one of Saturday Night Live's most famous sketches, "More Cowbell." — Read the rest
The post More 'More Cowbell' appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Let Leslie Jones fix your family Thanksgiving
This year, Leslie Jones' management of family Thanksgiving is more appropriate than ever.
Years ago, I was a guest at a tragic family Thanksgiving, so I know Leslie Jones gets it right. I am lucky that my family largely shares the same opinions on things like equality or the general state of the world, and we mainly discuss our pets. — Read the rest
The post Let Leslie Jones fix your family Thanksgiving appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Developer creates tool that transforms boring security keys into pretty ASCII art
Imagine if your house key could display a tiny work of art every time you used it. That's essentially what Victor Villas has achieved with computer security keys, turning a standard technical tool into something visually pleasing.
When you connect to a remote computer securely (like accessing a website's server), you use something called an SSH key. — Read the rest
The post Developer creates tool that transforms boring security keys into pretty ASCII art appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Spatchcocking is the best way to prepare a turkey
Turkey is famously bland and made worse when cooked unevenly. Spatchcocking the bird won't magically make it tasty, but it will cook the bird faster and better.
LIKE BOING BOING BUT NOT THE ADS? CLICK HERE TO GO AD-FREE!
Spatchcocking comes from some English-ism around dispatching the cock. — Read the rest
The post Spatchcocking is the best way to prepare a turkey appeared first on Boing Boing.

The Register
Open 
Investors just can't pull the plug despite datacenters facing AI power crunch
Even if 98% say they're worried about energy availability and reliability Investors are increasingly concerned about the availability and reliability of power for datacenters, yet most are still confident that investment in the sector will expand over the next several years, driven by demand for AI and cloud services.…

Sky News Home
Open 
New data reveals impact of war on civilians in Lebanon
As residents of southern Lebanon begin returning to neighbourhoods reduced to rubble, new data shared with Sky News illustrates the impact of the conflict.

ZDNet News
Open 
The best gaming headset I've tested isn't made by SteelSeries, and it's on sale for Black Friday
The new HyperX Cloud Alpha Wireless headset offers brilliant spatial audio and incredible battery life which may have convinced me to finally ditch wired headsets forever. And right now at Amazon, you can save $42 ahead of Black Friday.

ZDNet News
Open 
Save $140 on this Samsung Galaxy A35 and Buds FE bundle at Amazon for Black Friday
Got a tween or teen on your holiday shopping list who is asking for their first smartphone? Right now at Amazon, you can save $140 on a Samsung Galaxy A35 and pair of Buds FE wireless earbuds at Amazon.

ZDNet News
Open 
Black Friday BOGO deal: Get two PNY laptop SSDs for the price of one at Amazon
Need to upgrade your laptop's storage, or looking to set up a dual-drive gaming laptop? Right now at Amazon, when you buy a 1TB PNY CS900 internal SSD, you'll get a 500GB SSD for free.

ZDNet News
Open 
The 12 best Black Friday Verizon deals 2024: iPhone, Samsung Galaxy, and internet sales
Black Friday is almost here, and I've curated the best Verizon deals on popular phones, tablets, smartwatches, and more.

ZDNet News
Open 
Save up to $1,100 on this Sony Bravia 7 and soundbar bundle at Amazon for Black Friday
If you've been waiting to upgrade your home theater, now is your chance to snag an awesome bundle deal from Sony that includes a Bravia 7 Mini LED TV and a Sony Bravia Bar 8 during Amazon's Black Friday sales.

ZDNet News
Open 
The HP Victus 15 gaming laptop is just $450 at Best Buy for Black Friday
The HP Victus 15 may be an entry-level gaming laptop, but it still has great features like a 144Hz refresh rate and AMD FreeSync Premium VRR support. And right now, you can save $430 on one at Best Buy.

ZDNet News
Open 
The best Black Friday Kindle deals: Shop sales available now
Black Friday is just two days away, and we found discounts on Kindle e-readers, like a Kindle Paperwhite deal you can shop right now.

ZDNet News
Open 
The Victus 15L gaming desktop is just $440 at HP for Black Friday
Looking to get into PC gaming on the cheap or know someone who is? You can save $390 on the HP Victus 15L when you buy directly from HP in this awesome Black Friday deal.

ZDNet News
Open 
This 32-inch Android tablet on a rolling stand surprised me - and it's $120 off for Black Friday
The TC MegPad turns out to be not only pretty cool, but very handy. I've already found six uses it's perfect for. Plus: Amazon's got it for 15% off.

ZDNet News
Open 
Get a free Google Pixel 9 phone with this T-Mobile Black Friday deal
When you sign up for a new T-Mobile line or trade in your old device, you can get a free Pixel 9 phone -- an $800 value.

ZDNet News
Open 
This beach-worthy portable Sony Bluetooth speaker is 25% off for Black Friday
The Sony Ult Field 1 pumps out powerful audio for a portable speaker that costs less than you'd expect, and it's $30 off right now.

ZDNet News
Open 
The Whoop 4.0 band with its ChatGPT-like fitness coach is on sale for $200 ahead of Black Friday
I tested the Whoop Coach feature that gives you more insight into your biometric data, including what actions to take to improve your health, and was blown away. Now, you can purchase it for 17% off on Amazon.

ZDNet News
Open 
Black Friday AirPods deals 2024: Some of the best sales are live now
Black Friday is two days away, but discounts on AirPods, like record-low sales on the AirPods Max and AirPods Pro, are available now.

ZDNet News
Open 
This AMD desktop processor is a beast - and it's 60% off for Black Friday
If you're building a gaming rig or looking to juice up a sluggish PC, the AMD Ryzen 7 5700X delivers a 4.6 GHz Max Boost for just $130.

ZDNet News
Open 
The 8TB T5 Evo SSD is almost 50% off at Samsung for Black Friday
The Samsung T5 Evo 8TB portable SSD is $225 off at Samsung, saving you money on all the storage space you'll need for games, documents, photos, and videos. But you'll have to hurry, the T5 is a popular SSD and with a price this good stock may not last.

Slashdot
Open 
RIP Delicious Library
Wil Shipley, announcing the end of Delicious Library, a media cataloging app: Amazon has shut off the feed that allowed Delicious Library to look up items, unfortunately limiting the app to what users already have (or enter manually).

I wasn't contacted about this.

I've pulled it from the Mac App Store and shut down the website so nobody accidentally buys a non-functional app. John Gruber of DaringFireball adds: The end of an era, but it's kind of surprising it was still functional until now. (Shipley has been a full-time engineer at Apple for three years now.)

It's hard to describe just what a sensation Delicious Library was when it debuted, and how influential it was. Delicious Library was simultaneously very useful, in very practical ways, and obsessed with its exuberant UI in ways that served no purpose other than looking cool as shit. It was an app that demanded to be praised just for the way it looked, but also served a purpose that resonated with many users. For about a decade it seemed as though most popular new apps would be designed like Delicious Library. Then Apple dropped iOS 7 in 2013, and now, no apps look like this. Whatever it is that we, as an industry, have lost in the now decade-long trend of iOS 7-style flat design, Delicious Library epitomized it.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

CNET News
Open 
A Word of Warning to Apple on the iPhone Flip
Commentary: I have some advice for Apple before it launches its first folding iPhone.

CNET News
Open 
These Are the Best Black Friday Apple Watch Deals Right Now, According to Our Experts
Shop the best Apple Watch Black Friday deals we've ever seen for the Apple Watch Series 10, SE and more.

CNET News
Open 
On Sale for Black Friday, Snag the Coolest Smart Lamp at a Great Price
Upgrade your home lighting in a big way at this can't-miss Black Friday price.

CNET News
Open 
Power Up Your Holiday Shopping With EcoFlow's Black Friday Deals: Up to $4,000 Off Power Stations
EcoFlow is offering up to $4,000 in savings on its power stations for Black Friday. Shop now to save through EcoFlow or Amazon.

CNET News
Open 
Black Friday 2024: My Favorite Smartwatch Is a Great Budget-Friendly Gift Too
Black Friday is here. This is why the Samsung Galaxy Watch 4 would make the perfect gift for the holidays, especially now that it's 50% off.

CNET News
Open 
The Stanley Tumbler Meets the Hype and It's on Sale for Black Friday
My favorite water bottle is the real deal, not just a TikTok trend, and you can save some money on it for Black Friday.

CNET News
Open 
Average Electric Bill in Arizona (and How to Save)
Here's what to know about electricity costs in Arizona, plus tips for how to lower your energy usage.

CNET News
Open 
Fitbit Charge 6 Returns to Its All-Time Low Price of $100 for Black Friday
Score one of our favorite fitness trackers at its lowest price ever during Amazon's Black Friday sale.

CNET News
Open 
Tuft & Needle Nod Mattress Review: A Bed for Budget Shoppers
This Amazon exclusive from Tuft & Needle is a great bed-in-a-box for sleepers on a tight budget, but it won't work for everyone.

CNET News
Open 
Walmart Black Friday Sale: 50+ of the Hottest Walmart Black Friday Deals Happening Now
CNET's shopping experts have spent hours finding the most incredible deals at Walmart to bring you the best of the best bargains.

CNET News
Open 
Here's Why You Should Choose the Chipolo Tracker Over Apple's AirTag
The AirTag is the tracker boss, but that doesn't mean it's the best Bluetooth tracking device for you. And a four-pack of the Chipolo trackers is on sale for Black Friday.

CNET News
Open 
We’re Expecting a Restock of PlayStation’s 30th Anniversary DualSense Controller
This new, limited-edition variant is currently sold out, but rumors suggest that could be changing soon.

CNET News
Open 
This Is the Average Power Bill in Every State
See how your state's average utility bills compare to the rest of the nation.

CNET News
Open 
Grab a Deal on One of the Best 4-Player Board Games of the Year This Black Friday
This Black Friday deal is fire -- literally. The game is called Fire Tower, and it's so much fun.

CNET News
Open 
Secure Your Home From Anywhere With This $99 Smart Lock Deal
The Ultraloq U-Bolt Pro is one of the best smart locks of 2024, and right now you can snag it for $80 off.

CNET News
Open 
Want Free Airport Lounge Access This Holiday Season? Here's The Best Way to Get It
If you play your cards right, you'll get fully reimbursed for this luxury perk.

EFF
Open 
Tell the Senate: Don’t Weaponize the Treasury Department Against Nonprofits
Last week the House of Representatives passed a dangerous bill that would allow the Secretary of Treasury to strip a U.S. nonprofit of its tax-exempt status. If it passes the Senate and is signed into law, H.R. 9495 would give broad and easily abused new powers to the executive branch. Nonprofits would not have a meaningful opportunity to defend themselves, and could be targeted without disclosing the reasons or evidence for the decision. 
This bill is an existential threat to nonprofits of all stripes. Future administrations could weaponize the powers in this bill to target nonprofits on either end of the political spectrum. Even if they are not targeted, the threat alone could chill the activities of some nonprofit organizations.
The bill’s authors have combined this attack on nonprofits, originally written as H.R. 6408, with other legislation that would prevent the IRS from imposing fines and penalties on hostages while they are held abroad. These are separate matters. Congress should separate these two bills to allow a meaningful vote on this dangerous expansion of executive power. No administration should be given this much power to target nonprofits without due process. 
tell your senator
Protect nonprofits


Over 350 civil liberties, religious, reproductive health, immigrant rights, human rights, racial justice, LGBTQ+, environmental, and educational organizations signed a letter opposing the bill as written. Now, we need your help. Tell the Senate not to pass H.R. 9495, the so-called “Stop Terror-Financing and Tax Penalties on American Hostages Act.”

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Rapper's friend raped woman at party, court hears
Slowthai - real name Tyron Frampton - is charged with rape alongside friend Alex Blake-Walker.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Jeremy Bowen: 'The Lebanon ceasefire is a respite, not a solution for the Middle East'
What the latest developments mean for Iran's position - and for the prospect of peace in Gaza

Full Disclosure
Open 
Re: Local Privilege Escalations in needrestart
Posted by Mark Esler on Nov 27The security fix for CVE-2024-48991, 6ce6136 (“core: prevent race
condition on /proc/$PID/exec evaluation”) [0], introduced a regression
which was subsequently fixed 42af5d3 ("core: fix regression of false
positives for processes running in chroot or mountns (#317)") [1].

Many thanks to Ivan Kurnosov and Salvatore Bonaccorso for their review.

[0] https://github.com/liske/needrestart/commit/6ce6136cccc307c6b8a0f8cae12f9a22ac2aad59...

Full Disclosure
Open 
SEC Consult SA-20241125-0 :: Unlocked JTAG interface and buffer overflow in Siemens SM-2558 Protocol Element, Siemens CP-2016 & CP-2019
Posted by SEC Consult Vulnerability Lab via Fulldisclosure on Nov 27SEC Consult Vulnerability Lab Security Advisory < 20241125-0 >
=======================================================================
title: Unlocked JTAG interface and buffer overflow
product: Siemens SM-2558 Protocol Element (extension module for
Siemens SICAM AK3/TM/BC),
Siemens CP-2016 & CP-2019
vulnerable version: JTAG: Unknown HW revision, Zynq Firmware...

Full Disclosure
Open 
SEC Consult SA-20241127-0 :: Stored Cross-Site Scripting in Omada Identity (CVE-2024-52951)
Posted by SEC Consult Vulnerability Lab via Fulldisclosure on Nov 27SEC Consult Vulnerability Lab Security Advisory < 20241127-0 >
=======================================================================
title: Stored Cross-Site Scripting
product: Omada Identity
vulnerable version: <v15U1, <v14.14 hotfix #309
fixed version: v15U1, v14.14 hotfix #309
CVE number: CVE-2024-52951
impact: Medium
homepage:...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Are German carmakers exploiting Serbian workers?
Serbian workers have reported inhuman treatment and hazardous working conditions at suppliers with ties to German carmakers. A supply-chain law is supposed to protect them, but does it work?

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Aston Villa v Juventus: Champions League – live
Champions League updates from the 8pm GMT kick-offLive scoreboard | Liverpool v Real Madrid | Email JohnA famous name, a famous father, especially for Juventus. Jonny Liew spoke to Khéphren ThuramJuventus are unbeaten under Motta, with the best defensive record in Serie A. Things haven’t yet quite clicked at the other end, but early in the project the direction of travel feels encouraging and Thuram has established himself as a key player in midfield: tactically disciplined, defensively solid, but with the licence to get into the final third and create. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Biden administration claims win for Hezbollah-Israel ceasefire – but will it hold?
Peace is shaky at best, as Israel will still strike targets in Lebanon and a power transition looms in the USThe Biden administration has claimed the long-awaited ceasefire between Hezbollah and Israel as a diplomatic triumph achieved under tremendous pressure during a lame-duck period with a hostile Donald Trump administration waiting in the wings.Speaking from a lectern in the Rose Garden of the White House, Joe Biden called the result “historic” and said that it “reminds us that peace is possible”. It would return civilians to their homes, he said, and had “determined this conflict will not be just another cycle of violence”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
France says Netanyahu is immune from ICC warrant as Israel is not member of court
Claim comes after Paris signalled it would fulfil obligations as signatory to Rome statue after arrest warrant issuedThe French government has claimed that Benjamin Netanyahu has immunity from arrest warrants issued by the international criminal court for war crimes on the grounds that Israel is not an ICC member.The claim came soon after Netanyahu’s cabinet agreed to a French-backed ceasefire in Lebanon and is in contrast to Paris’s attitude towards last year’s ICC war crimes warrant issued against Vladimir Putin, another leader of a non-member country. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Transgender people have right to be recognised in legally acquired gender, court hears
For Women Scotland is challenging ruling extending definition of ‘woman’ to transgender women with GRCTransgender people have “a fundamental right” to be recognised in their legally acquired gender, the supreme court has heard in a case brought by Scottish campaigners to resolve how women are defined in law.For Women Scotland is challenging a prior ruling by the court of session in Edinburgh, which found that Scottish government guidance extending the definition of “woman” to transgender women with a gender recognition certificate (GRC) was lawful. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Liverpool v Real Madrid: Champions League – live
Champions League updates from the 8pm GMT kick-offLive scoreboard | Aston Villa v Juventus | Email MichaelThis is not the only game tonight, of course. Join John Brewin for the tantalising encounter that is Villa v Juventus.Gareth Bale is a pundit tonight for TNT. Presenter Laura Woods points out that the Welshman’s record at Anfield is not the best: Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Former BBC athletics commentator Dickenson dies aged 74
Former BBC athletics commentator Paul Dickenson dies at the age of 74.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Treasury yields drop even though PCE inflation reading edges up from Fed’s target
Treasury yields fall after pre-Thanksgiving economic data points to resilience, gradual Fed rate cuts in 2025

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Here’s how high inflation could rise on Trump’s tariffs on Canada, Mexico
Trump’s threatened tariffs on Canada and Mexico may boost inflation in the U.S., but there’s still “huge uncertainty” around macroeconomic forecasts, according to Deutsche Bank Research.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Trump, immigration and inflation are off limits for Thanksgiving dinner. What’s left to talk about? Can we even discuss Ozempic?
“My sister, who is a lifelong Democrat, wanted to school me on everything from the “real” causes of inflation to immigration.”

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Traders are loading up on crash protection even as stocks zoom higher
Investors are buying up crash protection for their portfolios even as a sizzling postelection rally shows few signs of slowing down.

TechRadar Reviews
Open 
Moana 2 review: Disney's anticipated sequel is a real tearjerker, but I wish we'd seen more from my favorite character

Mail Online
Open 
Fury as Gen Z viewers slam classic romcom star for being 'too ugly'
A now-viral post to X has sent longtime fans of the romcom into a spin after declaring that Crystal's character Harry Burns is not good enough for Meg Ryan's character Sally Albright.

Russia Today News
Open 
EU considering TikTok probe over election shock – FT

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Partner told mum 'hitting you is like hitting a man', manslaughter trial hears
Ryan Wellings’ alleged violence to Kiena Dawes led to her taking her own life, a court hears.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
FBI investigating bomb threats against Trump Cabinet picks
President-elect Donald Trump's transition team says several of his political allies were "targeted in violent, un-American threats to their lives." Trump himself has been the target of assassination attempts.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Thank God we are home’: Lebanese return south after ceasefire with Israel
People are relieved to be home but face having to rebuild lives among destroyed homes and villagesBefore the ceasefire had even come into effect, Zeinab and Dina were already driving south. The two sisters had been forced to flee to Tripoli, northern Lebanon, for 64 days – they had counted – and they could not bear another day without seeing home.“We were laughing and crying at the same time when we heard the news of the ceasefire. We were packing our stuff and still we didn’t believe it was happening, it was like a dream,” said Zeinab, 28, a resident of the town of Zibqeen in south Lebanon. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ed Davey is dreaming of Christmas No 1 hit with carers’ choir
Lib Dem leader teams up with choir of young carers to record a version of their self-penned song, Love is EnoughWhen already this year you’ve bungee-jumped, jetskied and led your party to its best election result for a century, how can you possibly top that as a politician? If you are Ed Davey, the answer is obvious: try for a Christmas No 1.That, at least, is the ambition for the Liberal Democrat leader, who has teamed up with a choir of young carers to record an original song of theirs, complete with a Christmas-heavy video featuring festive jumpers and hats, tinsel, and baubles being hung on a tree. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Liverpool v Real Madrid: Champions League – live
Champions League updates from the 8pm GMT kick-offLive scoreboard | Aston Villa v Juventus | Email MichaelThis is not the game tonight, of course. Join John Brewin for the tantalising encounter that is Villa v Juventus.Gareth Bale is a pundit tonight for TNT. Presenter Laura Woods points out that the Welshman’s record at Anfield is not the best: Continue reading...

Techdirt
Open 
Daily Deal: The 2024 Microsoft Essential Tools Training Bundle
The 2024 Microsoft Essential Tools Training Bundle will help you become a Microsoft expert in no time. Courses cover Microsoft 365, Excel, Word for beginners, and Word advanced. It’s on sale for $30. Note: The Techdirt Deals Store is powered and curated by StackCommerce. A portion of all sales from Techdirt Deals helps support Techdirt. […]

Techdirt
Open 
You Can’t Do Mass Deportations Without Mass Domestic Surveillance And ICE Is Already Exploring Its Options
ICE has never been opposed to mass surveillance. It has used everything it possibly can to locate Trump’s so-called “bad hombres” and subject them to family separation and a detainment infrastructure incapable of handling the former president’s (and now President-elect) masturbatorial fantasies about “border invasions.” ICE buys location info from data brokers to evade warrant […]

Sky News Home
Open 
Judge 'concerned' by costs in Prince Harry's phone hacking case
A High Court judge has warned he is "concerned" about the high costs of Prince Harry's phone hacking case against the publishers of the Daily Mail.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
England punish sloppy South Africa to seal T20 series
England equal their third-highest score in women's T20 internationals to cruise to victory against South Africa and seal the three-match series with a game to spare.

Russia Today News
Open 
EU considers TikTok probe over election shocker - FT

BBC World News
Open 
Pakistan security forces accused of pushing man off containers
Video of a man seen praying then being approached by soldiers has been verified by BBC Verify.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Lucy Letby's dad 'made threats' in meetings with hospital CEO
Tony Chambers waited for more than a year before contacting police about the neonatal nurse.

Telegraph
Open 
Liverpool vs Real Madrid: Alexander-Arnold on the bench, Bellingham and Mbappe start

The Hill
Open 
Trump taps Keith Kellogg as special envoy to Ukraine and Russia
President-elect Trump on Wednesday announced his appointment of Keith Kellogg, a retired lieutenant general who served as chief of staff on Trump’s National Security Council during his first term, as special envoy to Ukraine and Russia. Trump praised Kellogg as being with him “right from the beginning” and noted his distinguished military and business career. ...

The Hill
Open 
Jack Smith must release a final report on Trump
No defendant has ever received more help from his prosecutors than President-elect Donald Trump.

The Hill
Open 
$18M in fake Gibson guitars seized in California
U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) said Tuesday that $18 million in fake Gibson guitars were seized in California, which the agency called the “largest counterfeit musical instrument seizure on record.” CBP said in a press release that offices working with representatives of Gibson and local authorites seized 3,000 counterfeit Gibson guitars. Those counterfeits, if...

The Hill
Open 
Judge tosses Jan. 6 protester Ray Epps's lawsuit against Fox News
A judge in Delaware has dismissed a lawsuit against Fox News that was brought by an Arizona man at the center of a conspiracy theory about what sparked the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol. Ray Epps, a former U.S. Marine, sued Fox last year alleging the network knowingly promoted what his attorneys said...

The Hill
Open 
How a Democrat's post-election chat with a Trump supporter provided invaluable insights
A doctor in Ohio found solace in an unexpected inconvenience when his car broke down, and he was able to have a meaningful conversation with a local tow truck driver who had voted for Donald Trump, gaining invaluable insights into his beliefs and his own.

Mac Rumours
Open 
AirPods Pro 2 Get Massive $95 Discount for Black Friday, Available For Just $153.99
Black Friday is just two days away, and Amazon has one of the best deals of the year available to purchase right now. You can get the AirPods Pro 2 (USB-C) for just $153.99, down from $249.00.



Note: MacRumors is an affiliate partner with Amazon. When you click a link and make a purchase, we may receive a small payment, which helps us keep the site running.



This sale beats the previous all-time low price by nearly $40 and is overall one of the best deals we're tracking for Black Friday 2024. The AirPods Pro 2 were updated in 2023 with USB-C, and also feature Active Noise Cancellation, Apple's H2 chip, and Spatial Audio.



$95 OFFAirPods Pro 2 for $153.99



You can find all the Apple Black Friday Deals currently available in our dedicated post. For everything else, we're keeping track of all of the season's best Apple-related deals in our Black Friday roundup, so be sure to check back throughout the month for an updated list of all the most notable discounts you'll find for Black Friday 2024.







Deals Newsletter

Interested in hearing more about top deals as we head into the holidays? Sign up for our Deals Newsletter and we'll keep you updated so you don't miss the biggest deals of the season!









Related Roundup: Apple DealsThis article, 'AirPods Pro 2 Get Massive $95 Discount for Black Friday, Available For Just $153.99' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

The Verge
Open 
xAI could soon have its own app

The Verge
Open 
The DJI Mini 3 is $100 off and matching its record low for Black Friday

Mail Online
Open 
Robbie Williams smiles through the pain as he attends Better Man premiere alongside wife Ayda Field, ex-girlfriend Nicole Appleton and Holly Willoughby after revealing his beloved mother's dementia diagnosis
The singer, 50, was joined at the premiere in Leicester Square, London by his wife Ayda Field as the couple looked in good spirits while walking the red carpet together.

TechRadar News
Open 
This is the largest USB Flash Drive you can buy right now: 4TB USB 3.2 Gen2 thumb disk from Oyen Digital uses 3D TLC NAND — and can reach speeds of up to 1050MBps

Digital Trends
Open 
Black Friday Ember deals: Save up to 35% on our favorite smart mugs
Ember mugs are one of the best gifts you can give to your friends and family. Here are some great Black Friday Ember Mug deals from Best Buy and Amazon.

Digital Trends
Open 
How is this possible? Sansui’s 55-inch 4K OLED TV is only $600
Sansui's 55-inch 4K OLED TV isn't just affordably priced, it's now more affordable than its QLED TV competition.

Digital Trends
Open 
Devolver Digital announces 3 game delays the only way it knows how
Devolver Digital has a brand, and that brand is announcing game delays with a fake awards show.

Digital Trends
Open 
Is Moana 2 streaming?
Disney's latest Moana film is swimming into theaters, but is Moana 2 already streaming at home?

Digital Trends
Open 
10 great Amazon Prime Video movies to watch on Thanksgiving
Our picks for the best Amazon Prime TV movies to watch on Thanksgiving include a musical adventure, a romantic drama, and a sports underdog story.

Digital Trends
Open 
Best Black Friday drone deals to take to the skies
Don't miss out on a chance to fly and a chance to save with the best Black Friday drone deals. Everyone gets the chance to fly like Superman.

Digital Trends
Open 
Steam Deck is on sale for its lowest price yet during the Steam Autumn Sale
During the Steam Autumn Sale, you can get a Steam Deck for as little as $297, the lowest we've seen its price go yet on Steam.

Planet PostgreSQL
Open 
Paul Ramsey: PostGIS Day 2024 Summary
In late November, on the day after GIS Day, we hosted the annual PostGIS day online event. 22 speakers from around the world, in an agenda that ran from mid-afternoon in Europe to mid-afternoon on the Pacific coast.We had an amazing collection of speakers, exploring all aspects of PostGIS, from highly technical specifics, to big picture culture and history. A full playlist of PostGIS Day 2024 is available on the Crunchy Data YouTube channel. Here’s a highlight reel of the talks and themes throughout the day.The Old and the NewMy contribution to the day is a historical look back at the history of databases and spatial databases. The roots of PostGIS are the roots of PostgreSQL, and the roots of PostgreSQL in turn go back to the dawn of databases. The history of software involves a lot of coincidences, and turns on particular characters sometimes, but it’s never (too) dull!Joshua Carlson delivered one of the stand-out talks of the day, exploring how he built a very old-style cartographic product–a street with a grid-based index to find street names–using a very new-style approach–spatial SQL to generate the grid and find the grid numbers for each street to fill in the index. Put Making a Dynamic Street Map Index with ST_SquareGrid at the top of your video play list.For the past ten years, Brian Timoney has been warning geospatial practitioners about the complexity of the systems they are delivering to end users. In Simplify, simplify, simplify, Timoney both walks the walk and talks the talk, delivering denunciations of GIS dashboard mania, while building out a minimalist mapping solution using just PostGIS, SVG and (yes!) Excel. It turns out that SVG is an excellent medium for delivering cartographic products, and you can generate them entirely in PostgreSQL/PostGIS.And then, for example, work with them directly in MS Word! (This is, as Brian says, what customers are looking for, not a dashboard.)Steve Pousty brought the mandatory AI-centric talk, but avoided the hype and stuck to the practicalities of the new era: what do the terms mean, what are the models for, what tools are there in PostgreSQL to make use of them, and in particular what makes sense for spatial practitioners.Parquet and PostGISOur own Rekha Khandhadia showed off the power of our latest product, Crunchy Data Warehouse, when combined with the massive map data available from Overture, and the analytical tools of PostGIS.In Geospatial Analytics with GeoParquet, using only SQL, she addressed the 300GB of Overture data, and ran a spatial analysis on the fly over the state of Michigan.GeoParquet is the new kid on the block, with lots of folks in the researching phase.Brian Loomis of Nikola Motor shared how he is using PostGIS/PostgreSQL to quantify how much time their trucks are spending in various impacted communities, for reporting to the California Air Resources Board (CARB). Loomis also shares his use case for Crunchy Data Warehouse. In working with 4 billion points a day, they're using s3 to store partitioned data in Parquet. Loomis has some useful notes on Parquet file sizes and structure optimization if you're new to that topic.The Larger WorldPostGIS doesn’t exist in a vacuum, it’s part of a larger open ecosystem of data and other software and organizations trying to solve problems. Bonny McClain returned to PostGIS day with an update on her work on urban climate issues and using SQL as an engine for public policy analysis.At Overture Maps, a collaboration of industry members is synthesizing a public world base map from multiple sources, and Dana Bauer and Jake Wasserman got us Started With Overture Maps, how PostGIS can make use of the data and what is being built. At the other end of the spectrum, Felt is building end-user facing tools for spatial collaboration, and Michal Migurski walked us through a demo of pulling climate data from a PostGIS service, visualizing and story telling with the data.Meanwhile, in the daily grind of GIS operations, Kurt Menke is seeing a wave of open source adoption in Danish municipalities, as QGIS and PostGIS take over and old MapInfo installations are phased out. The pattern of adoption across the nation is very interesting and Kurt provides lots of maps.This poll from the webinar shows a lot of QGIS use in our PostGIS Day audience! Not surprising, really, QGIS is the easiest desktop GIS to integrate with PostGIS.Finally, we got to hear from Pekka Sarkola on How to Connect PostGIS to ArcGIS and the answer is “it depends”. There’s a lot of complexity in the Esri environment, lots of products, and lots of history, so the precise way you want to connect will depend on your needs. But you can do it, just remember to read the docs carefully.Regina with a pure SQL exploration of PostGIS-related extensions, shared PostGIS Surprise, the Sequel;The Nitty GrittyUsing PostGIS often means accessing and using from another language, and Tom Payne provided a great deep dive into using PostGIS from within the Go language. Tom’s work on 3D geospatial is built into flight devices to warn aviators of hazards in the Swiss alps. Also in the world of 3D, Loïc Bartoletti explained SFCGAL and PostGIS, bringing new algorithms into PostGIS – in particular algorithms working with volumetric types and 3D data.Finally, Maxime Schoemans introduced us to the power of Multi-entry Generalized Search Trees – imagine the current PostGIS spatial indexes, but with each spatial object potentially represented with multiple index keys. The potential for performance improvements, as Maxime demonstrated, is very high, particularly for data involving large and complex shapes.All these speakers crossed the threshold of true nitty – they talked about C and core code bindings!Routing and DrivingRoute finding and fleet management continue to be ever-green topics in the world of geospatial, as the world keeps spinning faster on more and more wheels. While it is tempting to reach for pgRouting to solve any routing problem, both Ibrahim Saricicek and Dennis Boachie Boateng counseled making sure your routing solutions matches your routing problem.Everyone has a favourite cost for routing, and this poll shows the PostGIS day audience pretty divided on the right one.Ibrahim provided a good comparison of different open source routing options, in a Survey of pgRouting and Other Open Source Routing Tools.And Dennis went all-in on the bespoke routing path, describing the core principles of routing, and demonstrating his own Custom Routing Solutions with PostGIS, in particular a live example of his own mobile way-finding application.You get an API, you get an API, you all get APIs!Web APIs to PostGIS are always a rich topic, because there’s a lot of them, and everyone has a favorite specification or implementation language. Michael Keller shared his incredibly well fleshed out FastCollection API, a Python state-of-the-art implementation of the Open Geospatial Consortium standards, with a few extra API end points for easier web application building. We are looking forward to seeing Michael in future years, as he builds out a complete example application on top of this API.Elizabeth Christensen showed off our favourite API tools, the lightweight services we use for building Web maps from PostGIS – pg_featureserv and pg_tileserv. Simplicity of deployment and interface are what distinguish these Go language services, just download and run, no dependencies, no fuss.Martin Davis also showed off our microservices, but in the context of the Uber global hexagonal grid system. He built a live dashboard specifically to show Summarizing Data in H3 with PostGIS and pg_tileserv. All the summary maps were generated on-the-fly, which is particularly impressive given the data on the backend.Topological Data ModelsTwo approaches to managing data with shared boundaries were demonstrated at PostGIS day this year. The “traditional” approach was explained by Felipe Matas in Simplify Space Relations like Country/State Divisions with Postgis Topology. PostGIS comes with a built-in topology model, but understanding the moving parts can be hard, and Felipe provided a great talk with (importantly) a lot of pictures about how a topological model represents something like administrative boundaries.Yao Cui from the British Columbia Geological Survey showed off the data model he developed 20 years ago to handle the difficult problem of keeping geological data clean while still supporting a robust data update cycle. Cui’s approach uses PostGIS to Facilitate Polygonal Map Integration Without Edge Matching. He keeps the topology implicit, and just manages the boundaries between areas, with a little careful work in identifying the boundaries of edit areas to allow long term data checkout, and clean data check-in.The curtain closesIt was an honor to once again host PostGIS day, and we are in debt to all the great speakers who gave their time to participate. Thanks to everyone who participated in the chat and Q&#38A sessions, it was a lively experience, all 11 hours of it!

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Flights cancelled amid yellow weather warning
The Met Offices issues a yellow fog warning, which is in place until 08:00 GMT on Thursday.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Brighton’s ‘vertical pier’ i360 files for administration
Company blames ‘escalating costs, bad summer weather and the cost-of-living crisis’ for the tourist attraction’s £51m debtIt was meant to be Brighton’s answer to the London Eye. A 162-metre tall “vertical pier” perched on the seafront, the Brighton i360 was designed to pull in hundreds of thousands of visitors a year, offering panoramic views of the Sussex coastline and the bustling seaside city.But eight years after opening, and saddled with £51m in debt, Brighton i360 has filed for administration, with the observation tower facing closure if it cannot find a buyer. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Aston Villa v Juventus: Champions League – live
Champions League updates from the 8pm GMT kick-offLive scoreboard | Liverpool v Real Madrid | Email JohnFor Villa, Jhon Duran is on the bench as Unai Emery makes three changes to the side from Palace. In come Matty Cash, Lucas Digne and Boubacar Kamara while Ross Barkley, Ian Maatsen and Lamare Bogarde are benched.Juve have been hit by injuries. Vlahovic and Luiz missing while Tim Weah steps in for the injured Weston McKennie, USA for USA. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Liverpool v Real Madrid: Champions League – live
Champions League updates from the 8pm GMT kick-offLive scoreboard | Aston Villa v Juventus | Email MichaelTwo changes for Slot since Liverpool’s win over Southampton. Diaz comes in for Gakpo and Mac Allister replaces Szoboszlai. Trent Alexander-Arnold is back on the bench after recovering from his injury troubles. Conor Bradley is tasked with marking Kylian Mbappé.What a huge game for Raúl Asencio at centre back for Real Madrid. The 21-year-old makes just his third senior appearance and his first game in the Champions League. There are two changes from the side that beat Leganés: Diaz comes in for the injured Vini Jr, and the evergreen Modric replaces Ceballos. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Thank God we are home’: Lebanese return south after ceasefire with Israel
People are relieved to be home but face having to re-build lives among destroyed homes and villagesBefore the ceasefire had even come into effect, Zeinab and Dina were already driving south. The two sisters had been forced to flee to Tripoli, northern Lebanon, for 64 days – they had counted – and they could not bear another day without seeing home.“We were laughing and crying at the same time when we heard the news of the ceasefire. We were packing our stuff and still we didn’t believe it was happening, it was like a dream,” said Zeinab, 28, a resident of the town of Zibqeen in south Lebanon. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ed Davey is dreaming of Christmas No 1 hit with carers’ choir
Lib Dem leader teams up with choir of young carers to record a version of their self-penned song, Love is EnoughWhen already this year you’ve bungee-jumped, jetskied and led your party to its best election result for a century, how can you possibly top that as a politician? If you are Ed Davey, the answer is obvious: try for the Christmas No 1.That, at least, is the ambition for the Liberal Democrat leader, who has teamed up with a choir of young carers to record an original song of theirs, complete with a Christmas-heavy video featuring festive jumpers and hats, tinsel, and baubles being hung on a tree. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ex-supreme court president backs assisted dying law change
Exclusive: David Neuberger, who ruled on high-profile assited dying cases, believes tight terms of bill cannot be expanded in courtsThe former president of the supreme court who ruled on the most high-profile assisted dying cases has declared his support for the law change, as MPs backing the bill say they believe they have the numbers for Friday’s historic vote to pass.David Neuberger, who ruled against high-profile assisted dying cases including Debbie Purdy in 2009 and Tony Nicklinson in 2015, told the Guardian he believed the status quo was failing “the fundamental aims of the law – to respect people’s right of personal autonomy, and to protect the vulnerable”. Continue reading...

Mail Online
Open 
Trump's top Cabinet picks targeted by bomb and death threats
Several of President-elect Donald Trump's Cabinet nominees were targeted by 'violent' threats to their homes, incoming press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Wednesday.

Sky News Home
Open 
Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire unlikely to last, says former UK spy chief
The ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah is unlikely to last in the long term, according to a former British spy chief.

Mail Online
Open 
Putin's secret daughter, 21, 'lives under pseudonym while hiding in West during his bloody war with Ukraine'
Ekaterina has reportedly been a student at the Paris School of Management and Arts during the war in Ukraine - but may not be there any more

Mail Online
Open 
Fury as Gen Z viewers slam classic romcom star for being too ugly
A now-viral post to X has sent longtime fans of the romcom into a spin after declaring that Crystal's character Harry Burns is not good enough for Meg Ryan's character Sally Albright.

Gizmodo
Open 
Xbox Players’ Favorite Seagate Storage Expansion Card at Its All-Time Low Price This Black Friday
This is the best gift for Xbox players, don't miss the Black Friday sale on this Seagate storage card.

Gizmodo
Open 
The Best Nerdy Gifts of 2024
The pop-culture geek on your list will be thrilled by these picks from Marvel, Star Wars, Lego, and more.

Gizmodo
Open 
Samsung’s Black Friday Gift, Massive Storage in a Tiny Memory Card at an Ultra-Low Price
The tiny price of the tiny PRO Plus microSDXC card makes it the ideal storage solution for any device with an SD card slot.

Gizmodo
Open 
Donald Trump Jr. Wants Guys Like Joe Rogan in the White House Briefing Room
It's hard to imagine Rogan wanting to sit patiently for a briefing.

Gizmodo
Open 
Prehistoric Tailoring? 13,000-Year-Old Bone Needles Show How Ice Age Humans Stitched Winter Clothing
Ice Age humans in what is now Wyoming used bones from hares, bobcats, and mountain lions to craft sewing needles, new research suggests.

Gizmodo
Open 
Don’t Buy an Old MacBook For Less, The New MacBook Pro M4 Is at a Record Low Price For Black Friday
Launched in early November, these MacBook Pro M4 models are the top choice on the market right now.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Romania regulator calls for TikTok suspension amid vote interference fears
Far-right, pro-Moscow candidate Călin Georgescu came from 5% in polls to win presidential election’s first roundRomania’s telecoms regulator is asking for TikTok to be suspended as the country’s defence council prepares to discuss cyber risks to its elections, after a little-known ultranationalist came from nowhere to win the first round of the presidential vote.The country’s constitutional court will also examine two allegations of electoral fraud after Călin Georgescu, a Moscow-friendly, EU-sceptic and anti-Nato independent, topped the ballot in a result that upended Romanian politics. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Aston Villa v Juventus: Champions League – live
Champions League updates from the 8pm GMT kick-offLive scoreboard | Liverpool v Real Madrid | Email JohnAston Villa: Martinez, Cash, Diego Carlos, Torres, Digne, Kamara, Tielemans, Bailey, Rogers, McGinn, Watkins. Subs: Gauci, Olsen, Konsa, Mings, Barkley, Duran, Buendia, Philogene-Bidace, Nedeljkovic, Maatsen, Bogarde.Juventus: Di Gregorio, Savona, Gatti, Kalulu Kyatengwa, Cambiaso, Locatelli, Thuram, Weah, Francisco Conceicao, Yildiz, Koopmeiners. Subs: Perin, Pinsoglio, Danilo, Fagioli, Rouhi, Mbangula. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Liverpool v Real Madrid: Champions League – live
Champions League updates from the 8pm GMT kick-offLive scoreboard | Aston Villa v Juventus | Email MichaelLiverpool enquired into signing Jude Bellingham from Borussia Dortmund in 2023, before deciding they could not afford the overall package to sign him. Bellingham has been talking this week about that interest, and his eventual decision to join Madrid.[Signing for Liverpool] probably wasn’t as close as a lot of the media made out. I had conversations with a few clubs when leaving Borussia Dortmund and making that decision. They gave me permission to speak to a few clubs. All the clubs I spoke to were very respectful of me and my family which was something I really respected. But when Real Madrid come knocking on the door it shakes the whole house. It’s hard not to accept. It’s not a matter the other teams weren’t good or were bad when I spoke to them, it’s just that Real Madrid are on a different level. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
KemiKaze her own worst enemy after another scattergun PMQs | John Crace
Tory leader’s aim is as wild as her temper as she sets up Starmer’s rejoinders before madly demanding he resignIt appears that Kemi Badenoch is a slow learner. The Tory leader has now had three attempts at prime minister’s questions and has yet to make an impact. In fact, most of the damage she has caused has been self-inflicted. Turns out that being shouty and condescending in the Commons doesn’t do you many favours.Part of the problem is that KemiKaze clearly hasn’t been paying much attention for the last few years. There’s a reason it’s called PMQs. The questions may get asked but they very rarely get answered. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Thank god we are home’: Lebanese return south after ceasefire with Israel
People are relieved to be home but face having to re-build lives among destroyed homes and villagesBefore the ceasefire had even come into effect, Zeinab and Dina were already driving south. The two sisters had been forced to flee to Tripoli, northern Lebanon, for 64 days – they had counted – and they could not bear another day without seeing home.“We were laughing and crying at the same time when we heard the news of the ceasefire. We were packing our stuff and still we didn’t believe it was happening, it was like a dream,” said Zeinab, 28, a resident of the town of Zibqin in south Lebanon. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Jess Phillips on new anti-domestic violence measures: ‘I feel hopeful today’
Police say strict new restraining orders on domestic abusers will enable them to ‘manage offenders proactively’In a white-walled room at Croydon custody centre on Wednesday, Jess Phillips let out a little whoop.Talking about new strict new restraining orders on domestic abusers, which were launched that morning, DI Sharad Verma said: “We’ve issued two Dapos today … you should have the first national-level Dapos by the end of the day.” Continue reading...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Unlicensed German driver lets boy steer, tries to flee cops
Police stopped a man who had a 4-year-old boy seated on his lap and steering the car. A policeman was injured as the 46-year-old tried to flee questioning, seemingly because he knew he shouldn't be on the roads either.

Russia Today News
Open 
Biden pushing Ukraine to force teenagers to war – AP

Russia Today News
Open 
Trump nominees hit by ‘un-American threats’

Atlas Obscura
Open 
Sequoia Legacy Tree in Visalia, California

The Register
Open 
Data broker leaves 600K+ sensitive files exposed online
Researcher spotted open database before criminals … we hope Exclusive  More than 600,000 sensitive files containing thousands of people's criminal histories, background checks, vehicle and property records were exposed to the internet in a non-password protected database belonging to data brokerage SL Data Services, according to a security researcher.…

ZDNet News
Open 
I tested the modular GoPro Hero 13 Black, and it's a fantastic travel camera (especially at $100 off)
The GoPro Hero 13 Black accessories bundle packs plenty of upgrades that make it more attractive at the Black Friday sale price of $350.

ZDNet News
Open 
Best Black Friday laptop deals 2024: 24 live deals organized by RAM, storage, and more
It's been a big year for laptops. With Black Friday just two days away, we're following the best deals on laptops from Apple, Dell, Lenovo, and more.

ZDNet News
Open 
The 75+ best Black Friday Amazon deals 2024: Apple, Roborock, Kindle and more
I hand-selected the best Black Friday Amazon deals, which are live now. Save up to 60% on products ranging from common household items to flagship tech devices.

ZDNet News
Open 
The camera I recommend to most new photographers is $180 off for Black Friday
If you're getting serious about photography and ready to upgrade from your phone, the Canon EOS R100 is one of the best cameras to start with. It's on sale now for 38% off ahead of Cyber Week.

ZDNet News
Open 
This fantastic 2-in-1 laptop will satisfy business professionals and creatives alike (and it's on sale for Black Friday)
HP's EliteBook x360 1040 enables one of the best video call experiences for a laptop. For Cyber Week, HP's website is offering huge discounts on multiple models.

ZDNet News
Open 
The 100+ Best Black Friday Walmart deals 2024: Apple, Samsung, Dyson, and more
Score the best Black Friday deals already at Walmart, from gaming monitors to robot vacuums.

ZDNet News
Open 
This Anker power bank solved my big problem with portable chargers, and it's on sale for $13 right now
Anker's Nano Power Bank makes charging your iPhone or Android device effortless - and it's on sale at Amazon.

ZDNet News
Open 
One of the best cheap Android phones I've tested is not a Motorola and it's 33% off for Black Friday
Although the Oukitel C50 isn't made by the most popular brand, its great battery life and a big 90Hz display make it feel like it should be twice the price. The best part is the phone is on sale ahead of Black Friday.

ZDNet News
Open 
My Dyson Airwrap has replaced all my styling tools, and it's $125 off ahead of Black Friday
If you have been eyeing this viral hair styling tool to gift to yourself or a loved one, it's on sale -- which is a rare occurrence.

ZDNet News
Open 
This laser engraver is the ultimate crafting tool - and it's $900 off for Black Friday
Save 33% on xTool's M1 Ultra 4-in-1 craft machine and you'll have everything you need to make great gifts for the holidays.

ZDNet News
Open 
Best Black Friday gaming PC deals 2024: Live sales on prebuilt PCs, GPUs, monitors, and more
Black Friday PC deals are live! Whether you're looking for a prebuilt PC or want to build your own customized rig, holiday discounts from top brands like Alienware and HP are out now.

ZDNet News
Open 
Why I don't regret leaving X for Bluesky
Are the skies really bluer away from X? I took a seat at the internet's new cool table to see what was what.

ZDNet News
Open 
One of the longest-lasting OLED laptops I've tested is $132 off for Black Friday
The Lenovo IdeaPad Pro 5i's battery defies expectations for an OLED, and its suite of powerful hardware means business. It's on sale now for $747.

Slashdot
Open 
China Woos Western Tech Talent in Race for Chip Supremacy
Chinese companies are aggressively recruiting foreign tech talent as a key strategy to gain technological supremacy, prompting national security concerns across Western nations and Asia, WSJ reported Wednesday, citing multiple intelligence officials and corporate sources. The campaign focuses particularly on advanced semiconductor expertise, with companies like Huawei offering triple salaries to employees at critical firms like Zeiss SMT and ASML, which produce essential components for cutting-edge chip manufacturing.

These recruitment efforts intensified after Western export controls restricted China's access to advanced technology. While Taiwan and South Korea have implemented strict countermeasures, including criminal penalties for illegal talent transfers, the U.S. and Europe struggle to balance open labor markets with national security concerns.

Chinese firms often obscure their origins through local ventures and persistent recruitment tactics. The strategy has shown results: Former employees have helped Chinese companies advance their technological capabilities, including SMIC's development of 7nm chips with help from ex-TSMC talent.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Slashdot
Open 
Philippines Recruits Civilian Tech Talent To Fend Off Cyber Attacks
The Philippine Army is recruiting civilian hackers to bolster its cybersecurity defenses amid rising digital threats from China, army officials said. The 120-member Cyber Battalion has hired 70 tech experts in their 20s and 30s since 2020, offering them military training and the opportunity to serve the nation despite lower wages than private sector jobs.

The initiative follows cyber attacks on Philippine government servers, including those of the Coast Guard and President Marcos Jr., which authorities traced to China. Beijing denies involvement. The Philippines ranks among the countries most vulnerable to cyber threats, with recent attacks compromising millions of citizens' data through state and private institutions.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

CNET News
Open 
Thinking About Getting a Home Battery? Ask Your Installer These 5 Questions
Getting good answers can save you from a bad deal and future headaches down the road.

CNET News
Open 
Best Black Friday Apple Deals 2024: We Found Huge Discounts on AirPods, MacBooks, iPads and More
Apple products don't often go on sale, but Black Friday is one of the few times you can get some great deals.

CNET News
Open 
Save Up to $250 On a New Pixel 9 Phone With These Black Friday Discounts
Google's Pixel 9, Pixel 9 Pro and Pixel 9 Pro XL are all now available with big savings for Black Friday.

CNET News
Open 
Champions League Soccer: Livestream Liverpool vs. Real Madrid From Anywhere
Two of the tournament's most successful teams face off at Anfield.

CNET News
Open 
Black Friday Nintendo Switch Deals: Over 30 Amazing Offers Across First-Party Titles, Console Bundles and Controllers
If you ever wanted to save money on a Nintendo console or game, now is the time with record-lows for 2024 games starring Mario, Princess Peach and more.

CNET News
Open 
Affordable Care Act Enrollment Is Open. Learn How, When and Why to Apply
Affordable Care Act health insurance -- aka, "Obamacare" -- is currently available to all during its open enrollment period.

CNET News
Open 
Experts Say to Focus on These 6 Vitamins and Minerals for Healthy Aging
It's essential to continue nourishing your body as you age. These are the vitamins and minerals to focus on.

CNET News
Open 
This Espresso Machine Is My Favorite Mom Essential, and It's on Sale for Black Friday
Sometimes the simple things in life make all the difference. My irreplaceable espresso machine is $24 off for Black Friday.

CNET News
Open 
Best Over-the-Counter Hearing Aids to Try in 2024
Hearing aids are easier than ever to purchase, but which OTC hearing aids are the best at dealing with hearing loss? Find out here.

CNET News
Open 
Not Sure How Much CBD to Take? Experts Discuss the Best Dosage
We spoke with experts to find the right CBD dosage for you.

CNET News
Open 
Last Call for an Instant $200 Amazon Gift Card for Black Friday and Cyber Monday
The Prime Visa elevated welcome bonus it set to end next Thursday.

CNET News
Open 
Best Black Friday Deals to Shop Now: We've Found More Than 70 Top Offers on TVs, Headphones and More
CNET's shopping experts are highlighting all the best Back Friday deals from smart home appliances to laptops and so much more.

CNET News
Open 
SpaceX Gets FCC Approval to Start Using Starlink for T-Mobile Cell Service
Using satellites as a backup for cell service, and providing coverage in areas where traditional service doesn't cover, just took a big step forward.

CNET News
Open 
Best Bluetooth Speaker for 2024
There are many Bluetooth speakers on the market, so finding the best one for you can be tricky. See what our CNET experts recommend after testing many of the models.

CNET News
Open 
Best Black Friday Headphone Deals 2024: Get Big Savings on Beats, AirPods and More
Get hundreds of dollars off headphones from Bose, Sony, Apple and others with this list of the best Black Friday headphone deals we've found.

CNET News
Open 
This Black Friday, Take $100 Off a New OnePlus Watch 2
The highly rated OnePlus Watch 2 is now at a record low price as a part of Black Friday sales

CNET News
Open 
Best LED Light Bulb for Every Room in Your House in 2024
Light up your house with the right bulbs to make it more aesthetic or functional. According to CNET experts, these are the best LED light bulbs.

CNET News
Open 
LG OLED TVs Slashed by Up to 45% This Black Friday
If you're thinking about upgrading to a new TV, LG has a wide selection of OLED TV deals now and through Black Friday.

CNET News
Open 
24 Best Black Friday Mattress Deals to Shop This Season
Your post-turkey food coma deserves to take place on the best beds at the best prices of the year

CNET News
Open 
I'm a Food and Travel Writer. My Go-To Travel Bag Is on Sale for $29 for Black Friday
You won't find a better deal on a dependable travel backpack than this one.

CNET News
Open 
Yes, You Can Shop Small on Amazon This Black Friday. Here's How
Amazon's small business portal isn't the easiest to navigate -- but it offers a convenient way to shop small on Black Friday.

CNET News
Open 
A Word of Warning to Apple on the iPhone Flip
Commentary: I have some words of warning for Apple before it launches its first folding iPhone.

CNET News
Open 
Grab This Black Friday Deal to Score 20% Off These New Earplugs
Never miss out on another good night of sleep with the Loop Quiet 2 Ear Plugs.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Unlicensed German driver lets boy steer, tries to flee cops
Police stopped a man who had a 4-year-old boy seated on his lap and driving a car. A policeman was injured as the 46-year-old tried to flee questioning, seemingly because he knew he shouldn't be on the roads either.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
French sovereign borrowing costs rise to highest premium in 12 years
Government faces risk of collapse over planned austerity budgetBusiness live – latest updatesFrench sovereign borrowing costs have soared to the highest premium since the eurozone debt crisis amid political turmoil as the government faces the risk of collapse over a planned austerity budget.The gap between French 10-year government bond yields and their German equivalent ballooned to as much as 90 basis points on Wednesday, the widest level in 12 years, while shares listed on the Paris stock exchange also tumbled. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
GMB staff and members to complain to equalities watchdog over institutional sexism
Group to say GMB is breaching Equality Act duties by failing to properly investigate sexual harassment and bullying claimsA dozen former and current GMB staffers and members are planning to complain to the equalities watchdog about allegations of institutional sexism and women being bullied out of their roles at the trade union.The group plans to argue to the Equality and Human Rights Commission that the GMB is failing to adequately investigate sexual harassment and bullying claims, which could be a breach of its duties under the Equality Act. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Aston Villa v Juventus: Champions League – live
Champions League updates from the 8pm GMT kick-offLive scoreboard | Liverpool v Real Madrid | Email JohnFor Juve, Dusan Vlahović and ex-Villa midfielder Douglas Luiz are out. Villa are missing Amadou Onana, signed as Luiz’s replacement.Here’s the squads, via Uefa. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Liverpool v Real Madrid: Champions League – live
Champions League updates from the 8pm GMT kick-offLive scoreboard | Aston Villa v Juventus | Email MichaelWith Vini Jr injured at Leganés, Mbappé switched to his preferred position on the left and the Frenchman will almost certainly occupy the same position this evening. Here’s Sid Lowe to explain a little more.“If ever a game needed a moniker Clash of the Titans, this would be it,” emails krishnamoorthy. “Real have not been winning of late, it is difficult even to type this statement, which is absurd. The losing streak had to end and what better platform to perform than in the tournament that they own. But then we thought the same about City last night. Real is no City and Liverpool is certainly no Feynoord. I expect a 2-2 draw”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Guardian view on the Lebanon ceasefire: a lasting regional peace must go through Gaza | Editorial
The US-brokered agreement is a breakthrough for suffering civilians. But a deal on Netanyahu’s terms offers scant hope to PalestiniansUnsurprisingly, Joe Biden struck an upbeat, optimistic note on Tuesday as he announced a US-brokered ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hezbollah. “It reminds us that peace is possible,” said Mr Biden, as the deal brought to an end the 14-month conflict, during which close to 4,000 people lost their lives and hundreds of thousands were displaced.For the outgoing American president, who has signally failed to restrain Israel’s excesses after the heinous Hamas massacre of 7 October 2023, the agreement amounts to a valedictory breakthrough after months of weak and ineffective diplomacy. More importantly, it affords the suffering people of Lebanon some respite, after a bombing campaign and ground invasion that paid scant regard to the appalling impact on civilian lives. For the 60,000 citizens of Israel forced to flee the country’s northern border region by Hezbollah rockets, there is the prospect of a return home after spending more than a year in displacement camps. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Guardian view on closing the Bibby Stockholm: a parable of failed asylum policy | Editorial
Labour has restored some decency and pragmatism to asylum policy. The next step is courage in changing the terms of debateAs a place of accommodation, the Bibby Stockholm had only a minor function in UK asylum policy, but it loomed large as an emblem of that policy’s dysfunction. The barge moored at Portland in Dorset held 400 men at maximum capacity. The last of them disembarked this week, marking the end of the vessel’s service as a Home Office incarceration facility.The total number of people in the UK waiting for asylum claims to be processed is around 85,600. Taking one barge out of the equation doesn’t reduce overall numbers. But it does indicate progress towards the more rational approach that Labour promised in contrast to ostentatiously punitive Conservative methods. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Jess Phillips on new anti-domestic violence measures: ‘I feel hopeful today’
Police say strict new restraining orders on domestic abusers will enable them to ‘manage offenders proactively’In a white-walled room at Croydon custody centre on Wednesday, Jess Phillips lets out a little whoop.Talking about new strict new restraining orders on domestic abusers, which have been launched that morning, DI Sharad Verma says: “We’ve issued two Dapos today … you should have the first national-level Dapos by the end of the day.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Staff at sixth-form colleges in England to strike on Thursday
More than 2,000 members of National Education Union will walk out on two further days next weekSixth-form colleges are taking legal action against the government to secure the same funding for pay rises handed to schools, as staff at colleges across England begin a series of strikes.More than 2,000 members of the National Education Union (NEU) at sixth-form colleges will walk out on Thursday, followed by further strikes on Tuesday and Wednesday next week, in the education sector’s first national industrial action since Labour took office. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Kemi Badenoch considering visa cap if Tories return to power
Party leader could revive deportations for people who arrive on small boats but did not recommit to Rwanda planKemi Badenoch is considering a new cap on visas if the Conservatives return to power and has admitted that previous Tory governments had failed to keep their promises on immigration.In her first policy intervention as party leader, she also said pulling out of human rights laws “may not be the most radical thing” that her future government will have to do to control the flow of people into the UK. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Government to look into electric vehicle target mandate after Vauxhall van factory closure
The government will look into rules on the number of electric vehicles carmakers must produce each year, Rachel Reeves has said.

Sky News Home
Open 
Crabs feel pain, scientists find - prompting calls for more humane ways to cook shellfish
Crabs can feel pain, according to a new study - prompting calls for more humane ways to kill shellfish.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Numerous bomb threats made against Trump cabinet nominees
Police are investigating a wave of incidents which happened on Tuesday night and Wednesday morning.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Pony AI rallies 17% in Nasdaq debut signaling thaw in U.S. stock-market listings by China companies
Chinese companies had been avoiding stateside IPOs due to geopolitical tensions, but now they have fresh reason to consider U.S. markets.

MarketWatch Top Stories
Open 
Tech-stock stumble is a worry heading into 2025. Here’s what could save the day.
Tech-sector weakness threatened to leave some investors with heartburn over the Thanksgiving Day holiday.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Man arrested after girl, 8, and father shot in car
A 32-year-old man has been arrested on suspicion of attempted murder, the Met says.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Tories got immigration wrong, says Kemi Badenoch
The new Tory leader says she would impose a cap on the numbers allowed to enter the UK if she was in power.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Russia: Kremlin orders 2 German ARD journalists to leave
The Kremlin expelled two German reporters on Wednesday in response to Berlin recently barring two Russians. Broadcaster ARD called Wednesday's move a "low point" in Moscow's pressuring of Western journalists.

Mail Online
Open 
White House tells Ukraine to lower age of conscription from 25 to 18 to boost the size of its military and stay in the fight with Russia
Russia has lost some 200,000 soldiers to the conflict so far, the WSJ reported this month, while data from UAlosses suggests Ukraine has lost 60,435 since 2022

Mail Online
Open 
Lucy Letby's father 'threatened guns to my head' because he was upset how she had been treated, hospital boss tells inquiry
Tony Chambers was the £160,000-a-year chief executive of the Countess of Chester Hospital when the neo-natal nurse murdered seven babies and attempted to murder seven more.

Mail Online
Open 
Hollywood actor's dream £13m plan to restore Rochdale manor house 'ancestral home' lies in tatters after row with council over delays to the project
EXCLUSIVE: Hopwood DePree gave up his movie career and life in LA to move to Rochdale to spend seven years and over £500,000 restoring the 15th century mansion and make it into his home.

Mail Online
Open 
BMW-driving businessman who 'drove like a man possessed' jailed after killing another motorist in a horrific 109mph country lane crash
Roger Brenninkmeyer, 60, overtook a car on the wrong side of the carriageway which sent his vehicle flying at crossroads before it slammed into the rear of another man's car.

Mail Online
Open 
Amanda Holden shows of daughter Hollie's incredible Beverly Hills themed bedroom at her £7million Surrey home as she has her walk-in wardrobe 'decluttered'
Amanda Holden showed off her daughter Hollie's incredible Beverly Hills Hotel themed bedroom at her £7million Surrey mansion on Instagram on Wednesday. 

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Letby's dad 'made threats' in meetings with CEO
Tony Chambers waited for more than a year before contacting police about the neonatal nurse.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
GMB staff and members to complain to equalities watchdog over institutional sexism
Group to say GMB is breaching Equality Act duties by failing to properly investigate sexual harassment and bullying claimsA dozen former and current GMB staffers and members are planning to complain to the equalities watchdog about allegations of institutional sexism and women being bullied out of their roles at the trade union.The group plan to argue to the Equality and Human Rights Commission that the GMB is failing to adequately investigate sexual harassment and bullying claims, which could be a breach of its duties under the Equality Act. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Manchester social club celebrates victory over eviction threat
Carlton Club, described as ‘beating heart of Whalley Range’ is operated by a community interest companyCampaigners battling to save a much-loved community club in Manchester have declared victory after successfully removing the threat of eviction.The Carlton Club, in Whalley Range, is in a sprawling white building and is regarded as an important cultural asset for that part of the city. It is a community hub which is seen as much more than a place to meet friends and neighbours for a drink and a catch-up. Depending on when you go, it might have live music, arts events, yoga, gardening, fitness sessions, a book club, quizzes, backgammon, philosophy group meetings and more. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Aston Villa v Juventus: Champions League – live
Champions League updates from the 8pm GMT kick-offLive scoreboard | Liverpool v Real Madrid | Email JohnFirst place to start, of course, is this fine piece by Rob Smyth.The pace of the game was ferocious, but most of the decisive moments involved players who had their bodies in the oven and their brains in the fridge. In the 51st minute, after a flurry of tackles in the inside-right channel, Gordon Cowans calmly danced away from Massimo Bonini and curved the ball out to the left-back, Gibson. He looked, as Villa always did, for the abundant head of Peter Withe at the far post, but the ball did not reach him. Cowans arrived late in the box and planted a joyous flying header past Dino Zoff. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Liverpool v Real Madrid: Champions League – live
Champions League updates from the 8pm GMT kick-offLive scoreboard | Share your thoughts with MichaelHere, from the archives just before the 2022 Champions League final (won 1-0 by Madrid), is a more detailed history of the meeting of these two teams.The last time Madrid travelled to Anfield was in February last year, when Madrid trounced Liverpool 5-2 in the round of 16, despite going 2-0 down. The injured Vini Jr and Karim Benzema, now departed to Al-Ittihad in Saudi Arabia of course, ran the show that night. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Every person should have care – not lethal drugs | Letters
Readers who believe the assisted dying bill shouldn’t be passed into law in England and Wales respond to Guardian coverage• Letters from those who argue in favour of the bill: ‘Dying people deserve a choice. Let them make it’The argument that the legalisation of assisted suicide in Oregon in 1997 has not started a “slippery slope” is dangerously misleading (‘Slippery slope’ fears over assisted dying have echoes of abortion debate, 24 November). While Oregon’s eligibility criteria have changed little, their interpretation has widened and safeguards have been relaxed. Oregon’s law, like Kim Leadbeater’s proposed bill, allows assisted suicide for adults with a “terminal illness that will lead to death within six months”. Interpretation of “terminal illness” has expanded such that physicians have prescribed lethal drugs to people with anorexia and arthritis.As for safeguards, Oregon’s 15-day “waiting period” (similar to that proposed in Kim Leadbeater’s bill) ceased to be mandatory in 2020. The following year, exemptions were made in one in five cases; the year after that, one in four. In the first three years after Oregon’s law passed, 28% of those seeking assisted suicide were referred for psychiatric evaluation; in 2022, only 1%. It is also worth noting that in the first year after Oregon’s legalisation passed, 13% of patients seeking assisted suicide cited fear of being a “burden” as a motivating factor. In 2021, that figure stood at 54%. Sick, elderly and disabled people are not burdens. They are, like every person, valuable. Like every person, they need and deserve care – not lethal drugs.Katherine BacklerOxford Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Dying people deserve a choice. Let them make it | Letters
Readers who believe the assisted dying bill should be passed into law in England and Wales respond to Guardian coverage• Letters from those who argue against the bill: ‘Every person should have care – not lethal drugs’Eight years ago, my husband Mark died. Our youngest child had just turned 11. Mark had been ill for five years. Finally, he waited till the kids and I were out of the house, and ended his own life. By the time he died, he was bedridden, in constant discomfort, doubly incontinent, unable to taste, smell, or see much, but when he was well, he was handsome and brilliant. He was an archaeologist and academic. He was also a dad, a brother, an uncle and a friend. The things he liked included fossils, Tom and Jerry cartoons, jazz, cycling, Rome, 19th-century novels and yellow climbing roses.Under the present English and Welsh law, ending your life because of physical suffering is a very lonely and isolating experience. Mark knew he wanted to die, but to protect me from prosecution, he could not have me with him at the end, or even share his plans with the person closest to him. He couldn’t access psychological support because all the professionals who might provide it are obliged to treat suicide as a risk, and something to be prevented in all circumstances. And, most of all, he had to die alone, with nobody holding his hand. His act was a brave and loving thing. It still hurts and angers me. Keeping assisted dying out of reach doesn’t stop people trying to end their lives. It just forces people to die bleak and derelict deaths. Dying people deserve better. They deserve choice. Continue reading...