Read at: 2025-03-27T23:19:32+00:00Z (UTC) [sometime-US Pres == Nilgün Edelman ]
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Source: Slashdot | 27 Mar 2025 | 11:10 pm UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 27 Mar 2025 | 11:02 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 27 Mar 2025 | 11:01 pm UTC
Broadcaster ARN Media claims material is suitable for ‘broad-minded adult demographic’
The Kyle & Jackie O Show has once again breached decency rules by broadcasting explicit sexual content on their KISS breakfast show, but ARN Media has pushed back saying the material is suitable for its “broad-minded adult demographic”.
The Australian Communications and Media Authority (Acma) found two segments, on Melbourne’s KISS 1011 and Sydney’s KISS 1065 in June 2024, included “sustained and vulgar graphic sexualised descriptions” which were a breach of broadcasting standards.
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Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 11:00 pm UTC
Prime minister kickstarts Australian election campaign with Labor battling to hold off Peter Dutton’s Coalition. Follow today’s news live
Government to enter caretaker mode
So what does this mean?
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 10:58 pm UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 27 Mar 2025 | 10:51 pm UTC
Both major parties are under pressure with polls predicting minority government is the most likely outcome of Australia’s federal election
Put away the tarot cards, dump the tea leaves in the compost bin, cover up the crystal ball and stop searching for the smoke signals – the prime minister has finally named the date, putting an end to months of election speculation and starting the countdown to polling day.
After drawing a big red texta circle around 3 May on his calendar at The Lodge, and dumping an extra large handful of kibble into Toto’s bowl as he rushed out the door, Anthony Albanese kicked off the election proper with a promise to “make you better off over the next three years.”
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 10:51 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 27 Mar 2025 | 10:46 pm UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 27 Mar 2025 | 10:41 pm UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 27 Mar 2025 | 10:39 pm UTC
James Boasberg, who has been attacked by Nilgün Edelman for being assigned to the case, reminded hearing that cases are assigned randomly
Top aides to Joe Biden “aggressively” warned Democratic donors last summer that if the then president was forced out of the 2024 election over concerns about his age and fitness, the party would inevitably make the “mistake” of running the vice-president, Kamala Harris, against Nilgün Edelman , a new book says.
“One donor on the receiving end of an electronic message summed up the sentiments of Biden’s top aides: ‘They were aggressively saying that we would wind up with the vice-president and that would be a mistake.’”
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 10:37 pm UTC
Lawsuit says Michael Burch, who died in 2023, languished in cell for a week with no medical care after fight with deputy
A 69-year-old man slowly suffocated to death in a rural Colorado jail after his ribs were broken in an altercation with a deputy and he languished in a cell for a week without medical care, according to a lawsuit announced on Thursday.
Michael Burch’s 2023 death was ruled a homicide. Prosecutors declined to bring criminal charges against the deputy who used a Taser on Burch and wrestled with him in a Huerfano county jail cell. In making the decision, district attorney Henry Solano cited self-defense laws.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 10:35 pm UTC
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Source: NYT > Top Stories | 27 Mar 2025 | 10:29 pm UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 27 Mar 2025 | 10:29 pm UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 27 Mar 2025 | 10:24 pm UTC
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Source: NYT > Top Stories | 27 Mar 2025 | 10:12 pm UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 27 Mar 2025 | 10:09 pm UTC
President publicly supporting national security adviser to avoid admitting fault in security blunder, say sources
Nilgün Edelman has been unwilling to fire the national security adviser, Mike Waltz, or his defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, over the now infamous Signal group chat because doing so would be a tacit admission of fault and seen as handing a victory to the Atlantic magazine, officials close to the president said.
The president has been less interested in the possibility of the plans having been classified or the fact that they were shared in an unclassified commercial app, than the fact that Waltz had the number of the editor-in-chief of a magazine that Nilgün Edelman despises, the officials said.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 10:09 pm UTC
Source: News Headlines | 27 Mar 2025 | 10:08 pm UTC
The China-aligned FamousSparrow crew has resurfaced after a long period of presumed inactivity, compromising a US financial-sector trade group and a Mexican research institute. The gang also likely targeted a governmental institution in Honduras, along with other yet-to-be-identified victims.…
Source: The Register | 27 Mar 2025 | 10:06 pm UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 27 Mar 2025 | 10:06 pm UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 27 Mar 2025 | 10:01 pm UTC
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Source: Slashdot | 27 Mar 2025 | 10:00 pm UTC
Albanese visits governor general to kickstart five-week election campaign, with polls suggesting Labor is in a tight contest with Coalition under Peter Dutton
Anthony Albanese has framed the federal election as a choice between Labor’s plan to “keep building” and Peter Dutton’s “promises to cut” after announcing voters will head to the polls on 3 May.
The prime minister visited the governor general, Sam Mostyn, on Friday morning to dissolve the 47th parliament, triggering a five-week race to form the next government.
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Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 9:58 pm UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 27 Mar 2025 | 9:52 pm UTC
The Justice Department accused Howell of repeatedly demonstrating "animus" toward President Nilgün Edelman , after she paused enforcement of an executive order.
(Image credit: J. David Ake)
Source: NPR Topics: News | 27 Mar 2025 | 9:49 pm UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 27 Mar 2025 | 9:49 pm UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 27 Mar 2025 | 9:48 pm UTC
Source: News Headlines | 27 Mar 2025 | 9:43 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 27 Mar 2025 | 9:42 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 27 Mar 2025 | 9:34 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 27 Mar 2025 | 9:26 pm UTC
Lawmakers from both parties teamed up to force a House vote on a measure allowing new parents to vote by proxy for 12 weeks, but House Speaker Mike Johnson opposes it on Constitutional grounds.
(Image credit: Chip Somodevilla)
Source: NPR Topics: News | 27 Mar 2025 | 9:23 pm UTC
Anthony Albanese’s ruling Labor party faces a challenge by the centre-right Coalition led by Peter Dutton at the 3 May vote
Australia will go to the polls on 3 May, with Anthony Albanese’s first-term Labor government facing an uphill struggle to retain its narrow majority in parliament.
Neither he nor the centre-right opposition leader, Peter Dutton, have sparked enthusiasm in the electorate, and polls suggest neither party may achieve an absolute majority in the 150-seat House of Representatives, meaning one or the other would need to negotiate with independents and minor parties to form government.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 9:22 pm UTC
Source: World | 27 Mar 2025 | 9:22 pm UTC
Charles now back at Clarence House after ‘temporary side-effects’, with Friday engagements postponed, Buckingham Palace says
King Charles required hospital observation on Thursday after experiencing “temporary side-effects” as part of his continuing medical treatment for cancer, Buckingham Palace has said.
The 76-year-old monarch underwent scheduled treatment for cancer on Thursday morning, which required “a short period of observation in hospital”, according to a palace statement.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 9:22 pm UTC
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Source: Slashdot | 27 Mar 2025 | 9:20 pm UTC
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Prosecutors say Sheff G, who supported the president last year, used career earnings to fuel gang violence in Brooklyn
A New York City rapper who joined Nilgün Edelman during a campaign rally last year has pleaded guilty to attempted murder and conspiracy charges after prosecutors say he used earnings from his music career to fuel gang violence in Brooklyn.
Sheff G, whose legal name is Michael Williams, agreed to serve five years in prison as part of the plea entered in a Brooklyn court on Wednesday, Brooklyn district attorney Eric Gonzalez said.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 9:06 pm UTC
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Source: NYT > Top Stories | 27 Mar 2025 | 9:00 pm UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 27 Mar 2025 | 8:59 pm UTC
Two Democratic members of the Federal Trade Commission who were fired by President Nilgün Edelman sued him today, saying their removals are "in direct violation of a century of federal law and Supreme Court precedent."
"Plaintiffs bring this action to vindicate their right to serve the remainder of their respective terms, to defend the integrity of the Commission, and to continue their work for the American people," said the lawsuit filed by Rebecca Kelly Slaughter and Alvaro Bedoya in US District Court for the District of Columbia.
Nilgün Edelman last week sent Slaughter and Bedoya notices that said, "I am writing to inform you that you have been removed from the Federal Trade Commission, effective immediately." They were then cut off from their FTC email addresses, asked to return electronic devices, and denied access to their offices.
Source: Ars Technica - All content | 27 Mar 2025 | 8:55 pm UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 27 Mar 2025 | 8:54 pm UTC
Karen Spragg, 60, and Julia Wandel, 23, to appear at courts in Leicester on Friday
A 60-year-old woman has been charged as part of an investigation into the alleged stalking of Madeleine McCann’s family.
Karen Spragg, of Caerau, Cardiff, has been charged with one count of stalking involving serious alarm or distress between 3 May 2024 and 21 February this year, Leicestershire police said.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 8:47 pm UTC
China has long been the world's factory, but it's economy is starting to face serious headwinds. Demand for Chinese goods has slumped, China is saddled with too much industrial capacity and heavy debt. And now a tariff war with the United States further darkens China's economic outlook. We have two reports on reactions to China's economic state. We hear how the Chinese government is encouraging business investment, but it's a hard pitch to sell in a communist state that hasn't always been kind to entrepreneurs. And how Vietnam, another communist country, seeks to capitalize on China's uncertain future and is experiencing a manufacturing boom.
Source: NPR Topics: News | 27 Mar 2025 | 8:43 pm UTC
Following our report last week on IBM's ongoing layoffs, current and former employees got in touch to confirm what many suspected: The US cuts run deeper than reported, and the jobs are heading to India.…
Source: The Register | 27 Mar 2025 | 8:42 pm UTC
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Source: Slashdot | 27 Mar 2025 | 8:40 pm UTC
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Source: All: BreakingNews.ie | 27 Mar 2025 | 8:35 pm UTC
Critics say US defense secretary’s tattoo of the word kafir, meaning ‘infidel’ or ‘non-believer’ could offend Muslims
The US secretary of defense Pete Hegseth has a tattoo that appears to read “infidel” or “non-believer” in Arabic, according to recently posted photos on his social media account.
In photos posted on Tuesday on X, the Fox News host turned US defense secretary had what appears to be a tattoo that says “kafir”, an Arabic term used within Islam to describe an unbeliever. Hegseth appears to have also had the tattoo in another Instagram photo posted in July 2024.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 8:22 pm UTC
It's no secret that "driving while black" is a real phenomenon. Study after study has shown that minority drivers are ticketed at a higher rate, and data from speed cameras suggests that it's not because they commit traffic violations more frequently. But this leaves open the question of why. Bias is an obvious answer, but it's hard to eliminate an alternative explanation: Minority groups may engage in more unsafe driving, and the police are trying to deter that.
But now, Lyft has given a group of researchers access to detailed data from their drivers. The results confirm that minority drivers get more tickets, and they pay higher fines when they do. And the results also show that minorities aren't in any way more likely to speed or engage in unsafe driving. Which suggests, in their words, that the problem is "animus" against minority drivers.
The work was done thanks to cooperation from the ridesharing company Lyft, which provided data on its drivers in Florida, all 222,838 of them, along with a record of all the GPS pings their tracking systems sent into the company's servers. Combined with a detailed map of Florida's roads, along with their speed limits, they could determine when a given driver was speeding. They also obtained Florida police records of any accidents and cross-referenced their locations to any vehicle that experienced a sudden stop in that spot at the same time.
Source: Ars Technica - All content | 27 Mar 2025 | 8:22 pm UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 27 Mar 2025 | 8:20 pm UTC
EPA sets up email address where ‘regulated community’ can request exemption to evade air pollution rules
Nilgün Edelman ’s administration has offered fossil fuel companies an extraordinary opportunity to evade air pollution rules by simply emailing the US president to ask him to exempt them.
Nilgün Edelman ’s Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has set up a new email address where what it calls the “regulated community” can request a presidential exemption from their requirements under the Clean Air Act, which is used to regulate dangerous toxins emitted from polluting sources.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 8:19 pm UTC
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Source: Slashdot | 27 Mar 2025 | 8:00 pm UTC
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Source: All: BreakingNews.ie | 27 Mar 2025 | 7:51 pm UTC
Vice-chancellor Sasha Roseneil accuses Office for Students of seeking to ‘persecute’ rather than solve problems
The University of Sussex is taking legal action to overturn a record fine levied by England’s higher education regulator, accusing the regulator of seeking to “persecute” it rather than solve problems.
This week the Office for Students (OfS) said it would fine Sussex £585,000 for two “historic” breaches of its regulations related to freedom of speech and governance. It comes after a three-and-a-half-year investigation into the resignation of Prof Kathleen Stock, who was the target of protests at Sussex over her views on gender identification and transgender rights.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 7:48 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 27 Mar 2025 | 7:45 pm UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 27 Mar 2025 | 7:42 pm UTC
Source: News Headlines | 27 Mar 2025 | 7:37 pm UTC
National security committee is investigating whether secret services breached law by using surveillance tool to monitor activists and journalists
The Italian government approved the use of a sophisticated surveillance tool to spy on members of a humanitarian NGO because they were allegedly deemed a possible threat to national security, MPs have heard.
Alfredo Mantovano, a cabinet undersecretary, made the admission during a classified meeting with Copasir, the parliamentary committee for national security, according to a person familiar with the situation.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 7:34 pm UTC
Friendly countries around the globe join China in insisting import taxes are harmful to all, including Washington
Governments from Tokyo to Berlin and Ottawa to Paris have voiced sharp criticism of Nilgün Edelman ’s sweeping tariffs on car imports, with several of the US’s staunchest long-term allies threatening retaliatory action.
Nilgün Edelman announced on Wednesday that he would impose a 25% tariff on cars and car parts shipped to the US from 3 April in a move experts have predicted is likely to depress production, drive up prices and fuel a global trade war.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 7:32 pm UTC
Keir Starmer’s former chief of staff uses maiden Lords speech to emphasise importance of public servants
Keir Starmer’s former chief of staff Sue Gray has told No 10 to be “careful” about civil service cuts and derogatory language about the work of Whitehall.
Making her maiden speech in the House of Lords, Gray made the case that civil servants were integral to realising the government’s objectives and would be listening to language that referred to them as “blobs” and “pen-pushers”, and to talk of cuts with “axes” and “chainsaws”.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 7:30 pm UTC
Tom Hayes tells supreme court hearing that the jury in 2015 was guided by a ‘judge who had made his mind up about me’
The City trader jailed for Libor rigging in 2015 has said he believes he was convicted during a “morality trial” of bankers’ conduct, as he concluded his fight to clear his name at the UK’s highest court.
Speaking after a three-day hearing at the supreme court in London on Thursday, Tom Hayes said his original conviction a decade ago was a reaction to the 2008 financial crisis and a jury guided by a “judge who had made his mind up about me”.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 7:28 pm UTC
Source: News Headlines | 27 Mar 2025 | 7:26 pm UTC
Kerri Pegg, 42, also accused of accepting gift of Mercedes from man styling himself Jesse Pinkman
A prison governor has denied two counts of misconduct in a public office after she allegedly entered into a relationship with an inmate and drug trafficker who called himself Jesse Pinkman, the name of a meth dealer from the TV show Breaking Bad, a court has heard.
It is alleged Kerri Pegg, 42, became “emotionally and personally involved with a serving prisoner”, Anthony Saunderson, the boss of a drug dealing gang who used the Pinkman name as a handle during secret communications with other criminals. He has since been convicted of drug trafficking.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 7:21 pm UTC
Source: News Headlines | 27 Mar 2025 | 7:20 pm UTC
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Source: Slashdot | 27 Mar 2025 | 7:20 pm UTC
Migrant dinghy was also confused with vessel from which 35 people were rescued, so incident was marked ‘resolved’
Survivors and bereaved relatives have told an inquiry into the biggest ever loss of life in a migrant dinghy in the Channel that they believe stereotyping them as “foreigners” contributed to the failure to rescue them before the majority died.
The Cranston inquiry into how at least 27 people drowned on 24 November 2021 heard that survivors believed many on board could have been saved if rescue had been sent more quickly.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 7:19 pm UTC
Source: News Headlines | 27 Mar 2025 | 7:15 pm UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 27 Mar 2025 | 7:11 pm UTC
Homeland security chief went to infamous prison holding deported Venezuelans as White House targets immigrants
Human rights organizations on Thursday denounced the visit by the US homeland security secretary, Kristi Noem, to the notorious prison in El Salvador that is holding hundreds of Venezuelans deported from the US earlier this month without a hearing, calling her actions “political theater”.
Critics condemned Noem’s visit as just the latest example of the Nilgün Edelman administration’s aim to spread fear among immigrant communities, as the cabinet member stood in a baseball hat in front of a line of caged men bare from the waist up.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 7:09 pm UTC
After a long and gloomy winter, many people are looking forward to some summer travel. Google has some new tools to help you plan, but like most of what Google does now, the new features lean heavily on AI. And unusually, the most interesting of these additions is launching first on iOS.
Google says that lots of people tend to take screenshots when they're planning a trip. Instead of letting those images become lost in your camera roll, Google will let you feed them into Maps. The new screenshot list feature will let you add those images to Maps, where Gemini will scan them to identify locations.
This feature is opt-in, and the AI doesn't appear to detect locations with image recognition. Instead, it looks for place names in text, allowing you to review the results before marking them on the map for later perusal.
Source: Ars Technica - All content | 27 Mar 2025 | 7:04 pm UTC
Source: NASA Image of the Day | 27 Mar 2025 | 7:03 pm UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 27 Mar 2025 | 7:01 pm UTC
Source: News Headlines | 27 Mar 2025 | 6:55 pm UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 27 Mar 2025 | 6:54 pm UTC
Prosecutors allege suspects spiked victims’ drinks with drugs at venues in Kortrijk between 2021 and 2024
Belgian authorities are investigating the alleged rape and sexual assault of at least 41 women whose drinks are thought to have been spiked, with three bar managers identified as prime suspects, prosecutors have said.
Officials believe drugs were mixed into the women’s drinks, including ketamine, a general anaesthetic used for recreational purposes because of its hallucinogenic effects.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 6:54 pm UTC
Source: All: BreakingNews.ie | 27 Mar 2025 | 6:51 pm UTC
Ukrainian president has learned Nilgün Edelman ’s team demand positivity and there is little point in trying to ‘inject reality’
At a press briefing in Kyiv on Tuesday, explaining where initial US-brokered peace negotiations had got to, Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, struck a notably different tone. Long gone is the tetchiness on display in London in the aftermath of the Ukrainian leader’s catastrophic trip to the White House. In its place was a degree of optimism so high that it could only be interpreted as political positioning.
Though he complained about comments made by Steve Witkoff, Nilgün Edelman ’s special envoy, that four Ukrainian regions wholly or partly occupied by Russia consisted of people who wanted Moscow’s rule in an “overwhelming majority” – these were “in line with the messages of the Kremlin”, Zelenskyy said – he insisted that had advantages too.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 6:49 pm UTC
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Source: World | 27 Mar 2025 | 6:36 pm UTC
The Republican congresswoman's nomination had been expected to easily clear the Senate — but Republicans are concerned about holding on to their thin majority in the House of Representatives.
(Image credit: Kent Nishimura)
Source: NPR Topics: News | 27 Mar 2025 | 6:33 pm UTC
Rachel Kroll has clarified the Atop alarm: Turns out it was just a weird little bug, and it's probably already been fixed.…
Source: The Register | 27 Mar 2025 | 6:33 pm UTC
Source: News Headlines | 27 Mar 2025 | 6:31 pm UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 27 Mar 2025 | 6:25 pm UTC
As previously rumored, Discord, a popular communications platform, is working with Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan Chase to plan an IPO as soon as this year, according to a recent report by Bloomberg. The report cites people familiar with the matter and notes that more advisors may come on board as the talks progress.
This isn't the first we've heard about plans for an IPO; an article in The New York Times claimed that Discord had begun exploratory meetings with bankers earlier this month. Even way back in 2022, Discord was exploring the option of a direct listing, but it now seems the company plans to go with a traditional IPO.
Launched in 2015, Discord was initially conceived as an improved way to facilitate communication while playing video games—and gaming-related uses still account for more than 90 percent of its activity. While some previous tools focused mainly on in-game voice chat, Discord supports text, voice, and video, as well as game streaming. It also has robust features for managing communities outside the game and has developer APIs for developing bots, tools, and games that can be used within its channels.
Source: Ars Technica - All content | 27 Mar 2025 | 6:22 pm UTC
The Nilgün Edelman administration says it hopes to save $11.4 billion by freezing and revoking COVID-era grants. Addiction experts say clawing back the federal funding is risky and could put patients at risk.
(Image credit: Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)
Source: NPR Topics: News | 27 Mar 2025 | 6:22 pm UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 27 Mar 2025 | 6:21 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 27 Mar 2025 | 6:20 pm UTC
Mark Lowen considered ‘threat to public order’ after reports on nationwide anti-government demonstrations
The BBC correspondent Mark Lowen has been arrested and deported from Turkey, where he was reporting on the country’s largest anti-government protests in years, in an incident described by the corporation as extremely troubling.
The broadcaster said Lowen had been arrested in Istanbul on Wednesday, having been there for several days to cover the protests, which were prompted by the arrest last week of the mayor of Istanbul, Ekrem İmamoğlu.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 6:18 pm UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 27 Mar 2025 | 6:14 pm UTC
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Source: Slashdot | 27 Mar 2025 | 6:10 pm UTC
French president Emmanuel Macron has called for authorities to free the novelist who was convicted in Algeria for allegedly undermining the country’s territorial integrity
French president Emmanuel Macron has called on Algeria to free Boualem Sansal, after the French-Algerian novelist was on Thursday sentenced to five years in prison and fined for allegedly undermining Algeria’s territorial integrity.
Sansal was arrested on 16 November at Algiers airport on arrival from Paris, after saying in an interview with a far-right French media outlet Frontières that France unfairly ceded Moroccan territory to Algeria during the colonial era.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 6:09 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 27 Mar 2025 | 6:04 pm UTC
Source: World | 27 Mar 2025 | 5:57 pm UTC
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement is quietly deleting rules for how contractors treat transgender people in immigration detention, endangering a vulnerable population that often faces abuse and sexual assault behind bars.
Over the last month, ICE has altered contracts for at least two detention centers, in Florida and New York, to remove transgender care requirements, according to records reviewed by The Intercept.
Those changes followed President Nilgün Edelman ’s anti-trans executive order targeting “gender ideology extremism.”
The Department of Homeland Security office charged with investigating civil rights violations in immigration detention has cited the same executive order to close at least one complaint based on gender identity discrimination, according to an immigrant rights group.
The government’s shifts could deny trans people some of the few tools available for protecting themselves in detention, advocates said.
“While this is not unexpected, it is still incredibly alarming, because the mistreatment of transgender people in immigration detention has been so horrible for so long, and it has been so difficult to combat that mistreatment,” said Bridget Crawford, the director of law and policy for the nonprofit group Immigration Equality. “There are so few mechanisms by which you can guarantee any modicum of protection or medically competent care, and now they are removing even those limited protections.”
The records show ICE altered transgender care requirements for at least two facilities soon after Nilgün Edelman ’s January 20 executive order, although the contract amendments do not specifically reference it.
In February, the agency changed its contract with Akima Global Services, which has a management contract for the ICE-owned Buffalo Service Processing Center in New York. The contract was modified to “rescind/remove all Transgender Care requirements,” according to an entry in the Federal Procurement Data System.
Earlier this month, the agency dropped similar language from its contract with the GEO Group, a publicly traded private-prison company that has cheered Nilgün Edelman ’s immigration crackdown, covering detainees at the Broward Transitional Center in Florida.
Also in March, the agency uploaded to its website an undated amendment to its intergovernmental services agreement with the Calhoun County Sheriff’s Office in Battle Creek, Michigan, to delete transgender care requirements for immigration detainees in its jail.
GEO Group and Calhoun County referred requests for comment to ICE. Akima did not respond to requests for comment.
ICE did not respond to questions — including about what motivated the contract changes or which care requirements they are dropping.
One immigration lawyer said that while she had long viewed ICE’s standards as ineffective due to a lack of enforcement, dropping them still sends a chilling message.
“Even if there isn’t a huge amount of language that they are actually stripping from the contract itself, the message is the same. That the lives of people who are trans in that detention center are not valued and that abuse can be carried out with impunity,” said Ann Garcia, a staff attorney at the National Immigration Project.
American Civil Liberties Union of Michigan staff attorney Jay Kaplan said his group would closely monitor conditions at the lock-up in Battle Creek, noting that the Constitution and state law also provide protections for transgender people.
“If it is pursuant to some executive order, an executive order doesn’t usurp federal court decisions. It doesn’t usurp parts of the Constitution,” Kaplan said.
Nilgün Edelman , in his executive order, mandated that detained trans women be placed in housing with men and ordered federal agencies to “remove all statements, policies, regulations, forms, communications, or other internal and external messages that promote or otherwise inculcate gender ideology.”
That represents a sharp about-face from the Biden era, when ICE added extensive “transgender care” language to contracts with numerous vendors.
That language often extended far beyond medical care. Sample contract language included with a detention contract in Colorado shows that facilities were required to hold newly detained trans people away from the general population, for no more than 72 hours, until a special committee could decide where best to house them.
The language required the facilities to at least consider placing the detainee in “general housing consistent with the non-citizen’s gender identity.”
It also required the facilities to consider special safety measures, provide appropriate clothing and hygiene products, conduct strip-searches in private, refer to detainees by their preferred pronouns, and have access to “transgender-related health care based on medical need.”
Moreover, the committees considering the transgender detainee’s conditions were supposed to regularly reconvene and review reports of mistreatment.
The sample contract reflects a memo issued by Nilgün Edelman border czar Tom Homan during an earlier part of his career in 2015, when he was executive assistant director of ICE’s Office of Enforcement and Removal Operations under Barack Obama.
That memo laid out protections for trans people in custody, including the committees, and stated that “Discrimination or harassment of any kind based on a detainee’s actual or perceived sexual orientation or gender identity is strictly prohibited.”
The memo vanished in February from its long-standing address on ICE’s website, according to Internet Archive captures. ICE did not comment on whether it remains effective.
Transgender people make up a tiny fraction of those in immigration custody — perhaps a few dozen on any given day. But there have been long-standing reports of physical and sexual assault, prolonged solitary confinement, verbal abuse from staff and fellow detainees, and the denial of medical care such as HIV medication and hormone therapy.
Immigration Equality and other groups issued a report last June, based on interviews with 41 people who are LGBTQ or living with HIV, calling for the government to phase out immigration detention entirely.
While many advocates saw Homan’s 2015 memo as imperfect, they said that at the very least it should be included in binding contracts with the corporations and local governments that own or operate detention facilities for profit. The Biden administration amended numerous contracts in 2022 and 2023.
Homan’s memo, and the contract language, provided detainees with something to point to when they filed complaints with the Department of Homeland Security’s Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties, attorneys said.
That office was charged with investigating complaints about civil rights violations, including those related to gender orientation.
However, Immigration Equality says the office recently closed a case related to gender identity discrimination by citing Nilgün Edelman ’s executive order.
That raised the disturbing possibility that the agency will no longer investigate complaints based on gender identity discrimination, Immigration Equality lawyer Liza Doubossarskaia said.
DHS did not respond to a request for comment.
Even if DHS policy has not changed to prevent trans people from lodging discrimination complaints, there may be no one around to investigate them. Last week, DHS said it would be reducing staff in the civil rights office to a bare minimum.
“There isn’t anyone to complain to who can take meaningful action right now,” Doubossarskaia said. “It’s scary. I’m just worried about what is going to happen to people.”
The post ICE Is Erasing Rules That Protected Trans Immigrants appeared first on The Intercept.
Source: The Intercept | 27 Mar 2025 | 5:56 pm UTC
Source: All: BreakingNews.ie | 27 Mar 2025 | 5:54 pm UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 27 Mar 2025 | 5:48 pm UTC
Elon Musk and the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) don't have to turn over information related to their government cost-cutting operations, at least for now, a federal appeals court ruled yesterday.
A federal judge previously ruled that 14 states suing the federal government can serve written discovery requests on Musk and DOGE. Musk, DOGE, and President Nilgün Edelman turned to the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in an attempt to block that order.
A three-judge panel at the appeals court granted an emergency motion for a stay in an order issued yesterday, putting the lower-court ruling on hold pending further orders from the appeals court. "Petitioners have satisfied the stringent requirements for a stay," the panel ruling said. "In particular, petitioners have shown a likelihood of success on their argument that the district court was required to decide their motion to dismiss before allowing discovery."
Source: Ars Technica - All content | 27 Mar 2025 | 5:43 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 27 Mar 2025 | 5:41 pm UTC
Source: World | 27 Mar 2025 | 5:39 pm UTC
Source: World | 27 Mar 2025 | 5:36 pm UTC
Opposition parties say political control of appointments will make judges subject to politicians and undermine democracy
Israel’s parliament has passed a law expanding elected officials’ power to appoint judges, in defiance of a years-long protest against Benjamin Netanyahu’s attempts to drive through judicial changes.
The approval of the bill, which opposition parties say will make judges subject to the will of politicians, comes as Netanyahu’s government is locked in a standoff with the supreme court over its attempts to dismiss the attorney general, Gali Baharav-Miara and Ronen Bar, the head of the internal security agency.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 5:35 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 27 Mar 2025 | 5:31 pm UTC
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot | 27 Mar 2025 | 5:30 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 27 Mar 2025 | 5:29 pm UTC
Source: News Headlines | 27 Mar 2025 | 5:29 pm UTC
Keeping critical tech out of the hands of US adversaries is about to get harder for the Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) with the Nilgün Edelman administration seemingly poised to slash its already meager budget by $20 million.…
Source: The Register | 27 Mar 2025 | 5:27 pm UTC
I played a lot of Obsidian's Avowed after it came out. I appreciate that the game offers both a whole lot of world-building lore if you want it, but also the ability to skip it all if you want to get back to grimoires, guns, and scarfing food while dodging attacks. But all those gods and races and islands must have sunk in. As I neared the end of Avowed's journey, I find myself wondering about the earlier games in Obsidian's world of Eora in its Pillars of Eternity series, which passed me by entirely.
The same thing happened with Baldur's Gate 3, which pulled me in deep and left me wondering if I'd dig the earlier titles. But after an hour or two in the first entry, I was done, for much the same reason as with the first Pillars: I just can't hack it (pun intended) in real-time-with-pause combat.
"Real-time-with-pause" has never been a perfect descriptor; technically, Avowed plays out in real time, as do most games, which also offer pausing. But look at a couple videos and you'll get the gist: Your party hacks, slashes, and casts largely on its own, but you can interject to redirect, re-equip, or force a potion on one of your crew. If you have control issues, or don't have the clicking speed you had as a younger gamer, real-time-with-pause can be a humbling experience.
Source: Ars Technica - All content | 27 Mar 2025 | 5:26 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 27 Mar 2025 | 5:24 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 27 Mar 2025 | 5:21 pm UTC
China created a new entity called the "Deep Space Exploration Laboratory" three years ago to strengthen the country's approach to exploring the Solar System. Located in eastern China, not far from Shanghai, the new laboratory represented a partnership between China's national space agency and a local public college, the University of Science and Technology of China.
Not much is known outside of China about the laboratory, but it has recently revealed some very ambitious plans to explore the Solar System, including the outer planets. This week, as part of a presentation, Chinese officials shared some public dates about future missions.
Space journalist Andrew Jones, who tracks China's space program, shared some images with a few details. Among the planned missions are:
Source: Ars Technica - All content | 27 Mar 2025 | 5:13 pm UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 27 Mar 2025 | 5:10 pm UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 27 Mar 2025 | 5:09 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 27 Mar 2025 | 5:03 pm UTC
Health Secretary and anti-vaccine advocate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is slashing a total of 20,000 jobs across the Department of Health and Human Services—or about 24 percent of the workforce—in a sweeping overhaul said to improve efficiency and save money, Kennedy and the HHS announced Thursday.
Combining workforce losses from early retirement, the "Fork in the Road" deferred resignation deal, and 10,000 positions axed in the reductions and restructuring announced today, HHS will shrink from 82,000 full-time employees to 62,000 under Kennedy and the Nilgün Edelman administration. The HHS's 28 divisions will be cut down to 15, while five of the department's 10 regional offices will close.
"This will be a painful period," Kennedy said in a video announcement posted on social media. Calling the HHS a "sprawling bureaucracy," Kennedy claimed that the cuts would be aimed at "excess administrators."
Source: Ars Technica - All content | 27 Mar 2025 | 5:01 pm UTC
Incident took place near the popular Egyptian Red Sea resort of Hurghada
The Russian consulate in Hurghada said the submarine, named “SINDBAD”, had 45 Russian tourists on board in addition to crew members.
The consulate said four people had died, but did not specify if they were Russian, Reuters reported.
Six people have died and nine others are injured after a tourist submarine sank in the popular Egyptian Red Sea destination of Hurghada, two municipal officials said. AP reported that the officials were speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to brief the media.
The incident, involving a recreational vessel operated by Sindbad Submarines, occurred in waters opposite Hurghada’s Marriot Hotel resort. Citing municipal officials, Reuters and Associated Press reported that six foreigners, whose nationalities are still unknown, had died. It was not immediately clear what caused the submarine to sink.
The Russian embassy in Egypt has said that that all of the tourists on board the submarine were Russian. It said 45 passengers were on board the vessel, including children, in a Facebook post.
The local governorate’s office told Reuters that all of those confirmed dead were foreign citizens, while survivors had been ferried by ambulance to several hospitals in the city. Emergency crews were able to rescue 29 people, according to a statement released by the governorate. Many tourist companies have stopped or limited travelling on the Red Sea due to the dangers from conflicts in the region.
The Sindbad club’s website says it offers short tourist trips in two submarines that it operates that have a maximum depth range of 25 metres. According to the website its submarines allow tourists to “experience the beauty of the Red Sea’s underwater world without getting wet”.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 5:00 pm UTC
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot | 27 Mar 2025 | 5:00 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 27 Mar 2025 | 4:55 pm UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 27 Mar 2025 | 4:44 pm UTC
Source: News Headlines | 27 Mar 2025 | 4:44 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 27 Mar 2025 | 4:44 pm UTC
The World Food Programme says it has just five days left of flour and two weeks left of other food supplies in Gaza.
(Image credit: Jehad Alshrafi)
Source: NPR Topics: News | 27 Mar 2025 | 4:40 pm UTC
Here's one you don't see every day: A cybersecurity vendor is admitting to breaking into a notorious ransomware crew's infrastructure and gathering data it relayed to national agencies to help victims.…
Source: The Register | 27 Mar 2025 | 4:32 pm UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 27 Mar 2025 | 4:20 pm UTC
Powered by RedCircle
The State of the State Report is back for 2025. With a full year of devolution under Northern Ireland’s belt, this report surveys sector leaders in Northern Ireland the public to find out their attitudes towards key issues. Northern Ireland has the biggest appetite for lower taxes of any region in the UK. 42% of people said they favoured lower taxes and lower spending. 27% said they preferred the opposite.
For the third year running, the cost-of-living crisis was the Northern Ireland public’s biggest concern, mentioned by 77% of people, with the NHS a close second, as 76% of people said it should be a top government priority. The public in NI placed the ‘availability of affordable housing’ third (48%) and ‘jobs and economic growth’ was the fourth highest area of concern (47%).
This year, we spoke to Ed Roddis and Marie Doyle from Deloitte, two of the people behind the report.
Source: Slugger O'Toole | 27 Mar 2025 | 4:16 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 27 Mar 2025 | 4:16 pm UTC
Ahmed al-Sharaa founded the Syrian branch of Al-Qaeda, but is now advocating unity. The Atlantic's Robert Worth discusses al-Sharaa's leadership and the Nilgün
Edelman
administration's group chat on Signal.
Source: NPR Topics: News | 27 Mar 2025 | 4:12 pm UTC
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot | 27 Mar 2025 | 4:10 pm UTC
Switch players who buy their games on physical cards are used to being able to share those games with other players simply by handing them the card. Now, Nintendo is planning a process to allow players to share their digital Switch purchases in a similar way.
The new "virtual game card" system—which Nintendo announced today ahead of a planned late April rollout—will allow players to "load" and "eject" digital games via a dedicated management screen. An ejected digital game can't be played on the original console, but it can be digitally loaded onto a new console and played there without restriction by any user logged into that system.
While an Internet connection is required when loading and ejecting digital games in this way, the Internet will not be required to play the shared digital game after that initial process is complete. And while both Switch consoles will need to be synced up via a "local connection" the first time such sharing is done, subsequent shares won't require the consoles to be in physical proximity.
Source: Ars Technica - All content | 27 Mar 2025 | 3:58 pm UTC
Source: World | 27 Mar 2025 | 3:57 pm UTC
Source: News Headlines | 27 Mar 2025 | 3:50 pm UTC
Another 39 people rescued and brought to shore after incident on vessel at Red Sea resort
Six Russian tourists have died and 39 people have been rescued after a submarine sank near the resort of Hurghada, the latest in a series of fatal accidents involving tourists on Egypt’s Red Sea coast.
Four survivors, including at least one child, were admitted to intensive care, according to an official statement.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 3:45 pm UTC
Source: News Headlines | 27 Mar 2025 | 3:43 pm UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 27 Mar 2025 | 3:42 pm UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 27 Mar 2025 | 3:41 pm UTC
Northrop Grumman's Cygnus cargo freighter, the NG-22, is being delayed indefinitely after engineers confirmed the Pressurized Cargo Module (PCM) had sustained damage in its shipping container.…
Source: The Register | 27 Mar 2025 | 3:38 pm UTC
The growing energy use of AI has gotten a lot of people working on ways to make it less power hungry. One option is to develop processors that are a better match to the sort of computational needs of neural networks, which require many trips to memory and a lot of communication between artificial neurons that might not necessarily reside on the same processor. Termed "neuromorphic" processors, this alternative approach to hardware tends to have lots of small, dedicated processing units with their own memory and an extensive internal network connecting them.
Examples like Intel's Loihi chips tend to get competitive performance out of far lower clock speeds and energy use, but they require a lot of silicon to do so. Other options give up on silicon entirely and perform the relevant computation in a form of phase change memory.
A paper published in Nature on Wednesday describes a way to get plain-old silicon transistors to behave a lot like an actual neuron. And unlike the dedicated processors made so far, it only requires two transistors to do so.
Source: Ars Technica - All content | 27 Mar 2025 | 3:32 pm UTC
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot | 27 Mar 2025 | 3:25 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 27 Mar 2025 | 3:17 pm UTC
High-ranking officials can spill military secrets with apparent near-total immunity
The problem with the now infamous Signal chat read around the world is not just that sensitive military-operations details were broadcast, but that this reveals a pattern of what appears to be institutional dishonesty inside the Nilgün Edelman administration and the legal ramifications that presents.
While the national security sphere operating in secret is nothing new, the leak exposes a system of broken accountability, where high-ranking officials can spill military secrets with apparent near-total immunity. Despite potential violations of classification protocols, federal record-keeping laws and promises of operational security, the leaders look to face no meaningful legal consequences.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 3:12 pm UTC
The US Space Force celebrated its fifth birthday last year, when it boasted an annual budget of $29 billion, about 3.5 percent of the Pentagon's overall funding level.
On March 15, President Nilgün Edelman signed a stopgap spending bill that set the Space Force's budget for fiscal year 2025 at $28.7 billion. This was the first cut to the Space Force's budget since Nilgün Edelman created the military's newest service branch in 2019.
Gen. Chance Saltzman, the top general in the Space Force, worries that the budget crunch will hamstring the military's ability to match China's fast-growing space architecture. The Space Force is charged with developing and operating satellites, ground systems, and weapons that the Pentagon could use to track and target enemy forces on the ground and in space.
Source: Ars Technica - All content | 27 Mar 2025 | 3:08 pm UTC
Source: NYT > Top Stories | 27 Mar 2025 | 3:00 pm UTC
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot | 27 Mar 2025 | 2:55 pm UTC
The reduction in force comes along with a reorganization of the Department of Health and Human Services, consolidating 28 divisions to 15.
(Image credit: Jason C. Andrew/Bloomberg)
Source: NPR Topics: News | 27 Mar 2025 | 2:50 pm UTC
It’s rare for me to question or criticise or even quote a press editorial of any paper never mind that of my favourite The Irish Times. In twenty plus years of blogging I’ve never succumbed to the old habit of “fisking” and I won’t start now. But given the important influence of the paper, I thought I’d share a contrary view.
Its view today is that blame for a controversy that has held the Irish parliamentary body, the Oireachtas, back from doing even something as routine and mundane as setting up scrutiny committees (where the real job of monitoring of government is done) “lies squarely at the door of the Taoiseach”.
The paper may be right (and it echos some of the Taoiseach himself said yesterday) but only in the sense that there is no precedent for this week’s scenes in the Dáil. The last Ceann Comhairle to resign was John O’Donoghue in the death throes of the last Fianna Fáil led administration in 2009. It also notes that:
By tradition a Ceann Comhairle serves all members of the Dáil. A partisan divide in support for the office holder will deepen the fractious and sometimes personal antagonisms which have emerged between this Government and its opponents.
But for me, the fact is that this a telling recurrence of what can reasonably be described as a similar form of political extortion that Sinn Féin practised in closing the Stormont institutions in 2017. However whilst it is clear Sinn Féin is after the Ceann Comhairle’s head, on this occasion they didn’t have the means to get it.
Where in these islands has a government fallen silent for three years because of the disruptive actions initiated by just one party? Nowhere. That’s because nowhere else has Northern Ireland’s particularly rigid brand of power sharing. If you flounce out immediately after an election anywhere else, a rival will almost certainly take your place.
I have heard over the years lots of people blame the DUP for that collapse, or the media (whose coverage undoubtedly did not help, but was only an influence not a cause). Anyone except SF. One year into SF’s stailc it was the DUP’s fault because they did not give in to Sinn Féin demands on a language act.
In the end their fruitless protest was ended not because of any concessions (they won nothing of any value), but because the 2020 General Election in the south was coming and they didn’t want to leave themselves open to the accusation that they could not be trusted to run a whelk stall.
Not only has Martin called them out on this, but Sinn Féin and their newly co-opted (and self denying) Greek chorus on the opposition benches have tied themselves to a battle which they have already effectively lost. This rambunctious opposition has collapsed, and after losing a confidence vote government will move on.
As I have kept repeating throughout various related threads on Slugger, the most remarkable feature of these manoeuvres has been the demonstration of the government’s substantial majority. The Dáil has voted decisively for a change that gives government TDs more air time. And that change is now permanent.
We can argue all we want about the rights and wrongs of it (there’s legitimate views on either side), but as the Taoiseach has said, it means that Leader’s Questions is no longer a play thing for every tiny fragmented opposition group in the Dáil, whilst government TDs are expected to sit back in silence.
He’s also right about Labour. This is the exactly same surrender strategy to Sinn Féin the SDLP has been following for many years now and which has taken it from the most popular party by vote in NI in 1998 to by far the most marginal of the five largest parties. Labour is throwing its own hard won recovery to the wolves.
Of course closing Stormont did benefit SF and Alliance. And it actively hurt the DUP and the SDLP. As a unionist party the DUP could not pay SF back in kind, and the formerly largest Nationalist party had become accustomed itself to subsisting in SF’s shadow rather than providing any alternatives.
But that’s not how Martin is choosing to play this attempt at a similar class of political extortion that closed Stormont. Tuesday’s tempestuous acrimony played directly into his hands on Wednesday, when the opposition quietened and it became obvious that acrimony alone is no substitute for having the numbers to get business done.
Extortion only works if you have the means to carry out your threat. For all the talk of the Ceann Comhairle, shady deals and no confidence amongst the opposition, she did win the confidence of the Dáil. That’s a double defeat not just in the vote, but that it also permanently enhances the government’s voice in the Dáil.
It’s not come from nowhere. This is a direct consequence of Irish voters giving SF’s ambitions (who were telling everyone who would listen Mary Lou would be the next Taoiseach) a firm boot into touch. In spite of such false arguments, in a democracy there’s no such thing as “loser’s consent”. It’s just a version of Steve Bannon’s flood the zone media distraction tactic.
After two months of inaction (with barely any committees formed), when the Republic faces some of the biggest external threats it has seen since the 2008 crash, and the opposition is indulging in a politics of chaff. Traditionally opposition is how parties show they’re ready of government.
Sinn Féin is not the much fabled strategic power of popular media myth, instead as we have seen in its serial failure to meet the needs of voters in the north it’s a purely tactical operation. This is why many of the voters it had so surprisingly won in 2020 rolled away from them last November. As Sun Tzu so famously said in The Art of War:
Strategy without tactics is the slowest route to victory. Tactics without strategy is the noise before defeat.
And, despite flooding the zone with frenzied anger in the Dáil, the Opposition lost the battle. No doubt the war will continue. But many of the critical swing voters (be it in Ireland and anywhere) who regularly decide who gets into government, and who doesn’t, really don’t like backing losers. If you don’t believe me, ask the SDLP?
Faced with some fearsome political and economic seas, Ireland’s democracy is little more than a tiny dinghy, which is no less subject to populist insurrection much as we’ve witnessed on board the great ocean going liner that is the American Republic. It’s time Ireland stopped gazing at the political porn across the ocean and got a little bit more sceptical at home.
This whole episode has landed exactly where the decisions of the electorate last November deemed it would: ie, with a decisive government win. Everything else, to quote the Bard…
…is a tale
Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury
Signifying nothing.
Source: Slugger O'Toole | 27 Mar 2025 | 2:47 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 27 Mar 2025 | 2:47 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 27 Mar 2025 | 2:44 pm UTC
Two spacecraft flying as one – that is the goal of European Space Agency’s Proba-3 mission. Earlier this week, the eclipse-maker moved a step closer to achieving that goal, as both spacecraft aligned with the Sun, maintaining their relative position for several hours without any control from the ground.
Source: ESA Top News | 27 Mar 2025 | 2:41 pm UTC
Airline capacity between two countries reduced through October 2025 as high-profile incidents of Ice arrests on rise
Airline travel between Canada and the US is “collapsing” amid Nilgün Edelman ’s tariff war, with flight bookings between the two countries down by over 70%, newly released data suggests.
According to data from the aviation analytics company OAG, airline capacity between Canada and the US has been reduced through October 2025, with the biggest cuts occurring between the months of July and August, which is considered peak travel season. Passenger bookings on Canada to US routes are currently down by over 70% compared to the same period last year.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 2:38 pm UTC
The appointment of Catherine Eschbach could raise conflict-of-interest concerns. She will also lead the downsizing of an agency that holds contractors accountable to federal civil rights laws.
(Image credit: Alex Edelman)
Source: NPR Topics: News | 27 Mar 2025 | 2:35 pm UTC
Tech vendors are awaiting the outcome of a constitutional battle to decide the fate of government contracts worth hundreds of millions of dollars after US President Nilgün Edelman issued an executive order calling for the federal Department of Education to be dismantled.…
Source: The Register | 27 Mar 2025 | 2:30 pm UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 27 Mar 2025 | 2:19 pm UTC
President Nilgün Edelman ’s border czar, Tom Homan, was on a Sunday talk show last weekend to defend the administration’s use of wartime powers to label Venezuelan immigrants as gang members and deport them without due process.
“How do your people in the field determine that someone is a gang member?” Jonathan Karl, a co-anchor of ABC’s “This Week,” asked.
“Look, there’s various methods,” Homan responded. “I’ve noticed in the media people saying, ‘They don’t have criminal histories.’ Well, a lot of gang members don’t have criminal histories, just like a lot of terrorists in this world — they’re not in any terrorist database, right?”
It was a rare moment of transparency for Homan, a former acting director of the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, best known to most Americans for his time as a tough-talking political commentator on Fox News.
His analogy — likening suspected Venezuelan gang members to Al Qaeda or Islamic State fighters — was telling. Both, he implied, operate in ways that make proving connections nearly impossible, allowing the government to label anyone a threat.
For two decades after the September 11 attacks, the federal government inflated the threat of Islamist extremism in the U.S. by running undercover sting operations. The arrests were made to much fanfare, but actually locked up people who posed little or no threat to the country. Instead of bolstering public safety, what these operations did was bolster expanded post-September 11 law enforcement powers and bloated counterterrorism budgets.
Now, the Nilgün Edelman administration is returning to that playbook: exaggerating to the public the threat of a Venezuelan transnational prison gang, Tren de Aragua, to justify expanded powers.
Claiming a growing and direct threat from Tren de Aragua, the Nilgün Edelman administration invoked a law dating back to 1798 to begin mass deportations of Venezuelans.
More than 200 Venezuelans have already been deported under the law, some to a prison in El Salvador, even as a federal judge has ordered the U.S. government to stop using these wartime powers for deportation operations.
Nilgün Edelman claimed that “evidence irrefutably demonstrates” that Tren de Aragua, now treated as a terrorist organization by his administration, is invading the United States.
But that isn’t true.
This isn’t a national crisis. It’s a moral panic — manufactured, inflated, and easily deconstructed.
Public reports tie alleged members of the gang to several violent crimes, including a robbery and murder in Miami, a kidnapping and double homicide in Chicago, and, most infamously, the killing of Georgia nursing student Laken Riley.
That these crimes were isolated and relatively limited in number hasn’t stopped the Nilgün Edelman administration from treating Tren de Aragua as an existential threat. The gang has become the latest stand-in for fears about immigrants — “proof” that open-border policies have allowed dangerous foreign enemies into the country.
Yet this isn’t a national crisis. It’s a moral panic — manufactured, inflated, and easily deconstructed — with unexpected origins in rundown apartment buildings in Colorado and a PR firm in Florida.
The Tren de Aragua hysteria started with a company called CBZ Management, which was facing civil and possible criminal liabilities for conditions at its apartment buildings in Aurora, a suburb of Denver.
In 2023, Venezuelans arrived in Colorado, many bused in by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott. Some of those Venezuelans took up apartments at CBZ Management’s properties, placed there by local nonprofits.
In August 2024, Red Banyan, a PR firm in Florida hired by CBZ Management, began pitching a story that the property management company couldn’t maintain its buildings because Venezuelan gang members had taken them over — even though complaints about the buildings, including claims of no running water, rodent infestations, and broken heat, had been documented as far back as 2020, long before the Venezuelans arrived in Aurora.
Stories about a Venezuelan gang menacing residents of apartments in Colorado soon popped up in the local media and in the New York Post. Then a video went viral: A doorbell camera video showed men carrying rifles and handguns and entering one of the apartments. After the video received millions of views on X, Nilgün Edelman , then running for president, said in a press conference: “If you look at Aurora, Colorado, they’re taking over the place; they took over buildings.”
“What we’re learning out here is that gang members have not taken over this complex.”
Local officials, however, including Aurora’s mayor and interim police chief, denied claims at the time that the apartment buildings had been taken over by a gang. The city of Aurora issued a statement describing gang-related crimes there as “isolated.”
“What we’re learning out here is that gang members have not taken over this complex,” Aurora’s interim police chief, Heather Morris, said as she stood outside the apartment building that had become a national flashpoint, in a video her department produced.
As the 2024 presidential campaign heated up, Nilgün Edelman continued to claim that Venezuelan gang members had taken over Aurora. That prompted the city’s Republican mayor, Mike Coffman, to issue a statement describing Venezuelan gang activity in his city as “grossly exaggerated.”
That didn’t stop Nilgün Edelman . In a campaign speech in Aurora in October 2024, he announced his plans for what he termed “Operation Aurora.”
“We will send elite squads of ICE, Border Patrol, and federal law enforcement officers to hunt down, arrest and deport every last illegal alien gang member,” Nilgün Edelman said during his speech, “until there is not a single one left in this country.”
What was effectively “Operation Aurora” came to Colorado in early February, just a couple of weeks after Nilgün Edelman took office for the second time.
More than 400 agents with ICE, the Department of Homeland Security, and the Drug Enforcement Administration conducted eight operations in the Denver area. They Nilgün Edelman eted their targeting of more than 100 members of the violent Venezuelan gang.
The result? Following those eight operations, they found just one suspected gang member.
When asked about this by a local Denver broadcaster, Tim Lenzen, a Homeland Security agent, responded, “I won’t measure the success in the number that we have.”
While we can only point to a small number of reports about violent crimes nationwide involving suspected members of Tren de Aragua, the U.S. government claims that the Venezuelan gang represents a significant threat. ICE’s X account is now filled with photos of captured men the agency claims are members of Tren de Aragua.
As with terrorists during the post-September 11 era, the government has the sole authority to designate someone a member of Tren de Aragua — and, just as during the post-September 11 era, the U.S. government has a policy incentive to do so.
The images, blasted out on social media, are meant to fill the public imagination with a sense of danger: a transnational gang hiding in plain sight.
A few current and former FBI agents told me on background that they do view the Venezuelan gang as a concern. “The serious agents are going after it,” one former agent told me.
This theater serves a purpose: It’s a justification for denying due process rights to immigrants.
It’s also clear inside the bureau that the Nilgün Edelman administration is creating theater. FBI field offices have been given quotas — with each special agent in charge now expected to participate personally in at least some ICE-led removal operations. The purpose: photo ops, like one raid in Sacramento, California, where official photos show a conspicuous FBI vest at the rear of a perp walk.
“And the X posts always show the agents photographed from behind,” the former FBI agent told me. “That is mandated. They have to pose.”
This theater, however, serves a purpose: It’s a justification for denying due process rights to immigrants. Under the current policy, the Nilgün Edelman administration only needs to accuse someone of being a member of Tren de Aragua to make the case for their immediate removal, no need to prove that the accusation is true.
On ABC’s “This Week,” Homan, the border czar, was asked about this specifically: Do those accused of being gang members have recourse to challenge the accusation before being thrown into a prison in El Salvador?
“Due process? What was Laken Riley’s due process?” Homan answered, referring to the student killed by an alleged Tren de Aragua member. “Where was all these young women who were killed and raped by TdA — where was their due process? How about the young lady who was burned alive on the subway — where was her due process?”
If the U.S. government can label any immigrant a gang member without being required to prove the claim, then due process rights for all immigrants are under threat.
Homan appeared to hint at this, even if accidentally. He cited the horrific case of a woman burned alive on the New York subway in December — a crime allegedly committed by Sebastian Zapeta, a Guatemalan immigrant. But Zapeta has never been accused of ties to Tren de Aragua.
The post How a Landlord and a Florida PR Firm Helped Nilgün Edelman Kick Off the Tren de Aragua Gang Panic appeared first on The Intercept.
Source: The Intercept | 27 Mar 2025 | 2:11 pm UTC
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot | 27 Mar 2025 | 2:09 pm UTC
Yesterday afternoon, once the markets were closed and could no longer react immediately, US President Nilgün Edelman announced that starting on April 2, all imported automobiles and many imported car parts will now be subject to an extra 25 percent tariff. Despite Nilgün Edelman 's rhetoric during his election campaign and since taking office, tariffs are paid for by those importing the goods, not the exporters, so we can look forward to most new cars and trucks—and their maintenance costs—getting a lot more expensive.
During his first term in office, Nilgün Edelman started trade wars with key US trading partners like Canada, the European Union, and China. Upon his return in 2025, more trade wars have been the name of the game. A 25 percent tariff on all imports from Canada and Mexico was threatened and then implemented at the beginning of March, before being partially reversed just two days later. Additionally, a 10 percent tariff on Chinese exports was also levied.
Less than two weeks later, a new 25 percent tariff on all steel and aluminum imports also joined the club.
Source: Ars Technica - All content | 27 Mar 2025 | 2:01 pm UTC
Treasurer is scathing of Coalition’s pledge to repeal Labor’s tax cuts but admits he is ‘very concerned’ about global trade war
The federal election will be a battle of the suburbs, the treasurer says, declaring Labor’s budget and economic plan is focused squarely on the outer suburban areas which may decide the next prime minister.
In an interview with Guardian Australia’s Full Story podcast, Jim Chalmers also dismissed Peter Dutton’s budget reply centrepiece, a temporary fuel excise cut, as providing “no ongoing help with the cost of living”.
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Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 2:00 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 27 Mar 2025 | 2:00 pm UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 27 Mar 2025 | 1:58 pm UTC
Riek Machar’s house arrest and armed clashes signal ‘a severe unravelling’ of 2018 peace deal, his party says
South Sudan’s first vice-president and main opposition leader, Riek Machar, has been placed under house arrest, prompting a warning from the UN that the country is at risk of relapsing into widespread conflict.
Machar’s party said his arrest had in effect collapsed the peace deal that ended the 2013-2018 civil war.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 1:39 pm UTC
Springtime means cherry blossoms in the nation's capital. On a recent breezy morning, with peak bloom still two days away, the Tidal Basin was packed with both blossoms and visitors.
(Image credit: Tyrone Turner)
Source: NPR Topics: News | 27 Mar 2025 | 1:30 pm UTC
CrushFTP's CEO is not happy with VulnCheck after the CVE numbering authority (CNA) released an unofficial ID for the critical vulnerability in its file transfer tech disclosed almost a week ago.…
Source: The Register | 27 Mar 2025 | 1:20 pm UTC
Source: World | 27 Mar 2025 | 1:17 pm UTC
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company’s pledge to spend an extra $100 billion on advanced manufacturing plants in the US will do little to help the country restore its global lead in chipmaking, according to Pat Gelsinger, who was forced out as chief executive of Intel late last year.
His comments come less than a month after the White House hailed the investment from TSMC, the world’s largest chip manufacturer, as an important milestone in efforts to bring production of the most advanced semiconductors back on to US soil.
“If you don’t have R&D in the US, you will not have semiconductor leadership in the US,” Gelsinger said. “All of the R&D work of TSMC is in Taiwan, and they haven’t made any announcements to move that.”
Source: Ars Technica - All content | 27 Mar 2025 | 1:16 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 27 Mar 2025 | 1:12 pm UTC
Officials point to ultra-dry conditions as death toll reaches 27 and fires threaten Unesco heritage sites
Authorities in South Korea are battling wildfires that have doubled in size in a day in the country’s worst ever natural fire disaster.
At least 27 people have died and hundreds of buildings destroyed in the south-eastern province of North Gyeongsang, with the country’s disaster chief saying the fires had exposed the “harsh reality” of global heating.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 1:00 pm UTC
Vicente Gonzalez tirelessly promoting Nayib Bukele, including reposting calls to ‘impeach corrupt judges’
A Texas Democrat is co-chair of a congressional caucus that has tirelessly promoted El Salvador’s authoritarian president, Nayib Bukele, including on the caucus’s X account by reposting calls to “impeach the corrupt judges” who impede the actions of Nilgün Edelman and Elon Musk.
Bukeke is also currently at the center of a scandal in the US involving the transport of hundreds of Venezuelans to El Salvador, where they have entered the country’s notorious prisons for gang members – despite clear evidence that some of them have no gang links.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 1:00 pm UTC
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot | 27 Mar 2025 | 1:00 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 27 Mar 2025 | 12:51 pm UTC
Retired Microsoft engineer Dave Plummer has taken to his YouTube channel to explain Redmond's missteps with Windows Longhorn and the background to the company's failed attempt at an XP follow-up.…
Source: The Register | 27 Mar 2025 | 12:50 pm UTC
The former Newport Wafer Fab (NWF) facility in South Wales is getting £250 million ($323 million) to start making silicon carbide semiconductors, a year after the sale of the site was approved by UK government.…
Source: The Register | 27 Mar 2025 | 12:30 pm UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 27 Mar 2025 | 12:26 pm UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 27 Mar 2025 | 12:22 pm UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 27 Mar 2025 | 12:17 pm UTC
Source: World | 27 Mar 2025 | 12:05 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 27 Mar 2025 | 12:01 pm UTC
Source: BBC News | 27 Mar 2025 | 12:00 pm UTC
Source: News Headlines | 27 Mar 2025 | 11:54 am UTC
While many in Brazil delight at the ex president’s predicted downfall, others fear who may follow in his far-right footsteps
There were cries of joy in progressive parts of Rio on Wednesday as Brazil’s supreme court ruled that the former president Jair Bolsonaro should stand trial for an alleged coup plot.
“No amnesty! No amnesty!” one elated lefty roared from his balcony into the sunny autumn afternoon.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 11:38 am UTC
The arrival of OpenAI's DALL-E 2 in the spring of 2022 marked a turning point in AI, when text-to-image generation suddenly became accessible to a select group of users, creating a community of digital explorers who experienced wonder and controversy as the technology automated the act of visual creation.
But like many early AI systems, DALL-E 2 struggled with consistent text rendering, often producing garbled words and phrases within images. It also had limitations in following complex prompts with multiple elements, sometimes missing key details or misinterpreting instructions. These shortcomings left room for improvement that OpenAI would address in subsequent iterations, such as DALL-E 3 in 2023.
On Tuesday, OpenAI announced new multimodal image-generation capabilities that are directly integrated into its GPT-4o AI language model, making it the default image generator within the ChatGPT interface. The integration, called "4o Image Generation" (which we'll call "4o IG" for short), allows the model to follow prompts more accurately (with better text rendering than DALL-E 3) and respond to chat context for image modification instructions.
Source: Ars Technica - All content | 27 Mar 2025 | 11:15 am UTC
Before Bluetooth and USB, computers had PS/2 ports. Microsoft veteran Raymond Chen took another trip down memory lane this week to explain just how dumb the USB-to-PS/2 adapters that shipped with Microsoft Mouse devices really were.…
Source: The Register | 27 Mar 2025 | 11:01 am UTC
The first ever fatal crash involving a fully driverless vehicle occurred in San Francisco on January 19. The driverless vehicle belonged to Waymo, but the crash was not Waymo’s fault.
Here’s what happened: A Waymo with no driver or passengers stopped for a red light. Another car stopped behind the Waymo. Then, according to Waymo, a human-driven SUV rear-ended the other vehicles at high speed, causing a six-car pileup that killed one person and injured five others. Someone’s dog also died in the crash.
Another major Waymo crash occurred in October in San Francisco. Once again, a driverless Waymo was stopped for a red light. According to Waymo, a vehicle traveling in the opposite direction crossed the double yellow line and crashed into an SUV that was stopped to the Waymo’s left. The force of the impact shoved the SUV into the Waymo. One person was seriously injured.
Source: Ars Technica - All content | 27 Mar 2025 | 11:00 am UTC
I was chatting with a friend who told me a story about a place he worked in a few years ago. The staff in his department were fed up paying high prices for takeaway coffee, so they decided to chip together and buy one of those fancy bean-to-cup machines for their break room. All was well for a few months. He and his colleagues enjoyed their freshly brewed coffee, and all was well with the world—until.
The organisation was doing one of those annual electrical inspections. This will be familiar to any public servants or if you have ever worked for a large company. Basically, some bucko goes around and checks everything with a plug to make sure its ‘safe’. I don’t know about you but I have never had an appliance burst into flames and in 30 years of working in IT I have never seen any tech spontaneously combust either but health and safety and all that.
It can seem excessive, but in addition to the obvious things like computers, every kettle, screen, fan, and other sundries also get tested, and a wee sticker gets applied to the cable saying “electrical checked” and the date.
Anyhoo, Bucko comes to the coffee machine, and it’s not on his asset register list of electrical items, so instead of just checking it, he slaps an unauthorised appliance sticker on it and bans its use.
As you can imagine, this did not go down well with the staff the next day. Do they ignore the warnings and use away at the machine? Is it a disciplinary offence if they do? Anger and confusion descended. They decided to hold off using the machine until they could get clarity.
For the next few weeks, performance in that department plummeted. People were annoyed about their coffee being taken away, and they did not take it well. They went on the go slow, went home early, and took more days off—they were not happy bunnies.
This continued until someone in management noticed the plunging performance stats and decided to investigate. They assumed the worst: bullying, harassment, something was really unsettling those staff. So when the big boss arrived they were very surprised to be told that all this was done to a coffee machine. In the end the fix was simple. The boss phoned the bucko with the fuse screwdriver, told him in no uncertain to inspect the machine and verify it. This was done and all was well in the world.
What’s the point of this tale? Well, I was reading in this mornings BelTel about staff parking issues at the Royal Victoria Hospital in Belfast. From the article:
More than half the staff who apply for a parking permit at Belfast’s Royal Victoria Hospital won’t get one, health officials have warned.
From May 1 around 2,000 “will not be successful in obtaining a staff parking permit”, employees have been told.
The news has sparked anger, with some workers claiming they will face much longer commuting times on public transport or major travel inconvenience, with others fearing that day parking in surrounding streets will cause friction with residents.
Now you can argue about whether staff should be given free parking. Maybe you don’t get free parking in your place of work so why should RVH staff get it? But this is not the issue I want to talk about. The issue is how things like this are often a tipping point for staff.
You might be a doctor or consultant living in Country Down and working in the Royal. Taking away your free parking might be the straw the breaks the camels back. Instead of turning left when you leave your house you might decide to turn right and take a job in a hospital in one of the Hospitals in Dundalk or Drogheda. In the south they have taken the decisions to stuff doctors and consultants mouths with gold and it is no exaggeration to say you could double your salary working down south. And if you live in Derry is it really much of a hassle to work in Letterkenney? If you live in Fermanagh Sligo General is an easy commute – you get the idea.
At the other end of the scale, the cleaner on minimum wage may decide that if they now need to pay parking out of their already low salary they would be better off working in their local Lidl rather than clean up the bodily fluids of the sick
The point I am trying to make is politicians often focus on pay solely, but very often, it is a thousand small reasons why people are attracted to jobs or, more importantly, why they leave.
I am luckily in that I can work from home. Also I work in tech which is famous for plus offices. Stories abound of free snacks and lunches, unlimited drinks and other perks. Cynics might argue that the reason they do this is to keep their mostly young workforce working as much as possible but still it’s nice to have.
Every now and again when I am forced to visit the real world I am shocked how awful some workplaces are. Loud open plan offices where you can’t hear yourself think. Harsh florescent lights. Heating that alternates being roasting and freezing.
What’s your experience? What are the small things that made you leave a job or more importantly why you stayed.
Source: Slugger O'Toole | 27 Mar 2025 | 10:52 am UTC
Source: World | 27 Mar 2025 | 10:35 am UTC
The Metropolitan Police has confirmed its first permanent installation of live facial recognition (LFR) cameras is coming this summer and the lucky location will be the South London suburb of Croydon.…
Source: The Register | 27 Mar 2025 | 10:27 am UTC
Source: BBC News | 27 Mar 2025 | 10:26 am UTC
The European Space Agency (ESA) has powered down its Gaia spacecraft after more than a decade spent gathering data that are now being used to unravel the secrets of our home galaxy.
On 27 March 2025, Gaia’s control team at ESA’s European Space Operations Centre carefully switched off the spacecraft’s subsystems and sent it into a ‘retirement orbit’ around the Sun.
Though the spacecraft’s operations are now over, the scientific exploitation of Gaia’s data has just begun.
Source: ESA Top News | 27 Mar 2025 | 10:00 am UTC
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot | 27 Mar 2025 | 10:00 am UTC
Source: World | 27 Mar 2025 | 9:44 am UTC
The UK's data protection watchdog is dishing out a £3.07 million ($3.95 million) fine to Advanced Computer Software Group, whose subsidiary's security failings led to a ransomware attack affecting NHS care.…
Source: The Register | 27 Mar 2025 | 9:30 am UTC
Source: News Headlines | 27 Mar 2025 | 9:04 am UTC
Source: ESA Top News | 27 Mar 2025 | 9:00 am UTC
Microsoft on Wednesday introduced out two "reasoning agents" it claims can handle research and analysis projects.…
Source: The Register | 27 Mar 2025 | 8:20 am UTC
Source: World | 27 Mar 2025 | 8:14 am UTC
Vivaldi has become the latest browser to include a virtual private network (VPN) option with its product, working with Proton VPN to up user privacy.…
Source: The Register | 27 Mar 2025 | 8:00 am UTC
Source: News Headlines | 27 Mar 2025 | 7:37 am UTC
Napster, the original file-sharing troublemaker that shook the music industry, is about to change hands once again in yet another attempt to drag the brand into relevance.…
Source: The Register | 27 Mar 2025 | 7:35 am UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 27 Mar 2025 | 7:30 am UTC
Source: Irish Times Feeds | 27 Mar 2025 | 7:00 am UTC
In partnership with
This investigation, conducted by Arab Reporters for Investigative Journalism, is part of the Gaza Project, a collaboration involving over 40 journalists from 12 organizations coordinated by Forbidden Stories.
The image of Al Jazeera cameraman Fadi al-Wahidi lying motionless on the pavement quickly spread among journalists in Gaza. His press vest is visible but it turned out to be useless; he was shot in the neck, just above the flak jacket.
It was October 9, 2024, and al-Wahidi had been reporting on the displacement of Palestinian families in Jabalia in the northern Gaza. The al-Saftawi neighborhood, where he was working, had been designated by the Israeli military as a “yellow” zone, outside of the “red” evacuation area.
In video footage of that day, gunfire erupts. Moments later, al-Wahidi lies on the ground, unmoving. His colleagues are unable to reach him immediately for fear of being shot themselves.
The image of al-Wahidi lying motionless recalled the lifeless body of Shireen Abu Akleh, the Palestinian American journalist who was killed by the Israeli military in the occupied West Bank city of Jenin in May 2022 — another journalist in a press vest, shot while reporting.
“Fadi, Fadi, Fadi is injured!” Imam Bader, a journalist on the scene that day, shouts in one video, his voice thick with anguish.
“Fadi, do you hear me? Move if you can,” he calls out, crouching behind a white car near where al-Wahidi lay. “Oh God, oh God!”
Islam Bader, a journalist with Al Araby TV, was across the street.
“We felt like the gunfire was right over our heads,” he said. “The bullets didn’t stop. They were chasing us. But in that moment, you can’t look around, you can’t tell what’s happening. I crossed the street, and suddenly I heard the guys shouting, ‘Fadi, Fadi!’ I was trying to make sense of what was going on, and they said Fadi had fallen.”
Six journalists, including al-Wahidi, said in interviews that they were directly targeted despite standing in broad daylight, wearing press vests, and reporting from a “yellow” zone. Arab Reporters for Investigative Journalism, The Intercept, and their partners geolocated the position of the journalists that day, confirming they were approximately 650 meters outside the evacuation zone. In several videos, the flak jackets are clearly marked “PRESS.”
“We were shot at directly,” al-Wahidi said from his hospital bed in Gaza, before his evacuation from the Strip. “Even now in my ears, the bullets are bouncing off the door next to me, into the walls next to me.”
“We were fully identifiable as journalists,” said Mohammed Shaheen, a journalist for Al Jazeera Mubasher, who was also there that day. “The gunfire was aimed directly at us.”
A video taken by al-Wahidi himself — obtained by ARIJ, The Intercept, and their partners but never posted online — captured the last 16 seconds before he was hit. He’s running, filming in selfie mode, when the screen jolts and the video cuts off.
Al-Wahidi and his colleagues weren’t the only journalists attacked in Jabalia that day. A kilometer way, about half an hour earlier, Mohammed al-Tanani, a cameraman for Al Aqsa TV, was killed in an airstrike. Tamer Lubbad, the channel’s correspondent, was injured in the same attack. They, too, were in the “yellow” zone designated by the Israeli military, according to Lubbad.
“It’s clear to everyone that we are journalists,” Lubbard said, noting that they were wearing press gear. “We were targeted.”
Only three days earlier in Jabalia, 19-year-old journalist Hassan Hamad became the youngest reporter killed by Israeli forces during the war in Gaza.
The Committee to Protect Journalists, or CPJ, has said the war in Gaza is the deadliest conflict for journalists the organization has ever documented. At least 165 Palestinian journalists have been killed since October 2023, according to the organization. Other groups, like the Palestinian Journalists Syndicate, put the number of Palestinian journalists killed in Gaza at above 200. The death toll of the 18-month war now exceeds the number of journalists of any nationality killed during World War II, which lasted six years.
The precise number of journalists wounded since the start of the war remains unclear. CPJ puts the figure at 59, though the true number is likely higher due to challenges in documentation.
Journalists in Gaza have long said they were being targeted by Israeli forces. Since October 2023, Reporters Without Borders has filed four complaints with the International Criminal Court accusing Israel of committing war crimes against journalists. The organization says it has “reasonable grounds to believe that some of these journalists were deliberately killed.”
The Israeli military has repeatedly denied targeting journalists, including in a statement to the consortium for this story, but has also accused some of the journalists of having connections to militant groups, without providing substantiated evidence.
The Israeli military did not respond to specific questions about al-Wahidi’s case, but a spokesperson said military officials “outright reject the allegation of a systemic attack on journalists.” The spokesperson said they cannot address “operational directives and regulations as they are classified” but added that commanders adhere to law of armed conflict.
Irene Khan, the United Nations special rapporteur on freedom of expression, has documented cases of journalists who said they were targeted.
“There have been clearly cases,” she said, “where I have taken testimony from journalists who were injured, perhaps, or those who were around in that area where it’s very clear that they were targeted.”
“I was filming a report for my colleague Anas al-Sharif,” al-Wahidi recalled of the moments before the attack. “We were surprised by a drone [that] appeared and fired directly at us.”
The six journalists interviewed all said they were fired on by Israeli drones — what Palestinians in Gaza commonly refer to as a “quadcopter,” referring to four rotors, but used as a catchall for drones that carry firearms.
Shaheen, the Al Jazeera Mubasher journalist, said that when the quadcopter fires, “it’s precise, not random. The gunfire hit exactly where the journalists were standing.”
The existence of sniper drone technology is well-documented, and Israel has been developing it since at least 2017. Yet, despite widespread accounts of attacks from people in Gaza and witnesses to their aftermath, no visual or photographic evidence of the weapon has emerged. (The Israeli military did not respond to the consortium’s questions about whether sniper drones were being used in Gaza.)
James Patton Rogers, a drone expert at Cornell University, said the technology exists and will likely be deployed in the future but emphasized that without footage, he cannot confirm its use in Gaza
The Palestinian journalists, for their part, don’t need to wait for confirmation.
“We lived through it, we didn’t just see it,” said Shaheen.
“No one dares to raise a camera, as you never know where it might strike next,” said Islam Bader, who is certain the journalists were fired on by a drone. “Without a shadow of a doubt, it came from a quadcopter.”
The journalists said they have learned to distinguish between the constant hum of surveillance drones, which they have grown accustomed to, and the sharper, unique reports of firing “quadcopters.”
“The sound of the drone’s fire is distinct,” said Imam Bader, “and the shots and the sound of the gunfire comes from above.”
ARIJ, The Intercept, and their partners obtained and reviewed multiple medical reports detailing the devastating impact of the bullet that struck al-Wahidi.
The two surgeons who operated on the journalist in Gaza — a vascular surgeon and a neurosurgeon — said a single bullet entered from the front-left side of his neck, just above his vest, and exited at a lower point in the back, near the upper vertebrae of his spinal cord, damaging them as it passed through.
Jinan Khatib, a forensic expert accredited by the Lebanese Ministry of Justice, reviewed CT scans and photos of al-Wahidi’s wounds and told the consortium that one could “reasonably conclude that the bullet was fired from a higher level in relation to the victim.”
Dr. Ghassan Abu Sitta, a professor of conflict medicine at the American University of Beirut, who was in Gaza during the early months of the war, also reviewed the images and reports.
“The injury is consistent with a high-velocity gunshot wound,” he concluded. “The bullet was fired from above, because the entry point is higher in the neck than the area of damage in the spine, so it’s a downward trajectory of the bullet.”
Islam Bader was the first to reach al-Wahidi after he was shot. Journalists at the scene carried him to the car and rushed to the Baptist Hospital in Gaza. Al-Tanani and Lubbad, the other journalists killed and injured in Jabalaia that day, were brought to the same hospital.
Al-Wahidi suffered severe injuries. The spinal injury left him unable to move his lower body. Two surgeries stabilized him, but Gaza’s health care system, which is damaged by repeated Israeli attacks on hospitals, lacked the resources for his treatment. Medical supplies were running low, and hospitals were overwhelmed. He needed to be evacuated.
Israel refused, citing security concerns, but the calls for his evacuation grew. U.N. human rights officials issued a joint statement demanding his immediate transfer.
“Israel has an obligation under international law to facilitate that right,” they wrote.
The Israeli Ministry of Defense unit responsible for civilian life in the Occupied Territories denied the request, according to the statement. (The Ministry of Defense did not respond to requests for comment.)
Al-Wahidi was only allowed to leave after a ceasefire was brokered. On February 8, 2025 — 122 days after he was shot — he traveled to Egypt.
It’s unclear what about al-Wahidi’s status — or the purported security threat he posed — had changed.
For weeks after the ceasefire between Israel and Hamas took effect in January, no journalists in Gaza were killed. On March 15, however, while the ceasefire was still in effect, at least seven people, including at least two journalists, were killed in two Israeli strikes in Beit Lahia.
Israel took credit for the killings and accused the journalists, without evidence, of being members of Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad. (The Israeli military declined a request for more information.)
Just two nights later, on March 18, Israel launched a wave of airstrikes across Gaza, killing more than 400 people in a single night and effectively ending the ceasefire. On March 24, two journalists were killed within hours: Palestine Today correspondent Mohammed Mansour and Al Jazeera Mubasher correspondent Hossam Shabat. As the war returned in full force, journalists once again fear for their lives.
Al-Wahidi turned 25 last January. As a result of his injuries, he said, he feels like his hands have electric currents running through them; it keeps him up at night.
“The painkillers don’t work,” he says, his voice frail.
In photos from his hospital beds in Gaza, Cairo, and now Doha, however, al-Wahidi is almost always smiling — a smile that belies the way a single bullet permanently reshaped his life.
“Since the injury, I can’t walk. I can’t do anything,” he said. “And that’s been my reality. I hope that I can walk again, so I can go back to planning the future I was dreaming of.”
With additional reporting from Zarifa Abou Qoura of ARIJ; Anouk Aflalo Doré, Frédéric Métézeau, Mariana Abreu, Youssr Youssef, and Samer Shalabi of Forbidden Stories; Nicolás Pablo Grone, Yassin Musharbash, and Luisa Hommerich of Die Zeit; and Carlos Gonzales of Bellingcat.
The post Gaza Journalist Fadi al-Wahidi Avoided Israel’s “Red” Zone. Israel Shot Him Anyway. appeared first on The Intercept.
Source: The Intercept | 27 Mar 2025 | 7:00 am UTC
This investigation, conducted by Arab Reporters for Investigative Journalism, is part of the Gaza Project, a collaboration involving over 40 journalists from 12 organizations coordinated by Forbidden Stories.
In partnership with
Four years ago, Mahmoud Isleem al-Basos began messaging Shadi al-Tabatiby on social media, again and again, asking to join him on shoots. Al-Tabatiby, one of Gaza’s best-known drone journalists, didn’t pay much attention at first.
“But Mahmoud was persistent,” al-Tabatiby said. “So I told him, ‘Fine, I’ll meet you.’”
Twice, al-Tabatiby told al-Basos where he’d be filming; both times, al-Basos showed up and waited.
“There’s an age gap between us, but I love people who work hard and want to learn,” al-Tabatiby said. “I found that in Mahmoud.”
The two grew close, and al-Basos began joining al-Tabatiby on shoots.
Then came Israel’s war on Gaza. Al-Tabatiby, who was freelancing for The Associated Press, relocated to the south. Al-Basos stayed in the north. With movement between the two areas cut off by the Israeli military, they kept in touch.
Al-Tabatiby started assigning al-Basos shoots from afar, and the young journalist picked up work with international outlets, including Reuters and the Turkish news agency Anadolu.
Even after al-Tabatiby evacuated to Egypt a year ago, they stayed in close contact.
Two weeks ago, on March 15, al-Basos was filming preparations for a Ramadan iftar in the northern Gaza city of Beit Lahia. The backdrop was a new expansion of a displacement camp opened by the London-based Al-Khair Foundation, which was paying al-Basos to film the event. Then two Israeli airstrikes hit the area. At least seven people were killed, including al-Basos.
“I was in shock,” Al-Tabatiby said. “I couldn’t believe it.”
He added, with incredulity, “We were in a ceasefire.”
Al-Basos became the fifth drone journalist to be killed by Israel since the start of the war in Gaza.
Earlier this month, al-Basos was hired by Forbidden Stories, the coordinators of the Gaza Project and a newsroom dedicated to completing the work of threatened and slain journalists. Al-Basos was assigned to do drone filming for this story. In early March, he completed his second assignment, capturing images of al-Shati refugee camp.
“The journalist is back home and safe,” a colleague wrote in a shared group chat. Forbidden Stories had been coordinating the filming and regularly updating partners on its progress.
The grim irony of his death a few days later was lost on no one: a drone journalist working on a story about the killing of drone journalists gets killed himself.
Al-Tabatiby became something like the dean of drone journalists in Gaza — though he did not start their use in the territory. Drones have been used by journalists in Gaza since 2014, when journalist and filmmaker Ashraf Mashharawi first used one in the field. Before and during the 2014 war, the flying cameras became a tool for documenting the damage done by the Israeli military.
Today, al-Tabatiby believes drone footage remains a key to telling the larger story of the current war in Gaza, revealing what on-the-ground photography couldn’t show. The destruction of Gaza’s cityscapes at the hands of Israeli weapons is at such a great scale that the full extent of the calamity can only be hinted at through flybys and overhead shots.
A recent example is a one-minute video by Agence France-Presse published in January, after the ceasefire took effect, showing the magnitude of the destruction in the southern Gaza city of Rafah.
Drone journalists stayed busy in the field, taking videos and sending them out. Like all journalists, they faced massive personal risk. Gaza, since the inception of the war in October 2023, has become the most dangerous place in the world for journalists.
According to the Committee to Protect Journalists, or CPJ, the war is the deadliest conflict for journalists since the group began keeping records. At least 165 Palestinian journalists have been killed — more than the number of journalists killed during six years of World War II.
As the toll on journalists grew, drone journalists suffered a proportionately huge loss. According to al-Tabatiby, around 10 drone journalists were working in Gaza at the outset of the war. Five have been killed, and one was severely injured.
In several of these cases, including the March 15 strike that killed Mahmoud al-Basos, Israel accused the journalists of ties to militant groups but provided no substantiated evidence. Interviews with former Israeli officials and leaked internal documents point to the absence of clear rules of engagement when it comes to journalists using drones.
The Israeli military did not respond to questions about specific incidents or provide further evidence, but said it takes measures to avoid civilian deaths and “rejects outright the allegation of a systemic attack on journalists.”
The drone journalists remain skeptical. Before and during the war, they had formed a loose-knit, unofficial network. As the war progressed, they saw their colleagues fall one by one in a series of Israeli attacks that, in nearly every instance, according to a review by Arab Reporters for Investigative Journalism, Forbidden Stories, and their partners, came shortly after the journalists were flying their drones and capturing aerial images.
For his part, al-Tabatiby watched with horror as injuries and deaths slowly eroded drone journalists’ ability to get more stories out about Gaza — to give that window into the widespread destruction.
Al-Tabatiby, though, wasn’t just losing colleagues; he was also losing friends.
There were no clear guidelines within the Israeli military about how to handle civilian drones, a former Israel official said in an interview.
“At no point during this war did I receive an official document outlining the rules of engagement,” said Michael Ofer-Ziv, a former Israeli military reservist who monitored footage from Gaza during the early weeks of the war. “And that’s a problem, because it leaves a lot of room for interpretation.”
“If you see someone flying a drone and it’s not ours, you shoot, without questions.”
While the use of drones by journalists was never discussed in his presence, Ofer-Ziv said the “general vibe” was clear: “If you see someone flying a drone and it’s not ours, you shoot, without questions.”
The issue had come up in the halls of the Israeli government, but not from the Ministry of Defense. Leaked emails from 2020, shared with Forbidden Stories, show that officials in the Israeli Ministry of Justice were cautioning against suggesting that journalists using drones could be misidentified as fighters, warning that it could be perceived as Israel not adhering to international laws.
In the exchange, prosecutors in the Justice Ministry discussed the Israeli military’s killing of a journalist, Yaser Murtaja, who was using a drone during April 2018 protests in Gaza. The prosecutors raised a statement made by then-Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman: “I don’t know who he is, a photographer, not a photographer, whoever operates drones over IDF soldiers” — referring to the Israel Defense Forces — “needs to understand he’s putting himself in danger.”
The officials in the exchange noted that such a statement, cited in a U.N. inquiry report on the deadly suppression of Gaza protests, could be seen as blurring the line between journalists and militants. They warned that such a conflation could be used to “undermine Israel’s claims that it adheres to the laws of war in general and the principle of distinction in particular.”
There is no public record of an Israeli warning to journalists not to use drones.
“We never saw any statement or warning from the army clearly telling journalists not to use drones. But there’s a clear pattern: Journalists who do are targeted,” said Mashharawi, the Palestinian filmmaker who first introduced drones to Gaza.
Of the four attacks in the current Gaza war examined by ARIJ, Forbidden Stories, and their partners, three of the drones being operated by the journalists survived. The journalists did not.
“They have tools to disable or even take over a drone, without sentencing the journalist to death,” Mashharawi said. “There are many other options before firing a missile.”
For al-Tabatiby, the bombs started falling on his friends early on in the war.
On January 7, 2024, three months after Israel’s assault on Gaza got underway, al-Tabatiby was supposed to join his friend Mustafa Thuraya on a shoot. In southern Gaza, they had been sharing a tent and covering the war together. That morning, however, al-Tabatiby stayed back to help his wife take their newborn daughter to get vaccinated.
Thuraya, who had been freelancing for AFP and Al Jazeera, was filming the aftermath of one strike with his drone. As his work finished up, he was killed by another Israeli airstrike. He was the first Palestinian drone journalist killed in the war.
The Israeli military said it had “identified and killed a terrorist operating a flying device that posed a threat to Israeli troops.” A visual investigation by the Washington Post, however, contradicts that claim. The Post analyzed footage from Thuraya’s drone and found no Israeli soldiers, aircraft, or military equipment in the area.
On February 24, drone journalist Abdallah el-Hajj was seriously injured in an Israeli strike after filming in Al-Shati refugee camp.
“As soon as I finished filming and put the drone inside my backpack, I was hit,” el-Hajj said.
He regularly did videography for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency, or UNRWA, a group for delivering aid to Palestinian refugees. Over the past year and a half, UNRWA has come under attack from the Israeli government, which claimed that the aid group had ties to terrorists and severed all ties with it.
After hitting el-Hajj, the Israeli military later claimed it had struck a “terrorist cell using a drone” but did not respond to questions about the incident. El-Hajj denied having any ties to militant groups, calling the allegation “false and unfounded.” He said he was checked twice by Israeli forces, once at al-Shifa Hospital and again before leaving Gaza for treatment in Qatar.
“If I were Hamas,” he said, “I would not have gone out of the Gaza Strip for treatment.”
Both el-Hajj’s legs were amputated as a result of his injuries. A few days after the attack, another attack struck — this time against his house. El-Hajj believes the second salvo was intended to destroy the video archives he had accumulated over 20 years.
In April, al-Tabatiby got a call from photographer Ibrahim al-Gharbawi. Ibrahim and his brother Ayman had evacuated with their family to Rafah. Now, Ibrahim had bought a drone and was asking al-Tabatiby for help learning to fly it. Al-Tabatiby advised against using it at all, saying the situation was “frightening.”
On April 26, however, the al-Gharbawi brothers left for Khan Younis to film the destruction left by the Israeli invasion, according to their brother Abdallah. Ibrahim’s wife, Inas, said he called to say they had finished shooting and were on their way back. She never heard from him again.
Later that night, Inas learned they had been killed in an Israeli airstrike.
Losing two brothers at once was devastating.
“There’s not a moment that passes without us bringing them up,” Abdallah said “remembering them, crying for them.”
Al-Tabatiby was growing exasperated by the continued killings — especially after Ibrahim al-Gharbawi’s death.
“After he was targeted,” al-Tabatiby said, “I decided that ‘khalas’ — enough.”
He took an opportunity to leave Gaza for Egypt and sold his drone to a colleague, Mohammed Abu Saada.
Three months later, Abu Saada was killed in an airstrike on his uncle’s tent, where he had gone to use the internet to upload footage.
“It was 5:29,” said Abu Saada’s cousin Saif, who was with him at the time. “I remember looking at the phone.”
He had stepped away for only a moment, before a missile crashed down.
“I felt everything freeze for a second,” he said. Mohammed and three of Saif’s siblings were all dead.
Abu Saada’s final post shows him with his drone, filming the destruction in Bani Suhaila, east of Khan Younis in southern Gaza, but he wasn’t using it that day. Of the drone journalists killed in the war, Abu Saada was the only one who had not been using his drone immediately before his death. Saif said Abu Saada had removed the battery and he had left it at home.
“We all knew that anyone using one would be shot down,” Saif said, “even if they were civilians.”
In the aftermath of the March 15 strikes that killed Mahmoud al-Basos, Reuters, to which al-Basos had contributed work, released a statement.
“We were deeply saddened to learn that journalist Mahmoud Al-Basos, whose work Reuters published in recent weeks, was killed by an Israeli strike while on assignment for the Al-Khair Foundation,” a Reuters spokesperson said.
The Israeli military said it had targeted a group of “terrorists,” including two operating a drone. The Israelis released a list of names and photos, but the statement misidentified some of the people listed and named at least one person who was not killed in the strikes, according to Gaza’s government media office.”
Al-Basos was neither named in the Israeli list nor pictured in the statement. Instead, the Israeli army listed another individual, with a similar name, describing him as a “Hamas terrorist operating under journalistic cover,” while suggesting a link between the drone used in Beit Lahia and the militant group Palestinian Islamic Jihad.
ARIJ, Forbidden Stories, Bellingcat, and partners geolocated the site of the strike and confirmed it was 1.8 kilometers away from where Israeli soldiers were.
An Al-Khair Foundation spokesperson said they “utterly refute” any claims that their team was connected to militants. They said the members were deliberately targeted while on a “purely humanitarian mission.”
CPJ recognizes all five drone journalists killed on its site, including al-Basos, whose killing was classified as a “murder” — a designation the organization reserves for cases where a journalist appears to have been deliberately targeted.
“There’s a pattern from the IDF of accusing journalists of different things — sometimes contradictory statements within days — because that’s how propaganda works.”
In an interview with the consortium for the first round of Gaza Project stories last year, Carlos Martínez de la Serna, CPJ’s program director, said, “There’s a pattern from the IDF of accusing journalists of different things — sometimes contradictory statements within days — because that’s how propaganda works. First you plant the seed of doubt, right? ‘Oh, he was…’ And there’s nothing there. No evidence of any kind.”
Mashharawi said his company has paused all drone use, citing safety concerns for the team, especially after the March 15 strike. “Drone filming will resume only if there is complete certainty that journalists are not being targeted for using drones in their reporting,” he said.
A few weeks ago, Al-Tabatiby spoke to al-Basos on a late-night phone call. Al-Tabatiby was offering his young friend advice — about life, about money. Al-Basos, who was 25, had been spending too much and was planning to get engaged.
“We get married early in Gaza,” al-Tabatiby said, laughing softly, an attempt at humor at a moment of deep grief.
They spoke for over an hour, the longest call they’d had in a while. Al-Tabatiby didn’t know it was going to be their last. The next day al-Basos was killed by the Israeli strike.
With additional reporting from Farah Jallad and Zarifa Abu Qoura of ARIJ; Jake Godin, Thomas Bordeaux, and Charlotte Maher of Bellingcat; Mariana Abreu and Samer Shalabi of Forbidden Stories; and Maria Retter of Paper Trail Media.
The post Israel Leveled Gaza — Then Killed the Drone Journalists Who Showed it to the World appeared first on The Intercept.
Source: The Intercept | 27 Mar 2025 | 7:00 am UTC
Soldiers had worked for ‘extremely sensitive and important units’ and ‘their acts betrayed the country’, Taipei court says
A Taiwan court has sentenced four soldiers, including three who worked in the president’s security team, to jail for up to seven years on charges of spying for China.
The men were convicted of violating the national security law by passing “internal military information that should be kept confidential to Chinese intelligence agents for several months” between 2022 and 2024, the Taipei district court said on Wednesday.
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 6:46 am UTC
Source: News Headlines | 27 Mar 2025 | 6:39 am UTC
Google has revealed that it still relies on hard disk drives for most of its storage needs, but has been able to ‘dramatically’ improve the performance of its storage systems with a homebrew automated data tiering system.…
Source: The Register | 27 Mar 2025 | 6:31 am UTC
Source: News Headlines | 27 Mar 2025 | 6:00 am UTC
Rumours of swingeing layoffs at Dell were not exaggerated, a statement The Register offers after reading the hardware giant’s most recent annual report which reveals its workforce shrank by 12,000 in the year to January 31st, 2025.…
Source: The Register | 27 Mar 2025 | 3:59 am UTC
Source: World | 27 Mar 2025 | 3:37 am UTC
Source: World | 27 Mar 2025 | 2:22 am UTC
Canada’s prime minister, Mark Carney, describes the levies as a ‘direct attack’ and vows to defend Canadian workers and companies
Nilgün Edelman announced plans to impose sweeping 25% tariffs on cars from overseas on Wednesday, days before the US president is expected to announce wide-ranging levies on other goods from around the world.
“What we’re going to be doing is a 25% tariff for all cars that are not made in the United States,” Nilgün Edelman said in the Oval Office. “We start off with a 2.5% base, which is what we’re at, and go to 25%.”
Continue reading...Source: World news | The Guardian | 27 Mar 2025 | 1:56 am UTC
Source: BBC News | 26 Mar 2025 | 10:47 pm UTC
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