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Seattle police union approves new contract with retroactive raises
www.seattletimes.com Seattle police union approves new contract with retroactive raises

The agreement, announced by Mayor Bruce Harrell on Monday, will make Seattle officers the highest paid in the state, leapfrogging them from 29th.

Seattle police union approves new contract with retroactive raises

> Rank-and-file Seattle police officers voted in favor of a new, partial three-year contract that, if approved by the Seattle City Council, will give them immediate retroactive raises totaling 23%.

> The agreement, announced by Mayor Bruce Harrell on Monday, will make Seattle officers the highest paid in the state, leapfrogging them from 29th. A starting officer will make $103,000 a year, up from $83,000.

> Negotiations are not finished, however. The agreement covers 2021, when the previous contract expired, through 2023. City negotiators and the Seattle Police Officers Guild left 2024 unresolved and called in a mediator with the Public Employment Relations Commission to help.

But I thought the police were defunded!! /s

0
5 dead and over 100 hospitalized from recalled Japanese health supplements
www.seattletimes.com 5 dead and over 100 hospitalized from recalled Japanese health supplements

In the week since a line of Japanese health supplements began being recalled, five people have died and more than 100 people are hospitalized as of Friday.

5 dead and over 100 hospitalized from recalled Japanese health supplements

> In the week since a line of Japanese health supplements began being recalled, five people have died and more than 100 people were hospitalized as of Friday.

> Osaka-based Kobayashi Pharmaceutical Co. came under fire for not going public quickly with problems known internally as early as January. The first public announcement came March 22.

> Company officials said 114 people were being treated in hospitals after taking products, including Benikoji Choleste Help meant to lower cholesterol, that contain an ingredient called benikoji, a red species of mold. Earlier in the week, the number of deaths stood at two people.

> Some people developed kidney problems after taking the supplements, but the exact cause was still under investigation in cooperation with government laboratories, according to the manufacturer.

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DMCA takedown requests - how responsive?
  • It really does depend, so I mainly was speaking from my personal experience. But this is also why using both is recommended for *aar, because then you get the best of both worlds.

  • U.S. fully bans asbestos, which kills 40,000 a year
  • This is correct. The only thing that is regulated is the disposal (at least in WA) - otherwise home owners are legally allowed to remove it themselves as they see fit. Not that I recommend it if you don't know what you're doing, but you won't get a fine.

    Source: am homeowner who (with saftey precautions such as a tent of 3 mil plastic, negative airflow, HEPA shopvac, soap and water, and a proper respirator) removed asbestos tape from my duct work.

  • DMCA takedown requests - how responsive?
  • It's understandable, sure. It's also a little more complex up front. For me personally, the pros outweigh the cons and I'd much rather use Usenet over torrenting, even with the cost.

    I definitely think it's DMCA, unfortunately.

  • DMCA takedown requests - how responsive?
  • For indexers, I have DrunkenSlug, nzbgeek, and nzbplanet. My backbone providers are UsenetExpress, FrugalUsenet, and Giganews. You can use https://whatsmyuse.net to make sure you don't have overlapping backbones.

  • DMCA takedown requests - how responsive?
  • The main benefit is that you don't need to use a VPN, so you get full download speeds. Also the availability and download speed isn't dependent on seeders, so more obscure content tends to survive longer on Usenet.

  • Walter Koenig on the Lean Years After Star Trek: TOS – ‘The Phone Didn't Ring’
  • Fair, but that's now, no? What was considered a livable wage in 1967 CA? If you take $130K of 2024 cash into 1967, it's worth around $13K in 1967 money.

  • DMCA takedown requests - how responsive?
  • That's not the problem here unfortunately. This is usually a complete take down on the server side, and has nothing to do with their location.

  • Walter Koenig on the Lean Years After Star Trek: TOS – ‘The Phone Didn't Ring’
  • $10,000 in 1967 is equivalent in purchasing power to about $92,911.98 today, an increase of $82,911.98 over 57 years. The dollar had an average inflation rate of 3.99% per year between 1967 and today, producing a cumulative price increase of 829.12%.

    source

    While not A list pay, that's still not bad and a livable wage, unless I'm missing something obvious.

  • DMCA takedown requests - how responsive?
  • Usenet, while way better than torrenting, still requires multiple indexers and providers for this reason. I have 3 of each and rarely ever run into this issue except for very niche releases.

  • DMCA takedown requests - how responsive?
  • What benefit would a VPN give for OP's problem?

  • Critical notifications in Home Assistant
  • At least on Android, you can make TTS go through your alarm channel on your phone at max volume, to really make sure you don't miss it. I do this for my alarm and doorbell (only when I'm at home).

  • Looking to move up from Neptune 2
  • I probably won't be going for commercial use, just hobby stuff mainly. It would be neat to do some nylon stuff but that's probably as crazy as I'd get.

    But yes, ideally my budget is $450-1200 (wide I know, but I'd like to explore my options).

  • Looking to move up from Neptune 2
  • Do you know how well the auto leveling works?

  • Looking to move up from Neptune 2

    I think it's finally upgrade time. While I love my Neptune 2, it definitely has its issues.

    Ideally, my next printer would have:

    • Built-in auto leveling, so I don't have to install a BL Touch
    • An enclosure
    • Be slightly larger than the Neptune 2
    • Open source firmware
    • OctoPrint support

    I was looking at the Prusa MK4, but it seems like a high price for what you get. Any recommendations?

    6
    What were the dumb things you did in 2020 to prevent COVID?
  • Constant hand sanitizer - I still haven't dropped this habit. I see hand sanitizer, I use hand sanitizer.

  • How to auto-reboot if CPU load too high?
  • Crontab to just auto reboot daily is probably better - if your PC becomes unresponsive I doubt it would be able to execute another script on top of everything. Ideally though, you'd do some log diving and figure out the cause.

  • Why did the ability to Watch Playlists Together go away?
  • This probably doesn't help, but I use watch together by going to the individual episode and clicking it there. Of course, for a playlist or TV show that means you have to click it for every individual episode.

  • Is anyone else tired of the doom posts on Lemmy?
  • That's not specific (or true) though, there are plenty of active niche communities, especially those for localities. Which communities would you like to be more active?

  • Is anyone else tired of the doom posts on Lemmy?
  • Be the change, become the active user

  • Republicans’ House majority is their smallest in decades, and shrinking
    www.washingtonpost.com Republicans’ House majority is their smallest in decades, and shrinking

    Republican control in the House will stand at 218 to 213 after Rep. Ken Buck resigns next week.

    > Republicans are entering a months-long stretch of legislating with their smallest House majority in decades. And the margin is about to tighten even more.

    > Departures from the House have whittled down the Republican caucus from 222 to 219, meaning the party can only afford to lose two members and still pass legislation when everyone is attending and voting.

    > Another Republican, Rep. Ken Buck (Colo.), announced Tuesday that he would vacate his seat at the end of next week.

    > Meanwhile, Congress is staring down a deadline next Friday to fund about 70 percent of the government — including the Defense, State and Homeland Security departments. It could further complicate a stalled border security bill and aid package for Ukraine and Israel.

    > Democrats are likely to add another lawmaker to their ranks after a special election in a deep-blue, Buffalo-area district in late April. The next special election in a red district isn’t until May 21.

    14
    US energy industry methane emissions are triple what government thinks, study finds
    phys.org US energy industry methane emissions are triple what government thinks, study finds

    American oil and natural gas wells, pipelines and compressors are spewing three times the amount of the potent heat-trapping gas methane as the government thinks, causing $9.3 billion in yearly climate damage, a new comprehensive study calculates.

    US energy industry methane emissions are triple what government thinks, study finds

    > American oil and natural gas wells, pipelines and compressors are spewing three times the amount of the potent heat-trapping gas methane as the government thinks, causing $9.3 billion in yearly climate damage, a new comprehensive study calculates.

    > But because more than half of these methane emissions are coming from a tiny number of oil and gas sites, 1% or less, this means the problem is both worse than the government thought but also fairly fixable, said the lead author of a study in Wednesday's journal Nature.

    > The same issue is happening globally. Large methane emissions events around the world detected by satellites grew 50% in 2023 compared to 2022 with more than 5 million metric tons spotted in major fossil fuel leaks, the International Energy Agency reported Wednesday in their Global Methane Tracker 2024. World methane emissions rose slightly in 2023 to 120 million metric tons, the report said.

    > "This is really an opportunity to cut emissions quite rapidly with targeted efforts at these highest emitting sites," said lead author Evan Sherwin, an energy and policy analyst at the U.S. Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Lab who wrote the study while at Stanford University. "If we can get this roughly 1% of sites under control, then we're halfway there because that's about half of the emissions in most cases."

    > Sherwin said the fugitive emissions come throughout the oil and gas production and delivery system, starting with gas flaring. That's when firms release natural gas to the air or burn it instead of capturing the gas that comes out of energy extraction. There's also substantial leaks throughout the rest of the system, including tanks, compressors and pipelines, he said.

    1
    Massachusetts to pardon ‘hundreds of thousands’ with marijuana charges
    www.theguardian.com Massachusetts to pardon ‘hundreds of thousands’ with marijuana charges

    Governor Maura Healey announces plans to pardon all simple marijuana possession charges from the state

    Massachusetts to pardon ‘hundreds of thousands’ with marijuana charges

    > The Massachusetts governor, Maura Healey, announced plans to pardon all simple marijuana possession charges from the state, which could affect “hundreds of thousands” who have faced charges.

    > “We believe this is the most sweeping cannabis pardon announced by any governor in the United States. The reason we do this is simple: justice requires it,” Healey said at a press conference on Wednesday.

    > Though the state does not have exact numbers of how many people the pardon will affect, Healey said it could be “hundreds of thousands” in Massachusetts.

    > The pardon does not cover other marijuana-related charges, including those related to distribution or driving under the influence. Without the pardon, simple marijuana possession charges can show up on people’s criminal records, affecting their ability to obtain a job or housing.

    3
    Idaho Supreme Court denies Bryan Kohberger’s grand jury appeal
    www.seattletimes.com Idaho Supreme Court denies Bryan Kohberger’s grand jury appeal

    The court ruled on a pretrial appeal from attorneys representing the man charged with killing four University of Idaho students.

    Idaho Supreme Court denies Bryan Kohberger’s grand jury appeal

    > Kohberger’s public defenders had argued that a grand jury seated by prosecutors improperly indicted him on four counts of first-degree murder and one count of felony burglary. They contended that Idaho law left open the idea that grand jurors must reach the higher legal standard of beyond a reasonable doubt — the same as at trial to convict a defendant — rather than the longstanding threshold of probable cause to indict.

    > In the one-page Supreme Court ruling issued Tuesday afternoon, the justices offered no legal rationale for their denial of the motion to appeal from Kohberger’s attorneys. The document was signed by Melanie Gagnepain, clerk of the Idaho Supreme Court.

    2
    Locked Removed
    House passes bill that would require ByteDance to either sell TikTok, or get banned in the U.S. Will go to the Senate next.
  • Really happy this is the focus of our highest chambers of government and not passing actual regulations for all social media companies, or you know, giving citizens healthcare.

  • Seattle SWAT officer who fatally shot DV suspect holding infant won't be charged
    www.seattletimes.com Seattle SWAT officer who fatally shot DV suspect holding infant won’t be charged

    Prosecutors found the Seattle Police SWAT officer who fatally shot Shaun Fuhr while he was carrying his daughter acted legally.

    Seattle SWAT officer who fatally shot DV suspect holding infant won’t be charged

    > The King County Prosecutor’s Office said Officer Noah Zech, 40, was justified in firing a single round from his patrol rifle, striking Shaun Fuhr in the back of the head as Fuhr fled through a construction site in the 4100 block of 37th Avenue South after police responded to a report of domestic violence and child abduction.

    > The city’s civilian-run Office of Police Accountability previously found Zech’s actions fell within the department’s policies. The office also dismissed complaints of biased policing — Zech is white and Fuhr was Black — and failure to de-escalate the situation before resorting to deadly force.

    > King County Prosecutor Leesa Manion met with Fuhr’s family and their attorneys before publicly releasing her office’s findings. A federal civil-rights lawsuit from Fuhr’s family is pending against the city and Zech in U.S. District Court in Seattle.

    > In addition to an internal investigation by OPA, the city in a rare move had asked the King County Sheriff’s Office to investigate the shooting, along with the SPD’s Force Investigation Team and Firearms Review Board.

    > Zech, a member of SPD’s SWAT team and longtime department veteran, was among a large number of officers who had responded to a frantic 911 call from a woman who said she had been beaten by her boyfriend, who fired a shot at her and had taken their 1-year-old daughter, according to police. The woman reported her boyfriend, Fuhr, had assaulted her throughout the day, and police said she had significant injuries.

    > The police department released a copy of the woman’s frantic 911 call and a clip of body-camera video from another officer who was pursuing Fuhr.

    > The lawsuit — filed by Fuhr’s father on behalf of his granddaughter — alleges she wasn’t in danger and that police, when they caught up with Fuhr about a half hour after the initial call, could see he was not armed, was not threatening officers, and was complying with their commands.

    > The body-camera video shows several officers chasing Fuhr through a small parking lot and down the side of a building, where they confront him. Fuhr was holding the child when he was shot, and another officer ran and picked up the child. Police said the infant wasn’t physically injured.

    > The department said a handgun was found “nearby.”

    > “At the time Shaun was shot, he was unarmed and cradling his infant daughter in his arms,” the family’s lawsuit said.

    6
    China could use TikTok to influence US elections, spy chief says
  • I've got bad news for you, the CCP is happy to use American social media to manipulate the populous, it doesn't matter if it's US owned or not.

  • New details revealed from FAA audit of Boeing’s 737 MAX production. Dozens of issues found
    www.seattletimes.com New details from FAA audit of Boeing’s 737 MAX production reveal dozens of issues

    Boeing failed 33 out of 89 of the FAA's product audits. At Spirit AeroSystems, the air-safety agency observed a hotel key card being used to check a door seal.

    New details from FAA audit of Boeing’s 737 MAX production reveal dozens of issues

    > A six-week audit by the Federal Aviation Administration of Boeing’s production of the 737 MAX jet found dozens of problems throughout the manufacturing process at the plane maker and one of its key suppliers, according to a slide presentation reviewed by The New York Times.

    > The air-safety regulator initiated the examination after a door panel blew off a 737 MAX 9 during an Alaska Airlines flight in early January. Last week, the agency announced that the audit had found “multiple instances” in which Boeing and the supplier, Spirit AeroSystems, failed to comply with quality-control requirements, though it did not provide specifics about the findings.

    > The presentation reviewed by the Times, though highly technical, offers a more detailed picture of what the audit turned up. Since the Alaska Airlines episode, Boeing has come under intense scrutiny over its quality-control practices, and the findings add to the body of evidence about manufacturing lapses at the company.

    > For the portion of the examination focused on Boeing, the FAA conducted 89 product audits, a type of review that looks at aspects of the production process. The plane maker passed 56 of the audits and failed 33 of them, with a total of 97 instances of alleged noncompliance, according to the presentation.

    > The FAA also conducted 13 product audits for the part of the inquiry that focused on Spirit AeroSystems, which makes the fuselage, or body, of the 737 MAX. Six of those audits resulted in passing grades, and seven resulted in failing ones, the presentation said.

    > At one point during the examination, the air-safety agency observed mechanics at Spirit using a hotel key card to check a door seal, according to a document that describes some of the findings. That action was “not identified/documented/called-out in the production order,” the document said.

    > In another instance, the FAA saw Spirit mechanics apply liquid Dawn soap to a door seal “as lubricant in the fit-up process,” according to the document. The door seal was then cleaned with a wet cheesecloth, the document said, noting that instructions were “vague and unclear on what specifications/actions are to be followed or recorded by the mechanic.”

    16
    NTSB investigating small plane crash in Oregon that left 'no survivors'
    www.seattletimes.com NTSB investigating small plane crash in Oregon that left ‘no survivors’

    Authorities say a small plane crash in a remote area of central Oregon has killed everyone on board.

    NTSB investigating small plane crash in Oregon that left ‘no survivors’

    > The Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office said a 911 call around 7:40 p.m. Sunday reported the crash outside the city of Madras, and deputies found the site with the help of power company officials.

    > “Due to the extent of the crash there were no survivors,” the sheriff’s Facebook post said.

    > Authorities did not specify the number of passengers in the single-engine plane. The sheriff’s office says it won’t release the names of the victims until identities are confirmed and families are notified.

    > The National Transportation Safety Board said it has opened an investigation into the crash, which involved a Piper PA-32. It will oversee the probe along with the Federal Aviation Administration, the sheriff’s office said.

    > The NTSB said one of its investigators arrived at the site Monday afternoon to document the wreckage before it’s sent to a secure facility for further evaluation.

    > Local power company officials found the wreckage after looking into a power outage in the area, the federal agency said in an email.

    0
    Boeing to face ‘enormous’ scrutiny after mishaps: Buttigieg
    www.seattletimes.com Boeing to face ‘enormous’ scrutiny after mishaps: Buttigieg

    Boeing has faced scrutiny from lawmakers, regulators and increasingly passengers after a series of high-profile flight incidents this year.

    Boeing to face ‘enormous’ scrutiny after mishaps: Buttigieg

    > U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said the Federal Aviation Administration will rigorously assess Boeing after the blowout of a fuselage section on an Alaska Airlines flight in January.

    > To maintain airline safety, “that means an enormous amount of rigor in dealing with Boeing, in dealing with any regulatory issue,” Buttigieg said on Fox News Sunday. “And that’s exactly what the FAA is doing.”

    > Boeing has faced scrutiny from lawmakers, regulators and increasingly passengers after a series of high-profile flight incidents this year, most notably the blowout of a fuselage section on a brand-new 737 MAX 9 during an Alaska Airlines flight in January.

    > Shares of Boeing fell 1.6% in premarket U.S. trading on Monday, after reports over the weekend that the Justice Department opened a criminal investigation into the Alaska Air incident. The head of Delta Air Lines Inc. told Bloomberg separately that he expects further delays to the yet-to-be certified 737 MAX 10.

    24
    WA expanding health care options for undocumented immigrants
    www.seattletimes.com WA expanding health care options for undocumented immigrants

    Lawmakers added $28.4 million, nearly twice as much as its first allocation, to continue helping undocumented immigrants who applied for coverage.

    WA expanding health care options for undocumented immigrants

    > By the close of Washington’s legislative session last week, state lawmakers had added more funding to help reduce health care insurance costs for undocumented immigrants, as the state also prepares to expand Apple Health, its free or low-cost health insurance, to the same population in July.

    > This year, the Legislature added $28.4 million, nearly twice as much as its first allocation of such funding during the 2023 session, to continue helping the 16,000 individuals who applied for coverage during the recent enrollment period, which ended Jan. 15.

    > In May 2022, Washington was the first state to file a waiver application to allow undocumented immigrants to buy private health insurance; a year later, the waiver was approved by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of the Treasury.

    > The waiver meant undocumented immigrants could apply for Medicaid or shop for private health care insurance through Healthplanfinder, the website to apply for health care in Washington.

    > Mixed-status families, or families with different citizenship or immigration statuses, can also purchase private insurance coverage together.

    3
    Russia’s Starlink use sparks probe into SpaceX compliance with US sanctions
    arstechnica.com Russia’s Starlink use sparks probe into SpaceX compliance with US sanctions

    Despite US sanctions, Russia using Starlink "to coordinate attacks" in Ukraine.

    Russia’s Starlink use sparks probe into SpaceX compliance with US sanctions

    > Democratic lawmakers are probing SpaceX over Russia's reported use of Starlink in Ukraine, saying that recent developments raise questions about SpaceX's "compliance with US sanctions and export controls."

    > SpaceX CEO Elon Musk last month denied what he called "false news reports [that] claim that SpaceX is selling Starlink terminals to Russia," saying that, "to the best of our knowledge, no Starlinks have been sold directly or indirectly to Russia." But Musk's statement didn't satisfy US Reps. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) and Robert Garcia (D-Calif.), who sent a letter to SpaceX President Gwynne Shotwell yesterday.

    > "Starlink is an invaluable resource for Ukrainians in their fight against Russia's brutal and illegitimate invasion. It is alarming that Russia may be obtaining and using your technology to coordinate attacks against Ukrainian troops in illegally occupied regions in Eastern and Southern Ukraine, potentially in violation of US sanctions and export controls," Raskin and Garcia wrote.

    > Musk has also stated that "Starlink satellites will not close the link in Russia." However, the concerns raised by Rankin and Garcia are about whether Russia used the broadband service in Ukraine. Their letter said that Ukraine last month "released intercepted audio communications between Russian soldiers that indicated Russian forces had illegally deployed and activated Starlink terminals in certain Russian-occupied areas in Eastern Ukraine."

    38
    After Astra loses 99 percent of its value, founders take rocket firm private

    > Astra's long, strange trip in the space business is taking another turn. The company announced Thursday that it is going private at an extremely low valuation.

    > Four years ago, the rocket company, based in Alameda, California, emerged from stealth with grand plans to develop a no-frills rocket that could launch frequently. "The theme that really makes this company stand out, which will capture the imagination of our customers, our investors, and our employees, is the idea that every day we will produce and launch a rocket," Astra co-founder Chris Kemp said during a tour of the factory in February 2020.

    > Almost exactly a year later, on February 2, 2021, Astra went public via a special purpose acquisition company (or SPAC). "The transaction reflects an implied pro-forma enterprise value for Astra of approximately $2.1 billion," the company stated at the time. For a time, the company's stock even traded above this valuation.

    > But then, rockets started failing. Only two of the seven launches of the company's "Rocket 3" vehicle were successful. In August 2022, the company announced a pivot to the larger Rocket 4 vehicle. It planned to begin conducting test launches in 2023, but that did not happen. Accordingly, the company's stock price plummeted.

    > Last November Kemp and the company's co-founder, Adam London, proposed to buy Astra shares at $1.50, approximately double their price. The company's board of directors did not accept the deal. Then, in late February, Kemp and London sharply cut their offer to take the company private, warning of "imminent bankruptcy" if the company doesn’t accept their new proposal. They offered $0.50 a share, well below the trading value of approximately $0.80 a share

    > On Thursday, Astra said that this deal was being consummated.

    10
    Attack wrangles thousands of web users into a password-cracking botnet
    arstechnica.com Attack wrangles thousands of web users into a password-cracking botnet

    Ongoing attack targeting thousands of sites, continues to grow.

    Attack wrangles thousands of web users into a password-cracking botnet

    > Attackers have transformed hundreds of hacked sites running WordPress software into command-and-control servers that force visitors’ browsers to perform password-cracking attacks.

    > A web search for the JavaScript that performs the attack showed it was hosted on 708 sites at the time this post went live on Ars, up from 500 two days ago. Denis Sinegubko, the researcher who spotted the campaign, said at the time that he had seen thousands of visitor computers running the script, which caused them to reach out to thousands of domains in an attempt to guess the passwords of usernames with accounts on them.

    > Visitors unwittingly recruited

    > “This is how thousands of visitors across hundreds of infected websites unknowingly and simultaneously try to bruteforce thousands of other third-party WordPress sites,” Sinegubko wrote. “And since the requests come from the browsers of real visitors, you can imagine this is a challenge to filter and block such requests.”

    > Like the hacked websites hosting the malicious JavaScript, all the targeted domains are running the WordPress content management system. The script—just 3 kilobits in size—reaches out to an attacker-controlled getTaskURL, which in turn provides the name of a specific user on a specific WordPress site, along with 100 common passwords. When this data is fed into the browser visiting the hacked site, it attempts to log into the targeted user account using the candidate passwords. The JavaScript operates in a loop, requesting tasks from the getTaskURL reporting the results to the completeTaskURL, and then performing the steps again and again.

    3
    Chinese hacking industry linked to the state through connections, alcohol, and sex, leak reveals
    www.seattletimes.com Chinese hacking industry linked to the state through connections, alcohol, and sex, leak reveals

    China’s hacking industry, leaked internal documents reveal, is vast in size and scope but also suffers from shady business practices, disgruntlement over pay and work quality, and poor security protocols.

    Chinese hacking industry linked to the state through connections, alcohol, and sex, leak reveals

    > China’s hackers-for-hire take government officials out for lavish banquets, binge drinking and late-night karaoke with young women in a bid to win favor and business, as revealed in a highly unusual leak last month of internal documents from a private contractor linked to Chinese police.

    > China’s hacking industry is vast in size and scope but also suffers from shady business practices, disgruntlement over pay and work quality, and poor security protocols, the documents show.

    > Private hacking contractors are companies that steal data from other countries to sell to the Chinese authorities. Over the past two decades, Chinese state security’s demand for overseas intelligence has soared, giving rise to a vast network of these private hackers-for-hire companies that have infiltrated hundreds of systems outside China.

    > Though the existence of these hacking contractors is an open secret in China, little was known about how they operate. But the leaked documents from a firm called I-Soon have pulled back the curtain, revealing a seedy, sprawling industry where corners are cut and rules are murky and poorly enforced in the quest to make money.

    5
    Judge denies Trump request to delay $83.3 million payment to E. Jean Carroll

    > The federal judge who oversaw a New York defamation trial that resulted in an $83.3 million award to a longtime magazine columnist who says Donald Trump raped her in the 1990s refused Thursday to relieve the ex-president from the verdict's financial pinch.

    > Judge Lewis A. Kaplan told Trump's attorney in a written order that he won't delay deadlines for posting a bond that would ensure 80-year-old writer E. Jean Carroll can be paid the award if the judgment survives appeals.

    > The judge said any financial harm to the Republican front-runner for the presidency results from his slow response to the late-January verdict in the defamation case resulting from statements Trump made about Carroll while he was president in 2019 after she revealed her claims against him in a memoir.

    7
    Iowa House OKs bill to criminalize death of an "unborn person" despite IVF concerns
    www.seattletimes.com Iowa House OKs bill to criminalize death of an “unborn person” despite IVF concerns

    Republicans in Iowa’s House of Representatives have approved a bill that would criminalize the death of an “unborn person” — over Democrats’ concerns about how it might impact in vitro fertilization.

    Iowa House OKs bill to criminalize death of an “unborn person” despite IVF concerns

    > DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Republicans in Iowa’s House of Representatives approved a bill Thursday that would criminalize the death of an “unborn person” — over Democrats’ concerns about how it might apply to in vitro fertilization, after an Alabama court found frozen embryos can be considered children.

    > Iowa’s law currently outlines penalties for termination or serious injury to a “human pregnancy,” but the proposed bill would amend the language to pertain to “causing of death of, or serious injury to, an unborn person,” defined as “an individual organism … from fertilization to live birth.”

    > It’s one of many bills being considered by state Legislatures around the country that would expand legal and constitutional protections for embryos and fetuses, a long-time goal of the anti-abortion movement.

    > The bill still would need to pass the state Senate and be signed by Gov. Kim Reynolds to become law.

    10
    Iconic Old West tumbleweeds roll in and blanket parts of suburban Salt Lake City
    www.seattletimes.com Iconic Old West tumbleweeds roll in and blanket parts of suburban Salt Lake City

    Tumbleweeds, the gnarled icon of the Old West, rolled in over the weekend and kept rolling until blanketing some homes and streets in suburban Salt Lake City.

    Iconic Old West tumbleweeds roll in and blanket parts of suburban Salt Lake City

    > The gnarled icon of the Old West — ominously featured in movies as gunslingers square off on dusty streets and townsfolk shake behind curtained windows — rolled in over the weekend and kept rolling until blanketing some homes and streets in suburban Salt Lake City.

    > Crews on Tuesday continued to plow, load and haul carcasses of twisted and dried tumbleweeds from neighborhoods in South Jordan, Utah, four days after scores of the beachball-sized plants were bounced in by heavy winds.

    > “People woke up Saturday morning and it looked like these huge walls had been erected made of tumbleweed,” said Dawn Ramsey, South Jordan’s mayor. “We had entire streets in some of our neighborhoods completely blocked. They wrapped around homes.”

    13
    Appeals court blocks Fla. ‘Stop Woke Act,’ says it’s a ‘First Amendment sin’
    www.washingtonpost.com Appeals court blocks Fla. ‘Stop Woke Act,’ says it’s a ‘First Amendment sin’

    A three-judge panel on Monday ruled that the “Stop Woke Act,” backed by Gov. Ron DeSantis, “exceeds the bounds” of the U.S. Constitution’s First Amendment.

    Appeals court blocks Fla. ‘Stop Woke Act,’ says it’s a ‘First Amendment sin’

    > A federal appeals court on Monday upheld a ruling that blocked Florida from enforcing a law, backed by Gov. Ron DeSantis, that restricts how private companies teach diversity and inclusion in the workplace.

    > A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit ruled Monday that the “Stop Woke Act” “exceeds the bounds” of the U.S. Constitution’s First Amendment right to freedom of speech and expression in its attempts to regulate workplace trainings on race, color, sex and national origin. The appeals court upheld a federal judge’s August 2022 ruling that said the same.

    > “By limiting its restrictions to a list of ideas designated as offensive, the Act targets speech based on its content. And by barring only speech that endorses any of those ideas, it penalizes certain viewpoints — the greatest First Amendment sin,” Judge Britt C. Grant wrote in Monday’s opinion.

    > The “Stop Woke Act” was approved by the Republican-controlled Florida legislature in March 2022. The act was one of DeSantis’s top priorities, and before he dropped out as a possible candidate for president in 2024, it was a routine talking point on the campaign trail.

    4
    GlitzyArmrest GlitzyArmrest @lemmy.world
    Posts 75
    Comments 557