Blog Page 40

The Latest on the NCAA Football Tournament

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This past weekend saw the first round of the NCAA football tournament kick off. Here are the results and some of the latest news surrounding the games.

LSU AND CLEMSON TO FACE IN COLLEGE NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP: DATE AND MATCHUP OF TIGERS

Fiesta Bowl: Trevor Lawrence leads Clemson past Ohio State, into national title game

Clemson rallies to beat Ohio State

Burrow throws seven TD passes, LSU routs Oklahoma, 63-28

How LSU coordinator fought through personal tragedy

So there you have it, LSU dominated Oklahoma and Clemson won a tightly contested game against Ohio State to meet in the National Championship. Also, it is a terrible tragedy that the LSU Offensive Coordinator Steve Ensminger’s daughter-in-law lost her life in a plane crash on her way to the game. Needless to say, both LSU and Clemson should be more than motivated to duke it out for the National Championship in the coming weeks.

Mozilla Drags Google and Microsoft in Joining Its Mission

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Since Mozilla came up with the plan to change standards for retrieving data from the web, there has been mixed reactions from the internet community at large. Some people are in for the idea (huge tech companies), but the public wants to hear none of it.

Recent developments have assured us that their quest will come to reality sooner than expected. Tech giants Microsoft and Google seem to be interested in the move.

It, therefore, means that corporations that sell internet access to subscribers won’t know what their subscribers are up to.

It’s the only reason why these corporations are a major stumbling block to Mozilla’s new protocol.  The corporations argue that the move brings a significant threat to web operations. Known as DoH (DNS over HTTPS), the contract prevents scammers by cloaking sources for web traffic.

So does this mean that our privacy will be traded for money? If the protocol goes through, will the government listen to the plea of the corporations? If so, can they step in and help?

How Transmission Occurs

Mozilla Foundation began the project 23 months ago. By September of the first year, they tested to route traffic automatically using Cloudflare’s DNS service in San Francisco. Because the trial passed they decided to try it on other platforms.

This is how the process works. It begins with a DNS (Domain Name System), which resolves letters written onto the browsers.  The URL then dissects the information more clearly and sends the page you were looking for to the IP address.

Now, these codes are not only seen by the servers and network operators like Internet Service Providers. They are also visible to scammers who monitors every move and collect data directing them to sites that are not genuine.

Here is where the protocol comes in. Its task is to keep off the malicious eyes that want to get maximum profit after noticing the pages you search for on the web. The DNS does this by concealing the Internet Protocol Address of your computer.

In March 2018, Google decided to join Mozilla to test DNS and make it stronger. It reported that it would use its DNS service that already records a whopping 400 billion requests every single day to encrypt data.

Not to forget that Microsoft also followed suit, but it’s not yet identified if it will go the same way Mozilla did.

What you should know is that Mozilla uses silos that are stored in the servers. It’s these silos when combined with DNS’ shrouding requests, that are causing an uproar.

In most European countries, some rules and regulations regulate the access of some content, for instance, adult content. According to some ISPs, the set encryption will bar them from adhering to such laws in the USA.

Why does it matter to you?

The move, without doubt, will help large companies already earning billions of dollars to get more profits. They do this by limiting hackers who can slip viruses into their digital platforms as employees continue with their day-to-day activities in the computers.

However, with the added layer of security, it’s no doubt that you will have to prepare additional chunks of dollars to market your product/services on google. Plus, if you add the threat of silos getting attacked, the disruption may be more than we anticipate.

The Latest on Deadpool 3

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Since Disney’s acquisition of Fox, many have wondered if and when we will be getting another movie with Deadpool. The merc with a mouth last appeared in Deadpool 2, which was another big success for Fox. Here is the latest on the next movie.

“It’s like the big leagues”: Ryan Reynolds confirms ‘Deadpool 3’ underway with Marvel Studios

Ryan Reynolds Says Deadpool 3 Is Currently in Development: ‘We’re Working on It Right Now’

Ryan Reynolds Confirms ‘Deadpool 3’ Is In The Works

So not only is Deadpool 3 on the way, it is currently being worked on!

One of the most exciting things from this news is that the whole team is returning to work on the sequel, so we should get the same quality release whenever it comes out. We have yet to see if this will be connected to the MCU or what is going on there, but it sure is an exciting time to be a Marvel fan!

Tour Helicopter Carrying 7 People Missing in Hawaii

A tour helicopter failed to return from its planned trip off the coast of Kauai in Hawaii on Thursday afternoon. The missing persons have not been named but include six tourists, two of whom are reported to be minors, and the pilot.

Per the Coast guard the helicopter is equipped with a tracking device but there have been no signals received as of Friday morning. It is believed that a sudden cold front caused rough wind and weather patterns that may have affected the flight pattern. The Coast Guard is readying more of their own helicopters and personnel to continue the search today.

What is holding up the coast guard?

The company waited 45 minutes before reporting the tour missing.

What is the next step?

One of the most dangerous volcanoes in America is on Kauai.

Weather on Friday expected to make the search more difficult.

Blue Jays vs. White Sox: Comparing Rebuilds

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An underreported aspect of the road from gutting rebuild to contention is the bridge. This is the time from when a team is terrible, intends to be terrible, knows it’s terrible and the results are terrible to when their keeper prospects are beginning to show their talent and marked improvement is clear. Even if the win-loss column and place in the standings is only slightly better, if at all.

At that point, surprisingly aggressive and costly additions will be made to take the next incremental step. Two teams that have determined they are in the bridge portion of their rebuilds are the Toronto Blue Jays and Chicago White Sox.

As they get closer to legitimate contention, it is valuable to assess which team is ahead of the other.

Toronto Blue Jays

When Mark Shapiro was hired away from the Cleveland Indians to take over as team president after the 2015 season, he allowed the team built by Alex Anthopoulos to run its course despite his preference to maintain a cost-controlled and flexible club, eschewing Anthopoulos’ strategy to make massive trades for stars Josh Donaldson, David Price, Troy Tulowitzki and R.A. Dickey to add to Jose Bautista and Edwin Encarnacion.

Once Anthopoulos was gone, Shapiro let the existing template stay in place for one more year and set about gutting it to build a team that suits his aesthetic – the one he was so successful with in Cleveland. By 2019, Shapiro and general manager Ross Atkins’ blueprint began to bear fruit with Vladmir Guerrero Jr., Cavan Biggio and Bo Bichette reaching the majors and establishing themselves as future linchpins. Trading away Marcus Stroman yielded Anthony Kay, who is close to Major League-ready.

The pieces are in place for a relatively expedient move into moderate contention. Thus far, Shapiro has stuck to the script without going overboard. The signing of Hyun-Jin Ryu for four-years at $80 million is, at first glance, an overpay. For context, Ryu is being paid more than Madison Bumgarner. The Dodgers were skillful in protecting and cocooning him. Once he’s out of Los Angeles and in a different environment, that signing could end up biting the Blue Jays.

Still, he didn’t cost them a draft pick and it sent a message that the Blue Jays are willing to spend and even overspend for a prominent free agent. Their estimated payroll is sufficiently reduced and they will have money to spend when the time comes to go for it.

That time is not now. In the American League East, the New York Yankees are a powerhouse; the Boston Red Sox, despite their ongoing retooling, have playoff-caliber talent; and the Tampa Bay Rays won 96 games in 2019 and shook the eventual pennant-winning Houston Astros in the Division Series.

However, they’re no longer a pushover nor are they looking to clear onerous, inherited contracts that were in place when the new regime took charge.

Chicago White Sox

To be blunt, general manager Rick Hahn’s hardest job was convincing owner Jerry Reinsdorf and executive vice-president Ken Williams to abandon the years of fruitless patchwork and accept that a full-blown rebuild was necessary. They had been awful for years with Chris Sale as the headlining star. The farm system was barren, the payroll was bloated, the clubhouse was toxic, and there was little hope that anything would change anytime soon. So, they gutted it.

As for the return on the trades, it does not diminish the positive outcomes of getting Yoan Moncada, Eloy Jimenez, Dylan Cease and Lucas Giolito for their name players to say that it’s not the most difficult job in the world to scour a trade partner’s prospects and acquire them for the likes of Sale, Adam Eaton and Jose Quintana.

The rebuild seems to have gone on longer than it really has because the team was so catastrophically bad in the four years prior to them capitulating and trading Sale, Eaton and Quintana. It only started in full in 2017. So, three years in, it’s been in-progress for the exact same amount of time as the Blue Jays’.

The White Sox have been more aggressive than the Blue Jays in the past two seasons. One year ago, they made noise about pursuing Bryce Harper and Manny Machado, but got neither. This offseason, they have made notable signings of Yasmani Grandal (four-years, $73 million), Dallas Keuchel (three-years, $55.5 million) and Edwin Encarnacion (one-year, $12 million).

Grandal might have appeared to be overkill after James McCann’s breakout season, but it was a coldblooded and likely accurate assessment to trust McCann’s career history as a defense-first backstop who had occasional pop and was a good clubhouse presence. If nothing else, he can catch 40 games to keep Grandal fresh as a designated hitter or he is decent trade bait at a relatively low cost ($5.4 million) before he is a free agent after 2020. Encarnacion is a pure slugger and solid voice in the clubhouse.

Retaining Jose Abreu, trading for the talented and underachieving Nomar Mazara, trusting the rise of Tim Anderson – all are acceptable moves as a means to an end of achieving their goal. Like the Blue Jays, they will have money to spend once the team is ready to go for it.

Who’s ahead?

In terms of talent level, the Blue Jays have the deeper every day player prospect foundation. While Moncada has MVP-potential, so does Guerrero. Bichette and Biggio are, at minimum, solid cogs for a contending team – exactly the type of low-risk players who have lower ceilings than the Moncada-type, but also a higher floor.

That may be the key: the philosophy. Shapiro hedges while Hahn – likely pushed by Williams – rolls the dice. The difference between the two front offices is that Shapiro has a documented history of tearing his club down only to build it back up. He did it twice in Cleveland and is adhering to the same structure in Toronto. The Blue Jays signing Ryu was costlier and a bigger gamble than the White Sox signing Keuchel; Grandal adds another layer of offense and defense with his pitch-framing skills.

The divisions are relevant here as well. While the Blue Jays are stuck in a very difficult AL East, the White Sox have two teams in the American League Central – the Kansas City Royals and Detroit Tigers – who lost 100+ games in 2019 and have done little to improve, granting divisional foes some relatively easy wins the Blue Jays will not have access to. The Indians are retooling; the Minnesota Twins won 101 games largely due to the awfulness of the Tigers, Royals and the general badness of the White Sox. They have done nothing to improve.

The division, while not open, is one in which the White Sox can compete if their young players continue to improve and Keuchel, Grandal and Encarnacion maintain their usual standard of production.

Based on the idea of a rebuild being to get to a position where the playoffs are a possibility, circumstances put the White Sox slightly ahead.

Christianity Today Editorial Calls Trump “Profoundly Immoral”

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Yesterday the Evangelical magazine Christianity Today featured an editorial piece written by Timothy Dalrymple, the current president of the magazine, that called for Christians to question their support of President Donald Trump. The Evangelical community has been a staunch supporter of President Trump, citing his pro-Christian and pro-family values. Mr Dalrymple says that “rampant immorality, greed, and corruption; his divisiveness and race-baiting; his cruelty and hostility to immigrants and refugees” should be a deterrent and a trigger of conscience for those who support President Trump. There has been an outcry both in defense of and against the editorial.

Christianity Today “Wrong about Trump.”

“[This is] now a matter of faith, not politics”

“Christianity Today had courage to speak out.”

What do others have to say on this opinion?

Does the Evangelical Community agree?

Kevin Spacey Resurrects Frank Underwood in Holiday Video

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Kevin Spacey has breathed additional life into the iconic political gangster character Frank Underwood from House of Cards once more. Posting a video to his YouTube channel, Spacey in all his South Carolina accent might wishes everyone a happy holiday and encourages us all to “kill” our critics “with kindness.”

It was exactly one year ago that Spacey posted another video, which was widely received as creepy, given the legal issues he faced at the time. Allegations of sexual assault, groping of a minor, and other accusations made at the Oscar winning actor have followed him since news first broke.

Earlier this year, U.S. prosecutors did drop the charges against Spacey for allegedly groping a teenager at a bar in 2016, which Spacey denied doing.

Other media outlets are calling this year’s holiday video featuring Spacey as Frank Underwood “creepy”, “uncomfortable”, and “bizarre.”

 

Co-founder of Uber Cuts Ties with Company to Focus on New Company

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Travis Kalanick, co-founder of Uber, cut his final ties with the company, this week. He stated that at the end of the decade it seemed time to leave, in order to focus on his new business and “philanthropic pursuits.”

This completes his separation from the company after he was forced out of the chief executive position in March, 2018 following a series of controversies surrounding the company’s business practices. Mr Kalanick will officially step away from Uber Technologies on December 31st of 2019.

What is next for Travis Kalanick?

Cutting ties and selling shares. What does Travis know?

Uber shares drop since the company went public.

Uber updates image after sexual assault report

Uber Technologies and their potentially shady business dealings. Why was Kalanick forced out.

 

 

Are U.S. Tech Giants Knowingly Benefiting from African Child Labor and Slavery?

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What do you get if you search the term “child labor” on Konsume?

You’ll see news results highlighting the fact that U.S tech giants such as Tesla, Apple, Dell, Microsoft, and Google are being accused of aiding child labor and slavery in Congo.

The lawsuit is the first of its kind brought against the largest tech companies at the same time. The suit was filed by International Rights Advocates on behalf of 14 parents and children from the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).

Just how are they aiding such horrific activity in a country that traffics in corruption, child and slave labor, and a crushing 73% poverty rate?

Cobalt.

John Doe, who lost a leg while mining cobalt.

That is the resource these children are being forced to mine for these tech giants so consumers can continue to enjoy the latest and greatest in smart phone, smart car, and smart everything technology.

This suit is directly accusing the named companies of “knowingly benefiting from and aiding and abetting the cruel and brutal use of young children in Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) to mine cobalt, a key component of every rechargeable lithium-ion battery used in the electronic devices these companies manufacture.”

Five children have already been killed working these mines and 11 others were injured. Images from the lawsuit show children who have lost limbs, have had limbs crushed, and become paralyzed from the chest down to highlight the dangers and horror these children and families face each day.

The children shown in the lawsuit are considered to be “lucky” because they managed to escape the mines with their lives.

It can be difficult to imagine and understand a world in which slavery still exists. But, that very thing is still rampant in underdeveloped parts of the world because only so much can be immediately done to force the corrupt, the abusers, and the perverted to end such practices.

A boys leg was serious injured after being crushed.

Africa has the largest number of child laborers in the world, with an estimated 72 million African children being forced into labor of some kind. Nearly 32 million of those children are in a hazardous line of work, such as mining cobalt directly or indirectly for companies who may have direct or indirect ties to the accused tech giants.

Studies have shown that nearly 59% of all child laborers in Africa are between 5 and 11 years old. Another 26% are between 12 and 14, and then 15% are between 15 and 17. Child labor, and in some cases outright slavery, skews much younger their than anywhere else in the world.

Even though the DRC is one of the poorest and most politically unstable countries in the world, it produces over 55% of the world’s cobalt. This uncertain nature regarding the political climate, labor practices, and mine operations are leading reasons why cobalt is classified as a critical raw material by the EU.

It also helps explain why major tech companies and foreign governments are so eager to get as much from the DRC as they possibly can. There’s just no telling when the situation on the ground could get worse politically, when working conditions at the mines become unmanageable that operations and production halts as a result, or that increased pressure from human rights groups and the international community becomes so intense that regulation in some form is forced on companies that seemingly have direct or indirect ties to such operations.

Given the fact global cobalt production has tripled in the past five years, as a result of global demand, and is looking to double by the end of 2020 – more injuries and deaths of children and other laborers will continue if it is not seriously addressed.

Media coverage in the United States, and from many other developed nations who rely on cobalt as a vital resource for tech, has been scant at best with just over a dozen unique news stories written about this humanitarian crisis. The vast majority of other mentions simply include the original AP article released. It’s a common tactic in news media that ‘if it bleeds it leads’, but perhaps that only applies to specific types of horrific news stories that can be glamorized and spun-up in a click-bait way.

Children being forced into hard labor, working mines for slave wages, and being cast aside when they die or become injured in a way that will negatively impact their lives forever isn’t sexy. It’s sad.

Who would want to call attention to something like that?

New Lawsuit Against Harvey Weinstein Involves a Minor

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While the lawsuits against Harvey Weinstein have not been in the forefront of the news, recently, a mass settlement was being brokered. This massive $45 million settlement was slated to fix all prior allegations against Mr. Weinstein and his subsidiaries. A new allegation has just come to light, however, and could break down all of the negotiations.

A former teen model from Poland claims that at 16 years old, Harvey Weinstein took advantage of his situation and sexually assaulted her. The now 33 year old clinical psychiatrist is refusing to join in the group settlement, claiming that it isn’t enough. This is the first case against Harvey Weinstein involving a minor.

Learn more about the mass group settlement

Former teen model describes the events leading up to the accusation

Will this affect Miramax? See who else involved in this claim

Original lawyer of accuser called her claim “preposterous”

Former aspiring actor claims Harvey Weinstein sexually assaulted her at 16: Lawsuit