Sarah Palin teases DC return as supporters call for ‘Mother of Maga’ to get Cabinet post
Gov. Ritchie Torres? Bronx Democrat calls for Hochul to stand down: ‘The new Joe Biden’
Torres has been making inroads in recent months, especially with business interests. The former city councilmember has also been a strong supporter of Israel since Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack.
nypost.com
Wisconsin kayaker who faked his death has resurfaced in Europe after elaborate plot
Wisconsin authorities say they have not yet issued a warrant for Ryan Borgwardt, who is believed to be somewhere in Eastern Europe. But that can change if he does not cooperate and return home soon.
npr.org
MSNBC contributor warns Trump’s new AG pick Pam Bondi should spark ‘fear’— ‘because she’s competent’
"She is a dangerous and effective pick, and that’s frankly worse," political science professor, Jason Johnson said.
nypost.com
Al Roker Shares Rare Photos of Daughter Leila Celebrating Major Milestone
The weatherman who shares two kids with his wife Deborah Roberts, posted heartwarming photos in honor of his daughter's recent life milestone.
newsweek.com
Supreme Court Dismisses Meta's Appeal to Block Multibillion-Dollar Suit
The high court left in place an appellate ruling allowing the case to move forward.
newsweek.com
MLB News: Baseball Auction Could Mean Millions for 10-Year-Old Dodgers Fan
The family that left Dodger Stadium with the baseball Freddie Freeman hit to end Game 1 of the 2024 World Series stands to make millions from the ball auction.
newsweek.com
Student Charged With Spying on US Embassy for Russia, Iran
Police arrested the suspect in his garage after uncovering records of alleged communication with a foreign handler.
newsweek.com
Judge Reduces Sentence of Jan. 6 Rioter Who Called Him a 'Clown'
"In my 22 years as a judge, I've never seen a defendant say the things he said at sentencing," the judge said.
newsweek.com
St. John’s appears to get screwed in clock controversy in heartbreaking loss — and it was reviewable
Television replays showed that the clock didn’t start on time after Zuby Ejiofor missed the second of two free throws with 4.1 seconds left in the Johnnies’ 99-98 double OT loss.
nypost.com
There can be life after the Giants — Sterling Shepard can attest to it
There was so much losing for Sterling Shepard with the Giants and it continues on without him, as the Giants take a 2-8 record into Sunday’s game against the Buccaneers.
nypost.com
Diddy blows kisses at family in court where he’s asking judge – again- to grant him bail in sex trafficking case
Prosecutors with the Manhattan US Attorneys Office have argued that Combs poses an “extreme danger to the community."
nypost.com
First Bird Flu Case in a US Child Confirmed in California: CDC
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has detected the first case of a child in the U.S. becoming infected with the H5N1 virus.
newsweek.com
How much are tickets to see Julión Álvarez in concert at SoFi Stadium?
The former Banda MS frontman has three concerts lined up at the Rams home field next year.
nypost.com
Ruben Amorim se declara ‘el indicado’ para revitalizar al Man United
El nuevo director técnico del Manchester United, Ruben Amorim, se declaró un “soñador” el viernes y dijo que puede tener éxito donde muchos han fracasado para intentar revivir al legendario equipo del fútbol inglés.
latimes.com
Ex-CNN anchor who ran for Congress says Democrats have become 'party of the status quo'
Former CNN host and failed congressional candidate John Avlon admitted the Democratic Party was perceived as the "party of the status quo" by American voters this election cycle.
foxnews.com
La NBA insta a los jugadores a aumentar la vigilancia en la seguridad del hogar tras robos
La NBA instó a sus jugadores a tomar precauciones adicionales para asegurar sus hogares tras los informes de recientes robos en las casas del alero de los Bucks de Milwaukee, Bobby Portis; el escolta de los Timberwolves de Minnesota, Mike Conley Jr.; y de los jugadores de los Chiefs de Kansas City de la NFL, Patrick Mahomes y Travis Kelce.
latimes.com
Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Spellbound’ on Netflix, a Disney-Lite Animated Musical Starring Rachel Zegler
A princess contends with her parents, who've very much not figuratively been transformed into monsters.
nypost.com
‘Real Housewives of Potomac’ talent manager Matthew Byars dead at 37, Bravo stars pay tribute
"Your personality was infectious. Your jokes - you always had them."
nypost.com
Javier Mascherano cerca de llegar como técnico del Inter Miami, según fuente de AP
Lionel Messi está a punto de reunirse con su excompañero de la selección argentina Javier Mascherano en el Inter Miami, esta vez como jugador y entrenador, según informó a The Associated Press el viernes una persona que tiene conocimiento de las negociaciones.
latimes.com
Jonathan Majors’ ex-girlfriend Grace Jabbari drops defamation lawsuit against the actor
Former Marvel star Jonathan Majors and his ex-girlfriend Grace Jabbari agreed Thursday to dismiss her civil lawsuit with prejudice, court documents say.
latimes.com
AI detects woman’s breast cancer after routine screening missed it: 'Deeply grateful'
A U.K. woman had her breast cancer detected through AI after a routine mammogram came back as normal. Experts Drs. Nicole Saphier and Harvey Castro discuss the power of AI in cancer care.
foxnews.com
Democratic leader Jeffries rebuffs 'View' co-host's suggestion 'racism,' 'misogyny,' cost Harris election
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries argued the economy was the primary reason why President-elect Trump won the election after a "View" co-host blamed racism.
foxnews.com
Nancy Mace interrupted by trans activist at Georgetown summit | Reporter Replay
Rep. Nancy Mace fired back at a transgender activist who was thrown out of a tech conference for protesting her bathroom bill — later calling the agitator a “raging lunatic, pretending to be female.” The South Carolina Republican shared footage on Nov. 21 of Evan Greer standing with an LGBTQ flag and interrupting her appearance...
nypost.com
Letitia James Celebrates SiriusXM Lawsuit Win: How It Affects Subscribers
SiriusXM was found liable for making it difficult for customers to cancel their subscriptions in a lawsuit brought by James.
newsweek.com
'Conveyor belt of radicals': GOP slammed over Senate absences that helped Biden score more judges in lame duck
Republicans are facing backlash after President Biden and Majority Leader Schumer scored judicial wins as a result of GOP Senate absences.
foxnews.com
Red Sox Legend David Ortiz Reveals Involvement In Juan Soto Pursuit
Boston Red Sox legend David Ortiz goes into detail on his involvement in helping his former club acquire Juan Soto.
newsweek.com
NFL flexes upcoming 'Thursday Night Football' game for first time ever
The NFL is flexing a "Thursday Night Football" matchup in Week 16, an unprecedented move considering how different preparation is for Thursday and Sunday games.
foxnews.com
Texas offers Trump 1,400-acre border ranch for mass deportations: ‘Protect our children’
"I want these criminals who are hurting our sons and daughters off of our soil," said Texas Land Commissioner Dawn Buckingham to The Post.
nypost.com
‘Mystery’ chemical found in millions of Americans’ tap water could be toxic: ‘Good reason to investigate’
"A major goal of our work is to identify these chemicals and the reaction pathways through which they form," said Julian Fairey, an associate professor of civil engineering at the University of Arkansas.
nypost.com
You deserve a better browser than Google Chrome
Google Chrome is the most popular browser in the United States, but that doesn’t mean it’s the best. | Getty Images The Department of Justice asked a judge this week to break up Google. Chrome? Sell it off. Android? Same. Paying other companies to make Google Search the default? Cut that out. If the DOJ gets everything it wants, the entire technology industry would tilt on its axis. The internet, as we know it, would change. Which got me thinking: There are a lot of Google services that are hard to quit, especially Google’s ubiquitous search and, if you’re not an iPhone person, Android phones as your default option. But Chrome? It’s historically bad at privacy, and it’s hardly the best browser. So why wait for a judge to decide, when you can quit Chrome now and lessen Google’s stranglehold on your digital life? Plenty of other browsers, including Apple’s Safari and Mozilla’s Firefox, work just as well as Chrome and do not collect massive amounts of your data in the process. At the very least, you should wonder why you’re using Chrome, and whether that has anything to do with Google’s illegal monopoly over the search industry. It will take years before we know the outcome of Google’s big antitrust cases. (Yes, there are two: This one about Google’s illegal search monopoly, and there’s another about Google’s alleged monopoly in the online advertising industry). Google might not have to sell off Chrome and Android. Indeed, Google said on Thursday it does not want to do this. But there’s a very good chance Google will be forced to stop paying for the exclusive right to be the default search engine in browsers like Firefox and Safari, two legal experts told me. Regardless of the outcome, you do have a choice about how you access the web. Try quitting Chrome. If it doesn’t work out, you can always come back — Chrome, in some form, isn’t going away. It might even get better if Google ends up being forced to sell it off. The case against Google, briefly explained If you’re a Chrome user, the first thing you probably do when you open a tab is type a query into the box at the top of the browser. This initiates a Google search that returns a bunch of blue links, and before you know it, you’re learning everything you ever wanted to know about fennec foxes or whatever. Frankly, if you’re a Safari or Firefox user, the experience is probably the same. Google currently owns around 90 percent of the US search engine market. There are a lot of reasons why that’s true, and according to the DOJ and a long list of state attorneys general, the ways Google has maintained that dominance is also illegal. They sued Google in 2020, during the first Trump administration, and argued that the company violated federal antitrust laws by maintaining a monopoly over search and search advertising markets. (This followed a separate 2023 lawsuit that alleged Google of using anticompetitive conduct to maintain a monopoly over online advertising technology. That case is ongoing.) In August, Judge Amit P. Mehta did not mince his words in his ruling on the search engine case: “Google is a monopolist, and it has acted as one to maintain its monopoly.” He ruled that by paying companies to make Google the default browser in their browsers, Google illegally asserted its dominance over its competitors. The ruling also said that, thanks to its massive market share, Google has driven up rates for search ads. The fact that Google also owns both the most popular web browser, Chrome, and mobile operating system, Android, has further cemented its ability to steer more and more users towards its search monopoly. Think about it: For many people, Chrome is their main gateway into Google’s empire. And Google is their gateway to the internet as a whole. This is good for Google, because as you’re searching for stuff and browsing the web, it’s collecting data about you, which it then uses to sell targeted advertising, a business that generated $237.9 billion for Google in 2023. “It’s not illegal to have a monopoly,” said Mitch Stoltz, IP litigation director at the Electronic Frontier Foundation. “But it is illegal to leverage one’s monopoly power to maintain that monopoly, basically to stay a monopolist by means other than simply having the best product.” There’s little reason to believe Google will stop being synonymous with search any time soon, regardless of how good its search engine is and despite recent attempts from companies like Microsoft and OpenAI to make AI-powered search an innovative option. Google’s mobile operating system is on about half the phones in the US, and 2 out of 3 people use Chrome to access the web. So it’s not terribly surprising that the Justice Department wants Mehta to break up Google. While we don’t know what Mehta will do, we do know that this won’t be resolved any time soon. While Google will probably have to kill its sweetheart deal with Apple, which is worth as much as $20 billion, it seems unlikely that Google will have to sell Chrome and Android. If the issue is that Google could exploit those products to suppress rival search engines, the judge could simply order Google not to do that, according to Erik Hovenkamp, a professor at Cornell Law School. “If Google abides by that, then it gets to keep Chrome and Android,” Hovenkamp said. “A judge is not going to want to break up a big company that generates a lot of popular products, if it thinks that there’s a less intrusive remedy that would eliminate the bad conduct.” And again, Google really does not want to sell off Chrome and Android. Google said in a blog post in October, “Splitting off Chrome or Android would break them — and many other things” and would “raise the cost of devices.” Then again, if a judge forced Google to sell off Chrome and Android, the company could be forced to make its search engine better in order to fend off competition in the search engine business. But speculating can be a fool’s errand. What we do know is Chrome, at least for another year, is a gateway into the Google ecosystem, so much so you may have even forgotten that Google is watching everything you do when you’re using its browser. The case for ditching Chrome If you’ve been using Chrome because it came as the default browser on your phone, you might want to try something new. If you’ve been using Chrome for 15 years because it was so innovative when it was introduced, that’s no longer the case, and you should definitely try something new. There’s one big reason for this: Google Chrome is not the most privacy-friendly browser because that’s how the company wants it. This might seem obvious, based on the established fact that Google stands to benefit by knowing more about its users’ online activity. Critics have long argued Chrome doesn’t give its users as many tools to protect their privacy as competing browsers like Safari and Firefox. Google is also dealing with an ongoing class-action lawsuit from Chrome users who said the company collected their data without permission. That’s in addition to a lawsuit Google settled in April, when it agreed to delete the privacy browsing history of millions of people. Then there are cookies. In August, Google broke its promise to stop using third-party cookies in Chrome. That promise dates back to around 2020 when Safari and Firefox started blocking third-party cookies due to the potential harm they cause by tracking users across the web, but Google kept delaying its plans to phase out third-party cookies as it worked to develop an alternative that wouldn’t harm the advertising industry. Third-party cookies help deliver personalized ads, which is good for business. Google ultimately built something called the Privacy Sandbox that can also help deliver personalized ads in Chrome without using third-party cookies. But just for good measure, Google still allows third-party cookies in Chrome, too. By the way, you could argue that there’s no escaping online tracking anymore, especially when it comes to Google. “That’s the problem: It’s insidious,” said Sacha Haworth, executive director of the Tech Oversight Project. “We don’t ask to have our data scraped and compiled and sold to the highest bidder.” Google itself tracks users across the web using its suite of analytics tools. As many as 86 percent of the top 75,000 websites online run Google trackers. Google knows what you watch on YouTube, and although it no longer reads the contents of your messages to deliver personalized ads to you, Google does track your behavior on Gmail. Google also tracks your location and stores it in the cloud — it’s historically been so prolific at tracking phones that it became “a dragnet for the police” — although the company says it will stop doing this. If you are concerned about your privacy, there are better browsers than Chrome. Actually, based on several collections of browser reviews, just about every other browser is better than Chrome when it comes to privacy. And they’re all free. You’ve heard of Safari, which is the browser that comes with all Apple operating systems. Safari comes with a long list of privacy features that are enabled by default and even more you can turn on in settings. There’s also Firefox, which is an open source browser made by Mozilla that comes with its own suite of enhanced privacy settings. But a few browsers you may not have heard of that are worth checking out include DuckDuckGo, which also makes a privacy-centric search engine. There’s Brave, which promises to block ads and load webpages faster. And there’s Edge, Microsoft’s successor to Internet Explorer, which uses Bing as a search engine and Copilot as an AI assistant. There are actually a bunch of new, innovative web browsers that have cropped up in the last couple years. A company called, appropriately, the Browser Company has now released Arc for both Windows and Mac. It will reportedly change the way you think about browsing the web by working more like an operating system that lets you tweak and remix content. Vivaldi, which is only available for Mac, comes with a built-in email client. SigmaOS, another Mac-only option, calls itself “the new home for your internet.” In the ‘90s, Microsoft got in trouble because it bundled Internet Explorer with every copy of Windows. So if Windows was your operating system — and it was for more than 90 percent of Americans at the time — you probably used Internet Explorer. The big difference between then and now, when Google Chrome has over 60 percent of the market, is that the alternatives to Chrome are free and easy to find. You can literally click your mouse twice on this very webpage and download a Chrome replacement. “You know, I think it’s popular,” the Electronic Frontier Foundation’s Stoltz said of Chrome. “But people are also very just ingrained in their habits, so we also see a lot of just like, ‘Hey, just leave me alone to use Google.’” A federal judge has already decided Google’s monopoly over the search industry is illegal. It might be worth admitting that the company a little bit forced you to use Google. And at least as far as browsers are concerned, it’s not that hard to stop. As for what that judge will decide to do next. We’ll have to wait and see. Again, after the upcoming decisions are inevitably appealed, it will be years before we know the final outcome of Google’s antitrust cases. Some say it would be a shame for the government to waste the opportunity to crack down now. “If we want to be serious about addressing the predatory monopoly power and abuses of Google,” said Haworth, from the Tech Oversight Project. “We have to take more extreme measures.”
vox.com
Jonathan Majors and ex-girlfriend Grace Jabbari settle assault and defamation case
In a civil lawsuit this spring, the actor's former girlfriend alleged a "pattern of pervasive domestic abuse" in addition to defamation. Her legal team said the suit has been settled.
npr.org
Former cyber czar urges vigilance — "it's not the attackers… it's us"
A new study says 86% of businesses and organizations hit by cyberattacks were targeted on a weekend or holiday.
cbsnews.com
WATCH: Holiday travelers find ways to have fun at the airport
From dance performances to gate runways, these passengers are making the most of their time at the airport during holiday travel!
abcnews.go.com
University of Texas, MIT and others announce free tuition for some undergraduates
Nearly half a dozen institutions of higher education announced plans this week to make tuition free for undergraduates whose families make below a certain income threshold, starting in fall 2025.
npr.org
Pam Bondi could fix the DOJ and help provide justice for all
Trump new attorney general nominee Pam Bondi can rely on her experience as both a county prosecutor and as Florida AG. In that role, she championed anti-human-trafficking legislation.
foxnews.com
Lindsay Lohan spills the simple skincare routine that has her seemingly aging backwards
Less is more for the seasoned Hollywood vet, who has gone viral in recent weeks for her fresher-than-ever appearance.
nypost.com
Why That Chatbot Is So Good at Imitating Bart Simpson
Inside the Hollywood writing that fuels generative AI.
theatlantic.com
Chiefs' Andy Reid Reveals Isiah Pacheco, Charles Omenihu Playing Statuses for Week 12
The Chiefs coach has confirmed Isiah Pacheco and Charles Omenihu's status to play against the Panthers this Sunday.
newsweek.com
Florida mom held 14-year-old daughter’s head underwater in bathtub until she died
A Florida mom-from-hell held her 14-year-old daughter’s head underwater in a bathtub until she drowned, according to police. Another child and a roommate who lived in the home in the town of Poinciana found Kelsey Glover, 35, in the process of killing her child, Giselle, in an upstairs bathroom Wednesday, Sheriff Marcos Lopez told reporters...
nypost.com
ICE arrests alleged child sex predator, MS-13 gang member in Massachusetts
ICE officers operating in Massachusetts have arrested an alleged child sexual predator and MS-13 gang member in the last two weeks.
foxnews.com
Marjorie Taylor Greene to head new DOGE House subcommittee with plans to cut 'waste'
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene will chair a new subcommittee aimed at eliminating government waste under the newly formed “Department of Government Efficiency.”
abcnews.go.com
Giants exec slams ESPN's Elle Duncan after mocking Daniel Jones for reading statement prior to release
New York Giants senior vice president of communications Pat Hanlon took exception to ESPN's Elle Duncan's segment during Thursday's "SportsCenter" that mocked Daniel Jones.
foxnews.com
WWE Trademarks 'Edge,' Is Adam Copeland Returning?
Could WWE be trying to woo back Adam Copeland, the wrestler formerly known as Edge, from AEW?
newsweek.com
How California's Major Reservoirs Changed After Atmospheric River
One reservoir jumped by nearly 9 feet since Monday after a bomb cyclone and atmospheric river hit the region.
newsweek.com
Ex-detective warns parents of red flags with popular video game Roblox’s new rule
Parents were rejoicing this week as Roblox, the popular online game marketed to children, announced that they were introducing some big changes to their controversial chat features.
nypost.com
Ukraine Returns Kursk Civilians to Russia After Offensive
Forty-six displaced Russian civilians, who were forcibly taken to Ukraine during the Kursk offensive, have been returned to Russia.
newsweek.com
Baby’s first Christmas? Shop everything from toys to teethers at Nuby
We know Santa is shopping at Nuby this year.
nypost.com