M365 Copilot Chat agent usage is measured in “message” credits. These are charged either with a pay-as-you-go model at 1 cent per message, or with pre-paid message bundles priced at $200 for 25,000 messages, Microsoft said in a blog post.
Microsoft sets out four types of agent “answers,” or responses, that each consume a different number of message credits. For example, “classic” answers, used for pre-written responses that are manually authored when an agent is created, cost 1 message, while autonomous agent responses cost 25 messages.
Consumption-based licensing provides a low-cost alternative for customers that want to get started with Copilot services grounded in M365 content, said Larry Cannell, research director at Gartner’s Technical Professionals Digital Workplace service.
Canoo said on Friday night that it has and “will cease operations effective immediately,” after failing to secure enough funding to keep it going. The writing was on the wall for the EV startup leading up to the announcement; the company has lost multiple executives in recent months, and reported to the SEC in November that it had just $700,000 in the bank, per .
In a press release announcing the filing, Canoo said it was unable to get funding from the Department of Energy’s Loan Program Office or from “foreign sources of capital” that executives had been in talks with. “In light of the fact that these efforts were unsuccessful, the Board has made the difficult decision to file for insolvency,” it said. Canoo owes a total of over $164 million to hundreds creditors, and has about $126 million in assets, according to TechCrunch. Under the filing in Delaware, Canoo’s assets will be liquidated and the proceeds will be distributed to its creditors. In a statement, CEO Tony Aquila said, “We are truly disappointed that things turned out as they did.”
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It was a pattern that repeated itself over and over again. Trump, first as a candidate and then as a president, said outrageous things that fueled the media, which drove Democrats and the American people to engage. It was an endless circle that had nothing to do with Trump’s agenda. A source of constraint distraction that left the American people fatigued and wanted to get off an interminable ride of chaos.
Since Trump has very few plays in his playbook, he tried to start the chaos machine again. This time, he was going to take Greenland and make Canada a state.
The reaction was different this time.
The late-night hosts made their jokes, and cable news tried to make Trump’s statements into a thing. The outrage mongers on social media tried to whip a fury for clicks and eyeballs, but it quickly puttered out.
The main reason is that Democrats didn’t play along.
It is impossible to distract the country if half the nation won’t allow itself to be distracted.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) explained how the Democrats have changed strategies, “People in 2017 were deeply uncertain about what a Trump presidency would mean and wanted to raise their voices to try to influence them,” Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) explained to HuffPost. “This time, Trump and his tight band of billionaires have made pretty clear what the fights will be, and that’s less about protests in the streets and more about the hard, inch-by-inch fighting over tax policy and environmental regulations and building permits.”
What Warren is talking about is the ability of Democrats to turn Trump’s presidency into a legislative slog. Protests in the streets are important, but they won’t slow Trump’s agenda in the same way that Democratic Senators using every tool in their toolbox can grind the Senate to a halt.
What Trump says isn’t important at all. This is a man who, as president, told tens of thousands of lies.
Trump’s actions will impact lives, and his ability to quickly take many of those actions is fertile ground that Democrats can win on.
President Trump previously asked the Supreme Court to pause the ban so his administration could be given “the opportunity to pursue a political resolution of the questions at issue in the case.”
Trump also said in an interview with NBC that he will “likely” give Tiktok a 90-day extension when he takes office.
“I think that would be, certainly, an option that we look at. The 90-day extension is something that will be most likely done, because it’s appropriate. You know, it’s appropriate. We have to look at it carefully. It’s a very big situation,” Trump said in the phone interview.
“If I decide to do that, I’ll probably announce it on Monday,” he said.
However, on Saturday evening, a TikTok advisory read,
“Important update from TikTok
We regret that a U.S. law banning TikTok will take effect on January 19 and force us to make our services temporarily unavailable.
We’re working to restore our service in the U.S. as soon as possible, and we appreciate your support. Please stay tuned.”
At approximately 10:30 pm EST, Tiktok announced its services had been terminated. No information was provided for when the app would be discontinued, but most users believed it to be at midnight. Users impacted by this ban may still download TikTok data here.
The latest TikTok notice advises:
“Sorry, TikTok Isn’t available right now
A law banning Tiktok has been enacted in the U.S. Unfortunately, that means you can’t use TikTok for now. We are fortunate that President Trump has indicated that he will work with us on a solution to reinstate TikTok once he takes office. Please stay tuned!”
Two 18-year-old women are in intensive care after a ski lift collapsed in Spain, according to local media.
The incident on Saturday took place on a chair lift at the Astún ski resort, which is on the Spanish border with France, in the Pyrenees mountain range.
The regional government said at least 30 people were injured, nine of them very seriously – though the ski resort later said around 15 people were injured and three were seriously injured.
Regional media outlet el Diario has since reported that two 18-year-old women are being monitored in intensive care units, citing the regional government.
Image: An emergency helicopter at the ski resort on Saturday. Pic: AP
Image: Pic: AP
In a statement on Saturday, the resort said: “The causes of the accident are unknown which are currently being investigated.
“The facility comes with all permits and inspections. The protocols for rescue and transfer of wounded have worked properly, evacuating all the uphill users within two and a half hours.”
The ski resort said it would be open on Sunday “at its usual hours”.
‘A very scary moment’
Jaime Pelegri, who was on the chair lift when it collapsed, told Sky News it was “a very scary moment” and that the incident took place “in a matter of seconds”.
“We were still going up, it looked like the cable lost tensity,” he said. “So at the same time, all of the chairs in the lift started to fall, and we actually were a part of that.”
He said as he and his wife had just got on the lift, they were uninjured and “the chairs surrounding us were falling back”.
But higher up the lift, “it’s where… more dangerous things happened, and there were injured people”.
Mr Pelegri said some skiers looked as though they had fallen “probably 10 to over 15m… to the snow”.
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez said he was “shocked by the news of the accident”.
“All our affection to the injured and their families,” he said.
Children cheer in Nuseirat in the central Gaza Strip on January 19, 2025, shortly before a ceasefire deal in the war between Israel and the Palestinian militant group Hamas was implemented.
Bashar Taleb/AFP via Getty Images
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Bashar Taleb/AFP via Getty Images
Israel’s prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu says a ceasefire between Israel’s military and Hamas has begun.
The Israeli government announced the ceasefire with Hamas took effect at 11:15 local time (4:15 am US ET) — around three hours after the originally scheduled time for hostilities to cease.
The ceasefire was supposed to have gone into effect at 8:30 a.m. Sunday, but before then Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu insisted Israel did not consider the terms of the agreement valid and enforceable until Hamas had handed over a list of the names of hostages to be released today.
Under the agreement, Hamas was supposed to hand them over on Saturday. They did eventually, and as of 2:30 p.m. local time, the ceasefire appeared to be holding.
A statement issued on Telegram after that initial deadline by the Al Qassem Brigades, the military wing of Hamas, identified three Israeli women the group would release on Sunday, part of the group of nearly 100 hostages still believed to be held by Hamas.
The Israeli government confirmed it had received a list of hostages, and that family members were being notified.
Hostages and Missing Families Forum, a group representing families of people held hostage, released the names of the three Israeli women expected to gain their freedom back today.
The three hostages to be released Sunday are Romi Gonen, 24, who was kidnapped at the Nova music festival that Hamas militants stormed on Oct. 7, 2023; Emily Damari, a British-Israeli citizen who was abducted the same day by militants attacking Kfar Aza, a small Israeli community — known as a kibbutz — close to Gaza; and Doron Steinbrecher, 31, who was also taken from Kfar Aza.
According to a statement from the Hostages and Missing Families Forum, Gonen “loves dancing, traveling, and enjoying life. Friends and family describe her as energetic, funny, family-oriented, and full of life.”
Friends of Damari describe her as “well-loved and popular, a friend to everyone. Emily enjoys barbecuing, karaoke nights, and loves hats,” according to the same statement. She was abducted along with her friends Gali and Ziv Berman, who remain in captivity.
Steinbrecher is a veterinary nurse, according to the group’s statement, and “has cared for animals since childhood, when she helped at the school’s petting zoo. She loves sports, especially running, and goes for early morning runs around the kibbutz every Saturday.” The group said her family considered her a devoted aunt to her nephews.
Throughout the morning, surveillance drones flew over Gaza and the Israeli military reported strikes in the territory. NPR confirmed that a jeep belonging to the Al Qassem Brigades was struck.
The spokesman for Gaza’s Hamas-controlled civil defense, Mahmoud Basal, said Israeli attacks had killed a total of 19 people across various parts of the Gaza Strip on Sunday morning.
The Israeli military also said it carried out a special operation alongside the country’s domestic intelligence service that helped recover the body of an infantry soldier called Oron Shaul. He had been killed during clashes with Hamas in 2014. The group is still holding 97 abductees inside Gaza. Most of those were seized on Oct. 7, 2023, but others were taken hostage in the preceding decade, and a substantial number are no longer alive.
In Jerusalem, the far right Otzma Yehudit party released a statement saying its leader, former National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, was making good on his threat to leave Netanyahu’s governing coalition, and he would take his party’s ministers with him. The statement called the ceasefire deal a “victory for terrorism.”
The descendants of the Los Angeles Basin’s first people had not had land of their own for nearly 200 years.
Two years ago, a 1-acre property in suburban Altadena dotted with oak trees and shrubs became the first parcel of land returned to the Tongva people. They finally had a space to host traditional ceremonies, community gatherings and other events.
The fire that broke out in the hills near Eaton Canyon Jan. 7, charring more than 14,000 acres as of Friday, caused significant damage to the property, including the destruction of an old stone house and a garage on the land.
Still, the losses could have been much worse if not for the Indigenous practices implemented on the land, according to the Tongva Taraxat Paxaavxa Conservancy, a nonprofit dedicated to restoring and protecting the land and cultural heritage of the Tongva people in the L.A. region.
Wallace Cleaves, president of the conservancy’s board, credits traditional stewardship practices — including the removal of 97 fire-prone eucalyptus trees — with reducing the wildfire’s impact.
Wallace Cleaves, president of the Tongva Taraxat Paxaavxa Conservancy, credits traditional stewardship practices — including the removal of 97 fire-prone eucalyptus trees — with reducing the wildfire’s impact.
(Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times)
“We do believe that the work that we did to remove the invasive and dangerous species on the property very likely mitigated the damage, and made it much more possible for the native plants there to be able to recover and not have suffered as much,” he said.
For thousands of years, the Tongva people flourished in the San Gabriel Mountains. Its canyons offered ample food and served as trading routes among far-flung Native communities. But by the early 20th century, following the displacement and enslavement wrought by successive waves of settlers — the Spanish, the Mexicans and then white Americans — the Tongva had lost their ancestral homeland in Southern California.
Without federal recognition or a reservation, they have sought through the “Land Back” movement to have available land returned to them, Cleaves and conservancy board member Charles Sepulveda wrote in a 2021 article for Bloomberg.
“We need a place where we can gather our foods, medicines and sacred plants without having to fear the arbitrary restrictions of a land management system that has mismanaged the land so badly that it now burns without end,” they wrote. “We need a place where we can gather and renew ourselves, our culture and our community.”
The 1-acre property that now provides renewed connection for the Tongva people had belonged to Sharon Alexander, whose family built a Spanish ranch-style home on the wooded parcel in 1931. Alexander, who was using the home as a rental, transferred the land to the Tongva people in 2022 after learning of its ancestral significance.
Since then, the Tongva community has worked to restore the land in accordance with traditional ecological knowledge and to develop the property to support community gatherings.
Along with removing the eucalyptus trees, they have nurtured 50 full-grown oak trees and removed tons of old firewood and other debris, Cleaves said. Cultural burning is another traditional land stewardship practice, but the Tongva have so far been unable to implement it on the property because of permitting requirements.
“Our duty is to be good stewards of the land, of the plants and the animals that are under our care,” Cleaves said. “So a lot of our efforts went to restoring as much of the Indigenous habitat as we could.”
Cleaves has been unable to visit the land since the wildfire roared through Eaton Canyon, devastating large swaths of Altadena. But he believes based on publicly available images that the ranch house on the property remains relatively intact. Nobody was living on the property, he said.
And while some of the oak trees appear scorched, many still have green leaves, he said. The oak is one of the Tongva people’s sacred plants; its acorns are a staple in traditional meals.
“We know our oak, and we know that it is very resilient,” he said. “We’re hopeful that most of the oaks will be able to recover from this and continue to be healthy and be part of our community there.”
A bobcat, coyotes and bears also visited the land, he said. He is unsure how they have fared.
Cleaves said he is hopeful the Tongva people will be able to return to the property for ceremonies later this year.
“When we think about Indigenous-led approaches, such as cultural burning or other Indigenous stewardship, it does help with mitigating and building resilience against climate change,” said Nina Fontana, a research scientist at UC Davis focused on Indigenous land stewardship.
Two years ago, this 1-acre property in Altadena became the first parcel of ancestral land returned to the Tongva people in nearly 200 years.
(Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times)
As the Los Angeles region begins to recover and rebuild from the devastating fires in Altadena and Pacific Palisades, it is critical for state and federal agencies to work alongside tribal communities to incorporate Indigenous experience, Fontana said. Practices such as cultural burning are place-based, developed around a particular topography and ecosystem, she said.
“It’s important to listen to Indigenous voices and to understand that the knowledge that communities hold is thousands and thousands and thousands of years of knowledge,” she said. “I think that listening and allowing that knowledge to be practiced is really the key to the future of wildfire.”
This article is part of The Times’ equity reporting initiative,funded by the James Irvine Foundation, exploring the challenges facing low-income workers and the efforts being made to addressCalifornia’s economic divide.
A TikTok ban in the US that’s been in the works for years started early on Saturday with the company locking down US users — but the entire saga remains more about politics than national security.
As of January 19, 2025, TikTok is no longer accessible within the US. The app is being removed from Apple’s App Store and the Google Play Store, plus Oracle must now stop hosting the service’s US user data.
Those existing users will see only an explanatory pop-up message on launching the app. TikTok’s owners, Chinese firm ByteDance, is said to be working to allow users to download their data and personal information.
The second notification sent to users with the app installed cites some sort of discussion taking place with president elect Donald Trump, despite him being the architect of the ban in the first place.
A law banning TikTok has been enacted in the U.S. Unfortunately, that means you can’t use TokTok for now
We are fortunate that President Trump has indicated that he will work with us on a solution to reinstate TikTok once he takes office. Please stay tuned!
How we got here
The ban is really the culmination of years of politics, but ostensibly, the reason is that TikTok is owned by a Chinese company. It’s alleged that therefore that China could compel the company to provide it with confidential US user data.
“As far as TikTok is concerned, we’re banning them from the United States,” he said in August 1, 2020. “Soon, immediately. I mean essentially immediately. I will sign the document tomorrow.”
It was on August 7, 2020, that Trump signed the Executive Order banning TikTok, and giving it a deadline of September 20. The order specified that such Chinese-owned apps continue “to threaten the national security, foreign policy, and economy of the United States.”
The order cited the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, and prohibited any transaction between US firms and TikTok’s owner, ByteDance. Before the September deadline, ByteDance was said to be in talks that would see Oracle take over its US business, and Trump publicly approved the deal — initially.
He then scuttled this Oracle/TikTok deal in September 2020. It’s not known why, but conceivably it was believed that the Oracle deal would not assuage security concerns.
TikTok’s owners have repeatedly claimed that the US security concerns were unfounded. It said that it had strong data security, and denied claims that the Chinese government had any access.
The September 2020 ban was first delayed by a US judge. It was then blocked in November 2020 by the courts as an infringement of the rights of Americans whose income was derived from their work on TikTok.
Biden signs the ban into law
The case against TikTok has not varied or expanded from the accusations of Chinese access to US user data. But in 2024, President Biden signed the ban into law.
“The path to my desk was a difficult path,” President Biden said. “It should have been easier and it should’ve gotten there sooner. but in the end we did what America always does — we rose to the moment.”
In this case, ByteDance was given nine months to divest itself of TikTok. A three-month extension would be triggered if the company was in negotiations to sell the platform.
That extension did not happen, but one thing that changed was that Trump asked in December 2024 for the ban to be paused. There doesn’t appear to be any technical, security, or legal reason for Trump’s request, but any delay would have pushed the ban into his forthcoming administration.
One other thing that arguably changed over the four years of the on/off ban threats, is that TikTok has grown significantly. According to SEO.ai,TikTok now has 150 million users in the US, compared to
82 million in 2020.
Overall, TikTok has a billion active users daily, so the loss of 150 million is significant, but not fatal. What might ultimately damage TikTok more is that news of the ban has sent users to alternatives, including RedNote — another China-based company.
We’re back for another day of the SB Nation UFC in-5 daily trivia game. We’ve made an adjustment to showing the games. We’ve linked back to previous days rather than embedding them so as to create a single day experience.
Game instructions are at the bottom if you’re new to the game! Feel free to share your results in the comments and feedback in this Google Form.
The goal of the game is to guess the correct random UFC fighter player with the help of up to five clues. We’ll mix in BOTH ACTIVE AND RETIRED FIGHTERS. It won’t be easy to figure it out in one or two guesses, but some of you might be able to nail it. It will be a mix of well-known players and some “that guys” that we haven’t thought of in some time. The game will appear in slot #3 of the MMA Mania layout each morning, with occasional movement later in the day.
After you correctly guess the player, you can click “Share Results” to share how you did down in the comments and on social media.
It happened — TikTok went down for American users and is officially banned in the United States thanks to a law that the government passed last year. Roughly two hours before the Sunday, January 19, 2025, ban was set to take effect, TikTok users located in the United States noticed they could not load friends’ videos or post new clips on Saturday, January 18. As Americans frantically try to figure out how to use the app amid the ban, many also want to know if TikTok is coming back.
Donald Trump indicated that he was inclined to institute a 90-day extension to the ban when he is sworn in as president again. However, he is yet to confirm whether or not the extension is definite.
Is TikTok Banned?
Apparently, yes. TikTok is officially banned in the U.S., as American users noticed at around 10:30 p.m. ET on Saturday, January 18, 2025. When logging into an account, TikTok users saw the following notice pop up: “Sorry, TikTok isn’t available right now. A law banning TikTok has been enacted in the U.S. Unfortunately, that means you can’t use TikTok for now. We are fortunate that President Trump has indicated that he will work with us on a solution to reinstate TikTok once he takes office. Please stay tuned! In the meantime, you can still log in to download your data.”
Credit: TikTok
Do I Have to Delete My TikTok?
Currently, American users are not required to delete their TikTok accounts, and the platform gave everyone the ability to download and save their posted videos.
Is TikTok Coming Back?
It’s unclear if TikTok could come back for Americans, but as the platform indicated in its shutdown statement, an apparent “solution” between them and Trump could take place “once he takes office,” which would be on Monday, January 20, 2025.
How to Use TikTok After the Ban
As of now, anyone located in the U.S. can access their own posts but are unable to load new posts. Users are also complaining that they cannot load saved or reposted videos. Currently, Americans can simply access their profile pages and recent posts made by friends and accounts they follow.
It’s still unclear how people in the U.S. can navigate TikTok unless they have a virtual private network (VPN). Having a VPN could potentially give a smartphone user the ability to hide their IP address, which discloses a person’s location. However, a VPN most likely cannot fix the TikTok issue forever.
Why Was TikTok Banned in the U.S.?
TikTok was banned in the U.S. because the government raised concerns about its security. Lawmakers in America are worried that China’s government could access users’ data through the social media app and use it to spread misinformation around the world.
TikTok is owned by the Chinese company ByteDance, and Congress gave them an ultimatum: either sell the app to a U.S. government-approved company or the app would be banned in America. In April 2024, President Joe Bidensigned the legislation into law, and the Supreme Court upheld the legalization weeks before the ban happened in January 2025.