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Tech giants join forces to better support Chromium-based browsers – Computerworld

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The Linux Foundation has unveiled a new collaborative organization called Supporters of Chromium-Based Browsers designed to ensure that open-source projects with connections to Chromium get the necessary resources to be successful.

Members of the group include Google, Microsoft, and Opera, the companies behind Chromium-based browsers such as Chrome, Edge and Opera. Facebook’s parent company Meta has also joined the collaboration, according to Ars Technica.

Currently, there are nearly 30 different browsers based on Chromium, of which the most well-known are Brave, Duckduckgo, and Vivaldi.



This story originally appeared on Computerworld

Chinese social media app RedNote is the number one app as TikTok ban looms

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With TikTok likely just days away from being banned in the US, the app’s users are pushing some previously little-known apps to the top of Apple and Google’s stores. The app that has so far seemed to benefit the most is a Chinese social media app called “RedNote” or Xiaohongshu, which translates to “little red book.”

The TikTok-like app for shortform video is currently the number one app in Apple’s App Store and is in the 34th spot in Google’s Play Store. RedNote has been gaining popularity as many TikTok creators have begun about their experiences trying out the Chinese app. Meanwhile, over on RedNote, a number of creators have shared videos about welcoming “TikTok refugees” to the service.

The app is set up very much like TikTok, with the ability to vertically scroll through feeds of shortform videos based on your interests. Much of the app’s interface is in Chinese, so it can be a bit confusing to navigate, though there are some on TikTok that explain how to change the app’s language to English.

While RedNote seems to have come out of nowhere, the app has been popular in China for years. CNBC that the more than decade-old app is seen as a challenger to ByteDance’s Douyin and e-commerce giant Alibaba, with about 300 million users.

RedNote isn’t the only app that’s been boosted by anxious TikTok users. Another ByteDance app, Lemon8, is also trending in both Apple and Google’s stores, where it’s in the second and first spot, respectively. But while TikTok itself has at times , Lemon8 will likely face the same fate as TikTok should the Supreme Court side with the Biden Administration, which .

Another video app , which describes itself as “where social meets shopping,” is also trending in both app stores. The app, from Los Angeles-based Humans, Inc., features shortform videos and an in-app storefront. It’s currently ranked number 14 in Google’s store and number four in Apple’s. The company was valued at more than $1 billion last year, according to .

Another app that has seemingly benefited from the impending TikTok ban is something called “ReelShort.” While the app’s name sounds like a play on Instagram’s reels and YouTube Shorts — both of which are well established TikTok clones — the app seems to be less of a TikTok clone and more of a wannabe . The app features bite-sized clips of longer “movies” with bizarre titles like “The Heiress Blacklisted her Husband” and “In Love with the Alpha.” ReelShort is number seven in the App Store number two in Google Play.

While it’s unlikely any of these apps will remain popular for long, the fact that so many relatively unknown apps have risen to the top of the app stores so quickly is yet another sign of how influential TikTok’s users and creators can be. It also highlights how banning TikTok alone the influence of Chinese tech companies in the US.

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This story originally appeared on Engadget

Disaster For Trump As Republicans Might Not Be Able To Pass Tax Cuts For The Rich This Year

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Republicans are having a massive problem getting their act together to pass their tax cuts for the rich. So far, House and Senate Republicans can’t agree on anything, and all of the talk of a quick start for the Trump administration is going up in flames.

Semafor reported:

The House and Senate GOP are still haggling over the size and the scope of their plan, with a long list of details to work out and decisions still to settle. And the more the two chambers tangle over how fast to move, the less time they spend on those even tougher policymaking choices.

House Speaker Mike Johnson has suggested the party’s entire tax plan could pass by April. But many other Republicans estimate it will take months to get a final bill to Trump’s desk — possibly running up against the year-end deadline to prevent the expiration of his first-term tax cuts.

Plenty of those Republicans are comfortable taking their time on taxes, too, arguing that they have a unique opportunity to reorient US economic policy and that rushing it makes no sense.

Republicans will probably get the tax cuts done before they end of the year, but to say that they disagree on everything might be an understatement. Republicans can’t even agree on the most basic point which is whether the tax cuts should be paid for.

It was just last month that Mike Johnson made an agreement with Trump to cut trillions of dollars in mandatory spending in areas like veterans benefits and healthcare.

Since those cuts aren’t popular with the American people, some House and Senate Republicans are arguing that there is no need to pay for tax cuts for the rich. Trump and the GOP can drive the country $4.2 trillion more into debt, and everything will be fine.

Instead of providing leadership, Trump’s big piece of advice is to tell Republicans to figure it out among themselves as he heads to the golf course.

Republicans are so dysfunctional that they can’t even pass tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations with a unanimous agreement.

Trump’s presidency could be shaping up to be an epic disaster, as the feeble president-elect is being taken out to sea by the currents of Republican dysfunction.

What do you think about Republicans struggling to pass tax cuts? Share your thoughts in the comments below.

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This story originally appeared on Politicususa

California Democrats Agree to Give Newsom $50 Million to ‘Fight Trump’ as Los Angeles Burns | The Gateway Pundit

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California Democrats agreed to give Governor Gavin Newsom (D) $50 million to ‘fight Trump’ as Los Angeles continues to burn.

Gusty Santa Ana winds and fires continued to rip through Southern California on Monday and the state’s Democrat leadership is obsessing over Trump.

The Los Angeles fires have killed at least 24 people and destroyed more than 12,000 structures, and the reported estimated damage is around $150 billion.

The damage is largely due to Democrats like Governor Newsom and LA Mayor Karen Bass after they slashed fire department funding and didn’t fill reservoirs.

Fire hydrants ran dry, and there weren’t enough resources to fight the fires because of the Democrat leadership, but Trump is the biggest threat to California, according to Newsom.

Politico reported:

California Democrats have reached a $50 million agreement to shore up state and local legal defenses against the incoming Trump administration just a week ahead of the president-elect’s inauguration. Half the money would go to fending off any mass deportation plan the new president might enact early in his administration.

The move — the first of its kind in the nation that positions California to lead a second term resistance against Donald Trump — comes as Republicans bash state Democratic leaders for focusing on a the highly partisan issue even as the southern part of the state suffers from historically devastating fires.

The deal includes $25 million Newsom had proposed for the state Department of Justice to fight the federal government in court shortly after Trump’s reelection in November — plus $25 million more proposed by state Senate leaders to defend immigrants against deportation, detention and wage theft. The $25 million proposed by the Senate would fund grants for legal nonprofits and immigration support centers.

On Monday after facing intense backlash, California Democrat lawmakers postponed their first special legislative session hearing to prepare for litigation against Trump.

The legislators were set to meet Tuesday morning for the Assembly Budge but the chairman’s district is on fire, according to KCRA News.

On Monday afternoon, Governor Newsom expanded the special session to include funding for wildfire recovery efforts and emergency response.




This story originally appeared on TheGateWayPundit

Europe seeks 'roadmap' to prevent 'breakout of Iran's nuclear programme or a broader crisis'

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Iran is holding nuclear talks with France, Britain and Germany in Switzerland. Iran has in recent years increased its manufacturing of enriched uranium, and it is the only non-nuclear weapons state to possess uranium enriched to 60 percent, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) nuclear watchdog says. Iran maintains that its nuclear programme is solely for peaceful purposes and denies any intention to develop atomic weapons. For in-depth analysis and a deeper perspective, FRANCE 24’s Genie Godula welcomes Dr Sanam Vakil, Director of the Middle East and North Africa Programme at Chatham House.


This story originally appeared on France24

Greenland PM hints at strengthening ties with US after Trump refuses to rule out military takeover | World News

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Greenland is looking to strengthen its defence and mining ties with the US, its prime minister has said.

It comes after president-elect Donald Trump repeated an idea of acquiring the strategically important and mineral-rich Arctic island which he said was an “absolute necessity”.

Mute Egede said his government was looking for ways to cooperate with the US and that it was ready to start a dialogue with Mr Trump’s incoming administration.

However, he said it would be up to it to decide how it should proceed.

Read more:
Why does Trump want Greenland and the Panama Canal?
Analysis: Trump’s threats could test NATO
Echoes of 1812 war with Canada threats

When asked at a news conference in the capital Nuuk on Monday about expanding US military capabilities on the island, Mr Egede said: “Greenland’s independence is Greenland‘s business, also in relation to the use of its land.

“So it is also Greenland that will decide what agreement we should come to.”

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1:44

Why does Trump want Greenland?

The prime minister has summoned the leaders of Greenland’s political parties to a meeting to discuss a collective approach to the US interest.

“This is the first time Greenland has been listened to in an intense way,” he added.

“We need to be calm and take advantage of things and stand together.”

Mr Trump did not rule out the potential use of military or economic means to gain control of Greenland.

But vice president-elect JD Vance dismissed the use of military force in an interview with Fox News.



This story originally appeared on Skynews

Father and son who used wheelchairs died in LA fire waiting for help : NPR

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Anthony Mitchell Sr., shown above, would help his son Justin, who had cerebral palsy, practice reading by going over the newspaper. The two died in the Eaton fire.

Anthony Mitchell Jr.


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Anthony Mitchell Jr.

A week before the California wildfires, Anthony Mitchell Sr. told his son Anthony Mitchell Jr. that what he treasured most in life was not money or possessions, but his family.

Those words have stayed with Anthony Jr. ever since he found out his father and younger brother Justin died in the Eaton fire last week. The blaze, which remains active, has become the deadliest fire in the outbreak. As of Monday, it had claimed at least 16 lives.

“He believed in family and I think that’s one of the reasons it cost him his life, because he wasn’t going to leave my younger brother,” Anthony Jr. told NPR.

On the morning of Jan. 8, Anthony Sr. called his son and other children to let them know he was waiting for assistance to evacuate himself and Justin. Anthony Sr. was an amputee while his son Justin had cerebral palsy. They both used wheelchairs, according Anthony Jr.

But after a few hours passed, Anthony Jr. said he received a call from another family member that his father and younger brother did not evacuate. Family members are still seeking more information about the events surrounding Anthony Sr. and Justin’s deaths.

The LA County Fire Department did not immediately respond to NPR’s request for additional information about the incident.

Anthony Jr. said he knows why his father stayed.

“Even though he had a missing leg, he did have a prosthetic. He could have got himself in the wheelchair and he could have rolled himself out the fire zone, but he wasn’t going to leave my brother,” he said. “There was no way my father was going to leave him. He wouldn’t leave any of his kids.”

Anthony Sr., who worked in sales, lived in the Altadena area for over two decades. He was a skilled pitmaster, able to smoke anything from fish to ribs. He loved cooking for others and hosting big gatherings at his home for his loved ones.

This resolve for his family was always apparent. Anthony Jr. said that even after his parents got divorced, his father went out of his way to be involved in his life. “ If he found out I was having problems at school, my dad would show up, meet the principal,” he said.

Hajime White, Anthony Sr.’s daughter, echoed that her father was a devoted parent. “He’d always tell me, ‘I’ll do anything for you,'” she told NPR. “He said, ‘You tell me to jump, I’m going to say, how high?'”

White also recalled that her father would help Justin practice reading and speaking by looking over the newspaper together.

“ When he’d get the newspaper, Justin had a certain part in the paper that he had to read too,” she said.

Recently, Anthony Jr. recalled talking with his father about all the exciting plans for the new year, including a potential trip to Japan to visit Anthony Jr.’s son and a barbecue for the Fourth of July.

“We were setting everything up to have a big ol’ family get together,” he said.

NPR’s Kira Wakeam contributed reporting.

More on the California wildfires

Resources to help stay safe:
➡️ With fire danger still high, authorities implore you to follow evacuation orders
➡️ What to do — and not do — when you get home after a fire evacuation
➡️ Is smoke in your home? Here’s how to make an air purifier from a box fan
➡️Trying to stay safe in a wildfire? There’s an app that can help

Ways to support the response and recovery:
➡️ Want to help fire victims? Here’s what experts say does the most good and places seeking volunteers
➡️ Wildfire donations and volunteering: How and where to help
➡️ Share: These are the steps fire victims need to take to make an insurance claim

The California Newsroom is following the extreme weather from across the region. Click through to LAist’s coverage for the latest.



This story originally appeared on NPR

$2-billion Powerball jackpot winner loses home in L.A. County wildfire

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The Altadena resident who won the largest ever Powerball jackpot and used some of his winnings to buy homes in exclusive Los Angeles County neighborhoods has lost at least one of those properties to the wildfires.

Edwin Castro won Powerball’s $2-billion jackpot in 2023, which equated to about $1 billion in winnings after taxes, and purchased homes in Malibu, another in Altadena and a third in the Hollywood hills, according to property records reviewed by The Times.

By the night of Jan. 8, two of the homes sat in evacuation zones and the third had burned to the ground, according to a review of satellite imagery from Airbus reviewed by The Times.

The home, a $3.85-million two-bedroom mansion with ocean views purchased in September 2023, was among thousands of structures razed by the Palisades fire, which started on Jan. 7.

The Sunset fire, which broke out near Runyon Canyon, placed Castro’s sprawling $25.5-million mansion in the Hollywood hills firmly within its evacuation zone.

And the Eaton fire approached his $3.98-milion home in Altadena, but spared it along with the Altadena gas station where he bought the winning ticket, according to visual analysis by the Times.

But the Malibu home, set along PCH near Big Rock, was destroyed along with all of its immediate neighbors.

Castro purchased the home using an LLC whose listed business managers in public records were the same two men as those listed for LLCs used to buy the other two properties.

The lottery winner, who has stayed out of the public eye since claiming his prize, could not be reached for comment Monday.



This story originally appeared on LA Times

Illinois will implement digital IDs for Apple Wallet in 2025

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Illinois will implement digital IDs in the Apple Wallet app by the end of 2025.

Illinois is the latest state to claim Apple Wallet users will have access to digital IDs and driver’s licenses by the end of 2025.

An Illinois state law took effect on January 1, 2025 that will bring digital versions of IDs and driver’s licenses to Apple Wallet. Illinois is already working with Apple to make digital IDs a reality, according to a press release from the Illinois Secretary of State, Alexi Giannoulias, as was originally discovered by 9to5mac.

Residents will be able to access their new digital IDs via Apple Wallet on their iPhone or Apple Watch. Digital IDs will be available at no cost and will be usable alongside existing physical ID cards rather than replacing them entirely.

Digital identity cards can mainly be used at select airports and TSA checkpoints within the United States, instead of a hard copy license or ID. Users will still need their physical identity cards for traffic stops or as a means of verifying age when attempting to purchase alcohol.

The Illinois Secretary of State will implement “robust testing requirements to ensure the office delivers the most secure and private product for Illinois residents.”

“We’re excited to have kickstarted our work with Apple – a company that shares our commitment to data security – to provide IDs in Apple Wallet that will offer convenience and privacy for Illinoisans,” Giannoulias said. “This is the first component of a multi-faceted approach to deliver a state-of-the-art mobile driver’s license and state ID program that leverages best-in-class technology for residents.”

By implementing digital IDs and driver’s licenses, Illinois will join 10 other states and territories where the option already exists. Digital IDs and driver’s licenses in Apple Wallet are currently available in Arizona, Colorado, California, Georgia, Hawaii, Iowa, Maryland, New Mexico, Ohio, and Puerto Rico.

Several other states have committed to implementing digital IDs in the Apple Wallet app but have yet to deliver on this promise. This includes the likes of Connecticut, Kentucky, Montana, Oklahoma, Utah and West Virginia. Some states, like Florida, have used proprietary digital ID formats not intended for Apple Wallet.

Support for digital identity cards in the Apple Wallet app was announced in 2021. Recently, in October 2024, the Vice President of Apple Pay revealed, among other things, that more states were working with the company to implement their digital IDs and driver’s licenses in the Wallet app.



This story originally appeared on Appleinsider

Opinion: UFC 311 Should Definitely Move From Los Angeles To Las Vegas

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UFC 311, the first Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) pay-per-view (PPV), will go down this weekend (Sat., Jan. 18, 2025) inside the brand-new Intuit Dome in Los Angeles, California, but it should be moved to “Sin City.”

As you probably know by now, Southern California is currently burning with five different fires, and at least 24 people have been killed, according to NYTimes. Three of the fires have been contained. However, the Palisades fire is at 13% containment, and the Eaton fire is 33% contained.

The arena where UFC 311 will be held and most of downtown Los Angeles are in absolutely zero danger of burning, but that’s not the point. It is a terrible time to hold a sporting event, and it is pretty irresponsible.

The promotion can spin the narrative that they are bringing fights for entertainment and for people to lose themselves – but who the hell cares about mixed martial arts (MMA) when the state is burning, and the fire is only 20 miles away?

UFC did hold an event six days after the deadliest mass shooting by a lone gunman in American history in the city where it occurred, which was questionable at that time, too – but UFC 216 was a great distraction that helped Las Vegas begin its recovery.

I guess the same phrase can be said for UFC 311, meaning maybe the fights this Saturday can be a distraction and help southern California recover. However, with the fire STILL burning and the winds picking back up, there will still be evacuations midweek.

Believe me, I want to watch UFC 311 just as much as anyone because it is a killer card, but it makes more sense to move the event to Las Vegas and then switch the upcoming March PPV back to Los Angeles.

Yes, UFC will lose money, and there will be many refunds, but the multi-billion dollar promotion will be okay.



LIVE! Watch UFC 311 PPV On ESPN+ Here!

LIGHTWEIGHT REMATCH! Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) kicks off its 2025 pay-per-view (PPV) schedule on Sat., Jan. 18, with its seemingly-unstoppable lightweight champion, Islam Makhachev, defending his 155-pound crown against top-seeded division contender, Arman Tsarukyan, in the five-round main event. In UFC 311’s championship co-headliner from inside Intuit Dome in Inglewood (Los Angeles), Calif., undefeated 135-pound contender, Umar Nurmagomedov, challenges newly-minted bantamweight titleholder, Merab Dvalishvili, for the undisputed crown. UFC 311 will also feature the exciting returns of former light heavyweight champions Jiri Prochazka and Jamahal Hill, as well as the pivotal middleweight showdown between Kevin Holland and Reinier De Ridder, and so much more! UFC 311’s start time is scheduled for 6 p.m. ET (Preliminary card) and 10 p.m. ET (PPV main card).

Don’t miss a single second of EPIC face-punching action!


For the finalized UFC 311 fight card and PPV lineup click here.



This story originally appeared on MMA Mania