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Tesla owners run into trouble amid bitter cold

EVERGREEN PARK, Ill. (CBS) -- Some Tesla drivers learned the hard way amid this frigid snap about how cold weather affects battery life.

At a charging station at The Evergreen Marketplace, at 9200 S. Western Ave. in Evergreen Park, Teslas were lined up early Monday morning. Some of the Teslas' batteries died – leaving the cars sitting askew and immobile in the parking lot.

Driver said some of the charging stations weren't working – and those that were working took a lot longer than usual to charge.

"I've been here for over five hours at this point, and I still have not gotten to charge my car," said Tesla driver Brandon Welbourne. "A charge that should take 45 minutes is taking two hours."

Welbourne said he saw at least 10 cars towed.

Tesla advises owners to keep the charge level above 20 percent during bitter cold weather.

Anyone with outdoor patio TVs

Hi all!

My new place has a bracket out on the patio for mounting a TV under the pergola. I want to put a TV out there, but I haven't had a TV outdoors before.

Do you use a specific "outdoor" TV, or do you use a regular TV and maybe put a cover on it when it's not in use?

Best Buy has "outdoor" TVs, but a) they're not brands I've ever heard of, and b) they're surprisingly expensive compared to regular TVs - like 3x as much. But, I guess if the outdoor TVs are made specifically to resist rain/weather damage and they're sealed up somehow, and the regular TVs would crap in a couple of weeks, then the price difference might be worth it. Still, I'm surprised that there aren't Sony, Samsung, LG, etc outdoor TVs listed on Best Buy's website.

Thanks in advance, and for your trouble...

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There is no denying that it was very gruesome and grotesque, how I killed that man

Va. man who stabbed Target co-worker sentenced to 100 years in prison​


A Fairfax County man was sentenced to 100 years in prison Tuesday for fatally stabbing a Target co-worker in a parking lot at the store in the Baileys Crossroads area.

Bazen Berhe, 25, pleaded guilty in October to first-degree murder in the April 17, 2021, killing of Hernan Leiva, 58, in what Berhe described to a judge as a fit of rage. Authorities said Berhe, then 22, attacked Leiva with knives and a hammer when the victim arrived at work that morning.

In an unusual statement to Judge Robert J. Smith in Fairfax Circuit Court, Berhe pleaded for a stiff sentence and promised he would behave behind bars while serving a maximum term. “I promise, your honor, I won’t kill someone again,” he said. “I will not stab someone.”

Berhe, who is from Ethiopia, said he was in a “state of absolute anger” before the killing because he was having trouble with immigration authorities. When he realized that he would not be able to legally stay in the United States, Berhe said, he became enraged. Three days before the killing, Leiva, a janitor at Target, ate Berhe’s lunch out of the office refrigerator, which made him mad. The next day, Berhe purchased the hammer and two knives and began “training for the murder,” officials said.

About 3:30 a.m., in the parking garage at the 5100 block of Leesburg Pike, police found Leiva, of Falls Church, suffering from apparent stab wounds, officials have said. Berhe said in court Tuesday that he had entered the garage about an hour earlier and stood behind a staircase, lying in wait to kill the first person who appeared. When Leiva came down the stairs on his way to work that morning, Berhe said, he bludgeoned him with a hammer and then stabbed him.

Berhe apologized to Leiva’s family, saying he “would have stabbed anyone” and that the slaying was not personal to Leiva. “Even a 4-year-old kid,” he said. “If anyone had gone down the steps first, I would have killed them.”

Commonwealth’s Attorney Steve Descano (D) said the sentence was warranted. “In this case, because of the unique and self-proclaimed danger the defendant continues to pose to the community, today’s sentence was a necessary outcome for maintaining public safety,” he said in a statement.

Brandon Sloane, Berhe’s attorney, asked the judge to be compassionate when giving the sentence and to take into consideration the incident’s nuances beyond the “wanton violence that is on the face of the case.” But after Berhe asked for a lengthy sentence, the judge obliged.

“There was somewhat of an expression of remorse,” Smith said. “But I think it’s hollow.”

In the courtroom on Tuesday, about 15 members of Leiva’s family were watching. They patted one another’s backs and squeezed their hands together as Berhe spoke for more than 20 minutes. As the hearing came to an end, some family members wiped away tears.

“There is no denying that it was very gruesome and grotesque, how I killed that man,” Berhe said. “But I want the family to know, I did everything in my power to kill him in less than a minute.”

“Well, that makes it fine,” one of Leiva’s relatives responded sarcastically, then sighed and shook his head, looking down.

Reminiscing

Over the past coupe of weeks I have been thinking about the late era Lute Olson Hawkeyes way too much. When I was young I would go to the Field House to shoot hoops and on one of these trips William Mayfield let me beat him at HORSE. Yes he was in a cast and he was super nice so let the 12 year old me win. The payoff for my "win" was a trip to Hawkeye locker room. Ronnie Lester was shy and Kenny Arnold was a super nice guy. Some recollection of Vince Brookins and Tom Norman being cool. Wish I would have understood how special that trip was. Thanks William!

Good guy with a gun!

Happy Daniel Bryan GIF by WWE


I'm so excited.


Car thieves’ heroin-fueled joy ride comes to screeching halt with the help of two armed homeowners: sheriff​



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Two Illinois suspects accused of stealing a car before leading police on a chase were apprehended when two separate armed homeowners confronted the men and held them at gunpoint until deputies arrived, a local sheriff’s office says.

The Macon County Sheriff’s Office said that on Jan. 23, law enforcement arrested suspects James Snow, 34, and Tyler Crum, 33, after a wild police chase that ended successfully with the help of two different armed homeowners. Crum was released shortly following his arrest due to a new and controversial Illinois law that ended cash bail, meaning judges do not require suspects charged with crimes to post bail in order to leave jail while they await trial. The law does not apply to suspects who are likely to pose a threat to the public.

The sheriff’s office said that just before 5:30 pm last Tuesday, deputies responded to Casey’s General Store in Argenta over the report of a suspicious vehicle in the parking lot. Deputies found the car was previously reported stolen to the Decatur Police Department, and confronted the two suspects in the car.

Crum, who was driving the vehicle according to his post-arrest comments to authorities, fled the officers, hitting the police vehicle with the stolen car while trying to make a speedy exit, according to the sheriff’s office. Deputies attempted to pursue the suspects, but lost sight of them.

Other law enforcement agencies joined the search for the duo, including the Maroa Police Department, which located the stolen car wrecked in a farmer’s field. Crum and Snow were not in the car by the time police found it, with the Oreana Police Department, Illinois State Police and the Illinois Conservation Police joining the search for the men.

That’s when the two armed homeowners stepped in, the sheriff’s office explained. The men had taken off in an attempt to find refuge in a local home.

"Deputies received a report that the males were outside a nearby residence seeking refuge but were met by the homeowner armed with a firearm. One of the males was apprehended & taken into custody by law enforcement at this location," the sheriff’s office press release, which was provided to Fox News Digital, states.

The second suspect fled the first home and met a similar fate. Another homeowner in the area also held him at gunpoint, earning praise from the sheriff’s office "for properly utilizing firearm training and assisting Law Enforcement."

"The other male had fled to another nearby residence before being met by that homeowner. The second suspect was intercepted by the homeowner armed with a firearm. The vigilant homeowner effectively held the offender at gunpoint, promptly calling 911. This male was also apprehended & taken into custody by law enforcement at the second location. We commend the homeowner for properly utilizing firearm training and assisting Law Enforcement," the sheriff’s office said.

A police report provided to Fox News Digital shows that Crum admitted to authorities that prior to the police chase and arrests, he and Snow had done heroin in an Arby’s bathroom in Decatur, which is about 15 miles from Argenta.

Crum told police that after the pair took heroin, they stole a black Chevy Malibu that was idling in the parking lot. They intended to drive to Crum's hometown of Heyworth, according to the police report, but got lost along the way and pulled over into the general store’s parking lot where the Macon Sheriff’s deputies first spotted them.

Crum said Snow, who was in the car’s passenger seat during the incident, told him to "just go dude" when they first saw law enforcement vehicles, resulting in them slamming into a sheriff’s car before taking off and crashing into the farm field.

Snow also told police he was the passenger of the vehicle during the string of crimes, and that he had no memory of the car crashing in the field or going to homes in the area seeking refuge, according to the police report.

Crum was charged with aggravated battery to peace officer, aggravated fleeing & eluding, possession of a stolen motor vehicle, and resisting/obstructing peace officer. He was released under Illinois’ controversial Pretrial Fairness Act, which is part of the SAFE-T Act, that eliminated cash bail. He was given a notice to appear for the charges.

Snow was charged with aggravated fleeing & eluding, possession of a stolen motor vehicle, and resisting/obstructing a peace officer. He remains in police custody due to an outstanding parole violation warrant.
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“Well, it’s finally official … murder is legal in the state of California.”

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/bryn-s...-avoids-prison-time-ventura-county-caifornia/

A California woman who fatally stabbed her boyfriend more than 100 times during what prosecutors called a "cannabis-induced" psychosis has been spared prison time, a judge ruled on Tuesday. The decision drew sobs of relief from the woman and a rebuke from the victim's father.

Bryn Spejcher, 32, was sentenced Tuesday to two years of probation, according to Ventura County Superior Court records. Last month, Spejcher was convicted in the 2018 fatal stabbing of Chad O'Melia, a man whom she had been dating for several weeks.

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Bryn SpejcherVENTURA COUNTY DISTRICT ATTORNEY
Testimony showed she stabbed O'Melia more than 100 times and also stabbed herself, the Ventura County Star reported.

After the sentence was handed down by Ventura County Superior Court Judge David Worley on Tuesday, Spejcher and her family cried tears of relief, the Ventura County Star reported, while the victim's father said the sentencing set a dangerous precedent.

"He just gave everyone in the state of California who smokes marijuana a license to kill someone," Sean O'Melia said, according to the outlet.


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Iowa vs Michigan preview with Probable Lineups







It is great to be an Iowa Wrestling fan.

Go Hawks!

New look Hawks are lookin good



In five dual meets against Big Ten competition, Iowa was 40-10 in matches contested. Of those 40 wins Iowa scored bonus points 21 times with 12 tech falls, 7 major decisions, and 2 falls.



It is great to be an Iowa Wrestling fan.

Go Hawks!

The EU Wants to Spy on Europeans’ Internet Use

link

Full article behind the link. It's long because it endeavors to explain how browser security works, so this effort can be understood in full context.


The European Commission is an EU legislative body with regulatory authority over digital technology. The EC’s eIDAS Article 45, a proposed regulation, would deliberately weaken areas of internet security that the industry has carefully evolved and hardened for over 25 years. The Article would effectively grant the 27 EU governments vastly expanded surveillance powers over internet use.

The rule would require all internet browsers to trust an additional root certificate from an agency (or a regulated entity) from each of the national governments of each one of the EU member states. For the non-technical readers, I will explain what a root certificate is, how internet trust has evolved, and what Article 45 does to this. And then I will highlight some of the commentary from the tech community on this matter.

...

Digital certificates are a form of ID – the internet version of a drivers’ license. When a browser connects to a site, the site presents a certificate to the browser. The certificate contains a cryptographic key. The browser and the website work together with a series of cryptographic calculations to set up secure communication.

Together, the browser and the website provide the three security guarantees:

  • privacy: by encrypting the conversation.
  • cryptographic digital signatures: to ensure that the content is not modified in flight.
  • verification of the publisher: through the chain of trust provided by PKI, that I will explain in more detail below.
...

In the online world, governments have, for the most part, not involved themselves in identity verification. Certificates are issued by private sector firms known as certificate authorities (CAs). While certificates used to be quite expensive, fees have come down considerably to the point where some are free. The best known CAs are Verisign, DigiCert and GoDaddy. Ryan Hurst shows the seven major CAs (ISRG, DigiCert, Sectigo, Google, GoDaddy, Microsoft, and IdenTrust) issue 99% of all certificates.

...

Fraudulent certificate issuance can happen. A rogue CA can issue one, but they won’t get far. The bad certificate will be detected. The bad CA will fail compliance programs and be removed from trust stores. Without acceptance, the CA will go out of business. Certificate Transparency, a more recent standard, enables more rapid detection of fraudulent certificates.

Why would a CA go rogue? What advantage can the bad guy gain from an unauthorized certificate? With the certificate alone, not much, even when signed by a trusted CA. But if the bad guy can team up with an ISP, or otherwise access the network that the browser uses, the certificate gives the bad actor the ability to break all of PKI’s security guarantees.

The hacker could mount a man-in-the-middle attack (MITM) on the conversation. The attacker could insert himself in between the browser and the real website. In this scenario, the user would be talking directly to the attacker, and the attacker would relay the contents back and forth with the real website. The attacker would present the fraudulent certificate to the browser. Because it was signed by a trusted CA, the browser would accept it. The attacker could view and even modify what either party sent before the other side received it.

Now we come to the EU’s sinister eIDAS, Article 45. This proposed regulation requires all browsers to trust a basket of certificates from CAs designated by the EU. Twenty-seven to be exact: one for each member nation. These certificates are to be called Qualified Website Authentication Certificates. The acronym “QWAC” has an unfortunate homophone to quackery – or perhaps the EC is trolling us.

The QWACs would be issued either by either government agencies, or what Michael Rectenwald calls governmentalities: “corporations and companies and other adjuncts of the state who are otherwise called ‘private,’ but really are operating as state apparatuses, in that they’re enforcing state narratives and dictates.”

This scheme would bring EU member governments one step closer to the point where they could man-in-the-middle attack against their own citizens. They would also need to access the networks. Governments are in a position to do that. If the ISP is run as a state-owned enterprise, then they would already have it. If ISPs are private firms, then local authorities could use police powers to gain access.

One point which has not been emphasized in the public conversation is that a browser in any of the 27 EU member nations would be required to accept every single QWAC, one from each EU member. This means that a browser in, for example, Spain, would have to trust a QWAC from entities in Croatia, Finland, and Austria. The Spanish user visiting an Austrian website would have to transit over Austrian portions of the internet. The issues raised above would all apply across countries within the EU.

The Register, in a piece titled Bad eIDAS: Europe ready to intercept, spy on your encrypted HTTPS connections explains one way this might work:

[T]hat government can ask its friendly CA for a copy of [the QWAC] certificate so that the government can impersonate the website – or ask for some other certificate browsers will trust and accept for the site. Thus, using a man-in-the-middle attack, that government can intercept and decrypt the encrypted HTTPS traffic between the website and its users, allowing the regime to monitor exactly what people are doing with that site at any time.

Having penetrated the shield of encryption, monitoring could include saving users’ passwords, and then using them at another time to access citizens’ email accounts. In addition to monitoring, governments could modify content inline. For example, they could remove the narratives they want to censor. They could attach annoying nanny state fact checks and content warnings to dissenting opinions.

As things currently stand, CAs must maintain the trust of the browser community. Browsers currently warn the user if a site presents an expired or otherwise untrusted certificate. Under Article 45, warnings or the ejection of trust abusers would be forbidden. Not only are browsers mandated to trust the QWACs, but Article 45 prohibits browsers from showing a warning that a certificate signed by a QWAC.

Last Chance for eIDAS (a website displaying the Mozilla logo) advocates against Article 45:

Any EU member state has the ability to designate cryptographic keys for distribution in web browsers and browsers are forbidden from revoking trust in these keys without government permission.
There is no independent check or balance on the decisions made by member states with respect to the keys they authorize and the use they put them to. This is particularly troubling given that adherence to the rule of law has not been uniform across all member states, with documented instances of coercion by secret police for political purposes.

In an open letter signed by several hundred security researchers and computer scientists:

Article 45 also bans security checks on EU web certificates unless expressly permitted by regulation when establishing encrypted web traffic connections. Instead of specifying a set of minimum security measures which must be enforced as a baseline, it effectively specifies an upper bound on the security measures which cannot be improved upon without the permission of ETSI. This runs counter to well established global norms where new cybersecurity technologies are developed and deployed in response to fast moving developments in technology.

Most of us rely on our vendors to curate the list of trusted CAs. However, as a user, you may add or remove certificates as you please on your own devices. Microsoft Windows has a tool to do this. On Linux, the root certificates are files located in a single directory. A CA may be untrusted simply by deleting the file. Will this also be forbidden? Steve Gibson, noted security pundit, columnist, and host of the long-running Security Now podcast asks:

But the EU is stating that browsers will be required to honor these new, unproven and untested certificate authorities and thus any certificates they issue, without exception and without recourse. Does that mean that my instance of Firefox will be legally bound to refuse my attempt to remove those certificates?

Gibson notes that some corporations implement similar surveillance of their employees within their own private network. Whatever your opinion about those working conditions, some industries have legitimate audit and compliance reasons to track and record what their employees are doing with company resources. But, as Gibson continues,

The trouble is that the EU and its member nations are very different from the employees of a private organization. Any time an employee doesn’t want to be spied upon, they can use their own smartphone to circumvent their employer’s network. And of course an employer’s private network is just that, a private network. The EU wants to do this for the entire public Internet from which there would be no escape.

Question for the hopeful types….

Serious question, it’s going to come off as just a poorly veiled jab and given my history that’s fair. But I’m seriously wondering how unusual I am as it pertains to my favorite team…..

Im not even sure I can make this sound the way I feel it…..🤷‍♂️

I’m a lifelong Iowa fan. I don’t really have any other team I’m terribly passionate about. I used to be a bit of a hater, meaning The Dukes and NDs of the world losing was important. But honestly none of that matters so much anymore…it’s a useless, shitty way to live anyway…

Long winded point withstanding, I have long said, I just want a coach who plays great D, understands how to identify great talent and win consistently…I really don’t care who it is.

But I am to the point, if we make a bad hire, I’m not sure I care if we F it up…the general negativity of these boards and fans in general anymore, have me to the point, I don’t think I care like I used to….

And it’s not our board, it’s all of them. I want to win, but it feels like a small consolation to watch these fanatics have to deal with the fallout….

I mean we make fun of Nebraska fans, but hell, anyone chasing off winning coaches in just another Nebraska fan….

So although I’d be pissed at first, is it goofy to find solace in those fans getting what they asked for?

I never thought I’d get to the day where other fans honestly ruin the games, but here I am.
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UAE dumps US dollar, goes digital Dirham in landmark China agreement

In a notable move reshaping the global economic landscape, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), a member of the BRICS alliance, has recently undertaken a significant shift in its international trade transactions. Departing from the traditional reliance on the US dollar, the UAE has opted to pay its dues to China using its newly introduced Digital Dirham, a digital version of its national currency.

This strategic move not only marks a departure from the established norm of denominating global transactions in the US dollar but also underscores the evolving dynamics within the BRICS coalition.

UAE Digital Dirham cross-border payment is a first​

Sheikh Mansour Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Vice President, Deputy Prime Minister, Chairman of the Presidential Court, and Chairman of the Board of the Central Bank of the UAE, made history on Monday by initiating the first cross-border payment of Dh50 million using the UAE Central Bank’s digital currency, ‘Digital Dirham’.

Sheikh Mansour made the historic transaction directly to China through the ‘mBridge’ platform while attending the ‘Golden Jubilee’ celebration of the Central Bank’s establishment and the graduation of 1,056 Emiratis from the first batch of the ‘Ethraa Emiratisation’ program at the Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre.

Project mBridge was launched in 2021 by the central monetary authorities of China, Hong Kong, Thailand, and the UAE in collaboration with the Bank for International Settlement (BIS). It is the only international collaborative partnership that includes China. The project finished its first pilot in Sept 2022.

One member of the United States Congress also noted mBridge’s advancements – Representative Maxine Waters, a member of the House Financial Services Committee, expressed concern that the initiative could be used as a cover for evading economic sanctions.

In addition, Sheikh Mansour underscored the Central Banks’ responsibility to promote economic growth to support development initiatives in the country. According to him, this should be achieved by ensuring financial and monetary stability, as well as enhancing the efficiency and adaptability of the financial system.

The end goal of these developments is to strengthen the UAE’s position as a global financial center. He further emphasized the leadership’s strategic dedication to this objective.

UAE commits to empowering its citizens to financial freedom​

Additionally, Sheikh Mansour emphasized the commitment of the leadership to empowering Emirati citizens and cultivating their expertise in various domains of expertise and professional practice.

He added that this commitment is designed to supply the financial sector with exceptionally skilled domestic personnel in accordance with the most stringent global criteria and to contribute to the nation’s broader cultural and developmental renaissance.

Sheikh Mansour extended his sincere congratulations to the esteemed graduates of the first cohort of the Ethraa program, the staff of the Central Bank, and the Emirates Institute of Finance and wished them the utmost success in their endeavors to serve their nation and contribute to its ongoing advancement.

On this occasion, the subsidiaries of the Central Bank erected the ‘Innovative Projects’ Pavilion, where the Vice President was briefed on the exhibits.

Additionally, he observed the establishment of Al Etihad Payments, a venture that manages the local payment card system, through the execution of the initial effective financial transaction using a payment card featuring unique attributes.

Additionally, the services offered by the Aani immediate payment platform, which was introduced by Al Etihad Payments in October 2023, and the supervisory technology project ‘Suptech’ were explained to Sheikh Mansour.


The collapse of the United States Dollar​

The BRICS countries, the UAE and China, have billion-dollar trade deals, and using Digital Dirhams as payment jeopardizes the US dollar. If the two BRICS countries continue to pay in Digital Dirhams, the US dollar will be affected most severely.

The UAE, a new BRICS member, is looking for innovative ways to propel the Digital Dirham ahead of the US currency. Furthermore, China encourages developing countries to prioritize their indigenous currencies in trade settlements above the US dollar.

The Digital Dirham is the United Arab Emirates’ central bank digital currency (CBDC), launched as part of the Central Bank Digital Currency Strategy. It involves wholesale and retail CBDC issuance, aiming to enhance domestic and cross-border payments, promote financial inclusion, and transition towards a cashless economy.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/mar...S&cvid=6f27f27af01f44079ae51e15e97b8b87&ei=42
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