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    After Clippers' 15-3 run, fan follows through on eating his words
    The Clippers' midseason surge turned a bold online statement into a literal follow-through.
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    Source: Giants ink Bader to 2-year, $20.5M deal
    The San Francisco Giants have agreed to a two-year deal with free agent center fielder Harrison Bader, a source told ESPN on Monday. The deal is worth $20.5 million, a source told ESPN's Jeff Passan.
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    Source: Chargers, Tart reach 3-year extension
    The Chargers and defensive tackle Teair Tart agreed to a three-year extension worth up to $37.5 million with $20 million guaranteed, a source told ESPN.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Kanye West Apologizes for Antisemitic Behavior in Full-Page Wall Street Journal Ad
    The artist formerly known as Kanye West, who first apologized in 2023 before taking it back, said a four-month manic episode in 2025 had led him to embrace swastikas and Hitler.
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  • THEONION.COM
    God Informs Humanity Choking People Meant To Die
    THE HEAVENSWarning His subjects that they should not mess with His carefully laid plans by playing hero, God, Our Lord and Heavenly Father, reportedly informed humanity Monday that choking people were meant to die. I created all thingsdo you really think I would fuck up and make human throats clog on accident? This is divine design, said He Who Commanded Light to Shine Out of Darkness, revealing that busybody asshole Henry Heimlich, who died in 2016, was burning in hell for all eternity. Look at how horrible choking is. Could I have made it any more clear that people are supposed to suffer? When it comes to money and love and politics, its all, Do not doubt Gods plan, but then suddenly youre rushing over to a toddler who swallowed a button. Whos the almighty being here? Did you design a perfectly balanced and intricate universe that goes on for billions of light years? I didnt think so. I actually have to kill other people just to balance the scale when you mess up this shit. That last earthquake in Myanmar was all just people who were supposed to choke to death in other places. So just step back and give choking people space to undergo the divine process through which I claim their soul. The Lord Almighty added that His plan was also in effect anytime someone was on fire or being devoured by a wild animal.The post God Informs Humanity Choking People Meant To Die appeared first on The Onion.
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    On Venezuela and Greenland, Many Trump Fans Give Him the Benefit of the Doubt
    At least so far, President Trump has managed to bring along even those conservative supporters who are skeptical of foreign interventions.
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  • 430,000-Year-Old Wooden Tools Are the Oldest Ever Found
    The finding, along with the discovery of a 500,000-year-old hammer made of bone, indicates that our human ancestors were making tools even earlier than archaeologists thought.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Washington Post Reverses Decision on Olympics Coverage
    The newspaper will send a small team of reporters to cover the Olympics after it informed sports journalists on Friday that the paper would not send a group.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Why Is the Trump Administration Demanding Minnesotas Voter Rolls?
    The Justice Department has urged Minnesota to hand over voters private data. It is part of a national push that has raised concerns about the Trump administrations motives.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Home Sourdough Bakers Are Turning Their Hobbies Into Full-Time Jobs
    Home bakers are finding devoted customer bases that allow them to stay home with family and still make a decent living but they do have get up in the middle of the night.
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  • THEONION.COM
    Kristi Noem Calls On Minneapolis Residents To Stop Obstructing Murders
    WASHINGTONUrging locals to fully cooperate with federal agents, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem called on Minneapolis residents Monday to stop obstructing murders. The brave men and women of ICE and the U.S. Border Patrol are doing their best to carry out these executions in a safe and professional manner, said Noem, who emphasized that public safety depended on the ability of federal immigration officers to kill unimpeded. These are official, state-sanctioned murders, and its not your place to interfere. Our agents need to be able to do the job they were hired to do.And if you do choose to resist being murdered, well, you shouldnt be surprised by what comes to you. The DHS secretary went on to condemn the media for depicting these murderers as Nazis.The post Kristi Noem Calls On Minneapolis Residents To Stop Obstructing Murders appeared first on The Onion.
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  • THEONION.COM
    Thats Norway to Treat a Lady
    The post Thats Norway to Treat a Lady appeared first on The Onion.
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  • WWW.APARTMENTTHERAPY.COM
    This $230 DIY Project Worked in Every Room of My Home
    It gave a new and fresh look to the whole inside.READ MORE...
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  • WWW.404MEDIA.CO
    Dozens of CDC Health Databases Have Gone Dark Under Trump: The Consequences Will Be Dire
    Subscribe to 404 Media to get The Abstract, our newsletter about the most exciting and mind-boggling science news and studies of the week. Researchers are raising alarms over unexplained pauses that have interrupted dozens of U.S. federal health surveillance databases covering vaccinations and overdose deaths during the second Trump administration. The breakdown is creating critical gaps in public health according to a study published on Monday in Annals of Internal Medicine.During 2025, nearly half (46 percent) of 82 routinely-updated databases managed by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) experienced delays or total cessations of new data, an interdisciplinary team reports in their new audit. The majority (87 percent) of the affected databases monitor vaccination-related topics, and most experienced data blackouts for a period of more than six months as of late October 2025.Such long pauses may have compromised evidence for decision making and policies by clinicians, administrators, professional organizations, and policymakers, wrote the researchers led by Jeremy W. Jacobs, an assistant professor of pathology, microbiology and immunology at Vanderbilt University Medical Center.Without current data on disease burden, vaccination coverage, behavioral health indicators, and demographic disparities, clinicians cannot identify emerging threats or focus on meeting the needs of specific populations, the team continued. Without safeguards, unexplained pauses in surveillance undermine evidence-based medicine and erode public trust at a time when both are critically needed.The affected CDC databases collect surveillance information from hospitals, research centers, and other sources to monitor dangerous situationslike infectious disease outbreaks or upticks in drug overdosesand provide real-time aid and guidance to assist local health authorities. As of December 2025, only one of the paused databases identified in the October survey had been updated.Over the course of the past year, the team wrote, federal health databases have seen "unprecedented removal and undocumented alteration. They speculated that the interruptions are related to the Trump administrations major cuts to federal staff and budgets across the U.S. government, including at the CDC and the National Institute of Health, which likely played a role in disrupting data collection and updates to technical infrastructure.The disproportionate impact on vaccination-related databases also reflect the priorities of Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Trumps Health and Human Services secretary, who has spread misinformation about vaccines, reduced the childhood vaccine schedule, and fired leading scientific advisors and CDC officials who have pushed back on his views.Vaccination tracking is particularly vulnerable because it requires ongoing coordination across federal, state, and health care system data sources, the researchers said. Vaccination surveillance identifies groups with greater challenges to access and equity by stratifying by age, race and ethnicity, geographic jurisdiction, and insurance coverage. The ability to address these disparities has been compromised precisely when such information is most needed to counter misinformation and target outreach.In an editorial published alongside the study, Jeanne Marrazzo, a physician and CEO of the Infectious Disease Society of America, called the new study damning and said it exposed tampering with evidence and selective silencing." She warns that the loss of updated data in these systems could lead to dire consequences, including delayed responses to disease outbreaks, and a loss of public trust in federal health institutions.The administrations antivaccine stance has interrupted the reliable flow of the data we need to keep Americans safe from preventable infections, said Marrazzo, who was not an author of the study.The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Secretary, who has stated baldly that the CDC failed to protect Americans during the COVID-19 pandemic, is now enacting a self-fulfilling prophecy, she warned. The CDC as it currently exists is no longer the stalwart, reliable source of public health data that for decades has set the global bar for rigorous public health practice.Subscribe to 404 Media to get The Abstract, our newsletter about the most exciting and mind-boggling science news and studies of the week.
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    No return of the Mac: McClung sits dunk contest
    Three-time defending NBA dunk contest champion Mac McClung will not defend his title, electing not to participate in the 2026 All-Star showcase.
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    Stanford, family of Katie Meyer reach settlement
    Stanford announced a settlement with the family of Katie Meyer, the former star soccer goalie and two-time team captain who died by suicide in 2022.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    The War in Minnesota Is for Our Phones
    We need to protect our right to carry cameras to document ICEs violence.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    White House Distances Trump From Initial Response to Minnesota Killing
    Officials clearly understood that the fatal shooting of a demonstrator posed one of the gravest political threats to President Trump since his inauguration.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    NATO Chief Says Europe Is Dreaming if It Thinks It Can Defend Itself Without U.S.
    Mark Rutte, the secretary general of the alliance, told members of the European Parliament that President Trump was doing a lot of good stuff.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Democrats Embrace a Shutdown Fight They Wanted to Avoid
    After a second fatal shooting of a U.S. citizen in Minneapolis, Democrats say public opinion is on their side and they are willing to risk a backlash to counter what they see as police-state tactics.
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  • THEONION.COM
    Canned Tuna Recalled For Potentially Fatal Botulism Mistakenly Reshipped
    Previously quarantined cans of yellowfin tuna that were recalled due to a defective pull tab which could introduce botulism, a potentially fatal form of food poisoning, were mistakenly reshipped to stores in at least nine states. What do you think?Nothing a 10% discount cant fix.Clark Diekmann, Produce DisplayerHow potentially fatal are we talking?Elyse Schubow, Seam ReinforcerSome poisonings are just meant to be.Allen Trottier, Riverbed RakerThe post Canned Tuna Recalled For Potentially Fatal Botulism Mistakenly Reshipped appeared first on The Onion.
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  • THEONION.COM
    Trump Alleges That Democrats Secretly Paid Alex Pretti To Be Model Citizen
    WASHINGTONClaiming that no one would realistically devote their life to serving others without being funded by nefarious actors, President Donald Trump allegedMondaythat Democrats had secretly paid Alex Pretti, the 37-year-old Veterans Affairs nurse killed by U.S. Border Patrol agents in Minneapolis, to be a model citizen. What they dont want you to know is that George Soros and his far-left billionaire friends hired Alex Pretti to act as a dependable, beloved pillar of his community for decades, said Trump, adding that there was no way a man could be so universally beloved by every member of his family, community, and workplace unless some kind of Democratic dark money was at play. Nowadays, people like Alex Pretti get a lot of money to live virtuous lives, follow the rules, and stand up for whats right. This guy was paid a prettypenny to help war veterans, own a legal firearm but have no criminal record, and use his last words to ask a woman who had been thrown to the ground by federal agents if she was okay. And believe me, he laughed all the way to the bank. If the radical left have their way, well have kindness like this taking over the country. Trump added that federal immigration officers had no choice but to fatally shoot Pretti when they discovered millions of dollars in cash from Democrats on his body.The post Trump Alleges That Democrats Secretly Paid Alex Pretti To Be Model Citizen appeared first on The Onion.
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    This Once-Dim Hallway Now Feels Bright, Calm, and Finished All for $650
    This hallway finally got the attention it deserved, the DIYer says.READ MORE...
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Under Biden Administration, Justice Dept. Began Examining Ilhan Omars Finances
    The inquiry, initiated by the U.S. attorneys office in Washington, appears to have stalled for lack of evidence.
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  • APNEWS.COM
    What we know about the investigations into the Minneapolis shooting death of Alex Pretti
    People gather near the scene where Alex Pretti was fatally shot by a U.S. Border Patrol officer yesterday, in Minneapolis, Sunday, Jan. 25, 2026. (AP Photo/Adam Gray)2026-01-26T23:10:24Z WASHINGTON (AP) The fatal shooting over the weekend of a Minneapolis man has prompted calls for a thorough independent investigation into the second death at the hands of federal immigration officers since the Trump administration began its large-scale operation in the city late last year.But many of the investigations details, including the identities of the officers involved and precisely what evidence is being examined, remain unclear even as tensions soar in Minneapolis over the death of Alex Pretti, 37, an ICU nurse. Any investigation into the details of the shooting will likely be highly scrutinized. The Trump administration has been quick to cast Pretti as an armed instigator, although videos emerging from the scene and local officials contradict that claim.Heres a look at whats known about the investigation into the shooting and whats not: Three probes launchedThe White House says three federal investigations into the shooting are underway. During a briefing Monday, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said the Department of Homeland Security and the FBI were investigating the shooting and U.S. Customs and Border Protection was conducting their own internal review.As President (Donald) Trump said yesterday, the administration is reviewing everything with respect to the shooting, and we will let that investigation play out, Leavitt added, without providing additional details on the probes. The Federal Bureau of Investigation, which normally plays a key role in any case in which a federal law enforcement officer kills a civilian, is instead only lending support in processing physical evidence from the scene, such as Prettis gun.Historically, the Civil Rights Division of the Justice Department investigates shootings of civilians by law enforcement officers for potential criminal violations, but theres no indication that they intend to do so in Prettis case. In the case of Renee Good, who was shot and killed by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent in Minneapolis on Jan. 7, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said in a statement earlier this month that there is currently no basis for a criminal civil rights investigation. Gil Kerlikowske, who headed Customs and Border Protection during the Obama administration, said that when he was at the agency, if a Border Patrol agent used deadly force on the job, it would be routine for the FBI to conduct a criminal civil rights investigation, even in cases where the force may have been justified and even if the probe wouldnt necessarily lead to prosecution.Kerlikowske also questioned why Homeland Security Investigations, an arm within DHS that traditionally probes cross-border issues like drug smuggling and human trafficking, would take a lead role in this investigation. This isnt something that HSI has real expertise or does at all, said Kerlikowske. Shooting and use of force and potential criminal liability is not something that would be in their portfolio. Videos, firearms and questions about Prettis phoneFBI Director Kash Patel said Sunday on Fox News that the agency will be assisting HSI by processing physical evidence. Patel said theyre in possession of the firearm, which is going to go to our laboratory, in reference to Prettis gun.But Patel made no reference to whether the bureau had gathered the firearms of the officers or agents who were on the scene or what other evidence the FBI was processing.DHS officials did not respond to questions Monday about whether they are in possession of Prettis phone or whether they have recovered the video he was recording when he was killed.Prettis family told The Associated Press they dont have the phone and dont know where it is. Prettis father, Michael Pretti, said Monday the family had still not been contacted by or provided any information by federal law enforcement.Investigators also have an extensive array of videos to sift through, including multiple videos shot by activists and protesters at the scene. Use-of-force experts have said that bystander video undermined federal authorities claim that Pretti approached a group of lawmen with a firearm and that a Border Patrol officer opened fire defensively. There has been no evidence made public, they said, that supports a claim by Border Patrol senior official Greg Bovino that Pretti, who had a permit to carry a concealed handgun, intended to massacre law enforcement. Investigators have video from at least four Border Patrol agents on the scene who were wearing body cameras, said DHS spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin. Those videos have not been made public.Neither have the identities of the Border Patrol agents involved. The officer who shot the man is an eight-year Border Patrol veteran, federal officials said Saturday. State officials say they are being shut outThe incident has shined a light on the increasing mistrust between officials in the state and the Trump administration over who should take the lead in investigating. Drew Evans, superintendent of Minnesotas Bureau of Criminal Apprehension, which investigates police shootings, told reporters Saturday that federal officers had blocked his agency from the scene of the shooting even after it obtained a signed judicial warrant. We will continue to investigate this case and others that we have recently been involved with. But I would be remiss if I didnt state that it would be difficult to obtain all of the evidence and information obtained without cooperation, Evans said Saturday.A federal judge has already issued an order blocking the Trump administration from destroying or altering evidence related to the shooting after state and county officials sued.Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison said the lawsuit filed Saturday is meant to preserve evidence collected by federal officials that state authorities have not yet been able to inspect. McLaughlin dismissed the lawsuit, saying claims that the federal government would destroy evidence are a ridiculous attempt to divide the American people and distract from the fact that our law enforcement officers were attacked and their lives were threatened.Minnesotas Democratic Gov. Tim Walz said he called for an impartial investigation in a phone call with Trump Monday.Trump, in an earlier social media post, said after their call he and Walz seemed to be on a similar wavelength, although he did not mention the investigations. Later, Leavitt said Trump supports the probes that are underway. ___Associated Press writers Michael Biesecker and Eric Tucker contributed. REBECCA SANTANA Santana covers the Department of Homeland Security for The Associated Press. She has extensive experience reporting in such places as Russia, Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan. twitter mailto
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  • APNEWS.COM
    Trump threatens to hike tariffs on South Korean goods over inaction on trade deal
    President Donald Trump speaks with reporters aboard Air Force One after leaving the World Economic Forum in Davos for Washington, Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)2026-01-26T22:12:21Z WASHINGTON (AP) President Donald Trump said Monday he is increasing tariffs on South Korean goods because the countrys national assembly has yet to approve the trade framework announced last year.Trump said on social media that import taxes would be raised on autos, lumber and pharmaceutical drugs from South Korea with the rate on other goods going from 15% to 25%. The U.S. president previously imposed the tariffs by declaring an economic emergency and bypassing Congress, while South Korea needed legislative approval for the framework announced in July and affirmed during Trumps October visit to the country.Our Trade Deals are very important to America. In each of these Deals, we have acted swiftly to reduce our TARIFFS in line with the Transaction agreed to, Trump said. We, of course, expect our Trading Partners to do the same. The threat was a reminder that the tariff drama unleashed last year by Trump is likely to be repeated again and again this year. The global economy and U.S. voters might find the worlds trade structure constantly being subject to disruption and new negotiations as Trump has already sought to levy tariffs in order to bend other nations to his will. Trump has in the past tied his tariffs to commitments by South Korea to invest $350 billion in the U.S. economy over several years, including efforts to revitalize American shipyards. But the Trump administrations relations with South Korea have at times been rocky with the raid last year by immigration officials at a Hyundai manufacturing site in Georgia that caused 475 people to be detained. Stay up to date with the news and the best of AP by following our WhatsApp channel. Follow on Mondays announcement of new tariffs fits a pattern in which Trump plans to continue to deploy tariffs, possibly to the detriment of relations with other countries. Just last week, the president threatened tariffs on eight European nations unless the U.S. gained control of Greenland, only to pull back on his ultimatum after meetings at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. Trump on Saturday said he would put a 100% tax on goods from Canada if it followed through with plans to bolster trade with China. Trump has bragged about his trade frameworks as drawing in new investment to the U.S., yet many of his heavily hyped deals have yet to be finalized. The European Parliament has yet to approve a trade deal pushed by Trump that would put a 15% tax on the majority of goods made by the EUs 27 member states.The United States is poised this year to renegotiate its amended 2020 trade pact with Canada and Mexico. There are also ongoing Section 232 investigations under the 1962 Trade Expansion Act, as well as an upcoming Supreme Court decision on whether Trump exceeded his authority by declaring tariffs under the 1977 International Emergency Economic Powers Act. JOSH BOAK Boak covers the White House and economic policy for The Associated Press. He joined the AP in 2013. twitter mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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  • APNEWS.COM
    US stocks rise as gold hits another record and the dollars value sinks again
    Trader Michael Capolino, left, and Specialist Thomas McArdle work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, Monday, Jan. 26, 2026. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)2026-01-26T04:21:18Z NEW YORK (AP) U.S. stock indexes ticked higher Monday, while other markets made louder moves, including another record-breaking rush for the price of gold.The S&P 500 rose 0.5% and won back its losses from last weeks dip. The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 313 points, or 0.6%, and the Nasdaq composite added 0.4%.Baker Hughes helped lead the way and rose 4.4% after delivering a stronger profit for the latest quarter than analysts expected. The energy technology company said its benefiting from strong momentum in demand for liquefied natural gas, among other things.CoreWeave climbed 5.7% after Nvidia said it invested $2 billion in the stock and will help accelerate the buildout of CoreWeaves artificial-intelligence factories, which use Nvidia chips, by 2030 to advance AI adoption. Nvidia slipped 0.6%.USA Rare Earth rallied 7.9% after saying the U.S. government agreed to provide $277 million in federal funding to help the company produce heavy rare earths, minerals and magnets. The Trump administration also agreed to a proposed $1.3 billion loan, while the company separately raised $1.5 billion through private investors. Much of the rest of Wall Street was relatively quiet. That included mixed performances for airlines, which had to cancel thousands of flights due to the winter storm that swept much of the United States over the weekend. Delta Air Lines lost 0.7%, and Southwest Airlines added 0.2%. All told, the S&P 500 rose 34.62 points to 6,950.23. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 313.69 to 49,412.40, and the Nasdaq composite gained 100.11 to 23,601.36. The action was stronger in the gold market, where the metals price rallied another 2.1% and briefly topped $5,100 per ounce for the first time to set another record. Silver surged even more and settled 14% higher. Prices for precious metals have been soaring as investors look for safer places to park their money amid threats of tariffs, still-high inflation, political strife and mountains of debt for governments worldwide. The latest worry to pile atop the swelling list was President Donald Trumps threat to impose a 100% tariff on goods from Canada if it signs a free trade deal with China.The U.S. dollars value also continued its recent slide against peers. Last week, it was U.S. tariff threats related to Greenland that drove some global investors away from the dollar. This time, it was the Japanese yen leaping sharply because of expectations that officials in both Japan and the United States may intervene in the market to prop up the Japanese currencys value.More swings could be ahead for financial markets in a week full of big tests.The Federal Reserve will announce its latest move on interest rates on Wednesday. Its been lowering its main interest rate and has indicated more cuts may be on the way in 2026 to help shore up the job market and give the economy a boost. Most economists expect it to hold steady on Wednesday, in part because inflation remains stubbornly above the Feds 2% target and lower rates could worsen it. Whatever the Fed decides, comments from its chair, Jerome Powell, following the decision could sway stock and bond markets. Several of Wall Streets most influential stocks are also set to deliver their latest earnings reports this week. That includes Meta Platforms, Microsoft and Tesla on Wednesday and Apple on Thursday.In the bond market, the yield on the 10-year Treasury eased to 4.21% from 4.24% late Friday.In stock markets abroad, indexes were mixed amid mostly modest movements in Europe following some sharper swings in Asia. Japans Nikkei 225 dropped 1.8% for one of the worlds bigger moves. A stronger yen could hurt Japanese exporters, and Toyota Motor fell 4.1%.___AP Business Writers Yuri Kageyama and Matt Ott contributed.
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  • APNEWS.COM
    European Union opens investigation into Musks AI chatbot Grok over sexual deepfakes
    Elon Musk attends a memorial for conservative activist Charlie Kirk, Sunday, Sept. 21, 2025, at State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Ariz. (AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson, File)2026-01-26T11:28:00Z LONDON (AP) The European Union opened a formal investigation into Elon Musks social media platform X on Monday after his artificial intelligence chatbot Grok spewed nonconsensual sexualized deepfake images on the platform. European regulators also widened a separate, ongoing investigation into Xs recommendation systems after the platform said it would switch to Groks AI system to choose which posts users see.The scrutiny from Brussels comes after Grok sparked a global backlash by allowing users through its AI image generation and editing capabilities to undress people, putting females in transparent bikinis or revealing clothing. Researchers said some images appeared to include children. Some governments banned the service or issued warnings. The 27-nation EUs executive said it was looking into whether X has done enough as required by the blocs digital regulations to contain the risks of spreading illegal content such as manipulated sexually explicit images. AP AUDIO: European Union opens investigation into Musks AI chatbot Grok over sexual deepfakes AP correspondent Laurence Brooks reports on the EU investigating Elon Musks X over deepfake images. That includes content that may amount to child sexual abuse material, the European Commission said. These risks have now materialized, the commission said, exposing the blocs citizens to serious harm. Regulators will examine whether Grok is living up to its obligations under the Digital Services Act, the blocs wide-ranging rule book for keeping internet users safe from harmful content and products. In response to a request for comment, an X spokeswoman directed The Associated Press to an earlier statement that the company remains committed to making X a safe platform for everyone and that it has zero tolerance for child sexual exploitation, nonconsensual nudity, and unwanted sexual content. The X statement from Jan. 14 also said it would stop allowing users to depict people in bikinis, underwear or other revealing attire, but only in places where it has been deemed illegal. Non-consensual sexual deepfakes of women and children are a violent, unacceptable form of degradation, Henna Virkkunen, an executive vice president at the commission, said in a statement. With this investigation, we will determine whether X has met its legal obligations under the DSA, or whether it treated rights of European citizens including those of women and children - as collateral damage of its service, said Virkkunen, who oversees tech sovereignty, security and democracy.Musks artificial intelligence company xAI launched Groks image tool last summer. But the problem began snowballing only late last month when Grok seemingly granted a large number of user requests to modify images posted by others. The problem was amplified both because Musk pitches his chatbot as an edgier alternative with fewer safeguards than rivals, and because Groks responses on X are publicly visible, and can therefore be easily spread.The EU investigation covers only Groks service on X, and not Groks website and standalone app. Thats because the DSA applies only to the biggest online platforms. Theres no deadline for the bloc to resolve the case, which could end in either X pledging to change its behavior or a hefty fine. In December Brussels issued X with a 120-million euro (then-$140 million) fine as part of the earlier ongoing DSA investigation, for shortcomings including blue checkmarks that broke the rules on deceptive design practices that risked exposing users to scams and manipulation.The bloc has also been scrutinizing X over allegations that Grok generated antisemitic material and has asked the site for more information. Malaysia and Indonesia blocked access to Grok earlier this month in response to the controversy, becoming the first countries to do so.On Friday, Malaysian authorities said they lifted the temporary restriction after the company implemented additional security and preventive measures, without giving further details. Malaysian regulators said they met last week with Xs representatives and would continue to monitor the situation. X is facing similar pressure in the United States Last week, attorneys general in 35 states wrote a letter to the company calling for it disclose its plans to prevent Grok from creating nonconsensual sexualized deepfake images, and explain how it will eliminate such existing content from the platform.We strongly urge you to be a leader in this space by further addressing the harms resulting from this technology, the attorneys general wrote.__AP writer Eileen Ng in Kuala Lumpur contributed to this report KELVIN CHAN Chan covers technology and innovation in Europe and beyond for The Associated Press. twitter mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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    Super Bowl betting buzz: How one bettor's $100 bet could turn into $310,000
    One bettor's $100 wager in August would win $310,000 if Seattle defeats the Patriots.
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    Ex-Olympian, alleged kingpin, pleads not guilty
    Former Canadian Olympic snowboarder Ryan Wedding has pleaded not guilty to running a billion-dollar drug trafficking ring and orchestrating multiple killings.
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    ACC moves title game to noon in schedule drop
    The ACC is moving its conference championship game to noon on Saturday in an effort to draw more attention to the game.
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    Hearing for Bediako postponed, TRO extended
    Charles Bediako can continue playing for Alabama after a hearing on his request for a preliminary injunction was delayed.
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    Why has Barcelona's best young player, left to join PSG?
    Shortly after turning 18, Dro Fernndez shocked the club by joining PSG for a minimal fee. What happened?
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    A Year After DC Plane Crash, Concerns About Airports Safety Continue
    The Federal Aviation Administration says it has reduced traffic in and out of the airport and designed safer routes. Crash victims families want more.
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    Thomas Fogarty, 91, Who Helped Revolutionize Vascular Surgery, Dies
    Drawing on his love of fly-fishing, he developed a balloon catheter that removes blood clots from patients limbs in a minimally invasive way. It has saved millions of lives.
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    Trump Changes Course in Minnesota
    Also, large parts of the U.S. are dangerously cold. Heres the latest at the end of Monday.
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    WWE 'Raw': Live results and analysis
    Andreas Hale breaks down all the action from Bron Breakker's return from suspension in the last episode of "Raw" before Royal Rumble.
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    Ex-FIFA prez backs call to 'stay away' from WC
    Former FIFA president Sepp Blatter on Monday backed a proposed fan boycott of World Cup matches in the United States because of the conduct of President Donald Trump and his administration at home and abroad.
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    Mavs' Flagg headlines Rising Stars player pool
    Ten rookies -- all of whom were taken in the lottery in June's draft -- and 11 sophomores, as well as seven players from the G League are slated to take part in next month's Rising Stars Challenge.
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    Trump Administration Takes Another Stake in Rare Earth Sector
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    Trump Briefed on Intelligence Saying Irans Government Is Weaker
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    Winter Storm Debilitates the South, Encasing Cities in Ice and Snow
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