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    Are food pouches healthy for toddlers?

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    Q: What’s your advice about toddler convenience foods like squeezable pouches, snack bars and special drinks?

    Toddlers need to snack, no question about it. Their stomachs are too small to get them through those long gaps from meal to meal, and it generally makes sense to give them a morning snack and then an afternoon snack, in addition to their regular meals.

    For many parents, feeding young children is a generally fraught topic. You want to satisfy their (sometimes urgent) demands while still building the foundation of healthy eating habits. All of this parental anxiety is complicated by marketing — you can find all kinds of packaged toddler snacks making all kinds of promises, from squeezable pouches of salmon teriyaki puree to special “smart” bars.

    As a pediatrician who has raised three children myself, I don’t want to make parents feel guilty about occasionally using convenience foods like squeezable pouches and toddler snacks. These foods are clearly helpful for busy families, and there’s nothing wrong with using them sometimes. But in terms of a child’s health and development, I want parents to know that snack time also presents a huge opportunity to shape their children’s eating and behavioral habits.

    That message isn’t always getting through to parents. Research suggests that some parents view breakfast, lunch and dinner as opportunities to provide healthy nutrition — but see snacks as more about behavior management. A 2020 study analyzed the meals and snack foods parents chose for young children, and observed that parents and siblings were less likely to sit down and eat with a toddler at snack time than at mealtime.

    Here’s my advice about snack time and toddler foods.

    We want toddlers to learn to handle real food — with their fingers, with spoons and with their mouths in terms of chewing and swallowing. But a toddler who prefers purées and sucking on pouches to chewing is not getting the chance to play with food textures, to handle food, to learn about ways of getting it into the mouth and what to do with it when it’s there. These skills develop in the toddler years, and children need practice.

    “Eating a lot of puréed foods in pouches as a toddler can negatively impact a toddler’s oral motor development and development of important feeding skills,” said Natalie Muth, pediatrician and registered dietitian and Well Clinic director at Children’s Primary Care Medical Group in San Diego. “My recommendation to parents is that it’s okay to offer pouches sometimes. To raise healthy eaters, it’s really important to offer the real fruits and vegetables early and often to help kids learn to love and enjoy fruits and vegetables in their natural form. It’s a process that can take time and patience, but it pays off in a big way at the end of the day.”

    Don’t use snacks as a fix for boredom

    Eating isn’t a purely nutritional activity for toddlers, any more than for the rest of us. Kids are learning about food, but they’re also learning about healthy patterns, about sociability and even about deferred gratification.

    So don’t encourage your child to get into the routine of “grazing” or constant all-day nibbling. Convenience foods can make everything a little too convenient. You don’t want the message to be that it’s good to go through life with a pouch of something edible always clutched in your hand. Toddlers get meals and they get snacks, and then the rest of the time, they need both hands free to explore the world.

    That puts the onus on parents not to respond to toddler boredom or frustration with a placating snack. There are other ways to distract a cranky toddler, and after all, many of us (as adults) wish fervently that we had never absorbed the idea of eating to relieve boredom or frustration.

    Choose real food vs. processed snack foods when you can

    For both regular meals and snacks, try to serve your toddler fruits and vegetables, and avoid processed foods, salty snacks and especially sweet snacks. A 2019 consensus statement by nutritional experts emphasized that toddlers should be drinking milk or water, and definitely not sugary drinks. There are lots of ideas for healthy snacks available from the American Academy of Pediatrics and from other medical authorities.

    My colleague Nicholle Francis, a registered dietitian and lactation counselor in New York City, said that snacks should ideally combine a protein and a healthy carbohydrate, and that parents should keep it “as close to the earth as possible; it doesn’t have to be packaged or processed.” She suggested cottage cheese, plain yogurt or homemade hummus as good sources of protein, combined with thinly sliced cucumber, softer squashable fruits or wholegrain crackers..

    Be aware of choking hazards

    Cut seedless grapes into spears (never give whole grapes) and apples into matchsticks, and squash whole berries. Avoid nuts, popcorn, hot dogs and anything that comes in big chunks. To keep young eaters safe, sit with your child during meals and snack time, and don’t let them walk, run, play or lie down with food in their mouth.

    Ignore food marketing claims

    Food marketing can leave you feeling that prepared and processed foods are somehow better, more nutritious or more brain-building than real foods you prepare yourself. But with toddlers, parents have control (and we hope the marketers can’t reach them directly yet). Parents can “sell” real foods to children by exposing them to different tastes and textures.

    And yes, as we know, it can be a little messy. But that’s what the transition to the toddler years is all about. Messy goes with learning, and playing with your food can be very educational.

    Eating — even snacks — should be social

    We want toddlers to learn that eating is social — you do it with family (or the other day care kids). Social interactions around snacking matter, just as they do around meals. When you can, sit down with your toddler and have your own healthy snack. Follow basic rules of civility — no screens at the table, a little conversation. And then when snack time is over, hands get washed, food gets put away and it’s time to get on with the day.

    Perri Klass is a pediatrician and professor of journalism and pediatrics at New York University, and author of “The Best Medicine: How Science and Public Health Gave Children a Future.”

    Trump, GOP seize on campus Gaza protests to attack Biden

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    Former president Donald Trump and other prominent Republicans are seizing on the eruption of campus protests across the country to depict the United States as out of control under President Biden, seeking to use the mostly peaceful demonstrations as a political cudgel against the Democrats.

    The pro-Palestinian protests at numerous colleges — including Columbia, Yale, Emory, the University of Southern California, the University of Texas at Austin and others — include encampments and barricades intended to highlight protesters’ denunciation of Israel’s military onslaught in Gaza, as well as to push universities to divest from companies with ties to Israel.

    Beyond the disruption to campus life, top Republicans have highlighted the antisemitic chants that have occurred at some of the protests. The issue is complicated by a debate over what constitutes antisemitism — and when criticism of Israel crosses that line — while some student organizers have denounced the chants or said they are coming from outside activists.

    Trump, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, has cited the protests to accuse Biden and Democrats of being unable to maintain order or quash lawlessness, an accusation he has leveled at the president on other hot-button political issues. He has also highlighted the protests as a way to air his own political grievances, including the lack of similar demonstrations around his current criminal trial.

    On Monday morning, Trump posted on Truth Social, “STOP THE PROTESTS NOW!!!”

    As the protests have mushroomed in recent days, numerous Republicans have sought ways to highlight them as an example of the country’s slide into chaos. Several Republican lawmakers, including House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.), have visited the campus of Columbia University, the site of some of the most sweeping protests, to call for its president to resign for purportedly failing to contain the demonstrations.

    Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican, dispatched more than 100 state troopers to the University of Texas at Austin to clear out pro-Palestinian protesters, resulting in dozens of arrests. All of the charges against the protesters were later dropped for lack of probable cause.

    The campus protests present conservatives with some of their favorite targets: elite universities, progressive activists, “woke” culture and civil rights leaders. In addition, attacking the protests allows Republicans to change the subject from less friendly political terrain, such as abortion rights and the war in Ukraine.

    Their rhetoric is harsh in many cases. Sens. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) and Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) have demanded that Biden mobilize the National Guard to protect Jewish Americans on campus. Hawley compared the standoff to the battle over segregation in 1957, when President Dwight D. Eisenhower summoned the National Guard to force the integration of Central High School in Little Rock.

    Sen. J.D. Vance (R-Ohio) suggested that the college protesters were mentally unstable. “You don’t get to turn our public places into a garbage dump. No civilization should tolerate these encampments. Get rid of them,” Vance posted on X. “If you want to protest peacefully fine. It’s your right. But go home and take a shower at the end of the day. These encampments are just gross. Wanting to participate in this is a mental illness.”

    The GOP rhetoric has not been limited to campus protests, sometimes covering pro-Palestinian actions more broadly, including those that have shut down roads and bridges in some cities. Cotton, in a post on X, urged those who get stuck behind “pro-Hamas mobs blocking traffic” to “take matters into your own hands.” Following criticism that some might read that as a call to violence, Cotton amended his post to say “take matters into your own hands to get them out of the way.”

    Supporters of the campus protests say they are peaceful, and that accusations of antisemitism are often a pretext to shut down dissenting voices. Many of the Republicans criticizing the protests, they say, condoned or excused the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol, which was far more violent.

    The students are “peacefully protesting for an end of the Israeli genocide against Palestinians in Gaza,” the group Jewish Voices for Peace, which supports a cease-fire in Gaza, said of the Columbia protests. “ … We condemn any and all hateful or violent comments targeting Jewish students; however, in shutting down public protest and suspending students, the actions of the University of Columbia are not ensuring safety for Jewish students — or any students — on campus.”

    The Israel-Gaza war has deeply fractured the Democratic Party, posing significant political challenges to Biden months ahead of November’s presidential contest. Biden pledged steadfast support of Israel after Hamas militants stormed through the Israel-Gaza border on Oct. 7 and killed 1,200 people, many of them civilians, and took 253 hostage, according to Israeli authorities.

    Israel responded with a punishing military campaign in Gaza that has killed more than 34,000 Palestinians, imposing a siege that has created a humanitarian catastrophe as Gaza’s health system has collapsed and the population faces a looming famine. The resulting protest movement has electrified many younger voters and progressives, as well as others in the Democratic coalition that Biden needs to repeat his 2020 win, who have called for the United States to impose conditions for aid to Israel or suspend it altogether.

    Democrats have voiced a range of views on the legitimacy of the protests, and Biden has sought a balance between condemning antisemitism and supporting students’ right to protest. Republicans, in contrast, are largely unified in casting the demonstrations as a disgrace, echoing conservative denunciations of the anti-Vietnam War protests of the 1960s.

    Trump this week called a 2017 neo-Nazi rally in Charlottesville — which he said at the time had “very fine people on both sides,” prompting a bipartisan backlash — a “peanut” compared with the current protests on campuses. Speaking to reporters after attending his criminal trial in New York on Thursday, Trump repeated the comments he wrote on social media and went further. He called the Charlottesville gathering, where a counterprotester was killed, “a little peanut” and added, “it was nothing compared — the hate wasn’t the kind of hate that you have here.”

    Trump has contrasted the pro-Palestinian demonstrations with the lack of protests outside the Manhattan courthouse where he is on trial for an alleged hush money scheme. In seeking to blame Biden for the campus protests, Trump has accused the president of hating Israel, Jews and Palestinians, and accused Jewish Democrats of hating their religion. Many of the protesters are Jewish students, and progressive Jewish organizations have helped lead a number of protest movements since the war began in October.

    “The Courthouse area in Lower Manhattan is in a COMPLETE LOCKDOWN mode, not for reasons of safety, but because they don’t want any of the thousands of MAGA supporters to be present,” Trump wrote on Truth Social on Thursday. “If they did the same thing at Columbia, and other locations, there would be no problem with the protesters!”

    The tone of the criticism is not new; since Biden took office, Trump and other Republicans have pushed the notion that America is descending into chaos and lawlessness on his watch. From illegal immigration to soaring inflation to violent crime, they have regularly painted a picture of a country out of control.

    These assertions have often been exaggerated or without context, but Trump has seized on them to promise a fierce crackdown should he return to power.

    And during his 2020 reelection campaign, Trump tweeted in response to the large-scale protests over the police killing of George Floyd, which were mostly peaceful but occasionally turned to looting, writing, “when the looting starts, the shooting starts.” The post was widely criticized for potentially encouraging private citizens, or police officers, to take deadly aim at looters.

    Trump’s own position on Israel has often been hard to pin down. He has tried to position himself as a firm defender of Israel, but he has also criticized Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s handling of the war and sought to exploit the fissures in Biden’s coalition over U.S. support of Israel.

    After the Oct. 7 attack, Trump insulted Israel’s leaders while praising the intelligence of the Hezbollah militant group. Faced with a backlash to that comment, the former president proposed harsh policies against Muslim migrants, saying he would reimpose his ban on travel from Muslim-majority countries and deport students involved in pro-Palestinian demonstrations.

    In the weeks after the Hamas massacre, Trump said his administration would revoke student visas of “radical, anti-American and antisemitic foreigners.” Other Republicans still running for president at the time — including Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and Sen. Tim Scott (S.C.) — and GOP members of Congress similarly called for the visas of “pro-Hamas” foreign students to be revoked.

    The spread of the college protests has ignited a renewed Republican response. When word circulated last Wednesday that pro-Palestinian protesters were planning to occupy a lawn at the University of Texas, Gov. Abbott sought to show that his Republican-dominated state would not tolerate a repeat of the encampment at Columbia University, dispatching state troopers.

    The Texas Department of Public Safety said it responded to the campus “at the direction of” Abbott, who applauded the crackdown on social media. He said the protesters “belong in jail” and that any student participating in “hate-filled, antisemitic protests” at public colleges should be expelled.

    Incidents at some universities have fed the criticisms, though pro-Palestinian activists say they are isolated incidents. Video re-emerged this week of a Columbia student who has taken part in the pro-Palestinian protest encampments declaring that “Zionists don’t deserve to live.” The student, Khymani James, made the comments in a video posted in January, although he has since stated that they were wrong. Columbia said it had barred the student from campus, but it was unclear whether he was suspended or expelled.

    In Georgia, Gov. Brian Kemp (R), following protests in several cities including Chicago and San Francisco, stressed that he would not tolerate anything similar in his state. Recounting a conversation with Georgia’s public safety commissioner, he said: “You know how I feel about people blocking bridges, airports and other things like we’re seeing around the country. I said, ‘If they do that, lock their ass up.’ ”

    In New York City, Speaker Johnson and a group of GOP lawmakers visited Columbia’s campus on Wednesday, where they demanded that the university’s president, Nemat “Minouche” Shafik, resign for failing to quickly dismantle the pro-Palestine encampments and, in their view, for not doing enough to ensure that Jewish people on campus felt safe.

    Their visit appeared to raise tensions, as Johnson was met with boos and pro-Palestinian chants. One student yelled at Johnson to “get off our campus,” while another shouted, “go back to Louisiana, Mike!”

    And on Capitol Hill, Republicans last week urged the Biden administration to intervene in the demonstrations. Rep. Elise Stefanik (N.Y.), a top-ranking House Republican, sent a letter to Education Secretary Miguel Cardona, Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas and Attorney General Merrick Garland, calling on them to deport students who she said “are brazenly endorsing Hamas and other terrorist organizations” by participating in demonstrations and related events on campus.

    Separately, a group of 27 Senate Republicans, including every member of the Senate GOP leadership team, signed onto a letter to Cardona and Garland calling on the administration “to take action to restore order and protect Jewish students on our college campuses.”

    “The Department of Education and federal law enforcement must act immediately to restore order, prosecute the mobs who have perpetuated violence and threats against Jewish students, revoke the visas of all foreign nationals (such as exchange students) who have taken part in promoting terrorism, and hold accountable school administrators who have stood by instead of protecting their students,” the letter said.

    Isaac Arnsdorf contributed to this report.

    Shari Redstone playing M&A war games with Paramount CEO removal

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    Bob Bakish, CEO of Paramount, speaks with CNBC’s David Faber on Sept. 6, 2023.

    CNBC

    Biden is up against nostalgia for Trump’s first term

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    CNN
     — 

    President Joe Biden is casting the 2024 election partly as a referendum on Donald Trump, but it’s a harder card to play now that he’s in office and some voters have warming memories of the former president’s chaotic term.

    The presumptive GOP nominee is showing progress in gathering the Republican Party around him, as his criminal trial underway in New York fuels his claims he’s a victim of political persecution. Even former Attorney General William Barr, who once said Trump shouldn’t be near the Oval Office, told CNN he’d back him. And the former president met with Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, his former GOP primary rival, for several hours on Sunday. At the same time, Biden is still experiencing problems with key sectors of his own coalition, including younger voters, a new CNN poll shows.

    Just over six months before the election, a volatile political climate is throwing up multiple tests for two flawed candidates, and it is hard to pinpoint which issues will be decisive in November. They span voter disenchantment with the economy, to abortion rights, as well as criticism of Biden’s leadership on key issues at home and abroad at a time of stubbornly high inflation and growing protests on college campuses over Israel’s war in Gaza.

    There is also the unprecedented spectacle of the potential next president facing multiple criminal indictments, including a jury verdict within weeks in his Manhattan hush money case, as he tries to make a historic comeback after his efforts to overturn the 2020 election to stay in power.

    And the impact on the race of Robert F. Kennedy Jr., an independent candidate, remains unclear, although Trump is showing increasing signs of concern over his run.

    The CNN poll released Sunday suggests Biden is facing extreme pressure to do more to remind voters of the turmoil of Trump’s single term, which ended amid his erratic leadership in a once-in-a-century pandemic but that now appears to some voters to have largely been a time of economic stability.

    More than half, 55%, of all Americans say they see Trump’s presidency as a success, while 44% see it as a failure. That contrasts with a survey taken just before Trump left office and days after the January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol, when 55% of voters considered his presidency a failure. Regarding Biden’s presidency so far, 61% say it’s a failure, while 39% see it as successful.

    The findings underscored the reversed dynamic that the president must deal with as he seeks a second term. Four years ago, he was able to assail Trump’s time in office from his position as a challenger. Biden vowed the country would “overcome this season of darkness” and choose “hope over fear, facts over fiction, fairness over privilege.” Now, however, Trump is able to exploit Biden’s travails in office as he seeks to make the election a classic referendum on the incumbent despite his own liabilities. The former president paints a picture of a failing nation, adrift in a world spinning into disorder, almost every day during breaks from his trial in Manhattan.

    “The economy’s falling apart now. Now you’re seeing it, very little growth, it’s going to get worse. Oil prices are going up and you have the college campuses all over closed down. Our country’s going to hell,” he said Friday.

    Inflation is lower than its peak but still higher than when Trump was in office. And with voters weary of high prices, it’s one of the former president’s most fruitful lines of attack. Biden’s approval rating on the economy is 34% in the CNN poll — and on inflation, it’s even worse at 29%. And voters say economic concerns are more important to their choice in this election than they were in the previous two.

    But the president has other areas of vulnerability. He’s facing a backlash over his handling of Israel’s war in Gaza, with 71% disapproving of his leadership on the issue. In a flashing danger sign among a cohort of voters critical to the Democratic coalition, he’s got an 81% disapproval rating among those younger than 35 over the war.

    Numbers like these explain why Republicans are highlighting college campus protests. The GOP is largely unified behind strongly backing Israel in its war against Hamas. But the issue causes deep splits in the Democratic coalition and may threaten enthusiasm for Biden among key voting blocs that could be decisive in swing states. As Republicans seek to exacerbate the president’s vulnerability on the issue, House Speaker Mike Johnson visited Columbia University last week and called for the National Guard to be deployed to break up protests. Some Jewish students have said they were threatened by protesters and encountered antisemitic rhetoric at some of the campus rallies over the past week.

    As Biden tries to temper a collision between his political interests (and what he perceives to be US national interests) with his support for Israel, he spoke to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu by phone on Sunday, underscoring his opposition to a planned Israeli incursion into Rafah in Gaza. Critics fear the operation to root out Hamas fighters could cause huge civilian casualties. Such a scenario would only intensify Biden’s political exposure at home over the crisis.

    Trump and DeSantis meet

    Polls can show only a snapshot of opinion at any given time.

    Trump’s (49%) and Biden’s (43%) levels of support among registered voters in a head-to-head matchup aren’t significantly different from where each was in January in CNN polling. And most poll averages show the race a statistical tie. CBS News polls published Sunday show Biden and Trump even in Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin — several of the key swing states that will decide the election. Biden won all three in 2020 after Trump won them in 2016 in his victory over Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton.

    Some Republicans now believe the dynamics of the election favor Trump, despite his confinement to a Manhattan courtroom four days per week while his hush money trial plays out. “Your poll tells me everything I need to know about these legal problems for Trump. People are looking at their problems, not Trump’s legal problems,” South Carolina Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham, one of the ex-president’s top supporters, told CNN’s Dana Bash on “State of the Union” on Sunday.

    The CNN poll suggests most Republicans are massing behind Trump, despite thousands of GOP primary voters still casting votes for former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, who dropped out in March. And the ex-president appears to have more control over his party than Biden does over his. In the poll, 92% of Republicans view Trump’s time in office a success, while just 73% of Democrats say Biden’s has been a success. And while 85% of Democrats polled say they back Biden, 91% of Republicans say they support Trump.

    One hallmark of Trump’s political success has been his capacity to crush GOP opposition and to force Republicans who want a political future — or who simply want a home in the party — to bow to his will. In a fresh sign of this phenomenon, DeSantis, who had lambasted Trump before ending his primary campaign, had breakfast with the former president Sunday, CNN’s Kristen Holmes and Kit Maher reported.

    In an extraordinary interview with CNN’s Kaitlan Collins last week, the ex-president’s former attorney general said he’d vote for Trump. Barr, who rejected Trump’s claims of electoral fraud in 2020 as the former president tried to steal the election, insisted that Biden and progressives represented a greater threat to democracy than Trump, partly because they wanted to tell “people what kind of stoves they can use and what kinds of cars they have to drive. … Yeah, those are the threats to democracy.”

    And New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu, a Haley supporter who has previously described Trump as an extremist and a loser, said before his candidate had even dropped out that he’d vote for Trump if he were the nominee — even if he were a convicted felon.

    Biden has made the ex-president’s threat to democracy a cornerstone of his campaign. But it appears unlikely that Trump will face any accountability for his attempts to overturn the election result in 2020 before the 2024 election, with two — one federal and one in Georgia — tied down in pretrial litigation. The president is again warning that political freedoms that Americans once took for granted are at stake. “Every single one of us has a role to play, a serious role to play, in making sure democracy endures. American democracy,” Biden said at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner on Saturday night.

    Biden has had a successful presidency by many traditional metrics. He has presided over a long period of historically low unemployment following the pandemic-induced economic crisis. He has unified the West to support Ukraine, a democracy, under a ruthless and illegal assault from Russia. And earlier this month, he presided over a stunningly successful US operation to shield Israel from a volley of Iranian drones and cruise and ballistic missiles. He’s passed as much or more major legislation as any of his recent predecessors, including a bipartisan infrastructure law that Trump failed to enact. Yet whether it is because of high inflation or a prolonged feeling of economic insecurity still haunting Americans, he’s not getting much credit from the voters.

    Biden’s troubles are more remarkable given that he’s running against the first ex-president to be indicted, who incited a riot that almost broke American democracy, and who left office in disgrace after a single, tumultuous term. “Saturday Night Live” comedian Colin Jost made this point in his roast of Biden at the correspondents’ dinner Saturday. “The Republican candidate for president owes half a billion in fines for bank fraud and is currently spending his days … (in) a porn star hush money trial and the race is tied? Nothing makes sense anymore,” Jost said.

    The joke went down well in the cavernous ballroom of the Washington Hilton. But outside of the cities where the political elites and media congregate, Trump enjoys a deep well of support from tens of millions of Americans waiting for a chance to try to send him back to the White House.

    ChatGPT’s ‘hallucination’ problem hit with another privacy complaint in EU

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    Image Credits: OLIVIER DOULIERY / AFP / Getty Images

    OpenAI is facing another privacy complaint in the European Union. This one, which has been filed by privacy rights nonprofit noyb on behalf of an individual complainant, targets the inability of its AI chatbot ChatGPT to correct misinformation it generates about individuals.

    The tendency of GenAI tools to produce information that’s plain wrong has been well documented. But it also sets the technology on a collision course with the bloc’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) — which governs how the personal data of regional users can be processed.

    Penalties for GDPR compliance failures can reach up to 4% of global annual turnover. Rather more importantly for a resource-rich giant like OpenAI: Data protection regulators can order changes to how information is processed, so GDPR enforcement could reshape how generative AI tools are able to operate in the EU.

    OpenAI was already forced to make some changes after an early intervention by Italy’s data protection authority, which briefly forced a local shut down of ChatGPT back in 2023.

    Now noyb is filing the latest GDPR complaint against ChatGPT with the Austrian data protection authority on behalf of an unnamed complainant (described as a “public figure”) who found the AI chatbot produced an incorrect birth date for them.

    Under the GDPR, people in the EU have a suite of rights attached to information about them, including a right to have erroneous data corrected. noyb contends OpenAI is failing to comply with this obligation in respect of its chatbot’s output. It said the company refused the complainant’s request to rectify the incorrect birth date, responding that it was technically impossible for it to correct.

    Instead it offered to filter or block the data on certain prompts, such as the name of the complainant.

    OpenAI’s privacy policy states users who notice the AI chatbot has generated “factually inaccurate information about you” can submit a “correction request” through privacy.openai.com or by emailing dsar@openai.com. However, it caveats the line by warning: “Given the technical complexity of how our models work, we may not be able to correct the inaccuracy in every instance.”

    In that case, OpenAI suggests users request that it removes their personal information from ChatGPT’s output entirely — by filling out a web form.

    The problem for the AI giant is that GDPR rights are not à la carte. People in Europe have a right to request rectification. They also have a right to request deletion of their data. But, as noyb points out, it’s not for OpenAI to choose which of these rights are available.

    Other elements of the complaint focus on GDPR transparency concerns, with noyb contending OpenAI is unable to say where the data it generates on individuals comes from, nor what data the chatbot stores about people.

    This is important because, again, the regulation gives individuals a right to request such info by making a so-called subject access request (SAR). Per noyb, OpenAI did not adequately respond to the complainant’s SAR, failing to disclose any information about the data processed, its sources, or recipients.

    Commenting on the complaint in a statement, Maartje de Graaf, data protection lawyer at noyb, said: “Making up false information is quite problematic in itself. But when it comes to false information about individuals, there can be serious consequences. It’s clear that companies are currently unable to make chatbots like ChatGPT comply with EU law, when processing data about individuals. If a system cannot produce accurate and transparent results, it cannot be used to generate data about individuals. The technology has to follow the legal requirements, not the other way around.”

    The company said it’s asking the Austrian DPA to investigate the complaint about OpenAI’s data processing, as well as urging it to impose a fine to ensure future compliance. But it added that it’s “likely” the case will be dealt with via EU cooperation.

    OpenAI is facing a very similar complaint in Poland. Last September, the local data protection authority opened an investigation of ChatGPT following the complaint by a privacy and security researcher who also found he was unable to have incorrect information about him corrected by OpenAI. That complaint also accuses the AI giant of failing to comply with the regulation’s transparency requirements.

    The Italian data protection authority, meanwhile, still has an open investigation into ChatGPT. In January it produced a draft decision, saying then that it believes OpenAI has violated the GDPR in a number of ways, including in relation to the chatbot’s tendency to produce misinformation about people. The findings also pertain to other crux issues, such as the lawfulness of processing.

    The Italian authority gave OpenAI a month to respond to its findings. A final decision remains pending.

    Now, with another GDPR complaint fired at its chatbot, the risk of OpenAI facing a string of GDPR enforcements across different Member States has dialed up.

    Last fall the company opened a regional office in Dublin — in a move that looks intended to shrink its regulatory risk by having privacy complaints funneled by Ireland’s Data Protection Commission, thanks to a mechanism in the GDPR that’s intended to streamline oversight of cross-border complaints by funneling them to a single member state authority where the company is “main established.”



    Biden discusses hostage deal, reiterates ‘clear position’ on Rafah invasion in phone call with Netanyahu on Sunday

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    Reuters

    US President Joe Biden and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu



    CNN
     — 

    President Joe Biden and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday primarily discussed the release of hostages in Gaza, a source familiar with their phone call said.

    A White House readout of the call earlier Sunday said Biden had reiterated his “clear position” on a potential Israeli invasion of Rafah. While that was part of the call, which lasted just under an hour, the source said the focus was mostly on the talks to release hostages held by Hamas.

    The two leaders discussed the videos released last week of two Americans held hostage as well as Biden’s rare joint statement with leaders from 17 other countries, urging Hamas to accept the terms of the ceasefire and hostage deal, the source said.

    The White House also highlighted the two leaders’ conversation about humanitarian assistance. “The President and the Prime Minister also discussed increases in the delivery of humanitarian assistance into Gaza including through preparations to open new northern crossings starting this week,” according to the readout.

    The White House added, “The President stressed the need for this progress to be sustained and enhanced in full coordination with humanitarian organizations. The leaders discussed Rafah and the President reiterated his clear position.”

    The Biden administration has made clear to its Israeli counterparts that it wants to see a clear and actionable plan on how they would protect civilians in Rafah.

    Israel has told its US counterparts that it won’t launch an invasion where more than 1 million people are sheltering in the Gaza Strip’s southernmost city until the Biden administration can share its concerns, White House National Security communications adviser John Kirby told ABC on Sunday.

    Kirby said the US is still working on reaching an agreement that would include a temporary ceasefire and the release of hostages.

    “If we’re able to get this hostage deal in place — and we are still working at that, Hamas has not fully rejected it, they are considering this proposal on the table. If we can get that in place, then that gives you six weeks of peace. It gives you no fighting for six weeks, and that includes no fighting in Rafah,” Kirby said on ABC’s “This Week.”

    “And what we’re hoping is that after six weeks of a temporary ceasefire, we can maybe get something more enduring in place. We want to see an end to the conflict as soon as possible,” he added.

    Secretary of State Antony Blinken will be in the region this week to discuss with leaders the ceasefire and hostage talks between Israel and Hamas that remain stalled despite months of mediation by Qatar and Egypt.

    During his conversation with Netanyahu on Sunday, Biden also reaffirmed his “ironclad” commitment to Israel.

    The call took place just days after Biden signed into law an aid package that includes $26 billion for Israel. The package also includes nearly $61 billion in aid to Ukraine and $8 billion for the Indo-Pacific.

    “The President reaffirmed his ironclad commitment to Israel’s security following the successful defense against Iran’s unprecedented missile and drone attack earlier this month,” according to the White House.

    In a phone call between the two leaders earlier this month, Biden told Netanyahu that the overall humanitarian situation in Gaza is unacceptable and warned Israel to take steps to address the crisis or face consequences — a stark statement from Israel’s staunchest ally.

    This story and headline have been updated with additional developments.

    Solana-based tokens JUP and JTO hit key milestones: What about SOL?

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    • The market cap of JUP, the native token for Jupiter, crossed $1 billion.
    • Other protocols such as Jito also saw growth.

    Solana [SOL] managed to attract a large number of users to its ecosystem over the last few months. But it isn’t just SOL that has benefited from the influx of new users on the network.

    Decentralized exchanges (DEXes) such as Jupiter also witnessed immense growth, which translated into interest in the JUP token as well.

    From Jupiter to the Moon

    JUP was one of the top four newly issued tokens in 2024 with a market value exceeding $1 billion.  Over the last 24 hours itself, the price of JUP has grown by 6.04%. At press time, the token was trading at $1.04.

    Source: X/ThorHartvigsen

    The exchange also did really well in terms of overall transactions and activity, which surged significantly over the past month.

    Source: Dapp Radar

    A flourishing ecosystem

    But Jupiter Exchange wasn’t the only Solana protocol that was witnessing growth. Other protocols, such as Jito, also observed a spike in interest. Jito is a protocol that helps address stake their SOL.

    At press time, JTO, the native token for the Jito protocol, was trading at $3.18 and its price had surged by 5.97% over the past month.

    Despite the surge in price of both these tokens, the social activity around the tokens was showcasing negative signs over the last few weeks.

    AMBCrypto’s data revealed that the Social Volume and Weighted Sentiment for both JTO and JUP had declined significantly.

    This indicated that, despite the overall progress of these tokens, they had hit a bump in the road in terms of gaining popularity across social media platforms.

    It may take some time for these protocols to regain interest of the crypto sector in the future.

    Source: Santiment

    Despite the waning popularity of both these protocols and tokens, its progress pointed to the fact that not only is the Solana network is benefitting from its popularity, but its overall ecosystem is growing as well.


    Read Solana’s [SOL] Price Prediction 2024-25


    At press time, SOL was trading at $142.72 and its price had grown by 4.67%  in the last 24 hours. The volume at which SOL was trading at had also grown by 12.06% during this period.

    It remains to be seen whether SOL manages to maintain this rally in the long run.

    Source: Santiment

    Trump and DeSantis meet privately in Florida

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    Former president Donald Trump and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis met privately Sunday morning in Miami, according to people familiar with the matter, breaking a years-long chill between the presumptive Republican nominee and his onetime chief primary rival.

    Allies brokered the meeting in hopes of a potential détente between the two men, and Trump’s advisers hope DeSantis will tap his donor network to help raise significant sums of money for the general election, the people familiar with the matter said. Like others interviewed for this story, the people spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe private deliberations.

    The pair met for several hours and DeSantis agreed to help Trump. The meeting was friendly, according to a person with direct knowledge.

    Trump and allied groups have lagged behind President Biden and his allies in the money chase. DeSantis has built a wide network of wealthy patrons whose assistance would be valuable in helping Trump try to close the gap, and is popular with some Republican voters who are exhausted by Trump.

    There is an incentive for DeSantis to form a closer relationship, as well. People close to DeSantis have said it is untenable for him to continue to have a strained relationship with Trump, particularly as he eyes his political future. He is widely viewed among Republican donors and consultants as weakened after a shellacking by Trump in the primary.

    The meeting was orchestrated by Steve Witkoff, a Florida real estate broker both men know, and he attended. Witkoff called the former president’s team and asked for him to meet with DeSantis, a person familiar with the matter said.

    Trump and DeSantis had not spoken since the end of a bruising primary, where DeSantis dropped out after a disappointing finish in Iowa, following months of attacks from Trump and his supporters. DeSantis offered a video endorsing Trump on the day he left the race.

    “It’s clear to me that a majority of Republican primary voters want to give Donald Trump another chance,” DeSantis said in a video message he posted that Sunday afternoon on the social media site X. “They watched his presidency get stymied by relentless resistance, and they see Democrats using lawfare to this day to attack him.”

    But DeSantis has not campaigned for Trump or helped him since, and in fact has made backhanded criticisms of Trump. DeSantis was stung by how Trump and his team treated him during the primary, people close to the Florida governor said.

    In a call with supporters in February after dropping out, DeSantis said Trump had political baggage and criticized some in Trump’s orbit.

    “I think he’s got people in his inner circle who were part of our orbit years ago that we fired, and I think some of that is they just have an ax to grind,” DeSantis said. The comments angered Trump’s team.

    At the time, Chris LaCivita, a top aide to Trump, called DeSantis a “sad little man.”

    DeSantis is widely loathed inside Trump’s orbit, but the former president has shown a willingness to be forgiving and remarkably transactional when it benefits him.

    “Will I be using the name Ron DeSanctimonious?” he said after DeSantis endorsed him. “I said that name is officially retired.”

    The two men have never been personally close, but Trump endorsed DeSantis in 2018 for governor of Florida — and once viewed him as a rising star in the party.

    In recent weeks, DeSantis held an event for donors at a resort in Florida, and people close to him said he is potentially interested in running for president again in 2028. During the Republican primary, Trump told advisers he wanted to hurt DeSantis for 2028, too. But he has moved his focus on to Biden and his criminal trial in recent weeks, and Trump allies say he would favorably view DeSantis raising money for him.

    Russia is making daily tactical gains in eastern Ukraine, as concerns swirl around Ukrainian military reporting

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    CNN
     — 

    Vladimir Putin’s forces have made further gains in at least three locations along the eastern front in Ukraine – including for the first time in several months an advance in the northern Kharkiv region – highlighting again Kyiv’s need for ammunition and weapons from the United States and other allies.

    Russia’s tactical advances are now daily and reflect the new tempo on the battlefield since the fall of the industrial town of Avdiivka in February.

    The gains are generally modest -– from a few hundred meters of territory to perhaps a kilometer at most – but they are usually taking place in several locations at once.

    Meanwhile, Ukraine’s losses are being accompanied by criticism from influential military bloggers and analysts of the armed forces’ official battlefield updates.

    One of Russia’s main efforts is in the Donetsk region. Ukraine’s DeepState monitoring group, which updates daily changes in frontline positions, shows Russian forces pushing forward in eight different locations along 20-25 kms of frontline in one 24-hour period.

    Military bloggers on both sides have reported that Russian forces have crossed a water course and taken control of the settlements of Semenivka and Berdychi – which Ukrainian army chief Oleksandr Syrskyi confirmed in a post on Telegram on Sunday. Russia had deployed up to four brigades in offensive operations in the area, Syrskyi said.

    A few kilometers to the north, Soloviove is now also reported to be in Russian hands, and the tiny settlement of Keramik at least partially so as well.

    “The withdrawal in the Donetsk operational zone continues,” the Ukrainian military blogger Myroshnykov wrote.

    Slightly further south, Russian forces are also making headway in the industrial town of Krasnohorivka, entering from the south and the east.

    Fierce fighting has been reported around the town’s large brick factory. One Russian military blogger wrote of the battle’s importance: “The liberation (sic) of the refractory plant would actually mean the fall of the Krasnohorivka fortification, as the northern outskirts of the settlement are private buildings, which will be too difficult to defend if the plant is lost.”

    Elsewhere, about 180kms (112 miles) to the north, Russia’s forces have also achieved their first successes in almost three months along that part of the frontline that cuts into Kharkiv region.

    A Ukrainian army spokesman described Russian forces there as having become “significantly more active” over the past day, while DeepState assessed a Russian advance of between one and two kilometers into the village of Kyslivka.

    Overall, the frontlines in this region have been among the most stable since Ukraine recaptured a large swath of territory in Kharkiv region in late summer of 2022.

    Stringer/Anadolu via Getty Images

    Utility workers clean up the aftermath of an overnight Russian rocket attack in the Ukrainian city of Kharkiv on April 27.

    With withdrawals and losses accumulating, military bloggers such as Myroshnykov and the DeepState site have both taken aim at official Ukrainian communications, accusing the armed forces of increasingly unrealistic updates from the battlefield.

    DeepState, in a post on Telegram, published a graphic video of a Russian soldier being killed in a drone strike in the village of Soloviove – but used the clip to argue that isolated incidents can mask the bigger picture, which it accused the military of doing as well.

    “You can watch with pleasure forever the video of a Russian (soldier) being torn to pieces,” DeepState wrote, “but nearby there is another location that requires attention: Muscovites calmly moving around the village, keeping it under control. The (Ukrainian) Defense Forces inflict fire damage on them, and one can repeat at least a billion times (on national television) that two-thirds of the village is under the control of the Ukrainian military, but the picture of reality is completely different.”

    That assessment – that two-thirds of Soloviove village was under Ukrainian control – was made by Nazar Voloshyn, spokesperson of the Khortytsia operational-strategic group, on Ukrainian TV on Saturday. Nearby Ocheretyne was also still two-thirds controlled by Ukraine, which had things in hand, he said.

    For its part, DeepState sees it differently, assessing that Russian troops have been in control of the center of Ocheretyne village, including the railway station, for at least three days. Last week, the monitoring site made a similar complaint against the military accusing “some spokespersons” of incompetence.

    Ukrainian army chief Syrskyi appeared to address those concerns in his Telegram post on Sunday suggesting that misunderstandings were due to the fluidity of developments.

    “There is a dynamic change in the situation, some positions change hands several times a day, which give rise to an ambiguous understanding of the situation,” he wrote.

    But he also acknowledged Ukraine’s overall situation had deteriorated.

    “The situation at the front has escalated. Trying to seize the strategic initiative and break through the front line, the enemy has concentrated its main efforts in several directions, creating a significant advantage in forces and in means,” he added.

    Narciso Contreras/Anadolu via Getty Images

    Ukrainian servicemen on an armored carrier return from the Semenivka battlefield near Avdiivka on March 4.

    Russia last made small gains in the region in late January and early February, but DeepState assesses a new advance of between one and two kilometers into the village of Kyslivka. Overall, the frontlines in this region have been relatively stable since Ukraine recaptured a large swath of territory in Kharkiv region in late summer of 2022.

    Russian forces are also making headway west of Donetsk city, entering the industrial town of Krasnohorivka from the south and the east.

    Fierce fighting has been reported around a large brick factory. One Russian military blogger wrote of the battle’s importance: “The liberation (sic) of the refractory plant would actually mean the fall of the Krasnohorivka fortification, as the northern outskirts of the settlement are private buildings, which will be too difficult to defend if the plant is lost.”

    Anatolii Stepanov/AFP/Getty Images

    Local residents sit at the entrance of an apartment building destroyed by shelling in Ocheretyne on April 15.

    Many Western analysts, along with Ukrainian officials, see Russia’s current stepped-up tempo as a precursor to a major offensive attempt later this spring. It is also assumed Moscow wants to take advantage of its significant advantage in ammunition before US supplies – greenlit last week after six months of political stasis – get to the frontlines.

    The Institute for the Study of War (ISW) assesses that there will be more short-term setbacks for Ukraine, though without major strategic defeats.

    “Russian forces will likely make significant tactical gains in the coming weeks as Ukraine waits for US security assistance to arrive at the front but remain unlikely to overwhelm Ukrainian defenses,” it wrote.

    Ukraine’s other major quantitative weakness, which also helps explain recent battlefield trajectories, is manpower. A new mobilization law comes into effect next month, which is expected to improve conscription processes. But Kyiv has proved highly reluctant to say clearly how many more soldiers it needs, while Moscow keeps increasing numbers.

    “The quality (of Russian fighters) of course varies, but the quantitative advantage is a serious problem, Rob Lee of Foreign Policy Research Institute, posted on X.

    “Without (its) manpower advantage, Russia’s artillery and airpower advantage would not be sufficient for Russia to make gains on the battlefield. The relative manpower situation is likely the most important factor that will determine the war’s trajectory, particularly if Russia can sustain recruiting 20-30k a month,” Lee adds.

    Time For ‘Destiny 2’ To Undo Its Industry-Worst Transmog System

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    Destiny 2 is in wish-granting genie mode as of late, blowing through a huge number of player requests over the last year, and the last few months especially. They are saying outright they want to do more of this, as seemingly they now have a greenlight from management to do whatever it takes to win the playerbase back.

    But would they dare touch…Eververse?

    I’ve spoken about this many times in the past, but if they’re actively taking requests, here we go. Destiny 2 has one of the worst transmog system in the history of the concept and it badly needs to reverse course to make it more player-friendly and just…logical.

    The current transmog system is a convoluted set of currencies that allow you to run activity bounties to get ten pieces of transmog per season, per character. It’s enough for perhaps two new armor sets a season, but sometimes there are more, and you will never catch up to get your full collection unlocked.

    Or at least not without paying. Unlimited transmog outside of that cap is $10 in the Eververse shop for each full set of armor. It’s the only way to both skip the grind and get past that cap. And it’s something that just seems outrageous compared to the larger industry.

    Even Diablo 4, a game that I have decried for its absurd volume and price of cosmetic transmog sets, allows you to instantly transmog any item you actually find in the game itself. While I am not saying Bungie should never sell Eververse armor ornaments, the same system should apply. You find armor in the game, you should be able to transmog that armor. The end.

    A long time ago, I said that they could keep the grind, just remove the cap. But I’ve changed my mind after seasons and seasons of these extremely dull bounties, and now in a situation like the present day, all I want to do is play Onslaught, but that doesn’t contribute toward my new ten transmog bounty cap at all, and I’d have to go run other stuff I’ve done a million times in the next month before The Final Shape and I lose my “free” ones. Forget it. Just make it all free, unlock it all.

    This reminds me of the consumable shader debacle which featured both paid and earned shaders, but in a way that was an exceedingly stupid grind paired with a way to get people burning currency in Eververse. Eventually, that was ended. You unlock a shader, you can use it an infinite number of times. It’s a similar principle with transmog, redesigning a basic cosmetic system to be logical and generous as opposed to squeezing blood from the monetization stone.

    It’s a popular request. My post under the “community manager asks for requests” tweet has the most likes of any others, and players have been beating this drum since transmog first existed. I hope this change is made, and even though I previously lost hope, I think there might be a chance with Bungie’s new philosophy.

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