House passes Paris Hilton-backed bill to curb abuse in youth residential homes The House passed the Stop Institutional Child Abuse Act on Wednesday after three years of lobbying by socialite Paris Hilton ... 12/18/2024 - 10:30 am | View Link
“Ken Howery is a quiet, unassuming tech investor who prioritizes discretion. And yet, he has ended up in the middle of two of the noisiest story lines of the incoming Trump administration,” the New York Times reports.
“One is the expanding ambition of Elon Musk, Mr. Howery’s close friend and fellow party-scene fixture since the two helped run PayPal 25 years ago.”
“The other is the expansionist ambition of Mr.
“In the final days of his term, President Biden has issued a series of policy decisions intended to cement his agenda and, in some cases, make it harder for President-elect Donald Trump to put in place his own,” the New York Times reports.
“The 11th-hour decisions, many of them executive actions, include measures on environmental justice, prison reform, immigration and foreign relations.
“President Biden issued an executive order on Thursday requiring software companies selling their product to the federal government to prove they included ironclad security features that can thwart Chinese intelligence agencies, Russian ransomware gangs, North Korean cryptocurrency thieves and Iranian spies,” the New York Times reports.
“But it is unclear whether the Trump administration, intent on deregulation even while it vows to take on China in particular, will keep the overhauled cybersecurity rules.”
“TikTok is spending $50,000 on an inauguration party honoring influencers who helped Donald Trump spread his campaign message, according to the party organizer — and it’s scheduled for Sunday, the deadline for the company to spin off from its China-based owner or be banned in the U. S.,” Politico reports.
“CEO Shou Zi Chew is expected to attend.”
Elon Musk is among the opening speakers who will precede President-elect Donald Trump at his pre-inaugural rally in Washington, D. C., on Sunday, NBC News reports.
The U. S. government clawed back more than $31 million in federal payments that improperly went to dead people, a recovery that one official said Wednesday was “just the tip of the iceberg,” the AP reports.