The Reason Elon Musk Is Facing A $258 Billion Lawsuit

Musk has found himself in court yet again, and this time around, the person suing him is seeking more money than the Tesla CEO is worth.

NASA Selects Two Daring Astronauts to Fly on Boeing's First Crewed Starliner Test Flight

In anticipation of Boeing’s first crewed test flight of Starliner, NASA has chosen two astronauts to fly on board the troubled spacecraft, in a mission that could launch later this year.

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AT&T and Verizon give FAA another year to remedy C-band 5G interference issues

AT&T and Verizon have given the Federal Aviation Administration another year to fix altimeter issues as they look to roll out C-band 5G services around airports. “We believe we have identified a path that will continue to enable aviation and 5G C-band wireless to safely co-exist,” acting FAA administrator Billy Nolen said in a statement.

Under a phased plan, operators of regional aircraft with radio altimeters that are most susceptible to interference are required to fit them with radio frequency filters by the end of this year. That work is underway and the FAA says it will continue on an expedited basis.

The agency also says it worked with AT&T and Verizon to identify airports where they can bolster service with minimal risk of upending flight schedules. The FAA plans to monitor the pace of RF filter retrofits on altimeters too.

Altimeters have been at the heart of the tussle over the rollout of C-band 5G around airports. Airlines have been worried that, because C-Band frequencies are close to ones used by some altimeters, they could create interference. That could cause a plane’s landing system to misinterpret the distance to the ground with potentially disastrous consequences.

In January, AT&T and Verizon agreed to delay activating C-band 5G towers around airports until July 5. They made the pledge just hours before switching on C-band 5G in other areas for the first time. The pair also agreed to create buffer zones around 50 airports.

Now, the carriers will continue with “some level of voluntary mitigations” for another year, until July 5th, 2023. “After that time, the wireless companies expect to operate their networks in urban areas with minimal restrictions,” the FAA said.

“Through close coordination with the FAA over the last several months, we have developed a more tailored approach to controlling signal strength around runways that allows us to activate more towers and increase signal strength,” an AT&T spokesperson said. “Though our FCC licenses allow us to fully deploy much-needed C-Band spectrum right now, we have chosen in good faith to implement these more tailored precautionary measures so that airlines have additional time to retrofit equipment. We appreciate the FAA’s support of this approach, and we will continue to work with the aviation community as we move toward the expiration of all such voluntary measures by next summer.”

“Today’s announcement identifies a path forward that will enable Verizon to make full use of our C-Band spectrum for 5G around airports on an accelerated and defined schedule,” Verizon executive vice-president and chief administrative officer Craig Silliman said. “Under this agreement reached with the FAA, we will lift the voluntary limitations on our 5G network deployment around airports in a staged approach over the coming months meaning even more consumers and businesses will benefit from the tremendous capabilities of 5G technology. This progress is the result of months of close collaboration with the FAA, FCC and aviation industry, and sets the stage for continued, robust 5G deployment.”

Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth Finally Revealed, But There's A Long Wait Ahead

Long-awited “Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth” was given its first public showing at a virtual event which also revealed “Crisis Core: Final Fantasy 7 Reunion.”

FBI warns crypto fraud on LinkedIn is a 'significant threat'

If you have a tendency to talk to people you don’t know on LinkedIn, you may want to take extra care. According to a CNBC report, the company has acknowledged a “recent uptick of fraud on its platform,” and this time the scams involve persuading users to make investments in cryptocurrency. It’s been deemed as a “significant threat” by Sean Ragan, the FBI’s special agent in charge of the San Francisco and Sacramento field offices in California, who spoke to the outlet.

CNBC said the schemes typically began with someone pretending to be a professional and reaching out to LinkedIn users. They would engage in small talk, offering to help users make money through crypto investments. First, they would tell their targets to go to an actual crypto investment platform, but “after gaining their trust over several months, tells them to move the investment to a site controlled by the fraudster.” Thereafter, the money is “drained from the account.”

According to victims interviewed by CNBC, the fact that they trusted LinkedIn as a platform for networking lent credibility to the investment offers. 

Ragan told CNBC that “the FBI has seen an increase in this particular investment fraud,” which the outlet said “is different from a long-running scam in which the criminal pretends to show a romantic interest in the subject to persuade them to part with their money.”

A screenshot of the scam reporting page on LinkedIn's website.
Linkedin

In a statement published yesterday, LinkedIn encouraged users to report suspicious profiles. The company’s director of trust, privacy and equity Oscar Rodriguez told CNBC that “trying to identify what is fake and what is not fake is incredibly difficult.”

LinkedIn’s article urges users to “only connect with people you know and trust” and to “be wary of… people asking you for money who you don’t know in person.” The company added “This can include people asking you to send them money, cryptocurrency, or gift cards to receive a loan, prize, or other winnings.”

It also lists “job postings that sound too good to be true or that ask you to pay anything upfront” and “romantic messages or gestures, which are not appropriate on our platform” as signs of potential fraud attempts.

The company isn’t fully relying on its users reporting suspicious accounts as its only defense against scammers on its platform. “While our defenses catch the vast majority of abusive activity, our members can also help keep LinkedIn safe, trusted, and professional,” Rodriguez wrote in the statement. LinkedIn also reported that “96% of detected fake accounts and 99.1% of spam and scams are caught and removed by our automated defenses.”

Arizona Wildfire Reaches Kitt Peak National Observatory, Telescopes Possibly Damaged

The Contreras Fire, which has been raging through the Arizona mountains since last week, has reached Kitt Peak National Observatory, threatening the site’s telescopes.

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Bandai’s New Digimon Watches Only Beef Up Their Monsters When Kids Exercise

Convincing kids to hand over their tablets and game controllers to go play outside is no easy task, but Bandai Namco’s Vital Hero watches might actually make fitness more appealing through gamification. Instead of chasing high scores, it straps a Digimon to a kid’s wrist, one that only gets better in battles the more…

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Strange, Isolated Group of Polar Bears Discovered in Greenland

Researchers have identified a previously unknown population of polar bears living in isolation Southeast Greenland. The bears hunt for seals on fjords, or freshwater ice shelves, instead of on rapidly receding sea ice like other polar bear species.

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Star Trek: Voyager's Most Infamous Episode Gets the 1970s Animation Treatment

Back in April, we were treated to a clip of Star Trek: The Next Generation: The Animated Series that imagined the show as if it had been animated in the 1970s by Filmation, just as the original Trek series had. Now, the heroes at Gazelle Automations have returned to reimagine Voyager in the same format, and it’s…

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It Suddenly Doesn’t Seem Like Californians Rejected Criminal Justice Reformers

Some journalists and pundits offered snap assessments of last week’s election and all but declared reform movements dead — but the reality is much more complicated.