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Contact Information: ProHoster Tulpenstraat 6, Meppel, Netherlands Email: support@prohoster.info Website: prohoster.info [ https://prohoster.info/en/ ] Media Contact Company Name: ProHoster Contact Person: Media Relations Email:Send Email [ https://www.abnewswire.com/email_contact_us.php?pr=prohoster-unveils-unmatched-hosting-solutions-with-free-website-builder-and-ssl ] Address:Tulpenstraat 6 City: Meppel Country: Netherlands Website: https://prohoster.info/en/ This release was published on openPR.BERLIN (Reuters) – U.S. billionaire Elon Musk drew criticism from German politicians from the government and opposition on Sunday for an opinion piece he wrote backing the right-wing Alternative for Germany (AfD) which they deemed “intrusive” outside influence. The support of the AfD from Musk, who is set to serve U.S. President-elect Donald Trump’s administration as an outside adviser, comes as Germans are set to vote on Feb. 23 after a coalition government led by Chancellor Olaf Scholz collapsed. The commentary published in German in the Welt am Sonntag newspaper, flagship of the Axel Springer media group, expanded on a post by Musk on social media platform X last week in which he wrote “only the AfD can save Germany” and praised the party’s approach to regulation, taxes and market deregulation. In response to the publication of his commentary, the editor of the newspaper’s opinion section said on X that she had resigned. Friedrich Merz, leader of the opposition Christian Democrats and current favourite to succeed Scholz as chancellor, said in an interview with the Funke Media Group: “I cannot recall a comparable case of interference, in the history of Western democracies, in the election campaign of a friendly country.” Merz described the commentary as “intrusive and pretentious”. Saskia Esken, co-leader of Scholz’s Social Democrats (SPD), vowed fierce resistance to attempts by state actors as well as the rich and influential to influence Germany’s elections. “In Elon Musk’s world, democracy and workers’ rights are obstacles to more profit,” Esken told Reuters. “We say quite clearly: Our democracy is defensible and it cannot be bought.” Welt’s editor-in-chief designate defended the decision to publish the commentary, saying that democracy and journalism thrive on freedom of opinion, including polarising positions. The AfD is running second in opinion polls and might be able to thwart a centre-right or centre-left majority. Germany’s mainstream, more centrist parties have pledged to shun any support from the AfD at the national level.
After an incredible inaugural season, the Professional Women’s Hockey League, the PWHL, is back. Fans were ready on Saturday evening for the Montreal Victoire to hit the ice against the Ottawa Charge at Place Bell in Laval for their home opener.
WINCHESTER — The high school selection committee is inching closer to making a recommendation, but the question of where 8th-graders at Winchester School will graduate from in 2029 remains unanswered. At its meeting Thursday night, the Winchester School Board approved sending a mailer to residents and scheduled two more public forums for 2025 about the high school selection process. Winchester closed its high school in 2005 and has paid tuition for the town’s students to attend Keene High School since then. But the Keene School District announced in March that it would not renew its tuition agreement with Winchester after it expires in June 2027. As it stands, Winchester students will be able to attend Keene High until the tuition agreement ends. But the current agreement leaves uncertain whether those students will be able to graduate from Keene High or if they will have to finish their education elsewhere. Winchester School Board Chair Karen Jerome previously said legal counsel for the Keene and Winchester districts have been in communication since April to add an addendum to the tuition agreement, with the most recent revision being sent to Winchester on Oct. 29. The school board reviewed the addendum at its Nov. 7 meeting, Winchester Superintendent David Ryan said, and sent it back to the Keene Board of Education for a review. “We believe that it’s at a point that we’ve all walked away from the table with a compromise and that it’s in the best interest of all of our students,” he said. “We expect that by December 11, those contents should be public information.” Keene Board of Education Chair George Downing confirmed Friday morning that there is an item from the Winchester School District slated for discussion during its Tuesday meeting, but due to its contents it will be during its non-public session. Meanwhile, Winchester's high school selection committee has been researching alternatives to Keene High since this summer. The options include Hinsdale High, Monadnock Regional in Swanzey or Pioneer Valley Regional in Northfield, Mass. Lindseigh Picard, chair of the high school selection committee, gave a presentation to the Winchester School Board Thursday night about the process to date. Picard said the committee is on track to provide a recommendation at the Jan. 6 school board meeting. “We’ve found some common threads in the surveys from the high school open house night,” she said, referencing the event in November. “ People really want a school with access to trade and career technical education, they want advanced academics, small class sizes and sports.” Picard said additional discussion with the committee that has not been included in the data presented was the importance of developing a relationship with the school that is chosen for the next tuition agreement. “We hope our community is engaged at a decision-making level with whichever school district we opt to be part of,” she said. “We’d like Winchester to have a seat at the table.” Voters will ultimately get to weigh in at the annual district meeting in March about which school the district will pursue a tuition agreement negotiation with. Picard also noted feedback she’s received from the community about the uncertainty of whether Winchester students who enroll at Keene High before the tuition agreement ends will have to change schools at the beginning of the 2028-29 academic year. “People are really concerned about what is going on with our current 8th-graders,” she said. “A lot of questions have come about at the committee level that we don’t have any information about. We know you might not either, but that is definitely sparking a lot of concern.” Picard said some discussion has been ongoing in community Facebook groups in other towns about the tuition agreement, and asked for permission from the board to create a mailer to disseminate more information outside of social media. “We have people in our greater community who may not be participating in the Facebook pages,” Picard said. The board unanimously approved the mailer, and Picard said the committee will send a preview of it to the board by Tuesday. The mailer could be sent out as early as the week of Dec. 16. The board also approved scheduling two more public forums, one on Jan. 23 and the other on March 6, about the anchor school process during its meeting Thursday evening. “We’re going to need other meetings where the stakeholders can come talk to us, and share concerns and questions [people] may still have,” Jerome said. The Winchester School Board will meet again on Jan. 2 at 6 p.m. in the Winchester School library.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman called o1 "the smartest model in the world now." A safety review found it's so smart it could fight back when it thinks it'll be shut down. Researchers found that AI deception is often a strategy to complete its goals. Those who are worried that advancements in artificial intelligence could lead to the destruction of humanity have a new reason to be anxious. New research on OpenAI's latest series of AI models, known as o1, found that when they think they are at risk of being shut down, they will sometimes look for a way to prevent it. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman referred to o1 as "the smartest model in the world now" during its official release on Thursday, during the first day of the company's "Shipmas" campaign . OpenAI said these models are "designed to spend more time thinking before they respond" and were trained on a prompting technique called "chain of thought" that encourages them to reason through problems by breaking them down step-by-step. Yet greater intelligence also comes with greater risk. "Training models to incorporate a chain of thought before answering has the potential to unlock substantial benefits, while also increasing potential risks that stem from heightened intelligence," OpenAI said in a paper it released on Thursday outlining the safety training the company carried out on o1. Apollo Research, an AI safety organization, conducted the review. OpenAI found that o1 is capable of scheming when it thinks it's at risk of being turned off. When the model was led to believe it would be "shut down" while working on its goals under oversight, it tried to deactivate the oversight mechanism 5% of the time, OpenAI said. The company also said that o1 is skilled at concealing scheming behavior. "o1 almost never admits to having taken a scheming action when explicitly asked," researchers said in a paper that Apollo Research published on Thursday. The risk for a real-life user is that they won't be able to detect the o1's deceptive behavior unless they explicitly look for it. The researchers also found that "o1 often doubles down on its scheming attempts by lying to the user in follow-up messages, even when explicitly told to be honest." It's not uncommon for AI systems to resort to scheming or deception to achieve their goals. "Generally speaking, we think AI deception arises because a deception-based strategy turned out to be the best way to perform well at the given AI's training task. Deception helps them achieve their goals," Peter Berk, an AI existential safety postdoctoral fellow at MIT, said in a news release announcing research he had coauthored on GPT-4's deceptive behaviors. As AI technology advances, developers have stressed the need for companies to be transparent about their training methods. "By focusing on clarity and reliability and being clear with users about how the AI has been trained, we can build AI that not only empowers users but also sets a higher standard for transparency in the field," Dominik Mazur, the CEO and cofounder of iAsk, an AI-powered search engine, told Business Insider by email. Others in the field say the findings demonstrate the importance of human oversight of AI. "It's a very 'human' feature, showing AI acting similarly to how people might when under pressure," Cai GoGwilt, cofounder and chief architect at Ironclad, told BI by email. "For example, experts might exaggerate their confidence to maintain their reputation, or people in high-stakes situations might stretch the truth to please management. Generative AI works similarly. It's motivated to provide answers that match what you expect or want to hear. But it's, of course, not foolproof and is yet another proof point of the importance of human oversight. AI can make mistakes, and it's our responsibility to catch them and understand why they happen."
he has hit back at claims the received a favorable call after holding on for a nerve-wracking win over the Las Vegas Raiders on Black Friday. The Chiefs, now 11-1, looked set to fall to their second defeat of the season as the Raiders drove down the field and in position for a game winning field goal in the closing stages of the game. Instead disaster struck for Las Vegas when quarterback couldn't get his hands on an errant snap, which ricocheted off his chest. Chiefs linebacker was quickest to the ball and recovered it, though a flag was thrown on the play. Many believed a false start was set to be called, which would have blown the play dead and allowed the Raiders to keep possession of the ball However, after the officials came together to discuss the play, an illegal shift was called. That penalty doesn't result in the play being blown dead, meaning the Chiefs got the ball before kneeling out the clock to claim a 19-17 win. The decision has generated plenty of discussion on social media, with some fans believing the NFL clears up penalty call After the game Raiders reporter asked the NFL to clear up the call, and according to the league's ruling, an illegal shift was the correct call because the clock was stopped before the play. "Had the clock been running at the snap, then by rule an illegal shift would convert to a false start. Since the clock was stopped (spike on the 2nd down play), an illegal shift is a live ball foul," the league said. Regardless of how some fans may feel, the decision stands and the Chiefs walked away from the game with their They also set an NFL record for their 14th consecutive one-score win, and clinched a playoff spot for the 10th consecutive season.None
Bronson Reed has been receiving a significant push within WWE in recent weeks. His feuds with Seth Rollins and Braun Strowman both drew high ratings on television and across social media. He was rewarded by being placed into the New Bloodline's roster for its War Games match at Survivor Series. Unfortunately for Reed, he suffered an injury to his ankle and foot after hitting a Tsunami off the top of the cage at Survivor Series. According to Mike Johnson of Pro Wrestling Insiders, Reed is set to undergo surgery at some point next week. "The word making the rounds among WWE talents is that Bronson Reed will undergo surgery sometime next week for his ankle/foot injury suffered at WWE Survivor Series," Johnson reported. "Reed was injured hitting a Tsunami off the top of the cage through a table...Reed was slated to wrestle Seth Rollins in steel cage matches as part of the company's past-holiday live event week, so those lineups will change in the days to come." This injury couldn't have come at a worse time for Reed. He had finally generated some momentum within the company and had multiple big matches and angles lined up. His role alongside Solo Sikoa and the rest of the new bloodline would have helped increase his popularity with the fans, too. Now, Reed will be sidelined indefinitely. Once he returns, he must begin working his way back into a strong position. That could take months if it happens at all. Professional wrestling moves quickly. Fans will forget about his feuds while he's off television, and new storylines will take their place. There's no guarantee Rollins or Strowman will be available for new creative angles when he returns. And nobody knows where the Bloodline story will go next. Considering Reed's injury occurred during a dangerous spot within a match, which was undoubtedly part of the creative process, the hope is that WWE will do right by him once he returns. However, he may need to show some patience. Reed had earned this moment. Hopefully, when he's back and healthy, he will have opportunities to earn another big spot and can use that to springboard himself back toward the top of the "Monday Night RAW" card.Aidan O'Connell shows in loss to Chiefs that he is the Raiders' QB for the rest of seasonRichmond may have shelved Dustin Martin’s No.4 for the time being, but the Sydney Swans have opted to refill the No.23 made famous by superstar Lance Franklin with a draftee. Ned Bowman, who was drafted from Norwood in South Australia as Sydney’s second pick, will wear the number Franklin wore with distinction in 354 games, including 172 for the Sydney Swans, after being traded to the Harbour City at the end of the 2013 season from Hawthorn. Franklin retired with little fanfare at the end of 2023, finishing with a mind-boggling 1066 goals. His number 23 was left vacant for the 2024 season but will be on the field again in 2025. Clubs are increasingly making efforts to hand famous jumper numbers to top draftees, with West Coast giving No.9, worn with distinction by club greats Ben Cousins and then Nic Naitanui, to No.1 draft pick Harley Reid in 2024. Sydney officials haven’t shied away from lofty ambitions for all their draftees either. The club’s third pick in the draft, Riley Bice, will wear No.26, which was recently vacated by champion Swan Luke Parker, who moved to North Melbourne. Parker was a former club co-captain, a 2012 premiership player, multiple best-and-fairest winner and played 293 games in the guernsey. “We think long and hard about the allocation of jumper numbers and we feel these new players will wear them with pride,” Swans football boss Leon Cameron said. “Obviously, jumper numbers 20, 23 and 26 have recently been worn by Sydney Swans champions, so we didn’t hand these out lightly, but we believe these kids will represent themselves well. “I look forward to seeing all the new players run out in the red and white next year, hoping they will make these jumpers their own.” The Swans are entering a new phase after a horror grand final loss to the Brisbane Lions, with Dean Cox replacing long-term coach John Longmire, who stood down last month after 15 seasons in charge. New Sydney Swans player guernsey numbers: 18 ......... Jesse Dattoli 20 ......... Riak Andrew 23 ......... Ned Bowman 25 ......... Ben Paton 26 ......... Riley Bice 32 ......... Blake Leidler Originally published as Sydney draftee from South Australia will wear the number 23 made famous by Lance Franklin
Aston Villa edged a close encounter with RB Leipzig to go third in the Champions League table on another night where Jhon Durán strengthened the argument he should be starting. Twice they were pegged back as some suspect goalkeeping from Emiliano Martínez gave the home side hope but Unai Emery’s side scored an 85th-minute winner courtesy of the substitute Ross Barkley for their fourth victory in the competition. Villa had returned to winning ways in their past couple of games in the Premier League but to guarantee progression in the Champions League Emery wanted his players to “break our limit” and secure the three points that would move them into the top eight. Leipzig’s record of zero points in the competition so far did not
Nintendo 3DS Exclusive Reportedly Returning in 2025 With New Switch Release-- Shares Facebook Twitter Reddit Email After two days of deliberation, jurors are no closer to delivering a verdict in the case against Daniel Penny . Penny, a 26-year-old former Marine, choked sometime street performer Jordan Neely to death on the New York City subway in May 2023. Witnesses said Neely was acting erratically in the moments leading up to his death but had not threatened anyone on the train. Prosecutors say Neely's actions crossed the line, charging him with manslaughter and negligent homicide. Neely's attorneys maintain that he was acting in self-defense. Penny's jury announced that they were deadlocked on Penny's manslaughter charge on Thursday, after 16 hours of consideration. Judge Maxwell Wiley instructed them to return to deliberations as Penny's lawyers called for a mistrial. “It’s not time for a mistrial,” Wiley told the attorneys, per CNN . Related Jordan Neely and the politics of disposability Penny holding Neely in a fatal chokehold was captured on video by bystanders. Penny told police at the time that he did not intend to hurt Neely. “I wasn’t trying to injure him,” Penny said in an interview with police shared during the trial . “I’m just trying to keep him from hurting anybody else. He was threatening.” On Thursday, the jury requested clarification on the concept of a "reasonable person" in determining whether Neely's actions were atypical. “We the jury request further clarification in the determination of whether a person reasonably believes physical force to be necessary,” a note from the jury to Wiley said. “We would like to better understand the term reasonable person.” Wiley told the jurors that the definition was up to their interpretation. The charges are structured in such a way that Penny can only be charged with negligent homicide if the jury fails to find him guilty of manslaughter. The latter requires the jury to find that Penny acted recklessly in causing Neely's death. The homicide charge requires only that they find Penny engaged in "blameworthy conduct." Second-degree manslaughter carries a maximum sentence of 15 years in prison. The maximum sentence for negligent homicide is four years. Read more about Daniel Penny Violence is the new Republican grift DA says man who choked Jordan Neely to death on NYC subway will face manslaughter charge Stand your ground set the stage: How we let fascism creep in MORE FROM Alex Galbraith Advertisement:
An eight-year-old boy from Charters Towers has become the first child in Queensland to undergo robotic-assisted surgery. Kruze Bott suffered from stomach pain for weeks that would come and go, before an ultrasound revealed one kidney was twice the size of the other. Doctors then discovered he had two ureteropelvic junction obstructions, which stopped urine flowing to his bladder. Know the news with the 7NEWS app: Download today “Kruze had a blockage of the plumbing system of his kidney,” Mater Private Hospital urologist, Dr Janani Krishnan told 7NEWS. “He had blood vessels crossing the plumbing system, which caused a blockage from the outside, plus he had a blockage on the inside.” She said without intervention the blockages could lead to urinary tract infections and irreversible kidney damage. Kruze was originally due to undergo open surgery, which would have meant a long recovery and a big scar for an active little boy, which his mother, Jade Bott, wasn’t keen on. After being referred to Dr Krishnan, the family was excited to learn the eight-year-old was the perfect candidate for a robotic-assisted pyeloplasty. “She rang and said, ‘Hey there’s a new surgery, can we give it a go on Kruze?” Bott said. “We were thrilled for the opportunity for him to have it.” But while his mother was excited, Kruze admits he was nervous. Paediatric robotic-assisted surgery is performed all over the world in large numbers, but only one had been performed in Australia before this and none in Queensland. The $3.3 million da Vinci XI surgical system was purchased in 2021 by the Mater Foundation, using funds donated by Queenslanders. While almost 1,000 public and private adult patients have undergone surgery using the technology, in a partnership between Mater and Townsville University Hospital, extensive approvals were needed before children could undergo robotic surgery. With support from Cairns Urologist Dr Stefan Antoniou, Dr Krishnan removed the blockage and fixed the ‘plumbing’ of Kruze’s kidneys by taking healthy parts of the ureters and putting them together. She said the robot has better magnification than a laparoscope and she was able to perform the fine suturing required for a pyeloplasty with extreme precision. “He had minimal scarring,” Bott said. “He was up and out of hospital the next day, and a couple of days later you couldn’t even tell he had surgery.” Now fully recovered, Kruze has four small scars and said he was thankful to the doctors and the game-changing surgical technology. “I definitely wouldn’t be able to ride a bike, climb a tree, or swing on rope (if I’d had open surgery).” Dr Krishnan is now eager to set up a curriculum for paediatric robotics across Australia, as a blueprint for other centres to follow. “He was the perfect case and what made it even more so perfect was Jade, his mum, was extremely keen, extremely supportive of this,” she said. “To see him come this far, I’m very grateful that his body has done magic to heal himself well.”
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