Ianf WATCH: How did the Jan. 6 attack affect the rest of the world
Kinza Chaudhry cringes when she gets a WhatsApp message full of forwarded health advice from a family friend or distant cousin. It might be a message about treating diabetes or thyroid disease or advice about what foods constitute healthy eating.Chaudhry, 33, who
stanley cup is a registered dietitian in Washington, D.C., is concerned that health misinformation shared on messaging platforms like WhatsApp are often not backed by science. These generalized chain messages are spreading a lot of misinformatio
stanley cup n. I dont know if any of this data is ever being tracked and if people are going to the hospital, because they followed faulty information, Chaudhry told the PBS NewsHour.Chaudhry is among the more than two billion WhatsApp users around the world who use the private messaging service to connect with family and friends. The services are a free co
stanley cup nnection for everyone, but for millions in diaspora communities across the United States, they are also a lifeline to home countries. Calls that used to cost dollars per minute are now free texts sent across thousands of miles. But they can also be a source of misinformation 8211 ome of it dangerous.As the U.S. was consumed with political disinformation surrounding the U.S. presidential election, largely on Facebook, the rest of the world was dealing with science and health news misinformation on messaging apps, said Claire Wardle, of First Draft News, a nonprofit dedicated to tackling misinformation, And while social media giants like Facebook Opvi Deficit Projected to Soar to $1.2 Trillion
TOKYO AP 鈥?Japan this week adopted a聽new national security stra
adidas og tegy that includes determination to possess counterstrike capability to preempt enemy attacks and double its spending to gain a more offensive footing and improve its resilience to protect itself from growing risks from China, North Korea and Russia. The new strategy marks a historic change to Japan exclusively self-defense policy since the end of World War II.READ MORE: As regional threats rise, Japan shifts away from defense-only strategyHere is a look at Japan new security and defense strategies and how they will change the country defense posture.Counterstrike capabilityThe biggest change in the National Security Strategy is possession of
stanley cup counterstrike capability that Japan calls indispensable. Japan aims to achieve capabilities to disrupt and defeat invasions against its nation much earlier and at a further distance within about 10 years.This puts an end to the 1956 government policy that shelved capability to strike enemy targets and only recognized the idea as a constitutional last-ditch defense.Japan says missile attacks against it have become a palpable threat and its current interceptor-reliant missile defense system is insufficient. North Korea launched missiles more than 30 times
stanley cup this year alone including聽one that overflew Japan, and China fired ballistic missiles into waters near southern Japanese islands.READ MORE: U.S., Japan, South Korea vow uni