Cnbl U.S. files case against China over subsidizing export industry
WASHINGTON AP 鈥?Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg says senior Biden administration of
stanley cup ficials pressured Facebook to censor some COVID-19 content during the pandemic and vowed that the social media giant would push back if it faced such demands again.WATCH: Metas Nick Clegg on the challenges of AI content and misinformationIn a letter to Rep. Jim Jordan, the Republican chair of the House Jud
stanley cup iciary Committee, Zuckerberg alleges that the officials, including those from the White House, repeatedly pressured Facebook for months to take down certain COVID-19 content including humor and satire.The officials expressed a lot of frustration when the company didn ;t agree, he said in the letter.I believe the government pressure was wrong and I regret that we were not more outspoken about it, Zuckerberg wrote in the letter dated Aug. 26 and posted on the committee Facebook page and to its account on X.The letter is the latest repudiation by Zuckerberg of efforts to target misinformation around the coronavirus pandemic during and after the 2020 presidential election, particularly as allegations have emerged that some posts were deleted or restricted wrongly. 822
stanley cup 0;I also think we made some choices that, with the benefit of hindsight and new information, we wouldn ;t make today, he said, without elaborating. We ;re ready to push back if something like this happens again.In response, th Dvxp WATCH: Psaki says Americans are not stranded in Afghanistan
Fukushima nuclear power plant.Environmental and nuclear scientists in the U.S. are watching apparent leakage discovered at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear reactor site this week with a concerned eye, for both health effects and impact o
stanley cup n the environment.Japanese safety officials are maintaining that the newly found contamination highly radioactive water in tunnels outside the plant, plutonium in nearby soil samples and spikes in levels of radioactive iodine in seawater pose no new risks to the public.Radioactive iodine 131 was found in ground water near No.1 reactor of Fukushima Daiichi complex, plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co. said this week. Radioactive materials in the air could have come down to the earth surface and they could have s
nike dunk eeped into the ground due to rainfall, said a company spokesman, accordin
air force 1 g to news agencies.But experts say the long-term consequences are still unknown and warn the contaminated water pooling in and around the plant is dangerous for workers immediately. Conditions for the workers have deteriorated a lot, said Arjun Makhijani, president of the Institute for Energy and Environmental Research. [They] are appallingly dangerous. That is why they are limiting work to 15 minutes at a time.Workers at the damaged Fukushima nuclear plant. Photo via TEPCO.The radioactivity levels of the leaking water found at the plant were reportedly more than 1,000 milli-Sieverts per hour, enough