“Today, cybersecurity failures are at an all-time high,” Hypponen said in a teaser video for the event. “With ransomware incidents, data breaches and data leaks, organisations need a comprehensive security awareness programme, which will bring security programmes an additional layer of security – the human layer.” The audience will also experience a Fireside Chat with the world’s most famous hacker, Kevin Mitnick, who is also KnowBe4’s Chief Hacking Officer and KnowBe4’s Chief Information Officer, Colin Murphy.
A 17-year-old girl was fatally shot by three police offers in the lobby of the Longview Police Department, public information officer Kristie Brian confirms to PEOPLE.
“Kristiana Coignard was shot after she was brandishing a weapon at the officers,” Brian said. “The officers are now on an administrative leave.”
When Coignard entered the station last Thursday around 6:30 p.m in Longview, Texas, she picked up a lobby phone that rings directly to police dispatch, and said that she needed an officer.
Courtesy of Mark SaltveitThe illustrious, palindromic prizes for the competition. For most of us, palindromes are just something we learn about one day in school. The teacher writes “race car” on the board, explaining that the phrase is the same backwards as forwards; minds are temporarily blown; and then everyone goes about their lives. But for true palindromists, crafting these linguistic mirror images is an obsession. And they’re about to test their best creations in a competition judged by the likes of crossword guru Will Shortz and “Weird Al” Yankovic.
TIME
November 30, 1959 12:00 AM GMT-5
When the medical world was agog over the discovery that blood circulates through the body, imaginative surgeons tried to transfuse sheep’s blood into human patients weakened by too generous bloodletting. Since they had never heard of such things as protein compatibility, it is small wonder that most patients died. In 1678 the French Parliament banned transfusions. Nowadays, no doctor would dream of transfusing animal blood to man.
Full Name: Moses Harry Horwitz
Profession: Comedian
Biography: Moe Howard was a seminal figure in American comedy, best known as the leader of The Three Stooges, a group that produced comedy shorts from the 1930s to the 1950s. Born Moses Harry Horwitz, he adopted the stage name "Moe Howard" and became synonymous with his onscreen character, renowned for his signature bowl haircut and bossy demeanor.
In the realm of comedy, Howard's influence was vast.
“The United States might eventually be forced to occupy Liberia by treaty, as it did Haiti; in which event, one important difference would recommend itself to the Government: The occupying force should consist of Negro soldiers and Negro officers, instead of brutal, arrogant, prejudiced white Marines. Intelligent Negro officers are available on the reserve list, and they could bring to their task of ending slavery a sympathy and a tact that were conspicuously missing in the American occupation of Haiti.
By common consent, the two best newspapers in America are the New York Times (daily circulation: 803,123) and the Washington Post (530,031) —and they far excel the rest. Most Americans seldom see them, but both are thoroughly read by those on the air or in print who bring others the national news Now the nation’s best newspaper has just restyled itself as the New New York Times; and when so pivotal an institution changes, something important is being said about American journalism.
The air is musty, Buffy the Vampire Slayer is playing on an ancient TV by the door, and Olivia Rodrigo is flipping through racks of slip dresses and flared pants. “What’s your style?” she asks. I tell her, unhelpfully, that I’m looking for something I might actually wear. She nods and says, “Vibes.”
We’re at a vintage shop in East Los Angeles, one the 18-year-old singer-songwriter frequented while working on her debut album, Sour.
Katy Winn/Corbis
“We have too many cellphones. We’ve got too many Internets. We have got to get rid of those machines. We have too many machines now.”
— RAY BRADBURY, author of novels like Fahrenheit 451, telling the Los Angeles Times about his desire for a smaller government, more space travel, and less technology; events will take place later this month to celebrate his 90th birthday
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TIME
July 24, 1939 12:00 AM GMT-4
The gloomy, clip-clop gutturals of Boake Carter, British-speaking newscaster, abruptly went off the air in August 1938. Apparent reason: outspoken Boake was embarrassing his sponsors, General Foods, by airing more opinions than they had bargained for. Since then Boake Carter has been opinionating on his own in a syndicated column (67 newspapers), has covered 50,000 lucrative lecture miles. Last week he turned up at the Atlantic City convention of the National Association of Broadcasters (see below), primed for a radio comeback.