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Por rentar su casa ahora temen perderla, residentes de Cathedral City buscan recuperar su patrimonio

Kraig Pakulski 0 18 Article rating: No rating
Por rentar su casa ahora temen perderla

Juan Montesló

Cathedral City, California (KUNA) – Una familia de la ciudad de Catedral ha solicitado apoyo a Telemundo 15 para dar a conocer que al rentar su casa a personas que consideraban cercanas, les sería difícil recuperarla.

Todo comenzó cuando decidieron arrendar su casa a una familia, la cual ha decidido apropiarse de la misma una vez que el contrato venció, los arrendadores han comenzado a experimentar crisis de ansiedad e inclusive violencia física al tratar de recuperar su hogar.

Pese a que, la familia Juarez ha realizado numerosas denuncias a la policía de la ciudad de Catedral, estos comentan haber sido ignorados e inclusive ser victimas de discriminación tanto por las autoridades como por los denominados invasores.

Así mismo la propiedad a recibido fuertes daños lo que significo multas por parte de la ciudad, y una notificación de “estructura inhabitable”, lo que representa un riesgo mayor tanto a la seguridad, como a la economía de los denunciantes.

El reporte completo lo tiene solo por Telemundo 15, seguiremos al tanto de actualizaciones en este caso.

The post Por rentar su casa ahora temen perderla, residentes de Cathedral City buscan recuperar su patrimonio appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

Iran-linked hackers have disrupted multiple US industrial sites

Kraig Pakulski 0 26 Article rating: No rating
The logo of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) is displayed on the building in Washington

By Sean Lyngaas, CNN

(CNN) — Iran-linked hackers have successfully targeted and caused disruptions at multiple US oil and gas and water sites in recent weeks, according to a federal advisory released Tuesday and three sources familiar with the investigation.

The hacking campaign marked an escalation of the cyberattacks launched by Tehran since the US-Israeli war with Iran began because it tested the safety systems at US industrial plants that protect human life.

The hacks have caused some industrial processes at the sites to shut down, forcing them to operate manually, the sources said. That downtime has caused financial losses for some of the victims, the federal advisory said. The hackers have in some cases tried to use destructive malware, or “wipers,” to delete data from victim companies, but it was unclear if they were successful, two of the sources said.

The FBI, the Department of Homeland Security’s cyber agency and others said Tuesday they were “urgently warning” US critical infrastructure firms about the ongoing hacking campaign, which officials said was aimed at causing “disruptive effects within the United States.

Later on Tuesday, President Donald Trump said he’d agreed to a two-week ceasefire with Iran, less than two hours before his 8 p.m. deadline to destroy a “whole civilization.” He has also previously threatened to bomb power plants in Iran.

While Iranian missiles can’t yet hit the US homeland, the hacking campaign offers an opportunity for Iran to respond asymmetrically by hitting the US critical infrastructure in cyberspace.

“Government and experts have been warning about internet connected systems for years, and how vulnerable they are,” said one source familiar with the federal investigation into the hacks. “The companies who paid attention and have severe consequences already removed those systems and followed the guidance.”

The concern is for the critical US infrastructure providers that haven’t been paying as close attention.

The Iran-linked hackers are opportunistically targeting internet-facing programmable logic controllers, the devices that allow machinery to communicate at industrial plants around the world. That “opens up the opportunity not just for immediate disruption, but potentially modification of operating parameters that could impact physical operations,” said Joe Slowik, director of cybersecurity alerting strategy at Dataminr and an industrial cybersecurity expert.

“The latter could lead to physical impacts and safety concerns, which is a serious issue and represents a notable extension of adversary capability and intent” from previous activity affiliated with certain Iranian hackers, Slowik said.

While the US and Israel have steadily bombed Iranian government facilities for weeks, Iran has managed to use its cyber personnel to pull off cyberattacks ranging from the embarrassing to the concerning. Tehran-linked hackers last month leaked emails stolen from the private account of FBI Director Kash Patel. Before that, they disrupted business for a major US medical device maker.

The cyber activity often has a psychological component. Iranian hackers boasted online of the hacks ag

El venezolano José Altuve llegó a los 2.400 hits y se encamina a la inmortalidad en el béisbol

Kraig Pakulski 0 18 Article rating: No rating

Por Pablo Antonio Garcia Escorihuela, CNN en Español

José Altuve está dejando cada vez menos dudas de que su camino lo conducirá, indefectiblemente, al Salón de la Fama al final de su carrera.

Este lunes por la noche dio una prueba más, cuando con un sencillo al jardín central se convirtió en el segundo jugador en la historia de los Astros de Houston en traspasar la barrera de los 2.400 hits, solo por detrás de Craig Biggio, quién terminó su carrera con 3.060 inatrapables.

Altuve está, además, en un listado aún más exclusivo, porque solamente otros dos ocupantes de la segunda base han logrado al menos 2.400 hits, 250 jonrones, 450 dobles y han terminado su carrera con 300 puntos de promedio: el dominicano Robinson Canó y el estadounidense Rogers Hornsby.

Biggio y Hornsby terminaron en el Salón de la Fama. El caso de Biggio estaba cimentado por la fórmula casi automática de sus 3.000 hits, y Hornsby terminó su carrera con 2.930 inatrapables y otras cifras históricas ofensivas para un camarero.

Canó, por su parte, será elegible para el Salón de la Fama en 2027, aunque sus polémicas alrededor del supuesto uso de sustancias para mejorar el rendimiento lo ponen en tela de juicio a la hora de una eventual elección.

Pero la búsqueda de Altuve ya no está enfocada en consolidarse como el segundo mejor bateador de la historia de los Astros de Houston, algo que ya tiene en el bolsillo.

Considerando que la temporada 2026 está comenzando y que le quedan tres años más de contrato con la franquicia, el venezolano puede comenzar a proyectarse para tratar de conectar los 3.000 hits, que serían un boleto inapelable hacia Cooperstown, donde está el Salón de la Fama.

Pero ¿tiene tiempo para lograrlo? El maracayero —quien cumplirá 36 años en mayo— tendrá 39 primaveras al final de su actual contrato y deberá conectar a razón de 150 hits por temporada para aspirar a acercarse a la cifra, sin contar lo que haga en 2026.

Es decir que, si Altuve, que ya este año tiene 14 hits, rebasa los 150 inatrapables también en 2026, puede sumar 600 hits más, que darían la cifra redonda al final de la temporada de 2030, su última con Houston.

Sin embargo, hay que considerar que el camarero tendrá que mantenerse saludable, conservando además su capacidad de hits, algo con lo que hasta ahora no ha tenido problemas. De hecho, salvo en la campaña de 2023, cuando el infielder venezolano jugó solamente 90 partidos, Altuve se las ha arreglado para mantenerse siempre por encima de los 150 hits.

Como pelotero insigne, como ganador comprobado, Altuve parece ir pavimentando su camino al Salón de los Inmortales del béisbol a fuerza de batazos.

The-CNN-Wire
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The post El venezolano José Altuve llegó a los 2.400 hits y se encamina a la inmortalidad en el béisbol appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

Oil prices drop and stocks rally after Trump’s ceasefire announcement

Kraig Pakulski 0 14 Article rating: No rating

By Ramishah Maruf, Samantha Delouya, Matt Egan, John Liu, CNN

(CNN) — Oil prices plummeted Tuesday after President Donald Trump agreed to a two-week ceasefire with Iran, spurring hopes that more oil tankers would be able to transit the key Strait of Hormuz soon.

But analysts warned that questions remained, including what will change for the effective blockade of the strait, through which about 20% of the world’s oil passes, and whether the ceasefire will lead to a long-term end to the war.

US crude futures declined more than 15% after hours to less than $95 a barrel – a significant drop, but still well above the $67.02 settled on February 27, before the war began. Brent crude futures, the global benchmark, declined 13.75% to $94.68.

Meanwhile, US stock futures and Asian markets jumped. Dow futures leapt more than 1,000 points, or about 2.2%, S&P 500 futures increased 2.4%, and Nasdaq futures rose about 3% in after hours trading.

On Wednesday morning, Japan’s benchmark index Nikkei 225 surged 4.9% as of 10:41 am local time, while South Korea’s Kospi gained 5.7%. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index rose 2.8%.

“The market has been eager to get good news but it remains to be seen if the Strait of Hormuz opens fully,” Bob McNally, founder and president of Rapidan Energy Group, told CNN. “That’s the whole ball of wax and so far Washington and Tehran seem to be talking past each other on that.”

While Trump celebrated on social media, Iran emphasized that the ceasefire was only temporary. “This is not the end of the war but all military branches should follow the Supreme Leader order and cease their fire,” according to a statement read out on state-run news channel IRIB.

Still, the jump in stocks and the slump oil prices sent an “extremely clear” message, Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B. Riley Financial, told CNN: “Investors would like to get the Strait of Hormuz open and this conflict behind them.”

Trump agreed to the ceasefire less than two hours before his 8 pm ET deadline to destroy a “whole civilization.” He said the agreement hinged on the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz.

“We received a 10 point proposal from Iran, and believe it is a workable basis on which to negotiate,” Trump posted on Truth Social on Tuesday night.

The war in the Middle East – and the effective closure of the crucial Strait of Hormuz – has caused the biggest oil supply shock on record, affecting roughly 12 million to 15 million barrels of crude oil a day. Both the futures and physical oil markets had signaled major warning signs.

But whether the Strait can simply return to business is up in the air. Iran also claimed victory and said its military will regulate passage through the Strait of Hormuz, which would grant Iran “unique economic and geopolitical standing,” a statement from Iran’s Secretariat of the Supreme National Security Council said.

The ceasefire “hasn’t really clarified anything when it comes to the Strait,” Patrick De Haan, head of petroleum analysis at GasBuddy, said on X Tuesday.

And the longer-term effects will take awhile to shake out.

“Beyond the near term, Iran’s ruling regime has (arguably) solidified its political control, and has demonstrated its capacity for bringing global oil and gas markets to their knees…,” wrote Karl Schamotta, of Corpay Currency Research, in a note Tuesday evening.

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