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Verizon network outage: Some wireless customers can’t place calls or access data

Kraig Pakulski 0 39 Article rating: No rating

By Lisa Eadicicco, CNN

(CNN) — Verizon said some of its wireless services were down Wednesday, leaving many customers without access to voice and data services.

Downdetector, a website that tracks user-submitted reports of outages among popular online services, estimates tens of thousands of users were impacted.

Verizon acknowledged the issue in a post on the social media platform X on Wednesday.

“We are aware of an issue impacting wireless voice and data services for some customers. Our engineers are engaged and are working to identify and solve the issue quickly. We understand how important reliable connectivity is and apologize for the inconvenience,” the statement said.

Verizon said in a statement to CNN that its engineers are addressing the service interruptions and that its teams “remain fully deployed and are focused on the issue.”

“We understand the impact this has on your day and remain committed to resolving this as quickly as possible,” Verizon said in its statement.

The outage is one of several high-profile tech outages in the past year that have interrupted daily life for thousands, including an Amazon Web Services issue that took down most of the web in October. In 2024, a widespread AT&T outage left customers across the United States without service and prompted a Federal Communications Commission investigation.

At its peak around 12:45 pm ET on Wednesday, Downdetector received more than 180,000 Verizon-related issue reports. Some users on social media reported their phones being stuck in SOS mode, or losing access to service. The issue reports began to escalate around noon ET and have been declining throughout the afternoon.

Users also reported problems with AT&T and T-Mobile service on Downdetector, although spokespeople for both networks said their services are operating normally. Customers may experience service issues when trying to contact those on Verizon.

“T-Mobile’s network is keeping our customers connected, and we’ve confirmed that our network is operating normally and as expected,” T-Mobile said in a comment to CNN. “However, due to Verizon’s reported outage, our customers may not be able to reach someone with Verizon service at this time.”

This story is developing and will be updated with additional details.

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How killing time at a laundromat set Lily Zhang on a path to multiple Olympics

Kraig Pakulski 0 31 Article rating: No rating

By Don Riddell, CNN

(CNN) — There’s not much you can do when you’re watching your clothes spin round and around, waiting for the laundry to wash and dry. But when Lily Zhang was seven years old, she spent that laundry time learning about another kind of spin, and with it she launched a career – not that she knew it at the time.

Her dad was a math professor at Stanford in California and there was a table tennis table in the launderette; that’s where her remarkable journey began.

“My parents are both from China,” the table tennis Olympian told CNN Sports. “It’s kind of the national sport there, everyone plays. It was really just a fun little game; I had no idea where it would lead me.”

A visit to the local table tennis club really opened her eyes to the possibilities, the technique, strategy and intensity of it really captured her imagination.

“I just fell in love with the game,” she explained, “I dove in headfirst.”

Asked if she felt as though she had a natural talent for table tennis, she chuckled, “I mean, I don’t want to brag, but yeah. I do think I had a natural affinity to the sport.”

She’s humble in person, but Zhang has every reason to brag. At the age of 12, she was playing for the under-15 US national team, by 12 she had made the senior team and just four years later she traveled to London, the youngest table tennis player at the 2012 Olympics. Her success was so rapid that she admits it was overwhelming.

“I remember multiple times in the Games thinking, like, ‘Why am I here?’” she recalled. “During the opening ceremonies, I remember it was Serena Williams to my right and Kobe Bryant to my left, it was so surreal.”

If Zhang felt overwhelmed in London, she was much more comfortable around players her own age at the 2014 Youth Olympics in China, where she won a bronze medal, becoming the first American table tennis player ever to make the podium at any Olympic-level event. But despite her success, she says table tennis wasn’t really the grand plan.

“In the US, it’s pretty customary for kids to stop playing once they reach university age, so I think my initial plan or vision was to just make the Olympics, get that on my college resumé and then focus on education,” she said.

Nonetheless, she returned to the 2016 Olympics in Rio, and no matter how hard she has tried, she just couldn’t let the sport go; the details of her story are reminiscent of Al Pacino’s famous line in The Godfather Part III: “Just when I thought I was out, they pull me back in!”

“I’ve quit multiple times in my career,” she explained. “I’ve pretty much quit after every Olympics I’ve attended, but there’s something about the sport just kept calling my name and I still feel like I have some unfinished business. Table tennis is something that I really, really love and it feels ingrained in my identity.”

In fact, she identifies so much with the game that she took her partner, Jessie Xiao, to a table tennis bar on their first date in San Francisco and challenged her to a game, without revealing that she was an Olympic player.

“Looking back, it was a cringy move, but at the end of the day, it worked!” she said.

In an attempt to level the playing field, Zhang at least played with her iPhone, instead of a bat.

After graduating from university, Zhang moved to Germany to become a professional player and she has since played in two more Olympic tournaments, Tokyo and Paris, where in 2024 she made it to a career-best round of 16. It was also in Paris where a clip of the US basketball star Anthony Edwards challenging Zhang to a game of table tennis went viral.

The exchange has just been featured more fully in “Serious Business with Anthony Edwards” on Amazon Prime, in which Zhang is so confident of victory that she gifts him a 10-point start in a first to 11-point game.

It was around the Pa

Sticky Crisis: Record Number of Local Animals Injured by Glue Traps

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SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) - Local wildlife are facing an unexpected threat: glue traps.

So far this year, rescuers have treated 35 animals — including birds, bats, and lizards — caught in these sticky devices.

Since 2019, 142 animals have needed care after getting trapped.

Experts are urging safer, more humane alternatives to protect unintended victims.

The Latest Breaking News, Weather Alerts, Sports and More Anytime On Our Mobile Apps. Keep Up With the Latest Articles by Signing Up for the News Channel 3-12 Newsletter.

The post Sticky Crisis: Record Number of Local Animals Injured by Glue Traps appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

Snow Leopard Layan Becomes Kid Favorite at Santa Barbara Zoo

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SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) - Layan, a 9-year-old snow leopard at the Santa Barbara Zoo, is quickly winning over young visitors.

He arrived from the Idaho Falls Zoo as part of a conservation breeding program.

Layan replaces the zoo’s late snow leopard, Kisa, giving families a rare chance to see this vulnerable species up close.

The Latest Breaking News, Weather Alerts, Sports and More Anytime On Our Mobile Apps. Keep Up With the Latest Articles by Signing Up for the News Channel 3-12 Newsletter.

The post Snow Leopard Layan Becomes Kid Favorite at Santa Barbara Zoo appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

YouTube will let parents stop their teens from endlessly scrolling short videos

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YouTube announced new parental controls on Wednesday. The platform has ramped up efforts to protect young users in recent months in response to scrutiny.

By Clare Duffy, CNN

New York (CNN) — YouTube will now let parents limit the amount of time their teens can spend scrolling through its short-form video feature, Shorts, or block them all together.

The option is part of a group of new parental controls the popular video platform announced on Wednesday. YouTube, like many tech platforms, has ramped up efforts to protect young users in recent months, in response to growing scrutiny from families, advocates and lawmakers.

The option to endlessly scroll through short videos can make social media platforms addictive, especially for young people, parents have argued.

Parents supervising their teen’s account will now be able to set a time limit on Shorts, ranging from two hours to zero minutes. For example, parents “can set the Shorts feed limit to zero when they want their teen to use YouTube to focus on homework, and change it to 60 minutes during a long car trip to be entertained,” YouTube said.

Parents will also be able to set custom bedtime and “take a break” reminders for their kids — automated versions of which YouTube already applies by default for users under the age of 18.

YouTube is adding a new sign-up process to make it easier for parents to create supervised accounts for their kids. It will also simplify the process of switching between minor and adult accounts on shared devices.

And the platform is updating its guidelines for the types of content that will be recommended and accessible to teen users. It will prioritize videos centered around “curiosity and inspiration,” “building life skills and experiences” and “credible information that supports wellbeing,” and other positive categories, YouTube said. Teens are already blocked from repeatedly viewing videos that could send them down dangerous content rabbit holes, such as those idealizing certain body types.

The updates come after YouTube said last year it would use artificial intelligence to guess users’ ages, and would place suspected teen users into its more protective under-18 settings regardless of what birthdate they provided at sign up. Other major online platforms, including Instagram, ChatGPT and Character.AI, have also recently rolled out additional parental controls and content restrictions for young users.

YouTube parent company Google has also been in the spotlight this week following a viral LinkedIn post. Online child safety advocate Melissa McKay posted screenshots that showed Google alerting her almost-13-year-old son that he’d soon have the option to remove parental supervision

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