La respuesta del CEO de la empresa tecnológica que ayudó a encontrar al sospechoso de Brown ante preocupaciones de privacidad

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Por Clare Duffy, CNN

El jueves por la tarde en la ciudad de Nueva York, me reuní con Garrett Langley, CEO de Flock Safety. Nos encontramos para hablar sobre la expansión de la empresa, que pasó de fabricar cámaras para leer matrículas a construir drones para las fuerzas del orden, y sobre las recientes preocupaciones sobre la privacidad vinculadas a la tecnología de Flock.

Solo unas horas después, el jefe de Policía de Providence, Oscar Perez, atribuyó a las cámaras y a la tecnología de Flock el mérito de haber logrado localizar al sospechoso del tiroteo en la Universidad de Brown.

Para Langley, la situación puso de manifiesto el valor y la importancia de la tecnología de Flock, a pesar de las crecientes preocupaciones sobre la privacidad que han llevado a algunas jurisdicciones a cancelar contratos con la empresa.

“Estados Unidos no puede tolerar tragedias como las que vimos en Brown y el MIT la semana pasada”, dijo Langley en una publicación en X tras la noticia. “Tenemos la intención de seguir utilizando la tecnología para garantizar que nuestras fuerzas del orden estén capacitadas para hacer su trabajo”.

Langley me dijo el jueves que su motivación para fundar Flock fue brindar mayor seguridad a los estadounidenses. Su objetivo es disuadir el crimen convenciendo a los posibles delincuentes de que serán capturados.

“Creo que hoy corremos el riesgo, como país, de que una generación de personas no crea que Estados Unidos funciona para ellos porque no se sienten seguros, porque en algunas comunidades… no se sienten seguros”, dijo Langley. “Es demasiado fácil salirse con la suya si cometes un delito en Estados Unidos”.

Flock es una empresa de tecnología de seguridad que trabaja con agencias policiales locales y empresas privadas. La empresa, con sede en Atlanta y fundada en 2017, anunció en marzo que estaba valorada en US$ 7.500 millones tras su última ronda de financiación de US$ 275 millones de importantes inversores de Silicon Valley, entre los que se incluyen Andreessen Horowitz y Founders Fund, respaldados por Peter Thiel.

Su producto estrella es una cámara para exteriores, conocida como cámara LPR, que puede leer matrículas e identificar otros detalles de los vehículos que pasan. El sistema de inteligencia artificial de Flock permite a la Policía buscar un coche específico en su red de grabaciones. Alrededor de 6.000 agencias policiales en todo Estados Unidos utilizan las cámaras LPR.

Así fue como la Policía de Providence localizó a Claudio Neves Valente, de 48 años, quien, según la Policía, fue responsable tanto del tiroteo en Brown como del asesinato de un profesor del MIT días después. Pérez contó cómo introdujo la descripción del vehículo de Valente en el sistema de Flock. Una de las cámaras de Flock había detectado el coche recientemente, lo que ayudó a la Policía a localizarlo.

Flock activó capacidades adicionales de inteligencia artificial que no formaban parte del contrato de la Policía de Providence con la empresa para colaborar en la búsqueda, según declaró un portavoz de la compañía a CNN, incluyendo una función que puede identificar el mismo vehículo basándose en su descripción, incluso si se han cambiado las matrículas.

La empresa ha recibido críticas de algunos defensores de la privacidad y grupos comunitarios que temen que sus redes de cámaras recopilen demasiada información personal de los ciudadanos y que esta pueda ser utilizada indebidamente. Tanto la Electronic Frontier Foundation como la Unión Estadounidense por las Libertades Civiles (ACLU) han instado a las comunidades a no colaborar con Flock.

“Las legislaturas estatales y los gobiernos locales de todo el país deben promulgar protecciones sólidas y significativas para nuestra privacidad y nuestro estilo de vida frente a este

Italian police arrest 384, seize 1.5 tons of drugs in nationwide crackdown

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From Reuters

Milan (Reuters) — Italian police said on Saturday they had arrested 384 people and seized 1.4 tonnes (1.54 tons) of drugs in a large-scale operation against drug trafficking.

In addition to the arrests, officers had put under investigation 655 individuals, including 39 minors, and confiscated 35 kilograms of cocaine and more than 40 firearms, police said in a statement.

The operation, concluded on Friday in several provinces, led to the temporary closure of five cannabis shops in three cities after 312 inspections.

During the checks, the police said they had seized 296 kilograms of cannabis products, which initial tests had shown to be illegal drugs.

Italy in June approved a security decree banning so-called “legal” cannabis and outlawing the trade of “cannabis light,” or hemp, which unlike marijuana has no psychoactive effects.

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Tyrese Haliburton promises to catch up on his texts in 2026

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By Leah Asmelash, CNN

(CNN) — Twenty-five games into the 2024-25 season, the Indiana Pacers, returning Eastern Conference Finalists, had a 10–15 record and a slew of injuries. Star Tyrese Haliburton took the brunt of the blame — in one January article, published the day the Pacers finally crept over .500, The Ringer questioned his ability to become a franchise player, saying he “fluctuates between rapturous and invisible.”

Six months later, he and his teammates were legends. By the end of the regular season, the Pacers had won 50 games, their best record since 2013, playing a quick and collaborative style that flowed through Haliburton. Their team chemistry made them impossible not to love. Their secret sauce? “The power of friendship,” players said.

In the playoffs, the team reached new heights of drama and ruthlessness: dropping 8 unanswered points on the Cleveland Cavaliers to steal a game in the final 47 seconds, capped by Haliburton’s last-second three-pointer; erasing a 9-point New York Knicks lead in similar fashion, with Haliburton burying the tying shot at the buzzer — after which he hit the Madison Square Garden crowd with a copy of Pacers legend Reggie Miller’s celebratory choke sign, against the Knicks in 1994.

The string of heroics somehow carried the team all the way to the limit of the NBA Finals, where they pushed the Oklahoma City Thunder — one of the most dominant teams ever — to a winner-take-all Game 7. Then, in the first quarter, Haliburton fell to the court just beyond the three, banging his fist and sobbing. His Achilles tendon was torn, and with it, the Pacers’ fairytale hopes were over.

Haliburton is now in the midst of rehab, preparing to come back for the 2026-27 season. In the meantime, he’s hopeful, recovering and working on what matters most: becoming a better texter.

What was the most memorable moment from this year?

Getting Engaged and making it to the NBA Finals!

Which of your dreams came true?

Playing Basketball on the biggest stage.

What do you already regret?

Game 4 of the NBA Finals.

What vices are you giving up or carrying with you into next year?

I always mean to reach out to people and then forget or I always think I answered a text and didn’t so going into this year whenever I think of someone I’ll try and reach out in the moment.

Who do you think made the biggest splash this year (if not yourself)?

John Cena! The last real champion.

How did you survive the hard parts?

I feel like God doesn’t give us anything we can’t handle. Leaning on the man above and my loved ones, always helps me get through anything.

What’s the biggest existential threat to human life?

AI.

What’s the secret to having the best sideline fits?

Finding outfits you like/inspiration, and incorporating small parts of that into your own fashion. Just be you!

What are you most excited for in 2026?

My wedding and my first game back in an NBA Uniform!

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Tines up or down? ‘Zigzag’ or ‘Continental’? Dining abroad comes with landmines to navigate

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By Terry Ward

(CNN) — When Brooke Black and her Danish husband first lived together in the United States, she doesn’t recall their different dining habits ever really being a thing.

It wasn’t until the 44-year-old mother of two moved to Denmark in 2020 that she became acutely aware that she didn’t use eating utensils like her husband — or pretty much any of the Europeans around her.

Growing up in Illinois, Black says her mother only set their family dinner table with forks, unless there was something being served, such as steak, that warranted a knife to cut it.

“I have not used a knife my whole life,” says Black, who shares cultural commentary about her daily life in Denmark on her Instagram account. While she jokes that she “stands by that a fork can also be a knife,” she never learned to eat in the “zigzagging” manner of many Americans who will cut meat with the knife in their dominant hand before switching the fork back into that one to eat.

But in Denmark at family gatherings, with her fork held in her right hand from the get-go — tines up — and her knife largely untouched beside the plate, Black soon realized she stuck out.

“I get made fun of constantly by my husband’s family. At the dinner table at my mother-in-law’s house, they’re all just like, ‘What are you doing?’ because they do all eat with the fork in their left hand, tines upside down, and the knife in their right,” she says.

Black says she has adapted, in public at least, to what’s widely called the Continental style of dining, digging into Danish foods like the dainty open-faced sandwiches called Smørrebrød with her fork in her left hand, turned down to eat, and the knife in her right to cut.

But even when dining like a Dane, she still often feels like the odd woman out.

“They all have their quiet, sensible ways of doing things. And I’m just a loud lady stabbing things,” she says.

The nuances of how silverware gets wielded on either side of the pond can be dizzying. While there are some obvious differences, the subtleties can be harder to master — and how those differences came to be is murky.

Continental and ‘labor-intensive’ American style

Tables may be set similarly across the Western world, but it’s clear that the two dominant styles of using silverware (or cutlery) — American and Continental — have some variations to navigate.

Jacqueline Whitmore , a business etiquette expert and founder of The Protocol School of Palm Beach, Florida, offers her summary of the differences between the two main styles of dining with a fork and a knife.

“In the Continental style, you use both the knife and fork at the same time, bringing the fork to your mouth with the tines upside down, never putting the knife down while you’re eating,” she says. The knife remains in the dominant hand, poised to cut when necessary or push food that can’t be speared atop the fork’s overturned tines.

What’s considered American style takes a cut-and-switch approach. The knife is held in the dominant hand to cut, with the fork in the non-dominant hand pinning food in place, tines down. The knife is then placed into resting position on the plate so that the fork can be switched to the dominant hand, tines facing upward to eat.

“The American style is kind of like a zigzag style. You cut your meat, you put the knife down on the side of the plate, and you switch the fork from one hand to the next. So it’s a little more labor-intensive,” Whitmore says.

To make matters more confusing, British dining has its own style that differs, however subtly, from Continental, according to British etiquette coach and expert William Hanson, author of the book “Ju

Fill your wife’s or mother’s stocking this Christmas Eve

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By Lily Hautau, CNN

(CNN) — While everyone else’s stockings are hung with care, Mom’s is often the last to be filled — if it’s filled at all. Why? For many families, moms are the magic makers of the holidays, but so often their needs can be overlooked.

“The pressure to create ‘magical’ holiday experiences often falls squarely on mothers,” said Dr. Catherine Birndorf, cofounder, CEO and medical director of the Motherhood Center in New York City, a mental health care and support network for new and expecting mothers.

Appreciation isn’t a luxury, Birndorf noted. “It’s psychological necessity . It binds us together. Recognizing everyone’s contributions, big and small, creates connection.”

Showing your appreciation by stuffing your wife’s or mother’s stocking doesn’t have to break the bank.

One of Paige Connell’s most memorable stocking stuffers was receiving a pair of plain but cool socks from her husband that she had wanted. It was the effort behind the gift that made it meaningful. “That is what I think so many of us are looking for,” said Connell, a married mother of four children from Boston.

Modeling appreciation for the next generation

Liz Kihn, a stay-at-home mom from Pennsylvania, has seen videos of mothers waking up on Christmas morning to find their stockings empty while the rest of the family laughs it off.

“That is my nightmare,” Kihn said. “I personally don’t want to feel that way, but I don’t want my daughter to ever think it’s OK to treat anybody that way, let alone her own family.”

This year she’s made it clear to her husband that she wants her stocking filled. And as her daughter gets older, Kihn said she feels it’s important to model that everyone deserves to feel valued.

But you can’t expect people to know what your needs are unless you speak up. Whether it’s filling a stocking, scheduling doctor’s appointments or helping with grocery shopping, Kihn points out that these are things many moms think about constantly.

“Dads can’t help us if they don’t know,” she said. “You just need to be bold and speak up for yourself and what you want.”

Tips for finding the right gift

Finding gifts for stockings can be as simple as picking up new toiletries or her favorite treat.

Dr. Galena Rhoades, research professor and director of the Institute for Relationship Science at the University of Denver, highlights the value of “finding small things that are important or funny or meaningful or kind.”

Even everyday items can be special if they’re chosen thoughtfully: “If you’re getting them toothpaste, for example, which is a silly one, what toothpaste do they use?” Connell added.

If you’re out of ideas, don’t be afraid to ask. “It’s an opportunity to communicate needs and desires and respond to them,” Rhoades said, noting that open communication can help ensure that gifts are useful and appreciated.

Building new traditions together

This stocking stuffing responsibility doesn’t have to fall solely on spouses or partners. Including children in the process can make the gifts even more meaningful for the whole family.

“Empathy can be nurtured, and holidays, when done with intention, are one of the richest opportunities to enhance and teach it,” Birndorf said.

Even young children can benefit from “a role and a sense of agency to be able to do something that’s kind for someone else in their family,” Rhoades said.

For Connell, who posts videos about partners sharing a family’s mental load equally, one of the most exciting days of her childhood occurred while shopping for gifts for her siblings. They were each given $5 at a local card shop to spend.

After the shopping trip, she and her siblings would go home and wrap the gifts and give

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