
Iran Flicks Its Internet ‘Kill Switch’ as Cyber Attacks Mount
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Diverging Reports Breakdown
Trump travel restrictions bar residents needed at US hospitals
Travel and visa restrictions threaten patient care at hundreds of hospitals that depend on medical residents. Foreign medical residents often serve as the front-line caregivers at busy safety-net hospitals in low-income communities. Iran imposed a nationwide internet and telephone blackout, telling civilians it’s necessary to prevent Israeli cyber attacks as fears grow the U.S. will join the ongoing conflict. Banning plastic bags to limit shoreline litter works, study finds in Paterson, N.J., Bryan Anselm says in a new study of a global database of beach litter. But in places throughout the United States where plastic bags require a fee or have been banned, fewer and fewer end up at the water’s edge, according to the study. The study was published Thursday in the journal Environmental Science and Policy. It was published by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, a peer-reviewed, open-access journal. It is published on behalf of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists.
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CYBER
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Iran flicks its internet ‘kill switch’ as cyber attacks mount
A woman on a rooftop in Tehran, Iran, checked her smartphone for news Thursday. ARASH KHAMOOSHI/NYT
Iran imposed a nationwide internet and telephone blackout, telling civilians it’s necessary to prevent Israeli cyber attacks as fears grow the United States will join the ongoing conflict. The Ministry of Communications and Information Technology called the measure needed and temporary, “given the abuse of the country’s communication network by the aggressor enemy,” according to a statement cited by the semi-official Tasnim news agency. It’s a further sign that Israel and Iran are escalating their conflict online as well as with missiles — ratcheting up hacking and cyberarmy efforts to disrupt infrastructure and essential services and track human targets. Access to a limited number of domestic services and websites was still available, the Iranian ministry said, without giving further details. Since Wednesday afternoon, both mobile phones and domestic landlines in Iran were unreachable from outside the country. Some Iranians appeared to be able to make calls domestically despite the restrictions. — BLOOMBERG NEWS
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SOCIAL MEDIA
Trump extends TikTok ban deadline for a third time, without clear legal basis
TikTok offices in Culver City, Calif. Bing Guan/Bloomberg
President Trump on Thursday signed an executive order to keep TikTok running in the United States for another 90 days to give his administration more time to broker a deal to bring the social media platform under American ownership. Trump disclosed the executive order on the Truth Social platform Thursday morning. “He’s making an extension so we can get this deal done,” White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters on Thursday. “It’s wildly popular. He also wants to protect Americans’ data and privacy concerns on this app. And he believes we can do both at the same time.” It is the third time Trump has extended the deadline. It is not clear how many times Trump can — or will — keep extending the ban as the government continues to try to negotiate a deal for TikTok, which is owned by China’s ByteDance. While there is no clear legal basis for the extensions, so far there have been no legal challenges to fight them. — ASSOCIATED PRESS
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CLIMATE
Banning plastic bags works to limit shoreline litter, study finds
A shopping bag clung to a tree in Paterson, N.J., in 2018. Bryan Anselm/NYT
At tens of thousands of shoreline cleanups across the United States in recent years, volunteers logged each piece of litter they pulled from the edges of lakes, rivers, and beaches into a global database. One of the most common entries? Plastic bags. But in places throughout the United States where plastic bags require a fee or have been banned, fewer bags end up at the water’s edge, according to research published Thursday in Science. Lightweight and abundant, thin plastic bags often slip out of trash cans and recycling bins, travel in the wind, and end up in bodies of water, where they pose serious risks to wildlife, which can become entangled or ingest them. They also break down into harmful microplastics, which have been found nearly everywhere on Earth. Using data compiled by the nonprofit Ocean Conservancy, researchers analyzed results from 45,067 shoreline cleanups between 2016 to 2023, along with a sample of 182 local and state policies enacted to regulate plastic shopping bags between 2017 and 2023. They found areas that adopted plastic bag policies saw a 25 percent to 47 percent reduction in the share of plastic bag litter on shorelines, when compared with areas without policies. The longer a policy was in place, the greater the reduction. “These policies are effective, especially in areas with high concentrations of plastic litter,” said Anna Papp, one of the authors and an environmental economist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. — NEW YORK TIMES