a glimpse into #SzilveszterMakó# magic
Stylist and Creative Director: Edward Enninful
Photographer: Szilveszter Makó
Videographer: Carolyn Girondo
Editor: Alec Maxwell
Grade: Edward Webb
#EE72#
When Wall Street gets involved in our courts, North Carolina families and employers pay the price. Third Party Litigation Investment increases legal costs that drive up insurance and healthcare expenses. Support H315 to protect affordability and keep North Carolina competitive.
Adam Carolla says people who make $70M a year are the one flourishing in California
‘There is a kind of a level of wealth that things don’t bother you anymore and people gas is $785 a gallon you know if you make $70M a year what’s the difference between $4 and $5’
‘Alot of this guys don’t care before they suck it up with the wealth tax,when I was growing up in California the idea of moving somewhere else was absurd’
‘And they were like move to Nashville and I’m like what ride house I don’t even know what Nashville is when your from California you don’t even know what Montana is’
Prof. Carola Dröge and Prof. Verena Keitel-Anselmino speak live from EASL 2026, discussing IBAT inhibitor therapy in adults with hereditary BSEP-deficiency.
Trump's push for Republican-led states to draw electoral maps more favorable to his party ahead of November's midterm elections suffered twin setbacks, when efforts in South Carolina and Alabama to reshape House of Representatives districts were stymied
South Carolina passed a law that aims to protect kids from addictive social media use.
The law requires large social media companies to estimate a user’s age using information they already collect, such as behavior, activity, account details, or device data.
>If someone uses the app for more than 25 hours within six months, the company must be at least 80% confident the person is older than 15.
>If the person reaches 50 hours of use, the company must be 90% confident.
>If the company cannot reach that confidence level, it must assume the user is a child.
The company must also recheck the age estimate every additional 100 hours of use and whenever it uses recommendation systems or analyzes user behavior.
If the company wrongly treats a child as an adult, it can face fines up to $10,000 per violation.
When a user is treated as a child, the platform must add protections such as parental permission tools, fewer addictive features like infinite scrolling or highly personalized feeds, stronger privacy settings, less data collection, more parental controls, and yearly safety reviews focused on risks to minors.
The law applies to major online platforms that operate in South Carolina and are likely to be used by people under 18.
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