Putin signs law allowing him 2 more terms as Russia’s leader

MOSCOW (AP) — Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday signed a law allowing him to potentially hold onto power until 2036, a move that formalizes constitutional changes endorsed in a vote last year.

The July 1 constitutional vote included a provision that reset Putin’s previous term limits, allowing him to run for president two more times. The change was rubber-stamped by the Kremlin-controlled legislature and the relevant law signed by Putin was posted Monday on an official portal of legal information.

The 68-year-old Russian president, who has been in power for more than two decades — longer than any other Kremlin leader since Soviet dictator Josef Stalin — said he would decide later whether to run again in 2024 when his current six-year term ends.

He has argued that resetting the term count was necessary to keep his lieutenants focused on their work instead of “darting their eyes in search for possible successors.”

The constitutional amendments also emphasized the primacy of Russian law over international norms, outlawed same-sex marriages and mentioned “a belief in God” as a core value. Nearly 78% of voters approved the constitutional amendments during the balloting that lasted for a week and concluded on July 1. Turnout was 68%.

Following the vote, Russian lawmakers have methodically modified the national legislation, approving the relevant laws.

The opposition criticized the constitutional vote, arguing that it was tarnished by widespread reports of pressure on voters and other irregularities, as well as a lack of transparency and hurdles hindering independent monitoring.

In the months since the vote, Russia has imprisoned the country’s most prominent opposition figure, Alexei Navalny,

The 44-year-old Navalny was arrested in January upon his return from Germany, where he spent five months recovering from a nerve-agent poisoning that he blames on the Kremlin. Russian authorities have rejected the accusation.

In February, Navalny was sentenced to 2 1/2 years in prison for violating the terms of his probation while convalescing in Germany. The sentence stems from a 2014 embezzlement conviction that Navalny has rejected as fabricated — and which the European Сourt of Human Rights has ruled to be unlawful.

His team says Navalny had lost a substantial amount of weight even before he started a hunger strike Wednesday to protest authorities’ failure to provide proper treatment for his back and leg pains.

Navalny complained about prison officials’ refusal to give him the proper medications and to allow his doctor to visit him. He also protested the hourly checks a guard makes on him at night, saying they amount to sleep deprivation.

In an Instagram post Monday, Navalny said that three of 15 people in his room at the penal colony were diagnosed with tuberculosis. He noted that he had a strong cough and a fever of 38.1 Celsius (100.6 Fahrenheit).

Later on Monday, the newspaper Izvestia carried a statement from the state penitentiary service saying Navalny was moved to the prison colony’s sanitary unit after a checkup found him having “signs of a respiratory illness, including a high fever.”

In an acerbic note, Navalny said he and other inmates studied a notice on tuberculosis prevention that underlined the importance of strengthening immunity with a balanced diet — advice that contrasted with a prison ration of “glue-like porridge and frozen potatoes.”

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Kodak Black Ambushed, Security Guard Shot in Florida

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After a decade of failure, LG officially quits the smartphone market

After 12 years of being an Android OEM, LG has had enough. The Korean company announced late last night that it is officially quitting the smartphone market; it plans to close up shop on the entire business by July 31, 2021.

The news doesn’t come as much of a surprise, since LG has been preparing the public for this decision for some time. LG’s mobile division has had 23 consecutive money-losing quarters, and its last profitable year was in 2014. In January 2020, LG Electronics’ then-brand-new CEO Kwon Bong-seok promised that the troublesome division would be profitable by 2021. That message was apparently “profitability or bust” because by January 2021, LG was warning the public that it would have to make “a cold judgment” about the future of the mobile division. Local media reports claim that LG explored selling the division but couldn’t find a buyer.

It’s not clear what will happen to what feels like “LG’s last smartphone,” the LG Rollable. The flexible-display smartphone was announced at CES 2021, and while the expanding display mechanism was identical to concepts and prototypes from other companies, LG promised that the phone would actually launch in “early 2021.” LG’s press release did not disclose what will happen to the Rollable, but rumors saying the phone might be canceled started circulating almost immediately after it was announced. We won’t hold our breath.

A decade of also-rans, gimmicks, and dead devices

LG’s phones were never good. The company ping-ponged between building exactly what Samsung was building—but with less marketing and brand recognition—and building wildly unappealing gimmick phones with no rationale behind them. Who could forget stinkers like the LG G Flex in 2013, which used flexible display technology to create a curved phone. The entire body was shaped like a banana for no reason at all. LG repeated this mistake in 2015 with the LG G Flex 2—again, for no discernible reason. The LG V10 in 2015 had a tiny extra display above the main display, so you could see icons or the time (so, just like the main display?). The LG G5 in 2016 had a removable bottom that enabled a modular accessory ecosystem. You could replace the battery, snap on a camera grip with a shutter button, or attach a new audio DAC for better headphone sound. The 2019 “LG V50 ThinQ 5G” had an attachable second screen. The LG Wing in 2020 was a T-shaped smartphone, where the main screen could turn sideways to reveal another, smaller screen underneath.

When LG wasn’t putting out ridiculous phone designs, the company’s more normal phones could never answer the question of “why would I buy this instead of a Samsung phone?” LG and Samsung both pumped out heavily skinned Android phones with the latest specs, but if the phones were both nearly identical, there was no reason not to buy the Samsung phone, which had way more sales and marketing muscle behind it. LG’s biggest contributions to the market, if you want to be really generous, were in making the first 1440p smartphone (the LG G3) and the first extra wide-angle camera (the LG G5). Both demonstrate LG’s typical inability to come up with a killer smartphone feature. Neither feature was a solid enough reason to buy an LG smartphone.

Even when people did choose an LG phone, LG did its best to make sure they would never be LG customers again. For years, the company produced defective smartphones that died early due to poor build quality. Faulty soldering on the phone motherboards would cause the phone memory to disconnect, and the phones would be unable to successfully boot. After years of complaints, the company’s shoddy craftsmanship earned it a series of class-action “boot loop” lawsuits covering the G4, V10, G5, V20, and Nexus 5X. Even if your LG phone didn’t die an early death, you were probably mad at the company for its atrocious Android update support, which often resulted in nine-month wait times for updates. The company even once claimed to launch the “LG Software Upgrade Center” to try to repair its awful update image, which resulted in absolutely no changes and quickly became the butt of community jokes.

The company’s most critically successful devices were its collaborations with Google through the Nexus program, but even then, many of those phones (even if they weren’t included in the lawsuit) ended up dying an early death due to LG’s boot-loop fiasco and other poor workmanship issues that led to an early death. LG got co-branding on the Nexus 4, (2012), Nexus 5 (2013), and Nexus 5X (2015) for Google, along with anonymous manufacturer work on the Pixel 2 XL.

LG will leave a sizable void in the pre-paid and mid-range shovelware market, which accounted for most of the 10 percent market share it had in the US. This will probably be quickly gobbled up by Samsung or a Chinese OEM.

LG joins Blackberry, Nokia, Motorola, Essential, Facebook, Amazon, Mozilla, Microsoft, Acer, Palm, Panasonic, Toshiba, HP, LeEco, Nextbit, Dell, Gigabyte, Ericsson, and many others in the pile of companies that couldn’t cut it in the smartphone market. RIP.

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Cincinnati Reds OF Nick Castellanos suspended 2 games for sparking brawl

Cincinnati Reds outfielder Nick Castellanos has been suspended two games for his actions Saturday which led to a benches-clearing brawl with the St. Louis Cardinals.

Castellanos, who is appealing the suspension, was not the only player to be penalized as he and five others were also fined.

The drama actually began on Thursday, Opening Day, when the Reds right fielder hit a home run and hopped out of the box before tossing his bat. After an off day for the teams on Friday, Castellanos was hit by a pitch from Cardinals reliever Jake Woodford in the fourth inning of Saturday’s game.

Unfazed by the plunking, Castellanos retrieved the ball and offered to toss it back to Woodford before flipping it out of play. When Castellanos came around to score on a wild pitch later in the inning, he slid and bumped into Woodford, who was covering at home plate, then stood up, yelled and flexed in front of the pitcher.

As Castellanos began walking away, catcher Yadier Molina rushed up and tapped him from behind, and the benches and bullpens emptied. Only Castellanos was ejected as umpire crew chief Jim Reynolds said Castellanos “re-engaged the pitcher in unnecessary fashion,” after sliding into home.

“I’m not out here to disrespect nobody or whatever, but I want to win,” Castellanos said after Saturday’s 9-6 win.

St. Louis manager Mike Shildt saw it differently.

“There is no need to stand over somebody and taunt somebody,” Shildt said.

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.

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Google’s latest Pixel patch comes with unexpected Pixel 5 performance improvements

Google’s Pixel updates for April are here. This isn’t one of the big feature drop updates (that was last month), but device owners can look forward to the latest security patches and a handful of fixes and improvements. This time around, Google specifically calls out improved photo quality in some third-party apps and even performance improvements for games on the Pixel 4a 5G and Pixel 5, plus a handful of fixes addressing issues on several Pixel models, including a problem that dates back to a missing December Feature Drop feature.

So-called “functional patch notes” describing changes for Pixels in this update. 

 Pixel 4a 5G and Pixel 5 owners may appreciate this update, which promises better camera quality in specific third-party apps and what sound like improved game performance. Other fixes for a freeze during startup and an issue with devices appearing as offline while connected to a VPN are also included for more Pixel devices — we haven’t heard of either, so I can’t tell you too much about them.

The fix for missing home grid settings calls back to an issue we reported on in January, where a handful of Pixels didn’t have the new custom grid size options that trickled down to older Pixels as part of the December 2020 feature drop. It wasn’t the biggest feature, but Google did specifically call it out as a new customization option for Pixel owners with older devices, and it was a bummer it didn’t work for everyone.

As per yooj, the very latest April 2021 security patches are included with this update, including several “High” and “Critical” severity vulnerabilities, though Pixel-specific vulnerabilities this month are few. Build numbers right now match across the Pixel lineup: RQ2A.210405.005.

Folks with a Pixel 5 or Pixel 4a 5G on Verizon may see a delay for this update. As of now, factory and OTA images have only been published for other carriers, specifically excluding big red for those two phones, and that may extend to the update’s more traditional rollout as well.

On that note, the update should start landing on Pixel devices still in their support window over the next hour or two — that’s the Pixel 3 series, Pixel 3a series, Pixel 4 series, Pixel 4a series, and Pixel 5 — but the impatient can sideload it manually.

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Man, 24, receives lung and kidney transplant due to COVID

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Photo via Tori Vondenstein Facebook

In the year since COVID-19 was declared a pandemic, we’ve learned that the virus can affect individuals differently. While some people may only experience mild symptoms (or no symptoms at all) the virus has caused more than 2.8 million deaths worldwide. 

In an interview with TODAY, Colby Vondenstein shared his experience with COVID-19 — which resulted in two organ transplants. 

According to Vondenstein’s wife, Tori, their nightmare began days after the couple and their three children celebrated Christmas with close family members in Texas. The 24-year-old tested positive for COVID-19 and began experiencing the traditional symptoms; fever, body aches, and a cough. But his fever resolved quite quickly — seemingly a positive indication of his recovery. 

ALSO SEE: Jessica Simpson tested positive for COVID-19 the day she wrote new essay

“You read about the symptoms, like, these are common symptoms,” Tori told TODAY. “He wasn’t really short of breath in the beginning.”

Colby and Tori Vondenstein (Image via GoFundMe).

Initially, their strategy was to “let [the virus] take its course” and wait for things to gradually improve. However, Vondenstein’s symptoms began to worsen, and Tori decided it was time for a trip to the emergency room.

“Two days later, he was in Baytown Methodist Hospital fighting for his life,” she recalled. “They were giving him steroids to try to help the lungs, but they couldn’t do a whole lot because the kidneys were failing. They stated that he would not make it.”

On Jan. 11, he was transferred to Houston Methodist hospital, where things took a particularly aggressive turn for the worse. 

“I didn’t really get scared until I woke up, and they had all these tubes in me, and I didn’t know what was going on,” Vondenstein said.

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Dr. Howard Huang, a pulmonologist at Houston Methodist, told TODAY that when Vondenstein arrived at the hospital he was already in renal failure and experiencing “severe respiratory distress.” Huang even described his condition as a “head-scratcher” and placed Vondenstein on extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO), often referred to as extracorporeal life support. 

“He became entirely dependent on ECMO and initially required very heavy sedation,” Huang told TODAY. “The issue then became you have a person who’s now stuck on the ECMO machine with no real viable solution to come off.”

Photo via Tori Vondenstein Facebook

Vondenstein remained in the hospital for two months, at which point Huang believed that neither his lung nor kidney function was going to improve, no matter what measures they took. His care team cut their losses and put him on the waiting list to have both organs replaced.

“This is obviously a very severe illness in a desperate situation,” Huang explained. “We usually like to do transplant as more of a controlled process instead of under emergency conditions. He really didn’t have that much more time on these devices. We felt he had a reasonable chance to be able to get through this. Transplant is done for COVID-19 in just a handful of cases. Worldwide there’s probably fewer than 100 cases that have been done to date.”

While Vondenstein and his family eagerly waited for matches, Tori recalled the nurses doing “everything they could” to keep her husband alive. 

ALSO SEE: Study: Pfizer, Moderna COVID vaccines effective for pregnant, breastfeeding individuals

“On Feb. 27, I came in that morning, and the physician stopped me in the hall and just said it’s getting harder and harder and we’re running out of time, like days. To watch him go through this and to watch him literally fighting to live, I can’t even describe it,” she said. “It’s the worst pain I think I’ve ever felt. I can just describe it as watching somebody be tortured.”

Luckily, suitable matches were found for both a lung and kidney transplant, and Vondenstein underwent both surgeries on Feb. 28. After two months of falling in and out of consciousness and four weeks post-op, he was finally able to get up from his hospital bed and take a few steps.

Colby and Tori Vondenstein (Image vai GoFundMe)

“It’s felt good to be able to get out and take some steps again,” he told TODAY. “I honestly don’t think (the doctors) thought I was going to recover this fast. They all looked shocked when they saw me do that.”

Huang said Vondenstein is on an accelerated path to recovery and predicts that he will spend another couple of weeks in the hospital before being considered “out of the woods.”

Vondenstein and his wife have chosen to share their story in an effort to raise awareness about the potential severity of COVID-19, and raise money that will go toward their medical bills. Tori urges young people to “just be more cautious.” 

ALSO SEE: 23-year-old woman shares her unusual experience with COVID-19

“We don’t go out to eat, we don’t do all that. But even if you get sick, be more cautious of your signs and symptoms, know when to get help or seek physicians. You don’t realize it until it happens to someone that you love how deadly the virus can be,” she continued.

“I don’t wish this on anybody,” Vondenstein said. “It’s definitely a hard one to go through what I’m going through.”

A GoFundMe has been created to help the couple with medical expenses. The couple has raised more than $15,000 with nearly $50,000 to go until they reach their goal. 

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Harvey Weinstein appeals rape conviction

Harvey Weinstein enters the courthouse on July 11, 2019 in New York City.

Stephanie Keith | Getty Images

Lawyers for film producer Harvey Weinstein on Monday filed an appeal of his conviction for rape and another sex crime.

Weinstein, 69, was convicted in February 2020 after a trial in Manhattan Supreme Court.

He is serving a 23-year prison sentence in the case, which was tried two years after explosive allegations of sexual misconduct by Weinstein ignited the #MeToo movement that has continued to derail the careers of other high-profile men.

His lawyers in a court filing laid out seven grounds for overturning the conviction of the producer of films such as “Pulp Fiction,” “Shakespeare in Love,” and “Gangs of New York.”

They include the claim that Weinstein was denied his right to be tried by an impartial jury when the trial judge denied his challenge to bar a prospective juror who had written an autobiographical book about “the predations of older men against younger women, and who lied about the substance of the book during” jury selection.

Lawyers also argued that Weinstein was denied his right to a fair trial because defense experts were barred from testifying on certain matters, and that he received “a sentence that was harsh and excessive.”

The appeal is filed in the Appellate Division in Manhattan Supreme Court.

“We have filed a 166-page brief, outlining several serious mistakes made during the course of the trial,” Weinstein’s appellate lawyer Barry Kamins said in a statement to CNBC.

“We are confident that the Appellate Division will find these issues serious enough to require a reversal of the conviction,” Kamins said.

Jurors convicted Weinstein committing a first-degree criminal sexual act by forcibly performing oral sex on production assistant Mimi Haleyi in 2006. He also was found guilty of third-degree rape for attacking aspiring actress Jessica Mann in a Manhattan hotel room in 2013.

– CNBC’s Kevin Breuninger contributed to this article.

This is breaking news. Please check back for updates.

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Biden’s electric vehicle ambitions may send Tesla stock skyrocketing beyond $1,300: analyst

Tesla shares (TSLA) are getting a nice pop on Monday following much better than expected first quarter delivery numbers, but the real upside to shares in the medium-term will be in part due to efforts out of the Biden administration to get people into electric cars. 

Or so says Wedbush tech analyst Dan Ives, who lifted his rating on Monday to Outperform with a $1,000 price target. Ives’ bull case price target is $1,300, reflecting optimism on Biden’s EV ambitions. 

“We are hearing from our contacts in the Beltway that $7,500 tax credit could potentially be $10,000 in terms of a credit and that’s going to be a massive catalyst not just for Tesla, but for the EV ecosystem in the U.S.,” Ives tells Yahoo Finance Live. 

Currently, the electric vehicle tax credit is $7,500. But it’s phased out after an automaker sells 200,000 battery-powered vehicles. Tesla and General Motors have surpassed the threshold. 

But to Ives’ point, the Biden administration recently laid out plans to spend nearly $200 billion over eight years to support the surging EV industry. The administration is rumored to be eyeing an expansion of the tax incentive to consumers, which could be a big tailwind to sales at Tesla and its rivals. 

The administration is also pledging support to build out 500,000 charging stations and bolster the battery production supply chain. 

Even without the help from the Biden camp, Tesla still has the wind at its sails. 

Photo by: STRF/STAR MAX/IPx 2021 4/2/21 Tesla’s first quarter sales more than double last year’s. STAR MAX Photo: A Tesla is seen in Hoboken, New Jersey.

Tesla reported Friday that first quarter deliveries came in at 184,000. Wall Street had estimated 172,230. Strength was seen in both the Model Y and Model 3.

Making Tesla’s performance more impressive is the ongoing semiconductor shortage that has caused Ford and General Motors to stop production of pickup trucks. To be sure, Tesla’s techie vehicles use their fair share of chips.

Says Ives, “Although there has been a painful sell-off for Tesla [stock this year], I think this is just the start of a massive rally of 30% to 40%.”

Brian Sozzi is an editor-at-large and anchor at Yahoo Finance. Follow Sozzi on Twitter @BrianSozzi and on LinkedIn.

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New Photo of the Veil Nebula Shows Incredible Detail

NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope has re-released an image of the Veil Nebula that it originally featured back in 2015. This time, significantly more detail has been made visible thanks to new processing techniques.

As Digital Trends reports, the photo depicts the Veil Nebula, the debris from what NASA describes as one of the best-known supernova remnants. The start that went supernova is estimated to have been 20 times larger than Earth’s sun. It’s name is derived from the “delicate, draped filamentary structures.” The entire nebula is 110 light-years across, which would cover six full moons in the sky as seen from earth. It resides in the Cygnus constellation, about 2,100 light-years away.

“The Veil Nebula’s progenitor star — which was 20 times the mass of the Sun — lived fast and died young, ending its life in a cataclysmic release of energy. Despite this stellar violence, the shockwaves and debris from the supernova sculpted the Veil Nebula’s delicate tracery of ionized gas — creating a scene of surprising astronomical beauty,” the European Space Agency (ESA) says.

The photo is a mosaic of six photos captured by Hubble in a small area of the nebula (roughly two light-years across) and therefore only covers a tiny fraction of the nebula’s full structure. The original image uploaded in 2015 can be seen below:

While good, it’s significantly lower in resolution than the new process, and the colors and details of the nebula’s structure are far less defined. You can see that below:

The level of detail is extraordinary, as this zoomed crop of the photo shows.

“Astronomer William Herschel identified the Veil Nebula in 1784. His work was followed up by Williamina Fleming’s 1904 discovery of a fainter portion of the nebula, referred to as Pickering’s Triangle (after the director of the Harvard College Observatory, where Fleming worked),” the ESA writes. “The Veil Nebula is best viewed in early autumn from the Northern Hemisphere (early spring in the Southern Hemisphere). Roughly magnitude 8, the nebula is not visible to the naked eye, but it can be seen through a telescope or even binoculars under a dark sky. A nebula filter will help brighten the Veil’s appearance and pull out its wispy features.”

The full image can be downloaded here (warning, the file is quite large).

“To create this colorful image, observations were taken by Hubble’s Wide Field Camera 3 instrument using five different filters,” the ESA writes. “The new post-processing methods have further enhanced details of emissions from doubly ionized oxygen, ionized hydrogen, and ionized nitrogen.”

The ionized oxygen is depicted as blue in the image above, while the ionized hydrogen and nitrogen appear in red.

The Veil Nebula was also featured recently as part of Hubble’s Caldwell Catalog, which is a collection of astronomical objects that have been imaged by Hubble and are visible to amateur astronomers in the night sky.


Image credits: ESA/Hubble & NASA, Z. Levay



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