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Tag: ban

  • City of L.A. won’t issue new dog breeding licenses, citing overcrowded shelters

    City of L.A. won’t issue new dog breeding licenses, citing overcrowded shelters

    The Los Angeles City Council voted Tuesday to temporarily stop issuing new dog breeding licenses because of overcrowding at city-run animal shelters.

    The city’s six shelters have 737 kennels, but more than 1,500 dogs were living at the shelters in February, according to the most recent available data. The shelters are more than 200% over capacity, which has led to dogs tripled up in kennels or being housed in crates in hallways for months on end.

    Euthanizations of dogs by the city are up 22% so far this year compared with the same period last year.

    The Times has chronicled poor conditions at shelters, including a lack of dogwalking and inadequate food supplies for small animals.

    “It is unacceptable for the city to continue issuing breeding permits while thousands of animals are suffering from overcrowded conditions in our shelters,” Councilmember Eunisses Hernandez, who chairs the committee that oversees the city’s Animal Services Department, said Tuesday.

    The American Kennel Club, which bills itself as the world’s largest not-for-profit all-breed registry, opposes the ban. It said in a statement this week that “blaming registered, responsible breeders” for the shelter crisis won’t improve conditions for those dogs.

    Anecdotal evidence suggests the majority of people who purchase licenses from the city aren’t breeding their dogs, said Staycee Dains, the Animal Services Department’s general manager, at a hearing last year.

    Rather, many dog owners buy a city breeder permit, which costs $235, so they don’t have to spay or neuter their pets as required under city law.

    The city doesn’t regulate breeders, and unlicensed backyard breeders remain a problem.

    Dains said at last year’s hearing that she is seeing more and more purebred dogs coming into the shelters.

    The ban applies only to new dog breeding permits. It will lift when the three-month average of the daily inventory count of dogs at the city-run animal shelters is “equal to or less than 75 percent of the department’s total dog kennel capacity.”

    People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals Senior Vice President Lisa Lange praised council members for the vote Tuesday but said in a statement that more needs to be done, including enforcing the existing spay and neuter law.

    Hernandez said the ban is “far from the only action” needed by the city. She said she hopes to discuss “current conditions in the shelters during our budget conversations” in the coming months.

    Dakota Smith

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  • Column: Yes, you can fight city hall. Huntington Beach retirees are waging a revolution

    Column: Yes, you can fight city hall. Huntington Beach retirees are waging a revolution

    They’re angry. They’re insulted. They’re embarrassed.

    And they’re not going to just sit there and take it.

    Protect Huntington Beach — a revolution led by retirees — is waging a spirited fight against what the group sees as a City Hall attempt to screen, and perhaps ban, library books with sexual content, reel in Pride flags and suppress voting rights.

    A posse of six or seven hell-raisers in their 60s, 70s and 80s agreed to meet with me Tuesday night as they geared up before a city council meeting, but before long, the group had grown to 10, then 15, then 20. Some of them were new to activism; others have histories.

    “I took my bra off in the ‘60s,” JoAnn Arvizu said proudly.

    California is about to be hit by an aging population wave, and Steve Lopez is riding it. His column focuses on the blessings and burdens of advancing age — and how some folks are challenging the stigma associated with older adults.

    “I’ve never done this before,” said Carol Daus, who added that she and her husband, Tony, were out posting signs late one evening. “This is our new hobby, I suppose. It’s midnight, and we’re out driving around. I have a torn meniscus, I’m going up a hill, there’s railroad tracks and for a minute I thought, ‘How crazy are you?’ ”

    “We’re dedicated,” said one rebel.

    “No, we’re mad,” said Tony Daus.

    Former Huntington Beach Mayor Shirley Dettloff, who’s almost 89, didn’t hesitate to join the resistance.

    “We’re really the people who built this city, and we’re proud of what we did,” Dettloff said. “And this new council is diminishing all that we worked for.”

    Several residents protest outside City Hall with signs.

    Members of Protect Huntington Beach protest outside City Hall before a city council meeting.

    (Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times)

    Dettloff said there’s long been a conservative strain in the city, which once had a John Birch Society presence and led the mask-resistance forces in the early days of the pandemic. But when she served on the council in the ‘90s, Dettloff said, there was always civil discourse and respectful compromise. The focus was on managing the city for the betterment of residents, not on culture wars.

    So what’s changed? Dettloff had a two-word explanation.

    “Donald Trump.”

    The former president unleashed “a whole new way of politics being done,” Dettloff said. And the current majority on the Huntington Beach City Council — Mayor Gracey Van Der Mark and council members Pat Burns, Casey McKeon and Tony Strickland — has joined the conga line.

    As mayor, Dettloff said, she was co-author of a human dignity policy after reports of a skinhead presence in Huntington Beach. But in September, the council voted 4-3 to remove references to hate crimes from the policy, and it added a line saying the city “will recognize from birth the genetic differences between male and female…”

     Huntington Beach city council members listen in chambers with flags behind them.

    Huntington Beach City Council members from left: Pat Burns, Mayor Gracey Van Der Mark, Tony Strickland, and Casey McKeon listen to speakers from Protect Huntington Beach.

    (Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times)

    And that wasn’t the only waste of time or insult to civility that set off Dettloff and others. They were steamed about a council discussion on whether to continue observing Black History Month, and about a March election that will cost taxpayers hundreds of thousands of dollars, if not more, to put three controversial measures before voters.

    One would effectively ban the flying of the Pride flag on city property, one would require voters to produce ID and allow drop-box monitoring despite the absence of any evidence of voter fraud, and one would grant more mayoral power in what the Orange County Register warned “can be misused to reduce public access and limit dissent.”

    “Vote no on all three,” a Register editorial advised, and “encourage the council to get back to governing rather than political theater.”

    That’s precisely the message the protesters carried to City Hall on Tuesday evening, where I expected them to clash with political foes. There’s a reason, after all, that four conservatives were elected to the seven-member City Council.

    But the several dozen people who gathered outside City Hall were all on the same side of the skirmish, while supporters of book bans and voter suppression apparently stayed home. And roughly 90% of those in attendance were in their 60s and older.

    I spotted one Support Huntington Beach lad of 39 years, who was shooting video of the protest, and asked how he ended up in the company of so many people twice his age.

    “I saw a group of senior citizens start to step up, and I joined one of their meetings,” said Michael Craigs. “I realized that their presence on social media and video content wasn’t going to reach younger generations, so I volunteered to help with that.”

    Cathey Ryder rallied the group with a barb aimed at the City Council majority that wants to crack down on perceived rigged elections.

    “If there’s so much fraud and mistrust, how do we know the four of them got elected?” she cracked.

    “We will be mailing out 30,000 postcards,” Ryder said. “We will be knocking on doors and leaving campaign literature to between [12,000] and 15,000 voters.”

    The crowd then moved indoors to confront the City Council, filling most of the auditorium and some of an adjacent spillover room with a video feed. Of the more than 40 people who signed up to speak, almost all were 65 and older, and all but a few denounced the ballot measures.

    “They stink,” said Andy Einhorn.

    “The City Council needs to get about the business of running the city,” said Tony Daus, who ripped council and staff for unspecified and unnecessary election costs.

    Carol Daus speaks at a lectern in front of the Huntington Beach city seal.

    “This is our new hobby, I suppose,” Carol Daus said, referring to her activism. “It’s midnight, and we’re out driving around. I have a torn meniscus, I’m going up a hill, there’s railroad tracks and for a minute I thought, ‘How crazy are you?’ ” Daus of Protect Huntington Beach addresses City Council members in City Hall on Tuesday.

    (Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times)

    “If I ran a business like this, I’d be fired,” said his wife, Carol, who warned of litigation costs if the state follows through on a threat to block any voter suppression tactics.

    Barbara Shapiro opened a gift-wrapped box and pulled out three sausages labeled Measures A, B and C, along with a piece of paper.

    “Oh, it’s a bill,” she said in mock surprise. “Oh my gosh. We’re going to be paying millions of dollars for these sausages.”

    Two days after the meeting, Carol Daus shared with me some social media feedback from Huntington Beach residents on the other side of this fight.

    “So much frosted hair,” said one post, while another referred to Dettloff as a “leftist granny.”

    “Maybe they did too much LSD at Berkeley,” said another post.

    I was prepared to visit with the other side, but if that’s the level of discourse, maybe I’ll pass.

    When I met with Protect Huntington Beach before the council meeting, two people said that if the ballot measures pass, they may move out of the city.

    Kathryn Goddard, 82, said she’s staying put.

    “I’ve been here 30 years and I feel like my job is to not let this happen,” she said. “This is my town, and I’m going to fight.”

    steve.lopez@latimes.com

    Steve Lopez

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  • Thailand moves to ban recreational cannabis use, 18 months after historic decriminalization – Cannabis Business Executive – Cannabis and Marijuana industry news

    Thailand moves to ban recreational cannabis use, 18 months after historic decriminalization – Cannabis Business Executive – Cannabis and Marijuana industry news





    Thailand moves to ban recreational cannabis use, 18 months after historic decriminalization – Cannabis Business Executive – Cannabis and Marijuana industry news






























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    Rob Meagher

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  • Thinking of lighting a fire for Christmas? Not with this ban in Southern California

    Thinking of lighting a fire for Christmas? Not with this ban in Southern California

    A crackling fire on Christmas Day might feel cozy, but for air quality officials in Southern California, the pollution ain’t worth it.

    All wood burning, both indoor and outdoor, is banned on Monday for everyone living in the South Coast Air Basin, which includes Orange County and nondesert portions of Los Angeles, Riverside and San Bernardino counties.

    Manufactured fire logs, such as those made from wax or paper, also are banned while the 24-hour No-Burn Day Alert is in effect.

    Officials from the South Coast Air Quality Management District emphasized that these alerts are mandatory — and that they are issued when public health is at higher risk.

    The particles in wood smoke — also known as fine particulate matter or PM2.5 — can bury deep into your lungs, trigger asthma attacks and cause a surge in emergency hospitalizations.

    Mountain communities above 3,000 feet in elevation are exempt from the ban, as well as homes that rely on wood as a sole source of heat.

    Rosanna Xia

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  • Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh banned from final 3 regular-season games over sign-stealing allegations

    Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh banned from final 3 regular-season games over sign-stealing allegations

    By RALPH D. RUSSO

    STATE COLLEGE, Pa. — The Big Ten Conference banned Jim Harbaugh from coaching at Michigan’s three remaining regular-season games on Friday, defying a warning from the second-ranked Wolverines in an extraordinary confrontation over a sign-stealing scheme that has rocked college football.

    Harbaugh was disciplined by the conference less than 24 hours before kickoff at No. 9 Penn State in the Wolverines’ toughest matchup of the season so far. Michigan (9-0) has a shot to win a third straight Big Ten title and the school’s first national championship since 1997.

    Michigan’s plane landed in Pennsylvania shortly before the announcement. It issued a statement ridiculing the decision.

    “Like all members of the Big Ten Conference, we are entitled to a fair, deliberate, and thoughtful process to determine the full set of facts before a judgment is rendered,” the school said. “Today’s action by Commissioner Tony Petitti disregards the conference’s own handbook, violates basic tenets of due process, and sets an untenable precedent of assessing penalties before an investigation has been completed.”

    Harbaugh has denied any knowledge of an improper scouting scheme in his program. Michigan warned earlier this week that it was prepared to take possible legal action if the conference punished the program before a full investigation; the NCAA and the Big Ten are both looking into the claims.

    “To ensure fairness in the process, we intend to seek a court order, together with Coach Harbaugh, preventing this disciplinary action from taking effect,” Michigan said.

    Getting a court order could prove difficult before Saturday’s game; Friday was the recognized federal holiday for Veteran’s Day and courts were closed. Michigan accused the Big Ten of trying to “thwart” its plan to seek immediate help from a judge.

    Such a fight between a conference and one of its most storied members is unheard of. The dispute began three weeks ago and the allegations leaked day by day, with it becoming clear the Wolverines do not want their undefeated season derailed by an unfinished investigation of activities it says Harbaugh knew nothing about and are not unheard of across college football.

    The Big Ten said the school had violated its sportsmanship policy by conducting “an impermissible, in-person scouting operation over multiple years” that resulted in “an unfair competitive advantage that compromised the integrity of competition.” As a result, the Big Ten said Michigan must play without Harbaugh against the Nittany Lions (8-1) this weekend, next week at Maryland and in the annual showdown game against rival and No. 3 Ohio State two weeks from now. While Harbaugh is allowed at practices and other activities, he cannot be “present at the game venue.”

    The league also sent a 13-page letter to Michigan athletic director Warde Manuel to back up its decision.

    “(A) university football staff member engaged in an organized, extensive, years-long in-person advance scouting scheme that was impermissible. … Such misconduct inherently compromises the integrity of competition,” the letter said, before saying the school’s response did not deny the scheme occurred. “Instead, it offers only procedural and technical arguments designed to delay accountability.”

    Michigan says it is cooperating with the NCAA, which does not outlaw sign-stealing, but has rules against in-person scouting of opponents and using electronic equipment to steal signs. The allegations against Michigan suggest a far more robust approach to gathering signs.

    The low-level staffer at the center of the investigation, Connor Stalions, resigned last week. Through his attorney, Stalions said that, to his knowledge, none of the Michigan coaches told anyone to break rules or were aware of improper conduct when it came to advance scouting.

    The NCAA probe is likely to stretch well past the season. Big Ten’s rules allowed for swifter action and coaches and athletic directors in the league had pushed Petitti to discipline Michigan under conference bylaws that cover sportsmanship and competitive integrity.

    Multiple Big Ten schools found tickets purchased in Stalions’ name to their games over the last three seasons. Tickets to the last two Southeastern Conference championship games were also purchased in Stalions’ name. Big Ten schools have also provided the NCAA some video surveillance footage of people sitting in those seats, holding cellphones pointed toward the field.

    Harbaugh served a school-imposed, three-game suspension earlier this season for an unrelated and unresolved NCAA infractions case tied to recruiting. The former star quarterback for the Wolverines has an 80-25 overall record and a 59-17 mark in Big Ten games over nine seasons with the Wolverines. He considered returning to the NFL coaching ranks after the 2021 season.

    Michigan has contended that other schools steal signs. A former employee at a Big Ten football program, whose role was to steal signs, said he was given details from multiple conference schools before his team played Michigan to compile a spreadsheet of play-calling signals used by the Wolverines last year. He spoke with The Associated Press on condition of anonymity, fearing the disclosures could impact his coaching career.

    The person said he also passed along screenshots of text-message exchanges with staffers from a handful of Big Ten football teams with the Wolverines, giving them proof that other conference teams were colluding to steal signs from Harbaugh’s team.

    The Big Ten dismissed Michigan’s argument that other schools were also stealing signs.

    “The conference is unmoved by the University’s attempt to downplay its impermissible conduct by asserting that other conference members may have engaged in sign decoding,” its letter said. “The conference has not received any information that any other members schools engaged in impermissible advance in-person scouting, let alone a scheme of the size and scale like the one at issue here. … the conference vehemently rejects any defense by the university or any other conference member that cheating is acceptable because other teams do it too.”

    Associated Press

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  • California banned the sales of flavored tobacco products, but researchers say online sales have boomed

    California banned the sales of flavored tobacco products, but researchers say online sales have boomed

    Despite California’s efforts to stop the sale of flavored tobacco products, University of San Diego researchers say consumers have discovered a loophole: online shopping.

    In 2022, Senate Bill 793 went into effect, prohibiting the sale of flavored tobacco products — making California the second state in the U.S. after Massachusetts to pass the broad law.

    The bill was prompted by the growing sales of an assortment of “kid-friendly flavors” such as cotton candy and bubble gum as well as the high rates of teen use of e-cigarettes.

    E-cigarettes are still considered a relatively new product — sold in the U.S. for about a decade — so their impact on health is still being researched, according to the American Lung Assn. However, in 2018 the National Academies of Science, Engineering and Medicine reported e-cigarettes can cause health problems, including a risk for coughing, wheezing and an increase in asthma in youth. It was also found that e-cigarettes contain a number of dangerous chemicals including acetaldehyde, acrolein and formaldehyde. These aldehydes can cause lung disease and heart disease.

    In 2022, the Food and Drug Administration reported e-cigarette use among youth as its top concern. In its 2022 National Youth Tobacco Survey, the agency found that more than 2.5 million U.S. middle and high school students used e-cigarettes. The same data found that e-cigarette users preferred flavored products, with fruit flavors being the most popular, followed by candy, desserts or other flavors.

    The most recent version of that national survey reported that 2.1 million youths use e-cigarettes, with a decline in high school students using the product.

    Several California counties, including Los Angeles, San Francisco and Sacramento, adopted local bans on flavored tobacco long before the statewide law took effect.

    But state and local efforts haven’t stopped consumers from getting their hands on tobacco-related products like e-cigarettes.

    Researchers at the Herbert Wertheim School of Public Health and Human Longevity Science at UC San Diego found that online shopping for cigarettes and vaping products increased significantly in the weeks after the implementation of Senate Bill 793.

    The law says tobacco retailers cannot sell flavored products, but it doesn’t specifically define e-commerce businesses as retailers.

    Researchers collected weekly Google search rates related to online shopping for cigarettes and vaping products in California from January 2018 to May 2023, and identified websites marketing flavored vaping and menthol products, according to the report.

    They found that shopping queries were 194% higher than expected for cigarettes and 162% higher than expected for vaping products after the Senate bill was adopted.

    Eric Leas, assistant professor of the School of Public Health and Human Longevity Science and director of the tobacco e-commerce lab, said retailer licensing programs have proved to be effective in enforcing tobacco control laws.

    “However, the exclusion of e-commerce retailers from these programs can undermine their impact,” Leas said.

    “The absence of explicit regulations on e-commerce sales can create loopholes in enforcing tobacco control laws, allowing consumers to easily access restricted products online,” he said.

    Researchers are recommending that e-commerce businesses be included in the definition of tobacco retailer within existing and future tobacco control policies as well as monitoring online compliance.

    Karen Garcia

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  • Lawsuit to block New York’s ban on gas stoves is filed by gas and construction groups | Long Island Business News

    Lawsuit to block New York’s ban on gas stoves is filed by gas and construction groups | Long Island Business News

    Listen to this article

    Gas and construction trade groups are suing to block New York’s controversial state ban on gas stoves and furnaces in new buildings.

    The organizations argue the law violates the federal government’s rules around how gas appliances are regulated, and filed the case against New York on Thursday in federal court.

    Gov. Kathy Hochul, a Democrat, approved the ban this spring on the installation of fossil-fuel equipment in new buildings. It’s set to take effect in 2026 for structures of seven stories or less and in 2029 for larger buildings. The law would not apply to existing buildings.

    Similar policies have been approved by dozens of Democrat-controlled cities and local governments as supporters say they are aiming to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and improve indoor air quality. The rule quickly became the source of partisan outrage over climate change, with Republican officials and other opponents criticizing it as an infringement on consumer choice.

    The New York Department of State, which is named as a defendant, declined to comment on the lawsuit.

    The case was filed by the National Association of Home Builders and the National Propane Gas Association, among others. It alleges that New York does not have the legal ability to enforce its rule because a preexisting federal law called the Energy Policy and Conservation Act already regulates energy use policies.

    They are asking a judge to rule that the state’s ban is unenforceable under federal law and for it to be blocked before it takes effect.

    The state’s law contains exemptions for emergency backup power equipment and for commercial food establishments, laboratories and car washes. New York City is set to begin phasing in a separate set of rules for all-electric new construction next year.

    The Associated Press

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  • Complete the BAN 2023 Reader Survey | Bank Automation News

    Complete the BAN 2023 Reader Survey | Bank Automation News

    At Bank Automation News, we want to ensure we are providing the most relevant, useful articles, reports, data, and content to our readers. The banking industry is constantly evolving, and we need your help to ensure we stay on the right path.

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    By completing the following survey, you ensure that BAN stays ahead of the curve, giving us your insights, opinions, and recommendations to keep us as the leader in the news for the industry.

    Your feedback will enable us to tailor our content, resources, and offerings to serve your interests better and provide exceptional service to help you and your business. And to show our appreciation, we are offering the first 50 survey respondents a $10 Starbucks gift card as a token of our gratitude for your valuable input.

    Thank you for your participation. We look forward to hearing your feedback and elevating Bank Automation News in the future.

    Best Regards,

    The Bank Automation News Team

    Bank Automation News

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  • Cask wine sales ban trialled at Adelaide CBD bottle shops to curb alcohol-fuelled violence – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    Cask wine sales ban trialled at Adelaide CBD bottle shops to curb alcohol-fuelled violence – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    Authorities are monitoring the impact of a trial ban on the sale of cask wine in Adelaide’s city centre, which has been introduced to curb alcohol-fuelled violence. 

    The month-long trial includes a ban on sales of casks of fortified wine, and of all wine in casks of four or five litres, at CBD liquor outlets, including pubs and bottle shops.

    Caps on the sales of spirits have also been imposed to limit customers to a 1 litre-bottle — or two, 700-millitre bottles — per day.

    The trial began on Good Friday at the behest of the liquor and gambling commissioner, Dini Soulio, who said it was intended to reduce “anti-social behaviour as a result of excessive liquor consumption”.

    “The four-week trial was introduced with the support of the state government’s safety and wellbeing taskforce, and is currently being evaluated,” he said in a statement.

    “The restrictions — which most bottle shops had already implemented voluntarily — limited the sale of takeaway liquor.”

    Similar restrictions are in place in other South Australian locations, such as Port Augusta, Whyalla and Ceduna.

    The commissioner will this week meet with senior police and the Australian Hotels Association (AHA) to discuss whether the ban should continue and, potentially, be strengthened.

    MMP News Author

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  • Notable & Quotable: In California, Marijuana Si, Smoking No – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    Notable & Quotable: In California, Marijuana Si, Smoking No – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    ‘If signed into law, it would mean by 2073 people wanting to buy cigarettes would have to show ID to prove they are at least 67 years old.’

    Original Author Link click here to read complete story..

    [ad_2] MMP News Author
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  • Amazon Bans Lost Ark Bots, Humans Caught In Crossfire

    Amazon Bans Lost Ark Bots, Humans Caught In Crossfire

    Image: Amazon

    Amazon’s Diablo-like RPG, Lost Ark, had over 1.3 million people playing it at launch. It’s cooled off since then, but there are still tens of thousands of people who log on every week to enjoy it. Or they would, if they hadn’t been banned for no reason.

    Last week Amazon decided to do some house-keeping and kick off a wave of bans, ostensibly targeting bot accounts. Loads of actual human beings were caught up in the bans too, though, and making things even worse was that for Steam players that counted as a ban on their Steam accounts as well, which is a serious blemish on their overall record.

    Amazon were quickly notified of this, and over the weekend were “actively working on reversing them for all affected players regardless of whether a support ticket has been filed”. For Steam players in particular, sweating the consequences of having a ban recorded on their account, Amazon say the reversal will not just “remove your game ban” but also “any marks on your Steam account”.

    The company issued this statement over the weekend:

    Greetings Heroes of Arkesia,

    Following a recent wave of bot bans, we’ve seen an increase in ban appeals from players who have been incorrectly impacted by these bans.

    We have determined the error that triggered these false bans, and are actively working on reversing them for all affected players regardless of whether a support ticket has been filed. This will remove your game ban and any marks on your Steam account. We will let players know when this work has been completed. In the meantime, you are still welcome to submit a Ban Appeal ticket to Customer Support so that the team can more quickly assist with restoring your account and removing all penalties.

    Thank you for your reports and patience as we work to make this right with affected players.

    And followed it up yesterday with a notice saying all bans should now have been reversed. The bans come in the wake of efforts by developers to fix certain areas of the game that were being swamped by bots, particularly the market and auction house.

    Luke Plunkett

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  • Why A Bitcoin Ban In The EU Is Likely… And Stupid

    Why A Bitcoin Ban In The EU Is Likely… And Stupid

    This is an opinion article by Guglielmo Cecero, the legal manager of European bitcoin investment app Relai, and Raphael Schoen, the content lead at Relai.

    Bitcoin is under attack. It is increasingly seen as a “dirty currency.” Elon Musk’s Tesla, Wikipedia, Greenpeace and other organizations have stopped accepting BTC for their products or as a means to donate money.

    Musk, who is not only one of the richest but also one of the most controversial people on this planet, has said: “Cryptocurrency is a good idea on many levels, and we believe it has a promising future, but this cannot come at great cost to the environment.” Ouch.

    Guglielmo Cecero,Raphael Schön

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  • Indonesia Bans Sex Outside Of Marriage

    Indonesia Bans Sex Outside Of Marriage

    Indonesia’s parliament has approved a new criminal code that bans anyone in the country from having extramarital sex, including tourists while visiting, with the law carrying a one-year jail term. What do you think?

    “Can I just do community service if it’s a handjob?”

    Antony Pezzullo, Sedimentationist

    “It’s none of the government’s business whether I see the gates of heaven or not.”

    Blanche Creegan, Deli Slicer

    “As long as everyone can repress all their sexual urges, I don’t see this having disturbing consequences.”

    Marcos Cipolone, Freelance Admiral

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  • Ziya Sadr’s Arrest Shows Bitcoin Educators Could Be A Target

    Ziya Sadr’s Arrest Shows Bitcoin Educators Could Be A Target

    This is an opinion editorial by Robert Hall, a content creator and small business owner.

    According to news reports, a well-known Iranian Bitcoin advocate Ziya Sadr was arrested in Tehran on September 19. There isn’t much information about his arrest, but with the ongoing unrest in Iran, the government may have seen him as a threat to their system.

    The young people of Iran are fed up with the current regime’s inability to create economic opportunities and tackle rampant inflation that saps their savings and makes it impossible to save for the future or afford the present. Iranians are no strangers to inflation and are currently experiencing an inflation rate of 25%.

    Robert Hall

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  • Owen-Withee, WIAA disagree on what caused team to miss out on post-season

    Owen-Withee, WIAA disagree on what caused team to miss out on post-season









    The pandemic, students getting jobs, other hobbies and losing interest, on the first day of football practice in 2020 Owen-Withee’s had just 13 athletes show up.

    After the 2019 season, they made the tough decision to take their football program down to the 8-man division, with the school administration filing the paperwork in November of 2020.

    They knew they would have to serve a two-year playoff ban, but were told they’d be eligible to play in the postseason in 2022.

    Over a year later, that statement was retracted.

    “I don’t know where things ultimately got switched, changed, whatever,” said Terry Laube, long-time Blackhawk head coach. “We feel we had done everything she asked us to do and we’re all good to go and all of the sudden the rug gets pulled from under us.”

    With documentation from the WIAA stating they’d be playoff eligible in 2022, the school took the decision to appeals.

    The WIAA effectively ruled it was a clerical error, made by a former employee.

    Not counting the 2019 season, the Blackhawks competed in junior-varsity season as a varsity sit out, however, it wouldn’t count to their two-year playoff ban, as the school had originally interpreted.

    “I’ve had the great fortune to coach for 34 years,” said Laube. “I don’t think I’ve ever been gut shot like this before. We have to go in and have to look 22 boys in the eyes and say, ‘I’m so sorry, you know what our appeal was denied’.”

    The error, made by a now retired WIAA official, was conveyed to the school over email, with WIAA Executive Director Stephanie Hauser, and other elected officials included. However, the correction of the error wasn’t caught until nearly a year later in September 2021.

    Although the WIAA admitted to the error, they said it comes down to what is written in the rulebook in place.

    “Every conversation we have in this office, when it comes to eligibility, it comes down to finding a way it can be done within the membership’s rules that have been voted on and implemented to find a way to make either schools programs, or individuals eligible for our tournament series,” said WIAA Director of Communications Todd Clark.

    “It’s pretty clear what the season regulations call for in a situation like this, and that’s why from a staff and a board perspective, we weren’t able to just ignore the rule.”

    Now, Owen-Withee, who is ranked third in the state in 8-man, will have their season end Friday with no trip to the postseason for the third consecutive year.

    “You know people make decisions that truly you don’t understand,” Laube said. “Life isn’t fair all the time, I guess. That’s it, life isn’t fair and a great lesson for them.”

    “We all have opportunities to make mistakes in our lives,” continued Laube. “To just acknowledge those mistakes and then say, ‘”in the best interest of the student athletes, this is what we need to do, we need to allow them to go ahead and experience the playoffs.’”

    Owen-Withee, 7-0, will conclude its season Friday against the also undefeated Thorp Cardinals.

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