EA Sports FC 24 Pre-Season Week 1: How to Complete Join the Club and Get Free Packs
EA Sports FC 24 Pre-Season Week 1 rewards are here! Here's how to complete the New Era and Join the Club objective set to earn free packs for FC 24 Ultimate Team.
2023-09-02 01:50
EA Sports FC 24 Pre-Season Best of Batch 1: Full List of Players
FC 24 Pre-Season Best of Batch 1 is now available in packs containing FUTTIES, TOTS and Icons. Here's the full list of players included.
2023-09-02 01:46
Howie Mandel, Mya, Alysia Reiner join celebrities, businesses supporting St. Jude Children's Research Hospital during Childhood Cancer Awareness Month
MEMPHIS, Tenn.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Sep 1, 2023--
2023-09-02 01:24
Dell shares hit record high after report, forecasts impress with AI in mix
Shares in Dell Technologies Inc rose 22.2% and hit a record high on Friday after it raised full-year
2023-09-02 01:18
Midea's PortaSplit Receives Prestigious Award at IFA, Showcasing Innovation and User-Centric Approach
BERLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Sep 1, 2023--
2023-09-02 01:17
Spotify to Cut Back Promotional Spending on White Noise Podcasts
Spotify Technology SA is cracking down on white-noise podcasters, reducing the advertising support for programmers that provide little
2023-09-02 00:50
Meta Rejects Trudeau’s Olive Branch in Canada Online News Feud
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government released new details of a law that tries to force technology companies to
2023-09-02 00:50
Canada tries to address news law concerns, Facebook not convinced
By Ismail Shakil and David Ljunggren OTTAWA Canada unveiled draft rules on Friday for a law to compel
2023-09-02 00:45
Biden boosts spending request to help pay for disasters
By Jarrett Renshaw The Biden administration on Friday added $4 billion to a supplemental funding request to Congress
2023-09-02 00:28
Africa Offers Global Warming Solution in 1st Climate Declaration
Africa will seek to present itself as a solution to the global warming crisis in a declaration to
2023-09-02 00:27
A new Titanic expedition is being planned – and the US government wants to stop it
You would think people would read the room, and learn from the tragic and fatal implosion of the Oceangate submersible in July, yet there’s already plans for another trip down to the Titanic wreckage next year – and the US government doesn’t want it to go ahead. Two months after the Titan sub crushed underwater, killing five people, officials are trying to stop Georgia-based firm RMS Titanic Inc. (RMST) from trying to recover further historical items from the wreckage to add to its collection of artifacts it exhibits. While RMST owns the salvage rights to the doomed liner which infamously struck an iceberg and sank in 1912, the US government is drawing attention to both federal law and an international agreement which classes the shipwreck as a hallowed gravesite. According to the Associated Press, the government states in court documents filed on Friday that RMST is “not free to disregard” the “validly enacted federal law” mentioned above, but it nonetheless is “its stated intent”. “[The shipwreck] will be deprived of the protections Congress granted it,” its lawyers argue. RMST, meanwhile, says it looks to take images of the entire site, including areas where “deterioration has opened chasms sufficient to permit a remotely operated vehicle to penetrate the hull without interfering with the current structure”. Provided the objects are not “affixed to the wreck itself”, artefacts recovered could include items from “inside the Marconi room” – that’s the room where the ship’s wireless radio was used to communicate with other vessels and those on the shore. RMST also insists they do not plan to cut into or detach any part of the wreck “at this time”, but that they don’t plan to seek a permit from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) – something the US government says it needs in order for the firm to move forward with its plans. The NOAA oversees the public interest in the Titanic, and on its website accepts it “may be in the public’s interest to salvage some artifacts” from the wreckage. “NOAA therefore balances this value with the Congressional intent to manage the wreck site as a maritime memorial consistent with the International Agreement, which proclaims that the Titanic shall be recognized as a memorial to those who perished. “NOAA has concluded that the recovery of many of the artifacts from the debris field (with certain exceptions) is consistent with the NOAA Guidelines and the International Agreement, including the in situ preservation policy. “However, NOAA has also determined that recovery of artifacts from within either of the two hull sections is not consistent with the purposes of a maritime memorial.” It’s not the first time the US government and RMST have had a legal battle over the ship, as back in 2020 a similar case concerning a planned expedition made its way to the courts, before the coronavirus pandemic scuppered proposals and the issue didn’t go any further. Sign up to our free Indy100 weekly newsletter Have your say in our news democracy. Click the upvote icon at the top of the page to help raise this article through the indy100 rankings.
2023-09-02 00:26
Record-Breaking Wildfires Drag Economic Growth Lower in Canada
Canada’s worst wildfire season on record, along with growing droughts in many parts of the country, have taken
2023-09-02 00:20