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2025-05-30 06:31:15
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  滨州儿童癫痫病医院   

(KGTV) - Did an Australian newspaper really print up a special edition with an extra 8 blank pages to serve as emergency toilet paper?Yes!Coronavirus fears have people stocking up on essentials, including buying up all the toilet paper they can find.So in response, the NT News printed a special edition of the paper, with a blank 8-page spread that serves as extra toilet paper if anyone runs out.The paper's editor says it's selling well. 448

  滨州儿童癫痫病医院   

(KGTV) - Can your online presence ruin your life? A social media post from years ago can come back to haunt you and even cost you your job. 10News dug into how to clean up your online reputation even if it's too late. If it's on the internet, it's there forever. From college photos to angry twitter rants, they can all come back to haunt you long after you click 'post.' It's becoming such a problem that Dr. Rebecca Nee devotes an entire lecture to it at San Diego State. "Teachers and professors can sometimes be forgiving," said Dr. Nee. "But most employers are not."Last month, a woman was fired from Panera Bread after a video revealing the secret to making their mac n' cheese went viral. Two weeks earlier, a man dominated the internet when he made a sign asking for beer money on ESPN's College GameDay. The instant fame quickly turned into backlash after so-called racist tweets he sent eight years ago came to light. In a world always online, could you be next?"It can keep you from getting a job; it can keep you from the career of your dreams," said Dr. Nee. In San Diego, a man had identity concerns when he was falsely accused of felony grand theft. The District Attorney claimed he and other employees used stolen credit cards to buy merchandise from a Go Wireless store at the UTC mall. It turned out that Go Wireless mixed him up with another man by the same name. He was booked, fingerprinted and DNA tested before the case was dismissed. "I barely even see my son now, and the last thing I wanted to do was go to jail and not even see him at all."But the damage to his reputation was already done with information online that may last forever. And it happens all the time. That's where the company Reputation Defender comes in. "People are really confused about information that's out there on the internet about them," said CEO Rich Matta. "The fact that the internet never forgets."Matta says they work on managing your reputation and your privacy. "If there's something you don't like on page one of Google, most people are seeing it," he said.It could end up costing you a job, a relationship, and even approval for a loan. "The idea is to create a network of content that is stronger than whatever is negative out there in Google's eyes," said Matta. "Therefore pushing that negative content down to page two or below in google where very few people actually see it."But before you get to that point, try to keep it clean. "Most employers have complete control over who they hire and who they fire," said Nee. "They can simply say, 'this is not the type of person that we wish to have working for us,' then that's all they need to say." Even if you think it's private, it's probably not. "Someone could easily screenshot a Snapchat photo or video, and that can be used against you in various ways," said Nee. Just like a credit score, your online reputation carries years of information. One slip-up may be impossible to fix. "There's always a chance when you put something in digital form that it can get out there, and it can burn you in the end," said Nee. Reputation Defender offers users a free 'Report Card' to determine the health of your online identity. You can get one for free here. 3226

  滨州儿童癫痫病医院   

(CNN) -- It may seem like an ordinary scene: Children and adults playing on pink seesaws, carelessly laughing and chatting with each other.But this is a playground unlike any other. These custom-built seesaws have been placed on both sides of a slatted steel border fence that separates the United States and Mexico.The idea for a "Teeter-Totter Wall" came from Ronald Rael, an architecture professor at the University of California, Berkeley, and Virginia San Fratello, an associate professor of design at San Jose State University -- and it was a long time coming.In 2009, the two designed a concept for a binational seesaw at the border for a book, "Borderwall as Architecture," which uses "humor and inventiveness to address the futility of building barriers," UC-Berkeley said.Ten years later, their conceptual drawings became reality. Rael and his crew transported the seesaws to Sunland Park, New Mexico, separated by a steel fence from Ciudad Juárez, Mexico.People from both sides came together Monday to play in a "unifying act," the University of California said in a statement. Participants on the Mexico side had no planning, it said.In an Instagram post, Rael said the event was "filled with joy, excitement, and togetherness at the borderwall.""The wall became a literal fulcrum for U.S -Mexico relations and children and adults were connected in meaningful ways on both sides with the recognition that the actions that take place on one side have a direct consequence on the other side," he wrote.Rael says that counterproposals for the wall created by his studio "reimagine, hyperbolize, or question the wall and its construction, cost, performance and meaning," according to the book's website. 1719

  

(KGTV) — Attorney General William Barr has decided to self-quarantine out of caution after President Donald Trump and several other lawmakers and aides tested positive for the coronavirus this week.Barr has had four COVID-19 tests since Friday and all have been negative, according to Justice Department spokesperson Kerri Kupec. She told the AP that Barr is quarantining out of an abundance of caution.Barr had attended one meeting at the Justice Department headquarters on Friday and stayed home during the weekend except to be tested.RELATED:President Trump drives by his supporters outside Walter Reed8 attendees of Trump's Supreme Court announcement test positive for the coronavirusLast weekend, Barr was one of several people to attend a White House event for Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett, where he was seen on video talking with former Trump aide Kellyanne Conway, who has since tested positive for the virus. Neither was wearing a mask.Many others in attendance were also not wearing a facial covering, as they sat close together throughout the ceremony. Since that event, at least eight people have tested positive for the coronavirus, including President Trump, first lady Melania Trump, Sens. Tom Tillis, and Mike Lee, Notre Dame President John I. Jenkins, Gov. Chris Christie, and Conway.The Associated Press contributed to this report. 1368

  

(KGTV) - Did a hearse driver really use the dead body he was transporting as an excuse to use the carpool lane?Yes.The Nevada Highway Patrol pulled over the hearse this week on I-15 in Las Vegas.The driver said he thought the deceased could be counted as a second person in the car.The trooper disagreed, but let the driver off with a warning.To be clear, you need two living people in a vehicle to use the HOV lane. 424

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