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Financials drag Wall Street down due to worries over credit card rate plan

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Wall Street falls with financials amid credit card rate plan concern

Marine Le Pen’s Legal Battle to Overturn Embezzlement Conviction Commences

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new video loaded: Marine Le Pen’s Appeal to Overturn Embezzlement Conviction Begins

Marine Le Pen, the French far-right leader, began her appeal trial aimed at overturning a ruling by a criminal court in 2025 that convicted her of embezzlement and barred her from running for public office for five years.

By Axel Boada

January 13, 2026

An industry insider warns brands not to rely too heavily on ‘GEO’ as ‘agentic commerce’ rises

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Hello and welcome to Eye on AI. In this edition….Google launches the ability to make purchases directly from Google Search’s AI Mode and Gemini…Apple selects Google to power an upgraded Siri…Meta announces a new AI infrastructure team…researchers use AI to find new ways to edit genes.

It was another week with a lot of AI-related announcements. Among the bigger news items was Google’s launch of an e-commerce shopping checkout feature directly from Google Search’s AI Mode and its Gemini chatbot app. Among the first takers for the new feature is retail behemoth Walmart, so this is a big deal. Behind the scenes, the AI checkout is powered by a new “Universal Commerce Protocol” that should make it easier for retailers to support agentic AI sales. Google Cloud also announced a bunch of AI features to support agentic commerce for customers, including a new Gemini Enterprise for Customer Experience product that combines shopping and customer support (watch this space—the combination of those two previously separate functions could have big implications for the way many businesses are organized.) Home Depot was one of the first announced customers for this new cloud product.

It’s still early days for agentic commerce, but already many companies are panicking about how they make sure their products and sites surface highly in what these AI agents might recommend to users. A nascent industry of companies has sprung up offering what are variously called “generative engine optimization” (GEO) or “generative-AI optimization” (GAIO) services. Some of these echo longstanding internet search optimization strategies, but with a few key differences. GEO seems, at least for now, somewhat harder to game than SEO. Chatbots and AI agents seem to care a lot about products that have received positive earned media attention from reputable news outlets (which should be a good thing for consumers—and for media organizations!) as well as those that rank highly in trusted customer review sites.

But the world of AI-mediated commerce presents big governance risks that many companies may not fully understand, according to Tim de Rosen, the founder of a company called AIVO Standard, which offers companies a method for generative AI optimization and also a way to track and hopefully govern what information AI agents are using.

The problem, de Rosen told me in a phone call last week, is that while various AI models tend to be consistent in how they characterize a brand’s product offerings—usually correctly reporting the nature of a product, its features, and how those features compare to competing products and can usually provide citations to the sources of that information—they are inconsistent and error-prone when asked questions that pertain to a company’s financial stability, governance, and technical certifications. Yet this information can play a significant role in major procurement decisions.

AI models are less reliable on financial and governance questions

In one example, AIVO Standard assessed how frontier AI models answered questions about Ramp, the fast-growing business expense management software company. AIVO Standard found that models could not reliably answer questions about Ramp’s cybersecurity certifications and governance standards. In some cases, de Rosen said, this was likely to subtly push enterprises towards procurement decisions involving larger, publicly traded, incumbent businesses—even in cases when a privately-held upstart also met the same standards—simply because the AI models could not accurately answer questions about the younger, privately-held company’s governance and financial suitability or cite sources for the information they did provide.

In another example, the company looked at what AI models said about the risk factors of rival weight loss drugs. It found that AI models did not simply list risk factors, but slipped into making recommendations and judgments about which drug was likely the “safer choice” for the patient. “The outputs were largely factual and measured, with disclaimers present, but they still shaped eligibility, risk perception, and preference,” de Rosen said.

AIVO Standard found that these problems held across all the leading AI models and a variety of different prompts, and that they persisted even when the models were asked to verify their answers. In fact, in some cases, the models would tend to double-down on inaccurate information, insisting it was correct.

GEO is still more art than science

There are several implications. One, for all the companies selling GEO services, is that GEO may not work well across different aspects of brand information. Companies shouldn’t necessarily trust a marketing tech firm that says it can show them how their brand is showing up in chatbot responses, let alone believe that the marketing tech company has some magic formula for reliably shaping those AI responses. Prompt results may vary considerably, even from one minute to the next, depending on what type of brand information is being assessed. And there’s not much evidence yet on how exactly to steer chatbot responses for non-product information.

But the far bigger issue is that there is a moment in many agentic workflows—even those with a human in the loop—where AI-provided information becomes the basis for decision making. And, as de Rosen says, currently most companies don’t really police the boundaries between information, judgment, and decision-making. They don’t have any way of keeping track of exactly what prompt was used, what the model returned in response, and exactly how this fed into the ultimate recommendation or decision. In regulated industries such as finance or healthcare where, if something goes wrong, regulators are going to ask for exactly those details. And unless regulated enterprises implement systems for capturing all of this data, they are headed for trouble.

With that, here’s more AI news.

Jeremy Kahn
jeremy.kahn@fortune.com
@jeremyakahn

FORTUNE ON AI

Anthropic launches Claude Cowork, a file-managing AI agent that could threaten dozens of startups—by Beatrice Nolan

U.K. investigation into X over allegedly illegal deepfakes risks igniting a free speech battle with the U.S.—by Beatrice Nolan

Malaysia and Indonesia move to ban Musk’s Grok AI over sexually explicit deepfakes—Angelica Ang

Anthropic unveils Claude for Healthcare, expands life science features, and partners with HealthEx to let users connect medical records—by Jeremy Kahn

AI IN THE NEWS

Apple chooses Google’s AI for updated Siri. Apple signed a multi-year partnership with Google to power key AI features in its products, including a long-awaited Siri upgrade, the companies announced on Monday. The deal underscores Google’s resurgence in AI and helped push the market value of Google-parent Alphabet above the $4 trillion threshold. Apple said the agreement does not change its existing partnership with OpenAI, under which Siri currently hands off some queries to ChatGPT, though it remains unclear how the Google tie-up will shape Siri’s future AI integrations. The financial terms of the deal were not disclosed either, although Bloomberg previously reported that Apple was considering paying Google as much as $1 billion per year to access its AI models for Siri.

Meta announces new AI infrastructure team, including former Trump advisor. The social media giant said it was creating a new top-level initiative called Meta Compute to secure tens—and eventually hundreds—of gigawatts of data center capacity. The effort is being led by Daniel Gross, a prominent AI tech executive and investor who Meta had hired to help its Superintelligence Labs effort, and Santosh Janardhan, who is the company’s head of infrastructure. CEO Mark Zuckerberg said the way Meta builds and finances data centers will become a key strategic advantage, as the company pours money into facilities such as a $27 billion data center in Louisiana and nuclear-power partnerships to meet energy demand. Meta also named Dina Powell McCormick, who served in several key positions during the first Trump administration, as president and vice chair to help forge government partnerships and guide strategy, reporting directly to Zuckerberg. You can read more from the Wall Street Journal here.

Microsoft warns that DeepSeek is proving popular in emerging markets. Research published by Microsoft shows that U.S. AI companies are losing ground to Chinese rivals in emerging markets. The low-cost of open models built in China, such as DeepSeek, is proving decisive in spurring adoption in places such as Ethiopia, Zimbabwe, and Turkmenistan. Microsoft president Brad Smith said Chinese open-source models now rival U.S. offerings on performance while undercutting them on price, helping China overtake the U.S. in global usage of “open” AI, especially across Africa and other parts of the global south. By contrast, U.S. firms like OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic have focused on closed, subscription-based models—raising concerns that without greater investment, the AI divide between rich and poor countries will widen, and that U.S. companies may ultimately see their growth limited to more developed markets. Read more from the Financial Times here.

Salesforce launches updated Slackbot powered by Anthropic’s Claude. Salesforce is rolling out an upgraded Slackbot for Business+ and Enterprise+ customers that uses generative AI to answer questions and surface information across Slack, Salesforce, and connected services like Google Drive and Confluence. The new Slackbot is powered primarily by Anthropic’s Claude model. The company says the AI assistant respects user permissions and is designed to reduce reliance on external tools such as ChatGPT by working directly inside Slack, which Salesforce acquired for $27.1 billion in 2021. The launch comes as investors remain skeptical about enterprise software firms’ ability to benefit from the AI boom, with Salesforce shares down sharply over the past year despite its push to get businesses to adopt its “Agentforce” AI agents. Read more from CNBC here.

EYE ON AI RESEARCH

Microsoft, Nvidia and U.K. startup Basecamp Research make AI-aided breakthrough in gene editing. An international research team including scientists from Nvidia and Microsoft has used AI to mine evolutionary data from more than a million species to design potential new gene-editing tools and drug therapies. The team developed a set of AI models, called Eden, which were trained on a vast, previously unpublished biological dataset assembled by Basecamp. Nvidia’s venture capital arm is an investor in Basecamp.

The AI models can generate novel enzymes for large, precise gene insertions that could improve the ability of the body’s immune cells to target cancerous tumors. Basecamp has demonstrated the effectiveness of these gene-edited cells in laboratory tests so far, but they have not been tested in people. The Eden-designed gene editing enzymes can also make genetic edits that allow cells to produce peptides that can fight drug-resistant bacteria. Researchers say the work could dramatically expand the range of treatable cancers and genetic diseases by overcoming long-standing data and technical constraints in gene therapy. Experts caution, however, that the clinical impact will depend on further validation, safety testing, and regulatory and manufacturing hurdles. You can read more from the Financial Times

AI CALENDAR

Jan. 19-23: World Economic Forum, Davos, Switzerland.

Jan. 20-27: AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, Singapore.

Feb. 10-11: AI Action Summit, New Delhi, India.

March 2-5: Mobile World Congress, Barcelona, Spain.

March 16-19: Nvidia GTC, San Jose, Calif.

BRAIN FOOD

What if people prefer AI-written fiction, or simply can’t tell the difference? That’s the question that New Yorker writer Vaudhini Vara asks in a provocative essay that was published as a “Weekend Essay” on the magazine’s website a few weeks ago. While out-of-the-box AI models continue to struggle to produce stories as convincing as graduates of top MFA programs and experienced novelists, it turns out that when you fine-tune these models on an existing author’s works, they can produce prose that is often indistinguishable from what the original author might create. Disconcertingly, in a test conducted by researcher Tuhin Chakrabarty— who has conducted some of the best experiments to date on the creative writing abilities of AI models—and which Vara repeats herself in a slightly different form, even readers with highly-attuned literary sensibilities (such as MFA students) prefer the AI written versions to human-authored prose. If that’s the case, what hope will there be for authors of genre fiction or romance novels?

I had a conversation a few months ago with a friend who is an acclaimed novelist. He was pessimistic about whether future generations would value human-written literature. I tried to argue that readers will always care about the idea that they are in communication with a human author, that there is a mind with lived experience behind the words. He was not convinced. And increasingly, I’m worried his pessimism is well-founded.

Vara ultimately concludes that the only way to preserve the idea of literature as the transmission of lived experience across the page, is for us to collectively demand it (and possibly even ban the fine-tuning of AI models on the works of existing writers.) I am not sure that’s realistic. But it may be the only choice left to us.

FORTUNE AIQ: THE YEAR IN AI—AND WHAT’S AHEAD

Businesses took big steps forward on the AI journey in 2025, from hiring Chief AI Officers to experimenting with AI agents. The lessons learned—both good and bad–combined with the technology’s latest innovations will make 2026 another decisive year. Explore all of Fortune AIQ, and read the latest playbook below: 

The 3 trends that dominated companies’ AI rollouts in 2025.

2025 was the year of agentic AI. How did we do?

AI coding tools exploded in 2025. The first security exploits show what could go wrong.

The big AI New Year’s resolution for businesses in 2026: ROI.

Businesses face a confusing patchwork of AI policy and rules. Is clarity on the horizon?

Isabel Wu Commits to Princeton for 2027-28 Season

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Fitter and Faster Swim Camps is the proud sponsor of SwimSwam’s College Recruiting Channel and all commitment news. For many, swimming in college is a lifelong dream that is pursued with dedication and determination. Fitter and Faster is proud to honor these athletes and those who supported them on their journey.

Isabel Wu from Sunnyvale, California, has announced her verbal commitment to the admission process* at Princeton University for 2027-28. She wrote on social media:

“I am super excited to announce my verbal commitment to the admissions process at Princeton University! Huge thank you to all of my family, friends, and coaches for their endless and unwavering support throughout the years. I would also like to express my gratitude to Coach Abby and the Princeton coaching staff for believing in me and giving me this amazing opportunity. GO TIGERS!! 🐯🧡🖤”

Wu is a junior at Archbishop Mitty High School. She swims year-round with Santa Clara Swim Club and specializes in the 200/400 IM. She is our #16 recruit on the Way Too Early list of top 20 girls from the high school class of 2027.

As a high school freshman, she came in 5th in the 200 IM (2:01.80 in prelims, a PB) and 5th in the 500 free (5:01.86) at the 2024 CIF-Central Coast Section Championships. She then went on to the State Meet and placed 6th in the IM with 2:02.69. Last May, she was runner-up in the IM (2:00.26, a PB) and placed 3rd in the 100 fly (54.54, a PB) at the Section meet; she also led off the medley relay in a PB of 26.70 and the 400 free relay in 51.37. At the 2025 California State Championships, she placed 4th in the IM (PB of 1:59.59 in prelims) and 3rd in the fly (PB of 54.39 in prelims).

Wu recently competed at 2025 Winter Juniors West but was off her best times, all achieved last spring. She clocked her best 400 IM time at Far Westerns in April, dropping 6.3 seconds while finishing 2nd in 4:12.14.

Wu had a strong showing in long-course season last year, culminating in PBs of 2:17.78/4:54.47 in the IMs and 28.39/1:01.48/2:15.03 in the butterfly events. She also achieved a Summer Juniors cut in the 200 free (2:04.87), a Winter Juniors cut in the 400 free (4:24.66), and Futures standards in the 200 back (2:22.24) and 100 breast (1:14.84).

Wu will arrive at Princeton just after the graduation of Tigers Eleanor Sun and Dakota Tucker, who finished 1-2 in the 200 IM and 400 IM at the Ivy League Women’s Championships. Wu’s times would already qualify for the ‘A’ finals in both events. It took 53.49/1:59.56 to make top 8 in the 100/200 fly at the 2025 conference meet.

Best SCY times:

  • 400 IM – 4:12.14
  • 200 IM – 1:59.59
  • 200 fly – 1:59.61
  • 100 fly – 54.32
  • 100 free – 51.02

*Note: A verbal commitment between an Ivy League coach and a prospective student-athlete is not an offer of admission, as only the Admission Office has that authority. The coach can only commit his or her support in the admission process. Ivy League Admission Offices do not issue “Likely Letters” before October 1 of the prospective student-athlete’s senior year of high school. The Likely Letter, while issued after an initial read of the student’s application, is not an offer of admission to the university.

If you have a commitment to report, please send an email with a photo (landscape, or horizontal, looks best) and a quote to [email protected].

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Lighter Made of Titanium with Compass, Watch, and Magnifier Features

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Even if you don’t smoke, a lighter is certainly a handy tool for starting campfires – and if you’re carrying one anyway, why not carry some extra functions with it? That’s where the Polar lighter comes in, as it packs a compass and mirror along with an optional capsule, watch and loupe.

Currently the subject of a Kickstarter campaign, the Polar is made by Hong Kong gear company EckDesign, which previously brought us a sort of similar device known as the Loki-Nav.

In its basic configuration, the Polar lighter is claimed to weigh 219 g (7.7 oz) in brass (pictured) and 125 g (4.4 oz) in titanium

EckDesign

At the heart of the Polar is the lighter itself, which is machined from a solid block of the buyer’s choice of titanium or brass. It holds up to 5 ml of fuel, and thanks to its fully sealed design which minimizes evaporation, should reportedly last up to 20 days before requiring a refill – obviously though, that figure depends very much on usage.

The basic version of the Polar features a removable disc-shaped mirror on its inside surface, along with a hinged liquid-filled compass that folds out from the lighter body and tilts to whatever angle is needed.

The Polar lighter alongside its capsule, watch and loupe modules
The Polar lighter alongside its capsule, watch and loupe modules

EckDesign

Optional extras include a waterproof capsule for storing items such as pills; an analog watch; and a loupe (aka magnifying glass). It should be noted that each of these modules is swapped into the space occupied by the compass by removing and reinstalling a couple of screws, so only a single module can be in place at one time.

Assuming the Polar lighter’s Kickstarter is successful, a pledge of US$79 will get you a basic one in brass (planned retail $155), $99 will get you one in stonewashed titanium (retail $179), and $119 will score you one in black-coated titanium (retail $199).

The capsule, watch and loupe modules are an extra $32, $25 and $27, respectively, or they can be purchased as a bundle for $79.

Source: Kickstarter

Note: New Atlas may earn commission from purchases made via links.

Trump announces ‘Day of Reckoning and Retribution’ in Minnesota following ICE outrage: Donald Trump | Latest News on Donald Trump

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US president issues latest threat to midwestern state, where protests have continued after ICE agent killed woman.

United States President Donald Trump has said that a “day of reckoning and retribution” is coming to Minnesota, as outrage and protests have continued days after an immigration agent fatally shot a woman in the state’s largest city, Minneapolis.

Trump did not provide further details on the statement, which came at the end of a lengthy screed on the president’s Truth Social account on Tuesday.

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The apparent threat represented the latest pledge to come down hard on the midwestern state in the wake of the killing of Renee Nicole Good by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent last week.

The administration on Monday promised to send hundreds more ICE agents to Minneapolis, where federal officer ranks already dwarf local law enforcement, in what city and state leaders have called a dangerous escalation.

“All the patriots of ICE want to do is remove them from your neighborhood and send them back to the prisons and mental institutions from where they came, most in foreign Countries who illegally entered the USA though Sleepy Joe Biden’s HORRIBLE Open Border’s Policy,” Trump said, referring to his predecessor, US President Joe Biden.

“FEAR NOT, GREAT PEOPLE OF MINNESOTA, THE DAY OF RECKONING & RETRIBUTION IS COMING!” he said.

The phrase was quickly quoted by the Department of Homeland Security, which oversees domestic US immigration enforcement, in a post on X.

Later on Tuesday, a federal judge was set to hear arguments in a lawsuit filed by Minnesota’s Attorney General and the cities of Minneapolis and Saint Paul, alleging that the surge of immigration agents violates residents’ freedom of speech while trampling on the state’s constitutionally protected authorities.

“People are being racially profiled, harassed, terrorised, and assaulted,” the state’s attorney general said in a statement upon filing the lawsuit.

“Schools have gone into lockdown. Businesses have been forced to close. Minnesota police are spending countless hours dealing with the chaos ICE is causing.”

“This federal invasion of the Twin Cities has to stop, so today I am suing DHS to bring it to an end,” it said.

Ongoing outrage

Daily protests have continued across the state since Good’s killing during an enforcement operation in Minneapolis.

Within moments of the shooting, the Trump administration labelled Good a “domestic terrorist”, while claiming the officer was acting in self-defence after the 37-year-old “weaponised her vehicle”.

Widely circulated video evidence quickly cast doubt on their claims, with many observers saying recordings appeared to show Good attempting to flee the scene in her Honda Pilot SUV when the agent opened fire. Questions have also been raised over the conduct of the agents involved, including a series of actions that appeared to escalate the situation.

Last week, local officials decried the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s (FBI) unorthodox move to block an independent state investigatory body from taking part in a probe of Good’s killing. Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey said the move – coupled with the Trump administration’s comments – raises questions over the integrity of any conclusions reached.

On Tuesday, the UN Human Rights Council also called for a “prompt, independent and transparent” investigation into the incident.

Prior to Good’s killing, the Trump administration had surged immigration agents to Minnesota as the president increasingly focused on alleged fraud in the large Somali-American community in the state, at times employing racist rhetoric as he sent 2,000 immigration agents to the area.

On Wednesday, the Trump administration announced it was revoking so-called Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Somalia, a special designation that protects individuals from deportation due to unsafe conditions in their home country.

In a statement on X, US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) said the move means Somalis who had been on TPS are required to leave the country by March 27.

Rostrum Pacific Signs Direct Agreements with Spotify and TikTok, Names Samantha Moore to Head New Distribution Platform SpaceHeater

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Rostrum Pacific, the parent company of indie label Rostrum Records, has secured direct licensing agreements with Spotify and TikTok.

The company has also officially launched its distribution platform, SpaceHeater, and appointed Samantha Moore as President of SpaceHeater to oversee the business.

Beyond Spotify and TikTok, SpaceHeater also operates through direct relationships with Amazon and Tidal, along with other major DSPs, Rostrum Pacific said.

The deals and new appointment arrive a month after the company secured a $150 million financing to grow its music catalog.

The agreements were negotiated by Mike Pelczynski, Rostrum Pacific‘s EVP of Digital Strategy, who noted on Tuesday (January 13) that “Direct relationships like this move beyond economics toward clarity, accountability, and alignment with where platforms are heading.”

He added: “These agreements position us as a valued partner at the rightsholder level, while SpaceHeater ensures our artists and label clients benefit from modern infrastructure built for today’s realities.”

As Rostrum Pacific shifts to a fully independent operating model offering physical and digital distribution, SpaceHeater will now distribute the full Rostrum Records catalog, as well as those owned and managed by Rostrum Pacific including Cantora and Fat Beats.

Rostrum’s catalog was previously distributed by ADA.

“These agreements position us as a valued partner at the rightsholder level, while SpaceHeater ensures our artists and label clients benefit from modern infrastructure built for today’s realities.”

Mike Pelczynski, Rostrum Pacific

Moore previously held senior roles at The Orchard, where she built the company’s Commercial Insights and Business Intelligence divisions, and at ADA, where she served as Chief of Staff and Senior Vice President of Business Operations.

Her experience spans more than a decade in digital distribution and data strategy.

Commenting on her appointment as President of SpaceHeater, Samantha Moore said: “It has been a great honor to join the team at Rostrum Pacific, who I have worked with and admired for the last few years.

“The team here has proven their ability to take tricky entrepreneurial ideas and turn them into reality, with an independent fearlessness that is ingrained in the company’s DNA. I’m excited to bring SpaceHeater into this next phase of growth in 2026.”

“The team here has proven their ability to take tricky entrepreneurial ideas and turn them into reality, with an independent fearlessness that is ingrained in the company’s DNA.”

Samantha Moore, SpaceHeater

Added Moore: “With larger labels and catalogs, there’s a perception of high switching cost and a real fear that moving your catalog will result in lost data or revenue.

“With SpaceHeater, we don’t just mitigate migration risk—we capitalize on the process by enriching metadata, auditing the catalog, and surfacing hidden opportunities through data insights.”

According to Rostrum, SpaceHeater aims to solve three “pain points” in the distribution landscape, including “complex and opaque catalog migration, limited access to deep data insights, and insufficient catalog optimization”.

Rostrum Pacific describes SpaceHeater as an “AI-native platform” that provides real-time analytics and tools for independent labels, artists, and catalog owners. The service is backed by a team of music industry professionals.

Rostrum Pacific COO Jonathan Partch said: “Samantha brings a rare combination of deep technical expertise, strategic problem-solving ability, and forward-thinking vision that very few in our business possess.”

“Samantha brings a rare combination of deep technical expertise, strategic problem-solving ability, and forward-thinking vision that very few in our business possess.”

Jonathan Partch, Rostrum Pacific

Added Partch: “She’s a proven innovator and operator who makes us infinitely stronger in our goal to become the preeminent independent digital music distributor.”

The development comes nearly three years after Rostrum Records launched Rostrum Pacific as its parent company to accommodate its portfolio of entertainment properties.

Music Business Worldwide

Trump administration takes steps to terminate Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Somalis, ending deportation protection

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The Trump administration is ending Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Somali immigrants, making it easier to deport thousands of people.

“Country conditions in Somalia have improved to the point that it no longer meets the law’s requirement,” US Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem told Fox News.

TPS prevents US officials from deporting immigrants to countries deemed unsafe. Starting March 17, around 2,500 Somalis will lose their work authorisations and legal status, making them eligible for deportation.

President Donald Trump has made it known he does not want Somali immigrants in the US, and has launched a major effort in Minneapolis to detain and deport people in the country illegally.

Noem last month announced a surge of immigration officers in Minnesota, home to a large Somali diaspora community and where a sprawling federal fraud investigation found problems in the state’s childcare industry, which the administration has linked to Somali immigrants.

Previous attempts to end TPS for other nations including Haiti have faced legal challenges.

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A Times Reporter Visits a Cyberscam Center in a Conflict Zone

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Holy moly. Look at these phones. The floor is just littered with SIM cards. We’re in Myanmar. Only weeks after rebel fighters took control of a cyberscam center near the border with Thailand. For years, Chinese criminals have used ordinary office spaces like this in the middle of the jungle to target Americans in elaborate online fraud. OK, here we are, the nerve center of this multibillion-dollar industry that is scamming people all across the world. More than 3,000 people from dozens of countries were once employed here, joining an industry that has proliferated during Myanmar’s civil war. There’s just row after row of monitors. Looks just like a normal office park. This is all evidence of scamming. Many of the workers fled, leaving behind documents and records detailing the scams. This looks like a receipt. There were also piles of electronic equipment, the main tools of their trade. Here are AT&T SIM cards. So you can just pretend that you’re calling from the United States. The scammers would act like potential love interests and send messages to their targets on social media. They would target lonely hearts in the United States and pretend to be beautiful, young Asian women who were interested in just making a connection with somebody. As their relationships with their victims grew closer, the scammers would then move the conversation to a video call. This is a video call room, and you can see that they’ve got a fake background and they’ve got fake flowers, some books. This looks like a book, but it’s actually just a box. When victims would send in large amounts of money, the scammers would celebrate. When you make $5,000 bucks, you hit the gong, and then when you make $50,000 bucks, you hit this very large drum. And in between is the god of wealth. [explosion] Jesus Christ, it’s close. Our visit was punctuated by the thud of mortar rounds that forced us to seek cover. “Hurry, hurry.” But many of the Chinese workers still living in the complex seemed unfazed about being in the middle of a war zone. We tried to speak to some of them during our visit to the compound. These are the scammers who are not willing to leave. Some said they were lured by fake job offers and forced to work in the scam industry. If they go home to China, they said, they’ll likely be arrested. So for now, their best hope is to find another job here in war-torn Myanmar.