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Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailWSJ's Jeff Horwitz: Instagram's algorithm delivers toxic video mix to adults who follow childrenJeff Horwitz, Wall Street Journal technology reporter and ‘Broke Code’ author, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss tests conducted by WSJ and the Canadian Center for Child Protection, which found that major brand ads could be served alongside sexually explicit images when they aimed to replicate the behavior that a child predator might engage in on Instagram, how Instagram's algorithm delivers inappropriate content to adults who follow children, Meta's response, and more.
Persons: Jeff Horwitz Organizations: Wall Street Journal, WSJ, Canadian Center for Child Locations: Instagram
Photos and videos show rat-infested Russian trenches along the front line. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . AdvertisementAdvertisementNew footage apparently from inside Russian trenches show hoards of rats and mice, the latest sign of increasingly disgusting and degrading warttime conditions for troops on the battlefield. In World War I, when trenches along the Western Front were filled with waste, food, and dead bodies of troops, rat populations exploded. AP Photo/LibkosIt's far from clear how widespread the rat issue is, but their presence in some Russian trenches adds to the already degrading conditions along the front lines for Russian troops.
Persons: , Rayner, they're, John Kirby, haven't, Kirby Organizations: Service, Twitter, Deutsch, Getty, 3rd Brigade, Canadian Field Artillery, Canadian Center, AP, White, National Security Locations: Donetsk, Avdiivka, Russian, Ukraine, Zaporizhzhia, Russia, Ukrainian
OTTAWA—A disagreement between the U.S. and Canada over border security, which has simmered for months behind the scenes, has escalated into a public diplomatic spat that is disrupting plans for business travelers who frequently cross the border. The snarl revolves around the U.S.-Canada trusted-traveler program, called Nexus, that expedites entry of previously screened passengers into either country. Nexus centers in Canada haven’t reopened since they were closed at the start of the pandemic, because the U.S.—which has long wanted more legal protection for American border agents working at Canadian centers—hasn’t sent its agents back.
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