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New speeding cameras catch more than 1,000 drivers on single Oregon street in just two weeks

New speeding cameras catch more than 1,000 drivers on single Oregon street in just two weeks ‘Not a single person really slows down,’ said one resident, who welcomed the cameras - Bookmark - CommentsGo to comments Speed cameras installed on a single Oregon street caught more than 1,000 drivers going too fast in under two weeks, according to a report. Two cameras were installed May 25 on Southwest Oregon Street in Sherwood, about 16 miles south of Portland, and have since caught 1,045 drivers...

The Independent World 2d ago

Florida city issues 44,000 school zone speeding tickets in less than one year

Florida city issues 44,000 school zone speeding tickets in less than one year Drivers going more than 10 miles per hour over the speed limit around Tallahassee schools were issued tickets using cameras - Bookmark - CommentsGo to comments A Florida city has issued more than 44,000 tickets to motorists speeding through its school zones in less than one year. The tickets were given for violations around Tallahassee schools from September 2025 to late May 2026, news outlet WCTV reported, citing...

The Independent World 15h ago

Drivers only slightly exceeding the speed limit will avoid fines with new Colorado law

Drivers only slightly exceeding the speed limit will avoid fines with new Colorado law A local news investigation into the Centennial State’s photo radar system led to two towns voiding thousands of tickets and issuing about $2.3 million in refunds - Bookmark - CommentsGo to comments A new Colorado law passed this week prohibits speed camera tickets for drivers going 5 mph or less over the speed limit. Set to take effect August 12, the legislation, signed by Governor Jared Polis, also...

The Independent World 4d ago

FBI warns drone operators to stay away from World Cup matches

HUNTSVILLE, Ala. — Security for the FIFA World Cup is expanding skyward, with law enforcement agencies preparing for drone activity that could range from a nuisance to a serious threat as the United States hosts the tournament starting next week. More than 60 local, county and state law enforcement agencies in places where the games will be held recently completed a first-of-its-kind federal training program to help detect and deter the unauthorized presence of drones near World Cup sites...

NBC News 4d ago

Crypto-Funded Chinese Peptide Labs Are Booming

Meta has been quietly stashing dormant face recognition code on more than 50 million phones, WIRED reported this week, tucked inside the companion app that pairs with its Ray-Ban and Oakley smart glasses. If activated, the feature—known internally as NameTag—would let wearers identify people in front of them by matching captured faces against a biometric gallery sitting on the user’s device. It’s the same kind of technology Meta said it walked away from in 2021, after paying out billions of...

Wired 4d ago

Carnival breach may put your travel data at risk

Carnival Corporation has confirmed a data breach affecting nearly 6 million people, and the fallout could reach travelers who may not think of themselves as Carnival customers. The company says the incident involved a social engineering attack on a single user account. In other words, someone fooled an employee and gained access to part of Carnival's IT system.

Fox News 5d ago

Carnival breach may put your travel data at risk

Carnival Corporation has confirmed a data breach affecting nearly 6 million people, and the fallout could reach travelers who may not think of themselves as Carnival customers. The company says the incident involved a social engineering attack on a single user account. In other words, someone fooled an employee and gained access to part of Carnival's IT system.

Fox News Tech 5d ago

The Betrayal of Black Patriots

Photographs by Nate Langston PalmerDaniel “Chappie” James Jr. became commander of the Wheelus Air Base, near Tripoli, just after rebels under Muammar Qaddafi took control of Libya in a coup in 1969. In the midst of the insurgency, Qaddafi led an effort to break into the U.S. air base, but James managed to close the gate in time to prevent the young rebel from entering. The incident, which James recounted in a 1978 interview, would come to be the stuff of Air Force lore.

The Atlantic 1d ago