Tag: crack

  • Twin Sisters from South Kashmir Village Crack NEET in First Attempt – TheNewsCaravan

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    In recent media reports, it has been revealed that twin sisters hailing from a remote village in south Kashmir have achieved remarkable success by cracking the NEET (National Eligibility cum Entrance Test) in their very first attempt. The sisters, Syed Tabia and Syed Bisma, are the daughters of Syed Sajad, a revered figure leading the prayers in Watoo village, located in Kulgam district. Their dedication and hard work have been attributed to the proper coaching they received at a renowned center in Srinagar.

    These talented sisters have undoubtedly made their parents proud, as well as their community, by achieving such an impressive feat. The significance of receiving proper coaching cannot be overlooked, as both the sisters and their father emphasized its vital role in their success. Their disciplined approach and determination have certainly paid off, setting a positive example for aspiring students in their region.

    >> Meet Abdul Basit, NEET 2023 Topper from Kashmir Valley

    In a separate report, it was also revealed that another pair of twin sisters from Srinagar, Rutba Bashir and Tooba Bashir, have also cracked the NEET examination. Although further details were not immediately available, this achievement highlights the exceptional talent and perseverance found within the city’s Shehr-e-Khas area.

    Twin Sisters from South Kashmir Village Crack NEET in First Attempt 1

    The success of these twin sisters serves as an inspiration to countless students across the region, demonstrating that with dedication, hard work, and proper guidance, anyone can overcome obstacles and achieve their goals. Their accomplishments deserve recognition and praise, and they stand as a testament to the potential that lies within the youth of Kashmir.

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    ( With inputs from : www.TheNewsCaravan.com )

  • Citadel review – this absurdly fun spy thriller is televisual crack

    Citadel review – this absurdly fun spy thriller is televisual crack

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    With the arrival at last of high-octane, international spy actionfest Citadel after a troubled gestation (commissioned before the pandemic, rejected pilot episode, replacement of the original director, radical overhaul), Prime Video is now the producer of the two most expensive streamed series of all time. The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power cost $465m (and that’s clearly without spending a cent on the title) and the new six-episode drama on the block reportedly comes in at somewhere north of $250m. And that’s clearly without spending a cent on the script.

    Is it worth it? You betcha. It’s Mission: Impossible meets The Bourne Identity meets James Bond while glancing off Indiana Jones a few times along its irresistible way.

    It opens, rather like a Hollywood remake of Bodyguard, with Richard Madden having loo-based traumas on a train. This time he is more chiselled, because people from outside the UK are going to see him, and doesn’t quite save the day. This time he plays Mason Kane (actually, they might have spent 10 dollars on the name) an agent for Citadel, an independent global espionage network comprising people tired of political corruption and criminal infiltration screwing up ordinary espionage and leaving the little people unprotected.

    His partner (and ex-wife) is the permanently pouting Nadia Sinh (Priyanka Chopra Jonas), who looks like Jessica Rabbit but who is a very good agent, perhaps even better than Kane, and everybody respects her and takes her very seriously OK so the producers hope they’ve done their bit and got away with it overall, ’kay?

    The train blows up because Citadel has been betrayed by one of its own to Manticore, a global crime syndicate fed up with the good guys cutting into their time and profits. We cut to eight years later and our agents are living normal lives in separate cities with absolutely no memory of their previous existence as a hot married agent couple being blown up on trains. But when Manticore steals a caseful of Citadel’s supertopsecret secrets that would enable them to establish a new world order, the remnants of Citadel gather for one last fight. And by “remnants” I mean Stanley Tucci as supertopCitadelagent Bernard Orlick, who tracks down Kane, kidnaps him and his family – but in a nice way, because good guys, remember – and launches him on a mission that will reunite him with Nadia, putting him very much in the way of Sinhing while he’s happily married to a normal woman called, I believe, Abby Wifewife (Ashleigh Cummings).

    It is basically televisual crack. Twists, turns, explosions, old-fashioned fisticuffs, the deployment of outrageous gadgetry from Acme’s Deus Ex Machina range, torture scenes, new locations (the Alps, London, all over the States, Paris, Spain, Iran – I may have missed a few in my delirious, glassy-eyed state), are parcelled out in one long, glorious stream. And just when you’re thinking “I could do with a quiet moment right now”, up pops Lesley Manville having the time of her life as evil ambassador Dahlia Archer (a nickel for the name but they had to build the English Gloss generator from scratch for $17m) to deliver a precise, devastating speech, demolish a journalist or order someone’s brain stem severed while she clips roses or finishes a light breakfast.

    This version of Citadel is the mothership – there are to be various spin-offs tailored to different countries, many of which have already started filming. I can only hope the addictive magic translates each time. Everyone deserves to have this much absurd fun.

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    #Citadel #review #absurdly #fun #spy #thriller #televisual #crack
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • UK introduces new bill to crack down on Big Tech abusing market power

    UK introduces new bill to crack down on Big Tech abusing market power

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    London: The UK government on Tuesday introduced a new legislation to tame Big Tech from abusing market power and ensure businesses and consumers are protected from rip-offs and can reap the full benefits of the digital economy with confidence.

    Fake reviews that cheat customers, subscription traps that cost more than a billion pounds a year, and new powers for the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) to tackle businesses that breach consumer rights law are all elements of the far-reaching bill.

    The new powers are aimed at boosting competition in digital markets currently dominated by a small number of firms and tackling fake reviews so customers aren’t cheated by bogus ratings.

    MS Education Academy

    “From abuse of power by tech giants, to fake reviews, scams and rip-offs like being caught in a subscription trap – consumers deserve better. The new laws we’re delivering will empower the CMA to directly enforce consumer law, strengthen competition in digital markets and ensure that people across the country keep hold of their hard-earned cash,” Business and Trade Minister Kevin Hollinrake said.

    As part of the bill, a Digital Markets Unit (DMU) within the CMA will be given new powers to tackle the excessive dominance that a small number of tech companies have held over consumers and businesses in the UK.

    “This market dominance has stifled innovation and growth across the economy, holding back start-ups and smaller firms from accessing markets and consumers,” said the government.

    The new digital regime will give the DMU powers to ensure that businesses and consumers are not unfairly disadvantaged by the biggest players, allowing them access to dynamic and thriving digital markets that will ultimately support the economy to grow.

    For example, the biggest tech firms may be instructed by the DMU to provide more choice and transparency to their customers. If firms don’t abide by these rules, the DMU will have the power to fine them up to 10 per cent of their global turnover.

    Firms may be told to give customers greater flexibility when purchasing products online and to break down restrictive technical barriers that block users from using products on different devices and systems.

    “Today’s announcement shows we are proudly pro-growth and pro-innovation across the board in the tech sector, seeking to open up new opportunities for all firms, however small or large they are, while empowering consumers,” Minister for Tech and the Digital Economy Paul Scully said.

    The new powers in this bill help the CMA take swift, decisive action to tackle rip offs, protecting consumers whether they are shopping online or on the high street.

    “The new fining powers will provide an important deterrent to businesses seeking to take advantage of people while also ensuring fair dealing businesses can thrive,” Chief Executive of the CMA Sarah Cardell said.

    New measures will come into effect as soon as possible following parliamentary approval, subject to secondary legislation and the publication of guidance.

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    #introduces #bill #crack #Big #Tech #abusing #market #power

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Cops Crack Down On Hooligans, Three Jeeps Seized

    Cops Crack Down On Hooligans, Three Jeeps Seized

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    SRINAGAR:  Srinagar police have seized three jeeps, while juveniles driving them are being counselling after they were found to be indulged in hooliganism on foreshore road in Srinagar.

    Police said the juveniles will be counseled and adults will be presented in front of magistrates.

    Srinagar police in a tweet said, “3 Thar jeeps JK01AK-5001, JK01AQ-7183, and JK01AQ-3132 in which 7 young boys including juveniles were doing hooliganism on Dal axis, late in night were seized on Foreshore road. The juveniles will be counselled with families & adults will be bound down in front of magistrate,” the police said.

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    #Cops #Crack #Hooligans #Jeeps #Seized

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Hyderabad police to crack down against illegal use of sirens

    Hyderabad police to crack down against illegal use of sirens

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    Hyderabad: Hyderabad police commissioner CV Anand on Monday asked the traffic cops to conduct a special drive against the illegal use of sirens in the city.

    The police have been directed to detain and seize all vehicles using unauthorized sirens.

    Hyderabad police to take action against ambulances

    The commissioner also directed the traffic cops to check ambulances, which have been reported to be using sirens even when they are not carrying patients or carrying fake patients. The use of sirens in such cases creates a disturbance in traffic flow and could cause accidents.

    MS Education Academy

    Responding to a tweet that highlighted the illegal use of sirens by a vehicle on April 23 from Tolichowki to Rethibowli, the commissioner agreed that the illegal use of sirens by all and sundry is creating a lot of traffic issues and disturbing the maintenance of traffic flow. He urged the public to keep reporting vehicles that are illegally using sirens and provide proof of such incidents.

    Rules for use of sirens

    As per the rules, sirens are allowed only in vehicles used as ambulances or for fire fighting or salvage purposes or vehicles used by police officers or operators of construction equipment vehicles or officers of the Motor Vehicles Department in the course of their duty. Therefore, any other use of sirens is illegal, and the police will take strict action against those violating the law.

    The Hyderabad Police’s move to crack down against the illegal use of sirens is commendable. The misuse of sirens not only creates a disturbance in traffic flow but also poses a danger to the safety of other road users.

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    #Hyderabad #police #crack #illegal #sirens

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Netflix to finally crack down on password sharing, upgrades ad-supported plans

    Netflix to finally crack down on password sharing, upgrades ad-supported plans

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    San Francisco: Streaming giant Netflix is finally set to crack down on password sharing in the US this summer.

    Netflix originally planned to roll out “paid sharing” in the US during the first quarter this year. The company will now introduce the feature on or before June 30.

    “We are planning on a broad rollout, including in the US, in Q2,” the company said in its first-quarter 2023 earnings.

    MS Education Academy

    “Paid sharing is another important initiative as widespread account sharing (over 100 million households) undermines our ability to invest in and improve Netflix for our paying members, as well as build our business,” the company added.

    Netflix first launched paid sharing in Canada, New Zealand, Spain, and Portugal.

    The company said it is also upgrading its ad-supported plan in terms of streaming quality and concurrent streams.

    Netflix users subscribed to this plan will be able to see content in 1080p resolution (up from 720p) with support for two concurrent streams.

    The feature is being rolled out to users in Canada and Spain now and people using the ad-supported plans in other 10 markets will receive these features later this month.

    “We believe these enhancements will make our offering even more attractive to a broader set of consumers and further strengthen engagement for existing and new subscribers to the ads plan,” Netflix said.

    Netflix says it will allow up to two extra members per account, and its fee per extra user varies by country.

    The sharing plans are available to members using Standard ($15.49 a month) and Premium ($19.99 a month) subscriptions.

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    #Netflix #finally #crack #password #sharing #upgrades #adsupported #plans

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Full emergency at Delhi airport as AI flight lands with crack in windshield

    Full emergency at Delhi airport as AI flight lands with crack in windshield

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    Mumbai: Full emergency was declared at Delhi’s Indira Gandhi International Airport on Tuesday for a Delhi-bound Air India flight owing to a glitch, a source said.

    The flight had 180 passengers on board.

    Air India, in a statement, said that its flight AI858 operating on Pune-Delhi route landed ahead of its scheduled time following a minor crack on the aircraft’s windshield.

    MS Education Academy

    “Full emergency was declared for the Air India Delhi flight from Pune at Indira Gandhi International airport at 5.44 pm on Tuesday due to a glitch. The aircraft was carrying 180 passengers on board,” the source said.

    “Air India flight AI 858 operating Pune-Delhi on April 18 safely landed in Delhi ahead of its scheduled arrival time, following a minor crack on the right (starboard side) of the operating aircraft’s windshield,” the airline said.

    All passengers and flight crew were safe, it said.

    The aircraft will undergo the necessary maintenance procedure, and its windshield will be replaced, Air India added.

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    #Full #emergency #Delhi #airport #flight #lands #crack #windshield

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Interstate voter list org starts to crack as Florida, other GOP states quit

    Interstate voter list org starts to crack as Florida, other GOP states quit

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    immigration florida 74109

    ERIC — a little-known but an important part of America’s election infrastructure — has been facing an onslaught of criticism, ranging from false claims that the organization is a left-leaning group that inflates the voter rolls for Democrats to more behind the scenes fights on its internal structure and practices.

    The group is responsible for identifying out-of-date registrations on member states’ rolls, which typically includes voters who moved either within the state or to another member state, or voters who died out of the state they’re registered to vote in.

    The three states’ withdrawal also surprised some member states, with Michigan Democratic Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson saying the overall criticisms of ERIC “are not rooted in anything legitimate.”

    In 2012, seven states — roughly split at the time between Democratic and Republican chief election officials — formed ERIC to address some challenges arising from the lack of a federally-mandated national voter registration database.

    Since 2012, membership to ERIC has ballooned — with more than 30 members at its height that spanned deep red states to blue bastions across the country.

    But recently, two states — Alabama and Louisiana — exited the compact over the last year, with Alabama’s new secretary of state alluding to conspiracy theories that percolated on far right websites about how the organization was secretly part of a liberal plot to take over voter rolls.

    Florida, West Virginia and Missouri’s departure, however, publicly reveals the broader fight about the organization’s governance and bylaws. Some Republican secretaries of state have been pushing for changes to ERIC, which have been the source of tense discussions for months that the departing secretaries alluded to in their announcements.

    Republicans secretaries have been pushing for an end to a requirement around eligible but unregistered voters — sometimes referred to as EBUs. In addition to list maintenance requirements around voters who have out-of-date registrations, ERIC’s bylaws require that state election officials contact those eligible but not registered people at least every two years to see if they would like to register. Some Republican officials want to scrap that requirement.

    In his letter announcing his intention to withdraw from the organization, Missouri Secretary of State “Jay” Ashcroft called those mailings superfluous — saying they were going to people who “made the conscious decision to not be registered.”

    Florida, notably, flouted the EBU mandates before the midterms and did not send the required mailers, several ERIC members with knowledge of the organization told POLITICO.

    Some Republican secretaries have also been called for changing the composition of the organization’s board. The board is currently composed of one senior election official from every member state, along with non-voting ex-officio positions. One ex-officio position is vacant, and another is currently filled by David Becker, a former Department of Justice attorney who helped stand up the organization in 2012 and who is now the founder and executive director of the Center for Election Innovation & Research.

    Republicans have called for the elimination of ex-officio positions, which would effectively boot Becker from the board. Becker has been a vocal defender of the security of the 2020 and 2022 elections, notably rebutting many of former President Donald Trump’s and his allies’ claims that the presidential election was stolen from Trump. More broadly, Becker has regularly called out people he believes were criticizing or critiquing election systems in bad faith. Although not mentioned by name in the Monday’s announcements, the three secretaries allude to Becker in their decisions to withdraw by citing a “partisan” actor.

    On Monday, Trump falsely claimed ERIC was “pump[ing] the rolls” for Democrats. On his social media site Truth Social, he called for Republican governors to pull their states out while also calling for severe restrictions on when people can cast their ballots, saying there should only be “SAME DAY VOTING” with limited exceptions.

    Becker was not immediately available for an interview. ERIC’s executive director Shane Hamlin did not return a request for comment on Monday afternoon.

    The decision by Florida to withdraw from the consortium comes just weeks after Byrd, an appointee of GOP Gov. Ron DeSantis, said the partnership had helped the state to identify voters who have voted in more than one state. Byrd told members of a legislative panel that the information was used in the arrest of a woman last November who had allegedly voted in both Alaska and Florida.

    “We do derive valid information from ERIC in order to do list maintenance,” Byrd told legislators.

    DeSantis himself pushed for Florida to join the group in 2019 after former Gov. Rick Scott had blocked it. The likely presidential contender has made “election integrity” a talking point in his speeches and pushed to create a special unit to investigate election related crimes, including voter fraud. DeSantis even praised ERIC in passing during a press conference last summer as an important tool in that toolbox.

    Some officials in the elections sphere expressed shock on Monday at the three states’ abrupt decision to withdraw from the compact. In Florida, local election supervisors learned about the move just minutes before it was announced by the DeSantis administration.

    “Surprised with the suddenness of the decision to withdraw, but the important question will be what out of state resources will now be available to us to continue to maintain a clean and accurate voter registration database,” Bill Cowles, the supervisor of elections in Orange County, Fla., said in an email.

    Multiple secretaries of state told POLITICO that they were not given any heads up by their counterparts that their states were withdrawing from the compact, with some being sharply critical of the move.

    “Their decision to bail on the most effective election integrity collaborative in our country is similarly seen as more of a strategic way to gain favor among extremists as opposed to any sincerely held concern,” Benson wrote in a text to POLITICO.

    Some were particularly caught off-guard by the timing of the announcements. ERIC members met late last month to discuss some of the proposed changes — where they were either voted down or tabled, according to several members. But the group’s governing board is set to meet again on March 17, and multiple ERIC members flagged that meeting as a potential make-or-break moment before Monday’s surprise departures.

    “I think it probably casts a shadow over March 17,” Minnesota Secretary of State Steve Simon, a Democrat, said in an interview. “It seems to have knocked the legs out from under some of the proposed changes because the states that those changes were meant to accommodate are gone.” Simon added that he hoped states that have recently left would reconsider.

    But those dropping out said they didn’t want to wait.

    “We gave them more than enough time,” Ashcroft, the Missouri secretary of state, said in an interview. “And at the February meeting, they made it clear that they weren’t interested in doing what needed to be done. So why wait?”

    In the interview, Ashcroft alluded to the possibility that some of the states that left may be looking to set up an organization similar to ERIC.

    “What I will say is that there have been conversations ongoing for a substantial period of time, about ‘how can we do a better job of cleaning our voter rolls and serving the people?’ Either by changing ERIC or by creating a new system, or if there is a way that states can do that solely in-house.”

    It is unclear if any other states will follow Florida and the others out of the organization, at least before the March 17 meeting. But some states have threatened to do so.

    Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose, a Republican, circulated a letter earlier on Monday before the withdrawals calling for changes to the organization. His letter references a “rushed and chaotic vote” taken at the February meeting, and calls for immediate action at the upcoming March meeting on proposals to eliminate the ex-officio positions and to allow members to use ERIC’s services “a la carte,” specifically calling for letting states skip EBU mailers.

    “I want to emphatically state that Ohio remains in constant discussion with fellow member states about the future of ERIC, and I will not accept the status quo as an outcome of the next meeting,” LaRose wrote in his letter, which was shared with POLITICO. “Anything short of the reforms mentioned above will result in action up to and including our withdrawal from membership.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Hyderabad police crack down on drunk driving, book over 2900 in February

    Hyderabad police crack down on drunk driving, book over 2900 in February

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    Hyderabad: Hyderabad Traffic Police as part of their campaign against drunk driving in the city have booked 2965 cases against violators in February.

    The violators were charge-sheeted and produced before relevant courts. As many as 371 of them were awarded jail. Seven people were awarded the maximum jail term of 15 days.

    Apart from it, fines were also imposed on the violators. A total of about Rs 94 lakh fines were imposed on violators.

    During the campaign against drunk driving in Hyderabad, 59 violators even lost their driving licenses.

    Drunk driving in Hyderabad

    Drunk driving is a serious violation in Hyderabad, as well as across India, and the Hyderabad traffic police are taking a tough stance on irresponsible behavior.

    It not only poses a serious threat to the driver but also to other road users. The campaign by the city traffic police serves as a reminder for all to say no to drunk driving.

    In order to curb the violation, traffic police are not only imposing fines but also canceling licenses. In some cases, cops are ensuring that violators are awarded jail terms.

    A criminal offense

    Under the Motor Vehicles Act 1988, drunk driving is a criminal offense and violators can face severe legal penalties.

    There are provisions of imprisonments, fines, and suspension of driving licenses.

    In the case of repeat offenders who get caught more than once for drunk driving in Hyderabad and in other parts of the country, penalties can be more severe.

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    #Hyderabad #police #crack #drunk #driving #book #February

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Video: Police crack down on tinted car windows in Hyderabad

    Video: Police crack down on tinted car windows in Hyderabad

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    Hyderabad: Hyderabad city police on Saturday launched a special drive against tinted car windows. Traffic police teams were seen checking vehicles on busy roads in the city.

    As per the motors vehicle act, adding tinted film on car windows is not allowed and attracts fines.

    It is not the first time, earlier too police launched such drives against the tinted car windows in Hyderabad.

    Ahead of summer season in Hyderabad, people prefer tinted car windows

    Ahead of the summer season in Hyderabad, many people prefer tinted car windows despite the fact that it violates Central Motor Vehicle Rule.

    Keeping this in view, Hyderabad police started launching drives against such violations.

    As per Central Motor Vehicle Rule 100, it is the responsibility of the car owners to ensure that the visual transmission of light is not less than 70 percent for the windscreen and the rear window.

    In the case of side windows, the visual transmission of light must not be less than 50 percent.

    Hyderabad police crack down on drunk driving

    Apart from the tinted car window, police is conducting regular drives against drunk driving. Last month, the city police booked 4236 cases against violators.

    During the campaign against drunk driving in Hyderabad, 72 violators even lost their driving licenses. Minors who were caught driving vehicles were ordered to render community and social services.

    Drunk driving is a serious violation in Hyderabad, as well as across India, and the Hyderabad traffic police are taking a tough stance on irresponsible behavior.

    Under the Motor Vehicles Act 1988, drunk driving is a criminal offense and violators can face severe legal penalties.

    There are provisions of imprisonments, fines, and suspension of driving licenses.

    In the case of repeat offenders who get caught more than once for drunk driving in Hyderabad and in other parts of the country, penalties can be more severe.

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    #Video #Police #crack #tinted #car #windows #Hyderabad

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )