“At no time was I ever given any indication that I would not be able to continue to do the work I have loved at the network. It is clear that there are some larger issues at play,” he wrote.
Shortly after Lemon’s announcement, CNN characterized the situation as the company having “parted ways” with the host.
“Don will forever be a part of the CNN family, and we thank him for his contributions,” the company tweeted. “We wish him well and will be cheering him on in his future endeavors.”
CNN then pushed back on the host’s statement, calling his claims “inaccurate.” Instead of being fired without warning, the company tweeted that Lemon was “offered an opportunity to meet with management but instead released a statement on Twitter.”
The high-profile departure comes just after Fox News announced that host Tucker Carlson was leaving the outlet. It’s a major shift for both companies, as they lose two of the most popular hosts on cable television.
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( With inputs from : www.politico.com )
For consumers, health care industry experts said, the shift offers more privacy, but could also make it more difficult to find primary care, mental health and other medical services online.
“Legal and compliance teams … are telling the marketing team that these tools are dead men walking, you need to shut it off immediately,” said Ray Mina, head of marketing at Freshpaint, a San Francisco firm that provides software to health care firms for managing customer marketing data.
The backdrop for this new concern is a rising trend of Americans receiving information or services from mental health apps, telehealth services and hospital websites. People may not know these services are capturing detailed personal information that is then used for marketing and advertising.
Now, as regulators set new limits on how this data is used and shared, Mina said clients have swamped his firm with questions about what data it’s collecting and with whom it is sharing it. So Freshpaint has to ensure it doesn’t run afoul of the regulators.
It’s a seismic shift for the industry that’s playing out in the numbers.
In the first three months of 2023, telemedicine firms spent a quarter of what they did on targeted Facebook and Google ads during the same period last year, according to data from MediaRadar, an ad industry intelligence platform. Meanwhile, MediaRadar data shows nonprofit health systems also halved their spending on targeted ads during that same three-month period year-over-year.
HIPAA and its limits
Until recently, much of the health data online — picked up in searches, by websites, apps and wearables — was thought to be outside the government’s purview. The federal health data privacy law, HIPAA, only covers patient data collected by insurers and health care providers, like doctors or hospitals.
Collecting data consumers leave online, and using it to market products, is a key mechanism for reaching customers that executives are now fretting about.
Last year, lawmakers proposed broad data privacy legislation, but Congress didn’t pass it. Agencies from HHS to the FTC are trying to expand data protections anyway, arguing that existing authorities provide them the power to do so, even though they haven’t used those authorities to broadly protect health data in the past.
HHS’ Office for Civil Rights surprised insurers and health care providers in December when it issued a bulletin expanding its definition of personally identifiable health information and restricting the use of certain marketing technology.
The office warned that entities covered by HIPAA aren’t allowed to wantonly disclose HIPAA-protected data to vendors or use tracking technology that would cause “impermissible” disclosures of protected health information.
That protected data can include email addresses, IP addresses, or geographic location information that can be tied to an individual, under HHS’ 22-year-old HIPAA privacy rule.
“We’re seeing people go in and type symptoms, put in information, and that information is being disclosed in a way that’s inconsistent with HIPAA and being used to potentially track people, and that is a problem,” said HHS Office for Civil Rights Director Melanie Fontes Rainer at the International Association of Privacy Professionals’ summit in Washington this month.
Meanwhile, in February, the Federal Trade Commission said it had fined prescription discount site and telehealth provider GoodRx $1.5 million for sharing customer data with Google, Facebook and other firms.
The FTC’s principle power allows it to police “unfair and deceptive” practices and GoodRx had told customers it would not share their data, and misled them into thinking their records were safe under HIPAA, the agency said.
But the FTC also cited a violation of its health breach notification rule, which says that entities not covered by HIPAA that collect personally identifiable health information must tell consumers when there’s been a breach of their data. The agency had never used the rule, which was previously considered a cybersecurity enforcement tool, as a stick to wield against companies that knowingly shared customer data with business partners.
The agency said to expect similar enforcement to come and last month fined online therapy provider BetterHelp $7.8 million for sharing customer data after telling patients it would not.
“Firms that think they can cash in on consumers’ health data because HIPAA doesn’t apply should think again,” said Samuel Levine, director of the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection. “Our recent actions against GoodRx and BetterHelp make clear that we are prepared to use every tool to protect Americans’ health privacy, and hold accountable those who abuse it.”
In both of the cases, the FTC required the firms to change their data protection practices and to halt sharing customer information. Both companies settled their cases, but denied wrongdoing.
GoodRx said in a statement that it “had used vendor technologies to advertise in a way that we believe was compliant with all applicable regulations and that remains common practice among many health, consumer and government websites.”
BetterHelp said in a statement that it was accused of using “limited, encrypted information to optimize the effectiveness of our advertising campaigns so we could deliver more relevant ads and reach people who may be interested in our services.”
The company suggested that it had been unfairly singled out, since “this industry-standard practice is routinely used by some of the largest health providers, health systems, and healthcare brands.”
Everyone from online telehealth providers to major hospital systems is taking notice.
“They’re taking a look at anything that looks like a marketing operation that sits on their website and they’re pulling back from it until they get more guidance from HHS,” said Anna Rudawski, a partner at law firm Norton Rose Fulbright who advises health care organizations on data protection.
Measuring the fallout
Data privacy advocates are urging the regulators on, arguing that health information deserves special protections and that enforcement needs to evolve now that the world has moved online. They expect companies can adjust.
“Advertising does not have to be privacy-invasive to be valuable or effective,” said Cobun Zweifel-Keegan, managing director of the Washington office of the International Association of Privacy Professionals.
And the industry is hardly putting up a united front in response.
Lartease Tiffith, the executive vice president for public policy at the Interactive Advertising Bureau, a trade group for online advertising firms, for example, said that recent enforcement actions target companies that explicitly misrepresented their data privacy policies by not telling customers they were sharing information about them with third parties.
“If you tell consumers, we’re not going to do X, and you do X, that’s a problem,” he said. “I don’t think it has anything to do with our industry.”
But some health care executives aren’t so sure. “This has been the reason that my CEO can’t sleep at night,” said a lawyer for a telehealth company whom POLITICO granted anonymity so as not to draw attention to their client.
Rudawski said risk-averse health care organizations are discontinuing advertising with major platforms like Google and Facebook until the new regulatory environment is clearer.
And Brett Meeks, executive director of the Health Innovation Alliance, which represents providers, insurers, and others on health technology matters, said that health systems want to follow the rules, but were not prepared for the abrupt policy changes. “It’s hard to follow rules that change with little notice,” he said.
Others may be trying to avoid the fines and remedies imposed on GoodRx and BetterHelp with preemptive action.
Online telehealth provider Cerebral, which is under federal investigation for allegedly overprescribing controlled substances and, reportedly, for violating privacy regulations, recently filed a data breach notification with HHS, citing its December guidance.
“Cerebral determined that it had disclosed certain information that may be regulated as protected health information under HIPAA to certain Third-Party Platforms and some Subcontractors without having obtained HIPAA-required assurances,” the firm said in the notice, which it also sent to 3.18 million patients and others who visited its website or used its app.
At the same time, the company told customers it hadn’t done anything unusual by tracking their clicks and sharing that information with other businesses, calling it standard practice “in many industries, including health systems, traditional brick and mortar providers, and other telehealth companies.”
In a statement, Cerebral said that the new HHS guidance marked a sea change for the health care industry because it said that “all data — including the submission of basic user contact information — gathered from a healthcare entity’s website or app should be treated as [protected health information]” under HIPAA.
A number of other health care organizations not previously known to be in regulators’ sights have also submitted breach reports this year, acknowledging that web trackers they’d employed had collected patient data. New York-Presbyterian Hospital, UC San Diego Health and alcohol recovery telehealth company Monument filed breach reports last month; Brooks Rehabilitation did so in January.
Still other firms are taking a wait-and-see approach, hoping for more guidance from both the FTC and HHS.
An executive at a telehealth company, who spoke on the condition of anonymity so as not to draw attention to his firm, said he doesn’t take issue with the FTC’s actions or the HHS guidance, but is concerned it could lead to more restrictive privacy guidance that directly interferes with standard advertising practices.
“That would suddenly create real challenges for companies to market their services, which if their company is doing something good in the world, you want their services marketed. So how do you balance?” he asked.
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( With inputs from : www.politico.com )
Israel has launched a retaliatory strike against Lebanon and Gaza, following a second night of violent clashes in Jerusalem. The clashes at the Al-Aqsa mosque compound in the Old City of Jerusalem have raised tensions between Israelis and Palestinians, leading to rocket fire from both sides.
Israel is bombing Gaza (Hamas tunnels and weapons production centers), Gaza is shelling Israeli settlements near the border with the sector pic.twitter.com/lxsUzGNe4T
The violence began on Monday when Israeli police stormed the Al-Aqsa mosque compound, which is considered one of the holiest sites in Islam, during Ramadan prayers. The move sparked outrage among Palestinians, who responded by throwing rocks and other objects at Israeli police. The police responded with stun grenades and tear gas, leading to violent clashes that left over 300 Palestinians and over 20 police officers injured.
The violence continued on Tuesday night, with Palestinians throwing rocks and fireworks at Israeli police, who responded with rubber bullets, stun grenades and tear gas. The clashes continued into Wednesday, with Israeli police using stun grenades and tear gas to disperse the crowds.
In response to the escalating violence, the militant group Hamas fired rockets into Israel from Gaza on Tuesday evening, prompting Israel to respond with air strikes on Gaza. The Israeli military said it had hit a number of targets in Gaza, including a weapons manufacturing site and a military post.
On Wednesday, the Israeli military said it had launched further air strikes against targets in Gaza, including a Hamas tunnel network. The military said the strikes were in response to continued rocket fire from Gaza into Israel.
In addition to the rocket fire from Gaza, Israel also launched retaliatory strikes against Lebanon on Tuesday, after thirty rockets were fired into northern Israel from Lebanese territory. The Israeli military said it had hit the launch sites in Lebanon.
The situation in Jerusalem remains tense, with Israeli police patrolling the Old City and Palestinian protesters vowing to continue their demonstrations. The clashes have raised concerns about a potential escalation of violence in the region, as well as the wider implications for Israeli-Palestinian relations.
The United States and other world powers have called for calm and urged both sides to avoid any further escalation of violence. The UN Security Council is due to meet later on Wednesday to discuss the situation.
Hyderabad: A 9-year-old boy, Samhith Chithajallu penned a book on birds in Hyderabad’s Botanical Garden by the name ‘Winged Friends’.
On the cover of his book, he said that he likes observing the birds in their natural habitat so as to understand how they behave in the wild. He said he loves exploring the woods and stated that the best part about it is that he gets to see all the wonderful and colorful birds.
Telangana IT minister KT Rama Rao took to Twitter to share the images of the book and a hand-written letter by Samhith asking the minister to launch the first copy of his book.
The minister responded and met him with his family and launched the first copy of the book. He also directed the state cultural department to support the young author and his future endeavors.
In this letter to KTR, Samhith mentions that he loves birdwatching and said, “Now-a-days, I am seeing a lot of birds in Hyderabad. I go to Botanical Gardens every weekend. I saw a lot of birds and made a book on the birds of Botanical Gardens”.
“Was pleasantly surprised when 9-year-old Samhith Chitajallu reached out to me to launch his Book! Met him today along with his parents & grandparents; requested Telangana Culture department to support the young man. Blessed him to do well in his future endeavours,” KTR tweeted after meeting the boy.
Was pleasantly surprised when 9 year old Samhith Chitajallu reached out to me to launch his Book!
Met him today along with his parents & grandparents; requested Telangana Culture department to support the young man. Blessed him to do well in his future endeavours pic.twitter.com/xBBxoaHkCs
Isn’t this young bird enthusiast-writer too adorable? He says that he wants to hear your thoughts about the book at samhithc@outlook.com. So head over and grab a copy of the book!
Video of skimpily clad woman in Delhi Metro goes viral, DMRC responds
Delhi: Video of a scantily clad woman travelling in a Delhi Metro coach has gone viral on social media.
In the undated short clip, the commuter can be seen sitting next to other female passengers inside a coach, before standing up and walking, revealing her two-piece outfit.
Responding to the video, the Delhi Metro stated that it expects its commuters to follow all social etiquette and protocols that are acceptable in society.
Commuters should not indulge in any activity or wear any attire that could offend the sensibilities of other passengers, it added.
The Delhi Metro Rail Corporation’s Operations and Maintenance Act lists indecency as a punishable offence under Section 59.
The DMRC has appealed to passengers to maintain decorum while travelling in public transport saying, “While issues such as the choice of clothing while travelling is a personal issue, passengers are expected to self-regulate their conduct in a responsible manner.”
The video was originally shared by the Twitter handle of NCMIndia Council For Men Affairs, along with a caption stating that the woman was not @uorfi_.
Mumbai: Varun Dhawan has reacted after he was criticised for picking supermodel Gigi Hadid on stage and giving a peck on her cheek. The Bollywood actor said that it was planned for her to be on stage.
Varun faced severe backlash online after a video of his dance performance at Nita Mukesh Ambani Cultural Centre (NMACC) went viral on social media. The video shows him picking Gigi up, spinning her and giving her a peck on the cheek as she was leaving the stage.
Reacting to a tweet by a woman, which read: “If you are a woman, you are not safe anywhere with anyone. Even if you are Gigi Hadid, invited to a party with an ‘elite’ crowd, guys like Varun Dhawan will randomly pick you up and kiss you without your consent, all in the name of fun. Disgusting.”
The actor reacted and said: “I guess today you woke up and decided to be woke. So lemme burst ur bubble and tell u it was planned for her to be on stage so find a new Twitter cause to vent about rather then going out and doing something about things. Good morning.”
The supermodel was attending the opening of the NMACC on Friday. Other celebrities who attended the gala included Tom Holland, Zendaya, Penelope Cruz, Karlie Kloss, Salman Khan, Alia Bhatt, and global icon Priyanka Chopra and her husband Nick Jonas, Kareena Kapoor, and Saif Ali Khan.
Bengaluru: Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday responded to a tweet on a drone shot posted on Twitter by Karnataka Chief Minister Basavaraj Bommai of the new Bengaluru-Mysuru Expressway with the high-speed train Vande Bharat Express passing underneath a road over bridge section of the 10-lane expressway.
“What a view! 10-lane Bengaluru-Mysuru Expressway alongside Vande Bharat Express, a visual depicting the story of world-class infrastructure and unprecedented growth in Karnataka. Under PM Narendra Modi, our double engine government is working wonders in the state,” Bommai wrote while posting a video clip on his Twitter handle on Friday.
On Saturday, re-tweeting the Karnataka Chief Minister’s tweet, PM Modi said: “Our people deserve the best possible infrastructure, which our government will always work hard to provide. Our strides in infra creation have been widely lauded.”
Our people deserve the best possible infrastructure, which our Government will always work hard to provide. Our strides in infra creation have been widely lauded. https://t.co/3MStIKTnSF
The work on the Expressway project started in two phases around three years ago — in May 2019, and December 2019. However, due to Covid-induced constraints, little progress could be made.
The expressway is expected to be inaugurated and opened in March 2023. This project under Bharatmala Pariyojana (BMP) had a prior deadline of October 2022.
The Rs 8,000-crore project is expected to bring down the travel time between some key Karnataka cities from 3 hours to 90 minutes and less.
Chao’s statement is an extremely rare case of the former Transportation Secretary wading into the political thicket that her former boss has laid around her since the end of his administration. It suggests that discomfort with Trump’s anti-Asian rhetoric has reached a new level amid several high-profile shootings targeting Asian Americans.
On at least a half a dozen occasions, Trump has taken to his social media platform, Truth Social, to criticize McConnell’s leadership, and to suggest, among other things, that he is conflicted because of his wife’s connection to China. Last fall, in a message widely viewed by Republicans and Democrats as a threat, he said that McConnell “has a DEATH WISH.”
But the personal attacks on Chao have stood out above the others, both for their overt racism and the relatively little pushback they’ve received. McConnell and his team have not responded. And on the rare occasion where she has been asked about them, Chao has pleaded for reporters to not amplify the remarks. Other Republicans have dismissed the attacks as Trump just being Trump. The former president “likes to give people nicknames,” Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) said in October on CNN.
Chao immigrated to the U.S. when she was a child from Taiwan and is one of six daughters of Ruth Mulan Chu and James S.C. Chao, the founder of the Foremost Group, a large shipping company based in New York. She went on to graduate from Harvard Business School and served in multiple Republican administrations, and was the first Asian American woman in a presidential Cabinet as Labor secretary for George W. Bush and Transportation secretary for Trump.
Chao’s personal story played an important role in her tenure. She blanketed the airwaves, especially with local media, talking about her immigration story and the promise America holds for others from far-off places.
At times her bureaucratic skills were tested under Trump, as he routinely criticized her husband even as she served in his Cabinet. Chao said at the time that she remained loyal to both men despite their differences.
“I stand by my man — both of them,” Chao told reporters at Trump Tower following a 2017 spat between Trump and McConnell.
But Chao reached her breaking point after Jan. 6. She resigned from the Cabinet, saying the riots “deeply troubled me in a way I simply cannot set aside.”
The statement did not sit well with Trump, who once lauded her work in his Cabinet and he began to include her in his attacks on McConnell. His attacks have “bewildered” Chao, according to a former senior administration official who remains close to her. But she initially decided not to respond since it just “creates another news cycle.”
“Especially for Asians, it’s critical to have filial piety — you honor the family name. And that’s a hit not only to her personal reputation but her name and family,” said the former official, who was granted anonymity to speak candidly about the former secretary. “It’s offensive and a stain on everything he achieved for Asian Americans.”
Steven Cheung, Trump’s spokesperson who is Asian American, said in a statement that the ex-president’s criticism of Chao was centered on her family’s potential financial conflicts and not race. Chao has been scrutinized over her family’s shipping business. Though an inspector general report released after Trump left office did not make a formal finding of any ethics violations, it did detail multiple instances of Chao’s office handling business related to her family’s company.
“People should stop feigning outrage and engaging in controversies that exist only in their heads,” Cheung said. “What’s actually concerning is her family’s deeply troubling ties to Communist China, which has undermined American economic and national security.”
But few outside Trump’s inner circle dispute that the ex-president’s posts about Chao are racist. And privately, GOP officials have raised concerns that his rhetoric is not mere background noise but an illustration of the way he has fundamentally altered the spectrum of accepted political discourse.
“Trump’s repeated racist attacks on Elaine Chao are beneath the office he once held and particularly despicable in this moment when the Asian American community has been subject to threats and harassment,” said Alyssa Farah, a former administration official turned critic of Trump.
The latest Trump attack — a suggestion that Chao may have been responsible for President Joe Biden bringing classified documents with him to his post-vice presidency office in D.C.’s Chinatown neighborhood — came amid a series of shootings that targeted Asian American communities. All of that has taken place against the backdrop of a rise of violence directed at Asian Americans.
While combating the rise of China has emerged as a rare issue with bipartisan support, there are concerns among lawmakers that anti-China attitudes could contribute to violence against Asian Americans. Some Republicans say Trump’s repeated and personal attacks in particular have hurt party efforts to make further inroads among Asian American voters — a task that the Trump 2020 campaign itself tried to undertake.
Trump’s anti-Asian rhetoric has been directed at others beyond Chao. Over the weekend, he went after a Biden aide, Kathy Chung, believed to be responsible for packing the then vice president’s materials when he was leaving office in 2017. He has said that Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s name “sounds Chinese” (Youngkin is not Chinese). He has mimicked Asian accents while talking about Asian leaders. He has mocked Asian accents on the campaign trail; he charged a reporter with asking a “nasty question” about Covid testing while insinuating she was doing so because of her Asian background. And he called Covid “Kung-flu.”
Lanhee Chen, a Stanford University professor who unsuccessfully ran as the Republican candidate for California controller last fall, claimed Trump’s language has already hurt the GOP’s ability to reach voters.
“I saw that firsthand when I was a candidate,” said Chen, the son of immigrants from Taiwan. “I talked to a lot of Asian American voters in my state and the feedback I got was, ‘What you represent is great, I love the vision, but I don’t know if I can vote for someone from the same party as Donald Trump because of all actual – and in other cases perceived – commentary towards Asian Americans over the last several years.”
“And the attacks against Elaine Chao are really puzzling given that she did really good work in his administration and accomplished a lot and benefited his own presidency.”
Asian Americans are among the fastest growing voting blocs in the United States, making up 5.5 percent of the entire eligible voting population, according to Pew Research Center. Those numbers are only expected to grow.
Asian American voters typically lean Democrat, but the Republican Party has invested millions in reaching them in states like California, Texas, Nevada and Arizona. In an op-ed before the midterms, RNC Chair Ronna McDaniel made the case for Asian Americans to join the GOP over shared concerns about the economy and public safety.
But while Trump’s comments haven’t helped with the coalition building, some Republicans predict it will mostly rebound on him.
“It’s a bizarre obsession he has with her,” said Scott Jennings, a Republican strategist and former McConnell aide. “If you heard someone on the street making these rants you’d expect to see them in a sandwich board or a straight jacket.”
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( With inputs from : www.politico.com )