Home Blog Page 1660

Apple Sues Israeli Spyware Maker NSO Group

23nso facebookJumbo

An opening for Apple’s lawsuit emerged in March, after NSO’s Pegasus spyware was discovered on the iPhone of a Saudi activist. Citizen Lab discovered that NSO’s Pegasus spyware had infected the iPhone without so much as a click. The spyware could invisibly infect iPhones, Mac computers and Apple Watches, then siphon their data back to government servers, without the target knowing about it.

Citizen Lab called the zero-click infection scheme “Forced Entry” and passed a sample of it to Apple in September. The discovery compelled Apple to issue emergency software updates for its iPhones, iPads, Apple Watches and Mac computers.

The sample of Pegasus gave Apple a forensic understanding of how Pegasus worked. The company found that NSO’s engineers had created more than 100 fake Apple IDs to carry out their attacks. In the process of creating those accounts, NSO’s engineers would have had to agree to Apple’s iCloud Terms and Conditions, which expressly require that iCloud users’ engagement with Apple “be governed by the laws of the state of California.”

The clause helped Apple bring its lawsuit against NSO in the Northern District of California.

“This was in flagrant violation of our terms of service and our customers’ privacy,” said Heather Grenier, Apple’s senior director of commercial litigation. “This is our stake in the ground, to send a clear signal that we are not going to allow this type of abuse of our users.”

After filing its lawsuit Tuesday, Apple said it would offer free technical, threat intelligence and engineering assistance to Citizen Lab and other organizations engaged in rooting out digital surveillance. Apple also said it would donate $10 million, and any damages, to those organizations.

Digital rights experts said Apple’s suit threatened NSO’s survival. “NSO is now poison,” said Ron Deibert, director of Citizen Lab. “No one in their right mind will want to touch that company. But it’s not just one company, this is an industrywide problem.”

He added that the suit could be a step toward more oversight of the unregulated spyware industry.

“Steps like this are useful, but incomplete,” Mr. Deibert said. “We need more action by governments.”

Merck asks EU regulator to authorize its COVID-19 pill

ema covid pill 63051 c0 95 2286

AMSTERDAM (AP) – The European Medicines Agency said it has received a request from Merck to authorize its coronavirus antiviral, the first pill shown to treat COVID-19.

In a statement Tuesday, the EU drug regulator said it had started evaluating molnupiravir, made by Merck and Ridgeback Biotherapeutics, and that a decision could be made within weeks on whether it might be cleared.

Last week, the EMA issued emergency advice saying that molnupiravir could be used to treat adults infected with the coronavirus who don’t yet need extra oxygen and are at increased risk of developing severe disease.

The agency said the drug should be given as soon as possible after COVID-19 has been diagnosed and within five days of symptoms starting. It is intended to be taken twice a day for five days.

Earlier this month, Britain became the first country in the world to OK the drug. The U.K. licensed molnupiravir for adults diagnosed with COVID-19 and with at least one risk factor for severe disease.

An antiviral pill that reduces symptoms and speeds recovery could prove groundbreaking, easing caseloads on hospitals and helping to curb explosive outbreaks in conjunction with vaccination campaigns.

Europe is now at the epicenter of the pandemic and the World Health Organization has warned that without urgent measures, Europe could see 700,000 more COVID-19 deaths by the spring.

Molnupiravir is also pending review with regulators in the U.S., which is expected to convene an expert panel later this month to consider authorization.

Even if the pill is licensed, initial supplies will be limited. Merck has said it can produce 10 million treatment courses this year, but much of that supply has already been purchased by governments worldwide.

In October, Merck agreed to let other drugmakers produce molnupiravir and signed a licensing agreement with the U.N.-backed Medicines Patent Pool allowing its pill to be made by companies in dozens of countries.

Copyright © 2021 The Washington Times, LLC.

Kuzma teased online for wearing oversized pink sweater

Wizards Heat Basketball 68048.jpg 0853e c0 165 3973

After spending the first four seasons of his career in Los Angeles, Wizards forward Kyle Kuzma is getting used to the cold weather in Washington, D.C.

When he arrived to Monday’s game against Charlotte, Kuzma was photographed wearing a pink sweater that looked five sizes too big. 

The fit caused the Twittersphere to argue about the freshness — or lack thereof — of Kuzma’s look, but his former teammates on Instagram didn’t hold back.

“Ain’t no f——— way you wore that!!!” commented LeBron James. “I’m not pressing that like button cause this is outrageous Kuz.”

“Man hell nawwwwwww,” responded J.R. Smith.

“Come on killa…lol that one ain’t it haha,” wrote Isaiah Thomas. 

Italy hits Amazon and Apple with more than $225 million in fines

Italy Amazon Apple 90510.jpg 6e6a7 c0 122 2925

Italy’s regulatory watchdog hit American tech behemoths Amazon and Apple with fines on Tuesday totaling more than $225 million for alleged anti-competitive cooperation in the sale of Apple products. 

The Italian Competition Authority said Tuesday that its investigation discovered a 2018 agreement between Amazon and Apple that blocked various resellers of Apple and Beats products on Amazon.it, the marketplace’s Italian hub. Beats, an audio manufacturer selling headphones, was acquired by Apple in 2014. 

The Italian regulator imposed a fine of approximately $77 million, on Amazon, and imposed a fine of approximately $151 million on Apple

Amazon disputed the Italian Competition Authority’s actions and vowed to appeal. 

“The proposed fine is disproportionate and unjustified,” said Amazon in a statement. “We reject the ICA’s suggestion that Amazon benefits by excluding sellers from our store, since our business model relies on their success.”

Amazon also argued that Italian customers can find the latest Apple and Beats products through its store as its catalog has “more than doubled, with better deals and faster shipping.”

Apple did not immediately respond to requests for comment. 

Amazon and Apple are also facing antitrust action elsewhere around the world. After the Italians’ investigation into the Amazon and Apple agreement, the Italian Competition Authority said Germany and Spain have initiated their own proceedings, according to the regulatory watchdog’s announcement on Tuesday. 

In the United States, both Amazon and Apple are facing antitrust scrutiny from policymakers. Sens. Tom Cotton, Arkansas Republican, and Amy Klobuchar, Minnesota Democrat, proposed a new bill earlier this month to give government regulators stronger enforcement powers to block anti-competitive mergers and acquisitions by giant tech firms such as Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Google.

Trafalgar: Most likely voters prefer Joe Rogan to Dr. Fauci as Thanksgiving guest

Joe Rogan May 2020.jpg 2021.11.23 2021.%25i.1637704181.2 c0 0 999

Most U.S. voters would prefer hosting podcaster Joe Rogan rather than Dr. Anthony Fauci at their Thanksgiving gatherings this year, according to a Trafalgar poll released Tuesday.

Trafalgar’s survey of 1,092 likely 2022 general election voters, conducted Nov. 13-16 on behalf of the nonprofit Convention of States Action, found that 51.3% preferred Mr. Rogan and 48.7% preferred Dr. Fauci as a potential guest to attend their Thanksgiving gathering.

The responses split along party lines, with 82.9% of Republicans preferring the former “Fear Factor” host and 83.1% of Democrats preferring Dr. Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

Independents identifying as “no party/other” made up the difference in the poll, with 61.8% saying they’d rather host Mr. Rogan.

Mark Meckler, president of the conservative Convention of States Action that advocates for limiting the federal government’s powers, said the poll reflects Dr. Fauci’s growing unpopularity among conservatives and independents, who view him as “a deeply divisive and political figure trusted only by Democrats.”

“In contrast, Joe Rogan represents unity, winning with independents, Republicans, and even some Democrats, all who view him as someone who calls them as he sees them,” Mr. Meckler said.

Mirroring likely voter demographics, 39.3% of respondents identified as Democrats, 35.6% as Republicans and 25.1% as independents.

Also reflecting likely voter breakdowns, 63.1% of respondents were older than 45 and 53.3% were women.

The national survey had a margin of error of plus or minus 2.97% at the 95% confidence level.

Health, The New York Today

Magnus Carlsen, Ian Nepomniachtchi square off for chess crown this week

23CHESS c0 187 900

Magnus Carlsen is sounding a little cocky — and history suggests he may have a right to preen.

There have been some 60 or so world championship matches (the numbers get a little fuzzy with the Split Crown Era of the late 1990s and early 2000s) since the mid-19th century, and there have been no real shocking upsets on the order of Buster Douglas knocking out Mike Tyson or the 1969 Mets winning the World Series.

Challengers and slight underdogs have won the crown, but Bobby Fischer beating Boris Spassky and Vladimir Kramnik dethroning Garry Kasparov didn’t exactly blindside the oddsmakers.

So the Norwegian world champ could be excused for some less-than-laudatory comments about his challenger, Russian GM Ian Nepomniachtchi, ahead of their 14-game title match that begins Friday in Dubai. Carlsen, the world’s No. 1-rated player for the past decade, has far more title match experience (three successful defenses so far) than his opponent, comes in on a hot streak and appears to have an edge in temperament over the sometimes inconsistent Nepomniachtchi.

The match — with just five rest days — has a $2 million overall purse and runs through Dec. 14, with a rapid and blitz playoff Dec. 16 if needed.

In recent comments to a Norwegian broadcasting outlet that he may one day regret, Carlsen suggested his opponent doesn’t react well to adversity and that Chinese GM Ding Liren or U.S. No. 1 Fabiano Caruana — both higher rated than the Russian — would have been a tougher pairing.

“I thought [before the Candidates tournament] that anyone else winning would be a good outcome for me, and I still feel that way,” Carlsen said.

“Nepo,” for his part, might want to channel the energy for former champs Alexander Alekhine of Russia and Max Euwe of the Netherlands, who pulled off the two biggest upsets in championship match history.

Cuban Jose Raul Capablanca, who had defeated the great Emanuel Lasker just six years earlier, was considered near-unbeatable when the up-and-coming Alekhine took him on in Argentina in the fall of 1927.

But the champ got off on the wrong foot with a Game 1 loss and suffered a shocking 6-3 defeat over the course of the 34-game match. The first game’s Winawer French was the only king’s pawn opening of the match, which would feature a near-interminable string of Queen’s Gambits, and the champ’s butter-smooth positional style is nowhere to be seen.

White’s clumsy 10. Nd1?! 0-0 11. Ne3 Nxe3 12. Bxe3 Rfe8 13. Nf4 (the knight has “no future here,” Alekhine later wrote) Bd6! 14. Rfe1 (14. Nxd5?! Bxh2+ 15. Kxh2 Qxd5 16. c4 Qh5+ 17. Rad8, with a rook lift coming, looks dangerous, but why White rejects the natural, reinforcing 14. c3 here is a mystery) Nb4 15. Qb3 Qf5 16. Rac1? (tougher was 16. Nd3 Nxd3 17. Qxd3 Qxd3 18. cxd3 Bb4 19. Rec1, though Black clearly has the better endgame structure) leads to the loss of a clear pawn after the simple 16…Nxc2! 17. Rxc2 Qxf4 and White can’t recapture because of the back-rank mate.

Capablanca regroups and puts up a spirited fight (22. Bd2!, temporarily sacrificing a pawn, offers real drawing chances), but Black’s 30. Qd1 Re6!, giving up the extra material to liberate the d-pawn and dominate the e-file, keeps Black on top.

After 35 Rd8 d4, Black has obtained the ideal set-up for the final assault, and Alekhine characterizes White’s next move as a sign of “despair”: 36. a4 Re1+ 37. Kg2 Qc6+ 38. f3 Re3 (the White defensive fortress cannot hold) 39. Qd1 Qe6 40. g4 Re2+ 41. Kh3 (Kf1 Rh2 42. Kg1 Qe5 wins) Qe3 42. Qh1 Qf4! (decisive — White’s queen can’t stop …Re2-f2 and continue guarding the f-pawn) 43. h5 Rf2, and Capablanca conceded in the face of lines like 44. hxg6+ Kg7 45. Rd7 Rxf3+ 46. Kh4 Qh6 mate.

—-

Alekhine in turn was a heavy betting favorite over Euwe in their 1935 match, only to go down to a stunning 15 1/2-14 1/2 defeat. (Alekhine would get back the crown in a 1937 rematch.)

Euwe showed a hint of his underappreciated strength, handing the champ his only loss in a strong tournament in Zurich in 1934 in their last head-to-head encounter before the first title fight. It’s a rare game in which the great Alekhine is outplayed in pretty much every phase of the contest.

Black’s QGD Janowski Defense (3…a6) is actually a pet line for Carlsen as well, but here after 17. Rab1 Re7 18. a4, Euwe as White has obtained a nice positional edge while Black’s pieces, especially the bishop on b7 and the knight on h4, are not really doing much.

White’s 19. a5 b5 saddles Alekhine with a terminally backward c-pawn, and worse, reduces the aggressive champ to passive, defensive chess for the remainder of the contest. White breaks open the center with 28. e4!? (Ne2 Nd7 29. Nxd7 Rxd7 30. Nf4 Rf6 31. Nd3 preserves the bind on Black’s cramped game) Nxe4 29. Nxe4 dxe4 30. Rxe4, and cements his edge with a neat tactical finesse.

Thus: 30…f6? (see diagram; 30…Ne7 31. Rce1 f5 allows Black to slog on) 31. Nf7! Qe8 (sadly for Black, 31…Kxf7 leads to 32. Qh5+ Ke7 33. Rxe6+ Kxe6 34. Re1+ Kd6 35. Qc5+ Kd7 36. Qf5+ Kd6 37. Qe6 mate) 32. Rxe6 Qxe6 33. Nd8!, cheekily squatting on the Black queen’s home square and winning the ill-favored Black c-pawn after all.

White’s technique is impeccable, providing shelter for his king before marshaling his pieces for the finale: 43. Qe4+! (trading queens on White’s terms) Qxe4+ 44. Rxe4 Kg8 (Rd7 45. Re8 Nd6 48. Ra8) 45. Nb8 Kf7 (Ra7 46. Re8+) 46. Nxa6 Rd7 47. Rd4 Ne7 48. d6 Nf5 49. Rd5 Nxd6 50. Nc5 Rd8 51. Ne4 Nb7 (Ke6 52. Rxd6+ Rxd6 53. Nxd6 Kxd6 is an elementary win for White) 52. a6! — clever to the last.

It’s over on 52…Ke6 (Rxd5 53. axb7 Rd8 54. Nd6+ Ke6 55. Nc8 and wins) 53. Rxd8, and Black resigns ahead of 53…Nxd8 54. a7, giving White a new queen.

Capablanca-Alekhine, World Championship Match, Game 1, Buenos Aires, September 1927

1. e4 e6 2. d4 d5 3. Nc3 Bb4 4. exd5 exd5 5. Bd3 Nc6 6. Ne2 Nge7 7. O-O Bf5 8. Bxf5 Nxf5 9. Qd3 Qd7 10. Nd1 O-O 11. Ne3 Nxe3 12. Bxe3 Rfe8 13. Nf4 Bd6 14. Rfe1 Nb4 15. Qb3 Qf5 16. Rac1 Nxc2 17. Rxc2 Qxf4 18. g3 Qf5 19. Rce2 b6 20. Qb5 h5 21. h4 Re4 22. Bd2 Rxd4 23. Bc3 Rd3 24. Be5 Rd8 25. Bxd6 Rxd6 26. Re5 Qf3 27. Rxh5 Qxh5 28. Re8+ Kh7 29. Qxd3+ Qg6 30. Qd1 Re6 31. Ra8 Re5 32. Rxa7 c5 33. Rd7 Qe6 34. Qd3+ g6 35. Rd8 d4 36. a4 Re1+ 37. Kg2 Qc6+ 38. f3 Re3 39. Qd1 Qe6 40. g4 Re2+ 41. Kh3 Qe3 42. Qh1 Qf4 43. h5 Rf2 White resigns.

Euwe-Alekhine, Zurich International, Zurich, Switzerland, July 1934

1. c4 e6 2. d4 d5 3. Nc3 a6 4. cxd5 exd5 5. Bf4 Nf6 6. e3 Bd6 7. Bxd6 Qxd6 8. Bd3 Nc6 9. Nge2 O-O 10. a3 Ne7 11. Qc2 b6 12. b4 Bb7 13. O-O Rfe8 14. Ng3 Ng6 15. Rfc1 Nh4 16. Nce2 c6 17. Rab1 Re7 18. a4 Rae8 19. a5 b5 20. Nf4 Rc7 21. Qc5 Qd7 22. Re1 Ng6 23. Bf5 Qd8 24. Nd3 Bc8 25. Rbc1 Ne7 26. Bxc8 Nxc8 27. Ne5 Re6 28. e4 Nxe4 29. Nxe4 dxe4 30. Rxe4 f6 31. Nf7 Qe8 32. Rxe6 Qxe6 33. Nd8 Qe4 34. Nxc6 h6 35. d5 Qd3 36. h3 Qd2 37. g3 Kh8 38. Kg2 Qd3 39. Re1 Kh7 40. Re3 Qd2 41. Re8 Qd3 42. Qd4 Qc4 43. Qe4+ Qxe4+ 44. Rxe4 Kg8 45. Nb8 Kf7 46. Nxa6 Rd7 47. Rd4 Ne7 48. d6 Nf5 49. Rd5 Nxd6 50. Nc5 Rd8 51. Ne4 Nb7 52. a6 Ke6 53. Rxd8 Black resigns.

• David R. Sands can be reached at 202/636-3178 or by email at dsands@washingtontimes.com.

Slovakia proposes lockdown amid record infection surge

virus outbreak slovakia 44058 c0 105 2534

BRATISLAVA, Slovakia (AP) – Slovakia’s leaders have proposed a national lockdown as hospitals across the European Union country are hitting their limits amid a record surge of coronavirus infections.

Inspired by neighboring Austria, the Slovak government is set to discuss a lockdown for all – vaccinated and unvaccinated alike – at its session Wednesday. Prime Minister Eduard Heger said it’s necessary to act “immediately.” His four-party coalition government was mulling a two or three-week lockdown.

“It’s an unpopular measure, but absolutely unavoidable,” President Zuzana Caputova said Tuesday after visiting a major medical facility in the capital of Bratislava.

Caputova said what she saw at Bratislava University Hospital “was tragic, was horrible.”

“Experts are clear,” she said. “It’s necessary to restrict people’s mobility, we need a lockdown … unfortunately, it’s a measure that has to affect everyone.”

Slovakia reported 9,171 new virus cases on Friday, surpassing the previous record of 8,342 set only a few days earlier.

On Monday, Slovakia imposed new restrictions targeting the unvaccinated, who are banned from all nonessential stores and shopping malls. They’re also not allowed to attend any public events or gatherings and are required to test twice a week to go to work.

The number of hospitalized COVID-19 patients rose by 161 to 3,182 on Monday, well above the 3,000-bed level considered critical by Slovakia’s Health Ministry. It said more than 82% of the patients have not been fully vaccinated.

At 45.3%, Slovakia’s vaccination rate is one of the lowest in the EU, well below the 27-nation bloc’s average of 65.5%.

Overall, the nation of 5.5 million has registered 621,423 virus cases with 13,985 deaths.

Copyright © 2021 The Washington Times, LLC.

Health, The New York Today

NFL defensive great Michael Strahan to be next space tourist

blue origin strahan 60429 c0 177 4245

“Good Morning America” co-host Michael Strahan is going to space next month.

Strahan, who turned 50 on Sunday, will join Laura Shepard Churchley, the eldest daughter of astronaut Alan Shepard, on the Dec. 9 mission aboard the New Shepard, a spacecraft named after her father and the first American in space.

The Blue Origin flight, the company headed by Jeff Bezos, will also carry four paying customers and will be the third by the New Shepard craft this year to shuttle humans to space.

Blue Origin has not disclosed the ticket price for paying customers.

The 10-minute flight, five minutes less than Alan Shepard’s 1961 Mercury flight, will launch from West Texas carrying six people, two more than the previous two flights this year with humans aboard.

Similar to previous jaunts, Strahan’s flight is likely to include about three minutes of weightlessness and a view of the curvature of the Earth. Passengers are subjected to nearly 6 G’s, or six times the force of Earth’s gravity, as the capsule descends.

Strahan, who played for 15 years in the National Football League with the New York Giants, reported on the first Blue Origin flight for “Good Morning America.”

“I want to go to space,” Strahan told “GMA.” “I think being there at the first launch, it really was mind-blowing.”

Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and Star Trek star William Shatner flew to space on separate New Shepard flights this year. Shatner became the oldest person in space, eclipsing the previous record – set by a passenger on Bezos’ flight in July – by eight years.

Virgin Galactic’s Richard Branson went into space in his own rocket ship in July, followed by Bezos nine days later on Blue Origin’s first flight with a crew. Elon Musk’s SpaceX made its first private voyage in mid-September, though without Musk on board.

Copyright © 2021 The Washington Times, LLC.

The Santa experience this year is a mix of laps, distancing

virus outbreak busy santa 38083 c0 127 3034

NEW YORK (AP) – Santa is back this year, but he pleads caution as he continues to tiptoe through the pandemic.

“Be smart. Be caring. If you have the tiniest tickle in your throat, the tiniest feeling, worry about yourself and worry about everybody else, and know Santa will always be there next year,” said 57-year-old Kevin Chesney, who’s been donning the big red suit since he was a kid.

Amid a downturn in Jolly Old Elves – about 15 percent fewer in one large database – Chesney is busier than ever from his North Pole in Moorestown, New Jersey. The photo studio where he works quickly sold out its 4,500 appointments to sit with him and the seven other Santas in the studio’s stable.

They’re among the brave in Santa’s ranks with full-contact visits, lap sitting included, though Chesney wears a mask until just before the photos are taken.

Other Santas might not be wearing masks or plastic face shields, or hanging out in protective snow globes like many did last year, but it seems 50-50 this season that they’re not quite ready for hugs, whispers in their ears for secret wishes, and kids smiling or sobbing on their knees.

Some Santas will remain behind barriers that popped up last year for safety. At Minnesota’s Mall of America, the big man will be housed in a log cabin behind a window with guests seated on benches in front of him. At 169 locations for the outdoor retailers Bass Pro Shops and Cabela’s, benches will also be used, with plastic partitions deployed at some stores for Santa’s photo ops.

Other retailers and Santa hosts are offering the option of no or full contact, even when mandates to distance aren’t in place. And many require or encourage reservations online to cut down on the number of people waiting.

More than 10 million U.S. households visited Santa in a mall or store in 2019, according to GlobalData Retail’s managing director, Neil Saunders. Nearly 73% of them also spent money at nearby restaurants or stores, he said. Last year, the company’s research found that 6.1 million households visited Santa, with fewer retailers and malls offering the holiday star in person. Of those visitors, 62% ate or shopped nearby.

Saunders said projections this year have about 8.9 million households expected to visit Santa in person, with virtual visits still a big option.

“Lingering concerns about the virus and ongoing restrictions in some states and localities continue to act as a brake on visiting Santa in person,” he said.

Chris Landtroop, a spokeswoman for Santa vendor Cherry Hill Programs, is optimistic. The new rollout of vaccinations for children 5 to 11 will certainly help.

“Santa is so back and we are super excited about that. Last year was incredibly tough,” Landtroop said.

The company has been sourcing Santas all year for the 800 malls, big-box stores and other locations it serves, with options for no-contact visits, too. Cherry Hill requires its Santas and other employees to be vaccinated and those with exemptions to be tested regularly.

“At the end of the day, we want guests to feel comfortable,” Landtroop said.

Luther Landon has been providing the Santa Experience at Mall of America in Bloomington, Minnesota, for nearly two decades. Last year, he hit on the log cabin idea but was shut down after a day due to the pandemic. He pivoted to virtual Santa and this year will offer both.

“We think that it would be very irresponsible of us to just ignore it and pretend like everything’s back to normal,” he said of the pandemic. “We’ve hidden some microphones so Santa can hear just fine. I know from our Santa community and knowing so many other Santas that the majority of them are reluctant, highly reluctant, to go back to the way it was before the pandemic. But we also have some who are just like, you know what, I don’t care. Having both of those groups is what’s happening in the country, too.”

Russell Hurd in Royse City, Texas, has been playing Santa since 2017, after he retired from the Army. He’ll be in his red suit to go with his long – and very real – white beard at the Gaylord Texan Resort & Convention Center near Dallas. His visits with the throngs are distanced and masks are required. He longs for that to end.

“The way it used to be, it’s meaningful for us Santas, too. I mean, we’re human beings. We crave that interaction, but for now we do what we can,” Hurd said.

Hurd is unvaccinated and tests regularly for COVID.

“I know a lot of unvaxxed Santas across the country. I mean, it’s not just Texas.” he said.

Count American Dream, a mega mall of 3 million square feet in East Rutherford, New Jersey, among retailers offering distanced Santa. He’ll be on ice, skating the indoor rink with visitors, and also tooling around with guests in hot pink golf carts.

At Macy’s stores, Santa will be making his list and checking it twice from behind a desk, with guests seated on the other side.

“We’re encouraging everyone to maintain masking throughout their visits,” said Kathleen Wright, senior manager at Macy’s Branded Entertainment. “Santa has been a part of the Macy’s tradition since 1862 so we’re overjoyed that we can safely continue the tradition this year.”

At Oakbrook Center, a mall in suburban Chicago owned by Brookfield Properties, Santa’s spot is a tricked-out motorhome with his fans allowed inside. Santa will be happening at 117 of 132 malls Brookfield owns in 43 states. The company is following local mandates on safety protocols but will distance anyone who asks. The same goes for CBL Properties, which owns 63 malls in 24 states and offered Santa visits from a safe distance last year.

“We’re bringing back a more traditional Santa experience this year,” said CBL spokeswoman Stacey Keating. “Visitors who wish to do so will be able to sit on Santa’s lap or on Santa’s bench. Masks will not be required at the set or during photos unless there’s a local mandate in place.”

And, bonus: “We’re also bringing back pet photo nights with Santa,” she said, “as well as Santa Cares, a reservation-only event that caters to those with sensory sensitivities and for whom the traditional experience may be too overwhelming.”

The pandemic has taken its toll on Santa in other ways.

Stephen Arnold, the 71-year-old head of IBRBS (formerly the International Brotherhood of Real Bearded Santas) said his organization of about 2,000 Santas and Mrs. Clauses has lost 57 Santas to COVID.

“Most of us are overweight, diabetic, with heart conditions,” said Arnold, a long-time Santa working this year both virtually and in person in Memphis, Tennessee. “I mean, we’re prime targets for a disease like COVID.”

Copyright © 2021 The Washington Times, LLC.

Matt Damon co-writing a book on access to clean water

the worth of water 21647 c0 851 1838

NEW YORK (AP) – Matt Damon has some big-name endorsers for a book he has out March 1 about access to safe water.

Former President Bill Clinton and Nobel Peace Prize-winner Muhammad Yunus are among those providing blurbs for “The Worth of Water,” which the Oscar-winning actor and filmmaker worked on with civil and environmental engineer Gary White. Damon has been a prominent spokesman for water sanitation since visiting Zambia in 2006, and with White founded the nonprofits Water.org and WaterEquity.

Damon and White met at a Clinton Global Initiative gathering in 2008.

“We’re excited to have written this book together, and we can’t wait to share the story of what happens when a movie actor and a civil engineer team up to try and take on the global water crisis – the stumbles and obstacles, the breakthroughs and big gains, and the incredible people we met along the way,” Damon and White said in a statement Tuesday.

“Our journey has proved two things: one, solving the water crisis is possible – within our lifetimes. And two, the key is unleashing the incredible determination and resourcefulness of the people who are fighting every day for essentials like safe water and sanitation.”

According to the book’s publisher, the Penguin Random House imprint Portfolio, “The Worth of Water” will illuminate “the challenges of building and scaling market-based financial solutions to make clean water and sanitation more accessible. And ultimately, it’s the story of how communities and individuals can be empowered to make long-lasting investments in their own well-being.”

Copyright © 2021 The Washington Times, LLC.