Author: newsdesk

  • Devastating WTC loss leaves Indian cricketers empty handed; fined 100% of match fee

    Devastating WTC loss leaves Indian cricketers empty handed; fined 100% of match fee

    The World Test Championship (WTC) final saw Australia thrashing India on the fifth day, defeating them with a huge margin of 209 runs to lift the maze on Friday at The Oval in London. Unfortunately, both teams have been fined by the International Cricket Council (ICC) for slow over-rate.

    The ICC declared that none of the players from the Indian team will receive their match fee. Meanwhile, the Australian team has been fined 80% of their match fee for slow over-rate.

    The Indian team reduced five overs, while the Australian team reduced four overs within the allotted time. According to ICC regulations, every player is fined for a slow over rate, with 20% of the match fee being imposed for each over.

    In addition, Indian opener Shubman Gill has also been fined. Gill criticized the umpire’s decision after getting out.

    Shubman Gill has been found guilty of violating ICC Article 2.4, resulting in a fine of 15% of the match fee.

  • Video: Former Twitter CEO says Modi Govt threatened to shut down platform in India

    Video: Former Twitter CEO says Modi Govt threatened to shut down platform in India

    Twitter’s co-founder and former boss Jack Dorsey in an interview with YouTube channel Breaking Points talked about censorship requests he received from the Indian government led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

    Jack said that Twitter received “many requests” from the Indian government to block accounts covering farmers’ protests. The former CEO of Twitter further said that the platform also received multiple requests to block those accounts that were critical of the government.
    He has also said that the Indian government threatened to shut down Twitter in the country.

    “India is a country that had many requests of us around the farmers protest, around particular journalists that were critical of the government, and it manifested in ways such as ‘we will shut Twitter down in India,’ which is a very large market for us; ‘we will raid the homes of your employees,’ which they did; ‘we will shut down your offices, if you don’t follow suit,’ and this is India, a democratic country,’” Dorsey said.

    Dorsey said that Turkey also has similar requests like India. He noted that Twitter, which frequently engaged in legal battles with the government and prevailed, was also threatened with closure by the Turkish government.

  • Untitled post 85304

    YOUR CURRENT HOROSCOPES

    aries horoscope

    you’ll need to tap into your optimism and gratitude.

    taurus horoscope

    Allow your emotions to guide you

    gemini horoscope

    Take note of which routines and activities contribute to your sense of wellness

    cancer horoscope

    Your mind will be a busy place

    leo horoscope

    Try not to move too boldly or impulsively

    virgo horoscope

    you’ll want to stay in the loop with your professional contacts 

    libra horoscope
    Take a moment to reflect on your psyche before starting the day

    scorpio horoscope

    choose your battles wisely 

    sagittarius horoscope

    Plan on treating your body to some extra TLC later 

    capricorn horoscope

    You won’t have patience for any dead weight in your life

    aquarius horoscope

    You’ll be in a decisive and bold mood

    pisces horoscope

     try not to let anyone take you for granted

    Source: https://www.astrology.com/us/home.aspx

  • May 9 riots: NA passes resolution to take action against the party involved and its chairman

    May 9 riots: NA passes resolution to take action against the party involved and its chairman

    The National Assembly on Monday adopted a resolution demanding action against May 9 rioters under the Army Act.

    The resolution was moved by Defence Minister Khawaja Asif.

    The resolution demanded that all individuals  involved in May 9 riots must immediately face legal repercussions, adding that members of the same party and its leaders were separating themselves from May 9 events.

    “Across the world, the right of inquiry against people involved in incidents such as attacks on military installations lie with the army. In Pakistan too, laws and constitutional protection against such elements exist,” it added.

    “Therefore, an inquiry should be initiated without any delay against all the people involved in these incidents and they should be punished under the Pakistan Army Act, 1952,” the resolution read.

  • TW: After posting complaint, Chicago man finds three severed heads on desk

    TW: After posting complaint, Chicago man finds three severed heads on desk

    Dale Wheatley, a transportation coordinator at the Anatomical Gift Association in Illinois that distributes human body parts for medical research, revealed to People Magazine that after he filed a complaint about the condition of donor bodies, he found three severed heads sitting on his desk.

    In the last five years of working at this place, Wheatley had never found body parts placed so casually at his desk. He said that they are safely transported to storage areas, and then shipped of to medical students where students dissect and study them. Afterwards, they are cremated, and the ashes are sent to family members.

    “At first I was confused,” Wheatley tells PEOPLE. “My boss walked by, and I asked him why the heads were at my desk. He said they need to get back with their bodies so we can send them to cremation.”

    Wheatley said he asked his boss about why the heads were lying on his desk. His boss said he did not know.

    Wheatley had earlier complained that donated bodies were not kept in proper conditions or stored, leading to decomposition and mold, rendering them unsuitable for studying. Wheatley’s lawyer David Fish said that rats had chewed through the bags, which made the bodies unusable.

    “The body goes to waste if it’s not properly cared for,” Fish told PEOPLE.

    The president of the company, William O’Connor, denied Wheatley’s complaint that bodies were being mishandled.

  • JKT announces top tier: What positions did they hold in PTI?

    Jahangir Khan Tareen, aka JKT, has on Monday announced the designations of important members of his newly launched Istehkam-e-Pakistan party .

    In a tweet, Tareen said that Abdul Aleem Khan will be the President of Istehkam-e-Pakistan party, while Amir Mahmood Kiyani will be the Secretary General and Auwn Chaudhary will be the Additional Secretary General and Spokesperson of the party as well as the Patron-in-Chief.

    All three of these politicians held important posts in Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) before they switched camps.

    In 2016, PTI appointed Aleem Khan as President of the party’s central Punjab chapter. Amir Mahmood Kiyani, an old confidant of PTI Chairman Imran Khan, was the federal minister of National Health Services, Regulation and Coordination. Auwn Chaudhary, another figure thought to be a very close aide of Imran Khan’s, previously served as Chief Coordinator to the Chief Minister of former Punjab Chief Minister Usman Buzdar.

  • British politician says celebration with alcohol ruined because of Muslim cricket player, Twitter roasts him, calls it ‘team spirit’

    British politician says celebration with alcohol ruined because of Muslim cricket player, Twitter roasts him, calls it ‘team spirit’

    Nigel Farage, former broadcaster and head of Brexit Party, has been roasted on Twitter for a tweet in which he berated the Australian cricket team for not celebrating “champagne style” after winning World Test Championship (WTC) because of Muslim opener Usman Khawaja.

    Farage posted a tweet on Sunday after Australia won the WTC at the Oval in London and chose not to celebrate with champagne, as teams traditionally do, out of respect for their Muslim teammate.

    “Once again the Australian cricket team do not celebrate in champagne style because 1 of the team members is a Muslim. Are we all to suspend normal life because of the minority,” he wrote.

    The tweet got slammed by fans of the game, with nearly every nationality joining in for a bit of Farage bashing.

    Cricket writer Kit Harris rebuked Farage in a scathing tweet that begun, “It’s called “mateship”. I know it doesn’t exist in politics, but it does in sport — especially Australian sport.”

    Indian fans jumped in too, though their team had just lost to Australia.

    Other tweeps were delighted with Australians uniting to respond to the ultra-right nationalist politician.

    Usman Khawaja himself posted what seems to be an indirect reply to Farage on Instagram, posting a picture of himself celebrating with a diet Coke.

  • ‘Mere pass DDLJ hai’: here is another round of Shah Rukh Khan’s hilarious #AskSRK session on Twitter

    ‘Mere pass DDLJ hai’: here is another round of Shah Rukh Khan’s hilarious #AskSRK session on Twitter

    When Shah Rukh Khan announces another session of #AskSRK on Twitter, more often than not goes on to become a leading trend on Twitter, with fans coming up with all sorts of hilarious questions for the Badshah of Bollywood.

    Whether it is about his secret to not aging (we’re stalking him until he answers that), on-set memories, hilarious quips to fans and love confessions, here is a round up of all that went down in the recent #AskSRK session.

    The reason why he is King Khan

    Even minor hilarious things like these get a witty reply from the King of sass

    LOL

    That’s it. Shut down the bird app we got the best interaction ever.

  • Netflix subscriptions jump after password sharing crackdown

    Netflix subscriptions jump after password sharing crackdown

    Netflix subscriptions have registered a spike in daily sign-ups after the streaming giant launched a crackdown on password sharing on May 23, data from research firm Antenna has shown.

    The news sent shares of the company up 2.3 per cent to US$418.92 in early trading.

    Looking for new ways to make money in a saturatwd market and a tough economy, Netflix moved to regulate the sharing of account passwords with friends and family- a drastic turnaround for a company that had once tweeted “Love is sharing a password”.

    Netflix added 100,000 new accounts on both May 26 and May 27, shortly after the crackdown went into effect, Antenna’s data found. In the following days, Netflix has seen a more than 100% increase in sign-ups from the prior 60-day average.

    “These exceed the spikes in sign-ups Antenna observed during the initial US Covid-19 lockdowns in March and April 2020,” the firm said in a report. It also noted that “cancels also increased during this period, but not as much as sign-ups.”

    Netflix (NFLX) shares popped on the news, rising nearly 2% in early trading Friday. Shares have climbed over 27%, to about $415, over the last month.
    Last month, the service alerted US subscribers that if they share passwords with people outside of their household, they would have to add an extra member to their account for an additional $7.99 monthly fee or sign up for a new account. It also plans to block users with unauthorized passwords.
    The streaming video pioneer saw its four largest days of U.S. user acquisition after the change came into effect in the 4-1/2 years that Antenna has been covering the company.