Monday, 22 July 2024

10 billion passwords have been leaked on a hacker site. Are you at risk?

10 billion passwords have been leaked on a hacker site. Are you at risk?, In the latest cybersecurity scare, a file with nearly 10 billion passwords has been posted to a hacking site.

Researchers at Cybernews said they discovered the file, posted on July 4, with 9,948,575,739 unique plaintext passwords.

Cybernews experts said they believe this data dump, called RockYou2024, is the largest password leak of all time.

"The Cybernews team believes that attackers can utilize the ten-billion-strong RockYou2024 compilation to target any system that isn’t protected against brute-force attacks. This includes everything from online and offline services to internet-facing cameras and industrial hardware," the online publication said in a report.



The 10 billion passwords included in a file uploaded by a user named ObamaCare are not all new, Cybernews said.

Cybernews said its team "cross-referenced the passwords included in the RockYou2024 leak with data from Cybernews’ Leaked Password Checker, which revealed that these passwords came from a mix of old and new data breaches."

The passwords on the document have likely been collected from more than 4,000 databases over the last 20 years, Cybernews said.

“In its essence, the RockYou2024 leak is a compilation of real-world passwords used by individuals all over the world. Revealing that many passwords for threat actors substantially heightens the risk of credential stuffing attacks,” Cybernews said.

Credential stuffing is when hackers take information, such as passwords, from one data leak and attempt to log onto other websites, which can be very damaging to businesses and consumers, Cybernews said.

The recent wave of hacks targeting several sites including Ticketmaster were the result of credential stuffing attacks, said Cybernews.

Three years ago, a leak of 8.4 billion passwords called RockYou2021 was posted on a hacker site. At the time it was the largest password leak.

Cybernews said its analysis determined that the 10 billion leaked passwords in the RockYou2024 document included 1.5 billion new passwords leaked from 2021 through 2024.

Friday, 12 July 2024

Lovebird Lingerie Revolutionizes The Lingerie Market By Bringing Variety and Inclusivity In Plus-Size Bras

Lovebird Lingerie Revolutionizes The Lingerie Market By Bringing Variety and Inclusivity In Plus-Size Bras, In the last few years, India has seen the emergence of several brands creating outfits or clothing pieces designed for plus-size bodies. While many clothing brands have catered to this customer base, very few have worked towards providing adequate options to plus-sized women in the intimate wear space. This is one category which Lovebird Lingerie has not just tapped into but also revolutionized with innovative designs and powerful ideas.

Lovebird Lingerie is setting new standards in the Indian lingerie market by offering premium plus-size bras, catering to women with band sizes up to 54 and cup sizes up to J. As the only brand in India providing such extensive sizing, especially in their bridal collection, Lovebird Lingerie is making waves with its commitment to inclusivity and quality.
Lovebird Lingerie Revolutionizes The Lingerie Market By Bringing Variety and Inclusivity In Plus-Size Bras


Elaborating on the brand's achievements, founder Sandeep Gupta says, "Lovebird Lingerie has achieved a significant milestone by offering bras with a band size that extends beyond five feet. This is a breakthrough in the Indian market, where traditionally, stores only stock up to D cup sizes. The brand's padded and underwired bras in these larger sizes ensure comfort and support for plus-size women, addressing a significant gap in the market."

Understanding that every woman's needs are unique, Lovebird Lingerie provides backless and strapless options even in plus sizes. The brand's direct-to-consumer (D2C) factory model makes it possible for customers to request customizations for any design. This level of customization is rare, especially for plus-size lingerie, and showcases the brand's dedication to meeting customer demands.

"We have always prioritized the needs and preferences of our customers above everything else. In addition to offering an extensive range of sizes, Lovebird Lingerie stands out for its on-demand customization of backless and strapless bras. Plus-size women often struggle to find stylish and functional backless and strapless options, but Lovebird's ability to create these designs upon request sets a new benchmark in the industry. This service ensures that every woman can find a bra that meets her specific needs and preferences, enhancing her confidence and comfort", says Sandeep Gupta.

Managing inventory for such a wide range of sizes and colors is a challenging task, but Lovebird Lingerie excels in this area. The brand's ability to keep an extensive inventory ready for sale ensures that customers have access to the right size and style without long waiting periods.

There has always been a lot of misconception around plus-size bras in India. While most brands have not addressed these concerns, Lovebird Lingerie has not only taken note of them but also made it a point to clear all the doubts and confusion floating around in the consumer's head. As the founder of the company, Sandeep Gupta has himself stepped forward to speak to the customers and address their concerns from time to time.

Talking about the same, Sandeep Gupta says, "A lot of misconceptions and misinformation surrounding push-up bras stems from lack of awareness and companies operating in this category not making an effort to address these concerns. Minimizer and underwired bras have been recommended by medical experts for plus-size figures. Sometimes, women feel a sense of discomfort while wearing some of these bras because of improper sizing. General stores only offer up to D cup sizes, leading to an ill fit that pokes and causes irritation. Since we offer high-quality products in a variety of sizes, women can be sure about not facing such issues while wearing our plus-size bras."

In India, a lot of women do not buy plus-size bras even when they feel the need to owing to the fact that a lot of them are quite expensive. Lovebird Lingerie, however, has consistently worked towards bringing a shift in this perception by offering high-quality and well-fitting bras that prove to be worth one's money.

"By providing the right size and style of bras, Lovebird Lingerie has helped many plus-size women improve their figure and dressing sense. The brand's inclusive approach ensures that every woman, regardless of her size, can find a bra that fits perfectly and feels comfortable. From comfort-based issues to pricing concerns, we have taken into account every problem that the consumer was dealing with and have come up with solutions for the same. Our team has worked very hard and played an important role in the growth of this segment", says Sandeep Gupta on a concluding note.

Lovebird Lingerie is more than just a lingerie brand; it is a movement towards inclusivity and comfort for plus-size women in India. With its wide range of sizes, customization options, and commitment to quality, Lovebird Lingerie is truly revolutionizing the lingerie market and setting a new standard for what plus-size women can expect from their bras. In the future, the brand will continue to experiment with designs and techniques and continue to offer plus-size bras that offer a blend of comfort, style and affordability.

Monday, 8 July 2024

Win for Trump, surprise on abortion: Takeaways from historic Supreme Court term

Win for Tru, surprise on abortion: Takeaways from historic Supreme Court termmp


Win for Trump, surprise on abortion: Takeaways from historic Supreme Court term, The Supreme Court ended its term last week granting broad immunity from criminal prosecution to presidents in an ideologically divided decision with major implications for this fall’s presidential contest between Donald Trump and Joe Biden.



And that wasn’t the high court’s only monumental decision this year.

The conservative justices trash canned a 40-year doctrine that gave deference to federal regulators in legal disputes, a top goal of a long-standing campaign of conservatives to shrink the “administrative state.”

Other decisions either made it generally easier to challenge federal rules or weakened the enforcement ability of specific federal agencies.

Rulings on culture war issues were less consequential. But that’s in large part because the court unexpectedly punted on two potentially major abortion cases, as well as on attempts by conservatives to fight what they saw as censorship of their views on social media.

On the always contentious issue of gun rights, the court created a slightly larger window for firearm restrictions than it appeared to have set in a landmark 2022 decision about the 2nd Amendment. But it still left confusion about how that decision applies to bans on assault-style rifles, to bans on felons owning guns and to other restrictions being challenged in the lower courts.

In keeping, however, with its overall eagerness to block the executive branch from perceived overreaching, the majority struck down a Trump-era ruling that bump stocks meet the legal definition of a machine gun so can be banned.

There were other highlights and greatest hits of the term, with Amy Coney Barrett emerging as a distinctive voice and Sonia Sotomayor's impassioned dissents. Samuel Alito, with his flag drama, and Clarence Thomas, continuing to stake out positions some deem as extreme, were critical Supreme Court personalities as well.

Here are the top takeaways for the term.

A huge win for Trump − with deeper implications for an election year, and for the presidency
The justices were largely united in March when they said Colorado couldn’t use an anti-insurrectionist provision of the Constitution to kick Donald Trump off the ballot. The court’s three liberals did accuse the conservative majority of going further than necessary to protect Trump from additional challenges to holding office, even as they agreed he must remain on Colorado’s ballot.

But the court was bitterly divided along ideological lines when it put limits on how prosecutors can try Trump for attempting to overturn his 2020 election loss.

Presidents, the majority said, have absolute immunity for core presidential responsibilities − and they have a presumption of immunity for other official acts. Prosecutors can still go after actions Trump took in his capacity as a candidate, and they can make a case for why some of his actions as president should not be immune. But the extra hurdles make it basically inevitable Trump won’t face trial before the November election.

In their dissent, the court's liberal justices said the majority gave Trump “all the immunity he asked for and more.”

But Chief Justice John Roberts said the dissenters' "tone of chilling doom" discounts the fact that the majority ruled that only Trump's official discussions with his attorney general are absolutely immune from prosecution, and directed the lower courts to apply the new immunity rule to other aspects of the charges against Trump.

Conservative majority torpedoes regulatory agencies
The majority overturned the landmark 1984 decision Chevron v. Natural Resources Defense Council, achieving a major conservative objective to dramatically shrink the regulatory power of the federal government.

Former White House counsel Don McGahn had been clear about using Trump's Supreme Court nominations to further that goal.

"There is a coherent plan here where actually the judicial selection and the deregulatory effort are really the flip side of the same coin," McGahn told a conservative gathering in 2018.

As a result of the 6-3 decision, courts will no longer have to accept agency expertise when corporations or others challenge regulations to protect the environment, consumers, workers, public safety and more.

“This decision shifts power from agencies to courts, which is troubling to some because agencies are very deliberative, made up of experts, and offer a democratic forum for policymaking," Josh Galperin, a Pace University law school professor and an expert in environmental law. “Sometimes Congress leaves ambiguity in statutes because Congress wants agencies to make policy decisions.”

The conservative majority said it’s the role of courts, not federal agencies, to interpret federal statutes if Congress hasn’t clearly enough told regulators how to do their job.

In a separate decision, the conservative majority also said regulations can be challenged long after they’ve gone into effect. And they said the Securities and Exchange Commission can’t use an in-house enforcement mechanism to protect investors against securities fraud. Instead, any penalties have to be decided through a jury trial, the court said in an opinion that could lead to similar challenges to other federal agencies.Punting on abortion access fights
The court avoided detonating an election-year bomb on abortion access by dismissing two cases without deciding the underlying issues.

The court said the anti-abortion doctors who challenged a widely used abortion drug had not shown they were sufficiently affected by the Food and Drug Administration’s loosening of restrictions on mifepristone. Anti-abortion groups are hoping another challenge being mounted by three states will have more success, or that a new administration could order changes if Republicans win the White House.

In the second case, the justices returned to the lower courts a fight over whether a federal law requires hospitals to provide emergency abortions. While the high court allowed doctors in Idaho to perform for now abortions needed to stabilize a woman’s health as the litigation continues, abortion rights advocates said doctors and their patients around the country needed clarity they didn’t get on what care can be provided in states with strict abortion bans.

Punting on social media
Despite hearing multiple cases this term that had the potential to rewrite how Americans interact online, the impact was minor. In one set of cases, the court said that public officials can sometimes be sued for blocking critics on social media if they use platforms to make official statements.

But because the court dismissed for procedural reasons a case about how far the government can go to pressure social media companies to remove or downgrade posts, the justices did not answer the underlying question. And they sent back to the lower courts for more review challenges to laws passed by Texas and Florida to limit the ability of platforms to moderate content.

Gun rules continue to evolve
After a series of rulings expanding gun rights under the 2nd Amendment in recent years, the court in June softened a 2022 decision that said gun prohibitions must be grounded in history.

Everyone except Thomas − who authored that 2022 decision − said a regulation doesn’t have to have a “historical twin” to be constitutional. That allowed the court to uphold a ban intended to keep domestic abusers from having firearms.  But it left a lot of questions about the constitutionality of many other gun restrictions under the 2022 test.

And in a gun case that didn’t involve the 2nd Amendment, the court said the federal government went too far in 2018 when declaring a bump stock met the legal definition of a machine gun so could be banned.  That case was based on whether the Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco and Firearms had correctly applied the law’s technical definition of a machine gun to a bump stock.

Conservative rift over `originalism'
Some of the cases exposed a rift among the majority about the proper way to use history under “originalism,” the dominant judicial philosophy of the conservative legal movement.

Originalists try to interpret the words of the Constitution as they would have been understood by the framers at the time of the nation’s founding.

But Barrett warned against the pitfalls of relying too narrowly on history and tradition to determine the original meaning.

That can lead to missing the forest for the trees, she wrote in a case about a trademark dispute.

The conflict was most apparent in the Second Amendment dispute about banning guns from domestic abusers.

The court’s three liberals said the majority’s 2022 decision that gun regulations must be grounded in history was creating chaos in the courts.

Justices Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh defended using “text, history and tradition” to decide cases.

“History is far less subjective than policy,” Kavanaugh wrote. “And reliance on history is more consistent with the properly neutral judicial role than an approach where judges subtly (or not so subtly) impose their own policy views on the American people.”

But Barrett said that there are “serious problems” with demanding “overly specific analogues.” Those problems include forcing 21st-century regulations to follow late-18th-century policy choices, she wrote.

Liberals: `I dissent'
There are days, Sotomayor said in May, when she’s so upset by the decision in a case that she closes her office door and cries.

“You have to shed the tears, and then you have to wipe them and get up and fight some more,” the most senior of the justices appointed by a Democratic president said during an event at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University.

She fought back on the the majority’s ruling to throw out a ban on bump stocks with a fiery dissent delivered from the bench, a rare move used to emphasis disagreement. That decision, she said, will have deadly consequences.

When the majority said homeless people could be fined or jailed for sleeping in public, Sotomayor called that unconscionable and unconstitutional.

And when the majority granted presidents broad immunity for their official acts, it was in part what Sotomayor didn’t say that drew attention.

In their separately written dissents, both Sotomayor and Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson removed the usual word “respectfully” before ending their opinions, “I dissent.”

Ethics issues continue to swirl
Responding to a litany of controversies involving private jet travel and posh vacations accepted by Thomas and other justices that polls suggested had undermined public faith in the institution, the Supreme Court announced in November it will honor a code of conduct for the first time in its 234-year history.

But that did not quell the ethical concerns. Critics pointed out that the code has no enforcement mechanism.

They raised that complaint again after Alito rejected calls that he recuse himself from deciding cases involving Trump because of flags flown at his homes that have been adopted by Trump supporters. Alito said the the flags were flown by his wife and were not meant to support the “Stop the Steal” movement.

Roberts reiterated to congressional Democrats that recusal decisions are left to the individual justices. And he declined their request that he meet with the Senate Judiciary Committee to discuss ethics questions swirling around the court.

Nationwide, multi-agency operation recovers 200 critically missing children, federal authorities say

Nationwide, multi-agency operation recovers 200 critically missing children, federal authorities say

Nationwide, multi-agency operation recovers 200 critically missing children, federal authorities say, The United States Marshals Service led a six-week nationwide operation that resulted in 200 critically missing children being found – the youngest being a 5-month-old, according to the US Department of Justice.


The children included endangered runaways and those abducted by parents who didn’t have custody, a news release from the Justice Department said. They were rescued from May 20 to June 24 during a nationwide effort called Operation We Will Find You 2. A critically missing child is one who is at an increased risk of danger if they are not found as soon as possible.

Federal, state and local agencies in seven federal judicial districts and locations across the United States along with the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children participated in recovering the children, 123 of whom were rescued “from dangerous situations,” according to officials.

“These missing children were considered some of the most challenging recovery cases in the area, based on indications of high-risk factors such as victimization of child sex trafficking, child exploitation, sexual abuse, physical abuse, and medical or mental health conditions,” the Justice Department release states.

The coast-to-coast operation took place in locations including Portland and Eugene, Oregon; several counties in South Florida; New York City; and parts of Michigan.

“Of the 200 children found, 173 were endangered runaways, 25 were considered otherwise missing, one was a family abduction, and one was a non-family abduction,” according to the release.

Fourteen of the children were located outside the city where they went missing and 57% of those rescued were found within a week of the US Marshals Service assisting with their case, according to the Justice Department.

“One of the most sacred missions of US Marshals Service is locating and recovering our nation’s critically missing children,” said Marshals Service Director Ronald L. Davis in the release. “This is one of our top priorities as there remain thousands of children still missing and at risk.”

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Persistent heat wave in the US shatters new records, causes deaths in the West and grips the East

Persistent heat wave in the US shatters new records, causes deaths in the West and grips the East


Persistent heat wave in the US shatters new records, causes deaths in the West and grips the East, A long-running heat wave that has already shattered previous records across the U.S. persisted on Sunday, baking parts of the West with dangerous temperatures that caused the death of a motorcyclist in Death Valley and held the East in its hot and humid grip.



An excessive heat warning — the National Weather Service's highest alert — was in effect for about 36 million people, or about 10% of the population, said NWS meteorologist Bryan Jackson. Dozens of locations in the West and Pacific Northwest tied or broke previous heat records.

Many areas in Northern California surpassed 110 degrees (43.3 C), with the city of Redding topping out at a record 119 (48.3 C). Phoenix set a new daily record Sunday for the warmest low temperature: it never got below 92 F (33.3 C).

A high temperature of 128 F (53.3 C) was recorded Saturday and Sunday at Death Valley National Park in eastern California, where a visitor died Saturday from heat exposure and another person was hospitalized, officials said.

The two visitors were part of a group of six motorcyclists riding through the Badwater Basin area amid scorching weather, the park said in a statement.

The person who died was not identified. The other motorcyclist was transported to a Las Vegas hospital for “severe heat illness,” the statement said. Due to the high temperatures, emergency medical helicopters were unable to respond, as the aircraft cannot generally fly safely over 120 F (48.8 C), officials said.

The other four members of the party were treated at the scene.

“While this is a very exciting time to experience potential world record setting temperatures in Death Valley, we encourage visitors to choose their activities carefully, avoiding prolonged periods of time outside of an air-conditioned vehicle or building when temperatures are this high," said park Superintendent Mike Reynolds.

Officials warned that heat illness and injury are cumulative and can build over the course of a day or days.

"Besides not being able to cool down while riding due to high ambient air temperatures, experiencing Death Valley by motorcycle when it is this hot is further challenged by the necessary heavy safety gear worn to reduce injuries during an accident,” the park statement said.

The soaring temperatures didn't faze Chris Kinsel, a Death Valley visitor who said it was “like Christmas day for me” to be there on a record-breaking day. Kinsel said he and his wife typically come to the park during the winter, when it's still plenty warm — but that's nothing compared with being at one of the hottest places on Earth in July.

“Death Valley during the summer has always been a bucket list thing for me. For most of my life, I've wanted to come out here in summertime,” said Kinsel, who was visiting Death Valley's Badwater Basin area from Las Vegas.

Kinsel said he planned to go to the park's visitor center to have his photo taken next to the digital sign displaying the current temperature.

Across the desert in Nevada, Natasha Ivory took four of her eight children to a water park in Mount Charleston, outside Las Vegas, which on Sunday set a record high of 120 F (48.8 C).

“They’re having a ball,” Ivory told Fox5 Vegas said. “I’m going to get wet too. It’s too hot not to.”

Jill Workman Anderson also was at Mount Charleston, taking her dog for a short hike and enjoying the view.

“We can look out and see the desert,” she said. “It was also 30 degrees cooler than northwest Las Vegas, where we live.”

Triple-digit temperatures were common across Oregon, where several records were toppled — including in Salem, where on Sunday it hit 103 F (39.4 C), topping the 99 F (37.2 C) mark set in 1960. On the more-humid East Coast, temperatures above 100 degrees were widespread, though no excessive heat advisories were in effect for Sunday.

“Drink plenty of fluids, stay in an air-conditioned room, stay out of the sun, and check up on relatives and neighbors,” read a weather service advisory for the Baltimore area. “Young children and pets should never be left unattended in vehicles under any circumstances.”

Heat records shattered across the Southwest

Rare heat advisories were extended even into higher elevations including around Lake Tahoe, on the border of California and Nevada, with the weather service in Reno, Nevada, warning of “major heat risk impacts, even in the mountains.”

“How hot are we talking? Well, high temperatures across (western Nevada and northeastern California) won't get below 100 degrees (37.8 C) until next weekend,” the service posted online. “And unfortunately, there won't be much relief overnight either."

More extreme highs are in the near forecast, including possibly 130 F (54.4 C) around midweek at Furnace Creek, California, in Death Valley. The hottest temperature ever officially recorded on Earth was 134 F (56.67 C) in July 1913 in Death Valley, though some experts dispute that measurement and say the real record was 130 F (54.4 C), recorded there in July 2021.

Tracy Housley, a native of Manchester, England, said she decided to drive from her hotel in Las Vegas to Death Valley after hearing on the radio that temperatures could approach record levels.

“We just thought, let's be there for that,” Housley said Sunday. “Let's go for the experience.”

Deaths are starting to mount

In Arizona’s Maricopa County, which encompasses Phoenix, there have been at least 13 confirmed heat-related deaths this year, along with more than 160 other deaths suspected of being related to heat that are still under investigation, according to a recent report.

That does not include the death of a 10-year-old boy last week in Phoenix who suffered a “heat-related medical event” while hiking with family at South Mountain Park and Preserve, according to police.

California wildfires fanned by low humidity, high temperatures

In California, crews worked in sweltering conditions to battle a series of wildfires across the state.

In Santa Barbara County, northwest of Los Angeles, the growing Lake Fire had scorched more than 25 square miles (66.5 square kilometers) of dry grass, brush and timber after breaking out Friday. There was no containment by Sunday. The blaze was burning through mostly uninhabited wildland, but some rural homes were under evacuation orders.

Sunday, 7 July 2024

Looking a lot like dad, Bronny James makes NBA Summer League debut

Looking a lot like dad, Bronny James makes NBA Summer League debut


Looking a lot like dad, Bronny James makes NBA Summer League debut,m Once that second-quarter layup went in and he finally had his first NBA points after a trio of misses, Bronny James could exhale and everything began to slow down.

He hardly expects to be perfect at this early stage of his professional career, and every touch and possession will provide an opportunity for growth and learning.



He sure felt the love and support Saturday, even playing in the Bay Area ruled by Stephen Curry and the Warriors.

“The atmosphere, it was more than I expected," a grinning James said. "It's a big game for me, but I didn't know the people of Golden State would come and rep for me, so that was pretty nice to see.”

Oversized headphones on his ears and dressed in full Lakers gold as he geared up for his NBA Summer League debut Saturday, the rookie looked so much like his famous father, LeBron, it caused some at Chase Center to do a double-take.

Down to their familiar mannerisms, facial expressions and the way they run or shuffle back on defense. Bronny James took his place in the starting lineup for the Los Angeles Lakers and his professional career was formally underway, with plenty of scouts in the building to witness it as he wore jersey No. 9 — not to be confused with his dad's former 6 uniform he sported before switching to 23.

“Every first game that I step on the next level there's always some butterflies in my stomach, but as soon as the ball tips and we go a couple times down it all goes away and I'm just playing basketball,” he said. “It's always going to be there but get through it.”

The younger James wound up 2 for 9 for four points, missing all three of his 3s, with a pair of assists, two rebounds and a steal in just under 22 minutes of court time — 21:43 to be exact — as the Lakers lost 108-94 to the Sacramento Kings.

James missed his initial two shots while playing nearly six minutes in his first action — grabbing a defensive rebound 1 minute, 20 seconds into the game then missing a 21-foot jump shot moments later. He came up short on a 26-foot 3-point try at the 4:23 mark of the opening quarter before getting a breather.

There were cheers and a warm ovation when James returned to the court at the 8:17 mark of the second quarter. He was initially whistled for his first career foul on a 3-point attempt by Sacramento's Xavier Sneed on the right wing with 7:23 remaining, and James argued briefly before the play went to replay review and was overturned. James missed a 3 off the front rim from the top of the arc at 7:04.

Then, at last, James scored his first NBA points on a driving layup 5:51 before halftime.

“Moments like that can slow the game down for you especially because I wasn't as productive as I wanted to beforehand,” he said. “... I couldn’t get the 3-ball to fall, but all the reps it’s going to come more smooth.”

James missed a pair of free throws at the 4:43 mark of the third period in his first trip to the line.

At one point during his warmup routine, the 6-foot-2 guard stood with hands on hips in a resemblant position to one of his father. And during the game, the son leaned over by the baseline 3-point corner, gripping his knees while waiting for the offensive possession to begin.

The younger James was drafted by the Lakers with the 55th overall selection in the second round out of the University of Southern California.

He will get another chance to play Sunday, when the Lakers face the Warriors, again at the Chase Center. Coach Dane Johnson plans to give James plenty of chances to acclimate and gain valuable experience in the coming days and weeks.

“Hopefully he’ll play all the games, we’ll see how it goes,” Johnson said. “We’re going to try to integrate him and get him as many reps as we can. He needs more experience playing.”

Johnson applauded James' keen court awareness, noting, “we all know he has good instincts already, so finding the consistency within those he'll build as we keep going forward in the summer league and throughout the coming season. His instincts are there, we've just got to keep building habits.”

If all goes as planned, the 19-year-old James and his dad would become the first father-son pair to play in the NBA at the same time — and on the same team no less.

“What he does in the California Classic and Summer League, it doesn’t matter if he plays well and it doesn’t matter if he doesn’t play well," LeBron James said at USA Basketball's training camp in Las Vegas. "I just want him to continue to grow, practices, film sessions, his individual workouts. You can’t take anything as far as stat wise from the California Classic and Summer League and bring it once the season starts. The only thing that matters is him getting better and stacking days.”

Bronny is NBA career scoring leader LeBron's oldest son. He survived cardiac arrest last July 24 during an informal team workout at USC and it was later determined he had a congenital heart defect. The younger James signed a four-year contract that will pay him $7.9 million.

He will remind himself along the way to stay aggressive and “believe in myself knowing I can make plays for myself and my teammates.”

“Looking at my mistakes and looking at the things I did right is really good for me,” James said. “But also just game by game growing that comfort in my playing my game, I feel like that's a big part of why I come out here and get those reps in.”

Kate Middleton Sends Message Of Thanks To Andy Murray After He Departs Wimbledon For Final Time

Kate Middleton Sends Message Of Thanks To Andy Murray After He Departs Wimbledon For Final Time


Kate Middleton Sends Message Of Thanks To Andy Murray After He Departs Wimbledon For Final Time, The princess of Wales has penned a personal message to British tennis player Andy Murray on his final departure from Wimbledon, saying he should be very proud.



Kate Middleton is the patron of the All England Lawn Tennis Club, the tournament’s host, since 2016, and has in previous years presented the big trophies at Wimbledon. She has not been seen at the tournament this year, while she continues her cancer treatment in private, but has sent a message to Murray, who bowed out for the final time this week.

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Murray had to withdraw from the singles event earlier this week due to injury, but announced he would be taking part in the mixed doubles with former US champion, British player Emma Radacanu. But yesterday Radacanu announced she wouldn’t be able to play in the mixed event, preferring to concentrate on her singles campaign, which meant Murray played his last competitive match on Centre Court Thursday evening, when he lost in the men’s doubles event alongside his brother Jamie.

Kate wrote on social media on Sunday: “An incredible #Wimbledon career comes to an end. You should be so very proud @andy_murray. On behalf of all of us, thank you! C.”The Sun newspaper reports that Raducanu confirmed that she was dropping out of her match with Murray due to a problem with her wrist.

She wrote: “Unfortunately I woke up with some stiffness in my right wrist this morning, so therefore I have decided to make the very tough decision to withdraw from the mixed doubles tonight.

“I’m disappointed as I was really looking forward to playing with Andy but got to take care.”

Murray broke a 80-year hiatus for British victory at Wimbledon when he won his first title there in 2013. He went on to claim it again in 2016.

After he and his brother were beaten by Australian pair Rinky Hiikata and John Peers Thursday evening, Murray was serenaded by past champions on Centre Court, including John McEnroe, Novak Djokovic and Martina Navratilova.

10 billion passwords have been leaked on a hacker site. Are you at risk?

10 billion passwords have been leaked on a hacker site. Are you at risk?, In the latest cybersecurity scare, a file with nearly 10 billion p...