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  • Why Kate Middleton Didn’t Curtsy in Front of Donald & Melania Trump

    Why Kate Middleton Didn’t Curtsy in Front of Donald & Melania Trump

    Kate Middleton didn’t follow typical Royal protocol in front of Donald and Melania Trump during the first day of their UK visit.

    The Princess of Wales, who is typically a rule follower in the Royal Family, deviated from tradition slightly when she didn’t curtsy for King Charles and Queen Camila during the official welcome for the U.S. and First Lady’s state visit.

    Upon the Trumps arrival to Windsor Castle, they were greeted by Kate and Prince William in a brief exchange that a lip reader decoded, unearthing a comment Trump allegedly made about Kate’s appearance.

    Related story

    Why Kate Middleton Was Reportedly ‘Shaken to Her Core’ Amid the Trumps’ UK Visit


    Then, the Prince and Princess of Wales walked with the couple to be welcomed by King Charles and Queen Camilla. There, Kate rather curiously did not curtsy for the monarch.

    However, this brief break in protocol may be easily explained.

    Kate and William were likely with Charles and Camila before walking into the garden to meet the Trumps who arrived via helicopter. We assume Kate may have privately curtsied for the King and Queen so didn’t need to do it again upon reuniting with them after greeting the President and First Lady.

    Donald Trump‘s UK visit is already being met with criticism from protestors chanting outside of Windsor to backlash over the Royal Family’s hypocritical approach to the Jeffrey Epstein scandal. While they’ve gone to great lengths to keep Prince Andrew out of the public eye due to his ties to the convicted sex offender, they have welcomed Trump, another Epstein ally, with open arms.

    Before you go, click here to see things you never knew about Kate Middleton before she met Prince William.

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  • College readout: press remarks by High Representative/Vice-President Kaja Kallas on the New EU-India Strategic Partnership and on the package of proposals on Israel

    College readout: press remarks by High Representative/Vice-President Kaja Kallas on the New EU-India Strategic Partnership and on the package of proposals on Israel

    Check against delivery! 

    Good afternoon,

    Before updating you on the college meeting, I would also like to focus on one key issue, which is in recent weeks, Russia has escalated its war against Ukraine thrown incursions into Poland and Romania signalling more a dangerous stage of this war.  

    Russia is testing the West. Should Putin sense any weakness, he will continue to push forward because he wants to test us. Europe must respond firmly. As President von der Leyen said yesterday, the Commission will soon present its 19th sanctions package. We must hit Russian banks, energy companies, crypto exchanges and shadow fleet ships harder. Depriving Moscow of the funds to wage a war is essential to end this conflict.

    Today in the College, we also addressed the war in Gaza, Israeli government’s push into Gaza City is a new escalation of the war and will further deepen the humanitarian crisis. Today, I presented a robust package of sanctions on Hamas terrorists, extremist ministers in the Israeli government and violent settlers and entities supporting the impunity going on in the West Bank.   

    The Commission adopted a proposal to partially suspend trade concessions. Commissioner Šefčovič will update you on the trade details in a minute, and I want to be very clear: the aim is not to punish Israel. The aim is to improve the humanitarian situation in Gaza. All Member States agree that the situation in Gaza is untenable. The war needs to end. The suffering must stop, and all hostages must be released. We must use all the tools we have towards this outcome. We must also not lose sight of the dangerous developments in the West Bank that reduce the viability of a two-state solution.  

    Then, on EU India relations, we have adopted a new EU-India strategy. India is a crucial partner for the European Union. The EU and India together account for 25% of the global population and GDP. India also is the world’s largest democracy and is the fastest growing economy. Closer European Union-India, relations are vital for strengthening economic security and diversifying supply chains. Our new communication sets out possibilities for closer cooperation on trade, technology, security and defence, and climate. A Free Trade Agreement, an Investment Protection Agreement and a Comprehensive Air Transport Agreement can be pillars of this partnership.   

    Security and Defence is another backbone of this partnership. We are working towards EU-India Security and Defence Partnership. We will enhance cooperation, including maritime security, counter terrorism and cyber defence. We are also negotiating an agreement of exchange of classified information and deepening ties between defence industry. 

    However, also the College had hesitations were the areas that we have disagreement. India’s participation in Russia’s military exercises and its purchase of Russian oil stand in the way of closer ties. Because, ultimately, our partnership is not only about trade, but also about defending rules-based international order. Our negotiations will address these challenges with the aim of adopting a joint roadmap at the EU-India Summit in early 2026.

    Finally, on Iran earlier today, we had a discussion with the Foreign Minister Araghchi, alongside with my European counterparts. The window for finding a diplomatic solution on Iran’s nuclear issue is closing really fast; we are weeks away from the reimposition of international sanctions. Iran must show credible steps towards addressing the demands of France, UK and Germany, and this means demonstrating full cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency and allowing inspections of all nuclear sites without delay.  

    Thank you.

     

    Link to the video: https://audiovisual.ec.europa.eu/en/media/video/I-277180 

     

    Q&A (for the EU-India New Strategic Partnership). 

    Q. My second question is to High Representative, so the presentation of the 19th sanctions package is delayed. Could you brief us how the coordination with the United States is going regarding this sanctions package and sanctions policy in general? And, for now, plenty of the EU diplomats are voicing the concerns that the United States President demanding from the EU to make the sanctions to offer, actually, is looking for the pretext to postpone his own sanctions. Do you share this feeling, and how optimistic are you when it comes to reaching the deal on sanctions with the US leadership? 

    Thank you. So, partly already the answer was there, but [on] the 19th package, we are working on this and closely coordinating also with the Americans. Of course, in the end, we are responsible for our decisions, and we have a very straight and understandable course: we need to be stronger on sanctions and move forward. And of course, we are trying to work together with our US partners to do the same. Thank you.  

     

    Q. I was wondering, is this the right moment to have a strategic agenda with India when they are joining Russian military exercises and are increasingly buying more oil despite EU sanctions on infrastructure in India? How do you hope to, let’s say, move forward from this particular moment that India is actually forging closer ties with Russia in this particular time? 

    This was the discussion also we had in the College. To be very clear, we are having clear areas of disagreement with India regarding these issues. Yesterday, I had also a call with the External Affairs Minister of India regarding these issues. I mean, participating in military exercises, purchase of oil – all these are obstacles to our cooperation when it comes to deepening the ties. And, if you read the communication, it also addresses these points. We are living in these very turbulent times, and we need to build partnerships. And the question is always whether we leave this void to be filled by somebody else or we try to fill it ourselves. So, deepening the ties also with India, in order to not push them to the Russia’s corner was the agreement by the College. 

     

    Q. [In Estonian] What should we do if India just says that they do not care about buying Russian oil? That they participate in the military exercises? Is it then possible that we cancel this strategic agenda, or would we have this parallel way of working that we sanction only one part of the company? So, what will happen if they say that they don’t care? 

    Thank you very much for this opportunity to reply in Estonian, our beautiful language. Indeed, we had these discussions, and we agreed that we should have this possibility to take a step back and of being completely clear with the Indian counterparts, letting them know what the obstacles are. So, if you read our communication about the new strategic agenda, then all these conditions are actually included. When we consider the situation, then this relation is equally beneficial to India as it is to us. It benefits us both to take into account the concerns we have in Europe and vice-versa. It is always a two-way street, but we will definitely always raise these questions, and currently we don’t have a mutual understanding here.

     

    Q. [In Estonian] Is it possible then that we cancel this plan if India doesn’t accept the conditions?  

    Negotiations are negotiations, and until we agree about everything, then nothing is agreed. So, it depends on the team. We have to take everything into account, so nothing is agreed until everything is agreed. Therefore, we know what the conditions are, and we have to take into account the interest and concerns and problematic issues.

     

    Q. To be clear on this point, do you think that if India, at the end of the year, beginning of next year, will still buy Russian oil and have a closer relationship with Vladimir Putin, the Commission should conclude – so give its agreement – to the Free Trade Agreement that you are negotiating and you should conclude at the end of the year, at the best? 

    The discussions we also had was whether it is possible to completely decouple India from Russia, considering their history as well. I do not think we have illusions regarding this. The problems we have between ourselves in the relationship are very clear, and we are trying to address them in the negotiations as we speak. So, if everything is not agreed, then nothing is agreed in the end, whether we reach the agreement. 

     

    Q. You mentioned that you spoke with your Indian counterpart, among other things, about the Zapad exercise. I was wondering if you could tell us anything more about their take on this, why they did it. This particular exercise is not any ordinary one. It is one that’s directly targeted against EU countries in the Eastern flank, including, if I’m not mistaken, your country. What is their take on this? Why did they participate? 

    Well, I am not communicating on behalf of India. So, you can ask them the arguments on that side. We will meet in person as well, because this is a great concern for our countries. If you want closer ties with us, then why participate in exercises that are existential threats to us. So, to be very clear on this message. We are not taking this, lightly, but I will not just reflect on our conversations and be communicating on their behalf. 

     

    Q. Just wanted to clarify what India has said to the EU about those military drills, it wasn’t quite clear what that position is. And, if you will allow me to get philosophical, I think potentially this question is for you, Madam Kallas, but maybe for Commissioner Šefčovič as well. Because in terms of trade, it is a priority for the European Union. We’re in the age where the concept of the rules-based international order – I mean, that’s a whole other philosophical debate that we can go into – but considering trade is mutually beneficial for both sides, I am then asking you whether trade can be separated from this agenda? I read the document, you speak about Defence and Security, but will trade always be something that you continue on? Because, as you yourself said, you have no illusions about whether this can change. So, I kind of wanted to ask about whether, because trade is so geopolitical and so separate from the issues of yesteryear and the way that we look at it, and you mentioned shift in paradigm once upon a time yourself. Just wanted to know if the European Commission is looking at these issues with a bit more, maybe pragmatic realpolitik view. 

    If you look at the communication, you can see also that it has different parts. And when I am talking about also these concerns and disagreement, it is about the defence and security partnership that we are building. So, the trade relations, we also need to be mutually beneficial, and the trade people are working on that. But our teams are addressing also the concerns we have in other files, because it definitely impacts our relationship. So, clearly we are in this world like you say that you know, world order is changing. It is in our interest to defend the international rules-based order, and it is also in the interest of India to defend this. So, considering the breaches of the international law, we should be on the same side.  

     

    Q. We spoke a lot about Russia, but there is another big, important country with which India maintains very close relations, and that is China. How do you position this closer partnership between EU and India in respect to China? How do you see this playing out in this geopolitical chessboard?

    Very good question. I think this is part of the bigger picture. This is clear when we look all around the world. If we are not building those partnerships, then this void is filled by China and other actors. And if we look the geopolitical power, we need to have those partnerships, and that is why we are moving also forward to find additional partners to counterweight the economic might that comes from China or the problems that we have with China regarding economic coercion, regarding unfair trading practices. And, therefore, our answer is to build relationships with other countries, including the biggest democracy, India; the large and growing economy like India is.

     

    Q. Are you saying it is a condition of the EU for India to stop purchasing Russian oil for this strategic cooperation to go through? And secondly, if we could get clarity on: is the EU planning to impose tariffs, as reportedly Washington wants up 200% on India? 

    So, what I was saying is that we have clear areas of disagreement that we need to address with India, which is also when you read the communication, you know the problems that we have [and] the proposals also that we have on the table. So, the relationship has to be mutually beneficial, which means that you know it has carrots as well as sticks, if you put it this way. The concerns we have and the benefits that could derive for both parties from these relationships, if the worries and interests are taken into account. 

     

    Link to the video: https://audiovisual.ec.europa.eu/en/media/video/I-277225 

     

    Q&A. (For the package of proposals on Israel) 

    Q. I would like to know from the High Representative, why now, exactly, why not a year ago, or a couple of months ago? A year ago, there were already 40,000 dead in Gaza. So why, specifically, in this moment, the situation is such that these measures are needed and not why a year ago? 

    We all heard the speech of the President of the Commission where she proposed these points. And I think this shows how the situation has really changed. We see the E1 settlements. We see also the action now in Gaza City, all these things that bring more suffering to the people. Why today? Because a week ago we had the State of the Union speech where President von der Leyen proposed these things.

     

    Q. Now, naturally, the question is, will the Member States approve the question that you put forward, the issue, the proposal you put forward. And there are two tracks here, because the sanctions against the Ministers and settlers and all of that requires unanimity and those on trade QMV. Now you as a chair of the FAC, can you tell us a bit what is the atmosphere in the room? Do you have confidence that at some point these proposals will be adopted, either in QMV or in unanimity? If not, what does that tell us a bit about the state of affairs of the EU?

    So yes, you’re correct that the sanctions require unanimity and the trade proposal, the QMV. You know very well how the situation in the council is. Although we see that the public opinion in Member States is really shifting because of the suffering in Gaza, and people really want to see the stopping of this suffering. On the political level I think we will have the discussions after these proposals are made, but I think the political lines are very much in the place where they have been so far. 

     

    Q. I may, a question on measures against Israel on a different level. High Representative, as you mentioned, like the public opinion right now we see also how political entertainment and culture are becoming when it comes to Israel. In particular, when we talk about also the Eurovision Song Contest taking place next year in Vienna, and seeing Member States like the Netherlands, Spain or Ireland threatening to not participate, in case Israel will participate. So as the EU’s most senior diplomat, I’d be interested in what are your thoughts on this?  

    What I want to stress, and what we stress all the time is that we are proposing these measures not to punish Israel or Israeli people, but to really try to pressure the Israeli government to change course and to end the human suffering in in Gaza. So that’s why the proposals that we have made are not really touching or somehow affecting the people so much as to put the pressure on the Israeli government to change course. So, all these steps that go to the direction of punishing Israeli people, I think, are wrong, and we are not proposing them.

     

    Q. It’s a question on something that if I’m not wrong, is not in the package. Several former ambassadors to the EU have recently called for additional trade related measures, including export control measures and the suspension of all arms and dual use exports to Israel. So what is the reasoning, if I may ask, Commissioner Šefčovič behind the exclusion of such measures from today’s package? 

    Of course, you can always ask, why don’t we propose other things? These are the things we are proposing right now and that is the discussion. Yes, in June, I presented an options paper where all the options are listed, what are the tools in our hands. But these are the choices that the Commission made right now. 

     

    Q. For High Representative, presumably in the past, part of the calculation for not putting such measures on the table is the risk that they get caught up in the Member States. That risk remains. You’ve addressed it a bit already, but have you basically just changed your calculation in seeing that it’s better to look like you have something on the table in the works than the risk of looking like you have a total inaction until now? We know that we might be here in several months’ time, and that none of these measures have moved forward. 

    Yes, thank you. First, I object to the statement that was in your question that we have been inactive. That’s not true. We have been the most active actors on the international sphere, on this file, trying to improve the humanitarian situation on the ground, really, day in and day out, working with what more can do. Yes, the proposal is now on the table to put more pressure on the Israeli government, derived from the State of the Union speech. And yes, it’s true that the College has now proposed, but now it’s up to the Member States to discuss in the in the Council. But really, it shows that the public opinion in all the Member States has really shifted. When we have the discussions, all the Member States or representatives foreign ministers agree that the situation is untenable. So, if we all agree on this, then the question is, what do we do about this? What are the tools in our hands? And that’s why we have proposed, then, from the Commission to go with these proposals. If these do not fly, then we can find other things, if we all agree that we need to do additional steps in order to have really a change on the ground.  

     

    Link to the video: https://audiovisual.ec.europa.eu/en/media/video/I-277231 

     

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  • India v Australia: Smriti Mandhana hundred helps hosts to series-levelling win in second ODI

    India v Australia: Smriti Mandhana hundred helps hosts to series-levelling win in second ODI

    Opener Smriti Mandhana scored a brilliant hundred as hosts India claimed a thumping 102-run win over Australia to level the one-day international series.

    Mandhana, the number one-ranked batter in the format, reached three figures from just 77 balls and went on to make 117 from 91 balls as India posted 292 in New Chandigarh.

    Australia chased down 282 to win the series opener but came up well short on this occasion and were bowled out for 190 in the 41st over.

    Seamer Kranti Goud was the pick of the India bowlers, taking 3-28, and bowled Georgia Wareham with the penultimate ball of her 10th over to seal the victory.

    Having put India in to bat, Australia may soon have been regretting that decision as Mandhana got the home side off to a strong start.

    The 29-year-old left-hander dominated an opening stand of 70 with Pratika Rawal and went on to hit 14 fours and four sixes in a sparkling knock.

    When Mandhana was eventually dismissed in the 33rd over, she had scored 117 of India’s 192.

    Australia were able to drag India back from there with Darcie Brown, who took 3-42, removing Deepti Sharma for 40 and no other batters making a score of note as the hosts were bowled out with a ball of the innings remaining.

    In reply, Australia lost both openers inside five overs and despite reaching 108-3 with Ellyse Perry and Annabel Sutherland going well, neither were able to kick on and the innings fell away.

    India’s comprehensive win means Saturday’s third ODI in Delhi will be a series decider between the world’s top two and favourites for the forthcoming 50-over World Cup.

    India and Sri Lanka, who are co-hosting the tournament, meet in the opening game on 30 September before Australia’s title defence starts against New Zealand on 1 October.

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  • Watch an asteroid the size of the Washington Monument zoom past Earth live on Sept. 18 (video)

    Watch an asteroid the size of the Washington Monument zoom past Earth live on Sept. 18 (video)

    Potentially Hazardous Asteroid 2025 FA22 close encounter: online observation – 18 Sept. 2025 – YouTube


    Watch On

    A potentially hazardous asteroid spanning the length of the Washington Monument will make a safe, close approach to Earth on Sept. 18 and you can watch the flyby live online courtesy of the Virtual Telescope Project.

    2025 FA22’s next flyby of Earth will occur at 3:42 a.m. EDT (0742 GMT) on Sept. 18, when the asteroid will pass 523,206 miles (842018 kilometers) from our planet — the equivalent to around 2.2 lunar distances — posing zero risk to us, or the moon.

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  • DG Immigration confirms 32,674 stolen passports blocked

    DG Immigration confirms 32,674 stolen passports blocked

    A major breakthrough has been reported in the case of 32,674 passports stolen from 25 passport offices, including Abbottabad.

    Director General (DG) Passports confirmed that all the stolen passports have been permanently blocked and will never be renewed.

    Calling it “a very alarming issue,” he revealed that several people who traveled to Saudi Arabia on these documents were intercepted by the Saudi Interior Ministry, while Afghan nationals were deported.

    He further stated that following the incident, NADRA and the passport system were fully digitized to prevent the creation of fake documents. “In the past, it was unthinkable not to catch those carrying fake passports,” he remarked.

    PAC Convener Tariq Fazal Chaudhry expressed serious concern, warning that such passports could still be misused under present circumstances.

    Officials added that NADRA and the Passport Department underwent a cyber-audit two years ago.

    The PAC sub-committee has directed the DG Passports to submit a detailed inquiry report on the matter.


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  • Cocoa extract supplements linked to reduced inflammation in older adults

    Cocoa extract supplements linked to reduced inflammation in older adults

    Could cocoa extract supplements rich in cocoa flavanols reduce inflammation and, in turn, prevent age-related chronic diseases? In a new study from the COcoa Supplement and Multivitamin Outcomes Study (COSMOS), investigators from Mass General Brigham and their colleagues looked at changes in five age-related markers of inflammation among participants who received daily cocoa supplements over several years. They found that hsCRP-an inflammatory marker that can signal increased risk of cardiovascular disease-decreased in participants taking the cocoa extract supplement, suggesting its anti-inflammatory potential may help explain its heart-protective effects. Their results are published in Age and Ageing.

    Nutritional interventions have become an increasingly attractive solution for slowing inflammatory aging, so called “inflammaging.” Cocoa extract has been shown in previous, smaller studies to reduce inflammatory biomarkers, thanks to flavanols-small, bioactive compounds found not only in the cocoa bean but also berries, grapes, tea, and other plant-based foods. To bridge the gap between these studies and humans, researchers launched the large-scale COSMOS trial, which examines the effects of cocoa extract on cardiovascular disease, and whether inflammaging may explain those effects.

    Our interest in cocoa extract and inflammaging started on the basis of cocoa-related reductions in cardiovascular disease. We also appreciate the important overlap between healthy aging and cardiovascular health, where aging-related inflammation can harden arteries and lead to cardiovascular disease. Because of that, we wanted to see whether multi-year cocoa extract supplementation versus a placebo could modulate inflammaging-and the data suggests it does.”


    Howard Sesso, ScD, MPH, corresponding author, associate director of the Division of Preventive Medicine and associate epidemiologist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital

    Between 2014 and 2020, Brigham and Women’s Hospital led the COSMOS trial, a large-scale, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial with 21,442 participants over 60 years old, finding that cocoa extract supplementation decreased cardiovascular disease mortality by 27%.

    In this new study, researchers collected and analyzed blood samples of 598 COSMOS participants to measure several inflammaging biomarkers: three pro-inflammatory proteins (hsCRP, IL-6, and TNF-α), one anti-inflammatory protein (IL-10), and one immune-mediating protein (IFN-γ). Comparing changes in these biomarkers measured at baseline, 1, and 2 years follow-up, hsCRP levels decreased by 8.4% each year compared with placebo, while the other biomarkers remained relatively consistent or increased modestly.

    “Interestingly, we also observed an increase in interferon-γ, an immune-related cytokine, which opens new questions for future research,” said senior author Yanbin Dong, MD/PhD, Director of the Georgia Prevention Institute (GPI) and cardiologist/population geneticist at the Medical College of Georgia/Augusta University. “While cocoa extract is not a replacement for a healthy lifestyle, these results are encouraging and highlight its potential role in modulatingi nflammation as we age.

    The decrease in hsCRP may help explain the cardio-protective effects seen with cocoa extract supplement in the larger COSMOS trial, where participants experienced a reduction in cardiovascular disease death. Researchers said that changes in the other inflammaging markers, including a small reduction in IL-6 observed in female but not male participants, warrant additional study. The team will continue to evaluate the COSMOS trial to determine whether the cocoa – and multivitamin – regimens can curb more severe inflammaging, as well as other important aging-related health outcomes.

    “This study calls for more attention to the advantage of plant-based foods for cardiovascular health, including cocoa products rich in flavanols,” added Sesso. “It reinforces the importance of a diverse, colorful, plant-based diet-especially in the context of inflammation.”

    Source:

    Journal reference:

    Li, S., et al. (2025) Effects of 2-year cocoa extract supplementation on inflammaging biomarkers in older US adults: findings from the COcoa Supplement and Multivitamin Outcomes Study randomised clinical trial. Age and Ageing. doi.org/10.1093/ageing/afaf269.

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  • LimeWire and Fyre Festival: Two of the music industry’s least favourite brands have joined forces | UK News

    LimeWire and Fyre Festival: Two of the music industry’s least favourite brands have joined forces | UK News

    They are both infamous in the music industry, and now LimeWire and Fyre Festival are joining forces.

    LimeWire, known for enabling illegal piracy of music, has just bought Fyre Festival, a brand which promised a luxury music festival in the Bahamas and ended up as one of the biggest viral disasters of 2017.

    The fallout from the festival sparked several lawsuits and even a spell in prison for Billy McFarland, its founder. Mr McFarland even tried his luck a second time, with 2,000 tickets going on sale for Fyre Festival II, earlier this year.

    The festival was postponed just weeks before it was due to take place this summer.

    Image:
    Billy McFarland was jailed over the festival

    Rights to the festival have now been sold in a bid “that even included Ryan Reynolds and his agency Maximum Effort”, according to LimeWire.

    “Congrats to LimeWire… I look forward to attend their first event but will be bringing my own palette of water,” Reynolds reportedly told the brand.

    But the CEO of LimeWire said the purchase does not necessarily mean a Fyre Festival III is in the works.

    “We’re not bringing the festival back,” said Julian Zehetmayr, the CEO. “We’re bringing the brand and the meme back to life, this time with real execution.”

    What is LimeWire – and how is it back?

    For music-loving millennials growing up in the early 2000s, in an era before Spotify and digital streaming, LimeWire was an essential part of life – as long as you didn’t mind downloading the occasional virus onto the shared family PC.

    The website was largely used for the download and distribution of pirated music, but was shut down in 2011 after the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) said LimeWire owed them $72 trillion in damages.

    LimeWire software, pictured on a computer in 2006.  Pic: AP
    Image:
    LimeWire software, pictured on a computer in 2006. Pic: AP

    The RIAA demanded $150,000 for each download of 11,000 infringed songs, a demand that even a federal judge called “absurd”.

    The case was eventually settled for a much smaller fee of $105 million.

    But it wasn’t the end, and the brand was resurrected as a crypto and file sharing company in 2022.

    As for what is next, LimeWire said “over the coming months, [it] will unveil a reimagined vision for Fyre – one that expands beyond the digital realm and taps into real-world experiences”.

    “What could possibly go wrong?” LimeWire’s statement said.

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  • Breathtaking timelapse photos capture September’s blood moon total lunar eclipse over Egypt’s White Desert

    Breathtaking timelapse photos capture September’s blood moon total lunar eclipse over Egypt’s White Desert

    Photographer Osama Fathi has produced a pair of breathtaking images showing the dramatic transformation of the moon during the total lunar eclipse on Sept. 7, as it fell into the deepest part of Earth’s shadow above the White Desert National Park in Egypt.

    A lunar eclipse takes place when Earth passes directly between the sun and moon during a full moon phase, casting its shadow across the lunar surface. The most dramatic moment occurs as the moon slips entirely into our world’s inner shadow, known as the umbra, and is bathed in the combined light of every sunrise and sunset on Earth, transforming it into a red, blood moon.

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  • Waves Audio Expands Immersive Wrapper to Support VST3 Plugins by Diverse Brands

    Waves Audio Expands Immersive Wrapper to Support VST3 Plugins by Diverse Brands

    Waves Audio announces an update to its Immersive Wrapper. This innovative tool, which until now enabled any Waves mono-compatible plugin to function as an immersive processor for multichannel and object-based mixing in Dolby Atmos and other immersive formats, now supports VST3 plugins from a wide range of third-party developers.

    With this expanded compatibility, Immersive Wrapper enables audio professionals to seamlessly integrate their favorite VST3 tools, by Waves and other plugin manufacturers, into immersive workflows, unlocking new creative possibilities across music, film, television, and gaming production. Engineers are now empowered to fully leverage their plugin toolbox when crafting an immersive mix.

    This tool addresses a longstanding limitation in immersive mixing: facilitating mix-wide bus processing with mono plugins across multichannel and object-based formats like Atmos. Now, users can create immersive bus processing setups in multichannel / object-based mixes using their favorite VST3 mono plugins, complete with a shared internal sidechain system for mix-wide dynamics processing.

    Waves Immersive Wrapper brings the benefits of dedicated bus processing to Atmos mixes, addressing a key challenge for immersive mixers who have longed for the ability to shape the overall sound and character of an immersive mix with bus compression, EQ, or saturation just as they are accustomed to applying on a stereo master bus when mixing in two-channel stereo. While the immersive mix is still outputted to the renderer as separate beds and objects, it works in a control-linked multi-mono configuration to deliver output channel cohesion and a unified feel to mixes from mono up to 9.1.6 channel configurations.

    Immersive Wrapper features:

    • Supports VST3 plugins by Waves + other brands (NEW!)
    • Supports all track types, from mono to 7.1.2 to 9.1.6
    • Create advanced multi-mono configurations
    • Flexible linking and relative parameter control
    • Cross-track “Global Group” linking over entire Atmos mix
    • Comprehensive shared internal sidechain system

    Waves Immersive Wrapper has been added to the Waves Ultimate plugin subscription, which includes the comprehensive Waves plugin catalog (over 240 plugins) as monthly or annual subscriptions. It is also available for purchase (perpetual license) as a single plugin.

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