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Encryption Security May Not Be Secure Anymore

Encryption security may not be secure anymore, if a breakthrough being touted as ‘possibly the biggest event in computer science and financial services for 50 years’ is proved correct. The breakthrough by students at the University of Toronto allows huge integer numbers to be factored quicker than previously thought possible, meaning encrypted files can be broken into in as little as ‘100 hours compute time’.

"They Do It For Better Grades" - Study Finds International Students 5 Times More Likely To Cheat

"They Do It For Better Grades" - Study Finds International Students 5 Times More Likely To Cheat

The number of international students attending US universities is rising, which is a welcome sight for administrators looking for ways to offset costs and stay profitable. What is not such a welcome sight however, is the amount of cheating that the international students are doing.

For the most recent academic year, 586,208 international undergraduate students attended US colleges and universities. More than 165,000 were from China, South Korea and Saudi Arabia contributed 50,000 and 23,500 respectively as well according to the WSJ.

Trump Relents, Says Judge Comments Were "Misconstrued"

Trump Relents, Says Judge Comments Were "Misconstrued"

With Paul Ryan denouncing his comments and blowback from Republicans, some of whom dropped their endorsements, it appears Donald Trump has relented in his comments against Indiana-born federal judge Gonzalo Curiel that he might be biased against Trump because of his Mexican heritage, saying that his comments had been misconstrued by the media.

As The Hill reports, the presumptive GOP nominee made the assertion in a new statement Tuesday afternoon as he scrambles to contain blowback from Republicans.

Radicalizing Kindergartners

A reader writes to say, “Here we go. This is state indoctrination in transgender ideology.” He’s right:

Kindergarten used to be a place for children to learn how to add, subtract, and read.  Next year, Washington school children as young as five years old will instead be learning about gender fluidity and the differences between gender and sexual identity.

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