Red flags to watch out for when online shopping
With Cyber Monday upon us, here are some red flags to watch out for when online shopping.
With Cyber Monday upon us, here are some red flags to watch out for when online shopping.
Revenue Surpasses Expectations, EPS Nearly Meets Forecasts
Insights into Financial Performance and Upcoming Merger with Summit Financial Group
An Israeli assault on southern Gaza's Rafah area would spell disaster for civilians, not only in Gaza but across the Middle East, the head of an aid group warned on Friday, saying the region faced a "countdown to an even bigger conflict". Jan Egeland, the Secretary-General of the Norwegian Refugee Council, told Reuters that 1.3 million civilians seeking refuge in Rafah - including his aid group's staff - were living in "indescribable fear" of an Israeli offensive.
First enjoyed by the Mississaugas some three hundred years ago, the awesome tree cover that provided natural and spiritual benefits has since fallen victim to wide scale deforestation. Some Ojibwe, whose homelands spread to the easternmost area of the Anishinaabe people, migrated south to the banks of the Great Lake now called Ontario, around the early 1700s. They came to be known as the Mississaugas. Framing what are now known as Etobicoke Creek and the Credit River, the mouths where these flow
LONDON (AP) — TikTok is in the crosshairs of authorities in the U.S., where new law threatens a nationwide ban unless its China-based parent ByteDance divests. It would be the biggest blow yet to the popular video-sharing app, which has faced various restrictions around the world. TikTok is already banned in a handful of countries and from government-issued devices in a number of others, due to official worries that the app poses privacy and cybersecurity concerns. Those fears are reflected in t
Loose Women guest Jennie Bond has shared her devastation on the 25th anniversary of her friend Jill Dando's murder.
U.S. Federal Reserve policymakers sifting through the latest inflation data will find little to fuel a sense of urgency to cut interest rates, but also nothing to rule out the likelihood of rate reductions starting later this year. That was the view from financial markets and analysts following a government report on Friday that showed inflation rose last month largely in line with economist expectations, and with what Fed officials themselves had said they anticipated. Core PCE, a measure of underlying inflation, came in at 2.8%, the same as February.
It should have come as no surprise to Councillor Lori Lococo that she would come up empty handed in her effort to get Niagara Falls Council to consider her Notice of Motion at their most recent meeting of April 9th, calling for easier access to oversight for all residents seeking to hold herself and her colleagues accountable to the voters who put them in office. On the surface, it seemed innocuous enough, asking for staff to prepare a report on Integrity Commissioner complaints from other citie
Ukraine has quietly withdrawn its American Abrams tanks from the front line to avoid the growing threat from Russian drones.
“It gave me so much bliss that she had a community,” said Ana Van Gilst, mother of murdered Andrea Doria Dos Passos.
NEW YORK (AP) — Jerry Seinfeld has been responsible for more movies than you think. Yes, he co-wrote and lent his voice to 2007's “Bee Movie." But before that, “Seinfeld” — where going to the movies, with or without the aid of Moviefone, was nearly as regular a destination as the coffee shop — gave birth to dozens of (fake) films. “Rochelle, Rochelle." “Prognosis Negative.” “Sack Lunch." But nearly three decades after Seinfeld was, in one episode, cajoled into bootlegging “Death Blow," he has fi
Deutsche Bank has named Oliver Jerome as head of European foreign exchange in London as the lender boosts its forex desks, according to a note sent internally. Jerome has held similar roles at JP Morgan and Morgan Stanley and was recently one of the founders of a technology company active in foreign exchange. At Deutsche Bank, he will report to Sameen Farooqui, co-head of global foreign exchange, and Panos Stergiou, head of institutional client group.
All the stories from Friday’s episode of the Tech & Science Daily podcast.
The Kansas basketball team has landed another transfer. He played in last year’s Final Four.
The federal Conservative critic for northern affairs and Arctic sovereignty says the Liberal government has failed to address housing and food security issues in the North. However, in an interview this week, Bob Zimmer, an MP from B.C., didn’t say how a Conservative government under Pierre Poilievre would tackle those issues. Zimmer was in Iqaluit to attend the Nunavut Mining Symposium on Wednesday. “The people in the North are tired of broken promises or no promises at all and we need to suppo
Several London Underground stations are closed due to workers striking while two Tube lines were halted because of a casualty on the track. Transport for London said three stations were closed on the network at midday on Friday due to the Transport Salaried Staffs' Association action. The union said the action was likely to cause Tube stations to close at the last minute, including into Saturday morning, but Transport for London said there will not be significant disruption.
Microsoft reported better than anticipated Q3 earnings on Thursday, powered by growth in its cloud products.
In July 2025, Brant will welcome over 1,000 young athletes and coaches for the Special Olympics Ontario Provincial Summer Games. At the official announcement on Thursday, local athlete Kailee Mitchell told The Spectator she is looking forward to “everything” that will come with being the host city. In the summer games, young athletes with intellectual disabilities compete in soccer, bocce, golf, track and field, and softball — plus pickleball as a new exhibition sport, said Glen Gretzky, executi
The Government of Alberta announced sweeping changes Thursday to legislation regulating municipal government and elections, formally introducing political parties at the local level and giving the province more power to overrule bylaws and remove elected councillors. Bill 20, The Municipal Affairs Statutes Amendment Act, was introduced in the Alberta Legislature on April 25, and includes more than two dozen amendments to the Local Authorities Election Act (LAEA) and the Municipal Government Act