1. Internet-Free North Korea
Warning: this is probably not how the internet outage actually happened. (Shutterstock)
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North Korea is currently being targeted in a massive cyberattack.
[Vox / Max Fisher]
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"While an attack on North Korea’s networks was suspected, there was no definitive evidence of it."
[NYT / Nicole Perlroth and David Sanger]
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The US is a prime suspect, after Barack Obama promised a response to North Korea's alleged involvement in the Sony hacks.
[Vox / Tim Lee]
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Then again, China is investigating North Korea's role in the Sony hacks — and controls North Korea's entire connection to the internet.
[Bloomberg]
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China's patience for the North Korean regime's antagonistic foreign policy appears to be waning, suggesting China might be behind the outage.
[NYT / Jane Perlez]
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It's also possible North Korea shut off its connection unilaterally. We just don't know enough to say at this point.
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North Korea has its own internal version of the internet, limited to a few handpicked sites and email.
[Vox / Max Fisher]
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"Almost all of the network within North Korea is restricted to the capital city, Pyongyang."
[Ars Technica / Peter Bright]
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The North Korean government released a long rant that included, among other things, a "quasi-denial of responsibility for the Sony hack, strong hints that North Korea was in fact responsible, a threat to attack the White House, and so much more."
[Vox / Max Fisher]
2. Cop killer
New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio (right) and New York Police Department Commissioner Bill Bratton (left) on December 22, 2014 in New York, NY. (Andrew Burton/Getty Images)
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Two NYPD officers were shot and killed in Brooklyn on Saturday.
[Vox / German Lopez]
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The suspected gunman, Ismaaiyl Brinsley, shot himself dead after the killings.
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He had a long criminal rap sheet and posted comments on Instagram suggesting he acted in retribution for police killings of civilians, like Eric Garner and Michael Brown.
[Washington Post / Jerry Markon and Peter Hermann]
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He was wanted in Baltimore County, but that police department's efforts to alert the NYPD via fax and teletype failed to prevent the murders.
[Slate / Lily Hay Newman]
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The New York police union chief said Mayor Bill de Blasio has "blood on his hands"; de Blasio had expressed empathy with protesters following the non-indictment in Eric Garner's killing by the NYPD.
[Capitol New York / Azi Paybarah]
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Rudy Giuliani, who repeatedly defended police who used excessive force when he was mayor, blamed President Obama and #BlackLivesMatter protesters for the killings.
[Vox / Matt Yglesias]
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This attempt to put the blame for the murders on protesters fails, for at least three reasons.
[Vox / Jenée Desmond-Harris]
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"Notably, none of these intellectually dishonest statements quote or link to any actual rhetoric spoken by Mayor de Blasio, Eric Holder, or President Obama. "
[The Atlantic / Conor Friedersdorf]
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De Blasio has asked protests against police killings to cease in the wake of the shootings.
[NY Mag / Margaret Hartmann]
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Deliberate, criminal killings of police officers are rare, and accidental killings are more common.
[Vox / Dara Lind]
3. Misc.
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After the GED high school equivalency test was altered this year, the number of people passing it fell 90 percent.
[Cleveland Scene / Daniel McGraw]
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The real-life CIA officer that Jessica Chastain's Zero Dark Thirty character was based on was a major architect of the torture program. She's still at the agency.
[Slate / Daniel Politi]
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Amazon stopped selling a novel because it had too many hyphens.
[The Guardian / Alison Flood]
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Coal miners have one of the lowest rates of depression of any occupation.
[The Atlantic / Joe Pinsker]
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The makers of Cards Against Humanity are becoming campaign finance activists and leveraging their customer base to do it.
[Washington Post / Jaime Fuller]
4. Verbatim
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"No country has ever made nerdery punishable by imprisonment or death."
[Wired / Adam Rogers]
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"My father, who is not a behavioral economist, would surely reject this last analysis and say if I ate the chocolates, that must have been the rational thing for me to do; therefore, the chocolates were a great gift."
[NYT / Josh Barro]
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"How is it that in over a century of research, we still know so little about pain that we haven't been able to create a powerful, non-opioid painkiller?"
[Mother Jones / Kevin Drum]
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"The idea that facts belong to someone is crazy. It’s a fiction we use to ensure that fact-creators keep creating facts."
[Tom Lee]
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"There in the dirt was a perfect set of baby teeth."
[Tampa Bay Times / Ben Montgomery]
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