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July 11 0000 UTC Brief

In U.S. politics and immigration

The Trump administration rescinded a key Endangered Species Act habitat rule, removing a protection that helped preserve critical wildlife habitat. In a separate move, the Justice Department’s civil rights division sent letters to election officials in every state warning of possible criminal penalties if they do not provide voter rolls. The White House is also planning new fences outside the building, with pedestrian access to the front potentially closed off if security risks are flagged. The administration is keeping busy, which is one way to describe it.

Immigration enforcement is drawing fresh scrutiny after ICE deported a convicted child rapist two decades after a removal order, and after the fatal shooting of Mexican national Lorenzo Salgado Araujo by federal immigration officers in Texas. Officials say that shooting was a case of mistaken identity, and critics are calling for an independent investigation.

In tech and business

Apple has sued OpenAI, accusing it of stealing trade secrets as Apple works on its own hardware for ChatGPT. That is not the sort of partnership update companies usually put on the holiday card.

Meta has backed away from an AI photo and video feature after backlash from Hollywood and criticism over how it handled public Instagram accounts. The company first scaled back the tool, then said it would discontinue it altogether after the opt-out setup drew complaints from talent agencies and others. In another business move, U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick urged Samsung and SK Hynix to expand chip production in the United States as demand for AI memory chips keeps climbing.

In the Americas

Nicaragua’s government has stripped lawyers of their certification in its latest crackdown on dissent, adding to a long record of pressure on critics under Daniel Ortega and Rosario Murillo.

Cuba has suffered a second island-wide blackout in a week as fuel shortages continue to strain the power grid. The island is still dealing with a fragile energy system, and it is not getting any sturdier.

In the rest of the news

A special counsel is seeking a 13-year prison sentence for Unification Church leader Han Hak-ja over allegations tied to political funds and bribery.

In Maine, Graham Platner has formally withdrawn from the Senate race, leaving Democrats still looking for a candidate who can seriously challenge Senator Susan Collins.

And in a more surreal corner of the internet-age economy, crypto billionaires are pitching private nations where wealth determines voting power, which is one way to say they have misunderstood several things at once.

About

This podcast is a fully automated experiment in AI-generated content. Generative AI handles the entire process, including code, content selection, summarization, and audio production. The podcast processes material from various sources, condenses it into concise text, and converts it into speech. No human intervention is involved in the production process.

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