Categories
Technology

Activision Blizzard’s mobile revenue rises above console and PC says financial report

Activision Blizzard, previously known for its high-profile console and PC games, is now primarily a mobile game publisher. Recent success Diablo Immortal combined with Candy Crush and Call of Duty Mobile helped the mobile earnings reach 51% of total revenue for Q2 2022.

Most gamers do not think about Activision Blizzard as a mobile company. Hearthstone and Candy Crush have been popular mobile games for several years, and Call of Duty Mobile made a huge splash when it launched, with a total of nearly 88 million downloads in the first month of its release.

Activision Blizzard used to be known only for PC and console games — primarily Call of Duty, Starcraft, and World of Warcraft. It’s been a rough year for the company overall: in addition to the numerous ongoing cases against the company regarding sexual harassment and abuse, as well as the furore surrounding its massive buyout by Microsoft, to the tune of nearly 100 billion AUD.

In Q2 2022, Activision Blizzard’s mobile games generated approximately $1.2 billion AUD, accounting for 51% of the company’s total quarterly earnings. Console games comparatively made only $540 million AUD, and PC games took in just shy of $500 million AUD. In the mobile games section, the biggest winner was King, with 82% of all mobile revenue profit at just shy of $1 billion AUD.

Embattled Activision Blizzard CEO Bobby Kotick had this to say during the earnings report: “In addition, we expect to continue to deliver ongoing content for various of our franchises. We will also continue to invest in opportunities that we believe have the potential to drive our growth over the long term, including continuing to build on our advertising initiatives and investments in mobile titles.

Activision Blizzard is facing no shortage of troubles despite this massive growth. The company is accused of anti-union behavior towards one of its studies, hiring union-busting firms in the process. Activision Blizzard also recently scrapped a World of Warcraft mobile game after some financial disagreements with its Chinese partner, NetEase.

Written by Junior Miyai on behalf of GLHF.

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Categories
Sports

Netball Australia’s crisis of confidence as Diamonds chase Birmingham gold

Asked to confirm that she’s a seven-time Most Valuable Player recipient, she takes a step back and playfully rolls her eyes: “I ammmmm.”

The Diamonds have a battle on their hands if they’re to win gold at these Games, but there’s a bigger war being waged on the home front for control of the sport.

On one hand, it’s all sparkles: it has just under one million players in Australia, making it the No.1 sport for women, and it is pushing hard for inclusion in the 2032 Olympic Games in Brisbane.

On the other, there’s a crisis of confidence in Netball Australia to navigate the choppy course ahead as rival codes finally wake up to the potential of women’s sport.

“I don’t know where the negativity comes from,” NA chief executive Kelly Ryan tells the herald and The Age. “It’s nothing that I’ll spend time thinking about because I can assure you that 90 per cent of the stakeholders want nothing but success for the sport. Hopefully, the other 10 per cent will embrace it.”

Reports surfaced in June about NA being “on the brink of financial collapse” as it struggled under the weight of crippling debt reportedly worth $11 million following two years of COVID-19 lockdowns.

“Absolutely not,” she said. “I don’t know how people came to that number to be perfectly honest. We had a $4.4 million loss to 2021, and we have $4.2 million in debt and $2.4 million of that debt is associated to the financial support that we gave all the states and territories in 2020 [during lockdowns]. We took out loans to keep the sport going.”

Netball Australia chief executive Kelly Ryan.

Netball Australia chief executive Kelly Ryan.

In the past month, a consortium, headed by Mental Health Australia chair Matt Berriman, has launched an ambitious $6.5 million bid to buy Super Netball, the domestic competition.

The consortium includes former ABC managing director Michelle Guthrie, Diamonds legend Liz Ellis and businessman James Rushton, co-founder of DAZN, a global sports streaming platform that has shaken up professional boxing.

They are heavy hitters you would expect any code to welcome.

“We feel netball is at that juncture here in Australia, and we hope, whether it is our bid or a competitive one, that it continues to ensure netball is Australia’s No.1 female sport in Australia for decades to come,” Berriman said. “That has always been our motivation. We are actively and positively engaged with Netball Australia regarding our bid.”

Diamonds legend Liz Ellis is among a consortium of heavy hitters looking to take over Super Netball.

Diamonds legend Liz Ellis is among a consortium of heavy hitters looking to take over Super Netball.

Under the proposal, a copy of which the herald and Age has seen, the bid offers to eliminate NA’s debt while also investing $2.5 million into development.

The situation remains delicate. Berriman on Tuesday met with NA chair Marina Go, the former chair of the NRL’s Wests Tigers, but Ryan is being kept at arm’s length from negotiations.

She refused to answer direct questions about Berriman’s bid and remained non-committal about private equity, which several sports and teams, including the All Blacks, have recently pursued.

“We’re delighted there’s interest, but it’s too early to go through the process,” she said. “We don’t have an opinion on whether private equity is the right thing for netball or not. We need to form that opinion before we start working out that particular arrangement. I don’t know enough about it. All I can do is look at what other sports are doing around the globe. It’s a process of understanding of all the sums of all the parts of netball, and not isolating one aspect of it.”

Australia next face an England side, featuring Super Netball alumni Natalie Metcalf and Helen Housby, in the race for gold at Birmingham 2022.

Australia next face an England side, featuring Super Netball alumni Natalie Metcalf and Helen Housby, in the race for gold at Birmingham 2022.Credit:Getty

What’s confused many stakeholders is the changing narrative about NA’s financial situation.

When last season’s Super Netball grand final between the West Coast Fever and Melbourne Vixens was sold to the Western Australia government, it was done so on the premise that NA desperately needed the funds. When reports surfaced about NA’s debt soon after, NA assured stakeholders the situation wasn’t at all dire.

“We put a stake in the ground for the grand finale, we did a deal with the WA government, we had all the facts,” Ryan insists. “We’ve got debt — that’s our reality. But there’s also a reality about making this sport more commercial. The grand finale is a prime example. It has not been positioned from a commercial-revenue driving position before. It’s been the opposite. That’s where our focus is: growing revenue. No part of our business is about cutting costs.”

Other fires are burning. NA is still nutting out collective bargaining agreements with the players’ association for the Diamonds and Super Netball players. Head office doesn’t seem particularly interested in a revenue sharing model.

But the grand finale, which attracted a record crowd of almost 14,000 people, and a TV audience on Fox Sports of almost 250,000, shows there’s strong devotion to netball.

‘We’ve been No.1 in the world since the moment rankings came. But the sport hasn’t come close to merchandising what should sit with that.’

Kelly Ryan

Which is important as all codes clamor for young participants.

According to AusPlay data in 2021, netball remains the leading team sport for women and girls in Australia. Netball had 601,165 participants aged 15 or over and 318,243 participants aged under 14.

According to NA, internal registration data for 2022 suggests participation levels are on track to match, if not exceed, those of 2019 before the pandemic.

“We’re competing with a lot of different sports,” Diamonds captain Liz Watson says. “AFLW, that’s becoming huge. We want to make sure we’re investing in our girls coming through. They need to see that’s our national sport and not lose them at 15, 16 years of age.”

There’s also an ambitious eye on inclusion at the Brisbane Olympics, although former AOC president John Coates has said the IOC prefers sports that can be played by men and women. Bids will be made in 2025 with an answer the following year.

Much like rugby sevens, it could attract a generation of women athletes.

Unlike other codes, particularly the Wallabies and Socceroos, the future of netball remains in the strength of its domestic league, not of its national team.

If Super Netball can replicate the nightclub-like scenes at the NEC Arena this week, with stadiums packed with fans having the time of their lives, you sense the code is going to be OK.

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Gold medals never hurt, though. The Diamonds will play England in the semifinal on Saturday morning, local time.

“Does winning gold mean money falls from the sky?” Ryan says. “Definitely not. It doesn’t change where the sport is positioned: we’ve been No.1 in the world since the moment rankings came. But the sport hasn’t come close to merchandising what should sit with that. That hasn’t materialized. We need to tell the story of how good netball is.”

Get all the latest news from the Birmingham Commonwealth Games here. We’ll be live blogging the action from 4pm-10am daily.

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US

Breaking down the week in American extremism

Categories
Technology

Aussie gamer girl Madeline Watson beats men at Call of Duty

A young Australian gamer who has more than half a million TikTok followers has revealed how men react when they realize they’ve been defeated by a woman in Call Of Duty.

Madeline Watson, from Adelaide, who’s known as ‘JustMaddyx’ online, has been a full-time Twitch streamer since 2020 and in her first year made nearly $70,000.

The 24-year-old said most people don’t expect women to be gamers in the male-dominated industry – but she doesn’t take any vile comments from men personally.

‘I have a thick skin and find it funny most of the time, but sometimes I bite back,’ she told FEMAIL.

The young streamer said she’s both a nerdy and girly because she enjoys wearing nice clothes, going to the hair salon, getting her nails done – and gaming.

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Young Australian gamer Madeline Watson (pictured) has more than 559,000 TikTok followers and has shared how men react when they realize she's a female gamer

Young Australian gamer Madeline Watson (pictured) has more than 559,000 TikTok followers and has shared how men react when they realize she’s a female gamer

In an industry that's prominently male dominated, Maddy, 24, told FEMAIL others don't expect women to be gamers, but doesn't take any negative comments from men personally

In an industry that’s prominently male dominated, Maddy, 24, told FEMAIL others don’t expect women to be gamers, but doesn’t take any negative comments from men personally

Maddy exposed some of the comments she’s received from players of the opposite sex while sharing videos to her 559,000 TikTok followers.

‘The typical comment is “go back to the kitchen” because people think this [gaming] it’s just a man’s thing to do,’ Maddy said.

After hearing the ‘kitchen joke’ one too many times, Maddy snapped at one male gamer.

‘If people are going to throw the kitchen joke out there, shouldn’t you by mowing the lawn? It’s overgrown – just like your p**es,’ she said in a viral video.

Maddy said she ‘doesn’t really care’ what other say to her and it doesn’t impact her.

‘A lot of people are supportive, but some can be rude and likely would never say anything in person.

‘Their reactions are always good and makes for funny content.’

Another male gamer recently lost it when he realized he was losing a game of Call Of Duty to a woman.

‘You’re not f***ing good Maddy. You’re just a girl and I hope you f***ing…,’ the furious male gamer said, before Maddy interjected.

‘Wow, that’s pretty toxic bro. You sound kind of mad.’

‘Make me a sandwich you b****,’ the man smoked.

Maddy replied: ‘You wish bro, you f***ing wish.’

'The typical comment is "go back to the kitchen" because people think this [gaming] is just a man's thing to do,' Maddy said, adding that she 'doesn't really care' what other say to her and it doesn't mentally impact her

‘The typical comment is ‘go back to the kitchen’ because people think this [gaming] is just a man’s thing to do,’ Maddy said, adding that she ‘doesn’t really care’ what other say to her and it doesn’t mentally impact her

Maddy grew up playing games with her brothers – including Pokémon, Animal Crossing, Game Boy and Mario Kart – and is also a competitive person.

During her childhood Maddy used to play with action figures – not Barbie dolls – and describes herself as a ‘tomboy’.

For the young Twitch streamer, video games are help her escape from reality and has help her cope mentally.

Today Maddy mainly plays multi-player PC games – her favorite being Call of Duty – but also dabbles into Apex, The Sims and Tarkov.

She prefers playing PC games due to the high quality for the video content.

'I've always enjoyed gaming for as long as I can remember and started out playing Game Boy,' Maddy said.  Being a full-time online streamer isn't all fun and games - it requires hours if work seated at the desk

‘I’ve always enjoyed gaming for as long as I can remember and started out playing Game Boy,’ Maddy said. Being a full-time online streamer isn’t all fun and games – it requires hours if work seated at the desk

Being a full-time online streamer isn’t all fun and games – it requires hours if work seated at the desk.

Maddy streams for a minimum of four hours and can continue for up to 12 hours at a time. On one occasion she was up until 6am.

‘The most difficult part of this career is not having a stable sleep schedule, which can take a mental toll and be exhausting sometimes,’ she said.

A home gaming setup can quickly add up to hundreds if not thousands of dollars in equipment.

'The most difficult part of this career is not having a stable sleep schedule, which can take a mental toll and be exhausting sometimes,' she said

‘The most difficult part of this career is not having a stable sleep schedule, which can take a mental toll and be exhausting sometimes,’ she said

Majority of her friends know about her online success and she's been able to meet new gaming friends from around the world

Majority of her friends know about her online success and she’s been able to meet new gaming friends from around the world

Prior to gaming full-time, Maddy used to work at Telstra and enrolled in a beauty course which Covid ‘ruined’.

‘I had to practice on other people but couldn’t because of Covid so I chose not to continue,’ she said.

Today Maddy lives out of home and is able to fully support herself from her gaming income.

The majority of her mates know about her success and she’s been able to meet new gaming friends from around the world.

What does Maddy do as a video game streamer?

Maddy starts her day with a morning coffee and feeds her two pets

She then does her content work by responds to messages, emails and plans the content she’s going to make that day

Next, she’ll do her makeup and record or edit any videos as needed for TikTok and YouTube

The videos are then uploaded

Her Twitch streaming videos often start in the afternoon or night for a minimum of four hours

When asked how others can get into gaming and Twitch streaming, Maddy recommends simply ‘giving it a crack’ and making sure you have a decent setup.

‘There’s no reason why you wouldn’t be able to do it. if you don’t give it a go, you’ll never know,’ she said.

But she warned to be prepared to spend money on a decent step up and don’t quit your job until you’re making decent money.

Watch Maddy beat others when gaming by visiting her YouTube channel here.

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Categories
Sports

Wallabies team announced to play Argentina in first match of 2022 The Rugby Championship in Mendoza

Tom Wright has been preferred to Jordan Petaia at No.15 for the Wallabies’ Rugby Championship Test opener against Argentina on Sunday AEST while Dave Rennie has pulled a move so far unseen in his 23 previous Tests in charge.

Rennie, bracing for a physical assault from Michael Cheika’s Argentina, has opted for a 6-2 bench split for the first time as Wallabies coach, leaving Reece Hodge and Jake Gordon as the only backline options to enter the fray.

That appears a risky move at any time but considering the number of injuries suffered by Australia’s backs already this year – Samu Kerevi the latest victim earlier this week – Rennie will be walking a high wire in Mendoza.

Rennie will hold a media conference at 8.30am AEST on Friday to discuss his selections.

As reported earlier in the week, Jed Holloway will make his Wallabies debut at No.6 while Melbourne prop Matt Gibbon is on the verge of a fairytale debut backing up James Slipper.

Gordon was the No.9 bench option behind Nic White for the first two Tests against England but Tate McDermott, who has had some minutes as a winger when required during Super Rugby, played in the decider.

Wright steps into a problematic position for Rennie having spent some time there in the Brisbane Test after the concussion suffered by Petaia, who was ruled out of game three, where Hodge wore the No.15 jersey. Tom Banks broke his arm in the Perth game while Andrew Kellaway was injured in training and is still sidelined.

“If that opportunity arises again, I’ll definitely take it with both hands,” Wright said this week when asked about the prospect of being named as No.15.

“I was given an opportunity there through someone else’s misfortune. It will be good to have Jordie back in the mix of selection, and we’re only going to be better off for it as a team, but fullback is something that excites me – you get a few different looks at getting the ball in different parts of the field.”

Holloway has been close to selection and would have played against England but for a calf injury.

The Waratahs flanker will add extra height in the lineout along with Darcy Swain who returns after suspension, and Matt Philip as the locks. Rory Arnold, called up as one of three allowed overseas picks, misses out after a slight calf strain, with Nick Frost on the bench.

Former Argentina center Marcelo Bosch is the special guest with Roar experts Brett McKay and Harry Jones as they preview the Wallabies’ TRC campaign. Listen here or find us on your podcast app of choice.

Quade Cooper returns after missing the entire England series with a calf strain to guide the team from No.10 with Hunter Paisami, as expected, alongside Len Ikitau at inside centre.

Hodge is well-regarded by Rennie for his versatility and can play anywhere from flyhalf out in a pinch.

Gibbon was called up after an impressive performance in the Australia A games in Fiji and following injuries to Angus Bell and Scott Sio in the England series.

Gibbon was involved in a Wallabies camp ahead of the 2019 World Cup and has subsequently undergone a shoulder reconstruction.

The 6-2 bench split means there is no spot for Reds stars James O’Connor and Suli Vunivalu, who made their debut in the dying embers of the Ella-Mobbs Cup decider, while Jock Campbell also must bid his time.

“We’ve had a strong week of preparation over here in Argentina and we are highly motivated to put on a performance that makes our supporters proud back home in Australia,” said Rennie in a statement from RA.

“It’s an extremely special occasion for Jed, Matt and their families and it’s up to the rest of us to make sure it’s a positive memory on their Test debuts.

“Argentina will be full of confidence after their home series win over Scotland and we know we’ll need to be at our best to get a good result on Saturday afternoon.”

Meanwhile Argentina’s coach Michael Cheika made nine changes to the starting team that scored a dramatic late win over Scotland to clinch their July series against Scotland.

Six changes of the changes are in the Argentina forwards where Julian Montoya returns as captain after a back injury to replace Agustin Creevy. .

Forwards Thomas Gallo, Joel Sclavi, Guido Petti, Santiago Grondona and Facundo Isa missed out on starting spots to Manuel Tetaz Chaparro, Francisco Gomez, Matias Alemanno, Juan Martin Gonzalez Samso and Marcos Kremer.

In the backs, Tomas Cubelli replaces Lautaro Bazan Velez, at No.9 Jeronimo de la Fuente is in at 12 for Matias Moroni and Santiago Cordero is named at 14 wing instead of Bautista Delguy.

Wallabies team to play Argentina at the Estadio Malvinas, Mendoza, Sunday, 5.10am AEST

1. James Slipper (117 Tests)

2. Folau Fainga’a (28 Tests)

3. Allan Alaalatoa (55 Tests)

4. Darcy Swain (11 Tests)

5. Matt Philip (23 Tests)

6. Jed Holloway*

7. Michael Hooper (c) (121 Tests)

8. Rob Valetini (21 Tests)

9. Nick White (50 Tests)

10. Quade Cooper (75 Tests)

11. Marika Koroibete (45 Tests)

12. Hunter Paisami (17 Tests)

13. Len Ikitau (15 Tests)

14. Jordan Petaia (18 Tests)

15. Tom Wright (12 Tests)

replacements

16. Lachlan Lonergan (4 Tests)

17. Matt Gibbon*

18. Taniela Tupou (40 Tests)

19. Nick Frost (2 Tests)

20. Rob Leota (9 Tests)

21. Pete Samu (22 Tests)

22. Jake Gordon (12 Tests)

23. Reece Hodge (55 Tests)

*denotes uncapped

Argentina (1-15): 1 Nahuel T. Chaparro, 2 Julian Montoya (c), 3 Francisco Gomez Kodela, 4 Matias Alemanno, 5 Tomas Lavanini, 6 Juan Martin Gonzalez, 7 Marcos Kremer, 8 Pablo Matera, 9 Tomas Cubelli, 10 Santiago Carreras, 11 Emiliano Boffelli , 12 Jeronimo De La Fuente, 13 Matias Orlando, 14 Santiago Cordero, 15 Juan Cruz Mallia.

Reservations: 16 Agustin Creevy, 17 Mayvo Vivas, 18 Joel Sclavi, 19 Santiago Grondona, 20 Rodrigo Bruni, 21 Lautaro Bazan Velez, 22 Tomas Albornoz, 23 Matias Moroni.

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US

Abandoned mines and poor oversight worsened Kentucky flooding, attorneys say

As eastern Kentuckians continue to search for missing loved ones, muck out their homes and prepare for more rain, they are beginning to ask who could be at fault for this past week’s deadly flooding and whether it was a natural disaster or one caused by the coal mines that have drastically reshaped and scarred the landscape.

Compacted dirt, destroyed mountaintops and deforestation in eastern Kentucky have often been left ignored by the coal companies that mined there, despite legal requirements that they attempt to return the land to its natural state when mining concludes. In recent decades, that spurned responsibility has, at times, turned heavy rains into floods and caused local residents who once counted on mining for jobs and prosperity to bring litigation against their former employers in Appalachian courtrooms.

Lawyers who have pursued these cases in the past said it is still too early to pursue a case in the most recent flooding, as studies need to be conducted and claimants contacted, but interest in holding someone to account for the lost homes and at least 37 dead is growing.

“It may be too early to tell, but I’ve received a couple phone calls already,” said Ned Pillersdorf, a Kentucky lawyer in Prestonburg who has successfully sued coal companies for flood damage in the past. “No one is denying the amount of rain we had — it truly was a 1,000 year event — but did the strip mines contribute? Absolutely.”

Kentucky, particularly the eastern mountains, are littered with abandoned coal mines. Many are a result of strip mining or mountaintop removal mining, the latter a method in which mining companies use explosives to blast off a mountain’s summit to get to the coal inside.

Pillersdorf, whose home was flooded, noted that the areas worst hit in his county are the ones closest to the strip mines.

“It is obviously just a clear slam dunk in terms of corporate irresponsibility,” said Alex Gibson, the executive director of Appalshop, the culture and education center in Whitesburg that was hit by more than 6 feet of water. “And of how we can predict an outcome and ignore all the signs along the way until the tragedy happens and then act like, ‘Yeah, but we didn’t see it coming. It was God’s work.'”

The Kentucky Coal Association, which represents the state’s mining operations, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The loss of the natural ridge lines, vegetation and trees, and the cracks in the mountains that are largely owned by companies often funnels rainwater into the thin valleys, or low-lying hollows, where most eastern Kentuckians make their homes.

Without these natural protections, regional flooding has grown as climate change brings new levels of precipitation up from the Gulf Coast to Appalachia.

“They’re saying it’s a natural disaster, but I’m sorry. This is a disaster that was made by a whole bunch of mining that’s been going on for the past 40 years,” said Jack Spadero, the former director of the National Mine Health and Safety Academy who has testified as an expert witness in numerous coal mine lawsuits in recent years.“It has changed the landscape of eastern Kentucky dramatically.”

‘Like pulling teeth’

The Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act of 1977, or SMCRA, was a federal regulation that was supposed to prevent coal companies from leaving abandoned mines behind. The law required mine owners to reclaim the land and return it to its natural form as much as possible. In the ensuing 45 years, many companies have avoided that work and many states in the region, like Kentucky, turned a blind eye to it.

Now, there are more than 2,800 entries for Kentucky in the national inventory of known-abandoned mine land, according to a Department of Interior database, and much of it is located in the state’s eastern hill country. Experts also said that the number in the inventory is likely a conservative figure and that recent coal company banks have made it more difficult to pursue accountability.

SMCRA required every state to enforce the financial responsibility and claim obligation of the coal mine operators in their state. While some states required mining companies to pay claim costs upfront, others — like Kentucky — allowed them to put up a bond for the potential costs. In the past, small companies in Kentucky were allowed to create a pooled fund, while larger ones were able to self-bond, but the majority were done through a third party.

“There are surety companies that are holding these bonds, which are woefully inadequate to do the real claim work, but many are even fighting to turn over those bonds, so it’s like pulling teeth,” said Joe Childers, who has litigated cases for vulnerable Kentuckians against major energy companies for more than 40 years. “In the meantime, nothing gets done. The hillsides are scarred, they’re not reclaimed and you get a rain event like last week and you have terrible flooding. And it was totally exacerbated by the lack of proper regulation.”

Image: An aerial view of eastern Kentucky on July 30, 2022.
An aerial view of eastern Kentucky on July 30.Kentucky National Guard / via AFP – Getty Images

Since 2013, Kentucky requires companies to pay into a single bond pool through what essentially serves as a tax on a certain amount of acreage or coal tonnage. But the difference between the liabilities that were left behind and the trust fund the state created in 2013 has grown significantly.

John Mura, a spokesperson for The Kentucky Energy and Environment Cabinet, said by email that the state agency was “engaged right now organizing cabinet aid” to the affected areas and declined to comment further.

About 408,000 Kentuckians live within one mile of abandoned mine land, the regional think tank Ohio River Valley institute estimated last year, and it will cost nearly $1.2 billion to remediate it. As of 2020, the Kentucky fund had about $52 million in it, according to a state report.

Kentucky spent a little more than $1.5 million from its claim fund, according to the 2022 executive budget. The state is expected to receive an additional $75 million this year as part of President Joe Biden’s infrastructure law, which dedicated $11.3 billion toward abandoned mine claim over the next 15 years. Last year, the state received $9 million from the federal government.

The new sum is huge, but “it’s just a drop in the bucket” to address the need for communities across Appalachia, said Sarah Surber, a public health professor at Wayne State University who has studied environmental justice issues in the region and practiced law there for more than a decade.

“How do you prioritize [the funding]?” she said. “You have so many that have been left abandoned or sitting in limbo, you have more coal mine company bankruptcies anticipated, so how do you decide what mines get reclaimed and what does that mean for communities and their protection in terms of pollution and flooding issues?

Lawsuit challenges

Kevin Thompson, an attorney whose work earned national attention for challenging powerful coal CEO Don Blankenship, said the images he saw out of Kentucky this past week gave him flashbacks to the 2009 King Coal case he worked on in West Virginia and the photographs he took of the days after the flooding that happened there.

That case brought 20 low-income families against four powerful companies that Thompson argued were responsible for two flooding incidents that washed away people’s homes.

Categories
Technology

Tecno Camon 19 Pro 5G launching soon in India

Tecno recently launched the Spark 9T in India, and the next smartphone it will introduce in the country is the Camon 19 Pro 5G. Tecno hasn’t revealed the Camon 19 Pro 5G’s launch date yet, but it said the smartphone is “coming soon.”

We don’t know about the Tecno Camon 19 Pro 5G’s Indian price either, but we know what the smartphone has to offer since it’s already available in other markets. The Camon 19 Pro 5G is powered by the Dimensity 810 SoC, runs Android 12-based HiOS 8.6 and has two memory options – 8GB/128GB and 8GB/256GB.

The smartphone’s built around a 6.8″ FullHD+ 120Hz LCD with a centered punch hole for the 16MP selfie camera. Around the back, it has a 64MP primary camera joined by 2MP macro and 2MP depth units. The main camera has OIS and uses an RGBW+ G+P lens, advertised to increase the light intake by more than 208%.

Tecno Camon 19 Pro 5G launching soon in India

The rest of the Tecno Camon 19 Pro 5G’s highlights include a side-mounted fingerprint reader, NFC, USB-C, and 3.5mm headphone jack. Keeping the entire package up and running is a 5,000 mAh battery with 33W charging.

Tecno also launched a 4G model of the Camon 19 Pro, powered by the Helio G96 SoC. It swaps the 2MP macro unit with a 50MP telephoto camera and the 16MP selfie shooter with a 32MP camera.

You can read our Tecno Camon 19 Pro 4G’s detailed review here to learn more about it or watch the video review linked below.

Categories
Sports

Gauff halts Osaka comeback in thrilling San Jose encounter

In a battle between two young superstars, it was Coco Gauff who bested Naomi Osaka on Thursday night to reach the quarterfinals of the Mubadala Silicon Valley Classic.

The 18-year old pulled off a 6-4 6-4 victory, as she went toe-to-toe with the former World No.1 in a highly anticipated encounter. Gauff looked poised and confident in the opening set, whereas Osaka showed shades of rust. The Japanese superstar was lacking competitive match play, after losing in the first round of this year’s Roland Garros and skipping the entire grass-court season, including Wimbledon.

Regardless, it was Gauff who maintained a good rhythm as she hit five aces and won 13 of 14 points behind her powerful first serve. The Roland Garros runner-up did not face a break point in the opening set, and required only one break of serve to clinch the first set.

With momentum on her side, Gauff quickly obtained another break as she raced to a 3-1 lead in the second set. The World No.11 extended her lead to 5-1, and soon had three match points at 40-0. It was here that Osaka’s championship pedigree kicked in, as the four-time Grand Slam champion fought back to erase four match points and keep her hopes for her alive.


To the shock of the crowd, Osaka broke back, saving seven match points in total as she reduced toe deficit to 4-5. However, Gauff would not be denied, finally sealing the victory on her eighth time of asking, putting the one and a half hour contest to an end.

The sixth seed now faces another dangerous threat in Spaniard Paula Badosa, who battled past American qualifier Elizabeth Mandlik to reach the quarterfinals.

=https://twitter.com/WTA/status/1555399150879051778″ data-service=”twitter”>

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US

Indiana lawmakers comment on first state abortion ban since Roe overturned

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Indiana lawmakers approved a near-total ban on abortion Friday, making the state the first in the nation to pass sweeping limits on access to the procedure since the US Supreme Court struck down Roe v. Wade.

The Republican-dominated state Senate passed the legislation in a 28-19 vote that had divided GOP legislators over how far the ban should go. Before Gov. Eric Holcomb (R) signed the bill into law on Friday, some GOP members had expressed support for allowing abortion in cases of rape and incest, while others opposed the bill because of those exceptions.

The measure, which will go into effect Sept. 15, allows abortion only in cases of rape, incest, lethal fetal abnormality or when the procedure is necessary to prevent severe health risks or death. Here’s what some state officials said on the ban:

“The body inside the mom’s body is not her body. Let me repeat that: The body inside of the mom’s body is not her body of her. Not her body of her, not her choice of her, ”said Jacob, to staunch abortion opponent who supported removing exceptions including for rape.

“Trying to end all abortion is not forced birth, but rather it is trying to end murdering children,” he said on the floor.

“Sir, I am not a murderer. And my sisters are not murderers, either,” she said.

Pack told the chamber she had an abortion in 1990 while serving in the army, according to the Indianapolis Star. “We are pro-choice. That is what we are,” she added. “We believe we have command over our own bodies.”

“I think we’ve landed in a great place and good policy for the state of Indiana,” said McNamara, who sponsored the House bill. She told reporters the ban “makes Indiana one of the most pro-life states in the nation.”

Indiana passes near-total abortion ban, the first state to do so post-Roe

Bohacek, who voted against the bill, could not finish his testimony as he spoke about his daughter, who has Down syndrome, and his concerns about protecting rape victims with disabilities. “If she loses her favorite stuffed animal, she she’s inconsolable,” he said. “Imagine making her carry a child to term,” he said before choking up and stepping away.

Pryor referenced the recent case of a 10-year-old rape victim who had to travel to Indiana for the procedure because abortions are now banned in Ohio after six weeks. “I just don’t understand why we would force a baby, really at 10, to have a baby,” Pryor said.

“By closing abortion clinics and limiting abortions to only the most heartbreaking instances, we are making massive strides for the pro-life movement,” said Leising, who called Friday “a monumental day,” according to WRTV in Indianapolis. She said the ban should be “combined with funding increases directed toward pregnancy services and easing the financial burden of adoption.”

“Eight of us in this chamber have ever had the possibility of becoming pregnant, yet we are about to tell millions of Hoosier women what they can do with their bodies,” she said.

Breaux described the legislation as an infringement on democracy, “Women should have the right to make these decisions in consultation with their doctors, not their state legislators,” she wrote in a tweet.

Vermilion condemned fellow Republicans for describing women who obtain abortions as murderers. “I think that the Lord’s promise is for grace and kindness,” she said, according to the Associated Press. “He would not be jumping to condemn these women.”

“Following the overturning of Roe, I stated clearly that I would be willing to support legislation that made progress in protecting life,” he said in a statement. After days of hearings and testimony, he said the legislation “and its carefully negotiated exceptions” addressed “some of the unthinkable circumstances a woman or unborn child might face.”

“I am personally most proud of each Hoosier who came forward to courageously share their views in a debate that is unlikely to cease any time soon,” Holcomb added.

Amy Cheng and Kim Bellware contributed to this report.

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Sports

schedule, events, times, Australians in action, medal tally, Eleanor Patterson high jump, lawn bowls, Diamonds vs England

Australia will have plenty of chances to add to its gold medal tally early on Saturday night [AEST] as the action gets underground on Day 9 of the Commonwealth Games.

Australia was on top of the Commonwealth Games medal tally with 50 golds, with England closing in on 47 but that was before Saturday’s events got underway.

Now the Australians have hit 54, with four gold medals in the opening hours. Read on for a full wrap and live coverage of Day 9’s action!

MEDAL TALLY: Aussies JUST in front as Comm Games race comes down to the wire

DAY 8 WRAP: ‘National disgrace’ rocks Comm Games as Hockeyroos survive penalty shootout scare

Australia benefits from BIZZARE rule | 00:29

LAWN BOWLS

Australia could pocket up to 11 more gold medals on Saturday, with Kristina Krstic and Ellen Ryan taking home the first in stunning fashion in the final women’s pairs lawn bowls.

England’s Sophie Tolchard and Amy Pharaoh led at 11-2 at one point but the Aussies refused to go away and won on the final bowl in dramatic fashion.

England skipped out to an early 2-0 lead and threatened to make it 4-0 but a brilliant final bowl from Ellen Ryan knocked two of her rival’s balls out of the way to level it at 2-2.

England responded though with two solid ends to reassert its dominance and kept going from there to take an 11-2 lead but Australia roared back in epic fashion to get it back to 11-10.

Ellen Ryan and Kristina Krstic of Team Australia react during Women's Pairs - Gold Medal Match.  (Photo by Stephen Pond/Getty Images)
Ellen Ryan and Kristina Krstic of Team Australia react during Women’s Pairs – Gold Medal Match. (Photo by Stephen Pond/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

The Aussie duo kept up the fight, picking up four points on the 13th end to lead 16-12 before England pegged it back and was up 18-17.

Krstic and Ryan though were on the brink of gold medal glory with two leading balls on the 18th end, only for Pharaoh to knock one out with a brilliant bowl on the final ball.

It meant the game finished a draw and would instead go into overtime to decide who would take home the gold.

England was in the commanding position with a few balls left but a pinpoint bowl from Ryan knocked the jack away and kept Australia in with a chance.

Once again it went down to the last ball, with Australia’s gold medal hopes resting on Ryan’s shoulders.

And she came up clutch with a stunning shot to knock England’s leading ball out of the way, sealing gold in a thrilling comeback.

ATHLETICS

‘That is breathtaking’: Comm Games record broken in 10,000m stunner

The gold rush has continued on the track, with Jemima Montag taking out the women’s 10,000m walk in a dominant display.

“That was absolutely breathtaking,” Channel 7’s Jason Richardson said.

Montag paced herself brilliantly throughout the walk and then picked up the pace in the latter stages of the race to get in a comfortable position.

So comfortable that Montag could start celebrating well before she crossed the finish line for gold with a time of 42:34:00 — a new personal best and Commonwealth Games record.

“That was surreal,” Montag told Channel 7 post race.

Jemima Montag of Team Australia celebrates after winning the gold medal. (Photo by David Ramos/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

“You just sort of pretend everyone’s clapping for you, even if they’re clapping for the high jump or the hammer throwers walking in and anytime there’s self-doubt, it really gives you a boost.

“I feel like I’m continuing the legacy of really strong Australian race walking and to go back-to-back, winning on the Gold Coast four years ago really changed my life. I didn’t think that at the time but I think with hindsight it did, it set in that self-belief. I have big dreams for two more Olympic games. So today was a special moment.”

Fellow Australian Rebecca Henderson finished fourth and Katie Hayward placed seventh.

Aussie world champ toppled in upset

There was a surprise result on track, with Eleanor Pattersonthe reigning world champion, missing out on gold in the women’s high jump final.

Patterson was coming off a brilliant win at the World Championships and became the first to clear 1.89m in a strong opening to the final.

In the end though she missed three attempts at 1.95m, the top result set by Jamaica’s Lamara Distin, who won gold with Patterson taking the silver medal.

Nicola Olyslagers was initially going to join her but with drawn from the final with a torn calf.

“It could be a few weeks and if I jumped today it was possible to be a nine-month injury,” the 2018 Commonwealth Games bronze medalist told Channel 7.

Australia’s Eleanor Patterson missed out on gold. (Photo by Ben Stansall / AFP)Source: AFP

Elsewhere, Julie Charlton will also be competing in the women’s F55-57 shot put final while there will be four Australians going for gold in the women’s 10km race walk final at 7.30pm.

Later at 8.50pm, ben buckingham and Edward Trippas will be going for gold in the men’s 3000m steeplechase final.

The final shot at gold comes in the men’s 1500m final, with Ollie Hoare in action and looking to secure ultimate redemption after a disappointing exit from the world championships.

Hoare was the fastest Australian qualifier after finishing first in heat one with a time of 3:37.57.

Other highlights include the women’s and men’s 4x100m relay heats.

There are lots of high-stakes events too with alex hulley (hammer throw), Sarah Carly (400m hurdles), Catriona Bisset (800m) and Ella Connolly (200m) in their own ends.

GYMNASTICS

The golds kept coming in gymnastics, with Alexandra Kiroi Bogatyreva taking out the rhythmic gymnastics clubs final with a score of 29,400.

Kiroi-Bogatyreva was also in action earlier in the ball final, placing fifth with a score of 28,600 and will be in the final ribbon later in the night.

Eighteen-year-old Lydia Iakovleva will also be in the rhythmical gymnastics hoop final after finish seventh (107.150) in the all-around final on Friday.

netball

The ultimate grudge match sees Australia’s Diamonds face England in the netball semi-final. You can read Nat Medhurt’s full preview ahead of the fiery semi-final here, with the game set to begin at 11.30pm.

If Australia is successful, it is Jamaica they will face in the end.

Jamaica’s stunning run continued as they dominated the Silver Ferns to take a 67-51 win and book their spot in the gold medal match for the first time at the Commonwealth Games.

Jamaica were the surprise top qualifiers in their pool after shocking Australia and it looks like

the Diamonds will again need to try to find a way to shut down Jhaniele Fowler.

The world’s best shooter dominated in Jamaica’s 57-55 win over Australia in the pool stage, finishing that match with 47 goals from 50 attempts and was even better against New Zealand.

The West Coast Fever star shot a perfect 54 goals from 54 attempts in the win.

Jhaniele Fowler starred in the win. (Photo by Mark Kolbe/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

TABLE TENNIS

Two Australian pairs (chunyi feng & Yangzi Liu and Jian Fang Lay & minhyung jee) were both successful in their Round of 16 matches for the women’s doubles table tennis.

They will face Singapore and Nigeria respectively in the quarter-finals at 1am.

Later in the night, Liu will continue her bid to become the first Australian woman to win a Commonwealth Games singles medal when she competes in the semi-final.

There will be guaranteed gold in the morning too, with an All-Australian for table tennis final between Li Na Lei and qian yang.

BOXING

There are lots of medals up for grabs in the ring, withfive Australians into the semi-finals. first-up, kaye scott is through to the gold medal fight after winning her women’s light middleweight boxing semi-final against Alcinda Helena Panguane on points.

Callum Peters will also put on the gloves for the men’s middleweight semi-final later in the night at 9.15pm, taking on Simnikiwe Bongco.

Edgardo Coumi is in action at 2am against Lewis Williams of England in the men’s heavyweight division while Australian middleweight Caitlyn Anne Parker faces Tammara Thibeault.

History will be made on Sunday morning regardless of the result as tina rahimi becomes Australia’s first Muslim woman boxer to take home a medal at the Games.

She will fight Elizabeth Oshoba in her featherweight semi-final.

DIVING

The swimming may be over but there was more success in the pool for Australia as Annabelle Smith and Madison Smith claimed gold in the women’s 3m synchronized springboard diving final.

Later on, the women’s synchronized 10m platform final sees Emily Boyd, Nikita Hayes, Charlie Petrov and Melissa Wu all in action.

CRICKET

There is plenty to look forward to in the early hours of Saturday morning too, with Australia’s women’s T20 cricket side battling New Zealand in a semi-final at 3am.

VOLLEYBALL

A dominant quarter-final performance has Mariafe Artacho del Solar and Taliqua Clancy one step closer to gold.

Their next challenge will be Vanuatu in the women’s beach volleyball semi-final at 6am.

HOCKEY

There will be more semi-final action, with Australia up against longtime rival England in the men’s hockey, with the time for that game to be confirmed.

SQUASH

There is plenty of action on the squash court too, kicking off with cameron pilly & Rhys Dowling and Zack Alexander & ryan cuskelly in the men’s doubles quarter-finals.

The mixed doubles semi-finals later in the day will feature donna lobban and pilley while Jess Turnbull and Alex Haydon team up in the mixed doubles plate quarter-final.

wrestling

There is lots to look forward to in wrestling too, with Naomi DeBruine (women’s 50kg, women’s 53kg and women’s 76kg) in action along with justin holland (men’s 57kg) and Tom Barnes (men’s 74kg, men’s 97kg).

FULL SCHEDULE — DAY 9

Lawn Bowls and Para Lawn Bowls, 5.30pm

Hockey, 6:00 p.m.

Netball, 6.00pm

Table Tennis and Para Table Tennis, 6.30pm

Athletics and Para Athletics, 7.00pm

Diving, 7.00pm

Rhythmic Gymnastics, 7.00pm

Boxing, 7.30pm

Wrestling, 7:30 p.m.

Badminton, 8:00 p.m.

Cricket T20, 8.00pm

Squash, 9.00pm

Boxing, 11.30pm

Netball, 11.30pm

Follow all the action live below! Can’t see it? Click here!

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