The Issue Is Podcast: Sen. Alex Padilla; Areva Martin and Jennifer Horn
The Issue Is Podcast: The Issue Is is a weekly show that airs on FOX 11 Friday nights at 10:30 PM and on several stations throughout California.
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We take on discussions and debates with top newsmakers about the most controversial and interesting issues impacting the state, hosted by FOX 11's Elex Michaelson. For showtimes and more information, go to TheIssueIsShow.com.
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The Issue Is Podcast contains the audio from the broadcast and often includes extended interviews of the guests we have on the show. The podcast is available on iTunes, Google Podcasts, Spotify, and Audioboom.
Host Elex Michaelson also co-anchors FOX 11 News weeknights at 5 p.m. and 10 p.m. with Christine Devine. He co-hosts the "FOX 11 Special Report" with Marla Tellez weeknights at 6 p.m.
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Forbes
2 hours ago
- Forbes
American iPhones Maybe Targeted In Spyware Attacks
Were iPhones really attacked? A new report from the team at iVerify warns that a 'previously unknown' vulnerability in iOS maybe enabled a highly targeted attack on iPhones in the U.S. as well as Europe. This flaw was not in the core messaging architecture itself, but in its nickname feature. 'Any increase in the size of a codebase is going to introduce attack opportunities,' iVerify told me. And that's the case here. When a user updates their profile, 'nickname, photo, or wallpaper,' this triggers "a 'Nickname Update' on a recipient's device." Trivial though it might seem, that nickname update process is a data transmission from one device to another, it's implicitly trusted data and it's within the secure enclave. 'This vulnerability was present in iOS versions up to 18.1.1 and fixed in iOS 18.3.1.' While there's no doubting the flaw and the fix, there is no concrete proof it was exploited in the wild. 'We analyzed crash data from nearly 50,000 devices," iVerify says, "and found that the imagent crashes related to Nickname Updates are exceedingly rare, comprising less than 0.001% of all crash logs collected.' But those rare instances appeared only on 'devices belonging to individuals likely to be targeted by sophisticated threat actors.' Sometimes, Occam's Razor really does apply. Those high-risk individuals were affiliated with 'political campaigns, media organizations, tech companies, and governments in the EU and U.S.' Delete All Texts On Your Phone That Look Like This These are exactly the type of individuals Apple says should use its Lockdown Mode, which restricts a raft of iPhone features and is intended to shutdown attacks that might otherwise get through. It's unclear whether that would have mitigated this risk — and irrelevant now as it's patched. But it certainly makes an iPhone more secure. 'iOS remains a robust and secure operating system,' iVerify told me. 'iMessage is likely targeted not because it's insecure but instead because it's popular." That said, it's toeing a tricky line between feature-rich messenger and secure comms tool. Signal is better, iVerify says, if you want to really secure your comms with a COTS platform. That said, as we've seen before, iMessage is on all iPhones and is almost never disabled, and so if there is a working zero-click attack, it will likely get through. On that note, 'Signal is open source,' iVerify says, "which does have security advantages in the sense that it's transparent and therefore easier for researchers to examine. And it's a simple code base, which does reduce the potential attack surface.' Google Confirms Most Gmail Users Must Upgrade Accounts iVerify reports that forensic examination of one affected device "provided evidence suggesting exploitation: several directories related to SMS attachments and message metadata were modified and then emptied just 20 seconds after the imagent crash occurred. This pattern of deleting potential evidence mirrors techniques observed in confirmed spyware attacks where attackers 'clean up' after themselves." But again, this is speculation ands there's no confirmation or attribution, as Apple will be keen to emphasize. While there's 'no smoking gun,' iVerify says, 'definitively proving exploitation exists, when taken together, this body of evidence gives us moderate confidence these crashes indicate targeted exploitation attempts.' I have reached out to Apple for any comments on this report. iMessage has been exploited before and whether or not that's what has happened here, it will remain a target — as will WhatsApp and all other apps and platforms that run on most devices. Exploiting such a vulnerability is the easiest way to compromise an endpoint, as is especially relevant at the moment when it comes to encrypted data. For most users though, your biggest iMessage risks remains texts with malicious lures and crafty links that trick you into clicking. These highly targeted attacks — real or not — should not be a concern. Unpaid tolls and undelivered packages, though…
Yahoo
8 hours ago
- Yahoo
A program for women replacing judgment with compassion
HONOLULU (KHON2) — A Honolulu courtroom is taking a new approach by focusing on support and healing instead of punishment. The Women's Court program helps women get their lives back on track and after a successful pilot program, lawmakers have voted to make it permanent with plans for expansion. New plaque unveiled to honor Queen's Surf Beach For years, Abcede Keawe's life was defined by addiction and arrests. 'I quit trying because every time I try, I fail,' Keawe said. Veronica Hanawahine had also given up hope. 'Something happened and from then on, my life was coming downhill,' she explained. But that all changed when they walked into Judge Trish Morikawa's courtroom where healing, not punishment, took center stage. Morikawa oversees Women's Court, a program offering women convicted of non-violent offenses who have faced trauma, addiction or mental illness a lifeline by leading with support and compassion KHON sat down with Judge Morikawa to discuss the program she created three years ago, which recently became permanent. 'Court tends to be, it should be a negative thing. So it's so nice to have something positive come out of it,' Morikawa said. 'We're extremely grateful to the (legislature) cause it's a great program and you can see the change it's made, and it really saves money.'By empowering these women and teaching them life skills, they become self-sufficient and contributing members of society. Morikawa said candidates are vetted before being accepted into the program. Space is limited to 50, but she says the most they've had is 35. 'I think people get worried that when we give when we do programs like this, you know that we're giving these people a free pass. That's not it at all,' Morikawa explained. 'They're willing to do the work and they need to earn what they're getting.' She said that what many of them have been through is devastating, and they have never been given the support they needed to succeed. 'The sad thing is that a lot of these women have not had a lot of positive affirmations,' Morikawa said. 'They were not the ones who had their artwork on the refrigerator you know, they were not the ones that their parents came to their May Day program.' Download the free KHON2 app for iOS or Android to stay informed on the latest news Hanawahine and Keawe have spent two years rebuilding their lives through the program with every goal met, they're now just weeks away from the moment they've worked so hard for: graduation. 'It was hard work, it was hard work but it was worth it for me,' Hanawahine said. 'It gave me hope to a new life.' Beyond the milestones, they've learned to love themselves, set boundaries, accept their past and show up for others on the same path. 'All those doors that you have closed, those doors can be opened, you are the key to unlocking that door,' Keawe said. Both Keawe and Hanawahine will be graduating from Women's Court in a ceremony at the Supreme Courtroom in front of their family and friends, along with four other women in the program on June 25. Check out more news from around Hawaii Morikawa said Women's Court hopes to help more women across the state and will be starting a pilot program on Hawaiʻi Island. They are also hoping to create an alumni program on Oʻahu to offer support and a sense of community for graduates. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
10 hours ago
- Yahoo
The story behind statue of King Kamehameha I
HONOLULU (KHON2) – In the ahupuaʻa of Honolulu, which lies in the moku of Kona here on Oʻahu, stands a symbol of Hawaiian pride. We are speaking of King Kamehameha I Statue. Kaʻahumanu St, from Downtown Honolulu to Pearl City What was originally proposed to celebrate the 100th anniversary of Captain Cook's arrival to Hawaiʻi, an image of a 45-year-old King Kamehameha I was chosen as a monument promoting Hawaiian national pride. At a cost of $10,000, it was politician Walter Gibson representing Lāhainā who had proposed the idea. Having been started in Boston and completed in Paris, the 7-foot-tall statue left Germany on a ship in August of months later, word reached Hawaiʻi that the ship went down off the coast of Falkland Islands, losing all of its cargo. Following the loss of the original statue, a second statue of King Kamehameha I was commissioned. But to the government's surprise, the original was recovered and arrived in Honolulu a couple months prior to its replacement. Today, there are four. Download the free KHON2 app for iOS or Android to stay informed on the latest news Molded after the marble Roman scultpure of Augustus Ceasar, King Kamehameha is shown as a 'Pacific Hero.' The replacement statue was installed first on Oʻahu in 1883 at its present location fronting Aliʻiōlani Hale. The recovered, original statue was unveiled a couple months later in Kohala on Hawaiʻi Island as it is the King's birthplace. In 1969, following statehood, a statue of the Father of the Hawaiian Kingdom was installed in the US Capitol Statutory Hall. The final statue was installed in Hilo in 1997, which was originally for a hotel on Kauaʻi, but Kauaʻi residents said no because King Kamehameha I failed to conquer them. Did you know? Now you do! Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.