As he lived in a tent and battled to provide for his family, Hussam al-Masri, a Reuters journalist killed by Israeli fire on Monday while running a live video feed at Gaza's Nasser Hospital, covered the suffering of civilians during the conflict. According to journalist colleagues, Masri, 49, was a seasoned cameraman who was well-liked by Gaza's close-knit community of reporters because of his upbeat demeanor in the most perilous circumstances. In the months before his death, he would say, "Tomorrow will be better," despite the fact that the Palestinian enclave was becoming increasingly desolate and hungry. That was the conclusion of his final discussion with Mohamed Salem, a senior Reuters visuals journalist who had collaborated with Masri in Rafah, in southern Gaza, last year and had known him since 2003. Salem, who left Gaza later in 2024 but stayed in daily contact with Masri until Monday morning, said he was a pleasure to work with because of his smiles and o...
Officially described as the US's first law to address the nation's cryptocurrency matters, it is, therefore, entering a significant moment. A still-cited major statute for that formerly fringe business with those sectors emerged after the long-lingering debates on congressional regulation, and $20 million was dumped into the 2020 polls for selected candidates, including Donald Trump. This law sets up a framework for regulating so-called stable coins, a type of cryptocurrency that has asset backing considered reliable, e.g., the dollar. It would be signed into law by Trump on Friday after getting House approval on Thursday, alongside the Senate's approval last month. Known as the Genius Act, it is one of three Trump-supporting bills on cryptocurrencies moving through Washington. The president once called crypto a scam, but his mood shifted after the sector stood behind him, and he became an active participant himself, having business ties involving firms like World Liberty ...