[Psalm 63] A psalm of David. When he was in the Desert of Judah. You, God, are my God, earnestly I seek you; I thirst for you, my whole being longs for you, in a dry and parched land where there is no water.

Psalm 63:1

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The Best Prime Day Vacuum Deals (2025): Dyson, Bissell, Black + Decker


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Supreme Court seems skeptical of conversion therapy ban


The Supreme Court on Tuesday appeared open to a Christian counselor's argument that Colorado's ban on youth conversion therapy hampers her First Amendment right to free speech.

Why it matters: A decision backing the counselor, Kaley Chiles, could force more than 20 states to revisit their bans on the practice, which aims to change sexual orientation and gender identities to align with a person's religious beliefs and has been discredited by leading medical associations.


Zoom in: The conservative Alliance Defending Freedom, which represented Chiles, argued that Colorado didn't consider less-restrictive alternatives to a conversion therapy ban, and that Colorado can't prove the counseling causes harm.

  • "If heightened scrutiny doesn't apply, states can transform counselors into mouthpieces for the government," said ADF's Chief Legal Counselor Jim Campbell.

The other side: Colorado Solicitor General Shannon Stevenson told justices that the state's law doesn't restrict free speech but rather regulates professional conduct.

  • "No one has ever suggested that a doctor has a First Amendment defense to say the wrong advice to their patient," Stevenson said.
  • Colorado's law doesn't apply to life coaches or religious ministers, because they aren't licensed by the state and held to a specific standard of care, she added.
  • "When you're going to see a licensed health care professional ... you're expecting information that is complying with the standard of care and not expecting the practitioner to just be exercising their right to say whatever they want to say," she said.

Conservative justices, who've backed protected speech in past cases, questioned whether Colorado's law put undue restrictions on counselors.

  • "Just because they're engaged in conduct doesn't mean that their words aren't protected," Chief Justice John Roberts said.
  • Justice Samuel Alito also questioned whether medical consensus can be influenced by ideology.

Yes, but: "I'm hopeful that when the dust settles, the Court will recognize that Colorado's law is an ordinary regulatory of a harmful treatment by licesenced medical professionals," Shannon Minter, legal director of the National Center for LGBTQ Rights, told Axios.

Context: The Supreme Court earlier this year ruled in favor of Tennessee's ban on gender-affirming care, on the grounds it was a form of regulating medical care.

  • But justices ruled in 2018 that states could regulate health providers' speech in striking down a California law requiring anti-abortion "crisis pregnancy centers" to provide information about how to obtain the procedure.

A decision in the case is expected this summer.


What to Expect From AT&T's Q3 2025 Earnings Report
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BatShadow Group Uses New Go-Based 'Vampire Bot' Malware to Hunt Job Seekers


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Minnesota PUC approves $6.2B Allete sale to private equity
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Steam is back online after outage


Steam went down on Tuesday. Steamstat.us indicated earlier that the Steam Store, Steam Community and Web API were all down. But it's been all systems go for the better part of the past hour.

Engadget staffers' experience matches that. Earlier, when trying to access the Steam Store on Steam Deck and in the mobile app, only the UI loaded as an empty wrapper. Now everything appears to be loading normally.

At the peak of the outage, Steamstat.us showed over 1.5 million page views in the previous hour. That typically means lots of annoyed gamers are trying to find out why they're having problems. PC Gamer reports that APIs for Valve's first-party games (including Counter-Strike 2 and Deadlock) were also offline earlier.

We'll keep an eye on the situation and update if the problems return.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/pc/steam-is-back-online-after-outage-170514965.html?src=rss

New Study Reveals America's Top Adventure Vacation States


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Mastodon is adding Bluesky-like starter packs


Mastodon, the federated social network built on ActivityPub, is taking cues from Bluesky and introducing its own version of the social platform's "Starter Packs." The hope is that Mastodon's "Packs" will make it easier to find people to follow when you first join a server, a sometimes daunting task given the distributed nature of decentralized social networks.

In comparison to Starter Packs, which let Bluesky users curate a list of accounts that you can follow in one foul swoop, Packs will come with some modifications and improvements. For one thing, Mastodon's nonprofit developer Mastodon gGmbH says that users will have a say in whether they appear in Packs. Packs will be incorporated in the discovery features Mastodon already has, so if you don't want to be included in a Pack, you can just toggle off the existing "Feature profile and posts in discovery algorithms" setting.

The developer also says that there will be a more "neutral" way to remove yourself from a Pack once you're added. On Bluesky, to be removed from a Starter Pack you have to either report the pack or block its creator. According to Mastodon gGmbH, once you're notified you've been added to a Pack, you'll be able to remove yourself in a similar fashion to the way Mastodon lets you remove yourself from Quote Posts.

Mastodon gGmbH says it's collaborating with other Fediverse developers on a Fediverse Enhancement Proposal (FEP), that once completed, will allow the feature to be used by any developer building an app on ActivityPub. Bluesky's feature is one of its better additions to the microblogging format, so it makes sense Mastodon would want to adopt it. In fact it's so good that Meta added a clone of it to Threads late last year.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/social-media/mastodon-is-adding-bluesky-like-starter-packs-182014446.html?src=rss

Two years after Hamas’ Oct. 7 massacre, 48 hostages — dead and alive — remain in captivity


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America's Best-Selling Vehicle Will Likely See Production Delays After a Major Factory Fire


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What Every Business Leader Must Know About Data Management to Avoid a Compliance Nightmare


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Meta makes Facebook Reels more like their Instagram counterparts


Meta is rolling out some serious changes to Facebook Reels to make the experience more like Instagram Reels. First of all, the Reels will now be accompanied by friend bubbles. This shows users which posts their friends like and makes it "easy to start a chat instantly about what you're both interested in." Instagram does something similar and also lets users send Reels as direct messages.

The tool in action.
Meta

The recommendations engine is also getting a refresh, with Meta claiming that it "learns your interests quicker and shows you newer and more relevant Reels." The company says that the new engine recommends 50 percent more reels that have been published that day.

The new algorithm will also take preferred video length into account, as it will recommend Reels that are longer if you've been watching longer content or the opposite. Reels are now accompanied by a "Not Interested" button for improved recommendations.

The search algorithm in action.
Meta

This is 2025, so you know Meta is also throwing some AI into the mix. Reels will now offer AI-powered suggestions for deep dives into particular interests. This is going to be a boon for my dad when he wants to watch hundreds of short Sopranos clips in a single sitting.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/social-media/meta-makes-facebook-reels-more-like-their-instagram-counterparts-180822646.html?src=rss

Borgata Sportsbook promo code: Bet $20, get $100 instantly in bonus bets


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New battery storage facility starts operations in Brazoria County with Tesla equipment


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Mariners vs. Tigers prediction, odds, time: 2025 MLB playoff betting picks for ALDS Game 3 by proven model


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NFL DFS picks, Thursday Night Football: Eagles vs. Giants daily fantasy lineups, advice on DraftKings, FanDuel


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