The NewsWorthy - Next Phase of Firings, Biden’s Public Return & Viral ‘Airport Theory’ – Wednesday, April 16, 2025

The news to know for Wednesday, April 16, 2025!

We’ll tell you why Trump officials will now have to testify under oath about one specific immigration case, and what President Biden had to say in his first major speech since leaving office.

Plus, we’re talking about a new government effort to lower drug prices, and why CDC advisers are changing their tune on COVID-19 vaccines.

And how it’s gone for people trying out the viral “airport theory” trend—and what travel experts suggest doing instead.

Those stories and even more news to know in about 10 minutes! 

 

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Security Unlocked - From Facebook-Phished to MVR Top 5 with Dhiral Patel

In this episode of The BlueHat Podcast, host Nic Fillingham and Wendy Zenone are joined by Dhiral Patel, Senior Security Engineer at ZoomInfo and one of MSRC’s Most Valuable Researchers (MVR). Dhiral shares how a hacked Facebook account sparked his passion for ethical hacking. From web development to penetration testing, Dhiral has become a top bug hunter, landing multiple spots on the MSRC leaderboards. Dhiral reflects on his early MSRC submissions and lessons learned. He also discusses the importance of mastering web security basics, practicing on platforms like TryHackMe and Hack the Box, and staying connected with the bug bounty community.  

 

 

In This Episode You Will Learn:  

 

  • The importance of mastering web security basics before diving into bug bounty hunting 
  • Why hands-on platforms like TryHackMe and Hack the Box are perfect for beginners 
  • Dhiral’s journey from blogging to freelancing and security research 

 

Some Questions We Ask: 

 

  • How do you balance competition and collaboration in the bug bounty community? 
  • Can you explain what clickjacking is and if it still works today? 
  • Why did you start with Power BI, and how did it lead to your journey in security? 

   

  

Resources:      

View Dhiral Patel on LinkedIn    

View Wendy Zenone on LinkedIn   

View Nic Fillingham on LinkedIn  

  

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Discover and follow other Microsoft podcasts at microsoft.com/podcasts   


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The Best One Yet - 📕 “Hedge Fund University” — Harvard’s $2B battle. Coachella’s Pay-Now-Party-Later. Netflix’s Dr. Evil plan.

Harvard is taking on the Trump admin for $2B… so we looked at the Economics of Endowments.

60% of Coachella ticket sales were payment plans… it’s not buy-now-pay-later, it’s 

pay-now-party-later.

Netflix thinks it’s recession-proof… So its new internal goal? Hit $1 trillion Dollars.

Plus, what’s the most forgetful day of the year?... Uber’s Lost & Found data just told us


$NFLX $SPOT $UBER


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Short Wave - How Nature Makes A Complex Brain

A recent series of studies suggests that the brains of birds, reptiles and mammals all evolved independently — even though they share a common ancestor. That means evolution has found more than one way to make a complex brain, and human brains may not be quite as special as we think. To learn more about this, we talk to Fernando García-Moreno about this series of studies he co-authored that came out in Science in February.

Want to hear more about the complex road of evolution? Send us an email at shortwave@npr.org.

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NPR's Book of the Day - Rex Ogle’s ‘When We Ride’ is a novel-in-verse about a best friendship under pressure

Seventeen-year-old Benny is studying hard and working as a busboy, hoping to attend college. Meanwhile, his childhood best friend, Lawson, is on a different path, dealing drugs – and is always in need of a ride. Rex Ogle's When We Ride is a novel-in-verse about their relationship, which becomes strained as differences between the two young men come into focus. In today's episode, Ogle joins NPR's Ayesha Rascoe for a conversation about the book. They discuss friendship breakups, what we owe our oldest relationships and an unlikely high school romance between the author's own best friends.

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Planet Money - OIRA: The tiny office that’s about to remake the federal government

OIRA — the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs — is an obscure, but powerful federal office around the corner from the White House. President Trump has decided that it should get even more powerful.

For the last 45 years, OIRA has overseen most federal agencies by reviewing proposed regulations to make sure they agree with the President's policies and don't conflict with the work of other agencies. But one set of federal agencies has always been exempt from this review process — independent federal agencies like the SEC, FTC, FCC, and Federal Reserve. Until now.

According to a new executive order, those independent agencies are about to get a lot less independent. We take a look at what this change could mean for financial markets...and the future of American democracy.

This episode was produced by James Sneed and Willa Rubin. It was edited by Jess Jiang and engineered by Jimmy Keeley. It was fact-checked by Sierra Juarez. Alex Goldmark is our executive producer.

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Hayek Program Podcast - Women and Policy — How Do Female Property Rights Impact Economic Development?

On this episode, Jessica Carges chats with Karol Boudreaux on female land and resource rights in Sub-Saharan Africa and their impact on economic development. Karol discusses how even when property rights are granted, formal documentation and cultural backgrounds pose challenges to control over land use, and she shares the success story of Rwanda, how the state undertook a massive land documentation effort to improve formal property rights.

Karol Boudreaux has a JD in International Law from the University of Virginia, and her work over the past two decades has focused on efforts to support improvements to land tenure and property rights for people around the world, particularly those in Sub-Saharan Africa. During her time at the Mercatus Center, she was the lead researcher for the Enterprise Africa project. She focuses on understanding links between property rights systems and development, as well as the evolution of property systems.

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Native America Calling - Wednesday, April 16, 2025 — Is it the end of civil rights complaints in schools?

The Trump administration scrapped a civil rights agreement 14 years in the making with the Rapid City, S.D. school system. The agreement was aimed at correcting inequities for Native American students. Data show Native students in the district are given harsher punishments than their white counterparts. The students also are less likely to be in higher level classes. The decision comes as President Donald Trump has terminated nearly half of the federal Education Department’s Office for Civil Rights staff. We’ll also look at a Virginia tribe’s suit against the commonwealth for what the tribe says is withholding Medicaid reimbursements for tribal citizens’ health care.

The Indicator from Planet Money - Did Trump enable insider trading?

On the morning of April 9, President Trump posted on Truth Social "THIS IS A GREAT TIME TO BUY!!! DJT." Around four hours later, he announced a pause on some new tariffs, causing a stock market spike. Now, Democrats are demanding an investigation into possible insider trading. But were Trump's posts actually insider trading?

Related episodes:
Morally questionable, economically efficient (Apple / Spotify)
An insider trader tells all

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What Next | Daily News and Analysis - When a State Tells Trump ‘No’

In February, Donald Trump and Maine Governor Janet Mills got into a spat over Trump’s executive order on trans athletes, that ended with both parties tersely agreeing to meet in court. Since then, the Trump administration seems to be trying to make an example of the state—cutting off federal funding where it can. 


Guest: Callie Ferguson, investigative reporter for the Bangor Daily News.


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Podcast production by Elena Schwartz, Paige Osburn, Anna Phillips, Madeline Ducharme, Ethan Oberman, and Rob Gunther. 


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