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Douglas lost his job as the general manager on Tuesday, six weeks after the head coach was replaced following a 2-3 start. The Jets have gone 1-5 under interim coach Jeff Ulbrich so owner Woody Johnson sent Douglas packing. Rodgers has played more like a 40-year-old quarterback coming off an Achilles tendon injury than a four-time NFL MVP. He's expressed a desire to play another season. The big question is whether the Jets will want him back. Maybe they'll decide to take one more shot at a playoff run with Rodgers while having him mentor a rookie quarterback. Or, they could start fresh. There are significant contract ramifications either way. Rodgers is slated to make a non-guaranteed $37.5 million in 2025 with a dead cap hit of $49 million as his salary cap total goes from $17.1 million to $23.5 million. The Jets could spread the dead money over two years by releasing Rodgers with the use of post-June 1 designation. He has a no-trade clause in his contract so they would need his permission to make a deal. If Rodgers doesn't retire and New York's new regime wants a clean slate, here are potential destinations for the future first-ballot Hall of Famer: SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS: This could only happen if Brock Purdy's shoulder injury is more significant than is known. Rodgers is a native of northern California and grew up a Niners fan. Returning home to help San Francisco win its sixth Super Bowl has to be attractive. Playing for coach Kyle Shanahan surrounded by playmakers Christian McCaffrey, Deebo Samuel and George Kittle would be a quarterback's dream. Again, Purdy is the team's present and future. And, he's resilient. Purdy rebounded from elbow surgery following his rookie season to start Week 1 last year and ended up finishing fourth in MVP voting, leading the 49ers to the Super Bowl. Purdy also is due for a contract extension and a major raise so the salary cap makes this even more of a longshot. But never say never in the NFL. MINNESOTA VIKINGS: Sam Darnold has been more than a stopgap, helping the Vikings (8-2) to an impressive start. J.J. McCarthy is the future, however, and Darnold will be a free agent after the season. If the Vikings fall short of a Super Bowl and Rodgers shows over the final six weeks that he can play championship football, this could be a fit. The Vikings could let McCarthy sit and learn for another year, especially coming off a knee injury that required a second surgery earlier this month. NEW YORK GIANTS: Rodgers wouldn't have to move. The Giants will need a quarterback after benching Daniel Jones and eventually releasing him. They could draft a quarterback in the first round and have him learn behind Rodgers for a season. That'll depend on which pick New York ends up with because it's a thin draft class. Unlike the Jets, the Giants (2-8) haven't made any coaching or GM changes yet. If it's status quo with GM Joe Schoen and coach Brian Daboll, one year with Rodgers isn't unrealistic. LAS VEGAS RAIDERS: They also need a quarterback. Brock Bowers could set an NFL record for most catches by a tight end if he had Rodgers next season. The Raiders (2-8) are aiming for a high pick to get a shot at a quarterback of their choice. New minority owner Tom Brady believes rookie quarterbacks need time to develop and learn. The seven-time Super Bowl champion would have to be in favor of having Rodgers start and tutor a youngster. TENNESSEE TITANS: If Will Levis doesn't prove over the final seven games that he can be a No. 1 quarterback, the Titans (2-8) will be in the QB market and likely have a high draft pick. It's another scenario where Rodgers would fit as a one-year bridge.
12. Clemson Tigers 10-3 (7-1 Atlantic Coast Conference regular season) What's next: First-round at No. 5 seed Texas, Dec. 21 Head coach: Dabo Swinney (17th season, 180-46 overall) About Swinney: The 55-year-old, who is 6-4 in the CFP, took over during the 2008 season and has won two national titles (2016, 2018). He will take the Tigers to the CFP the first time since the 2020 season and the seventh time overall. Resume The Tigers, the only three-loss team in the 12-team field, were in a must-win situation in the ACC championship game, prevailing on a last-second, 56-yard field goal to defeat SMU 34-31. Clemson lost two games to SEC opponents (Georgia and South Carolina) this season. The Tigers' other defeat came at home to Louisville. The matchup with Texas will be Clemson's first true road game against the SEC this season. Postseason history A nine-time winner of the ACC Championship Game, the Tigers notched a double-figure win total for the 13th time in the last 14 seasons. Along with its two national titles, Clemson reached the title game two other times (2019 and 2015). This will be the first Clemson-Texas matchup. The road to Atlanta It will be a tricky road for the Tigers to reach the CFP title game in Atlanta at a venue familiar to Clemson fans. The Tigers will take at least two and maybe three trips outside of their own time zone to qualify for the final. Names to know QB Cade Klubnik Klubnik, a Texas native, has been taking snaps in crucial situations since a limited role as a freshman in 2022, when he rescued the Tigers in an ACC Championship victory vs. North Carolina. Sporting a 19-8 career record as a starter, Klubnik has thrown for 3,303 yards and 33 touchdowns along with five interceptions this season. He tossed four TDs in the ACC title game Dec. 7 against SMU after receiving All-ACC honorable mention following the regular season. "He's battle-tested," Swinney said. "He has got a lot of experience under his belt. He has had some failure, which has made him better." RB Phil Mafah The senior has racked up 1,106 rushing yards with eight touchdowns this season and has 28 career scores. Mafah has averaged fewer than 17 carries per game, so he makes the most of his opportunities, and at 230 pounds he can be a load to bring down. DE T.J. Parker He's been disruptive on a regular basis, racking up 19 tackles for loss (11 sacks) this season. The 265-pound sophomore helped set the tone in the ACC title game when the Tigers feasted on early SMU mistakes. Parker is tied for the Division I lead with six forced fumbles this season. K Nolan Hauser The freshman joined the Tigers this season with great acclaim and produced a career highlight with a 56-yard game-winning field goal -- the longest in ACC title game history -- to beat SMU at the buzzer. --Field Level Media
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The Chicago Blackhawks are going to be without Laurent Brossoit for even more time then initially expected. On Friday, Blackhawks head coach Luke Richardson updated that Brossoit had underwent a second surgery on his right knee and is expected to miss at least six more weeks. The Blackhawks signed Brossoit this past offseason , one of their major acquisitions to help boost the team. Unfortunately fans have not had an opportunity to see Brossoit in a Blackhawks uniform as a summer injury turned into Brossoit missing the preseason, but expected to come back within a few weeks. Then, after hearing very little and seeing Brossoit on the ice practicing just a few times, the Hawks have now updated that Brossoit would be out for even more time. Brossoit missing at least six more weeks puts his return to play now in the middle of January. That could have a major impact on the Hawks roster, especially in the crease. How Laurent Brossoit’s injury impacts the Blackhawks With Brossoit out for six more weeks, the Blackhawks will need to lean on Arvid Soderblom and Petr Mrazek in the meantime. Entering the season, Mrazek and Brossoit looked to be a great tandem and a major improvement over last season’s pairing of Mrazek and Soderblom. In Brossoit’s absence, Soderblom has stepped up to the challenge, posting a .926 save percentage and a goals against average of 2.36. That is a major improvement from last season where in 32 games Soderblom registerd a 3.92 goals against average and s ave percentage of just .880. Across 29 starts last season, Soderblom played in just five wins, with a record of 5-22-2. Soderblom being with the Hawks into January will impact his waiver status as he is four games away from 60 career games played and will then no longer be waiver exempt. So, once Brossoit does return, it is likely Chicago will have to carry three goaltenders as Soderblom would not clear waivers if he was sent down, especially with so many teams struggling with injuries in the crease. The Hawks carrying three netminders would take up an additional roster spot that could go to a seventh defenseman or 13th forward, which would complicate things for Chicago. Kyle Davidson signed Brossoit to a two year contract carrying a $3.3 million cap hit this summer. Brossoit, 31, missing so much time definitely is a loss for the franchise. Last season, Brossoit played in 23 games with the Winnipeg Jets and registered a career best .927 save percentage. It looked like Brossoit and Mrazek would form a really strong duo, both capable of potentially working as a true 1A 1B tandem, not a traditional starter backup. With Brossoit out for another month plus, expect Soderblom to get a bigger opportunity to play. So far he has started in just six games, and now the Hawks might as well use this time to see if he can be a potential starter long term. This article first appeared on Chicago Hockey Now and was syndicated with permission.TribLIVE's Daily and Weekly email newsletters deliver the news you want and information you need, right to your inbox. Sen. John Fetterman (D., Pa.) joined Truth Social, President-elect Donald Trump's social media platform, on Tuesday and his first order of business on the site was to call for a pardon for Trump in his New York hush money case. "The Trump hush money and Hunter Biden cases were both b-, and pardons are appropriate," Fetterman said in his first Truth Social post Tuesday evening. Fetterman's participation on the platform is another example of the junior senator's signature bluntness and tendency to stray from party lines, offering rare glimmers of bipartisanship in Washington, D.C. Since Election Day, Fetterman has expressed his support for some of Trump's picks for the incoming administration and said he admired billionaire Elon Musk, a staunch Trump ally. Truth Social was launched in early 2022 after Trump's ban from several mainstream platforms, including Facebook and Twitter, in the aftermath of the Jan.... The Philadelphia Inquirer
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RA Capital Management Announces Close of $1.4 Billion Acquisition of Aliada Therapeutics by AbbVieAs artificial intelligence is sprinting forward, many argue that the public policy to regulate the technology is falling behind. And with the federal government playing catch-up, states are taking small steps to fill that vacuum, but several sectors, including attorneys general, argue that state-level efforts offer an inadequate, patchwork of rules when what's really needed, they argue, is a uniform standard on the national and international stage. Others cautioned against rushing to regulate without careful analysis of a proposed policy's ramifications for businesses, consumers and companies' freedom to innovate. Like the internet, U.S. Rep. Brittany Pettersen said the genie cannot be put back in the bottle. Today, AI can be used in every industry in some form or another. Used right, advocates say, its potential is vast — the technology can make jobs faster, smarter, more efficient. When used for nefarious purposes, it can make scamming, defrauding or ruining people's reputations faster and easier. On the international stage, Pettersen said the race to set AI policy is playing out between the United States and China, and she's worried about the latter gaining the upper hand. Recently elected to her second term in Colorado’s 7th District, Pettersen said public policy to regulate AI must take center stage next year, when a new Republican Congress takes over. U.S. Sen. John Hickenlooper, a Democrat in Colorado’s 6th District, looks to start making progress by year’s end. “Great legislation starts with its first hearing, and I feel a great sense of urgency,” Hickenlooper said during a Nov. 19 Senate hearing focused on protecting consumers from AI deepfakes. A “deepfake” refers to AI-generated images or videos that look real, a phenomenon further popularized by a viral Tiktok of a deepfake of “Tom Cruise” goofing around. With Donald Trump winning the presidency and Republicans securing the majority in both chambers of the U.S. Congress, Pettersen said she is confident regulating AI will remain a priority, given both House Speaker Mike Johnson and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries came together to create the AI Working Group in 2024. Pettersen was appointed to the bipartisan group, which is exploring how AI impacts financial services and housing industries. While there is bipartisan interest in developing AI regulations, Pettersen said a “dysfunctional Congress” creates challenges, especially in an election year, in which the working group’s progress was stalled to some degree. “I really worry about areas like this where we need to be leading the way globally and making sure that China is not the one doing that,” Pettersen said. “I don’t want a future where China’s leading on AI. It needs to be the United States and we have to come together in Congress to bring comprehensive pragmatic, bipartisan solutions. It cannot matter (which party) has the majority. This needs to continue to be a bipartisan effort.” Pettersen said it is vital that the U.S. is setting global standards that other countries will follow, noting that such safeguards are “critical for our national security and for consumers.” When asked if China is already leading the U.S. in setting global policy, Pettersen said no, but admitted the race is on. “China is making significant investments,” she said. “We can’t get behind them, and this is really going to define, you know, what the next 100 years looks like for global leadership, and we need to make sure that it’s people here in the United States that are benefitting not only from these technologies in their lives, but also the financial benefit of innovating and leading here in the U.S.A." Already, China is advocating that the United Nations take the leading role on global governance of AI , a move that could sideline the U.S. While both China and the U.S. agree that AI poses risks, China has built extensive surveillance systems, which carry AI components, that tracks its citizens through chat apps and mobile phones. The U.S. has criticized China's approach. Pettersen said the risk to public interest continues to grow “exponentially” as companies develop AI technology at record pace. Comparing it to when the internet first came online, Pettersen said the U.S. must navigate the guardrails. The illustration shows how states are taking action to regulate artificial intelligence. Pettersen said besides focusing on the global aspect, setting national standards is needed as a preemptive guide for states to follow. “The debate will continue, but right now, what we’re seeing is that without federal action, we’re seeing patchwork approaches across states,” the congresswoman said. “It makes it incredibly difficult, I think, for AI industries and how they’re navigating some of those regulations. So, I think a national standard will help give states those protections and guidance.” Hickenlooper said states are moving forward and conceded it is a patchwork approach. He said some states are focusing on laws that protect election integrity, others on non-consensual intimate imagery, while some have done nothing at all. In Colorado, Attorney General Phil Weiser told Colorado Politics he is taking AI regulation seriously while awaiting federal guidelines, calling state policy "second best." "The first best world is one where we have federal leadership and federal public policy frameworks in the areas of AI,” Weiser said. “If we can’t live in the first best world, the second-best world for us to live in is a world where states are providing that leadership." He added: "And I do prefer state leadership in technology to no leadership in technology policy. And, if you will, the third best world, or maybe you say the worst world, is there is no leadership at all, and technology companies have no guardrails when it comes to protecting consumer privacy or how they manage data or how they use artificial intelligence.” The best way to build trust and operate in a way that consumers can believe in requires the federal government to provide policy leadership, Weiser said. In 2024, the Colorado legislature passed a first-of-its-kind bill that sponsors said would protect consumers from "bias" in artificial intelligence development. Several organizations representing the technology industry had urged Polis to veto the bill, arguing it would harm small businesses developing artificial intelligence technology. At its core, Senate Bill 205 establishes regulations governing the development and use of artificial intelligence in Colorado and focuses on combatting "algorithmic discrimination." It defines "algorithmic discrimination" to mean any condition in which AI increases the risk of "unlawful differential treatment" that then "disfavors" an individual or group of people on the basis of age, color, disability, ethnicity, genetic information, race, religion, veteran status, English proficiency and other classes protected by state laws. In May, Gov. Jared Polis reluctantly signed the measure into law, which is slated to go into effect in February 2026. In the meantime, Weiser’s office is tasked with implementing the law by creating audit policies and identifying high-risk AI practices. While Polis signed the law, he and Weiser vowed to revise it before it actually takes effect. In a statement to Colorado Politics, the governor’s office said, “Governor Polis believes this legislation was the beginning of a conversation around AI and looks forward to continuing to discuss this issue with legislators and stakeholders and ensure the final product supports innovation before the 2026 implementation date. Governor Polis is a former tech entrepreneur and supports technological advancements like AI that can support consumers, reduce bias, and help drive Colorado’s economy.” In June, Weiser, Polis, and Democratic Senate Majority Leader Robert Rodriguez, the bill's sponsor, signed a letter promising several steps before implementing the law in 2026. This includes creating a task force to revise the new law in the upcoming 2025 session to minimize unintended consequences. The goal, they said, is to “provide for a balanced regulatory scheme that prevents discrimination while supporting innovation in technology.” The letter also identified the areas the task force will tackle, including the following: • Refining the definition of artificial intelligence systems to the most high-risk systems • Focusing on the developers of these high-risk systems, rather than on small companies that are deploying the technology • Shifting from a proactive disclosure regime to traditional enforcement • Making clear that consumer right of appeal refers to the ability for consumers to appeal to the attorney general. • Considering other measures the state can take to become the most welcoming environment for technological innovation Alvin McBorrough, founder and managing partner of OGx, a Denver consulting firm that focuses on technology and analytics, applauded Colorado lawmakers for approving Senate Bill 205 . “The ultimate goal is to provide protection for the well-being of the citizens, public interest, and trust,” McBorrough said. “It’s a pretty comprehensive role that has been developed to make sure that developers and deployers of AI technology systems have some level of control around it.” As a practitioner and advisor in the AI industry, McBorrough said he reviewed the new law and asked himself if it’s better to have some form of regulation right now that can be tweaked — instead of none at all. “I was a proponent leaning towards going forward and coming up with some kind of framework and put that in place,” he said. “You can always come back and approve upon it, but if there is nothing, there is a free for all, and that is what is happening right now.” McBorrough said one of the biggest drawbacks in AI is the development of "algorithmic" biases, which can have negative impacts in housing, healthcare and education. “We’ve never seen one technology so profound and so promising,” McBorrough said. “I think at the end of the day, just from a human perspective, I will say this is going to be another area that will profoundly impact all of us — the way we learn, the way we play, and the way we continue to grow. We have to make sure that whatever we are developing is 100% on the up and up.” On the other hand, some 200 business leaders, including some of Colorado's most prominent executives, earlier wrote the governor about their "collective concern" regarding the new law. Also earlier, Eli Wood, the founder of software company Black Flag Design, expressed worries the legislation would inadvertently disadvantage small startups, such as his company, that heavily depend on open-source AI systems. Wood said the bill could penalize small businesses for "algorithmic" bias identified in their system, even if the bias originated from the open-source system rather than the one developed by the small business itself. Alvin McBorrough, founder and managing partner of OGx, a Denver consulting firm that focuses on technology and analytics, speaks at a recent AI Tomorrow Workshop in Boulder. In chairing a Nov. 19 Senate hearing, Hickenlooper heard testimony about the dangers the public faces if or when AI technology falls into the wrong hands. Hickenlooper is pushing for the passage of several AI-related bills to protect minors and veterans from AI misuse. During the hearing, Hany Farid, a professor at the University of California Berkeley School of Information, said lawmakers considering a five- or 10-year plan need to realize that without regulations, “everything is going to get worse.” Farid pointed out that ChatGPT went from zero to one billion users in a year. According to Bloomberg, generative AI is slated to become a $1.3 trillion industry by 2032. In 2022, the AI industry was worth $40 billion. “Five years is an eternity in this space,” Farid said. “We need to be thinking tomorrow and next year. Here is what we know — hundreds of billions of dollars are being poured into predictive AI and generative AI. The technology is going to get better, it’s going to get cheaper, and it's going to become more ubiquitous. That means the bad guys are going to continue to weaponize it unless we figure out how to make that unbearable for them.” By unbearable, Farid said the answer is for lawmakers to hold big tech companies accountable as developers of a technology that, in the hands of "deployers," can be weaponized for scams and other bad behavior. Weaponizing AI includes a variety of scams that are starting to cost the general public money, time and dignity. Farid said a restaurant or retailer can tell AI to produce 20 positive reviews to post online. Fake videos and images can ruin someone’s reputation, while senior citizens and veterans can be scammed out of money because the technology is so realistic, he said. Dorota Mani testified that her daughter became a victim of "deepfake" pornography distribution. Mani testified that her daughter’s high school classmate created "deepfakes" — nude images of her that were circulated around school. Because the school did not have any AI policies — and the state and federal government have no laws against the production of fake nude images — the student who produced them faced very little to no consequence. “I want to start with saying that our situation is really not unique,” Mani said. “It has been happening and it is happening right now. Last year, when we found out, or we were informed by the school, what has happened to us, the first thing we did, obviously, was we called a lawyer in the school sector. We were informed that nothing can be truly done because there are no school policies and no legislation, and the lawyers repeat exactly the same thing." She added: "So, when my daughter heard from the administration that, you know, she should be wearing a victim's badge and just go for counseling, she came home, and she told me, ‘I want to bring laws to my school so that way my sister, my younger sister, will have a safer digital future’.” In November, explicit images of nearly 50 female students created controversy inside a Pennsylvania school district. According to reports , the explicit photos were created and posted by a ninth-grade male student and not removed or reported to police for months. Mani said this is but another case proving schools are unprepared to battle "deepfake" posts, and why guidance from the federal government is imperative. Mani applauded current efforts to pass the TAKE IT DOWN Act . Co-sponsored by Hickenlooper, the TAKE IT DOWN Act seeks to protect minors from AI scams. The measure passed the Senate on Dec. 3. If signed into law, the measure will criminalize the publication, without the subject's consent, of intimate imagery on social media and other online sites. The bill requires social media companies to develop procedures to remove content upon notification from a victim. For instance, once a platform like Facebook is informed of a deepfake video or image, the company would have 48 hours to take it down. “The TAKE IT DOWN Act allows the victims to take control over their own image, and I think that is so important,” Mani said. “It gives the freedom to anybody affected to just move on with their life, which sometimes that's all they want.” According to a 2019 Sensity report, these types of deepfake pornography, created without the consent or knowledge of the subjects, accounts for 96% of the total deepfake videos posted online. Justin Brookman, the director of technology policy for Consumer Reports said recent research suggests that generative AI can be used to scale “spear phishing,” which is the personalization of phishing messages based on personal data to make them more convincing. With only a few seconds of a person’s voice and image easily found on social media, Brookman and fellow panelists agreed that believable "deepfakes" are being created, costing consumers billions in losses each year. The cost of creating "deepfakes" is getting cheaper with technology. Brookman estimated that what once cost spear phishing creators $4.60 per message is now only 12 cents. Brookman said the federal government can be more effective by beefing up the staffing at the Federal Trade Commission, even if no laws or new regulations are passed. In his report to the Senate committee, Brookman said scams and fraud are already illegal under a variety of federal and state civil criminal laws. However, the FTC only has 1,292 full-time employees to pursue its competition and consumer protection missions. The number of FTC staff has plateaued for about 14 years, Brookman said, noting that in 1979, the agency had 1,746 employees. “The FTC is expected to hold giant sophisticated tech giants accountable for their transgressions, but they are severely hamstrung by unjustifiable resource constraints,” Brookman said. The Associated Press contributed to this story.
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