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Ross Ulbricht (freeross.org)
President Donald Trump is allegedly weighing a pardon for Ross Ulbricht, creator of the now-dead dark web marketplace Silk Road who is serving a life sentence. He was arrested in 2013 and two years later a Manhattan federal jury found him guilty on seven charges including conspiracy to launder money, conspiracy to commit computer hacking, conspiracy to traffic narcotics by the means of the internet and continuing a criminal enterprise. Ulbricht, who used the pseudonym Dread Pirate Roberts online, was sentenced to spend the rest of his life behind bars.
According to a Daily Beast report, The White House counsel’s office has had records related to Ross s case under review and Trump was recently made aware of the situation and the pleas of the Silk Road founder’s allies . According to two sources, Trump has at times privately displayed some sympathy for Ross s condition and has been considering his name, among others, for his next
A Pfizer representative said the drug developer will use GPS-enabled thermal sensors in every container of vaccines to track the location and temperature of each vaccine shipment.
“These GPS-enabled devices will allow Pfizer to proactively prevent unwanted deviations and act before they happen,” said Francesca Marzullo, manager of Pfizer Global Supply Communications.
But the sensors aren’t on each individual vial.
“These electronic temperature sensors are typically used for large shipments of vaccines that are going from the manufacturer to the places where these vaccines are locally distributed,” Baughman said. “They are not used on individual vaccine vials.”
Threat to vaccines
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Post-Stroke Motor Skill Recovery Gets Boost from Vagus Nerve Stimulation
Pairing a physical therapy task aimed at improving the function of an upper limb in rodents along with vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) demonstrated a doubled long-term recovery rate relative to current therapy methods, suggest researchers from The University of Texas at Dallas.
The recovery rate was not only in the performance of the targeted task, but also in similar muscle movements that were not specifically rehabbed, the researchers add in their study, published recently in the journal
“Our experiment was designed to ask this new question: After a stroke, do you have to rehabilitate every single action?” says Dr Michael Kilgard, associate director of the Texas Biomedical Device Center (TxBDC) and Margaret Forde Jonsson, professor of Neuroscience in the School of Behavioral and Brain Sciences.
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