Monday, November 07, 2022

Mysterious White Powder-in-an-Envelope... Anything else for a in last-minute would-be-news story??

 I guess that's something

www.theguardian.com

Kari Lake closes campaign office over envelope with white powder – reports


 

Victoria Bekiempis
3 - 4 minutes

"Arizona’s Republican gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake closed a campaign office after an envelope containing “suspicious white powder” was delivered to the premises on Saturday, according to reports.

A member of the candidate’s staff unwittingly opened the envelope and is now under “medical supervision”, campaign spokesperson Colton Duncan told CNN.

The FBI will analyze the item at its laboratory in Virginia, and agents stopped short of saying whether they had confirmed the powder was harmful.

“It was one of two envelopes that were confiscated by law enforcement and sent to professionals at Quantico for examination, and we are awaiting details,” Duncan reportedly said.

While Lake was taking the threat seriously, Duncan said, she would not be deterred. “In the meantime, know that our resolve has never been higher, and we cannot be intimidated,” Duncan added. “We continue to push full speed ahead to win this election.” .  .

Gone Bonkers over the Weekend > Bleeping Computer

 Hey Sportsfans!

  • ACE seizes 42 soccer and live TV piracy web domains with millions of visitors

    The Alliance for Creativity and Entertainment (ACE) has shut down 42 websites for the pirated streaming of televised soccer games and live TV, seizing their domains and taking down the illegal streaming services.

  • British govt is scanning all Internet devices hosted in UK

    The United Kingdom's National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC), the government agency that leads the country's cyber security mission, is now scanning all Internet-exposed devices hosted in the UK for vulnerabilities.

  • Z-Library eBook site domains seized by U.S. Dept of Justice

    Internet domains for the popular Z-Library online eBook repository were seized early this morning by the U.S. Department of Justice, preventing easy access to the service.

  • Robin Banks phishing service returns to steal banking accounts

    The Robin Banks phishing-as-a-service (PhaaS) platform is back in action with infrastructure hosted by a Russian internet company that offers protection against distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks.

  • Windows 11 22H2 blocked on systems using Xbox Game Bar Capture

    Microsoft is now blocking the Windows 11 2022 Update from being offered on some systems because of compatibility issues with the Xbox Game Bar Capture feature.

  • Prep for a career in cybersecurity with this $49 CompTIA boot camp

    The full bundle contains well over 200 hours of education, and it's now available for a deep discount. You can get the full CompTIA SuperBundle today for $49, a savings of hundreds off the combined MSRP for all courses.

    • BleepingComputer Deals
    • November 04, 2022
    • 07:24 AM
    • Comment 0

  • As Twitter brings on $8 fee, phishing emails target verified accounts

    As Twitter announces plans to charge users $8 a month for Twitter Blue and verification under Elon Musk's management, BleepingComputer has come across several phishing emails targeting verified users. 

  • Microsoft rolls out fix for Outlook disabling Teams Meeting add-in

    Microsoft is rolling out a fix for a known issue affecting Outlook for Microsoft 365 users and preventing them from scheduling Teams meetings because the option is no longer available on the app's ribbon menu.

  • Microsoft Teams now boasts 30% faster chat, channel switches

    Microsoft has significantly reduced latency for Windows and Mac users of the Teams desktop client in some critical scenarios when interacting with the application.

  • RomCom RAT malware campaign impersonates KeePass, SolarWinds NPM, Veeam

    The threat actor behind the RomCom RAT (remote access trojan) has refreshed its attack vector and is now abusing well-known software brands for distribution.

  • New Crimson Kingsnake gang impersonates law firms in BEC attacks

    A business email compromise (BEC) group named 'Crimson Kingsnake' has emerged, impersonating well-known international law firms to trick recipients into approving overdue invoice payments.

  • LockBit ransomware claims attack on Continental automotive giant

    The LockBit ransomware gang has claimed responsibility for a cyberattack against the German multinational automotive group Continental.

  • Get sharp, clear audio with this noise-cancelling earbuds deal

    Good audio is crucial for hybrid work, getting more out of your exercise, and relaxing after a long day. These noise-cancelling wireless earbuds put great sound in your pocket for $49.99, but act quickly; just like Black Friday itself, once this deal is sold out, it's gone.

    • BleepingComputer Deals
    • November 03, 2022
    • 02:11 PM
    • Comment 0
  • OPERA1ER hackers steal over $11 million from banks and telcos

    A threat group that researchers call OPERA1ER has stolen at least $11 million from banks and telecommunication service providers in Africa using off-the-shelf hacking tools.

  • ALMA Observatory shuts down operations due to a cyberattack

    The Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA) Observatory in Chile has suspended all astronomical observation operations and taken its public website offline following a cyberattack on Saturday, October 29, 2022.

  • New clipboard hijacker replaces crypto wallet addresses with lookalikes

    A new clipboard stealer called Laplas Clipper spotted in the wild is using cryptocurrency wallet addresses that look like the address of the victim's intended recipient.

  • More. . .

    Sunday, November 06, 2022

    CAPITALIST CORPORATE CANNABIS CONGLOMERATE: Puff Diddy has Plans

     Intro: There are many related posts on this blog ,> Use the Searchbox




    www.forbes.com

    Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs Hopes To Build The ‘Diageo Of Cannabis’ With $185 Million Deal

    Will Yakowicz
    6 - 7 minutes


    The deal will help the hip-hop mogul foster more Black and Brown entrepreneurs in the industry.


    The Right Puff: With the $185 million purchase of cannabis operations in three states, Sean 'Diddy' Combs has added to a business portfolio that includes fashion, spirits and entertainment.

     

    Sean “Diddy” Combs, the Harlem-born hip-hop mogul and businessman once known as “Puff Daddy”, may need to dust off his old moniker.

    As the Wall Street Journal was the first to report on Friday, the 53-year-old Combs has agreed to buy cannabis retail stores and production facilities in New York, Illinois, and Massachusetts from Chicago-based Cresco Labs and New York-based Columbia Care for $185 million.

    In doing so, Combs will become chairman and CEO of the largest Black-owned cannabis business in the $25 billion (2021 annual sales) industry once the transaction closes next year. Among his motivation for getting into cannabis is to help diversify a mostly white-owned industry. About 80% of legal weed businesses are currently owned by white people, while only 2% of businesses are Black-owned.

    “The purpose is bigger than the moment,” Combs says from his home in Los Angeles. “When I looked at the staggering statistics, [Black people] get arrested four times the rate of white people. And when it got legalized, we only owned 2% of it, while 80% was owned by the people who incarcerated us. It inspired me and invigorated me to go fight as the scales are so unbalanced.”

    MORE FROM FORBESHow Former NBA Star Al Harrington Is Building A $100 Million Team Of Black Cannabis EntrepreneursBy Will Yakowicz

    Part of his plan will include hiring formerly incarcerated people, convincing lawmakers to create better social equity programs, and mentor and fund Black and Brown entrepreneurs.

    “We don’t just want our fair share; we want what’s rightfully ours,” says Combs. “I honestly think that because of the impact that [cannabis prohibition] has had on our communities, something more fair would be 70% to Black and Brown owners and 30% to everybody else.”

    Combs Enterprises will operate a total of nine dispensaries, with locations in Manhattan, Brooklyn, and Chicago, and three cannabis cultivation and production facilities in Illinois, Massachusetts and New York. Legal cannabis sales in the U.S. are expected to hit $65 billion by 2030, according to Cowen.

    This marks Combs’ first investment in the marijuana industry, but he’s not the first hip-hop mogul who believes there’s money to be made in cannabis. . .

    Combs has been a serial entrepreneur for several decades. In the early 1990s, he started his music label, Bad Boy Records. One of his biggest stars was Christopher “The Notorious B.I.G.” Wallace (aka Biggie Smalls), the Brooklyn hip-hop artist known for hits like “Juicy.” Combs also started his own clothing company, Sean Jean in 1998, and five years later partnered with Diageo to launch his vodka brand, Ciroc. He recently launched a new R&B record label called Love and his own media company, Revolt.

    MORE FROM FORBESHow The Cannabis Industry Can Begin Interstate Commerce- LegallyBy Will Yakowicz

    Combs sees the new cannabis venture as something bigger than nine dispensaries and three cultivation facilities. He wants to build it into a Black-owned cannabis conglomerate known for its suite of brands.

    “My mission is to become the Diageo of cannabis,” says Combs, “where I'm able to give people of all colors and races an equal opportunity to be entrepreneurs in this space.” 

    READ MORE Road to Nowhere: Because of cannabis prohibition, companies can only do business in one state at a time


    www.forbes.com

    How The Cannabis Industry Can Begin Interstate Commerce— Legally


     

    Will Yakowicz
    7 - 9 minutes


    A federal ban on marijuana and several state laws make selling and transporting weed across state lines illegal. Here’s the road map for changing that.


    "If Jonathan Elfand is good at anything, it’s shipping weed across borders. In the 1990s, he smuggled cannabis from Mexico by sealing it inside empty salsa cans and packing them on a truck headed to San Diego. The cannabis, totaling a few tons over seven years before the feds caught him, made its way to Florida, New Jersey and New York.

    The enterprise eventually earned Elfand some time in prison for distribution, but he also spent a lot of time reading federal and state laws—and he began putting his unique arguments into action. After reading New York’s marijuana law, Elfand opened Empire Cannabis Club in 2021, a marijuana dispensary chain with locations in Manhattan and Brooklyn—all without a license. By using membership fees, Elfand believes he’s operating legally according to the letter of the law. New York lawmakers have said he is breaking it, but they have also introduced legislation that, if passed, would make his business model explicitly illegal—hinting that he might have actually found a loophole. Now Elfand is waiting for the chance to test another legal theory he’s been mulling over for years, one that got him into trouble the first time—shipping cannabis across state lines.

    While cannabis is banned at the federal level, recreational use is now legal in 19 states, with five more on the ballot this November. But every state that has legalized weed has also passed laws banning interstate commerce, meaning every cannabis market is restricted to the state. What that means on an operational level is that cannabis companies can only sell products in the state in which the cannabis is grown, even if that company has a facility in another state where cannabis is legal.

    Put another way, imagine if Florida orange juice could not be sold in California or if bourbon produced in Louisville was banned in every state but Kentucky. Now some legal experts believe a national marketplace is coming soon to the cannabis industry, thanks to a federal appellate court ruling in August based on how the Dormant Commerce Clause, a doctrine in the U.S. Constitution, applies to the marijuana industry.

    Robert Mikos, a professor at Vanderbilt University’s law school who has written about how the Dormant Commerce Clause could bring an end to these state bans on interstate commerce, says there is a legal pathway for cannabis companies to do business across state lines.

    “State bans, I think, are plainly unconstitutional,” says Mikos. “And therefore, if somebody wanted to take product from one state into another state, they could do so.”

    In a 2-1 opinion, the 1st Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that Maine’s law barring nonresidents from owning medical marijuana companies violates the U.S. Constitution. The Dormant Commerce Clause, which was at the heart of the ruling, prohibits states from passing legislation that favors its citizens or businesses at the expense of noncitizens conducting business in that state. The doctrine is supposed to prevent states from creating protectionist policies that discriminate against interstate commerce.

    MORE FROM FORBESPresident Biden Says It's Time To Change America's Cannabis LawsBy Will Yakowicz

    The ruling is significant because it could affect the entire industry. Currently, almost all states that regulate marijuana have enacted laws that ban the import and export of cannabis. (California Governor Gavin Newsom signed a bill in September that would allow interstate commerce if federal law changes. Oregon passed a similar law.)

    But Mikos says a company could potentially ship cannabis from one state to another by waging a series of lawsuits. . .

    We’re going to get companies that take the plunge,” says Mikos, who estimates that a legal challenge will hit the federal court system in the next 12 to 18 months. “If one company wins, it’s a victory for everybody.”

    Mikos says there is a certain level of risk because the Dormant Commerce Clause doesn’t apply to the federal government and marijuana is still illegal. “The chances you’d actually be prosecuted are vanishingly small,” he says. “I just don't see the federal government lifting a finger to try to stop this.”

    Not everyone agrees with Mikos’ theory. Andrew Freedman, who made history in 2014 when then-Colorado governor John Hickenlooper appointed him as the first cannabis czar in the first state to legalize recreational weed, is one of them.

    “No, I don't think this is a backdoor loophole to total federal legalization,” says Freedman. The only way to allow for interstate commerce is if Congress removes marijuana from the Controlled Substances Act and regulates it like alcohol and tobacco, he says. If a state were to allow for the import and export of cannabis, Freedman believes that another doctrine in the U.S. Constitution, the Supremacy Clause, would take over. The Supremacy Clause establishes that federal law generally takes precedence over state laws.

    As for Mikos’ theory about how a company could get an injunction to import into a state, he also disagrees. Freedman, the executive director of the nonprofit Coalition for Cannabis Policy, Education and Regulation, thinks a court would uphold the state’s ban because there is no federal consumer protection system.

    MORE FROM FORBESWeed vs. Greed: How America Botched Legalizing PotBy Will Yakowicz

    Sam Kamin, a professor at the University of Denver Sturm College of Law, says if companies focus on interstate sales and production in legal states that share borders, “it’s a possibility” that the federal government wouldn’t intervene. And once this happens, cannabis, which is currently stuck within state markets, will slowly transform into a national market, like alcohol and tobacco. . .

    READ MORE

    Weed vs. Greed: How America Botched Legalizing Pot


     

    Will Yakowicz
    18 - 22 minutes

    Thanks to overregulation and overtaxation, the U.S. government has blown the easiest revenue opportunity ever—legalized drugs. But it’s not too late to save the $72 billion cannabis industry from the perils of prohibition.

    ". . .

    Cannabis legalization was supposed to make a slew of entrepreneurs rich—including “legacy” operators, a coy euphemism for what used to be called drug traffickers, dealers and illegal growers. It was supposed to take something used widely and erase the criminal element from it. But of course, America’s politicians are blowing it. Thanks to overregulation, overtaxation and state-by-state inconsistencies, the biggest no-brainer in the history of capitalism—legalizing the world’s most popular illicit drug—is turning into a massive market failure.

    Some 95% of California cannabis cultivators operated at a loss last year, according to Jonathan Rubin, CEO of New Leaf Data Services, an institutional-grade wholesale price tracker. With the wholesale price of pot per pound in California down 52% since 2017, the year before legal recreational sales started in the state, squeezing out a profit is nearly impossible. The trouble boils down to simple supply and demand. It’s easy enough to get a permit to grow marijuana, a crop that proliferates abundantly if you know what you’re doing. Many farmers therefore began growing it in search of green riches. But gaining approval to sell it is complicated for retail outlets. First, there’s Nimby-ism: Even in weed-friendly California, nearly two thirds of municipalities have refused to allow legal dispensaries within their borders. Second is regulation: Many states make dealing with weed more complex than handling weapons-grade plutonium. Third is the continued federal ban on marijuana, which makes building a business extremely difficult and limits access to the mainstream banking system. As such, most dispensaries are cash-only—a dangerous absurdity in an increasingly cashless world. 

     

    One result is that California is home to just 1,000 dispensaries—one for every 40,000 residents. With so much pot chasing so few retail outlets, a lot of the extra weed funnels into the black market, which was supposedly going to be eradicated when marijuana went legit. Thus, legal prices are plummeting—by 35% in California in the second quarter alone compared with the year before. In the United States’ largest cannabis market, consumers spent $5.1 billion on legal weed last year—and an estimated $15 billion on illegal bud. The numbers nationally are similarly tilted toward the black market, with $25 billion worth of pot sold legally last year and almost twice that much moved the old-fashioned way, according to research from investment bank Cowen Inc.

    Despite the fact that 60% of Americans support legalization for recreational use and 91% for medicinal purposes, the Drug Enforcement Administration recorded 6,606 marijuana arrests in 2021, a 25% increase over the prior year, with Black and brown people making up a majority of those arrested. So much for “legalization.”

    Amid collapsing prices, the legal weed industry shoulders a tremendous tax burden that its illicit competitors don’t. State taxes on retail sales are as high as 37%. And although marijuana remains illegal under federal law, Uncle Sam still holds out his hand for a big cut; pot companies are not allowed to take most normal business deductions, leaving them with an effective tax rate of 60% or more.


    STREET VALUES

    Despite legal and regulated markets in 38 jurisdictions, the illicit cannabis business still dwarfs legal sales.  .  . 

    “We legacy folks, over the course of 50 years, built a market which was fair, which was resilient and which served everybody in the market very well,” says DeAngelo, who founded Oakland-based Harborside Health Center, one of the country’s first licensed cannabis dispensaries. “And now we’ve had this hand of government intervention completely disrupt it.”

    Compare the difficulty of working within a state, across multiple states and amid a thicket of tax regimes with the established black market, which has to deal with none of that, and you can see why the typical person smoking a joint probably obtained it illegally. “There’s an economic disincentive to participate in the legal market,” says Emily Paxhia, who cofounded Poseidon, a San Francisco cannabis investment firm with $200 million in assets under management.

    In the middle of this mess, the lines blur. Many companies in the legal industry regularly divert product into the black market, and vice versa. “There is cannabis flowing in both directions all the time,” says Rubin, the industry tracker at New Leaf.