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Kdew Second American killed fighting for ISIS
$ J1 V( o2 ^' A. M K Entertainer Wyclef Jean is boosting Black-owned businesses for Black Friday, after many were particularly hard-hit by the coronavirus pandemic.The artist penned a jingle for Google to convince people to shop at businesses owned by Black Americans, with lyrics that read: Black Friday stanley cup They say spend for less.We say take your hard-earned dollars To a Black-owned business.Oh it s the season to show up and show love.Black Friday is Black-owned Friday. Known for making hit songs such as Borrowed Time, Jean is also known for lending a helping hand mdash; after the September 11 attacks, he paid tribute to and raised money for families who lost loved ones. After the 2010 earthquake in Haiti, he used his gift once again to help and heal. Amid the struggles gripping the country, Jean told CBS News Jericka Duncan that it was the thought of his parents, Haitian immigrants, that partially inspired him to help. My parents came here. They were middle class, hard-working people. And my father, not only was he a minister, he also was a tailor, the artist said. So for me, it was important to step up on the stanley cup right side of history. More than half of Black-owned businesses may be forced to close by April without federal help, according to one economic research group.As part stanley cup of Jean s partnership with Google, the search giant enabled the ability to search for Black-owned businesses in one s area on Google Maps. If you invest in Black-own Jltx Pelosi says White House effort to lock down Ukraine call was a cover-up0 K/ G' Z3 x) F7 w# S& B. \
A viral hoax is spreading across Facebook, prom stanley cup pting officials to warn against heeding the fake messages about cloned accounts.The message says, Hihellip;.I actually got another friend reques af1 t f stanley cup rom you yesterdayhellip;which I ignored so you may want to check your account. It then asks the recipient to forward the message to all their friends, an instruction that causes the hoax to spread even farther, officials said.While cloned accounts can be an issue -- when fraudsters set up fake accounts using a real person s name -- there isn t a current epidemic, as the hoax message suggests, according to CBS Philly. The hoax works by suggesting an account has been cloned, even when it hasn t, prompting worried users to spread the message to all their friends. Your account isn t sending duplicate friend requests. And you didn t receive a request from the person you re forwarding it to, officials in Louisiana warned in a public service message on Facebook. You re simply doing it because the message tells you to. Facebook said that it was aware of the hoax. We ve heard that some people are seeing posts or messages about accounts being cloned on Facebook. It takes the form of a chain mail type of notice, a spokeswoman wrote in an email. It advises consumers to report fake accounts if they encounter them.The cloned account hoax comes after Facebook reported a security breach in which 50 million user accounts were accessed by hackers |
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