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☕️ iPhone 5s, 6, 7, 8 et X : une mise à jour pour éviter une coupure en janvier… 2027

28 janvier 2026 à 07:44

Cette semaine, Apple a déployé des mises à jour pour iOS 26.2.1 et 18.7.4, sans oublier les déclinaisons iPad OS. Mais le fabricant a aussi mis à jour d’anciens systèmes, un très ancien même avec iOS 12.5.8 puisque cette 12ᵉ déclinaison a été lancée en septembre 2018.

Cela concerne les iPhone 5 s, iPhone 6 (Plus), mais aussi les iPad Air, iPad mini 2 et 3 pour iPadOS 12.5.8. Il ne s’agit pas d’une mise à jour de sécurité, d’autant que ces terminaux sont depuis longtemps en fin de vie, mais de préparer une échéance qui arrivera dans un an :

« Cette mise à jour prolonge la validité du certificat requis par des fonctionnalités telles que iMessage, FaceTime et l’activation de l’appareil afin qu’elles continuent de fonctionner après janvier 2027 ».

La précédente mise à jour 12.5.7 date de janvier 2023, soit cinq ans après l’arrêt du support. Elle concernait cette fois-ci une vilaine faille de sécurité : la simple lecture d’une page web spécialement conçue permettait l’exécution d’un code arbitraire et malveillant.

Toujours sur de vieux smartphones dont la fin du support logiciel a été actée, Apple déploie une mise à jour pour iOS 15.8.6 (iPhone 6 s, 7 et SE de 1ʳᵉ génération, iPad Air 2, mini de 4e génération), mais aussi iOS 16.7.13 (iPhone 8 (Plus) et X, iPad 5ᵉ génération, iPad Pro de 1ʳᵉ génération). Les notes de version ne font état que de la correction « d’importants bugs ».

Apple ne corrige donc pas de faille de sécurité, mais fait en sorte que ces smartphones ne cessent pas de fonctionner à cause d’un certificat invalide à partir de 2027.

☕️ iPhone 5s, 6, 7, 8 et X : une mise à jour pour éviter une coupure en janvier… 2027

28 janvier 2026 à 07:44

Cette semaine, Apple a déployé des mises à jour pour iOS 26.2.1 et 18.7.4, sans oublier les déclinaisons iPad OS. Mais le fabricant a aussi mis à jour d’anciens systèmes, un très ancien même avec iOS 12.5.8 puisque cette 12ᵉ déclinaison a été lancée en septembre 2018.

Cela concerne les iPhone 5 s, iPhone 6 (Plus), mais aussi les iPad Air, iPad mini 2 et 3 pour iPadOS 12.5.8. Il ne s’agit pas d’une mise à jour de sécurité, d’autant que ces terminaux sont depuis longtemps en fin de vie, mais de préparer une échéance qui arrivera dans un an :

« Cette mise à jour prolonge la validité du certificat requis par des fonctionnalités telles que iMessage, FaceTime et l’activation de l’appareil afin qu’elles continuent de fonctionner après janvier 2027 ».

La précédente mise à jour 12.5.7 date de janvier 2023, soit cinq ans après l’arrêt du support. Elle concernait cette fois-ci une vilaine faille de sécurité : la simple lecture d’une page web spécialement conçue permettait l’exécution d’un code arbitraire et malveillant.

Toujours sur de vieux smartphones dont la fin du support logiciel a été actée, Apple déploie une mise à jour pour iOS 15.8.6 (iPhone 6 s, 7 et SE de 1ʳᵉ génération, iPad Air 2, mini de 4e génération), mais aussi iOS 16.7.13 (iPhone 8 (Plus) et X, iPad 5ᵉ génération, iPad Pro de 1ʳᵉ génération). Les notes de version ne font état que de la correction « d’importants bugs ».

Apple ne corrige donc pas de faille de sécurité, mais fait en sorte que ces smartphones ne cessent pas de fonctionner à cause d’un certificat invalide à partir de 2027.

NVIDIA publie les drivers GeForce Game Ready 591.86 WHQL

28 janvier 2026 à 07:00

NVIDIA publie de nouveaux drivers, les GeForce Game Ready 591.86 WHQL, qui possèdent donc une signature numérique et promettent une optimisation pour la mise à jour ARC Raiders: Headwind, ainsi que pour le jeu Arknights: Endfield et le support de la technologie DLSS Super Resolution dans le titre Highguard. Le téléchargement est possible ici. […]

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18 minutes de gameplay pour le jeu Resident Evil Requiem

28 janvier 2026 à 06:00

Le studio Capcom vient d'annoncer le neuvième opus issu de sa fructueuse licence, son nom est Resident Evil Requiem, préparez-vous pour de l'action en début d'année 2026 !On nous promet un retour dans l'emblématique ville de Racoon City, totalement dévastée par une jolie petite bombe. Nous incarnerons une analyste du FBI, timide, Grace Ashcroft et devrions dire au revoir à Ethan Winters.Raccoon City Retour à la ville du désastre et du désespoir Une ville ordinaire du midwest des États-Unis où se trouvait le siège d'une entreprise pharmaceutique d'envergure mondiale nommée Umbrella. Suite à l'apparition dévastatrice de zombies en 1998, le gouvernement a approuvé une opération de stérilisation, un tir de missile sur la ville dans l'espoir de reprendre le contrôle de la situation, et tout a été très vite étouffé. […]

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Ancient Martian Beach Discovered, Providing New Clues To Planet's Habitability

Par : BeauHD
28 janvier 2026 à 07:00
alternative_right shares a report from Phys.org: New findings from NASA's Perseverance rover have revealed evidence of wave-formed beaches and rocks altered by subsurface water in a Martian crater that once held a vast lake -- considerably expanding the timeline for potential habitability at this ancient site. In an international study led by Imperial College London, researchers uncovered that the so-called 'Margin unit' in Mars's Jezero crater preserves evidence of extensive underground interactions between rock and water, as well as the first definitive traces of an ancient shoreline. These are compelling indicators that habitable, surface water conditions persisted in the crater (home to a large lake around 3.5 billion years ago) further back in time than previously thought. "Shorelines are habitable environments on Earth, and the carbonate minerals that form here can naturally seal in and preserve information about the ancient environment," said lead author Alex Jones, a Ph.D. researcher in the Department of Earth Science and Engineering (ESE) at Imperial. The findings have been published in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets.

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10 minutes de gameplay pour Resident Evil Requiem, attention au spoil à gratter !

C'est dans un mois que sera lancé le prochain épisode de Resident Evil 9, alias Requiem. Nous avons déjà eu deux présentations de la part de Capcom, au point où nous savons déjà pas mal de choses sur l'histoire, les protagonistes, leur expérience (et donc la vôtre puisque vous présidez leur destinée...

Amazon Inadvertently Announces Cloud Unit Layoffs In Email To Employees

Par : BeauHD
28 janvier 2026 à 05:00
Amazon appears to have prematurely acknowledged layoffs inside AWS after an internal email referencing "organizational changes" and "impacted colleagues" was mistakenly sent to cloud employees. CNBC reports: "Changes like this are hard on everyone," Colleen Aubrey, senior vice president of applied AI solutions at Amazon Web Services, wrote in an email viewed by CNBC. "These decisions are difficult and are made thoughtfully as we position our organization and AWS for future success." The note also references a post from Amazon's HR boss Beth Galetti and said the company notified "impacted colleagues in our organization." The subject of the email mentions "Project Dawn," and the email says it was "canceled," possibly indicating it was recalled by the sender after the fact. It's unclear what Project Dawn refers to. The job cuts come after Amazon announced in October that it would lay off 14,000 corporate employees. At the time, the company indicated the cuts would continue in 2026 as it found "additional places we can remove layers." Amazon CEO Andy Jassy said the layoffs were meant to reduce management layers and bureaucracy inside the company. He also predicted last June that efficiency gains from AI would shrink Amazon's corporate staff in the coming years.

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US Government Lost More Than 10,000 STEM PhDs Last Year

Par : BeauHD
28 janvier 2026 à 03:30
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Science.org: Some 10,109 doctoral-trained experts in science and related fields left their jobs last year as President Donald Trump dramatically shrank the overall federal workforce. That exodus was only 3% of the 335,192 federal workers who exited last year but represents 14% of the total number of Ph.D.s in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) or health fields employed at the end of 2024 as then-President Joe Biden prepared to leave office. The numbers come from employment data posted earlier this month by the White House Office of Personnel Management (OPM). At 14 research agencies Science examined in detail, departures outnumbered new hires last year by a ratio of 11 to one, resulting in a net loss of 4224 STEM Ph.D.s. The graphs that follow show the impact is particularly striking at such scientist-rich agencies as the National Science Foundation (NSF). But across the government, these departing Ph.D.s took with them a wealth of subject matter expertise and knowledge about how the agencies operate. [...] Science's analysis found that reductions in force, or RIFs, accounted for relatively few departures in 2025. Only at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, where 16% of the 519 STEM Ph.D.s who left last year got pink RIF slips, did the percentage exceed 6%, and some agencies reported no STEM Ph.D. RIFs in 2025. At most agencies, the most common reasons for departures were retirements and quitting. Although OPM classifies many of these as voluntary, outside forces including the fear of being fired, the lure of buyout offers, or a profound disagreement with Trump policies, likely influenced many decisions to leave. Many Ph.D.s departed because their position was terminated.

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Apple Updates iOS 12 For the First Time Since 2023

Par : BeauHD
28 janvier 2026 à 02:02
Apple quietly released its first update to iOS 12 since 2023 to keep iMessage, FaceTime, and device activation working on older hardware through January 2027. The update applies to legacy devices like the iPhone 5S, iPhone 6/6 Plus, and 2013-era iPads. Macworld reports: The update appears to be related to a specific issue. According to Apple's "About iOS 12 Updates" page, iOS 12.5.78 "extends the certificate required by features such as iMessage, FaceTime, and device activation to continue working after January 2027." Meanwhile, the iOS 16 update says it "provides important bug fixes and is recommended for all users." When iOS 13 arrived, it dropped compatibility for the iPhone 5S, iPhone 6, and iPhone 6 Plus, as well as the 2013 iPad Air and iPad Mini 3, so users of those phones should specifically take note. To update to the latest version, head over to the Settings app, then General and Software Update, and follow the instructions. Further reading: Apple Launches AirTag 2 With Improved Range, Louder Speaker

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Apple M3 Progress On Linux: Asahi Can Boot To KDE Desktop - But No GPU Acceleration Yet

28 janvier 2026 à 01:27
While the Asahi Linux project has made good progress on bringing Linux to Apple Silicon hardware, much of the success and in turn upstreaming to the Linux kernel has been around the aging M1 and M2 Macs. Apple M3 and newer has been a struggle but progress is being made. One of the Asahi Linux developers shared the ability now to boot to the KDE Plasma desktop with the experimental Asahi Linux code on an M3 MacBook but without any GPU acceleration yet...

Scientists Launch AI DinoTracker App That Identifies Dinosaur Footprints

Par : BeauHD
28 janvier 2026 à 01:25
Scientists have released DinoTracker, a free AI-powered app that identifies dinosaur footprints by analyzing shape patterns rather than relying on potentially flawed historical labels. "When we find a dinosaur footprint, we try to do the Cinderella thing and find the foot that matches the slipper," said Prof Steve Brusatte, a co-author of the work. "But it's not so simple, because the shape of a dinosaur footprint depends not only on the shape of the dinosaur's foot but also the type of sand or mud it was walking through, and the motion of its foot." The Guardian reports: [...] Brusatte, [Dr Gregor Hartmann, the first author of the new research from Helmholtz-Zentrum in Germany] and colleagues fed their AI system with 2,000 unlabelled footprint silhouettes. The system then determined how similar or different the imprints were from each other by analysing a range of features it identified as meaningful. The researchers discovered these eight features reflected variations in the imprints' shapes, such as the spread of the toes, amount of ground contact and heel position. The team have turned the system into a free app called DinoTracker that allows users to upload the silhouette of a footprint, explore the seven other footprints most similar to it and manipulate the footprint to see how varying the eight features can affect which other footprints are deemed most similar. Hartmann said that at present experts had to double check if factors such as the material the footprints were made in, and their age, matched the scientific hypothesis, but the system clustered prints with those expected from classifications made by human experts about 90% of the time. The findings have been published in the journal PNAS.

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SoundCloud Data Breach Impacts 29.8 Million Accounts

Par : BeauHD
28 janvier 2026 à 00:45
A data breach at SoundCloud exposed information tied to 29.8 million user accounts, according to Have I Been Pwned. While SoundCloud says no passwords or financial data were accessed, attackers mapped email addresses to public profile data and later attempted extortion. BleepingComputer reports: The company confirmed the breach on December 15, following widespread reports from users who were unable to access SoundCloud and saw 403 "Forbidden" errors when connecting via VPN. SoundCloud told BleepingComputer at the time that it had activated its incident response procedures after detecting unauthorized activity involving an ancillary service dashboard. "We understand that a purported threat actor group accessed certain limited data that we hold," SoundCloud said. "We have completed an investigation into the data that was impacted, and no sensitive data (such as financial or password data) has been accessed. The data involved consisted only of email addresses and information already visible on public SoundCloud profiles." While SoundCloud didn't provide further details regarding the incident, BleepingComputer learned that the breach affected 20% of all SoundCloud users, roughly 28 million accounts based on publicly reported user figures (SoundCloud later published a security notice confirming the information provided by BleepingComputer's sources). After the breach, BleepingComputer also learned that the ShinyHunters extortion gang was responsible for the attack, with sources saying that the threat group was also attempting to extort SoundCloud. This was confirmed by SoundCloud in a January 15 update, which said the threat actors had "made demands and deployed email flooding tactics to harass users, employees, and partners."

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Supreme Court To Decide How 1988 Videotape Privacy Law Applies To Online Video

Par : BeauHD
28 janvier 2026 à 00:02
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: The Supreme Court is taking up a case on whether Paramount violated the 1988 Video Privacy Protection Act (VPPA) by disclosing a user's viewing history to Facebook. The case, Michael Salazar v. Paramount Global, hinges on the law's definition of the word "consumer." Salazar filed a class action against Paramount in 2022, alleging that it "violated the VPPA by disclosing his personally identifiable information to Facebook without consent," Salazar's petition to the Supreme Court said. Salazar had signed up for an online newsletter through 247Sports.com, a site owned by Paramount, and had to provide his email address in the process. Salazar then used 247Sports.com to view videos while logged in to his Facebook account. "As a result, Paramount disclosed his personally identifiable information -- including his Facebook ID and which videos he watched—to Facebook," the petition (PDF) said. "The disclosures occurred automatically because of the Facebook Pixel Paramount installed on its website. Facebook and Paramount then used this information to create and display targeted advertising, which increased their revenues." The 1988 law (PDF) defines consumer as "any renter, purchaser, or subscriber of goods or services from a video tape service provider." The phrase "video tape service provider" is defined to include providers of "prerecorded video cassette tapes or similar audio visual materials," and thus arguably applies to more than just sellers of tapes. The legal question for the Supreme Court "is whether the phrase 'goods or services from a video tape service provider,' as used in the VPPA's definition of 'consumer,' refers to all of a video tape service provider's goods or services or only to its audiovisual goods or services," Salazar's petition said. The Supreme Court granted his petition (PDF) to hear the case in a list of orders released yesterday. [...] SCOTUSblog says that "the case will likely be scheduled for oral argument in the court's 2026-27 term," which begins in October 2026.

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OpenAI Releases Prism, a Claude Code-Like App For Scientific Research

Par : BeauHD
27 janvier 2026 à 23:20
OpenAI has launched Prism, a free scientific research app that aims to do for scientific writing what coding agents did for programming. Engadget reports: Prism builds on Crixet, a cloud-based LaTeX platform the company is announcing it acquired today. For the uninitiated, LaTeX is a typesetting system for formatting scientific documents and journals. Nearly the entire scientific community relies on LaTeX, but it can make some tasks, such as drawing diagrams through TikZ commands, time-consuming to do. Beyond that, LaTeX is just one of the software tools a scientist might turn to when preparing to publish their research. That's where Prism comes into the picture. Like Crixet before it, the app offers robust LaTeX editing and a built-in AI assistant. Where previously it was Crixet's own Chirp agent, now it's GPT-5.2 Thinking. OpenAI's model can help with more than just formatting journals -- in a press demo, an OpenAI employee used it to find and incorporate scientific literature that was relevant to the paper they were working on, with GPT-5.2 automating the process of writing the bibliography. [...] Later in the same demo, the OpenAI employee used Prism to generate a lesson plan for a graduate course on general relativity, as well as a set of problems for students to solve. OpenAI envisions these features helping scientists and professors spend less time on the more tedious tasks in their professions.

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Reçu hier — 27 janvier 2026 Actualités numériques

Amazon To Pay $309 Million To US Shoppers In Settlement Over Returns

Par : BeauHD
27 janvier 2026 à 22:40
Amazon has agreed to pay $309 million and provide additional remedies in a class-action settlement over claims that customers were wrongly denied refunds after returning items. Plaintiffs say (PDF) the deal delivers over $1 billion in total value, including more than $600 million in refunds and operational changes. Reuters reports: Amazon denied any wrongdoing in agreeing to the settlement. "Following an internal review in 2025, we identified a small subset of returns where we issued a refund without the payment completing, or where we could not verify that the correct item had been sent back to us, so no refund had been issued," an Amazon spokesperson said, adding that the company had taken steps to resolve the issue. The lawsuit, filed in 2023, said Amazon caused "substantial unjustified monetary losses" for consumers who in some instances properly returned an item but were still charged for it. In a court filing, Amazon said customers accepted the terms of the company's return policies, including the possibility they would be recharged for failing to return the product within a specified time frame. The proposed settlement class covers U.S. purchasers of goods on Amazon from September 2017 who allegedly did not receive timely or correct refunds, or who were later charged despite returning items. Class members are expected to recover the full amount of any incorrectly denied refund or retrocharge, plus interest, the plaintiffs told the court.

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Internal Messages May Doom Meta At Social Media Addiction Trial

Par : BeauHD
27 janvier 2026 à 22:02
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: This week, the first high-profile lawsuit -- considered a "bellwether" case that could set meaningful precedent in the hundreds of other complaints -- goes to trial. That lawsuit documents the case of a 19-year-old, K.G.M, who hopes the jury will agree that Meta and YouTube caused psychological harm by designing features like infinite scroll and autoplay to push her down a path that she alleged triggered depression, anxiety, self-harm, and suicidality. TikTok and Snapchat were also targeted by the lawsuit, but both have settled. The Snapchat settlement came last week, while TikTok settled on Tuesday just hours before the trial started, Bloomberg reported. For now, YouTube and Meta remain in the fight. K.G.M. allegedly started watching YouTube when she was 6 years old and joined Instagram by age 11. She's fighting to claim untold damages -- including potentially punitive damages -- to help her family recoup losses from her pain and suffering and to punish social media companies and deter them from promoting harmful features to kids. She also wants the court to require prominent safety warnings on platforms to help parents be aware of the risks. [...] To win, K.G.M.'s lawyers will need to "parcel out" how much harm is attributed to each platform, due to design features, not the content that was targeted to K.G.M., Clay Calvert, a technology policy expert and senior fellow at a think tank called the American Enterprise Institute, wrote. Internet law expert Eric Goldman told The Washington Post that detailing those harms will likely be K.G.M.'s biggest struggle, since social media addiction has yet to be legally recognized, and tracing who caused what harms may not be straightforward. However, Matthew Bergman, founder of the Social Media Victims Law Center and one of K.G.M.'s lawyers, told the Post that K.G.M. is prepared to put up this fight. "She is going to be able to explain in a very real sense what social media did to her over the course of her life and how in so many ways it robbed her of her childhood and her adolescence," Bergman said. The research is unclear on whether social media is harmful for kids or whether social media addiction exists, Tamar Mendelson, a professor at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, told the Post. And so far, research only shows a correlation between Internet use and mental health, Mendelson noted, which could doom K.G.M.'s case and others.' However, social media companies' internal research might concern a jury, Bergman told the Post. On Monday, the Tech Oversight Project, a nonprofit working to rein in Big Tech, published a report analyzing recently unsealed documents in K.G.M.'s case that supposedly provide "smoking-gun evidence" that platforms "purposefully designed their social media products to addict children and teens with no regard for known harms to their wellbeing" -- while putting increased engagement from young users at the center of their business models. Most of the unsealed documents came from Meta. An internal email shows Mark Zuckerberg decided Meta's top strategic priority was getting teens "locked in" to Meta's family of apps. Another damning document discusses allowing "tweens" to use a private mode inspired by fake Instagram accounts ("finstas"). The same document includes an admission that internal data showed Facebook use correlated with lower well-being. Internal communications showed Meta seemingly bragging that "teens can't switch off from Instagram even if they want to" and an employee declaring, "oh my gosh yall IG is a drug," likening all social media platforms to "pushers."

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Citigroup Mandates AI Training For 175,000 Employees To Help Them 'Reinvent Themselves'

Par : msmash
27 janvier 2026 à 21:25
Citigroup has rolled out mandatory AI training for all 175,000 of its employees across 80 locations worldwide, a sweeping initiative that CEO Jane Fraser describes as helping workers "reinvent themselves" before the technology permanently alters what they do for a living. The $205 billion bank sent out an internal memo last year requiring staffers to learn prompting skills specifically. Fraser told the Washington Post at Davos that AI "will change the nature of what people do every day" and "will take some jobs away." The adaptive training platform lets experts complete the course in under 10 minutes while beginners need about 30 minutes. Citi reported last year that employees had entered more than 6.5 million prompts into its built-in AI tools, and Q4 2025 data shows a 70% adoption rate for the bank's proprietary AI tools.

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New Intel Linux Driver Workaround Halves Initial Game Load Time For MHW

27 janvier 2026 à 21:16
In addition to Mesa 26.1 today seeing Vulkan present timing support finally merged to help reduce game stuttering and separately another long-in-development Mesa merge request for DG2 / Meteor Lake to improve performance as much as 260% in some scenarios, there is another merge today to Mesa Git for enhancing Intel graphics on Linux. For Intel Linux gamers the newest Mesa code adds a new DriConf workaround that is capable of halving the initial game load time for at least one problematic game title...

Mozilla is Building an AI 'Rebel Alliance' To Take on Industry Heavweights OpenAI, Anthropic

Par : msmash
27 janvier 2026 à 20:43
Mozilla, the nonprofit organization behind the Firefox browser that has spent two decades battling tech giants over control of the internet, is now turning its attention to AI and deploying roughly $1.4 billion in reserves to fund what president Mark Surman calls a "rebel alliance" of startups focused on AI safety, transparency and governance. The organization released a report Tuesday outlining its strategy to counter the growing dominance of OpenAI and Anthropic, which have raised more than $60 billion and $30 billion respectively from investors and now command valuations of $500 billion and $350 billion. Mozilla Ventures, a fund launched in 2022 with an initial $35 million commitment, has invested in more than 55 companies to date and is exploring raising additional capital. Surman, who runs the organization from a farm outside Toronto, acknowledged the financial mismatch but said Mozilla is playing the long game. By 2028, he wants Mozilla to be funding a "mainstream" open-source AI ecosystem for developers. The effort faces headwinds from the Trump administration, which has criticized AI safety efforts as "woke AI" and signed an executive order establishing a task force to challenge state AI regulations.

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