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Vigilance.fr - Visual Studio Code: file write via Sensitive File Protections Bypass, analyzed on 21/11/2025Vigilance.fr - Visual Studio Code: file write via Sensitive File Protections Bypass, analyzed on 21/11/2025
Divers

Vigilance.fr - Visual Studio Code: file write via Sensitive File Protections Bypass, analyzed on 21/11/2025

An attacker can bypass access restrictions of Visual Studio Code, via Sensitive File Protections Bypass, in order to alter files. - Security Vulnerability

globalsecuritymag.com21 janvier 2026
Chicago high school basketball scores
Chicago high school basketball scores
Divers

Chicago high school basketball scores

Please send scores and corrections to preps@suntimes.com. Schedule provided by Jack Gleason. Send schedule updates to hsbballjg@gmail.com.Tuesday, January 20, 2026RED CENTRALHyde Park 63, Dyett 29Kenwood 54, Perspectives-LT 53King 77, Perspectives-MS 43Phillips 72, Englewood 52RED NORTHAmundsen 41, Lane 40Lincoln Park 66, Taft 49Payton 79, Northside 49Young 66, Lake View 39RED SOUTHAg. Science 57, Bogan 56Julian 78,…
chicago.suntimes.com21 janvier 2026
O'Hare reclaims top spot, named nation's busiest airport in 2025
O'Hare reclaims top spot, named nation's busiest airport in 2025
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O'Hare reclaims top spot, named nation's busiest airport in 2025

For the first time since 2019, O'Hare International Airport has topped Atlanta as the busiest airfield in the nation, city officials announced Tuesday. O'Hare had 857,392 aircraft land and take off in 2025 to pass flights at Hartsfield Jackson Atlanta Airport, according to newly released preliminary data from the Federal Aviation Administration. Atlanta, however, still had the most passengers at its airport. "This…
chicago.suntimes.com20 janvier 2026
President Trump's tantrum is no reason to invade GreenlandPresident Trump's tantrum is no reason to invade Greenland
Divers

President Trump's tantrum is no reason to invade Greenland

He took it.Give Donald Trump credit. Truly a wonder. A continual marvel of what human beings are capable of doing: the Great Pyramid of Giza, Hoover Dam, and Donald J. Trump.I'm serious. Despite decades of his toddler pettiness being ground in our faces, daily if not hourly, the man still manages to surprise. How can that be? Maybe because we cling to our traditional values, and confronted with someone who is an utter moral void, untouched by conscience, self-awareness or humility, the mind just rebels and insists on assigning him a notional decency he actually doesn't possess. Last week, Maria Corina Machado, the Venezuelan opposition leader, gave the U.S. president her Nobel Peace Prize, the latest in a series of blatant buy-offs attempting to curry favor. The Swiss delivered a gold brick. Qatar gifted a plane. Machado handed over her Nobel.And he took it. The irony of a man who thunders against DEI as undercutting achievement through merit, then turning around and accepting a prize earned by a Latina, hardly needs to be pointed out. Opinion bug Opinion Maybe my mind boggles extra hard at this because I'm so averse to awards. Sour grapes, perhaps, since I seldom win one. But unlike the president, I don't go out of my way trying to win them either. I have never, for instance, applied for the highest award in journalism, the Pulitzer Prize, because A) applying seems a waste of time; B) I know how political the award process is, being familiar with Tribune panjandrums on the awards committee and C) I am too busy writing stuff.Not that I wouldn't take one. From the Pulitzer Prize Board at Columbia University. Not from any random past winner. Though it's fun to imagine a scenario similar to what played out last week in the surreal farce called Washington, D.C."Hey buddy," Mark Konkol says, over the phone. "You know, I was reading another one of your hard-hitting columns and was struck, yet again, by how unfair it is that I was given the Pulitzer Prize while your high-caliber professional journalism is somehow always overlooked. So I'm going to hop on my motorcycle and blast up to Northbrook and give you mine, along with my heartiest congratulations."That would horrify me. I would beg Mark not to do it. Honors can curse as well as uplift. They're a monkey's paw. Even legitimately won prizes. I wasn't the paper's charities, foundations and private social services reporter for long, but managed to write a story on how the MacArthur Foundation's "genius" grants ruin people's lives. Recipients kill themselves, get divorced, have breakdowns, stop creating whatever it is that snagged the award in the first place. Not all winners, obviously. But enough for a story.The MacArthur Foundation didn't send out a press release tipping me off to this. I just knew it had to be so, and went looking. Because every rose comes with thorns. With honor, mitigation. In 2009, Barack Obama was abashed, almost horrified, when nine months into his first term he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. He said he didn't deserve it. He was right.Trump is the opposite. Look at his frenzy of self-honor. Renaming buildings, ships, accepting that joke FIFA peace prize. Won't someone tell him that the whole point of an honor is that other people are bestowing it? "Self-praise is self-damnation," as Cervantes writes. Besides, no amount of honor can fill the gaping hole where a person's soul should be. No end in sight. Every day, something worse. Every brag, a blot. This is why highlighting any particular act of wrongness is a loser's game. Over the weekend, Trump wrote to Norway's prime minister saying, since he wasn't given the Nobel Peace Prize, he no longer needs to "think purely of Peace" and can seize "complete and total control of Greenland." As if invading Greenland isn't bonkers enough— and setting aside that the Nobel is given by a 5-member Norwegian committee, not the country itself — Trump found a way to make it even crazier. Framing it himself as a tantrum,…

chicago.suntimes.com20 janvier 2026
What to know about U.S. Senate candidates’ debate
What to know about U.S. Senate candidates’ debate
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What to know about U.S. Senate candidates’ debate

The Chicago Sun-Times, WBEZ and the University of Chicago Institute of Politics are hosting a debate with the three leading Democratic candidates in the March 17 primary for the open U.S. Senate seat to replace outgoing Sen. Dick Durbin. The debate will be Jan. 26 at 6 p.m. at the University of Chicago's International House. Who is participating in the debate? U.S. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi, U.S. Rep. Robin Kelly and…
chicago.suntimes.com20 janvier 2026
Friends, family of Linda Brown establish advocacy program, GoFundMe following her death
Friends, family of Linda Brown establish advocacy program, GoFundMe following her death
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Friends, family of Linda Brown establish advocacy program, GoFundMe following her death

Loved ones of Linda Brown launched a program offering guidance to those enduring missing persons cases, in addition to a GoFundMe page, following the death of the Bronzeville special education teacher who died by suicide earlier this month. Brown's niece, Jen Rivera, announced the program through her nonprofit, the Reignited Project, to equip families with guidance during a missing persons case. The program, named…
chicago.suntimes.com20 janvier 2026
En Chicago invocan las enseñanzas de Martin Luther King Jr. para oponerse a las políticas de inmigración
En Chicago invocan las enseñanzas de Martin Luther King Jr. para oponerse a las políticas de inmigración
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En Chicago invocan las enseñanzas de Martin Luther King Jr. para oponerse a las políticas de inmigración

Para conmemorar el día feriado que marca el 97º aniversario del nacimiento del Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., líderes políticos de todo Chicago se reunieron el lunes para invocar sus enseñanzas en la lucha continua contra la agenda del presidente Donald Trump.La Coalición Rainbow PUSH, organización fundada por el reverendo Jesse Jackson Sr., discípulo de King, celebró su desayuno anual en honor a King en un hotel del…
chicago.suntimes.com20 janvier 2026
Subzero temperatures expected by end of week — 'Don't spend time outdoors unless you have to'Subzero temperatures expected by end of week — 'Don't spend time outdoors unless you have to'
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Subzero temperatures expected by end of week — 'Don't spend time outdoors unless you have to'

Chicago area residents are urged to stay indoors and dress in layers ahead of bitter temperatures at the end of this week, Chicago and Cook County officials said. Temperatures are expected to drop on Thursday night below zero and remain there throughout the day on Friday into Saturday, according to the National Weather Service. A hazardous weather outlook issued Tuesday will remain in effect through Monday."Don't spend time outdoors unless you have to," said Gino Izzi, senior meteorologist at the weather service. "If you have to spend time outdoors, you're going to want to wear a lot of layers, multiple layers of loose-fitting clothing. The more layers you put on between yourself and the outside is better."Meanwhile, before the colder temperatures roll in at the end of the week, Izzi said a system that could blanket the Chicago area with 1 to 2 inches of snow will move through Tuesday night but end before rush hour Wednesday. The north suburbs could see heavier snowfall, while the south suburbs could see lighter amounts, Izzi said. Snow will lead to hazardous travel conditions for part of the area late evening-early WED AM. A cold front then moves through WED evening bringing snow showers and gusty winds to 35 mph which may cause blowing and drifting snow. Dangerous cold then returns late week. #ILwx #INwx pic.twitter.com/vCrWZsL4tX— NWS Chicago (@NWSChicago) January 20, 2026 On Wednesday, temperatures could get up into the 20s, with some areas getting up to 30 degrees. While these temperatures aren't warm, Izzi said Wednesday has the potential to be the warmest for a while. Izzi didn't rule out the potential for lingering snow showers or snow squalls Wednesday evening as temperatures drop into the teens. A deep freeze will set in Thursday. On Friday, the air temperature is not expected to get above zero, while the wind chill is expected to plummet, said Izzi. "This looks noteworthy, impressive and unusual," Izzi said, "but not unprecedented or probably not record-breaking."

chicago.suntimes.com20 janvier 2026
Demócratas de Illinois se suman a los crecientes pedidos de 'Abolir ICE'
Demócratas de Illinois se suman a los crecientes pedidos de 'Abolir ICE'
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Demócratas de Illinois se suman a los crecientes pedidos de 'Abolir ICE'

Varios demócratas de Illinois están uniéndose a los llamados a “Abolir ICE”, incluso cuando los demócratas nacionales lidian con advertencias sobre los posibles impactos de este movimiento en las elecciones de medio término.La representante Delia Ramírez, los candidatos al Senado Raja Krishnamoorthi y Juliana Stratton, los candidatos del 9º Distrito Congresional Daniel Biss, Kat Abughazaleh y Laura Fine, así como la…
chicago.suntimes.com20 janvier 2026
Espace publicitaire · 728×90
Young Playwrights Festival examines teen concerns
Young Playwrights Festival examines teen concerns
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Young Playwrights Festival examines teen concerns

All Michael wanted to do was learn how to create an Excel spreadsheet.Unfortunately, the office worker failed to get answers from his manager or the senior managers above him. A trip further up the corporate ladder revealed a startling truth: No one knew how to use the software.That scenario didn’t happen at a Fortune 500 company, but onstage at the Chicago Dramatists theater in West Town. Titled “Offices Etc.,” the…
chicago.suntimes.com20 janvier 2026
No Shot Clock high school basketball podcast: Previewing When Sides Collide
No Shot Clock high school basketball podcast: Previewing When Sides Collide
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No Shot Clock high school basketball podcast: Previewing When Sides Collide

Joe Henricksen and Michael O’Brien’s weekly breakdown of Illinois high school basketball.This week's episode starts off with Two Takes, then takes a look at the Public League conference races heading into the final week of the conference season. Up next is a look at the When Sides Collide shootout at Benet, which features Warren vs. Benet, DePaul Prep vs. Marist, Bolingbrook vs. Neuqua Valley and New Trier vs.…
chicago.suntimes.com20 janvier 2026
Equipment issue causing delays at O'Hare AirportEquipment issue causing delays at O'Hare Airport
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Equipment issue causing delays at O'Hare Airport

Some incoming flights to O'Hare International Airport will be delayed nearly an hour and a half Tuesday morning because of an equipment issue, officials said. The nature of the issue was not made clear and the FAA said departing flights also may be affected and urged passengers to check with their airline. Additionally, to see if you may be affected, select your departure airport and check "Delays by Destination," according to the FAA. In an apparently unrelated issue Monday at O'Hare, a water pipe burst in the baggage claim area in Terminal 1, according to Chicago Fire Department spokesperson Larry Merritt. No one was injured in the Monday 4:35 p.m. issue, which caused "steam" to escape, Merritt said.

chicago.suntimes.com20 janvier 2026
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