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US Supreme Court to hear case against LGBTQ books in schools
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Pistons snap NBA playoff skid, vintage Leonard leads Clippers
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Migrants mourn pope who fought for their rights
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Duplantis kicks off Diamond League amid Johnson-led changing landscape
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Taliban change tune towards Afghan heritage sites
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Kosovo's 'hidden Catholics' baptised as Pope Francis mourned
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Global warming is a security threat and armies must adapt: experts
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Can Europe's richest family turn Paris into a city of football rivals?
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Climate campaigners praise a cool pope
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As world mourns, cardinals prepare pope's funeral
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US to impose new duties on solar imports from Southeast Asia
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Draft NZ law seeks 'biological' definition of man, woman
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Auto Shanghai to showcase electric competition at sector's new frontier
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Tentative tree planting 'decades overdue' in sweltering Athens
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Indonesia food plan risks 'world's largest' deforestation
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Gold hits record, stocks slip as Trump fuels Fed fears
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Trump helps enflame anti-LGBTQ feeling from Hungary to Romania
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Woe is the pinata, a casualty of Trump trade war
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'Like orphans': Argentina mourns loss of papal son
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Trump tariffs torch chances of meeting with China's Xi
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X rival Bluesky adds blue checks for trusted accounts
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China to launch new crewed mission into space this week
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Morocco volunteers on Sahara clean-up mission
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Latin America fondly farewells its first pontiff
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'I wanted it to work': Ukrainians disappointed by Easter truce
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Harvard sues Trump over US federal funding cuts
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'One isn't born a saint': School nuns remember Pope Francis as a boy
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Battling Forest see off Spurs to boost Champions League hopes
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Gang-ravaged Haiti nearing 'point of no return', UN warns
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US assets slump again as Trump sharpens attack on Fed chief
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Forest see off Spurs to boost Champions League hopes
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Trump says Pope Francis 'loved the world,' will attend funeral
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Oscar voters required to view all films before casting ballots
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Bucks' Lillard upgraded to 'questionable' for game 2 v Pacers
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Duplantis and Biles win Laureus World Sports Awards
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US urges curb of Google's search dominance as AI looms
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The Pope with 'two left feet' who loved the 'beautiful game'
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With Pope Francis death, Trump loses top moral critic
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Mourning Americans contrast Trump approach to late Pope Francis
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Leeds and Burnley promoted to Premier League
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Racist gunman jailed for life over US supermarket massacre
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Trump backs Pentagon chief despite new Signal chat scandal
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Macron vows to step up reconstruction in cyclone-hit Mayotte
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Gill, Sudharsan help toppers Gujarat boss Kolkata in IPL
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Messi, San Lorenzo bid farewell to football fan Pope Francis
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Leeds on brink of Premier League promotion after smashing Stoke
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In Lourdes, Catholic pilgrims mourn the 'pope of the poor'

X rival Bluesky adds blue checks for trusted accounts
X rival Bluesky on Monday said it was adding blue checks to accounts that have been verified to confirm users are who they claim to be.
In a blog post, the company said it would "proactively verify authentic and notable accounts and display a blue check next to their names."
"Trust is everything," the team said in the post.
The move mirrors a feature once deployed at Twitter in an effort to thwart imposters and help users know when account holders were authentic.
Billionaire Elon Musk did away with verifying who was behind accounts after he bought Twitter, now called X, in 2022.
Instead, Musk offered blue check marks to those paying for subscriptions for an X Premium tier on the social network.
"Social media has connected us in powerful ways, but it hasn't always given us the tools to know who we're interacting with or why we should trust them," the Bluesky team said in its post.
Bluesky was created by Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey as a side project in 2019.
Dorsey pulled five engineers aside to build a decentralized alternative to Twitter.
He said at the time that centralized attempts to police abuse and misinformation on a platform like Twitter were unlikely to work, and that he wanted to give users more control of personal data and content moderation.
Bluesky did not see the light of day until 2023, the year after Twitter was bought by Musk -- a key ally of US President Donald Trump who has pushed misinformation on his platform since his takeover.
Bluesky said in a post early this year that it had grown to more than 30 million users.
The burgeoning social media network already lets individuals and organizations verify who they are by letting them use their website addresses as their user names, and more than 270,000 accounts use that option, according to the platform.
Bluesky is starting out such "trusted verifiers" with blue checks and plans to eventually launch a request form for accounts seeking the mark of authenticity, the team said.
Bluesky's chief operating officer Rose Wang said in a recent interview with AFP that she was optimistic about the social network's trajectory.
"We really see this as our coming-out year," she said.
"People want to know what's happening in the world and need a safe, moderated space to discuss it, have fun, and make friends. Right now, they're not finding that anywhere else."
T.Ziegler--VB