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Drunk driving suspect tells SoCal officer: 'I'm the DUI tonight' - Los Angeles Times

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Hours into 2025, a suspected drunk driver in Murrieta may have already committed the year’s worst gaffe caught by police on video.

Shortly after the new year began, an officer “noticed a vehicle swerving across the roadway and initiated a traffic stop to investigate potential DUI” — or a person suspected of driving under the influence, Murrieta police said in a statement.

During the stop, which was captured on the officer’s body camera, the suspect said he drove a friend home because “I’m the DUI tonight.”

In seeming disbelief, the officer responded: “You’re the DUI tonight?”

“Yes sir,” the driver confirmed.

“Do you mean to say the ‘DD’?” the officer asked, referring to the abbreviation for a designated driver who would remain sober while others imbibed.

The driver paused, apparently at a loss for words, and meekly apologized.

Later in the encounter, the suspect admitted to consuming alcohol and underwent field sobriety tests, police video showed. He nearly fell several times while simultaneously attempting to walk in a straight line and count.

Ultimately, he was arrested for DUI and taken to jail, Murrieta police said.

“Each day in the U.S., around 37 people die in drunk-driving crashes — about one every 39 minutes,” the Police Department said in a statement. “In 2022, alcohol-impaired driving claimed 13,524 lives.”

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freeAgent
35 minutes ago
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I *AM* the DUI tonight, officer!
Los Angeles, CA
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These Ukrainian women survived a massacre. Now, they're shooting down Russian drones

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Women from a Kyiv suburb traumatized by a 2022 massacre by Russian troops joined an all-female volunteer air defense unit to deal with their fears.

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freeAgent
5 hours ago
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Putin thinks these people are Russians. Maybe he should go introduce himself to them.
Los Angeles, CA
acdha
23 hours ago
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Washington, DC
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Someone made a CAPTCHA where you play Doom on Nightmare difficulty

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People have been complaining for a while that passing a CAPTCHA is too difficult, but developer and tech CEO Guillermo Rauch has made one of the hardest yet: a fully playable CAPTCHA based on the classic PC game Doom.

It's been a long-running joke that developers will make Doom run on absolutely anything, so it's not much of a surprise that it's now running inside something that resembles a CAPTCHA.

The app essentially amounts to a small Doom level that is playable with keyboard controls (arrow keys to move, space bar to shoot) within a CAPTCHA-like presentation. You must kill three enemies to pass the test.

The level reflects Doom's Nightmare difficulty, and it is much harder than needed to be an effective CAPTCHA—especially since you can't strafe to avoid enemy fire. It took me several tries to cheese a victory, and the Hacker News thread about this app is filled with people noting how difficult it is and sharing strategies.

It's a WebAssembly application, but it was made via a human language, prompt-driven web development tool called v0 that's part of a suite of features offered as part of Vercel, a cloud-based developer tool service, of which Rauch is the CEO. You can see the LLM bot chat history with the series of prompts that produced this CAPTCHA game on the v0 website.

Strangely enough, there has been a past attempt at making a Doom CAPTCHA. In 2021, developer Miquel Camps Orteza made an approximation of one—though not all the assets matched Doom, and it was more Doom-adjacent. That one was made directly by hand, and its source code is available on GitHub. Its developer noted that it's not secure; it's just for fun.

Rauch's attempt is no more serious as a CAPTCHA, but it at least resembles Doom more closely.

Don't expect to be playing this to verify at real websites anytime soon, though. It's not secure, and its legality is fuzzy at best. While the code for Doom is open source, the assets from the game like enemy sprites and environment textures—which feature prominently in this application—are not.

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freeAgent
5 hours ago
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I tried this out and was unable to prove I was human.
Los Angeles, CA
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New Jersey Makes One Last Desperate Attempt at Sabotaging Congestion Pricing in New York City

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A halt sign on a city crosswalk light with skyscrapers in the background |  Andrey Bayda/Dreamstime.com

Charging drivers a price for using congested, currently free roadways is near-universally accepted as the only surefire way to eliminate gridlock traffic.

The endless drama over New York's implementation of "congestion tolls" to be charged to drivers entering lower Manhattan is a case study of how a good policy in theory can be undone by broken regulatory processes and toxic practical politics.

Late on New Year's Eve, New Jersey asked a federal judge to stop New York from moving ahead with its plan to start charging motorists $9 congestion tolls starting January 5 while its federal environmental lawsuit challenging the policy plays out.

New Jersey's filing claimed the state would suffer irreparable harm from increased traffic and reduced air quality if the tolls were allowed to go into effect as scheduled, reports The New York Times.

The move potentially endangers the tolling scheme that was first approved by the New York Legislature in 2019 and was initially supposed to go into effect in January 2021.

Since New York's plan involved tolling federal-aid highways, it needed federal sign-off, which in turn requires arduous environmental review mandated by the federal National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA).

NEPA requires federal agencies to study the environmental impacts of the discretionary actions they make as well as collect public feedback on potential environmental impacts. Third parties are empowered to sue agencies for conducting insufficient environmental reviews.

The law frequently invites lawsuits from third parties whose main motivation isn't securing a more thorough environmental review but rather delaying a disfavored project for as long as possible.

New York's NEPA review of congestion pricing—which involved dozens of public hearings, the collection of 28,000 pages of public comment, and some alleged foot-dragging from the Trump administration—was finally completed in June 2023.

Throughout this process, everyone from truckers to teachers unions argued that the importance of the congestion they caused warranted an exemption from the tolls.

No one has fought New York's congestion pricing plan harder than New Jersey. Garden State politicians have proposed federal bans on congestion pricing, revenge tolls on New Yorkers entering the state, and tax credits for New Jersey commuters who end up having to pay the tolls.

Shortly after the federal NEPA sign-off, New Jersey sued federal highway officials, arguing that they didn't do a thorough enough environmental analysis of the congestion pricing scheme.

New York pressed ahead with congestion pricing implementation while that lawsuit was ongoing. Then in June 2024, just a few days before the tolls were supposed to go into effect, Gov. Kathy Hochul indefinitely suspended them on the grounds that the timing wasn't quite right.

Coincidently enough, with the 2024 election in the rearview mirror, Hochul announced that the time was now right to start imposing reduced tolls.

On Monday, a federal judge issued a ruling in New Jersey's NEPA lawsuit saying that New York had followed most of the required steps in federally mandated environmental review. New York officials took this as license to proceed with the tolls.

That Monday ruling likely makes New Jersey's Tuesday filing a futile effort. Per the Times reporting, the speculation is that New Jersey is simply trying to delay implementation of congestion pricing until Donald Trump (a critic of the policy) is back in the White House and in a position to block the program.

A statement from the lawyer representing New Jersey suggests political motives: "New Jersey remains firmly opposed to any attempt to force through a congestion pricing proposal in the final weeks of the Biden administration," Randy Mastro said.

New York's congestion tolling program is hardly an ideal policy.

The $9 tolls (reduced from the $15 most drivers would have been charged before Hochul's suspension) are likely too low and too static to meaningfully reduce Manhattan gridlock. For instance, Singapore's successful congestion pricing program charges dynamic tolls to ensure a set travel speed.

New York's decision to pour all of its congestion toll revenue into New York rail transit likewise gave New Jersey drivers a legitimate gripe that they were merely being taxed to fund a horribly wasteful transit bureaucracy they don't even use.

Nevertheless, if congestion pricing in New York is killed again at the last minute, it won't be because of reasonable complaints about the design of the program. Rather, it'll be a result of special interests once again hijacking a broken environmental review process that delays projects both good and bad.

The post New Jersey Makes One Last Desperate Attempt at Sabotaging Congestion Pricing in New York City appeared first on Reason.com.

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freeAgent
5 hours ago
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It's frustrating that facially false claims such as, "a toll which will cause less single-occupancy vehicle traffic will increase pollution," have to be treated seriously. It's even more frustrating that a state government is making these claims.
Los Angeles, CA
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Tesla Cybertruck sales are disastrous

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Tesla confirmed that Cybertruck sales are disastrous in the release of its quarterly results. Sales of the controversial electric pickup truck are stalling a year into the production ramp.

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freeAgent
8 hours ago
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Los Angeles, CA
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Man taken into custody after trying to drive off in a Waymo in downtown L.A., police say

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A man is taken into custody after apparently attempting to drive away in a self-driving Waymo taxi, L.A. police say.



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freeAgent
8 hours ago
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At least he's safe from getting a DUI...right?
Los Angeles, CA
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