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Friday, February 3, 2023

Personalis gains on agreement with Moderna

 

  • Personalis Inc  and Moderna Inc  have signed a new agreement to continue using the Personalis NeXT Platform as part of upcoming clinical studies of mRNA-4157/V940, an investigational personalized cancer vaccine, jointly developed by Moderna and Merck & Co Inc .
  • The platform, also utilized in the vaccine candidate's Phase 2b study, will be used to sequence genomic information from a patient's tumor sample to identify the unique genetic mutations that are most likely to generate a tailored antitumor response.
  • In January, Personalis approved a reduction in its workforce by up to approximately 30% to reduce operating costs and improve operating efficiency. 
  • The company estimates that it will incur charges of approximately $3 million for severance payments and employee benefits, primarily in the first quarter of 2023

Suspected Chinese Spy Balloon Might Be Headed To East Coast

 Update (1415ET): 

A suspected Chinese spy balloon flying over the US was spotted in the skies of north Kansas City on Friday afternoon.


The question people are asking: Where is the balloon headed? 

To answer that, Capital Weather Gang said:

"Forward trajectory based on atmospheric steering currents would bring it close to St. Louis tonight & into North Carolina Saturday." 

A map of the balloon's trajectory. 

Others say the balloon could take a different path:

*   *   * 

Update (1012ET): 

Bloomberg confirmed US Secretary of State Antony Blinken would postpone his trip to Beijing amid spy balloon allegations. 

The two-day trip was set to begin on Sunday. Even before Blinken postponed his trip, expectations were low to reset deteriorating Sino-US ties. 

*   *   * 

Update (0932ET):

In response to some US officials accusing China of sending a spy balloon near ICBM fields in Montana, the Chinese foreign ministry said the balloon was for monitoring the 'weather' and veered off course and entered into US airspace due to force majeure. 

The ministry "regrets the unintended entry" and said Chinese officials would continue communicating with the US about the balloon. They added the balloon is for meteorological and 'other scientific research.' 

Earlier, foreign ministry spokeswoman Mao Ning urged the US to act "calmly and prudently" after some US officials accused China of sending a spy balloon. 

"I want to emphasize that before the facts are clear, any speculation and hype are not conducive to the solution of the problem," Ning said.

So China states the balloon is for weather purposes only, while some US officials declare it a spy balloon. One thing is certain. The balloon mysteriously ended up near a highly sensitive area in Montana that is home to ICBM fields. 

*   *   * 

US military commanders have advised President Biden against shooting down a Chinese spy balloon flying over the US. 

Reuters said the US military took "custody" of the "high-altitude surveillance balloon" and deployed military aircraft, including stealth fighter jets, to observe it. 

Such balloons operate at an altitude of 15-22 miles, well above commercial air traffic. The balloon's size is estimated to be equivalent to three buses. 

"The United States government has detected and is tracking a high-altitude surveillance balloon that is over the continental United States right now," Pentagon spokesperson Brigadier General Patrick Ryder told reporters Thursday. 

"The balloon is currently traveling at an altitude well above commercial air traffic and does not present a military or physical threat to people on the ground," Ryder continued. 

Right now, the spy balloon appears to be occupying Montana airspace. This alarmed the state's Republican Senator Steve Daines, who sent an alarming letter to the Department of Defense (DOD). He said the spy balloon is a "concerning event": because Montana airspace includes "Malmstrom Air Force Base (AFB) and the United State's intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) fields." 

Daines wrote that given "the serious nature of the event," he is "requesting a full security briefing from the administration on this situation."

"It is vital to establish the flight path of this balloon, any compromised US national security assets, and all telecom or IT infrastructure on the ground within the US that this spy balloon was utilizing," he continued.

"As you know, Montana plays a vital national security role by housing nuclear missile silos at Malmstrom AFB," the senator said. 

Separately, Canada's defense ministry is monitoring a "potential second incident" but declined to give further details. 

News of the spy balloon followed CIA Director William Burns' speech at a Georgetown University event, where he called China the "biggest geopolitical challenge" facing the West. 

https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/high-altitude-chinese-spy-balloon-tracked-montana-airspace-near-icbm-fields

Chinese spy balloon spotted over Kansas, both senators object

 Sen. Roger Marshall (R-Kan.) said Friday afternoon that the “Chinese spy balloon” that has been drifting over the continental United States has been seen over northeast Kansas. 

Marshall tweeted that his staff is in contact with law enforcement officials about the balloon. 

“I condemn any attempts the Chinese make to spy on Americans,” he said. “President Biden must protect the sovereignty of the U.S. whether it’s our airspace or the southern border.” 

The balloon was first seen on Wednesday over Montana. Beijing has confirmed that the balloon belongs to China but has said it is a weather balloon that was blown off course. 

U.S. officials have said they believe the high-altitude balloon’s purpose is for surveillance, but that it poses no military or physical threat and is not collecting sensitive information. They said they would not shoot down the balloon over concerns about the safety of people on the ground.

Republicans, however, have seized on the issue to accuse President Biden and the Defense Department of failing to protect national security.

Like Marshall, Sen. Jerry Moran (R-Kan.) also called on the Biden administration to act, tweeting that he is in touch with the Defense Department to discuss what is being done to protect the country. 

“China invaded US airspace, & the Biden admin needs to take action to address this situation. Further delay is unacceptable,” he said. 

Secretary of State Antony Blinken has postponed a scheduled visit to China amid the detection of the balloon. 

The Chinese government has maintained that it has no intention of violating any country’s sovereignty.

https://thehill.com/homenews/senate/3843054-chinese-spy-balloon-spotted-in-kansas-senator-says/

Emailing error causes former Blue Cross Blue Shield customers to receive claims

 Many former customers of Blue Cross Blue Shield (BCBS) health plans woke up on Friday to discover they had been notified of insurance claims despite not being covered by the provider for some time, causing concerns that a security breach could have leaked customer information.

Several people on social media on Friday reported receiving insurance claim notifications from Health Care Service Corporation (HCSC), the licensee for BCBS in five states: Illinois, Montana, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas. The last time these former customers reported being covered by HCSC ranged from some months to years.

Some expressed concerns that these erroneous emails were phishing attempts while others were simply confused by the sudden notification so long after they had been covered by BCBS.

Copies of the claims shared online showed that the claims were reported to be recent and some former customers reported receiving more than one claim.

“I have two claim notifications on insurance I haven’t had/used in 9 months & their login website is down this morning to ask anybody why,” one former customer wrote on Twitter. “I’m not sure if it makes me feel better or worse that others are having the same problem. Data breach? Personal information compromised?”

HCSC said in a statement to The Hill, however, that the notifications these individuals received were due to an error within the company and were not indicative of a security issue.

“Starting on Feb. 2, we sent claims notification emails to some current and former members in error. Those emails generated high traffic into Customer Service and our member-facing site and app, which has created longer hold times and sluggish service,” an HCSC spokesperson told The Hill.

“We have completed our review, and we have no evidence that these system issues are due to malicious cyber threat activity. We are also not aware of any improper disclosure of personal health information,” they added. “Members do not need to take any action.”

https://thehill.com/policy/healthcare/3843207-emailing-error-causes-former-blue-cross-blue-shield-customers-to-receive-claims/

US to send high-tech Boeing missiles in latest $2.2B Ukraine package

 A new U.S. weapons package for Ukraine worth nearly $2.2 billion will for the first time include a longer-range missile, the Pentagon announced Friday. 

The Boeing-made ground-launched small diameter bomb, a bomb-tipped rocket with a range of 90 miles, is included as part of a $1.75 billion Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative package. That initiative allows the Defense Department to buy weapons directly from defense contractors to then be sent into Ukraine.  

Another $425 million in weapons will come from U.S. stocks, bringing the total U.S. military aid committed to Ukraine to $29.3 billion since Russia first invaded last February. 

The ground-launched small diameter bomb will give Kyiv “long-range fires capability that will enable them to conduct operations in defense of their country and to take back their sovereign territory in Russian occupied areas,” Pentagon press secretary Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder told reporters. 

The most notable part of the latest weapons tranche to the embattled country, the small diameter missile consists of a 250-pound precision-guided bomb attached to a rocket motor and fired from a ground launcher. 

As the U.S. military does not currently keep the ground-launched version of the weapon in its inventory, it could be up to nine months before it makes it to the Ukrainian battlefield.  

Friday’s package notably does not include Army Tactical Missile Systems, a surface-to-surface missile with a range of up to 200 miles. Ukraine has repeatedly asked the United States for the weapon but has been rebuffed over fears it could be used to strike targets in Russia and escalate the conflict beyond Ukraine’s borders. 

The new lethal aid does include additional ammunition for High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems, also known as HIMARS, 181 mine-resistant ambush protected vehicles, two HAWK air defense firing units, Javelin antitank missiles, drones, artillery, ammunition, radars, military gear and medical supplies.  

https://thehill.com/policy/defense/3843278-us-to-send-high-tech-boeing-missiles-in-latest-2-2b-ukraine-package/

New Student Loan Rule To Cost $361 B; Study Shows Debt Forgiveness Benefits The Wealthy

 by Andrew Moran via The Epoch Times,

A new rule proposed by the Department of Education could cost up to $361 billion over the next decade, while a separate study says President Joe Biden’s landmark student loan forgiveness plan benefits the wealthy.

The White House recently confirmed that more than 16 million people were approved for its student loan forgiveness program. Since October 2022, approximately 26 million people have applied for student debt relief. The borrowers will be approved for the aid if the initiative survives a legal challenge in the Supreme Court in February.

The administration’s program would forgive up to $10,000 for borrowers with federal student loans and up to $20,000 for Pell grants recipients. Individuals earning less than $125,000 and families with incomes below $250,000 would be eligible. In total, 95 percent of all student loan borrowers would qualify for forgiveness.

“More than 40 million Americans would qualify for one-time student debt relief,” the White House tweeted on Jan. 30.

“Nearly 90% of the relief going to out-of-school borrowers would go to those earning less than $75,000 a year. This relief is currently on hold because of lawsuits brought by opponents of the plan.”

This comes as the Department of Education proposed a rule to overhaul one of its income-driven repayment plans by cutting borrowers’ payments to a specific percentage of their discretionary income. The plan—known as REPAYE—would slash monthly costs for undergraduate borrowers by as much as half. It’s estimated that the average graduate from a four-year university could see savings of as much as $2,000 per year.

But this could cost hundreds of billions of dollars over the next 10 years, says a new study.

According to the Penn Wharton Budget Model, a nonpartisan organization at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School, it’s projected that the concept could cost taxpayers between $333 billion and $361 billion. By comparison, the Education Department estimated that it would cost $137.9 billion.

The gap is caused by the government planning for enrollment to remain “static,” but the Penn Wharton projections show that there would be an acceptance rate of as high as 75 percent of eligible loan volume.

“Taking this factor into account, our estimates provide a range of potential budgetary cost for the government over the 10-year budget window starting in 2023,” the study authors said in a statement.

“Higher costs emerge at higher take-up rates.”

This would be in addition to the administration’s one-time cost of direct loan forgiveness that it projected would come with a price tag of $469 billion.

Student Debt Relief is ‘Regressive’

A separate University of Virginia report learned that the federal government’s present student loan payment pause had benefited high-income individuals more than anyone else. The study revealed that the top half of earners garnered 70 percent of the benefit, and the top quintile, which accounted for 16 percent of student loan borrowers, enjoyed close to 30 percent.

Put simply, the program, which has received nine extensions, is believed to be more regressive than Biden’s debt cancellation efforts.

Previous studies have also concluded that the administration’s debt cancellation plan supports high-income households.

“The benefits of the payment pause tie directly to the balances, monthly payments, and the interest rate on the loans. Each of these components contributes to the net regressive impact of the payment pause continuation,” the report stated.

Continuing to extend the student loan payment pause is expensive and regressive. It costs at least $5 billion per month and delivers the bulk of the benefits to upper-income families. In addition, these many extensions threaten the government’s future credibility to administer student loan programs or, indeed, any government lending initiative.”

The paper recommends restarting student loan payments immediately, arguing that additional extensions might result in more pressure on the federal budget and the student loan system.

In October 2020, the Brookings Institution, an economic research think tank, concluded that high-income households benefited the most from canceling student loan debt.

The highest-income 40 percent of households owed nearly 60 percent of outstanding education debt and represented 75 percent of payments. Conversely, the lowest-income 40 percent of households maintained a fifth of the outstanding debt and accounted for 10 percent of the payments.

“It should be no surprise that higher-income households owe more student debt than others,” the think tank wrote.

“Students from higher-income households are more likely to go to college in the first place. And workers with a college or graduate degree earn substantially more in the labor market than those who never went to college.”

Economists also aver that student loan debt relief is “net regressive,” according to a November 2020 Chicago Booth poll. Moreover, they believe that it would “exacerbate U.S. economic inequality,” adding that a preferable policy would be offering “targeted relief.”

Former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers posted a series of tweets in December 2021 that stated that student loan debt reduction is “regressive,” warning that it would also add to inflationary pressures.

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/new-student-loan-rule-cost-361-billion-study-shows-debt-forgiveness-benefits-wealthy

Montana China spy balloon higher than US fighter aircraft

 "The United States government has detected and is tracking a high-altitude surveillance balloon that is over the continental United States right now," Pentagon press secretary Air Force Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder said during an impromptu briefing Thursday evening. "The U.S. government, to include NORAD, continues to track and monitor it closely."

According to a senior defense official, the ballon "has limited additive value from an intelligence collection perspective." A separate senior official told ABC News the balloon is the size of three buses and complete with a technology bay, which the defense official "wouldn't characterize" as "revolutionary."

These comments suggest the balloon, which is flying at 60,000 feet, is no more capable than satellites in low earth orbit at taking photos. 

Chinese spy balloon

The alleged Chinese spy balloon. (Fox News / Fox News)

According to a senior U.S. defense official, the balloon was launched from mainland China. The Pentagon does not believe China's assertions that this was a weather balloon that flew off course. There was no "force majeure" that caused the Chinese surveillance balloon to enter U.S. airspace.

"This was intentional," a senior U.S. official told FOX News Journalist Jennifer Griffin.

The balloon is flying at 60,000 feet, which is higher than most U.S. warplanes or aircraft can fly. To put that in perspective, the F-35 Lightning II, the United States' newest multi-role aircraft, has a service ceiling of 50,000 feet, while controlled airspace for commercial aircraft ranges between 18,000 and 60,000 feet, with most commercial traffic flying around 35,000 feet.

Map of spy balloon

Map shows approximate path of a suspected Chinese surveillance balloon over Montana Friday, Feb. 3, 2023.  (Fox News / Fox News)

So far, the U.S. has decided not to shoot the balloon down, saying it is not an immediate threat and that the debris falling from the balloon as it plummets to earth could cause harm to civilians and property. ⁠⁠

The Department of Defense said the intent of the balloon is surveillance and that it's goal might have been to locate and study United States' nuclear missile silos in Montana.

The balloon is currently over Kansas City, Missouri, and will likely stay over U.S. airspace a few days.

https://www.foxbusiness.com/politics/montana-china-spy-balloon