FIFA slashes price of some World Cup tickets to $60 after global fan backlash

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MIAMI (AP) — FIFA slashed the price of some World Cup tickets for teams’ most loyal fans following a global backlash and some will get $60 seats for the final instead of being asked to pay $4,185.

FIFA said Tuesday that $60 tickets will be made available for every game at the tournament in North America, going to the national federations whose teams are playing. Those federations decide how to distribute them to loyal fans who have attended previous games at home and on the road.

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Fans worldwide reacted with shock and anger last week on seeing FIFA’s ticketing plans that gave participating teams no tickets in the lowest-priced category.

The cheapest prices ranged from $120 to $265 for group-stage games that did not involve co-hosts the United States, Canada and Mexico.

FIFA has faced fierce criticism, especially in Europe, for its World Cup ticket pricing strategy that includes so-called “dynamic pricing” and acting as its own resale platform.

Snoop Dogg will perform on Christmas Day when Vikings host Lions

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The party will begin when the Vikings and the Detroit Lions enter the locker room at halftime on Christmas Day.

That’s when global icon Snoop Dogg will take the stage at U.S. Bank Stadium.

The highly anticipated announcement came on Tuesday afternoon with a rollout that also included a video on social media.

“We’re servin’ up music, love and good vibes for the whole world to enjoy,” Snoop Dogg said in a release. “That’s the kind of holiday magic Santa can’t fit in a bag.”

It’s unclear which hit songs will be featured in setlist. The only guarantee is that Snoop Dogg is bound to bring good vibes.

“Christmas Gameday just got a whole lot cooler,” Netflix chief content officer Bela Bajaria said in a release. “We’re uniting two global cultural juggernauts, the NFL and the one and only Snoop Dogg, who will drop the hottest halftime show.”

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A photographer finds thousands of dinosaur footprints near Italian Winter Olympic venue

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By COLLEEN BARRY, Associated Press

MILAN (AP) — A wildlife photographer stumbled upon one of the oldest and largest known collections of dinosaur footprints, dating back about 210 million years to the Triassic Period, high in an Italian national park near the 2026 Milan Cortina Winter Olympic venue of Bormio, officials announced Tuesday.

The discovery in the Stelvio National Park was striking for the sheer number of footprints, estimated at as many as 20,000 over some 3 miles, and the location near the Swiss border, once a prehistoric coastal area, that has never previously yielded dinosaur tracks, experts said.

“This time reality really surpasses fantasy,’’ said Cristiano Dal Sasso, a paleontologist at Milan’s Natural History Museum, who received the first call from wildlife photographer Elio Della Ferrera after making the discovery.

The dinosaur prints are believed to have been made by long-necked bipedal herbivores that were up to 33 feet long, weighing up to 4 tons, similar to a Plateosaurus, Dal Sasso said. Some of the tracks were 40 centimeters wide, with visible claws.

The footprints indicated that the dinosaurs traveled in packs and they sometimes stopped in circular formations, possibly as a protective measure.

“There are very obvious traces of individuals that have walked at a slow, calm, quiet rhythmic pace, without running,’’ Dal Sasso told a press conference.

The tracks were discovered by Della Ferrera, who set out to photograph deer and vultures in September when his camera was trained on a vertical wall nearly 2,000 feet above the nearest road.

The location, some 7,900 to 9,200 feet above sea level on a north-facing wall that is mostly in the shade, made the footprints, though in plain sight, particularly hard to spot without a very strong lens, Dal Sasso said.

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Della Ferra said something strange caught his eye, and he scaled a vertical rock wall with some difficulty to get a closer look.

“The huge surprise was not so much in discovering the footprints, but in discovering such a huge quantity,’’ Della Ferrara said. “There are really tens of thousands of prints up there, more or less well-preserved.’’

The entrance of the park, where the prints were discovered, is located just a mile from the mountain town of Bormio, where Men’s Alpine skiing will be held during the Feb. 6-22 Games.

Lombardy regional governor, Attilio Fontana, hailed the discovery as a “gift for the Olympics,” even if the site is too remote to access in the winter, and plans for eventual public access have not been made.

6 women targeted by serial rapist sue Hinge, Tinder

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She met him on Hinge.

The two gathered for drinks in Denver’s Highland neighborhood in January 2023. Two shots later, Alexa said she was “completely intoxicated” at a level that did not match the number of drinks she had. She remembers tripping up the stairs to his apartment, but that’s where her memory of the night ends.

She slowly pieced together what happened with her ruined clothes, home security camera footage, medical testing and social media sleuthing, Alexa said.

Alexa is one of more than a dozen women who reported being assaulted by convicted serial rapist Dr. Stephen Matthews between 2019 and 2023. The former Denver cardiologist used dating apps to target and lure women, prosecutors said.

The Denver Post is withholding Alexa’s full name because it does not identify victims of sexual assault.

Matthews was convicted in August 2024 on 35 felony counts of assault and sexual assault and sentenced to 158 years in prison two months later.

Now, some of his victims are coming forward after the dating apps that they say enabled Matthews’s attacks. Match Group’s apps, including Hinge and Tinder, were “designed with deliberate disregard for the foreseeable problem of rape,” the lawsuit stated.

Match Group, a global leader in the dating app industry worth nearly $8 billion, ignored clear warning signs about predators like Matthews and failed to take basic steps to protect its users, according to the lawsuit.

A coalition of law firms representing six of Matthews’ victims filed a lawsuit Tuesday against IAC, Match Group, Hinge, Tinder and Matthews in Denver District Court.

Women reported being assaulted by Matthews to both Match Group and Hinge as early as September 2020, but the man continued to appear on the app using the same photos and identifying profile information for the next three years, according to the lawsuit.

Staying Safe on Dating Apps After Dr. Stephen Matthews Case

At one point, three months after she had reported him, Hinge recommended Matthews’ presumably new profile to one of his previous victims. When she reported him a second time, Hinge again claimed it had “permanently banned” him and had taken “additional steps to ensure that he permanently stays off Hinge.” Those statements were false, the lawsuit claims.

Bans are “fake and ineffective,” and the apps’ infrastructure to report abuse is “defective,” according to the lawsuit. The apps allowed banned users to easily create new accounts using the same information and photos, or reopen their accounts after appealing the ban, the lawsuit alleges.

In his profiles, Matthews continued to use his real name, the same photographs of himself and the same descriptions of his job and place of employment, according to the document. Attorneys also claimed he repeatedly linked the same phone number to his accounts.

The Denver man only stopped using dating apps in 2023 because he was arrested by the Denver Police Department for sexual assault.

“Every detail in this complaint shows a catastrophic failure of basic safety,” Carrie Goldberg, one of the attorneys representing the six victims, said in a statement. “Hinge had explicit notice in 2020 that Matthews drugged and raped a woman he met on the app. Hinge confirmed receipt. Hinge promised it had banned him. Then, Hinge recommended him to more women.”

Alexa said she no longer feels safe using dating apps after she was drugged and assaulted by the Denver man in 2023.

“If Hinge had properly reported him and removed him from all of their platforms, he would have probably done this to a significantly smaller number of women, and he would have never done it to me,” Alexa said. “They were completely liable. Not for his actions, but for giving a platform for his actions.”

In today’s increasingly digital world, people are using dating apps like Hinge and Tinder as their primary source for finding love and connection, Alexa said. The apps need to prioritize user safety over profits, she added.

Alexa said the lawsuit is about “sending a message.”

“This can happen to anyone,” she said. “It has and will continue happening if we don’t take measures like this (lawsuit).”

Match Group’s central database contains records of every user-reported rape and assault across all of its dating apps since 2019, according to The Dating Apps Reporting Project, which was repeatedly referenced in the lawsuit. The 18-month investigation was produced in partnership with the Pulitzer Center’s AI Accountability Network and The Markup, now a part of CalMatters, and copublished with The Guardian and The 19th.

By 2022, hundreds of incidents were being reported each week, according to the project.

“The reality is that if Stephen Matthews were released today, he could get right back on a dating app,” the investigation stated. “Match Group knows this — and now so do you.”

Match Group, Hinge and Tinder did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The group of attorneys pursuing the Denver lawsuit originally considered making the case a class action suit, but said it’s difficult when each victim has personalized injuries, Greg Bentley of Denver-based Dormer Harping said.

“I certainly anticipate that there will be additional lawsuits,” Bentley said. “While it won’t be a class action, I think that this will be more like a mass action. There’ll be a group of individual cases that potentially share the same nucleus, a common set of facts, from what the platforms knew and what they didn’t do.”

Bentley said he wants to ensure anyone affected seeks justice, including survivors who didn’t report their experience or who weren’t discovered in the criminal case. He said the team is working to protect each of the victims’ privacy throughout the case, including by not naming them in the lawsuit.

“Hinge had the chance to stop him,” Alexa said. “Hinge could have protected us. I want this lawsuit to stand for every woman who trusted a dating platform that promised safety and gave her danger instead.”