tv Shepard Smith Reporting FOX News July 3, 2018 12:00pm-1:00pm PDT
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raising three puppies to be service dogs. just like spike. a reminder, you can follow spike's blog. i'm dana perino. happy fourth. >> shepard: it's noon on the west coast. 2:00 a.m. wednesday in thailand. a dozen kids in a cave do not know when they will see the sun again. searchers that found the children after a week warn it could take months to get them out. except they may not have that kind of time. forecasters say heavy rains are on the way, which may mean rescuers may have to take a risk. turns out, it's not just computers. automatically scanning your e-mail. sometimes it's people. workers at software companies reading stuff in your inbox. want to lock them out? you can.
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we'll show you how. let's get to it. tuesday before independence. first from the fox news deck, a dozen children could have to wait for months to get out of that cave in thailand. or attempt to save themselves. with an extremely risky rescue plan. the children and their soccer coach have been stuck in the cave for about ten days. searchers found the boys alive yesterday and brought in food and lights at last. they were some three miles from the cave entrance. now rescuers are deciding on their next move. they have two main choices. option number 1, wait for the flood waters to recede in rainy season ends in mid to late october. more than three months from now. think of it. most likely 100 days. children from 11-16 years old in a pitch black wet cave with food
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and water but little more. option number 2, teach them how to use scuba gear and swim to safety. the kids are all said to be in good condition considering all they've been through. seven thai navy seals are staying with them in the cave. future swim instructors? a doctor and nurse there as well. outside the cave, relatives can do little but wait and pray. these images show family members after divers sent back word yesterday that they found the boys alive. smiles capturing the complete relief after days of agony. days of not knowing whether their sons were alive or debt. try to imagine yourself as one of the parents right now. you know your kids in there. you know he's okay. you can't hug him. you can't see him. you can't help him. little you can do but hope he makes it home. forecasters say heavy rains are on the way. that is the worst thing they
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could get. that means the flooding inside the cave could get much worse. of course, as the waters rise, so too does the danger. it's fox's top story. trace gallagher is tracking the developments. hi, trace. >> shep, in a perfect world, the best way for the kids to get out is swim. that is risky. they don't know how to swim one and it would take them three days how to use the dive equipment. experts say they would be guided out by professional divers. thailand's elite navy divers found it difficult to move through the muddy waters and tight passage ways. because some of the channels are so narrow, only one person at a time can fit through. that means the boys would be on their own for at least certain portions of the trip. listen. >> it's a confined space. almost zero visibility.
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the currents to battle against. so it's a really quite a strenuous environment to be in. >> yeah, the question then becomes how the boys handle stress. experts say if any of them panic in any way in the small passage ways, it could be life threatening for them and others. if they decide to sit town for the rainy season, they would have supplies brought in but more rain might mean moving to higher ground and right now they're already a half mile underground. listen again. >> we want to get them out as soon as possible. but they have to make sure that it's very, very safe to bring them out. that means they have to sit and wait and we have to transfer equipment, that will maintain them, so be it. >> the third option is to drill open a new entrance.
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if you've seen the area, it's solid rock and that would take a long time. chef? >> shepard: what details do we have on the condition of the kids? >> well, they're using a color code to assess their conditions and health. red is critical. yellow is serious. green is stable. most of the boys are in green and a few have minor injuries so they're in yellow. after not eating for a week, all are being given a high protein diet, pain medicine and antibiotics. more than 1,000 people are on scene working around the clock to get them out. they have also captured the hearts of the world. watch this. >> i truly believe when, you know, someone puts their heart towards something, it's powerful. when a whole country puts their hearts towards something, wow. >> yeah, u.s. navy seals are
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flying to the scene. the kids are scared but in good spirits, we're told. we could get more information about rescue attempts in the next few hours. we'll keep you posted. >> shepard: we'll look forward to it. let's turn to somebody that has been rescuing people from caves since he was a teen. anmar is with the national cave rescue commission. sir, great of you to be here. thank you. >> you're welcome. >> shepard: what is a top priority? you want to get them out. how do you get to that end? >> the top priority, of course, is to make sure that they're safe and that where they're located in the cave can stay safe in the event of more flooding. the biggest danger that they're facing immediately is the fact that they've been under starvation conditions the last nine days and reintroducing them to food, it has to be done carefully. making sure they're in good health so they can regain their strength. there's nothing that they can do immediately because they're too
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weak at this point. >> i guess you have to wait to get the strength back before you can begin to swim and eventually dive. sounds like a lot to accomplish under those circumstances. >> it is. the diving option is of course the most dangerous as several of your folks have said. it's not one of the preferred options. i know it seems counter intuitive. but sitting tight and waiting and either getting the new entrance found or drilled in, if that is possible, we're waiting for enough break in the weather for the monsoon rains to calm enough that they can lowter water with the existing pumping and any future actions they might take so the boys can come out on their own without having to use scuba. >> shepard: how concerned are you about the rain? >> i'm not following it that closely from the standpoint of what the case is doing as how it reacts. i know the people i've talked to on site say that it will certainly slow down their
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ability to resupply in the cave. they've been moving supplies in fairly rapidly before the new rain hits. so they should be able to sit tight for quite some time in the cave. >> can you give us an idea what conditions like that, the darkness, the wetness, the isolation, what effect that has on children? >> well, it's going to affect everybody differently. some people will have no problem with it or less problem with it. other people will suffer severe effects. the last nine or ten days, they've been under extreme stress, which is certainly not good for their health and plus the fact that they've been involved with the starvation. that is also associated with it. every person reacts differently. so there's no right or wrong way that they can react. i will say that in the -- in essence, it's a sensory deprivation experience that they've just had. the time -- their sense of time
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passing gets distorted and the sense of what reality is starts to become distorted. we've had people under similar conditions actually thought that they told us later that they had hallucinated us coming to rescue them. >> shepard: one of the first things they said according to rescuers, what day is it? how long have we been here? they didn't have any idea. i was wondering if the people that go in the cave have to sort of reality check them. if there's some q&a that you do with them or some sort of brain stimulation. >> when i first come up on people, i evaluate them mentally and emotionally. my goal is to ground them in reality. i let them know what day it is, what has been going on since they have been missing. a real danger, of course, the fact that they're not going to be rescued immediately.
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the best option or even the fastest option still could take a week or more if they choose to dive them out, which is the most dangerous option and the fastest to get them out. you have to regain their strength. you've taught them enough skill to not be as dangerous as it might be otherwise. so it gives them something to focus on. if they do not have that immediate focus and have to wait in the cave for some time, your next biggest task is to keep them occupied so they have something to focus on and they don't have the depression that follows the elation of being discovered. >> thanks, anmar. good:0 you. thank you. >> you're welcome. >> shepard: imagine their parents. the nation of thailand enthralled with all of this. here at home, president trump could meet with two more supreme court contenders today. he's a what a source is telling
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fox news. the president said he met with four candidates yesterday. now we're learning he talked to another possible nominee by telephone. president trump is choosing somebody to fill the smith of justice anthony kennedy. he was a crucial swing vote on major issues including abortion and gay rights. his retirement means the court will be split, four liberals, four conservatives. the president has a chance to give the conservatives the majority. john roberts is live on the north lawn. >> depending who he picks, a conservative majority for a deck kate. the president planning on meeting with at least another couple potential candidate. among them, thomas hardiman. he was under consideration last year to fill the vacancy left by the death of antonin scalia and joan larson is also in
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contention. yesterday the president met with four candidates, amy barrett from the seventh circuit court of appeals. brett cavanaugh from the d.c. circuit court of appeals, raymond kethledge. you're getting a theme here. three candidates from the sixth circuit court of appeals. the white house says there's no particular issue the president is looking at. doesn't ride on say roe v. wade. what he's looking for is judicial philosophy. >> the main thing the president is looking for are people that set the qualifications that you would want in a supreme court justice. tremendous intellect. someone that will stick to upholding the constitution and somebody who has great judicial temperament. >> the white house takes great glee in laying down a lot of smoke around the process. for example, they are happen my
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this afternoon to read stories that the president was spoking on the telephone with utah senator mike lee potentially interviewing him for the job. the two had a phone call yesterday. the white house is chumming the waters here to see who will take the bait. they like to get a lot of speculation, going around potential picks and see what the reaction is. i'm told by people close to the process that mike lee as the next supreme court judge is not likely. cavanaugh and kethledge is a frontrunner. cavanaugh i'm told is the one that looks the most like neil gorsuch. some people have a problem with the ruling he made on obamacare. some people say the criticism is not merited. the president expecting a big fight from democrats because they believe that roe v. wade is on the line here. the next supreme court judge can tip the way in a way that would
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overturn roe v. wade and more moderate republicans of maine have expressed concern about the judicial philosophy of the next supreme court justice. she believes that roe v. wade is established law and doesn't need opening again. >> john roberts, thank you. we'll take a closer look at the top supreme court contenders and confirmation battle ahead. that, plus permits for lemonade stands and the bear that wanted more. stay with us. good to have you on this tuesday afternoon. get your groove on with one a day 50+. ♪ get ready for the wild life ♪ complete multivitamins with key nutrients that address 6 concerns of aging, including heart health, supported by b-vitamins. your one a day is showing. from this day forward, 'til death do us part. selectquote can help you keep your promise. with life insurance starting under $1 a day.
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[snap!] so i feel protected... ...and pretty. always discreet boutique. >> we're learning more about who the president is interviewing as he picks a nominee a week from now. ever-mason is with us from reuters. >> nice to see you, shep. >> shepard: what is the early word? >> he's got a couple that he's thinking about. he's interviewing up to seven starting yesterday and continuing today. two of the main people he's looking are brett cavanaugh and judge amy barrett. both of them are conservative. interesting choices for a different reason. cavanaugh has an interest with george w. bush. barrett is 46. when she ran -- when she was selected by trump in 2014, her
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confirmation hearing were tricky. she was drilled about her catholic faith. >> you hear a lot of rumblings about the white house to bring in a woman so that you have your first woman conservative on the bench. is that just talk or is there something there? >> it's no doubt something that is -- they're thinking about. when we talked to the president on air force one friday, he mentioned there's two women and the top five candidates. clearly the president and the white house are focusing on the long-term when they're making this choice. they're looking for somebody that would uphold the law and uphold conservative principles that the president talked about as a candidate. politically, you can't rule out the politics of this move and choosing a woman. something that might help the president with in the election. >> shepard: if you want someone,
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you want someone pro life but not for instance like susan collins would have to acknowledge is pro life. you have to have someone that fits the bill all the way around. that's not evidence especially on kavanaugh. >> it's not. the president said he wasn't going to ask the candidates about roe v. wade but in the same breath he mentioned that everyone on the list of 25 that he's considering were conservative judges. so the implication was he already knows that these are people that would be -- at least not in favor of abortion. that said, other conservative justices have said in their confirmation hearings that they would respect established law and roe v. wade is established law. >> shepard: this list came together not through the white house but through an outside group. tell us about it. >> it was developed during the 2016 campaign. very aggressively but the trump campaign then and since coming
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into the white house as a way of saying these are my values, these are the things i look for in a supreme court justice. the president likes to say a lot that one of the reasons he think as lot of conservatives supported him in 2016 is because of the supreme court. of course, there was an opening then during that year. now he's very pleased to have a second opportunity to shape the court. >> shepard: thanks a lot. mr. mason, appreciate you. >> thanks. >> shepard: mike pompeo heading back to north korea this week. remember last month president trump and kim jong-un signed an agreement in which kim said he would work toward giving up his nukes. there's now there's reports he's doing the opposite of that. so if north korea is doing what they're not supposed to be doing, we are we over there talking with them? well, to get them to do what they're supposed to do. when does the talking become a change in policy? are they moving the goal posts?
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>> shepard: what the world wants is for north korea to abandon its nuclear program. what north korea appears to be doing is expanding its nuclear program. yet president trump says talks with the hermit kingdom are growing well. the white house says secretary of state mike pompeo is headed to north korea thursday. his trip comes after our corporate cousins reported north korea is expanding a facility that builds ballistic missiles and the analysts say those missiles are capable of striking u.s. military bases in asia with a nuclear weapon. the president tweeted this morning, many good conversations with north korea. going well.
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meantime, no rocket launches or nuclear testing in eight months. all of asia is thrilled, only the opposition party, which includes the fake news, is complaining. if not for me, we would be at war with north korea. >> how does the president say it's going well with north korea when u.s. intelligence agencies saying they're making more fuel? >> as i said yesterday, i'm not going to confirm or deny intelligence reports. we had good meetings with ambassador kim. as you know, secretary of state is headed to north korea. we're continuing to make progress in those conversations. >> he moving the goal posts though? >>. the goal is the same it's always been, denuclearization. that's what we're going to continue to push for and working with them on. >> shepard: that's the goal. but that is not what is happening. the expansion seems to be the reality. at last month's summit, the
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north korean dictator promised to work towards denuclearization. it's virtually this exact same promise that north korea made and broken for decades. let's bring in tara maller, spokesperson and senior policy adviser for the counter extremism project. hi, tara. >> hi. thanks for having me. >> shepard: goals are great. reality is awful. how are we any better now than before all of this mess happened? >> i was here with you after the summit occurred. we talked about how problematic it was that a, we didn't have a transcript of what transpired and b, there wasn't anything tangible and concrete that came out of that discussion. diplomacy is good. it's a necessary part of this. it's not sufficient. we're not any closer to getting towards denuclearization and we won't be closer until we have a specific timetable with specific guarantees about concessions that the north koreans are going to demonstrate.
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as we all know, actions speak louder than words. all we've seen up till now are a lot of words from both leaders. from the trump administration side, a lot of positive words and i'd argue setting the bar too high. they should be lowering expectations. this is going to be a long process and phased and if we succeed, it's going to take a long time. >> shepard: i don't understand who they think they're kidding here. first, we had maximum sanctions and the world together no, north korea. then we got together, said some words. now the expansion continues. things are worse. the threats of sanctions went away. >> shepard: the real troubling part is in the "washington post" a couple days ago. the intelligence community has reported to "the washington post," been reporting that the north koreans have been ramping up their activities and there's intelligence suggesting they're going to try to deceive or denial and deception campaigns
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around how many missiles they have, what they're going to declare. what we need here and we heard sarah sanders say the goal is denuclearization. if both sides don't agree to what that means, we won't get there. for the united states, it needs to be complete and irreversible and this is key, verifiable. so until you have transparency and declarations from the north koreans about specific amounts of material, where their sites are and until the intelligence community confirms that, we're not actually making progress. we'll see if secretary pompeo can make more inroads, this is part of building good will. we shouldn't mistake that for actual progress. >> shepard: for them, in the past, prior to this administration when things like this have happened, the screaming from whoever the opposition party has been and goes both ways, you can't appease them, this is helpful for him. any destabilization that might have happened because the people are tired and hungry and mad at
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this regime that goes away when you put the president of the united states against them. this helped him. do you grow? >> i agree that we should not be appeasing in terms of granting concessions without getting anything in return. i don't think president trump should have halted our thwarting our military exercises and i don't think we should be praising a dictator and complimenting him and going over the top that is unnecessary. diplomacy needs to take place. we'll see how it pans out. >> shepard: tara maller, hope you have a fantastic fourth of july. >> thank you. same to you. >> shepard: thank you. north and south korea facing off on the basketball court. dozens of south korean basketball players arriving in pyongyang tad. the south koreans coming to the north. set to play. another good show of good will
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as talks towards peace continue. no word on whether kim jong-un will attend any of those matches. he's known to be a big hoops fan. his favorite team, the chicago bulls, as i'm sure you know, dennis rodman made multiple trips to north korea to meet with him. warm diplomacy. the feds have put shredded documents back together after seizing them from president trump's former fixer, michael cohen. now all of a sudden we're getting a look at those reconstructed files. first, why somebody flew this drone into a nuclear power plant on purpose. it's the bottom of the hour, the top of the news is straight ahead. woman: i stay active by staying in rhythm.
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it may have happened because the hot weather is using more water. the water department commissioner says she doesn't think that's a problem. 2,000 people lost power. green peace activists say they flew a drone in the side of a power land to show the lack of security there. video showed it crashing into the plant in france. an engineer in mississippi testing a rocket engine that could be reused and launched into space repeatedly. it's being tested every 24 hours for ten straight days. the goal, create a space craft that can launch into orbit with days notice rather than months or years. the news continues after this. child: bye, grandpa! and if you have heart failure, entrusting your heart to entresto may help. entresto is a heart failure medicine that helps improve your heart's ability
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locked up. that's the ruling from a federal judge. it's another setback for the president's zero tolerance immigration policy. at issue here, what happens to those seeking asylum while their applications move through the courts? it's a process that can take years. under a policy put in place in 2009, people that prove that they have a credible fear of going back home are eligible for release during that waiting period. for the most part, that's exactly what's been happening. officials have been releasing them. back in march, the aclu filed a lawsuit claiming that parole rates for asylum seekers have dropped to nearly zero since the president took office. casey stegall live in el paso. this represents a large facility there, i understand. >> yeah, shepard. on the other side of town in el paso, it's one of 4 others across the country named in this lawsuit. so again, el paso, then we have
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the facility in los angeles, detroit, newark and philadelphia. those are the other ice offices involved in the suit. it's alleged more than 1,000 people between those offices were denied the humanitarian parole you talked about, even though they met the current guidelines for it. the d.c.-based federal district court judge writing this opinion does no more than hold the government accountable to its own policy, which recently has been honored more in the breach than the observance. now, the white house has argued all along, shepard, that smugglers and violent criminals come to the border and they exploit the asylum process, pretending to be fleeing their homeland because of persecution, knowing it's a loop hole that in the past could get them out of detention faster. >> shepard: thanks, casey.
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imagine your job is to take documents that were run through a shredder and somehow put them back together so they can be read and understand in court. thousands of them. tedious much? the fbi is reconstructed shredded documents that it found during raids on the president's former personal lawyer and fixer, michael cohen. buzz feed news reports its gotten ahold of them. they include insurance papers, finance records and an invitation to meet with business representatives from the nation of qatar. the fbi raids were part of a criminal investigation into michael cohen's business deals. they include a payment to stormy daniels, hush money over the affair she says she had with the then future president trump. the president now denies the relationship. just this week, michael cohen told abc's george stephanopoulos that he will eventually reveal whether the president told him to make that payment.
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cohen also said if prosecutors force him to choose between protecting his family or the president, he said my wife, my daughter, my son have my first loyalty and always will. david lee miller live in new york city. >> the reconstructed shredded documents seized by the fbi and obtained by buzz feed don't have any meaningful new information about michael cohen despite speculation to the contrary, there's no smoking gun. one document is a march 29, bank transfer confirmation for $62,500. the pay-out was hush money to a play bottle model with whom that a man had an affair. another document is an invitation to a dinner reception welcoming a business associate from qatar. some of the other documents are rambling letters sent from a
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california woman that claims donald trump who she has never met wanted to marry her in the 80s. she claims she's a victim of extortion with her home being buzzed by planes and helicopters. last year the judge said she was a burden on the court system for filing frivolous lawsuits. also are handwritten notes. one is about the taxi business where cohen had substantial investments. other pages had jumbled word fragments. in a court filing, the u.s. attorney told kemba wood that 16 pages of cohen's shredded documents. buzz feed published 13. it's not clear if there's additional material. the u.s. attorney declined to comment. thursday is the deadline for the trump organization to finish examining 23,000 items seized by the government and to request
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that some be withheld from prosecutors because of attorney client privilege. the trump organization wanted another week for the review but the request was rejected by the judge. shepard? >> shepard: david lee, thank you. google promised awhile back to stop scanning people's e-mails, to personalize ads that appear on your screen. a new report finds some companies can still look through your inbox for personal information and in some cases actual people are seeing them. reading your e-mail box. at the top of this news cast, i promised you we would tell you what to do to stop them from doing that and next we will. you're headed down the highway when the guy in front slams on his brakes out of nowhere. you do, too, but not in time. hey, no big deal. you've got a good record and liberty mutual won't hold a grudge by raising your rates over one mistake. you hear that, karen? liberty mutual doesn't hold grudges. how mature of them! for drivers with accident forgiveness,
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lipstick gives the mouth color and definition. and als paralyzes the body. you look great mom. thank you, doll. slowing taking away the ability to move and eventually breath. >> shepard: you probably heard that tech companies mine your e-mails to deliver targeted advertising to you. there's a new report that indicates in some cases software company employees are reading through our inboxes. that's court to an investigation from the "wall street journal."
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that paper's parent company and fox news parent share common ownership. the journal reports google lets hundreds of application developers scan people's g-mail inboxes using computer programs or in some cases using human beings. google representatives tell the journal that they vet the information. if you don't want them in your inbox, we'll explain how to block them. first, we go to douglas. good to see you. >> thanks for having me. >> shepard: are they scanning through my subject lines or reading the e-mails? >> if you signed up for one of the several hundreds of apps out there that connect to g-mail, they may be doing that. google has opened up g-mail to third party developers because they think that apps make g-mail more useful. there's an array of productivity
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tools and travel itinerary tools, all apps that google says help a tract more users making it more useful. as we found in the reporting, a lot of apps are leaking data outside of g-mail and potentially to companies that you shouldn't trust with your e-mail data. >> shepard: there's a lot of ones and you can tell when it's happening. like if you made a reservation on a particular application through which you make dinner reservations, and if you do that and it shows up do you want to plot the address or get an uber, it means they're talking to each other, right? >> yes. there's a permission screen that says i'm giving this app permission to access read my e-mails what we've found, many users don't realize the extent to what that is. >> shepard: of course not. >> what that means is human beings reading your e-mails to help train their computers and
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algorithms. >> shepard: do they save it? do we have a way to know? >> e-mails become something that data miners are more interested in. we're starting to see new businesses mine the data contained in e-mail to find out things like what you're shopping for, what companies you're doing business, who you're talking to. a lot of sensitive data that markers, hedge funds, other companies are trying to get their hands on. >> shepard: all right. how do we keep them out of our business? >> just be careful and mindful about what you're doing when you connect your e-mail to a third party app. because google is doing this doesn't mean they're vetted thoroughly. i'd recommend reading privacy policies, going to the fine print and seeing what they're do. >> shepard: yuk. >> if the app is free, it's very likely they're trying to harvest your data in some ways. so figuring out what the business models are of the
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companies can help reveal what they're looking at in terms of your e-mail. >> shepard: it's not bullet points. a lot of pages in there. people don't have the space for that stuff. >> it's not easy to read privacy policies. >> shepard: it's not fun. thanks for being with us. >> thank you. >> shepard: lillian has this thing and she will show it us. it's bleepin' golden. you can show us -- i don't want them reading my e-mail. >> if you go to your g mail, the home page, the first thing to do is get to your google account. i'm here in the right-hand corner. notice an i con. click there. >> shepard: oh, good. that's not your real address. she will never read it. don't bother. >> so this will take you to your main account home page. >> shepard: look at that. >> the first column, you see sign in and security.
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right here apps with account access. click on that. this will bring you to another page where you can click manage apps, this will show you the apps that will have your third party apps that have information. if you click on them, you can see what it has access to and when it was given that access. if you see anything here that makes you uncomfortable, click the remove access button. these are things i truth. i don't want to remove them. >> shepard: drop box and open table in this case. google chrome. >> none of these make me feel uncomfortable. you can see what the app is looking into or if there's something you don't remember getting access to. you'll remove access for those. >> shepard: it's simple if you know how to do it. >> it is. >> shepard: we'll have this on our website at foxnews.com. if you don't want them reading your e-mail, lillian will show you how to stop them. a teenage girl was swimming in
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florida when a gator chased her up a tree. you'll hear her mothers dramatic 911 call. i smiled because everybody is fine. then there's the case of a bear. bear news ahead. ♪motorcycle revving ♪ motorcycle revving ♪motorcycle revving ♪ motorcycle revving ♪ no matter who rides point, ♪ there are over 10,000 allstate agents riding sweep. ♪♪ and just like tyrone taylor, they know what it takes to help keep you protected. are you in good hands?
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>> shepard: we're hearing a mother's desperate 911 call after an alligator in central florida changed her teenage daughter up a tree during a camping trip. >> my daughter is stuck in a tree. this gator is surrounding her. we can't get out. she's 15. >> shepard: happened in astor, about an hour north of orlando. a sheriff's deputy there says he found the girl screaming and hanging from the tree branch with the 11-foot alligator
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hissing below her. the gator is dead. the people are fine. a little boy trying to sell lemonade in kansas city. that's all he wanted to do for his birthday, a man showed up and said jacob needs a permit to stay in business. >> i was like whoa. what is wrong with him? why you want to shut me down? it's just lemonade, come on! >> shepard: golly. the cops agreed, thank goodness. after hearing about the situation, this bunch of local first responders went to jacob's stand to show up and give support. they gave them seals of approval. look at this. that's a permit, crayon style.
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our producers contacted the health department. they consider them low risk and they focus on high risk situations like restaurants. jacob says he will be open more days this summer. in bear news, something more adult than lemonade, thank you. this bear story finds our furry four-legged star making himself at home like something out of goldilocks. no bet for this killer. he tried out the hot tub. this is in l.a. county. no porage. he threw back a margarita. when the bear left, he made two drinks. bears in the hot tub with a margari margarita. top of the hour headlines
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you know your family, we know senior living. through everys hamoment of your life. they were with you when you felt unbreakable. and with you when you had your heart broken. they were with you when you shared your love with the world. and with you when she became your world. they're still with you right now. but... how well do you know them?
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>> shepard: on this day in 1775, george washington get a promotion. he took command of a continental army fighting for independence in the revolutionary war. washington supporters said he was from virginia. he was the perfect person to unite the colonys from the north and the south. they didn't have a lot of experience or equipment. but washington turned the troops into a winning fighting force after our first future president got a new job 243 years ago today. should news break out, we'll break in. breaking news changes everything on fox news channel. on the fox broad cast network, world cup continues. england and columbia going into extra time on the main fox network on your local fox station. here, "your world" with with neil cavuto next. the markets had a half day in
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preparation for independence day. we're off 132 on the session. it's closed. you can see it started off good. ended up bad. our day has gone the reverse. enjoy your independence day. be thankful for what you got. i'll see you back here next week. >> neil: don't watch that soccer so fast. the mad dash is on. americans begin to hit the roads and the airports and what could be record numbers this july fourth holiday. we're live everywhere in washington d.c. motorists are taking to the roads. denver airport where passengers are not taking to the skies. chicago where traffic is just taking a toll. in wildwood, new jersey, some folks are trying to take a stroll. be cool, be calm. try to stay out of the heat. welcome to "your world." i'm neil cavuto. 47 million people expected to travel for the holiday at the exact same second. that would be a new report. drivers are
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