tv CBS Overnight News CBS March 18, 2016 3:07am-4:01am EDT
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the big bang theory is one of the most successful sitcoms in tv hi it's won eight emmys. big bang just passed the 200 episode mark this season. so there was a whole lot to celebrate at a big bash thrown in their honor. >> it's always very moving, but frankly in a kind of overwhelming way. >> to hit that milestone in this season is really special. >> 200 episodes, you only see that once in a lifetime and e we'rjust sue peer honored. >> katy goe t thparty started early by taking in a yoga class.
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she turned her own camera on them. we kind of hoped kaley would be wearing those trendy bachelor leggings she put on instagram for monday's finale. so does this supermom think ben made the right decision? >> obviously it's an extremely unattractive couple, which is very sad for them, hideously ugly. >> kaley wore a black stress with accents to the big bang party. which celebra >> it says you're pregnant. >> i'm pregnant. >> it's a shocking moment for my character, it's actually i think of where i started. >> i'm a fan of children. does that sound weird?
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with some twins? >> no, i'm not. >> i think it would be actually great for the baby to have around, because then they have to cast like babies, like the olsen twins. >> how does jim feel about babies coming to the show and how does sheldon feel? >> jim is fine with a baby coming on the show because it's not mine, how does sheldon feel? i don't know if he's going to be excited about it. i hope not because i might have to hold it in some episodes or something, i like babies, but fake babies. >> when they're not together and celebrating, this cast is in demand away from the show. in fact simon has a big film coming up with meryl streep and hue grant called florence hawking junio it seems like just about every star in hollywood has a stylist who gets her ready for the red carpet and jennifer garner is a perfect example, but what you don't know is that you cannot imagine the torture that
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jennifer was actually scr ewed and bolted into her oscar gown corset. >> what they do is they move your organs around. >> who knew that versaci was a feat of engineering. >> there are basically two men who come in with screw guns and they screwed me into a metal corset. this isn't true, but it was a metal corset. but it was two italian people who were talking very quickly and the next thing you kno ribs were compressed. >> was it like spanx? >> no, it's so intense. there's metal inside it and these people move your ribs and they move your liver out to the side and they pop you in. >> brie larsen won her scar for room. her favorite red carpet look was this calvin klein stunner. >> i do think that the golden globes was really, really spectacular and special. when i put that dress on for the first time i was overwhelmed and it was the first time i have
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ever cried over a garment of clothing. >> "e.t" first introduced you to christina ehrlich. >> whet ihert's physically hanging on the rack or we're lookin images, i would say it's born here. >> now the hollywood reporter is profiling the top 25 fashionistas who choose the dresses that stop us in our tracks. >> before we met what i had said was, i don't wear >> i don't ware sparkles. >> i don't wear sparkles don't wear anything floral. >> oscar dominated for brooklyn had a lot of rules before she met elizabeth salesman. >> all she had was pink, glittery and sequins, and i put them all on and everything felt like me. >> and who doesn't have goals to look like beyonce. one of her stylists was a gooir who had that classic moment of arranging her train al the met gala.
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phone cake. stars like gaga used it. carrie washington too, thr lights help you create that perfect beyonce like con tour face. >> warm, warm is what a lot of people use for the club settings, it gives you that glow and you can't go wrong, and the next one is brilliant which is really superbright. >> i actually saw that light, michelle williams had it on her phone at the super bowl. everyone was so excited about it. >> did you bring it back for me? >> i will get you one, i promise, i will get you one. >> beyonce actually came up when rihanna talked to "vogue" for their new issue that's out on the 29th. rumors of a rivalry starting. rihanna says, quote, that's just not what i wake up to because i can only do me and nobody else is going to be able to do that. now that's some confidence.
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we can't leave tonight without remembering frank sinatra jr. who passed away yesterday at the age of 42 #. he was ten years younger than when his father died. >> mary hart sat down with both frank jr. and sr. and they opened up about their relationship. >> frank did you ever feel that you got robbed because your dad was so famous? >> not for any length of time, no. now people realize i have a life to lead on my own and it's all the more pleasant that i get to work with my old man today at this age than it ever could have been at a younger age..
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often a celebration - like these guys here. but if you or someone you love has a food allergy, you may feel anxious about dining out. great job, coach! that's why our friends at food allergy research and education want to spread the word that you can have a safe and enjoyable dining experience. you just need a game plan! and you can find one online at safefare.org. visit safefare.org to learn more - and remember. we're all on the same team! a public service messaroge fm food allergy research and education.
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celebrating an "e.t" birth day, rob lowe is 52 and kurt russell is 65. we're going the leave you with a look at tomorrow's "e.t." >> bye, everybody. # >> gwen stefani's new >> i found a friend that was going through literally the exact same thing with me. >> what she is singing about blake. >> it's based on a time in our marriage when we were really struggling. >> that's tomorrow. #
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his friend. farmer's branch police chief sid fuller. >> we have policies that deal with off-duty enforcement that we all follow. >> do your policies involve an off duty police officer to chase suspects in his own vehicle? >> no. >> reporter: cruz's mother has been inconsolable, attending community vigils where hundreds of people have been protesting against the police. cruz family spokesman carlos quintinilla. >> what this officer did is he thought he had sovereign immunity. he thought he was in the wild west. he thought he was a vigilante. this is a cold-blooded murderer who murdered a 16-year-old, innocent young man. >> reporter: here's where it happened. that's the intersection where the officer rammed the vehicle, and i am standing in the spot where the shots were fired. scott, that officer who was charged with murder, that arrest happened yesterday, but by this morning, he had posted a $150,000 bail and walked out of jail. >> david begnaud tonight. david, thank you. there are big chs
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the company will also no longer breed its captive orcas. seaworld ceo joel manby on "cbs this morning"." >> so this will be the last generation of orcas at seaworld. obviously, that's a very difficult decision for us, but we feel it's the right one for the future of the organization. >> reporter: seaworld still holds 23 orcas in captivity at its three parks in san diego, san antonio, and orlando. the highly critical 2013 documentary "black fish" was the beginning of the end for seaworld's killer whale shows. it chronicled attacks on seaworld trainers suchda as wn brancheau, who was killed by a massive orca in 2010. attendance has been falling at the parks, along with seaworld's stock price. the company is now entering into a $50 million partnership with the humane partnership, the one-time adversary. ceo wayne pacelle. >> we're hoping to partner with them to help with animals in distress-- stranded whales,
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turtles. >> reporter: seaworld was running out of options. the california coastal commission ruled it could not expand its san diego park unless it ended orca breeding. california congressman adam schiff said seaworld does dot suddenly see the light. >> i think it is mostly a decision based on the fact that people were not showing up at the parks. people did not approve of the continued captivity of these whales. they didn't approve of how they were being exhibited. >> reporter: now, the orcas will still be on display at seaworld parks, such as this one here in san diego, but in what the company calls more natural orca encounters. scott, seaworld made a lot of money selling orcas to theme parks around the world, something they say won't do anymore. >> ben, thanks. frank sinatra, jr. has died. the chairman of the board's son became a singer himself. at 19 he was kidnapped and returned after his father paid the ransom. he went on to become the keeper of his father's flame. frank sinatra jr. died of a
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march madness is under way, and we end tonight with a team that didn't make it in, though they put on quite a show. here's elaine quijano. >> reporter: monmouth university's basketball team had its best year ever. >> we get the battering ram. >> reporter: but it may have been their bench that put them on the map. >> it got pretty legit pretty quickly. >> reporter: greg noack and dan pillari are the unofficial leaders of the bench mob, a bit of sideline theater to get the team and the crowd going. >> b theench is never known as a cool place to be. so we kind of revolutionized it a little bit where it's okay to
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be on the bench and support your team because it's a group effort. >> reporter: the group rehearses its celebrations before games, playing off current events, pop culture-- >> "star wars." >> reporter: and sometimes a little bit of history. during their victory in december over basketball powerhouse georgetown, they unveiled what they called the sistine chapel. >> look at that. that's the sistine chapel. that's my favorite one. >> reporter: what do your teammates say about it? >> they love it. >> reporter: do you feel like it helps them? >> absolutely. if they look over at the bench and see we're in the game and we're energized and trying to feed energy to them. they'll be like, if they're in it, how can i not be in it. >> reporter: basketball teams across the country have picked up on their antics. high school teams and even nba players have copied r thei celebrations. coach king rice. es i really preach having fun, pecially to my guys. you should have fun when you're doing what you love. >> reporter: doing what they love while changing attitudes about riding the pine.
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elaine quijano, cbs news, west long branch, new jersey. that's the "overnight news" for this friday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back with us just a little bit later for the morning news and "cbs this morning." from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm scott pelley. -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com
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news."is is the "cbs overnight >> welcome to the "overnight news." i'm jericka duncan. a major victory for animal rights activists. seaworld announced it will end it's killer whale shores and the theme park chain is also ending its orca breeding program. the shakeup comes after years of controversy about how the whales are treated in captivity and is being praised by the humane society. norah o'donnell has more. >> reporter: for years, animal advocacy groups have argued the family friendly shows at seaworld hide a more troubling reality below the surface. the 2013 documentary "blackfish" cast a harsh spotlight on seaworld's oti
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abuse and neglect, but since the film's release, seaworld's stock price and park attendance have plummeted. "blackfish" tells the story of trainer dawn brancheau killed six years ago by an orca named tillicum. since then, seaworld no longer allows trainers in the water with the killer whales. the backlash led to the resignation of the ceo in 2014 with joel manby named as the new ceo last year. the company has since instituted other reforms. seaworld says it's replacing its shows with shows that highlight the whale's natural behaviors in the wild. but critics said the changes do little to improve the animal's living conditions. >> there you go. >> reporter: and the bad press continues for seaworld. tillicum remains in captivity and the company says he's now
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the people who run the los angeles zoo say they're forgiving a local mountain lion suspected of eating one of their prized koalas. it's the only local predator capable of scaling an eight-foot wall. since the killing, there's been a raging controversy over what to do about p-22. shoot him, relocate him, or leave him alone. the zoo now says just let him be. john blackstone reports. >> reporter: other animals at the los angeles zoo may have witnessed the crime, but they're not talking. the victim was kalarney, a 14-year-old emale koala mauled to death. the man suspect, caught on zoo security cameras, is well known to authorities and most everyone else in los angeles at p-22, the hollywood mountain lion. zoo director john lewis. >> what we know at this point is
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it's circumstantial, but he was in the zoo the night that the koala disappeared. certainly would be capable of doing it. >> reporter: but we do know that in griffith park, the 4,000 acre wild land preserve where the l.a. zoo is located, there is only one mountain lion on the loose -- p-22. >> he's an opportunistic animal. if he has an opportunity to have an easy and quick meal, he'll take advantage. >> reporter: not his fault? >> right. >> reporter: part of nature? >> right. >> reporter: but zoo officials aren't taking any chances. moving the remaining koalas under supervised protection. p-22 has never been known to bother a human. if he's guilty at all, it's only for doing what comes naturally. john blackstone, los angeles. the chicago white sox designated hitter adam laroache abruptly walked of the of spring training and retired from baseball after a dust-up with ge
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on the field and in the locker room every day. he's walking away from a $13 million contract and considering he only hit .207 last year, he may not get another shot with a different team. jeff glor reports. >> a deep drive, right center field. and it is out of here! >> reporter: for adam laroche -- his sport and his only savon he always been inseparable. >> nobody's kid needs to be in a professional locker room. >> i was really unaware of the fact that he was around as much as he was. >> reporter: the 36-year-old abruptly walked away from a $13 million contract on tuesday and the white sox vice president asked him to limit his son's time in the clubhouse. >> it's not because the young
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because he wasn't well received or well liked by the players. but in management, sometimes you've got to make some unpopular decisions. >> reporter: 14-year-old drake laroche has been a fixture, alongside his father on the field, and in major league clubhouses for years. complete with his own jersey and personal locker. >> my friends think it's like really cool and everything. but i just think it's normal because i do it every single year since i've been a baby. >> reporter: kids on tiehe fld and in the clubhouse isn't uncommon across baseball. but drake's involvement with the white sox was uniqu. >> you see kids in clubhouses all the time, but not on a consistent basis. i can't think of a single case where a players' son was in a clubhouse the entire time the player was. >> reporter: the white sox insist their decision had nothing to do with drake's conduct but rather an attempt to focus on winning. >> it's awesome. i'm so lucky to take him to work. my brothers and i just grew up around the stadium. we always did it, so it's cool
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>> reporter: baseball has long been a family affair for the laroches. adam's dad pitched in the majors for 14 seasons and often brought adam. family, friends and fans are remembering the life of frank sinatra, jr. he died of a heart attack at a florida hospital. he was 72 years old. the only son of the legendary entertainer, he was a singer himself. but he lived and performed in the long shadow of his father. don dahler looks back. >> maybe you might remember this song, dad. we stole it from you. ♪ >> reporter: if frank sinatra was the chairman of the board -- ♪ -- his son, frank sinatra, jr., was the heir apparent. ♪ their relationship appeared as heartfelt as that iconic baritone vrbrato. ♪
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silky smooth. >> for the third night of anguish ended at 3:00 this morning. >> reporter: frank sinatra jr. was kidnapped when he was 19. his father paid the $240,000 ransom. >> his first words when he saw me was "i'm sorry." ♪ >> reporter: frank sinatra, jr. pursued his own musical career, but had difficulty finding his own persona and became sinatra senior's director and conductor in 1988. >> for a guy that has to live in the shadow of one of the most important, iconic singers, performers, artists of all-time, those are big shoes to fill. >> reporter: turning to television, he played himself on "the sopranos" and "family guy." but it was only towards the end of his career that he embraced his father's legacy. >> he would introduce me to the audience. he said my son, frank, is conducting. he said he's almost as good as lawrence welk. and the orchestra would break up.
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and i would say, now you hurt me, you cut me to the quick. >> the "overnight news" will be right back. alright kiddos! everybody off the backpack, we made it to the ottoman. i like to watch them clean, but they'll never get me on the mattress! finally there's a disinfectant mist designed for sofas, mattresses and more. introducing new lysol max cover. its innovative cap has a 2x wider spray that kills 99.9% of bacteria. max cover is another great way to lysol that. in our house, imagination runs wild. but at my table, i keep the food real. like country crock's recipe made with real simple ingredients. and no artificial flavors or preservatives. real country fresh taste from real ingredients. welcome to crock country. and there's moving with move free ultra. it has triple-action support for your joints, cartilage and bones. and unlike the big osteo-bi flex pills,
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you may be one of those people who never forgets a face. even if it's someone you met only briefly years ago. but for some people, it's exactly the opposite. they can't remember any faces. they can't recognize their own parents or even their own children. it's a condition called face blindness. lesley stahl reports for "60 minutes." >> reporter: jacob is one of them. he's 31 years old. he has a college degree, has had great jobs, and he seems perfectly normal. but just don't ask him to identify any faces. we're going to put up the first one. even very famous ones. >> no idea. >> reporter: we showed jacob faces without hair. a pure test of facial
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>> no. nope. can't say if i've ever stheen at person. >> reporter: he's seen jimmy carter plenty of times. and knows michael jordan, too. >> oh, lord. >> reporter: he just can't recognize their faces. >> that's just impossible. >> reporter: can you describe my face? you're staring right at it. >> high cheekbones, light eyes. >> reporter: clearly he could see my face, but he says if we happened to run into each other in a few days, he wouldn't know me from any other woman with short, blonde hair. >> they meet somebody, they have a good time, they have a nice relationship. then a week later they walk past them. >> reporter: brad duchenne is a professor at dartmouth college who has been studying face blindness for 15 years. he said the hardest thing to understand is how someone can see a familiar face with you not recognize it. so he created a demonstration to
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give me a little taste. faces turned upside down. >> here's some famous faces. you're going to be tempted to twist your head but don't do it. can you identify any of these people? >> reporter: i was completely at a loss. you would think i would know all of these people. >> you've seen them all a lot. >> reporter: i don't know any of these people. i really don't. >> want to see them upright? >> reporter: sure. it was astonishing. with just that click, they became recognizable people before my eyes. i know john travolta. i know morley. and there was denzel washington, jennifer aniston, sandra bullock. but the one that really got me is the young woman on the lower right, my daughter. i didn't know my own daughter? >> no. >> reporter: i didn't know my own daughter. >> so there she is. >> reporter: am i getting a feeling for what people with face blindness have? >> when you look at that,
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there's a face there. there's eyes, a mouth. but you can't put it together. >> reporter: that's stunning. i feel terrible for them now. >> it's really difficult. >> reporter: and largely unknown. the condition only got its name in the 1940s when a couple of soldiers came back from world war ii with head injuries and couldn't recognize their wife or parents. it took another 50 years for science to discover that people could be born face blind like jacob. and joe livingston, a retired teacher. ben, a software products designer. and meg novotny, a doctor. >> if i were your patient, you had spent a long time with me discussing the problem, i come back the next time. >> no, you walk out to the window at the front and start check out and i don't know who you are. >> reporter: she relies on patient chartshe
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but there aren't any of those in ben's office, where lunch in the cafeteria can be tricky. >> sitting down at lunch having a discussion with someone about one of my projects and guy across the table gets up and says that's interesting. when you have that meeting, can you invite me? thanks, see you. who is it? i don't know. i have no idea. >> reporter: is it a memory issue? the face doesn't get filed? so they have to rely on other strategies to identify people. hair, body shape. the way people walk, their voice. even style of dress. but jacob told us that it can all fall apart when someone changes their hair, like a colleague named sylvia who he couldened find one day until she started putting her hair in her usual pony tail. >> she put it into the pony tail and once that was in place, that was sylvia. it clicked. and then she took her hair back
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out of that pony tail and she disappeared. >> reporter: to him it was show her face changed into someone else's before his eyes. >> now i'm confronted with the situation that got weird. i knew this person was sylvia, but it didn't feel like sylvia. >> reporter: faces mean so much to us. identity, beauty, character. a place to hang all our memories about a person. faces have captivated artists forever. so it may surprise you to learn that the man who painted these faces, renowned portraitist chuck close, is also face blind. and severely so. say you had dinner with somebody and saw her the next day -- >> wouldn't remember her. >> reporter: yet he's spent his career, even after a collapsed spinal artery left him mostly paralyzed, painting, well, faces. >> yes. >> reporter: chuck close has face blindness and he paints faces.
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the reason i think i was driven to it was to, to take images of people that mattered to me and commit them to memory in the best way i can, which is to slow the whole process down, break it down with lots of little memorable pieces. >> reporter: which is exactly how he creates these works. he can't make sense of a whole face, so he works from a photograph with a grid on it. and translates what he sees, square by square, onto his canvas. guess what we've done. >> i don't know. >> reporter: we've put together a quiz for you. we brought some of our famous faces to show him. >> from the chin, i think it's leno. >> reporter: and we're surprised he did pretty darn well. >> from the lips, i think it's tiger woods. >> reporter: you're pretty good. but of course, not perfect. >> i don't have a clue. >> reporter: that's tom cruise. >> right now, my guts are tied
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activity is a thing that makes me most nervous. oh, now i have to figure out who this person is. >> you can see the full report on our website, cbsnews.com. the "overnight news" will be right back. take off. these dissolve fast. they're new liquid gels. and you're coming with me... you realize i have gold status? mucinex sinus-max liquid gels. dissolves fast to unleash max strength medicine. let's end this. someone's hacked all our technology... say, have you seen all the amazing technology in geico's mobile app? mobile app? look. electronic id cards, emergency roadside service, i can even submit a claim. wow... ye p, geico's mobile app works like a charm. geico. expect great sav ings and a whole lot more.
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big problems. contessa brewer reports. >> reporter: in san antonio, they cheered clearing the clog. in australia, a crane pulled out this, a glob of wipes, grease, and other items. the problem starts here, when wipes go from the back of the toilet into it. and 7% of wipes are labeled flushable. new york city estimates it spends $3 million a year just dealing with wipes in the sewer system. >> whatever you flush ends up somewhere. it doesn't just disappear. and the sewage passes through -- >> reporter: he showed us the screening process, but it doesn't catch everything. >> wipes are getting into our gear, clogging them up and we're not able to process as much waste water as we normally would. >> reporter: kimberly
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manufacturer of flushable wipes, told cbs news -- our flushable products are tested to ensure they meet the current u.s. industry guidelines for flushability. the industry has firm criteria. wipes have to break down when flushed. but manufacturer compliance is voluntary. no laws regulate how flushable they are. they blame the nonflushable wipes for the clogs. >> there is no evidence presented by anyone at any time that a guideline compliant wipe flushed down a toilet has caused any damage or any issue anywhere. and it's because they don't. >> reporter: new york city is not alone. tackling legislation now to regulate flushaway brands. >> our preference is, if you're going to use a wipe, that's fine. put it in the trash. >> reporter: that's the bottom line. contessa brewer, cbs news, new york. from the sewers of new york to the streets, where they're taking out all the old pay phones and installing wi-fi spots.
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don dahler reports. >> reporter: this is a link-in kiosk. there are about three dozen running, with the goal being 7500 stationed around the city. as you can see, it has a touch screen pad here. we can have internet access. it has high speed wi-fi for your device, charging ports, even a 911 emergency button if you get into trouble. but the question is, if more people use public wi-fi, does that put more people at risk to hackers? these aren't your daddy's phone booths. in fact, they're replacing them. colin o'donnell helped design the system. >> along with maps, you've got the internet. you can browse the web, find information. >> reporter: and it makes regular phone calls? >> yeah, you can make free phone calls, talk as long as you want anywhere in the u.s. >> reporter: at the nerve center, technicians remotely monitor usage. designed for the rigors of city life, the
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kiosks have been tested to withstand everything from bad weather, to a parking accident to dog pee. other cities have tried and failed at public wi-fi, because of a lack of funding. he says new york city will succeed because it will benefit financially from ads on the kiosk sites. >> one of the beauties of this is that it is going to generate ultimately, potentially hundreds of millions of dollars a year for the city that it wouldn't have otherwise. >> reporter: the biggest issue with public wi-fi at this scale is security. >> the main concern for a lot of people, you go on public wi-fi, you're afraid to be hacked. how can they be assured this won't happen? >> we're a public network. everybody has to have their own encryption key, so it makes for a very secure and safe network. >> reporter: meaning every time you go online, the system issues
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only your device can use it. but there are ways around encryption. >> the first thing you see is an ad that is a spear phishing attack. >> reporter: we asked this cyber expert to show how easily hackers can set up a fake log-in page that looks like the real thing. >> they think they're connecting to a kiosk but they're connecting to a malicious site and they don't know what they're going to put in their credit card credentials. >> reporter: the best way to be safe is never use public wi-fi for anything that involves personal information, credit cards, or banking. >> we as consumers have to be one step ahead of the next threat. >> reporter: they say they have people monitoring any kind of suspicious online activity 24-7 and do not gather your personal information and sell to a third party. by the way, if you're wondering, if you live within 150 feet of
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with their support and adaptive sports programs, my fire is lit again. for veterans with spinal cord injury or disease, pva is our partner for life, assisting as our needs and challenges change. thanks to pva, my life is back on course. to learn more, visit pva dot org. has been my life long mission for almost 40 years. nutrition is the hallmark of good health and pairing nutrition with an active lifestyle and educating our children on those values i believe can really change the face of the disease in the future. i view my life differently now, because i no longer felt alone anymore. i saw all the little kids with diabetes just like me. with good exercise and good nutrition diabetes can get easier and life can be long lived.
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captioning funded by cbs it's friday, march 18th, 2016. this is the "cbs morning news." president obama's pick to fill the supreme court vacancy gets the seal of approval from senate democrats. but the battle to get merrick garland confirmed is just beginning with republicans saying he'll never make it to the high court. taking on trump. forces from conservatives to activists line up to stop donald trump from winning the republican nomination. march magic for the yale bulldogs! >> upsets abound. the first full day of the ncaa
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