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Twitter Rolls Out Larger Image Display in Timelines to All Users on Android and iOS – Social Media Today

After testing it out over the last couple of months, Twitter is now rolling out its new tweet image display format, which will mean that full-sized previews of attached tweet images are now shown within user timelines, as opposed to the current cropping down to fit your picture into a specific tweet image frame.

You can see the current display on the left, versus the new format on the right. Rather than being cropped to within an inch of their life, making it difficult to see what the image actually is in many cases, Twitter will now show full-sized pictures in the timeline, which will change the way tweets are displayed -and will likely have a few implications from a digital marketing perspective.

The main change in approach relates to the larger tweet display for tweets with images, which equals more screen real estate, and more room to share your message. That could mean that attaching images will improve user response to your brand message, as it will be larger, and will stand out more in-stream - so you may want to experiment with images a little more in your Twitter process as a result of this update.

It also means that you no longer need to try and calculate exactly the right dimensions to ensure that users can see your attached image in the timeline.

Though there are some provisos to this - as explained by Twitter:

Within those parameters, you're good to go - so you will still need to ensure your Twitter images meet these requirements. But you won't have to upload different versions till you get just the right one that displays as you want in the feed.

And there is one other implication, as noted by Conviva's Nick Cicero:

This is an interesting, and valid consideration to keep in mind. If users no longer have to click on your tweets to expand your attached images, that will also likely result in a decline in engagement with your tweets. So if you regularly post images, and your numbers take a dip, this could be the reason why. Worth noting in your process.

It is also worth noting that this only applies to single-image tweets. Tweets with multiple images will still be displayed in the older format - so if you want to keep using the ol' 'open for a surprise' tweet engagement trick, you still can, just with multiple images instead.

It seems like a good addition, which will make your Twitter feed a more visually interesting space. Though it could take some getting used to - and again, for brands, it could mean that tweets with images generate a lot more user interest, due to the variable size and display.

Which could also, eventually, make this an annoying update. If brands work out that using the max image size is the best way to dominate space, that could render popular hashtags streams virtually unfollowable, as trendjacking reaches new (visual) heights - though Twitter is also working on curated topics to help improve this experience.

Still, it's an interesting update, which is sure to have implications to come.

Time to start experimenting with your tweets.

The new display update is now live in the latest version of the app.

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Twitter Rolls Out Larger Image Display in Timelines to All Users on Android and iOS - Social Media Today

Obama family announces death of family dog Bo, the "loyal companion" who spent two terms in the White House – CBS News

Former President Barack Obama's family dog, Bo, who spent two terms in the Obama White House, has died of cancer, Barack and Michelle Obama announced on Saturday.

The Obamas posted a series of photos of Bo on social media on Saturday, paying tribute to the role the dog had in their family. On Instagram, former first lady Michelle Obama said they had to say goodbye to their "best friend" after his battle with cancer.

She said that Bo, who was gifted to the Obama's in 2009 from the late senator Ted Kennedy, was originally adopted as a companion for their daughters. The Obama's other Portuguese water dog, Sunny, moved into the White House in 2013.

"On the campaign trail in 2008, we promised our daughters that we would get a puppy after the election," the former first lady wrote. "At the time, Bo was supposed to be a companion for the girls. We had no idea how much he would mean to all of us."

She described Bo's presence in their lives, noting that he greeted their daughters with a wag when they came home from school.

"He was there when Barack and I needed a break, sauntering into one of our offices like he owned the place, a ball clamped firmly in his teeth," she wrote. "He was there when we flew on Air Force One, when tens of thousands flocked to the South Lawn for the Easter Egg Roll, and when the Pope came to visit. And when our lives slowed down, he was there, too helping us see the girls off to college and adjust to life as empty nesters."

And when the pandemic hit, forcing everyone back home, Mrs. Obama said, "no one was happier than Bo."

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"All his people were under one roof again just like the day we got him. I will always be grateful that Bo and the girls got to spend so much time together at the end."

Mr. Obama posted a similar tribute on his social media accounts, saying that, for more than a decade, Bo "was a constant, gentle presence in our lives happy to see us on our good days, our bad days, and everyday in between."

"He tolerated all the fuss that came with being in the White House, had a big bark but no bite, loved to jump in the pool in the summer, was unflappable with children, lived for scraps around the dinner table, and had great hair," Mr. Obama wrote. "He was exactly what we needed and more than we ever expected. We will miss him dearly."

The day Bo made his press debut on the South Lawn of the White House, Mr. Obama said Bo had "star quality."

"You know what they say about if you want a friend in Washington, get a dog?" Mr. Obama joked. "Well, I'm finally going to have a friend."

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Obama family announces death of family dog Bo, the "loyal companion" who spent two terms in the White House - CBS News

Former first lady Michelle Obama reacts to Chauvin verdict: "There’s still work to be done" – CBS News

After former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin was convicted of murdering George Floyd, former first lady Michelle Obama and former President Barack Obama issued a rare statement on the verdict. Mrs. Obama told "CBS This Morning" that she and her husband felt compelled to speak out.

"The goal is to let leaders lead. But in certain times, people, you know, look to us often. 'Well, what do you think? How do you feel?'" Mrs. Obama told "CBS This Morning" anchor Gayle King when asked about the verdict.

The Obamas released a statement after the verdict saying the Minnesota jury "did the right thing" in convicting Chauvin, but noting that "true justice is about much more than a single verdict in a single trial."

"We know that while we're all breathing a sigh of relief over the verdict, there's still work to be done. And so we, we can't sort of say, 'Great. That happened. Let's move on,'" Mrs. Obama told King. "I know that people in the Black community don't feel that way because many of us still live in fear."

Mrs. Obama said many Black Americans experience fear as they grocery shop, walk their dogs and drive. She expressed worry about her own daughters, Sasha and Malia.

"Every time they get in a car by themselves, I worry about what assumption is being made by somebody who doesn't know everything about them. The fact that they are good students and polite girls. But maybe they're playin' their music a little loud. Maybe somebody sees the back of their head and makes an assumption," she said. "The innocent act of getting a license puts fear in our hearts."

"I think we have to talk about it more. And we have to ask our fellow citizens to listen a bit more, and to believe us, and to know we don't wanna be out there marchin'. I mean, all those Black Lives Matters kids, they'd rather not have to worry about this. They're takin' to the streets because they have to. They're tryin' to have people understand that that we're real folks, and the fear that many have of so many of us is irrational. And it's based on a history that is just, it's sad and it's dark. And it's time for us to move beyond that."

Mrs. Obama also discussed her continuing advocacy for the issues she championed while in the White House.

She is now the executive producer of the Netflix show "Waffles and Mochi," a children's program that focuses on teaching kids the value of healthy eating by sharing stories and traditions from around the world.

On "CBS This Morning" on Monday, Mrs. Obama will reveal Waffles and Mochi's next adventure. King sat down with her in Washington, where she explained why she is so excited about her upcoming initiative with the Partnership for a Healthier America and her ongoing mission to ensure all families have access to healthy foods.

Caitlin Yilek contributed to this report.

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Former first lady Michelle Obama reacts to Chauvin verdict: "There's still work to be done" - CBS News

Meet the Dream Team Suing the Biden Administration Over Your Right To Sell Your Kidney – Reason

Despite years of advocacy and legal activism from libertarian-leaning academics, the federal government continues to bar Americans from selling their kidneys. Now a service dog trainer and a personal injury attorney are teaming up to take this prohibition down.

Last month, New Jersey man John Bellocchio filed a lawsuit in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York against U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland, challenging the constitutionality of a decades-old federal ban on compensating organ donors.

"Risks are associated with the donation of an organ, yet individuals are wrongfully excluded from being provided with any incentive or compensation for the potential risks that may occur in giving their organ to another," reads his complaint. "There is no valid constitutional or public policy rationale why one should not be able to receive a profit from such a transaction."

For Bellocchiothe owner of Fetch and More, which places service dogs with veterans and other low-income clientsthe issue of organ sales is personal. His company works primarily in Appalachia, he says, where he's encountered many clients who are desperate for a new kidney or some extra cash.

"My colleagues and I saw that there was an enormous need both for kidneys and for money," he tells Reason. "I think what was sort of an esoteric or ephemeral constitutional question became very real for me."

According to his lawsuit, Bellocchio also recently experienced financial distress that led him to look into options for selling his kidney. Through that research, he learned that doing so would put him on the wrong side of the 1984 National Organ Transplant Act (NOTA), which makes it a crime for anyone to "acquire, receive, or otherwise transfer any human organ for valuable consideration for use in human transplantation if the transfer affects interstate commerce."

Violators of this ban face a maximum fine of $50,000 and up to five years in prison.

That prohibition has left the 90,000 patients in need of a kidney on the national transplant list dependent on either finding a donor who is both a physical match and altruistic enough to part with an organ for free or waiting for the exact right stranger to die unexpectedly while they are still young and healthy. Due largely to those constraints, it's estimated that between 5,000 and 10,000 people die for want of a kidney transplant each year. Many more are left to undergo expensive, draining dialysis treatment.

Medicare, which covers kidney patients of all ages, spent $81 billion on patients with chronic kidney disease in 2018. Medicare-related spending on patients with end-stage renal disease totaled $49.2 billion that same year.

These preventable deaths, high treatment costs, and perceived injustice of prohibiting people from voluntarily using their own body as they see fit has led a small but enthusiastic cadre of legal scholars and policy wonks to try to amend or overturn the ban on organ sales.

That includes Lloyd Cohen, a professor at George Mason University's Antonin Scalia Law School, who has been making the case for a market in organs in journal articles and media appearances since the early 1990s.

Because of his long history of public advocacy on this issue, Cohen is usually the first stop for people looking to get more involved in the fight to end the organ war.

"My name is out there in this literature [as] one of the promoters of a market in transplant organs," he says. "What happens is every once in a while, every three months, six months, somebody gets it in his head that this is a good idea. And they start doing research and they find my name and then they get in touch with me."

That includes Bellocchio, who reached out to Cohen a few months ago hoping the law professor might represent him in a lawsuit challenging the federal ban on organ sales.

Cohen, who teaches but doesn't practice law, declined to take up Bellocchio's case. But he was able to connect him with someone who was more than eager to do so.

At the time Bellocchio reached out to him, Cohen had been corresponding with Matthew Haicken, a personal injury attorney in New York City. Like Bellocchio, Haicken became interested in the issue of kidney sales after knowing a few clients who were undergoing dialysis treatment.

"I Googled what it was and I saw videos and it just seemed awful. The more I learned about it and just how inefficient the system was. It's always seemed ridiculous to me," he says. Soon enough, he was reading Cohen's writings and watching his interviews (including one video he did with John Stossel for Reason.)

His growing interest in the issue also dovetailed with his desire to do some public interest pro bono work. "I was brainstorming and I thought, hey, why not the organs issue?" he says. "As a personal injury lawyer, I'm always thinking about what is life worth, what is suffering worth, what are body parts worth?"

Once Cohen introduced Haicken to Bellocchio, the former agreed to represent him on a pro bono basis, and the two were off to the races.

Bellocchio's lawsuit makes two constitutional claims: The first is that a ban on kidney sales violates his freedom of contract as protected by the Fifth and 14th Amendments of the U.S. Constitution. The second is his right to privacy under the 14th Amendment.

His lawsuit cites Supreme Court precedent on birth control and abortion, arguing that "the decision to have a portion of one's own body extracted and sold to one in need is an extremely personal one and must be afforded the same privacy rights that have frequently been extended to matters of personal, bodily autonomy as mentioned above."

This most recent challenge likely faces an uphill battle according to Ilya Somin, another law professor at George Mason University.

"Much as I wish it were otherwise, I fear the lawsuit has little, if any chance of succeeding. Under current Supreme Court precedent, laws restricting economic transactions are subject only to very minimal 'rational basis' scrutiny," writes Somin at The Volokh Conspiracy (which is hosted by Reason). "I believe that precedent should be reversed, or at least significantly revised. But that is unlikely to happen any time soon."

Past efforts to challenge the ban on organ sales have also come to naught.

Cohen says about a decade ago he worked briefly with Sally Satel, a physician and scholar at the American Enterprise Institute to try and assemble a legal challenge to the ban on compensating kidney donors.

Satel tells Reason that she and Jeff Rowes, an attorney with the Institute for Justice, had collaborated briefly on the idea, but it eventually morphed into a narrower (successful) challenge to the NOTA's ban on compensating people who give renewable bone marrow.

On the legislative front, Rep. Matt Cartwright (DPenn.) has proposed a bill that would clarify which types of payments to kidney and other organ donors count as legal reimbursement of expenses under NOTA, and not illegal compensation. Cartwright last introduced this bill in July 2020, but it stalled in committee.

Former President Donald Trump also issued an executive order that expands the definition of kidney donors' legally reimbursable expenses to include the costs of travel, child care, and lost wages.

Libertarian ideas about bodily autonomy have proven surprisingly successful in recent years at liberalizing drug laws. They're starting to move the conversation on things like sex work as well. The prohibition on kidney sales remains stubbornly stalled, however.

Satelwho once received a donated kidney from former Reason Editor in chief Virginia Postrelchalks up the lack of progress to people's own instinctual distaste at the idea of a market for organs, and the narrow appeal of kidney disease as an issue.

"Unfortunately, because it's so niche, there's only one major interest group and that's the National Kidney Foundation," which she says remains opposed to compensating kidney donors.

Cohen says much the same thing: "It doesn't have an interest group that can coalesce. It's not like a race or religion. People who themselves have had some bad luck or people in their family who've had bad luck and have kidney disease."

Both Haicken and Bellocchio hope that their lawsuit can be that catalyst for change.

"I've been contacted by people all over the country. People are very positive about it," says Haicken. "I have gotten some hate mail, but that's mostly been from my friends and family."

Only time will tell if they'll be successful. It would be a great thing if they were, says Cohen.

"There are organs that can be restoring people to life and health instead of being fed to worms," Cohen tells Reason. "Not because people have a fundamental objection to giving up their organs, but because it is illegal for them to get any compensation."

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Meet the Dream Team Suing the Biden Administration Over Your Right To Sell Your Kidney - Reason

Here are Rugby’s borough election results in full – Rugby Advertiser

Rugby's Borough Council election results have now all been declared.

A third of the council's seats were up for election and of this third the Conservatives won 10, Labour 2 and the Lib Dems 3.

Candidates from the Green Party and one candidate from the Libertarian Party also stood but did not gain any seats.

All seats have been held by Rugby's political groups - with the exception of Newbold and Brownsover - a marginal Labour seat which the Conservatives have taken with a majority of 58 votes.

This year's count is took place at the Queen's Diamond Jubilee Centre instead of the Benn Hall, with social distancing measures meaning the Advertiser is unable to attend in person.

Here are the results in full.

Results for Coton and Boughton Ward

Carolyn Robbins - Con (1,034 votes)

Alison Livesey - Lab (697 votes)

John Blackburn - Lib Dem (150 votes)

Caroline Pailthorpe - Green (143 votes)

Eric Pullin - Libertarian Party (42 votes)

20 ballot papers rejected for: "being unmarked or wholly void for uncertainty."

Maggie O'Rourke - Lab (888 votes)

Rachel Lowe - Con (461 votes)

Becca Stevenson - Green Party (219 votes)

Hugh Trimble - Lib Dem (122 votes)

23 ballot papers rejected for "being unmarked or wholly void for uncertainty."

Results for Rokeby and Overslade Ward

Carie-Anne Dumbleton - Lib Dem (1,205 votes)

Toby Lawrence - Con (707 votes)

Mark Gore - Lab (360 votes)

Kate Crowley - Green Party (133 votes)

18 ballots rejected for: "being unmarked or wholly void for uncertainty."

Results for Dunsmore Ward

Howard Roberts - Con (1,888 votes)

Bob Hughes - Lab (552 votes)

Roy Sandison - Green (339 votes)

19 ballots rejected for: "being unmarked or wholly void for uncertainty."

Timothy Douglas - Lib Dem (1,114 votes)

Ann Jones - Con (812 votes)

Chris Mawby - Labour (401 votes)

Bob Beggs - Green Party (141 votes)

24 ballot papers rejected for: "being unmarked or wholly void for uncertainty."

Results for Clifton, Newton & Churchover Ward

Eve Hassell - Con (539 votes)

Richard Harrington - Lab (232 votes)

Mark Summers - Green Party (80 votes)

Patricia Trimble - Lib Dem (74 votes)

5 ballots rejected for: "being unmarked or wholly void for uncertainty."

Sue Roodhouse - Lib Dem (872 votes)

Teri Watts - Con (571 votes)

Sal Molina - Lab (448 votes)

Angie Dunne - Green Party (167 votes)

17 ballot papers rejected for: "being unmarked or wholly void for uncertainty."

Julie Barrow - Con (1,256 votes)

Lesley Kennedy-George - Lib Dem (499 votes)

Phil Bates - Lab (401 votes)

Richard Brook - Green Party (160 votes)

15 ballot papers rejected for: "being unmarked or wholly void for uncertainty."

Results for Revel & Binley Woods Ward

Tony Gillias - Con (1,632 votes)

Sarah Ferney - Lab (471 votes)

Stephen Ward - Green Party (245 votes)

20 ballot papers rejected for: "being unmarked or wholly void for uncertainty."

Results for Hillmorton Ward

Adam Daly - Con (1,134 votes)

Sean Baulk - Lab (501 votes)

Julie Douglas - Lib Dem (171 votes)

Nick Feledziak - Green (107 votes)

9 ballot papers rejected for: "being unmarked or wholly void for uncertainty."

Results for Wolston & The Lawfords Ward

Tim Willis - Con (1,276 votes)

Audrey Rooney-Ellis - Lab (477 votes)

Lesley Summers - Green Party (425 votes)

17 ballot papers rejected for: "being unmarked or wholly void for uncertainty."

2 ballot papers rejected for: "voting for more candidates than voter was entitled to."

Results for Newbold and Brownsover

Labour loss, Conservative gain

Wayne Rabin - Con (838 votes)

Kieren Brown - Lab (780 votes)

Hossain Tafazzal - Lib Dem (114 votes)

13 ballot papers rejected for: "being unmarked or wholly void for uncertainty."

3 ballot papers rejected for: "voting for more candidates than voter was entitled to."

Results for Admirals & Cawston

Conservative hold (Two candidates wore elected as there was a by-election for this ward at the same time)

Carolyn Watson-Merret - Con (1,181 votes)

Mark Williams - Con (1,166 votes)

Michael Moran - Lab (774 votes)

Jon Vickers - Lab (650 votes)

Lee Chase - Lib Dem (373 votes)

Jenny Farley - Green Party (206 votes)

Results for New Bilton Ward

Ishvarlal Mistry - Lab (782 votes)

Gareth Jones - Con (532 votes)

Maralyn Pickup - Green Party (194 votes)

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Here are Rugby's borough election results in full - Rugby Advertiser