


The app is currently in beta, and users can request an invite. Yahoo has mentioned that users can save their chat history on their computer till November end, after which that limited access will also be withdrawn.Īs it had revealed last month, Yahoo is pointing users towards its invite-only group messaging app called Yahoo Squirrel. While you cannot log in to the app, even if you have it downloaded on your device, there is a provision by the company to save your chats. Users can now no longer access chats in-app, and the service will no longer work. To recall, California-based company Yahoo announced last month that it would be killing off Yahoo Messenger. The USA TODAY Network Ohio Bureau serves The Columbus Dispatch, Cincinnati Enquirer, Akron Beacon Journal and 18 other affiliated news organizations across Ohio.Yahoo Messenger, the pioneering messaging app that changed the way users communicated over the Internet, is now officially dead. The episode is also available by clicking the link in this article. Listen to "Ohio Politics Explained" on Spotify, Apple, Google Podcasts and TuneIn Radio. And that's largely what it's been up to.įor example, the division helped ferret out bad actors gathering signatures for the NoLabels party − which is seeking third-party status in Ohio − for signing up dead or unregistered voters. The new unit was touted as being dedicated to investigating voter fraud, helping local prosecutors and educating voters. Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose created the public integrity division last year to tackle a "crisis of confidence" in our elections. What does the election integrity division do? House Bill 91 would criminalize knowingly "installing a tracking device or application on another person's property without the person's consent" as a first-degree misdemeanor. "But using these devices in a criminal fashion should be a criminal act." "Technology is wonderful, and I embrace it," Rep.
#YAHOO MESSENGER INSTALLATION BLUETOOTH#
It’s not a crime in Ohio to hide a Bluetooth tracking device like the Apple AirTag in someone's car, but one state lawmaker thinks it should be. "I am 100% pro-life, and I am working on a winnable solution with a path to victory." Outlawing nonconsensual tracking "I suggest that we hold the vote on the constitutional amendment in March of 2024 to maximize turnout," Rep.

But not every Republican thinks that's a good idea. Ohio eliminated August elections last year, but a vote on this issue in November 2023 could coincide with another constitutional amendment to protect abortion access.īasically, those who oppose abortion like Ohio Right to Life, want this amendment voted on first to potentially make it harder for abortion rights supporters.
#YAHOO MESSENGER INSTALLATION PLUS#
The resolution, which would need voter approval, would raise the bar for changes from 50% plus one vote to 60%. Ohio House Speaker Jason Stephens, R-Kitts Hill, canceled session this week, raising questions about whether a Republican plan to make it harder to amend the state constitution will make it before voters this August. The court recommended charging Bertram with criminal trespassing. “Bertram did not commit burglary under Ohio law, because he did not gain access to Huff’s garage by force, stealth, or deception," according to the unanimous decision. Scioto County Common Pleas Court sentenced Bertram to eight to 12 years for the burglary, but the Ohio Supreme Court tossed that conviction. Huff told a jury that Bertram smiled the whole time, even when he asked him to put the blower down. In September 2020, Donald Bertram parked in front of Timothy Huff's house, walked into his open garage, grabbed a $500 leaf blower and drove away. Ohio's highest court decided this week that stealing a leaf blower while the owner does yardwork isn't burglary.
