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"misleadingly" Definitions
  1. in a way that gives the wrong idea or impression and makes you believe something that is not true
"misleadingly" Synonyms
falsely deceptively fallaciously spuriously speciously delusively deceitfully wrongly inaccurately illusorily beguilingly sophistically trickily disingenuously casuistically ambiguously confusingly evasively unstraightforwardly equivocally dishonestly duplicitously crookedly fraudulently underhandly treacherously unscrupulously deviously shadily guilefully shiftily cunningly craftily untrustworthily wilily sneakily ludicrously implausibly improbably incredibly fantastically unbelievably preposterously outlandishly dubiously absurdly unconvincingly exaggeratedly fancifully unimaginably impossibly bizarrely questionably doubtfully extravagantly outrageously obscurely indefinitely vaguely indeterminately nebulously uncertainly cryptically enigmatically hazily indistinctly foggily imprecisely inexactly inexplicitly obliquely puzzlingly unclearly contradictorily inconsistently bafflingly bewilderingly complicatedly perplexingly mysteriously complexly impenetrably inexplicably intricately involvedly mystifyingly unaccountably unfathomably convolutedly wildly irrationally eccentrically nonsensically oddly extraordinarily insanely crazily ridiculously one-sidedly biasedly partially partisanly unfairly discriminatorily inequitably twistedly unjustly preferentially bigotedly lopsidedly narrow-mindedly inclinedly vainly uselessly futilely fruitlessly unproductively pointlessly ineffectively worthlessly ineffectually unsuccessfully unavailingly unprofitably profitlessly pettily powerlessly sterilely abortively inefficaciously emptily bootlessly More

362 Sentences With "misleadingly"

How to use misleadingly in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "misleadingly" and check conjugation/comparative form for "misleadingly". Mastering all the usages of "misleadingly" from sentence examples published by news publications.

And they claimed, misleadingly, that he had criticised the Koran.
Across the river lies a stream misleadingly named Lychee Bay.
Mr. Simpson found that the videos had been edited misleadingly.
Ms. Rousseau's show is fascinating but confusingly disparate and misleadingly ahistorical.
Boost your testosterone and your editor goes reassuringly (but misleadingly) silent.
Goldman Sachs economists said the market "misleadingly shortened Powell's formulation" on neutral.
And both Trump and Barr misleadingly have repeated the "No Collusion" mantra.
The Social Democrats were further divided into two also misleadingly named factions.
And that's where the misleadingly simple echoes of a certain classic premise end.
But yes so we will probably like edit this as misleadingly as possible.
Problem is, the headline is at best misleadingly simplified; at worst, plain wrong.
The misleadingly named SESTA would essentially make private companies deputized censors and snitches.
He describes their conversations in terms that misleadingly suggest they were intimate friends.
He misleadingly suggested that NATO members are increasing defense contributions at his urging.
They misleadingly claim it would reduce prices to ship goods by increasing competition.
The claim misleadingly dates these notorious disease outbreaks to match with election years.
The right-wing press likes to dwell misleadingly on stories about immigrants and crime.
Verona (Dunn misleadingly calls him a Gaul) who lived among the great at Rome
Some networks and financial institutions are also fond of misleadingly arguing PINs are irrelevant.
The science as presented isn't always correct, and interpretations are misleadingly presented as facts.
" (His evidence is dubious.) He misleadingly claimed to have "started the wall a year ago.
And misleadingly assuring people that there's nothing to worry about can end up doing harm.
What does it mean if the fact that the documentary was misleadingly edited impacts the verdict?
His (misleadingly named) Social Liberal Party (PSL) will be the second-largest in the lower house.
As we've written before, several of these claims are acknowledged, if misleadingly written, complaints about Amazon.
" (Several were larger,) He misleadingly claimed to have "saved our family farms from the estate tax.
Mr. Erekat misleadingly suggests that a "surrender" will lead to an end of the Palestinian people.
Democrats later showed that the transcripts had been misleadingly edited, and Bossie was pressured to resign.
Ms. Sanders circulated misleadingly edited video of the encounter that came from an infamous conspiracy website.
He misleadingly claimed to have "already started" to build a border wall (construction has not begun).
He misleadingly claimed "we are already building the wall" (construction on the wall has not begun).
Recent news has renewed attention on Obamacare's health insurance exchanges (misleadingly called "marketplaces" by the Administration).
The president also misleadingly claimed that the coronavirus will go away in April as temperatures rise.
The president also misleadingly claimed that the coronavirus will go away in April as temperatures rise. 
One prediction: It's likely that the first votes counted will be misleadingly good for Mr. Ossoff.
The remaining five suspects remain at large, though that description misleadingly suggests a life in hiding.
The emissions from these appliances are not factored into their prices, so they appear misleadingly cheap.
The bill is somewhat misleadingly being headlined by most journalists as a bailout for nuclear plants.
Press reports, which understandably focuses on campus discord more than harmony, can create a misleadingly gloomy impression.
More than 220006 House Democrats have signed onto H.R. 2202, the misleadingly named "Do No Harm Act".
Al Qassemi filed under the pretenses that Sotheby's had misleadingly advertised the date of the work's creation.
Earlier this year, he misleadingly suggested that he opposed the Iraq War from the beginning in 2003.
The two strategies are very different, and the term "geoengineering" is sometimes wielded to misleadingly conflate them.
Some arts organizations misleadingly suggests that artists can get tax deductions for works they donate to charity.
One effect of this is that facts no longer seem to matter (the phenomenon misleadingly dubbed "post-truth").
But according to Twitter, these claims are factually incorrect and misleadingly portrayed by O'Keefe's media organization Project Veritas.
Reporting by the media that focuses on campus discord more than harmony can create a misleadingly gloomy impression.
YouTube is the outlier — it bans some forms of trickery, including misleadingly edited videos, a spokesperson tells Axios.
Case in point: Dior's mascara ad being banned for featuring misleadingly long eyelashes on Natalie Portman in 2012.
Some posts also misleadingly say the "patient" is escaping from an "isolation facility" instead of a hospital ( here ).
Yet TRAP laws misleadingly use the rhetoric of protecting women's health safety to restrict and deny abortion access.
More precisely, he'd like to perfect and sell an automated bricklaying robot, but even this is misleadingly grand.
Emphasizing the importance of flight time, Canoll misleadingly suggests that pilots gain enriched flying experience after they graduate.
She was pregnant at the time and was experiencing the condition commonly, and misleadingly, known as morning sickness.
Asked about his reaction to the reduced funding, Mr. Trump misleadingly cited comments made by Speaker Nancy Pelosi.
The proximity of "The Dinner Party" risks misleadingly placing Chicago at the center of these artists' radical production.
And it discloses the mechanism by which some such ordeals come, selectively and misleadingly, to be redescribed as triumphs.
The ACM said on Tuesday that Volkswagen had misleadingly advertised the diesel cars as "environmentally friendly" from 2009-2015.
Or imagine the company misleadingly enrolls customers in an unwanted service, such as a credit monitoring service, for $10.
Both of them were aimed at misleadingly portraying the House Speaker as obsessed with getting him out of office.
The jacket copy misleadingly presents Benner as salvaging Machiavelli's thoughts and opinions from demonization, as if they needed rescue.
Despite all of this, Mr. Trump could repeat some of these statistics, which other administration officials have cited misleadingly.
It not only results in an eye-catching checkerboard design, it also adds additional functionality to the misleadingly simple flashlight.
Changes in U.S. crude and products stocks are often (misleadingly) interpreted to reflect changes in the global supply-demand balance.
Where it misleadingly suggests that the advertiser is officially associated with the games, it is already unlawful under existing laws.
President Donald Trump squarely -- and misleadingly -- blamed Democrats for the unfolding crisis in opening remarks at a space policy event.
" (Most Democrats support border security measures.) He misleadingly claimed Representative Maxine Waters, Democrat of California, "wants people to be violent.
His news article about that, recklessly written and misleadingly edited, was never submitted to censorship, as was the normal practice.
This effort is in response to a Congress overturning what was misleadingly described as a Federal Communications Commission "privacy" rule.
Second of all, he misleadingly implies that Sanders and Warren's free college plans only apply to fancy four year degrees.
The complaint accuses those companies of negligence, namely of misleadingly marketing their products as aids to individuals with limited hand mobility.
If you just want a casual thing, be clear on that and don't confuse people by being misleadingly romantic or familiar.
But when British regulators took a second look at Study 216, in 2003, they concluded that it had been misleadingly presented.
"We just opened up Europe," Trump said in Dubuque, Iowa, earlier Thursday, misleadingly overstating the significance of his deal with Europe .
In a Medium post published Sunday evening, Stephanie Carter wrote that the 85033 image was "misleadingly extracted" from its proper context.
First, communicate honestly"Boeing must immediately reverse the company practice of communicating its situation through misleadingly rose-colored glasses," Sucher said.
So they want to muddy the picture the public has of the process but claiming, often misleadingly, that it is unfair.
But some former Obama aides say the ads are "jarring" and misleadingly imply Obama has endorsed Bloomberg, when he has not.
" He accused Republicans of attempting "to selectively and misleadingly characterize classified information in an effort to protect the President at any cost.
If there had been no misleadingly Earth-orbiting Moon, Asimov argued, that sun-centred idea would have been much easier to accept.
Houser's colleague, Laura Palumbo, points to a recent study that underscores how misleadingly narrow our definition of violent sexual behavior really is.
However, there appear to be a number of discrepancies in the photos and the Post's report, suggesting the images were misleadingly presented.
But Ms. Sanders posted a 15-second video clip on Twitter that misleadingly suggested Mr. Acosta had pushed the intern's upper arm.
Products that might initially look misleadingly badged are often just a reflection of the bewildering array of different ESG-focused investment products.
Moreover, Wood wrote, Berger took too much credit, misleadingly suggesting that he had single-handedly discovered the complexity of australopith limb proportions.
Another problem lied in presenting data in a misleadingly favorable way, like underreporting negative outcomes or writing abstracts that were overly positive.
In microgravity, which is sometimes misleadingly referred to as zero gravity, there are limited effects of gravity and objects appear to be weightless.
On March 1st Luo Fuhe, a senior leader of one such misleadingly named party, the Chinese Association for Promoting Democracy, challenged that description.
He also said, misleadingly, that the classification of broadband under Title I is the only one "blessed" by the Supreme Court, in 2005.
The Conservative Party accused of spreading 'fake news' after posting misleadingly edited footage of an interview with Labour's Shadow Brexit Secretary Keir Starmer.
He misleadingly claimed President Barack Obama paid $1.8 billion to free hostages from Iran (the money was payment for a decades-old dispute).
These actions all misleadingly suggest an optimism that tomorrow might be bearable, as does her little dance while making her frugal evening snack.
Finally, the onslaught of images of the U.S.A. in the sixties—those cars, those clothes, that hair—generates a misleadingly rah-rah glamour.
There will be no desire nor political capital for even Iranian officials often misleadingly described as moderates to sit down with US counterparts.
The new bill, misleadingly sold as the "Stop Enabling Sex Traffickers Act" (SESTA), is a disaster for our community — but not just our community.
The U.S. paper had misleadingly edited China's official policy, cutting out references to the "decisive role" of the market in allocating resources, he said.
A day later, another snippet misleadingly labeled one of the same state's senators a "BIGOT" by relying on information from a 2012 blog post.
A recent report from Fox News, "'Day Without a Woman' supporters got $280M from Soros" misleadingly suggested Soros funded the Women's March-organized strike.
" In the past, Ferrero USA has been targeted by a false advertising class action lawsuit for "misleadingly advertising Nutella as a healthy breakfast food.
The videos, which were later proven to be heavily and misleadingly edited, resulted in a renewed effort by abortion opponents to defund the organization.
The "new economics" mentioned in the subtitle refers to what the authors misleadingly call the "discovery" of multisided businesses by fellow economists in 2000.
Clinton highlighted Facebook&aposs refusal to remove an altered video of House speaker Nancy Pelosi that was misleadingly edited to make her appear drunk.
" Mr. Huppenthal argued that the Tucson program presented a misleadingly negative view of American history and taught a "toxic construct" of "oppressed and oppressor.
Photo: APThe Federal Communications Commission's revocation of Barack Obama-era net neutrality rules (misleadingly billed as Restoring Internet Freedom Order) starts going into effect today.
But despite its misleadingly simplistic name, establishing a "safe zone" in Syria would put civilians in even greater danger and risk prolonging Syria's bloody nightmare.
But the solar industry and environmentalists charged that the amendment was a wolf in sheep's clothing, misleadingly designed by electric utilities to restrict rooftop solar.
" (The company has not announced the opening of a single plant.) He misleadingly claimed that construction on his border wall "is moving along very nicely.
As archly observed by "The Atlantic," that misleadingly-self-described Harvard epidemiologist who tweeted "HOLY MOTHER OF GOD" followed by math errors was … well … wrong.
Bloomberg misleadingly cited comments he made in support of healthcare reform in March 2009 to show he supported Obamacare, a bill he later harshly criticized.
The artifacts were also falsely or misleadingly labeled when they arrived in the U.S. from dealers in Israel and the UAE, the Justice Department said.
Several have argued that MacLean misleadingly truncates quotes, to make it seem as if Buchanan and other libertarians such as Tyler Cowen are anti-democratic.
Her campaign came under fire in July for controversial ads that misleadingly claimed Brown was "dangerous" for eastern Washington children and soft on sex offenders.
In other words, large financings are typically very dilutive, even if on paper they appear to be evidence of massive value accretion and misleadingly little dilution.
Where Purdue and the Sacklers went wrong is in misleadingly marketing their products, claiming they were safer and more effective than they really were for years.
The misleadingly headlined article received more than 10,000 Facebook shares, reactions, and comments, and was cited by large conservative publishers including ZeroHedge, WorldNetDaily, and the Federalist.
Last week, AT&T proudly crowned itself as "the nation's fastest wireless network," buoyed by speed tests from Ookla and its misleadingly named 25G E — i.e.
Don't let misleadingly universalizing, feel-good feminist rhetoric distract from the most crucial question: What does each candidate intend to do with the power they're seeking?
Two recent op-eds published in The Hill argue that broad patent legislation—misleadingly labeled "reform"—is needed because the U.S. patent system is fundamentally broken.
Facebook and Twitter, in particular, have used enforcement as a PR operation, with large-scale content and account purges being misleadingly touted as anti-Russian efforts.
In their roseate statement about the conference's results, the three leaders misleadingly proclaimed a 'common desire to see established a strong, free, independent and democratic Poland.
And Mr. Trump continued to misleadingly blame the Obama administration for testing lapses, prompting a host to ask why he had not reversed that rule earlier.
He has misleadingly said over 4.83 times that his promised wall along the southern border is being built (construction has not begun on any new section).
The numbers that Mr. Trump cited appear to refer — misleadingly — to an overall decline in border apprehensions since the barriers were first erected in the 1990s.
Similarly, a clip of former Vice President Joe Biden went viral online that was misleadingly edited to make it falsely appear he was making racist remarks.
Somewhat misleadingly, they often are called "Blaine provisions" because of superficial similarities to a federal constitutional amendment proposed in 1875 by prominent politician James G. Blaine.
That means the new policies won't just affect things like misleadingly altered videos (like deepfakes), but could implicate simple lies made by people impersonating others online.
With that said, Trump has often misrepresented how the NATO alliance functions and is funded, misleadingly saying that other nations pay the US to defend it.
The second allegation is that TrueCar offered misleadingly high "factory invoice" prices, implying that figure was the dealer's cost, to make its discounts look more significant.
In it, Schrage doubled down on the company's defense of its opposition campaign by misleadingly stating that Soros was funding members of the Freedom From Facebook effort.
CPCs outnumber abortion clinics in America by about 3,000 to 800, and California's 200 or so CPCs misleadingly "pose as full-service women's health clinics", legislators concluded.
This category of drugs has recently appeared in the black market, where fentanyl and its analogs are often laced into other drugs or misleadingly sold as heroin.
Under H.R. 22019 the misleadingly titled "Protecting Access to Care Act" Astleford would only be able to collect a maximum of $250,000 for her pain and suffering.
In about the same time it takes for you to regain your composure and sobriety, you've got a misleadingly impressive stack of York-gasm-worthy peppermint patties.
He misleadingly accused President Barack Obama of paying Iran $3363 billion in cash to release hostages (the money was a payment related to a decades-long dispute).
It also warns lawmakers against intentionally posting "audio-visual distortions," which could sweep up misleadingly Photoshopped images or video footage that has been altered in any way.
It also warns lawmakers against intentionally posting "audio-visual distortions," which could sweep up misleadingly altered images or video footage that has been altered in any way.
That could mean, for example, that an account impersonating a US presidential candidate and making posts that falsely and misleadingly represent that candidate's positions could be banned.
The misleadingly named "National Monument Creation and Protection Act," which narrowly passed the House Natural Resources Committee last week, is an assault on our public land heritage.
For example, the hotel industry in the States routinely imposes resort fees also intended to misleadingly jack up the advertised price, a practice banned in many European countries.
The government sensibly plans to import all existing EU rules into British law via a (misleadingly named) Great Repeal Bill; any unwanted regulations will be abolished only gradually.
Companies such as Purdue Pharma—infamous for helping spark the opioid crisis via its misleadingly marketed painkillers—have also sought to muscle into the opioid overdose antidote market.
Texas had sought $5 billion under the lawsuits, claiming the company had falsely and misleadingly marketed the two drugs in violation of the Texas Medicaid Fraud Prevention Act.
This kind of rank speculation misleadingly ignore the fact that the SPEAK FREE Act expressly provides that all claims with minimal merit will see their day in court.
The building was designed in a neo-Georgian style that was intended to conjure (misleadingly or not) the rectitude of the early republic, when the society was founded.
"Second, the analysis, which is misleadingly packaged as a comprehensive analysis of post-9/11 terrorism, could lead policymakers to overlook significant national security threats," the official added.
People talked misleadingly about "the sovereignty of Parliament" during the debate, but in fact, as I said, Britain no longer has a sovereign Parliament in the old sense.
In 2015 and 2016, Isgur posted tweets comparing abortion to America's epidemic of gun violence, and pushed Planned Parenthood conspiracy theories that were grounded in misleadingly edited videos.
In a piece titled "Vox's Consistent Errors on Free Speech, Explained," al-Gharbi argues that we misuse data to paint a misleadingly rosy picture of speech on campus.
" (The United States' trade deficit with Mexico was $78.5 billion in 2018.) He misleadingly claimed that "prescription drug prices went down for the first time in 51 years.
The language, which misleadingly downplays the effects of climate change and touts the debunked potential benefits of carbon dioxide for plants, was inserted into at least nine reports.
Before Mueller's report was released, Barr released a memo describing its contents that was so misleadingly pro-Trump that Mueller sent him a private note complaining about it.
He sees partisans like Johnson as strikingly similar to their right-wing nemeses, particularly in the ways they argue (evasively, he says) and invoke history (misleadingly, he says).
"Such misleading conduct continues today with companies, including PMI, marketing tobacco products in ways that misleadingly suggest that some tobacco products are less harmful than others," it said.
In fact, the VA has displayed consistently outstanding performance in one area of health care administration: the presentation of quality-of-care data that misleadingly suggest outstanding performance.
"Sanderson's '100% Natural' marketing and advertising scheme falsely and misleadingly suggests that consumers are ingesting nothing but chicken, and certainly no synthetic drugs or other chemicals," the lawsuit says.
This makes it an awesome place for developers to experiment but also makes certain strategies misleadingly viable as people are willing to prioritize notoriety over genuine utility early on.
" A couple weeks later Zane Lowe premiered the misleadingly nonchalant "Gonna Die Alone" on Beats 1 and two days after that came the furious, decomposing electrics of "Born Brown.
Before he starts lurking misleadingly on rooftops in the middle of the night, Colleen finds Danny meditating at her dojo, and he's pretty torn up about Matt's apparent death.
According to the SEC, Lions Gate had misleadingly claimed that the transactions were meant to cut debt rather than block a takeover, and failed to get needed shareholder approvals.
The IOC and its affiliates should have the means to stop advertising misleadingly suggesting a sponsorship connection or where protected expressions are associated with partisan, political or religious agendas.
In the New York case, the plaintiff Brad Buonasera accused Honest of misleadingly marketing at least 41 items including bubble bath, children's toothpaste, floor cleaners, laundry detergent and soap.
It shows a graph of sea-surface temperatures, misleadingly implying that it's a graph of global temperatures (a move the scientist who produced the original graph called "very misleading").
While it's tempting to treat the fine as a "tariff," as some in the business media have done, that misleadingly suggests it comes in response to Trump's protectionist push.
But by cherry-picking lines from those briefs, the Supreme Court's Zubik ruling misleadingly suggested that the nuns and the feds were this close to coming to a solution.
After the Wrap's Jon Levine misleadingly tweeted that simply typing "learn to code" might get Twitter users suspended, conservative figureheads leaped in, leveraging conservative paranoia about social-media censorship.
"They" is also a popular choice, transforming the plural into a new singular, with its advocates arguing (misleadingly, in my opinion) that such use reaches back several hundred years.
The duet for Husbandman and Bride from "Appalachian Spring" is the sweetest and most polite section of that great work: Out of context, it gives a misleadingly conventional impression.
The first invader we encounter (Yuri Tsunematsu) has taken the form of a uniformed schoolgirl, whose bloody introduction evokes, teasingly and somewhat misleadingly, the iconography of classic Japanese horror.
Bouchard had also wanted her social media posts to be kept out of the trial, arguing that they painted a misleadingly sunny portrait of her life since the injury.
While Pelosi did in fact rip up the address, the video misrepresented the order of events, misleadingly showing Pelosi shredding the speech as Trump honored members of the military.
In their own way, then, they create a misleadingly rosy vision of life in the United States, one just a bit too carefree and virtuous to be completely true.
Often misleadingly termed "pointillist," these later works were modelled on the musical technique of contrapuntal inversion: the harmony of independent themes often found in the music of Johann Sebastian Bach.
Based on the lawsuits, it might be relatively straightforward to make a case against Purdue as a whole and executives who were directly involved in misbranding and misleadingly marketing opioids.
Love never mentions the quote in the Tribune is her own, marking the second time in a week a Utah publication has complained about Love presenting an opinion piece misleadingly.
The platform was found to have 4,152 items that were deemed unsafe by federal agencies, labeled misleadingly, or banned by federal regulators by a report from The Wall Street Journal.
Last month, the FDA published the results of a computer model and misleadingly declared kratom an opioid, painting it as a problem rather than a possible treatment or alternative painkiller.
So much of this started with the advertised-as-safe drugs like OxyContin that were approved by the F.D.A. and marketed misleadingly, which led users down the path to heroin.
He blamed Democrats for not bending enough in negotiations over a legislative package to combat coronavirus and he accused past administrations -- misleadingly -- of hampering his ability to confront the virus.
The deal was first announced last fall, ostensibly as a way for Apple to sell on Amazon in an official capacity and cut down on counterfeit or misleadingly marketed products.
The social media giant said it would require users to take down posts that deny expert recommendations, promote fake treatments and prevention techniques, or misleadingly claim to be from authorities.
Two days later, Trump posted a tweet in which he undersold the coronavirus threat by misleadingly comparing it to the common flu, which is less deadly and spreads less easily.
"Both the Judge and the lawyer in the Paul Manafort case stated loudly and for the world to hear that there was NO COLLUSION with Russia," Trump misleadingly tweeted Friday.
" According to the Justice Department, the shipments of thousands of artifacts arrived from dealers in Israel and the United Arab Emirates with labels that "falsely and misleadingly described their contents.
While it is true some of the major disease outbreaks developed during the years presented, this claim misleadingly suggests a connection between disease outbreaks, or peaks, and the years listed.
An investigation by The Washington Post has uncovered a dozen accounts, pages, and groups across Facebook and Instagram which misleadingly claim to be official hubs for Libra, Facebook's proposed digital currency.
It prohibits any abortions after eight weeks of gestation, putting it among the category of misleadingly named "heartbeat bills" that use fetal cardiac activity as a marker for … well, illegality, really.
Seemingly the thrust of Mr. Galstyan's article, though, is to misleadingly convey that Azerbaijan actively seeks close ties with Israel to avail itself of the "Jewish lobby" in the United States.
DE sold travel insurance that misleadingly promised unlimited emergency medical cover wherever people were even though the policies had limits on both cost and location, a misconduct inquiry heard on Monday.
He instead talked to top White House aide Hope Hicks about crafting the statement that misleadingly claimed the Trump Jr. and Veselnitskaya only talked about adoption, rather than campaign-related issues.
Mr. Hiler's misleadingly titled "Bagatelle II," draws on ravishing moments in time (dancing lights, scudding clouds, a bathing woman) that build into what seems like a self-portrait of the artist.
In another case, his administration relied on a misleadingly edited video from a contributor to the conspiracy site Infowars to help justify removing the credentials of CNN's chief White House correspondent.
Under the new rules announced Wednesday, Twitter will require users to take down posts that deny expert recommendations, promote fake treatments and prevention techniques, or misleadingly claim to be from authorities.
Under the new rules announced Wednesday, Twitter will require users to take down posts that deny expert recommendations, promote fake treatments and prevention techniques, or misleadingly claim to be from authorities.
California's law does not use the word deepfake, but it's clear the AI-manufactured fakes are the primary culprit, along with videos misleadingly edited to frame someone in a negative light.
She is at the center of viral photo, which shows Biden grasping her shoulders and whispering in her ear, an image Carter says was "misleadingly extracted" from video of the day.
With no Republicans at the top of the ballot, no one is making the conservative case to Californians, so GOP turnout in general elections is suppressed, leading to misleadingly lopsided outcomes.
There were over 20 different problematic products misleadingly marketed using the Navajo name (and various signature patterns or motifs that are distinctively associated with the tribe), including a flask, socks, and underwear.
He merely referred back to it: A 448-page document that has been summed up misleadingly by Trump's attorney general, and that many lawmakers have publicly admitted they have not actually read.
Doctors generally did this with good intentions: They were misleadingly told by drug companies that opioids were both effective and had a lower risk of abuse than other painkillers on the market.
These bills, like Blackburn's misleadingly-named "Open Internet Preservation Act," are an attempt to pass flimsy, loophole-filled rules that would pre-empt any efforts to restore tougher rules down the road.
Instead of slowing down Pelosi's speech, Fox Business misleadingly spliced together lots of small sections of a recent news conference to make it look as if Pelosi stammered worse than Porky Pig.
Fact Check WASHINGTON — As the Senate raced on Friday to keep the government open, President Trump and other top Republicans are repeatedly — and misleadingly — warning that a shutdown would incapacitate the military.
Other Claims Mr. Trump also repeated a number of other claims The New York Times has previously debunked: He misleadingly claimed to have eliminated the estate tax for small farmers and ranchers.
Cain claimed, somewhat misleadingly, that the national debt decreased $12 billion during Trump's first month in office,  compared to a $200 billion jump in the same time on Barack Obama's watch.
Andrew Breitbart in 2009 successfully got the Obama administration to fire US Department of Agriculture staffer Shirley Sherrod by posting a misleadingly edited video to imply she was an anti-white racist.
The list describes the target as "a bus carrying Canadian Embassy guards," which is correct but in keeping with the document's emphasis on Western targets — a focus that is sometimes misleadingly narrow.
Blackburn's misleadingly-named Open Internet Preservation Act, introduced in the House last fall, bans behaviors that ISPs weren't really interested in anyway, such as the outright blocking of certain websites or services.
Yet when Gary Cooper, playing Roark in the film, says that a building must be true to its own idea, this misleadingly suggests that a building emerges perfectly formed from an architect's imagination.
In 2011 the Office of Civil Rights (OCR) sent a "Dear Colleague" letter—named after its misleadingly congenial salutation—which issued a sweeping reinterpretation of Title IX, a federal law prohibiting gender discrimination.
In the overall results, the 2000-percentage-point gap between those who prioritize meaning and those who prioritize pay is statistically significant and consistent over time, but it still may appear misleadingly strong.
They took the first steps off that line and into the "complex plane," where misleadingly named "imaginary" numbers couple with real numbers like capital letters pair with numerals in the game of Battleship.
After the disaster of Charlottesville, the focus in some quarters on the far-right has been to come across, however misleadingly, as sane and rational in comparison to counter-protestors—including antifa activists.
He misleadingly said construction on the border wall with Mexico had begun; projects to replace fencing and barriers are underway, but the administration has not begun to build a 2552,2807-mile-long wall.
He misleadingly claimed that Germany imports up to 70 percent of its energy from Russia (Germany relies on Russia for natural gas, but gets just 9 percent of their total energy from Russia).
NBC reported last week that Chang had misleadingly claimed in her official bio that she was an "alumna" of Harvard Business School when in fact she only attended a seven-week course there.
But a still shot taken from a video  —  misleadingly extracted from what was a longer moment between close friends —   sent out in a snarky tweet  —  came to be the lasting image of that day.
" But Trump's misread of both Great Falls and Montana speaks directly to the very real challenges that GOP candidates face in the midterms — especially those running in places often misleadingly labeled as "red states.
In fact, the federal government pushed doctors to prescribe opioids through the "Pain as the Fifth Vital Sign" campaign in the 1990s and 2000s, as drug companies misleadingly marketed opioids to treat chronic pain.
He's painting them as anti-American, misleadingly equating criticism of his administration with hatred of the US. In this vein, he's said that if "the Squad" isn't happy in the US, they can leave.
Suffolk County Superior Court Judge Janet Sanders in Boston ruled that the company's belief that parts of Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey's complaint misleadingly quoted from confidential records could not justify keeping it redacted.
It's trailers have been fascinatingly opaque in the past; the very first trailer for It: Chapter One misleadingly used editing to emphasize a different kind of horror language than the one Muschietti was using.
In 1965, Gordon Moore, the founder of Intel, made a famous prediction (misleadingly labeled a "law"): Every 18-24 months, engineers would fit about twice as many transistors on a particular piece of silicon.
Briggs does not set out to propose an extended argument for why translations are necessary or a grand unified theory claiming that all translations are entitled to boundless artistic license, as Moser misleadingly suggests.
He misleadingly accused President Bill Clinton of giving "billions and billions" to North Korea and getting "nothing" (the amount, in energy aid, was far less, and the 1994 nuclear agreement did produce some results).
The new policy covers fake articles misleadingly attributed to real journalists, forged election communications purporting to come from real government agencies, and scammy domains posing as those of a particular news outlet or politician.
When making this point, Everson reminded the audience of a scandal that unfolded earlier this year around a doctored video that spread online that misleadingly made House Speaker Nancy Pelosi appear to be drunk.
Nothing fundamental had changed, except that Irish debt – typically (and misleadingly) expressed as a share of GDP – suddenly looked less onerous, falling from 108 percent of GDP in 2014 to 79 percent in 2015.
That fight kicked into high gear this fall after a Trump campaign ad misleadingly insinuated that Biden improperly pressured Ukraine to protect his son—and the Biden campaign unsuccessfully demanded that Facebook pull it.
Purdue is accused of aggressively — and misleadingly — marketing its blockbuster opioid painkiller OxyContin, helping fuel an opioid crisis that has contributed to the more than 700,000 drug overdose deaths in the US since 1999.
The video — which misleadingly rehashes Stelter's use of the term "fake news" before it was appropriated by President Donald Trump and his followers — is currently linked at the top of every Sinclair local TV website.
The webpage itself was a convincing copy of the actual Guardian website, and had a URL that misleadingly used a Turkish-language character instead of the "i" in "Guardian" to appear real at first glance.
He also misleadingly claimed the United States is leading other countries in reducing carbon dioxide emissions, when in fact our reduction as a percentage of overall emissions — a much more meaningful metric — trails many others.
President Donald Trump on Monday misleadingly suggested that the emoluments clause is "phony" as he continues to face criticism over his ultimately canceled move to hold the next G7 summit at one of his properties.
Trump's soliloquy about an illness he misleadingly described as "this corona flu" began after Hannity asked him to respond to the WHO's 3.4 percent death rate figure (which the organization said could vary by region).
"Kyrsten voted for this legislation to toughen penalties for child trafficking and in the same remarks this latest false attack ad misleadingly edited, she spoke out forcefully against sex trafficking," said campaign spokeswoman Helen Hare.
He tweeted a story from the conservative Australian that misleadingly said 180 people had been arrested on arson charges, though they were from bushfire-related charges and only 24 were charged with deliberately lighting fires.
Washington (CNN)A misleadingly edited 19-second video clip of Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden rocketed around Twitter on Wednesday night, creating the inaccurate impression that Biden was endorsing views commonly held by white nationalists.
A U.S. judge on Monday rejected BlackBerry's request to dismiss a lawsuit claiming it inflated its stock price and defrauded shareholders by painting a misleadingly positive picture of sales prospects for its BlackBerry 10 smartphones.
But while Korean-English dictionaries will misleadingly translate the word to "cool," in K-food speak, the term refers less to temperature, and more to the after-effect of consuming a warm and spicy broth.
The application, they said, drew on other intelligence that the Republican memo misleadingly omits — but revealing that other information to rebut the memo would risk blowing other sources and methods of intelligence-gathering about Russia.
Some economists believe the second-quarter readings are misleadingly low, because firms brought forward purchases of components to stockpile ahead of March 29th, the original Brexit date, and so spent the second quarter using them up.
The lawsuit, which was brought on by ten California counties, alleged that Goop's two vaginal eggs—the Jade Egg and the Rose Quartz Egg—as well as its Inner Judge Flower Essence Blend were misleadingly advertised.
The Wayback Machine, meanwhile, noted in a blog post that its own investigation "found nothing to indicate tampering or hacking" on its end, suggesting that the Wayback Machine wasn't hacked to misleadingly show fraudulent blog posts.
House Democrats blasted Twitter and Facebook on Friday for hosting what they called a misleadingly edited video posted by President Donald Trump that features House Speaker Nancy Pelosi ripping up his State of the Union speech.
A new space-faring IP from Ubisoft, Starlink: Battle for Atlas has perhaps one of the most misleadingly generic sci-fi titles for what could be one of the most blissfully fun games of the year.
It's been almost a year and a half since a series of misleadingly edited videos attacking Planned Parenthood set off a flurry of investigations into whether the organization illegally "sold" fetal tissue to researchers for profit.
Concerns surrounding Autopilot's misleadingly robust functions were first raised after the fatal Autopilot crash in Florida in May, since the driver may have been watching a Harry Potter movie rather than paying attention to the road.
Beto O'Rourke, for his part, has gone from endorsing Medicare for All to endorsing the misleadingly named Medicare for America, a public option policy borne of several years of research from the Center for American Progress.
Mayor Lori Lightfoot said the tweets mischaracterized the location where a shooting took place, got some of the numbers wrong, and misleadingly suggested all of those wounded across the city were shot in a single incident.
Fact Check of the Day On Fox on Thursday, the president claimed that Michael D. Cohen pleaded guilty to counts that "aren't a crime" and misleadingly compared the violations to infractions by Barack Obama's 2008 campaign.
Fact Check of the Day Ms. Conway, a counselor to President Trump, falsely claimed that he did not know about payments to two women until this year, and misleadingly suggested the arrangement occurred in August 2015.
Most of the fires have been caused by lightning strikes, though some people have misleadingly pointed to arson in an effort to minimize the links to climate change and the Australian government's inaction on the issue.
Vice President Mike Pence on Friday incorrectly and misleadingly linked Iran to the September 11, 2001, terror attacks in a series of tweets aimed at justifying the assassination of Iran&aposs top general the day prior.
The changes attempt to tighten — but don't close — what's widely (but misleadingly) known as the "gun show loophole," as well as increase the efficiency of the federal background check system to avoid cases from falling through.
Instead, they have argued these flights weren't bribes, the two men are long-time friends, and the prosecution has misleadingly focused on the higher number of flight segments, or "legs," instead of measuring by round-trip flights.
Fact Check of the Day The Senate majority leader misleadingly suggested on Sunday that his rationale in 21888 for refusing to fill a Supreme Court vacancy in a presidential election year was related to a divided government.
The hackers released the data "selectively, and sometimes misleadingly," in retaliation for the revelations of a state-sponsored Russian doping program that led to a ban on the Russian team from the 2018 Winter Olympics, prosecutors said.
Biden calls for more accountability of drug companies, which have been accused — and in some cases convicted — of misleadingly marketing opioid painkillers to get more people to prescribe and use them even when they weren't truly necessary.
He's also been arrested for bringing a gun to the airport, may have edited his own Wikipedia page, and was once called out for misleadingly implying he testified as an expert witness during the Boston Bombing trial.
On Tuesday, the House approved legislation misleadingly titled the Taxpayer First Act that includes a provision prohibiting the Internal Revenue Service from developing a free online system that most American households could use to file their taxes.
The video is misleadingly cropped to make it seem like Sanders holds prejudice toward the groups he mentions in his talk, when actually he is talking about the danger of stereotypes and how they change over time.
Only last week, the party was caught red-handed, having posted a video of Labour's Brexit spokesperson Keir Starmer, misleadingly edited to look as if he was unable to answer a question on the party's Brexit policy.
Justice Thomas' concurrence, totaling 20 pages, tells a one-sided and out of context story about the history of birth control and reproductive rights in America by primarily -- and misleadingly -- citing statements by Planned Parenthood founder Margaret Sanger.
Biden anticipated that busing might come up in the debate, aides said, but they said he did not expect Harris to misleadingly imply that he opposed the local voluntary busing that took her to school as a child.
And he said Mustafa opened the door to mention of his United Kingdom convictions by misleadingly implying during his testimony that he was in custody there solely on the U.S. charges and by portraying himself as a peacemaker.
But it was another example of Trump speaking imprecisely at best, misleadingly at worst and offering disinformation about a crisis that could have profound reverberations for him in his reelection year if it causes a major economic downturn.
Fact Check At a rally in Michigan, President Trump misstated the findings of the special counsel investigation, misleadingly promised to protect patients with pre-existing conditions and falsely described funding for a restoration program for the Great Lakes.
"The ACCC alleges Samsung's advertisements falsely and misleadingly represented Galaxy phones would be suitable for use in, or for exposure to, all types of water...when this was not the case," ACCC Chairman Rod Sims said in a statement.
Boulger, who helped start Silvers For Sanders, heard Biden misleadingly tell a group of older voters at the AARP presidential forum recently in Des Moines, Iowa that Medicare-for-all would mean "hiatuses" in health care for older adults.
In the examples of expansionary austerity used so misleadingly to justify austerity in the depressed economies of the rich world, big declines in interest rates were one of the key mechanisms through which budget cuts led to output growth.
The New York Times reported on Friday that Kavanaugh, who is President Trump's nominee to replace Anthony Kennedy on the U.S. Supreme Court, misleadingly downplayed his role in a campaign to put a controversial judge on an appeals court.
The government also delivered a warning to "The Jim Bakker Show," which is hosted by the disgraced tele-evangelist Jim Bakker, for allegedly selling products labeled to contain silver and misleadingly saying they could treat and cure the coronavirus.
Scholars reflect on the political construct of "Eastern Europe" and the need to write independent regional chronicles which will address a more nuanced differentiation of individual cultural developments within what is generally and misleadingly addressed as one geopolitical mass.
In the video, presidential candidate and former Vice President Joe Biden warns about the potential of reelecting Trump, but the viral clip is edited down to a portion that misleadingly makes it sound as though Biden is endorsing Trump.
A Reuters video showing Melania's parents in 2018 is visible here A photo of Knavs taken in 2006 (closer to the claimed photograph's date) is visible here Another post on Facebook misleadingly claims Audrey Gruss to be Melania's sister.
The Trump administration relied on a misleadingly edited video from a contributor to the conspiracy site Infowars to help justify removing the credentials of CNN's chief White House correspondent, a striking escalation in President Trump's broadsides against the press.
Then it pushed out more emails, one of which seemed to misleadingly suggest in its subject line — "📎 Call Transcript" — that it included the readout of the phone call on which Trump allegedly solicited aid from the Ukrainian president.
Some Republican lawmakers continue to misleadingly say that the government of Ukraine interfered in the 22016 election on the same level as Russia, despite the GOP-led committee looking into the matter and finding little to support the allegation.
Others gripe that it is misleadingly plugging its Japaneseness (it says it was founded in Tokyo, though it has only four shops there and over 1,000 in China) to appeal to Asian consumers keen on kawaii, or Japan's brand of cuteness.
"The ACCC alleges Samsung's advertisements falsely and misleadingly represented Galaxy phones would be suitable for use in, or for exposure to, all types of water ... when this was not the case," ACCC Chairman Rod Sims said in a statement on Thursday.
The national press has reported his latest videos, and how they seem to show two left-wing activists discussing how elections might conceivably be rigged, while noting that Mr O'Keefe also has a history of selectively and misleadingly editing his films.
Under Basel rules, the ratio of a bank's equity to its RWAs are a key gauge of its strength: if lenders are too sanguine about risk, their estimated RWAs will be too low and their reported capital ratios misleadingly high.
I know Kurtz is mistaken because I've battled an irrational fear of black men that has, misleadingly, been only attributed to white or other non-black people: Scott was in fact killed by a black officer in Charlotte last week.
On August 220006, union leaders celebrated as Missourians overwhelming voted to overturn a Republican-backed state law to institute "right-to-work," a misleadingly-named policy that undercuts union fundraising by letting workers avoid paying fees for union-provided workplace benefits.
And fentanyl is even more potent than heroin, and it's often laced into illicitly sold heroin without a user's knowledge or misleadingly sold to a user as heroin — increasing the odds he'll take a much bigger dose than he can handle.
Representative Adam B. Schiff, the top Democrat on the Intelligence Committee, who has seen the underlying classified materials on which the memo is based, has said the memo contains both inaccurate assertions and material omissions to misleadingly impugn law enforcement officials.
May's official country residence, that The New York Times has previously debunked: He misleadingly claimed that the United States pays "90 percent of the cost of NATO" (his figure is overstated and conflates different measures of the alliance's military spending).
Trump himself seems alarmed, recently posting on Twitter that "Mini Mike Bloomberg is spending a lot of money on False Advertising" before going on to misleadingly claim that he has tried to protect coverage for people with pre-existing conditions.
" On the obstruction charge, Stone's indictment said he "testified falsely and misleadingly" before the House Intelligence Committee, lied about the existence of records, falsely misled the committee about communications with colleagues, and pressured radio host Randy Credico to "falsely testify.
Aside from raising the default tip amount, workers will demand that Instacart give them the entirety of each tip and remove an "intentionally confusing & obsolete 'service fee,'" which misleadingly goes directly into the pockets of the company, not its workers.
Fagen's lawsuit, riddled with half-truths and omissions, misleadingly fails to state that the day after Walter died, Mr. Fagen had his lawyer send a demand letter to Walter's estate, thus beginning a legal campaign against Walter's family immediately after his death.
Facing an enormous backlash from the medical community, the clinic worked rapidly to distance itself from Dr. Daniel Neides, the author of the erroneous column, saying in a statement—misleadingly, it appears --that the doctor published the blog without the hospital's authorization.
The FCC's Republican majority passed its misleadingly named order in mid-December, overturning earlier FCC rules that prevented internet service providers from blocking or throttling online content or creating "fast lanes" for companies willing to pay more for better service for their users.
By mid-decade, the Democrats were in charge of congressional inquiries into the misdeeds of the CIA and FBI, and they roasted Kelley when he misleadingly (though apparently unwittingly) claimed the FBI had stopped conducting illegal break-ins in the mid-'60s.
The US Food and Drug Administration joined the Federal Trade Commission to issue 13 warning letters to companies that "misleadingly labeled or advertised nicotine-containing e-liquids as kid friendly food products such as juice boxes, candies, and cookies," the FDA wrote.
Over the next eight decades a succession of white governments evicted 3.5m black South Africans from their homes, in cities and in the countryside, prodding them onto the backs of lorries at gunpoint and dumping them in barren reservations misleadingly called "homelands".
The week-old MyEtherWallet digital wallet app, which is misleadingly named at best, or a scam at worst, rose to the third most popular ranking in the paid finance category over the weekend, where it still resides at the time of publication.
Still others have been questioned about how a statement was crafted aboard Air Force One, which misleadingly claimed a 2016 Trump Tower meeting between senior campaign aides and a Russian attorney focused on primarily adoptions rather than collecting damaging information about Hillary Clinton.
Washington (CNN)Vice President Mike Pence on Tuesday misleadingly cited some statistics about illegal entry to the US in an effort to build support for the Trump administration's border wall by tying the issue of immigration to fears of terrorism and crime.
The memo was misleadingly silent with regards to any other evidence presented to the FISA judge beyond the Steele dossier, and there are now press reports that the judge was aware of the political motivation behind those bankrolling Steele, directly contradicting the memo.
Republicans at the time claimed that the F.B.I. had misleadingly used the article as corroboration for Mr. Steele's claims, while Democrats said that was false and that it was instead included to inform the court that Mr. Page had denied the allegations.
The misleadingly thin towels made of bamboo fibers (to reduce energy during laundry) were absorbent and all the toiletries from the hotel's own natural Ablu Botanica line were in large dispensers so we didn't have to worry about squeezing out any last drops.
" Other Claims Mr. Trump also made a host of other claims during the rallies that The Times has previously debunked: He misleadingly claimed in West Virginia that 4.5 million new jobs had been created since his election, "a number that was unthinkable.
Twitter this month said it was drafting deepfake policy after a number of high-profile incidents, including a misleadingly edited video of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi going viral, that have highlighted how vulnerable the company's platform is to misinformation of this variety.
In September, according to the documents obtained by Just Security, Duffey emailed McCusker and suggested, misleadingly, that if the president approved the aid but the Pentagon was not able to push the funding through, it would be the Defense Department&aposs fault.
Earlier in November, it posted a misleadingly edited clip of an interview from the television show "Good Morning Britain" that appeared to show Labour's Brexit spokesperson Keir Starmer faltering for words and unable to answer a question from the host, Piers Morgan.
He also pushed for new requirements on the type of science the agency could use in rulemaking, misleadingly referring to scientific studies that didn't make all of its data public "secret science," and ruling that it shouldn't be used to craft EPA policy.
Following a second tweet in which she misleadingly referred to everyone from countries like Iraq, Iran, and Afghanistan as "terror suspects," Nielsen posted a third tweet in which she tried to stoke fears about people traveling through Western Hemisphere countries like Morocco and Fiji.
They also misleadingly edited footage of one of his rallies to portray him as trying to rile members of the Uzbek minority in southern Kyrgyzstan—incendiary tactics in a country where clashes in 2010 between Kyrgyz people and Uzbeks led to hundreds of deaths.
"The Report misleadingly connects terrorism and crime to immigration by presenting false data in order to generate fear regarding criminality among immigrants coming to the United States," Booker, who sits on the Senate Judiciary Committee, wrote in his letter obtained by CNN on Wednesday.
President Donald Trump spent his Thursday morning lashing out at the media, calling out reporters and news outlets by name and suggesting, apparently for the first time, that video of him explaining his decision to fire ex-FBI Director James Comey had been misleadingly presented.
Sally Burtnick and Brett Davis, of the Manhattan Neighborhood Network's variety show "The Special Without Brett Davis," host the third anniversary of this misleadingly named comedy production, which is not affiliated with the titular actor (despite the hosts' best efforts to persuade him to attend).
A judge in Chittenden Superior Court denied Purdue Pharma's motion to dismiss the case, ruling the state could bring claims against the company based on allegations that it "aggressively and misleadingly marketed opioids such as Oxycontin in Vermont, leading to massive addiction and the resulting societal costs."
Yet he and other officials insisted that the decree in fact reinforces punishment of "Italian-sounding" products — those misleadingly labeled as being of Italian provenance, but actually produced elsewhere — which each year amount to about 228 billion euros, or $21 billion, in missed earnings for Italy.
That reform starts with expanding health care choices outside the VA system for veterans who so choose (which is not the same thing as "privatization," as critics misleadingly claim), and demanding greater accountability from VA managers and workers (which includes terminating employees who fail to perform).
"In sum, the State failed to prove that Janssen misleadingly promoted opioids, that any of Janssen's promotions caused any harm in Oklahoma (let alone a crisis of opioid abuse), or that its proposed remedy was a prudent and justified response to the present crisis," Johnson & Johnson said.
The coverage of AT&T's latest 5G deployment may be limited and it might only be available to businesses, but at least today's announcement is about an actual 5G network instead of the "5GE" network, which is how the company is misleadingly referring to its 4G network.
The current bill, misleadingly titled the "ADA Education and Reform Act of 2017," would render largely unenforceable key ADA requirements that businesses be accessible to disabled consumers – requirements that they provide ramps instead of stairs where possible, that doorways be wide enough for wheelchairs and so forth.
This ad aims at the majority black electorate in South Carolina, a must-win state for Biden, by misleadingly using Obama's words from his 1995 book "Dreams from My Father" to suggest that the former president believes his vice president supports "plantation politics" that hurt African Americans.
Rather than making a fair-minded effort to review investigators' work, he's constantly tried to use whatever he can find — often wrenched out of context or misleadingly spun, as in his infamous "Nunes memo" — to attack the Justice Department and try to discredit Mueller's investigation of Trump.
Lichtman, a remarkable thinker and social satirist, fills his first 50 pages with a misleadingly pedestrian cycle of basic cowardice, random aggression, flagrant self-congratulation and garden-variety self-loathing, until a Suboxone strip chops up the rhythm of his prose and the book begins in earnest.
The misleadingly named personal transportation device — it doesn't actually hover, as Back to the Future purists will remind you— was propelled into the mainstream last year by viral Internet-fueled popular demand and the unmatched speed and dexterity of the Chinese manufacturing sector that rose up to meet it.
It showed the members of the caucus, wearing kente cloth adornments that stood out in the audience, sitting — some with blank expressions, others with more active looks of annoyance — as the president, somewhat misleadingly, touted that black unemployment had reached a historic low during his first year in office.
Photo: Amy Sancetta (AP)AT&T's claim that its "212.2G E" network—which is a regular 25G network boosted with some technical tricks, misleadingly rebranded as next-generation 25G—has helped make it the fastest carrier in the country doesn't tell the whole story, the Verge reported on Wednesday.
Media's hypocrisy shows again in complaints about Trump 'ditching' press pool  During the week I spent with a team of colleagues from the Fragomen law firm volunteering at the misleadingly-named South Texas Family Residential Center in Dilley, Texas, we helped women prepare for their interviews with Asylum Officers.
Mr. Prysby and Mr. Busch each face two misdemeanor charges of violating the state's Safe Drinking Water Act by failing to order anticorrosion treatment of the water, and for telling residents to run, or "preflush," their taps before samples were taken for lead testing, creating misleadingly low readings.
Watch more from Tonic: The new South Carolina suit claims Purdue violated an agreement from the 2007 settlement by continuing to misleadingly market OxyContin by overstating its benefits compared to other painkillers, downplaying its addictiveness to doctors who prescribe it, and encouraging doctors to prescribe it for unapproved uses.
Striking his most somber tone in discussing the coronavirus to date, Trump's Oval Office address injected gravity and even a sense of crisis into a topic that he and right-wing media have downplayed for weeks, assuring Americans "it will disappear" and misleadingly comparing it to the flu.
So far, it seems like it's been fairly successful; the high point for me was when a student emailed me a link to a graphic on our own school's website that misleadingly portrayed our test scores as being much higher than those in the rest of the country.
And yet, by quoting selectively and misleadingly from "The Descent of Man," she has in the past reduced Darwin, for instance, to a proto-eugenicist, the fountainhead of social Darwinism, which is not unlike blaming John Calvin for the animatronic dinosaurs in the Creation Museum's diorama of Eden.
As a result, we may be seeing the emergence of America's own version of a market-dominant minority: the much-discussed group often referred to as the coastal elites — misleadingly, because its members are neither all coastal nor all elite, at least in the sense of being wealthy.
Comedy Sally Burtnick and Brett Davis, of the Manhattan Neighborhood Network's variety show "The Special Without Brett Davis," will host the third anniversary of this misleadingly named comedy production, which is not affiliated with the titular actor (despite the hosts' best efforts to persuade him to attend), on Dec.
"Samsung's advertisements falsely and misleadingly represented Galaxy phones would be suitable for use in ... all types of water, including in ocean water and swimming pools, and would not be affected by such exposure to water," Rod Sims, chair of the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, said in a statement on Thursday.
In an interview on ABC's "Good Morning America," Pence was asked about a statistic, misleadingly cited by White House press secretary Sarah Sanders, that 4,000 "known or suspected terrorists" were caught trying to enter the US illegally as part of the administration's push for greater security at the southern border.
The first bill, a 2628-week abortion ban misleadingly labeled as the Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act, is premised at least in part on the assertion that fetuses can experience pain starting at 28503 weeks post-fertilization—a claim that is not supported by the preponderance of scientific evidence.
These include a Cabinet minister's suggestion that more victims of the Grenfell Tower disaster might have survived if they had used 'common sense,' and a doctored video of Labour's shadow Brexit secretary Keir Starmer which misleadingly appeared to show him rendered speechless by a question on the party's Brexit policy.
He said that Mr. Barr had acted in "good faith" by choosing not to release summaries of the report drafted by Mr. Mueller's team, despite his entreaties that a March 24 letter from the attorney general, widely criticized as painting a misleadingly rosy view of Mr. Trump, confused the public.
But Boetticher also won credit for his progressivism, which can be seen in the misleadingly titled "Buchanan Rides Alone," which finds Scott, as a roving West Texan named Tom Buchanan, forging a friendship with a Mexican man, Juan (Manuel Rojas), whose father is widely regarded as a populist benefactor in Mexico.
The president misleadingly called Mr. McGurk an Obama-era appointee, and accused him of "loading up airplanes with 1.8 Billion Dollars in CASH & sending it to Iran" as part of the nuclear deal that world powers struck with Tehran — an agreement from which Mr. Trump has withdrawn the United States.
As women who've been working in this space for years know, the voices this segment overlooked and the narrative it amplified are a part of a much larger battle — one in which leaders in business, media, and culture continue to opt for misleadingly simple explanations for the gender gap in the tech industry.
And even as Pompeo tried, misleadingly, to present the move as continuation of a previous president's policies, the State Department tacitly recognized the disruption the shift could cause by issuing a sweeping travel warning for all US government facilities, US private interests and US citizens in the West Bank, Gaza and Jerusalem.
The president seized on the information, misleadingly, as evidence for his thoroughly debunked claim that President Barack Obama had wiretapped Trump Tower — an allegation dismissed not only by senior law enforcement officials, like the F.B.I. director, James B. Comey, but also by the heads of the Senate and House investigations, including Mr. Nunes.
" On Friday, in a statement retweeted by the president, Mr. Fitton accused Hillary Clinton and Democrats of trying to hide the fact that they had funded the dossier, which, he said, "was used by their allies in the Obama Administration to convince a Court misleadingly, by all accounts, to spy on the Trump Team.
Conservative legislators have passed nearly 300 abortion restrictions in the past five years, forcing 162 providers to close and often enacting humiliating and bizarre regulations in the process—such as forcing women to pay for fetus funerals or requiring doctors to tell their patients, misleadingly, that abortion will increase their risk of contracting breast cancer.
By the time my sister tried OxyContin in 2004, it was one of the most commonly abused prescription opioids in the US. Purdue Frederick Company, an affiliate of Purdue Pharma, the drug manufacturer that first produced OxyContin, eventually pleaded guilty to a felony charge of misleadingly advertising the drug but was still allowed to sell it.
I think if you're talking about Buddhism in larger sense to include the supernatural stuff, I'm not sure that you can defend that claim but I think if you're just talking about what is sometimes called, misleadingly I think, the secular part of Buddhism or the naturalistic part, there's no reason for anyone to feel threatened by me.
Paul GosarPaul Anthony GosarHouse ethics committee warns lawmakers against posting deepfakes Pelosi slams Trump administration's new water rule: 'An outrageous assault' Republicans criticize Pelosi for gifting pens used to sign impeachment articles MORE (R-Ariz.) drew criticism when he tweeted a misleadingly edited image depicting former President Obama meeting with Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, an encounter that never happened.
"The ACCC alleges Samsung's advertisements falsely and misleadingly represented Galaxy phones would be suitable for use in, or for exposure to, all types of water, including in ocean water and swimming pools, and would not be affected by such exposure to water for the life of the phone, when this was not the case," ACCC Chair Rod Sims said in a statement.
The union, in a response to the lawsuit filed in United States District Court in Chicago, argued that the federation's 2015 financial statement had conceded the key question in the lawsuit — whether the women's team, the reigning World Cup champion, has a valid collective bargaining agreement with U.S. Soccer — and charged that U.S. Soccer had filed "misleadingly incomplete" documentation to support its lawsuit.
Some in the Sanders camp have misleadingly claimed this is a natural extension of Obamacare, a view challenged by that administration's vice president and 85033 candidate, Joe BidenJoe BidenHarry Reid: 'Decriminalizing border crossings is not something that should be at the top of the list' Warren offers plan to repeal 1994 crime law authored by Biden Panel: Jill Biden's campaign message MORE.
" In light of the limited number of light beer brands, the ruling adds, "with Bud Light, Miller Lite and Coors Light accounting for almost 100% of sales, that same jury could also find a substantial segment of consumers would infer that Bud Light's principal competitors contain corn syrup, especially after a hundred million dollar television and print campaign misleadingly suggesting the same thing.
He cited an outdated tally that officials had acknowledged almost immediately was too low, misleadingly suggested that doubt over the tally did not emerge until "a long time later," accused Democrats, without evidence, of inflating the figures and wrongly described the current official estimate as counting all deaths on the island, regardless of whether they were related to the storm.
According to reports, Nirvana, LCC (the legal unit founded in September 1997 by Dave Grohl, Krist Novoselic, and the Courtney Love-controlled Cobain Estate) has handed a lawsuit to the brand, claiming that the T-shirt "infringed Nirvana's copyright, misleadingly used Nirvana's trademarks, and utilised other elements with which Nirvana is widely associated to make it appear that Nirvana has endorsed or is otherwise associated with" the reissued collection.
But if hard-working New Yorkers had a better insight into how much of their income is being siphoned into public coffers, beyond what they pay in ordinary income and sales taxes, if they knew how these fees were misleadingly labeled, and if they knew better how the resulting revenue is spent and misspent, more would undoubtedly demand change and greater visibility on how these fees are collected and spent.
What's more, the Justice Department claimed, GSK selectively and misleadingly released information about three studies it had conducted of the drug: It hired a consulting company to write a journal article that played up evidence from one study that the drug worked better as a treatment for pediatric depression than a placebo, played down (better) evidence from the same study that it hadn't, and soft-pedaled the side effects.
Go over it' THE TRUTH ABOUT THE BORDER CRISIS: Experts say there is no security crisis, but there is a simple way to fix immigration — and it's not a wall As the government shutdown over Trump's border wall rages, a journey along the entire 1,933-mile US-Mexico border shows the monumental task of securing it The Trump administration keeps getting called out for misleadingly linking migrants at the US-Mexico border with terrorism
This creates a serious problem if you want to find a fix to the problem of disinformation online, because doing so both technologically and democratically seems basically impossible: This problem hinges on the difference between explicitly fake news—the type of stories created by Macedonian teens and others purely trying to make some money—and disinformation, which tends to involve interpreting facts misleadingly and allowing consumers to infer false conclusions rather than offering outright falsehoods.
One of those musicians was a small, misleadingly muscular dirtbag named Iggy Pop, whose face appears on the cover of one version of Legs McNeil and Gillian McCain's oral history of punk Please Kill Me. I read the book three times before I was old enough to legally drink, and the stories told there — about Lou Reed's sleazy come-ons and Tom Verlaine's fawnishness — became signposts of an era I had never lived in.
That the bruises on her face when she reported him to the police were fake, that the pictures of broken glass and smashed bottles were staged, that the video she took of him screaming at her was misleadingly edited, that the doctor's report showing that Depp cut off the tip of his finger was unrelated, and that the years of text messages documenting his abuse were all part of a cunning plot to destroy an innocent man.
Available to stream with subscription: Netflix (Both sequels are also available, so you can really make a day of it.) Available to rent: YouTube, iTunes, Amazon Video, Vudu, Google Play Available for free: Dailymotion Available to rent: YouTube, iTunes, Amazon Video, Vudu, Google Play Available to stream with subscription: Netflix Available to rent: YouTube, Amazon Video, Vudu, Google Play Available to stream for free: Dailymotion Available to stream with subscription: Amazon Prime Video Available to purchase: Amazon Video A misleadingly titled film because the primary peril is not the weather, but the wolves.
Monday: White House says tax 'refunds will go out' amid shutdownTrump plans prime-time address, border visit as shutdown fight continues Tuesday: Trump warns of 'crisis of the heart' in immigration addressPence misleadingly claims nearly 4,000 terrorists caught trying to enter US Wednesday: Trump suggests he may use executive authority on borderTaxpayers will pay for wall, White House aide acknowledgesTrump revives threats to withhold FEMA funds from California fire recoveryTrump said trip to the southern border is 'not going to change a damn thing'Rosenstein, who picked Mueller, plans to leave Justice Dept.
President TrumpDonald John TrumpFacebook releases audit on conservative bias claims Harry Reid: 'Decriminalizing border crossings is not something that should be at the top of the list' Recessions happen when presidents overlook key problems MORE's lawyer is claiming that NBC misleadingly edited the 85033 interview in which President Trump said he was thinking about "this Russia thing" when he fired former FBI Director James ComeyJames Brien Comey3 real problems Republicans need to address to win in 2020 Barr predicts progressive prosecutors will lead to 'more crime, more victims' James Comey shows our criminal justice system works as intended MORE.

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