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Disgruntled ex-CEO allegedly hijacked domain name, caused $1M in damage and tried to sell it for $6,666,666: lawsuitA di...
01/28/2026

Disgruntled ex-CEO allegedly hijacked domain name, caused $1M in damage and tried to sell it for $6,666,666: lawsuit
A disgruntled ex-CEO locked his former video game studio out of its own website, knocked employees offline and triggered more than $1 million in alleged losses — then put the domain up for sale for $6,666,666, a new lawsuit claims.

The lawsuit, filed last week in federal court in Los Angeles, accuses former That’s No Moon Entertainment CEO Michael Mumbauer of seizing control of company-owned domains years after he was fired for cause and using them to sabotage the studio’s operations.

After his 2022 firing, Mumbauer grew “resentful about his termination” and launched a harassment campaign that included threatening a senior executive and their family, the complaint alleges. News of the lawsuit was reported by the gamer news site Aftermath.

“At 6 a.m. on January 6, 2026, Defendant hijacked ThatsNoMoon.com, disabling TNM’s own access to that domain and TNM employees’ ability to e-mail with any external sender or recipient,” the complaint states.

The sudden shutdown left the studio effectively paralyzed, cutting off communications with investors, business partners and job candidates and forcing employees to abandon their normal work to triage the outage, according to the lawsuit.

Visitors who tried to log on to ThatsNoMoon.com were instead redirected to a Swiss travel site, the suit stated.

🔥 NBA TEA SPILL ALERT! 🔥Gilbert Arenas just dropped a pic with a bag labeled “Informant Lunch”
01/28/2026

🔥 NBA TEA SPILL ALERT! 🔥
Gilbert Arenas just dropped a pic with a bag labeled “Informant Lunch”

The Ceremony Was Ready to Begin — Until One Chair Stayed EmptyWhat happens when a four-star general stops a VA hospital ...
01/28/2026

The Ceremony Was Ready to Begin — Until One Chair Stayed Empty
What happens when a four-star general stops a VA hospital dedication because the janitor is trying to leave? If you love stories of quiet heroes, hit subscribe and turn on notifications. The ceremony was scheduled for 10. Veterans Affairs Hospital, Denver, Colorado, October. Grand opening of the new trauma wing.

300 attendees packed the main atrium. Senators, generals, VA officials, hospital staff, veterans in wheelchairs, families, everyone in their best suits and uniforms, cameras ready, a $15 million facility about to be dedicated, Harold Jensen was mopping the floor near the stage when people started arriving. 82 years old, thin, bent slightly from two decades of physical labor, gray hair cut short, weathered white skin, pale blue eyes that had seen too much.

He wore the standard VA hospital janitor uniform. Blue work pants, blue shirt, name tag reading Harold, yellow rubber gloves, pushing a mop bucket, moving slowly, methodically the way he'd done for 20 years. What nobody knew was that Harold Jensen was a retired Army colonel with a distinguished service cross. The atrium was filling fast.

Front rows reserved for VIPs. Senators Patricia Reynolds and David Morrison, hospital director Dr. Sarah Rosenberg, VA Regional Director James Martinez, and the keynote speaker, General Thomas Mitchell, four stars. Commander of Army Forces Command, 62 years old, decorated combat veteran, Iraq, Afghanistan. A career soldier at the top of his profession.

Herald saw the crowd growing, checked his watch. 0945. 15 minutes until the ceremony. He needed to finish mopping and get out. He didn't belong here. This was for important people. He was just the janitor. He pushed his mop bucket toward the side exit, moving along the wall, trying to be invisible, the skill he perfected over 20 years.

General Mitchell arrived at 09. Full dress uniform, four stars on his shoulders, chest covered with ribbons, combat infantryman badge, Ranger tab, master parachutist wings. He walked through the main entrance with his aid. Captain Williams, young, efficient, carrying the general's speech notes. Mitchell scanned the room. Force of habit.

A lifetime of assessing terrain, identifying threats, locating exits. His eyes swept across the crowd, the stage, the new trauma-wing entrance behind it. Then he saw the janitor, an old man in blue work clothes, pushing a mop bucket toward the exit, moving slowly, something familiar in the way he moved.

The posture, even bent with age, there was something military in it. Mitchell stopped walking, stared. The janitor was 70 ft away. Profile view, but something clicked. a memory. 46 years old, buried deep. Sir, Captain Williams noticed the general had stopped. Mitchell didn't respond. He was watching the janitor. The old man reached the side door, started to push through.

Billionaire pretends to be asleep to test a waitress—what she does leaves him paralyzedThe billionaire pretended to stay...
01/28/2026

Billionaire pretends to be asleep to test a waitress—what she does leaves him paralyzed
The billionaire pretended to stay asleep during dinner in his luxury restaurant, leaving thousands of weights on the table to test the new waitress But what she did in silence left him completely paralyzed printing. Leave your city below and subscribe. Ready for an amazing story? Let's get started. The crystal chandelier on table seven cast dancing shadows on the white tablecloth, while Sofía Ramírez I cleaned the bar for the third time that night.

His hands were shaking a little, not from fatigue, but from electricity knowing he was there again. Alejandro Vargas, the owner of Vargas companies and this very elegant restaurant, was sitting alone at his usual table in the corner with its dark suit that was worth more than her salary in a whole year. I had been working in lighting for exactly two weeks and in that time I had learned three things about Alejandro Vargas.

First he arrived at his own restaurant every Thursday night at 8 in the morning. Second, he always sat alone, watching everything with those gray eyes intense sounds that seemed to record every detail, every mistake, every imperfection. Third, he never smiled. Sofia adjusted her black apron and tried to concentrate on polishing the glasses of wine, but his gaze continued returning to him.

At 34 years old, Alejandro Vargas was the City's youngest billionaire from Mexico. According to the gossip he had heard among the staff, had inherited the empire of his dad's restaurants at 25 and had tripled in value in just 5 years. He now owned 30 of the most exclusive to the country. Stop staring at him, Leiseo María, the veteran waitress who had taken her under his wing. He notices everything.

Sofia quickly looked back at the glass that he had in his hand with his cheeks burning. I wasn't seeing it, I was just there. Everyone looks at him at first, Maria interrupts in a softer voice. But trust me, you don't want to call her attention. He fired three people last month for small errors. It's bright, but it's cold like ice.

As if to confirm what he said María, Alejandro raised a finger without taking your eyes off your cell phone and Instantly a waiter appeared next to him. Sofía observed the scene, noticing how The waiter's shoulders were tense, like Alejandro's face was still totally neutral while giving his order. There was no please or thank you, just dry instructions in a voice that I expected absolute obedience.

The night continued its usual rhythm. Sofía served drinks, bussed tables and I was trying to memorize the complicated letter of wines that seemed to change every week. She was good at her job, I knew. There in his hometown of Monterrey, I had paid for community college. working as a waitress at a Dainer. local, but luminaria was something else.

Everything here worked with precision. which bordered on the intimidating. At 9:30 Alejandro's dinner arrived. Sofía recognized the dish, a portion 50,000 pesos worth of Chilean sea bass grilled with risotto truffle saw him from the bar while the waiter He placed it in front of him with great care. Alejandro nodded once, dismissed the waiter and started eating with the same methodical precision that seemed to apply to everything.

Truong Thao Vy missed out on the American professional basketball league.Truong Thao Vy missed out on the American profe...
01/28/2026

Truong Thao Vy missed out on the American professional basketball league.
Truong Thao Vy missed out on the American professional basketball league.

Kaylynne Truong was not registered by the Washington Mystics on the official roster for the 2024 National Basketball Association (WNBA).

On April 16th, Thao Vy was selected by the Mystics in the second round, 21st pick of the 2024 WNBA Draft – the event that selects athletes for the WNBA. Vy became the second Vietnamese-American athlete to join a professional basketball club, after Jaylin Williams – the center born in 2002 who was selected by the Oklahoma City Thunder in the 34th pick.

However, after a month of training, the Mystics announced the removal of Thao Vy (Kaylynne Truong), along with Jakia Browne-Turner and Elissa Cunane. Besides the fierce competition among the players, Thao Vy's exclusion from the 12-player roster for the 2024 WNBA season was partly due to injury. During preseason training, Vy had to compete with 12 players from the 2023 roster, two newly drafted players, Edwards Aaliyah and Nastja Claessens, and several other players who had already played professionally. Thao Vy attended all practice sessions, played one exhibition game for nine minutes, and scored three points.

The Mystics only retained one rookie from the draft, Aaliyah. At the same time, the team successfully traded point guard Jade Melbourne from the Seattle Storm, thus closing the door on Thao Vy's participation in the 2024 WNBA season.

"We are disappointed that Thao Vy is on the list of those dropped," stated an article on Bullets Forever – a website specializing in Mystics. "However, Thao Vy suffered a minor ankle injury during training, so she didn't have many opportunities to prove herself in recent games."

Furthermore, Bullets Forever highlights the reality that American basketball clubs have to release many talented players because each team is only allowed to register 11 to 12 players, depending on salary allocation. At the same time, new players like Thao Vy face fiercer competition due to the high entry requirements. Even though she's no longer with the team, Thao Vy could always be called back by the Mystics, or any team in the WNBA, in the middle of the season. League regulations stipulate that players like Thao Vy can be signed to short-term contracts to replace other injured players. Alternatively, she could move to other high-quality basketball leagues such as Australia or European countries.

The corrupt police officers scoffed and ridiculed her, but were stunned to learn she was running the FBI.They thought it...
01/28/2026

The corrupt police officers scoffed and ridiculed her, but were stunned to learn she was running the FBI.
They thought it was a celebration. They believed that the court was his playground. Sergeant Miller and his squad spent years planting evidence, destroying lives and laughing on the way to the bank. Today they toasted another conviction of a woman whom they considered a nobody, but they forgot something.

He doesn't usually take notes. Observe with attention, because the handcuffed woman is not a victim. She is the director of the FBI. Take a microphone and in exactly 10 minutes the laughter stops and the screams begin. This is the story of a judicial revenge more satisfactory than ever they will listen. The air in the county courthouse Cook, room 4B, smelled old for wood.

Stale and stuffy coffee arrogance of men who believed themselves untouchables It was a wet Tuesday in Chicago. The gallery was sparsely busy, mainly with clarks bored and some relatives of the accused waiting their turn in the summary. But at the prosecutor's table The atmosphere was electric. It seemed less a judicial process and more a fraternity meeting.

Sergeant Rick Bulldog Miller leaned back in his chair nibbling on a toothpick while his eyes scanned the room with a predatory boredom. He was a big man, with uniform straining his thick neck and robust shoulders, adorned with medals that had not been earned, but stolen. Officer Gary sat next to him. Thorn, a younger and nervous man who laughed too hard with Miller and Detective Shon, jokes Al, a police veteran whose silence was often confused with wisdom more than with complicity.

"Look at her," Miller whispered, nudging him. Thorn. He clears his throat. He pointed with his chin at the coffee table. defense, sitting there like a statue. Surely you are already thinking about accepting the agreement with the prosecution. Thorn laughed. surreptitiously covering his mouth. five for possession and assault on an officer.

I'd be lucky. Judge Sterling agrees bad mood today. I heard your coffee maker broke this morning. At the table defense was sitting the woman to whom they only knew him as Ive. It was a woman black woman in her 30s, dressed in a bright orange jumpsuit provided by the county jail. He wore his hair collected in a serious and discreet bun.

No, she was wearing makeup and her expression was indecipherable. He sat with a posture unusual for the broken souls that they used to parade through 4B. His spine remained erect, with his hands peacefully intertwined on the table in front of her. along with blog notes I hadn't touched. Initially had rejected a public defender, but then he accepted a public defender called Mr.Gilbert, a man so exhausted and sweaty looking melt into your cheap suit. Gilbert I was shuffling papers, dropping half and mumbling apologies to no one in particular. "Your honor, the state is ready," announced prosecutor Marcus Dent. Dent was an elegant man with a smile that did not reach his eyes. He and Miller played golf Sundays.

He knew perfectly well how I played. Miller brought him the bodies. Dent buried them and they both looked like heroes on the 6:12 p.m. news. The judge Harold P. Sterling looked them over his glasses. He was an older white man. with a face like a road map wrinkled, known for its long sentences and his light lunch. Very good. Case number 492b.

State v. Evely Smith. Charges. Possession of a waiting list. Controlled substance with intent to distribute and two counts of assault on a police officer Ivni flinched. no He looked at the judge. His eyes were fixed on Sergeant Miller. It was such an intense look, so devoid of fear, that For a split second, Miller He felt a chill on the back of his neck.

Police fired three bullets at a Black judge—minutes later, she entered the courtroom and...Three bullets were enough to ...
01/28/2026

Police fired three bullets at a Black judge—minutes later, she entered the courtroom and...
Three bullets were enough to break the silence of a lonely road and seal the fate of two officers arrogant They thought they had just solve a problem. They believed that their plates were shields of invincibility that would allow them to get away with it. They were wrong, totally wrong, because the woman they were targeting didn't She was a simple driver.

She was the Honorable Judge Evely Van B, one of the most powerful women in the state. and not I was dead. What happens when the victim that you left for dead enters your she came out 20 minutes later, dressed in her toga and holding the shackle? You are about to witness karma most satisfying instant history of law. Fasten seat belts. The rain was pouring down.

turning the asphalt of route nine in a black and slippery mirror. It was just after 8 or the morning of a Tuesday, usually rush hour. but there, on the edge of the city, where the suburbs merged with the bush of the pines, the road was deserted Judge Evely Bans pressed with force the leather steering wheel of your Classic Mercedes.

He was 55 years old, skin intense mahogany color and eyes that had Seen all the lies that a criminal could conjure. Today was an important day. He presided over the notorious corruption case of a local councillor, a case that had half the city threatening it and the other half praying for her. He looked in the rearview mirror. There was only rain and a gray sky.

Then lights came on. Blue and red strobe lights They pierced the gloom reapingly bright against the storm. Evely He sighed looking at the speedometer. I was going 70 km Mokyes in a zone of 80 kua. I was careful. had to be in your place. He couldn't even afford a fine of parking much less a traffic violation.

He put the sign turned and stopped in the muddy arsen with gravel crunching under their feet tires. He opened the window a little, letting the smell of ozone and pine damp will seep into the warm cabin. In the rearview mirror he saw the door open of the patrol car. Two appeared figures. They were not wearing raincoats, They moved with an arrogance that It fit the climate.

Agent Daniel Thorn and his partner, Agent Brad Miller. Evely didn't know them personally, but I did know who they were. Thorn was big, with long hair shaved and a neck that seemed disappear between his shoulders. Miller he was younger, wiry, with hands nervous that got too close to the holster Thorn approached the driver as Miller turned towards the co-pilot with his hand resting on the butt of his service weapon.

The nurse who was shot dead by US agents had previously received a letter of gratitude.Pretti, the nurse shot and killed...
01/27/2026

The nurse who was shot dead by US agents had previously received a letter of gratitude.
Pretti, the nurse shot and killed by federal agents in Minnesota, had received a letter of appreciation from the Department of Veterans Affairs and was praised by her colleagues for her dedication.

In the January 24th altercation in Minneapolis, Minnesota, federal agents shot and killed Alex Pretti, an intensive care nurse at the local Veterans Affairs Hospital, shocking the United States.

This is the second white American citizen killed since the federal government intensified its immigration crackdown in Minnesota in December 2025, and the sixth person killed in the nationwide crackdown launched by President Donald Trump.

Secretary of Veterans Affairs Doug Collins confirmed on January 25th that Pretti was a nurse working at the Minneapolis Veterans Affairs Hospital. Internal documents obtained by the Federal News Network show that Pretti had recently received a letter of appreciation from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.

"Thank you for working even on your day off to help care for veterans. You were a very important member of the team," the email sent to Pretti read.

Many employees at Minneapolis Veterans Affairs Hospital expressed outrage after federal agents shot and killed Pretti. Colleagues said he was a dedicated nurse. Doug Massey, president of the American Federation of Government Employees Local 17, representing employees of the Central Office of the Department of Veterans Affairs, said union members were "very upset and concerned" after the shooting.

He called it a "senseless" act by the agents, as Pretti was only trying to help a protester who had been pushed to the ground.

"I know many nurses, they are often the kind of people who want to help others. He saw a woman being pushed," Massey said.

WNBA players say they’re not paid what they’re owed. Are they right?The league’s best players believe they are not being...
01/27/2026

WNBA players say they’re not paid what they’re owed. Are they right?
The league’s best players believe they are not being given a fair deal when it comes to compensation. But sports accounting is a tricky affair.

Napheesa Collier was in record-breaking form on Saturday night as she set a new high for a WNBA All-Star Game, with 36 points. But much of the attention was focused on what happened before the game when players warmed up with shirts bearing the message “Pay us what you owe us.”

The move came after players and the league failed to reach a deal on a new collective bargaining agreement. Do they have a point though? Evaluating athlete pay is notoriously tricky because sports accounting always includes a certain amount of voodoo.

That’s especially true in the WNBA, whose fortunes – literally and figuratively – are tied up with the NBA’s, for better or for worse. The relationship has evolved through the years, and many current WNBA teams have no direct ties with an NBA team, although some remain under NBA ownership. NBA commissioner Adam Silver refers to the two leagues as “integrated,” and they have bundled their broadcast rights together in a massive 11-year deal.

And Silver is the one who has faced pressure within the NBA over the WNBA’s apparent losses, something that those who believe the likes of Collier and Caitlin Clark should be happy with their current salaries often use as a counter argument to demands for a pay hike. Silver said in 2018 that the WNBA’s losses were roughly $10m a year. And reports last fall said the WNBA was due to lose $40m in 2024. Adjust the 2018 figures for inflation, and the WNBA is supposedly losing three times as much as it was a few years ago.

That’s a curious figure given other public statistics suggesting the league’s financial health has never been better.

The first Vietnamese female athlete to join a professional basketball club in the US.Truong Thao Vy joins the Washington...
01/27/2026

The first Vietnamese female athlete to join a professional basketball club in the US.
Truong Thao Vy joins the Washington Mystics for the 2024 season, becoming the first Vietnamese female athlete to compete in the American professional women's basketball league (WNBA).

Truong Thao Vy (Kaylynne Truong) was selected 21st overall in the 2024 WNBA Draft – the selection event for professional women's basketball teams in the US – this morning, April 16th, Hanoi time. Meanwhile, her twin sister, Truong Thao My (Kayleigh Truong), was not selected by any club.

Previously, Jaylin Williams was the first Vietnamese-American athlete to join a professional basketball club in the US. The center, born in 2002, was selected 34th overall by the Oklahoma City Thunder in the NBA.

Thao Vy was selected thanks to her impressive performance in the 2023-2024 season of the American collegiate sports league (NCAA). After 36 games for the Gonzaga Bulldogs, Thao Vy averaged 11.4 points, 2.3 rebounds, and 5.8 assists per game. Thao Vy is 1.77 meters tall and is considered to have a playing style similar to NBA superstar Stephen Curry of the Golden State Warriors.

Thao Vy and Thao My, nicknamed the "Truong Twins," impressed by helping Vietnam make history with a silver medal at the 31st SEA Games and then a gold medal at the 32nd SEA Games in 3x3 basketball. Both demonstrated a different skill level thanks to their professional training in the United States – the birthplace of basketball.

Vy and My were born in 2001 in the United States, with both parents being Vietnamese. Their father taught them basketball from the age of five, and they trained seriously from the eighth grade. Both play well as point guards or shooting guards, with Thao Vy having a slight edge in skill. While playing at Jersey Village High School, Thao Vy was selected by the American television channel ESPN as one of the 28 best high school guards in the United States.

The truth behind the harassment incidents in the NBA women's league.A series of incidents involving s*x toys in the WNBA...
01/27/2026

The truth behind the harassment incidents in the NBA women's league.
A series of incidents involving s*x toys in the WNBA (Women's National Basketball Association) has raised alarm bells about ethics and gender discrimination in the United States.

The problem began with an incident in late July when a fan threw a s*x toy onto the court. What seemed like an isolated incident, seemingly without a system in place, triggered a series of similar incidents, causing outrage among athletes, coaches, and commentators.

A group of meme creators using cryptocurrency as a basis for their actions took responsibility. This reveals a strange perspective on Gen Z culture, with its desire to spread opinions regardless of the consequences, and demonstrates the persistence of gender discrimination and prejudice within women's sports.

Regarding the incident, Reuters and CNN reported that two men, aged 23 and 18, were arrested on charges of disorderly conduct, indecent behavior in public, and trespassing. The issue at the WNBA has become the subject of satire in many major American newspapers, while individuals in the basketball community feel deeply offended.

"Centuries have passed, yet women are still targeted in s*xual matters," said Minnesota Lynx coach Cheryl Reeve. "This is the latest version of defamation. There's nothing funny about this. We're not a joke."

The WNBA is no stranger to s*xist or racist behavior. While the league strives for openness and diversity, especially for women of color, this has also drawn the WNBA into the American culture war as the organization grows in size and popularity. Many believe the incident of throwing s*x toys during games is the latest manifestation of this.

"The female athletes were just doing their job, playing basketball. So, those who threw objects onto the court were harassing women in the workplace," Assistant Professor Mariel Barnes of the University of Wisconsin-Madison told CNN. "Incidents like this show that society still has prejudice and hatred towards women, especially successful women. This is just the tip of the iceberg, with a much stronger backlash targeting women in modern society."

In the WNBA incident, a group specializing in creating cryptocurrency-related memes was behind it. A representative of the group told USA Today that members began throwing green objects onto the court to introduce a new meme named after a type of s*x toy.

Female basketball star dreams of walking the Victoria's Secret runway.Cunningham, born on August 16, 1996, in Columbia, ...
01/27/2026

Female basketball star dreams of walking the Victoria's Secret runway.
Cunningham, born on August 16, 1996, in Columbia, Missouri, stands out with her height of 1.85 meters and currently plays guard for the Indiana Fever in the Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA).

Cunningham was a star at the University of Missouri, where she averaged 17 points, 5.4 rebounds, and 3 assists per game. In 2019, she was drafted by the Phoenix Mercury in the second round of the WNBA draft and quickly impressed with her energetic play and consistent long-range shooting.

In her professional career, Cunningham spent five seasons with the Phoenix Mercury before moving to the Indiana Fever in February 2025 in a four-team deal. She is considered one of the best three-point shooters in the league, with a shooting percentage of over 36%, having had a game in July 2025 where she scored 16 points and grabbed 10 rebounds. Not only outstanding on the court, Cunningham is also loved for her outgoing personality and distinctive fashion style off the court.

Sophie Cunningham wants to try her hand at fashion, after being inspired by her colleague Angel Reese's performance at the Victoria's Secret Fashion Show 2025.

Reese wore two outfits – a three-piece floral lingerie set paired with a s*xy fluffy coat and a pink cut-out baby tee – confidently strutting her stuff at the show in New York on October 15th. She is the first professional athlete in history to walk the runway for the famous American lingerie and women's clothing brand.

In a recent episode of the Show Me Something podcast, Cunningham revealed she immediately texted her agent after seeing Reese walk the runway in her famous angel wings.

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