Officials have described Project Homecoming as a smoother alternative to forcible deportations.
Kroos managed to turn things around and became a very important part of the team, but Modric had a phase on the bench.During the last couple of years, his situation has left him a bit uneasy. He didn't know where he stood. He felt he could play 90 minutes more often. It was a nightmare for him but this season, he has understood his role better and has been their leader.
But ultimately, this will have been a decision taken by the club. Xabi Alonso would have agreed to it but it's a club decision, first of all. The way Alonso's teams play requires a lot of effort which he cannot ask of Modric.It also feels like the end of an era.There is a new culture that has to be set for this team. Ancelotti has struggled with the fractions and egos in the team and by getting Modric out, you can build for new leaders - and that might be Real's thinking.
Chris Pelkey died in a road rage shooting in Arizona three years ago.But with the help of artificial intelligence, he returned earlier this month at his killer's sentencing to deliver a victim's statement himself.
Family members said they used the burgeoning technology to let Mr Pelkey use his own words to talk about the incident that took his life.
While some experts argue the unique use of AI is just another step into the future, others say it could become a slippery slope for using the technology in legal cases."In the past, we would have used customer satisfaction surveys," says Mr Salmon, "but with live shopping, we get feedback right away and I bring that back to my team to help refine our products."
Few technology careers offer the chance to demonstrate your skills in exclusive venues worldwide, from luxury hotels to Las Vegas e-sports arenas, peers cheering you on as your name moves up the leaderboard and your earnings rack up.But that's what Brandyn Murtagh experienced within his first year as a bug bounty hunter.
Mr Murtagh got into gaming and building computers at 10 or 11-years-old and always knew "I wanted to be a hacker or work in security".He began working in a security operations centre at 16, and moved into penetration testing at 20, a job that also involved testing the security of clients' physical and computer security: "I had to forge false identities and break into places and then hack. Quite fun."