惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
B
Blog RSS Feed
宝玉的分享
宝玉的分享
腾讯CDC
博客园_首页
T
Tailwind CSS Blog
月光博客
月光博客
博客园 - 司徒正美
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
M
MIT News - Artificial intelligence
A
About on SuperTechFans
云风的 BLOG
云风的 BLOG
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
有赞技术团队
有赞技术团队
freeCodeCamp Programming Tutorials: Python, JavaScript, Git & More
大猫的无限游戏
大猫的无限游戏
MongoDB | Blog
MongoDB | Blog
博客园 - 聂微东
V
Visual Studio Blog
H
Hackread – Cybersecurity News, Data Breaches, AI and More
SecWiki News
SecWiki News
美团技术团队
P
Privacy International News Feed
H
Help Net Security
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
Microsoft Security Blog
Microsoft Security Blog
Know Your Adversary
Know Your Adversary
Y
Y Combinator Blog
D
DataBreaches.Net
Project Zero
Project Zero
T
The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss
Cyberwarzone
Cyberwarzone
C
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency CISA
C
Cisco Blogs
S
Schneier on Security
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
博客园 - 三生石上(FineUI控件)
Cisco Talos Blog
Cisco Talos Blog
小众软件
小众软件
Forbes - Security
Forbes - Security
D
Docker
T
Tenable Blog
S
Secure Thoughts
雷峰网
雷峰网
S
Security @ Cisco Blogs
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
The Cloudflare Blog
博客园 - 【当耐特】
Spread Privacy
Spread Privacy
阮一峰的网络日志
阮一峰的网络日志

JPost.com - Business & Innovation | The Jerusalem Post

Your Investments: Financial freedom and Jerusalem unification Your Taxes: How Israel’s new war compensation system works Victory for the Negev vision: Light Rail will reach gates of the intelligence campus - opinion Only 45% of Tel Aviv Stock Exchange companies made donations in 2025, study finds “Within 5 to 6 Years, all of Israel will be connected to a single water network” Forget the model wars, the real AI challenge is orchestration -opinion Israeli-Cypriot cyber company to unveil Starlink de-anonymizing tool - report Cellular Intelligence strikes deal with Novo Nordisk to advance Parkinson’s cell therapy Israel’s inflation dynamics remain under control IDF reservists created 150 new startups during last year, innovation program reveals Trump to regulate AI development after Anthropic's Mythos posed cybersecurity threat - report Your Investments: Prosperity in Israel takes time, but aliyah is worth it Your Taxes: An agreement is an agreement Inside Inspiraction, the Jerusalem incubator helping young Israelis turn ideas into start-ups Israeli-founded AI biotech Immunai expands AstraZeneca cancer collaboration The death of the US Jewish Orthodox middle class- opinion Real estate giant invests $200 million into Miami’s high-tech hub: What’s Flow Wynwood? Almost half of operational decisions will be done by AI in 2030, IBM reveals - poll It’s all about timing! 2026 is a rare opportunity window for Tel Aviv real estate A new standard of hospitality How Israel’s new reporting rules change the olim tax holiday - opinion Senior R&D managers are paying the price of the AI revolution - opinion Consumer guilt costs companies billions in abandoned online shopping carts - study A strategic miss: R&D is Israel's brain - so why does it develop, manufacture abroad? - opinion Connecting neighbors under fire: The story behind Angels of the Shelter AI is ending era of ‘job immunity’ for young tech workers as it reshapes Israel's job market Israeli AI startup cracks code of who is at fault when system fails: What do they do? - interview Your Taxes: Israel’s lower mid-market is tempting international M&A buyers Your Investments: Second chances, respect, and newlywed finance Microbes coordinate activity to reduce competition, Israeli researchers discover Decoding the digital pulse: How Prof. Yaniv Dover maps the flow of information and human behavior UAE exit weakens OPEC+ power over oil market but group to stay together, sources say - analysis Cyber proxy wars escalate as hackers shift to infrastructure targets Fattal Hotels to transition THE JAFFA into kosher luxury hotel starting May 1 Israel's high-tech faces unexpected crisis as dollar slides 20% against shekel | The Jerusalem Post From the capital of the Negev to the decision-making tables of the world’s leaders From Caesarea to the Moon Hundreds of Google employees urge CEO not to sign deal with Pentagon in open letter AI startup Mercor faces mass litigation following data breach - report Omer Adam’s AI company signs billion-dollar deal with AI infrastructure giant Crusoe Beer, snacks and smart design: An Israeli innovation targets stadium crowds Shlomo Group turns to Indian technicians in NIS 50m service-center expansion Against all official odds: Jerusalem business owners struggle to survive as the state dithers Your Investments: Avoid repeating financial blunders Your Taxes: So you want to acquire an Israeli company? Amazon-backed nuclear reactor developer X-Energy raises over $1 billion in IPO The network effect: Orly Carmon’s ORCA is rewriting power for women across borders Israeli battery-swapping IP owners demand $250 million from Chinese EV giant | The Jerusalem Post Polymarket forecast: What does the platform predict for US-Israel-Iran war? | The Jerusalem Post A strong shekel, a weakened export engine US Iran tensions send oil higher, rattle global markets | The Jerusalem Post Tim Cook steps down as Apple CEO after 15 years, with insider John Ternus set to replace him Israel’s hidden strength: Institutional capital pools The banking system Israeli drone‑detection start-up scores major US commercial breakthrough | The Jerusalem Post Bypassing closed skies: First-of-its-kind solution keeps e-commerce shipments flowing to Israel Why hi-tech recruitment must evolve: The role of AI in the new hiring landscape | The Jerusalem Post Jerusalem razes Elie Wiesel Plaza for NIS 73m. underground passage to Shaare Zedek Shipping firms seek clarifications before crossing Hormuz as tankers move towards Strait Your Taxes: OECD, G20 launch plan to expose untaxed real estate funds and income Your Investments: Can you attain financial freedom in Israel? Between Israel and Latin America, Ilan Goldfajn builds a quiet economic bridge Luria: A Jerusalem-inspired project with modern boutique design | The Jerusalem Post S&P 500 closes at fresh record, recovering all losses since start of US-Iran war Dollar falls below three shekels for first time in over 30 years, annual inflation rate declines US gaming company sues Israeli game developer who claims no connection to company's failure US will not renew waiver on Iranian oil as it mounts pressure on Tehran, sources say While dating swipes decrease, JWed.com Marriages increase to record 4,100! | The Jerusalem Post IMF warns of potential global recession if Iran war worsens | The Jerusalem Post BHI extends $88m bridge loan for Midtown Manhattan tower acquisition | The Jerusalem Post How deepfake scams are costing companies millions worldwide | The Jerusalem Post Beyond a ceasefire, top IDF officer compromised- opinion Isracard, JFNA-backed fund says it has extended NIS 135m. in credit to war-hit small businesses Crisis contractor for OpenAI, Anthropic eyes a move to combat extremism Bank Hapoalim’s US arm funds $203m Manhattan housing conversion IMF warns Strait of Hormuz might never be back to normal Are Polymarket, Kalshi illegal? | The Jerusalem Post Rethinking risk: Why Israel is no longer the outlier - opinion Artemis II astronauts safely back on Earth after trip around moon Your Investments: Financial modesty Your Taxes: The budget’s tax breaks New Israeli app tracks disaster victims in real time, speeds emergency response | The Jerusalem Post US consumer inflation expected to have surged in March amid Iran war Former El Al chief rejects monopoly, price gouging claims after Iran war profits Global markets rally, oil drops below $100 after US-Iran ceasefire | The Jerusalem Post Strait of Hormuz closure has raised oil prices, but not without precedent - analysis Q-Factor emerges as Israel’s latest quantum computing developer with $24 million seed investment Enlight CEO: Iran war reinforces Israel's need for renewable energy Leviathan gas field resumes operations after risk of strikes from Iran war outbreak Can you really trust your ‘private’ AI assistant to keep your secrets? | The Jerusalem Post Your Taxes: You can't have your matzah and eat it, too Gulf states consider bypassing Strait of Hormuz with new oil pipelines via Haifa - FT ‘Perfect storm’: Israel's high-tech faces human capital crisis, lack of new students in age of AI Mekorot reports strong core growth in 2025, but regulatory changes drive heavy net loss Leumi, Shestovitz take stakes in Profit Finance Group with NIS 670 million investment Pentagon denies report of Hegseth-linked pre-strike defense investments Despite the war: Israeli high-tech opens 2026 with approximately $3.1 billion in funding Prediction 2026 Israeli AI optimization company ScaleOps surpasses $800 million valuation More than a port - a strategic anchor for Israel
The nightmare of the Prinok affair | The Jerusalem Post
WALLA! MONEY · 2026-06-23 · via JPost.com - Business & Innovation | The Jerusalem Post

Sedatives have already been detected in five products. A tort law expert explains: What is the amount of compensation, and how will it be determined?

Follow us on Google
Prinok
Prinok
(photo credit: TPS, official site)
ByWALLA! MONEY

The Ministry of Health updated last week that during the investigation into the infant purees of the brand "Prinok," two additional products were located in which sedatives of the Clonazepam and Lorazepam types were found. This brings the number of products in which the pharmaceutical substances were identified to five. According to the ministry's announcement, three of the products were submitted by the families whose children were hospitalized after consuming the purees, and the two additional products were sampled directly from the shelves of the food chain in Jerusalem.

So far, two incidents have been reported in which five children were hospitalized with suspicion of exposure to substances from the benzodiazepine family – psychoactive substances used to reduce anxiety symptoms and as sleeping pills. This disturbing affair could have been uncovered about a month earlier. Already then, a first case was treated, involving two children who arrived at the Hadassah Ein Kerem emergency room with similar symptoms. The medical staff transferred the puree purchased at that same supermarket to the police, and the police requested to transfer it for examination by the Ministry of Health.

However, the Ministry of Health, for reasons that remain unclear, did not see fit to test the puree. Only after the second incident, last Thursday, in which three children were rushed to the emergency room simultaneously, did the ministry contact the police and request to receive the first jar for testing.

The new discoveries bring to the surface difficult questions regarding the regulator's failure. Will the Ministry of Health be required to compensate the families for negligence, and what is the potential psychological damage to the parents? To make sense of things, we turned to Attorney Assaf Warsha, an expert in tort law.

Does the conduct of the Ministry of Health constitute negligence under tort law?
"Negligence in Israeli tort law is proven through four cumulative elements: Duty of care, its breach, damage, and causation. The first two allegedly exist here. The duty of care is examined on two levels. On the conceptual level, the Ministry of Health is, as defined by the police itself, 'the body entrusted with testing food products,' and therefore owes a duty of care toward the consuming public, an increased duty when it comes to infant food. On the concrete level, this was not a vague suspicion but a focused report from a hospital about two children who were hospitalized after eating an identified product, whose jar was available for testing.

"A body entrusted with food safety can and should foresee that failing to test a suspect product will lead to its continued sale and harm to additional children. The breach of duty is measured against the 'reasonable person,' based on conduct and not outcome. A reasonable person in such a situation would have ordered a laboratory test, a basic and routine action, and avoiding it is the deviation from the standard. This is reinforced by the conduct of the ministry itself: After the second incident, it immediately requested the jar and tested it, thereby proving that the capability, availability, and professional need existed already in the first case. The gap between the two is the measure of the negligence."

And what about the damage?
"Even though the babies were discharged from the hospitals after a few days, and ostensibly without long-term damage, it is precisely the parents who may be the primary victims here. The anxieties and mental distress that arose following the nightmare into which they were thrust, the sight of their child collapsing before their eyes, could leave a significant psychological mark on them. Legally speaking, a parent is an 'indirect victim,' and their entitlement to compensation for their psychological damage is examined according to the Alsuha ruling, the guiding ruling on psychological damage to a family member. The ruling sets four conditions: Family proximity to the victim, direct impression of the event, proximity in place and time, and sufficient severity of psychological damage. In the first three, the parents meet the criteria. The crucial question is whether their psychological injury will reach the threshold that Alsuha requires, an open question that will be examined on its merits according to the severity of the injury, its duration, and the medical documentation."

Attorney Assaf Warsha
Attorney Assaf Warsha (credit: Shahar Kalev)

Why, psychologically speaking, did the parents suffer trauma that could accompany them, even if their children recovered quickly?
"From a psychological perspective, the parents were exposed to an event that could leave a lasting mark on them. Research shows that the intensity of a traumatic response is determined not by the objective medical severity of the injury, but by the subjective experience, and that it is not contingent at all on a death threat. A parent who saw their child collapsing before their eyes experienced a threat to what is most precious to them, even if the child recovered quickly. These reactions, termed 'pediatric medical traumatic stress,' include intrusive thoughts, avoidance, hyper-alertness, and disturbed sleep, and sometimes develop into post-traumatic stress disorder. Although only a portion of those exposed develop the full disorder, watching a child lose consciousness places the parents in a real risk group. The child's physical recovery does not guarantee their psychological recovery."

What is the amount of compensation the parents are likely to receive?
"If the parent's psychological injury remains at the level of temporary distress without disability, the compensation may range in the tens of thousands of shekels, mainly for pain and suffering and treatment expenses. If a real and ongoing psychological disability is determined, the sum could reach hundreds of thousands of shekels and even more, depending on the percentage of disability, the parent's age, and the impact on their earning capacity."

What would have happened if a similar affair had occurred in the United States, would the court have required the American Department of Health to pay punitive damages?
"Had the event occurred in the United States, the picture regarding a government entity would be the opposite of the prevailing image of giant American compensations. The doctrine of sovereign immunity blocks lawsuits against the state, and the laws that partially waive it explicitly forbid awarding punitive damages against authorities. Thus, even if the Department of Health had been negligent exactly as described, the parents would have won, at most, compensation for the actual damage proven, but not a single NIS 1 of punitive damages.

"This is an interesting paradox: Precisely in the country considered the capital of punitive damages, a public body that is negligent is much more protected than a private manufacturer or a commercial chain. The central deterrent weapon of tort law is not drawn at all when the defendant is the state."

Follow us on Google