Too late to appeal judge’s decision in Speedway lawsuit RACETRACKS: Attorney for Batavia track and four others says season can’t be saved – The Daily…

The attorney for Genesee Speedway, LLC, and four other racetracks said its too late to appeal this weeks dismissal of a civil complaint against Gov. Andrew Cuomo and Attorney General Letitia James.

The racetracks, represented by Troy attorney Kenneth McGuire Jr., brought a lawsuit asking the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of New York, in part, to prevent Cuomo and James from enforcing gathering limits for outdoor activities if the spectators at those gatherings observe social distancing protocols. Aside from Genesee Speedway, located at the Genesee County Fairgrounds in Batavia, the racetracks in the lawsuit were Lebanon Valley Auto Racing Corp., Genesee Speedway, Airborne Speedway, Albany Saratoga Speedway and The Fonda Speedway.

Were not taking any further action at this point, because nothing would occur that would be relevant to the saving of the season, McGuire said Friday. The problem is an appeal takes between 60 to 90 days to get before a judge. It varies from area to area. Im sure it would be at least that long here.

At Genesee Speedway, following a three-week hiatus, the track was open again for racing last weekend.

The likelihood is the racetracks would run one or two more weeks at the most and then shut down for the season. McGuire said.

We have an option to file a new action. This decision would have to be appealed in 30 days, he said. McGuire said the 30-day window would begin when the state files the courts decision.

Its going to go way beyond having any effect. It doesnt make sense to spend the money (to take further action). Even if we win, we lose. The only hope we had was this preliminary injunction, which the court declined to give us.

Judge Lawrence Kahn of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of New York announced his decision Tuesday. He also denied a motion for a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction to keep the defendants Cuomo and James from enforcing orders which prevent the tracks from opening their businesses.

In his decision, Kahn said the racetracks made a First Amendment claim.

Plaintiffs allege that Defendants executive orders barring spectators from their racetracks infringe upon their freedom of speech, assembly, and expressive association, he wrote. Because Plaintiffs fail to identify any guiding legal authority supporting their First Amendment claim, the Court grants dismissal. Here, Plaintiffs make no allegation that Defendants actions were in retaliation against protected speech or conduct. There also does not appear to be any allegation that Defendants infringe upon expressive conduct.

The essence of the racetracks First Amendment claim, the judge said, appears to be that Cuomos edict forbidding spectators, infringes upon the right to assemble.

Kahn on Tuesday said regulations of commercial activity such as a racetrack spectator ban have First Amendment implications only if the activity in question is inseparably intertwined with a particularized message.

The Court is unable to discern any message so closely linked with auto racing or more specifically, its display in front of spectators to trigger First Amendment protection, the judge wrote.

The judge said the complaint by the racetracks included an equal protection claim. They appear to be arguing that their racetracks have been treated differently from other non-essential businesses and from protesters who have been in public demonstrations.

Defendants argue, and the Court agrees, that Plaintiffs equal protection claim must be dismissed for failure to allege specific facts showing that the comparators are similar in relevant respects, Kahn wrote.

On the racetrack spectator ban, Genesee Speedway and the other racetracks have not alleged any facts suggesting some racetracks have not been subject to enforcement, Kahn wrote.

The Court does not find the requisite rough equivalence between private, capacity-limited sports venues on one hand and attendees of public protests on the other. Because Plaintiffs have not plausibly pled facts suggesting they have been treated differently from others similarly situated, the Court grants Defendants motion to dismiss the equal protection claim.

I disagree with that. The thing that annoys me, he (Kahn) claimed that we didnt show that the rioters ... were not similarly situated as the people in the grandstands (at the racetracks).

McGuire said he and the racetracks were arguing that Cuomo cant exercise his power against the tracks and not exercise it against rioters.

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Too late to appeal judge's decision in Speedway lawsuit RACETRACKS: Attorney for Batavia track and four others says season can't be saved - The Daily...

Defend the Monument Rally takes over Downtown Stone Mountain – CBS46 News Atlanta

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Defend the Monument Rally takes over Downtown Stone Mountain - CBS46 News Atlanta

Letter to the Editor: Reader: ‘We need to stand up for our First Amendment rights’ – The Coastland Times

To the Editor:

America has the potential for reducing the mortality rate of COVID-19, and not only are the state governments and media suppressing the publics access to a potentially life-saving medication, but they are also launching a coordinated effort to control all public opinion. For months, studies have shown that Hydroxychloroquine is a safe and effective treatment for COVID.In fact, for many years, HCQ has been used safely to treat lupus, rheumatoid arthritis, and malaria. Many countries sold it over the counter prior to spring of 2020.Several studies in the US have shown that the drug is effective, with the most recent positive studies coming in early July from Michigan, New York, Portugal, India, and Brazil.In countries that have easier access to HCQ (i.e. Israel, Poland, Philippines, and Turkey), the mortality rate from COVID is 1/10 that of countries which have restricted access, like the U.S.

Recently, a group of doctors led by Dr. Simone Gold, a board certified emergency physician and Stanford law graduate, presented scientific evidence that Hydroxychloroquine is an effective treatment against COVID-19. The groups goal is to inform the public about how theyve been misled regarding HCQ. One of the doctors, Dr. Stella Immanuel, a Nigerian-based US doctor, has successfully treated more than 350 patients in her Texas clinic with a combination of HCQ, zinc, and azithromycin. As soon as these doctors presented their information at a recent news conference, Dr. Immanuel was attacked for her personal religious beliefs by the media in an attempt to destroy her credibility.Perhaps her personal beliefs are strange to most Americans, but her medical record is intact and her treatment protocol has been successful.Within a short time, the video of the conference was removed by Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and Squarespace.This violation of free speech is frightening. What has happened to America? Our country has stopped people from assembling in person so they are all assembling online.And now they cant even have a voice online because its being censored.

I encourage you to do the research on Hydroxychloroquine and ask yourself why the media and state governments are so adamantly vilifying it. Dont we all want to find a treatment for COVID, or does this transition into the new normal have more nefarious implications? We are losing our freedoms, folks.Whether you agree with what these doctors are saying or not, we need to stand up for our First Amendment rights.Free speech is being banned very quickly, and once weve lost it, weve lost our country.

Susan Stroud

Southern Shores

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Letter to the Editor: Reader: 'We need to stand up for our First Amendment rights' - The Coastland Times

Live Coverage of the Dan Ryan Expressway Protest in Chicago – NBC Chicago

NBC 5 will offer live coverage of events in Chicago as they unfold

UPDATE: A group of demonstrators began heading toward downtown Chicago, appearing to avoid the Dan Ryan Expressway despite earlier plans to shut it down. Heavy police presence reported in the area. Live aerial coverage in the player above.

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Thousands of protesters were expected to march Saturday with plans to shut down the Dan Ryan Expressway before traveling to downtown Chicago.

NBC 5 will offer live coverage from the scene as events unfold.

Hosted by several area organizations, the protest, titled "Black Lives Matter March: SHUTDOWN OUR DAN RYAN," is set to step off at noon Saturday at 39 W. 47th St.

As of Friday, Chicago's Office of Emergency Management and Communications said the route the protesters are expected to take ends in Grant Park. It includes:

- Westbound on 47th St to the Dan Ryan Expressway onto the Dan Ryan via the ramp- Marchers will then proceed northbound to the 43rd St exit ramp and walk eastbound on 43rd to Indiana, North on Indiana to 31st St- West on 31st St to Michigan Avenue- North on Michigan Ave to Roosevelt Rd (Grant Park)

Illinois State Police confirmed they are aware of the protest and have been in contact with protest organizers "to set up a safe route of travel."

"The Illinois State Police will protect the rights of those seeking to peacefully protest while ensuring the safety of the public," the department said in a statement.

Chicago police also said they were aware of the event.

OEMC said roughly 2,000 protesters were estimated to attend.

Following violent clashes with police during demonstrations at a Christopher Columbus statue in the city, organizers issued restrictions for those planning to march Saturday.

Among the restrictions were no PVC pipes, no wagons or coolers, protesters must avoid CTA Red Line tracks along the route and marchers cannot stay on the expressway once the group exits. Bikes will also be prohibited on the expressway.

Still, Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot expressed concerns about the demonstration.

"I have great concerns about allowing anyone ever to get on expressways, particularly in this time," Lightfoot said Friday. "It's a significant drain of police resources, even though we don't have primary jurisdiction over the expressway, we have to be there. And particularly, as I understand it, they're planning to come down to Grant Park. That is our jurisdiction. So I have a lot of concerns about it. We are going to continue to be in conversation with our state partners about this issue and hopefully have a workable solution."

In addition to safety concerns, Lightfoot also said she's worried about people "hijacking" the event.

"We of course support peaceful protests and assembly always, but unfortunately, as we've seen way too many times over the course of this summer, peaceful protests have been hijacked by people who have every made every effort to try to provoke our police, injure our police and end up injuring innocent people who come just to be able to express themselves, as is their God given right- particularly the right under the First Amendment of the Constitution," Lightfoot said. "So these are very complicated, delicate situations. And we need to make sure that first and foremost, we are keeping our residents, our neighborhoods and our businesses and our police officers safe."

Chicago's Fraternal Order of Police President John Catanzara also wrote a letter to U.S. Attorney John Lausch Wednesday blasting reported plans of the Saturday protest as an act of terrorism.

We have also learned that there is a major protest scheduled for this weekend on the Dan Ryan Expressway which will lead to more civil unrest and violence, he said. The expressways should provide federal jurisdiction, as it will impede interstate commerce and to be quite frank, to block an interstate highway is an act of terrorism.

Catanzaras letter was also sent to President Donald Trump and Attorney General William Barr.

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Live Coverage of the Dan Ryan Expressway Protest in Chicago - NBC Chicago

Ted Trimpa: Colorado Democrats need to find their spines and stand against destruction and vandalism – The Denver Post

Democrats are cruising toward an electoral cliff, yet we are too busy to notice because were adulating over graffiti.

The right to protest doesnt include the right to pillage. The former is constitutional and the latter crime. Just like theres no protection for screaming fire in a dark theater, there should be no protection to throw bricks, start dumpster fires, smash windows, and play Pablo Picasso all over our state Capitol.

Were told that these activities are for the purpose of proving a point. And were okay with this? One should use the freedom of expression protesting to prove a point. The point of vandalism? No more than destroying property.

And Democrats pretty much have been standing idly by. Hello? Anyone there? The sound of crickets has been deafening. Too many are scared to speak up, afraid of the small swath of the far left and the mob of Twitter trolls. We may not pay a political price this election cycle, but if we keep this up, we will. This rooster will come home to roost.

Now I want to be clear. I unequivocally support peaceful protests. I, like nearly all Americans, am appalled with the deaths of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Elijah McClain, and no telling how many others, at the hands of police. Im appalled that Black people in America make less per hour, have significantly less economic opportunities, are less likely to own a home, and, well, have been getting the short end of the stick for decades.

For too long we have turned a blind eye to the existence of this systemic racism, racial and economic inequality. Although the average voter, even the average protester, probably cant define systemic racism, it doesnt matter. The mere fact that parents of Black children must teach their kids specific, clearly non-threatening ways to act when stopped by the police, ways that no white child ever has to know, screams systemic racism. It should be no surprise theres a Black Lives Matter movement, and no surprise people are pissed off.

Should we be exercising every nook and cranny of the First Amendment to express how pissed we are? Absolutely. Should we march? Of course. Should we demand sweeping change now? Most certainly. But use our state Capitol as a canvass for art to make a point? Are you kidding? I would hope we all hold our First Amendment rights so dear that such destruction would be seen as a grave offense to the Constitution.

Granted, social change happens, in part, because of radical action. Disruption. But when the overall movement is defined by the fringes thugs (yes, I went there) it loses credibility and public support. Suburban moms, blue-collar workers, farmers on the Eastern Plains, and a lot of us others wont put up with trashing the Capitol. And we shouldnt.

Some claim the only way to build a house is to burn the bad one down. But its this very house a democratic institution that is the path to reforms that many of us are fighting for. Case in point, the passage of one of the most expansive police reform bills in the country. The very institution that some want to burn down, and many have defaced without consequence, enacted one of the most sought-after reforms during the 2020 legislative session.

And when did the parade of other progressive issues show up? We on the left need to be careful. The Black Lives Matter movement is becoming conflated with nearly all things progressive. Although Im all-in on this progressive list, I doubt every protester is. Its hard for me to believe that all those kneeling in support of the Black Lives Matter movement also support all these policies of the left.

Yet, were now being told by some apologists its inexcusable to be worried about the trashing of our Capitol when were facing all these other justifiably pressing problems. Pillage art to prove a point. Following this logic, lets go put another crack in the Liberty Bell to prove the point of democracy. Our elected leaders, and the rest of us for that matter, can walk and chew gum at the same time. We can hold two thoughts at once.

These times are calling out for more than one-off democratic leadership and passing on this opportunity would be a disservice to us all. Too many are trying to ride this out, waiting for the moment to pass, effectively saying its a phase. Thats a mistake.

To stay quiet is an implicit, actually complicit, condoning that protesting includes wanton criminality. This is not only wrong, its bad politics. If we keep this up, itll mean jumping off the electoral cliff.

Power to change the law comes with winning elections. Winning elections comes with public support. And to keep that, we Democrats must be true to ourselves and the politics. It is reality.

Ted Trimpa is an attorney and longtime Democratic strategist.

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Ted Trimpa: Colorado Democrats need to find their spines and stand against destruction and vandalism - The Denver Post

The 19th Amendment: An Important Milestone in an Unfinished Journey – The New York Times

Historians who specialize in voting rights and African-American womens history have played a welcome and unusually public role in combating the myths that have long surrounded the womens suffrage movement and the 19th Amendment, which celebrates its 100th anniversary on Tuesday.

In the lead-up to this centennial, these same campaigning historians have warned against celebrations and proposed monuments to the suffrage movement that seemed destined to render invisible the contributions of African-American women like Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, Mary Church Terrell, Sojourner Truth and Ida B. Wells all of whom played heroic roles in the late 19th- and early 20th-century struggles for womens rights and universal human rights. In addition to speaking up for Black women of the past, these scholars have performed a vital public service by debunking the most pernicious falsehood about the 19th Amendment: that it concluded a century-long battle for equality by guaranteeing women the right to vote.

Americans who imbibed this fiction in civics classes are caught off guard when they hear the more complicated truth that millions of women had won voting rights before the 19th Amendment was ratified, and millions more remained shut out of the polls after ratification. Indeed, as middle-class white women celebrated ratification by parading through the streets, African-American women in the Jim Crow South who had worked diligently for womens rights found themselves shut out of the ballot box for another half century and abandoned by white suffragists who declared their mission accomplished the moment middle-class white women achieved the franchise.

As the distinguished historian Nancy Hewitt has shown, a lengthy campaign and a range of subsequent laws was required to fully open ballot access to others, including Black women, Mexican-Americans, Native Americans, Chinese-Americans and Korean-Americans. Among those necessary laws were the repeal of the Chinese Exclusion Act in 1943 and the adoption of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952, the 24th Amendment in 1964 and the Voting Rights Act in 1965, along with its amendments of 1970 and 1975. In other words, the 19th Amendment was one step in a long, racially fraught battle for voting rights that seemed secure a few decades ago but face a grave threat today.

The white suffrage heroes Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony got a stranglehold on the historical record in 1881, when they inaugurated the first volume of what would eventually become the influential six-volume History of Woman Suffrage. The duo and their comrades established an enduring, self-serving legacy when they designated a meeting at Seneca Falls, N.Y., in 1848 a meeting that Stanton and her collaborator Lucretia Mott attended as the starting point of the womens rights movement. In fact, the movement already was stirring in various forms, and in various places.

History of Woman Suffrage provides a minutely detailed account of a movement that implicitly defined women as people who were white and middle class and renders prominent African-Americans virtually invisible. For a long time, historians who relied on this history duplicated its omissions. The African-American historian Rosalyn Terborg-Penn, who died last year at the age of 77, discredited this lily-white version of events by uncovering more than 100 Black suffragists. In recent decades, historians have shown that Black women were erased partly because they sensibly argued that gender discrimination and racism were interconnected problems that could not be neatly separated.

Books and studies timed to coincide with the 19th Amendments centennial are rendering ever more candid and inclusive versions of this story. In Recasting the Vote: How Women of Color Transformed the Suffrage Movement, for example, the historian Cathleen Cahill foregrounds the suffrage struggles of women of color as they played out in New York Citys Chinatown, New Mexico and elsewhere. Ms. Cahill shows how white suffragists worked with and sometimes against marginalized women, including Native Americans and Mexican-Americans.

In the forthcoming book Vanguard: How Black Women Broke Barriers, Won the Vote, and Insisted on Equality for All, the historian Martha S. Jones offers a version of the suffrage and voting rights story that begins well before the 1848 meeting at Seneca Falls. The history she recounts continues into the 1960s and 70s with the work of revered African-American civil rights organizers like Septima Clark and Fannie Lou Hamer.

Ms. Jones argues that the elided Black women were at the forefront of the quest for womens rights and were overlooked in history because they achieved their victories in civic and political organizations on the Black side of the color line. Invisibility aside, she writes, African-American women pointed the nation toward its best ideals. They were the first to reject arbitrary distinctions, including racism and sexism, as rooted in outdated and disproved fictions. They were the nations original feminists and antiracists, and they built a movement on these core principles.

The Seneca Falls convention concerned itself with a number of womens rights issues, including ecclesiastical policies that excluded women from authority in churches. By then, Ms. Jones writes, Black women in the African Methodist Episcopal Church had capped years of skillful organizing and alliance building by persuading church leaders to grant them licenses to preach. This achievement was built on the singular accomplishments of Jarena Lee, who in 1819 after years of rejection became the first woman authorized to preach in the African Methodist Episcopal Church.

The ever-broadening story of the womens rights struggle is opening public awareness to other standout Black women as well. One of them is Mary Ann Shadd Cary, who received a belated Times obituary two years ago. Cary was one of the first female lawyers in the country and is described as the first Black woman in North America to edit and publish a newspaper. The paper, known as The Provincial Freeman, was founded in Canada in 1853 and became a forum for women to discuss their lives. In a letter to the editor, one woman, Dolly Bangs, told readers that it was counterproductive to discourage women from leadership roles in the afternoon of the 19th century. She urged women to take their fate into their own hands: It is her right, as her duty, to press boldly forward to her appointed task, otherwise who is guilty of burying her talent?

Among the rising stars Cary championed in The Freeman was the African-American poet and anti-slavery orator Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, who would go on to an illustrious career. In 1866, Harper rattled the white suffrage elite in a prophetic speech delivered at the founding conclave of the American Equal Rights Association. She argued that the destinies of Black and white, rich and poor, were all bound up together and that racism was in fact a white womens issue. Ticking off the abuses Black women suffered daily, she thundered: You white women speak here of rights. I speak of wrongs.

Harper did not live to witness the unsettling contrast between scenes of middle-class white women celebrating the 19th Amendment with ticker tape parades and Southern Black women being driven from the polls under threat of bodily harm. A half-century after ratification, when African-Americans were still being beaten and murdered for seeking the vote, the charismatic organizer Fannie Lou Hamer did not stand on the 19th Amendment. As Ms. Jones writes: Yes, she was a woman. But she did not see the terms of the Nineteenth Amendment the one that constitutionalized womens voting rights as protecting her.

The 19th Amendment can fairly be seen as an important milestone in an unfinished journey. It is morally repugnant and counterproductive to mythologize it as a triumph of egalitarianism at a time when the voting rights Hamer and others paid for in blood are under attack in the courts and in state legislatures all over the United States. This disturbing fact needs to remain uppermost in mind as the country unveils its new suffrage monuments and holds its celebratory events.

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Ex-FBI lawyer to plead guilty to falsifying claim made to continue surveillance of key figure in Mueller probe – NBC News

A former FBI lawyer plans to plead guilty to falsifying a claim made to sustain government surveillance on a key figure in former special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation of Russian meddling in the 2016 election, according to court documents.

It is the first legal development to come from a review of the Mueller team's work, an effort led by John Durham, the U.S. attorney in Connecticut. Attorney General William Barr assigned him more than a year ago to examine the origins of the Russia investigation.

A legal filing submitted Friday in federal court in Washington, D.C., said Kevin Clinesmith will plead guilty to a single charge of making a false statement by altering an e-mail in the course of seeking a renewal of government surveillance of Carter Page, a former Trump campaign adviser. The warrant for approval from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court has been a flashpoint for conservative critics of the FBI and the Mueller investigation.

The Justice Department's inspector general reported last December than when Clinesmith was working in the FBI's Office of General Counsel, he altered an e-mail about Page so that it said he was "not a source" for another U.S. intelligence agency. Page has publicly said he briefly was a source for the CIA.

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Clinesmith told the inspector general he did not consider Page to be a "recruited asset."

"Kevin deeply regrets having altered the e-mail," said his lawyer, Jonathan Shur. "It was never his intent to mislead the court or his colleagues, as he believed the information he relayed was accurate, but Kevin understands what he did was wrong and accepts responsibility."

Page said in a statement Friday that Clinesmith was "finally being held accountable and pleading guilty to committing a felony for his involvement in the plot to falsely portray me and by implication the Trump administration as traitors. The actions by the full band of government officials and Democrat operatives involved in the creation of the false applications for my FISA surveillance warrants were entirely unconscionable."

"Clinesmith, his organization and their associates put my very life at risk, leading to abusive calls and death threats because of my personal opinions and support for President Trump," Page continued. "There is a long way to go on the road to restoring justice in America, but certainly a good first step has now been taken."

President Donald Trump remarked on the development at a White House news conference Friday, calling Clinesmith "a corrupt FBI attorney who falsified FISA warrants in James Comey's corrupt FBI."

"That is just the beginning, I would imagine, because what happened should never happen again," Trump said. "He is pleading guilty. It's a terrible thing. The fact is, they spied on my campaign and they got caught. You will be hearing more."

Barr foreshadowed the expected plea agreement in an interview with Fox News on Thursday evening. He said it not be an "earth-shattering development," but would be "indication that things are moving along at the proper pace, as dictated by the facts in this investigation."

The inspector general's report concluded that the FBI had a legitimate reason for opening an investigation in to Russian election meddling and whether anyone connected with the Trump campaign was involved. The report concluded that there was no proof of political bias in the decision.

But Inspector General Michael Horowitz said the FBI made serious and repeated mistakes in seeking an order under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act to conduct surveillance of Page. The FBI's submissions to the court made assertions that were "inaccurate, incomplete, or unsupported by appropriate documentation," he said.

Barr said he asked Durham to look into the origins of the investigation because he did not believe the FBI had a proper reason for launching it. He told NBC News last December that the FBI started looking at the campaign on the thinnest of suspicions and kept pushing even after it went nowhere.

"There has to be some basis before we use these very potent powers in our core first amendment activity. And here, I felt this was very flimsy," he said.

Pete Williams is an NBC News correspondent who covers the Justice Department and the Supreme Court, based in Washington.

Tom Winter is a New York-based correspondent covering crime, courts, terrorism and financial fraud on the East Coast for the NBC News Investigative Unit.

Ken Dilanian contributed.

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Ex-FBI lawyer to plead guilty to falsifying claim made to continue surveillance of key figure in Mueller probe - NBC News

Google, Microsoft, GitHub, and Others Join the Open Source Security Foundation – InfoQ.com

Supported by The Linux Foundation, the Open Source Security Foundation (OpenSSF) aims to create a cross-industry forum for a collaborative effort to improve open source software security. The list of initial members includes Google, Microsoft, GitHub, IBM, Red Hat, and more.

As open source has become more pervasive, its security has become a key consideration for building and maintaining critical infrastructure that supports mission-critical systems throughout our society. It is more important than ever that we bring the industry together in a collaborative and focused effort to advance the state of open source security. The worlds technology infrastructure depends on it.

Microsoft CTO for Azure Mark Russinovich explained clearly why open source security must be a community effort:

Open-source software is inherently community-driven and as such, there is no central authority responsible for quality and maintenance. [...] Open-source software is also vulnerable to attacks against the very nature of the community, such as attackers becoming maintainers of projects and introducing malware. Given the complexity and communal nature of open source software, building better security must also be a community-driven process.

The OpenSSF will bring together diverse open source security initiatives starting with the Core Infrastructure Initiative (CII) and GitHub's Open Source Security Coalition. In addition, it will create several working groups to address key security concerns. Those include vulnerability disclosure, with the aim to speed up the time required to fix a vulnerability and deploy the fix; security tooling, with the aim to improve existing security tools and develop new ones; security threats identification, focusing on creating key metrics to better asses how each component in an open source project fares in regard to security; and security best practices.

Additionally, the OpenSSF will aim to help critical projects to get the support they need to guarantee their security.

Whether it is dedicated help from specialized experts or simply grant money or cloud credits, we recognize that no two projects are the same, and support can come in many shapes. We intend to work with upstream maintainers to understand what help and support they need, and then develop scalable processes to make this help available.

Among others, Google and Microsoft announced their participation to the OpenSSF with specific focus on a number of areas, including shared schemas and metadata to better enforce security best practices; dependency management and risk assessment to map vulnerabilities to specific code versions; tools for build verification, like its own Tekton; and using developer identity to associate changes to their authors.

Besides joining the OpenSSF, GitHub confirmed its commitment to open source security and stated it will continue investing and building new security features free to public repositories.

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Google, Microsoft, GitHub, and Others Join the Open Source Security Foundation - InfoQ.com

Free and Open: Accelerating Innovation in the Battle Against COVID-19 – Governing

The fight to stop the spread of COVID-19 is a tireless effort for the medical community, first responders, and government agencies. Personnel on the front lines are working together to save lives and mitigate the impact on citizens and businesses. At times like these, the power of community and collaboration come into sharp focus and show us all what we can accomplish when we work together for a common good.

The technology community has a critical role to play in this fight by driving the creation of innovative tools and putting them into the hands of medical and scientific experts that are leading the way. Making those innovative tools as accessible as possible starts with being free and open. Solutions and software based on a free and open philosophy are exactly that free. Because they don't cost anything and have a low barrier to adoption, they can be immediately placed into the hands of responders, volunteers, and others who need them. And because they are open, these tools can be improved again and again. When governments look to free and open source software, they can quickly innovate and deliver solutions to move forward during a crisis like this pandemic.

Software built on open source has proven critical to success during past periods of crisis. When Ebola struck West Africa in late 2014, staff with eHealth Africa leaned on open source solutions to evolve their efforts to collect, link, and analyze data recorded during the epidemic. At the outset of the virus, it was taking weeks between the identification of a suspected case and laboratory confirmation to start contact traces. By using an open source technology to deploy a call center application, workers could record data at a central location and distribute that data to its district centers. Around the country, these centers were able to receive the data, respond to the alerts, and then add in the follow-up alerts and the rest of the data.

Open source-based search engine technology also enabled immediate indexing of different facets of the call center, so indexes were updated quickly as new data sets became available. With these open source tools, eHealth African played a pivotal role in identifying suspected cases and getting contact tracing in motion sooner during the Ebola outbreak.

All of this was only possible because developers were empowered with open source technology to stand up projects quickly. Open source was the fastest, most affordable, and most flexible way to turn a mountain of data into insights and action that saved lives. Solutions built on a free and open philosophy are already being used in the fight against COVID-19, including geospatial technology that assists with social distancing in public spaces. Several applications to assist with contract tracing are also being developed using open source software. As we advance into an uncertain future, open source solutions will be critical to building the innovative tools responders and agencies need to continue the fight.

Since the COVID-19 crisis began to unfold, many enterprise software firms have started offering their solutions and services for free, but only for a limited time. Eventually, these free offers expire and agencies who have adopted them during a crisis emerge worried about which fundamental services of government will encounter vendor lock-in and be forced into closed and proprietary ecosystems. These limited-time free offerings hinder the ability to innovate confidently in a crisis by making the procurement of software a primary concern over fighting the disease.

Alternatively, software built on open source or even free-forever tiers of pricing are free now and always. Nothing changes about the business model once were out of this crisis.

Its still free and open and it remains that way. The free and open model puts tools into the hands of developers now to manage, search, and analyze various data types in real-time, and that gives IT leaders the visibility and transparency they need to truly implement a data-first strategy to modernize their systems tomorrow as well.

The open source community has a history of collaborating to create solutions that benefit society and communities, especially during a crisis like COVID-19. The benefits of placing tools based on a free and open model were well documented before the crisis and it will remain that way after.

By drawing on the strengths of open source solutions -- quick to stand up, completely free with no potential for vendor lock in, and constantly improved upon by the community -- governments can build solutions that can be built upon in the future. Solutions that can be used in the next crisis.

Together with healthcare workers, scientific researchers, government agencies, and the scores of volunteers helping to stamp out this pandemic, it is through open source that we will light the path to innovation in the future.

We believe that the best products are built in the open, in collaboration with a community of passionate developers and users who push the bounds of whats possible. Join us!

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Free and Open: Accelerating Innovation in the Battle Against COVID-19 - Governing

A bang in the Snowden case: Trump is considering a step that Obama shied away from and makes an admission – Pledge Times

In front of representatives of the press, Donald Trump has announced the prospect of examining a pardon for whistleblower Edward Snowden but he does not seem to know much about the case.

Washington The consequences of his whistleblowing in 2013 continue to have an effect today: At that time, Edward Snowden, a former CIA employee, handed over documents to journalists about the escalating surveillance practices of the US secret service NSA. Snowden, des Treason accused im exile in Moscow. On his Escape he was stranded there and applied for asylum.

The reputation of the USA has suffered internationally: Only a few weeks ago the European Court of Justice conceded an agreement to transfer data from Europeans to the USA because the information there was not sufficiently protected for the second time. Well, of all things Donald Trump Get moving into the matter.

The topic Edward Snowden was in an interview recently Trumps with the newspaper New York Times came up. Trump had stated that many people believed that Edward Snowden had not been treated fairly.

Because Snowden is still polarizing: While some people continue to accuse him of betraying secrets, others see his actions as a service to society. He has even received several international awards for it. Trump himself admits, however, that he was not particularly concerned with the case but he may now want to change that.

Some people think he should be treated differently, others think he did very bad things, Trump said in typical fashion at the press conference. He had been approached by journalists about his position on Snowden. His first reaction was that he wasnt particularly familiar with the matter, but he promised, I willIll see that.

Edward Snowden was open on Friday Twitter responded to Trumps first interview by taking a poll one Youtube channel who posted a probably not particularly independent, but clear answer to the question about the pardon delivered: 92 percent of the participants would support one.

At the end of his tenure in 2017, Trumps predecessor already had Barack Obama the Whistleblower Chelsea Manning pardoned although he was rather strict with whistleblowers during the tenure. The Democrat showed no mercy for Snowden. The CDU reacted extremely to an asylum request by Snowden in Germany.

Meanwhile, the current US President is mourning a family member: Donald Trumps younger brother has died. (kat) * Merkur.de is part of the Ippen-Digital network.)

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A bang in the Snowden case: Trump is considering a step that Obama shied away from and makes an admission - Pledge Times