Facebook Censors Conservative Ads, Even Though Fact Checkers Admit They Could Be True – CBN News

Dealing in a fact check rife with obscure language, Facebook has censored a conservative ad critical of Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden.

The latest example of the deceptive censorship practice came when a pro-Trump super PAC launched an ad on Facebook Aug. 4. After being slapped with amisleading mostly false ratingby PolitiFact, the 30-second video which includes a direct quote from Biden, saying, If you elect me, your taxes are going to be raised, not cut Facebook blocked the ad.

The America First Action Super PAC also referenced research from the Tax Policy Center, which states Bidens plan would see tax increases on all income groups.

Quite ironically, you dont have to look any further than PolitiFacts own fact check to learn the censored ad is, in reality, factually accurate. Within the first three paragraphs, writer Bill McCarthy admits the conservative advertisement really is truthful (emphasis added):

Anew adfrom a pro-Trump super PAC uses out-of-context footage of Joe Biden to claim that the former vice president wants to raise taxes for Americans across the board.

Versions of the ad from America First Actionbegan airingAug. 4 onFacebookand on TV screens in Wisconsin and North Carolina. They focus largely on a comment Biden made in response to a voter during a February campaign stop in South Carolina.

But the America First Action ad presents that remark out of context. And whilesome tax experts estimate that Bidens plan would mean higher taxes on average for all income groups, those increases would be relatively small for all but the biggest earners.

Seemingly dismissing any attempt to be objective, the PolitiFact journalist then used the words of a Biden campaign official to prove the ads inaccuracy.

A Biden campaign official said his point was that the wealthy not all Americans would not benefit from his plan, wrote McCarthy, adding, The ads portrayal of the exchange leaves a different impression.

So, then, what makes the ad mostly false? According to PolitiFact, the ad is untrue because it doesnt offer enough complex context within its 30-second window and gives viewers the wrong impression about Biden.

Kelly Sadler, communications director for America First, told The Daily Wire she and her team at the super PAC are drafting legal letters to both PolitiFact and Factcheck.org, challenging their bogus, politically driven fact checks.'

We are going to ask them to revise their ratings based on the actual facts, she added. Someone needs to fact check the fact-checkers.

It should be noted Facebook also recently censored another conservative ad from the right-leaning American Principles Project. According to Facebook, the ad, which is critical of the progressive Equality Act, is missing context and could mislead people.

The ad suggests the full embrace of the Equality Act, which calls for allowing transgender athletes to participate on the sports teams that correlate with their chosen sexual identities, could ultimately destroy girls sports.

For what its worth, PolitiFact said the American Principles Project ad includes a prediction itcant effectively fact check.

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Facebook Censors Conservative Ads, Even Though Fact Checkers Admit They Could Be True - CBN News

China’s Influence on the Global Human Rights System – Human Rights Watch

Is the Chinese governments greater engagement with international institutions a gain for the global human rights system? A close examination of its interactions with United Nations human rights mechanisms, pursuit of rights-free development, and threats to the freedom of expression worldwide suggests it is not. At the United Nations, Chinese authorities are trying to rewrite norms and manipulate existing procedures not only to minimize scrutiny of the Chinese governments conduct, but also to achieve the same for all governments. Emerging norms on respecting human rights in development could have informed the Chinese governments approach to the Belt and Road Initiative, the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, and national development banks, but they have not. Chinese authorities now extend domestic censorship to communities around the work, ranging from academia to diaspora communities to global businesses.

This paper details the ways Chinese authorities seekto shape norms and practices globally, and sets out steps governments and institutions can take to reverse these trends, including forming multilateral, multi-year coalitions to serve as a counterweight to Chinese government influence. Academic institutions should not just pursue better disclosure policies about interactions with Chinese government actors, they should also urgently prioritize the academic freedom of students and scholars from and of China. Companies have human rights obligations and should reject censorship.

Equally important, strategies to reject the Chinese governments threats to human rights should not penalize people from across China or of Chinese descent around the world, and securing human rights gains inside China should be a priority. The paper argues that many actors failure to take these and other steps allows Chinese authorities to further erode the existing universal human rights system and to enjoy a growing sense of impunity.

In recent years, the Chinese government has become considerably more active in a wide range of United Nations and other multilateral institutions, including in the global human rights system. It has ratified several core U.N. human rights treaties,[1]served as a member of the U.N. Human Rights Council (HRC), and seconded Chinese diplomats to positions within the U.N. human rights system. China has launched a number of initiatives that can affect human rights: It has created the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) and the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) under the mantra of promoting economic development, and it has become a significant global actor in social media platforms and academia.

This new activism on issues from economics to information by one of the most consequential actors in the international system, if underpinned by a serious (albeit unlikely) commitment among senior Chinese leaders to uphold human rights, could have been transformative. But the opposite has happened.[2] Particularly under President Xi Jinpings leadership,the Chinese government does not merely seek to neutralize U.N. human rights mechanisms scrutiny of China, it also aspires to neutralize the ability of that system to hold any government accountable for serious human rights violations.[3] Increasingly Beijing pursues rights-free development worldwide, and tries to exploit the openness of institutions in democracies to impose its world view and silence its critics.

It is crucial particularly for people who live in democracies and enjoy the rights to political participation, an independent judiciary, a free media, and other functioning institutions to recall why the international human rights system exists. Quite simply, it is because often states fail to protect and violate human rights, particularly in countries that lack systems for redress and accountability. People need to appeal to institutions beyond their governments immediate control.

Beijing is no longer content simply denying people accountability inside China: It now seeks to bolster other countries ability to do so even in the international bodies designed to deliver some semblance of justice internationally when it is blocked domestically.[4] Within academia and journalism, the Chinese Communist Party seeks not only to deny the ability to conduct research or report from inside China, it increasingly seeks to do so at universities and publications around the world, punishing those who study or write on sensitive topics. The rights-free development the state has sanctioned inside China is now a foreign policy tool being deployed around the world.

Beijings resistance to complying with global public health needs and institutions in the COVID-19 crisis,[5] and its blatant violation of international law with respect to Hong Kong,[6] should not be seen as anomalies. They are clear and concerning examples of the consequences for people worldwide not only of a Chinese government disdainful of international human rights obligations but, increasingly, also seeking to rewrite those rules in ways that may affect the exercise of human rights around much of the world. Chinese authorities fear that the exercise of these rights abroad can directly threaten the partys hold on power, whether through criticism of the party itself or as a result of holding Beijing accountable under established human rights commitments.

In June, Human Rights Council member states adopted Chinas proposed resolution on mutually beneficial cooperation by avoteof 23-16, with eight abstentions.[7] This vote capped a two-year effort that is indicative of Beijings goals and tactics of slowly undermining norms through established procedures and rhetoric, which have had significant consequences on accountability for human rights violations. The effort became visible in 2018 when the Chinese government proposed what is now known as its win-win resolution,[8] which set out to replace the idea of holding states accountable with a commitment to dialogue, and which omitted a role for independent civil society in HRC proceedings. When it was introduced, some member states expressed concern at its contents. Beijing made minor improvements and, along with the perception at the time that the resolution had no real consequences, it was adopted 28-1. The United States was the only government to vote against it.

Chinas June resolution seeks to reposition international human rights law as a matter of state-to-state relations, ignores the responsibility of states to protect the rights of the individual, treats fundamental human rights as subject to negotiation and compromise, and foresees no meaningful role for civil society. Chinas March 2018 resolution involved using the councils Advisory Committee, which China expected would produce a study supporting the resolution. Many delegations expressed concern, but gave the resolution the benefit of the doubt, abstaining so they could wait to see what the Advisory Committee produced.

Chinas intentions soon became clear: Its submission [9] to the Advisory Committee hailed its own resolution as heralding the construction of a new type of international relations.[10] The submission claims that human rights are used to interfere in other countries internal affairs, poisoning the global atmosphere of human rights governance.

This is hardly a coincidence: China has routinely opposed efforts at the council to hold states responsible for even the gravest rights violations, and the submission alarmingly speaks of so-called universal human rights. It is nonetheless encouraging that 16 states voted against this harmful resolution in June 2020, compared with only one vote against in 2018, signaling increasing global concern with Chinas heavy-handed and aggressive approach to cooperation.

That the resolution nonetheless passed reflects the threat China poses to the U.N. human rights system. In 2017, Human Rights Watch documented Chinas manipulation of U.N. review processes, harassment, and intimidation of not only human rights defenders from China but also U.N. human rights experts and staff, and its successful efforts to block the participation of independent civil society groups, including organizations that do not work on China.[11]

In 2018, China underwent its third Universal Periodic Review (UPR), the process for reviewing all U.N. member states human rights records. Despite or perhaps because Chinese authorities had since Chinas previous review opened an extraordinary assault on human rights, Chinese diplomats did not just resort to some of its past practices. These had included providing blatantly false information at the review, flooding the speakers list with friendly states and government-organized civil society groups, and urging other governments to speak positively about China.

This time around China also pressured U.N. officials to remove a U.N. country team submission from the UPR materials (ironically that report was reasonably positive about the governments track record),[12] pressured Organisation of Islamic Cooperation member states to speak positively about Chinas treatment of Uyghur Muslims, and warned other governments not to attend a panel event about Xinjiang.

China has so far fended off calls by the high commissioner for human rights and several HRC member states for an independent investigation into gross human rights abuses in Xinjiang, the region in China where an estimated one million Uyghurs and other Turkic Muslims remain arbitrarily detained.[13] Typically, violations of this magnitude would have already yielded actual accountability proceedings, but Chinas power is such that three years into the Xinjiang crisis there is little forward movement.

In July 2019, two dozen governments sent a letter to the Human Rights Council president though they were unwilling to make the call orally on the floor of the HRC urging an investigation.[14] China responded with a letter signed by 37 countries, mostly developing states with poor human rights records. In November, a similar group of governments delivered a similar statement at the Third Committee of the U.N.;[15] China responded with a letter signed by 54 countries.[16]

Beijing also seeks to ensure that discussions about human rights more broadly take place only through the human rights bodies in Geneva, and not other

U.N. bodies, particularly the Security Council. China contends that only the HRC has a mandate to examine them a convenient way of trying to limit discussions even on the gravest atrocities. In March 2018, it opposed a briefing by then-High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Raad al Hussein to the Security Council on Syria,[17] and in February 2020 it blocked a resolution at the Security Council on the plight of Myanmars ethnic Rohingya.[18]

U.N. human rights experts, typically referred to as special rapporteurs, are key to reviews and accountability of U.N. member states on human rights issues. One of their common tools is to visit states, but China has declined to schedule visits by numerous special rapporteurs, including those with mandates on arbitrary detention, executions, or freedom of expression.[19]

It has allowed visits by experts on issues where it thought it would fare well: the right to food in 2012, a working group on discrimination against women in 2014, and an independent expert on the effects of foreign debt in 2016.[20] In 2016, China allowed a visit by Philip Alston, then the special rapporteur onextreme poverty and human rights, who ended his visit early when authorities followed him and intimidated people he had spoken to.[21 ] Since that time, China has only allowed a visit by the independent expert on the rights of older people in late 2019.

China also continues to block the Office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights from having a presence in China. While there are two dozen other U.N. agencies in China, they have rarely invoked their mandate to promote human rights.

In late June, 50 U.N. current and former special procedures the most prominent group of independent experts in the U.N. human rights system issued a searing indictment of Chinas human rights record and call for urgent action.[22] The experts denounced the Chinese governments collective repression of religious and ethnic minorities in Xinjiang and Tibet, the repression of protest and impunity for excessive use of force by police in Hong Kong, censorship and retaliation against journalists, medical workers, and others who sought to speak out following the COVID-19 outbreak, and the targeting of human rights defenders across the country. The experts called for convening a special session on China, creating a dedicated expert on China, and asking U.N. agencies and governments to press China to meet its human rights obligations.It remains to be seen whether and how the U.N. secretary-general, the high commissioner for human rights, and the Human Rights Council will respond.

Despite its poor human rights record at home, and a serious threat to the U.N. human rights system, China is expected to be reelected to the Human Rights Council in October. Absent a critical mass of concerned states committed to serving as a counterweight to both problems, people across China and people who depend on this system for redress and accountability are at serious risk.

For the last several decades, activists, development experts, and economists have made gains in creating legal and normative obligations to ensure respect and accountability for human rights in economic development. By the time China became the worlds second-largest economy in 2010, major multilateral institutions including the World Bank Group and International Monetary Fund had already adopted standards and safeguards policies on community consultation, transparency, and other key human rights issues. In 2011, the United Nations adopted the Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights. Taken together, these emerging global norms should have afforded Beijing a template to pursue development with clear respect for human rights, but neither Chinas development banks nor BRI shows signs of doing so.[23]

Beijings trillion-dollar BRI infrastructure and investment program facilitates Chinese access to markets and natural resources across 70 countries. Aided by the frequent absence of alternative investors, the BRI has secured the Chinese government considerable good- will among developing countries, even though Beijing has been able to foist many of the costs onto the countries that it is purporting to help.

Chinas methods of operation appear to have the effect of bolstering authoritarianism in beneficiary countries, even if both democracies and autocracies alike avail themselves of Chinas BRI investments or surveillance exports.[24] BRI projects known for their no strings loans largely ignore human rights and environmental standards.[25] They allow little if any input from people who might be harmed, allowing for no popular consultation methods. There have been numerous violations associated with the Souapiti Dam in Guinea and the Lower Sesan II Dam in Cambodia, both financed and constructed mainly by Chinese state-owned banks and companies.[26]

To build the dams, thousands of villagers were forced out of their ancestral homes and farmlands, losing access to food and their livelihoods. Many resettled families are not adequately compensated and do not receive legal title to their new land. Residents have written numerous letters about their situation to local and national authorities, largely to no avail. Some projects are negotiated in backroom deals that are prone to corruption. At times they benefit and entrench ruling elites while burying the people of the country under mountains of debt.

Some BRI projects are notorious: Sri Lankas Hambantota port, which China repossessed for 99 years when debt repayment became impossible, or the loan to build Kenyas Mombasa-Nairobi railroad, which the government is trying to repay by forcing cargo transporters to use it despite cheaper alternatives. Some governments including those of Bangladesh, Malaysia, Myanmar, Pakistan, and Sierra Leone have begun backing away from BRI projects because they do not look economically sensible.[27] In most cases, the struggling debtor is eager to stay in Beijings good graces. In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, China has made some pronouncements on debt relief, yet it remains unclear on how that will actually work in practice.[28]

BRI loans also provide Beijing another financial leverto ensure support for Chinas anti-rights agenda in key international forums, with recipient states sometimes votingalongsideBeijing in key forums. The result is at best silence, at worst applause, in the face of Chinas domestic repression, as well as assistance to Beijing as it undermines international human rights institutions. Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan, for example, whose government is a major BRI recipient, said nothing about his fellow Muslims in Xinjiang as he visited Beijing, while his diplomats offered over-the- top praise for Chinas efforts in providing care to its Muslim citizens.[29]

Similarly, Cameroon delivered fawning statements of praise for China shortly after Beijing forgave it millions in debt: Referencing Xinjiang, it lauded Beijing for fully protect[ing] the exercise of lawful rights of ethnic minority populations including normal religious activities and beliefs.[30] Chinas national development banks, such as the China Development Bank and the Export-Import Bank of China, have a growing global reach but lack critical human rights safeguards. The China-founded multilateral AIIB is not much better. Itspoliciescallfortransparencyandaccountabilityintheprojectsit finances and include social and environmental standards, but do not require the bank to identify and address human rights risks.[31] Among the banks 74 members are many governments that claim to respect rights: much of the European Union including France, Germany, the Netherlands, and Sweden, along with and the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand.

Beijings censorship inside China is well documented, and its efforts to disseminate propaganda through state media worldwide are well known. But Chinese authorities no longer appear content with these efforts and are expanding their ambitions. Under Xi Jinpings leadership, Chinese authorities increasingly seek to limit or silence discussions about China that are perceived to be critical, and to ensure that their views and analyses are accepted by various constituencies around the world, even when that entails censoring through global platforms.

Chinese authorities have long monitored and conducted surveillance on students and academics from China and those studying China on campuses around the world. Chinese diplomats have also complained to university officials about hosting speakers such as the Dalai Lama whom the Chinese government considers sensitive. Over the past decade, as a result of decreasing state funding to higher education in Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States, universities are increasingly financially dependent on the large number of fee-paying students from China, and on Chinese government and corporate entities. This has made universities susceptible to Chinese government influence.

The net result? In 2019, a series of rigorous reports documented censorship of and self-censorship by some administrators and academics who did not want to irk Chinese authorities.[32] Students from China have reported threats to their families in China in response to what those students had said in the classroom.

Scholars from China detailed being directly threatened outside the country by Chinese officials to refrain from criticizing the Chinese government in classroom lectures or other talks.

Others described students from China remaining silent in their classrooms, fearful that their speech was being monitored and reported to Chinese authorities by other students from China. One student from China at a university in the United States summed up his concerns about classroom surveillance, noting: This isnt a free space. Drew Pavlou, a student at the University of Queensland who has been critical of the schools ties to the Chinese government, is facing suspension on the grounds that his activism breached the universitys code of conduct.[33]

Some universities in the United States are now under pressure from federal authorities to disclose any ties between the schools or individual scholars and Chinese government agencies, with the stated objective of countering Peoples Republic of China influence efforts and harassment as well as the theft of technology. Universities and scholars in Australia, the United Kingdom, and the United States have been embarrassed by revelations over their ties to Chinese technology firms or government agencies implicated in human rights abuses. In April 2020 the Massachusetts Institute of Technology broke off a relationship with Chinese voice recognition firm iFlytek whose complicity in human rights violations Human Rights Watch documented after adopting tighter guidelines on partnerships.[34]

Other schools have grappled with tensions between students who are critical of the Chinese government and those who defend it. Students from the mainland tried to shout down speakers at a March 2019 event at the University of California at Berkeley who were addressing the human rights crisis in Xinjiang, or in September when unidentified individuals threatened the Hong Kong democracy activist Nathan Law as he arrived for graduate studies at Yale.[35]

But few if any universities have taken steps to guarantee students and scholars from China the same access to academic freedom as others.[36] The failure to address these problems means that for some debates and research about China are arbitrarily curtailed.

Surveillance and harassment of diaspora communities by Chinese authorities is also not a new problem, but it is clear that securing a foreign passport does not guarantee the right to freedom of expression. Even leaving China has become more difficult: Beijing has worked hard in recent years to prevent certain communities from leaving the country through tactics such as denying or confiscating their passports, tightening border security to prevent Tibetans and Turkic Muslims from fleeing, and pressuring other governments from Cambodia to Turkey to forcibly return asylum seekers in violation of their obligations under international law.[37]

Since early 2017, some Uyghurs who have traveled outside China and returned, or simply remained in contact with family and friends outside the country, have found that Chinese authorities deem that conduct criminal.[38]

As a result, even individualswhohavemanaged to leave China and obtain citizenship in rights- respecting democracies report that they are cut off from family members still inside China, are monitored and harassed byChinesegovernmentofficials,and are reluctant to criticize Chinese policies or authorities for fear of reprisals. Some feel they cannot attend public gatherings, such as talks on Chinese politics or Congressional hearings, for fear of being photographed or otherwise having their presence at those events noted. Others describe being called or receiving WhatsApp or text messages from authorities inside China telling them that if they publicly criticize the Chinese government their family members inside China will suffer.

One Uyghur who had obtained citizenship in Europe said: It doesnt matter where I am, or what passport I hold. [Chinese authorities] will terrorize me anywhere, and I have no way to fight that. Even Han Chinese immigrants to countries like Canada described deep fear of the Chinese government, saying that while they are outraged by the human rights abuses in China, they worry that if they criticize the government openly, their job prospects, business opportunities, and chances of going back to China would be affected or that their family members who remain in China would be in danger.[39]

Governments have relatively weak means to push back against this kind of harassment, given that it originates largely in China. In 2018, the Federal Bureau of Investigation stepped up its outreach to Uyghurs in the United States who had been targets of Chinese government harassment, and the Uyghur Human Rights Act, adopted in June 2020, expands that work across various diaspora communities from China.[40]

Chinese authorities also seek to limit freedom of expression beyond Chinas borders by censoring conversations on global platforms. In June, Zoom, a California-based company, admitted that it had at the request of Chinese authorities suspended the accounts of U.S.-based activists who had organized online discussions about the 1989 Tiananmen massacre.[41] While the company reinstated the accounts of people based in the United States, it said it could not refuse Chinese authorities demands that it obey local law.

Other global platforms have also enabled censorship. WeChat, a Chinese social media platform with about one billion users worldwide, 100 million of them outside China, is owned by the Chinese company Tencent.[42] The Chinese government and Tencent regularly censor content on the platform, skewing what viewers can see. Posts with the words Liu Xiaobo or Tiananmen massacre cannot be uploaded, and criticisms of the Chinese government are swiftly removed even if those trying to post such messages are outside the country. WeChat is wildly popular for its easy functionality, but it is also a highly effective way for Chinese authorities to control what its users worldwide can see.

It also affects what politicians outside China can say to their own constituents. Politicians around the world increasingly use WeChat to communicate with Chinese speakers in their electorates. In September 2017, Jenny Kwan, a member of the Canadian parliament, made a statement regarding the Umbrella Movement in Hong Kong in which she praised the young protesters who stood up and fought for what they believe in, and for the betterment of their society; that statement was subsequently posted on her WeChat account only to be deleted.[43]

It is unclear whether or how politicians in democracies are tracking Beijings efforts to censor their speech. As China plays an ever-more prominent role in global affairs, governments need to move swiftly to ensure that elected representatives ability to communicate with their constituents is not subject to Beijings whims.

Finally, Beijing also leverages access to its market to censor companies ranging from Marriott to Mercedes Benz.[44] Chinese state television, CCTV, and Tencent, a media partner of the National Basketball Association with a five-year streaming deal worth $1.5 billion, said they would not broadcast Houston Rockets games after the teams general manager tweeted in support of Hong Kongs pro-democracy protesters.[45] Under pressure from Beijing, major international companies have censored themselves or staff members. Others have fired employees who have expressed views the companies perceive as critical of Beijing.Itisbad enough for companies to abide by censorship restrictions when operating inside China. It is much worse to impose that censorship on their employees and customers around the world. One can no longer pretend that Chinas suppression of independent voices stops at its borders.

AND WHAT TO DO

The consequences for failing to stop Chinas assault on the international human rights system, and on law and practice around rights-respecting development and on the freedom of expression are simple and stark. If these trends continue unabated, the U.N. Security Council will become even less likely to take action on grave human rights crises; the fundamental underpinnings of a universal human rights system with room for independent actors will further erode; and Chinese authorities (and their allies) impunity will only grow.

Serious rights-violating governments will know they can rely on Beijing for investment and loans with no conditions. People around the world will increasingly have to be careful whether they criticize Chinese authorities, even if they are citizens of rights-respecting democracies or in environments like academia, where debate is meant to be encouraged.

Chinese government conduct over the first half of 2020 its stalling into an independent investigations into the COVID-19 pandemic, its blatant rejection of international law in deciding to impose national security legislation on Hong Kong, even its manipulation of Tiananmen commemorations for people in the United States appears to have galvanized momentum to push back. Members of parliaments from numerous countries are calling for the appointment of a U.N. special envoy on Hong Kong, governments are pressuring Beijing over a COVID-19 cover up, and companies capitulation to Chinese pressure to censor are regular news items.

But this is far from creating the kind of counterweight necessary to curb Beijings agenda, whose threat can now be seen clearly. To protect the U.N. human rights system from Chinese government erosions, rights-respecting governments should urgently form a multi-year coalition not only to ensure that they are tracking these threats, but also to prepare themselves to respond to them at every opportunity to push back. This means nominating candidates for U.N. expert positions and calling out obstructions in the accreditation system.

This means canvassing and organizing objections to norm-eroding resolutions, and mobilizingalliestoput themselves forwardascandidatesfortheHRCor other selectionsmadebyregionalblocs.Chinahas the advantages of deep pockets and no periodic changes in government to encumber its ability to plan; democracies will struggle with both. But here the stakes could not be higher not just for the 1.4 billion people in China, but for people around the world.

Governments,especiallythosethathavejoined the AIIB, should use their joint leverage to push the institution to adoptwell-established human rights and environmental principles and practices to ensure abuse-free development. And governments entering into BRI partnerships should carefully consider the consequences and ensure that they do what China will not: provide adequate public consultation, and full transparency about the financial implications for the country, and the ability of affected populations to reject these development projects.

Governments should urgently consider Beijings threats to the freedom of expression in their own countries. They should track threats to citizens, and pursue accountability to the fullest extent through tools like targeted sanctions. Academic institutions should not content themselves merely with better disclosure policies about interactions with Chinese government actors, they need urgently to ensure that everyone on their campuses has equal access to freedom of expression any less is a gross rejection of their responsibilities.

Companies have a role to play in rejecting censorship. They should recognize that they cannot win playing Beijings game, especially given their responsibility to respect human rights under the United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights. They should draft and promote codes of conduct for dealing with China that prohibit participation in or facilitation of infringements of the right to free expression, information, privacy, association, or other internationally recognized human rights. Strong common standards would make it more difficult for Beijing to ostracize those who stand up for basic rights and freedoms. Consumers and shareholders would also be better placed to insist that the companies not succumb to censorship as the price of doing business in China, and that they should never benefit from or contribute to abuses.

Finally, it is critical that none of these efforts to limit the Chinese governments threats to human rights rebound on people across China or of Chinese descent around the world. The rapid spread of COVID-19 triggered a wave of racist anti-Asian harassment and assaults, and an alarming number of governments, politicians, and policies are falling into Beijings trap of conflating the Chinese government, the Chinese Communist Party, and people from China.[46] They are not the same, and the human rights of people in China should remain at the core of future policies.

of the High Commissioner, August 23, 2016, https://www.ohchr.org/en/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews. aspx?NewsID=20402&LangID=E.

Newsweek, April 17, 2019, https://www.newsweek.com/china-muslims-pakistan-imran-khan-1399044.

Originally posted here:

China's Influence on the Global Human Rights System - Human Rights Watch

In the Rajya Sabha on Sunday who were the Badshahs? The Government of course – National Herald

The ordinances were, ironically, opposed by organisations affiliated to the RSS as well. And the Government is yet to come up with a satisfactory explanation why on the one hand it allows market forces to determine prices of rice and wheat while on the other hand, it imposes a ban on the export of onions, allegedly because of Bihar elections. It has also not explained why the ordinances, now Bills, provide no regulation for corporate bodies trading in farm produce.

The problem with this Government is that it believes in acting first and do the thinking later. It believs it knows best. It believes criticism is anti-national and that it alone has the right to speakallegedly because it has the mandate.

If they had the mandate, why didnt it allow voting in the Rajya Sabha? Because that would have exposed the Government?

Sadly, the Government believes in winning by hook or by crook. It is Heads I win, tails you lose.

Who then is behaving like the Badshah?

Continued here:

In the Rajya Sabha on Sunday who were the Badshahs? The Government of course - National Herald

Open source: Why governments need to go further – TechRepublic

Commentary: Yes, governments should open source their custom code. But more than that is needed.

Image: lucky-photographer, Getty Images/iStockphoto

For Drupal (and Acquia) founder Dries Buytaert, "the default [in government] should be 'developed with public money, make it public code.'" That is, if a government is paying for software to be created, that software should be available under an open source license. While he acknowledged there might be exceptions (e.g., for military applications, as I've called out), his suggestion makes sense.

Years ago I argued that government mandates of open source made no sense. I still feel that way. Governments (and enterprises) should use whatever software best enables them to get work done. Increasingly, that software will be open source. But when good open source alternatives don't yet exist, it makes no sense to mandate the use of suboptimal software.

But software that governments create? There's no compelling citizen-focused reason for closing it off. Instead, there are many reasons to open it up.

SEE:How to build a successful developer career (free PDF)(TechRepublic)

This topic of why countries should embrace open source is an easy argument to make. As Buytaert pointed out, if public money pays for the code to be developed, why wouldn't that code be available to the public (except, as mentioned, in the case of sensitive military software)?

Some countries have already gone this route. As I detailed in 2016, Bulgaria is one of them. A few years later, Bulgaria has been preparing its own national source code repository, based on Git (as required by law: "administrative authorities shall use public storage and control systems for the source code and technical documentation for development, upgrading or deployment of information systems or electronic services").

This is a significant step toward greater transparency. However, it's not enough.

SEE: Open source can thrive in a recession says Drupal creator Dries Buytaert (TechRepublic)

As much as I understand Bulgaria's desire to build its own source code repository, there's even greater need for governments to collaborate on code beyond their borders. Think about it: Governments tend to do the same things, like collecting taxes, issuing parking tickets, etc. Currently, each government builds (or buys) software to tackle these tasks. Obscene quantities of custom code are created each year by government organizations operating in silos.

Why isn't the city of Bogota sharing software with London, which shares software with Lagos, which shares software with Pocatello (that's in Idaho, by the way)?

As IBM president (and former Red Hat CEO) Jim Whitehurst said way back in 2009, "The waste in IT software development is extraordinary....Ultimately, for open source to provide value to all of our customers worldwide, we need to get our customers not only as users of open source products but truly engaged in open source and taking part in the development community." This is particularly true in government, where there isn't even the competitive pressure (e.g., Bogota doesn't compete with Pocatello) that might prevent large financial institutions from collaborating (though even they partner on open source).

So, yes, we need governments to open source the software they pay to have built, to Buytaert's point. But we also need those same governments to share that code beyond their borders, thereby driving greater innovation at lower cost for their citizens.

Disclosure: I work for AWS but the views expressed herein are mine, not those of my employer.

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Excerpt from:

Open source: Why governments need to go further - TechRepublic

GitHub to replace ‘master’ with ‘main’ starting next month – ZDNet

Starting next month, all new source code repositories created on GitHub will be named "main" instead of "master" as part of the company's effort to remove unnecessary references to slavery and replace them with more inclusive terms.

GitHub repositories are where users and companies store and synchronize their source code projects.

By default, GitHub uses the term "master" for the primary version of a source code repository. Developers make copies of the "master" on their computers into which they add their own code, and then merge the changes back into the "master" repo.

"OnOctober 1, 2020, any new repositories you create will usemainas the default branch, instead ofmaster," the company said.

Existing repositories that have "master" set as the default branch will be left as is.

"For existing repositories, renaming the default branch today causes a set of challenges," GitHub explained in asupport pagepublished earlier this month, such as having to edit settings for pull requests and modifying security policies.

"By the end of the year, we'll make it seamless for existing repositories to rename their default branch," GitHub said.

"When you rename the branch, we'll retarget your open PRs and draft releases, move your branch protection policies, and more - all automatically."

The company's move is part of a bigger trend in the tech community.

After the brutal death of George Floyd and the Black Lives Matter protests earlier this year, tech companies wanted to show their support for the black community by abandoning non-inclusive terms such as master, slave, blacklist, and whitelist.

Companies and major open source projects likeMicrosoft, IBM,Twitter,Red Hat,MySQL, theLinux kernel, andOpenBSDhave agreed to make changes to their technical jargon all through the 2020 summer.

GitHub was one of the first companies to show support for such changes whenits CEO revealed in Junethat they were already looking for a replacement for "master."

The company's announcement earlier this month comes to deliver on its CEO's promise.

Furthermore, the Git project, which is the base software on which GitHub was built, has alsoannouncedsimilar plans to at least provide repository owners with the option to customize their default repository branch going forward.

Originally posted here:

GitHub to replace 'master' with 'main' starting next month - ZDNet

Microsoft announces new Project OneFuzz framework, an open source developer tool to find and fix bugs at scale – Microsoft

Microsoft is dedicated to working with the community and our customers to continuously improve and tune our platform and products to help defend against the dynamic and sophisticated threat landscape. Earlier this year, we announced that we would replace the existing software testing experience known as Microsoft Security and Risk Detection with an automated, open-source tool as the industry moved toward this model. Today, were excited to release this new tool called Project OneFuzz, an extensible fuzz testing framework for Azure. Available through GitHub as an open-source tool, the testing framework used by Microsoft Edge, Windows, and teams across Microsoft is now available to developers around the world.

Fuzz testing is a highly effective method for increasing the security and reliability of native codeit is the gold standard for finding and removing costly, exploitable security flaws. Traditionally, fuzz testing has been a double-edged sword for developers: mandated by the software-development lifecycle, highly effective in finding actionable flaws, yet very complicated to harness, execute, and extract information from. That complexity required dedicated security engineering teams to build and operate fuzz testing capabilities making it very useful but expensive. Enabling developers to perform fuzz testing shifts the discovery of vulnerabilities to earlier in the development lifecycle and simultaneously frees security engineering teams to pursue proactive work.

Microsofts goal of enabling developers to easily and continuously fuzz test their code prior to release is core to our mission of empowerment. The global release of Project OneFuzz is intended to help harden the platforms and tools that power our daily work and personal lives to make an attackers job more difficult.

Recent advancements in the compiler world, open-sourced in LLVM and pioneered by Google, have transformed the security engineering tasks involved in fuzz testing native code. What was once attachedat great expensecan now be baked into continuous build systems through:

These advances allow developers to create unit test binaries with a modern fuzzing lab compiled in: highly reliable test invocation, input generation, coverage, and error detection in a single executable. Experimental support for these features is growing in Microsofts Visual Studio. Once these test binaries can be built by a compiler, todays developers are left with the challenge of building them into a CI/CD pipeline and scaling fuzzing workloads in the cloud.

Project OneFuzz has already enabled continuous developer-driven fuzzing of Windows that has allowed Microsoft to proactively harden the Windows platform prior to shipment of the latest OS builds. With a single command line (baked into the build system!) developers can launch fuzz jobs ranging in size from a few virtual machines to thousands of cores. Project OneFuzz enables:

Project OneFuzz is available now on GitHub under an MIT license. It is updated by contributions from Microsoft Research & Security Groups across Windows and by more teams as we grow our partnership and expand fuzzing coverage across the company to continuously improve the security of all Microsoft platforms and products. Microsoft will continue to maintain and expand Project OneFuzz, releasing updates to the open-source community as they occur. Contributions from the community are welcomed. Share questions, comments, and feedback with us: fuzzing@microsoft.com

To learn more about Microsoft Security solutions visit our website. Bookmark theSecurity blogto keep up with our expert coverage on security matters. Also, follow us at@MSFTSecurityfor the latest news and updates on cybersecurity.

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Microsoft announces new Project OneFuzz framework, an open source developer tool to find and fix bugs at scale - Microsoft

In the WeChat, TikTok US shutdown order, TikTok gets Nov. 12 stay, keeping it up through the US election and Oracle dealmaking – TechCrunch

The U.S. Commerce Department has nowannounced the details of how it will enforce the shutdown of TikTok and WeChat in the country, after announcing in August plans to do so by September 20 over national security concerns. The news is structured along two dates, September 20 and November 12. Both apps and their app updates will no longer be distributed in U.S. app stores as of September 20. But TikTok specifically gets an extension on how it operates until November 12.

That not only keeps it up until after the November 3 U.S. election, but leaves the door open for it to complete a complicated deal with Oracle and partners to take control of its U.S. operations without an interruption in service.

That timing, plus the statement from the Department of Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, underscores the strong political current running through the news.

Todays actions prove once again that President Trump will do everything in his power to guarantee our national security and protect Americans from the threats of the Chinese Communist Party, said Ross in a statement.At the Presidents direction, we have taken significant action to combat Chinas malicious collection of American citizens personal data, while promoting our national values, democratic rules-based norms, and aggressive enforcement of U.S. laws and regulations.

The first part of the action, starting September 20, has to do with halting all new app distribution for both WeChat (owned by Tencent) and TikTok (owned by ByteDance) . In other words, no new downloads of either app as of September 20, and no new updates. And it also forbids any provision of services through theWeChatmobile application for the purpose of transferring funds or processing payments within the U.S. that is, all payments.

WeChats owner Tencent has issued a response to the announcement:

We are reviewing the latest announcement from the Department of Commerce restricting the use of WeChat by U.S. users, said a spokesperson. WeChat was designed to serve international users outside of mainland China and has always incorporated the highest standards of user privacy and data security. Following the initial executive order on August 6 we have engaged in extensive discussions with the U.S. government, and have put forward a comprehensive proposal to address its concerns. The restrictions announced today are unfortunate, but given our desire to provide ongoing services to our users in the U.S. for whom WeChat is an important communication tool we will continue to discuss with the government and other stakeholders in the U.S. ways to achieve a long-term solution.

It seems that the different dates might mean that those that already have TikTok installed by September 20 should still be able to continue using it, even if youre an iPhone user updating to iOS 14.

We write might because the government hasnt provided technical detail around how it plans to implement its rules.

From that date, WeChat also will not, seemingly, work at all, with the U.S. forbidding any provision of internet hosting services enabling the functioning or optimization, any provision of content delivery, internet transit or peering services, or any provision of constituent code, functions or services of the app.

Notably, TikTok will not face the same operational roadblock on September 20.

TikTok has until November 12 before those rules come into play. That is to say, if you have TikTok downloaded by September 20, you will still be able to use it.

The date is important for a couple of reasons. It firstly leaves the app up and running in the run-up to the U.S. presidential election. Many have said that Trump shutting down the popular app which has some 100 million users in the U.S., but beyond that a much wider public following in pop culture, where TikToks are shared on national television and across a lot of other social channels now could hurt him with younger voters. Whether or not that really would have been the case, this seems to have knocked that problem out of his re-election calculus.

It secondly leaves the door open for Oracle, Walmart and the rest in that consortium negotiating to take over the operation of TikTok to seal their deal without any interruption in service. The app has around 100 million users in the country, similar to its number of users in Europe.

The story around the deal has been changing by the day, shifting from an outright acquisition to one where Oracle might control the data in the app but not the source code, to licensing the source code too, to getting Chinas approval as well as that of the U.S., and other permutations. The most recent developments have included the idea of a public listing and even considering Instagram co-founder Kevin Systrom to take it over as the new CEO.

Ironic, then, that one of the more outspoken tech leaders around this latest development has been Adam Mosseri, the current head of Instagram, who has been tweeting his thoughts about the wider implications for other big tech companies.

(Weve been in a tit-for-tat war around apps and freedom to operate them across national boundaries for some time already, and many countries with national firewalls have long decided that there is absolutely nothing wrong with prohibiting some apps from other countries if you feel they compromise your national security.)

The U.S. Department of Commerce decisions are in line with an executive order signed by President Trump on August 6, which put ByteDance and Tencent, the respective owners of TikTok and WeChat, on notice of the governments intention to block access to their products over purported concerns about national security.

That executive order precipitated the last few weeks of feverish dealmaking to avoid a shutdown of TikTok, discussions that remain ongoing and are not finalized. As of today, Oracle and what looks like Walmart are still negotiating with the White House, Treasury Department and ByteDance to come to a deal that will be acceptable to the president. China also has authority to approve a sale of TikTok.

Over the last few weeks, the administration has promoted a policy known as Clean Network designed to eliminate foreign interference in applications and cloud infrastructure that powers American technology.

That policy calls for the removal of certain apps, data sovereignty to onshore American user data to the United States, mobile network infrastructure built from clean equipment and a host of other measures to create a clean computing environment for U.S. citizens. While those policies are generally written broadly, their clear target has been China, based on speeches from administration officials.

TikTok and WeChat are not the only app removals announced overnight. In India, one of the most popular payment apps in the country Paytm has been removed from Googles Play Store for repeat policy violations. The app has tens of millions of monthly users. In late June, the country also announced a list of 59 apps developed by Chinese companies that would be banned, including TikTok.

Such national fights over the future of technology have increasingly come to a head as tech drives a larger segment of the global economy and increasingly becomes intertwined with competing national interests.

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In the WeChat, TikTok US shutdown order, TikTok gets Nov. 12 stay, keeping it up through the US election and Oracle dealmaking - TechCrunch

ATO declines to fix code replay flaw within myGovID – ZDNet

The default login option for agents used by the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) is vulnerable to a code replay attack, security researchers Ben Frengley and Vanessa Teague said.

Writing in a blog post, the pair described that an attacker could use a malicious login form to capture user details, which the attacker could then use to login into other accounts held by the myGovID user.

The nub of the attack is that when a myGovID user attempts to login into a site, they are asked to input a four-digit code into the myGovID smartphone app to verify the login -- no passwords are used, and the only identifying piece of information is an email address.

If the attacker can capture an email address, that can be used by the attacker to log into another myGovID service and replay the generated code to the user to enter into the myGovID app. Once the code is entered, the user will believe they are logged into a proper site, while the attacker can simultaneously log into their account elsewhere.

The user is not alerted to the other login taking place.

"This attack is detectable by a diligent user who understands the protocol well enough to know that they should only accept 4-digit codes from mygovid.gov.au (and knows how to check for TLS)," the pair wrote.

"However we believe that there are very few users in this category, because it is a counter-intuitive protocol designed to reverse the information flow relative to what users are accustomed to."

The suggested short term mitigation from the researchers is to inform users about what site is requesting a login, and for the long term, the pair recommended ditching the framework altogether.

"In the long run, the [Trusted Digital Identity Framework] and all its current implementations should be deprecated and replaced with an open standard such as OpenID Connect or a protocol modelled on that of a nation with an existing secure public key infrastructure such as Belgium or Estonia," they wrote.

"The implementation and design documentation should be openly available to the Australian public to allow for the identification and responsible disclosure of other vulnerabilities.

"We have no reason to believe that this is the only, or the worst, vulnerability in this system. Its complex nature and the desire to hide information makes enforcing and validating correct, secure behaviour close to impossible."

For users, the pair recommended they do not use myGovID unless unavoidable, and in that case, to ensure they only receive codes from the mygovid.gov.au site.

"This unlikely to work in practice for most users, who will struggle to recognise a secure website with the right URL," they said.

The pair said they informed the Australian Signals Directorate of the issue on August 19, and were told on Friday by the ATO that "they did not intend to change the protocol, at which point we immediately informed them that we would make a warning to users public".

In October, the Digital Transformation Agency said almost 7,000 Australians had created a myGovID.

Also on Monday morning, the ATO announced it has signed a three-year, AU$11.4 million deal with Vocus for managed network services.

"The contract will see Vocus provide up to 230 services across 80 ATO sites, on its fully separated secure network," Vocus said.

"The types of services include IP WAN, internet and data centre connectivity for all existing and future ATO sites."

The contract has three potential two-year extensions.

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ATO declines to fix code replay flaw within myGovID - ZDNet

Chinese firm amasses trove of open-source data on influential Canadians – The Globe and Mail

The office for Shenzhen Zhenhua Data Information Technology Co. Ltd., a small Chinese technology company that is building tools to process the worlds open-source information about influential people.

Nathan VanderKlippe/The Globe and Mail

On the 14th floor of a tower filled with cramped workspaces in Chinas high-tech city, a small military contractor is building tools to track politicians, aerospace entrepreneurs, scholars and other influential people around the world, including thousands in Canada.

The office of Shenzhen Zhenhua Data Information Technology Co. Ltd. is modest. When a Globe and Mail reporter visited, three people sat at desks in what appeared to be a converted studio apartment, with the bathroom door open. One person was entering code into a computer, while another worked on a PowerPoint presentation. The third person said the company has a work force of more than 30 employees. And although she said Zhenhua is expanding, thats small even by startup standards in China.

Its ambitions, though, extend far beyond its small real estate footprint. It is building tools to process the worlds open-source information about influential people culled from Twitter, criminal records, LinkedIn posts, YouTube videos and more into data that can be analyzed and used by universities, companies, government actors and the Chinese military.

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Our client base is a bit special, the woman said.

The Globe and a consortium of international journalists have accessed an early copy of the companys Overseas Key Information Database (OKIDB), which shows the type of information Zhenhua is collecting for use in China, including records on small-town mayors in Western Canada, where Chinese diplomats have sought to curry favour.

The company claims to have built tools to manipulate content on Twitter, WhatsApp and other platforms, including Facebook which says it has banned Zhenhua from gathering data on its platform.

The company declined an interview request, saying it was not convenient to disclose trade secrets. Its website became inaccessible after The Globe visited its office, which is located in a government-backed business incubator building across the street from an investigative centre for the local Public Security Bureau all a short drive from the headquarters of some of Chinas most important technology companies and civilian military contractors, including Tencent and China Electronics Corp.

The company, led by a former IBM data centre management expert, has also described its work online in job postings, LinkedIn records, blog articles and software patents. One employee described work mining the business needs of military customers for overseas data. Before it became inaccessible, Zhenhuas website listed a series of partners that included important military contractors.

It claims to have collected information on more than 2.4 million people and 650,000 organizations from about two billion social-media articles.

Together the documents reveal a Chinese firm with a keen interest in advanced forms of warfare, the structure of the U.S. intelligence apparatus and the use of social media to achieve military victories.

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The company has secured a software patent for a social media account simulation system, a title that connotes a tool for managing networks of fake social-media usernames in ways that emulate human characteristics, making them more effective at spreading messages.

Zhenhuas name translates to China Revival, a reference to a mantra of President Xi Jinping, who has proclaimed the great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation.

It seems to be collecting information about people who are around things that China would be interested in. The question is whether this is a database of potential targets that could be used by the intelligence services of China to get what they want, said Stephanie Carvin, a former national security analyst who is now an associate professor of international relations at Carleton University.

Prof. Carvin looked at the database on behalf of The Globe and said it wasnt clear whether it was being used by Chinese intelligence or had simply been created by a company hoping to sell it to Chinese intelligence.

But she found it curious that it contained records on people such as Ella-Grace Trudeau, the 11-year-old daughter of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, and Jeremy Fry, the adult son of long-time MP Hedy Fry. That, Prof. Carvin said, suggested an attempt to learn more not just about the people in power in Canada but about those around them.

Why have these people in some kind of database? That, to me, is the question that national security agencies in the West have to figure out. Thats the thing I worry about, Prof. Carvin said. Is this an attempt to create a database of targetable individuals? And what are they trying to do with that?

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A version of the Zhenhua OKIDB database analyzed by The Globe contained almost 16,000 entries mentioning Canada.

Its files seem to have been cobbled together from various sources. Some catalogue news stories, including hundreds of Globe articles, while others are archived Facebook posts from U.S. President Donald Trump about trade tariffs. A large portion of the data appears to have been extracted from the business information website Crunchbase and serves as a Rolodex of social-media accounts and contact information for people in all sorts of occupations, from tech executives to university professors. Roughly 70 per cent of the people captured in the data are men.

The database appears to have a special focus on mayors of Western Canadian towns, as well as academics and bureaucrats who focus on international relations.

However, the effort is broader than it is deep.

Jeremy Kirk, an information security analyst who said he gained independent access to the database earlier this year, said he didnt see any sign that it was a tool of an intelligence service.

This is data that anyone could find through a Google search. So far, none of the data has been linked to a non-public data source. As it stands, it doesnt represent a threat to any country, said Mr. Kirk, who is the executive editor of the Australia-based Information Security Media Group. But people should be mindful of what they post publicly on the internet, as it could be collected by other countries for commercial gain or intelligence purposes.

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The vast majority of the files contain little more than what can be found about the individuals on social-media websites such as Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn. If the person of interest has a police record, links are included to newspaper stories about their cases.

The mass scraping of data contravenes Facebooks policies, spokeswoman Liz Bourgeois said. We have banned Shenzhen Zhenhua Data Technology from our platform and sent a cease and desist letter ordering them to stop, she said. LinkedIn does not permit the use of any software that scrapes or copies information from LinkedIn, spokesperson Billy Huang said. If any violation of our user agreement is uncovered or reported, we investigate and take necessary steps to protect our members' information.

The database also contains a shorter list of 3,767 Canadians who have been assigned a grade of 1, 2 or 3. Those assigned a 1 appear to be people of direct influence, such as mayors, MPs or senior civil servants, while those assigned a 2 are often relatives of people in power, such as Mr. Trudeaus daughter and Ms. Frys son. Those assigned a grade of 3 often have criminal convictions, mostly for economic crimes.

Dozens of current and former MPs dot the list, including new Conservative Party Leader Erin OToole, whose file includes a link to the web page of his official parliamentary profile and, like most, a seven-digit ID number.

Others with files assigned a grade of 1 include senior bureaucrats at the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency, the Treasury Board, the Transportation Safety Board, Export Development Canada even the Office of the Privacy Commissioner.

The justice system appears to be another focus of the database, which contains entries on judges up to and including current and former members of the Supreme Court of Canada.

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Notable individuals assigned a grade of 3 include former theatre impresario Garth Drabinsky, who was convicted of fraud in 2009, former SNC-Lavalin executive Riadh Ben Aissa, who pleaded guilty to corruption charges in Switzerland before testifying against his superiors in Canada, and Nicola Iammarrone, a former Canada Revenue Agency auditor who pleaded guilty to taking bribes.

It is unclear how often the database is updated, as several names on the list appear to correspond with those of prominent Canadians who have died, in some cases many years ago.

Entries about Canadian criminals feature prominently. The database lists 198 people it says are associated with narcotics, 178 with conspiracy, 162 with fraud and 100 with money laundering. A handful of people are mentioned multiple times, including Gilles Vaillancourt, the former Laval, Que., mayor jailed in 2016 on fraud charges; Amin Mohamed Durrani, jailed after being arrested in the 2006 Toronto anti-terrorism sweep; and Michael Witen, an accountant who was found guilty of defrauding the federal government.

Zhenhua appears to be a company hoovering up open-source intelligence, and one of the things where there is a lot of open-source intelligence is around criminal records and court records, said Garrett Graff, co-author of Dawn of the Code War: Americas Battle Against Russia, China, and the Rising Global Cyber Threat.

According to database timestamps, all of the Canadian entries analyzed by The Globe were collected in mid-to-late 2018.

Data collection on this scale is not without precedent. The internet made collecting massive amounts of general-purpose data infinitely easier, giving rise to data brokers. Today these companies sell datasets ranging from credit-card purchasing histories to cellphone geolocation data, and their clients rely on the information for everything from tailoring advertising campaigns to calculating credit scores.

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But other evidence points to Chinese players attempting to take in large amounts of data. A series of data breaches between 2013 and 2018 attributed to Chinese hackers stole personal information from Marriott hotels, the United States Office of Personnel Management and health insurer Anthem. China routinely denies involvement in hacking.

Each individual collection of data may be of limited value. But when you begin to layer these databases on top of one another, it provides an arguably unparallelled window into human targeting backgrounds, personal motivations, personal weaknesses and provides a roadmap for influencing people, Mr. Graff said.

Zhenhuas data is structured in a way similar to that of Factiva, a research tool from Dow Jones that also catalogues influential people around the world. In fact, the woman at the Zhenhua office likened the companys products to those of Dow Jones and Wind Information, a Chinese provider.

Some foreign software companies are able to obtain content such as videos, text and music from social media posts. What we can do is to get them all at once, she said. The company describes OKIDB as tracking people, institutions, connections and relationships. The people include global leaders and core figures in the fields of military, politics, business, science and technology, media, civil organizations and the like.

Zhenhuas clients are in government, the military, universities and academic institutes, the woman at the company said, adding they can use the companys technology to conduct a more detailed analysis of a certain professor. She said the company is not merely a technology provider, as its employees actively work with customers and are based in cities across China, including Nanjing and Wuhan.

Western intelligence services now estimate that China has collected personally identifiable information on 80 per cent of the U.S. population, said Nicholas Eftimiades, a former senior U.S. intelligence officer and China expert who recently published Chinese Espionage: Operations and Tactics. For a company like Zhenhua, applying artificial intelligence tools to a trove of social-media data can help its customers attain their goals locally, regionally, nationally or commercially, he said.

Youre talking about the ability to influence academics, political leaders ranging from mayors up through senior leaders in a government. Its about influencing them to serve the Chinese Communist Partys desires, their goals.

Online, Zhenhua stresses its military connections. On LinkedIn posts, a senior R&D engineer describes working on a social media cultivation system, and military deployment simulation demonstration system, while a product sales manager discusses mining military customers' business needs for overseas data. A job posting seeks a candidate that can manage sales and focus management systems at the direction of the Party, government, and military.

Zhenhua also lists a series of corporate partners with ties to the security establishment. Wenge Group uses big data and artificial intelligence to aid smart law enforcement. LSSEC Tech provides encryption tools and IT equipment to national security and military customers and has trained its employees to keep secrets on weaponry research. GTCOM sifts social media to spot the development of heated public opinion, equipping authorities to minimize the probability of group incidents. TRS lists the police and the Communist Party as customers for software services that include online relationship mining, a public opinion management system and a crystal ball intelligence analysis platform. CHRTC provides urban governance products to the countrys security apparatus.

Zhenhua itself has been granted 10 software patents, Chinese records show, for systems that include searching global think tanks, monitoring personnel appointments and removals around the world, gathering real-time telecommunications content and social-media account simulation. The latter appears to describe a technology to teach a computerized system to better mimic humans on social media.

The ultimate intent of this sort of thing is to get attention, to stimulate phony online traffic, said Wu Fei, director of the AI Research Centre at Zhejiang University. When people see content that has already received thousands of likes or comments, the majority of which may be created and stimulated by the system they would immediately be interested.

Zhenhua said on its website that its system manages multiple social-media accounts belonging to virtual humans bots. When an assigned task is received, the user can select all social media accounts or part of them to execute the assigned instructions.

Such tools can be used by companies to promote products. But Zhenhua has explained how they could also hold military value.

The company has published extensively on Number 99 Institute, a blog account on the WeChat messaging app. Its articles reveal an interest in the structure and hierarchy of U.S. intelligence agencies, as well as in future forms of conflict. One, which was also posted to the Zhenhua website, describes social media as important tools for hybrid warfare, explaining how the manipulation of public opinion through social media can be a cost-effective and powerful way to prevail in battle. Social media can manipulate reality and weaken a countrys administrative, social, military or economic power, the company wrote. It can also lead to internal conflicts, social polarization and radicalization in a country.

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Chinese firm amasses trove of open-source data on influential Canadians - The Globe and Mail

NVIDIA GeForce Now quietly starts working on Linux as the Avengers come to play – Android Central

If you use or have been following NVIDIA GeForce Now, the cloud gaming platform that delivers PC titles you already own from sources such as Steam and Epic Games to a multitude of devices, the latest development seems to have emerged silently. Spotted by the team at GamingonLinux, users of Linux can now, it seems, access GeForce Now in either Chromium of Google Chrome.

Indeed, previously this tactic involved fudging user agents to make GeForce Now believe you were on a Chromebook, following the launch of the web client for Google's laptops. And it works just fine, I logged in and played some games with no issues on Ubuntu in both browsers. And just to double check, Firefox still shows an incompatible device error.

So, if you've been waiting on Linux support for GeForce Now, definitely go check it out. It also means the platform is usable now on all major desktop operating systems. Mobile access is currently limited to Android.

Along with this bit of good news NVIDIA also added its regular weekly slew of new games to the GeForce Now library, and while it's a smaller week in numbers, the headline act is a big hitter. Earth's Mightiest Heroes join GeForce Now as Marvel's Avengers joins the service, alongside Stick it to the Man, ULTRAKILL and Zero Escape: The Nonary Games.

Other interesting GeForce Now news includes work of Fortnite with RTX enhancements coming to GeForce Now for Founders members in the weeks after it launches on PC. Buyers of a new NVIDIA RTX 30 Series graphics card can also get a year's access to GeForce Now bundled in along with a free copy of Ubisoft's forthcoming title, Watch Dogs: Legion. Not too shabby at all.

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NVIDIA GeForce Now quietly starts working on Linux as the Avengers come to play - Android Central