Cryptocurrency This Week: YouTube Removes Crypto Videos; Russia Bomb Threats Over A Bitcoin Fraud And More – Inc42 Media

Malls and courts in St Petersburg were evacuated over a wave of bomb threats related to a Bitcoin fraud

Bitcoin marks 100% growth this year

After Indians lost billions in Bitcoin-based MLM schemes, Kenyans lose KES 2.7 Bn ($27 Mn) In NuruCoin scam

As 2019 comes to an end, when compared to 2018, the year has been better for cryptocurrencies especially Bitcoin in multiple ways despite multiple scams through the year and cases of fraud involving cryptocurrency. Bitcoin started the year at around $3.6K and went on attain, if not the all-time $19.5K, $14K on July 10, this year.

At the time of writing the cryptocurrency is trading at $7.3K, and if the price remains so, Bitcoin will exit the year, marking over 100% growth, this year.

10 years and on, while the dark knight of the dark web, remains the undisputed king among all the cryptocurrencies, stable coins, according to many, may beat Bitcoin in the near future.

Can Facebooks Libra whose unveiling created a lot of buzz this year be that stable coin? Facebooks Libra is slated for July 15 release. However, for Libra to rise to the challenge, first needs to get approval from regulatory authorities across the world which looking at the current scenario may not be easier as Facebooks founder Mark Zuckerberg might have thought.

Barring Libra which will be controlled by Libra Association, cryptocurrencies, based on public blockchains, have been known for their democratic approach. However, we are also aware of how big whales and Ripple developers have influenced various cryptocurrencies and Ripple tokens in the past.

According to a Chinese research report, about 45,000 BTC ($302 Mn) and 800,000 ETH ($102 Mn) were sent by steering pockets of PlusToken to individual addresses that are owned by the frauds themselves. And as a result, 20,000 BTC which is worth over $134 Mn is about to be disposed of. Freezing such large amount of cryptocurrencies that were obtained inappropriately is capable of bringing down the costs of cryptocurrency, said the report.

Last week, Ripple raised Series C funding worth $200 Mn. While the company will use this fund to improve its global payments and to broaden the utility of the digital asset XRP and the XRP Ledger, Tone Vays, a former Wall Street trader and VP of JP Morgan Chase has a starkly different view. In an interview, Vays stated, I think XRP should be in very serious trouble. I want to understand why Ripple is doing a fundraise the Ripple token now more or less act as a security of the Ripple corporation. And I think the people who created it should be held accountable. Everything about Ripple token is bad.

I usually dont like people getting arrested, but if the senior management of Ripple gets arrested Ill actually be happy. Vays

On December 24, VC Chris Dunn who has 210K subscribers on Youtube complained on Twitter that most of his videos pertaining to cryptocurrencies have been taken down by Youtube. He tweeted,

YouTube just removed most of my crypto videos citing harmful or dangerous content and sale of regulated goods,' Dunn wrote, adding hes been making videos on the platform for 10 years and built up 200,000 subs and 7 million views.

Soon it appeared that not only Dunn but a large number of other YouTubers were also affected by the takedowns. Cryptopotate has compiled the list of affected Youtubers.

Responding to the criticism, a Youtube spokesperson stated that the videos were taken down by mistake. The spokesperson said,

With the massive volume of videos on our site, sometimes we make the wrong call. When its brought to our attention that a video has been removed mistakenly, we act quickly to reinstate it. We also offer uploaders the ability to appeal removals and we will re-review the content.

Dunn, in another tweet, has now confirmed that all his videos have been reinstated.

NuruCoin, a Kenyan cryptocurrency which became quite popular in 2018 through its multi-level-marketing has suddenly shut its shop after raising KES 2.7 Bn ($27 Mn) from investors.

According to reports, approximately 11K investors had participated in NuruCoin initial coin offering which was organised by ChurchBlaze. All the ChurchBlaze offices across the above towns have been closed including their main office in a Nairobi suburb, according to reports.

Blockchain Association Kenya along with other organisations has now released a joint statement in order to raise awareness about cryptocurrencies and its differences from Ponzi schemes.

Earlier this week, schools, courts and malls in Russias largest city St Petersburg were evacuated over bomb threats emails screenshots circulated in Russian News Media. Sent from anonymous addresses, senders claimed to had planted bombs across various places and demanded $870K worth of Bitcoin, supposedly stolen from the defunct cryptocurrency exchange WEX, reported Coindesk.

Its not the first time such emails were circulated, in fact since November, there has been a wave of similar email threats with senders accusing Russian businessman Konstantin Malofeyev of Bitcoin fraud. Malofeyev is reportedly under international sanctions over the Ukraine conflict. According to allegations, Malofeyev had stolen $120 Bitcoins from WEX, a now-defunct cryptocurrency exchange.

Message from our partner

More:
Cryptocurrency This Week: YouTube Removes Crypto Videos; Russia Bomb Threats Over A Bitcoin Fraud And More - Inc42 Media

Is There an Ongoing Covert War against Cryptocurrency? – Cryptocurrency Regulation – Altcoin Buzz

Google has announced the removal of Metamask, a well known Dapp browser from its app store.

Something strange is happening in the cryptocurrency world. Recently,Metamask made the announcement about its removal via an official tweet on Thursday, December 26, 2019. According to it, the Web3 browser referred to Googles action as uncalled for and unfair.

The browser disclosed that Google cited its anti-mining regulation as the reason for the delisting. Metamask, however, pointed out that it does not carry out mining operations.

Further adding that this action by Google is just a means to curtail awareness and prevent the adoption of Web3 browsers. The exchange also cited a similar incident last year, where Google also temporary delisted its chrome browser extension.

The Metamask browser contains a cryptocurrency wallet. One which allows users to store and utilize digital assets as well as operate ethereum based Dapps. This is made possible by browser extensions for desktop computers. While on smartphones, the Web3 browser makes use of native apps.

One very important feature of Web3 technology is its decentralization. A system where users are in charge of its control. Though this system comes with a few disadvantages, it is quite famous for its democratic nature. One school of thought sees it as the free evolution of the internet.

The digital asset industry has had a tough climb getting to where it is today. Many governmental and regulatory bodies have tried to keep a cap on this budding technology. Right now it seems their effort has gone a notch higher. That said, the popular video-sharing platform YouTube seems to have joined the fight against cryptocurrency. Thus, the social media giant has suddenly deleted several crypto-related channels this week. Though the platform alleged that this was a mistake and has begun to put them back up.

Now Google Chrome has without prior notice removed Metamask from its app store. This leaves us wondering if theres a secret war against crypto going on.

See original here:
Is There an Ongoing Covert War against Cryptocurrency? - Cryptocurrency Regulation - Altcoin Buzz

Reporters Without Borders demands immediate release of Julian Assange – Washington Examiner

Reporters Without Borders is "alarmed" by WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange's health and demanded his immediate release.

The international nonprofit organization, previously known as Reporters Sans Frontieres, also said the United States "should cease" its plans to charge Assange under the Espionage Act in a statement published Friday.

"We are alarmed by the current state of Julian Assanges health, and call for his immediate release on humanitarian grounds," said RSF secretary-general Christophe Deloire. "Assange is being targeted by the US for his journalistic-like activities, which sets a dangerous precedent for press freedom. The US should cease its persecution of Assange and drop the charges under the Espionage Act without further delay.

Assange, 48, has been a wanted man since his website WikiLeaks published Iraq War logs in 2010 that showed there were no weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. The same year, Assange was accused of "rape, sexual molestation, and forceful coercion by Swedish officials.

In 2012, with U.S. officials hopeful of collecting Assange, Ecuadorian foreign minister Ricardo Patino granted Assange asylum in London's Ecuadorian embassy. The Swedish investigation was dropped nine years later, but the U.S. by then had a greater intention to collect the information leaker.

By 2018, the relationship between Ecuador and Assange had soured, and Ecuadorian President Lenin Moreno lashed out against Assange, labeling the Australian a "spoiled brat" before cutting off Assange's internet connection inside the embassy. In April, British officials dragged Assange out the embassy.

In June 2019, the U.S. Department of Justice requested that Assange be extradited on grounds that he "actively solicited United States classified information, including by publishing a list of Most Wanted Leaks that sought, among other things, classified documents."

Despite the complexity of the proceedings against him led by the worlds most powerful Government, Mr. Assanges access to legal counsel and documents has been severely obstructed, thus effectively undermining his most fundamental right to prepare his defence, said UN special rapporteur on torture Nils Melzer in November.

Several clinicians who visited Assange in early 2018 wrote an opinion piece in the Guardian stating that Assange "badly needs care but he cant get it."

The rest is here:
Reporters Without Borders demands immediate release of Julian Assange - Washington Examiner

A picture and its story: Photographers share their experiences capturing news images in 2019 – The Independent

From the protests convulsing Hong Kong to that exchange between US first lady Melania Trump and Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau, Reuters photographers covered the biggest news stories of 2019, as well as capturing some the moments that went viral.

Beyond the images themselves, these are the inside stories of the men and women behind the lens and their experiences in the line of duty. Below is a selection of some exceptional 2019 Reuters pictures along with the stories of how they came to be, directly from the photographers who took them.

Jose Luis Gonzalez: Ledy Perez fell to her haunches, a clenched hand covering her face as she wept, an arm clutching her 6-year old son, who glared defiantly at the Mexican National Guard soldier blocking them from crossing the Rio Grande into the United States.

Sharing the full story, not just the headlines

I captured the plight of this mother and son, who had travelled 1,500 miles from Guatemala to the border city of Ciudad Juarez, only to be stopped mere feet from the US.

The woman begged and pleaded with the National Guard to let them cross to a better future for Anthony Diaz. The soldier, dressed in desert fatigues, an assault rifle slung over his shoulder, only said he was following orders. Her face was a small reflection of all migrants suffering.

One of several images Reuters published, this photo was picked up widely on social media. It has thrown into the spotlight the role Mexicos militarised National Guard police force is playing in containing migration.

The soldier displayed no overt aggression during the nine-minute encounter with Ms Perez and her son. Still, the power dynamics apparent in the image resonated with criticism of the treatment migrants are receiving.

Former Mexican President Felipe Calderon, who retweeted my picture after it was posted by a former Mexican ambassador to the United States wrote: What a pity, Mexico should never have accepted this.

Seizing the opportunity when the soldier glanced away, Ms Perez lunged into the shrubs growing on the side of the river bank, pulling her son with her. They quickly ran across to the other side of the river and out of the guardsmens jurisdiction, where USCustoms and Border Protection agents took them into custody.

Dakar rally is a gruelling endurance race through Peru (Reuters)

Carlos Jasso: The Dakar Rally is a race like no other, a two-week long endurance challenge across Peru in some of the harshest terrain and conditions on Earth. The event spanned thousands of kilometres with motorcycles, cars and trucks racing across vast deserts and towering dunes, from the Andes to the shores of the Pacific Ocean.

As a photographer, I had good access with the helicopter. I wore a harness attached to the helicopter, with the door open in order to shoot.

I like the abstract images best the detail created by a motorcycle accelerating, the sand thrown up and combined with beautiful light so that it looks almost like a wave. You must have the camera exposures pre-set to be ready for the action, but the light is constantly shifting as clouds move across the sky. You point the camera and expose for the highlights and hope the vehicle comes into the frame and drives between the shadows of the clouds.

You start reading the dunes ahead of reaching them. Now its beautiful golden light, Im going to shoot a landscape. Or Now there are great shadows, Im going to play with that.

Everything can change so quickly. Every choice you make is a gamble the exposure you set, the dune you choose to climb.

Twelve-year-old Mohammadwas injured during a protest on the Gaza border (Reuters)

Ibraheem Abu Mustafa: Two weeks after a tear gas canister struck Mohammad An-Najjars right eye during a Gaza border protest, the 12-year-old boy learned he will never see through it again. The doctor who treated him said his retina was damaged beyond repair in the incident, the aftermath of which I captured on camera.

It had been one of the quietest weeks in nine months of Gaza border protests, when Mohammad and his friends went to their nearest border protest site, as they often did on the weekend. He said he did not take part in throwing stones or rolling burning tyres.

When I arrived on the scene, I took up position at what felt like a safe distance. As the clashes between Gaza protesters and Israeli troops intensified, I switched between lenses for distance shots and close-ups and began taking images. Some protesters covered their faces with T-shirts to protect themselves against tear gas as others ran away.

The first I knew that something happened was when people began shouting, An injury, an injury. I continued to shoot pictures. A man was carrying a boy in his arms, and blood was coming from the boys eye as he screamed. I was muttering to myself in shock even as I continued to shoot. I knew he had lost an eye.

His mother, Lamia Abu Harb, hopes that he will be permitted to cross through checkpoints into Israel for medical treatment beyond what Gaza can offer.

An attack on a hotel complex in Nairobi in January left 21 people dead (Reuters)

Baz Ratner: I dumped my motorbike next to the front gate of the upmarket Dusit hotel complex in Nairobi. I entered the first building with armed police. A boobytrap hand grenade rolled out from behind a door. Luckily it did not explode.

Kenyas paramilitary General Services Unit ran in through the front gate and I ran with them to the second building. The GSU started to help civilians from the first floor to safety. While the GSU was escorting one of these groups, officer Ali Kombo formed a line of civilians behind him. When he got in front of the hotel, he pointed his rifle at the hotel where the militants were holed up. I positioned myself between the group and a wall and took a few pictures. His face would later be splashed all over local media, making him a national hero.

I managed to stay inside the building even though other journalists were cleared out. There were a few foreign security operators wearing body armour as was I so maybe I blended in. If someone agreed to speak to a journalist, Id call the office and let them do the interview. I also collected phone numbers we were able to use later to reconstruct the attack. People were speaking freely to me because I had a spare battery pack, and everyone needed to charge their phones including the police. It took all night to free the trapped civilians.

Children in Gaza play Jews and Arabs (Reuters)

Dylan Martinez: We have a great team of photographers in Gaza whose main task is to photograph the clashes between Israel and Gaza. My remit was to do pretty much anything but that.

It was in the lead-up to the one-year anniversary of the Gaza border protests, which had opened a deadly new front in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, that I visited Gaza for the first time. My assignment was to use my unfamiliar eyes to record life beyond the daily drumbeat of violence in the blockaded Palestinian territory.

Accompanied by a Reuters assistant photographer from Gaza City, I travelled the strip, photographing it at every hour of the day and night over a 10-day period. One of the most powerful scenes was a patch of waste land between a school and a mosque where children were playing. These kids were burning some cardboard, they were in trenches and throwing sand balls, so they werent hurting each other. I asked them what they were doing, and they said, We are playing Jews and Arabs. That image will stay with me forever.

Is this Kim Jong-uns Mona Lisa smile? (Reuters)

Athit Perawongmetha: I was assigned to cover Kim Jong-uns arrival by train in Dong Dang the border town between Vietnam and China. I covered the North Korean leaders first nuclear summit with Donald Trump in Singapore, so I knew access would be difficult.

I arrived in Dong Dang two days before the arrival of Mr Kim and preparations were tricky undercover police officers stopped me every time I pulled out my camera. One day before his arrival I, along with the worlds media, began negotiating with media liaison officers about staking out the best spots. No one had approval from security yet.

We positioned ourselves 70 metres opposite the gate of the train station. Producers sent their assistants to buy ladders. I rushed back to my hotel and borrowed one but Japans and Koreas were higher. By the afternoon no one dared abandon their spot. His expected arrival was early morning, so we camped outside the Dong Dang train station in the cold next to a wall of ladders.

When he arrived, Mr Kimshook hands with Vietnamese delegates and waved to the media as he exited the train station. The level of access was unprecedented. After he got into his limousine, I no longer had a good vantage point from my ladder, so I instinctively ran to the side of his car which was surrounded by bodyguards. Just before the window closed, I captured his expression. I called it Kim Jong-uns Mona Lisa smile.

Twenty people, mostly children, were killed when a building collapsed in Lagos (Reuters)

Temilade Adelaja: The boy lay wide-eyed on a bed of outstretched arms. The men who carried him, and others looking on, cheered at the sight of the youngster who seconds earlier had been pulled from the rubble of a four-storey building that collapsed in Lagos.

Nine-year-old Ademola Ayanbola had been in a classroom on the top floor. He emerged with his face caked in white dust from the rubble and a bloody graze on the side of his head. His eyes were open, so we knew he was alive. He wasnt shouting or crying. He was so calm. People were shouting: Theres a child. The men who surrounded him were rescue workers, residents and area boys youths who roam parts of Lagos in gangs.

The boys father, Francis Ayanbola, had feared he would never see his son alive again. When I got there everything was flat, he said. I was just crying. I was expecting the death of my son. A friend eventually called Mr Ayanbola to tell him his child was being treated at a hospital. When I finally held my son, I was so excited, I was so happy. It wasnt my sons dead body that I would have to carry, he said.

It had been disembowelled, and it was now a symbol of Congos empty forests (Reuters)

Thomas Nicolon: I slept overnight with the poachers in the forest. The sun had risen above the canopy; there was still fog over the river and the hunters were packing their dugout canoes ready to leave.

That day we would go back to the city of Mbandaka after spending four days in the rainforest hunting bushmeat. The monkey that had been killed the day before was hanging from a tree above the water, in order to prevent ants from eating it. Its baby had been crying all night. They would eat it a few hours later.

I grabbed my camera and got closer to the dead monkey. I wanted to show the reality of hunting. Hours earlier the monkey had been swinging from branch to branch, high up in the trees, a symbol of Congos rich biodiversity. By morning it was just flesh. It had been disembowelled, and was now a symbol of Congos empty forests.

Julian Assange was turned over by Ecuador after months of souring relations with embassy staff (Reuters)

Hannah McKay: We had been waiting for Julian Assange to leave the Ecuadorian embassy for seven years. Every now and then there would be a rumour that he was leaving and we would scramble to Knightsbridge, but nothing.

When the news broke that Assange had been taken into custody I was in Downing Street. I rushed to Westminster Magistrates Court in case he was taken there. A Reuters colleague got an exclusive image of him leaving the police station, and let me know that Assange would be in the second van in the convoy.

When the police vans arrived it was pandemonium. The photographers and TV crews surged forward as police tried to hold us back. One officer lunged towards me. I darted to the left and shot a few frames. To be honest, I was quite surprised I got the shot.

Shooting through tinted glass is a bit of a skill. You had to jam your lens as close to the window of the moving vehicle as possible and fire the flash to illuminate through the glass. Ive been told that the picture is reminiscent of an oil painting. Thats partly due to the colour of the tinted window, and partly because the image isnt entirely sharp!

Notre Dames spire collapsed during the blaze (Reuters)

Benoit Tessier: I was covering Vivendis AGM when I was directed to Notre Dame because it was on fire. When I arrived, this was the first image I saw the cathedral going up in smoke.

I could not have imagined the fire would be so big or spread so quickly. It is difficult to find your way on the crowded sidewalks around the cathedral. This image was taken with a 24-70mm lens at about 400m from the scene.

Thousands of Parisians and tourists from around the world came to see the fire with their own eyes. I remember two emotional young women in shock standing next to me. We couldnt even imagine the damage inside at that stage. The phone network was saturated and sending a photo was a nightmare. It was an urban landscape that was being transformed by this partial destruction. A symbol burned that day.

Journalist Gregory Jaimes was injured during protests in Caracas Reuters)

Manaure Quintero: The May Day protest in Caracas started with a failed coup attempt by the opposition leader. The day passed filled with teargas, rubber bullets, stones, Molotov cocktails and live bullets.

In the afternoon officials detained a protester carrying a handmade mortar. We ran towards the detained protestor to photograph him. The national guard told us to move away but a local TV journalist, Gregory Jaimes, didnt heed the warning. At that point, the national guard took the protestors device, activated it and threw it at Gregorys feet.

When the explosion occurred, he didnt realise his jaw had been hit by shrapnel until he spit blood inside his gas mask. Many journalists, including me, ran towards him to help. Several colleagues carried him and a dozen more stayed close by. It was only at that point that I took my camera and shot several frames. Fortunately, he recovered.

Yellow Vest protesters were joined by anarchists on May Day (Reuters)

Gonzalo Fuentes: The May Day labour union march in Paris was joined by the Yellow Vest protestors and the Black Bloc anti-globalisation anarchists who wore black clothes and covered their faces.

Following several months of Yellow Vest demonstrations, the challenge was to avoid an image repeat. I walked in the march until I identified a small group of Black Bloc who were trying to blend in. Walking next to them for a while allowed me to feel those little tensions that usually precede a clash.

A couple of hours later I followed a policetactical unit on the move and decided to stay close to them which led me to a confrontation. However, the crowd suddenly moved, and I found myself standing between the police and the demonstrators at the exact moment an officer pointed a teargas canister to disperse activists.

I was there with my camera pointing at him and without thinking I took the picture. Luckily the police officer never fired his teargas canister as the demonstrator was arrested. It wasnt until I saw the image in my camera that I realised I was standing too close to the clash. As photojournalists we try to blend in with the crowd to work. But protestors do this too pretending to be media by using cameras to approach the police.

Farage was a victim of milkshaking out on the campaign trail (Reuters)

Scott Heppell: I was assigned to cover Nigel Farage doing a routine meet and greet in Newcastle upon Tyne. We didnt know it would go down in the history books as the day he got milkshaked.

A reporter had jokingly said before the event started that he had been in touch with the fast food shops to ask if milkshakes were available. At first, nobody knew what had been thrown at Farage. There was chaos as his handlers tried to whisk Farage away as quickly as possible. He was bundled into a nearby taxi and his city visit cut short.

I was lucky enough have been using a 16-35mm lens to catch the reaction on Farages face and his security grabbing hold of the man who had thrown the milkshake.

Reuters

Continued here:
A picture and its story: Photographers share their experiences capturing news images in 2019 - The Independent

Pictures of the year 2019: From the Notre Dame fire to the birth of Harry and Meghan’s first child Archie – Evening Standard

The latest headlines in your inbox

From the devastating fire in Notre Dame to the joyful birth of royal baby Archie, 2019 has been a year full of highs and lows.

And with the help of the world's best photographers, the Standard has captured the key events of the last 12 months.

There have been iconic sporting moments, including tennis star Andy Murray's retirement and England's epic Cricket World Cup victory.

January kicked off the year with the sad news of Argentinian footballer Emiliano Sala's tragic death in a plane crash over the English channel.

In April, WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange was dragged from the Ecuadorian embassy, where he had sought refuge since 2012, by British authorities.

Prince Harry and his wife Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, holding their son Archie, meet Archbishop Desmond Tutu at the Desmond & Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation in Cape Town, South Africa

Reuters

Archbishop Desmond Tutu kisses Archie Mountbatten-Windsor on the head as he is held by his mother, Meghan, Duchess of Sussex during a visit to the Desmond & Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation during their royal tour of South Africa

Getty Images

Prince Harry and his wife Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, holding their son Archie, meet Archbishop Desmond Tutu at the Desmond & Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation in Cape Town, South Africa

Reuters

The Duchess of Sussex holds her son Archie during a meeting with Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Mrs Tutu at their legacy foundation in cape Town, on day three of their tour of Africa

PA

Prince Harry and his wife Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, holding their son Archie, meet Archbishop Desmond Tutu (not pictured) at the Desmond & Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation in Cape Town, South Africa

PA

Prince Harry and his wife Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, holding their son Archie, meet Archbishop Desmond Tutu (not pictured) at the Desmond & Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation in Cape Town, South Africa

PA

Prince Harry and his wife Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, holding their son Archie, meet Archbishop Desmond Tutu (not pictured) at the Desmond & Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation in Cape Town, South Africa

Reuters

Prince Harry and his wife Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, holding their son Archie, meet Archbishop Desmond Tutu (not pictured) at the Desmond & Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation in Cape Town, South Africa

PA

Prince Harry and his wife Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, holding their son Archie, meet Archbishop Desmond Tutu at the Desmond & Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation in Cape Town, South Afric

Reuters

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex along with their son Archie meet with Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Mrs Tutu at their legacy foundation in Cape Town

PA

Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, holding her son Archie, meets Archbishop Desmond Tutu at the Desmond & Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation in Cape Town

Reuters

Sky News

@sussexroyal

Prince Harry and his wife Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, holding their son Archie, meet Archbishop Desmond Tutu at the Desmond & Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation in Cape Town

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex along with their son Archie meet with Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Mrs Tutu at their legacy founda

Prince Harry and his wife Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, holding her son Archie, meet Archbishop Desmond Tutu and his daughter Thandeka at the Desmond & Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation in Cape Town, South Africa

Reuters

Prince Harry and his wife Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, holding her son Archie, meet Archbishop Desmond Tutu and his daughter Thandeka at the Desmond & Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation in Cape Town, South Africa

Reuters

Sky News

Sky News

@sussexroyal

@sussexroyal

@sussexroyal

@sussexroyal

@sussexroyal

@sussexroyal

@sussexroyal

@sussexroyal

@sussexroyal

Sky News

Prince Harry and his wife Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, holding their son Archie, meet Archbishop Desmond Tutu at the Desmond & Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation in Cape Town, South Africa

Reuters

Archbishop Desmond Tutu kisses Archie Mountbatten-Windsor on the head as he is held by his mother, Meghan, Duchess of Sussex during a visit to the Desmond & Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation during their royal tour of South Africa

Getty Images

Prince Harry and his wife Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, holding their son Archie, meet Archbishop Desmond Tutu at the Desmond & Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation in Cape Town, South Africa

Reuters

The Duchess of Sussex holds her son Archie during a meeting with Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Mrs Tutu at their legacy foundation in cape Town, on day three of their tour of Africa

PA

Prince Harry and his wife Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, holding their son Archie, meet Archbishop Desmond Tutu (not pictured) at the Desmond & Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation in Cape Town, South Africa

PA

Prince Harry and his wife Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, holding their son Archie, meet Archbishop Desmond Tutu (not pictured) at the Desmond & Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation in Cape Town, South Africa

PA

Prince Harry and his wife Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, holding their son Archie, meet Archbishop Desmond Tutu (not pictured) at the Desmond & Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation in Cape Town, South Africa

Reuters

Prince Harry and his wife Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, holding their son Archie, meet Archbishop Desmond Tutu (not pictured) at the Desmond & Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation in Cape Town, South Africa

PA

Prince Harry and his wife Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, holding their son Archie, meet Archbishop Desmond Tutu at the Desmond & Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation in Cape Town, South Afric

Reuters

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex along with their son Archie meet with Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Mrs Tutu at their legacy foundation in Cape Town

PA

Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, holding her son Archie, meets Archbishop Desmond Tutu at the Desmond & Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation in Cape Town

Reuters

Sky News

@sussexroyal

Prince Harry and his wife Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, holding their son Archie, meet Archbishop Desmond Tutu at the Desmond & Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation in Cape Town

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex along with their son Archie meet with Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Mrs Tutu at their legacy founda

Prince Harry and his wife Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, holding her son Archie, meet Archbishop Desmond Tutu and his daughter Thandeka at the Desmond & Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation in Cape Town, South Africa

Reuters

Prince Harry and his wife Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, holding her son Archie, meet Archbishop Desmond Tutu and his daughter Thandeka at the Desmond & Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation in Cape Town, South Africa

Reuters

Sky News

Sky News

@sussexroyal

@sussexroyal

@sussexroyal

@sussexroyal

@sussexroyal

@sussexroyal

@sussexroyal

@sussexroyal

@sussexroyal

Sky News

Royal fans worldwide were treated to the first photo of newborn Archie Windsor, the first child of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex.

And as the climate change furore reached new heights, there was no shortage of images from Extinction Rebellion protests which dominated London and made headlines around the world as millions of activists took to the streets.

Extinction Rebellion at Waterloo Road opposite the Old Vic

Jeremy Selwyn

Police move in to make arrests at Extinction Rebellion protest at London Concrete plant in Bow

Edward Hennessy/Evening Standard

Extinction Rebellion protest at London Concrete plant in Bow

Edward Hennessy/Evening Standard

Extinction Rebellion protest at London Concrete plant in Bow

Edward Hennessy/Evening Standard

Go here to see the original:
Pictures of the year 2019: From the Notre Dame fire to the birth of Harry and Meghan's first child Archie - Evening Standard

New Internationalist’s top reads in 2019 – New Internationalist

27 December 2019

The year felt gloomy, long and agonizing, but there were reasons to have hope. We lookback at our coverage of 2019, and what our readers were most interested in.

It has not been a great year for global politics. Climate change continued to cause disaster across the world throughout 2019 wildfires have battered the earth while glaciers and permafrost melt, pushing more and more species to the brink of extinction.

At the same time, far-right populist strongmen have continued their rise to power just as incessantly. 2019 was Bolsonaros first year in power in Brazil (can you believe there could be *three* more?) and the Amazon burned at unprecedented speed; Indian voters rewarded Modi with a new term in office and he rewarded them by stripping millions of their citizenship; Salvinis policies caused unnecessary suffering to tens of thousands of refugees in Italy; and the UK voted in as Prime Minister a gleefully immoral narcissist who glories in his inability to tell the truth.

But theres cause for some optimism, with mass movements erupting in Chile and much of South America, Hong Kong and Algeria and with minor anti-Putin rallies now held even in Russia. Young people have also begun reclaiming their future, with the School Strikes for the climate booming across the world.

At New Internationalist, weve sought to bring fresh arguments, marginalized voices and new perspectives to the debate. Heres our countdown of what readers found most interesting on our pages:

When New Internationalist first contacted activist Isaac Rose, chair of the Manchester branch of Momentum, to ask his opinion of the Extinction Rebellion, he was sceptical. Extinction Rebellion have correctly recognized [how urgent climate action is], but their strategy will not work, he said at the time, arguing that the climate movement had to stop blocking bridges and should instead form an alliance with the labour. In this piece, Rose explains what made him change his mind about XR.

Extinction Rebellions masterstroke has been the way it used language. By focussing on terms such as extinction, climate emergency and earth systems breakdown and the demand of telling the truth, they have zoned in upon and overturned one of the key blockages to dealing with the crisis: consciousness of its urgency.

Read the full article.

Julian Assange faces up to 175 years of jail time if he is extradited to the US, with most of his charges criminalizing common practices in journalism and setting a dangerous precedent to target news organizations that hold governments to account. Even those who have spent years criticising Assange have recognized the danger his trial represents for democracies.

The indictments for which Assange is now imprisoned have nothing to do with Sweden, Russia, Trump or his cat. They are a straightforward attempt to prosecute a publisher for committing acts of journalism.

Read the full article.

On 23 October 2019, 39 people were found dead in the back refrigerated lorry in Essex, South East England, with media outlets reporting that the victims may have frozen to death in temperatures as low as -25C. Many have called the events a tragedy. But writer and researcher Jun Pang argues that this is just a way to dodge Britains responsibility for the deaths.

The conditions that produced these 39 deaths emerge from the same set of policies that deny asylum, justify indefinite immigration detention, charter deportation flights, and restrict migrants access to fundamental rights that is, the so-called Hostile Environment.

Read the full article.

The refugee crisis may seem like a distant memory but it is not. At least 12,500 refugees are still trapped indefinitely in Greek islands, living in ragged, overflowing tents and prevented from rebuilding their lives. In this article, Isabelle Merminod and Tim Baster look for a reason for the way things are.

The number of those arriving has seen a decline in recent years, but the policy of containing people on the islands rather than allowing them to settle on the mainland continues, multiplying the difficulties for those seeking protection in Europe.

Read the full article.

2019 was yet another year in which the climate emergency showed its strength. Wildfires ravaged California and Australia, while typhoons battered east Asia, Cyclone Idai submerged much of Mozambique under rising floods and Western Europe shattered its record-high temperatures ever recorded. Meanwhile, some billionaires have been observed building bunkers to escape a possible apocalypse.

The actions of rich preppers are a reminder that climate change is class war.

Read the full article.

Carlotta Dotto reports on Guangzhou, the Chinese city with the largest immigrant population. As many as 15,000 Africans have settled there, lured by business opportunities, reputable universities and low living costs.

While Europe is rejecting migrants, China is doing a lot for helping us.

Read the full article.

On 6 October 2019, the Trump administration ordered American troops to withdraw from northeastern Syria, also known as Rojava, where the US had been supporting its Kurdish allies. Turkey attacked the Kurds immediately. What is at stake in north-east Syria is more than the fate of the Kurdish people or even the fight against Isis: its a unique alternative to our current civilisation in crisis. A model that by its existence could help us imagine alternatives before its too late.

This is a blueprint for the kind of society that many of us have been campaigning for all our lives and yet it is the best-kept secret in the world.

Read the full article.

2019 was chaotic, confusing, infuriating. So we asked someone wiser than us to help us make sense of it. And the renowned Slovenian philosopher, sociologist and cultural critic unpacked what many of uscant get ourheads around: Donald Trump, the Lefts failures across the world, digital technologies.

I think a new world order is emerging. A rule that is ideologically and politically America First, Russia First, China First, Turkey First We have to move beyond this level. Its literally becoming a matter of survival.

Read the full article.

Lifestyle changes are no substitute for collective action. But as we begin to see glaciers melt, the Amazon burn and wildfires ravage not just Europe and California but Greenland, personal carbon-cutting has to be on the table for all of us. Its a powerful way to signal the climate emergency to those around us, move the needle on policy and set bigger cultural changes in motion.

Adjust your diet. Fly less, or better, stop.

Read the full article.

Our most-read piece of the year is a long, passionate article debunking the myths put forward by the New Optimists the comforting theories proposed by the likes of Bill Gates and Steven Pinker. They claim that the world has never been better: from global poverty to inequality between nations, all the indicators are showing progress. But Steven Pinker finds this is only true if you dont question the statistics you are fed.

We are actually doing worse than at any time in history, as our capacity to end poverty has grown rapidly, while poverty itself remains widespread. In moral terms, we have regressed. It doesnt have to be this way. We can change the rules of our global economy to make it fairer for the worlds majority.

Read the full article.

Patreon is a platform that enables us to offer more to our readership. With a new podcast, eBooks, tote bags and magazine subscriptions on offer,as well as early access to video and articles, were very excited about our Patreon! If youre not on board yet then check it out here.

Support us

View post:
New Internationalist's top reads in 2019 - New Internationalist

Medical opinion, torture and Assange – newagebd.net

Supporters of Wikileaks founder Julian Assange hold placards outside Westminster magistrates court in London on December 19. Agence France-Presse/Tolga Aakmen

Melzer, along with a medical team, attended to Assange on May 9 in Belmarsh, finding a man with all the symptoms that are typical of persons having been exposed to psychological torture for a prolonged period of time, writes Binoy Kampmark

ON NOVEMBER 27 this year, UN special rapporteur on torture, Nils Melzer, delivered an address to the German Bundestag outlining his approach to understanding the mental health of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange. These comprised two parts, the initial stage covering his diplomatic asylum in the Ecuadorean embassy, the second dealing with his formal detention in the United Kingdom at the hands of the UK legal and judicial system. The conclusion was a recapitulation of previous findings: that Assange has been subjected to a prolonged, state-sponsored effort in torture, nothing less than a targeting of his being.

Melzers address is an expansive portrait of incremental inter-state torment that led to Assanges confinement in a highly controlled environment within the Ecuadorean embassy for more than six years. There was the eventually justified fear that he would be sought by the United States in extradition proceedings. The Swedish authorities threw in their muddled lot between 2010 and 2019, attempting to nab Assange for rape claims despite not being able to produce enough evidence for an indictment, and which now, after almost a decade, has been silently closed for the third time based on precisely that recognition.

Then came the British contribution, consisting of encouragement to the Swedes by the Crown Prosecution Service that the investigation should not be closed, inspiring them not to get cold feet. (The cold feet eventually came.) The Ecuadorean contribution completed the four-piece set, with the coming to power of a pro-Washington Lenn Moreno. Embassy personnel in London were encouraged to make conditions less pleasant; surveillance operations were conducted on Assanges guests and meetings.

Melzer, along with a medical team, attended to Assange on May 9, 2019 in Belmarsh, finding a man with all the symptoms that are typical of persons having been exposed to psychological torture for a prolonged period of time. There was little doubt, in Melzers mind, that symptoms already measurable physically, neurologically and cognitively, had been shown.

These calls went unheeded. Melzer, in early November, accused the UK authorities of showing outright contempt for Assanges rights and integrity. Despite warnings issued by the rapporteur, the UK has not undertaken any measures of investigation, prevention and redress required under international law. Melzers prognosis was bleak. Unless the UK urgently changes course and alleviates his inhumane situation, Assanges continued exposure to arbitrariness and abuse may soon end up costing his life.

This point has been restated by Dr Stephen Frost, a chief figure of the dedicated outfit calling itself Doctors for Assange. We repeat that it is impossible to assess adequately let alone treat Assange in Belmarsh prison and that he must as a matter of urgency be moved to a university teaching hospital. When will the UK government listen to us?

The medical degrading of Assange has assumed ever greater importance, suggesting unwavering state complicity. On November 22, over 65 notable medical doctors sent the UK home secretary a note based on Melzers November 1 findings and Assanges state at the October 21 case management hearing at Westminster Magistrates Court. It is our opinion that Assange requires urgent expert medical assessment of both his physical and psychological state of health. Any medical treatment indicated should be administered in a properly equipped and expertly staffed university teaching hospital (tertiary care).

In a second open letter to the UK lord chancellor and secretary of state for justice dated December 4, the Doctors for Assange collective warned that the UKs refusal to take the required measures to protect Assanges rights, health and dignity appears [to] be reckless at best and deliberate at worst and, in both cases, unlawfully and unnecessarily exposes Assange to potentially irreversible risks.

The same grounds were reiterated in a December 16 letter to Australian foreign minister Marise Payne, with a curt reminder that she had an undeniable legal obligation to protect your citizen against the abuse of his fundamental rights, stemming from US efforts to extradite Assange for journalism and publishing that exposed US war crimes. In the event that Payne took no action on the matter, people would want to know what you [] did to prevent his death.

In the addendum to the open letter, further to reiterating the precarious state of Assanges health and medical status as a torture victim, the doctors elaborate on the circular cruelty facing the publisher. An individual deemed a victim of psychological torture cannot be adequately medically treated while continuing to be held under the very conditions constituting psychological torture, as is currently the case for Julian Assange. Appropriate medical treatment was hardly possible through a prison hospital ward.

A lesson in understanding mental torture is also proffered. Contrary to popular misconception, the injuries caused by psychological torture are real and extremely serious. The term psychological torture is not a synonym for mere hardship, suffering or distress.

At Assanges case management hearing on December 19, restrictions on medical opinion were again implemented; psychiatrist Marco Chiesa and psychologist David Morgan were prevented from attending. Both had been signatories to the spray of open letters. According to Morgan, he had hoped to provide some observations about Julian Assanges health, psychologically, and with my colleagues, physically. Instead, it transpired that access was denied, according to psychologist Lissa Johnson, despite members of the public offering to give up seats for them.

Cold-shouldering expert opinion can be counted as one of the weapons of the state in punishing whistleblowers and publishers. The State has always made it a bureaucratic imperative to sift the undesirable evidence from the apologetic message. Accepting Assanges condition would be tantamount to admission on the part of UK authorities, urged on by the United States, that intolerable, potentially martyring treatment, has been meted out to a publisher.

DissidentVoice.org, December 20. Binoy Kampmark was a Commonwealth Scholar at Selwyn College, Cambridge. He lectures at RMIT University, Melbourne.

See the original post here:
Medical opinion, torture and Assange - newagebd.net

Customer-driven open source is the future of software – ARNnet

By some estimates there are roughly 190 million companies on earth today. Imagine if they were all contributing to open source. Of course, most of those companies arent in a position to contribute code, but if we want truly sustainable, customer-friendly open source, its time to focus on the best possible source: companies that dont sell software.

Why? Because the more software is built to suit the needs of those who are actually running it day-to-day, the better that software will be, and the less well need to worry about sustainability.

Despite the fact that open source has never been more broadly used, apparently were in an open source sustainability crisis. Its the same crisis weve been in for the past 20 years, with persistent warnings that this cant last. I wrote about it in 2008 (Open source has the chance of becoming a nonrenewable resource if enterprises consume it without contributing cash or code back), but by 2013 my concern had faded:

By early 2019 I was calling open source sustainability concerns fake news because open source clearly has never been stronger.

While I continue to believe open source is nowhere near an existential crisis, I do believe weve frittered away needless energy looking for sustainability in the wrong place: vendors. As I pointed out in 2013, the real innovation in open source stems from customers; that is, from enterprises who use open source to build their businesses and contribute code accordingly.

Red Hat CEO Jim Whitehurst has been agitating for customer-driven open sourcefor well over a decade: 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.

There are many reasons why such customer-driven (or user-driven) innovation might be best, but Linux veteran Matt Wilson put it this way: If I can risk predicting the future, I think youll see a lot more new open source software emerging from companies that are building it and using it to solve their business problems. And it will be better because of a positive feedback loop of putting the software into an applied practice.

Say that again?

Wilson: If you look backwards in time, [youll see] that software vendors dominate the enterprise software space. And I think that is a reason why so much of it is so so bad. Because the people building the software are not using it to solve problems.

Not software sold on a golf course. Software built to meet real-world needs by the companies experiencing those needs.Fortunately, its already happening:

There are many more. Even a cursory review of the speakers at OSCON 2019 reveals Uber, Bosch, The Home Depot, Comcast, and others, many of them talking about how their companies bothuse and build open source software.

And of course theres great software built by vendors, too, though the best software released by vendors tends to have more to do with how theyre running their infrastructure than what theyre selling. Take Google and Kubernetes, for example: Google had been running containerized workloads for over a decade before releasing Kubernetes. Kubernetes suddenly gave non-Google-like companies Google-like powers.

This is the future of open source. Vendors will continue to contribute to open source projects, and to release projects of their own. But Whitehurst and Wilson seem to be onto something: the best software is software that companies build to scratch their own itches, in true open source fashion, and address their own day-to-day needs.

Error: Please check your email address.

Tags open source

Excerpt from:
Customer-driven open source is the future of software - ARNnet

UPDATED Move over Edge: Safari looks to be jumping on the Chromium bandwagon, too – Chrome Unboxed

UPDATE: According to some traffic over on Twitter, it looks like this whole thing is vaporware. It has been uncovered that the bug in question in the article below has nothing to do with Safari at all. The bug is still private and cannot be viewed by non-Google employees, but it appears that this bug is assigned to Move sync tests to staging from 2015. Were sorry for the incorrect reporting and have left the original story below. Additionally, here is a tweet from someone more informed than me on the subject:

This is completely fake. No such plan. The supposed email address isnt anyone on the Safari/WebKit teams, there is no ITP code in Chromium that could be enabled, and the screenshot is not a real Safari design.

A day after Christmas, a reader delivered a tasty little present to our collective inbox and the implications are pretty big. If the screenshots in this email/article are to be believed, it looks like Apple may be transitioning the Safari web browser over to Chromium in a move similar to what Microsoft has done recently with Edge. It is shocking, honestly, to consider Apple bending this way, but it makes a lot of sense in the long run.

Before we can make any sense of this, we have to get the whole picture. Apple has famously been very closed in its software efforts over the years. From iOS to MacOS, they have never really felt the need to associate themselves with open source material in general. Apple builds the hardware, maintains the OS and software, and if you want to sell your apps on their platforms, you just have to suck it up and play ball.

This all works fine when you sell iPhones like hotcakes. When you so heavily dominate a given market (the US) with your hardware, you get to make whatever rules you want and developers and consumers alike get whatever it is you feed them. But this doesnt work with the web. The web is the ultimate open platform and delivery tool. Thank God weve not all caved on that expectation. Somehow in the midst of this open-minded nature, no one has ever been OK with being forced to use one browser over another. People dont care what browser their computer of choice ships with: they want to use the browser they enjoy using that just works.

For the vast majority of users, Chrome became that browser right in the middle of companies like Apple and Microsoft choosing to lag behind on rapidly-changing web standards. Whether it was due to stubbornness or incompetency, Safari, Internet Explorer, and Edge were constantly lacking in multiple facets when compared with Chrome. As those browsers stayed consistently behind the curve, Chrome only grew in popularity to where it is in its dominant place now. At any point, Apple or Microsoft could have simply decided that 3rd party browsers were not allowed, but theres just something about the web that wouldnt allow that to happen. Theres no way users would have it.

One of the primary benefits of Chrome is the fact that it is based on the Chromium browser. This is the open source foundation of Chrome the way you know it. Chromium and Chromium OS are both developed out in the open and are contributed to by anyone interested in their success. Chrome (Googles version of the Chromium browser) has a handful of proprietary bits and pieces that are Googles and those things make it unique to other browsers that run on Chromium, but because it is built on an open source base, Chrome gets to take full advantage of not just a single team of developers, but an entire horde.

Other browsers have seen the vast opportunity and done the same. Browsers like Brave, Opera, Vivaldi, Edge, Samsungs Internet Browser, and a slew of others all run on this same Chromium foundation. What this means is the teams charged with developing each of these expressions of Chromium care about what Chromium can do and what it cant and are all working towards a more functional, better-performing web browser core. Sure, they all serve their own interests along the way, but the work they do for their platform is there for others to leverage as well.

This is the power of open source software. Instead of a ton of companies competing to build differing standards and ways of doing things, they all spend that same time working on a common project that will be so much better as a result. Microsofts work on Chromium for Edge has already began yielding better RAM management and battery life. These are things important to Microsoft in their browser, so it will become something that is also important for Chromium. In this system, consumers win every time.

Shop Chromebooks on Amazon

Now, we get to this new report. As you may assume, Safari is both behind the curve and closed source, so a move to a Chromium-based browser would be both beneficial to Apple and users alike. Apple gets to deliver Safari without all the technical deficiencies it comes with and users get to just use Safari out of the box without having to decide which browser to go with when they buy their new Mac. If Safari is already installed and just as good from a technical standpoint as Chrome, why bother installing something else?

If this report from iphones.ru is to be believed, theres a good chance Safari may end up built on Chromium sooner rather than later. In the article, a bug report (that has since been hidden) was found that is requesting Intelligent Tracking Prevention to be activated in Chrome 80. This is a big deal since ITP is a proprietary to Safari at this point and the request is coming from an Apple employee. Why would an Apple developer be requesting a proprietary Safari feature be activated in Chrome 80? Well, you know that answer to that, dont you?

In addition to this evidence, there are a couple screen grabs from the bug report. The first one clearly shows this request coming from a developer with an @apple.com address along with an included screenshot, and upon quick inspection, the screenshot is of Safari running on Chromium in an alpha state.

A couple more notes, here. First, the bug has since been marked as private. If this was a fake, searching the bug number would come up with an error. Instead, it comes up as blocked and needing permission to view. Theres no real reason for anyone to hide this if it wasnt legit. They could have simply replied in the bug thread and told this guy to stop messing around. Instead, they hid the references, and this tells me that something was uncovered that shouldnt have been.

Second, the alpha version of the Chromium-based Safari being pictured is just that: alpha. It looks pretty rough and that is honestly to be expected. Ripping out the guts of your browser makes you only focus on the function at first. Apple is likely doing a ton of work under the hood to make sure all the functional parts are lining up and working before they even consider making the outside look nice, so dont read too much into the overall hideous appearance in that screenshot.

Finally, it is worth noting that in the first screenshot, you can see the list of operating systems this is being added to: Windows, Linux, and Mac. This could mean that well see a Chromium-based Safari on all three major desktop operating systems and could signal yet another softening of the walled garden approach Apple has long been known for. Theyre relatively recent inclusion of PWAs on iPhone is further evidence that Apple may finally be seeing the light with broader, open source, web-based software, and thats good news for everyone.

See the rest here:
UPDATED Move over Edge: Safari looks to be jumping on the Chromium bandwagon, too - Chrome Unboxed

Suse Marks Nine Years Of Continuous Growth With Successful FY2019 – E3zine.com

Suse heralded its ninth consecutive year of revenue growth, announcing financial results and highlights from its fiscal year 2019 ended Oct. 31.

Having become the worlds largest independent open source company earlier this year, Suse saw its application delivery subscription revenue jump 299 percent year over year. In addition, cloud revenue increased 64 percent, driven by cloud providers like Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud and Microsoft Azure, as Suses Cloud Service Provider ecosystem grew exponentially.

Customer deals valued at $1 million or more increased 13 percent, contributing to a double-digit jump in revenue. As growth accelerated, Suses employee base grew 11 percent.

Suses success comes from our commitment to customers, open source software and innovation that is relevant to the market and customers today, said Melissa Di Donato, CEO of Suse. As the worlds largest independent open source company, we are in a position to serve customer needs, accelerate our growth and move at a speed like never before. Suse will continue to try to be the most customer-centric open source company, to meet customers where they are and help them get to what success looks like to them. That commitment shows in the numbers from this year and years past, and even more impressively: it shows in the success of our customers and partners.

Suses commitment to customers and technology that matters can be seen in the companys increased focus and investment in strategic software solutions that enable customers to create, deploy and manage workloads anywhere on premises, hybrid and multi-cloud as they embrace digital transformation to more effectively compete in todays markets.

In addition to increased focus on the application delivery market, Suse is maintaining and growing its commitment to delivering the best enterprise Linux in the industry along with best-in-class software-defined storage based on the Ceph open source project. Suse always works to provide innovative technology and services that best serve the needs of customers and partners.

Suse continues to focus on growth and expansion, and the companys commercial growth is and will continue to be driven both organically and through potential acquisitions.

View post:
Suse Marks Nine Years Of Continuous Growth With Successful FY2019 - E3zine.com