Encryption: UK Defence Sec says tech companies ‘have to do more’, gives no detail – Computerworld Australia

The UK Secretary of State for Defence has struggled to explain what his government wants tech companies to do to support national security operations, but was adamant that they have to do more.

Sir Michael Fallon, speaking to ABC's 7.30 program last night, said the UK had not fully used new laws which compel operators to decrypt messages sent via services such as WhatsApp and Telegram.

We want them to do more and we are continuing to discuss with them how they can help our security services to do more, he told 7.30.

UK Home Secretary Amber Rudd was in discussion with a number of companies, Fallon said, to make them do more, to acknowledge their responsibility, to work with us in identifying potential terrorist threats to our country.They have to do more.

Despite passing its Investigatory Powers Act last year, the UKgovernment has struggled to maintain a consistent message on end-to-end encryption, and has not said what it expects providers to do to remove electronic protection.

The act nicknamed the Snoopers Charter compels companies to remove electronic protection applied by or on behalf of that operator to any communications or data. They must also provide information in an "intelligible form"when requested.

Rudd said in March said that it was completely unacceptable that law enforcement agencies were unable to read messages hidden by end-to-end encryption, before coming out in support of encryption later the same day.

Australia's government is now seeking to create similar laws, and has cited the Investigatory Powers Act as an inspiration.

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull and Attorney-General George Brandis have been similarly vague on the details of how tech companies are expected to cooperate, but made it clear that they should.

Fallon added that security services should be given all the powers they need to thwart terrorist plots.

That's vital and we're continuing to work with those [tech] companies to make sure they cooperate better, he said.

On Wednesday, the UK and Australia cemented its long-standing relationship in tackling cyber threats which can risk international stability, a joint statement said.

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German Police to Bypass Encryption by Hacking Devices – Infosecurity Magazine

German police are set to make use of new laws to hack the devices of criminal suspects in order to monitor communications, bypassing the need to force tech companies to provide encryption backdoors.

Local media reports referencing Interior Ministry documents claimed that law enforcers will be able to make use of new Remote Communication Interception Software (RCIS) to target Android, iOS and BlackBerry mobiles.

The idea is to hack into suspects devices in order to read communications at source. This would seem to be a neat way of monitoring targets without the need to engage with providers of services like WhatsApp, iMessage and Telegram.

Tech companies including Facebook and Apple have been steadfast in refusing to engineer backdoors for law enforcers arguing that it would undermine security for millions of innocent users and businesses. As most are based in the US, its unlikely that the German government alone could do anything about it.

The German parliament recently passed a new law expanding the power of the police to hack devices belonging to all criminal suspects and not just terror suspects.

This is in stark contrast to the situation in the UK, where the new Investigatory Powers Act grants police the power to hack devices irrespective of suspicion of criminal activity.

However, activists in Germany are still worried about the move, especially as the authorities have been revealed to have bought surveillance software from infamous provider FinFisher, as a back-up in case their own RICS 2.0 tools are leaked or get compromised.

By using third party provider tools, governments could skirt legal restrictions on what they can and cant do, according to Deutsche Welle.

The European Commission claimed back in March that it was planning to give tech communications providers three or four options forcing them to make the communications of suspects available to police, ranging from voluntary measures to legislation.

In related news, rights groups have this month signed a joint open letter to EU member states urging more to be done to reform EU rules governing the export of surveillance equipment.

It claimed over 330 export license applications for such technology have been made to 17 EU authorities since 2014; with 317 granted and only 14 rejected.

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How IT operations management is embracing open source – Cloud Tech

Open source software adoption continues to disrupt the traditional IT markets, as enterprise CIOs and CTOs seek ways to evolve by working with progressive vendors and service providers who have a proven track record of open innovation.

The growth of digital business transformation and the Internet of Things (IoT) is expected to drive large investment in IT operations management (ITOM) through 2020, according to the latest global market study by Gartner. A primary driver for organisations moving to ITOM open-source software (OSS) is lower cost of ownership.

While acceptance of OSS ITOM is increasing, traditional closed-source ITOM software still has the biggest budget allocation today. Moreover, complexity and governance issues that face users of OSS ITOM tools cannot be ignored.

"In fact, these issues open up opportunities for ITOM vendors. Even vendors that are late to market with ITOM functionality can compete in this area," said Laurie Wurster, research director at Gartner.

Gartner believes many enterprises will turn to managed ITOM or ITOM as a service (ITOMaaS) enabled by open-source technologies and provided by a third party. With OSS, vendors can provide more cost-effective and readily available ITOM functions in a scaled manner through the cloud.

Through 2020, public cloud and managed services are expected to be leveraged more often for ITOM tools, which will drive growth of the subscription business model for both cloud and on-premises ITOM.

However, on-premises deployments will still be the most common delivery method. This imposes multiple challenges to incumbent ITOM vendors. First, those vendors that do not offer a cloud delivery model will face continuous cannibalisation from ITOM vendors that can deliver ITOM through both cloud and on-premises.

Second, platform vendors are providing some native ITOM functionalities on their public clouds. Customers that are running workloads solely on these platforms may prefer these native features. There are also hybrid requirements for ITOM tools that can seamlessly manage both cloud and on-premises environments.

Customer demand has driven traditional software vendors to transform and adapt to the changing technology and competitive landscapes. Competitive pressure from cloud (SaaS offerings) and commercial OSS (offerings with a free license plus paid support) is forcing ITOM providers to move toward subscription-based business models for both cloud and on-premises deployments.

The influx of new, smaller ITOM vendors focused on one or two major tool categories will continue to cause disruption for large traditional suite vendors. Given this situation, traditional vendors will need to react by changing how their products fit together.

More importantly, according to the Gartner assessment, traditional vendors need to change how their solutions are sold as customers exert significant pressure to shift to offering cloud-based services.

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Why you need more than just open-source – Networks Asia

In 2016, the Open Source Drives Digital Innovation study commissioned by Red-Hat and conducted by analyst house Forrester revealed that 52% of CIOs and senior IT decision makers in the Asia-Pacific (APAC) region are already tapping open source software in areas such as cloud, mobility, big data and DevOps.

More IT decision-makers are turning to open source to drive better efficiency and digital innovation, as its flexibility enables organisations to build new customer experiences, services and products more quickly.

As more enterprises tap open source there are some misconceptions about what open-source means. Open source technology allows for incredible collaboration between people, communities and projects. Yet many inadvertently associate the words free and easy with open source which is not always true. Open source makes tech easily accessible and collaborative, which drives incredibly fast innovation. But open source is much more than easily accessible tech. Enterprise needs must be considered and that is why the business of open source tech is about more than just accessibility.

Here are five reasons why you need more than DIY (Do-It-Yourself) open source.

The open source tech community is not necessarily motivated or inspired to make an integrated set of different open source technologies (projects) work together. Each team is in charge of their own project but making it all work together, easily, seamlessly spending time to test and certify different sets of tech together is not their mandate. The community is responsible to their members, and to the guidelines of their community each of which can have differing rules, different codes of conduct for each project. The community is not responsible to other communities and are not necessarily developing the necessary glue to make everything work together for an enterprise grade level of integrated functionality.

Success Requirement: Someone (usually a software vendor) who is a member of the communities, to compile different projects into a single implementable software package.

The collaboration of open source creates an unprecedented pace of innovation, but this pace is not always compatible with enterprise business. Not every business can implementnew systems or upgrade existing ones, create new processes and train people to adapt at the same pace that the community is developing at. And in fact, sometimes such a pace can be detrimental to good business outcomes where some stability is required to refine and develop best practices and outcomes.

Success Requirement: Access to multiple (possibly more mature) versions of the integrated software package to give enterprises the freedom to update to newer versions at their own pace.

Not every enterprise customer needs the leading edge, or the so-called bleeding edge. While the open source community continues to shift towards the next version, the newest features, the new release, it still takes time to mobilize an enterprise to adapt to the change. Enterprises may not always be on the same leading edge innovation that the open source community is on. Business critical environments may be based on more mature versions of open source tech for better business stability. Creating a balance of adapting innovative new tech with stable, more mature tech is not necessarily in alignment with the objectives of the open source community.

Success Requirement: Establish a clear new technology introduction path, usually by including an early version of the new tech as a technical preview into the integrated software package.

Some requirements such as enterprise security and governance do not organically manifest themselves in open source communities. Only when there is an application, and integration across different technologies does this become an issue. For some needs to be met in open source, there needs to be a voice representing enterprise needs in a public forum, to foster innovation and collaboration of needs into either new or existing open source communities.

Success Requirement: An enterprise voice in the open source community.

Open source means collaborative innovation that is easy to access. But easy to access doesnt mean its easy to succeed. For example almost everyone has access to a grocery store and the raw ingredients it offers. But to make a casserole, a souffle, to create duck au confit requires experience and expertise. The open source community is no more obligated to making enterprises successful with their tech, than a grocery store is obligated to make someone a great chef. To make your project succeed enterprises need expertise; expertise than can be home-grown, hired, and/or trained. In most cases a combination of in-house staff and experts from outside who had done this many times are the best approach. Simply being able to download bits does not result in a successful business outcome.

Success requirement: Connect in house software deployment, integration and testing with outside experience, expertise, enterprise support, professional services and education.

There is much more to being successful with open source technology than just a Do-It-Yourself project of downloading and installing raw bits of technology. Hortonworks is in the business of helping enterprises harness the power of open source technology to create successful business outcomes

Kamal Brar, Vice President and General Manager of Asia Pacific at Hortonworks

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Buy/Sell with Cryptocurrency

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A Tech Startup Is Releasing a Wearable Cryptocurrency Payment Device – Futurism

In Brief Irish startup Bitcart just announced the creation of Festy, the world's first wristband capable of facilitating Dash cryptocurrency payments. The wearable could help bring crypto payments into the mainstream by making the process of using them more attractive for both customers and merchants. Wearing Your Wallet Cryptocurrencies are enjoying a groundbreaking year.The market is growing in popularity, attracting investors and sending crypto values to ever new heights. However, the market currently lacks the technology necessary for everyday use in real-world scenarios.

Bitcartislooking to rectify this.

The Irish startup has developed the worlds first Dash cryptocurrency payment wristband. NamedFesty, the device allows the wearer to pay for products with the Dash cryptocurrency. Users can add funds to their wrist-mounted wallet at a Festy-branded ATM or using an online transfer service.

Although Dash is a cryptocurrency, Festy is compatible with any point-of-sale system that accept Visa contactless payments. It can also be used to make payments on any phone or computer using near field communication (NFC) tags or offline payments via quick response (QR) codes. The wristband isdesigned primarily for bar and festival hoppers andcan also be used to store tickets, which could play a role in eliminating fraud or verifying ages of compliance at events.

For customers, Festy offers several advantages over traditional credit cards. Payments made via the wearable are nearly immediate and acard number or private key is never displayed.

Vendors benefit from the system, too. Our partnership with Dash makes the perfect payment solution for everyday transactions, Bitcart CEOGraham de Barratold Bankless Times.Unlike existing traditional bank payments that take a two to five percent fee, there is no cost on receiving Dash for merchants.

Cryptocurrencies are built on blockchain technology that has the potential to revolutionize transactions worldwide. They boast increased transparency and security, but they are unlikely to go mainstream without easy to use tech like Festy.

Thankfully, Bitcart is just one company working hard to help cryptocurrencies break into the mainstream. A number ofBitcoin debit cards are making it easier to make payments via the currency, and in nations likeJapan, bitcoin is on track to become a commonly accepted form of payment.

Disclosure: Several members of the Futurism team, including the editors of this piece, are personal investors in a number of cryptocurrency markets. Their personal investment perspectives have no impact on editorial content.

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Washington’s New Cryptocurrency Exchange Rules Are Now in Effect – CoinDesk

New regulations for cryptocurrency exchanges have gone into effect in the U.S. state of Washington.

Following the passing of Senate Bill 5031 into law at the weekend, the state's money transmitter laws now apply to exchanges, meaning that they need to obtain a license fromthe Washington State Department of Financial Institutionsand must provide a third-party audit of their data systems.

Among other requirements, the law also mandatesa new transmitter bond requirement, with the figurebeingtied to the amount of currency exchanged during the previous year.

Lawmakers finalized the measure in April, sending it to the desk of Gov.Jay Inslee, who signed it days after work on the bill was completed. According to public records, the law went into effect on Sunday, July 23.

As CoinDesk haspreviously reported, lawmakers in the western U.S. state have been working since January to develop regulations for exchange startups.

The bill's passage wasn't without controversy, however. Cryptocurrency exchanges Poloniex and Bitfinex declared that they would would stop serving customers there, citing the new regulations.

At the same time, startupssuch as New York-based exchange Gemini moved in the opposite direction, obtaining approval to begin serving customers in the stateearlier this year.

Washington State Capitol imagevia Shutterstock

The leader in blockchain news, CoinDesk is an independent media outlet that strives for the highest journalistic standards and abides by a strict set of editorial policies. Have breaking news or a story tip to send to our journalists? Contact us at [emailprotected].

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Indian Government Still In Power Struggle Regarding Cryptocurrencies – ETHNews

News world

India is making progress with cryptocurrency regulation, but there are still areas that need to be polished.

According to a recent tweet by member of the Indian National Congress party Priyank M. Kharge, the Indian government intends to research and develop policy for blockchain and cryptocurrencies.

In the tweet, Kharge links an article on the apparent power struggle occurring between the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) due to differing opinions on cryptocurrency regulation. According to the publication, RBI suggested that cryptocurrencies should be traded similarly to commodities, such as gold and silver, and therefore should be tracked by SEBI to ensure theyre not used for illegal activities, like money laundering and terror funding. However, SEBI has opposed the proposal. According to an undisclosed regulatory official, "It (bitcoin) cannot be classified ascommodity derivativesas per extant legal provisions."

The disparity amongst Indian officials comes at a pivotal time in the country of India. Currently, the country is recovering from a recent demonetization of all 500 and 1,000 rupee banknotes from the Mahatma Gandhi Series, implemented by the Indian government in November 2016. As a result, the country has experienced a surge of cryptocurrency investments that has sent Indian officials scrambling for control measures. Shivam Thakral, CEO and co-founder of Indian cryptocurrency exchange BuyUcoin, tells ETHNews that this is exemplified by rigid mandates from government entities.

The government has strictly guided companies involved in virtual currencies to take proper KYC norms of their customers. The ministry in India which implements the companies law has instructed the Serious Fraud Investigation Office (SFIO) regional directors, as well as the Registrar of the companies, to get the details of the companies involved in cryptocurrencies.

In March, Minister of State for Finance Arjun Ram Meghwal expressed to the Rajya Sabha (Council of States) that no regulatory approval, registration or authorisation is stated to have been obtained by the entities concerned for carrying on such activities, related to cryptocurrencies. The Dinesh Sharma Committee, which consists of a diverse group of representatives from a number of Indian government organizations, then surfaced in April to conduct a comprehensive review of cryptocurrencies and assist the government with creating a framework. According to Thakral, the committee is actively involved in the regulation process and could release the results of its review possibly in the month of August.

Despite previously denouncing their use, Indian officials seem to be trying to forge a somewhat harmonious relationship with cryptocurrencies. In May, the Indian government sought public opinion on how cryptocurrencies should be addressed. For now, cryptocurrency businesses will have to cope with the Indian governments uncertainty. Thakral went on to say:

Currently, under the existinglaws,cryptocurrencies are treated as property and hence capital gain tax is applied on it. But due to its nature of decentralization, its transfer can't be traced as easily as a property, which violates several Indian regulations. Due to which, Indian government is more likely to form some different laws especially molded forcryptocurrencies,as there are many other major existing laws that are breached, like FEMA, and give rise to major concerns like money laundering and consumer protection.

ETHNews will update this story and any related events as they occur.

Dan is a Los Angeles-based musician, writer, and veteran passionate about science and technology, current events, human rights, economic impacts, and strategic calculus. Dan is a full time staff writer for ETHNews.

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Chelsea Manning Is a Free Woman: Her Heroism Has Expanded …

Ever since Chelsea Manningwas revealed as the whistleblower responsible forone of the most important journalistic archives in history, her heroism has beenmanifest. She was the classic leaker of conscience, someone who went at the age of 20 to fight in the Iraq War believing it was noble, only to discover thedark reality not only of that war but of the U.S. governments actionsin the world generally: war crimes, indiscriminate slaughter, complicity with high-level official corruption, and systematic deceit of the public.

In the face of those discoveries,sheknowingly risked her own liberty to disclose documents to the world that would reveal the truth, with no expectation of benefit to herself. As someone who has spent years touting the nobility of her actions, my defenses of her always early oncentered on the vital nature of the material she revealed and the right of the public to know about it.

It is genuinely hard to overstate the significance of those revelations: Aside from exposing some of the most visceral footage of indiscriminate slaughter by the U.S. military seen in decades, the leaks were credited even by harsh WikiLeaks skeptics such as New York Times Executive Editor Bill Keller with helping to spark the Arab Spring. Even more significantly, revelations about how the U.S. militaryexecuted Iraqi civilians, then called in a bombing raid to cover up what they did, prevented the Iraqi government from granting the Obama administration the troop immunity it was seeking in order to extend the war in Iraq.

Though Mannings case has been somewhat colored by the changing perceptions over time of WikiLeaks, she actually first attempted to contact traditional media outlets such as the New York Times, the Washington Post, and Politico with her revelations, only to be thwarted by a failure to get their attention. In the online chats that she had with a deceitful individual who thereafter became agovernment informant and turned her in, she said her motive in leaking was solely to trigger worldwide discussion, debates, and reforms, adding: I want people to see the truth regardless of who they are because without information, you cannot make informed decisions as a public.

In the wake of these disclosures, the U.S government as it reflexively does claimed that therelease of the documents would endanger lives, and that those responsible for publishing the leaks had blood on their hands. But subsequent investigations by theAP and McClatchy found those accusations utterly unfounded, and ultimately, even Defense Secretary Robert Gates ridiculed the hysteria driving the governments claims about the leaks harms as significantly overwrought.

In sum, though Manning was largely scorned and rejected in most mainstream Washington circles, she did everything one wants a whistleblower to do: tried to ensure that the public learns of concealed corruption and criminality, with the intent of fostering debate and empowering the citizenry with knowledge that should never have been concealed from them. And she did it all knowing that she was risking prison to do so, but followed the dictates of her conscience rather than her self-interest.

But as courageousas that original whistleblowing was, Mannings heroism has only multiplied since then, become more multifaceted and consequential. As a result, she has inspired countless people around the world. At this point, one could almost say that her 2010 leaking to WikiLeaks has faded into the background when assessing her true impact as a human being. Her bravery and sense of convictionwasnt aone-time outburst: It was the sustained basis for her last seven years of imprisonment that she somehow filled with purpose, dignity, and inspiration.

The overarching fact of Mannings imprisonment was its enduring harshness. In 2010, during the first months of her detention in a U.S. Marine brig in Quantico, Virginia, I began hearing reports from herhandful of approved visitors about the vindictive and abusive conditions of her confinement: prolonged solitary confinement, being kept inher cell alone for virtually the entire day, gratuitous, ubiquitous surveillance, and worse. When I called the brig to investigate these claims, I was startled when a brig official confirmed to me, in the most blas tones, their accuracy.

That enabled me to report for the first time that Manning was being imprisoned under conditions that constitute cruel and inhumane treatment and, by the standards of many nations, even torture. That report sparked a major controversy, ultimately culminating in the resignation of President Obamas State Department spokesman, P.J. Crowley, after he denounced the treatment of Manning as ridiculous and counterproductive and stupid on the part of the Department of Defense.

But that turned out to be only the beginning of the abuse she endured. Several months after my report, the New York Times reported that Manning was being subjected to deliberately humiliating rituals in which she was stripped and left naked in hercell for seven hours, and required to stand naked outside her cell during inspection. It was back then, in 2011, that the first report of Mannings suicidal thoughts surfaced. Amnesty International denounced her detention conditions as a breach of the USAs obligations under international standards and treaties, and ultimately called for proteststo demand a cessation of the abuse.

It was nonetheless difficult to generate large amounts of public or journalistic support for Manning: Many on the right long viewed leakers as traitors and thus took gleein her suffering, while many liberals loyal to Obama literally mocked the abuse Manning endured. But ultimately, the U.N. special rapporteur on torture investigated the conditions of Mannings imprisonment and concluded in 2012that the U.S. military was at least culpable of cruel and inhumane treatment, and that imposing seriously punitive conditions of detention on someone who has not been found guilty of any crime is a violation of his right to physical and psychological integrity as well as of his presumption of innocence.

All of the controversy generated by those reports ultimately compelled the Obama administration to transfer her from Quantico to a more professionalized but still harrowing prison, in the middle of Kansas, on a military base at Fort Leavenworth, as she awaited her trial. While her imprisonment then became more normalized, her heroism multiplied to entirely new levels.

In July 2013, Manning was convicted of multiple counts of espionage for her whistleblowing (though she was acquitted of the most serious charge she faced: the treason-equivalent of aiding the enemy). On August 21, she was sentenced to 35 years in prison. On August 22 the very next day she issued her statement identifying herself as Chelsea Manning, a trans woman, and demanded that she receive from military authorities the medical therapy she neededto complete her transition:

Given the way that I feel, and have felt since childhood, I want to begin hormone therapy as soon as possible. I hope that you will support me in this transition. I also request that, starting today, you refer to me by my new name and use the feminine pronoun (except in official mail to the confinement facility).

It is hard to describe the courage and determination that required. Less than 24 hours after she learned that she had been consigned to spend the next 35 years in the custody of a military prison, she publicly identified as the trans woman she is and demanded the medical therapy to which she was legally and ethically entitled.

To truly grasp the bravery that required, its necessary to understand her situation at the time. In 2015, I visited her at Fort Leavenworth. To get there, one must fly to Kansas City, then drive more than an hour into the woods of Kansas, in the proverbial middle of nowhere. One arrives at a sprawling, completely militarized base, Fort Leavenworth, where it wasquitedifficult to gain access. Upon entering, one drives another 15 to 20 minutes deep into the military base to arrive at the military brig, which itself is a labyrinth of cages and security measures that must be navigated in order to finally meet her somewhere in the bowels of that prison.

In sum, its almost impossible to be more isolated, more cut off from society, than Chelsea Manning was. Coming out as a trans person, and embarking on the transition process, is extraordinarily difficult even under the best of conditions. Trans people still face incomparable societal hurdles including an epidemic of violence even when they enjoy networks of support in the middle of progressive cities. But to do that while in a military brig, in the middle of Kansas, where your daily life depends exclusively upon your military jailers, is both incomprehensibly difficult and incomprehensibly courageous.

Mannings strugglesin prison, including her suicide attempts and grotesquely cruel punishments for them, were publicly reported. Although the military prison begrudgingly gave her some of the therapy she sought, authoritiesalso imposed petty restrictions, including a refusal even to let her grow her hair and a failure to provide much of the support that was needed.

As one of the few people on the list of approved visitors, I spent many hours on the phone with her during this period. Her experience both in prison generally and transitioning specifically was filled with completelygratuitous challenges and difficulties caused by malicious or ignorantprison authorities.

But what is ultimately most striking about Chelsea Manning is her unyielding persistence. In the most humble yet determined tones, she insists on following what she knows is the right path regardless of the risks and costs to her. And in doing so, far beyond the initial acts of whistleblowing, she became a heroto LGBTs around the world, and so many other people, by demanding the right to be who she is, and to live freely, even under the most oppressive conditions.

This is nota case where I feign journalistic objectivity or neutrality. I regard Chelsea Manning as one of this generations greatest heroes, as well as a valued friend. While her release today is somewhat bittersweet How can one forget the grave injustice that she spent almost all of her 20s in prison for having done something that merited our collective gratitude, and the abuse she continually endured? I am thrilled that she will finally live as a free woman, and incredibly excited about what she can achieve, how she can inspire people, now that she is finally released.

Ultimately, what makes Chelsea Manning unique is not so much her political heroism but rather the way she has personally navigated her life after that. As I recounted in the letter I wrote in support of her clemency petition, she is the single most empathetic and compassionate person I have ever met. When I would speak to her, it was difficult for me to contain my anger and resentment over the abuse she had suffered and continued to suffer. Yet she never displayed or even seemed to share any of that anger, instead often defending even those who wronged her by empathizing with their own predicaments and mitigating their behavior.

To be sure, her transition back into freedom is not going to be easy. Shes been imprisoned since she was 22 years old. She knows that she is a controversial and polarizing figure and is unsurewhat life outside of Fort Leavenworth has in store for her. It will naturally be a huge adjustment in all sorts of ways.

But Manning is one of the most intelligent, engaging, and inspiring people one could ever hope to meet. There is a massive amount of admiration and support for her all over the world, as evidenced by the incredibly successful fundraising campaign to ease her transitionout of prison. No matter where I have spoken in the world, the mere mention of her name prompts sustained standing ovations for her. All of that her seeing how much love and gratitude there is for her will undoubtedly strengthen her in whatever she chooses to do.

It is rare, especially lately, to find inspiration in any political stories. But the last decade of Chelsea Mannings life, and the potential it now holds for the future, is one of those cases. One shouldnt idealize what happened to her: There is a lot of injustice, harm, and outrage in her story. But the way she has inspired so many, and the fact that today she istruly free, is a cause for real celebration, and a valuable reminder of how human beings, through pure acts of conscience and determination, can singlehandedly change the world for the better.

Top photo: A poster depicting Chelsea Manning at the San Francisco pride parade on June 29, 2014.

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The day after Trump announced transgender ban, Chelsea Manning stops by White House – USA TODAY

This file photo taken on May 18, 2017 shows an Instagram account screen capture portrait of transgender former soldier Chelsea Manning which she posted on May 18, 2017 one day after being released from a top-security US military prison.(Photo: AFP/Getty Images)

Chelsea Manning stopped bythe White House on Thursday,the day after President Trump tweeted that transgender people would nolonger be allowed to serve in the military.

Manning, the transgender U.S. Army soldier who spent seven years in prison for leaking classified documents, posted a selfie while standing on the north side of the building.

Her message: "Figured I would show my face at the new ground zero of the war on trans people, #WeGotThis."

Manning, who joined the Army in 2007, had slammed the president over his announcement, saying it "sounds like cowardice."

In 2010, shewas arrested and convicted for leaking more than 700,000 classified documents.Her 35-year sentence was commuted by President Obama in the final days of his administration.

At the time of her arrest, she was known as Pvt. Bradley Manning. Shecame out as transgender during her incarceration.

She remains an active-duty, unpaid soldier, eligible for health care and other benefits while her court-martial conviction remains under appeal.

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Trump seeks to ban transgender people from serving in U.S. military 'in any capacity'

Chelsea Manning, progressive and LGBTQ groups slam President Trump's transgender ban

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