Wikileaks: UAE Asked The US To Bomb Al Jazeera Headquarters – Mintpress News (blog)

The Wikileaks document also revealed that Bin Zayed had advised the Americans not to have journalists accompany them during the first attack on Afghanistan so they could not report civilian victims.

President Donald Trump welcomes Abu Dhabis Crown Prince Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan to the White House in Washington,, May 15, 2017. (AP/Susan Walsh)

The Crown Prince of the UAE Mohamed bin Zayed Al-Nahyan asked the Americans to bomb the headquarters ofAl Jazeeraduring the US war in Afghanistan,Arabi21.comrevealed yesterday.

According to the document bin Zayed spoke about a meeting between his father and the former Qatari Emir Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani.

The same document also revealed that Bin Zayed had advised the Americans not to have journalists accompany them during the first attack on Afghanistan so they could not report civilian victims.

In addition, the document revealed a meeting between bin Zayed and the US diplomat Richard Haas two months before the war on Iraq.

Bin Zayed offered information to the Americans about Iraq and how to contain the anger people in the Arab world felt about this war.

The document revealed that bin Zayed called on the Americans to put more pressure on Qatar to rein inAl Jazeerascoverage.

Stories published in our Hot Topics section are chosen based on the interest of our readers. They are republished from a number of sources, and are not produced by MintPress News. The views expressed in these articles are the authors own and do not necessarily reflect Mint Press News editorial policy.

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No Snowden, No NSA Files: German Enquiry Into Five Eyes Spying ‘Simply Blocked’ – Sputnik International

AFP 2017/ Frederick Florin

It emerged that the intelligence services had collected and shared information onmillions ofordinary people, aswell asintercepted the communications ofEuropean politicians including German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

In light ofthe revelations, the German parliament launched an investigative committee inMarch 2014. Hans-Christian Stroebele, former chairman ofthe Alliance 90/Greens party inthe Bundestag, told Sputnik Deutschland that there were many obstructions tothe enquiry, which nevertheless managed toconstitute some important facts.

Stroebele, the deputy ofGreens representative Konstantin von Notz onthe committee, said that "Edward Snowden was right, it is true that massive amounts, millions, oftelecommunications inGermany and fromGermany were intercepted and recorded," Stroebele said.

"A large part was available tothe NSA; 40,000 NSA selectors [search terms] were used. These search terms should not have been used, because the Federal Intelligence Service (BND) was also ofthe opinion that they are not permitted."

Despite that, the BND helped the NSA togather data onGerman citizens inreturn forUS monitoring technology. The BND itself used 3,000 selectors tospy onGerman telecommunications, Stroebele said.

The enquiry also brought tolight some new information aboutthe US military's controversial use ofthe Ramstein military base inGermany fordrone operations inother countries, and the extent ofthe German government's knowledge ofRamstein's operations.

"We also learnt other things, forexample that Ramstein was used toconduct killer drone operations inAfrica," Stroebele said.

Last December, Berlin finally admitted afterparliamentary questioning fromDie Linke that the US Air Force uses the base tocarry outdrone strikes and extra-legal killings. The US had confirmed Ramstein's major role inits drone operations tothe German government inAugust 2016. As US drone operations violate German and international law, the revelation has led forcalls toclose the base.

"The White House itself has once again emphasized: 'We never talked abouta no-spy agreement,' and Pofalla announced that five weeks beforethe Bundestag elections. That took the wind outof the sails and the whole NSA affair was no longer important inthe Bundestag elections," Stroebele said.

The Green politician echoed complaints bytwo ofthe committee members, Christian Fliesek (SPD) and Martina Renner (Die Linke), who complained that the committee's work was obstructed bythe government.

Berlin "constantly intervened tostop uphaving access tofiles fora long time, which we had tothen laboriously and repeatedly request again," Stroebele said.

AFP 2017/ Julian Stratenschulte

The spying affair dates back to 2013, when it was alleged that the NSA had bugged German Chancellor Angela Merkel's mobile phone.

"The government did a lot tomake the work ofthe committee ineffective."

For political reasons, the committee didn't hear evidence fromthe most important witness tothe spying, Edward Snowden. In addition, German Chancellor Angela Merkel refused tohand overher mobile phone forexamination, making it impossible toinvestigate how the handset was tapped.

AP Photo/ Carolyn Kaster

Committee chairman Patrick Sensburg (CDU) complained that the committee had concerned itself too much withthe activities ofthe German BND. Stroebele said the work had toconcentrate onBND documents "because we didn't receive any files fromthe NSA and also not a single witness. They simply blocked it."

The US secret service refused toanswer questions fromthe German deputies.

"That is why there is still a lot toclear up, butwe can only do that withthe help ofthe Americans," Stroebele complained. He urged the German government totake a strong stand toprotect German citizens and stop the US frombreaking German laws, such ascarrying outdrone killings fromRamstein or wiretapping the German Chancellor.

"You have totell them straight, and say tothe US, 'you can't do this, it's a violation ofour laws.'"

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No Snowden, No NSA Files: German Enquiry Into Five Eyes Spying 'Simply Blocked' - Sputnik International

Encryption: Turnbull continues his Man of La Mancha ways – iTWire

An exclusive report this morning says that Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull plans to ask US President Donald Trump to demand that US technology companies break into encrypted messages sent by suspected terrorists.

It is an indication that the publishing company, Fairfax Media, and the writer, Peter Hartcher, are prepared to print any kind of bunkum as long as it comes from a sufficiently "official" source.

Whether the statement makes sense or not is never the issue, it would appear. The reader is also given no indication that Turnbull is speaking nonsense.

Without any proof, Turnbull also told Hartcher: "The point is, what are the responsibilities that a WhatsApp or a Telegram or a Signal, what are the responsibilities they owe to public safety You have got a very real global threat where terrorist organisations, Islamist terrorist organisations, are using these digital platforms to do us harm."

To put it rather bluntly, short of rolling back encryption altogether, there is no way of ensuring that all people who are not behind bars do not have access to encryption.

Tom Sulston (right), a software delivery consultant who works for ThoughtWorks, agrees. "Given that the best encryption libraries are open source, that genie is out of the bottle," he said during an informal exchange with iTWire.

"While governments might choose to compel companies to put backdoors in their individual implementations, the library code remains secure," said Sulston, who recently addressed the Canberra press gallery on the tools journalists could use to help protect their sources from unwanted intrusion.

"So attempts to roll back encryption not only wouldnt work, theyd punish ordinary citizens while criminals used other, un-backdoored tools, or simply move their communications to other jurisdictions."

Somehow, the Australian government, which can afford to pay any number of consultants steep fees, cannot find a man with the simple common sense that someone like Sulston has. Or is that because the kind of logic that Sulston dishes out would mean that Turnbull would be unable to bloviate as he has in the exclusive interview mentioned at the start of this piece?

Sulston was asked what was the best option for governments in the existing scenario. Pat came the answer: "Governments need to realise the limitations of technology encryption tools are either broken or not. They cant be compromised just for intelligence agencies and no-one else. There is a huge gap where our society has gone digital and our government has failed to understand what this means."

Unlike our good Prime Minister, Sulston also knows his limitations as a technologist. "Im not a legal or security expert, so I dont have strong (or relevant!) opinions on how governments should tackle terrorism," he confessed.

"But I do believe that their efforts to do so need to remain within the boundaries set by existing laws, including the Universal Declaration of Human Rights."

Turnbull would do well to contemplate the fact that the whole debate about encryption was brought to the fore by the US National Security Agency. Its blanket surveillance of Americans was exposed in 2013 by one Edward Snowden and this led US companies to do everything possible to convince their customers that their data was safe.

Microsoft went so far as to set up a data centre in Germany where it would not be subject to the remit of US laws.

Encryption is built into products like WhatsApp for a reason the owners, in this case Facebook, want to attract more and more people with the selling point being that whatever they say is secure.

Try asking companies which are making billions hand over fist by offering such apps free, to cut back on encryption.

Empty promises can be made some of the time, but even Turnbull, who probably holds the record for the use of the words "innovative" and "agile" in recent times, should realise that you cannot blow hot air on encryption all the time and expect people not to become cynical as to the motives behind such talk.

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Encryption: Turnbull continues his Man of La Mancha ways - iTWire

Why breaking WhatsApp security is such a bad idea – Mashable


htxt.africa
Why breaking WhatsApp security is such a bad idea
Mashable
However, in this video British YouTuber Tom Scott passionately explains why forcing services like WhatsApp to break their end-to-end encryption is actually a very dangerous idea. "The devil is in the detail," Scott says. "If we could replicate the way ...
How WhatsApp encryption works and why we need ithtxt.africa

all 3 news articles »

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Why breaking WhatsApp security is such a bad idea - Mashable

GitHub’s Advice to ‘Ask What You Can Do for Open Source’ – Windows IT Pro

On Saturday, the folks in Canada celebrated Canada Day, while today we here in the States are celebrating our Independence Day. Both countries celebrate with parades, fireworks and by eating too many hot dogs, and oddly enough, in the U.S. we include outdoor performances of the 1812 Overture -- which celebrates the defeat of a Western nation by Russia. Go figure.

Both holidays offer an opportunity to overindulge in national pride and to reflect on what it means to be a good citizen, which always evokes some variation on JFK's advice to "ask what you can do for your country." Of course, in this global world you might reword that to "ask what you can do for humankind." The choice is yours.

If you're a developer -- especially if you or your organization uses open source software -- GitHub has a potential answer to the question JFK would have you ask. You can pledge time to contribute to open source projects. It won't cost you anything but time, and you'll get to use your skills for the greater good.

GitHub is all about open source. While the development platform and code repository does host a number of proprietary projects, it's mostly a home for open source projects. And practically everyone uses it for at least a portion of their developmental needs -- even Microsoft which recently moved nearly all of it's open source projects to the platform.

And since we're on the subject of the Fourth of July, GitHub has also been a good open source citizen.

Already this year it has documented best practices with Open Source Guides that cover everything from how to make code contributions or start open source projects to finding users and building communities. It's released a balanced employee IP agreement, which any company or organization that requires employee IP agreements might find useful. In addition, it conducted an extensive Open Source Survey to provide insight into the state of open source.

It's latest project, Open Source Friday, was announced last week and it fits today's stateside celebrations -- or what those celebrations are meant to inspire.

"Open Source Friday is a structured program for contributing to open source," Mike McQuaid, a senior engineer at GitHub wrote in a blog announcing the project. "Contribution to open source is part of our DNA with GitHub employees maintaining projects like gh-ost, Rails, Atom, Homebrew, HospitalRun and Exercism. Over the last three years, we've encouraged GitHub employees to take time at least every fourth Friday to work on open source and share what we're working on with each other. Open Source Friday has grown from this into a program anyone can take part in."

It's doubtful that McQuaid, who hails from Scotland where they probably have a different take on our Independence Day than we, or GitHub made the connection with today's U.S. holiday -- you can blame me for that. But whether you agree there's a connection or not, Open Source Friday is still a good idea.

"Open Source Friday isn't limited to individuals," he added. "Your team, department, or company can take part, too. Contributing to the software you already use isn't altruisticit's an investment in the tools your company relies on. And you can always start small: spend two hours every Friday working on an open source project relevant to your business."

Heck, if you play your cards right, you might even get the bosses to let you contribute on company time. And businesses that frequently use open source software might want to offer all employees the opportunity to contribute a couple of hours a week on the company's dime. This could include even those who aren't coders:

"A common misconception about contributing to open source is that you need to contribute code," GitHub points out in its guide on contributing to open source. "In fact, its often the other parts of a project that are most neglected or overlooked. Youll do the project a huge favor by offering to pitch in with these types of contributions!"

Getting started is easy. Just go to the Open Source Friday webpage and click the "sign up" button. If you don't have at least a free GitHub account, you'll be prompted to open one. Once signed up, you'll find resources, including help finding open source projects that could use your help if you need it.

Now, go and enjoy your Fourth.

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Global Quantum Cryptography Market – Analysis, Technologies & Forecasts to 2021 – Aided by Adoption of Crypto … – Business Wire (press release)

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Research and Markets has announced the addition of the "Global Quantum Cryptography Market 2017-2021" report to their offering.

The global quantum cryptography market to grow at a CAGR of 33.22% during the period 2017-2021.

The report, Global Quantum Cryptography Market 2017-2021, has been prepared based on an in-depth market analysis with inputs from industry experts. The report covers the market landscape and its growth prospects over the coming years. The report also includes a discussion of the key vendors operating in this market.

According to the report, one driver in market is adoption of the crypto cloud computing system. Crypto cloud computing is built on the quantum direct key system. Each entity encrypts data using their individual private key while using crypto cloud computing systems. These crypto cloud computing systems are being rapidly adopted for authentication processes, video management systems, and for storing information gathered from biometrics. Many enterprises including banks and healthcare organizations are storing their confidential data on the cloud, which makes it important to secure the cloud from unauthorized access. The adoption of crypto cloud computing systems is escalating faster in small and medium sized business (SMBs) when compared to large enterprises as cloud-based services work on a pay-per-use model. These systems also offer flexibility and scalability to accommodate the varying needs of the enterprises.

Key vendors

Other prominent vendors

Key Topics Covered:

PART 01: Executive summary

PART 02: Scope of the report

PART 03: Research Methodology

PART 04: Introduction

PART 05: Market landscape

PART 06: Five forces analysis

PART 07: Market segmentation by end-user

PART 08: Geographical segmentation

PART 09: Decision framework

PART 10: Drivers and challenges

PART 11: Market trends

PART 12: Vendor landscape

PART 13: Key vendor analysis

PART 14: Appendix

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/sx97c4/global_quantum

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Global Quantum Cryptography Market - Analysis, Technologies & Forecasts to 2021 - Aided by Adoption of Crypto ... - Business Wire (press release)

Assange hits back at threats from ‘tolerant liberals’ and brands Hillary Clinton a JOKE – Express.co.uk

GETTYTWITTER

Using the hashtag #tolerantliberal, Mr Assange has spent a considerable amount of time retweeting articles and posts from senior journalists at organisations who appear to have called for an extrajudicial killing.

In his flurry of tweets, Mr Assange included compilation videos showing both Democrats and Republican politicians in the US, calling for him to be hanged or droned.

A number of videos even show TV pundits calling for the Wikileaks founder to be executed, with the Palmer Report going as far as to compare him to terrorist Osama Bin Laden.

TWITTER

In response, he launched a scathing attack at the mainstream media for their lack of standards.

Mr Assange wrote: These journalists love nothing more than to threaten to help assassinate me and my staff and my sources for telling the truth.

They couldn't dream of our accuracy or independence. I have abiding contempt for their lack of standards and craven characters.

Mr Assange was once the focus of intense hate from the conservative media following the release of classified security information on his website.

The tables appear to have turned however, with the hate now coming from their liberal counterparts following the publishing of leaked emails from the Democratic National Committee during last years US presidential election.

In his retaliation, Mr Assange hit out at Hillary Clintons comments against him, going as far as to label her failed Presidential campaign a joke.

Getty Images

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It is believed that Julian Assange chooses to live in Sweden because the country's media laws are among the world's most protective for journalists

He wrote: She said it was a joke--a bit like her election campaign? It's certainly not good to threaten our staff or torture our alleged sources.

After retweeting a series of posts from Twitter users calling for him to be tortured and put to death, Mr Assange concluded that liberals aint liberal.

He wrote: Theyve fallen into bed with the worst elements of state hard power & love censorship and death.

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Cryptocurrency Hash Rental Service Review Nicehash – The Merkle

Summary

Nicehash is an excellent platform for people looking for multipool mining or a way to buy and sell hashpower. The platform is very transparent about its business and has built up a solid reputation over the past three years.

It is not all that easy to find a legitimate cryptocurrency cloud mining service. Nicehash is one of the few companies people can trust these days. The platform specializes in cloud mining, hash rental services, and multipool mining. It is refreshing to see legitimate companies pop up now and the in the landscape filled with Ponzi Schemes. Now is a good time to look at what Nicehash offers to its customers and why they are so successful.

Most cryptocurrency cloud mining scams ask users to make a Bitcoin investment, so they can earn a passive income. Unfortunately, a lot of those are Ponzi schemes. However, Nicehash is doing things in a professional manner and without putting users at risk of losing any funds. In fact, they are one of a handful of legitimate companies in the world of cryptocurrency cloud mining.

Nicehash first came to the market in April of 2014 and has quickly grown to be one of the most reliable online mining hashrate marketplaces in the world. The company specializes in added-value services for miners, traders, and investors alike. Providing customer support services helped Nicehash achieve success. So far, the team is doing an outstanding job in this regard, as they have no negative reviews.

What makes NiceHash so unique is how they let users buy and sell hashing power on demand. Contracts can run for as little as one hour, and the maximum duration can be agreed upon by the buyer and seller. The platforms marketplace is filled with available orders, which can be filtered based on mining algorithm, and geographical locations. Reducing latency between the miner and the mining pool is of the utmost importance to maximize potential earnings.

It is worth mentioning Nicehash is not the only company providing a cryptocurrency mining hashrate marketplace. Mining Rig Rentals is one of their main competitors in this space, as they provide a powerful service as well. It is good to see competing peer-to-peer mining hashpower rental marketplaces. Competitionallows for far more flexibility than one would get through traditional cloud mining.

Nicehash also provides users with their own mining software clients, which is a nice addition. Plus, their own multipool servers allow miners to point their eligible hardware to the pool and earn mining revenue in the process. Nicehash supports a few dozen mining algorithms, including X11, Scrypt, Keccak, Decred, Cryptonight, and Pascal. Pointing aminer at this pool allows users to earn revenue without having to worry about anything, as earnings are calculated and paid out automatically.

The main question is whether or not miners should sell their hashpower or point it to the multipool. It heavily depends on how much risk one is willing to take. Using the multipool means investing in the mined coins, which can be a financial risk.One could always rent out the hashpower and keep mining the multipool as long as the contract is not picked up by a buyer. That way, users can get the best of both worlds.

If you liked this article, follow us on Twitter @themerklenews and make sure to subscribe to our newsletter to receive the latest bitcoin, cryptocurrency, and technology news.

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Cryptocurrency Hash Rental Service Review Nicehash - The Merkle

ElliottWaveTrader launching cryptocurrency service – CryptoNinjas – CryptoNinjas

It was announced recently from ElliottWaveTrader.net (EWT), a live Trading Room of market analysis, based on Elliott Wave principle, that due to high demand and many requests, they will start a cryptocurrency service based onElliott Wave analysis. To lead this new service, the firm has brought on Ryan Wilday.

Ryan has over 17 years experience trading equities, futures, and options. He was introduced to cryptocurrency in 2013 by a programmer friend and began mining and trading shortly thereafter.

The EWT team stated:

Though he read Prechters Elliott Wave Principle in the early 2000s, he didnt make practical use of the theory until joining EWT in 2015. Today he melds his deep knowledge of the cryptocurrency market with Elliott Wave theory and Fibonacci Pinball.

Ryans service will be opening in August of 2017, more information will be forthcoming on the launch.

ElliottWaveTrader benefits traders looking to anticipate the direction of U.S. & world equity indices, stocks, bonds, precious metals, energy & forex over a time horizon of several days to several months.

The site also features insights and interaction by its community of traders, many of them professionals, as members are encouraged to post questions and contribute their own analysis in the interactive room.

How the cryptocurrency market and certain assets within react to Elliot Wave analysis will be quite interesting to observe.

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ElliottWaveTrader launching cryptocurrency service - CryptoNinjas - CryptoNinjas

South Korea Will Introduce Legislation To Legalize Cryptocurrencies – ETHNews

News world

The South Korean government is expected to consider legislation that is intended to increase consumer trust in cryptocurrencies.

South Korean lawmakers will be presenting several bills that will affect the legal status of cryptocurrencies. According to the Korea Herald, Rep. Park Yong-jin of the Democratic Party stated on July 3, 2017 that he will introduce three revisions in July that will build a set of regulatory frameworks for digital currencies. According to Park, the legislation is intended to fill the void of a state-led protection that guarantees digital currencys value, and eradicate the possibility of wreaking havoc on national economy from digital currency bubble burst.

One bill aims to revise the Electronic Financial Transactions Act. If approved, the bill will require traders, brokers, and other businesses involved in cryptocurrency transactions to get regulatory approval from the Financial Services Commission, maintain data processing facilities, and have at least 500 million won ($436,300) in capital.

Tax laws will also be revised to allow Korean financial authorities to pursue tax evaders who do not pay income or corporate tax from digital currency transactions. According to Park and the Financial Supervisory Service, although virtual currency exchanges hold a large amount of market power in the countrys cryptocurrency space, there is no legal ground for their business.

The move for more robust regulation comes after a mishap with South Korean exchange Yapizon, when it fell victim to a massive bitcoin heist in April. In the incident, a hacker swiped four hot wallets and made off with 3831 bitcoin, which at the time totaled to about $5 million. To resolve the problem, Yapizon implemented a clever accounting scheme in which it essentially provided users with IOUs. At the time of the occurrence, the South Korean government authorities lacked regulation to handle such calamities. Parks proposals lookto fill this void and increase trust in one of South Koreas emerging markets.

Cryptocurrency investments have also been on the rise in East Asian markets. To promote growth and innovation in FinTech companies operating in foreign exchange markets, the South Korean Ministry of Strategy and Finance in May decided to revamp capital requirements, which will go into effect July 18.

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

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South Korea Will Introduce Legislation To Legalize Cryptocurrencies - ETHNews