Ziftr Launches ziftrPAY, a Cryptocurrency Payment Platform and Customer Loyalty Program

Boston, MA (PRWEB) March 24, 2015

New Hampshire-based e-commerce company Ziftr today announced the launch of ziftrPAY, a one-stop cryptocurrency/credit card payment platform and customer loyalty program.

The benefits of ziftrPAY include the following:

As part of ziftrPAYs customer loyalty program, all merchants will receive free ziftrCOIN digital coupons to give to their shoppers to incentivize them to use cryptocurrency, a low-cost, low-risk alternative to credit cards. When spent within Ziftrs network of ziftrPAY merchants, each ziftrCOIN will have a minimum redemption value of $1.

ziftrPAY is more than just a payment platform, its also a customer loyalty program, said Bob Wilkins, CEO of Ziftr. The Ziftr team has been developing e-commerce products for over six years now, so we have a solid understanding of what merchants want and need. We know they need ways to incentivize customers and establish brand loyalty, and the ziftrCOIN digital coupons are there to help them do just that.

Along with the launch of the ziftrPAY website, Ziftr is working to onboard the first group of ziftrPAY merchants, with the goal of reaching a critical mass of ziftrPAY merchants in time for Black Friday/Cyber Monday 2015.

Ziftrs ultimate goal is to bring cryptocurrency into the mainstream by making it easy for consumers to spend and easy for merchants to accept. ziftrPAY is one component of this strategy, along with ziftrCOIN, ziftrWALLET, and ziftrSHOP.

Merchants that are interested in learning more about ziftrPAY can visit http://www.ziftrPAY.com for more information.

About Ziftr

Established in 2008 and based in Milford, New Hampshire, Ziftr is revolutionizing the online shopping experience by bringing cryptocurrency into the mainstream for both consumers and merchants. To accomplish this goal, Ziftr has developed the following tools and applications: ziftrCOIN, a digital coin that functions like a coupon; ziftrPAY, a one-stop cryptocurrency/credit card payment platform and customer loyalty program; ziftrWALLET, a multicoin digital wallet; and ziftrSHOP, a worldwide online marketplace where consumers will be able to conduct transactions using credit cards and cryptocurrency.

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Ziftr Launches ziftrPAY, a Cryptocurrency Payment Platform and Customer Loyalty Program

Assange agrees to questioning – with conditions

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange will agree to be questioned by Swedish prosecutors in London over rape allegations, but only if he is given access to the investigation files.

"We need to be provided access to the entirety of the proceedings, which for four-and-a-half years has been in the hands of the Swedish prosecution and not in the hands of the defence," said Baltasar Garzon, a former Spanish judge who is the Australian's lawyer.

Swedish prosecutors offered earlier this month to drop their previous demand that Assange come to Sweden for questioning about the 2010 allegations, marking a significant U-turn in the case that has been deadlocked for nearly five years.

Sweden issued an arrest warrant for Assange in 2010 following allegations from two women in Sweden, one who claimed rape and another who alleged sexual assault.

The former hacker, who has always vehemently denied the allegations and insisted the sexual encounters were consensual, has been ensconced in Ecuador's embassy in London since 2012 to avoid extradition to Sweden.

He has long offered to be interviewed by prosecutors at the embassy or by video link.

"That offer has always been on the table. It has been repeated again, and again and again, and I am very pleased that the prosecution has finally accepted that offer," Assange said via video feed to a diplomatic conference on how to protect whistleblowers from prosecution.

He added though that "there are details to work through" since three countries were involved and it remained unclear which jurisdiction would apply.

Garzon said it remained unclear when the interrogation might take place, but that "it should be fast".

That would be good news for Assange, 43, who pointed out that he had spent 1006 days holed up in the Ecuadorian embassy "without charge", and another 560 days mainly under house arrest in Britain "without charge in any country".

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Assange agrees to questioning - with conditions

Chelsea Manning Archives – Ideas Guy

Chelsea Manning, the US army soldier serving 35 years in prison for leaking a huge stash of state secrets, has won a small but significant victory in her bid to transition to living as a woman.

Manning has taken on the might of the US military, challenging its ongoing refusal to refer to her as a woman, and won. A court order from the US army court of criminal appeals instructs the military to refer to the soldier in all future official correspondence either using the gender neutral Private First Class Manning or employing the feminine pronoun.

As a result, the military is henceforth forbidden from referring to Manning as a man.

The court order marks another advance towards Mannings goal of gender transition which she has had to fight every step of the way in the face of an intransigent army hierarchy. Last month, Manning, who has been diagnosed with gender dysphoria, was allowed to start hormone treatment, having struggled for years to convince her jailers to grant her the medical care that had been indicated.

The treatment marked a breakthrough for the US military, which continues to ban transgender individuals from service.

Manning was allowed to change her name legally from her male designation at birth Bradley in April last year. Even so, army lawyers continue to contest her new identity. Last month the US government filed a formal objection to Mannings request to be referred to as a woman in all future filings.

In its submission to the court, government lawyers pointedly referred to the soldier as Bradley, and said that unless directed otherwise by this honourable court, the government intends to refer to [Manning] using masculine pronouns.

Mannings legal advisers were jubilant about the outcome of the challenge. Nancy Hollander, who is leading the soldiers appeal against conviction, said it was an important victory for Chelsea, who has been mistreated by the government for years.

Chase Strangio, a staff attorney with the ACLU who pressed a lawsuit against the army to force it to allow her hormone treatment, said that the court had court rightly recognized that dignifying Chelseas womanhood is not the trivial matter that the government attempted to frame it as. This is an important development in Chelseas fight for adequate medical care for her gender dysphoria.

Manning, who writes for the Guardian from her confinement in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, has written that a doctor, a judge or a piece of paper shouldnt have the power to tell someone who he or she is We should all be able to live as human beings and to be recognized as such by the societies we live in.

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Chelsea Manning Archives – Ideas Guy

US pressures Russia on Snowden slams China

(MENAFN - Arab Times) WASHINGTON June 24 2013 (AFP) -The White House pressured Russia to expel fugitive US intelligence leaker Edward Snowden and warned China it had harmed efforts to rebuild trust by allowing him to leave Hong Kong.

As intrigue in the case mounted Snowden vanished in Moscow not taking a flight to Cuba on which he was booked -- possibly on a journey scheduled to end up in Ecuador.

He was said by Russian officials to have spent Sunday night in a "capsule hotel" at Moscow''s Sheremetyevo airport awaiting his onward connection.

Russia''s Interfax news agency known for its strong security contacts confirmed that he was not on the Havana flight and quoted an informed source as saying he was likely already out of the country.

Snowden had arrived in Moscow on Sunday from Hong Kong from where he leaked to the media details of secret cyber-espionage programs by both US and British intelligence agencies.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange himself holed up in Ecuador''s embassy in London to avoid claims of sexual assault in Sweden said Snowden was "safe" after leaving Hong Kong with a refugee document supplied by Quito after the United States revoked his passport.

And Snowden made another revelation sure to irk the US government.

He told the South China Morning Post in a story that appeared Tuesday that he joined the NSA contractor Booz Allen Hamilton from which he stole secrets on the surveillance programs specially to gain access to information on such activities and spill it to the press.

"My position with Booz Allen Hamilton granted me access to lists of machines all over the world the NSA hacked" he told the Post. "That is why I accepted that position about three months ago." The interview was conducted June 12.

President Barack Obama said Washington was using every legal channel to apprehend Snowden.

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NSA spying law set to expire

The current law, due to expire on June 1, allows the NSA to collect bulk data on numbers called and the time and length of calls, but not their content.

Efforts by Congress to extend the law so far have proved fruitless, and Congressional aides said that little work on the issue was being done on Capitol Hill.

Read More Want to be invisible online? There's an app for that

There are deeply divergent views among the Republicans who control Congress. Some object to bulk data collection as violating individual freedoms, while others consider it a vital tool for preventing terrorist attacks against America.

Ned Price, a national security council spokesman, told Reuters the administration had decided to stop bulk collection of domestic telephone call metadata unless Congress explicitly re-authorizes it.

Some legal experts have suggested that even if Congress does not extend the law the administration might be able to convince the secretive Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court to authorize collection under other legal authorities.

But Price made clear the administration now has no intention of doing so, and that the future of metadata collection after June 1 was up to Congress.

Read MoreiPhone encryption 'petrified' NSA: Greenwald

Price said the administration was encouraging Congress to enact legislation in the coming weeks that would allow the collection to continue.

But Price said: "If Section 215 (of the law which covers the collection) sunsets, we will not continue the bulk telephony metadata program."

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NSA spying law set to expire

WorldViews: Allies spy on allies all the time. Did Israel do something worse?

On some level, the reports that Israel spied on Iran-U.S. nuclear talks don't come as a shock. Just last year, German newsmagazine Der Spiegel reported that Israel had eavesdropped on Secretary of State John Kerry during Middle East peace talks. Jonathan Pollard,who was arrested in November 1985 after passing secret documents to Israel while working as a civilian analyst for the U.S. Navy,has become a cause celebreamong some Israelis.

In fact, as we learned after the2013 revelation that the NSA was tracking German Chancellor Angela Merkel's phone, allies spy on one another all the time. "I have a word of advice for American allies outraged by alleged NSA spying on their leaders," conservative analyst Max Boot wrote in the New York Postafter that scandal broke. "Grow up."

Germany was angered by the NSA revelations, but it was soonembarrassed by reports that it wasitself spying on anally in this case, Turkey and had eveninadvertently intercepted calls made by Kerry and Hillary Clinton. AsBernard Kouchner, a formerFrench foreign minister, put it, the problem wasn't so much that nations spied on their allies it was that the United States was better at it.Lets be honest, we eavesdrop, too," Kouchner told a French radio station. "But we dont have the same means as the United States, which makes us jealous.

As such,it is tempting to look at these new reports and come back with simple schadenfreude: It seems as if theUnited States is just getting a taste of its own medicine. But there is something distinctabout the new allegations.It's not just that Israel wasallegedly spying on the U.S. talks with Iran. According to reports, it was then using the information gleamed from it to undermine U.S. foreign policy.

According to Adam Entous of the Wall Street Journal, Israel's surveillance of closed-door talks between Washington and Tehran was used to gather information that was then passed on toU.S. lawmakers. This detail is apparently what is causing the most anger within the White House.It is one thing for the U.S. and Israel to spy on each other," one unnamed U.S. official told the Journal. "It is another thing for Israel to steal U.S. secrets and play them back to U.S. legislators to undermine U.S. diplomacy."

Israel has denied the reports, though few people buy it. "I'd be more surprised if Israel did NOT spy on the Iran nuclear negotiations,"Steven A. Cook, a senior fellow at theCouncil on Foreign Relations, tweeted on Tuesday. And given the state of relations between the White House and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, the idea that they passed on details to lawmakers seems distinctly plausible.

[Read: Obama says Netanyahu statements leave little room for serious peace talks]

Netanyahu, who was reelected as Israel's leader last week, caused a furor when heacceptedSpeaker John A. Boehners invitation to addressCongress this month. Although the Israeli prime minister denied reports that he would risk bipartisan U.S. support for Israel, many observers saw the speech as a direct appeal to President Obama's Republican rivals and an attempt to undermine a sittingU.S. president."The planned speech,"Chuck Freilich, a former deputy head of Israel's National Security Council, wrote, is "essentially an attempt to mobilize Congress against the administration."

Despite objections,Netanyahu went ahead with the speech. And then, to the surprise of many analysts, he was reelected last week. The Obama administration offered him a lukewarm note of congratulation at best, noting that Netanyahu's Likud Party had won a "plurality" of seats. Later, Obama said that the United States was reassessing its relationship with Israel after controversial comments made by the Israeli incumbent in the last few days before the election.

Theimpression given by all this is of a uniquelyduplicitous Israeli administration. And if the latest reports are true, they seem remarkable: It's hard to think of another instance when a nation spied on an ally and then shared information with the ally's domestic rivals. But then again, espionage is by its nature secret. And it's worth remembering that the only way these new reports came to light wasby an allyspying on its ally Entous reports thatofficials told him that "U.S. intelligence agencies spying on Israel intercepted communications among Israeli officials" featuring details that could have come only from confidential talks.

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WorldViews: Allies spy on allies all the time. Did Israel do something worse?

Q&A: IBM’s Adam Jollans talks Linux & Open Source strategy

CBR asks Adam Jollans, the firms director for Linux and open source strategy, for his views on several topics including security, and where IBM is heading with open source in 2015.

CBR: Why are emerging workload requirements - cloud, big data - suited to open source development culture?

Many of the new cloud, analytics, mobile and social (CAMS) workloads are being implemented on top of open source software. There appear to be three main reasons for this:

1) Open source communities are now hubs of innovation, where the cool kids hang out. This is fuelled by the collaborative nature of open source, enabling faster development iterations and the ability to 'stand on the shoulders of giants' when developing software. So as new workloads emerge, the technologies to support them are prototyped first on open source platforms.

2) Open source removes the barriers to entry for new start-ups and individual programmers. The software is easy to get hold of, and open source versions are available to download and test for free.

3) Born-on-the-web companies are built using open source software, for the reasons above, and the open source approach then becomes embedded in their culture. This then feeds back into the first reason, encouraging more innovation for the next wave of new workloads, and creating a virtuous circle of open source development.

CBR: Given the furore over Heartbleed, how will IBM address security concerns about open source?

Recent security concerns such as Heartbleed and ShellShock aren't about open source per se; rather, they are concerns about largely forgotten or under-resourced open source projects that are fundamental to the internet and other key components of enterprise IT.

To address these concerns, IBM and other key vendors have established the multi-million dollar Core Infrastructure Initiative (CII), hosted by the Linux Foundation. This aims to support and fund key open source elements of the global information infrastructure, such as OpenSSL, Network Time Protocol and OpenSSH. A key part of the CII's work is to identify all the key open source projects the Internet depends on to ensure they all have the resources they need to be secure.

Other, properly resourced open source projects are already regarded as highly secure; for example, Security Enhanced Linux (SELinux) providing mandatory access control (MAC) in the Linux kernel, and the EAL4+ security certifications obtained by Linux distributions such as Red Hat Enterprise Linux and SUSE Linux Enterprise Server.

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Q&A: IBM's Adam Jollans talks Linux & Open Source strategy