Paxful Selects iProov to Provide Effortless Security for Cryptocurrency Onboarding and Transactions – Business Wire

LONDON & NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--iProov, the world leader in face biometric authentication technology, announced today that Paxful, a global peer-to-peer fintech platform, will employ its award-winning liveness technology to verify user identity during the onboarding process and when making transactions.

We are thrilled to partner with iProov to offer our users a safe and secure experience while using the Paxful platform. Our mission as an organization is to provide greater access to Bitcoin by building a financial system that serves the global economy, said George Georgiades, Chief Compliance Officer of Paxful. To properly do so, we need to ensure we provide the highest level of security and peace of mind to users. iProovs technology allows us to safeguard against fraud and theft for our community while ensuring continued access and growth of the platform.

When a user onboards with Paxful, they verify their identity using an ID document, such as a driver's license. They then complete a brief face verification to confirm they are the right person and a real person. To carry out a transaction, a returning user then completes a brief face authentication instead of using a password or entering a one-time passcode (OTP).

iProovs Liveness Assurance technology enables organizations to verify that an online user is the right person (not an imposter) and a real person (not a photo or mask being used in a presentation attack). In doing so, it helps businesses and public sector agencies to protect themselves and their users by preventing stolen or faked identities being used for new account fraud and account takeover fraud. Liveness Assurance is device- and platform-agnostic, working across any computer, tablet or cellphone with a user-facing camera.

With the tremendous influx of new users into the crypto space comes an even greater invasion of fraudsters looking to empty or take over accounts or even hold them for ransom, said Andrew Bud, iProov CEO. Paxfuls mission is a critical one that helps connect the underbanked and unbanked around the globe to financial opportunities and stability. We are delighted to support them in offering inclusive and secure remote verification measures to protect their users.

About PaxfulPaxful is a global peer-to-peer fintech platform for people to make payments, transactions, and send money by buying and selling cryptocurrencies as a means of exchange. Founded in 2015 by Ray Youssef and Artur Schaback, Paxful's mission is to help everyone have equal access to finance no matter who or where they are. More than seven million people use Paxful to buy and sell Bitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETH) and Tether (USDT) with nearly 400 different payment methods.

As part of Paxfuls mission to support emerging markets, Ray Youssef, alongside Yusuf Nessary, set up the Built With Bitcoin Foundation, a U.S.-based registered 501(c)(3) not-for-profit dedicated to creating equitable opportunity by providing clean water, access to quality education, sustainable farming, and humanitarian support all powered by Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies. To date, the Foundation has built and repaired 8 schools, 7 solar projects, and over a dozen water and farming systems across the globe.

About iProoviProov is the world leader in online facial biometric authentication, working with governments, banks and other enterprises to securely verify customer identity. Used for effortless onboarding and authentication, customers include the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, the UK Home Office, the UK National Health Service (NHS), the Australian Taxation Office, GovTech Singapore, Rabobank, ING, and others. iProovs technologies include Liveness Assurance and Genuine Presence Assurance, which ensures that an online customer is the right person, a real person, and is authenticating right now. This protects against spoof attacks from photos, videos, masks and digital injection attacks and the emerging threat of deepfakes. iProov was recognized as a Gartner Cool Vendor 2020 in Identity Access Management & Fraud Detection. For more information, please see http://www.iproov.com or follow us on LinkedIn or Twitter.

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Paxful Selects iProov to Provide Effortless Security for Cryptocurrency Onboarding and Transactions - Business Wire

Epstein was murdered Chelsea Manning RT World News

The pedophiles prison guards were likely involved, Manning said on a recent podcast

US Army whistleblower Chelsea Manning told podcast host Ethan Klein that Jeffrey Epsteins apparent suicide in a Manhattan jail cell was likely a prison murder that correctional officers allowed to happen.

Arrested in 2019 and charged with sex trafficking of minors, Epstein was found hanging in his cell in Manhattans Metropolitan Correctional Center a month later. His death was ruled a suicide. However, video cameras covering Epsteins cell malfunctioned and two guards falsified records stating that they had monitored the sex offender on the night of his death, generating public skepticism about the suicide story.

Epsteins death was murder, Manning said on an episode of Kleins H3 Podcast on Friday. Thats how a prison murder happens. I know when it happens.

You wanna get rid of someone in prison? Thats how you do it, she added, referring to the apparent switching off of the security cameras covering Epsteins cell.

Manning, who was born a man, served in the US Army as an intelligence analyst until her arrest in 2010 for leaking classified material to WikiLeaks. Some of this material depicted possible US war crimes in Afghanistan and Iraq. Charged with espionage, she was locked up at a Marine Corps brig in Virginia that year. Manning was later transferred to a military correctional facility in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, and was sentenced in 2013 to 35 years there.

Mannings sentence was commuted in 2017 by outgoing President Barack Obama. However, she served another stint in jail in Virginia between 2019 and 2020 for refusing to testify to a grand jury against WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.

Manning has spoken extensively about her time behind bars, and told Klein that in her experience, prison guards were responsible for most of the violence in correctional facilities.

They f**k with people, she said. Imagine youre sitting there and your job is to watch inmates for 12 hours. Of course youre gonna screw with us.

Time and time again, the most violent and dangerous people in prison are the prison guards, Manning said. Just endless amounts of fear and anxiety ofwhat a[Correctional Officer] or prison guard of any variety was going to do. It haunts me to think, I dont associate someone in a prison uniform with a threat, but I see the CO uniform and its different.

Epstein was a well-connected financier whose frequent contacts included former US Presidents Bill Clinton and Donald Trump, Microsoft CEO Bill Gates, and British royal Prince Andrew. While his death ensured that some details of these relationships would never be brought to light, it also resulted in the prosecution of Prince Andrew and of Epsteins long-term girlfriend and madam Ghislaine Maxwell. Andrew paid a settlement to a woman accusing him of sexual assault in March, and Maxwell was found guilty on five counts of sex trafficking involving a minor in December 2021.

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Epstein was murdered Chelsea Manning RT World News

Epstein was ‘murdered’ says US whistleblower Chelsea Manning

Chelsea Manning is in no doubt as to the fate of convicted sex-offender Jeffrey Epstein, and has used her own experiences of the American prison system to come to her conclusion.

Manning was speaking on the Jan 10th 'After Dark' episode of the H3H3 podcast to hosts Ethan and Hila Klein.

Prompted by Ethan, she was asked her opinion on the circumstances of Epstein's death based on her time as a fairly high-profile prisoner.

And Chelsea's answer was straight to the point.

"Murder, that's how a prison murder happens. I know. That stuff happens. Some of theses stories are in my book," said Manning in response.

"You wanna get rid of someone in prison? That's how you do it."

On August 10, 2019, Guards found Epstein unresponsive in his jail cell where he was awaiting a trail on sex-trafficking charges.

His death was ruled as suicide by hanging, but despite the official verdict, the incident has become a lightning-rod for conspiracy theories and a number of allegations, including Manning's.

Manning's answer was based on her experiences of the United States prison system, and in particularly the actions of guards.

"I just gotta' say, time and time again - the most violent people in the prison are the prison guards, every single time, just endless amounts of fear and anxiety of what a correctional guard of any variety was going to do. It haunts me to say, I don't associate the prison uniform with violence, but I see the CO uniform and it's different."

"I would say that there's the rule of thirds. There are guards who care, they think they are doing a service and they try to be fair - it's a fast turnover rate. Then there are the guards who look the other way, treat it as a paycheck. Then there's the sadistic ones, the ones who play games and lie and cheat and steal, and get away with it. The other third who look the other way, don't do anything."

Manning's currently untitled memoir will release later this year.

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Epstein was 'murdered' says US whistleblower Chelsea Manning

Edward Snowden – National Whistleblower Center

In 2013, Edward Snowden, a former intelligence contractor for the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA), revealed the existence of previously highly classified intelligence-gathering surveillance programs run by the NSA and the U.K.s equivalent, the GCHQ. While working at the NSA, Snowden began accumulating information on NSA surveillance programs and activities while contracted there from 2009 to 2013.

In May 2013, Snowden flew to Hong Kong where he brought NSA documents to reporters at The Guardian, who conducted interviews of Snowden about his discoveries. With The Guardian and The Washington Post publishing reports on NSA surveillance and data-collecting activities, Snowden revealed his identity shortly thereafter. In June 2013, the U.S. government charged Snowden with espionage under the Espionage Act and attempted to extradite him. However, with the Hong Kong government not taking any action with regard to his extradition, Snowden fled to Russia where he has since remained.

Snowdens discoveries drew open the curtain on many classified NSA programs including PRISM, an undercover data-mining operation that collected private data of users from companies such as Apple, Facebook, Google and AOL. Additionally, included in Snowdens exposures was an NSA court order compelling internet service provider, Verizon, to turn over metadata for millions of its users.

In August 2013, President Obama announced proposed reforms to increase transparency of NSA and other agency programs, including updating sections of the Patriot Act and reforming the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court. Additionally, President Obama convened an independent panel of outside experts to examine the U.S. governments surveillance technologies and practices. In December 2013, the panel found that the NSA should not be permitted to collect personal data and information from Internet service providers and phone carriers, among other recommendations.

In 2019, Snowden released his memoir, Permanent Record.

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Edward Snowden - National Whistleblower Center

Commentary: The fight against excessive surveillance continues in Maine and across the country – Press Herald

Two years ago, an unidentified hacker collective compromised 251 police websites, exfiltrating 270 gigabytes of data and exposing a massive system of public-private surveillance: the regional offices of the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas Program created in the 1990s; the fusion centers established after 9/11 to share information across all levels of government; the privately-run organized retail crime alliances set up in the last decade by corporate retailers to track shoplifters.

The transparency collective Distributed Denial of Secrets named this unredacted archive of police data BlueLeaks and published it on Juneteenth 2020. We have yet to fully reckon with its implications.

Appearing amid the 2020 racial justice protests, Blueleaks attracted immediate attention. The Intercept, the nonprofit founded to report on the documents leaked by Edward Snowden, provided the most comprehensive coverage, exposing the fear-mongering and political repression that passes as domestic intelligence. Intercept reporters found that intelligence analysts manufactured non-existent eco-terrorists, passed information on environmentalists to corporations, monitored racial justice protests and exaggerated their danger, and downplayed the threat of violence from the far right.

In Maine, BlueLeaks broke furthest and fastest. The hacks compromised the already-controversial Maine Information and Analysis Center (MIAC), a fusion center run by the Maine State Police. In May 2020, a state trooper blew the whistle, alleging that the MIAC illegally gathered and retained data on Mainers, including many suspected of no crime.

Drawing on BlueLeaks, journalists found that the MIAC had shift from counterterrorism to routine crimes. Subsequent peer-reviewed scholarship confirmed this point, countering vague claims from MIAC leadership about MIACs role preventing violence with hard evidence that reveals the spy center remains almost exclusively preoccupied with property crime, violent crime, drugs and homelessness. An analysis of the MIACs Civil Unrest Daily Reports on the 2020 racial justice protests found that the MIAC shared disinformation sourced from satirical websites and social media to support claims of paid protestors and pre-staging of bricks.

In response, legislators proposed two bills in 2021. An effort to close the spy center passed the house but failed in the senate. Another bill requiring an annual report on the MIAC from the State Police became law, creating a self-policing surveillance bureaucracy. Unsurprisingly, many legislators were unimpressed with this self-audit.

In anticipation of this outcome, a grassroots group prepared The MIAC Shadow Report to highlight the official reports omissions and deficiencies, while raising new questions about the extent and scope of the MIACs surveillance powers.

To give just one example, we found that an officer employed by the Scarborough Police and Maine Drug Enforcement Agency used a passcode and encryption circumvention device called a Cellebrite UFED Touch 2 to extract personal data from cell phones. The officer sent the extracted data to the MIAC for analysis. When the MIAC was hacked over a year later, the records, still languishing on the MIACs email servers, became public documents.

Police, in other words, are using surveillance systems with no oversight. Maine recently became the first state to regulate law enforcement use of facial recognition surveillance. Should police have cell phone passcode and encryption circumvention devices? This question and a similar one regarding private data brokers (see the MIAC Shadow Report for more)has been answered without public input.

Although two years have passed since their publication, BlueLeaks contains many explosive revelations that are still reverberating. The effort to close the MIAC raised the stakes and inspired others. In Oregon, activists spied on by their states fusion center filed a class action suit that alleges that the fusion center operates without legislative authority.

The fight against police surveillance continue and BlueLeaks remains as an essential resource, an unredacted archive of the police state that challenges us to claw our privacy and other freedoms back from the state and corporate powers that seek to make our lives legible for the purposes of social control and profit.

Special to the Press Herald

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Commentary: The fight against excessive surveillance continues in Maine and across the country - Press Herald

Jeff Bezos Slammed Over Biden Inflation Tweet: ‘Buyer’s Remorse’ – Newsweek

Billionaire Jeff Bezos has been slammed online after he attacked President Joe Biden for blaming gas companies for setting high prices at the pumps.

In a July 3 tweet, Biden said: "My message to the companies running gas stations and setting prices at the pump is simple: This is a time of war and global peril. Bring down the price you are charging at the pump to reflect the cost you're paying for the product. And do it now."

His comment came as Americans continue to navigate crippling inflation over the July 4 holiday weekend.

Americans face paying a staggering average of $4.812 for gas, according to gasprices.aaa.com. The website said in 2021 the national average for gas was $3.127.

The Amazon CEO soon stepped in and berated the Democrat for pleading with gas companies to bring down their prices.

Bezos said in a tweet shared the same day as Biden's: "Ouch. Inflation is far too important a problem for the White House to keep making statements like this. It's either straight ahead misdirection or a deep misunderstanding of basic market dynamics."

Bezos' comment did not go unnoticed, however, and while many praised the billionaire, there were many who hit out at him for his previous vocal support for Biden, including an Instagram post where he congratulated the Democrat for winning the 2020 presidential election.

Whistleblower Edward Snowden, who was granted asylum by Russia in 2013, simply tweeted: "Buyer's remorse."

Pedro L. Gonzalez, associate editor at Chronicles magazine, said: "Bezos criticizing is ironic because: as a company, Amazon overwhelmingly supports Biden.

"Bezos pours hundreds of millions of dollars into the Democratic Party's machine. Bezos owns the Washington Post, which does nothing but run cover for Biden."

Other commentators said they had no patience for a billionaire complaining about inflation and gas prices.

Aaron Huertas, former communications director for the U.S. House Select Committee on the Climate Crisis, said: "The billionaires are on Twitter and constantly setting themselves up to be trolled. @POTUS or @WHCOS (White House Chief of Staff) or @SecMartyWalsh should be dunking on this.

"Nobody wants to hear about gas prices from an out-of-touch union-busting wannabe space cowboy."

Newsweek has contacted Amazon and the White House for comment.

Bezos has shared his critical views on politicians and fellow billionaires on Twitter on multiple occasions.

Earlier this year, the second richest person in the world raised questions about Elon Musk's takeover of Twitter.

In a tweet responding to New York Times reporter Mike Forsythe listing the way Tesla is dependent on the Chinese market and raw materials produced in the country, the Amazon founder said: "Did the Chinese government just gain a bit of leverage over the town square?"

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Jeff Bezos Slammed Over Biden Inflation Tweet: 'Buyer's Remorse' - Newsweek

UK Bill Threatens Journalists With Life in Prison – Scheerpost.com

Journalists and publishers could face life sentences if National Security Bill 2022, being debated in the U.K. Parliament, becomes law, reports Mohamed Elmaazi.

By Mohamed Elmaazi / Consortium News

The British Parliament is debating a national security bill which could undermine the basis of national security reporting and ultimately throw journalists in jail for life.

A person convicted under the new offense of obtaining or disclosing protected information, defined in Section 1 ofNational Security Bill 2022,faces a fine, life imprisonment, or both, if convicted following a jury trial.

A review of the parliamentary debate on the bill makes clear that work by press outlets such asWikiLeaksis at the heart of Tory and Labour MPs thinking as they push to make the bill law.

As currently written, direct-action protests, such as thoseconductedby Palestine Action against U.K.-based Israeli weapons manufacturer Elbit Systems Ltd, could also be captured under the offences of sabotage and entering prohibited places sections of the bill.

Whistleblowers, journalists and publishers focusing on national security related matters may be most at risk of being prosecuted, though any person who copies, retains, discloses, distributes or provides access to so called protected information could be prosecuted.

Protected information is defined as any restricted material and it need not even be classified.

Under this bill, leakers, whistleblowers, journalists or everyday members of the public, face a potential life sentence if they receive or share protected information which is widely defined.

That does not mean up to a life sentence. Following a conviction, a judge would have the option to either issue a fine or hand down a life sentence, or both.

[Read the bill in its entiretyhere.]

There is no public interest or journalistic defense in the bill, a fact noted bysome of the parliamentariansduring the debates.

The glaring omission at the heart of the National Security Bill is a straightforward public-interest defense, so that those who expose wrongdoing, either as whistleblowers or journalists, will be protected, Tim Dawson, a long-time member of the National Union of Journalists National Executive Council toldConsortium News.

Without this, there is a risk of concerned U.K. citizens being prosecuted as though they were foreign spies, he added.

[Related:Sweeping Threat to Free Speech in U.K,]

The bill can be seen as part of a growing crackdown in both Britain and the United States against legitimate journalism that challenges establishment narratives.

In many respects, the proposed law, which applies to people both inside and outside the U.K., shares many elements with the draconian 1917 Espionage Act, which the U.S. government is using to prosecuteWikiLeakspublisher Julian Assange.

Assange is charged with 17 offenses under the Espionage Act, amounting to a maximum 170 years in prison. None of the charges allege conspiring with a foreign power and merely pertain to receiving and publishing documents leaked to him by U.S. Army whistleblower Chelsea Manning.

No Evidence of Harm

As is the case with the U.S. Espionage Act, no evidence of actual harm needs to be proven by prosecutors in order to secure a conviction under the National Security Bill.

There is a broad test of whether the defendant knows or ought reasonably to know that their conduct is prejudicial to safety or interests of the U.K.

What is, or is not, prejudicial to the safety or interests of the U.K. is also to be determined by the government of the day,according to long established case lawfrom the U.K.s highest court.

This could include anything from environmental, energy, climate and housing policy, to policing, foreign affairs or military policy.

WikiLeaks-Style Publications

A review of theparliamentary debatesover the bill shows that although it is being justified on the basis of protecting the U.K.from theserious threat from state-backed attacks on assets, including sites, data and infrastructure critical to the U.K.s safety or interests, national security leaks and reporting including that ofWikiLeaks is explicitly in the minds of at least some of the key politicians supporting the bill.

Will the right honourable lady condemn theWikiLeaks-type mass dumping of information in the public domain? It is hugely irresponsible and can put lives at risk, Tory MP Theresa VilliersaskedLabours Shadow Home Secretary Yevette Cooper, on June 6.

Yes, I strongly do, because some of the examples of such leaks that we have seen put agents lives at risk, put vital parts of our national security and intelligence infrastructure at risk and are highly irresponsible, Cooperreplied, adding, We need safeguards to protect against that kind of damaging impact on our national security.

There is no evidence that anything published byWikiLeakshas resulted in the loss of life.

A U.S.-leakedgovernment reportitselfconcludedthat there was no significant strategic impact to the release of the [Iraq War Logs and Afghanistan War Diary], from the Manning leaks which Assange is being prosecuted over. No actual harm [against an individual] could be shown either, a lawyer acting for the U.S. governmentadmitted duringAssanges extradition hearings.

This contradicts the official government line that the leaks caused serious harm.

Broad Threat

Among the many disclosures revealed byWikiLeaks,includethe secret texts of proposed corporate and investor rights treatiessuch asthe Trans-Pacific Partnership.

These treaties, which were beingnegotiated in secretand would not have been known to the citizens until just before or even after they had become law, would have preferenced corporate rights over domestic laws and subordinated labor, environmental and health protections and climate policy to the profit-making imperatives of private industry. Their passage stalled after their draft texts were leaked and then published byWikiLeaks.

WikiLeaksrevelations also include dramatic incidents such as the executionof 10 handcuffed Iraqi civilians in their family home, including four women, two children and three infants, by U.S. soldiers who later ordered an airstrike to cover it up.

Many around the world might still believe that a U.K. plan to build the worlds largest marine park in the Chagos Islands was motivated by environmental concerns, were it not for a cable published byWikiLeaksrevealing thatthe true purpose was to prevent theindigenous populationfrom ever being able to return to their land.

Torture and renditionof civilians as well as other war crimes were also revealed byWikiLeaks.

All such material, which are among the documents Assange is being prosecuted by the U.S. for publishing, would fall under the National Security Bills definition of protected information.

Conspiracy with Foreign Power

In theory, involvement of a foreign power must also be proven for Section 1 of the bill to apply. But a review of the foreign power condition in Section 24 of the bill shows a myriad of ways that this condition could be satisfied.

Section 24 reads as follows:

24 The foreign power condition

(1) For the purposes of this Part the foreign power condition is met in relation to a persons conduct if

(a) the conduct in question, or a course of conduct of which it forms part, is carried out for or on behalf of a foreign power,

and

(b) the person knows, or ought reasonably to know, that to be the case.

(2) The conduct in question, or a course of conduct of which it forms part, is in particular to be treated as carried out for or on behalf of a foreign power if

(a) it is instigated by a foreign power,

(b) is under the direction or control of a foreign power,

(c) it is carried out with the financial or other assistance of a foreign power, or

(d) it is carried out in collaboration with, or with the agreement of, a foreign power.

(3) Subsections (1)(a) and (2) may be satisfied by a direct or indirect relationship between the conduct, or the course of conduct, and the foreign power (for example, there may be an indirect relationship through one or more companies).

(4) A persons conduct may form part of a course of conduct engaged in by the person alone, or by the person and one or more other persons.

(5) The foreign power condition is also met in relation to a persons conduct if the person intends the conduct in question to benefit a foreign power.

(6) For the purposes of subsection (5) it is not necessary to identify a particular foreign power.

(7) The foreign power condition may be met in relation to the conduct of a person who holds office in or under, or is an employee or other member of staff of, a foreign power, as it may be met in relation to the conduct of any otherperson.

Foreign Funded Organizations

The foreign power condition could potentially be satisfied, therefore, due simply to the involvement, at any stage, of a journalist working for news outlets such as Al Jazeera, Press TV, CGTN, RT, Voice of America, France 24, Redfish or TeleSUr.

Tory MP David Davies, himself a supporter of the bill despite being known for his criticism of the prosecution of Assange,noted that[human rights group] Reprieve, Privacy International, Transparency International and other excellent organizations that do very good work have received some funding from other nations Governments and could therefore fall foul of this law.

Perfectly legitimate organizations could be left committing an offence, under this area of the bill, if they use leaked information which may not even be classified to challenge government policy, Daviesadded.

Furthermore, what is deemed to be a perfectly legitimate organization is in the eye of the beholder and can change over time as proven by the increased E.U. and U.S. censorship of RT and Sputnik since Russias invasion of Ukraine.

Even if a foreign power is proven to somehow be involved, either in the obtaining of restricted material, sharing or publishing it, there is no apparent need to prove conspiring with that foreign power for the condition to be satisfied and therefore for a defendant to be convicted.

Therefore, if a person reports upon U.K. government documents which prosecutors argue have been hacked and released by a foreign government agency, or even a hacker group infiltrated or influenced somehow by a foreign government agency they could be found guilty under this law, without any evidence either of participation in the hack or conspiracy with a foreign power.

The Bill and the Official Secrets Act

Following the revelations of mass, warrantless, government surveillance, by NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden, as well asWikiLeaksrevelations of war crimes and other state wrongdoing, the Cabinet Office asked the Law Commissionto reviewits official secrecy, data protection and espionage laws.

In 2020, the Law Commission recommendedreplacingthe Official Secrets Acts 1911, 1920 and 1939 with an Espionage Act, and updating the Official Secrets Act 1989. Many of itsrecommendationson reforming U.K, secrecy laws, would make it easier to bring prosecutions against whistleblowers, journalists and publishers by lowering so called barriers to prosecution.

For example, the Law Commission recommended that prosecutors should no longer have to prove that leaks by public servants and contractors, covered by the 1989 Act, have caused damage. The 1989 Actis the main legislation currently used to target whistleblowers, leakers, journalists and publishers.

The National Security Bill repeals the older official secrets laws and expands criminalisation of conduct which might be useful to an enemy with the more broadly defined foreign power. This bill also adoptsrecommendations to expandwhat can be labelled a prohibited place beyond military sites.Section 1 applies to people based outside the U.K,, regardless of their nationality, and this appears to flow from the Law Commissions proposed amendments to the 1989 Act, which currently only applies to U.K. citizens.

Technically, the National Security Bill hardly amends the Official Secrets Act 1989. Perhaps this is because the Home Office opposes the Law Commissions insistence that revisions to the 1989 Act re-introduce a public interest defence, which could be used by journalists and everyday civilians. The Home Office also opposes the idea of an independent body to receive whistleblower concerns. Yet many of the most draconian recommendations have been implemented in some form in the Bill.

Section 1 of the Bill which lacks any requirement to prove damage along with the overly broad foreign power condition could simply be the Home Offices way of seeking to expand the scope of conduct covered by the 1989 Act as much as possible without explicitly doing so. The National Security Bill therefore appears to fall foul of the Law Commissions recommendations that the definition of a foreign power should not render the offense overly broad.

National Security Reporting

In 2018, emails and other documents belonging to the Institute for Statecrafts Integrity Initiative, a now defunct U.K.-based, intelligence services-linked, propaganda and psyop organization, were hacked and published online.

The documents revealed that the Integrity Initiative was receiving funding from the U.K. Foreign Office, Facebook, NATO and neoconservative-linked foundations, and was engaged in directing anti-Russian, anti-left and pro-NATO propaganda towards the European and U.K. public.

Integrity Initiative documents, including emails and a contract with the U.K. Foreign Office, revealed an ambitious global agenda involving secret clusters of academics, journalists, policy makers and national security-linked officials in Europe, North Africa and North America, with more being planned.

The hacked documents revealed that the purpose of the Integrity Initiative was to shape public opinion and public policy under the guise of combatting Russian disinformation.

A group called Anonymous Europe claimed responsibility, though the Foreign Office and Western mediasuggested, without evidence, that the Russian government was somehow behind the hack.

The BBCeven reported, also without evidence, that the documents were leaked to the Russian media.

In fact, the documents were published on an internet messaging board and available to anyone aware of the website,includingindependent British and American journalists who reported upon them.

Reporting on such documents, if the National Security Bill becomes law, could be considered a violation of Section 1, given that some of the files were restricted government documents and the Integrity Initiative was partially government funded. If foreign government actors were involved in hacking or releasing the documents that alone could satisfy the foreign power condition in Section 24.

Even the fact that journalists (including British citizens) who were writing for foreign government-funded news outlets reported on the documents could satisfy the foreign power condition.

Even more disturbing, involvement of a foreign power is not actually needed if the government argues that the conduct of the defendant was intended to benefit a foreign power. In this circumstance, it is not necessary [for the prosecution] to identify a particular foreign power.

Therefore, for example, if a journalist known for writing articles critical of NATO reports on restricted material which paints the military alliance in a bad light, regardless of whether the documents were leaked to him directly or even if he simply came across them already published online, that journalist could be prosecuted, convicted and sentenced to life if the prosecutor convinces the jury that, based on their prior reporting or public comments critical of NATO or of Western foreign policy, they intended their reporting on the restricted material to benefit a foreign power.

Which foreign power was he intending to benefit? It isnt necessary for the prosecutor to say, as Section 24 (6) makes clear.

There are a number of other notable elements to this bill worth considering.

Sabotage & Entering Prohibited Place

Direct action might also fall foul of provisions in this bill, if the foreign power condition is satisfied.

Committing damage against any asset, inside or outside the U.K., for a purpose that they know, or ought reasonably to know, is prejudicial to the safety or interests of the United Kingdom is also punishable by a fine or life in prison, or both, under Section 12.

Damage includes alteration or loss of or reduction in access or availability to an asset.

Under Section 4, entering a prohibited place could result in a life sentence, if the person knew or ought reasonably to know it is prejudicial to the safety or interests of the U.K. This includes if someone accesses, enters, inspects [including films], passes over or under, approaches or is in the vicinity of a prohibited place.

Conceivably,direct action activistssuch as members of Palestine Action who have successfully shut down factories belonging to Israeli weapons manufacture Elbit Systems Ltd, would be caught by such provisions, The same goes for journalists filming them or entering a premises designated prohibited.

In the 1964 case ofChandler v Director of Public Prosecutions, the U.K.s highest court upheld conviction of members of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament for violating the Official Secrets Act. The activists were convicted for entering Wethersfield RAF base a prohibited place for a purpose deemed prejudicial to the security of the state. The trial judge was said to be within his right to deny the defendants the ability to offer evidence or cross-examine witnesses to argue that their purpose in entering the base was to improve the U.K.s security.

This is the same case that held that what is prejudicial to the safety or interest of the country is up to the government of the day to determine.

Protecting Corporate Secrets

Section 2 of the bill also creates a crime of obtaining or disclosing trade secrets. As is the case with Section 1, this occurs whether the person knew or ought reasonably to know that their conduct is unauthorised.

A person faces either a fine or up to 14 years in prison, or both, if they are convicted.

There is no whistleblowing, journalistic or public interest protection provided in this section either.

Arguably, obtaining or disclosing trade secrets which could reveal, for example, corruption, environmental pollution, labor violations and other human rights abuses or other forms of corporate malfeasance could conceivably result in prosecution under this bill.

The foreign power condition must be satisfied for Section 2 to apply, which, it has already been shown, is arguably easier to do than one might think.

Limiting Legal Aid Access

Access to legal aidis also restricted for anyone convicted of a terror offence. This means that someone who, for example, was convicted for violating Schedule 7 of the Terrorism Act 2000 for refusing to give access to their mobile phone password at the airport could find themselves denied legal aid years later.

Freezing Funds & Other Assets

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UK Bill Threatens Journalists With Life in Prison - Scheerpost.com

Shadow Fury – Hypixel SkyBlock Wiki

Shadow Fury Dmg

+300 (+310 with Livid Fragments)

+125 (+130 with Livid Fragments)

+30 (+40 with Livid Fragments)

Ability: Shadow FuryRapidly teleports you to up to 5 enemies within 12 blocks, rooting each of them and allowing you to hit them.

SHADOW_FURY

The Shadow Fury is a rare drop from the Bedrock Chest in The Catacombs - Floor V. It costs 15Mcoins to open. Like all dungeon items, it has a chance to be Recombobulated or Starred when received from a Chest.

The Shadow Fury is a melee weapon. Players must complete The Catacombs - Floor V to be able to use this weapon.

Its ability teleports the player behind up to 5 enemies within 12 blocks in rapid succession. Upon teleporting, the target is stunned and dealt melee Damage. This continues to work even when the Shadow Fury is not held and doing so will change the damage of the hit according to what weapon you are currently holding. The ability has a 15-second cooldown and does not cost Mana.

It can be salvaged for 50 Wither Essence.

It can be upgraded with Livid Fragments to provide an additional +10 Speed, +10 Damage and +5 Strength.

This weapon can be upgraded using Wither Essence.

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Shadow Fury - Hypixel SkyBlock Wiki

FDA temporarily suspends order banning sales of Juul | FOX 2

(The Hill) The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) on Tuesday announced it had temporarily suspended its ban on sales of the popular e-cigarette maker Juul.

On July 5, 2022, FDA administratively stayed the marketing denial order, the agencys Tobacco division wrote in a tweet. The agency has determined that there are scientific issues unique to the JUUL application that warrant additional review.

This administrative stay temporarily suspends the marketing denial order during the additional review but does not rescind it, the agency said in its Twitter thread.

All electronic nicotine delivery systems, or ENDS products, including those made by JUUL, are required by law to have FDA authorization to be legally marketed, the agency concluded. The stay and the agencys review does not constitute authorization to market, sell, or ship JUUL products.

The health agency also said that the company is allowed to market its products in the U.S. for the time being.

Two weeks earlier, the health agency banned the sale of the e-cigarette maker, saying that the company did not prove to them that keeping their product on the market is the best for the protection of public health.

In a statement, FDA commissioner Robert Califf said that Juul has played a major role in the rise of vaping among U.S. youth.

Todays action is further progress on the FDAs commitment to ensuring that all e-cigarette and electronic nicotine delivery system products currently being marketed to consumers meet our public health standards, Califf said in his statement.

A federal appeals court a day later temporarily blocked the FDA ban on Juul, granting the e-cigarette makers request for a stay order, noting that its order will not reflect its ruling on the case.

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FDA temporarily suspends order banning sales of Juul | FOX 2

Coughlicts of interest?- POLITICO – POLITICO

Good Thursday morning!

Colleen ODea and John Reitmeyer recently reported that the Union County and Middlesex County improvement authorities each got $20 million in funding in the budget. Im sure youre aware of where Senate President Nick Scutari and Assembly Speaker Craig Coughlin live.

The previously-unreported detail I can add here is that the law firm co-founded by Coughlin one of the few politicians who has a real hand in crafting the budget is general counsel for both of those authorities. In 2021 it was paid about $360,000 from the Middlesex one and $407,000 from the Union County one.

Coughlins law firm started up five years ago, just as it became clear that he was in line to be speaker. Since then, its public sector billings have increased every year, from $1.8 million in 2017 to $6.6 million today. I suppose with that amount of public work its inevitable youll have situations like this, where the firms getting money from public entities that one of the firms named partners had a major hand in funding. I doubt this is the only public entity they represent that got money in the budget.

But at the very least, one could argue that this has the appearance of a conflict.

Speaker Coughlin is proud to have sponsored this years $50 billion budget, which included investments that will benefit millions of New Jerseyans and hundreds of localities throughout our state, Assembly Democratic spokesperson Gina Wilder said in a statement. The Speaker routinely confers with counsel for any potential ethical questions, and we are confident there are no conflicts in this year's budget.

It might be a tough sell politically to raise lawmakers salaries, but a full-time Legislature where members arent allowed to hold other jobs is one way to avoid this type of thing.

DAYS SINCE MURPHY REFUSED TO SAY WHETHER HIS WIFES NON-PROFIT SHOULD DISCLOSE DONORS: 142

WHERES MURPHY? Italy

QUOTE OF THE DAY #1: I am not a conspiracy theorist, but nonetheless the coincidence of errors seems to be statistically impossible. Based upon the nature of this matter, I believe there is something rotten in Denmark. Attorney Michael Hanafan, who represents Sussex County GOP commissioner candidate Bill Hayden in a defamation lawsuit against county Democrats, in a letter to judge William McGovern III.

QUOTE OF THE DAY #2: I cannot ignore Mr. Hanifans misquotation of Marcellus famous line, Something is rotten in the State of Denmark,' Plaintiffs counsels letter reminds me of a more appropriate line, also from Hamlet. Specifically, The lady doth protest too much, methinks, as stated by Queen Gertrude in Act 3, Scene 2. Attorney Christine Stripp in a response letter to McGovern

HAPPY BIRTHDAY Assemblymember Brian Bergen, Mercurys Mo Butler, Washington Posts Naomi Nix. Saturday for Ocean Dems Ken Bank, NJBACs Melanie Willoughby, Bergen Countys Christian Sforza, former Rep. Scott Garrett. Sunday for POLITICOs John Appezzatto, Plainsboro Committeeman David Bander, WSJs Heather Haddon, Porzios Beau Huch, 12th District staffer Synnove Bakke, friend Margaret Morgan, former assemblymember Jack Conners

TIPS? FEEDBACK? HATE MAIL? Email me at [emailprotected]

A message from Rise Light & Power:

The Clear Choice for NJ Clean EnergyWhat would advance New Jersey as a national leader in the fight against climate change and repurpose a decades-old brownfield? Transforming the site of a former coal plant into a gateway for offshore wind with strong community support. Thats the Outerbridge Renewable Connector, anextension cordconnecting clean offshore wind energy toNew Jerseys powergrid.

BOAT CHECKS STILL FLOATING New Jersey municipalities wasting 'many millions' on improper sick leave payouts, watchdog group says, by POLITICOs Carly Sitrin: New Jersey municipalities have wasted and are continuing to waste many millions of taxpayer dollars on improper sick leave payouts to public employees, according to a damning new report from the state comptroller's office. Of the 60 municipalities, the Office of the State Comptroller investigated, 57 of them, or 95 percent, are currently violating or have policies that will violate state laws that were enacted to protect taxpayers from wasteful and abusive sick leave payments

Investigators found examples of sick leave payments being permitted annually instead of just at retirement, municipalities simply not imposing the mandated $15,000 cap on sick leave payments, and policies and contracts that blatantly disregarded the states sick leave reform laws instituted in 2007 and expanded in 2010. While the report does not offer an accounting of how much money is estimated to have been wasted, the investigators cite the borough of Palisades Park in Bergen County as one example. According to the report, the local business administrator there collected unlawful sick leave payouts of nearly $10,000 in 2018 and 2019 and was entitled to a $360,000 payout when he retired including $160,000 in unlawful sick and vacation leave payouts. Thats just for one employee in one municipality, but Walsh said there are potentially hundreds if not thousands of similar examples across the state.

FAIR LABOR JUST TOO MUCH TO ASK Newark Airport deal for $432M Amazon air hub collapses, by The Records Daniel Munoz: Amazon and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey have walked away from a controversial $432 million air freight hub proposed for Newark Liberty International Airport. Without specifying what led to the breakdown, the Port Authority, which owns the airport, announced in an emailed statement Thursday that the two sides were parting ways after almost a year of talks. Unfortunately, the Port Authority and Amazon have been unable to reach an agreement on final lease terms and mutually concluded that further negotiations will not resolve the outstanding issues, Port Authority Chief Operating Officer Huntley Lawrence said in the statement [S]ome labor groups and environmental advocates have been sharply critical of the deal, citing what they call Amazon's poor record on worker safety and warning of increased pollution for nearby neighborhoods. After the Port Authority's June board meeting, board Chairman Kevin OToole told reporters that the agency was pushing for guarantees of fair labor practices at the hub, but did not elaborate further. Its not clear what role these conditions played in the deal collapsing.

THE GUNDEN STATE Gun owners sue to overturn N.J.s assault weapons ban, by New Jersey Monitors Dana DiFilippo: A group representing over a million New Jersey gun owners has sued New Jersey law enforcement officials in federal court to overturn the states ban on semiautomatic firearms and assault weapons. The Association of New Jersey Rifle & Pistol Clubs Inc. filed the complaint Friday, a day after the U.S. Supreme Court ordered Maryland to reconsider a similar ban there in light of its ruling declaring a constitutional right to carry handguns in public. Scott Bach, who heads the association, hopes the Maryland remand means New Jerseys 32-year-old ban will fall too like its justifiable need requirement did after the U.S. Supreme Court last month relied on the Second Amendment to overturn a concealed carry regulation in New York. Weve been waiting decades for this moment, Bach said.

N.J. gun laws face new legal challenges after Supreme Court strikes down concealed carry law

Justice Barry Albin the common sense jurist steps down from N.J. Supreme Court

Legislators want non-disparagement provisions barred in discrimination cases

DeCroce ready to run again

N.J. is now an abortion safe haven for those from other states. Heres what that means

Opinion: New Jersey can play a pivotal role in providing abortions for women in other states

Medical marijuana is now tax-free for New Jersey patients

NO SLEEP IN BEDMINSTER Anti-Trump group uses cable ads to tweak ex-president staying at his N.J. golf club, by NJ Advance Medias Jonathan D. Salant: Residents living in and around Bedminster will begin seeing an ad proclaiming how Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has stolen Donald Trumps thunder. The ad is aimed at one person: the former president. Weve got this thing we call the audience of one, basically getting into Trumps head, said Rick Wilson, co-founder of the Lincoln Project, an anti-Trump Republican group. The ads will run on Fox News and the Golf Channel while Trump is spending the warmer months at his Bedminster golf club

Sen. Booker among lawmakers calling on Biden to end federal ban on cannabis

Picatinny Arsenal's contamination may be larger than previously known, report shows

A message from Rise Light & Power:

POWER HOARDING DISORDER? George Gilmore wins race for Ocean GOP Chairman by 7 votes, by New Jersey Globes George Christopher and David Wildstein: George Gilmore will return to the helm of the states most powerful Republican organization, winning back his job as Ocean County Republican Chairman by seven votes, 330 to 323, a 50.5%-49.5% margin against Sheriff Michael Mastronardy. Gilmore had sought return to the post he held from 1996 to 2019 before a conviction on federal tax-related charges triggered his resignation. Frank B. Holman III, who succeeded Gilmore in 2019, endorsed Mastronardy, along with all five county commissioners and the Ocean Republican legislative delegation. Gilmore received a pardon from President Donald Trump before he served any jail time and has since become a thorn in the side of the Ocean County Republican establishment, backing challengers to local Republican incumbents and fundraising for a rival Republican organization.

IN UNRELATED NEWS, IM SUDDENLY FEELING VERY SPIRITUAL Lawsuit may slow vacant church in Hunterdon becoming marijuana farm, by MyCentralJerseys Mike Deak: A lawsuit has been filed alleging that the Hunterdon County Health Department's approval of a septic system for a proposed marijuana cultivation facility was invalid because a report on the system made "false representations." The suit, filed by WoodMeier Farms on Rock Road West, also names Green Medicine NJ and GMNJ Properties, which want to convert a vacant church at the intersection of Rock Road West and Route 518 into the cultivation facility. The lawsuit, filed June 30 in Superior Court in Hunterdon County, comes as the township's Planning Board has scheduled a special meeting for 7 p.m. July 14 at South Hunterdon High School to continue a public hearing on the plan for the facility, which has drawn vocal community opposition

FERRY FOLLIES N.J. ferry war moves to court after NY Waterway sues to keep running Shore service, by NJ Advance Medias Larry Higgs: NY Waterway filed a lawsuit this week against Monmouth County and a rival ferry company that was recently awarded a lucrative contract for a route to New York as the fight over the lucrative commuter service from the Jersey Shore escalated. Named in the suit filed Wednesday were the Monmouth County Board of Commissioners, the county and SeaStreak LLC, which awarded the contract last month for the Belford-to-New York ferry service. NY Waterway has run that route since 1999 from a county-owned ferry terminal in the Belford section of Middletown.The suit seeks a temporary court order blocking the county from implementing the contract awarded to SeaStreak on June 21 by the board of commissioners.

POLITICAL MUSCHAL Muschal, facing censure, called on to resign over ex-Trenton police directors claims, by The Trentonians Isaac Avilucea: In the twilight of his career in public service, South Ward Councilman George Muschal faces calls from political rivals to resign over allegations that he used his power and influence as an elected official to interfere with the management of Trenton Police. The retired Trenton cop, who has been under attack for weeks, is also accused of wielding his position to obtain courtesy from cops who responded last summer to a neighbors residence for an alleged break-in, according to the resolution sponsored by West Ward Councilwoman Robin Vaughn The resolution says its in the best interests of Trentonians for Muschal to step aside. He has been in office since 2009, when he won a special election to fill the unexpired term of Jim Costin, who resigned for a pastoral position in Waco, Texas. Muschal was not available for a phone interview Thursday afternoon, ahead of the impending vote. However, his wife, Theresa, had choice words for Council President Kathy McBride and Vaughn, promising an explosive showdown at the meeting.

@IsaacAvilucea: Muschal censure fails in a 3-3 tie.

Clark Township agrees to pay $825K to settle two lawsuits against embattled police department

Massive [West Windsor] warehouse project approved but faces more scrutiny

New Jersey gives Long Branch $500K to prevent pop-up parties

Are South Jersey inmates being shipped to Hudson County?

Zisa wins re-election in a 2-1 blowout

Hoboken Yard, municipal budget and 20-mph speed limit all approved by Hoboken City Council

Hoboken council allows HCIA to consider acquiring Poggi Press site for municipal complex

TIRED: COMPLAINING THAT TWITTER IS SHADOW BANNING YOU. WIRED: TRYING TO GET LIBRARIANS ARRESTED FOR BOOKS With rising book bans, librarians have come under attack, by The New York Times Elizabeth A. Harris And Alexandra Alter: Martha Hickson, a high school librarian in Annandale, N.J., heard last fall that some parents were going to call for her library to ban certain books A parent stood up and denounced two books, Lawn Boy and Gender Queer, calling them pornographic. Both books, award winners with L.G.B.T.Q. characters and frank depictions of sex, have been challenged around the country and were available at the North Hunterdon High School library. Then the woman called out Ms. Hickson, who is the librarian there, by name, for allowing her 16-year-old son to check out the books. This amounts to an effort to groom our kids to make them more willing to participate in the heinous acts described in these books, said the parent, Gina DeLusant, according to a video recording of the meeting. It grooms them to accept the inappropriate advances of an adult. Ms. Hicksons district in New Jersey, a complaint was made to the Clinton Township Police Department about obscene materials in a library book. The Hunterdon County Prosecutors Office said none of the information it received indicated criminal conduct

GEORGE III POISED TO TAKE OVER REPUBLIC Appeals court backs Republic rebels, clears new board majority to take over bank, by The Philadelphia Inquirers Joseph N. DiStefano: Investors in Republic First Bancorp Inc. who oppose chief executive Vernon Hills expansion plans on Wednesday cheered an appeals court ruling that favored a rival board faction led by Hills predecessor, Harry Madonna, in a fight for control of the 33-branch, Philadelphia-based bank. The decision by a three-judge Third Circuit federal appeals court panel in Philadelphia overturns Judge Paul Diamonds actions, which had kept Hill in power with the support of just two other directors on the seven-member board and called for an appointed custodian to set up elections that could settle a board fight between the two groups Madonna supporters include Cooper Health chairman, insurance executive and Democratic Party leader George Norcross, a leader of a group that owns nearly 10% of the bank, and Greg Braca, a former TD Bank executive and potential Hill replacement.

NJ home schooling spikes sharply amid COVID-19 pandemic

Former N.J. priest indicted for sexual assault dies by suicide after shooting 3, killing 1 in Ecuador

Dog rescued after swimming more than a mile into Raritan Bay during firework display

'I'll probably break down and cry.' Moving Wall memorial arrives in Randolph

A message from Rise Light & Power:

The Outerbridge Renewable Connector (Outerbridge) a proposal before the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities would enable the state to harness offshore wind energy by repurposing an abandoned brownfield, revitalizing an industrial-zoned waterfront, and supporting the local and state economy without impacting our beaches.

Outerbridge, proposed by Rise Light & Power, would be an underground electrical transmission project functioning as an extension cord and connecting energy generated by offshore wind farms to New Jerseys power grid. Outerbridge would support New Jerseys economic growth and resilience strategy. It is projected to deliver clean energy to 1.4 million homes and generate more than $1 billion in economic activity.

The project would minimize community disruption, protect environmentally sensitive areas and repurpose the past to power the future. Outerbridge would play a key role addressing the health and economic dangers of climate change while protecting the Jersey Shore we know and love.

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Coughlicts of interest?- POLITICO - POLITICO