A new book argues Julian Assange is being tortured. Will our new PM do anything about it? – The Conversation Indonesia

It is easy to forget why Julian Assange has been on trial in England for, well, seemingly forever.

Didnt he allegedly sexually assault two women in Sweden? Isnt that why he holed up for years in the Ecuadorian embassy in London to avoid facing charges? When the bobbies finally dragged him out of the embassy, didnt his dishevelled appearance confirm all those stories about his lousy personal hygiene?

Didnt he persuade Chelsea (formerly Bradley) Manning to hack into the United States militarys computers to reveal national security matters that endangered the lives of American soldiers and intelligence agents? He says he is a journalist, but hasnt the New York Times made it clear he is just a source and not a publisher entitled to first amendment protection?

Review: The Trial of Julian Assange: A Story of Persecution Nils Melzer (Verso)

If you answered yes to any or all of these questions, you are not alone. But the answers are actually no. At very least, its more complicated than that.

To take one example, the reason Assange was dishevelled was that staff in the Ecuadorian embassy had confiscated his shaving gear three months before to ensure his appearance matched his stereotype when the arrest took place.

That is one of the findings of the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture, Nils Melzer, whose investigation of the case against Assange has been laid out in forensic detail in The Trial of Julian Assange.

What is the UNs Special Rapporteur on Torture doing investigating the Assange case, you might ask? So did Melzer when Assanges lawyers first approached him in 2018:

I had more important things to do: I had to take care of real torture victims!

Melzer returned to a report he was writing about overcoming prejudice and self-deception when dealing with official corruption. Not until a few months later, he writes, would I realise the striking irony of this situation.

The 47 members of the UN Human Rights Council directly appointspecial rapporteurs on torture. The position is unpaid Melzer earns his living as a professor of international law but they have diplomatic immunity and operate largely outside the UNs hierarchies.

Among the many pleas for his attention, Melzers small office chooses between 100 and 200 each year to officially investigate. His conclusions and recommendations are not binding on states. He bleakly notes that in barely 10% of cases does he receive full co-operation from states and an adequate resolution.

He received nothing like full co-operation in investigating Assanges case. He gathered around 10,000 pages of procedural files, but a lot of them came from leaks to journalists or from freedom-of-information requests. Many pages had been redacted. Rephrasing Carl Von Clausewitzs maxim, Melzer wrote his book as the continuation of diplomacy by other means.

What he finds is stark and disturbing:

The Assange case is the story of a man who is being persecuted and abused for exposing the dirty secrets of the powerful, including war crimes, torture and corruption. It is a story of deliberate judicial arbitrariness in Western democracies that are otherwise keen to present themselves as exemplary in the area of human rights.

It is the story of wilful collusion by intelligence services behind the back of national parliaments and the general public. It is a story of manipulated and manipulative reporting in the mainstream media for the purpose of deliberately isolating, demonizing, and destroying a particular individual. It is the story of a man who has been scapegoated by all of us for our own societal failures to address government corruption and state-sanctioned crimes.

Read more: Explainer: what charges does Julian Assange face, and what's likely to happen next?

The dirty secrets of the powerful are difficult to face, which is why we and I dont exclude myself swallow neatly packaged slurs and diversions of the kind listed at the beginning of this article.

Melzer rightly takes us back to April 2010, four years after the Australian-born Assange had founded WikiLeaks, a small organisation set up to publish official documents that it had received, encrypted so as to protect whistle-blowers from official retribution. Assange released video footage showing in horrifying detail how US soldiers in a helicopter had shot and killed Iraqi civilians and two Reuters journalists in 2007.

Apart from how the soldiers spoke Hahaha, I hit them, Nice, Good shot it looks like most of the victims were civilians and that the journalists cameras were mistaken for rifles. When one of the wounded men tried to crawl to safety, the helicopter crew, instead of allowing their comrades on the ground to take him prisoner, as required by the rules of war, seek permission to shoot him again.

As Melzers detailed description makes clear, the soldiers knew what they were doing:

Come on, buddy, the gunner comments, aiming the crosshairs at his helpless target. All you gotta do is pick up a weapon.

The soldiers request for authorisation to shoot is given. When the wounded man is carried to a nearby minibus, it is shot to pieces with the helicopters 30mm gun. The driver and two other rescuers are killed instantly. The drivers two young children inside are seriously wounded.

US army command investigated the matter, concluding that the soldiers acted in accordance with the rules of war, even though they had not. Equally to the point, writes Melzer, the public would never have known a war crime had been committed without the release of what Assange called the Collateral Murder video.

The video footage was just one of hundreds of thousands of documents that WikiLeaks released last year in tranches known as the Afghan war logs, the Iraq war logs, and cablegate. They revealed numerous alleged war crimes and provided the raw material for a shadow history of the disastrous wars waged by the US and its allies, including Australia, in Aghanistan and Iraq.

Read more: Julian Assange on Google, surveillance and predatory capitalism

Melzer retraces what has happened to Assange since then, from the accusations of sexual assault in Sweden to Assange taking refuge in the Ecuadorian embassy in London in an attempt to avoid the possibility of extradition to the US if he returned to Sweden. His refuge led to him being jailed in the United Kingdom for breaching his bail conditions.

Sweden eventually dropped the sexual assault charges, but the US government ramped up its request to extradite Assange. He faces charges under the 1917 Espionage Act, which, if successful, could lead to a jail term of 175 years.

Two key points become increasingly clear as Melzer methodically works through the events.

The first is that there has been a carefully orchestrated plan by four countries the United States, the United Kingdom, Sweden and, yes, Australia to ensure Assange is punished forever for revealing state secrets.

The second is that the conditions he has been subjected to, and will continue to be subjected to if the USs extradition request is granted, have amounted to torture.

On the first point, how else are we to interpret the continual twists and turns over nearly a decade in the official positions taken by Sweden and the UK? Contrary to the obfuscating language of official communiques, all of these have closed down Assanges options and denied him due process.

Melzer documents the thinness of the Swedish authorities case for charging Assange with sexual assault. That did not prevent them from keeping it open for many years. Nor was Assange as unco-operative with police as has been suggested. Swedish police kept changing their minds about where and whether to formally interview Assange because they knew the evidence was weak.

Melzer also takes pains to show how Swedish police also overrode the interests of the two women who had made the complaints against Assange.

It is distressing to read the conditions Assange has endured over several years. A change in the political leadership of Ecuador led to a change in his living conditions in the embassy, from cramped but bearable to virtual imprisonment.

Since being taken from the embassy to Belmarsh prison in 2019, Assange has spent much of his time in solitary confinement for 22 or 23 hours a day. He has been denied all but the most limited access to his legal team, let alone family and friends. He was kept in a glass cage during his seemingly interminable extradition hearing, appeals over which could continue for several years more years, according to Melzer.

Assanges physical and mental health have suffered to the point where he has been put on suicide watch. Again, that seems to be the point, as Melzer writes:

The primary purpose of persecuting Assange is not and never has been to punish him personally, but to establish a generic precedent with a global deterrent effect on other journalist, publicists and activists.

So will the new Australian prime minister, Anthony Albanese, do any more than his three Coalition and two Labor predecessors to advocate for the interests of an Australian citizen? In December 2021, Guardian Australia reported Albanese saying he did not see what purpose is served by the ongoing pursuit of Mr Assange and that enough is enough. Since being sworn in as prime minister, he has kept his cards close to his chest.

The actions of his predecessors suggest he wont, even though Albanese has already said on several occasions since being elected that he wants to do politics differently.

Melzer, among others, would remind him of the words of former US president Jimmy Carter, who, contrary to other presidents, said he did not deplore the WikiLeaks revelations.

They just made public what was the truth. Most often, the revelation of truth, even if its unpleasant, is beneficial. [] I think that, almost invariably, the secrecy is designed to conceal improper activities.

The first in the two-part series Ithaka: A Fight to Free Julian Assange airs on ABC TV tonight at 8.30pm.

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A new book argues Julian Assange is being tortured. Will our new PM do anything about it? - The Conversation Indonesia

Julian Assange’s lawyer likely to have been ‘subject of covert surveillance’ – government accepts – GB News

Jennifer Robinson said the development "raises serious questions" about information shared between the UK and US over Mr Assange's extradition case

One of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assanges lawyers has reached a settlement with the Government after it accepted it was likely she was the subject of covert surveillance which breached her human rights, she said.

Jennifer Robinson welcomed a statement by the European Court of Human Rights which she said meant the UK Government has accepted her rights were breached by surveillance.

Julian Assange Victoria Jones

Mr Assange awaits a decision by Priti Patel on whether he should be extradited to the US Danny Lawson

She was one of the three lead claimants in a complaint against the UK Government which went to the court.

Ms Robinson said the UK Government has reached a friendly settlement, admitting there was reasonable cause to believe she was the subject of surveillance.

She said: The UK Government has now admitted that its surveillance and information-sharing arrangements with the US violated my rights. That includes in relation to the protection of confidential journalistic material.

This follows a pattern of unlawful spying on Julian Assange and his legal team, and it raises grave concerns about government interference with journalistic material and privilege.

It also raises serious questions about what information the UK and US governments have been sharing about Mr Assanges case against extradition to the US.

The development came as Mr Assange awaits a decision by Home Secretary Priti Patel on whether he should be extradited to the United States.

Ms Robinson said she will receive compensation which she will donate to Privacy International, which worked on her case, to support their work on the protection of civil liberties and right to privacy and free speech.

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Julian Assange's lawyer likely to have been 'subject of covert surveillance' - government accepts - GB News

‘Free Assange’ protesters arrested right before Party at the Palace – Metro.co.uk

The scuffle broke out just a stones throw away from Buckingham Palace (Picture: Reuters)

Protesters wearing Free Assange t-shirts were arrested on The Mall just moments before the Queens Platinum Party at the Palace began.

One man was pictured being pinned down on the ground and handcuffed as eight officers surrounded him.

Another man wearing a Guy Fawkes mask was also detained by police in the same spot close to Buckingham Palace.

Beside the scuffle was a placard saying Free Assange demanding the release of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.

The 50-year-old Australian activist has been in Belmarsh maximum-security prison since 2019.

Hed spent seven years in the Ecuadorian embassy before eventually being forced out into the custody of UK police.

Earlier this year the High Court formally ordered Assange to be extradited to the US, where hes wanted for an alleged conspiracy to disclose national defence information.

The charge came after Wikileaks published hundreds of thousands of leaked documents relating to the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.

A crowd of 20,000 people attended tonights Platinum Party at the Palace, celebrating Queen Elizabeth IIs 70-year reign.

On the star studded line-up was Diana Ross, Craig David, Hans Zimmer, Diversity and Queen (the band).

There was a pre-recorded performance from Sir Elton John, while stars including Sir David Attenborough, Emma Raducanu, David Beckham, Stephen Fry, Dame Julie Andrews, The Royal Ballet, and Ellie Simmonds will also appeared.

The Queen also showed off her acting skills by staring in a skit with none other than Paddington Bear.

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us atwebnews@metro.co.uk.

For more stories like this,check our news page.

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'Free Assange' protesters arrested right before Party at the Palace - Metro.co.uk

Thousands of Australian flood victims still denied government aid – WSWS

More than three months on from the first of two floods that engulfed large parts of the regional city of Lismore, the surrounding Northern Rivers region of New South Wales (NSW) and outer areas of Sydney, thousands of residents remain effectively homeless and thousands more have been blocked from flood recovery grants.

Following the flood disasters of February 28 and March 30, in which many people had to rely on local volunteers to be rescued, the state and federal governments belatedly and grudgingly promised various aid packages, mostly for businesses, to seek to head off widespread outrage over the lack of government rescue and recovery assistance.

Yet less than a third of applications for help have been approved so far, and many more have been rejected, producing growing discontent in Lismore and elsewhere over the contemptuous official response.

The NSW Liberal-National Coalition government, backed by the Labor Party parliamentary opposition, announced four different grant programs for devastated households and businesses. More than 43,000 applications have been made across those programs, but only 27 percent have been approved, while 50 percent have been declined.

Even worse, the governments Resilience NSW agency, which was nowhere to be seen during the floods, has approved only about 330 Disaster Relief Grants from more than 2,440 applications. Likewise, the Rural Assistance Authority, which is meant to aid primary producers, has processed a little under half of the 3,200 grant applications it has received, and approved about1,100.

Premier Dominic Perrottets NSW government has flatly defended this record, saying it has more than 200 people working to process grant applications. To put that in perspective for people, its more than four times the number of grant applications that we had resulting from the Black Summer fires, Flood Recovery Minister Steph Cooke said.

However, there have been similar outcomes from the 201920 bushfire catastrophe, with victims still homeless or struggling to rebuild more than two years on.

In a bid to cover its tracks, the government is now claiming that the delays and rejections for the flood grants are the result of fraudulent claims, even though these allegations apply to only a fraction of the applications.

Of the 43,000 applications, 2,705 are reportedly under review for possible fraud, and just 530 applications have been referred to the police for investigation. Many of these may be honest mistakes, given the complex and confusing application processes.

There is a similar pattern of delay and obstruction from insurance companies. More than 216,000 claims had been filed by the end of May, potentially costing $4.3 billion. According to the Insurance Council of Australia, however, only about 20 percent of claims, totalling almost $1 billion, have been paid.

During a brief hearing in Lismore last week by a parliamentary inquiry into the floods, people spoke about couch surfing, sleeping in vans or camping in houses with no walls or doors.

Marcus Bebb, formerly of South Lismore, explained that he and his family of five are living in a caravan in a showground after losing their home. A rebuild could take three years, and he was still waiting to hear the governments position on house buybacks.

Downtown Lismore still remains a disaster zone, with most shops boarded up, along with key educational and cultural institutions such as the citys library, art gallery, TAFE college and historical museum. Debris still litters some streets.

Due to the protracted failure of governments, both Coalition and Labor, to address the threat of climate change, the entire region is at increasing risk of extreme weather events such as floods and fires, with the dangers greatest among its high proportion of working-class, vulnerable and poor residents.

The WSWS discussed these and other political issues with residents last Saturday at the only shopping complex still open in Lismore, at Goonellabah. Many commented on the hundreds of extra people now homeless in the area and the difficulties residents were having in filling out the complex forms and providing all the documents needed to apply for government grants.

Glorz, a long-time resident, who is studying to be a teacher, commented: People have been left to fend for themselves since the floods. Its like governments want to get rid of them.

Asked for her views on the May 21 federal election and the new Labor government, Glorz agreed that both the major parties stood for the interests of big business. Its a two-party system, and nobody else had a chance, she said. I reckon that the Australian people have been ripped off, the workers have been ripped off and the general citizens have been ripped off.

Asked about the Socialist Equality Partys fight for a socialist alternative, she commented: The whole system needs to be abolished, the current government and everything. They are just one body with lots of arms. All they are about is themselves. A new system needs to be for the people, and by the people.

Glorz condemned the persecution of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange and had no confidence that the Labor government would do anything to free him. That man stood up years ago and told us the truth and nobody wanted to believe what was going on. He has been jailed for telling the truth. He needs to be free, because men like him are leaders in free speech.

In the context of the US-led war against Russia in Ukraine, she added: And its a chain reaction to whats actually going on now. If you think back to what he [Assange] was saying years ago, and exposing years ago, that is now coming true.

He exposed America, and England and Australia for who they really are, and they dont want that. They want him out of the picture completely. He has a hell of a lot more to expose, and they dont want that Free Julian Assange!

Danny and Sandra, from the NSW south coast, were visiting friends in Lismore. They stopped to voice their support for Assange.

Danny explained: Hes told the world the truth. Hes brought out the secrets and showed the world. Hes opened up what the world didnt know about If you tell the truth in this country today, you are penalised for it. America is the problem and Australia is too far in bed with the Americans.

Sandra added: He was only doing his job as a journalist. He was holding up journalistic integrity, because he didn't divulge his sources. Its disgusting. There were never any charges against him.

Danny interjected: The people are starting to find out, and if they dont stop theres going to be a revolution. The people are sacrificing, with the price of living and everything else, but the governments dont sacrifice.

Sandra asked: Whats the use of sending money to Ukraine, like billions of dollars, to kill people? So theyre warmongers.

In its March 6 statement, Australias floods: An indictment of capitalism, the Socialist Equality Party (SEP) explained:

Every aspect of the floods crisisfrom the lack of preparation and warnings to people, to the inadequacy of basic infrastructure and support services, and the lack of assistance offered to the hundreds of thousands of flood victimsis the direct result of the subordination of society to the dictates of private profit.

The statement outlined a series of essential demands, including:

These demands mean forming rank-and-file committees to fight for them, rejecting the dictates of the financial elite and advancing the struggle for a workers government to implement socialist measures.

As the statement explained: The pressing social needs of the majority can and must be addressed by placing the banks, insurance companies, property developers and other corporate giants under working class ownership and democratic control.

Join the SEP campaign against anti-democratic electoral laws!

The working class must have a political voice, which the Australian ruling class is seeking to stifle with this legislation.

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Thousands of Australian flood victims still denied government aid - WSWS

Biden Excludes Cuba, Nicaragua and Venezuela from Summit of the Americas – Democracy Now!

President Biden has reportedly made a final decision not to invite the governments of Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua to attend the Summit of the Americas, which opens in Los Angeles today. The move might lead to other Latin American leaders boycotting the talks. Mexican President Andrs Manuel Lpez Obrador as well as the leaders of Guatemala, Bolivia and Honduras have threatened to skip the summit, which is taking place in the United States for the first time since 1994. Cuban President Miguel Daz-Canel recently criticized Bidens plan to exclude Cuba and other nations.

President Miguel Daz-Canel: Our America has changed. Exclusions are no longer possible. The decision to not invite everyone is a historic setback, and all countries must be invited on equal terms. Its disrespectful and harmful to the sovereignty of nations to try to decide, from the privileged condition of the host, those who represent them. In the face of attempts at exclusion and selectivity, it is urgent to strengthen the authentic mechanisms of Latin American and Caribbean integration and coordination.

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Biden Excludes Cuba, Nicaragua and Venezuela from Summit of the Americas - Democracy Now!

Where open source communities live GitHub

Where open source communities live GitHub

There are millions of open source projects on GitHub. Joinone or start your own.

Open source software is free for you to use and explore. Get involved to perfect your craft and be part of something big.

Your contributions help make technology better for everyone, developers and non-developersalike.

Amazing developers use GitHub. Contribute code to projects that change how softwareisbuilt.

Whatever your skill level, working on open source software is a great way to learn newthings.

Open source is made by people just like you. Learn how to contribute, launch a new project, and build a healthy community of contributors.

Browse data from over 3,800 projects on the experiences and backgrounds of those who use and build open source software.

Whether you are new to code or ready to start a big project, there are a few ways to get involved in open source.

Learn how developers build and maintain open source software. You can watch a project that interests you to see its progress as it happens.

You dont have to build everything from scratch. Make copies of your favorite projects, experiment in private repositories, and tailor tools and features to meet your needs.

Make a suggestion, fix a bug, improve documentation, or contribute code to a project. Even asking questions helps.

Open source software is made by people just like you. Heres how they gotstarted.

Katrina Owen created Exercism, a platform to gain fluency in programming languages, to solve her own needs. Today, Exercism supports more than 50 programming languages, written and used by developers in over 190 countries.

Whatever your interestwhether its mobile apps or astrophysicstheres an open source project foryou.

Start exploring now

Were building developer tools alongside you. We hope they help you perfect your process, work on projects of any size, and share ideas with your friends and coworkers. Take them for a spin or help us build them.

Atom is a hackable text editor for the 21st century, built on Electron, and based on everything we love about our favorite editors.

Hubot is a chat bot, modeled after GitHubs Campfire bot, hubot. Hes pretty cool. Hes extendable with scripts and can work on many different chat services.

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The Open Source Definition (Annotated) | Open Source Initiative

The indented, italicized sections below appear as annotations to the Open Source Definition (OSD) and are not a part of the OSD. A plain version of the OSD without annotations can be found here.

Open source doesn't just mean access to the source code. The distribution terms of open-source software must comply with the following criteria:

The license shall not restrict any party from selling or giving away the software as a component of an aggregate software distribution containing programs from several different sources. The license shall not require a royalty or other fee for such sale.

Rationale: By constraining the license to require free redistribution, we eliminate the temptation for licensors to throw away many long-term gains to make short-term gains. If we didn't do this, there would be lots of pressure for cooperators to defect.

The program must include source code, and must allow distribution in source code as well as compiled form. Where some form of a product is not distributed with source code, there must be a well-publicized means of obtaining the source code for no more than a reasonable reproduction cost, preferably downloading via the Internet without charge. The source code must be the preferred form in which a programmer would modify the program. Deliberately obfuscated source code is not allowed. Intermediate forms such as the output of a preprocessor or translator are not allowed.

Rationale: We require access to un-obfuscated source code because you can't evolve programs without modifying them. Since our purpose is to make evolution easy, we require that modification be made easy.

The license must allow modifications and derived works, and must allow them to be distributed under the same terms as the license of the original software.

Rationale: The mere ability to read source isn't enough to support independent peer review and rapid evolutionary selection. For rapid evolution to happen, people need to be able to experiment with and redistribute modifications.

The license may restrict source-code from being distributed in modified form only if the license allows the distribution of "patch files" with the source code for the purpose of modifying the program at build time. The license must explicitly permit distribution of software built from modified source code. The license may require derived works to carry a different name or version number from the original software.

Rationale: Encouraging lots of improvement is a good thing, but users have a right to know who is responsible for the software they are using. Authors and maintainers have reciprocal right to know what they're being asked to support and protect their reputations.

Accordingly, an open-source license must guarantee that source be readily available, but may require that it be distributed as pristine base sources plus patches. In this way, "unofficial" changes can be made available but readily distinguished from the base source.

The license must not discriminate against any person or group of persons.

Rationale: In order to get the maximum benefit from the process, the maximum diversity of persons and groups should be equally eligible to contribute to open sources. Therefore we forbid any open-source license from locking anybody out of the process.

Some countries, including the United States, have export restrictions for certain types of software. An OSD-conformant license may warn licensees of applicable restrictions and remind them that they are obliged to obey the law; however, it may not incorporate such restrictions itself.

The license must not restrict anyone from making use of the program in a specific field of endeavor. For example, it may not restrict the program from being used in a business, or from being used for genetic research.

Rationale: The major intention of this clause is to prohibit license traps that prevent open source from being used commercially. We want commercial users to join our community, not feel excluded from it.

The rights attached to the program must apply to all to whom the program is redistributed without the need for execution of an additional license by those parties.

Rationale: This clause is intended to forbid closing up software by indirect means such as requiring a non-disclosure agreement.

The rights attached to the program must not depend on the program's being part of a particular software distribution. If the program is extracted from that distribution and used or distributed within the terms of the program's license, all parties to whom the program is redistributed should have the same rights as those that are granted in conjunction with the original software distribution.

Rationale: This clause forecloses yet another class of license traps.

The license must not place restrictions on other software that is distributed along with the licensed software. For example, the license must not insist that all other programs distributed on the same medium must be open-source software.

Rationale: Distributors of open-source software have the right to make their own choices about their own software.

Yes, the GPL v2 and v3 are conformant with this requirement. Software linked with GPLed libraries only inherits the GPL if it forms a single work, not any software with which they are merely distributed.

No provision of the license may be predicated on any individual technology or style of interface.

Rationale: This provision is aimed specifically at licenses which require an explicit gesture of assent in order to establish a contract between licensor and licensee. Provisions mandating so-called "click-wrap" may conflict with important methods of software distribution such as FTP download, CD-ROM anthologies, and web mirroring; such provisions may also hinder code re-use. Conformant licenses must allow for the possibility that (a) redistribution of the software will take place over non-Web channels that do not support click-wrapping of the download, and that (b) the covered code (or re-used portions of covered code) may run in a non-GUI environment that cannot support popup dialogues.

The Open Source Definition was originally derived from the Debian Free Software Guidelines (DFSG).

Version 1.9, last modified, 2007-03-22

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The Open Source Definition (Annotated) | Open Source Initiative

GitHub to sunset open-source text editor Atom later this year – Siliconrepublic.com

The company has set 15 December as the last official day Atom will be in operation. But a successor is in sight.

After more than a decade of helping software developers write code, GitHub is archiving its open-source text editor Atom to focus on cloud-based alternatives.

Launched in 2011, Atom is a free and open-source text and source code editor for software developers working on a range of operating systems.

The Atom software development environment laid the foundation of the Electron framework which has paved the way for thousands of apps, according to GitHub, including Microsoft Visual Studio Code, Slack and GitHub Desktop.

Now, GitHub has announced that it is officially sunsetting Atom and archiving all associated projects on 15 December, 2022.

When we introduced Atom in 2011, we set out to give developers a text editor that was deeply customisable but also easy to use one that made it possible for more people to build software, the company said.

While that goal of growing the software creator community remains, weve decided to retire Atom in order to further our commitment to bringing fast and reliable software development to the cloud via Microsoft Visual Studio Code and GitHub Codespaces.

GitHub said Atom has not had any significant feature development for the past several years, despite sporadic maintenance and security updates for developers still using the editor.

We recognise that Atom is still used by the community and want to acknowledge that migrating to an alternative solution takes time and energy, GitHub said.

Microsoft, which acquired GitHub for $7.5bn in 2018, launched its Visual Studio Code text editor in 2015 to compete with Atom. Since the acquisition, VS Code has gained popularity and now has a significant hold of the market share, while Atoms popularity has dwindled.

As new cloud-based tools have emerged and evolved over the years, Atom community involvement has declined significantly, said GitHub.

The legacy of Atom may yet live on through a successor, however. TechCrunch reported that one of Atoms core contributors, Max Brunsfeld, is leading an effort to launch a new, lightning-fast collaborative code editor called Zed.

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GitHub to sunset open-source text editor Atom later this year - Siliconrepublic.com

GIMP: the free, open-source software option for photo editing – TechHQ

Since being first cultivated by special effects engineers at visuals house Industrial Light & Magic to produce an array of practical effects shots for the original Star Wars films in the 20th century, the photo editing software Photoshop has continued to be a significant presence in the 21st century.

From pioneering revolutionary image enhancement techniques to creating a whole stable of toolkits and editing methods, Adobes Photoshop (PS) has become synonymous as the premier photo editing software for commercial and even personal image enhancement. It works just as well on bespoke birthday card imagery as it does on professional layouts like ad posters and restaurant menus.

Along with Illustrator, Photoshop creator Adobe has spawned an entire suite of photo, video, and creative tools, from prepping materials to be edited, right down to post-production editing. But while Photoshop might be ubiquitous as the primary photo & image editing software for pro designers and studios, its success has also come with drawbacks that might not make it the most accessible tool on the market especially for novices, amateur content creators, or those on limited budgets.

While there are many alternatives out there when it comes to photo editing software ranging from browser-based tools to bundled software that comes preinstalled on cellphones one of the standout programs that sets itself to be a genuine challenger to PS is GIMP, the GNU Image Manipulation Program.

Plugins can be downloaded to flesh out GIMPs functionality to be more like Photoshop. Source: TechHQ

GIMP has been called a Photoshop-killer for many reasons, but one of the primary ones is that the open-sourced software is essentially free to distribute and use. Until very recently when Adobe Creative Cloud allowed subscriptions to Adobe software for as little as US$10 a month, Photoshop developed a reputation as being exorbitantly expensive.

With a one-time fee approaching US$700, Adobe was very aware it had the flagship photo editing software on the market and charged accordingly. The first benefit to using GIMP is that it can be tested out with no upfront commitment, and, unlike Photoshop, downloading and running GIMP takes up very little PC processing power. That makes it suitable to run on last-generation or even veritably old hardware.

Photoshop is one of the heaviest and most demanding editing tools for imagery, with designers often decrying its steep system demands, not just to run the software, but to render and store processed images. This might be less cumbersome on an office iMac, with storage and RAM paid for by the company, but it can still be extremely prohibitive for the small design studio or the enthusiastic amateur.

While Photoshop can usually want up to 4GB of hard disk space, GIMP takes as little as 20MB. Not only is GIMP much smaller to store and run, it is also way faster to install and set up. This writer was able to source the GIMP .exe file and download it locally, and finish setting up all within 15 minutes. There are versions for Mac, Windows and Linux, and the source code is available to compile from scratch, should that be your idea of fun.

Many of the same core functions as Photoshop are available except for the low, low price of absolutely free. Source: TechHQ

Once fully installed, it is highly customizable on many levels, including the user interface. This might be something that was inspired by Photoshop, but Photoshop has come to have to cover a wide gamut of design disciplines, and so contains many hundreds of features its accrued over the years. For relative beginners there are, for instance, lighting effects that may not get much use but its good to know they are there.

GIMP clears away a lot of feature clutter, with tools that you are unlikely to utilize being easily removed or minimized from the main UI. The customizability of its features extends beyond managing the interface, and because of its open-source code, there is a thriving catalog of independent plug-ins or extensions that can be downloaded and added to the core application.

For example, there is a Heal Selection featurette that can be downloaded, to perform the same function as Smart Remove that is built-in on Photoshop. So even though Photoshop is kitted out with every feature from bow to stern, a lot of it might be surplus to regular requirements but if you ever need a super-specific capability that Photoshop has, you can bet the open-source community has created something similar, or maybe even better, for GIMP.

For an untrained, unpracticed Luddite like myself, playing around with Photoshop can be pretty daunting. Not only are there scores and scores of features and adjustments that can be made to an image, even performing the same repeat functions can be challenging if one has not memorized the order to perform them in. It can almost seem like trying to play particularly complex sheet music transcriptions of hard-bop jazz.

Despite being so much lighter to install and run in contrast (no pun intended) to Photoshop, a lot of the color palettes, masks, and layers can often be indistinguishable between GIMP and Adobes premier software. Source: TechHQ

A lot of usability is boiled down in GIMP, made more user-friendly (read, idiot friendly) and is significantly easier to pick up for a photo editing software rube indeed, its much easier for anyone, even for someone with only a passing familiarity with photography disciplines and terminology.

For instance, conducting repeat actions (or batch process) on a big collection of photos is easily performed on GIMP. This could be an important commercial function, as repeating processing with the same tints or themes that fit a companys branding or campaign direction might be whats called for; and no doubt called for on a tight deadline.

But inexplicably, batch processing on Photoshop is an unwieldy and cumbersome process, requiring setting everything up with preprogrammed actions. And for the uninitiated, that could take a long time, plus theres the unavoidable waiting for everything to be processed. Thats often followed by finding out later that the group edits didnt take on a bunch of images. Problems like these are, admittedly, pilot error, but in business settings where time is short, the ability to make fast edits can be pretty important. Clients dont like delays one bit.

But while both photo editing software suites have excellent features support, it must be said that some of the more powerful shared tools work better in Photoshop. Features like pixel manipulation are much more powerful and granular on Photoshop, owing no doubt to the more powerful processing the program relies on from the more modern hardware stipulated in its specifications sheet.

Another drawback with GIMP is it lacks some diversity when it comes to color modes and file formats. Like to print final artworks, using the CMYK color mode is necessary GIMP only processes using the Red Green Blue (RGB) mode by default; print designers will need a further plug-in to print imagery with accurate colors.

GIMP only processes using the Red Green Blue (RGB) mode, a further plugin would be needed to print using Cyan Magenta Yellow Key (CMYK), the preferred printing color mode. Source: TechHQ

And with Photoshop, any edits are saved as a separate exported file, preserving the original. To the uninitiated like me using GIMP for the first time, unwittingly pressing save would actually overwrite the original file, meaning I would now have an edit without the base file. Exporting edits as a separate file can be done, but it is not straightforward.

But of course, there is a far larger team working constantly on Photoshop, upgrading its capabilities as one of the most dominant photo editing softwares of all time. With Adobe Creative Cloud, new updates are auto pushed to subscribers, and can be downloaded seamlessly.

By contrast, the GIMP team of freelance developers from the open-source community work hard, but their results are nowhere near as large or well-provisioned as the Adobe crews. Nevertheless, considering the differing capacities, it is astounding that the GIMP team still manages to roll out new updates every few months, just like Adobe. Having said all that, GIMP is due for a big update soon, to version 3.0. Watch out for that.

So when the dust settles, is GIMP a genuine alternative to Photoshop? GIMP is extremely worthy, especially for beginners or those who have just basic editing needs of professional quality and with a range of aesthetic functionality including filters, opacity, transformations, saturation, and brightness contrasts. Its filters and certain modes are not as refined as Photoshops but it is still a very handy and sophisticated palette to work with. Approaching Photoshops polish and sophistication in some aspects, GIMP is most certainly worth much, much more than its asking price which is, theoretically, nothing at all. Of course, if you use GIMP and find it useful, sending a few dollars to the projects maintainers will help assure that development continues.

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GIMP: the free, open-source software option for photo editing - TechHQ

How open source is fast becoming an innovative platform for digital transformation in Qatar – The Peninsula

Open source solutions are accelerating the innovation and adoption for cloud, big data and analytics, the Internet of Things (IoT), artificial intelligence (AI) and blockchain. An agile, cost-effective and flexible alternative to proprietary software there is no better way to achieve connectivity on a massive scale without relying on open source frameworks and platforms within digital infrastructures.

As most countries in the Middle East activate national digital transformation initiatives to drive economic diversification, open source solutions will continue to gain momentum across the region. Open source is becoming increasingly omnipresent across the IT stack, particularly as organisations look to drive innovation while maintaining operational and cost efficiencies.

The State of Enterprise Open Source 2022 report revealed that not only is the open source development model showing no signs of slowing down, it has actually accelerated during the pandemic.

The report, which explores why enterprise leaders are choosing the open source development model and technologies built with this model, found that 92 percent of IT leaders surveyed feel enterprise open source solutions are important to addressing their COVID-related challenges.

As organisations build out their digital competencies to gain a competitive edge, improve customer engagement, and enhance their services, they are increasingly extending their infrastructure and applications to run on cloud.

Whether an intentional architecture choice or a result of rapid market changes, cloud computing and always-on services built using the open source development model and open source code are increasingly crucial to nearly every organisation regardless of industry.

In fact, 89 percent of respondents believe that enterprise open source software is as secure or more secure than proprietary software. Anyone who has spent time in the IT industry will recognise that this is a significant shift from mainstream perceptions about open source software from a decade or so ago when open source software security often surfaced as a weakness.

The use of open source will continue to rise as organisations increasingly adopt agile development frameworks and tools to modernise existing applications and build new, cloud-native applications or services.

Awareness of open source in the Middle East has risen significantly in recent years. In fact, new technologies are set to play a major role in achieving key objectives of Qatar Digital Government strategy to increase government openness and generate economic and political value by collaborating with customers. To this end, government entities, research and educational institutes, and open source IT vendors have been playing an active role in promoting both the awareness and use of open source across the region.

Red Hats annual survey revealed that 82 percent of IT leaders globally are more likely to select a vendor who contributes to the open source community. Data also revealed the top reasons why enterprise open source vendors are preferred: They are familiar with open source processes (49 percent); They help sustain healthy open source communities (49 percent); They can influence the development of features that we need (48 percent); and They are going to be more effective if I face technical challenges (46 percent).

Across the Middle East, sectors such as telecommunications, banking and financial services, education, and healthcare have been using open source to optimise and simplify operations, reduce costs, and facilitate their digital agendas. As digital transformation and cloud become mainstream in the Middle East, demand for open source solutions and skills will intensify.

Unsurprisingly, the increasing use of enterprise open source extends to important new emerging technology workloads, with 80 percent planning to increase their use of enterprise open source in areas such as artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning (ML), edge computing, and the Internet of Things (IoT).

As organisations in Qatar increasingly pursue digital transformation and innovation, open source adoption will have a pivotal role to play. Organisations should consider working with established commercial open source solution providers and their channel ecosystems in order to secure the support and skills needed to adopt open source solutions.

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How open source is fast becoming an innovative platform for digital transformation in Qatar - The Peninsula