Cloud Encryption Technology Market Size, Analytical Overview, Key Players, Growth Factors, Demand, Trends And Forecast to 2027 – The Daily Chronicle

Fort Collins, Colorado Reports Globe recently added the Cloud Encryption Technology Market Research Report that provides a thorough investigation of the market scenario of the market size, share, demand, growth, trends, and forecast from 2020-2027. The report covers the impact analysis of the COVID-19 pandemic. COVID-19 pandemic has affected the export-import, demands, and trends of the industry and is expected to have some economic impact on the market. The report provides a comprehensive analysis of the impact of the pandemic on the overall industry and offers insights into a post-COVID-19 market scenario.

The report primarily mentions definitions, classifications, applications, and market overview of the Cloud Encryption Technology industry. It also covers product portfolios, manufacturing processes, cost analysis, structures, and gross margin of the industry. It also provides a comprehensive analysis of the key competitors and their regional spread and market size.

Global Cloud Encryption Technology Market valued approximately USD 529.5 million in 2016 is anticipated to grow with a healthy growth rate of more than 30.3% over the forecast period 2017-2025.

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Competitive Analysis:

The report provides a comprehensive analysis of the companies operating in the Cloud Encryption Technology market, along with their overview, business plans, strengths, and weaknesses to provide a substantial analysis of the growth through the forecast period. The evaluation provides a competitive edge and understanding of their market position and strategies undertaken by them to gain a substantial market size in the global market.

Key features of the Report:

The report covers extensive analysis of the key market players in the market, along with their business overview, expansion plans, and strategies. The key players studied in the report include:

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Additionally, the report is furnished by the advanced analytical data from SWOT analysis, Porters Five Forces Analysis, Feasibility Analysis, and Investment Return Analysis. The report also provides a detailed analysis of the mergers, consolidations, acquisitions, partnerships, and government deals. Along with this, an in-depth analysis of current and emerging trends, opportunities, threats, limitations, entry-level barriers, restraints and drivers, and estimated market growth throughout the forecast period are offered in the report.

Market Breakdown:

The market breakdown provides market segmentation data based on the availability of the data and information. The market is segmented on the basis of types and applications.

By Component:

By Service Model:

By Cloud Deployment:

By Organizational size

By Vertical:

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The report provides additional analysis about the key geographical segments of the Cloud Encryption Technology Market and provides analysis about their current and previous share. Current and emerging trends, challenges, opportunities, and other influencing factors are presented in the report.

Regional analysis includes an in-depth study of the key geographical regions to gain a better understanding of the market and provide an accurate analysis. The regional analysis coversNorth America, Latin America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, and the Middle East & Africa.

Objectives of the Report:

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Cloud Encryption Technology Market Size, Analytical Overview, Key Players, Growth Factors, Demand, Trends And Forecast to 2027 - The Daily Chronicle

Rocket Software Renews Commitment to Open Source on the Mainframe With New Product Offering – Business Wire

WALTHAM, Mass.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Extending its commitment to open source development on legacy technology systems, Rocket Software, a global software leader in IBM Z and IBM i modernization, today unveiled Rocket Open AppDev for Z, a new and innovative way for the mainframe community to securely adopt, manage, and obtain support for IBM Z ported open software.

Open-source technologies offer users many modernization and efficiency benefits, especially in mainframe development. This often leads individuals and development teams to take a do-it-yourself approach when they download, install, and use these tools. Open-source tools can be combined with different products developed by different communities and can be undermanaged, leading to version latency and code vulnerabilities. This creates unintentional regulatory and security risks for the business. Rocket Open AppDev for Z helps mitigate the risks associated with open software, offering a solution that provides developers with a package of open tools and languages they want, along with the security, easy management and support IBM Z customers require.

We wanted to solve three common customer challenges that have prevented enterprises from leveraging the flexibility and agility of open software within their mainframe environment: user and system programmer experience, security, and version latency, said Peter Fandel, Rockets Product Director of Open Software for Z. With Rocket Open AppDev for Z, we believe we have provided the most innovative, secure path forward for our customers. Businesses can now extend the mainframes capabilities through the adoption of open source software, making IBM Z another valuable platform for their DevOps infrastructure.

To meet these common customer challenges, Rocket Open AppDev for Z provides:

Its not even a question anymore: open source is the future of technology, and organizations that dont embrace this are going to be left behind, said Milan Shetti, President of Rockets Z Systems Business Unit. We are focusing our innovation on creating tools that people need to access, use, and benefit from mainframe systems. This year has been extremely challenging, yet legacy systems have proven their worth every single day. Open source is only extending the amazing results that these technologies power.

For more information about Rocket Open AppDev for Z, please visit the Rocket website.

About Rocket Software

Rocket Software empowers organizations to create legendary impact in the world through innovation in legacy technologies. With deep expertise in IBM Z, IBM Power, and database systems and connectivity solutions, Rocket provides solutions that power tens of thousands of global businesses, solving real problems and making real-world impact. Rocket is a privately held U.S. corporation headquartered in the Boston area with centers of excellence strategically located throughout North America, Europe, Asia, and Australia.

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Rocket Software Renews Commitment to Open Source on the Mainframe With New Product Offering - Business Wire

J.P. Koning: The Standard About to Revolutionize Payments – CoinDesk – CoinDesk

What will payments over the internet look like in 2030?

A revolution in finance and payments. Thats what crypto-based platforms like Bitcoin, decentralized finance and stablecoins are attempting to do. But just because traditional money is centralized around monolithic central banks doesnt mean that it cant have a revolution of its own.

Over the next ten years, a big bang will be unfolding in central bank land. ISO 20022, a new standard for communicating electronic payments instructions between financial institutions, will be taking over. This, combined with the emergence of real-time central bank retail payment systems, means that payments in 2030 are going to be much better than in 2020.

J.P. Koning, a CoinDesk columnist, worked as an equity researcher at a Canadian brokerage firm and was a financial writer at a large Canadian bank. He runs the popularMoneynessblog. This post is part of CoinDesk's "Internet 2030" series about the future of the crypto economy.

Anyone involved in anarchic finance may want to keep one eye on what the suits have planned for the next decade. Not everyone will be included in this centralized revolution. Decentralized options will be the go-to back-up for many people.

We rarely notice standards, but they affect all parts of our daily life. Standards govern everything from screw thread spacing (ISO 68-1) to country codes (ISO 3166) to child seats (ISO 13216) to quality management (ISO 9000).

Settling on a uniform way of doing things makes life easier. Prior to the 1950s, for instance, international cargo shipping handling required a Tetris-like approach to dealing with diverse package sizes. It was expensive, dangerous and labor-intensive. Putting everything in a universal metal container made the cargo handling process go much more smoothly. The International Standards Organization, an international non-governmental technical body founded after WWII, helped the industry settle on a standard definition for shipping containers by creating ISO 338, ISO 790 and ISO 1897.

The principles that apply to shipping are equally applicable to payments and commerce. To avoid a cacophony of different payment requests and orders, it helps if everyone uses a common grammar. The payments community builds this grammar by agreeing ahead of time on a fixed way of formatting messages. Standard headers. Footers. Payee account number fields. Character limits.

Take the U.S. People usually pay their utility bills by making an automated clearinghouse (or ACH) payment. All parties to an ACH payment must agree to use the common grammar set out by the National Automated Clearing House Association, or NACHA, the not-for-profit organization that governs U.S. ACH systems. A typical NACHA message looks like this:

NACHA message example

To the human eye, a NACHA-formatted message looks like gibberish. But there are many advantages to a standardized message format like this, including that it is readable by machines. And so all ACH payments can be automated from one end to the other. This reduces costs, processing times and errors. Without NACHAs standards, monetary chaos would result.

There are a number of local message standards in the U.S. The Federal Reserve, for instance, requires participants to use its own proprietary messaging format if they wish to make wire transfers via the Fedwire Funds Service. And so a U.S. bank, municipality, or corporation must be fluent in the financial grammars of both NACHA and the Fed.

This proliferation of messaging standards is a global phenomenon. The U.K.s multiple payments systems each use a different one. The Faster Payments Service uses a modified version of ISO 8583, BACS (the UKs ACH system) uses Standard-18, and CHAPS (its large value payment system) uses the SWIFT MT messaging format.

It is into this babel of standards that ISO 20022 is being ushered. The idea is to convert all existing payments systems from their own proprietary messaging standards over to ISO 20022. And so ISO 20022 will become the English of payments, a global lingua franca for transferring value electronically.

ISO 20022 isnt new. The ISO began to devise the standard in the early 2000s. In the 2010s, a few trailblazing nations shifted over to it from their domestic standards. The Chinese are the leaders, having converted their main payment systems to ISO 20022 in 2013.

But most countries have yet to make the shift. The U.S.s main large value payment system, Fedwire, was originally slated to start transitioning to ISO 20022 over a three-year period beginning in late 2020. But thanks in part to COVID-19, the start date has been pushed to at least 2022, which means that the final changeover wont be complete till 2025 or so. The European Central Banks large value system, Target2, will start its transition in November 2022. The UK will switch in April 2022 in conjunction with a new real-time gross settlement system.

Probably the most important piece of financial infrastructure to make the shift will be the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication, or SWIFT. SWIFT operates the global messaging network that banks rely on for making international payments. It intends to begin the switch to ISO 20022 near the end of 2022. There will be a three year coexistence period in which ISO 20022 and SWIFTs legacy MT messaging format can both be used. Only in November 2025 the legacy format will be turned off.

One of the big advantages of a universal payments language is that banks, businesses, governments, and other actors can stop supporting multiple formats. Whether a payment is made in dollars over Fedwire, in renminbi via the Peoples Bank of China, or from euros to rand along SWIFT, a single unique payment standard will prevail. Thats pretty neat.

When a payment gets passed on from one system to another, it has to get re-translated into that systems language. This means data loss. But with one universal standard, no data gets lost in translation.

ISO 20022 has some nice features of its own that other standards lack. To begin with, it can carry more data than other messaging standards. No more cramming information into the wrong fields and truncation of names and addresses. This means that fewer messages will be tagged by machines as requiring human intervention. With fewer repairs needed, the overall payment process will go faster, require less labour, and reduce costs.

ISO 20022 also allows for more precision. SWIFT asks us to imagine a payment sent to CUBA SPORTS BAR GRILLE in Louisiana. In the pre-ISO 20022 format, Cuba might mistakenly trip a sanctions filter. But with ISO 20022 the data is carefully structured such that the word CUBA is designated in the name field, and so wont get held up.

It will be tomorrow's unbanked who will be the natural customers of non-gated decentralized systems.

This standardization of global payments grammar is arriving at the same time that 24/7 instant retail payment systems are being introduced by central banks all over the world. Until recently, small payments to and from bank accounts were typically processed by central banks over a 2-3 day settlement window. That central banks typically close at nights and on weekends only added to waiting time. Delays like this were fine in the 1950s, but modern consumers raised on a diet of instantaneous email and on-demand video expect much more from their bank accounts.

The U.K.s Faster Payments scheme, introduced in 2007, was one of the first real-time retail payment systems. More upgrades came in the 2010s including Swedens BiR, Singapores FAST, and Indias IMPS. Canadas Real Time Rail will be in place in 2022 while the U.S.s FedNow real-time system is slated to arrive in 2024.

By 2030, 24/7 real-time retail payments will be de rigueur not only in developed nations but also in developing nations in Africa, the Middle East, and South America. And all of these blazing fast systems will have settled on one unified language, ISO 20022, which means lower costs, fewer errors, and more automation. In short, centralized payments are going to get very, very good over the next few years.

Where do blockchains fit in all of this? In times past, blockchain advocates have pigeonholed centralized payments systems as archaic and clumsy. But tomorrows payments are unlikely to conform to these stereotypes.

Given this firming up of the center, blockchain-based platforms will have to find ways to innovate around the edges. In 2030, there will still be people who are excluded from the ISO 20022 real-time payments nirvana Ive just described. There will be some who are frozen out because they are protesting their governments. This is happening in Belorussia today. Or those selling legal, albeit controversial, products, say like sex workers who often face deplatforming.It will be tomorrows unbanked who will be the natural customers of non-gated decentralized systems.

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J.P. Koning: The Standard About to Revolutionize Payments - CoinDesk - CoinDesk

The importance of WikiLeaks worldwide – The Daily Star

Nozomi Hayase, PhD, is a US-based liberation psychologist and widely published journalist. She has authored the book Wikileaks, the Global Fourth Estate: History Is Happening. In an exclusive (electronic) interview with John Kendall Hawkins, Hayase talks about the significance of WikiLeaks and why its editor-in-chief and publisher needs public support, as the US extradition hearing of Julian Assange unfolds in the UK.

How are the extradition proceedings going?

First of all, Julian Assange's US extradition case is a direct attack on the First Amendment by the US government. This is the first time the (US) Espionage Act is being used to prosecute a publisher. If it's successful, it would threaten media freedom everywhere. What has been unfolding this month at the London court is a Kafkaesque show-trial.

There have been problems with the abuse of process. Julian has not been allowed to sit with his lawyers and has been placed behind a glass cage, as was the case during the hearing in February. NGOs and international political observers were denied remote access to the court on the first day of the hearing. This includes Amnesty International and Reporters Without Borders.

With that said, I think Julian's defence team has been doing extremely well. From an offer of a pardon for Assange by the US President Donald Trump to his administration's high-level plan to revoke Assange's political asylum granted by Ecuador, the defence team's witness testimonies have revealed the highly political nature of this case.

In your preface to WikiLeaks, the Global Fourth Estate, you reference "illegitimate governance," by which you seem to mean any "democracy" that hides from the people what they need to know in order to pressure their representatives in Congress (or Parliament) to make corrective changes. Can you say more about such "illegitimate governance" and how it relates to Assange's work?

Governments in modern democratic states theoretically require the consent of the governed. For people to give their consent to those who govern, they need to be informed about what their governments are doing. Illegitimate forms of governance are ones that violate this principle. We can see it in oppressive regimes like Saudi Arabia and Turkey, where the governments can act dictatorially with draconian top down laws, coercing people's will.

In western societies, where there is a notion of free press, governments don't engage in outright violence. Instead, they engage in secrecy and manipulation of public perception, as Noam Chomsky documents in his seminal book The Engineering of Consent, which fits into this category. Assange, through his work with WikiLeaks, defended the public's right to know. By publishing material that is verified to be authentic and is of public interest, WikiLeaks helped to keep the government honest.

How does what you call "revolutionary journalism" compare to good old adversarial journalism?

The role of journalism from the very beginning was to perform vital checks and balances of government power. The founding fathers of the US had an inherent distrust of government. Thomas Jefferson once noted that if he had to choose between the government and the newspaper, he would choose the latter. So the press was meant to be a watchdog. Sadly, the media has now been infiltrated with commercial interests, and is failing to fulfil its role. Corporate media has become a stenographer of power. Instead of seeking the truth and challenging power, they lie and deceive the public.

When I say WikiLeaks is revolutionary, I am echoing the sentiment described by Orwell's phrase: "in a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act". When western governments criticise WikiLeaks and create controversy, it is actually deflecting people from recognising the failure of the established media and their lack of commitment to the duty of a free press. What WikiLeaks does is not radical. It is in line with the tradition of a free press.

In the 60s, we had alternative media streamsthe birth of FM radio, which activists listened to, as well as magazines like Ramparts, which gave long-read exposes of what "The Man" was up to. Can you compare Ramparts to WikiLeaks?

I don't compare WikiLeaks to Ramparts. WikiLeaks invented scientific journalism, which was unprecedented. Just like scientists writing scientific papers are required to provide all the data that they used to form their conclusions, WikiLeaks publishes full archives (after going through rigorous harm minimisation process, to redact information that brings imminent harm). They provide a means for ordinary people to independently check the claims of journalists and this enables a mechanism of accountability for journalists. So, with WikiLeaks, the source of legitimacy that used to be placed in the "objectivity" of journalists (that determine their editorial decisions) is now placed in the actual source documents. People don't have to believe journalists, they can independently check the validity of the reporting on their own.

WikiLeaks provided a means for common people to claim their own history. By opening their archives, WikiLeaks freed people from a stolen history that repeats the abuses of the past. Leaked documents allow us to look at past events anew and restore perspectives that were oppressed and pushed to the margins.

Different cultures have different ideas of what freedom of expression should look likeChina, India, Japan, the US, Francebut for Americans, their right to free expression came out of a revolutionary rejection of Britain. Their initial expression to the British was their freedom.

I think the US First Amendment was truly a major milestone in securing individual liberty, but it has shown to be not sufficiently fascist-proof. It has been compromised through economic censorship, now increasingly carried on by giant tech companies, such as Google, Facebook and Twitter, censoring and de-platforming anyone who challenges the status quo.

American people believe that they live in a democracy and a free society. In fact, they often compare their right to free speech with oppressive regimes like in China and Russia that don't have that protection. But what we have here in the US is a facade of a democracy and the illusion of freedom. While Americans live under this illusion, people in China know that their government engages in propaganda, and they are not getting accurate information. So at the end of the day, what we have is the same. None of us have the right to free speech and we are all controlled. The difference is just whether it is done overtly or done subversively. It is a choice between Orwell's 1984 or Aldous Huxley's Brave New World.

How would you describe the benefit of what Assange has done for people around the world?

Even though WikiLeaks is a transnational journalistic organisation, I see their work as being very much tied to the impulse that came through the US during its Revolutionary War against Great Britain. This impulse was people's aspiration toward individual liberty. I think what happened at the time in the US was historically significant and its impact is not only important for the US but also for the entire world. US independence from King George III set a new trajectory in history. It opened up the possibility to move away from monarchy and into creating a society based on the rule of law.

Thomas Jefferson, as a principal author of the Declaration of Independence said, "All men are created equal" and are endowed with certain unalienable rights, such as "Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness". Those words inspired people around the worldeven to this day.

Of course, as history has shown, our founding fathers were not perfect. They had their own hypocrisy and contradictions manifested in the genocide of natives, enslavement of blacks and suppression of women. But I would like to think that the signers of this document, 56 people who put their lives and livelihood on the line to achieve America's independence, believed in the ideals spelled out in the document. I would like to think those words were not lies. I see them as promises and believe that Jefferson had aspired to create a society that lives up to those words.

WikiLeaks released documents that helped us see the unaccounted power inside the US and its history. The publication of the collateral murder video, the US wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and the illegal torture at Guantanamo Bay showed us how America had become a global empire, repeating its dark past of killing natives and destroying their culture, now under the name of fighting terrorism abroad in the oil-rich Middle East. We were able to see America's betrayal of its own ideals.

So what WikiLeaks did was help ordinary people around the world to engage in history, and make society more democratic and free. When we truly recognise the significance of WikiLeaks, we can see why Julian has been put in prison, tortured and politically persecuted. We can understand why the former CIA director and Trump's Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo called WikiLeaks "a non-state hostile intelligence service" and declared war against the whistleblowing site. We can understand why the CIA, via a Spanish security firm, spied on Julian and his privileged communication with his lawyers while he was inside the Ecuadorian Embassy in London, and as Julian's defence revealed, why the CIA plotted to poison him. I hope people then realise what is truly at stake with Julian's extradition case and how we need to do whatever it takes to stop it.

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The importance of WikiLeaks worldwide - The Daily Star

Georgia Today: Into The Dark Heart Of QAnon – GPB News

RELATED: 'Supercharged conspiracy theory QAnon takes root in Georgia'

Steve Fennessy: This is Georgia Today, a production of Georgia Public Broadcasting. I'm Steve Fennessy. It's Friday, September 25, 2020.

Stephanie Grohe: I made very clear directives in the group. I kicked somebody out of the group this morning because they were determined to bring their Q posters. And I told them, this is not about Q.

Chris Joyner: Right.

Steve Fennessy: Today, Chris Joyner, an investigative reporter at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, takes us down the rabbit hole of QAnon, a vast and preposterous conspiracy theory and, now, rapidly growing political movement that's found fertile ground in Atlanta's far northern suburbs. But its beginnings go back at least four years ago to a pizza shop in Washington, D.C.. So, Chris, we're here today to talk about QAnon, but actually the story of QAnon begins before we even heard what QAnon is. I'm thinking of 2016 about something called Pizzagate or what became known as Pizzagate. What was that?

Chris Joyner: So Pizzagate was a conspiracy theory that involved a pizza restaurant in the metro D.C. area called Comet Ping Pong. And it developed, as many of these things do, online. And there was a belief that there was a hidden part of that pizza parlor where Democratic elites were using it to kidnap and torture children, sexually tortured them. And its a far obviously, it's a far-fetched-sounding idea. But it gained a lot of traction, so much so that a man drove from North Carolina armed with an assault rifle and a pistol and broke in, in an attempt to liberate the children he believed were being held there.

Newscast: A North Carolina man was arrested Sunday in Washington, D.C., after a shooting that he says was motivated by an Internet conspiracy theory.

Newscast: An adult male, approximately in his late 20s, entered the Comet Pizza with an assault rifle.

Chris Joyner: A lot of this developed from the leaked emails from the Hillary Clinton campaign, and they were dissected and misinterpreted online in various ways that sort of allowed the creation of this conspiracy theory.

Steve Fennessy: Comet Ping Pong was was, as you said, a popular pizza joint

Chris Joyner: Oh and a family place, too!

Steve Fennessy: And a family place where there were Democratic fundraisers. And so it was referenced often in the leaked emails.

Chris Joyner: Exactly.

Steve Fennessy:And at some point those things became twisted into something incomprehensible.

Chris Joyner: Yeah, it was a real case of people taking two and two and getting, you know, cheese pizza out of it. It was they got a very strange result by putting all these these elements together. And it became a big story and it was somewhat laughed off, even though it was dangerous. But in some ways, that's where people date the genesis of the QAnon conspiracy web. It actually predates the person or people that are known as Q this anonymous online person who drops cryptic clues on various deep web message boards that are supposed to suggest to people that there is a deep state conspiracy of Hollywood and Washington elites who are engaged in trafficking children for sex purposes. And there's a part of the conspiracy that believes that they're harvesting a chemical from their blood to keep them young and that Donald Trump is attempting to reveal this elite cabal, is battling it and they're battling him. Because the belief here is that Q is a government insider who's working with Donald Trump or on behalf of Donald Trump.

Steve Fennessy: It sounds like you're you're almost speaking in religious terms. It sounds almost like there are almost Biblical references being made.

Chris Joyner: Well, yeah. I mean, because it is it's apocalyptic in its sort of tone that, you know, the forces of good are engaged in a battle against evil that in the end will result in a sort of new society, a sort of Second Coming sort of a language for people who are familiar with evangelical Christianity. So, yeah, I mean, in some ways it does take on a very religious tone; its also a very populist tone. The idea that there is an elite group that conspires against the rest of us.

Steve Fennessy: Right.

Chris Joyner: And that we're in a constant struggle to reveal a secret society, whether it's the Illuminati or the Freemasons or this elite cabal of, you know, cannibalistic pedophiles that are supposed to be out there. There's nothing new about conspiracy theories. What is kind of unique about QAnon is how all-encompassing and limber it is as conspiracy theory. It is. I I've talked about it as the conspiracy theory that eats all the other conspiracy theories. A lot of what attracts people to QAnon are things that attract people to other sort of subterranean cultures, right? Its this idea that they know something that other people don't know? You know, those folks who are, you know, kids of the '90s, remember how how popular TheX-Fileswere for the same reason. It touches all those buttons that you just love; that there's this secret world and only you're privy to it.

Steve Fennessy: Right.

Chris Joyner: And, you know, this sort of like peeling of the onion to get to the truth. In the QAnon culture, it's Do your own research. That's what they encourage you to do. And they will say specifically, Do your own research, but don't trust the mainstream media. So that cuts off an entire avenue. And the same thing happens in white supremacist culture and a lot of other extremist groups.

Steve Fennessy: So the dogma that they embrace is becomes irrefutable, almost by definition that there is nothing you can say

Chris Joyner: Yeah, and QAnon especially so. You know, people walk away from white supremacy all the time. QAnon is so impervious to other bits of information that would, you know, clue a person in to say, "Hey, maybe this is a bunch of malarkey."

Steve Fennessy: So, Chris, I understand there are now almost 5,000 messages from Q. How frequently are his followers hearing from him or her or them?

Chris Joyner: There will be times where there are multiple in a day and then there will be times when there is sort of a drier period. There are a lot of them and you can pore over them like Nostradamus. You know, and a lot of them make less sense than Nostradamus.

Steve Fennessy: Yeah.

Chris Joyner: They're they're so heavily coded and the language is weird. Some of it tries to take on a sort of military affect which goes towards, you know, the authenticity of Q in that community.

Steve Fennessy: At what point did QAnon get on your radar in a way that made you say to yourself: This is something we need to be writing about?

Chris Joyner: It got on my radar a little more than a year ago, maybe a year-and-a-half ago. As I noticed, it had picked up steam and it was really sort of flourishing. But as a local issue, it really wasn't until the pandemic that it started catching my eye a little more. It just began growing very rapidly, particularly on Facebook, particularly after the March shutdown.

Steve Fennessy: At the AJC, Chris Joyner covers fringe political movements, which often bring out just a handful of demonstrators. But at a march in August that attracted QAnon followers, he was in for a surprise. That's ahead. This is Georgia Today.

[BREAK]

Steve Fennessy: This is Georgia Today. We're talking with Chris Joyner, an investigative reporter with the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, about the appeal and growth of QAnon in Georgia. In August, you attended a Save the Children march up in Woodstock. What was that all about?

Chris Joyner: Well, it was it was interesting. I'd been in this Facebook group just sort of monitoring and trying to get a sense of the flavor of that group. And they began fairly quickly organizing towards a date in early August.

Steve Fennessy: So do these start these groups as honest, sort of saving the children groups or were they infiltrated and co-opted by QAnon? What what came first?

Chris Joyner: From what I can tell from my reporting, these were created specifically as QAnon groups.

Steve Fennessy: Okay.

Chris Joyner: But with non-QAnon language. These were branded specifically, as you know, "You're concerned about sex trafficking in your state." They were moving towards a date where they would be a coordinated series of marches and there was one here in Woodstock in early August. I cover lots of, you know, fringe elements, and it is very rare to see a virtual community turn out in real life in those kind of numbers. In this case, when I got there and I saw, there were like three or four or five hundred people running out of cars.

Steve Fennessy: Were you surprised?

Chris Joyner: I was very surprised. And I think that is that says something about their recruiting tactics, the issue they chose, and where they chose to do it.

Steve Fennessy: Right.

Chris Joyner: You know, many of them had not been involved with this group for terribly long.

Steve Fennessy: Yeah.

Chris Joyner: They they saw what they saw was it was concerned about sex trafficking. They were politically aligned being, you know, conservative and suburban and largely pro-Trump. Pretty explicitly pro-Trump, actually. And so, I mean, it was, you know, come out into your community and march against sex trafficking is a pretty easy get for a lot of these people. But when I joined and walking along with the march I began to pick out on their signs hashtags that are specific to the Q community, you know, code words like Frazzledrip and Adrenochrome, thats vocabulary specifically from QAnon. And then as they were marching, the back half of this large group was chanting, We Go One, We Go All, which is a popular slogan insideQAnon in fact, it's probably the you you would describe it as probably the QAnon motto.

Steve Fennessy: What were the marchers reaction to you as a representative of the mainstream media, which, according to their beliefs, is actively involved in suppressing knowledge of this vast conspiracy?

Chris Joyner: Yeah. Yeah, I mean, the short answer is they were deeply, deeply suspicious. And in some cases, hostile to my being there.

Steve Fennessy: But how so? And what kind of reactions did you get?

Chris Joyner: Well, because a lot of the QAnon culture believes that members of the mainstream media are either incompetently failing to report on the cabal or are in league with the cabal and covering it up, I you know I'm seen as really there, you know, on the evil side of the Good versus Evil battle. OK. So I was a little, you know, prepared for that.

Chris Joyner: Could you tell me about your signs? Tell me about what is Frazzledrip?

Chris Joyner: So when I was at the rally in Woodstock last month, I was interviewing a man who had brought a sign that read Frazzledrip, which is a code word for a QAnon conspiracy theory involving an alleged video on former Congressman Anthony Weiner's laptop that is supposed to be of Hillary Clinton and her aide, Huma Abedin, sacrificing a child and drinking its blood. But while I was talking to him about his sign, I was interrupted by another person in the march who wanted to interrogate me as to why I was talking to him.

Woman: I heard youre with the AJC.

Chris Joyner: I am.

Woman: Have you spoken with the leader of the group or the organizer

Chris Joyner: Stephanie?

Woman: Yeah.

Chris Joyner: Yes, I spoke to her on the phone earlier.

Woman: Okay. I was just curious how many more people of the group that youve interviewed.

Chris Joyner: Well I interviewed them

Chris Joyner: So I asked her what to make of the crowd, at the end of the protests, it was chanting: We Go One We Go All. And she essentially denied it.

Chris Joyner: The back half of this group. I think probably a couple hundred, were chanting We Go One We Go All.

Woman: I understand that. But that was one small section. If you look, if you were to really look at the signs, at what the people are wearing on their shirts, what they were chanting

Chris Joyner: No, I totally get your point.

Woman: Right. And so I know when I go and read the newspaper tomorrow and I see what maybe little bit news coverage we get on TV, it's going to be to try to totally discredit and tie this to things that are wackadoo, that

Chris Joyner: They really wanted to portray this march as a, you know, solely sex trafficking, apolitical awareness event and fundraiser, even. And I brought up the We Go One We Go All chants to one of the organizers of the protests, Stephanie Grohe, and she told me that they had been forbidden from saying that.

Stephanie Grohe: So I made very clear directives in the group. I kicked somebody out of the group this morning because they were determined to bring their Q posters. And I told them thatthis is not about Q.

Chris Joyner: Right.

Stephanie Grohe: This is about these these fundraisers. It's about the children. It's about trafficking.

Chris Joyner: But having been a part of that community on that Facebook group for a number of weeks, I knew that there was this large element of QAnon culture inside this group.

Steve Fennessy: So let's talk a little bit about social media, because it's certainly been the medium by which the word of this has spread and new adherents have come on board. Primarily, we're talking about Twitter and Facebook. And then there's also, of course, these sort of deeper sites, message boards like 4chan. So to what degree are are is social media responsible for the spread of these ideas?

Chris Joyner: Well, I mean, there were conspiracy theories before social media, obviously.

Steve Fennessy: Sure, sure.

Chris Joyner: In the spread of this particular web of conspiracy theories, you know, it is the secret sauce that has caused it to spread. Social media companies developed around an idea that they were going to be content neutral. It wouldn't be about whether what you said was right or wrong. They weren't going to make those calls. We've seen moves by social media companies to de-platform extremist right groups. And that's had an impact in, you know, sort of stemming the spread of some of these really, really harmful ideologies. In another way, it has also caused them to become more extreme and violent as they are forced into darker and darker areas of the Internet.

Steve Fennessy: Right.

Chris Joyner: So, I mean, I could see I could see, you know, a de-platforming effort stemming the spread of QAnon but QAnon becoming maybe even more militant.

Newscast: President Trump Tweeting congratulations today to QAnon conspiracy theorist Marjorie Taylor Greene after she won a seat in the House. Now, Greene is known for some extreme and racist views. She's warned of a, quote, Islamic invasion. She did that after two Muslims won office. She has described Black people as, quote, slaves to Democrats.

Steve Fennessy: I'd like to talk a little bit about Marjorie Taylor Greene, who is going to be the next Congresswoman from the 14th District even though she hasn't been elected yet. She won the Republican primary and her Democratic opponent, who is not favored anyway, recently dropped out. She is a a vocal adherent of QAnon, no?

Chris Joyner: She has been. She has tried to distance herself from QAnon. Or she did during her campaign, in particular when she was in a primary runoff. She seems to be less concerned, doesnt really address the issue at all. Certainly she is and has been a personality in QAnon through her own social media presence. The videos that she has recorded and interviews she's given over the past several years have been heavily indebted to the QAnon conspiracy web.

Marjorie Taylor Greene: Q is a patriot. We know that for sure, but we do not know who Q is, OK? So, now.

Chris Joyner: I think it's probably fair to say that she was the better candidate in terms of how she ran her campaign.

Steve Fennessy: Right.

Chris Joyner: She ran as an outsider. She ran against the media. These are not problems for voters in that area that that went for Trump in in a very big way in 2016. And he ran on those same themes.

President Donald Trump: Well, I don't know much about the movement other than I understand they like me very much, which I appreciate. But I don't know much about the movement.

Steve Fennessy: Also interesting is that they're they're disavowed among some mainstream political figures, but not all mainstream political figures, including, most notably the President of the United States. To what degree has has President Trump's refusal to disavow them or to speak out against them really in any way lit a fire under them?

Chris Joyner: You know, the president's handling of questions about QAnon has been very encouraging for people inside the QAnon movement. You know, they see this as real evidence of the truth of what they believe, right? That he is actively fighting this deep state cabal. What is amazing is he didn't even have to do that, really. I mean, because they were taking all sorts of cues from his public appearances. You know, how he held his hands and moved his hands, to what tie he wore as all being secret coded messages to them. So he didn't even have to say anything but his decision to not, you know, to not say that it's absurd and ridiculous and no one should listen to these people as some high-ranking Republicans have said has been very encouraging to them.

Steve Fennessy: Does its prevalence and popularity concern you?

Chris Joyner: The growth concerns me because, as I said, it's it is impervious to facts and it is hard for people to to draw themselves out of because it is so affirming to be a part of it. And so that rapid growth bothers me. The other thing that bothers me is that it's now an international movement.

Newscast: QAnon conspiracy theories are spreading overseas, popping up in Berlin at a protest against coronavirus restrictions.

Reporter: They're chanting Lugenpresse, which means basically fake news.

Newscast: Most European QAnon believers are new to this conspiracy theory. Their skepticism of the coronavirus acted as a kind of gateway to QAnon.

Steve Fennessy: So, Chris, wheres all this going? Coming up on a presidential election. What happens if President Trump is reelected? What happens if Joe Biden is our next president? How how do either of these outcomes affect the trajectory of QAnon?

Chris Joyner: I really think that in some ways, QAnon it will be unaffected by the election.

Steve Fennessy: Either way?

Chris Joyner: Either way. I mean, if if the president wins a second term, they will factor that into the you know, the running web of conspiracies. If the president is defeated and leaves office, he could still very well be considered to be running a campaign against this cabal. Just as an outsider, you know. That I'm trying to imagine an area where it would peter out in the shortterm. But I'm not sure how that would happen. Now, I think there are ways that, technologically, it can be disrupted, and I imagine that we'll see some of that.

Steve Fennessy: So is QAnon like COVID, in a way? Is it something that we're just gonna have to live with for an indefinite period of time?

Chris Joyner: Hmm,well, that's kind of a depressing thought. You mean until we develop a vaccine?

Steve Fennessy: Well, I mean, kinda like like, what is the cure for mass delusion?

Chris Joyner:It's tough to say. We're all, we're we are attracted, as a culture, to conspiracy theories. And, you know, QAnon being such a buffet of conspiracy theories, it would be hard to imagine that well get shed of it here in the short term.

Steve Fennessy: Our thanks to Chris Joyner, an investigative reporter at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. I'm Steve Fennessy. This is Georgia Today, a production of Georgia Public Broadcasting. You can subscribe to our show GPB.org/GeorgiaToday or anywhere you get podcasts. Please leave us a rating and review on Apple Podcast. Have a story idea? Connect with us at GeorgiaToday@GPB.org. Our producers are Sean Powers and Pria Mahadevan. Thanks for listening. We'll see you next week.

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Georgia Today: Into The Dark Heart Of QAnon - GPB News

Opening digitalization to all with low-code open source approaches – ITProPortal

Remember when being digital-first or pure play was a thing? Operating online gave a brands cache, reach, flexibility and saved a hell of a lot on rental costs. Digital touchpoints allowed consumers to engage as and when they pleased with brands, and brands could adapt their communications and front-end accordingly. This was all thanks to teams of developers coding away. The complexity and often cumbersome nature of their work created the illusion of sleek, responsive websites and straightforward consumer experiences

And then Covid-19 happened. Retail community Bazaarvoice Network registered a 25 percent increase in page views of members sites in March 2020 vs March 2019. In the same month, registrations to use the NHS App increased by 111 percent. Netflix added a record 15.77 million paid subscribers globally in the first quarter. We headed online in our droves, in order to access essential services just as much as we did to enjoy housebound entertainment. Suddenly, what had appeared in the past to be an enjoyable or passable engagement with a brand, was under intense scrutiny. Brands were under pressure to deliver strong, engaging customer experiences at speed. This burden fell on teams of already stretched developers, many of whom were also tasked with design and content tasks, and who were under-resourced for the level of work needed.

Brands now have to have an online presence and offer online services. These have to be accessible, relevant, continuously updated and consistent across channels. Businesses have to be quick on their feet, spin up new apps and websites, launch new services. If they cant, theyll quickly fall to a competitor capable of offering the kind of joined up, seamless experience customers either want (Netflix et al) or desperately need (education, healthcare, benefits, food!). Of course, weve had the dotcom boom and social engagement phenomenon and digital disruption. But its the onset of the pandemic, the subsequent lockdown, and now the worlds gradual re-emergence that has been the real catalyst for digitalization.

Its not over yet, either. To say the state of play for many global industries is volatile is somewhat of an understatement. While some sectors are opening up (travel, hospitality, education), many are just as quickly being forced to shut down (travel, hospitality, education).

When we couldnt travel abroad, we sought the staycation. Between 1 January to 24 February booking site Independent Cottages, for instance, saw an average 40 percent jump in web visitors compared with 2019. Then Europe opened: Spain-holiday.com, the third biggest holiday rental site in the country, reported a report-breaking day of site visits. Following the UK governments travel announcement at the end of July, however, one can imagine the brands web traffic looks somewhat different.

Almost all sectors face the ongoing threat of restrictions tightening again. New health and safety regulations, changes to employment laws, personal finance and benefits, and localized messaging are all changing rapidly. Yet in the midst of this turbulence, consumers expect the same streamlined experiences and brand interactions that theyve become accustomed to.

Being digital-first or pure-play is no longer a niche and innovative thing. Its a pre-requisite for businesses, public services, and governments. Developers are a critical part of this, equipped with the technical skill needed to create digital experiences. However, the need for every business and every one to digitalize has prompted a rise in DIY platform-building tools. Adopting tools like Wix and Squarespace have helped to democratize the web, allowing non-developer users to create and rapidly update websites using simple drag and drop tools. The downside? Its not just the tools that are simple: the websites themselves are pretty basic too.

These websites also lack the control and governance tools required to manage their creation and operation. Without these tools build into a development platform, brands risk jeopardizing the security of website users and their data. Basic tools lack the roles and permissions features which enable developers, designers, marketers and agencies to have access to specific sites, components, and design elements. In absence of these, the situation is a free-for-all, with the risk of sites being created that dont meet a brands security or brand identity guidelines.

At the other end of the scale are larger enterprises using different - but equally unfit-for-purpose - tools and approaches to website creation. Developers are still coding and play a crucial role in developing these websites and ensuring engaging user experiences, but at the same time they are tasked with doing design and content creation work. This is frustrating for many and an inefficient use of talent and resources by businesses. Having to do the latter two tasks means developers have less time to do coding work.

Businesses do need the ability to democratize technology and roles. But they also need to retain the ability to still set guardrails around brand, security, workflow and so on.

Fortunately the Wix way isnt the only way. The development of basic no-code tools for consumers and SMEs revolutionized small-scale web development. Now, the sophistication of enterprise-level is extending these benefits across the entire business ecosystem. Organizations can digitalize at pace, adapt websites quickly and easily, scale to support fluctuations in web demand, edit and add content and launch new digital services.

Low-code tools feature visual interfaces much like the drag-and-drop style of basic solutions with the technology behind the platforms doing the hard graft of converting this into robust code. Templates can be created via a component-based design system that serves as a kind of pattern library for a team. Users can then create new content using the components from the library.

This doesnt mean that developers will be out of a job though; quite the reverse. As more (non-technical) team members are empowered to create and edit websites themselves, developers can concentrate their time and effort on more complex, value-add tasks. After all, its these kinds of problem-solving tasks (versus updating content and design work) that drew many to coding roles in the first place.

Low-code is also gaining ground due to the investment and backing of some of the biggest names in the game. Google and Amazon now offer various low-code tools, and were recently joined in the space by AWS with its launch of Honeycode, a managed service that allows users to build mobile and web apps.

The traditional ways of working with developer bottlenecks means that larger companies often deliver at the speed of their technology infrastructure. Adopting enterprise-grade platforms that democratize tasks means that even larger companies can move at the speed of their customers. This is crucial when events like Covid mean that customer behavior and expectation are changing every day.

Open platforms are now giving IT teams the power to do more with less by providing enterprise functionality, easy-to-use web components and low-code site-building solutions that let teams re-assemble digital experiences as required without the burden of a total replatforming. Backed by open-source technologies, low-code tools are the future, opening up the market to all businesses and services to digitalize on-demand. And its just as well: delivering superior online customer experiences in this way will be a critical factor in business prosperity post-Covid.

Drew Griffiths, Cohesion CEO, Acquia

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Opening digitalization to all with low-code open source approaches - ITProPortal

Ask Hackaday: Is Windows XP Source Code Leak A Bad Thing? – Hackaday

News comes overnight that the Windows XP source code has been leaked. The Verge says they have verified the material as legitimate and that the leak also includes Windows Server 2003 and some DOS and CE code as well. The thing is, it has now been more than six years since Microsoft dropped support for XP, does it really matter if the source code is made public?

As Erin Pinheiro pointed out in her excellent article on the Nintendo IP leak earlier this year (perhaps the best Joe Kim artwork of the year on that one, by the way), legitimate developers cant really make use of leaked code since it opens them up to potential litigation. Microsoft has a formidable legal machine that would surely go after misuse of the code from a leak like this. Erin mentions in her article that just looking at the code is the danger zone for competitors.

Even if other software companies did look at the source code and implement their own improvements without crossing the legal line, how much is there still to gain? Surely companies with this kind of motivation would have reverse engineered the secret sauce of the long dead OS by now, right?

The next thing that comes to mind are the security implications. At the time of writing, statcount pegs Windows XP at a 0.82% market share which is still going to be a very large number of machines. Perhaps a better question to consider is what types of machines are still running it? I didnt find any hard data to answer this question, however there are dedicated machines like MRIs that dont have easy upgrade paths and still use the OS and there is an embedded version of XP that runs on point-of-sale, automated teller machines, set-top boxes, and other long-life hardware that are notorious for not being upgraded by their owners.

From both the whitehat and blackhat side, source code is a boon for chasing down vulnerabilities. Is there more to be gained by cracking the systems or submitting bug fixes? The OS is end of life, however Microsoft has shown that a big enough security threat still warrants a patch like they did with a remote desktop protocol vuln patch in May of 2019. I wonder if any of this code is still used in Windows 10, as that would make it a juicy tool for security researchers.

As for dangerous information in the leak, there have been some private keys found, like the NetMeeting root certificate. But its hard to say how much of a risk keys like this are due to the age of the software. You should stop using NetMeeting for high-security video conferencing if you havent already it was end of life thirteen years ago so theres nothing surprising there.

I think the biggest news with a leak of code like this is the ability to learn from it. Why do people look at the source code of open source projects? Sure, you might be fixing a bug or adding a feature, but a lot times its to see how other coders are doing things. Its the apprenticeship program of the digital age and having source code of long-dead projects both preserves how things were done for later research, and lets the curious superstars of tomorrow hone their skills at the shoulder of the masters.

Why dont companys get out in front of this and publish end-of-life code as open source? This would vouch for the validity of the code. As it stands, how do you verify leaked code acquired from the more dimly lit corners of the Internet? Publishing the official source code for end of life projects preserves the history, something the Internet age has never given much thought to, but we should. Weve heard the company promoting the message that Microsoft loves open source, heres another great chance to show that by releasing the source code since its already out there from this leak. It would be a great step to do so now, and an even better one to take before leaks happen with future end of life products.

This is a pie-in-the-sky idea that we often trot out when we encounter stories of IoT companies that go out of business and brick their hardware on their way out. In those cases, the source code would allow users to roll their own back-end services that no longer exist, but Microsoft would be likely to frown on a LibreWinXP project based on their own code. Its likely that the company still has a few long-term contracts to provide support for entities using XP hardware.

This is Ask Hackaday so we want to know your take on this. When old source code leaks, is it a bad thing? Are there any compelling reasons for keeping the source code from projects that have seen their last sunset a secret? And now that the XP code is out there somewhere, what do you think may come for it? Weigh in below!

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Ask Hackaday: Is Windows XP Source Code Leak A Bad Thing? - Hackaday

What is FOSS? What is Open Source? Are They the Same Thing? – It’s FOSS

What does FOSS in Its FOSS mean? What is FOSS?

I have been asked this question numerous time in the past. It was about time that I explained what is FOSS in Linux and the software world.

The distinction is important because FOSS is a generic world and it could mean different depending on the context. Here, I am discussing the FOSS principle in software.

FOSS means Free and Open Source Software. It doesnt mean software is free of cost. It means that source code of the software is open for all and anyone is free to use, study and modify the code. This principle allows other people to contribute to the development and improvement of a software like a community.

In the 60s and 70s, computers were hardware focused and the hardware were expensive. They were mainly used by academics in universities or researchers in labs. The limited amount of software used to come for free or with their source code and the users were allowed to modify the source code to suit their need.

In the late 70s and early 80s, the manufacturers stopped distributing source code in an attempt to not let their software run on their competitors computers.

This restrictive licensing led to the inconvenience and dislike of peoplewho were used to and fond of modifying software. In the mid 80s, Richard Stallman started the Free Software Movement.

Stallman specified four essential fundamental freedom for a software to be Free and Open Source Software.

I am rephrasing them for easier understanding:

If interested, I would advise reading this article on the history of FOSS.

As you may have noticed, the free in Free and Open Source Software doesnt mean it is free of cost. It means freedom to run, modify and distribute the software.

People often wrongly think that FOSS or Open Source software cannot have a price tag. This is not correct.

Most Free and Open Source Software are available free of cost because of a number of reasons:

To avoid the emphasis on free some people use the term FLOSS. FLOSS stands for Free and Libre Open Source Software. The world libre (meaning freedom) is different than gartuit/gratis (free of cost).

Free as in free speech, not free as in free beer.

It is a myth that open source projects dont make money. Red Hat was the first open source company to reach the billion dollars mark. IBM bought Red Hat for $34 billion. There are many such examples.

Many open source projects, specially the ones in the enterprise sectors, offer support and enterprise oriented features for a fee. This is main business model for Red Hat, SUSE Linux and more such projects.

Some open source projects like Discourse, WordPress offer hosted instance of their software for a premium fee.

Many open source projects, specially the desktop applications, rely on donations. VLC, GIMP, Inkscape and other such open source software fell in this category. There are ways to fund open-source programs but usually, youll find donation links on project websites.

Making money with open source software may be difficult but it is not entirely impossible.

This is a valid question. You are not a software developer, just a regular computer user. Even if the source code of the software is available, you wont understand how the program works.

Thats fine. You wont understand it but someone with the necessary skill sets will and thats what matter.

Think of this way. Perhaps you wont understand a complicated legal document. But if you have the freedom to look at the document and keep a copy of it, you can consult someone who can check the document for legal pitfalls.

In other words, open source software has transparency.

Youll often come across terms FOSS and open source. They are often used interchangeably.

Are they the same thing? It is difficult to answer in yes and no.

You see, the term free in FOSS is confusing for many as people incorrectly assume that it as free of cost. Enterprise executives, higher ups and decision makers tend to focus on free in Free and Open Source. Since they are business people focused on making money for their company, the term free works as deterrence in adopting the FOSS principles.

This is why a new organization named Open Source Initiative was created in the mid 90s. They removed the Free from Free and Open Source Software and created their own definition of open source. and their own set of licenses.

The term open source got quite popular specially in the software industry. The executives are more comfortable with Open Source. The adoption of open source grew rapidly and I believe removal of free term did play a role here.

Got questions?

This As I explained in the article what is Linux Distribution, the FOSS/open source concept played a big role in the development and popularity of Linux.

I tried to explain the concept of FOSS and open source in simpler terms in this jargon buster article. I have tried to avoid going too much in detail or technical accuracies.

I do hope you have a better understanding of this topic now. If you have got questions or suggestions, feel free to leave a comment and continue the discussion there.

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What is FOSS? What is Open Source? Are They the Same Thing? - It's FOSS

Microsoft programming languages and open source help win customers – Business Insider

Ever since cofounders Bill Gates and Paul Allen launched Microsoft's first product in 1975, programming languages have been a key part of its strategy to win over customers.

Microsoft's first product was Altair BASIC, used to run the BASIC programming language on Altair computers. Since then, Microsoft has developed several other new programming languages, including Visual Basic, C#, .NET, and TypeScript.

Over the years, building these programming languages has been crucial to bringing more developers to its products, particularly now, as it races against Amazon Web Services and Google in the cloud.

"The most important thing is that as the industry moves, we want to meet developers where they are," corporate vice president of Microsoft's developer division, Julia Liuson,told Business Insider.

While Microsoft has always invested in building these languages, its strategy has changed over time, most prominently through its shift towards developing open source software, as shown in 2012 when it launched TypeScript as a more powerful alternative to JavaScript. While Microsoft previously only built proprietary products, TypeScript was totally open source from its beginning. Today, open-source development is key to growing its cloud.

"Microsoft's investment in languages is good it's steady," VP and principal analyst at Forrester, Jeffrey Hammond, told Business Insider. "They're turning over and investing in modern languages. It's had real benefit to their products. The ability to introduce modern concepts as needed but also embrace concepts from outside the organization is one reason we've seen strong growth of Azure."

Here's how emphasizing language development and changing its tune on open source has helped Microsoft win over developers:

Back when Anders Hejlsberg first joined Microsoft 24 years ago, it was a "very different company," he said. Now a technical fellow in Microsoft's developer division, Hejlsberg has helped the company build three programming languages: Delphi, C#, and TypeScript.

"Lots of people love to work on new programming language innovations, but very few people build a programming language that can attract millions," Microsoft's Liuson said. "Anders has done a hat trick: He has done it three times."

While Microsoft has changed in many ways since Hejlsberg joined for example, the development process was much slower and engineers would release products every two years, rather than on a weekly or monthly cadence like they do one major shift stands out: When Microsoft changed its opinion on open source.

Bill Gates is seen in October 2019. Nicolas Liponne/NurPhoto via Getty

At the beginning, all of Microsoft's products were closed source, and it even actively crusaded against open source software in the 1990s and early 2000s, waging war against open source projects like the operating system Linux. While it gradually began doing some open source work, launching TypeScript in 2012 was a turning point, as it was its first programming language that was open source from the very start.

"I've seen transformation that occurred in the company in the last 5-8 years," Hejlsberg said. "It is truly profound. It is truly a different company. These last eight years have seen so much fun because it is so energizing."

Now, Microsoft has made a complete turnaround. It develops its languages in the open and acquired GitHub, the bustling heart of open-source projects around the world. It even made its own legacy programming languages like C# and .NET (which is used for building Windows applications) available as open source.

GitHub CEO Nat Friedman (left) and Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella (right) Microsoft

With open source development, Microsoft's engineers can easily communicate with the users of the languages to learn what they want. Someone may submit a suggestion through GitHub to fix a bug, and it's possible for an engineer to fix that bug the day of. This was "unheard of in the old days," Hejlsberg says.

"C# is now 20 years old but our development process on C# is every bit active as it always has been," he said. "We're devoted to staying in it in the long term."

Open source also allows developers to build better products faster, Hejlsberg says, as people around the world can contribute to the language remotely. What's more, open source programming languages attracts developers who are sensitive to getting locked into one vendor and want a language that can easily be used on any platform.

"Writing code is the manifestation of the investment you make in your applications," Hejlsberg said. "The code is the artifact that comes out of that. If that code can somehow only function as long as you license with somebody else, that can be problematic. For that reason, there's a strong incentive for developers to view the world through an open-source lens."

Ultimately, the firm's switch to "entirely open source" has been "tremendously important for our accelerated adoption," Hejlsberg said.

Today, JavaScript is the most popular programming language according to GitHub, and it's used to build web applications. As JavaScript continued to grow in popularity, TypeScript emerged as a strong contender for building modern web applications.

"JavaScript programmers wanna write in JavaScript," Hejlsberg said. "Why is it that JavaScript isn't suitable for large scale development? What can we do to fix that but stay in the ethos of the JavaScript community?"

To fix these problems and make a language that's like JavaScript, but more powerful for running large scale applications, Microsoft came up with TypeScript. It's similar to JavaScript and compatible with it, but it also helps developers catch issues and bugs more easily so that their apps run smoothly in web browsers.

And because TypeScript is available as open source, this allowed the language to spread quickly among developers. Today, it's the second most loved programming language, according to the developer Q&A site Stack Overflow.

"I think if you have to look at the modern Microsoft, TypeScript is probably the next big successor to the history of successful Microsoft languages," Forrester's Hammond said.

Hammond only expects TypeScript to keep growing as web technology advances. He says that every time Microsoft designs a new language, it "gets a bit better."

"I think TypeScript is a reflection of that," Hammond said. "In some ways, it's almost like the three bears: Not too firm, not too soft, it's just right."

For Microsoft, it's not just about building its own programming languages. It's also about investing in its developer tools and supporting outside languages as well. For example, Microsoft's Visual Studio Code, a platform for developers to write and edit code, has become the most popular open source project on GitHub.

Read more: Here's why 8.5 million users love Visual Studio Code, the free software that's helping Microsoft win over programmers in the cloud wars with Amazon

Again, all this helps Microsoft lure more developers as customers. And recently, a Gartner report said that Microsoft has the greatest market share of application developer tools.

"Often you'll see someone talk about how wonderful this programming language is and then you discover that the tools are horrible," Hejlsberg said. "Unless you invest both in the language and in the tools, it is very very hard to get growth."

And besides Microsoft languages, the company also supports several other popular programming languages, including Python, C++, Java, Rust, and more. And even though Microsoft didn't build these languages, it still embraces them. Since they are open source, Microsoft can actively contribute to these languages to fix bugs and add new features.

Overall, building and investing in programming languages helps Microsoft bring in more customers. All this has helped accelerate Microsoft's cloud, bolstered by its strong relationships with enterprise customers as well as its investment in attracting developers.

"Azure would be nothing without the interesting applications of developers that run in there," Liuson said. "Having a great set of programming languages and tools to write applications faster and help them deploy Azure will help our cloud strategy."

Relying on open source also let it avoid missing out on any big trends.

"One of the more interesting areas where there might be a weakness from a Microsoft perspective in artificial intelligence," Hammond said. "Python has taken over as the dominant language. While it was not invented at Microsoft, they embrace it strongly."

Not all of Microsoft's languages have become a smash hit. For example, F#, which can be used for app develop, and Q#, which is used for quantum computing, have not yet gained much traction. Still, as quantum computing continues to grow, Q# could become Microsoft's next big language, Hammond says. It, too, is open source.

"Future wise, we are deeply devoted to this continuous journey of investing in open source," Hejlsberg said. "We have gotten much much better and understanding what our customers want because we have this much deeper engaged conversation through the open development process."

Got a tip?Contact this reporter via email atrmchan@businessinsider.com, Signal at646.376.6106,Telegram at @rosaliechan, orTwitter DM at@rosaliechan17. (PR pitches by email only, please.) Other types of secure messaging available upon request.

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TikTok says it would open its source code and algorithm to an Australian committee for inspection – The Tech Portal

TikTok just cant seem to catch a break as it faces multifaceted scrutiny from around the world. While the ongoing battle in the United States continues, the ByteDance owned company has now vowed to an Australian government committee that it will open its source code and algorithm for tests and review by government officials. By doing so it hopes to prove its innocence in the matter.

Executives from the companys Australian operations appeared before the committee on Foreign Interference through Social Media, today. In this meeting, they promised to provide the algorithm of the platform for inspection by the committee. TikTok has invited qualified government personnel to its transparency and accountability centers in Los Angeles and Washington or a virtual tour of these centers, to test its source code and review the algorithm.

Roland Cloutier, Global Chief Security Officer at ByteDance said, (It will be) available in a public setting for regulators, governments, commercial entities to come in and to test our code. He further added that TikToks source code is not the same as its Chinese counterpart Douyin, contrary to popular belief.

Governments across the globe are questioning TikToks credibility and its links to the Chinese government, accusing the app of helping the CCP mine users data through the platform. India, the platforms former largest market, has already banned the platform, and prospects in U.S. dont look very good either. Thus, its not very surprising that TikTok is going on a transparency drive

Moreover, to solve this issue of distrust, a deal between TikTok, Oracle and Walmart was brought into the picture, resulting in the formation a new entity, TikTok Global. The new deal would have allowed Oracle to have access to TikToks source code. However, TikTok Global hit a wall when ByteDance and Oracle claimed contradicting views on the ownership of the new TikTok Global. ByteDance said that it will retain a majority in the platform whereas, Oracle claimed that the new TikTok platform will be majorly owned by American firms with zero Chinese interference. Moreover, China has suggested that it wont allow the deal to happen, and now, we are back to square one.

The deal is still not off the table, but it might run into some large delays, if it ever happens in the first place.

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TikTok says it would open its source code and algorithm to an Australian committee for inspection - The Tech Portal