Canadian government doubles down on its threats to tightly censor online hate and misinformation – Reclaim The Net

Last October, before the 2019 Canadian federal election, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau made tackling online hate speech a major election policy for his Liberal Party.

Over the last few days, the Canadian government has doubled down on this pre-election proposal and signaled renewed efforts to impose tighter internet regulations based around the censorship buzzwords hate speech and misinformation.

On Tuesday, Canadas Minister of Infrastructure and Communities, Catherine McKenna, responded to an article about the Government of Quebec having a 12-person war room that scrubs online hate and misinformation from Facebook and other online platforms by stating:

I think theres a lot that we can do, but the social media companies themselves need to step up. We dont have to regulate everything but if you cant regulate yourselves, governments will.

One of the main criticisms of regulating based on vague terms such as hate speech and misinformation is that those enforcing the rules can censor anything they disagree with or dont want to address by branding it as hate speech or misinformation.

Double your web browsing speed with today's sponsor. Get Brave.

And when McKenna was asked about this tweet by digital media outlet Rebel News, her response demonstrated these concerns, with McKenna first denying the threat to regulate social media companies and then accusing Rebel News of contributing to hate against her because theyre spreading misinformation and disinformation by asking her about the tweet.

A day after McKenna tweeted out this threat to regulate social media companies, the Canadian government again referenced tighter internet regulations during Canadas 2020 Speech from the Throne and vowed to redouble its effort by taking action on online hate.

While neither of these statements were specific policy proposals, they signal the Canadian governments intent to take a more active role in policing what citizens can say on the internet.

These statements about internet regulation follow several unprecedented censorship decisions from Canadian law enforcement, courts, and the government over the last 12 months.

These decisions include the use of a legal request to block access to a Canadian subreddit, Canadas Federal Court ordering internet service providers to block access to the pirate IPTV service GoldTV, and the Trudeau government suing digital media outlets to ban them from attending government press events.

In February, the Canadian government also proposed requiring news media outlets to get a license and said that this requirement would apply to websites that distribute content in Canada.

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Canadian government doubles down on its threats to tightly censor online hate and misinformation - Reclaim The Net

US has never asked WikiLeaks rival to remove leaked cables, court told – The Guardian

US authorities have never asked a WikiLeaks rival to take down unredacted cables that have been among those at the centre of the legal battle to send Julian Assange to the US, his extradition hearing has been told.

The evidence was given by a veteran internet activist whose website, Cryptome, published more than 250,000 classified documents a day before WikiLeaks began placing them online.

In a short statement submitted by Assanges team at the Old Bailey, John Young said he had published unredacted diplomatic cables on 1 September 2011 after obtaining an encrypted file, and that they remained online.

Young, who founded Cryptome in 1996, added: Since my publication on Cryptome.org of the unredacted diplomatic cables, no US law enforcement authority has notified me that this publication of the cables is illegal, consists or contributes to a crime in any way, nor have they asked for them to be removed.

Assange, 49, is fighting extradition to the US, where he is facing an 18-count indictment alleging a plot to hack computers and conspiracy to obtain and disclose national defence information.

June 2010 - October 2010

WikiLeaks releases about 470,000 classified military documents concerning American diplomacy and the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. It later releases a further tranche of more than 250,000 classified US diplomatic cables.

November 2010

A Swedish prosecutor issues a European arrest warrant for Assange over sexual assault allegations involving two Swedish women. Assange denies the claims.

February 2011

A British judge rules that Assange can be extradited to Sweden. Assange fears Sweden will hand him over to US authorities who could prosecute him.

November 2016

Assangeis questionedin a two-day interview over the allegations at the Ecuadorian embassy by Swedish authorities.

January 2018

Britain refuses Ecuador's request to accord Assange diplomatic status, which would allow him to leave the embassy without being arrested.

11 April 2019

Police arrest Assange at the embassyon behalf of the US after his asylum was withdrawn. He is charged by the US with 'a federal charge of conspiracy to commit computer intrusion for agreeing to break a password to a classified U.S. government computer.'

24 February 2020

Assange's extradition hearing begins at Woolwich crown court in south-east London. After a week of opening arguments, the extradition case is tobe adjourned until May. Further delays are caused by the coronavirus outbreak.

15 September 2020

A hearing scheduled for four weeks begins at the Old Bailey with the US government expected to make their case that Assange tried to recruit hackers to find classified government information. If the courts approve extradition, the British government will still have the final say.

Medical experts have also given evidence to the Old Bailey this week. On Tuesday, a psychiatrist called by Assanges team who has visited him in Belmarsh prison said the WikiLeaks founder would be at a high risk of taking his own life if extradited.

Michael Kopelman, an emeritus professor of neuropsychiatry at Kings College London, who has visited Assange 20 times in prison, added: The risk of suicide arises out of clinical factors ... but it is the imminence of extradition and/or an actual extradition that would trigger the attempt, in my opinion.

However, a psychiatrist giving evidence for the US government on Thursday said Assanges suicide risk was manageable.

Dr Nigel Blackwood, an NHS doctor, described Assange as a resilient and resourceful man who had defied predictions over his mental health.

Assange has been held on remand in prison in south-east London since last September after serving a 50-week jail sentence for breaching bail conditions while he was in the Ecuadorian embassy in London for almost seven years.

The hearing also heard from a Swiss computer science expert that unredacted US diplomatic cables came into the public domain following the publication of a passcode in a book by Guardian journalists in February 2011.

Prof Christian Grothoff, of the Bern University of Applied Sciences in Switzerland, said it had later been discovered the code could be used to decrypt a mirrored version of WikiLeaks online encrypted store of cables. The full cache including classified documents was made available through Cryptome and another website on 1 September, he said.

The Guardian denied the claim, which has also been made by Assanges legal team.

The Guardian has made clear it is opposed to the extradition of Julian Assange. However, it is entirely wrong to say the Guardians 2011 WikiLeaks book led to the publication of unredacted US government files, a spokesman said.

The book contained a password which the authors had been told by Julian Assange was temporary and would expire and be deleted in a matter of hours. The book also contained no details about the whereabouts of the files. No concerns were expressed by Assange or WikiLeaks about security being compromised when the book was published in February 2011. WikiLeaks published the unredacted files in September 2011.

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US has never asked WikiLeaks rival to remove leaked cables, court told - The Guardian

Wikileaks and the El-Masri kidnap case – Morning Star Online

LAWYERS for the US government wrangled for days to prevent Julian Assanges extradition proceedings hearing Kahled El-Masris evidence.

When eventually his story was laid before the court last week, it was obvious why.

The German shop worker suffered horrific treatment at the hands of the Macedonian police and the CIA.

He was secretly held captive for months, tortured and then dumped on a roadside in a country he had never visited.

It took a determined investigative journalist, the Wikileaks revelations and nine years to establish the facts.

Once they had, however, the grand chamber of the European Court of Human Rights ruled that El-Masri had been severely beaten, shackled, sodomised, hooded and subjected to total sensory deprivation, carried out by state officials of Macedonia.

The court held that the facts of his case were established beyond reasonable doubt.

The US, however, has resisted all attempts to hold it to account for the five months during which the CIA tortured El-Masri in secret.

The International Criminal Court in the Hague is investigating the case, which could come to trial later this year.

In response, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has denounced the ICC and issued sanctions against its senior officials for illegitimate attempts to subject Americans to its jurisdiction.

El-Masri grew up in Lebanon. During the 1980s civil war, when he was in his 20s, he was granted political asylum in Germany where he became a citizen, set up home in Ulm, married and started a family.

In 2003, he took a short holiday in Skopje, Macedonia possibly after a row with his wife.

As he started his coach journey home, however, he was detained by Macedonian police who mistook him for an al-Qaida suspect with a very similar name and German connections.

The Macedonian police held him incommunicado for 23 days before handing him over to the CIA. Its operatives stripped, blindfolded and drugged him before strapping him spread-eagled to the floor of a plane and flying him to Afghanistan.

I was continuously interrogated, held in a cold concrete cell with only a dirty, thin blanket and a bucket to use for a toilet. I was humiliated, stripped naked and threatened, he told the court in his statement. It would later transpire that he was in one of the CIAs black sites known as the Salt Pit.

Eventually he went on hunger strike. After 34 days without food he was strapped to a chair and forcibly fed through his nose.

After four months of inhumane treatment, it appears the US agents had realised their mistake. On May 28 El-Masri was again blindfolded and handcuffed and taken to a plane where he was strapped to a seat. He was flown to Albania, although he did not know it at the time.

I was put in the back of a vehicle and driven up and down mountainous roads. Eventually the vehicle stopped, I was brought from the back of the car and the handcuffs removed. The men gave me my suitcase and my passport and told me to walk down the road without turning back.

He imagined that he was about to be shot in the back and was surprised as he rounded a corner to meet a group of armed men. They asked for his passport and demanded to know why he was in Albania without a visa.

By some miracle he managed to return to Germany, but his ordeal was by no means over. After so long without word, his wife had returned to Lebanon, assuming her husband had abandoned her. And persuading anyone of what had happened to him during his five-month absence would prove challenging.

Among the investigative journalists that El-Masri contacted was John Goetz, then working for NDR, the German state broadcaster. When we first met, very few people believed Mr El-Masris story, Goetz told the court last week. Macedonia itself denied all knowledge of the detention and the US provided no information.

Goetz started meticulously checking flight records to corroborate El-Masris account. Eventually these led not only tothe actual flights, but to the names of the 13 CIA operatives who had held him prisoner.

I myself knocked on doors in different countries and eventually in the US where I discovered the agents and questioned them about their role, Goetz said at the Old Bailey.

In January 2007 the Munich prosecutor issued arrest warrants for 13 people wanted in connection with El-Masris abduction. For reasons that were, at the time, incomprehensible, the German government chose not to request extradition of those individuals.

When the diplomatic cables (obtained by Wikileaks) first came to light El-Masri was the first thing that I typed in, said Goetz. What they revealed was the intense pressure that US diplomats had exerted on German Chancellor Angela Merkel: There will be serious repercussions for German/American relations if (the warrants are issued), she was warned by US diplomats.

US justice proved equally illusive. The American Civil Liberties Union filed a suit against the US government on behalf of El-Masri.

When he and his lawyer arrived to testify, they were denied entry to the US, however. Their statements were eventually heard by video link, but the judge dismissed the case on the grounds that it wouldpresent a grave risk of injury to national security.

Whether El-Masris story and its cover up persuades Judge Baraitser to refuse Assanges extradition is for the future. The ICCs deliberations too are for another day.

In no doubt, however, is El-Masris gratitude to Wikileaks. Those cables made public in September 2011 made it clear why over the intervening yeas my suffering had been able to be denied and ignored and steps that should have been taken against those responsible sidelined.

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Wikileaks and the El-Masri kidnap case - Morning Star Online

WikiLeaks cables showed US interfered in German torture investigation – ComputerWeekly.com

Government cables published by WikiLeaks showed that the US interfered in a judicial investigation in Germany into the kidnapping of a German citizen by the CIA.

The citizen, Khalid El-Masri, said in written evidence that WikiLeaks publication had ensured that his story had been acknowledged and accepted after years of trying to bring the facts of his treatment to light.

El-Masri gave the statement on the ninth day of extradition proceedings against Julian Assange, founder of WikiLeaks, at the Old Bailey.

Assange is accused of conspiring with hacking groups and faces 18 charges under the Espionage Act and one charge under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, which carry a maximum sentence of 175 years.

El-Masri, a German citizen of Lebanese descent, said he had been detained in 2003 at the Macedonian border, then kidnapped and taken to a prison in Afghanistan by CIA agents where he was tortured.

Technical difficulties prevented El-Masri from joining the courts cloud video platform, which meant he was unable to address the court beyond his written statement.

Assange is reported to have stood up and said, I will not accept you censoring a torture victims statement to this court, after prosecution lawyers objected to him giving live testimony.

Mark Summers QC, representing Assange, said the diplomatic cables published by WikiLeaks in 2011 exposed the pressure the US had put on the German authorities not to go ahead with extradition charges against the CIA agents involved in El-Masris kidnapping.

El-Marsi said in his written evidence that the European Court of Human Rights relied on US government cables published by WikiLeaks in a ruling announced in December 2012.

The European Court said El-Masris account of his abduction, torture and rendition had been established beyond reasonable doubt.

It found that Macedonia was responsible for his torture and ill-treatment, both in the country itself and after his transfer to the US authorities.

El Masri said the WikiLeaks cables showed that the US interfered in a judicial investigation in Germany, as well as in Spain where the rendition flight in question travelled from.

Without dedicated and brave exposure of the state secrets in question, what happened to me would never have been acknowledged and understood, he said. The exposure of what happened was necessary, not just for myself, but for law and justice worldwide.

El-Masri said he was kidnapped at the Macedonian border while travelling through Europe on a bus.

He said he was detained without reason, held incommunicado, and severely ill-treated for 23 days. He reported being handcuffed and blindfolded at Skopje Airport and handed to a CIA rendition team who physically overwhelmed me, cutting off all my clothes except my blindfold.

He recalled seven or eight men dressed head to foot in black, wearing black masks before being shackled and marched to a waiting aircraft.

Without dedicated and brave exposure of the state secrets in question, what happened to me would never have been acknowledged and understood. The exposure of what happened was necessary, not just for myself, but for law and justice worldwide Khalid El-Masri, German citizen kidnapped by the CIA

I was spread-eagled and my limbs tied to the side of the aircraft. I was given injections and anaesthetic. I was unconscious for most of the journey, he stated in written evidence.

The plane took El-Masri to a prison in Afghanistan where he was held incommunicado in a concrete cell in winter and continuously interrogated humiliated, stripped naked, insulted and threatened.

When he protested his detention by going on a hunger strike, El Masri said he was dragged from my cell to the interrogation room, tied to a chair and a tube painfully forced through my nose.

El-Masri later discovered that the CIA knew his detention was the result of mistaken identity but continued to hold him there for several more months.

After that, he described being taken to an aircraft, blindfolded, ear-muffed and chained to the seat. The aircraft took him to Albania where his blindfold and handcuffs were removed.

The men gave me my suitcase and my passport and told me to walk down the road without turning back.I really believed I was going to be shot in the back and that I would die on that road, said El-Masri.I was warned as a condition of my release I was never to mention what happened to me and that there would be consequences if I spoke.

His account has been confirmed in a report by the Office of Inspector General (OIG), which found that CIA officers met with El Masri and related conditions for his release which included: that he would not reveal his experiences to the media or the local authority; that he would accept that his post-release activities would be monitored; and that any breach of his pledge would have consequences.

El Masri said over the following years, as a result of the secrecy of the states involved, he had a long struggle to expose even the most basic facts about his case.

It was only with the assistance of independent journalists working with WikiLeaks, and later human rights investigators and lawyers, that I was slowly able to build up my credibility and gather evidence to support my story, he said.

El-Masri said he had been harassed by being suddenly blocked on the motorway by cars, unknown strangers approaching my children, [and] my complaints to the police leading to their attempting to section me in a hospital for the mentally ill.

The Grand Chamber of the European Court of Human Rights confirmed that El-Masri was severely beaten, sodomised, shackled, hooded and subjected to total sensory deprivation carried out in the presence of state officials of Macedonia and within its jurisdiction.

The court found the aim was to cause Mr Masri severe pain and suffering to obtain information and in its view such treatment amounted to torture, in violation of Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights.

One of the key investigators was John Goetz, a German journalist who worked for Der Spiegel from 2010-11, who managed to reconstruct the rendition flight and eventually identify the names of 13 CIA agents involved.

In a statement to the court that Goetz provided on 16 September in support of El-Masri's testimony, he said: The investigation into what happened to him was as difficult as anything I have worked on.It was only years later, when WikiLeaks published US diplomatic cables in 2010-11, that I finally found an explanation about why there had been so many difficulties during the investigation.

He said the cables revealed the extent of the pressure brought on the German authorities (and in parallel, relevant Spanish authorities) not to act upon the clear evidence of criminal acts by the US even though by then exposed.

The WikiLeaks cables threw light on the pressures and bullying techniques brought by the US in more than one country to prevent the prosecution of CIA agents involved, said Goetz.

In light of a case initiated on his behalf by the American Civil Liberties Union against the US before the International Criminal Court the court of last resort when governments will not investigate grave crimes El-Masri said threats and intimidation are not diminishing, but expanding for all concerned.

Goetz said: The impediments have taken a further and disturbing course to this day, with threat and intimidatory measures being announced by the relevant minister, US Secretary of State Pompeo, threatening retribution upon those parties bringing cases of which El-Masris case is currently one to the International Criminal Court.

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WikiLeaks cables showed US interfered in German torture investigation - ComputerWeekly.com

The Extradition Trial of Julian Assange: an Interview With John Pilger – CounterPunch.org – CounterPunch

Multi-Emmy-award-winning filmmaker John Pilger is among the most important political filmmakers and investigative reporters of the 20 and 21st century. From Vietnam to Palestine to atomic war, Pilgers work has been on the cutting edge, and his stinging critique of Western media has always been revelatory and spot on. Indeed, his biting analysis is more relevant and important now than ever. His film, The Coming War on China powerfully sets out the growing potential for war between the U.S. and China. And his film released last year, The Dirty War on the NHS of Great Britain couldnt be more timely, in the age of COVID-19.

I spoke with John Pilger in London on September 12, in response to the case of investigative reporter and Wikileaks publisher Julian Assange, a close friend of Pilgers, who was back in a British court last week. Assange is currently fighting extradition to the US, where he is facing a 175 year jail sentence for alleged espionage.

Dennis J Bernstein:It is good of you to join us John Pilger. American prosecutors have indicted Julian Assange on 18 counts of espionage. They want him to serve 175 years in a US prison. Hes 50 years old, so that means they want him to die in jail. What is so dangerous to the Americans about Julian Assange?

John Pilger:Well, hes very dangerous. He exposes what governments the crimes of governments, the crimes that we the people know very little about. And in this case, he has revealed the unerring, relentless war crimes of the U.S. government, especially in the post-9/11 period. Thats his crime. There are so many ironies to this, Dennis. Assange is more than a whistleblower. Hes a truth teller and as the so-called corporate media is now committed almost entirely to propaganda, the truth that he tells is simply intolerable, unforgivable. He for example, he Wikileaks exposed something those of us who have reported Americas wars already know about, and that is the homicidal nature of these wars, the way the United States has exported the homicide that so consumes much of U.S. society, the way that its exported it to other countries, the relentless killing of civilians.

The video, Collateral Murder, in which an Apache helicopter crew guns down civilians, including journalists, in Baghdad, with the crew laughing and mocking the suffering and death beneath them was not something that will be unique. All of us who have reported lets say Americas colonial wars had stories of that kind of thing happening. But Assange had evidence, and thats and that was his other crime. His evidence is authentic. All the disclosures of Wikileaks are authentic. That makes it very different from other kinds of journalism, which some are authentic, but some are not. Thats just the way it goes. But all of Wikileaks disclosures are authentic. They are coming from within a system and all of that has really shaken, I think, the inner core of the national security establishment in the United States. And nothing is being spared, to get hold of Assange and put him away.

Bernstein:And that is very troubling to those of us who really consider ourselves journalists. We know thatU.S.authorities allege that Assange conspired with U.S. Army Intelligence Analyst Chelsea Manning.Manning spent a lot of time in jail, in solitary and she is back in jail again. Theyre going after her and him.Really, the point that you make about collateral murder, some would say he released important secrets ofthe United States. Others would say he told the truth about a country called the United States, engaged inmass murder.

Pilger:Well, these revelations give us more than a glimpse of the sociopathic nature of the way the United Statesconducts itself around the world. You know, many people are shocked by the behavior of Donald Trump,but they really wouldnt shouldnt be shocked. Well, yes, they should be shocked. They but theyshouldnt be surprised, because Trumps behavior has been the behavior of his predecessors overmany years. The difference is that Trump is a caricature of the system. And so, hes much easier toidentify, much easier to loathe, I suppose [laughs], certainly much easier to understand. It makes it all verysimple and simplistic, but its rather more complicated than that.

The evidence that Wikileaks produced was long before Trump, and its we now know, of course, thatAfghanistan has been a killing field for the United States and its so-called allies since 2001. I mean, therewas a report you may have seen, just recently, by Brown University, Professor David Vine, at theWatson Institute at Brown, I know David, where this study estimates that some 37 million people thatsequivalent to the entire population of Canada have been forced to flee their home country by the actionsof the United States. He says this is a very conservative figure, that the numbers of these displacedpeopleis probably in the region of between 48 and 59 people [sic]. They estimate that 9.2 million peopleand 7.1 million people in Syria have been displaced.

Now, the numbers of deaths and again, they emphasize how conservative this finding is, is something like12 million. This carnage has been going on for a very long time, but Professor Vine and his researchersare only referring to the period since 9/11, the so-called war on terror, which, of course, has been a war ofterror all that time, as his findings demonstrate. And Wikileaks findings really complement these facts, andwere talking of facts here. This isnt an opinion. These things have happened. These people have beenforced out of their homes. Their societies have been destroyed. Untold numbers have been probably sentout of their mind, and many, many people are grieving the loss of loved ones because of these actions.

So, Wikileaks has given us that truth, and really, Julian Assange has performed a quite remarkable publicservice in letting us know hes let hes letting us know how governments lie to us, how our governmentslie to us, not the official enemies, although Wikileaks, of course, has released hundreds of thousands ofdocuments, secret documents from Russia and China and other countries. But its really those countries inthe West that we regard as our countries that matter most. Hes forced us what he hes forced us tolook in the mirror. That has been his extraordinary contribution and to true enlightenment of Westernsocieties. And for that, hes paying a very high price

Hes told us the truth, in other words. He is shining the light on all corruption in the worldWikileaks has given us insights. Wikileaks has allowed us to see how governments operate in secret,behind their backs. I mean, that is such an essential part of any true democracy that really theres nodiscussion about. It should be just part of it. But weve reached a stage in the 21st century where theformal democracies have changed character to such a degree.

I dont know, really, what theyve become, but theyre certainly not democracies, where almost every daythey invent a new law that is designed to suppress truth or make what they do even more secretive. Andthats thats earned him the curiously, but I suppose understandably, if youre a psychiatrist, thatsearned him the animosity of many journalists, because he shamed journalism for not doing the job, for nottelling us.

Bernstein:Whats your best understanding of how Julian is doing, and please talk a little bit about why he is in courtnow, and about the process?

Pilger:Well, this is the continuation of the extradition hearing, which is going at an agonizingly slow pace. And itbegan in February, and it picked up again on MondaySeveral of the defense witnesses have been have been very impressive. Clive StaffordSmith, the who has is an American lawyer but also a British lawyer. He practice can practice in bothcountries. And he founded the organization, Reprieve, and he has had a lot to do with helping people inGuantanamo.

And he was describing to the court the importance of Wikileaks revelations about Guantanamo, howWikileaks had shone a light on the whole dark corner that was Guantanamo. And he was describing thepositive impact of that. Theres been argument about what has come through, what is clear, is that manysenior Department of Justice officials did not want to carry through this prosecution. Assange was neverprosecuted during Obamas time, because Obama understood very clearly that if Assange was prosecuted,then the knock-on effect would be that those media institutions, such as the New York Times, which hadcarried Wikileaks revelations, would have to be prosecuted as well. And Im sure not for any principalreason, but for his own political reasons, he decided the administration decided not to go that far.

It is the Trump administration that has decided to go that far, because Trump is clearly well, hes declaredthat hes at war with the American media. He called them enemies of the people, and for his ownreasons. I mean, there are no argued principal reasons. There are plenty [laughs] plenty of reasons tobe critical of the media. But Trumps quite different from that. And undoubtedly Wikileaks has been sweptup in this personal war that Trump is conducting Trump and his cronies are conducting against the media.People like Pompeo, I mean, Pompeo has really swore publicly that he would be going after JulianAssange, in so many words.He was rather angry when he was Director of the CIA that Wikileaks leaked files known as Vault 7, andVault 7 was the CIA files that really told us how the CIA spy on us and can spy on us through our televisionsets. And so, theres no question Julian Assange has made real enemies among these people, and theyrevery extreme people. And their though their indictment reflects their almost their desperation, becausemost of the so-called charges are to do with espionage. So, journalism is reclassified by the Trumpadministration as espionage, and theyre using a 1917 Espionage Act that was brought in during the FirstWorld War to silence peace activists, who didnt want the United States to join Europe in the First WorldWar.

Thats how desperate they are. Theyve had to reach back more than a century and defy the Constitution,which, of course, allows the publication the free publication of leaks and documents. But they are defyingthat and ignoring it. And so far, theyre getting away with it. The truth is, Dennis, that this ordeal that JulianAssange is going through day after day in a court where the whole atmosphere is not of due process butof due revenge and bias, hes hes going through this because those who have political power regarda political enemy. Its a completely lawless approach. It has nothing to do with the law.

And the truth is that these so-called these espionage charges and all the rest of these frankly ridiculousindictments wouldve been thrown out on the first day of any legitimate court hearing or would never havegot to court, in the first place. Ive sat in a number of courts over the years. Ive never heard anything likethese. Theres a kind of its like Alices tea party, you know, theyre mad. But theyre very serious.

Bernstein:I think where US journalists fail most is their ignorance around foreign policy, context, and history. Youknow, the genius in American foreign policy is Thomas Friedman of the New York Times, who knows verylittle about a lot. But I want to I mean, for instance, this fantasy story that came up about the Russianspaying the Taliban to kill Americans.

Pilger:Yeah, Dennis, and the the Russians stole the election from Hilary Clinton and Saddam Hussein reallydid have weapons of mass destruction, and so on and so on.Its just fantasy. Theres nothing I find thereis absolutely nothing to be believed now. Fantasy: A Russian politician, a very unsavory character he is,too; hes not an opposition leader, is miraculously poisoned with Novichok, made in the former Soviet Unionand miraculously spirited into Berlin, where the German doctors contradict the Russian doctors and saythat he was poisoned. I mean, [laughs] you know, anything can be made up now. I mean, it always madeup, in one sense. You know, I I think I was self-taught that you never believed anything that well, younever believe anything, until it was officially denied. That was the famous maxim of great Irish muckrakerClaude Cockburn. But you never believed anything that had intelligent sources as its legitimacy. Youdismissed it. A real journalist dismissed it.

Now, all this nonsense is is all over front pages and spoken with such hysterical certainty on the TV news.

This is government propaganda on steroids, at the moment. I mean, they laugh at Trump, but I mean, in away, quite separately, the media is a propaganda vehicle is well and truly past Trump, in its in the power ofits fantasies.

Bernstein:Finally, John, you know, in the current context of politics and the presidential election, youve got both sidessmashing China, blaming China, sort of setting us up for that 21st-century war that you warned us about inThe Coming War on China. Your thoughts on whats coming up here.

Pilger:Well, Im sorry that film of four years ago seems to have been prescient. The Trump administration is soobsessed with China. And so, when I spoke of fantasies before, we now have China fantasies, day afterday. Now, but what this is doing is creating a state of almost not quite yet, but its getting there, a state ofsiege in China. And they are very hurriedly putting up the ramparts, their defenses. Theyre developingsome extremely effective maritime missiles, and theyre changed their as I understand it, theyvechanged their nuclear posture from low alert to high alert. Theyre doing all sorts of things they hadno intention of doing, when I was there four years ago. Then, they were bemused [laughs].

Now, I think theyre genuinely worried, and theyre moving quickly to prepare to in preparing to defendthemselves. Thats a situation when mistakes and accidents can happen, and these are nuclear powers.

People have to understand that propaganda has is lethal. Its lethal in many ways, but it can be literallylethal. It can create the conditions that lead to war. And I think thats a possibility, at the moment. It hasnt it hasnt happened yet, but the risks are now far more numerous, and they come day after day.

Bernstein:Finally, do whats your sense of how Julian is doing, personally? Is he hanging on? Whats the situation? What do we know about the physical stuff?

Pilger:Well, hes certainly hanging on. He looks like hes put on a little more weight, which is good news. But hehas still has an untreated lung condition. Hes managing to survive in a prison where there have beenCOVID cases and at least one COVID death. But the thing about Julian is his resilience, for me. I mean,there are lots of interesting sides to the man, but his resilience is probably [laughs] the most extraordinary,how he keeps going. But he is. And but he is still only one human being, and the pressures of this showtrial, this squalid show trial and all the sordid events that led up to it, he is an innocent man. His only crimeis journalism.

Bernstein:His only crime is journalism. And whats at stake, if he loses? If Julia Assange is sent to jail for the rest ofhis life for committing the act of journalism. Do we lose, here in the United States, the First Amendment?Whats at stake?

Pilger:Whats at stake? Well, whats at stake, first of all, is justice for this for this person, this one heroicindividual. But on a wider sense, what is at stake is is freedom. And I dont really say immediately. Itsquite even among those who support Julian and campaign for him, but freedom of the press is at stake.

Well, I dont think there is any free press. So, Im not sure that thats at stake, because it doesnt exist,certainly not in the mainstream. But I think the freedom of those exceptional journalists, and thats theyrepresent the free press, those principled mavericks who have nothing to do with the Guardian or the NewYork Times or any of these institutions.

I think theyre the whole principle of their right to be free journalists is at stake. Certainly, above all that, isthe right of all of us to live in free societies and to know to call to account great power, to know what itdoes. Theyre very basic freedoms at stake, here.

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The Extradition Trial of Julian Assange: an Interview With John Pilger - CounterPunch.org - CounterPunch

We now know more about Fall Guys’ anatomy, and it turns out they’re abominations – Windows Central

Source: Windows Central / Zackery Cuevas

Fall Guys: Ultimate Knockout has taken the gaming world by storm, already crossing over 2 million copies sold on Steam alone. Its intense and addictive gameplay, where players tackle a wide variety of solo and team-based mini-games to eventually declare a single victor, has led to gamers and streamers alike playing the game endlessly. However, due to popular request (apparently), the team behind Fall Guys: Ultimate Knockout has decided to reveal a little bit more about the mysterious little guys that make up the game's cast: the Fall Guys themselves.

When I said "mysterious little guys" before, I meant "not mysterious enough after this" and "oh wow they're bigger than I imagined" and "I cannot erase this from my mind." According to the "official Fall Guys lore," Fall Guys stand at 6ft tall, with a rather unique skeleton snaking its way through their amorphous bodies. The thing that stands out above everything else, however, is the way their eyes (unassuming from the outside) are precariously attached to a skull recessed far into their heads.

But hey, at least they're smiling.

If this elicited a reaction out of you, or changed your opinion on Fall Guys, be sure to let us know in the comments below! I'm certainly never going to see a swarm of these rushing for a goal in the same manner ever again.

So Fall Guys. Much scary.

Fall Guys: Ultimate Knockout is a wacky battle royale that is inspired by gameshows like Wipeout. Currently available on the PC and PS4, Fall Guys: Ultimate Knockout is sure to keep the attention of both casual and hardcore players alike with its fun and addictive gameplay, as long as you don't think about what Fall Guys are.

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We now know more about Fall Guys' anatomy, and it turns out they're abominations - Windows Central

State of the software supply chain: Machines will make software faster – TechBeacon

How far away are we from machines making safersoftware, faster? We might be closer than you think.

Other than ensuring that your people are happy and engaged, digital innovation is the bestsource of competitiveness and value creation for almost every type of business. As a result, three things are increasingly common among corporate software engineering teams and the 20 million software developers who work for them:

They seek faster innovation.

They seek improved security.

They utilize a massive volume of open-source libraries.

The universal desire for faster innovation demands efficient reuse of code, which in turn has led to a growing dependence on open-source and third-party software libraries. These artifacts serve as reusable building blocks, which are fed into public repositories where they are freely borrowed by millions of developers in the pursuit of faster innovation.

This is the definition of the modern technology supply chainand more specifically, a software supply chain.

Organizations that invest in securing the best parts, from the fewest and best suppliers, and keeping those components updated, are widening the gap against their competitors. The best-performing organizations are applying automation to help them manage their open-source component choices and updates.

As these practices evolve, machines will become better at guiding developers to the best-quality and most secure component versions. And in the not-too-distant future, machines may be compiling the best components into application code based on functional requirements defined upfront.

Here's why automation should be a key strategy for helping you select open-source components, and other lessons from my team's research.

The2019State of DevOps Reportfound thatelite organizations are deploying 200 times more frequently than their peers, and their change failure rates are seventimes lower. They're also much faster inmean time to recover from failure than other organizations.

But these kinds of metricsarereally focused onhow you're doing internally as a development team and don't take into account many external factors.

This reminds me of what Jeff Bezossaid in his 2017 letter to shareholders: "Beware of the proxies."You can get so focused on a process, and doing that process well, that it becomes the thing that you're trying to achieve.

You might be trying to achieve faster deployments, faster mean times to recovery, or more secure code releases. They can represent your proxies for success, while not necessarily contributing to the outcome your business is attempting to achieve.

Consider adversaries who attack your code. If you can release new security updates in your codebase within two weeks, but your adversaries can find and exploit the new vulnerabilities in two days, your organization's data is at risk.

In this situation, it does not matter as much that you've already reduced your time to implement security updates fivefoldif your adversaries are still faster.

Consider thisreal-world scenario. On Wednesday, April 29, 2020, the creatorsand maintainersof SaltStack, an open-source application, announced that the app had a critical vulnerability. On the very same day, they released the safe version of the application. If you had automatic updates turned on from SaltStack, you got the newer version. If you didn't, then you needed to get the newer version, update your infrastructure, and do so before the adversaries found it.

One of the researchers at F-Secure said that"the vulnerability was so critical, this was a patch-by-Friday-or-be-breached-by-Monday kind of situation."

Andthat's exactly what happened. By Saturday morning, May 2, some18 people on GitHub reported that breaches were actively happening. They had lost control of their servers. SaltStack had been taken over, rogue code was executing on their systems, and their firewalls were being disabled. Throughout May, 27 breaches were recorded.

But not allof the news is bad: We know that developers are getting faster, too, because they're not writing all of their code themselves.

Figure 1:Number of download requests for Java component releases, 2012 to2020, from the Central Repository.Source: 2020 State of the Software Supply Chain Report

We're assembling more and more code from open-sourcecomponents and packages. As one example, it's amazing to look at download volumes for the npm package manager. There were95 billion npm package downloads in July 2020. If you annualize thatdownload volume, wewould seeover 1.1 trillion npm package downloads this year.

In Java, similar things are happening. In 2019, Maven Central had 226 billion download requests. In 2020, download request volumes are expected to hit 376 billion.

How do these monstrous numbers translate to your own developers and applications? After analyzing 1,500 unique applications, we can see that 90% of their code footprint is built from open-source software components.

As I started thinking about all of the above, I wanted to understand not just how these parts are being used, but where they are coming fromand who the open-source software suppliers are. So, in a two-year-long collaboration,Gene Kim,Stephen Magill, and I examined software release patterns and cybersecurity hygiene practices across 30,000 commercial development teams and open-source projects.

We set out to understand what attributes we coulduse to identify the best open-source project performance and practices. If development teams were going to assemble applications from these building blocks, we wanted to understand who the best suppliers were.

We wanted to know who released most often, who were the most popular suppliers, who prioritized features over securityor security over features, who enlisted automated build tools, which projects were consistently well staffed, and more. All of these variables played a role in identifying suppliers with the best track records, because they would be the ones to help developers build the best applications.

Additionally, the more you could teach machines to identify the attributes of the best open-source softwaresuppliers for developers, the faster development could become.

The top-performing projects released 1.5 timesmore frequently than the rest of the teams we studied,were 2.5 times more popular by download count, had 1.4 times larger development teams, and managed 2.9 timesfewer dependencies.

We also saw a strong correlation between open sourceprojects that updated dependencies more frequently and their ability to maintain more secure code. High-performing projects demonstrated a median time to update (MTTU) their dependencies that was 530times faster than other projects. By moving to the latest dependencies, they purposely or consequently remediated known vulnerabilities discovered in older dependencies.

Figure 2: Open-source project cluster analysis of popularity and release speed. Source: 2019 State of the Software Supply Chain Report

To better understand all this, we performed a cluster analysis of these different open-source projects based on severalattributes. We were able to see what development teams should focus on when choosing components.

Choosing open-source projects should be considered an important strategic decision for enterprise software development organizations. Different components demonstrate healthy or poor performance that affects the overall quality of their releases.

Therefore, MTTU should be an important metric when deciding which components to use within your software supply chains. Rapid MTTU is associated with lower security risk, and it's accessible from public sources.

Just as traditional manufacturing supply chains intentionally select parts from approved suppliers and rely upon formalized procurement practices,enterprise development teams should adopt similar criteria for their selection of open-source softwarecomponents.

This practice ensures that the highest-quality parts are selected from the best and fewest suppliers. Implementing selection criteria and updated practices will not only improve code quality, but can accelerate mean time to repair when suppliers discover new defects or vulnerabilities.

Ideally, dependencies should be updatedsimply, safely, and painlessly, and as part of the routine development process. But reality shows that this ideal is rarely met.

An astonishing story of how far an organization can stray from ideal update practices comes from Eileen M. Uchitelle, staff engineer at GitHub, who said it took seven years to successfully migrate GitHub from a forked version of Rails 2 to Rails 5.32.

Even with new tools available to developers that automatically create pull requests with updated dependencies, changes in APIs and potential breakage can still hold back many developers from updating. We suspect this change-induced breakage is a primary driver of poor updating practices.

Taking a deeper dive into the vast data available to us from the Central Repository, the world's largest collection of open-source components,you can better visualize open-source project releases and their adoption by enterprise application development teams that migrate from one version to a newer one. We believe this data shows how open-source component selection can play a major role in allowing for easier and more frequent updates.

Figure 3:Migration patterns between component releases for the joda-time library.Source: 2020 State of the Software Supply Chain Report

Consider the widely used joda-time library, which shows that developers using this open-source component update fairly uniformly between all pairs of versions. This suggests that updates are easy, presenting a seemingly homogeneous set of versions tomigrate to and from.

Figure 4:Migration patterns between component releases for the hibernate-validator library.Source: 2020 State of the Software Supply Chain Report

On the opposite extreme, consider the graph for the hibernate-validator library, where there are two sets of communities using itone favoring version 5 and another preferring version 6. The two communities very rarely intersect. This suggests either that updating to version 6 from version 5 is too difficultor that the value is not worth the effort.

Figure 5:Migration patterns between component releases for the spring-core library.Source: 2020 State of the Software Supply Chain Report

Finally, we take a look at the pattern for spring-core, which suggests that updating is sufficiently difficult that the effort must be planned and some version ranges end up being avoided.

If you are a developer, don't worry; your job is secure. No machine out there will take your place. Having said that, an increased reliance on automation to help you select better, higher-quality, and more secure components can serve you and your teams well today.

You can use automation, through advanced software composition analysis and open-source-governance tools, to point to better suppliers with a better track recordfor instance,they release often, update vulnerabilities quickly, are well staffed, and are popular.

Using these tools to set policies around components can help you determine when to upgrade your dependencies, and they can quickly inform you of newly discovered vulnerabilities in need of remediation. Additionally, these tools can lead developers to the best versions of components, indicating which newer versions will introduce the fewest breaking changes or introduce troublesome dependencies.

To learn more about our research into high-performance, open-souce component-based development,read the2020 State of the Software Supply Chain Reportor attend my upcoming session on this topic at the DevOps World virtual conference, whichruns from September 22-24, 2020.

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State of the software supply chain: Machines will make software faster - TechBeacon

Keep an Eye on This Cohort of Open Source Developer Interns – CoinDesk – Coindesk

When Christopher Allen received applications for the 2020 Blockchain Commons internship, he had a problem: He had more applications than he had ever received in the internships history, and all from stellar applicants.

This was a good problem to have, of course, and Allen tackled it head-on by expanding the internship program. He typically only takes one intern under his tutelage, but this year he took on 7.

With so many extra hands, each intern had the opportunity to work on a project of his or her preference. Each of these projects went toward improving software in the Blockchain Commons repositories.

As the internship draws to a close, the interns contributions to free and open-source software (FOSS) are nearing completion and will soon be open to the public to use.

The Blockchain Commons: a hub for open-source software

Allen founded the Blockchain Commons in 2018 in a bid to keep Bitcoins development open and distributed.

In a past life, he helped pioneer the OpenSSL/TLS protocol, an encryption standard for securing data transmitted over the internet. Come 2014, the Heartbleed Bug compromised the OpenSSL implementation of the encryption standard, which handled 60% of the internets traffic at the time (and with it, trillions of dollars of online commerce).

The flaw was promptly patched. But Allen took that tribulation to heart and vowed to not allow a single point of failure to threaten the security of other software projects he works on.

Cue Allens discovery of Bitcoin and the founding of the Blockchain Commons. After a brief tenure at Blockstream, Allen founded his not-for-profit benefit organization to do his part to keep Bitcoins development distributed.

Now, after a summer of tinkering, his newest interns have enriched the codebase and Github libraries of some of the Blockchain Commons principal projects including the addition of a project of their own design.

What these budding Bitcoin developers created

Spotbit

For their new group project, the interns began building Spotbit, a software for curating Tor-supported bitcoin (BTC) price feeds.

Led by Dartmouth senior Christian Murray with assistance from Nishit Shah, the modular, self-hosted feed draws pricing data from 100 cryptocurrency exchanges across various stablecoin and fiat trading pairs. Users can choose which exchanges they want their feed to tap into, which trading pairs to support and what data they want to store. If a user doesnt want to host a Spotbit node, they can connect to others.

Lethe Kit

Besides Spotbit, each intern has an individual project which they work on alongside Allen to improve.

Gorazd Kovacic from Slovenia, for example, has been working on the Blockchain Commons code for the Lethe Kit. The DIY hardware wallet so-named after the river of Greek mythology that cleansed the underworlds denizens with amnesia of their past lives is an air-gapped hardware wallet, meaning it cannot come in direct contact with an internet-connected device.

The Lethe Kit can generate seeds and addresses to receive transactions, but it cannot send bitcoin through partially-signed Bitcoin transactions (a previous version of this article indicated otherwise).

Kovacic has been working on integrating animated QR codes and Shamir secret shares (a cryptographic technique for dividing a private key into multiple parts) into the Lethe kit.

Gordian Wallet and Gordian Server

Another intern, Gautham Ganesh Elango, is working on Gordian, a two-part project which includes a Bitcoin full-node implementation which runs over Tor and an iOS mobile wallet.

The Gordian Server operates similarly to Bitcoin node dashboards like My Node by offering its users a graphical user interface (GUI) for interacting with Bitcoin Core.

A GUI (an interface type we use everyday when commanding our Macs and PCs with iOs or Windows, to give one example) is the user-friendly, laymans version of the command-line interface the raw coding terminal that developers use to speak to their devices.

The projects other working part, Gordian Wallet, is a mobile Bitcoin wallet for iOS which can connect to the Gordian Server.

Elango, a freshman from Australia, is also building out an accounting tool which will allow Gordian users to import transaction and price data to Microsoft Excel for tax purposes.

For another project, Elango and fellow intern Javier Vargas are stepping into the role of instructor by fleshing out the Blockchain Commons documentation of RPC codes for managing a Bitcoin node from the command-line interface.

Internship takeaways

Almost all the tools the interns have been working on contribute to each others tech stacks (Spotbit, for example, provides price data for the Gordian Wallet). Showing that theres more to open-source development than coding, cross-project collaboration is one of the internships key instructional points.

For Murray, this was indeed one of the internships primary lessons: that open-source development means creating sustainable tools that go beyond a solitary use case.

This was my first introduction to open-source development, and definitely one of the big learning curves is learning to collaborate effectively and developing processes for yourself. A lot of the stuff I wrote before I got here was something I needed to work one time, but this is a lot more about something that is going to work all the time, he told CoinDesk.

Murray said that he plans to continue to work on Bitcoin open-source software after the internship, whether professionally or otherwise. This was a common thread for the soon-to-be alumni of the Blockchain Commons.

Kovacic, who is already diving into other open-source repositories like Blockstreams c-lightning, said the internship reaffirmed my position that I want to work in the Bitcoin space.

For his part, Elango agreed, saying the internship shook off his apprehension about approaching the seemingly daunting task of maintaining open-source projects.

Its definitely got me interested in Bitcoin open-source development. At first I was kind of intimidated by these large open-source projects. After the internship, Ive become more comfortable with doing large contributions to these projects. Once I learn the basics of C++ I may start contributing to Bitcoin Core. And if not Bitcoin Core specifically, then some other open-source project, he told CoinDesk.

Looking ahead to the next cohort of interns

With this internship coming to a close, Allen is offering another one that will begin in October and end in December. He stressed that the latest internship hopes to pull in more talent from Bitcoin-adjacent fields, not just the realm of computer science. This could mean students studying law, library science or other disciplines to help improve aspects of Blockchain Commons documentation.

When Allen asked his students what they would say to incoming interns, Murray answered in the spirit of what may be considered the internships core ethos: Ask plenty of questions and cooperate with others whenever possible.

If I could give advice to anyone coming in it would be: dont be afraid to ask for help when you need it. We have one group chat and I wanted to be professional and not spam the chat with questions. One time, I had spent several hours trying to fix this Github commit and couldnt figure it out. But then Gorazd ended up giving me this one-line solution. If I had asked the question early, I would have saved a lot of time.

This article has been updated to correct a description of the Lethe Kit and to clarify how the Gordian Server and Gordian Wallet operate.

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Keep an Eye on This Cohort of Open Source Developer Interns - CoinDesk - Coindesk

The Government Digital Service truly was once world-beating. What happened? – The Guardian

No 10 adviser Dominic Cummings and his Silicon Valley ambitions for the civil service have put digital, data and technology in the spotlight but where does this leave the former bright light of UK tech, the Government Digital Service (GDS)?

For many years, government IT was the punchline to a joke that wasnt funny. People trying to deal with government departments picked up the phone or sent letters rather than experience the grief of going online.

But by using the tools of the open web simple words, clear design, open source code, agile ways of working one team in government managed to build some public services fit for the internet era. They didnt seek to amaze citizens; just make their experience simpler, clearer and faster.

That team the GDS was set up nine years ago with a brief from the then Cabinet Office minister, Francis Maude, to haul the civil service into the digital age. It started well. The UK governments new website, gov.uk, was many times cheaper than its predecessors and even won design of the year in 2013. New online services for setting up a power of attorney, taxing a vehicle and booking prison visits, among others, made a mark. Entrepreneurs described GDS as the best startup in Europe. David Cameron lauded the team as one of the great unsung triumphs of the coalition government. Five years after the team started, the UK led the world in digital government, according to the UN. Other countries took note, and copied.

The trick GDS pulled off was to realise that the game wasnt about changing websites. It was about changing government. The digital team saw that parts of public services, such as sending lots of text messages or taking payments, were being developed separately by scores of public organisations, at great cost to the public purse and making systems harder to use. By 2015, the GDS team had rebuilt some of these common components to be used again and again across the public sector. The service also published patterns and code, and enforced standards, to give everyone an incentive to raise their game.

This paid dividends, in better public services and money saved: a whopping 1.7bn by 2014, according to the Cabinet Office. As a result, in the November 2015 budget and spending review, GDS was handed a 450m bounty in what then cabinet secretary Sir Jeremy Heywood described as a vote of confidence.

Even in its pomp, GDS was not universally loved; senior civil servants described the kids in jeans as an insurgency. But the real problem was the challenge it presented to the sovereign power of Whitehall departments. Changing government was not on their agenda, nor in their interests. Common components took away control. So for that 450m, there was a tacit quid pro quo: GDS would support departments, not lead them. That shift, demanded by the chief executive of the civil service, John Manzoni, and encouraged by permanent secretaries who had been embarrassed by GDS, was a tipping point.

While GDS has retained some of the countrys smartest technology talent, its purpose has drifted. From once receiving grudging respect from departments for its rallying cries, it is now peripheral. A top-level post for government chief digital officer has gone unfilled for more than a year. This July, the UN announced that the UK had slipped to seventh in its world e-government rankings, falling six places in four years.

This leaves some awkward questions. Aside from the world-class platforms and patterns that were already taking shape five years ago, where did the 450mgo? For better or for worse, it hasnt gone into the data foundations so desired by the present administration. Whatever Cummings is looking for, he hasnt found it in GDS yet.

Some of GDSs legacy is in plain sight. Some digital successes have been the dogs that didnt bark during the pandemic. HMRC, universal credit and parts of the NHS have delivered online services that have just about stood up to extraordinary new demands. Without GDS starting out by showing departments how to deliver, rather than telling, this would not have happened.

And GDS did something else that no other team had done before. It led everyone using public services to expect a half-decent experience of their government online. It did this by worrying more about user needs than mandarin egos. For Britain to be a leading digital government, it needs a digital team that leads.

Andrew Greenway is a co-founder of Public Digital and former staffer at the Government Digital Service.

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The Government Digital Service truly was once world-beating. What happened? - The Guardian

GitHub aims to make India the largest market from the third largest – Economic Times

BENGALURU: GitHub, the code-repository service used by many developers, startups and companies worldover, aims to make India the largest market from the third largest at present, said Maneesh Sharma, India head of GitHub.

Sharma, who was appointed India head in February when GitHub opened its first office in the country, is doubling down on working with Indian startups and has built a sales team to target large startups, corporates and financial institutions and in the country.

Covid has accelerated digital transformation. Startups are helping disrupt the status quo which is getting every company look at how they use digital. Globally we have every large industry using digital. In India, the biggest segment using Github is IT enabled services, internet commerce companies and software product companies, he said.

Indias software as a service companies are also a potential customer base for Github, he added.

GitHub, which is popular among developers, particularly those who work on open source projects, was acquired by Microsoft in 2018. Since then, the company has stepped up expanding its presence in newer markets such as India, where there are millions of developers, who work for both large and small companies in India as well as globally. GitHub is also looking at engineering students to contribute to the repository.

We have been participating in global projects and are a great consumer of open source. We need to start thinking about how we can build software that can contribute to global communities as well, said Sharma. We are getting offshoots from the startup ecosystem as well who are starting to open source their libraries. There is a lot to do more,

They can start looking at how they can build software on GitHub. Think of it as credits. We will be doubling down on startup ecosystem, said Sharma.

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GitHub aims to make India the largest market from the third largest - Economic Times