Google rolls out Chrome OS 85 with Wi-Fi Sync, simpler settings, and a mic slider – XDA Developers

Chrome OS is the main USP of Chromebooks, riding upon a perennially-connected internet ecosystem to offer users the OS experience. While the upstream Chromium OS is open-source and can be compiled from the source code, Chrome OS is only available pre-installed on hardware from Google manufacturing partners. As such, you do need to rely on official updates reaching your Chromebook from Google. After v84, Google is now rolling out Chrome OS 85 with Wi-Fi Sync, simpler settings, and a mic slider, helping you avoid headaches in your daily routine.

The latest Chrome OS update brings along Wi-Fi Sync, making it easier to access the same set of Wi-Fi networks across Chromebooks. Now, when you enter a Wi-Fi password on your personal profile on one Chromebook, that info is securely saved with your account when you log in to another Chromebook. The Wi-Fi passwords become part of your profiles keychain, making the feature very useful for users who share multiple Chromebooks.

Chromebook Settings is now getting simpler and smarter on Chrome OS. It now incorporates an improved design and more intelligent search model which displays results for matching settings as well as related suggestions, even if you used different terms in the query.

Google also promises that soon you will be able to search through Settings from the Launcher, following up on Googles vision to have the Launcher work like an everything button that can access Google Search, Drive, Settings, apps, local files, and more.

Chrome OS is also adding in the ability to more easily control the volume of their voice on video chats through a new mic slider. This new mic slider can be accessed from Quick Settings to control how soft or loud the user sounds on calls.

Chrome OS is also getting the ability to pause and resume video recording in the Camera app on Chromebooks, and also take a still snapshot while recording. Videos are automatically saved in .mp4 format, which makes it easy to share.

Source: Google Keyword Blog

XDA News Brief Google rolls out Chrome OS 85 with Wi-Fi Sync, simpler settings, and a mic slider

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Google rolls out Chrome OS 85 with Wi-Fi Sync, simpler settings, and a mic slider - XDA Developers

Monero Outreach: Algorithm Battle Flares Between CipherTrace and Monero – PRNewswire

LOS ANGELES, Sept. 4, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- Contradicting claims were exchanged this week between cryptocurrency analytics firm CipherTrace and the Monero community after a press release from the firm claimed the ability to trace the movement of the Monero cryptocurrency. The CipherTrace press release spawned counters from the Monero community, including videos, public statements, and memes.

Many cryptocurrencies, including Bitcoin and Ethereum, use a transparent blockchain, where sending addresses and receiving addresses are broadcast for all to see. When these addresses are connected to individuals using data outside the blockchain, it discloses the spending and receiving patterns and connections of those individuals.

Monero is an open-source community-driven cryptocurrency focused on preventing this type of surveillance. Monero's cryptographic algorithms prevent most blockchain analysis. By looking at the Monero blockchain alone, senders, receivers, and amounts in transactions cannot be determined. This protects Monero users even when an address owner happens to be identified using information outside the blockchain.

Because of this, CipherTrace's Monero-tracing claim in its August 21, 2020, press release (ciphertrace.com/ciphertrace-announces-worlds-first-monero-tracing-capabilities) was unprecedented.

"Monero (XMR) is one of the most privacy-oriented cryptocurrencies," said Dave Jevans, CEO of CipherTrace, in CipherTrace's press release, and, "CipherTrace is proud to announce the world's first Monero tracing capability."

The announced work in part satisfied a US government contract, with Mr. Jevans acknowledging in the press release, "we are grateful for the support of the Department of Homeland Security's Science & Technology Directorate on this project."

CipherTrace has received contracts totaling over $6M, according to funding tracking site govtribe.com (govtribe.com/vendors/ciphertrace-inc-dot-7e0x3). This includes a $3.6M potential-value contract (including options) whose timeline ended on August 29, 2020, with 65% funding for $2.4M, according to govtribe.com (govtribe.com/award/federal-contract-award/definitive-contract-140d7018c0008).

The Monero community, which itself develops and promotes the cryptocurrency, reacted to the press release with questions and criticism, as expressed on Reddit and Telegram discussion boards. Members of the Monero community met with Mr. Jevans in a public online discussion (youtube.com/watch?v=w5rtd3md11g).

In the discussion, Sarang Noether expressed theoretical concerns with CipherTrace's claims, concerns that remain unresolved.

"What is the math behind this?" asked Dr. Noether, without resolution in the discussion. "Saying that this is a 90% or not 90% [for example] likelihood of signing depends entirely on the metrics you are usingit's very subjective."

Additionally, after the CipherTrace press release, Monero Outreach published a description of a new algorithmic innovation called Triptych (monerooutreach.org/stories/monero-triptych.html). Triptych promises to even further protect Monero users through obfuscation of the limited information CipherTrace appears to use.

Triptych allows the number of funding-source-hiding decoys used in a transaction to surge while blockchain space and processing time drop. It is part of a continual pattern of Monero improvement.

"I suppose this kills the concept of CipherTrace before it even got started," stated Reddit user Deif in a discussion of the Triptych breakthrough (reddit.com/r/Monero/comments/ikn8t7/triptych_a_new_algorithm_protecting_monero_users).

Competition has formed between government-funded efforts at surveillance and community efforts to protect privacy and liberty. This week gives a snapshot of that struggle through the lens of privacy-focused open-source Monero, where research is active. This week tilted in favor of Monero and privacy, but it's an ongoing battle.

For additional information, contact Alex Mutasim at [emailprotected].

About Monero

The cryptocurrency Monero was launched in April 2014 in response to privacy issues present in Bitcoin. Since launch, ongoing improvements have provided better security and privacy and made Monero easier to use. It has attracted over 500 developers, the third highest code contributor count among all cryptocurrencies. Monero advances with the uncompromised priorities of privacy and security, striving to be the most fungible cryptocurrency.

Monero Outreach is a semi-autonomous workgroup, separate from Monero's Core Team, focused on Monero public relations, education, and marketing.

SOURCE Monero Outreach

SOURCE Monero Outreach

https://www.monerooutreach.org

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Monero Outreach: Algorithm Battle Flares Between CipherTrace and Monero - PRNewswire

To towel or not to towel? That is the 2020 US Open question – ESPN

NEW YORK -- Like many toddlers, Stefanos Tsitsipas, at age 3, had an object he lugged everywhere he went. He was a Greek version of the iconic American comic strip character Linus, but instead of a blanket, Tsitsipas' totem was a towel.

"It was like a toy," Tsitsipas, the No. 4 seed at the US Open, told ESPN after he won his first match at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center on Monday. "I would always carry it around. So I have history with the towel. It resembles something special in my life. It does provide me with some amount of comfort."

Because of that, count Tsitsipas among the pros most adversely affected by the drastic change in towel policy because of the coronavirus pandemic. Among all the new health regulations and tweaked policies, the towel rule might be the one with the most moment-to-moment impact on the competitors. Masks and frequent testing are an inconvenience, as is observing social distancing in the locker room or player restaurant. Hawk-Eye Live, the infallible, all-electronic line-calling system in use on most of the courts here is an advance as innocuous as it is radical. The players uniformly love it.

The rule requiring players to handle their own towels, keeping them in color-coded boxes at the back of the court, is less popular and, to many, problematic.

2 Related

"For me, it has huge importance," Tsitsipas said. Committed to following the rule that a game proceeds at the pace of the server, he added, "The biggest struggle with the towel is when you want to use it before returning. That's a big concern, because I would like to use it more often, but I can't really because I'm disrupting my opponent's rhythm."

Right from the get-go, players bridled at the new towel rules brought on by the pandemic. Novak Djokovic, another player who towels frequently, questioned a chair umpire during his opening-day win when he was warned for a time violation after retrieving his towel. The top seed was accustomed to the more relaxed approach to ATP Tour shot clock enforcement last week at the Western & Southern Open.

"I lost my focus. Kind of got stressed out a couple times," he said after the match. "We've played in the certain tempo, so to say, got used to it during the Western & Southern tournament, which just ended two days ago. Two days later, we have a different rule that was just not communicated to us."

While both of the tournaments in the "double in the bubble" event here at the National Tennis Center used a 25-second time clock, Western & Southern Open umpires last week had more leeway. They frequently waited until players -- including Djokovic -- were finished with their towels before starting the countdown. At the US Open, the visible shot clock is activated when the score is called.

Until the COVID-19 lockdown, players were in the habit of entrusting their towels to ball persons who then sprinted out to attend to the player's needs whenever summoned. Sometimes, that was after almost every point. Under the new rules here at the US Open, only the player is allowed to handle his or her towel, and it must be deposited in the appropriate color-coded box at the back of the court. As many have learned, it's challenging to fetch and replace the towel within the 25-second time frame allowed between points.

Ajla Tomljanovic lost in the first round to 2016 champion Angelique Kerber. Asked which rule change most inconvenienced her, she told ESPN: "I guess towels would be the biggest thing for me because I sweat a lot. I don't like to be late; I usually play fast. So I get a little nervous when I see the [shot] clock running really low."

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Perspiration is one part of the towel equation, inspiration is another.

"The towel gives me time to think -- it gives me time to refresh myself and to think about my tactics," Tsitsipas said. "It provides some sort of comfort."

Caroline Garcia, a French player who has been ranked as high as No. 4, also misses the opportunity to commune with her towel as frequently as she'd like.

"When I go to the towel, I have time to think. I try to focus," she said. "It's a routine, and you can do it if you ask for the towel or go for it yourself. But time can make it difficult."

Towels weren't always such a vital piece of equipment with psychological as well as practical uses. Until relatively recently, players toweled off only when they sat down during changeovers. They rarely carried them onto the court, although some, including Dick Stockton and Sandy Mayer -- U.S. stars and Grand Slam semifinalists in the 1970s -- played with hand towels tucked into the waistbands of their shorts.

Andy Roddick and Greg Rusedski were among the first of the frequent users. But it was Rafael Nadal, the man of many rituals, who ushered in the golden age of the "towelers." Doubles specialist Bob Bryan once told Toronto's Globe and Mail: "Nadal brought those methodical rituals into the game. ... That goes to younger players, and younger players -- they emulate their idols and it just becomes part of the culture."

Like any other "cultural" trend, including grunting or shrieking after hitting a shot, the tendency to use the towel with compulsive frequency created a backlash. Many felt that overuse of the towel was not only tedious to watch but a key element in increasingly long match times. But the trend was an example of the law of unintended consequences: In 2012, the ATP Tour formally adopted a rule allowing only 20 seconds between points. That only encouraged players to recruit ball persons as service aids.

Spectators and critics are often appalled to see the way some players treat ball persons. The internet is ripe with "gotcha" moments showing players yanking towels from the hands of ball persons or flinging them carelessly toward them when finished. One of the most famous of those episodes occurred at the 2019 US Open, when Daniil Medvedev was handed a code violation after rudely yanking a towel from the hands of a ball person (the chair umpire who issued it was veteran Damien Dumusois, the same official who docked Djokovic on Monday).

The gesture earned Medvedev the wrath of the crowd, but he pushed back by taunting fans and showing moxie that many New Yorkers prize even more than good manners. Medvedev lost to Nadal in the final, but he left Gotham a star.

Whatever else happens, there will be no such incidents at this US Open. Players such as frequent towel user Petra Kvitova, who told ESPN that the towel restrictions were "something I really had to get used to, as part of the bubble," will have to find a way to adapt. Others who aren't comparably discomfited by the towel regulations will be just fine.

"I have no problem with the towel rule," Kristina Mladenovic said. "I'm humble. I can pick up my own towel."

Marketa Vondrousova, the defending French Open finalist, is also content with the change. She's accustomed to using the towel only on changeovers.

That's old-school, like some of the actual uses for a towel.

"It's not very comfortable playing all sweaty and having sweat drip from your face and get to your eyes," Tsitsipas said. "Having the towel there is very important for us."

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To towel or not to towel? That is the 2020 US Open question - ESPN

The Future One-Stop-Station for DeFi Services: SpaceSwap To Conquer the Yield Farming Industry – Coin Idol

Sep 04, 2020 at 13:51 // News

Although leading DeFi platforms have attracted billions of U.S. dollars for liquidity pools, they still leave a lot to be desired.

Protocols face a range of critical issues that affect usability and contributors profits. The SpaceSwap project promises to become a one-stop-station for all major DeFi services and is offering extra sources of profit as well as a wide variety of liquidity pools.

The DeFi industry has been among the fastest-growing FinTech sectors in 2020, with liquidity pools collecting tokens worth over $9 billion in August. While Uniswap is still in the leading position with its 17% market dominance, theres a number of unicorn projects performing nose-to-nose with it. According to DeFi Pulse - Maker, Curve and AAVE each have over $1 billion locked in their pools.

All of the above-mentioned services have pretty much the same underlying mechanism. Users make a deposit in cryptocurrency, exchange it for pool-specific tokens (for example, aETH, yDAi and so on), and add them to liquidity pools. In return, they receive loan interest rates. Passive earning ceases once lenders claim their coins back.

Compound offers 2-12% APY for stablecoins with Curves current rates at around 4%, AAVE gives 2-6% in interest rates, while Celsius average APY is 10%. Is this enough for liquidity providers? As opposed to traditional loaning, DeFi protocols offer varied APY rates. This percent is always fluctuating, which means its hard to predict the final profit. With an ever-changing demand/offer ration in the market, users earnings might be lower than expected.

Modern Decentralized Finance services have serious flaws:

Complicated interfaces make liquidity management challenging for crypto newbies and non-experienced users.

Due to their open-source code structure, theres a large number of forks and clone projects popping up. That puts the platforms infrastructure at risk.

It goes without saying that most services charge a high ETH gas fee, which further decreases profits.

The above-mentioned issues beg for a new incentivization system to motivate users to provide more liquidity. Thats why fork projects for vampire yield farming are evolving in full-force.

Yet, SpaceSwap is a primary candidate to outperform other DeFi players. Whats so special about this platform?

This is a new protocol that aggregates DeFi protocols. Its developers call it the one-stop-station for major DeFi services and have ambitious plans to make it the major player in the DeFi industry.

So far, the roadmap roughly includes three major steps:

SpaceSwaps launch on 10th September 2020 will start with improving the Uniswap protocol with extra features and tools added.

In Q4 2020, the team plans to start supporting Curve, Compound, Yearn and wBTC products.

In Q1 2021, SpaceSwap can turn into the only DeFi superstructure that covers major DeFi protocols in one place.

Thus, SpaceSwap promises to become a one-of-a-kind project that gives liquidity providers additional means of profit-making. While conventional protocols are designed to bring liquidity providers only the loan interest, SpaceSwap takes it a step further and introduces a new scheme of yield farming.

Aside from the high APY rates, users will enjoy additional incentives in the form of MILK tokens, not to mention quick access to all major liquidity pools for DeFi & CeFi protocols, Oracles, lending protocols, synthetic assets... and so on.

SpaceSwap is not just about yield farming - it will revolutionize the DeFi industry by providing a fair and profitable protocol for efficient crypto liquidity management. Leading platforms like Uniswap generate earnings only while users keep their assets in liquidity pools. Its high time to change the rules of this game - SpaceSwap LPs will earn MILK tokens on top of APY rates and reap benefits from ALL DeFi Protocols combined

- says the SpaceSwap development team.

Reportedly, the team received hundreds of liquidity claims from early investors. While SushiSwap developers plan to get 10% SUSHI after the generation of blocks and reward distribution, the SpaceSwap team will have only 3% left.

SpaceSwap DeFi protocol promises to change the way users earn profits from liquidity pools and revolutionize the approach to yield farming. It will be launched on 10th September and early investors are promised extra perks and premium features.

The DeFi industry is in its early stages of development and is not devoid of substantial flaws and drawbacks. SpaceSwap may solve the problems of usability and low profits by providing a more eligible model for passive income and incentivization. This future one-stop-station for major DeFi services has what it takes for getting to the moon.

Disclaimer. This article is paid and provided by a third-party source and should not be viewed as an endorsement by CoinIdol. Readers should do their own research before investing funds in any company. CoinIdol shall not be responsible or liable, directly or indirectly, for any damage or loss caused or alleged to be caused by or in connection with the use of or reliance on any such content, goods or services mentioned in this article.

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The Future One-Stop-Station for DeFi Services: SpaceSwap To Conquer the Yield Farming Industry - Coin Idol

TinyML is breathing life into billions of devices – The Next Web

Until now building machine learning (ML) algorithms for hardware meant complex mathematical modes based on sample data, known as training data, in order to make predictions or decisions without being explicitly programmed to do so. And if this sounds complex and expensive to build, it is. On top of that, traditionally ML related tasks were translated to the cloud, creating latency, consuming scarce power, and putting machines at the mercy of connection speeds. Combined, these constraints made computing at the Edge slower, more expensive, and less predictable. Tiny Machine Learning (TinyML) is the latest embedded software technology that moves hardware into an almost magical realm, where machines can automatically learn and grow through use, like a primitive human brain.

But thanks to recent advances companies are turning to TinyML as the latest trend in building product intelligence. Arduino, the company best known for open-source hardware is making TinyML available for millions of developers, and now together with Edge Impulse, they are turning the ubiquitous Arduino board into a powerful embedded ML platform, like the Arduino Nano 33 BLE Sense and other 32-bit boards. With this partnership you can run powerful learning models based on artificial neural networks (ANN) reaching and sampling tiny sensors along with low powered microcontrollers. Over the past year great strides were made in making deep learning models smaller, faster, and runnable on embedded hardware through projects like TensorFlow Lite for Microcontrollers, uTensor, and Arms CMSIS-NN; but building a quality dataset, extracting the right features, training and deploying these models is still complicated. TinyML was the missing link between Edge hardware and device intelligence, now coming to fruition.

Tiny Devices With Not So Tiny Brains

The implications of TinyML accessibility are very important in todays world. For example, a typical drug development trial takes about five years as there are potentially millions of design decisions that need to be made on route to FDA approval. Using the power of TinyML and hardware, not animals, for testing models can speed up the process and take just 12 months.

Another example of this game-changing technology in terms of building neural networks is the ability to fix problems and create new solutions for things we couldnt dream of doing before. For example, TinyML can listen to beehives and detect anomalies and distress caused by things as small as wasps. A tiny sensor can trigger an alert based on a sound model that identifies a hive under attack, allowing farmers to secure and assist the hive, in real-time.

Why Real-Time TinyML

The huge need for inexpensive, easily deployable solutions for COVID-19 and other flu viruses is present for all of us and early detection of symptoms could have an immediate impact on millions of lives around the world. Today, using TinyML and a simple Arduino board, you can detect and alert of unusual coughing as a first defense mechanism for COVID19 containment. In a recent showcase, Edge Impulse and Arduino published a project that had the power and simplicity of running TinyML on an Arduino Nano BLE Sense that can detect the presence of specific coughing sounds in real-time audio, including a dataset of coughing and background noise samples, and applied a highly optimized TinyML model, to build a cough detection system that runs in under 20 kB of RAM on the Nano BLE Sense. The project and the dataset were originally started by Kartik Thakore to help in the COVID-19 effort and was made available as an open-source repository on Hackster.io.

This same approach applies to many other embedded audio pattern matching applications, for example, childcare, elderly care, safety, and machine monitoring.

TinyML Is Going to be Everywhere

With 250 billion microcontrollers in the world today, and growing by 30 billion annually, TinyML is the best technology for performing on-device data analytics for vision, audio, motion, and more. TinyML gives small devices the ability to make smart decisions without needing to send data to the cloud. Unlike the general ML monsters used by data scientists, TinyML models are small enough to fit into any environmentand thats why they will be everywhere.

The accessibility of TinyML for software developers and engineers is another key factor as to why this technology will be so pervasive. For example, software developers who want to build embedded systems using ML can build a model by tapping their iPhone as the edge device, using its sensors to capture the data. All you need to do in order to build your first model is sign into the data acquisition tab on the Edge Impulse Studio, select your phone as the edge device, choose the accelerometer sensor for example, and then click Start sampling while moving your phone up and down to generate the data and see it in a graph. It is that easy.

TinyML Code Will be Everywhere: Machine, Plant, Human, Animal.

Aluminum and iconography are no longer enough for a product to get noticed in the marketplace. Today, great products need to be useful and deliver an almost magical experience, something that becomes an extension of life. Today and going forward, billions of tiny devices will act as an extension of our brains, feelings, and emotions, as a natural extension of everyday life, and with that, TinyML will impact every industry: retail, healthcare, transportation, wellness, agriculture, fitness, and manufacturing.

Published September 3, 2020 19:00 UTC

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TinyML is breathing life into billions of devices - The Next Web

WhatsApp advisory page with list of updates and vulnerabilities is now live – The Indian Express

Written by Nandagopal Rajan | New Delhi | Updated: September 4, 2020 7:24:26 amFacebooks new Vulnerability Disclosure Policy clarifies expectations when it reports issues in third-party code and systems.

WhatsApp now mad live an advisory page where it will give a comprehensive list of security updates and associated Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVE). While the messaging platform does list these vulnerabilities on MITRE, Cert-in and other similar code libraries across the world, its own list will come with more context on the bugs and its fixes.

The details included in CVE descriptions are meant to help researchers understand technical scenarios and does not imply users were impacted in this manner, a note from WhatsApp said, suggesting that a lot of the bugs, though reported, dont impact users.

WhatsApp also relies on numerous code libraries developed by third parties for various features and we will annotate security updates for these libraries so other developers can make necessary updates, it said, adding how it was their policy to notify developers and providers of mobile operating systems about security issues that WhatsApp may identify.

We are very committed to transparency and this resource is intended to help the broader technology community benefit from the latest advances in our security efforts. We strongly encourage all users to ensure they keep their WhatsApp up-to-date from their respective app stores and update their mobile operating systems whenever updates are available, the note said.

The listing is live on from September 3 and will be regularly updated. Many other large tech organisations like Microsoft too list the vulnerabilities that have found or have been brought to their notice. Some older CVEs have also been listed on the new WhatsApp advisory page.

In a related announcement, Facebook has announced its Vulnerability Disclosure Policy wherein it will contact the appropriate responsible party and inform them as quickly as reasonably possible of a security vulnerability. The new policy will require the third party to respond within 21 days to let us know how the issue is being mitigated to protect the impacted people after which Facebook could disclose the vulnerability.

The social network said it may occasionally find critical security bugs or vulnerabilities in third-party code and systems, including open source software after which the priority is to see these issues promptly fixed and the people impacted informed.

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The Facebook post said since not all bugs are equally sensitive, the policy outlined below explains how it handles vulnerability disclosure. And as fixing an issue requires close collaboration between researchers at Facebook and the third party responsible for fixing it, the policy will unambiguously explain the social networks expectations when it reports issues in third-party code and systems.

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WhatsApp advisory page with list of updates and vulnerabilities is now live - The Indian Express

Will Julian Assange finally be extradited for his WikiLeaks work? – Film Daily

Julian Assange is somewhat notorious in the United States for his work on the famed website WikiLeaks. The site would publish documents leaked by whistleblowers from any powerful place the entertainment industry or even a government. Whether you agree with their actions or not, their work was a search for truth with the hope of justice.

However, Assange & WikiLeaks crossed a line in 2010 after four years of running the site. The United States government was furious and Assange has been on the run ever since. If you dont recall what happened with Julian Assange, WikiLeaks, and the U.S. government, lets recap it. Then well look at why hes making headlines for possible extradition again.

WikiLeaks wasnt Assanges first transgression. The Australian-born man was convicted of hacking all the way back in 1995. He got off with a fine and a promise not to do it again.

In 2006 Assange decided to co-found the website WikiLeaks where people could send information & documents in order to expose the nasty & illegal secrets of the world. There was contention about the site for years. Questions of legality in many instances arose, and some wondered whether this was truly the best outlet for whistleblowers.

In 2010 WikiLeaks posted a video from a U.S. military helicopter that bore proof of eighteen civilians being killed in Baghdad, Iraq. Following this, the website also posted hundreds of thousands of documents from U.S. Army intelligence. The whistleblowers name is Chelsea Manning.

The U.S. government was exposed for having killed 66,000 civilians deaths that went unreported. The documents also contained information regarding the torture of prisoners. It wasnt long before the U.S. government made it clear they had every intention of prosecuting Julian Assange for his part in the major military leak. He was forced to flee to anywhere he could find asylum after exposing the war crimes.

Julian Assanges life has been tumultuous ever since his decision to post the 2010 documents, but as of today, hes in a British prison. Specifically, hes being held at the Belmarsh Prison in London. He was originally arrested under the pretense of a Swedish extradition request due to a completely different circumstance in Sweden, but it has now become clear the arrest was for the United States desire of extradition.

The United States has eighteen charges against Julian Assange (meanwhile, Chelsea Manning, the woman who gave the documents to Assange, was given a presidential pardon by Barack Obama). Assanges charges include one count of conspiracy to receive national defense information, seven counts of obtaining national defense information, nine counts of disclosure of national defense information, and one count of conspiracy to commit computer intrusion.

Each individual charge could net Assange a potential maximum sentence of ten years in prison, save for the final charge, which only carries a maximum sentence of five years provided, of course, hes found guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.

Right now, Assange has three countries pursuing him the United Kingdom, Sweden, and the United States. He was found guilty of breaching bail in the UK which could force him to spend up to 12 months in prison.

For the U.S., theyll have to wait for a decision from a British court as to whether Julian Assange will be extradited for his WikiLeaks involvement. However, the U.S. may also have to contend with a possible request from Sweden. The country once was pursuing sexual assault claims pointed at Assange, but they were later dropped. Sweden has now said theyre considering reopening the case.

Now that Julian Assange is no longer safe in asylum it appears he will, after all these years, have to go to court.

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Will Julian Assange finally be extradited for his WikiLeaks work? - Film Daily

Republican-led Senate Panel Reinforces Russian Interference – Catholic University of America The Tower

Image Courtesy of CNN

By: Jeremy Perillo

A new bipartisan report released by the Republican-led Senate Intelligence Committee affirms that Russia did indeed interfere with the 2016 election to help President Donald Trump win the White House. The report comes as Trumps allies continue to protest any accusations against Trump, his allies, or his campaign when it comes to Russian interference.

The nearly one thousand-page report signals the end of the committees three-year probe into election meddling by the Russians. One of the concerns made by senators was that especially given the 2020 election is less than eighty days away, interference, particularly from the Russians, is nearly a guarantee for the upcoming election.

The committee investigation was able to go beyond what Robert Muellers report outlined since Mueller and his team was limited to calls of criminality outlined in the special counsel probe. Mueller concluded that Russian interference was sweeping and apparent, but found no criminal conspiracy between the Russians and the Trump campaign.

The key findings from this new report offer more details and a better perspective on Russian interference during the last election. One of those findings delves further into former Trump campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, and his connections with a Russian intelligence officer. The committee speculates that that Russian intelligence officer may have been connected to the 2016 Russian hacking operation. Overall, the committee held Manaforts role in the campaign represented a grave counterintelligence threat.

The report also discussed how Trump and senior campaign officials sought information on Wikileaks email dumps through Roger Stone, and that Trump had indeed discussed Wikileaks with Stone, despite telling the special counsel otherwise.

The committee found that the information gained from the 2016 Trump Tower meeting with Russian nationals was part of a broader influence operation by the Kremlin, and made clear to note that there was no evidence that the Trump campaign knew of that. The Russian nationals had significant connections and ties to the Russian government and Russian intelligence.

Given the drama surrounding these various high-profile events with the Trump campaign, another aspect the report touches on how various Russian-government actors continued to spread misinformation on Russian election interference, into 2020. The report specifically names Manafort and his Russian connection as individuals who promoted the narrative that Ukraine interfered with the election, rather than Russia.

While the committees report, and various other government investigations, have cleared Trump or his campaign from colluding with the Russians, the report shows the exhaustive extent Russia took to influence the results of the 2016 election.

We can say, without any hesitation, that the Committee found absolutely no evidence that then-candidate Donald Trump or his campaign colluded with the Russian government to meddle in the 2016 election, said Senator Marco Rubio, the committees acting chairman. What the Committee did find, however, is very troubling. We found irrefutable evidence of Russian meddling.

I encourage all Americans to carefully review the documented evidence of the unprecedented and massive intervention campaign waged on behalf of then-candidate Donald Trump by Russians and their operatives and to reach their own independent conclusions, said Senator Mark Warner, the committees Ranking Member.

The responses show a divide in how both sides are positioning this report. Republicans find this report as another exoneration of the Trump campaign, as there was no evidence of collusion. Democrats seem to disregard that fact, and would rather focus on the appalling efforts by the Russians to influence the Trump campaign.

There is little doubt that government investigations will quickly reveal unprecedented foreign interference in the election, unfortunately confirming the fears of many American voters throughout this election cycle. This report will be one of many reviewed as the government acts on the inevitable perversion of American democracy.

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Republican-led Senate Panel Reinforces Russian Interference - Catholic University of America The Tower

3 Pieces Of Recycled Collusion Garbage In The Senate Intelligence Report – The Federalist

Recently, the Senate Intelligence Committee issued a fifth report on Russian interference in the 2016 election. Senate insiders obviously coordinated with allies in the media to spin the 1,000-page report in a desperate effort to revive the Russian collusion hoax.

Robert Mueller deputy Andrew Weissmann, who is promoting a new book, helped pump up the new revelations, citing information about Paul Manafort and Konstantin Kilimniks relationship and Roger Stones alleged foreknowledge of the public release of WikiLeaks emails. Neither story is new and both have been thoroughly debunked by the free, non-legacy press, such as The Federalist. Below is a brief, partial list of debunked conspiracy theories the report attempted to resurrect with the help of hoaxers in the media.

The report found that Manaforts presence on the Campaign and proximity to Trump created opportunities for Russian intelligence services to exert influence over, and acquire confidential information on, the Trump Campaign. Taken as a whole, Manaforts high-level access and willingness to share information with individuals closely affiliated with the Russian intelligence services, particularly Kilimnik and associates of Oleg Deripaska, represented a grave counterintelligence threat.

This is false. Manafort shared internal Trump campaign polling data with Kilimnik, a longtime employee. Neither the Mueller report nor the Senate report produced evidence, beyond innuendo, the Kilimnik was an active intelligence officer acting on orders from the Kremlin.

In the immediate aftermath of the May 2019 special counsel report, reporter Paul Sperry debunked the reports innuendo against Kilimnik. He wrote,

The special prosecutors report indicated that one of Manaforts Kremlin handlers was Konstantin Kilimnik. Manafort briefed Kilimnik on the state of the Trump Campaign and Manaforts plan to win the election, it said. That briefing encompassed the Campaigns messaging and its internal polling data. It also included discussion of battleground states, which Manafort identified as Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania and Minnesota.

Except that this wouldnt have been an unusual conversation: Kilimnik was a longtime Manafort employee who ran the Ukraine office of his lobbying firm. Footnotes in Muellers report show that Manafort shared campaign information to impress a former business partner, Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska, who was suing him over financial losses. Mueller failed to tie the information exchange to Russian espionage. He also failed to mention that Deripaska is an FBI informant.

The New York Times broke that Deripaska was a U.S. informant the FBI tried to use to entrap the Trump campaign. The Times then reported that the FBI pressed Mr. Deripaska about whether his former business partner, Mr. Manafort, had served as a link to the Kremlin during his time as Mr. Trumps campaign chairman.Mr. Deripaska, though, told the F.B.I. agents that while he had no love for Mr. Manafort, with whom he was in a bitter business dispute, he found their theories about his role on the campaign preposterous. Yet in its dishonest reporting on the latest Senate report, the Times failed to cite its own scoop from September 2018.

The Senate report claims, The information that Natalia Veselnitskaya, the Russian lawyer, offered during the June 9, 2016 meeting and planned to offer again at the follow-up meeting requested by Aras. Agalarov was part of a broader influence operation targeting the United States that was coordinated, at least in part, with elements of the Russian government.

If thats true, then Hillary Clinton and Democrat PR firm Fusion GPS were the ones working with the Russians to interfere with the election. In June 2016, members of the Trump campaign including Donald Trump Jr. briefly met with an oddball delegation that included two Russians, one of whom claimed to have dirt on Hillary Clinton.

The firm Clinton hired to frame Trump for colluding with the Russians, Fusion GPS, had longstanding ties with both of those Russians, Natalia Veselnitskaya and Rinat Akhmetshin. The Senate report discloses that Veselnitskaya used research from Fusion GPS as bait.

Obviously, its not a coincidence that the two Russians the Trump campaign met also happened to be working with the firm hired to frame Trump for colluding with the Russians. Indeed, as noted by the Senate report, Veselnitskaya had dinner with Fusion GPS founder Glenn Simpson the night before and after the Trump Tower meeting.

As noted in 2018 by Lee Smith, A growing body of evidence, however, indicates that the meeting may have been a setup part of a broad effort to tarnish the Trump campaign involving Hillary Clinton operatives employed by Kremlin-linked figures and Department of Justice officials. This view, that the real collusion may have taken place among those who arranged the meeting rather than the Trump officials who agreed to attend it.

Its totally dishonest to include this meeting in a 2020 Senate report again, implying it shows the Trump campaign colluded with the Russians. The Trump campaign ended the meeting after a few minutes and rebuffed efforts for a follow-up.

And if the Russians did steal the Democratic National Committee emails and colluded with the Trump campaign, why didnt Russia use this meeting to give those emails to the Trump campaign instead of a Clinton file prepared by Clintons subcontractor? The obvious answer is that the Clinton dirt was just a prop for a Fusion GPS setup meant to put Donald Trump Jr. in a room with a Russian.

The New York Times wrote of this theory advanced in the report:

The Intelligence Committee sought to track calls between Mr. Trump and Roger J. Stone Jr. an adviser to the Trump campaign who was in contact with Guccifer 2.0, the online pseudonym for Russian intelligence operatives dumping the Democratic emails in an effort to discover what Mr. Stone might have told Mr. Trump about the hacked emails.

In written answers to Mr. Mueller, Mr. Trump said he could not recall discussing WikiLeaks with Mr. Stone, a response challenged in the Senate report. The committee assesses that Trump did, in fact, speak with Stone about WikiLeaks and with members of his Campaign about Stones access to WikiLeaks on multiple occasions, the report said.

But when one drills into the documents, Stones contacts with Guccifer 2.0 dont appear to exceed a single exchange, which was about publicly available information. As I wrote here, Stone is just a fool who lies about gossiping. He dressed up (incorrect) speculation about the WikiLeaks dumps as though he had inside knowledge. He didnt.

Trump denies any recollection of speaking with Stone about the WikiLeaks document dumps. If he did, all Stone had to offer was the same idle speculation anyone reading public accounts might engage in.

Stone also had virtually nothing to do with WikiLeaks in spite of his braggadocio to the contrary. According to a recent Business Insider article, Stone sent WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange a Twitter message in spring 2016. That has since been characterized as a source of inside knowledge by Stone about the Clinton emails. But theres no evidence that WikiLeaks told him anything that wasnt already public knowledge.

To understand the absurdity of the Senate committee pushing the Roger Stone-Russia connection, one must first understand that Stone is a wannabe insider. In a way, Stones arrest was the fulfillment of his dream to be relevant to the grand drama of the Russia controversy.

Although the report mentions Stone a whopping 113 times, its forced to admit that Stone really didnt know anything that wasnt already public. One bullet reads, The Committee could not reliably determine the extent of authentic, non-public knowledge about WikiLeaks that Stone obtained and shared with the Campaign. Its telling that the Senate Intelligence Committee would dignify the sordid and irrelevant Roger Stone story with any attention at all.

Dont forget a question Sperry posed: Did Robert Mueller Tap Fusion GPS and Christopher Steele to Assist His Anti-Trump Investigation? Recall that after the election, the get-Trump movement raised millions of dollars to continue funding Fusion GPS.

Then, in a particularly tell-tale sign of Fusions involvement in the Mueller report, their company name does not appear a single time in that report. Only a party interested in protecting Fusion GPS could produce an extensive report on the Russian collusion hoax without mentioning the firm that was behind it all.

The Senate report mentions Fusion GPS a mere two times in spite of reporting extensively on Fusion GPS-connected events. That leads one to again wonder whether Fusion GPS might have had editorial input in the Senate report.

Adam Mill is a pen name. He works in Kansas City, Missouri as an attorney specializing in labor and employment and public administration law. Adam has contributed to The Federalist, American Greatness, and The Daily Caller.

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3 Pieces Of Recycled Collusion Garbage In The Senate Intelligence Report - The Federalist

Senate Report Shows What Mueller Missed About Trump and Russia – The Intercept

When Donald Trump traveled to Moscow in November 1996, looking for real estate development opportunities, he didnt get a hotel deal in Moscow, but he may have found a new woman, and the Russian government probably knew about it, according to the Senate Intelligence Committees remarkable new report on the committees three and a half year investigation into Trump and Russia.

Trump met the Russian woman through his business connections at a party at a luxury hotel in Moscow, and the two apparently had a brief affair, at a time when Trump was married to his second wife, Marla Maples. The Senate report has redacted the womans name and blacked out her face in photos taken of her with Trump at the time and provided to the committee. But the report explains in detail how Russian intelligence operatives keep track of the sexual activities of visiting foreign business executives, and notes that the Moscow-based U.S. businessman who introduced Trump to the woman probably told Russian government officials about it.

The report reveals the true nature of the counterintelligence threat posed by a president willing and eager to accept the help of a foreign adversary to win American elections.

The story of Trumps alleged Moscow affair is in keeping with the bipartisan and comprehensive nature of the Senate report, which is at turns both reassuring and alarming. While it debunks the so-called Steele Dossier, which was highlighted by a wild accusation that Trump had two women urinate on his bed in his Moscow hotel room in 2013, the Senate report examines in detail the less tawdry, but far more plausible, story that Trump had a brief affair on his earlier trip to Moscow and the Russians knew about it.

In fact, the Senate report dismisses many of the most outrageous accusations involving Trump and Russia even as it provides overwhelming and damning evidence of Russias efforts to intervene in the 2016 presidential election to help Trump win and the Trump campaigns eagerness to embrace the Russian intervention.

But the Senate report goes much further than election interference and provides the first detailed examination of the broader and complex network of relationships between Trump, his ever-shifting circle of personal and business associates, and a series of Russian oligarchs and other Russian and Ukrainian figures with ties to Russian President Vladimir Putin. In the process, the report provides badly needed context for the events of 2016 and beyond. Above all, it reveals the true nature of the counterintelligence threat posed by a president willing and eager to accept the help of a foreign adversary to win American elections.

Since its August 18 release, the Senate report actually the fifth and final volume of the committees massive opus on Trump and Russia has been overshadowed by both the Democratic and Republican national conventions, and as a result, it has received far less attention from the press and the public than it deserves.

But the Senate report is particularly significant now, as the 2020 general election campaign intensifies and Trump and his supporters continue to deny that Russia tried to help him win in 2016 and that Moscow is trying to do so again this year. In recent days, John Ratcliffe, the director of national intelligence, has said that the DNI will stop in-person briefings for Congress about election interference, angering congressional Democratic leaders who charge that Ratcliffe and the Trump administration are trying to keep the public in the dark.

But the Senate report cuts through the political noise with clear and unequivocal language to explain what happened in 2016.

At nearly 1,000 pages, the Senate report is by far the best and most thorough examination of the Trump-Russia story to date, and puts the narrower and more legalistic Mueller Report to shame. Robert Mueller, the former FBI director appointed in 2017 to be special counsel to investigate the Trump-Russia case, kept his focus on gathering evidence for specific criminal prosecutions; the Senate report shows that he missed the forest for the trees.

The Senate report itself is critical of Muellers narrow approach and chides him and his team for having failed to grasp the true nature of the national security threat posed by Russias intervention in 2016. The report complains that Mueller failed to continue the FBIs original counterintelligence investigation once the FBI handed off the broader Trump-Russia case. Instead, the special counsel abandoned the counterintelligence portions of the case and focused instead only on elements of the case that could result in criminal prosecutions.

Over the course of its investigation, the [special counsel] successfully secured numerous criminal indictments and convictions, the Senate report states. While criminal prosecutions are a vital tool in upholding our nations laws, protecting our democratic system from foreign interference is a broader national security mission that must be appropriately balanced with the pursuit of criminal prosecutions. It is the committees view that this balance was not achieved. Russian interference with the U.S. electoral process was inherently a counterintelligence matter and one not well-suited to criminal prosecutions.

The Senate report is most remarkable for its bipartisan nature. It was produced by a Republican-controlled committee, but the report almost never seems to pull its punches aimed at any of its targets. It is unsparing in its description of Trump and his campaign aides as eager to reach out for Russian help in 2016, but is equally tough in its criticism of the FBI for its missteps in its subsequent investigation of Trump and Russias intervention in the election. Along the way, each episode is recounted in exhaustive detail, and the result is that the reader is left with a clear understanding of the relative significance of the different chapters of the Trump-Russia case. That is a relief after years of partisanship and polarization have skewed the publics understanding of the case.

In fact, the Senate Intelligence Committees report is a throwback to an earlier era of congressional investigations in which bipartisanship was the rule, not the exception. The report is so thick with research and evidence that the letters from Republican and Democratic senators on the committee, attached at the end of the report and arguing over the reports meaning, seem trivial by contrast.

Perhaps the only significance of the attached letter from the Republican senators is the name of one senator who didnt sign it: Richard Burr of North Carolina, who until recently was the committees chair. Burr was forced to step aside in May, after the disclosure that he was under investigation for stock sales he made before the American public knew the extent of the likely economic threat posed by the Covid-19 pandemic. But by that time, the committees work on the Trump-Russia case was virtually complete. In hindsight, Burr appears to have played a key role in protecting the committees investigation from excessive partisan influence.

The independence of the committees investigation is evident in its clear and concise conclusions.

The committee found that Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered the Russian effort to hack computer networks and accounts affiliated with the Democratic Party and leak information damaging to Hillary Clinton and her campaign for president, the report states. Moscows intent was to harm the Clinton campaign, tarnish an expected Clinton presidential administration, help the Trump campaign after Trump became the presumptive Republican nominee, and undermine the U.S. democratic process.

The committee found that Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered the Russian effort to hack computer networks and accounts affiliated with the Democratic Party and leak information damaging to Hillary Clinton and her campaign for president.

The GRU, a Russian intelligence service, conducted the hacks and then used a false cyber front to transfer data to WikiLeaks, which then published the Clinton-related documents at key moments in the 2016 campaign, according to the report. The U.S. media obligingly wrote stories based on the documents, without aggressively pursuing evidence that the leaks were the product of a Russian cyberattack.

The report states that while the GRU and WikiLeaks were releasing hacked documents, the Trump campaign sought to maximize the impact of those materials to aid Trumps electoral prospects. To do so, the Trump Campaign took actions to obtain advance notice about WikiLeaks releases of Clinton emails; took steps to obtain inside information about the content of releases once WikiLeaks began to publish stolen information; created messaging strategies to promote and share the materials in anticipation of and following their release; and encouraged further theft of information and continued leaks.

One of the most intriguing sections in the report deals with the relationship between Paul Manafort, the onetime Trump campaign chair, and a Russian intelligence officer. Indeed, the Manafort section of the report is a prime example of how the Senate investigators brought fresh eyes to a well-known episode in the Trump-Russia case and, unlike Mueller, found new information by examining it as a counterintelligence matter.

In March 2016, longtime international lobbyist Paul Manafort joined the Trump campaign and by May was named the campaigns chair. Manafort offered to work for Trump for free.

Russias President Vladimir Putin (L) talks to Rusal President and Management Board Member Oleg Deripaska at the 2017 Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit at Da Nang, Vietnam on Nov. 10, 2017.

Photo: Mikhail Klimentyev/TASS via Getty Images

But Manafort came to the Trump campaign with a lot of baggage and was facing a desperate financial squeeze. He had spent years working for Oleg Deripaska, a Russian oligarch with close ties to Putin, who had tasked him to conduct influence operations in countries where Deripaska had major business interests. Deripaska also introduced Manafort to Ukrainian oligarchs and eventually Manafort went to work for Ukraines pro-Russian President Viktor Yanukovych until he was ousted from power in 2014 in the wake of Ukraines Maidan revolution.

By 2016, Manafort was caught up in a fight with Deripaska over an investment that had gone sour, and he saw his new position with the Trump campaign as a lifeline to help him resolve the situation. Once on the campaign, Manafort quickly sought to leverage his position to resolve his multi-million dollar foreign disputes and obtain new work in Ukraine and elsewhere, the Senate report concluded.

One of Manaforts closest aides during his time in Ukraine was Konstantin Kilimnik, who the Senate report identifies as a Russian intelligence officer. Kilimnik also served as Manaforts liaison with Deripaska.

While he was working for Trump during the 2016 campaign, Manafort stayed in contact with Kilimnik and gave him the Trump campaigns internal polling data, which showed that the key to defeating Clinton was to drive up negative attitudes about her among voters.

The Mueller report found that Manafort had shared Trump polling data with Kilimnik, but didnt examine why he had done so. The Senate report says that the intelligence committee obtained some information suggesting Kilimnik may have been connected to the GRUs hack and leak operation targeting the 2016 election. The report adds that this information suggests that a channel for coordination on the GRU hack operation may have existed through Kilimnik. The report adds that in interviews with Muellers prosecution team, Manafort lied consistently about one issue in particular: his interactions with Kilimnik. Manafort decided to face more severe criminal penalties rather than provide complete answers about his interactions with Kilimnik. The Manafort-Kilimnik relationship, the Senate report concludes, represents the single most direct tie between senior Trump campaign officials and the Russian intelligence services.

The Senate report is filled with such rich details, shedding new light on the wide cast of characters surrounding both Trump and Putin, and the end result is an engrossing tale of modern intelligence and of lust, avarice, squalid opportunism, and incompetence worthy of John le Carr. With its depth of research, layered with an understanding of a complex series of personal networks in both the United States and Russia, the Senate report has done what none of the previous investigations have achieved. It has brought the Trump-Russia story to life.

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Senate Report Shows What Mueller Missed About Trump and Russia - The Intercept