The Age of Mass Surveillance Will Not Last Forever – WIRED

When I was working at the CIA, if you had told me that there would soon come a youth rebellion that relied on lasers and traffic cones as sword and shield, and that it would come to paralyze one of the worlds richest and most powerful governments, I would haveat the very leastraised an eyebrow. And yet as I write these words nearly a decade later, this is exactly what's happening in Hong Kong, the city where I met with journalists to reveal the secret that would transform me from an agent of government into one of the worlds most wanted men. As it happened, the very book that you now hold in your hands lay on the desk, the desk of the last hotel room I would ever pay for with a credit card.

Excerpted from Little Brother & Homeland by Cory Doctorow, with a new introduction by Edward Snowden. Buy on Amazon.

What I showed those journalists was proof, in the form of the governments own classified documents, that the self-described Five Eyesthe state security organs of the United States, United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, and Canadahad together conspired to weaken their laws. They had forced clandestine access to the networks of their largest telecommunications and internet titans (some of whom hadn't needed much in the way of arm-twisting) in pursuit of a single goal: the transformation of the free and fragmented internet into historys first centralized means of global mass surveillance. This violation of our fundamental privacy occurred without our knowledge or consent, or even the knowledge and consent of our courts and most lawmakers.

Heres the thing: although the global response to this violation was furious, producing the largest intelligence scandal of the modern age, mass surveillance itself continues to work today, virtually unimpeded. Nearly everything you do, and nearly everyone you love, is being monitored and recorded by a system whose reach is unlimited, but whose safeguards are not.

But while the system itself was not substantially changedas a rule, governments are less interested in reforming their own behavior than in restricting the behavior and rights of their citizenswhat did change was the public consciousness.

The idea that the government was collecting the communications of those who had done nothing wrong had once been treated as a paranoid conspiracy theory (or as the subject of instructive fiction, such as the work you're about to read). Suddenly, this prospect had become all too realthe sort of universally acknowledged truth that can be so quickly waved away as obvious and unremarkable by the crooked timber of our political operators.

Meanwhile, the corporations of the world digested the realization that their darkest shametheir willful complicity in crimes against the publichad not been punished. Rather, these collaborators had been actively rewarded, with either explicitly retroactive immunity or informal guarantees of perpetual impunity. They became our latest Big Brother, striving to compile perfect records of private lives for profit and power. From this emerged the contemporary corruption of our once-free internet, called surveillance capitalism.

We are coming to see all too clearly that the construction of these systems was less about connection than it was about control: the proliferation of mass surveillance has tracked precisely with the destruction of public power.

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And yet despite this grim reading from my seven years in exile, I find more cause for hope than despair, thanks in no small part to those lasers and traffic cones in Hong Kong. My confidence springs not from how they are appliedto dazzle cameras and, with a little water, to contain and extinguish the gas grenades of a state gone wrongbut in what they express: the irrepressible human desire to be free.

The problems that we face today, of dispossession by oligarchs and their monopolies, and of disenfranchisement by authoritarians and their comfortably captive political class, are far from new. The novelty is in the technological means by which these problems have been entrenchedto put it simply, the bad guys have better tools.

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The Age of Mass Surveillance Will Not Last Forever - WIRED

Viewpoint: Bill Barr’s Unconstitutional Campaign to Reelect the President – GovExec.com

Throughout his first year in office, Bill Barr worked overtime to advance the personal and political interests of President Donald Trump, and to alter the structure of American government to confer virtually autocratic powers on the president, in accordance with views that Barr has held for several decades. Now, less than 100 days before the election, the attorney generals focus has narrowed and his methods have become more transparently outrageous: Facing gross mismanagement of the coronavirus pandemic, a diminished economy, and sinking presidential poll numbers, Barr is using the most intrusive and offensive tools he can command simply to extend his and the presidents tenure in office into a second term.

[Anne Applebaum: Trump is putting on a show in Portland]

Most recent and shocking are the unilateral armed invasions of Portland, Oregon; Kansas City, Missouri; Seattle, and, presumably, a number of other American cities soon. There are many reasons to believe that these counterproductive incursions are being pursued not for some legitimate purpose but as political theater, to generate an impression of the country in disorder, of dangerous people supposedly on the attack, and of the Trump administration standing firm against them. These interventions defy the traditional conservative principle of federalism: respecting the leadership of local and state government in maintaining order, with federal assistance generally limited to coordinated action by invitation. The federal actions have also involveda disregard of constitutional rights, and by all indications have been a stimulus for, rather than a solution to, violence.

These invasions echo similar events that took place in Lafayette Square in Washington, D.C., on June 1, when officials from various federal law-enforcement agencies, acting on an order given by Barr, cleared peaceful protesters from the area in the early evening. That action was followed a short time later by the president walking across the park to pose for a picture holding a Bible in front of Saint Johns Church. The episode was roundly condemned, including by former Trump-administration officials, and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff later apologized for allowing himself to be anywhere near it. Barr equivocated about what exactly happened that day, butadmitted to giving the park-clearing order.

[Read: The Christians who loved Trumps stunt]

No less shocking last week was the revelation of the governments attempt to take Michael Cohen back into custody after being released to home confinement for the purpose of minimizing spread of the coronavirus. The governments position was that to avoid being re-incarcerated, Cohen would have to honor a condition of release giving up his First Amendment rights to criticize the president. Judge Alvin Hellerstein found the condition to have been imposed for retaliatory purposes. Althoughthe hearingdid not clarify where this condition came from, at issue is an action of the Bureau of Prisons, which operates under the attorney general. This hearing concerning Cohen followed an earlier effort to violate the First Amendment by an unsuccessful Department of Justice action to enjoin publication of former National Security Adviser John Boltons book, which contained facts embarrassing to the president. The obvious purpose of both efforts was to avoid publicizing information that would highlight the presidents unfitness for office.

Barr has also been vocal in advancing other highly dubious legal positions central to Trumps reelection campaign. One of those concerns the efficacy of mail-in voting, which is used in some form in every state, and is presently the primary means of voting in a number of states. Barr, following Trumps lead, has asserted the claim, bereft though it is of empirical support,that such voting methods are prone to fraud by foreign actors. Trump, meanwhile, relies on such assertionsto reserve judgment on whether he will accept the outcome of the election if he loses.

[Read: Trump could still break democracys biggest norm]

Barr also has spoken up repeatedly, andhis Department of Justice has at times intervened, concerning conduct restrictions imposed on churches in connection with the coronavirus pandemic. In service to Trumps oft-stated desire to get the economy reopened quickly, and also perhaps appealing to religious voters, Barrs actions here again reflect an unconservative disregard for the preeminence of state and local government in addressing public-health issues. Similar efforts to undermine such restrictions have beenrejectedtwiceby the Supreme Court.

A long-standing theme of Barrs termthe perceived unfairness to Trump and his supporters of the FBI investigation of Russian interference during the 2016 campaignhas this spring become for him a nearly constant public-relations effort. Starting in April, during interviews with Fox News and other outlets, andin violation of a clear departmental rule against such public discussion, Barr has offered colorful commentary about alleged outrageous things being unearthed by the largely redundant investigation that he and a team under U.S. Attorney John Durham have been conducting since May 2019.

Among many other angry characterizations, he has described the Russian-interference investigation as one of the greatest travesties in American history, and promised to get to the bottom of it. His recent comments indicate that developments in the Durham investigation can be expected in the next few monthsperfect timing to enhance its possible impact on the election. And Barr has made clear that he will not feel constrained from acting, including bringing possible indictments, for fear ofany resulting impact on the election. The departments now-pending motion to dismiss the prosecution against Michael Flynn, for lies to which he twice pleaded guilty, has been another context in which Barr has attacked the FBIs investigation of Russian interference.

[Read: The billion-dollar disinformation campaign to reelect the president]

From this incomplete list of recent, grossly improper actionsand the fact that Barr, though publicly called out repeatedly, seems hell-bent on securing Trumps perpetuation in officeone is well justified to wonder how this can be happening in America. A partial answer is that Barr has worked hard to render ineffective the departmental norms that were put in place after Watergate, so that he now has much greater leeway to behave as he pleases.

In place of respect for an evenhanded process predominantly conducted by career professionals dedicated to fairness and impartiality, Barr has substituted ad hoc reliance on personal confidants to second-guess or take the place of career lawyers in special situations. In place of a scrupulous avoidance of political interference or personal favor, including a long-standing policy largely curtailing communications with the White House on a range of important matters, he has substituted a willingness to act in inappropriate ways at the presidents bidding. He has joined in the undermining of inspectors general, independent watchdogs created after Watergate. Five inspectors general have been fired recently, with no public objection from Barr and in one instance with his vocal support. And he has done his best to destroy the independent stature of the United States attorneys, who are required by law to be appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate. Barr has engineered the removal of a few of them, some in key offices with cases of special interest to himself or the president, andreplaced them where possible with trusted associates serving in an acting role, and thus subject to instant removal if they fail to do Barrs bidding.

For the nations lead law-enforcement officer to play an overt, hands-on role in advancing a presidents campaign strategy is unheard-of in recent history. Even John Mitchell saw fit to resign as attorney general before taking over the leadership of the Committee to Re-elect the President. Barr, on the other hand, has shown no reticence to use the full force of his powers and then some, including violence and intimidation in violation of the constitutional rights of citizens, as tools in Donald Trumps effort to secure reelection.

There is a suggestion though, in public reactions to recent events, that Barrs use of such awesome powers to advance such an inappropriate purpose may prove a bridge too far. The man whose bullheaded persistence has won him the nicknames Honey Badger and The Buffalo, honoring their indifference to obstacles of any sort, may have persisted right into a course of action that will be his ruin. If America is to remain a free nation, Barrs recent course of conduct had better be more than the body politic will tolerate.

This article was originally published in TheAtlantic.Sign up for their newsletter.

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Viewpoint: Bill Barr's Unconstitutional Campaign to Reelect the President - GovExec.com

Ron Rivera will stand during national anthem, might kneel for coin toss – NBC Sports Washington

When Ron Rivera took over as the Washington Football Team's head coach in early January, he inherited a squad who was coming off a dismal 3-13 season. To make matters worse, Washington's best player at the time, Trent Williams, wanted out.

Over the past seven months, Washington's franchise has been in the news plenty, and mostly for bad reasons. The team's name controversy took off in July, which resulted in the franchise officially retiring the name 'Redskins' and logo. Days later, the Washington Post released a story detailing 15 former female employees who said they were sexually harassed by multipleteam executives.

While Rivera just arrived in January, he was the one who immediately spoke on behalf of the organization on these issues. So, if the head coach ever had even taken a step back over the past few months and wondered, 'What did I get myself into?', that would have been completely fair.

Rivera has already said he has no regretsabout taking the Washington job.In an exclusive interview with The Athletic's Ben Standig on Monday, the head coach asked the press to do their part in helping the organization move forward.

"So to me to have these things go on, thats okay. All right, thats fine. But were going to get past that. Okay, were gonna get past that," Rivera told Standig. "And Ben its guys like you and (other local reporters) that could help us. Write all the bad articles now, get all the past out of the way. But as we start going forward, write about where we are and where were going. Help push us forward."

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Rivera did not try to downplay the severity of the situation, either. He knows that what went on with the personnel execs was far from okay.

However, the head coach wants everyone to judge his team on what they do in the future, not what happened in the past. That's fair. After all, he wasn't in the building nor responsible for what has happened in the past.

"Iget it. There are some things that were totally Fd up," Rivera said."Okay, but lets stop telling everybody that everythings Fd up and start saying to everybody, Hey, look, what theyre trying to do. Look how theyre trying to fix it."

Additionally, Rivera doubled down on his comments that he doesn't regret taking the job, saying he felt the organization needed someone to come in and lead them. He emphasized, once again, that he still really likes Washington's young core, too. Joining an organization with a 'coach-centric' approach, similar to the ones in Kansas City, New England and New Orleans, is something Rivera is still plenty excited about.

So, while the recent events that have transpired in Washington would likely throw off many other coaches, Rivera remains committed to turning around the franchise.

"I just look at this, and I think to myself, this is an opportunity, and that not too many things are gonna dampen my spirit about this, Rivera said. "I know its going to be hard. Believe me. This is not all roses. And it hasnt been all roses. Theres been a lot of thorns, but thats all part of it."

Stay connected to the team with the MyTeams app.Click hereto download for comprehensive coverage of your teams.

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Ron Rivera will stand during national anthem, might kneel for coin toss - NBC Sports Washington

This ‘world’s biggest’ messaging and collaboration rollout is based on open source software – ZDNet

While Zoom and Microsoft Teams might have grabbed many of the headlines for keeping us connected during lockdown, open source tools have also been making significant progress.

For example, technology developed by UK software company Element is to be rolled out by the German education system to provide collaboration tools for half a million seats in the states of Schlesweig-Holstein and Hamburg.

Dataport, the public sector infrastructure provider in Germany, will be responsible for managing the servers hosting the app, making sure that the technology complies with German data privacy laws, and deploying the tool to a vast network of schools and offices.

"So far as we know, 500K users makes this the biggest single messaging and collaboration implementation in the world," said Element.

SEE: Guide to Becoming a Digital Transformation Champion (TechRepublic Premium)

At the core of Element's business model is the idea that organizations shouldn't have to surrender the management of communication technologies to big corporations, such as Microsoft Teams, Zoom, Slack or Facebook Workplace.

"We want to democratize control over communication," Element's CEO Matthew Hodgson tells ZDNet needless to say, over an open-source video call. "People in Germany shouldn't be beholden to the legislation happening in the US, or trusting their data through an app controlled by a particular government.

"Empowering organizations to run their own stuff is just a re-levelling effect to decentralize the control of that data to the people who own it in the first place," he continues, "rather than holding it all in whatever organization it might be and hope it doesn't get compromised or pressured by the authorities."

To replace the communication tools that most of us know, Hodgson and his co-founder Amandine Le Pape set out to rethink the entire system.

To replace the communication tools that most of us know, Hodgson and his co-founder Amandine Le Pape set out to rethink the entire system. The duo came up with Matrix, an open-source project that provides developers with the infrastructure, tools and protocols to build their own communication systems.

Matrix provides simple HTTP APIs and SDKs for iOS, Android and Web, on top of which developers can create chat rooms and video conferencing, add read receipts, formatted messages or synchronized conversation history, and even build in IoT solutions.

Element is the flagship application that was built on top of Matrix, that users can leverage to to build their own services if they wish to. "A little bit like Netscape, in the early days, was the flagship way of using the web," says Hodgson.

In fact, to better understand the way that the founders of Element engage with communication tools, Hodgson suggests comparing Matrix to the birth of the web: the internet was created as an open platform for users to build their own webpages. When it comes to communication apps, however, things went down a different route.

Because building a communication system is much harder than setting up a webpage, companies quickly created the WhatsApps, Slacks, and Microsoft Teams that we know and use now commercial services that Hodgson argues resulted in siloed systems and vendor lock-ins, more often than not in the hands of Silicon-Valley-based big tech.

"As a result, we've never had an equivalent of the web as an open platform for people to build communication on," says Hodgson. "And that is what we created with Matrix. You can think of it as being the missing communication tool for the web."

At the core of Matrix, and the by-default method embedded in all the communication systems built on top of the protocol, is end-to-end encryption, which the project's founders see as a fundamental aspect of any modern communication system.

The idea will sit well with many potential customers who are currently faced with apps that do not protect communications with end-to-end encryption. Zoom has been dancing around the method for the past few months, while Slack or Microsoft Teams encrypt customer data in transit and at rest, but have shown no plans to add end-to-end encryption capabilities to their software.

Hodgson explains that many users simply cannot use such apps because of the privacy implications. "This is why we have end-to-end encryption," he says. "If an attacker gets into one of our servers and tries to read the messages, they can't actually access the data."

Matrix sounded like "a crazy idea" when Le Pape and Hodgson came up with it back in 2013; a few years later, and the technology is now a vibrant open-source project with thousands of developers, including teams from Ericsson and Thales, leveraging the protocol to build next-generation communication services.

To generate revenue, Le Pape and Hodgson provide Element as a hosting platform, and offer support to the customers who deploy the service on-premise. The company also developed a number of proprietary apps to carry out specific tasks, such as audit compliance or antivirus scans, to complete their commercial offering.

SEE: GitHub just buried a giant open-source archive in an Arctic vault for 1,000 years

The project is gathering pace, and has seen a ten-fold increase in demand since the COVID-19 crisis has forced organizations online. Companies and public sector bodies found themselves having to rely on what Hodgson calls "centralized American systems" for critical communications, with little control over their data or how to secure it. In that context, Element's offer of a run-your-own system has made huge strides in popularity.

European nations have long been interested in distancing themselves from the technologies potentially controlled by other nations in an effort to reinforce their digital sovereignty. Last month, for example, France and Germany kicked off the GAIA-X cloud project, a non-profit foundation designed to re-establish European control over US and Chinese cloud giants.

It is no surprise, therefore, that the biggest deal signed by Element before the one secured in Germany was with the French government last year. The Matrix-based app Tchap was developed by the French government to replace employee use of Telegram or WhatsApp, and prevent attacks or surveillance from foreign intelligence agencies..

With 300,000 current users across all ministries, Hodgson described the partnership as "the killer app for this use case". "We supplied them with a run-your-own communication tool with proper encryption," he says. "It really was the flagship deployment."

Today, more than 11 million people use Element's technology: still a small player relative to Microsoft Teams' 75 million daily users, or Google Meet's 100 million daily users.

But as the COVID-19 crisis keeps organizations dependent on online collaboration tools for the foreseeable future, and work goes increasingly remote, the appeal of Le Pape and Hodgson's offer seems likely to increase rapidly. And with hacks and privacy scandals getting ever-more sophisticated, the Matrix ecosystem is set to thrive this time, putting the data back where it belongs.

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This 'world's biggest' messaging and collaboration rollout is based on open source software - ZDNet

Bitcoin surges 14% to 8,900 but experts warn price will drop if theres a second Covid wave – The Sun

BITCOIN's value has surged to almost 8,900 in the past 24hours but experts have warned prices could tumble if there's a second coronavirus wave.

The digital cryptocurrency rose by 14 per cent from 7,760 ($9,903) yesterday morning to 8,855 ($11,300) overnight to reach Bitcoin's highest price in almost a year.

Read our coronavirus live blog for the latest news & updates

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It last reached this height back in August 2019, although prices have fallen slightly to 8,370 ($10,679) at the time of writing.

The surge followed the news that US banks are planning to allow customers to hold digital currencies.

Gary McFarlane, Bitcoin analyst at investment platform interactive investor said: "Surprise news from the US that banks will be allowed to provide custody services for Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies has lit a fire under the price of the virtual currency."

Currently, Bitcoin and other virtual currencies can either be stored in digital wallets or you can invest in cryptocurrencies via a platform, and these platforms then hold your money for you.

What is Bitcoin?

BITCOIN got you baffled? Here's what you need to know:

But Mr McFarlane explains that US banks getting in on the act could help to eliminate the risk to consumers over where to hold their Bitcoins, although he points out banks are likely to focus on big businesses investing to begin with.

It's thought savers worried about stock market dips may also be using Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies in a similar way to gold; in a bid to try and preserve their capital.

The FTSE100 index tracking the UK's largest companies crashed when the coronavirus crisis hit earlier this year to below 5,000 from around 7,500. It has since hovered around the 6,000 mark.

Mr McFarlane said: "The prospect of a covid-19 second wave has seen Bitcoin benefit in a similar way to gold by attracting safe haven interest from worried investors."

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But Bitcoin's price can be volatile and it's yet to reach highs of almost 16,000 ($20,419) last seen back in December 2017. That's despite it being seen as the most popular of the cryptocurrencies.

Bitcoin's value plummeted to 3,300 ($4,200) when the coronavirus crisis struck the UK in March and the US implemented a European travel ban.

The cryptocurrency has also been surrounded by controversy with Bitcoin scammers targeting the accounts of high profile Twitter users earlier this month.

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Mr McFarlane said: "Bitcoin watchers will remember in March how its price fell just as hard if not harder than other financial assets, so if there is a reversal in the share market recovery, Bitcoin might not be immune."

It's thought a second wave of the coronavirus pandemic could strike the UK in winter when temperatures fall.

And only today, Prime Minister Boris Johnson warned that Europe was on the verge of a second wave as he defended the government's decision to quarantine travellers from Spain.

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Bitcoin surges 14% to 8,900 but experts warn price will drop if theres a second Covid wave - The Sun

Mercatus Introduces Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning PDF Parser to Rid Time-Consuming, Manual PDF Uploads and Improve Data Quality -…

SAN FRANCISCO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Mercatus, the modern data management platform for private market investors, today announced the availability of PDF Parser, a technology-augmented PDF data extraction for private markets. The latest in a series of new enhancements, the Mercatus platforms PDF Parser feature significantly mitigates the challenges of data on-boarding, eliminating manual extraction of asset reports, investor memos and other custom reporting.

Scraping data from PDFs is a time-consuming, expensive and manual process that is prone to errors and often leads to poor data quality, says Mercatus CEO Haresh Patel. With PDF Parser, we are eliminating the labor-intense task of processing, extracting, cleaning and uploading data from PDFs. By automating the process, businesses can do in two or three minutes what traditionally has taken three or more days. Thats a reduction of $240,000 per reporting cycle for a typical fund manager managing 50 active investments.

Because PDFs are designed for humans and not computers, they do not have a defined structure that allows users to gather data from it easily. With a solid back-end extraction tool, the Mercatus data management platform allows users to query, search, filter, merge, sort and extract texts and images from any PDF documents in an effective way. Features include:

Private market investors are dependent on diverse and rapidly changing unstructured documents. Traditional (optical character recognition) OCR and data extraction techniques that work in adjacent markets with standardized documents simply do not work, says Mercatus CTO Jason Adams. By blending advancements in AI and machine learning paired with human-in-the-loop processing we have provided a solution that answers the demand to interact with these documents at scale. Now critical business data locked away in unstructured documents can finally be accessed and extracted at high volumes in an automated way.

Yann Pron, Partner at Ktlaysis, added, Being able to analyze unstructured data in a systematic and systemic manner is a must-have today. Pushed by disruptive technologiessuch as AI, machine learning and natural language processing (NLP)computer calculation powers have never been as high. Until now this had to be processed, read and written manually into miscellaneous documents, systems and databases. Mercatus latest release is a real step-up in process automation which has been intensively manual until now.

Last week, Mercatus released a No-Code Integration front-end interface that automates the data-in process by connecting to private market applications and databases.

For more information, visit http://www.gomercatus.com

About Mercatus

Mercatus is the modern data management platform for private market investors. Our vision is total transparency across the entire investment lifecycle and investor ecosystem - from LP to GP to Portfolio Company and their underlying investments. Because the truth is in your data. Mercatus built the first data architecture to systematically harness and control data, workflows, and financial models to accelerate and scale growth, reduce operational risk, and achieve alpha. Many leading private market funds leverage Mercatus to manage over $590B of multi-asset investments globally. For more information on what makes our approach different, visit http://www.gomercatus.com.

Connect with Mercatus on LinkedIn and Twitter.

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Mercatus Introduces Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning PDF Parser to Rid Time-Consuming, Manual PDF Uploads and Improve Data Quality -...

China Censors League of Legends Champs Because of Seductive Visual Graphics; Here are the Edited Skins – Tech Times

China censoredLeague of Legendssplash arts by editing their original artworks and some champion's skins. ARedditpost revealed that some skins and splash arts in the Wild Rift had been edited in China to lessen the seductive graphics of each skin.

(Photo : Screenshot from Twitter post of @PixelButts)League of Legends Splash Arts Censored in China: Who's Responsible, Riot or Tencent?

Also Read: League of Legends Spirit Blossom Festival's New Champion: Best Champs to Use to Rank Up Solo Queue This Season

According toMillenium's previous report, sexy aesthetic champions and characters' skins, are nothing new in the popular 5v5 strategic game. Some of the lady characters are wearing fewer clothes, display a sexy visual. If you're a fan of this awesome game, always check LoL's update on TechTimes. Also, check how Tyler1 experience how OP nerfed Aphelios is.

Also Read:[VIDEO] League of Legends: Tyler1 Left Saying 'OK' After Seeing Nerf Aphelios Fight in 1v5

It was explained that the game has been present in China. However, the government still decided to censor certain splash arts of Wild Rift. The edited images were first posted by a Twitter user under the name of "PixelButts."

"Also yes the Wild Rift splash art is censored," captioned the Twitter user.

"Many are tweaked slightly but a few have more significant changes such as janna and jinx is hard to see, but theres now bandages under their top," added PixelButts.

He said that although he is generally against censorship, sometimes there's nothing he can do with the edited champs.

It is common for some Asian countries to censor content that they find inappropriate. On theLeague of Legends Pacific Servers(PCS), Evelynn's original outfit was changed to lessen the character's skin exposure.

(Photo : Screenshot from Twitter post of @PixelButts)League of Legends Splash Arts Censored in China: Who's Responsible, Riot or Tencent?

China's action is comparable to this since Chinese authorities censored some of the Wild Rift's champion splash art. Some of the changes are just minimal. For example, Jinx got a strip of fabric on her chest as censorship.

Other champs were just changed, including Zed, who had additional designs on his armor, and Ahri, who received more decorations for her outfit. However, some champs had major changes. Janna's costume received additional fabric to cover her tummy, as well as Miss Fortune. Shyvanna's design was changed, as well as her dragon.

Some users defended China's action, saying that "making people have less revealing clothes is not censorship." And there are also some saying that it is censorship since the changes were based on Chinese regulations.

To keep you updated withLeague of Legendsnews this season, such as the upcoming new heroes, keep your tabs open on TechTimes.

Visit our website at https://www.techtimes.com/

Also Read: League of Legends Cinematic: Riot's Anime Short Reveals Yone, Yasuo's Demonic Brother: A Playstyle Guide

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Written by:Giuliano de Leon.

2018 TECHTIMES.com All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission.

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China Censors League of Legends Champs Because of Seductive Visual Graphics; Here are the Edited Skins - Tech Times

National Guard Commander To Testify ‘Excessive Force’ Used on White House Protesters – Defense One

Officer on the scene saw spent tear gas canisters, contradicting key details of Attorney General Barrs account of the controversial night.

A National Guard commander who was present during the forcible clearing of protesters in front of the White Houselast month accused the Trump administration of an unprovoked escalation and excessive use of force on peaceful protesters, and contradicted key elements of Attorney General Bill Barrs account including whether tear gas was used in theincident.

In a prepared statement to be delivered to a House committee on Tuesday, Maj. Adam DeMarco said that protesters gathered in Lafayette Park were behaving peacefully, exercising their First Amendment rights when Park Police abruptly moved in to clear the area so that President Donald Trump could walk through to take a photograph at a nearby church, approximately 30 minutes before a 7 p.m. city curfew. Although the Park Police issued three warnings over a megaphone, DeMarco said warnings required both by law and court rulings the announcements were barely audible and I saw no indication that the demonstrators were cognizant of the warnings todisperse.

DeMarco also accused a Park Police liaison officer of misleading him about the use of tear gas. On June 1, DeMarco was on the scene serving as the liaison between the D.C. National Guard and D.C. Health, the city governments department for health, and local hospitals, to facilitate immediate needs requests, surge capacity planning, and emergency events associated with the pandemic. He said that when he asked his Park Police liaison if tear gas was being used on protesters, the liaison officer claimed that explosions DeMarco could see from the clearing operation were stage smoke, not teargas.

But I could feel irritation in my eyes and nose, and based on my previous exposure to tear gas in my training at West Point and later in my Army training, I recognized that irritation as effects consistent with CS or tear gas, DeMarco said. And later that evening, I found spent tear gas cannisters [sic] on the streetnearby.

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Barr, defending the operation in a press conference on June 4, claimed that protesters in the park were growing increasingly unruly and refused to disperse after receiving three warnings. He has claimed that the maneuver was an appropriate use of force needed to create more of a buffer around the White House complex, denying that it was a last-minute change to create a photo opportunity for the president. He has defended police tactics, insisting that there was no gas and pepper spray is not a chemicalirritant.

The Trump administrations use of force at that event, and its handling of the protests in Washington, D.C. broadly,have faced widespread condemnation, including from four prominent retired generals. Trumps first defense secretary, Jim Mattis, former Joint Chiefs chairmen Mike Mullen and Martin Dempsey, and retired top Afghanistan war commander John Allen all issued public missives condemning the militarized response to the protests and unrest, and specifically decried the parkoperation.

DeMarco will appear alongside Gregory Monahan, the acting chief of the Park Police, at 10 a.m. on Monday, Aug. 3, in front of the House Natural Resources Committee, which has jurisdiction over the ParkPolice.

According to DeMarco, he was briefed at approximately 5:30 p.m. that the park was to be cleared in order to install a larger security barricade on H street, pushing the protesters farther away from the White House. Because D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowsers curfew was not until 7 p.m., DeMarco said he was not expecting any movement before then. DeMarco said he also asked prior to the operation whether tear gas would be used, having noticed canisters strapped to Park Police officers vests. The Park Police liaison said the chemical irritant would not be employed, DeMarcosaid.

At 6:05 p.m., DeMarco reported, Barr appeared and conferred with Park Police officers. Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Mark Milley who has been criticized for his presence during the operation also arrived and spoke with DeMarco. General Milley told me to ensure that National Guard personnel remained calm, adding that we were there to respect the demonstrators First Amendment rights, DeMarcosaid.

Milley has denied any prior knowledge of the clearing operation and later said he was wrong for appearing at the protests in fatigues, which critics have said crossed an important line between civilian law enforcement and the military. I should not have been there, he said, in a speech ten dayslater.

The first of three warnings were given at 6:20 p.m., according to DeMarco, and the clearing operation began shortly thereafter. No National Guard personnel participated in the push or engaged in any other use of force against the demonstrators, DeMarco said, backing up official statements from the Pentagon. From the northeast corner of the square, DeMarco said he witnessed people fall to the ground as some Civil Disturbance Unit members of the D.C. police used their shields offensively asweapons.

At around 7:05 p.m., DeMarco said he saw Trump walk towards St. Johns Church, where he would be photographed holding up a Bible. His arrival came as a complete surprise, DeMarco said, because we had not been briefed that he would enter oursector.

As for the new security barrier, whose installation was the stated purpose of the clearing operation, the materials to erect it did not arrive on the scene until around 9:00 pm, and it was not completed until later that night, DeMarcosaid.

DeMarco in his testimony condemned the operation as an unnecessary use of force that was deeply disturbing to me, and to fellow NationalGuardsmen.

Having served in a combat zone, and understanding how to assess threat environments, at no time did I feel threatened by the protestors or assess them to be violent, he said. From my observation, those demonstrators our fellow American citizens were engaged in the peaceful expression of their First Amendment rights. Yet they were subjected to an unprovoked escalation and excessive use offorce.

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National Guard Commander To Testify 'Excessive Force' Used on White House Protesters - Defense One

Washington Football Team coach Ron Rivera will stand during national anthem, might kneel for coin toss – Yahoo Sports

Washington Football Team head coach Ron Rivera will not be kneeling during the national anthem, he told The Athleticon Monday.

Rivera, who earlier this offseasonexpressed support for any of his players who decideto kneel, said he may take a kneeduring the coin toss to show his support of Black Lives Matter. But his decision to stand during the national anthem is tied to honoring family who haveserved.

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"I'm not gonna kneel because my father served in the military," Rivera said."My brother was a first responder. My wife's family was in the military. My dad had brothers that served in World War II. So to me, standing at attention is what I'm going to do. That's how I'm going to honor them. I might kneel during the coin toss because I do support Black Lives Matter. I do support the movement to help correct the policing."

In reiteratinghis support for players who decide to kneel, Rivera citedtheir rights to do so under the first amendment of the Constitution of the United States, which gives people the freedom of speech and right to peaceably assemble.

RELATED: DWAYNE HASKINS UNSURE IF HE WILL KNEEL DURING ANTHEM

"Let's go back to our Constitution, to our Bill of Rights, the amendment," Rivera said."Let's go back to the oath of office to serve and protect. Part of the Constitution is the First Amendment. There's a lot of people out there that support the Second Amendment vehemently. Well, if you support the Second Amendment vehemently, why wouldn't you support the first one, which is freedom of expression, freedom of speech? And that's all that is. That's an extension of one of our unalienable rights, one of our God-given rights, one of the things written into the Constitution. So, again, let's at least applaud that. Let's celebrate that as well."

In June, following the death of George Floyd, Washington running back Adrian Peterson said he "without a doubt"would be kneeling during the national anthem this fall to protest police brutality. He said other players would too: "We're all getting ready to take a knee together."

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Washington Football Team coach Ron Rivera will stand during national anthem, might kneel for coin toss - Yahoo Sports

New Machine Learning Features, Data Integrations, and Upgraded Classification Engines Available in Grooper Version 2.9 – PRNewswire

OKLAHOMA CITY, July 28, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --Grooper, the leading intelligent document processing and digital data integration platform announces the release of version 2.9. Included are fourteen new capabilities that enhance machine learning, classification, separation, data integration, and reporting.

New Machine Learning FeaturesMachine learning is easier and more powerful. The new Rebuild Training features provide tuning and A/B testing using identical training sets and document training decisions.

Integration with BoxBuilt-in integration with Box.com enables file import and export, metadata mapping, data lookups, and more.

Advanced Document ClassificationTackle complicated document sets with advanced classification strategies. Target documents within or across groups that are lexically dissimilar or similar with high accuracy.

New Document ViewerUsers can choose from multiple document renditions to build better data extractions.

Improved Document SeparationDocument separation is now more robust and accurate due to new auto-separation logic. New page extractors separate unstructured documents.

Enhanced Database ExportDefine multiple exports on a single export step within a single database or spanning multiple tables. Multipart database exports are simplified and SQL server-generated identity columns are supported.

CMIS Data LookupsPopulate and validate data fields based on queryable metadata located on CMIS objects.

New Data Annotation Option in Data ReviewExtracted document data is now displayed at the extraction location on the document. This speeds up human data review and includes multiple configurable properties.

Content Type FilteringNow users can enable classification, extraction, and review to proceed in stages for larger more complicated projects.

Compile Stats FeatureThe Compile Stats feature provides comprehensive statistics on classification and extraction activities to assist administrators in developing and troubleshooting advanced content models.

Learn more about Grooper visit http://www.grooper.com.

About GrooperGrooper was built from the ground up by BIS, a company with 35 years of continuous experience developing and delivering new technology. Grooper is an intelligent document processing and digital data integration solution that empowers organizations to extract meaningful information from paper/electronic documents and other forms of unstructured data.

The platform combines patented and sophisticated image processing, capture technology, machine learning, natural language processing, and optical character recognition to enrich and embed human comprehension into data. By tackling tough challenges that other systems cannot resolve, Grooper has become the foundation for many industry-first solutions in healthcare, financial services, oil and gas, education, and government.

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New Machine Learning Features, Data Integrations, and Upgraded Classification Engines Available in Grooper Version 2.9 - PRNewswire