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Bears' revamped defense has been hit hard by injuries in camp, preseason
Bears' revamped defense has been hit hard by injuries in camp, preseason
The Chicago Bears have revamped their defense after finishing near the bottom of the league on that side of the ball last season
2023-08-30 08:20
Taqtile Reimagines AR-Enabled Work Instructions on iPad to Meet Growing Global Demand
Taqtile Reimagines AR-Enabled Work Instructions on iPad to Meet Growing Global Demand
SEATTLE--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jun 8, 2023--
2023-06-08 22:00
Canada tries to address news law concerns, Facebook not convinced
Canada tries to address news law concerns, Facebook not convinced
By Ismail Shakil and David Ljunggren OTTAWA Canada unveiled draft rules on Friday for a law to compel
2023-09-02 00:58
Olivia Dunne was in 'disbelief' after being named Sports Illustrated cover girl: 'It was surreal'
Olivia Dunne was in 'disbelief' after being named Sports Illustrated cover girl: 'It was surreal'
When Livvy Dunne shared her immense excitement and joy on being named the SI Swimsuit cover girl
2023-09-16 17:04
Who is Hailey Dandurand? Hawaiian woman receives lengthy prison sentence for brutally killing substitute teacher Telma Boinville
Who is Hailey Dandurand? Hawaiian woman receives lengthy prison sentence for brutally killing substitute teacher Telma Boinville
Hailey Dandurand and her boyfriend abducted and tied up the victim’s daughter after slaying her inside her home
2023-08-06 04:45
Singapore Air Trounces Hong Kong’s Cathay in Battle for the Skies
Singapore Air Trounces Hong Kong’s Cathay in Battle for the Skies
The fortunes of Singapore Airlines Ltd. and Cathay Pacific Airways Ltd., the flagship airlines of two of Asia’s
2023-06-20 05:00
80 people freed from Australian migrant centers since High Court outlawed indefinite detention
80 people freed from Australian migrant centers since High Court outlawed indefinite detention
Australia's immigration minister says 80 people including convicted criminals who are considered dangerous have been released from Australian migrant detention centers since the High Court ruled last week that their indefinite detention wis unconstitutional
2023-11-13 12:26
Meta faces renewed criticism over end-to-end encryption amid child safety fears
Meta faces renewed criticism over end-to-end encryption amid child safety fears
Child protection experts have fiercely criticised social media giant Meta over its plans for end-to-end encryption, accusing the tech firm of prioritising profit over children’s safety. Simon Bailey, a former police chief constable who was national lead for child protection at the National Police Chiefs’ Council, accused Meta of a “complete loss of social and moral responsibility” over the plans. John Carr, who is secretary of a coalition of UK children’s charities to deal with internet safety, called the move “utterly unconscionable”. Their comments came after head of the National Crime Agency Graeme Biggar said introducing end-to-end encryption on Facebook would be like “consciously turning a blind eye to child abuse”. Speaking at a lecture in Westminster earlier this month, the law enforcement chief said it should be up to the government rather than technology companies to draw the line between privacy and child safety. Meta responded by saying it has robust measures in place to combat abuse and that it expects to make more reports to law enforcement after end-to-end encryption is brought in. Mr Bailey said as he had seen the scale of online sexual abuse grow, he also saw “big tech companies, like Meta, absolve themselves of any responsibility when it comes to tackling online child sexual abuse”. The former chief constable said: “Big tech facilitates and, through their algorithms, encourages this abuse to take place. It is time their complete loss of social and moral responsibility is highlighted and challenged Simon Bailey “In response to what they know and can see as a global pandemic of online child sexual abuse, they have consciously decided to take the easy way out of dealing with the problem. “Meta, one of the largest carriers of this abuse, has decided to implement end-to-end encryption by default, and effectively stop law enforcement’s ability to identify and arrest offenders and, ultimately, to protect children. “They are using the guise of privacy to justify their position and in doing so, are continuing to put profit before child protection. It is time their complete loss of social and moral responsibility is highlighted and challenged.” Mr Carr, who is secretary of the UK Children’s Charities’ Coalition on Internet Safety said: “If introduced without the appropriate safeguards that will allow law enforcement to detect and prevent online child sexual abuse, end-to-end encryption threatens to deny justice to huge numbers of children. “Children are major user of social media. A great many use Meta’s platforms, including Facebook Messenger and Instagram Direct. “The design and nature of these platforms make them a perfect space for dangerous people to discover, befriend, groom and sexually abuse children – and if end-to-end encryption is introduced without appropriate safeguards, Meta will be willingly blinding itself to the abuse taking place online. “Their plans are utterly unconscionable – particularly when there are tech solutions out there that enable end-to-end encryption to exist and child sexual abuse to be detected, reported, and justice to be served. “Big tech companies, like Meta, must think again before introducing a blanket roll-out of end-to-end encryption across their platforms. “If they don’t, thousands of children will be at risk, and we will fail to solve the growing problem of online child sexual abuse. Do better Meta – it’s time to prioritise child safety over profit.” I cannot emphasise enough the impact this has on me and other victims of this abuse Rhiannon-Faye McDonald Rhiannon-Faye McDonald, head of advocacy at the Marie Collins Foundation, was herself sexually assaulted at the age of 13 after a predator contacted her online. She said: “To say I am disappointed that Meta is continuing with their plans to roll out end-to-end encryption is an understatement. The measures they say will be in place – using metadata to identify patterns of behaviour rather than content – are not good enough. “This move gives child sex abusers the ability to act undetected on its platforms as Meta will also lose the ability to use technology to detect and remove child sexual abuse images and videos. “As a victim of child sexual abuse myself, where my abuse was documented and shared online by the perpetrator, I cannot emphasise enough the impact this has on me and other victims of this abuse. “I am horrified that the images of my abuse could be infinitely reshared across the globe with no hope of them being blocked or taken down. How is this protecting my privacy?” She said it is “incredibly worrying” that big tech companies “can unilaterally make decisions that limit our ability to protect children”. A Meta spokesperson said: “The overwhelming majority of Brits already rely on apps that use encryption to keep them safe from hackers, fraudsters and criminals. “We don’t think people want us reading their private messages so have spent the last five years developing robust safety measures to prevent, detect and combat abuse while maintaining online security. “We recently published an updated report setting out these measures, such as restricting people over 19 from messaging teens who don’t follow them and using technology to identify and take action against malicious behaviour. “As we roll out end-to-end encryption, we expect to continue providing more reports to law enforcement than our peers due to our industry-leading work on keeping people safe.” Read More Call of Duty launch sparks record traffic on broadband networks Crypto investment fraud warning issued by major bank Council investigating extent of cyber attack that affected website and systems Setback for Ireland as EU legal adviser recommends revisit of Apple tax case Smartphones ‘may be able to detect how drunk a person is with 98% accuracy’ Ireland and Apple await major development in long-running EU tax dispute
2023-11-13 08:01
Mount Taranaki: Climber survives 600m fall with minor injuries
Mount Taranaki: Climber survives 600m fall with minor injuries
The man was saved by snow and softened ice after tumbling from New Zealand's Mount Taranaki.
2023-09-11 17:45
FBI finds skulls, other human remains decorating Kentucky man's apartment
FBI finds skulls, other human remains decorating Kentucky man's apartment
When FBI agents arrived at James Nott's Kentucky apartment with a search warrant on Tuesday, they asked if anyone else was home.
2023-07-14 23:50
Indonesia Races to Extinguish Wildfires as Dry Season Hits Peak
Indonesia Races to Extinguish Wildfires as Dry Season Hits Peak
Firefighters are rushing to extinguish forest and land fires across parts of Indonesia, with the scorching weather in
2023-10-01 12:23
Work from yurt? Co-working spaces are getting weird
Work from yurt? Co-working spaces are getting weird
At the start of the Covid-19 pandemic, nobody wanted to work full time in the office. Three years later, many of those same people have soured on working full time at home.
2023-07-01 18:00