Tuesday, August 20, 2024

EXCLUSIVE
Pro-Palestine group takes credit for hacking Donald Trump-Elon Musk interview on X as 2024 gears up to be the most hackable election ever

By Matthew Phelan Senior Science Reporter For Dailymail.Com
14 August 2024

Pro-Palestinian hackers, working anonymously under the name RipperSec, claimed credit for a cyber-attack on Elon Musk's live interview with Donald Trump this week.

And a major cybersecurity firm said the hack included a 'highly targeted operation, specifically aimed at Donald Trump's personal Twitter [X] account' alongside its assault on the pair's livestream, sowing chaos for their X 'Spaces' interview Monday.

Though one London-based expert told DailyMail.com he would take the firm's claims 'with a pinch of salt for now' — the murky nature of these technical difficulties during the interview has raised the specter of US election's increasing digital vulnerability.
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Since June, for example, the FBI has pursued a quiet investigation into alleged Iranian hacking of both Republican and Democratic presidential campaigns. 


One of China 's largest cybersecurity firms has confirmed tech mogul Elon Musk's claim that hackers struck his livestream interview with presidential hopeful Donald Trump (left)

Compounding concerns over those attacks, 20 cybersecurity experts delivered a stern warning to Congress this March calling for a phase-out of voting machines that they said are 'not reliable against the danger of hacking or mis-programming.'

Critics had initially dismissed Musk's cyberattack claim as face-saving bluster from a man some see as an increasingly erratic and heedlessly opinionated billionaire.

'There appears to be a massive DDoS attack on X,' Musk posted to his social site, once known as Twitter, as his Trump stream crashed. 'Working on shutting it down.'

As one computer science professor at the University of California, Riverside, Emiliano De Cristofaro, told Newsweek: 'There is no evidence of any malicious activity happening but more importantly no other functionality was affected.'

De Cristofaro said that he doubted a Distributed Denial of Service (DDOS) attack — in which a coordinated influx of traffic overwhelms a site's servers — caused the crash.


The firm, QAX XLab, identified a 'highly targeted operation, specifically aimed at Donald Trump's personal Twitter [X] account' and more, amid the chaotic 'Spaces' interview Monday. Above, 20 military attachés from the MidEast and Africa visit QAX to talk network security

'It is much more likely that the platform just couldn't handle a sudden big spike in the number of users trying to stream,' the computer scientist opined.

Others questioned the motives of the Palestinian rights 'hacktivists' that took credit for the attack, claiming their boasts were a gambit to boost their activist message.

'Rippersec is a pro-Palestine hacktivist group who conducts DDoS attacks motivated by geopolitical events,' digital security writer CyberKnow posted to X.

'The group like many hacktivist groups also thrives off attention,' the writer warned, 'making it easy for them to claim this to improve credibility and reputation.'

But researchers with XLab, the cybersecurity research and threat analysis wing of China's cybersecurity firm QAX, believed they had unearthed real evidence to the contrary — laying out their case for a confirmed DDoS attack in a post Wednesday.

QAX XLab said: 'We identified four Mirai botnet C2s (command and controllers) involved in the attack. Additionally, other attack groups also participated using methods like HTTP proxy attacks.' Above, Donald Trump sits for his Monday X Spaces interview


Above, a copy of the 'exact attack payloads' used in Monday's 'highly destructive attacks [...] specifically aimed at Donald Trump's personal Twitter account,' according to China's XLab

'We identified four Mirai botnet C2s (command and controllers) involved in the attack. Additionally, other attack groups also participated using methods like HTTP proxy attacks,' the firm's researchers reported in a blog post.

'Mirai' is a form of malicious code that turns internet-connected devices running a Linux operating system into remote-controlled 'zombies' for a 'botnet' army.



'The attack lasted from 8:37am to 9:28am Beijing time [8:37–9:28pm Eastern],' XLab noted, 'which closely matches the delay durations in the start time of the interview.' Above, the logo for Chinese cybersecurity firm QAX - whose XLab studied the hack

In an 'HTTP proxy attack,' hackers intercept and modify web traffic between sites, servers and computers — whether to steal private data or alter the content for a variety of mischief.

'The attack lasted from 8:37am to 9:28am Beijing time [8:37–9:28pm Eastern],' XLab noted, 'which closely matches the delay durations in the start time of the interview.'

'Our analysis indicates that the attack did occur,' their report summed it up.

As proof of their analysis, the firm posted screen captures of a social media channel 'UglyBotnet' in which one anonymous user appeared to take credit for the attack.

'Just crashed twitter round 2,' that user, whose handle was iholdLTC, claimed.

Cybersecurity expert and director of the UK firm NetBlocks Alp Toker, however, was skeptical of QAX XLab's interpretation of these findings.

As he told DailyMail.com via email: 'The HTTP attack described in that report wouldn't likely have been able to bring down the X Spaces streaming feature as it appears to target a different part of the platform's infrastructure.'


As proof of their analysis, QAX XLab posted screencaptures of a social media channel 'UglyBotnet' in which one anonymous user appeared to take credit for the attack (above)

Critics had initially dismissed Musk's cyberattack claims as face-saving bluster from a man some see as an increasingly erratic and heedlessly opinionated billionaire. Above, Elon Musk sitting in a chair on Monday in a room with a small dog and an American flag

Toker also expressed doubt that the outage could have been caused by the type of DDoS attack specified by the XLab report: a 'UDP attack' in which hackers crowd out legitimate site users with their own User Datagram Protocol (UDP) packets.

'Note that X was able to restore the stream by limiting the number of concurrent listeners,' Toker pointed out, 'a measure that wouldn't have halted the impact of a UDP packet flood or inundation attack [like a DDoS] targeting HTTPS ports.'

Two anonymous current staffers at X appeared to corroborate this assessment, with one telling The Verge that they were '99 percent' sure Musk lied about the hack.

But Toker caveated his take by noting it was 'a very quick preliminary analysis' and he 'can't validate the claims either way' with any high degree of certitude.

China's QAX XLab team, however, reported that they were certain that these attacks were 'obviously well prepared and highly targeted,' in another post.

And at least one nation, Iran, is being actively investigated by the FBI for attempting to hack both major US political parties' presidential campaigns this cycle, according to the Washington Post.


Above, Donald Trump sits for his X (formerly Twitter) Spaces chat with Musk on Monday

While Iran has denied interfering in US elections, the Post reports that hackers sponsored by Iran had targeted advisers to the Democratic campaigns of President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris, as well as Trump associate Roger Stone.

Trump's campaign went public over the weekend accusing Iran of hacking one of its websites, noting that the FBI was investigating the breach.



'We were just informed by Microsoft Corporation that one of our many websites was hacked by the Iranian Government - Never a nice thing to do!' Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform on Saturday.

Grant Smith, an attorney for Stone, said his client 'was contacted by Microsoft and the FBI regarding this matter and continues to cooperate with these organizations.'

Earlier this election cycle, over 20 election cybersecurity experts took their own concerns to Capitol Hill, signing a joint warning on the need to replace key voting machines with harder-to-hack 'optical scanning' voting machines.

The machines would replace so-called 'ballot-marking devices,' where voters punch in their choices on a computer screen or via buttons — which, unlike paper ballots, increase the chances that their votes could be manipulated by a cunning software substitution.

'Most Pennsylvania counties use hand-marked paper ballots, counted by machine and recountable by hand. That's the state-of-the-art most reliable method,' Princeton cybersecurity expert Professor Andrew Appel told Congress in his March testimony.

'But 14 counties are using touchscreen ballot-marking devices for all in-person voters,' the Princeton professor continued, 'and that is a disaster waiting to happen.'

Unlike Professor Appel, NetBlocks Toker was more optimistic about the security of America's voting machine infrastructure.

Above, Princeton cybersecurity expert Professor Andrew Appel during a March 2024 hearing, where he warned Congress about touchscreen ballot-marking devices in use in Pennsylvania

'The US has robust protections for elections, including a paper trail for votes and competent cybersecurity agencies,' Toker told DailyMail.com, 'which makes hacking the actual election results difficult.'

But he struck a different tone on the issue of online disinformation campaigns and the proven threat of malicious hacks targeting candidates.

'The human element in the run-up to the election is a different matter and remains the weakest link,' the NetBlocks director said, 'with [political] campaigns at risk from social engineering attacks, damaging leaks and potential insider threats.'

'The general public is also an easy target for misinformation campaigns by foreign state actors,' according to Toker, 'or even non-state actors with a vested interest.'

One vulnerability that Toker stressed might make these issues worse, is America's 'growing political polarization' which has transformed these risks into a game of partisan gamesmanship.

'Cyber risks may be downplayed or overlooked by partisans,' he cautioned, 'where they're perceived only to target the "other side."'
Swift Backlash

Swifties Erup in Fury Afte Donald Trump Uses AI to Fake Taylor Swift Endorsement
"Swifties, now is your chance to destroy Trump and AI in one fell swoop.


Kate Green / Grant Baldwin via Getty / Futurism
Aug 19, 5:30 PM EDT   by Maggi Harrison Dupré


Swifties Assemble

Donald Trump's AI streak continues — and now, the Swifties are getting involved.

Hours after sharing an AI-generated image of vice president Kamala Harris leading a fake communist rally, the former president took to Truth Social to "accept" a fabricated endorsement from Taylor Swift and her clans of fans known as the Swifties.

"I accept!" Trump captioned the post, which featured various screenshots of X-formerly-Twitter posts that combined real images of one Trump-supporting Swift fan — a 19-year-old who, according to Wired, has sold six "Swifties for Trump" shirts on Etsy — with multiple images of uncanny valley-esque young women bearing telltale signs of AI generation.

One included image was that of a fake Swift herself depicted as Uncle Sam, captioned "TAYLOR WANTS YOU TO VOTE FOR DONALD TRUMP."

One of the posts, a fake article announcing that Swifties had joined the Trump movement following a foiled ISIS plot to bomb an Eras Tour concert in Austria, was marked with the word "SATIRE" in capital letters. Other fake images included in the lineup, however, weren't marked as fake or AI-generated. Multiple screenshots also came from a right-wing poster who regularly shares misinformation.

To be clear, Swift has yet to endorse either candidate in the 2024 race, but backed the Biden-Harris campaign in 2020 via cookies. And in any case, it's unclear what Trump was really even trying to do here, besides incur the wrath of some Swifties — which some are pointing out might not have been the smartest political move considering their big reputation for being intense and influential.

"Swifties, now is your chance to destroy Trump and AI in one fell swoop," one X user wrote. "You were made for this. You are the army we need."

It's a No

A number of Swift fans took to X to denounce the alleged "Swifties for Trump" movement (which, also per Wired, doesn't appear to be much of a real movement after all).

"Real Swifties hate Donald Trump btw," wrote one perturbed Swift fan, who added in a follow-up that "you can't be a Swiftie and support convicted criminal, that can't co-exist."

"Oh i just know [Tree Paine] is writing up a GOOD lawsuit," added another, referring to Swift's much-feared publicist.

"'Swifties for Trump' obviously don't know who Taylor Swift HATES," another fan chimed in, sharing multiple screenshots of real Swift tweets from 2020 denouncing the former president's actions during the Black Lives Matter protests and "calculated dismantling of the USPS" ahead of the 2020 election.

Swift has yet to weigh in on the possibly-illegal faux endorsement. In the meantime, rest assured, her fans are waiting in the wings to come to her defense.

More on AI and 2024: After Falsely Accusing Kamala Harris of Using AI, Donald Trump Posts AI Slop About Her on Twitter

UK
Thousands sign petition to stop CO2 pipeline

Rufus Pickles
Local Democracy Reporting Service
BBC
Getty Images
Exxon Mobil is seeking permission for an underground pipeline from its Fawley oil refinery

A petition to stop a carbon dioxide pipeline project coming to the Isle of Wight has gathered nearly 3,000 signatures.

Exxon Mobil unveiled plans on 18 July seeking permission for an underground pipeline to transport captured CO2 from its Fawley oil refinery near Southampton.

Little Atherfield resident Christopher Davis started the petition and said the project would leave a “massive scar” across the island.

Exxon Mobil has been approached for comment.

The American multinational oil and gas corporation said the CO2 would be taken to a deep rock formation in the English Channel for safe storage.

Exxon Mobil
Further public consultations are planned over the planned corridors

The corporation is looking for views on its Solent CO2 Pipeline Project, which proposes three possible routes, two of which travel beneath the Isle of Wight.

The Isle of Wight North to South corridor is 26km long and stretches south from Lepe under the Solent seabed.

After passing to the west of Gurnard, it continues south to Little Atherfield.

The 24km Isle of Wight North to West corridor follows the same route from Lepe under the Solent seabed, before heading south west towards Dunsbury near Brook.

Mr Davis said the pipeline would “devastate” areas of outstanding natural beauty, and sites of special scientific interest, such as unique wetland and protected animal habitats, including those of endangered red squirrels.

Richard Quigley, Labour MP for Isle of Wight West, and Nick Stuart from Isle of Wight Council have criticised the project.

They both echo Mr Davis’s fears over the project’s impact on the island’s landscape.

The government has a general election manifesto commitment to carbon capture and storage (CCS) technology, with £1bn of investment pledged for carbon capture deployment.

Over 1,000 UAW Members Go On Strike at Cornell University

ITHACA – After months of negotiations, over 1,000 UAW members have walked out on strike at Cornell University, as the university has failed to present a fair package and has not bargained in good faith, stalling and retaliating against protected union activity by the workers.

The membership, made up of maintenance and facilities workers, dining workers, gardeners, custodians, agriculture and horticulture workers and others, are facing declining real wages even as Cornell’s endowment has ballooned and tuition revenue has skyrocketed. Over the past four years, Cornell’s endowment has soared 39% to nearly $10 billion and tuition has increased 13% – all while workers’ buying power has fallen 5%. 

Many of the workers have had to move out of Ithaca to afford housing and must pay expensive parking fees to park on campus. The wage for most at the university is less than $22 per hour, far lower than what economists estimate it costs for a family to live in the region. The compensation for top administrators exceeded $12.4 million in 2022.

“Workers at Cornell are fed up with being exploited and used. The university would much rather hoard its wealth and power than pay its workers fairly,” said UAW Local 2300 President Christine Johnson. “Cornell could have settled this weeks ago. Instead, they’ve scoffed and laughed at us and broken federal law. We’re done playing around.”

UAW Local 2300 recently filed seven separate unfair labor practice charges with the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) against Cornell University, citing violations of workers’ rights and federal labor laws amid ongoing contract negotiations.

“The workers at Cornell are pushing back against the university’s arrogance and greed. With a $10 billion endowment, the administration can more than afford the members’ demands,” said UAW Region 9 Director Daniel Vicente. “Workers in Local 2300 are showing the university that they are willing to do what’s needed to win what they deserve.”

Cornell University workers are the latest UAW members standing up to billionaire class greed. Thousands of UAW members have won record contracts in the last year, including auto workers at Daimler Truck, the Big Three automakers, and Allison Transmission workers in Indianapolis, IN.

#


Monday, August 19, 2024

AOC Slams Trump As Union Buster at Dem Convention

By Michael Katz | Monday, 19 August 2024 
NEWSMAX

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., a member of the far-left wing "Squad" of House Democrats and a frequent GOP antagonist, laid into former President Donald Trump on Monday night as the Democratic National Convention opened in Chicago.

"Chicago, we have to help [Kamala Harris] win because we know that Donald Trump would sell this country for a dollar if it meant lining his own pockets and greasing the palms of his Wall Street friends," Ocasio-Cortez said in her speech, a portion of which aired live on Newsmax and simulcast on the Newsmax2 online streaming platform.

"And I, for one, am tired about of hearing about how a two-bit union buster thinks of himself as more of a patriot than the woman who fights every single day to lift working people out from under the boots of greed trampling on our way of life."

Ocasio-Cortez said Trump can't love this country if he only fights for the wealthy and big business.

"To love this country is to fight for its people," she said. "All people, working people, every-day Americans like bartenders and factory workers and fast-food cashiers who punch a clock and are on their feet all day in some of the toughest jobs out there."


AOC speaks to the middle class in her first major convention appearance

August 19, 2024
By  C Mandler
NPR


Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) speaks onstage during the first day of the Democratic National Convention at the United Center on August 19, 2024 in Chicago, Illinois.Joe Raedle/Getty Images

The NPR Network will be reporting live from Chicago throughout the week bringing you the latest on the Democratic National Convention.

New York Representative and member of the "Squad," Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, began her speech at the DNC by thanking Kamala Harris and Tim Walz for their "vision," and Joe Biden for his "leadership."

She then weaved her own story of growing up middle class in New York into the stories of the upbringings of Harris and Walz.

"There is nothing wrong with working for a living. Imagine having leaders who understand that," she told the cheering crowd.

This was the congresswoman's first major convention speech, for which she was given a primetime slot. In 2020, Ocasio-Cortez addressed the DNC crowd with a pre-recorded minute-and-a-half-long endorsement for Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders.

Ocasio-Cortez also used her time at the podium to slam former President Trump, saying, “We know Trump would sell this country for a dollar if it meant lining his own pockets and greasing palms of his Wall Street friends."

"I, for one, am tired of hearing about how a two-bit union buster thinks of himself as more of a patriot than the woman who fights every single day to lift working people out from under the boots of greed trampling on our way of life," she added.

The congresswoman was also seemingly the first person on stage to reference Israel's war on Gaza, saying that Harris has been “working tirelessly to achieve a ceasefire in Gaza.”

Following the end of her speech, the crowd cheered, "AOC! AOC!" as she walked off the stage.




WATCH: Rep. Alexandra Ocasio-Cortez speaks at 2024 Democratic National Convention

 

New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez delivered the first mention of the war in Gaza from the DNC stage.

WATCH LIVE: 2024 Democratic National Convention Night 1

“And she is working tirelessly to secure a cease-fire in Gaza and bringing the hostages home,” Ocasio-Cortez said to cheers in the crowd.

Ocasio-Cortez has been one of the most critical voices in Congress of the Biden administration’s policy on Israel-Palestine and has called for greater restrictions on military aid to Israel. But she and other progressives have also been in dialogue with the administration on its policy, which has caused her to face pushback from some on the hard left.


UAW President Shawn Fain tears into Donald Trump during DNC speech: 

‘Trump Is A Scab’

UAW President Shawn Fain contrasts the working-class policies of presidential candidates Donald Trump and Kamala Harris during his Democratic National Convention speech.



UAW’s Shawn Fain Blasts ‘Scab’ Trump In DNC Speech

The convention’s first day showcased the labor support lining up behind Kamala Harris’ campaign, with the crowd chanting, “Trump’s a scab!”


By Dave Jamieson
Aug 19, 2024

Labor leaders sent a message loud and clear on the opening day Monday of the Democratic National Convention in Chicago: Unions stand behind Vice President Kamala Harris in her quest to keep former President Donald Trump out of the White House.

United Auto Workers President Shawn Fain summed up the sentiment when he removed his blazer while speaking onstage, revealing a red T-shirt that read: “Trump is a scab. Vote Harris.”

“When the UAW stands up, we know who stands with us and who stands against us,” Fain told the crowd. “Donald Trump laughs about firing workers who go on strike. Kamala Harris stands shoulder to shoulder with workers when they’re on strike. And that’s the difference.”

Delegates responded to Fain’s remarks with chants of “Trump’s a scab!”

Fain was one of a half-dozen union leaders who addressed the crowd Monday night, showcasing the Democratic Party’s close ties to organized labor.

Some of the largest unions quickly announced they were backing Harris after President Joe Biden dropped out of the race last month, and the AFL-CIO labor federation of 60 unions said Harris received a unanimous endorsement from its executive council.


Shawn Fain, president of the United Automobile Workers, speaks Monday during the Democratic National Convention in Chicago.
Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call via Getty Images

Organized labor is historically a pillar of the Democratic Party and could prove pivotal in driving turnout for Harris and down-ballot Democrats in battleground states such as Michigan, Nevada and Pennsylvania.

Kenneth Cooper, president of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, urged union members to get behind the Harris campaign, noting that Harris had cast a tie-breaking vote to pass a massive pension rescue for union workers and retirees.

“She has come through for all of us,” Cooper said. “Now it’s our turn to come through for her.”

There was, however, one striking omission from the DNC’s union-heavy speaker list on Monday: Sean M. O’Brien, president of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters.

O’Brien angered many Democrats and union activists when he sought and accepted Trump’s invitation to speak at the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee last month. Trump was overtly hostile to unions and union organizing during his first term in the White House, and precious few Republicans support policies that would bolster the labor movement.

O’Brien used the opportunity at the RNC to court Republican support for unions. But his appearance, which included praising Trump as “one tough S.O.B.,” may have come at a political price: A Teamsters spokesperson told HuffPost that the DNC never responded to O’Brien’s request for a speaker slot in Chicago.

Mpox Isn't More Infectious for Gay and Bisexual Men

The director-general of the World Health Organization declared the virus a "public health emergency of international concern" in August 2024.

Madison Dapcevich
Published Aug. 19, 2024
SNOPES
Image courtesy of Getty Images

There is no evidence to suggest that gay or bisexual men are biologically more susceptible to mpox.

Rather, health experts warn that the virus is spreading within that community due largely to human habits, and the World Health Organization has previously said men who have sex with other men are a vulnerable population.

Mpox is a virus that can be spread through respiratory droplets and skin-to-skin contact, and thus sexual activities in general.

In mid-August 2024, the director-general of the World Health Organization, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, declared mpox a "public health emergency of international concern" because of a growing number of cases in the Democratic Republic of Congo and other African nations.

As the virus — which was formerly known as monkeypox — spread, some social media users began sharing posts that misstated scientific facts about the disease to exaggerate its danger. One such user posted (archived) headlines about the spread of the disease between men and about cases in children in an attempt to imply a connection between homosexuality and pedophilia.

That post dredged up a claim shared widely 2022, when the virus spread outside of its endemic African range to areas it isn't normally reported in — including the United States and parts of Europe. Social media posts (archived) implied then that the properties of mpox allow the virus to spread faster among men who have sex with men, or that gay and bisexual men are more susceptible to infection:

This was not true. As far as medical health experts are concerned, there is nothing about the mpox virus that targets gay or bisexual men over others. Neither does AIDS, for that matter. Transmission within such communities is largely due to human behavior — not how the virus itself behaves within infected people's immune systems.

In 2022, it was true that mpox spread faster within some communities of men who have sex with other men, giving public health officials reason to issue public warnings to the LGBTQ+ community. Put another way, men who have sex with other men were found to be more susceptible to the virus compared to other people, simply because of who was infected and where, not because of biological properties of the virus. Transmission can simply be explained by human behavior. (More on that below.)

A leading adviser to the WHO told The Associated Press in 2022 that the "unprecedented outbreak" that year likely began through sexual transmission during two raves in Spain and Belgium.

"We know monkeypox can spread when there is close contact with the lesions of someone who is infected, and it looks like sexual contact has now amplified that transmission," Dr. David Heymann said.

As we have previously reported, mpox is a DNA virus related to smallpox in the poxvirus group. (DNA viruses are those that have genomes that can be replicated by the host, meaning that they use the host to make copies of themselves to further spread through the body during the course of infection.) Mpox infections are rare, but they can lead to serious complications that begin with flulike symptoms and progress to a widespread rash on the face and body.

Though not easily transmitted between people (the virus mainly spreads from infected animals to humans), human-to-human transmission occurs through the swapping of bodily fluids and touch — including sexual activities if contact is made with the lesions of an infected person — as well as shared personal items, such as contaminated clothing and bedding. Health experts recommend avoiding contact with anyone who is exhibiting symptoms, and for symptomatic individuals to isolate at home and talk to a health worker.

"Stigmatizing people because of a disease is never ok. Anyone can get or pass on monkeypox, regardless of their sexuality," the WHO said.

With regard to the 2022 outbreak, the WHO issued a public health advisory for men who have sex with other men.

"Some cases have been identified through sexual health clinics in communities of gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men. It is important to note that the risk of monkeypox is not limited to men who have sex with men. Anyone who has close contact with someone who is infectious is at risk," the global health agency said.

Although a sizable amount of mpox cases in 2022 were confirmed in men who have sex with men, there is no evidence to suggest that gay or bisexual men are biologically more susceptible to the virus. Rather, health experts warn that the virus is spreading within that community due largely to human habits. Regardless of a person's sexuality, they can become infected with mpox through sexual contact — or any physical contact, for that matter — with an infected person either via respiratory droplets or by touching skin lesions and bodily fluids.
Gaza Protesters Breach Democratic Convention Fence In Chicago

AFP
 August 20, 2024
Chicago, US

Riot police officers block a road as demonstrators take part in the rally March on the DNC on the sidelines of the Democratic National Convention (DNC) in Chicago, Illinois, U.S., August 19, 2024. (Reuters)

A small group of around 100 demonstrators broke off from a larger march involving thousands of people



Donald Trump Posts Image Of Fake Taylor Swift Endorsement




Protesters against Israel’s war in Gaza briefly breached the outer security fence of the Democratic convention in Chicago, hours before US President Joe Biden was set to pass the torch to new nominee Kamala Harris.

A small group of around 100 demonstrators broke off from a larger march involving thousands of people and targeted the metal barriers surrounding the United Center on the first day of the party gathering

Police in blue helmets with shields and carrying black batons prevented them from getting to the inner cordon. One demonstrator clad in black was carried out by their arms and legs by several officers, an AFP correspondent saw.

Protest groups have called for mass demonstrations throughout the week against the Biden-Harris administration’s support for Israel’s war on Hamas following the Palestinian militant group’s deadly October 7 attacks.

Chicago police said in a statement that protesters “breached a portion of anti-scale fencing along the Democratic National Convention’s outer perimeter.” “Law enforcement personnel were immediately on-scene and contained the situation. At no point was the inner perimeter breached, and there was no threat to any protectees,” police said.

Police later advanced on a park near the convention center to clear it of demonstrators. Chants of “Free Palestine” and “Let’s March” continued as about half a dozen holdout activists, one wearing a pink gas mask, began to leave.

The Gaza war has been a hugely divisive issue for the Democratic Party ahead of the November 5 election. It has threatened to alienate Muslim and Arab-American voters, once a reliable Democratic voting bloc, particularly in key battleground states

Thousands march against Gaza war at Democratic convention

By Andrea Shalal and Bianca Flowers for Reuters



A protest to demand reproductive justice, defend the rights of trans and queer people and demand a ceasefire in Gaza on the eve of the Democratic National Convention at the United Centre in Chicago, Illinois, on August 18, 2024. Photo: AFP / Matthew Hatcher

Thousands of mostly peaceful pro-Palestinian protesters marched in Chicago on Monday as President Joe Biden arrived for the opening day of the Democratic National Convention, in a show of force against his administration's support for Israel in the Gaza war.

After hours of peaceful demonstrations, dozens of protesters broke through part of the perimeter security fence, drawing riot police to the site, a Reuters witness said.

The Democratic National Convention security team did not respond to a request for comment on whether the protesters were arrested.

"Law enforcement personnel are currently on scene and more information will be provided when available," said a Chicago city spokesperson.

Chanting intensified ahead of the fence breach, as protesters reached a neighbourhood park on Chicago's West Side and paused to amplify their calls for a ceasefire. Amid the noise, the crowd turned its frustration toward Vice President Kamala Harris, referring to the Democratic candidate as "Killer Kamala".



A person films the crowd during the protest rally in Chicago. Photo: AFP

Chicago police formed a perimeter around the park on foot to contain protesters, with some police personnel on bikes.

Still, the umbrella group "March on the DNC" drew fewer supporters than expected to a park outside the convention arena, hours before Biden was to address the gathering.

They started a two kilometre march near where Democratic delegates will nominate Harris as their candidate to face Republican Donald Trump in November's presidential election.

Organisers had expected tens of thousands of protesters - enough to fill the park and the march route - Hatem Abudayyeh, a spokesman for March on the DNC, said on Monday. By afternoon though, several thousand protesters had gathered for speeches and the park was only half full.

The coalition of more than 200 groups includes those advocating for a variety of causes from reproductive rights to racial justice. Many people were coming from Palestinian and Arab communities in Illinois and neighbouring states, organisers said last week.

Roman Fritz, at 19 one of the youngest Wisconsin delegates, wore a scarf imprinted with the traditional Palestinian keffiyeh pattern. He planned to participate in the march but had no plans to disrupt the official events later, and said he supported Harris as the party nominee to beat Trump.

Dozens of Muslim delegates and their allies, angry at US support for Israel's offensive in Gaza, are seeking changes in the Democratic platform and plan to press for an arms embargo, putting the party on guard for disruptions to high-profile speeches at the convention.

Some protesters were doubtful that the party will change its platform.

"It'll never happen," said Mwalimu Sundiata Keita, who travelled from Cincinnati, Ohio, to join the protest. "It's the policy of the party to support Israel, and until that policy changes, that's the way it's going to be."

Senan Shaqdeh, 54, a member of the executive committee of the Palestinian American Organisations Network, said additional buses from as far away as Florida were expected to deliver more protesters to the site of the march throughout the day.

"The Democratic Party should not expect business as usual," Shaqdeh said.

Another large protest was scheduled for Thursday, when Harris is due to formally accept the nomination. Pro-Palestinian groups have for months protested the Biden administration's military and financial support for Israel during its war against Hamas, which has killed more than 40,000 Palestinians in Gaza, according to Gaza health officials.

Israel launched the offensive after it was attacked on 7 October by Hamas militants who killed 1200 people, according to Israel tallies. The protests swelled on US college campuses in the spring, with police clearing student encampments, at times after confrontations between protesters and counterprotesters.

"The Democrats are the ones in power," Abudayyeh said on Monday. "It's their war. They're responsible for it, they're complicit, and they can stop it."

-Reuters

 

Trump shares fake AI posts of Taylor Swift fans endorsing him

Trump shares fake AI posts of Taylor Swift fans endorsing him
The people depicted in the photos were obviously AI-generated, but it's unclear whether Donald Trump knew that. — Picture via TruthSocial/@realdonaldtrump

WASHINGTON, Aug 19 — US Republican presidential candidate and former US president Donald Trump has shared posts depicting images of fans of pop star Taylor Swift aka Swifties endorsing him.

The trouble is that those images were AI-generated and Swift very likely had nothing to do with them, but that didn’t stop Trump from declaring “I accept!” on his social media.

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An X (formerly Twitter) account that reposts Trump’s posts from TruthSocial, another social media site primarily catering to right-wing or US Conservatives, shared Trump’s latest post that depicts various obviously faked AI posts.

While Swift has not as yet publicly endorsed any of the US 2024 presidential candidates, she did publicly endorse Joe Biden in the last election and encouraged her fans to turn up to vote.

As of press time, Swift has yet to make a statement about the fake posts. This is not the first time Swift has been the subject of fake AI posts as Taylor Swift searches were temporarily banned on X after a proliferation of deepfaked porn videos featuring the singer.

Swift had allegedly considered legal action but various AI services including OpenAI have blocked her name as a prompt to forestall any lawsuits so it begs the question which service was used to create those fake posters.