Saturday, October 12, 2024

Nobel prize a timely reminder, Hiroshima locals say

By AFP
October 12, 2024

Around 140,000 people died when the United States dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima on August 6, 1945 
- Copyright AFP Philip FONG

Kyoko HASEGAWA

Just like the dwindling group of survivors now recognised with a Nobel prize, the residents of Hiroshima hope that the world never forgets the atomic bombing of 1945 — now more than ever.

Susumu Ogawa, 84, was five when the bomb dropped by the United States all but obliterated the Japanese city 79 years ago, and many of his family were among the 140,000 people killed.

“My mother, my aunt, my grandfather,and my grandfather all died in the atomic bombing,” Ogawa told AFP a day after the survivors’ group Nihon Hidankyo was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.

Ogawa himself recalls very little but the snippets he garnered later from his surviving relatives and others painted a hellish picture.

“All they could do was to evacuate and save their own lives, while they saw other people (perish) inside the inferno,” he said.

“All nuclear weapons in the world have to be abandoned,” he said. “We know the horror of nuclear weapons, because we know what happened in Hiroshima.”

What is happening now in the Middle East saddens him greatly.

“Why do people fight each other? …hurting each other won’t bring anything good,” he said.



– ‘Great thing’ –



On a sunny Saturday, many tourists and some residents were strolling around the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park to the bomb’s 140,000 victims.

A preserved skeleton of a building close to ground zero of the “Little Boy” bomb and a statue of a girl with outstretched arms are poignant reminders of the devastation.

Jung Jaesuk, 43, a South Korean primary school teacher visiting the site, said the Nobel was a “a victory for (grassroots) people.”

“Tension in East Asia is intensifying so we have to boost anti-nuclear movement,” he told AFP.

Kiyoharu Bajo, 69, a retired business consultant, decided to take in the atmosphere of the site after the “great thing” that was the Nobel award.

With Ukraine and the Middle East, the world “faces crises that we’ve not experienced since the Second World War in terms of nuclear weapons,” he told AFP.

The stories told by the Nihon Hidankyo group of “hibakusha”, as the survivors of the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki are known, “have to be known to the world,” he said.

He said he hopes that the Nobel prize will help “the experiences of atomic bomb survivors spread further spread around the world” including by persuading people to visit Hiroshima.



– Future generations –



Kiwako Miyamoto, 65, said the Nobel prize was a “great thing, because even some locals here are indifferent” to what happened.

“In Hiroshima, you pray on August 6, and children go to school”, even though the date is during summer vacation, she told AFP.

“But I was surprised to see that outside Hiroshima, some people don’t know (so much about it)” she said.

She said that like many people in Hiroshima, she personally knows people whose relatives died in the bombing or who witnessed it.

With the average age among members of the Nihon Hidankyo over 85, it is vital that young people continue to be taught about what happened, added Bajo.

“I was born 10 years after the atom bomb was dropped, so there were many atom bomb survivors around me. I felt the incident as something familiar to me,” he said.

“But for the future, it will be an issue.”



Buried Nazi past haunts Athens on liberation anniversary



By AFP
October 12, 2024

Traditionally attired women carry a Greek flag on Acropolis hill during the liberation commemoration
 - Copyright AFP Philip FONG


Hélène COLLIOPOULOU

A brass sculpture of a naked man being garrotted, a monument evoking prison bars and a sign are the only hints this sleepy central Athens street once housed the Gestapo’s headquarters.

As Athens marks 80 years since its liberation from Nazi Germany in World War II this weekend, historians lament that this modest memorial is typical of the lack of attention paid to one of the most horrific periods in Greece’s history.

In the basement below where a cosmetics store stands today, Adolf Hitler’s secret police would beat, maim and torment their opponents, with thousands of resistance members arrested, tortured and killed during the Nazi occupation of 1941-44.

“In another European country this place would be a museum,” Menelaos Charalampidis, a historian of the time told AFP by telephone.

Across Greece, 250,000 people died as a result of famine during the Nazi occupation, including some 45,000 in Athens and Piraeus, the capital’s major port nearby.

More than 86 percent of Greece’s Jews were deported to be exterminated in the Holocaust.

To bring this dark chapter of the capital’s history to light, Charalampidis launched Athens History Walks, an initiative preserving locations where the Nazi occupation left its mark.

“Places of remembrance of this difficult period in Athens are not highlighted enough, and for some major events there are not even any monuments,” he said.

For example, there is no monument to the famine’s many victims, the historian noted — an omission which may have to do with what happened after Greece was freed.



– A ‘traumatised society’ –



Greece annually commemorates October 28, 1940, when its strongman leader Ioannis Metaxas refused Italian fascist leader Benito Mussolini’s ultimatum to surrender or face invasion.

Yet scant attention is paid to October 12, 1944, when Greece’s foremost resistance group ELAS marched through Syntagma Square in central Athens to the applause of hundreds of thousands of people.

That historic moment marking Greece’s freedom from the Nazi yoke was soon overshadowed by violence and clashes between the communist ELAS and British-backed royalist government for control of the country.

The ensuing 1946-1949 civil war saw the communists defeated and led to decades of political turmoil.

“The civil war in Greece, as in Spain, deeply traumatised society, making it impossible to deal with certain events of the past and move forward as a society,” said historian Tasoula Vervenioti.

“If we don’t deal with our past, we run the risk of losing our places of remembrance,” she warned.

This year, the Athens city council urged the public to take part in a series of conferences and exhibitions to “honour those who fought for democracy and freedom”.

“We are keeping memories alive so that younger people can learn and determine their future with strength and vigour,” the city’s socialist Mayor Haris Doukas said in a statement.



– ‘Loss of memory’ –



Charalampidis argued that because the Greek resistance effort was mainly by the left, successive conservative governments that followed the civil war had little interest in celebrating it.

It was not until 1982, after the country’s first socialist government came to power following decades of conservative rule, that the main left-wing portion of Greece’s ‘national resistance’ was officially recognised by parliament.

Taboos over the authorities’ actions during the civil war have also stifled historical research into the era.

In 2017, the left-wing government of Alexis Tsipras created a special Directorate for the History of the Greek Police to investigate, among other issues, collaboration with the Nazis.

But some files have still not been integrated into the Greek national archives, meaning that regular access is not guaranteed, experts say.

“We have a major problem in Greece concerning the upkeep of archives and our historical culture,” Charalampidis said.

“Governments are not interested in it and so there is a loss of memory despite our important history.”

Extent of anti-money laundering revealed: Report



By Dr. Tim Sandle
October 11, 2024


Image: - © POOL/AFP/File Patrick Pleul

The Anti-Money Laundering Megaminds Report finds that 70 percent of experts warn the fight against money laundering is failing. This comes from the anti-money laundering (AML) automation company Strise.

Is the fight against money laundering failing? Most AML professionals agree that current measures are inefficient, citing outdated legacy systems, fragmented data, and overwhelming false positives as major obstacles. One expert emphasised that “relying on outdated technology is like bringing a knife to a gunfight” calling for urgent modernisation of AML infrastructure.

By synthesising over 60 hours of in-depth conversations from The Laundry podcast, one of the industry’s leading podcasts on money laundering, the report details the output from artificial intelligence systems used to identify critical trends shaping the future of AML and financial crime prevention.

What are the top threats in financial crime?

Experts warn of rising threats, including cyber-enabled financial crimes, sophisticated sanctions evasion techniques using decentralised finance (DeFi), and the expansion of professional money laundering networks. Emerging technologies are making financial crimes more complex and harder to detect.

Emerging technologies

The report provides insights on the effectiveness of sanctions, the inefficiency of current AML systems, and the transformative potential of emerging technologies like AI and machine learning.

Pioneering the use of AI in financial crime intelligence

The AML Megaminds Report is an authoritative, data-backed resource that is both forward-thinking and practical, according to Marit Rødevand, CEO & co-founder of Strise and The Laundry host. Rødevand adds: “This report is a game-changer. By using AI to weave together the experiences and insights of over 80+ financial crime professionals, we’re offering a uniquely holistic view of the industry’s most critical challenges and opportunities. It’s an invaluable tool for anyone involved in financial crime prevention, and we’re proud to be at the forefront of this innovation.”

Is the industry suffering from sanctions fatigue?

While sanctions remain a vital tool, 40 percent of experts believe they are not fully effective. Many questioned their long-term impact and pointed to issues such as “sanctions fatigue” and the potential for driving illicit activities further underground. Others, however, highlighted success stories such as the freezing of Russian oligarchs’ assets, showcasing the importance of better-targeted sanctions and stronger enforcement.

Companies must also invest in the best available systems. Here regulatory pressure is the primary driver for making financial crime prevention a priority at the senior management level. The threat of significant fines and reputational damage compels boards to focus on compliance and crime prevention initiatives.

What are the main solutions for tackling financial crime?

Reframing financial crime as a public health issue could allow governments to allocate resources similarly to how they handle pandemics, with emergency powers to freeze assets, force cooperation from private entities, and impose mandatory reporting for suspicious activities. Other solutions include mandating the use of AI for all financial institutions, traditional banking secrecy laws, or creating public beneficial ownership registries with blockchain verification.

Rødevandcontinues: “Financial crime impacts every facet of society, and we can no longer afford to operate in silos. This report is not only a synthesis of expert opinion but a catalyst for change. We can’t keep doing the same things and expect different results. The inefficiency identified by the majority of experts signals that it’s time for a paradigm shift in how we approach AML efforts.”



TD Bank to pay more than $3 bn to US in money-laundering case



By A FP
October 10, 2024


TD Bank has agreed to pay $3 billion in penalties for failing to adequately monitor money laundering by drug cartels, US officials say - Copyright GETTY IMAGES/AFP SPENCER PLATT

Canada’s TD Bank has agreed to pay more than $3 billion in penalties for failing to adequately monitor money laundering by drug cartels, US officials said Thursday.

TD Bank, the 10th largest bank in the United States, has pleaded guilty to multiple felonies including violating the Bank Secrecy Act and conspiracy to commit money laundering, Attorney General Merrick Garland said.

“TD Bank created an environment that allowed financial crime to flourish by making its services convenient for criminals,” Garland said at a press conference.

“Our anti-money laundering laws dictate that a bank that willfully fails to protect against criminal schemes is also a criminal,” Garland said. “That is what TD Bank was.”

Garland said that between January 2014 and October 2023, TD Bank failed to monitor $18.3 trillion in customer activity, allowing three money laundering networks to transfer over $670 million through TD Bank accounts.

Under the settlement, TD Bank will pay $1.8 billion to the Justice Department and another $1.3 billion assessed by the US Treasury Department’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN).

Criminal investigations into individual employees at TD Bank were “active and ongoing,” Garland said.

Internet Archive reels from ‘catastrophic’ cyberattack, data breach


By AFP
October 11, 2024


A massive cyberattack and data breach hits the Internet Archive - Copyright AFP Stefani REYNOLDS
Anuj CHOPRA

The Internet Archive, an online repository of web pages, was offline Thursday after its founder confirmed a major cyberattack that exposed the data of millions of users and left the site defaced.

The assault on the San Francisco-based nonprofit, claimed by a shadowy group that experts described as a pro-Palestinian “hacktivist,” lays bare the perils of cybersecurity breaches ahead of the November 5 US presidential election.

Brewster Kahle, the Internet Archive’s founder and digital librarian, acknowledged a series of distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks — aimed at disrupting a website or server — since Tuesday and said the organization was working to upgrade security.

The assault led to the “defacement of our website” and a breach of usernames, emails and passwords, Kahle wrote on X, formerly Twitter, late Wednesday.

In a new post early Thursday, Kahle said the attackers had returned, knocking down both the Internet Archive’s main site and its “Open Library,” an open source catalogue of digitized books.

The Internet Archive’s data “has not been corrupted,” he wrote in a subsequent post.

“We are working to restore services as quickly and safely as possible,” he added.

On Wednesday, users reported a pop-up message claiming the site had been hacked and the data of 31 million accounts breached.

“Have you ever felt like the Internet Archive runs on sticks and is constantly on the verge of suffering a catastrophic security breach?” said the pop-up, apparently posted by the hackers.

“It just happened. See 31 million of you on HIBP!”

HIBP refers to site called “Have I been Pwned,” a site that allows users to check whether their emails and passwords have been leaked in data breaches.

In another post on X, HIBP confirmed that 31 million records from the Internet Archive had been stolen, including email addresses, screen names and passwords.

– ‘Rising’ threat –

Kahle did not respond to a request for comment about the scale of the data breach.

A hacker group called “SN_BLACKMETA” claimed responsibility for the attack on X.

“The Internet Archive has and is suffering from a devastating attack,” the group wrote on the platform Wednesday.

“They are under attack because the archive belongs to the USA, and as we all know, this horrendous and hypocritical government supports the genocide that is being carried out by the terrorist state of ‘Israel.'”

In a threat advisory in July, Radware, a cybersecurity solutions provider, described the group as a “pro-Palestinian hacktivist with potential ties to Sudan” and possibly operating from Russia.

Radware called the group a “rising cyber threat” with a “strong ideological stance and a strategic approach to cyber warfare.”

The Internet Archive, a nonprofit that is not known to have any ties to the US government or Israel, was founded in 1996 and advocates for a free and open internet.

It operates a web archive called the Wayback Machine, which has captured snapshots of millions of internet pages.

Like other archival sites, the Wayback Machine is a crucial resource for fact-checkers, who use it to trace deleted web pages and ensure that the evidence cited in articles is permanently available to readers.

It can also be used to document changes made to online content over time and helps researchers and scholars find historical collections that exist in digital formats

‘Sleeper agent’ bots on X fuel US election misinformation, study says


By AFP
October 10, 2024

Researchers analyzed accounts that shared posts favoring Republican candidate Donald Trump, while targeting Democratic nominee Kamala Harris 
- Copyright AFP Mauro PIMENTEL

Anuj CHOPRA

Hundreds of apparent pro-Russian bot accounts on X are pushing US election misinformation and amplifying false narratives about Democratic contender Kamala Harris, a research group said Thursday, calling them “sleeper agents” for having evaded detection for years.

The findings by the Washington-based American Sunlight Project (ASP) demonstrate how bot-like activity plagues X, previously called Twitter, despite pledges by billionaire owner Elon Musk to crack down on the digital manipulation.

ASP analyzed nearly 1,200 accounts, a long-standing network that generated more than 100 million posts as of July, including pro-Kremlin propaganda, content favoring Republican nominee Donald Trump, and misinformation about Harris’s campaign.

The accounts, some of which have escaped detection and moderation on the site for as long as 15 years, retweeted such content within seconds of its posting, indicating bot activity, the group said in a report shared with AFP ahead of its public release.

“We were not surprised to find another pro-Russian bot network, but we were shocked to learn that some of the accounts in the sleeper agent network have been active for more than a decade,” Nina Jankowicz, the group’s co-founder and chief executive, told AFP.

Jankowicz, the former Department of Homeland Security disinformation chief, called on X to take down the network, which has seen an uptick in “abusive and false content” targeting Harris.

One account created in 2020 promoted the falsehood that Harris had admitted that she will be a “puppet” of Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky if elected president.

It also touted the unfounded claim that the White House was pushing for regime change in Lebanon, taking advantage of Israel’s recent attacks on the militant group Hezbollah.

– Data restrictions –

Another account created in 2011 shared a post by Musk — who has endorsed Trump and courted criticism for amplifying political falsehoods through his influential personal account — that pushed the debunked narrative that migrants were being imported into the United States to manipulate the November 5 election.

Hundreds of accounts in the network are not attributable to real social media users, with some creating fake personas using images from stock photo websites such as Shutterstock, ASP said.

To disguise their objectives and more easily “inject themselves into larger X/Twitter conversations,” some accounts regularly shared content about subjects such as sports and cryptocurrency, the report said.

It was not possible to determine the precise entity behind the pro-Russian accounts.

With data restrictions imposed by X since Musk purchased the company in 2022 for $44 billion, it was also difficult to assess their exact reach.

Researchers are now required to pay a hefty fee for access to its API, which allows third-party developers to gather the social platform’s data.

“If researchers had data access restored, more of such activity would likely be visible,” the ASP report said.

– ‘Platform manipulation’ –

Bots and other automated accounts, researchers say, are a cornerstone of the Kremlin’s efforts to spread misinformation, in some cases supplanting state media accounts which have been restricted across several countries since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

X did not reply to AFP’s request for comment.

Ahead of his purchase of the platform, Musk pledged to “defeat the spam bots or die trying.”

But bot activity remains entrenched on the platform, a report from Australia’s Queensland University of Technology said last year, after an analysis of about one million posts.

The platform has gutted trust and safety teams and scaled back content moderation efforts, making it what researchers call a hotbed for misinformation.

“Despite the fact that Musk has an avowed goal of ridding his platform of bots, we’ve found that they persist on X, even coming from networks that are likely state-affiliated,” said Jankowicz.

“This is behavior that is fairly easy to identify, and yet this multi-billion dollar corporation has not cracked down on these accounts that violate its platform manipulation and spam policies.”


X says ‘alert’ to manipulation efforts after pro-Russia bots report


By AFP
October 11, 2024

Disinformation researchers say bot-like activity plagues X 
- Copyright AFP/File Alain JOCARD

X was “alert” to any platform manipulation attempts, the Elon Musk-owned site told AFP Friday, following a report that hundreds of apparent pro-Russian bot accounts were amplifying US election misinformation.

In a study shared exclusively with AFP earlier this week, the Washington-based American Sunlight Project (ASP) said it found nearly 1,200 accounts on X that pushed pro-Kremlin propaganda, content favoring Republican nominee Donald Trump, and misinformation about Democratic contender Kamala Harris.

ASP called them “sleeper agents” as some of the accounts had escaped detection and moderation on the site –- previously known as Twitter — for as long as 15 years and retweeted content within seconds of its posting, indicating bot activity.

“Our safety team remains alert to any attempt to manipulate the platform by bad actors and networks,” an X spokesman said in a statement.

“We have a robust policy in place to prevent platform spam and manipulation, and we routinely take down accounts engaged in this type of behavior.”

Without directly addressing ASP’s findings, the spokesman added that in the first half of 2024, the platform had suspended more than 460 million accounts under its manipulation and spam policy.

Nina Jankowicz, ASP’s co-founder and chief executive who is the former Department of Homeland Security disinformation chief, has called on X to take down the pro-Russian network that was pushing out “abusive and false content” targeting Harris.

Musk — who has endorsed Trump ahead of the November 5 presidential election –- has also courted criticism for amplifying political falsehoods through his influential personal account on X, which has over 200 million followers.

Among the accounts analyzed by ASP was one created in 2020 that promoted the falsehood that Harris had admitted she will be a “puppet” of Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky if elected president.

It also touted the unfounded claim that the White House was pushing for regime change in Lebanon, taking advantage of Israel’s recent attacks on the militant group Hezbollah.

Ahead of his purchase of the platform in 2022 for $44 billion, Musk pledged to “defeat the spam bots or die trying.”

But apparent bot activity remains entrenched on the platform, according to several disinformation researchers, including a report last year from Australia’s Queensland University of Technology that analyzed about one million posts.



From Tesla to Trump: Behind Musk’s giant leap into politics


By AFP
October 11, 2024

Tesla CEO Elon Musk jumps on stage as he joins former US president and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump during a campaign rally - Copyright AFP TIMOTHY A. CLARY
Alex PIGMAN

With his no-holds-barred embrace of Donald Trump, Elon Musk is not only backing the former president’s bid to return to the White House but also signaling his own ambition to command the world stage on his terms.

At a recent Trump rally in Pennsylvania, the world’s richest man bounded onto stage with pogo-like energy, sparking a torrent of memes on social media and driving engagement on X, the platform he owns.

The following day, Musk leaned into his provocative persona during an interview with conservative commentator Tucker Carlson, laughing that Vice President Kamala Harris had not faced assassination attempts and expressing concern about his own future.

“If (Trump) loses, I’m fucked,” Musk quipped, still chuckling.

Musk is “all-in” for the former president as the US election enters its final stretch.

He’s poured tens of millions of dollars into the campaign and is positioned for a key role in a second Trump administration, where the former president has said he will be tasked with ripping up government bureaucracy and firing civil servants.

Observers point to various factors behind Musk’s hard turn to the right.

Some highlight his upbringing in apartheid-era South Africa, suggesting it influences his views on immigration and demographic change.

Musk frequently argues, without evidence, that an influx of undocumented immigrants threatens US democracy, echoing the “Great Replacement” theory prevalent among many whites in his childhood South Africa.

“The white South African nightmare in the 1980s, hanging over everything, was that one day Black people would rise up and massacre whites,” wrote essayist Simon Kuper in the Financial Times.

More recent personal experiences also appear to have shaped Musk’s politics.

In 2022, his daughter Vivian, then aged 18, legally changed her name and gender.

Musk later claimed his child was “killed” by the “woke mind virus” instilled at an elite California school, marking a significant hardening of his political stance.

Musk’s business interests may also help explain his allegiance to Trump.

His companies operate in highly regulated industries and have frequently clashed with authorities.

Tech analyst Rob Enderle of Enderle Group suggests that in a Trump White House, Musk might even “be in charge of his own oversight, giving him the potential power to do anything he wanted.”

– X at your service? –

The billionaire’s influence extends beyond his wealth.

Musk uses his X account, with more than 200 million followers, to amplify misinformation and controversial narratives that align with Trump’s campaign messaging.

The platform’s light-touch content moderation allows Trump-backed distortions and lies to thrive that might be restricted on other social media sites.

“It’s very different to have a figure like Musk who owns a social media platform, versus him just being out there as his own individual,” said Sophie Bjork-James, assistant professor of anthropology at Vanderbilt University.

“Musk is helping to mainstream these racist conspiracy theories and bring in mainly white men who may either be disengaged or former political liberals.”

In a recent get-out-the-vote initiative, Musk’s America super PAC, a political action committee, promised to pay $47 to anyone who gets a registered swing-state voter to sign a petition supporting free speech and the right to bear arms.

“Easy money,” Musk posted about the potentially multi-million-dollar effort.

– ‘King of the world’ –

Larry Sabato, director of the University of Virginia’s Center for Politics, summarized Musk’s political toolkit: “Musk’s influence is money, his super PAC and X. He’s not shy about using all three to push Trump — and even push misrepresentations and falsehoods that help Trump.”

For supporters, Musk’s political involvement is an extension of his successful track record with companies like SpaceX, which now plays a central role in the US space program.

“In almost every case, Musk’s innovations paralleled things the government was trying to do, but he did it better,” Youngstown State University political science professor Paul Sracic told the Washington Examiner.

But Musk’s political stance is affecting public perception of his businesses.

Mark Hass, an Arizona State University professor who has advised major corporations, noted that driving a Tesla is no longer “the first choice if you want to demonstrate your environmental bona fides, because of his association with Trump.”

As the 2024 election approaches, Musk’s political evolution represents a new force in American politics: a tech titan with vast wealth, media influence and authoritarian leanings, Hass added.

His actions in the coming weeks could significantly affect both the election outcome and the future landscape of politics.

Musk could become a “king of the world,” said Hass.
Internal TikTok documents show prioritization of traffic over well-being




By AFP
October 11, 2024


TikTok faces a ban in the United States if it continues to be owned by China-based ByteDance - Copyright AFP/File Alain JOCARD

TikTok teams identified harmful effects of its platform on young users but limited preventive measures so as to avoid a drop in traffic, according to internal documents revealed Friday by a US public radio station.

The documents, mentioned in a subpoena issued by the Kentucky attorney general, are part of a lawsuit filed by 13 states and Washington D.C., accusing TikTok of harming young users’ mental health.

The papers reveal TikTok’s awareness of its platform’s appeal and its recommendation algorithm, which offers a seemingly endless chain of short videos.

One unnamed TikTok executive noted the need to be “cognizant” of the app’s impact on “sleep, and eating, and moving around the room, and looking at someone in the eyes.”

Kentucky Public Radio reconstructed the internal communications before a state judge ordered the documents removed from the public record.

The lawsuit claims TikTok’s research found that after viewing 260 videos, a user likely became addicted to the platform.

The company’s studies also correlated “compulsive usage” with negative mental health effects, including “loss of analytical skills, memory formation, contextual thinking, conversational depth, empathy, and increased anxiety.”

While TikTok has implemented features to limit young users’ screen time, including parental controls and a one-hour timeout, the documents suggest ByteDance, TikTok’s parent company, did not seek to improve these tools despite knowing their limited effectiveness.

A TikTok project manager wrote, “Our goal is not to reduce the time spent” on the platform.

In response, TikTok called the publication of sealed court information “highly irresponsible.”

“Unfortunately, this complaint cherry-picks misleading quotes and takes outdated documents out of context to misrepresent our commitment to community safety,” it said.

The state lawsuits come as the popular video-snippet sharing app faces a ban in the United States if it remains owned by China-based ByteDance.

The US government alleges that TikTok allows Beijing to collect data and spy on users. It also says TikTok is a conduit to spread propaganda. China and the company strongly deny these claims.


Supercharged hurricanes trigger ‘perfect storm’ for disinformation


By AFP
October 11, 2024


False accusations of the US government waging 'weather warfare' spread in the run-up to Hurricane Milton slamming into Florida, fueling a spate of tornadoes 
- Copyright AFP/File CHANDAN KHANNA

Manon JACOB

Monster hurricanes slamming the United States in recent weeks have triggered a torrent of misinformation, with politicians and social media users reviving conspiracy theories about weather manipulation ahead of the November 5 presidential election.

False accusations of the government waging “weather warfare” spread online with social media posts claiming the storms were “deliberately deployed against red states” likely to vote for Republican Donald Trump.

“We are in a geoengineering ‘meltdown’ perpetrated by Globalists who want to ‘control’ the whole of humanity,” said one post on X.

Rumors also focused on the Alaska-based High-frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP), which was formerly run by the US military, and cloud seeding, despite a lack of evidence linking the technologies to the formation of large storms.

The wave of falsehoods emerged after Helene became the deadliest hurricane to hit the US mainland since 2005’s Katrina, and Milton quickly followed, making landfall in Florida on October 9.

Both storms ravaged entire neighborhoods, forcing widespread evacuations and causing massive power outages.

Ethan Porter, a professor and researcher at The George Washington University Misinformation/Disinformation Lab, said some people are using misinformation “as a convenient way to express their political beliefs.”

He said the focus is less on the details, but rather the underlying message — “that neither science nor government should be trusted, that climate change isn’t real, and that somehow, Democrats are responsible for the unfolding catastrophe.”

Pro-Trump Republican Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene has repeatedly told her followers that the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration authorizes programs that “control the weather.”

Methods such as cloud seeding can help increase rain and snow in localized areas, but they cannot create storms like Helene.

Experts told AFP it is concerning that politicians are engaging with such narratives.

“This is coming at a time of real political tension,” said Callum Hood, head of research at the Center for Countering Digital Hate.

“The social media landscape is a friendlier place for hate and disinformation than it has been in a long time, particularly on X.”

University of Miami professor Joseph Uscinski, who researches why people believe in conspiracy theories, agreed: “We have members of Congress who are pushing ideas that this is real, when, in fact, it’s not.”



– ‘Scary world’ –



The situation highlighted the sharp divide over climate change, as scientists warned that supercharged storms were the result of warmer ocean temperatures.

Storms, also amplified by warmer air, show a potential to impact inland areas as well as coastal regions that have historically been in the path of destruction.

“Hurricane Helene showed us that it is not (only) the coast we have to worry about. A hurricane with a lot of moisture passing through a mountainous area — such as Asheville — is a bad combination,” Jayantha Obeysekera, director of the Sea Level Solutions Center at Florida International University, told AFP.

Nature Conservancy chief scientist Katharine Hayhoe said weather control narratives help defer the responsibility of curbing emissions.

She worries such logic brings a false sense of security and comfort for people trying “to make sense of what is rapidly becoming a very scary world.”

These conditions create “a ‘perfect storm'” for disinformation, Hayhoe said, highlighting how disbelief can further delay action on the ground or prevent proper resilience and mitigation plans against a warming climate.

“It moves us in exactly the opposite direction from where we need to be going,” she said.

 

Kessler Foundation 2024 Survey highlights key strategies for hiring and supporting workers with disabilities in the hospitality industry



Supervisors share impressions related to recruiting, hiring, and providing workplace accommodations and effectiveness of those methods


Kessler Foundation

Houtenville, O'Neill, Katz 

image: 

Several key takeaways from the survey were outlined by industry experts (from left) Andrew Houtenville, PhD, Professor of Economics and Research Director, UNH-IOD and Kessler Foundation’s John O’Neill, PhD, Director, Center for Employment and Disability Research and Elaine E. Katz, MS, CCC-SLP, Senior VP, Center for Grants and Communications.

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Credit: Kessler Foundation




East Hanover, NJ – October 11, 2024 – A new Kessler Foundation survey of supervisors in the hospitality industry – focused on restaurant and traveler accommodations – has revealed critical insights into the recruitment, support, and accommodation of workers with disabilities. The findings, released today in a special live Zoom webinar, offer actionable takeaways for employers looking to diversify their workforce and enhance workplace inclusion. Key points revealed that proactive recruitment, effective partnerships, and targeted accommodations are critical to fostering a diverse and inclusive workforce.

The 2024 Kessler Foundation National Employment and Disability Survey: Hospitality Industry is the fifth in a groundbreaking series conducted in partnership with the University of New Hampshire, Institute on Disability (UNH-IOD), focused on deconstructing the employment barriers and key workplace dynamics for people with disabilities. The final sample consisted of 813 supervisors, ages 18 and older, working in the U.S. for companies in the hospitality industry that employed 25 people or more.

Several key takeaways from the survey were outlined by industry experts Andrew Houtenville, PhD, Professor of Economics and Research Director, UNH-IOD and Kessler Foundation’s John O’Neill, PhD, Director, Center for Employment and Disability Research and Elaine E. Katz, MS, CCC-SLP, Senior VP, Center for Grants and Communications.

"Proactively recruiting workers with disabilities leads to greater job success, with 50% of successfully performing employees having been recruited through intentional efforts," said Dr. Houtenville, adding, "Partnering with disability organizations and state vocational rehabilitation agencies is an effective hiring strategy, with 84% of companies finding these partnerships successful in filling positions."

The speakers noted that providing workplace accommodations is a key factor in helping employees with disabilities perform effectively in their jobs. "Workplace accommodations, such as flexible schedules and assistive devices, play a critical role in the success of employees with disabilities, and most can be provided with little to no cost,” explained Dr. O’Neill.

"Flexible work schedules are the most commonly offered accommodation, with 91% of companies making them available automatically or upon request for all employees," agreed Dr. Houtenville. Barriers to providing workplace accommodations included perceptions of the high cost of accommodations, coworker attitudes, and complicated or no processes in place to request accommodations. These answers suggest the need for improved training on how to provide low-cost accommodations in the workplace. “In fact, most workplace accommodations can be provided without any direct expense, and those that do involve a cost typically incur a one-time median expense of $300, according to the Office of Disability Employment Policy,” he added. Training supervisors on accessible hiring and accommodation processes is essential, agreed Katz, “Yet only 52% of supervisors feel very confident in their understanding of how to provide accommodations."

In final remarks, Katz asserted, “As the hospitality industry continues to grow and faces a shortage of workers, understanding how to effectively integrate people with disabilities into the talent pool is essential for building an inclusive and diverse workforce.”

About the Institute on Disability at the University of New Hampshire
The Institute on Disability (IOD) at the University of New Hampshire (UNH) was established in 1987 to provide a university-based focus for the improvement of knowledge, policies, and practices related to the lives of persons with disabilities and their families. For information on the NIDILRR-funded Research and Training Center on Disability Statistics, visit ResearchOnDisability.org.

About Kessler Foundation
Kessler Foundation, a major nonprofit organization in the field of disability, is a global leader in rehabilitation research. Our scientists seek to improve cognition, mobility, and long-term outcomes, including employment, for adults and children with neurological and developmental disabilities of the brain and spinal cord including traumatic brain injury, spinal cord injury, stroke, multiple sclerosis, and autism. Kessler Foundation also leads the nation in funding innovative programs that expand opportunities for employment for people with disabilities. For more information, visit KesslerFoundation.org.

Press Contact at Kessler Foundation:
Deborah Hauss, DHauss@kesslerfoundation.org

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Hawaii distillery project wins funding from Scottish brewing and distilling award



The proposed Kamehameha Distillery in Maui will produce spirits including gin, vodka, blended whisky and Japanese shochu



Heriot-Watt University

Ethan Wang on a beach in Maui, Hawaii. 

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Ethan Wang on a beach in Maui, Hawaii.

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Credit: Ethan Wang




Hawaii could soon be welcoming a new distillery after a postgraduate student at Scotland’s Heriot-Watt University won a prestigious entrepreneurial award.

Canadian student Ethan Wang, 42, wants to open a new distillery on Hawaii’s scenic volcanic island of Maui and said he was in “total shock” after winning cash and support from an industry membership organisation to help make his idea happen.

The award, called the Worshipful Company of Distillers’ Entrepreneurship Award, is designed to help students apply their science in the real world and is run jointly by Heriot-Watt’s respected International Centre for Brewing and Distilling and The Worshipful Company of Distillers, a historic trade association in the City of London.

“Maui is an ocean paradise and is one of the finest places in the world to get botanical ingredients and clean flavours,” said Ethan, who is currently studying online with ICBD to complete a Master of Science degree in Brewing and Distilling.

“Winning this award was such great news to wake up to in Hawaii. It will help me buy additional expensive tools for flavour extraction – and having an experienced industry body to guide me with my planning will be a huge help.”

Ethan is originally from Victoria in British Columbia, Canada, where he studied a Bachelor of Commerce at the University of Victoria. He first visited Hawaii during his early career in accountancy and finance and got married there in 2011. Since then, he has visited Maui, the second largest island in the Hawaiian archipelago, every year.

Ethan says the £5,000 prize money from the award is an important addition to the personal savings he is investing to open the distillery, which will produce spirits including gin, vodka, blended whisky, Japanese shochu – a spirit typically distilled from ingredients including rice, barley and sweet potatoes – and Korean soju, also traditionally made from rice.

Called the Kamehameha Distillery, Ethan’s distillery will be based in Kula, a scenic rural area of Maui on the slopes of a dormant volcano called Haleakalā.

“The site offers sweeping views of the Pacific Ocean and the lush, rolling hills of upcountry Maui,” Ethan says. “Hawaii’s tropical climate is warm and humid, but up in Kula, the air is cooler and crisper, especially in the evenings. This variation in temperature, along with the volcanic soil and the sea air, has a profound influence on the ingredients we use, from the hibiscus flowers to the sea grapes. The clean, fresh environment helps preserve the natural flavours, giving our products a unique and authentic taste that truly reflects the land they come from.”

Kamehameha’s products are designed to appeal particularly to American and Japanese markets. But Ethan’s longer-term vision is to expand globally and to create opportunities locally in Hawaii.

“Supporting the island’s economy is vital – and I want to create meaningful opportunities for the local community, including creating jobs and fostering partnerships with local farmers and suppliers,” he says. “In the long term, I see Kamehameha Distillery expanding beyond Hawaii and introducing the world to unique, authentic Hawaiian flavours. International expansion is a goal, as I want our spirits to be enjoyed globally, not just as beverages but as an experience of Hawaiian culture.”

Heriot-Watt University has been researching brewing and distilling since 1903 and formed the International Centre for Brewing and Distilling in 1990 to meet the needs of the brewing, distilling and malting industries worldwide. Part of the university’s School of Engineering & Physical Sciences, the centre has an international reputation for learning and teaching in brewing and distilling. Its degrees prepare students to enter the malting, brewing or distilling industries and cover a broad range of subjects including brewing and distilling science, chemical engineering, business studies and production management. The centre’s on-campus facilities in Edinburgh include a 200-litre capacity brewery, a mobile mashing unit and cereal cooker, a mash filter, fermentation vessels, stills and a laboratory.

Dr David Jenkins, Assistant Professor in Brewing and Distilling at ICBD and also an MSc programme leader, said: “Ethan’s plans for his Hawaiian distillery are incredibly exciting and it’s fantastic to help fund his vision. Jumping from a science degree to the real world can be challenging – so our focus is on helping students apply what they learn to their own entrepreneurial ideas. There are always new opportunities in the drinks industry – and we look forward to seeing Ethan’s business grow.”

Lorne MacKillop of the Worshipful Company of Distillers – the company’s ‘Master’ this year and figurehead – has spent 47 years in the wines and spirits sector. He said: “Education is an important part of our role and we support a number of awards and scholarships in the science of distilling. These are designed to help students achieve excellence in their craft and apply their knowledge to real-world businesses and innovations. We were hugely impressed with Ethan’s submission for our Heriot-Watt University award and are delighted to support him in his new venture.”

The Worshipful Company of Distillers (the WCD) was formed in 1638 when King Charles I granted the company a Royal Charter. The organisation is a City Livery Company – a trade guild that once acted as a modern day trade association, but whose powers to regulate alcoholic spirits were discontinued in the 19th Century. Today its function revolves around industry philanthropy, education, networking and fellowship.

The company’s industry mentoring capacity will involve providing a hand-picked mentor from amongst those members freely giving their time to help support mentees like Ethan. The WCD has run its mentoring scheme for three years and has about 45 mentees presently in the programme, chosen from those students who are sponsored with bursaries at the training providers used.

Ethan hopes to have the Kamehameha Distillery open by the end of 2024.

View from the slopes of dormant volcano Haleakalā in Maui, Hawaii.

 

Credit

Ethan Wang



Heriot-Watt University’s Edinburgh Campus in Scotland, United Kingdom.

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Heriot-Watt University



Lorne MacKillop, Master of the Worshipful Company of Distillers

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Worshipful Company of Distillers

 

The amber caddisflies show that Trichoptera already conducted swarming behavior in the Mid-Cretaceous.



Science China Press
Ecological reconstruction. 

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Ecological reconstruction of Copulariella ramus Wang, Engel, Zhang, Shih et Ren 2024. Painted by Ms. Xiaoran Zuo.

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Credit: Painted by Ms. Xiaoran Zuo.




This study is led by Professor Dong Ren and Dr. Jiajia Wang (College of Life Sciences, Capital Normal University). The obvious aggregations, a large gathering of adult caddisflies, were found in six small mid-Cretaceous Kachin amber pieces. The Mid-Cretaceous swarming of Trichoptera is identified according to the results of Principal Component Analysis based on the morphological traits of wing shape, as well as other morphological evidences such as presence of sexual dimorphism and the extended phalli of males.

Results of a phylogenetic reconstruction of both molecular and morphological data as well as ancestral-trait reconstructions and tip-dating analyses indicate that swarming was likely present in the Triassic as a feature of the trichopteran groundplan.

In order to reconstruct patterns of swarming during trichopteran evolution, the team took a Bayesian Evolutionary Analysis Sampling Tree based on 30 morphological characters and six molecular sequences. In this analysis, they selected 79 trichopteran species from 15 families, which include the major superfamilies and swarming groups. Swarming behavior was reconstructed as a synapomorphy of Trichoptera based on the ancestral-trait reconstruction.

The researchers also found that many trichopteran families lost swarming behavior about 50–53 million years ago. This episode of time is critical as it was coeval with the rise of echolocating bats. Tympanic organs and other sound-detecting organs of similar attunement have not been present in extant or fossil Trichoptera, so the caddisflies cannot detect bat ultrasound. This phenomenon shows that the presence of echolocating-bats resulted in a significant pressure on swarming Trichoptera, and it was possible that this was a contributing factor to the repeated loss of swarming behavior by various trichopterans during the Eocene, representing a strategic response to bat predation. Although birds and pterosaurs were the major small-flying predators from the Mesozoic, they seemingly had little impact on swarming because most Mesozoic flying insectivorous predators were also diurnal while the swarming began mainly after dusk and peaked before midnight. This study shows a correlation between the rise of nocturnal bat predators from the Paleocene or Early Eocene and the repeated loss of swarming from various clades of caddisflies, revealing the potential impact of bat predation on reshaping the behavioral landscape of Trichoptera during the Cenozoic. Trichoptera diversity appeared to have fallen behind that of their sister group, the Lepidoptera, during the Cenozoic, and this might have partly been a result of novel predator pressures such as those imposed by the rise of bats.

The ancestral reconstruction of swarming behavior based on morphological and molecular data using a Bayesian total-evidenced dating method with a molecular backbone constraint. The data source of trichopteran species comes from GenBank and NCBI. Painted by Jiajia Wang

Credit

Painted by Jiajia Wang

See the article:

Swarming caddisflies in the mid-Cretaceous

https://doi.org/10.1093/nsr/nwae227