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andre-wolfs · 3 years
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Definitieve bekerwinnaars 2020-2021
Iedere week staan de keepers op het veld om zich te ontwikkelen. Als stimulans voor de ontwikkeling kunnen de keepers wekelijks een beker winnaar. Jaarlijks in mei worden de definitieve bekerwinnaars bekendgemaakt. In het weekend van 14 en 16 mei waren de laatste trainingen van seizoen 2020-2021. Op vrijdag 28 en zondag 30 mei starten we seizoen 2021-2022. De winnaars van 2020-2021 zijn als…
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modernnetsec · 4 years
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COVID-19 Has United Cybersecurity Experts, But Will That Unity Survive the Pandemic?
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The Coronavirus has prompted thousands of information security professionals to volunteer their skills in upstart collaborative efforts aimed at frustrating cybercriminals who are seeking to exploit the crisis for financial gain. Whether it’s helping hospitals avoid becoming the next ransomware victim or kneecapping new COVID-19-themed scam websites, these nascent partnerships may well end up…
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inkagnedotv · 3 years
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Nelly is getting his flowers. The 46-year-old St. Louis product will be honored at the upcoming 2021 BET Hip Hop Awards on Oct. 5 with the “I Am Hip Hop” award for his 22 years in the music business and to say he’s deserving is an understatement. 1. FOREVER REPPING Since exploding onto the scene in 2000, Nelly has always made certain to put St. Louis first. "I felt like as long as I stay in St. Louis the light will stay in St. Louis," he says in Budweiser Made in America Doc  "I felt like if I left St. Louis then the light would possibly leave," he continued.  The “Country Grammar” music video featured hundreds of people from the St. Louis neighborhoods, which, in turn, inspired local rappers like Tef Poe and Nick Menn to pursue a rap career. 2. PHILANTHROPY Nelly also puts on for his city out of pocket. The “All in My Head” rapper began hosting a “White and Black Ball” in St. Louis to fundraise for educational scholarships, which, for more than a decade, has got two students into college every year. Furthermore, he runs the non-profit 4Sho4Kids Foundation in honor of his sister Jackie Donahue, who died in 2005 from leukemia and has the Jes Us 4 Jackie fundraising campaign that educates minorities about the need for bone marrow transplants and donors. 3. AMBASSADOR Nelly’s St. Louis twang and presence continues and will also forever keep St. Louis on because of how immersed he is in pop culture. —Joshua Eferighe, BET News Follow @inkagnedotv ⁣ .⁣ .⁣ .⁣ .⁣ .⁣ #90sfashion #antioxidants #betawards #blackexcellence #breakdance #dancers #deals #downtown #drone #dronelife #droneoftheday #dronephotography #drones #exploremore #fine #freestyle #gainpost #hiphopdance #hiphoplove #jazz #jazzfunk #kellyrowland #king #nelly #omgedit #plantbased #rnbmusic #vegas #vibes #worldofdance https://www.instagram.com/p/CUVM3LlLgZO/?utm_medium=tumblr
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norsereadalong · 4 years
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Eyrbyggja Saga Week Three
I (Eddie) am unsure what’s up with Nick or whether he’s working on prompts at all. Sorry for the wait!  For now, the least I can do is post the reading. This week (Oct. 12th, 2020) we’re reading chapters 14-18, as laid out in Hermann Pálsson’s translation. This week’s section starts off as follows:
In the spring at the District Assembly, Snorri demanded his inheritance from Bork….He married Thorgrima Witch-Face, and their sons were Orn and Val, both sturdy fellows.
Á vorþingi um sumarið heimti Snorri föðurarf sinn af Berki….Þeirra synir voru þeir Örn og Valur, drengilegir menn.    
There's some family drama and fun legal shenanigans going on, so feel free to respond to whatever sparks your interest! As usual, remember to DM a link to your responses to @edderkopper so we can find them.
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ladystylestores · 4 years
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1,000 Twitter workers had access to internal tools that hackers could exploit
(Reuters) — As of earlier this year, more than a thousand Twitter employees and contractors had access to internal tools that could change user account settings and hand control to others, two former employees said, making it hard to defend against the hacking that occurred last week.
Twitter and the FBI are investigating the breach that allowed hackers to repeatedly tweet from verified accounts of the likes of Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden, billionaire philanthropist Bill Gates, Tesla CEO Elon Musk, and former New York Mayor Mike Bloomberg.
Twitter said on Saturday that the perpetrators “manipulated a small number of employees and used their credentials” to log into tools and turn over access to 45 accounts. On Wednesday, the company said that the hackers could have read direct messages to and from 36 accounts, but it did not identify the affected users.
The former employees familiar with Twitter security practices said that too many people could have done the same thing, more than 1,000 as of earlier in 2020, including some at contractors like Cognizant.
Twitter declined to comment on that figure and would not say whether the number had declined before the hack or since. The company was looking for a new security head, working to better secure its systems and training employees on resisting tricks from outsiders, Twitter said. Cognizant did not respond to a request for comment.
“That sounds like there are too many people with access,” said Edward Amoroso, former chief security officer at AT&T. Responsibilities among the staff should have been split up, with access rights limited to those responsibilities and more than one person required to agree to make the most sensitive account changes. “In order to do cybersecurity right, you can’t forget the boring stuff.”
Threats from insiders, especially lower-paid outside support staff, are a constant worry for companies serving large numbers of users, cybersecurity experts said. They said that the greater the number of people who can change key settings, the stronger oversight must be.
Stumbles
The former employees said that Twitter had gotten better about logging the activity of its people in the wake of previous stumbles, including searches of records by an employee accused last November of spying for the government of Saudi Arabia.
But while logging helps with investigations, only alarms or constant reviews can turn logs into something that can prevent breaches.
Former Cisco Systems chief security officer John Stewart said companies with broad access need to adopt a long series of mitigations and “ultimately [ensure] that the most powerful authorized people are only doing what they are supposed to be doing.”
Who exactly pulled off the hacking spree isn’t clear, but outside researchers such as Allison Nixon of Unit 221B say the incident appears linked to a cluster of cybercriminals who regularly traded in novelty handles — especially rare one- or two-character account names — that are a bit like the vanity license plates of the online world.
Although the public evidence tying the hacking to those individuals was circumstantial, ultra-short Twitter handles were among the first to be hijacked.
In addition, the forums where those hackers were active have long been replete with boasts about having access to Twitter insiders, according to Nixon and Nick Bax, an analyst with StopSIMCrime, a group that lobbies for greater protection against “SIM swapping” — a phone number hijacking technique often used by these kinds of hackers.
Bax said he had seen reference on forums to “Twitter plugs” or “Twitter reps” — the terms used to describe cooperative Twitter employees — since as far back as 2017.
The potential involvement of low-level cybercriminals has particularly alarmed professionals because of the implication that a hostile government might be able to cause even greater havoc.
Access to accounts for national leaders was limited to a much smaller number of people after a rogue employee briefly deleted President Donald Trump’s account two years ago. That could explain why Biden’s account was hijacked but not Trump’s.
Twitter should expand the number of protected accounts, said former Twitter security engineer John Adams. Among other things, accounts with more than 10,000 followers should at least need two people to change key settings.
Security experts said they were worried that Twitter has too much work to do and too little time before the campaign for the November 3 U.S. election intensifies, with potential interference domestically and from other countries.
Said Ron Gula, a cybersecurity investor who cofounded network security company Tenable, “The question really is: Does Twitter do enough to prevent account takeovers for our presidential candidates and news outlets when faced with sophisticated threats that leverage whole-of-nation approaches?”
On a call to discuss company earnings on Thursday, Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey acknowledged past missteps.
“We fell behind, both in our protections against social engineering of our employees and restrictions on our internal tools,” Dorsey told investors.
(Reporting by Joseph Menn and Katie Paul in San Francisco and Raphael Satter in Washington. Editing by Greg Mitchell and Grant McCool.)
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compare-wp10 · 4 years
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COVID-19 Has United Cybersecurity Experts, But Will That Unity Survive the Pandemic? — Krebs on Security
The Coronavirus has prompted thousands of information security professionals to volunteer their skills in upstart collaborative efforts aimed at frustrating cybercriminals who are seeking to exploit the crisis for financial gain. Whether it’s helping hospitals avoid becoming the next ransomware victim or kneecapping new COVID-19-themed scam websites, these nascent partnerships may well end up saving lives. But can this unprecedented level of collaboration survive the pandemic? At least three major industry groups are working to counter the latest cyber threats and scams. Among the largest in terms of contributors is the COVID-19 Cyber Threat Coalition (CTC), which comprises rough 3,000 security professionals who are collecting, vetting and sharing new intelligence about new cyber threats. Nick Espinosa, a self-described “security fanatic,” author and public speaker who’s handling communications for the CTC, said the group does most of its work remotely via a dedicated Slack channel, where many infosec professionals seem eager to counter the gusto with which the cybercriminal community has sought to profit by exacerbating an already difficult situation. “A nurse or doctor can’t do what we do, and we can’t do what they do,” Espinosa said. “We’ve seen a massive rise in threats and attacks against healthcare systems, but it’s worse if someone dies due to a malicious cyberattack when we have the ability to prevent that. A lot of people are involved because they’re emotionally attached to the idea of helping this critical infrastructure stay safe and online.” Using threat intelligence feeds donated by dozens of cybersecurity companies, the CTC is poring over more than 100 million pieces of data about potential threats each day, running those indicators through security products from roughly 70 different vendors. If at least 10 of those flag a specific data point — such as a domain name — as malicious or bad, it gets added to the CTC’s blocklist, which is designed to be used by organizations worldwide for blocking malicious traffic. “For possible threats, meaning between five and nine vendors detect an indicator as bad, our volunteers manually verify that the indicator is malicious before including it in our blocklist,” Espinosa said. Another Slack-based upstart coalition called the COVID-19 CTI League spans more than 40 countries and includes professionals in senior positions at such major companies as Microsoft Corp and Amazon.com Inc. Mark Rogers, one of several people helping to manage the CTI League’s efforts, told Reuters the top priority of the group is working to combat hacks against medical facilities and other frontline responders to the pandemic, as well as helping defend communication networks and services that have become essential as more people work from home. “The group is also using its web of contacts in internet infrastructure providers to squash garden-variety phishing attacks and another financial crime that is using the fear of COVID-19 or the desire for information on it to trick regular internet users,” wrote Reuters’ Joe Menn. “I’ve never seen this volume of phishing,” Rogers told Reuters. “I am literally seeing phishing messages in every language known to man.” Among the more mature organizations working to counter the threat from COVID-19 scammers is the Cyber Threat Alliance, a industry group founded in 2017 that counts among its members more than two dozen major cybersecurity firms that are all required to regularly share threat intelligence with other members. “One thing we’re paying attention to in addition to phishing and malware attacks is anything targeting stuff involved in the pandemic response, such as the manufacturers of protective gear, testing kits, or hospitals,” CTA President Michael Daniel told KrebsOnSecurity. “One of those organizations getting hit with ransomware now would be really bad, and we want to make sure if we see that we’re alerting and working with law enforcement.” Earlier this month, the international police network INTERPOL issued a warning to law enforcement in nearly 200 member countries, saying it had detected “a significant increase in the number of attempted ransomware attacks against key organizations and infrastructure engaged in the virus response.” The alert came after several top ransomware gangs pledged a moratorium on attacking hospitals and other care centers for the near future. Nevertheless, these group have continued to target companies on the periphery of the pandemic response, including virus testing labs, N95 mask production facilities, and companies engaged in vaccine research. The CTC’s Espinoza said it would be a potentially fatal mistake to assume all cybercriminal groups might observe such a cease-fire. “We might have independent criminal groups saying they won’t hit hospitals but they’ll hit everyone else, but that doesn’t prevent them from sending phishing emails and masquerading as the World Health Organization or the Centers for Disease Control,” he said. “These are people who have no problems locking out little old ladies out of their computers for 800 bucks, and of course there are state-sponsored hackers who love any opportunity to sow discord and disrupt things.” SURVIVING THE PANDEMIC The CTA’s Daniel said while it’s great to see so much voluntary collaboration between the cybersecurity industry, governments and law enforcement, he’s been thinking a lot lately about how to sustain these relationships and networks once the urgency of the pandemic subsides. Formerly special assistant to President Obama and cybersecurity coordinator on the National Security Council, Daniel said he sees preserving and enhancing this information sharing effort post-COVID as one of the biggest policy issues facing the federal government over the next few years. “Information sharing is easy to talk about, and hard to do in practice,” Daniel said. “I don’t use the term ‘public-private partnership’ because it’s been bandied about so much over the years that I don’t know what it means anymore. It’s probably best described as ‘working together on an operation.'” What prevents private companies from working more closely and frequently with governments on operations to target cybercrime organizations and networks? Daniel said on the government side, there are real concerns that working with one or two particularly clueful or effective companies (versus all of them) might give the impression that the government is showing favoritism, or picking winners and losers in the market. “But you have to do that to some extent because the truth is some companies matter in this space, and a lot don’t,” Daniel said. “The government has to accept that, determine what are the objective rules, and establish transparency so that [their efforts] aren’t seen as some secret club but as part of a normal process.” Daniel said governments in general also need to get more comfortable sharing information about operations targeting specific crime groups in advance of those actions. “The government has to figure out how to let the private sector in on some of the planning and preparation,” he said. “If you want [the cybersecurity industry’s] help against certain targets, you have to tell us who they are ahead of time. But this goes against how  governments operate in almost every way.” On the private sector side are issues of how for-profit companies can closely collaborate with the government without being perceived as potentially compromising the privacy and security of their customers, or as simply an agent of the government. “For companies, the question is how do you deal with the liability and other questions that come with that,” Daniel said. “These are very real impediments, and why I think we need to get past the endless discussions of public-private partnerships and start talking about what we can do to coordinate actions against these groups so we can have a more strategic impact on the adversary.” Tags: COVID-19 Cyber Threat Coalition, Cyber Threat Alliance, Joe Menn, Mark Rogers, Michael Daniel, Nick Espinosa This entry was posted on Wednesday, April 15th, 2020 at 11:28 am and is filed under The Coming Storm. You can follow any comments to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. 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jc · 5 years
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Das Beste aus Twitter, November-Edition
Fröhliche Adventszeit, ihr Twitterianer/innen!
A whale taking a nap pic.twitter.com/ecUfhJsJK3
— Physics-astronomy.org (@OrgPhysics) October 5, 2019
In eine fremde Bar gehen, „Wie immer, bitte!“ bestellen und warten, was kommt.
— leonceundlena (@leonceundlena) October 5, 2019
Berühmte Endungen bei Toptweets: – Auch sie kennen das – Tschüss – Zündet alles an – Weiß man da schon was genaueres? Berühmte Anfänge bei Toptweets: – Die Kinder haben heute – Der 3 jährige meinte – K1 sagte zu K2 – K2 sagte zu K1
— Jesus von Hartzareth (@jesusvonhartz) October 6, 2019
Weil ich keine Lust habe morgen aus dem Haus zu gehen, werde ich in der früh direkt meine Mutter anrufen und sagen, dass ich nicht aufgeräumt habe, mit etwas Glück bekomme ich Hausarrest.
— 🎃PrincessPeach👑🍑 (@Cut_with_an_E) October 7, 2019
Das könnten wir sein aber du bist noch niczt geboren pic.twitter.com/9CbWRCcvhp
— Batu🌿 (@Batu_1907_06) October 7, 2019
Bitte, lieber Gott, gib, dass ich nie etwas mache, das "augenzwinkernd daherkommt"
— Christian Möller (@moelllller) September 19, 2019
Wenn du mal einen schlechten Tag hast, denk dran: Irgendwer fängt bei deinem früheren Arbeitgeber an und denkt das sei ein toller, neuer Job.
— Genug Anouk (@GenugAnouk) October 8, 2019
Was ich bedauere: Merkel ist doch fast durch mit allem. Und sie ist Physikerin, versteht die Zusammenhänge. Warum nutzt sie nicht die Chance und macht sich unsterblich mit einem konsequenten Kampf gegen den Klimawandel. Das würde bleiben.
— Leander Wattig (@leanderwattig) October 7, 2019
Apropos Udo Jürgens, der hat vor 40 Jahren schon ein Lied über arrogante Erwachsene geschrieben, die protestierende Jugendliche nicht ernst nehmen: https://t.co/MOhZxRt8QC
— Quarkkrokettchen (@anneschuessler) October 8, 2019
Mahlzeit. pic.twitter.com/akcIhDDv0r
— Ralph Ruthe (@ralphruthe) October 9, 2019
Ich sehe jeden Tag tagsüber Stau auf den Straßen… Können die ganzen Autofahrer nicht einfach mal nachts fahren? https://t.co/ofsL1AE1k1
— Olli (@I_Am_Marth) October 11, 2019
Die mutigste Maus im Viertel. 💚 pic.twitter.com/LaWRrGdG5C
— Ulf Matthias ( Der fade Poet ) (@UlfSchmid) October 11, 2019
Wer jahrelang mit Begriffen wie “Umvolkung“, “Schuldkult“ oder “Genderwahn“ Hass schürt, sollte jetzt nicht so tun, als trage er keine Verantwortung wenn ein Rechtsterrorist aus rassistischen, antisemitischen und misogynen Motiven zwei Menschen erschießt.
— Philipp Menn (@PhilippMenn) October 10, 2019
me: im depressed therapist: try a good walk me: will that work therapist: yes *subtly gives a ‘thumbs up’ to my dog*
— Christopher Ashman (@CAshmanActor) October 11, 2019
vorgestern wieder gemerkt: mit leuten, die grundsätzlich herablassend mit dienstleistungsmenschen umgehen, will ich so wenig wie möglich privat zu tun haben.
— schnoerpsel (@schnoerpsel) October 11, 2019
Wisst ihr was noch viel heißer ist als Käse? Ofenkäse.
— Hummelfee (@Hummelfee5) October 11, 2019
Weil die Jury sich anders entschied. pic.twitter.com/eyXbbpTpny
— Dennis Horn (@horn) October 11, 2019
Alle gehen ins Kino… … und ich so 😔 pic.twitter.com/yyE7L4dSdI
— lo0nymo0n 🕹 (@loonymoon) October 11, 2019
Wenn das so weitergeht bei XING, wird man bald zahlen sollen, um sein eigenes Profil sehen zu können.
— Leander Wattig (@leanderwattig) October 13, 2019
Genau Google, genau pic.twitter.com/JF52LCGm4v
— Grimson Prime (@DerletztePrime) October 23, 2017
"oh, hello. you're back early" 📹: https://t.co/ITkBKNZaXF pic.twitter.com/AqFHfI4URm
— Paul Bronks (@SlenderSherbet) October 15, 2019
Wählen Sie Ihre Zahlungsart: ⚪️Visa ⚪️Mastercard ⚪️AmEx ⚪️PayPal ⚪️Rechnung ⚫️Bar pic.twitter.com/0Ny8na0Jog
— Frau Schlau (@Frau_Schlau__) October 14, 2019
Es ging mehr rein als raus, ich verbuche das als Erfolg. pic.twitter.com/dI9sLngArv
— Danger Mouse (@octodontidae) October 17, 2019
Google 2019: "Here is not what you EXPLICITLY searched for, but 25 ads of Corporations trying to sell you something vaguely related…"
— Benjamin Helsper (@Klausebou) October 17, 2019
Typ auf Stehempfang gestern, der mir erklärt hat, dass mein Buch scheiße ist und dann gesagt hat „ich würde dich trotzdem gerne näher kennen lernen 😉“, perfekte Zusammenfassung der Buchmesse
— Sophie Paßmann (@SophiePassmann) October 18, 2019
Kürzlich habe ich einem Kollegen gebeichtet, dass ich nicht gerne #Tatort gucke. pic.twitter.com/oBWqNWJvyP
— Niddal Salah-Eldin (@Nisalahe) October 18, 2019
Warum nehmen heutzutage eigentlich soviele Eltern Fotos ihrer Kinder als Profilbild? Mein WhatsApp sieht aus, als würd ich mit 'ner Kita chatten…
— Der Blödler (@bloedler) October 19, 2019
🐟             🐡         🐟     🐟     🐡 🐟 🐟           🐡      🌿    🌿  🌾
— Emoji Aquarium (@EmojiAquarium) October 23, 2019
Eindeutig 😄 pic.twitter.com/dv5fT1NSUL
— 🥂 ᴘʀᴏsᴇᴄᴄᴏᴘʀɪɴᴢ 🥂 (@ProseccoPrinz) October 13, 2019
Ich will ja nix sagen Leute, aber heute in 132 Jahren bricht die USS Enterprise auf und alles, was wir bisher dafür erfunden haben ist dieses Bluetooth-Headset von Uhura.
— 𝚜𝚝𝚊𝚍𝚝𝚠𝚊̈𝚌𝚑𝚝𝚎𝚛 (@stadtwaechter) October 23, 2019
pic.twitter.com/5vfkH42ow5
— the Awkward Yeti (Nick Seluk) (@theawkwardyeti) October 24, 2019
Zum Selbstausmalen. pic.twitter.com/wmE8SoE0xD
— Peter Breuer (@peterbreuer) October 26, 2019
was ist eure meistbenutzte herdplatte?
— Ilona Hartmann (@zirkuspony) October 25, 2019
Olaf Scholz – das E steht für Erneuerung.
— Peter Wittkamp🐬 (@diktator) October 26, 2019
Nürnberger Ultras mit einem Argument, das in der Debatte über den Literaturnobelpreis bislang vielleicht zu kurz kam @sasa_s pic.twitter.com/0kS4g3tNxe
— Oliver Fritsch (@OliFritsch) October 27, 2019
Stellenanzeige für einen Social Media Manager in der "Internetnutzung" als Benefit angeboten wird🤔
— Antje Tomfohrde (@AntjeTomfohrde) November 1, 2019
MS-DOS hatte den Dunkel Modus als Standard.
— Veit Klapp (@VeitKlapp) October 16, 2019
„Er nimmt mir manchmal die Kinder ab. Damit ich in Ruhe einkaufen kann.“ Gespräche im Supermarkt, die gruseln.
— Vanessa Giese (@dieliebenessy) November 4, 2019
Ich möchte befreundet sein mit der Frau hier im ICE, die gerade am Telefon mit sehr zärtlicher Stimme ihren Mann verabschiedete mit den Worten „Ich dich auch. Ja. Tschüsseldorf.“
— Sophie Paßmann (@SophiePassmann) November 4, 2019
„Chef, das passt aber nicht in eine Zeile!” „Soldat, was nicht passt, wird passend gemacht.” pic.twitter.com/1qpcNuHIei
— Marcus Schwarze (@MarcusSchwarze) November 2, 2019
hello darkness my old friend why are you here its 4pm
— jonny sun (@jonnysun) November 3, 2019
Hier in Bielefeld ist morgen eine Nazidemo. Klar, es ist schön, wenn auch Nazis mal ein bisschen an die frische Luft gehen. Aber das mit NAZIS RAUS war doch irgendwie anders gemeint.
— Hazel Brugger (@hazelbrugger) November 8, 2019
Es beginnt die Zeit, in der ich gebetsmühlenartig wiederholen muss, dass ich auf keinen Weihnachtsmarkt gehe. Nicht zum Vergnügen. Das ist in Deutschland ungefähr so, als sage man, man trinke keinen Alkohol.
— Vanessa Giese (@dieliebenessy) November 12, 2019
Ich feiere den Plakatierer. pic.twitter.com/N2WTg7F40q
— Fischer-Steak (@DerWachsame) November 14, 2019
(Original unter: https://1ppm.de/2019/11/das-beste-aus-twitter-november-2019/)
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billigefotball-blog · 7 years
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Arsenals siste spørsmålene gjenoppstår i Champions League tegne med PSG
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Arsenals Champions League-sesongen tok en kjent sving da de spilte 2-2 med Paris Saint-Germain på Emirates Stadium. Nick Wright var der for å se sine siste spørsmålene gjenoppstår ...
Når Arsene Wenger sa at det var "ingen grunn til panikk" i sin post-match pressekonferanse, hadde han et poeng. Arsenal kan ha overgitt seg topplasseringen i gruppe A med sin 2-2 mot Paris Saint-Germain, men deres plass i Champions League knockout rundene er allerede sikret, og deres ubeseiret nå strekker seg til 18 kamper i alle turneringer.
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Det er ikke en dårlig situasjon å være i, men som avhørene fortsatte på Emirates Stadium, Wenger innrømmet sin side har mistet noe av sin fart.Dette var Arsenals tredje påfølgende uavgjort etter at de delte poengene med Tottenham og Manchester United. Mer bekymringsfullt, men det var også den tredje påfølgende spill der de har prestert godt under sitt beste.
Arsenal sliter for flyt og advarsel skiltene var der fra starten mot PSG. Knapt et minutt var gått da Laurent Koscielny sprayet en løs pasning rett til Blaise Matuidi 30 yards fra eget mål, og øyeblikk senere Francis Coquelin begavet ballen til Edinson Cavani i en tilsvarende situasjon.
Arsenal overlevde de nervøse øyeblikk, men deres kamp i besittelse fortsatte som de besøkende begynte å dominere. Kieran Gibbs hadde allerede ryddet en av linjen når Cavani utlignet åpneren fra Matuidi er et lavt innlegg, og da Olivier Giroud utlignet fra straffemerket på slutten av første omgang, var det med sitt første skudd på mål.
The Gunners fikk en annen heldig pause da Marco Verratti egen mål setter dem foran på timen mark. Deres fordel varte ikke lenge, men som PSG kapitalisert på slakk merking til nivå resultatet fra et hjørne. Arsenal ble skranglet, og de ville ha tapt hvis det ikke var for noen villfarne behandling fra Cavani i den avsluttende fasen.
Etter den tid dommeren blåste sluttsignalet hadde Arsenal ikke mønstret et eneste skudd på mål fra åpent spill. Mangelen på kreativitet er problematisk for en side som er stolte av sine angripende kvaliteter. Arsenal har scoret mange mål mot Ludogorets og Sunderland de siste ukene, men mot elite motstand i sine tre siste kamper kombinert har de bare klart fire skudd på mål.
Skader har vært ødeleggende. I det sentrale midtbane, Arsenal sårt savner Santi Cazorla evne til å bryte ut av trange steder og starte angrep fra dyp. Wenger er å finne det vanskelig å finne den rette balansen i spanjolens fravær, og hans usikkerhet har ført ham til felt forskjellige midtbane partnerskap i hver av Arsenals tre siste kamper.
Granit Xhaka var uten tvil beste spilleren Arsenal i Nord-London-derby, men han har falt ut av laget siden da. Mohamed El-Nenny ble foretrukket til partner Coquelin mot United, mens Ramsey fikk nikk mot PSG. Det er litt rart Arsenal mangler samhold. Med Cazorla satt til å være ute før jul, må Wenger å slå seg ned på en løsning før heller enn senere.
Arsenals defensive blundere er også vedrørende. De har ikke holdt nullen i noen av sine fem siste kamper, og Héctor Bellerín skaden har allerede vist problematisk. Carl Jenkinson har vist mange bestrebelser i hans fravær, men forskjellen i kvalitet var tydelig mot PSG som han ikke klarte å finne en medspiller med alle fem av hans kors.
Wenger ble spilt ned sin side usammenhengende ytelse, men det kan være kostbart. Arsenal er nesten sikker på å fullføre som gruppe løpere opp for femte år på rad sesongen, og mens det fortsatt er en runde med kamper igjen å spille, betyr det at de allerede står overfor den distinkte muligheten for en annen siste-16 møte med Lionel Messis Barcelona.
Det ville være den verste fall, men Arsenal må vise betydelig forbedring uansett hvem de møter. Wengers menn er ubeseiret siden åpningsdagen av kampanjen, og det er ikke tid for panikk stasjoner ennå, men lykken varer ikke evig. De trenger å gjenoppdage sin tidlig-season form, og starter med besøk av Bournemouth på Nissan  Super søndag .
Oppgrader til Sky Sports nå og få 12 måneder halv pris. Skynd deg, tilbudet avsluttes 04.12!
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tefpoe1 · 7 years
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Intro / God In the City produced by Indiana Rome and Jackpot featuring Corey Black Best Rapper Alive Like Weezy featuring Monkh produced by Jackpot Don't Judge Her produced by Jackpot featuring Tara Tee and Monkh Genocide produced by Beau Brenton featuring T Dubb-O ,Monkh, and The Knuckles Pray For Me produced by The Urban Legendz featuring Brad Young , Mai Lee, Nick Menn FVCK 12 featuring Monkh produced by Chase the Money Bring Me Down produced by Duke Rellington featuring Rockwell Knuckles New Ice Cube produced by Jackpot Wait For Me produced by Trifeckta featuring T Dubb-O Assata produced by Radio Rasheid Testimony produced by The Urban Legendz featuring GLC Die High produced by Duke Rellington Tubman's Bounce produced by Jackpot Cancel That produced by Average Jo featuring Monkh Mix and mastered by Matt Sawicki for Suburban Pro Studios Pre-production recorded at Doorway Studios and Checkmate Studios Executive produced by Tef Poe and Mugol Mind frame Creatives
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omcik-blog · 7 years
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New Post has been published on OmCik
New Post has been published on http://omcik.com/u-s-tech-leaders-sound-alarm-over-trump-immigration-order-reuters/
U.S. tech leaders sound alarm over Trump immigration order | Reuters
By Joseph Menn and Julia Love | SAN FRANCISCO
SAN FRANCISCO The U.S. technology industry, a major employer of foreign workers, hit back on Saturday at President Donald Trump’s sudden executive order on immigration, with some leaders calling it immoral and un-American.
Trump’s order temporarily bars citizens of seven majority-Muslim countries from entering the United States even if they hold valid visas or permanent residence permits, a move that caught many companies off-guard.
Netflix Inc Chief Executive Reed Hastings called it “a sad week” and added: “It is time to link arms together to protect American values of freedom and opportunity.”
Apple Inc CEO Tim Cook sent a letter to employees saying Trump’s order was “not a policy we support” and promised to help affected employees.
“We have reached out to the White House to explain the negative effect on our coworkers and our company,” Cook added.
Elon Musk, the South African-born founder of Tesla and SpaceX who met recently with Trump, said on Twitter: “The blanket entry ban on citizens from certain primarily Muslim countries is not the best way to address the country’s challenges.”
Airbnb co-founder and CEO Brian Chesky said: “Not allowing countries or refugees into America is not right and we must stand with those who are affected.”
Airbnb will provide free housing to anyone not allowed into the United States, Chesky said.
Aaron Levie, the outspoken founder and CEO of online storage company Box Inc, said: “The executive order on immigration is immoral and antithetical to our values.”
STRANDED
Friday’s order could be a major headache for tech companies, potentially leaving employees stranded overseas and unable to return to the United States.
Alphabet Inc’s Google urgently called back employees from overseas and told ones who might be affected by the ban not to leave the United States.
CEO Sundar Pichai said in an email to staff that more than 100 Google employees were affected by the order, according to a Google executive.
One Google employee of Iranian nationality with legal U.S. residency made it back to the United States just hours before the order took effect, the executive said.
“We’re concerned about the impact of this order and any proposals that could impose restrictions on Googlers and their families, or that could create barriers to bringing great talent to the U.S.,” Google said in a statement.
Microsoft Corp President and Chief Legal Officer Brad Smith said in a company-wide email posted on LinkedIn that 76 company employees were citizens of the seven countries in question and held U.S. work visas, and thus were directly affected by the order.
He said the company had not determined how many people with green cards, or permanent residence status, might be affected.
“As a company, Microsoft believes in a strong and balanced high-skilled immigration system,” Smith said in the post. “We believe in the importance of protecting legitimate and law-abiding refugees whose very lives may be at stake in immigration proceedings.”
Uber Technologies Inc [UBER.UL] CEO Travis Kalanick, who has faced criticism from some employees for participating in President Trump’s business advisory council, said in a statement that the company would compensate drivers from the seven countries who might not be able to return to the United States for three months or more. He said the company knew of about a dozen affected employees.
“This ban will impact many innocent people – an issue that I will raise this coming Friday when I go to Washington for President Trump’s first business advisory group meeting,” Kalanick said.
Facebook Inc CEO Mark Zuckerberg said in a post on Friday that was “concerned” about the order and voiced support for immigrants.
(Reporting by Joseph Menn, Julia Love and Kristina Cook; Writing by Jonathan Weber; Editing by Alan Crosby, Bill Rigby and Nick Zieminski)
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olko71 · 7 years
Text
New Post has been published on About business online
New Post has been published on http://yaroreviews.info/?p=26
U.S. tech leaders sound alarm over Trump immigration order
By Joseph Menn & Julia Love | SAN FRANCISCO
SAN FRANCISCO The U.S. technology industry, a major employer of foreign workers, hit back on Saturday at President Donald Trump’s sudden executive order on immigration, with some leaders calling it immoral & un-American.
Trump’s order temporarily bars citizens of seven majority-Muslim countries from entering the United States even whether they hold valid visas or permanent residence permits, a move that caught many companies off-guard.
Netflix Inc Chief Executive Reed Hastings called it “a sad week” & added: “It is time to link arms together to protect American values of freedom & opportunity.”
Apple Inc CEO Tim Cook sent a letter to employees saying Trump’s order was “not a policy we support” & promised to assist affected employees.
“We have reached out to the White House to explain the negative effect on our coworkers & our company,” Cook added.
Elon Musk, the South African-born founder of Tesla & SpaceX who met recently with Trump, said on Twitter: “The blanket entry ban on citizens from certain primarily Muslim countries is not the best way to address the country’s challenges.”
Airbnb co-founder & CEO Brian Chesky said: “Not allowing countries or refugees into America is not right & we must stand with those who are affected.”
Airbnb will provide free housing to anyone not allowed into the United States, Chesky said.
Aaron Levie, the outspoken founder & CEO of online storage company Box Inc, said: “The executive order on immigration is immoral & antithetical to our values.”
STRANDED
Friday’s order could be a major headache for tech companies, potentially leaving employees stranded abroad & unable to return to the United States.
Alphabet Inc’s Google urgently called back employees from abroad & told ones who might be affected by the ban not to leave the United States.
CEO Sundar Pichai said in an email to staff that more than 100 Google employees were affected by the order, according to a Google executive.
One Google employee of Iranian nationality with legal U.S. residency made it back to the United States just hours before the order took effect, the executive said.
“We’re concerned approximately the impact of this order & any proposals that could impose restrictions on Googlers & their families, or that could create barriers to bringing tremendous talent to the U.S.,” Google said in a statement.
Microsoft Corp President & Chief Legal Officer Brad Smith said in a company-wide email posted on LinkedIn that 76 company employees were citizens of the seven countries in question & held U.S. work visas, & thus were directly affected by the order.
He said the company had not determined how many people with green cards, or permanent residence status, might be affected.
“As a company, Microsoft believes in a strong & balanced high-skilled immigration system,” Smith said in the post. “We believe in the importance of protecting valid & law-abiding refugees whose very lives may be at stake in immigration proceedings.”
Uber Technologies Inc [UBER.UL] CEO Travis Kalanick, who has faced criticism from some employees for participating in President Trump’s commerce advisory council, said in a statement that the company would compensate drivers from the seven countries who might not be able to return to the United States for three months or more. He said the company knew of approximately a dozen affected employees.
“This ban will impact many harmless people – an issue that I will raise this coming Friday when I go to Washington for President Trump’s first commerce advisory group meeting,” Kalanick said.
Facebook Inc CEO Mark Zuckerberg said in a post on Friday that was “concerned” approximately the order & voiced support for immigrants.
(Reporting by Joseph Menn, Julia Love & Kristina Cook; Writing by Jonathan Weber; Editing by Alan Crosby, Bill Rigby & Nick Zieminski)
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Snapchat to reveal financials within a week: sources
Snap Inc, the secretive technology company that owns the popular messaging service Snapchat, is due to reveal its financials within a week as it moves toward its eagerly awaited initial public offering (IPO), sources familiar with the situation said on Friday.
German‎ watchdog suspected VW scam on CO2 emissions: report
BERLIN Germany’s motor industry watchdog raised suspicions Volkswagen was using prototype vehicles to lower carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions in tests in 2015 shortly after VW’s manipulation of diesel emissions tests was uncovered, the Berliner Zeitung newspaper reported on Saturday.
Starbucks in crosshairs as Mexico boycott campaign simmers
MEXICO CITY Seeking to quell a social media campaign imploring Mexicans to boycott U.S. companies, Starbucks defended itself on Friday, saying it had invested millions in the country, created more than 7,000 jobs, & that its local unit is Mexican-owned.
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noiseymusic · 10 years
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We went to St. Louis for the fourth episode of ‪#‎MadeInAmerica‬ and hung out with Nelly, Tef Poe, Nick Menn from Doorway, and JGE Retro. 
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celeboftea · 10 years
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[Watch] Made In St. Louis ft. Nelly, Jge Retro, Tef Poe, & Nick Menn - Made In America #Getmybuzzup
[Watch] Made In St. Louis ft. Nelly, Jge Retro, Tef Poe, & Nick Menn – Made In America #Getmybuzzup
Made In St. Louis ft. Nelly – Made In America By Amber B
Noisey is proud to present the St. Louis Episode of the Made In America series, directed by acclaimed filmmaker and music video director Lance Bangs. In the series, Noisey and Budweiser travel the country to speak with world famous and locally adored artists, including Nelly, Ben Gibbard, and Big Gigantic, and explore the cities that made…
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dylanmbates-blog · 10 years
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vanitynumbers · 6 years
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Uber should have given court an ex-employee's letter about 'fraud and theft' in Waymo case
New Post has been published on https://new800numbers.com/business/uber-should-have-given-court-an-ex-employees-letter-about-fraud-and-theft-in-waymo-case/
Uber should have given court an ex-employee's letter about 'fraud and theft' in Waymo case
Local vanity Numbers:
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – Ride hailing company Uber was obligated to turn over to a U.S. federal judge a letter from a former employee that told of the company’s “fraud and theft” and mentioned evidence of stolen trade secrets nailed “like a scalp” to the wall, a court official said Friday.
Special master, John Cooper, assigned to a lawsuit against Uber Technologies Inc [UBER.UL] by Alphabet Inc’s (GOOGL.O) self-driving car unit, Waymo, released a report on Friday stating the company should have produced the letter and was wrong in keeping it from the court.
The letter, from former Uber security analyst Richard Jacobs alleging Uber engaged in illegal and unethical competitive tactics and had stolen trade secrets, is at the heart of Waymo’s lawsuit against Uber.
The letter was sent to Uber’s in-house lawyer in May and shared with executives and board members, who could easily access it, special master Cooper said in his report.
“This needle was in Uber’s hands the whole time,” he said.
Cooper’s determination marks another setback for Uber in a case in which the judge has blamed Uber for withholding evidence and masterminding a coverup.
U.S. District Judge William Alsup will determine what, if any, consequences Uber faces for not turning over the letter.
The 37-page letter from Jacobs was released publicly for the first time Friday, partially redacted, although its contents had been discussed in detail during court testimony last month.
Because Uber had not disclosed it, the letter turned up just last month when the U.S. Department of Justice notified Alsup about it. The Justice Department has opened a criminal investigation into the matter.
Waymo sued Uber in February, alleging it had stolen trade secrets from Waymo’s self-driving car designs, and estimates damages in the case at $1.9 billion. Uber has said no Waymo designs have been used in its cars and rejects the financial damages claim.
In the letter, written by Jacobs’ lawyer, the ex-Uber employee said Uber’s security team had a unit that “exists expressly for the purpose of acquiring trade secrets, codebase, and competitive intelligence,” and a second unit that “frequently engages in fraud and theft.”
His letter says that Uber stole trade secrets from Waymo, but in court testimony last month he recanted that statement.
Jacobs’ letter also describes surveillance operations in which Uber employees bugged meetings with transportation regulators and recorded executives of rival companies, and says that former Uber CEO Travis Kalanick directed these operations.
In a statement on Friday, Uber said it has not substantiated all of the claims in Jacobs’ letter, but “our new leadership has made clear that going forward we will compete honestly and fairly, on the strength of our ideas and technology.”
Dara Khosrowshahi replaced Kalanick as CEO in August, and has been critical of Uber’s behavior under its old leader.
Jacobs named Mat Henley, who is on medical leave from Uber, Nick Gicinto, a manager on the security team, as instrumental in Uber’s clandestine intelligence-gathering operation. Security chief Joe Sullivan, and legal director Craig Clark, who were both fired last month for their role in concealing a massive data breach, were also involved, the letter said.
Sullivan said in a statement on Friday his team “acted ethically” and an attorney for Clark said has he “acted appropriately at all times.”
Matthew Umhofer, an attorney for Henley, Gicinto and other members of Uber, said: “Jacobs’ letter is nothing more than character assassination for cash.”
Jacobs was forced to resign in April after a demotion, and sent the letter the following month. He struck a deal with for Uber a $7.5 million settlement, and Jacobs continues to work for Uber as a consultant.
Additional reporting by Joseph Menn and Dan Levine in San Francisco; editing by Clive McKeef
Our Standards:The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
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