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Today β€” 1 July 2024Main stream

Israel-Gaza war live: thousands of Jewish ultra-orthodox men clash with police in Jerusalem over conscription law

1 July 2024 at 02:41

Government decision to begin drafting previously exempt ultra-Orthodox men came months into Gaza war

Here are some of the images of protests in Jerusalem overnight in which Israeli security forces intervened. Ultra-Orthodox Jews, also known as Haredim, were protesting against plans to end their exemption from compulsory military service.

Al Jazeera reports that Muhammad Abu Salamiya, director of the al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City, has been released by Israeli forces.

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Β© Photograph: Ohad Zwigenberg/AP

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Β© Photograph: Ohad Zwigenberg/AP

Yesterday β€” 30 June 2024Main stream

The 2025 Polestar 4: Great steering and a small carbon footprint stand out

30 June 2024 at 18:01
A white Polestsr 4 in a field

Enlarge / The Polestar 4 is the latest entrant into the crowded midsize luxury electric SUV segment. We think it has what it takes to stand out. (credit: Jonathan Gitlin)

"If you're going to make a car and use all that energy, it should be a good car," said Thomas Ingenlath, CEO of Polestar. Ingenlath was referring to the company's latest electric vehicle, a midsize SUV with striking coupe looks called the Polestar 4. While Ingenlath is on point from a sustainability perspective, it makes good business sense, too. The Polestar 4 needs to be a good car to stand out as it enters one of the most hotly contested segments of the market.

In fact, Polestar uses less energy to make its latest EV than anything else in its rangeβ€”the company quotes a carbon footprint of 19.9 tonnes of CO2 from cradle to gate. Like some other automakers, Polestar is using a monomaterial approach to the interior to make recycling easier, choosing the same base plastic for all the components in a particular piece of trim, for example.

The carpets are made from, variously, recycled fishing nets or plastic bottles. The vinyl seats use pine oil instead of the stuff extracted from the ground, and the knitted upholstery fabricβ€”also recycled plastic bottlesβ€”was designed to leave no off-cuts.

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Tour de France: Vauquelin wins stage two as Tadej Pogacar takes yellow jersey

30 June 2024 at 12:19
  • Jonas Vingegaard responds to late Tadej Pogacar attack
  • KΓ©vin Vauquelin follows Bardet as French stage winner

Tadej Pogacar threw down the gauntlet to defending Tour de France champion Jonas Vingegaard, attacking in the hills ringing Bologna, to take the yellow jersey on stage two of the 2024 race.

β€œIt was more important to test myself [than Vingegaard],” Pogacar said after taking the maillot jaune. β€œIt’s good to be in yellow. You don’t say no to yellow.”

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Β© Photograph: Papon Bernard/Reuters

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Β© Photograph: Papon Bernard/Reuters

Middle East crisis live: Israeli and Palestinian forces fighting β€˜above and below ground’ in northern Gaza

30 June 2024 at 06:15

Israel’s military says β€˜large number’ of militants dead in Shujaiya area near Gaza City amid reports of bodies in streets

Australian prime minister Anthony Albanese has suspended Fatima Payman from the Labor Party caucus after the senator crossed the floor on Tuesday to support a Greens motion supporting Palestinian statehood.

β€œBy her own actions and statements, senator Payman has placed herself outside the privilege that comes with participating in the federal parliamentary Labor party caucus,” a government spokesperson said.

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Β© Photograph: Atef Safadi/EPA

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Β© Photograph: Atef Safadi/EPA

Before yesterdayMain stream

Revealed: the tech entrepreneur behind a pro-Israel hate network

29 June 2024 at 09:00

The Guardian used public records and open source materials to identify Daniel Linden of the Shirion Collective

A prime mover behind the Shirion Collective, a conspiracy-minded, pro-Israel disinformation network seeking to shape public opinion about the Gaza conflict in the US, Australia and the UK, is a tech entrepreneur named Daniel Linden living in Florida who co-wrote a guidebook for OnlyFans users, the Guardian can reveal.

Shirion has harassed pro-Palestinian activists, including many Jews, offered bounties for the identity of pro-Palestinian protesters, spread conspiracy narratives centered on figures like George Soros, and boasted of an AI-surveillance platform but offered few concrete details of how the technology functions.

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Β© Photograph: Celal Gunes/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

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Β© Photograph: Celal Gunes/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

Middle East crisis live: Iran sounds warning on Israeli β€˜aggression’ in Lebanon

29 June 2024 at 05:10

Islamic republic’s UN mission says an β€˜obliterating war will ensue’ if Israel launches β€˜full-scale military aggression’ in Lebanon

At least 37,834 Palestinians have been killed and 86,858 wounded in Israel’s military offensive on Gaza since 7 October, the Gaza health ministry said in a statement on Saturday.

In case you missed it, an intervention by the UK government at the international criminal court is expected to delay a decision over whether an arrest warrant can be issued against the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, for alleged war crimes in Gaza.

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Β© Photograph: Ahmad Al-Rubaye/AFP/Getty Images

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Β© Photograph: Ahmad Al-Rubaye/AFP/Getty Images

The generous impulses of all were awakened by the danger that threatened

By: bq
28 June 2024 at 16:01
Welcome to the website dedicated to preserving the Civil War history & record of the men of the 13th Regiment, Massachusetts Volunteer infantry. The site was launched June 2, 2008. Since that time over 60 pages of detailed history have been added. These pages include newspaper stories, soldiers letters, diaries, memoirs, photos, and post-war reminiscences.... Content warning for language, racism, and violence.

It cost a recruit $12.50 for the privilege of enlisting in the exclusive 4th Battallion of Rifles, but before considering the fee, the applicant needed to be approved by a vote from members of the Boston Militia group. In spite of the cost there were plenty of applicants & there was no problem filling each company to its full compliment of men. The four rifle companies of the Fourth Battallion, Companies A, B, C, & D, became the nucleus of the 13th Regiment Massachusetts Volunteers (...) Many of these men chose to go directly to the seat of war as privates in the 13th rather than wait for a chance at an officer's commission with another organization.(...) "They are a damned insubordinate lot," said brigade commander General John J. Abercrombie when asked what kind of troops they were. Amongst the material gathered here is this outstanding story attributed to (Union) Lieutenant Edward Rollins: Dr. Stringfellow's Slaves

Apple’s Vision Pro goes on sale outside the US for the first time

28 June 2024 at 17:42
A mixed reality headset over a table in an Apple Store

Enlarge / A Vision Pro on display at an Apple Store in Tokyo. (credit: Apple)

Apple's Vision Pro headset went on sale outside the United States for the first time today, in the first of two waves of expanded availability.

The $3,499 "spatial computing" device launched back in February in the US, but it hasn't taken the tech world by storm. Part of that has been its regional launch, with some of the biggest markets still lacking access.

Apple announced that the product would be sold internationally during its keynote at the Worldwide Developers Conference earlier this month.

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The week around the world in 20 pictures

28 June 2024 at 14:48

War in Gaza, a failed coup in Bolivia, protests in Nairobi and Taylor Swift at Wembley: the last seven days as captured by the world’s leading photojournalists

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Β© Photograph: Luis Tato/AFP/Getty Images

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Β© Photograph: Luis Tato/AFP/Getty Images

ICC decision on Netanyahu arrest warrant may be delayed by UK

28 June 2024 at 12:18

Britain to make legal arguments over jurisdiction in case of alleged war crimes by the Israeli PM

An intervention by the UK government at the international criminal court is expected to delay a decision over whether an arrest warrant can be issued against the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, for alleged war crimes in Gaza.

Judges at the ICC ruled on Thursday they would allow the UK to make legal arguments in the case as they consider whether to approve requests made by the ICC’s chief prosecutor for warrants against Netanyahu and his defence minister, Yoav Gallant.

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Β© Photograph: Reuters

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Β© Photograph: Reuters

Germany is learning the lesson of history. Are we? | Letters

28 June 2024 at 11:33

Readers respond to Barney Ronay’s account of touring Germany for Euro 2024 football games

Barney Ronay’s article resonated very strongly with me (β€˜On a journey through Germany, the horror of the past lurks close to the surface’, Sport, 22 June). He spoke with clarity on how past horror echoed in his encounters with places and spaces in everyday Germany, from mundane buildings to the seemingly innocent woodland clearing. I too am from a β€œJewish enough” family displaced from Nazi Germany. Our family has those seemingly improbable stories of survival, andΒ I sometimes wonder if I shouldΒ have existed at all.

That Gestapo knock on the door has cast a long shadow and, throughout my β€œimprobable” life, has caused me to ask how this terror arose. I wonder what its harbingers are, so we might not make such terror again. But right now we are witness to it. We can all see it raising its grotesquely mundane yet human head, with larger-than–life characters encouraging us to devalue and demean those who are different.

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Β© Photograph: Sean Gallup/Getty Images

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Β© Photograph: Sean Gallup/Getty Images

Vingegaard back to defend Tour de France title but Pogacar man to beat

28 June 2024 at 07:00

Slovenian has taken over the sport since double Tour winner Vingegaard suffered horror crash in April

If the defending Tour de France champion Jonas Vingegaard overcomes both the lingering aftermath of a horror crash in April that hospitalised him for 12 days, and the rampant form of a seemingly invincible Tadej Pogacar, his will be one of the most remarkable wins in the race’s history.

The double Tour winner starts this year’s race, which begins in Florence on Saturday and ends in Nice on July 21 in extremis, his embattled team beset by illness and injury, his form uncertain.

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Β© Photograph: Martin DivΓ­Ε‘ek/EPA

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Β© Photograph: Martin DivΓ­Ε‘ek/EPA

If you want to know how free a society is, look at what’s happening in its theatres | Arifa Akbar

28 June 2024 at 07:00

Political art helps us debate and confront the challenges in our lives. It is also a record we must return to again and again

β€˜A play should be an act of moral imagination,” said the late British playwright Edward Bond, who died three months ago and who, in his lifetime, spoke about theatre’s absolute right to address the most difficult issues of its day.

Perhaps a revival ought to be an act of moral imagination, too. So I found myself thinking this week while I watched a verbatim drama from 2005 at the Old Red Lion theatre in north London, amid a packed audience. My Name Is Rachel Corrie is about the 23-year-old American who travelled to the Gaza Strip in 2003 to aid Palestinians living under occupation and was killed by an Israeli bulldozer.

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Β© Photograph: Courtesy of Sascha Shinder

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Β© Photograph: Courtesy of Sascha Shinder

β€˜It isn’t hard to see where things went wrong’: how The Bear went off the boil

28 June 2024 at 04:00

From one of the best television series of all time to rushed, unfocused and half-baked, the cooking drama’s third season is a big letdown. Is it a victim of its own success?

Before we begin, it’s important to point out that The Bear is one of my favourite shows of all time. If you ever need to look for a perfect season of television, I will always point you to The Bear’s first eight episodes. That season was incredibly stylish, overwhelmingly propulsive and filled with characters you found yourself rooting for. More than anything, though, it was about something. The first season of The Bear was about leaving home, returning changed and trying to fit back in. This thumped through every scene of every episode. It was stunning.

While season two allowed itself to unspool a little, it was still driven by an unbeatably strong engine, in the countdown to the opening of a new restaurant. There was still such momentum that, like everyone else, I wolfed it down in one go. Season three couldn’t come quick enough.

The Bear is on Disney+

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Β© Photograph: Chuck Hodes/Photographer: Chuck Hodes

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Β© Photograph: Chuck Hodes/Photographer: Chuck Hodes

Israel-Gaza war live: ultra-Orthodox Jews block major highway in protest against Israel’s new military service ruling

Protest is in response to a recent supreme court decision ordering young religious men to enlist for military service

A ship’s captain reported that five missiles had landed close to his vessel in the Red Sea, 150 nautical miles (172 miles) northwest of the Yemeni port city of Hodeidah, the United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) monitor said on Friday.

After posting earlier that it had received the report and that authorities were investigating (9.32am BST), the UKMTO said the ship had reported no damage and was heading northward. It gave no information on the ship or its cargo, reports Reuters.

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Β© Photograph: Oded Balilty/AP

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Β© Photograph: Oded Balilty/AP

Hisham Matar wins Orwell prize for political fiction

27 June 2024 at 16:30

The Pulitzer winner’s third novel My Friends is based on an event from 1984, when officials opened fire on protesters at the Libyan embassy in London

Pulitzer prize winner Hisham Matar has won this year’s Orwell prize for political fiction for his third novel My Friends, which follows three Libyan exiles in London.

Matthew Longo won the nonfiction counterpart – the Orwell prize for political writing – for The Picnic, about a group of Hungarian activists who staged a pan-European summer party near the militarised Austrian border in August 1989. During the picnic, 600 East Germans breached the border unhindered by guards – an event which came to be seen as a catalyst for the fall of the Berlin wall.

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Β© Photograph: Awakening/Getty Images

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Β© Photograph: Awakening/Getty Images

Critically ill children leave Gaza through Kerem Shalom crossing

27 June 2024 at 14:28

Nineteen minors, five with cancer, allowed to enter Israel before travelling to Egypt and elsewhere for treatment

A group of critically ill children have been allowed to leave Gaza, the first such medical evacuation since early May when Israel seized control of Rafah, the territory’s sole border crossing with the outside world.

Nineteen minors, including five who have cancer, were allowed to travel through the Kerem Shalom crossing into Israel on Thursday accompanied by relatives, and were to travel to Egypt and further abroad for medical treatment. The Israeli military body responsible for Palestinian civilian affairs said the evacuation was carried out in coordination with the World Health Organization (WHO) and officials from the US and Egypt.

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Β© Photograph: Abdel Kareem Hana/AP

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Β© Photograph: Abdel Kareem Hana/AP

US Congress faces growing calls to withdraw Netanyahu invitation: β€˜a terrible mistake’

27 June 2024 at 10:06

Notable Israelis add their voices to oppose invite extended by Mike Johnson, which Democrats plan to boycott

A group of prominent Israelis – including a former prime minister and an ex-head of Mossad, the foreign intelligence service – have added their voices to the growing domestic calls in the US for Congress to withdraw its invitation to Benjamin Netanyahu to address it next month, calling the move β€œa terrible mistake”.

The plea, in an op-ed article in the New York Times, argues that the invitation rewards Netanyahu, Israel’s current prime minister, for β€œscandalous and destructive conduct”, including intelligence failures that led to last October’s deadly Hamas attack and the ensuing bloody war in Gaza which shows no sign of ending.

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Β© Photograph: Shaul Golan/AP

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Β© Photograph: Shaul Golan/AP

AzzaSec, NoName Cyberattackers Join Hands to Potentially Target Pro-Ukriane Allies

AzzaSec NoName form alliance

Amidst the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian war, hackers from Italy have decided to join forces with an infamous cyber attacker group in Russia. Azzasec is an Italian hacktivist group who has been involved in anti-Israel campaigns and has teamed up with the infamous pro-Russian hacktivists Noname057(16). Azzasec has a large network of partner groups, whereas Noname05716 is selective in their allies. The alliance between these two nefarious groups signifies a potential increase in the scale and sophistication of cyberattacks on Ukraine and its allies.

Understanding the AzzaSec Ransomware

On June 26, 2024, NoName formally announced on its social media channels about the alliance. β€œToday we have formed an alliance with the Italian hacker group AzzaSec, which is one of the TOP 3 coolest hack teams in Italy! We are always open to cooperation with various trance around the world!” the post read. [caption id="attachment_79189" align="alignnone" width="837"]AzzaSec NoName alliance Source: X[/caption] AzzaSec is an infamous actor that infects computers and encrypts files. It later demands a ransom for its decryption. Once a computer is infected, AzzaSec assigns the '.AzzaSec' extension to the filenames. It alters files such as '1.png' to '1.png.AzzaSec' and '2.pdf' to '2.pdf.AzzaSec.' Additionally, it changes the desktop wallpaper and provides a ransom note via a pop-up window like the screenshot below. [caption id="attachment_79190" align="alignnone" width="1828"]Azzasec ransomware Source: X[/caption] The group demands ransom through Bitcoin. AzzaSec’s sophisticated encryption techniques and the secrecy of cryptocurrency transactions make it increasingly difficult for authorities to crackdown and defuse the cybercriminals. AzzaSec recently announced the release of a Windows ransomware builder. The group claimed that their ransomware could bypass major antivirus solutions such as Windows 10 / 11 Defender, Avast, Kaspersky, and AVG. AzzaSec’s emergence into the ransomware scene signals a reminder for organizations and individuals alike to upgrade their cybersecurity measures and remain vigilant against online threats.

Inglorious Past of NoName

NoName057(16) , on the other hand, Β first emerged in March 2022 and is known for its cyber-attacks on Ukrainian, American, and European government agencies, media, and private companies. The group is considered one of the biggest unorganised and free pro-Russian activist group. Renowned for its widespread cyber operations, NoName057(16) has garnered notoriety for developing and distributing custom malware, notably the DDoS attack tool, the successor to the Bobik DDoS botnet. [caption id="attachment_79192" align="alignnone" width="1280"]AzzaSec NoName Russia Source: X[/caption] According to a report by Google-owned Mandiant, NoName057(16), along with other Russian state hackers, pose the biggest cyber threat to elections in regions with Russian interest. β€œMandiant is tracking multiple self-proclaimed hacktivist groups primarily conducting DDoS attacks and leaking compromised data in support of Russian interests. These groups claim to have targeted organizations spanning the government, financial services, telecommunications, transportation, and energy sectors in Europe, North America, and Asia; however, target selection and messaging suggests that the activity is primarily focused on the conflict in Ukraine. Relevant groups include KillNet, Anonymous Sudan, NoName057(16), JokerDNR/DPR, Beregini, FRwL_Team (aka "From Russia with Love"), and Moldova Leaks,” Google stated in its threat intelligence report in April. The alliance between AzzaSec and NoName057(16) raises serious concerns about the evolving cyber threat landscape. With a combined skillset for ransomware deployment and large-scale attacks, these groups pose a significant risk to organizations and governments aligned with Ukraine. As the Russo-Ukrainian war rages on, the digital front is likely to see further escalation in cyberattacks.Β  It is crucial for targeted nations and organizations to bolster their cybersecurity defenses, implement robust incident response plans, and collaborate on international efforts to counter these cyber threats. Media Disclaimer: This report is based on internal and external research obtained through various means. The information provided is for reference purposes only, and users bear full responsibility for their reliance on it.Β The Cyber ExpressΒ assumes no liability for the accuracy or consequences of using this information.

Our Baillie Gifford boycotts aren’t about tearing down the arts – they’re about building them up | Tom Jeffreys

27 June 2024 at 07:06

Sustainable, ethical sources of funding are not an outlandish ask – and possibilities are already emerging

  • Tom Jeffreys is a writer who also organises with Fossil Free Books

When I became involved with Fossil Free Books in March, I did not anticipate how toxic the name Baillie Gifford would become, or how quickly. The firm, once thought of as a benevolent supporter of the arts, is now better known for its investments in environmental destruction. Nine literary festivals and three art galleries are no longer receiving funding from Baillie Gifford. Such shifts may not feel like victories, but in several important ways they are.

Fossil Free Books came together last summer after Greta Thunberg announced she was pulling out of the Edinburgh international book festival amid concerns over the fossil fuel investments of its sponsor, Baillie Gifford. At the time, Baillie Gifford stated that its investments in fossil fuels were 2% compared with an industry standard of 11%. Which raises the obvious question: if these investments are so low, then surely divestment is not so hard to achieve without denting profits?

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Β© Photograph: Shannon Galpin/Fossil Free Books

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Β© Photograph: Shannon Galpin/Fossil Free Books

Tour de France 2024: full team-by-team guide

27 June 2024 at 07:00

Our in-depth look at every team, main riders to watch and the cast of characters racing through France this summer

Once a low-key Dutch cyclo-cross team, now the home of the best one-day racer plus the fastest sprinter in the business. Mathieu van der Poel, the reigning world champion and Jasper Philipsen, winner of the points prize at the Tour last year, dominated racing this spring winning three of five Monument one-day races. Ominously, Philipsen seems to have adopted the β€œrace less, win more” approach which paid dividends for VdP last season: team owners the Roodhooft brothers have built a strong support squad around them with SΓΈren Kragh Andersen and Axel Laurance both capable of winning on their day.

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Β© Composite: Getty, Guardian design

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Β© Composite: Getty, Guardian design

Nearly 21,000 children are missing in Gaza. And there’s no end to this nightmare | Arwa Mahdawi

27 June 2024 at 06:10

The numbers that have been coming out of Gaza have been almost too shocking to comprehend

Dead or dismembered Palestinians don’t seem to shock anyone any more. A couple of hundred killed over here, dozens burned to death over there, a bunch of children dead from malnutrition: every day there seems to be another massacre that barely makes a blip on public consciousness. After eight months of intense bombing, the most abject civilian suffering has been dangerously normalized.

Still, as steeled as people may have become to the horrors in Gaza, you’d have to be completely broken not to be devastated by Save the Children’s new report on the missing children of Gaza. While more than 15,000 children are estimated to have been killed by Israel’s relentless assault on the strip, Save the Children has estimated that up to 21,000 children are missing.

Arwa Mahdawi is a Guardian columnist and the author of Strong Female Lead

Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.

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Β© Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images

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Β© Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images

The Bear season three review – unbelievably frustrating

27 June 2024 at 03:00

At its best, this is the finest show on TV. But the new season feels half finished, wastes its best actors and ends maddeningly. Only two episodes are knockouts

I am going to be hard on The Bear, because when the show is flying, it really is wonderful television. If the first season cooked up a solid base for the drama, returning troubled chef Carmen Berzatto (Jeremy Allen White) to The Beef, the hectic Chicago sandwich shop owned by his recently deceased brother Mikey (Jon Bernthal), the second season refined it beautifully. Few shows earn the privilege of having episodes that become widely known by their titles, but season two’s Forks and Fishes did just that. They were special, inventive and shaped the sometimes operatic emotional register of the series into clever, compelling drama. Little wonder it has become such a pop culture phenomenon, churning out superstars quicker than plates on the pass.

As a result, it returns for a third season under another level of expectation. But pressure is one of The Bear’s main themes. It squeezes its characters, presses down on them, and we witness the results, as some thrive in crisis mode and some collapse completely. Season two ended with Carmen finally closing down (most of) The Beef and preparing to open his own far fancier restaurant, The Bear. But the return of his professional ambitions come at a price: he stampedes towards greatness at the cost of his two most solid relationships, sabotaging his closeness with girlfriend Claire (Molly Gordon) and the newly reformed β€œCousin” Richie (Ebon Moss-Bachrach).

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Β© Photograph: FX Networks

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Β© Photograph: FX Networks

The Guardian view on Netanyahu’s leadership: making enemies and clinging to far-right friends | Editorial

By: Editorial
26 June 2024 at 13:25

Putting his own interests above his country’s is nothing new for the Israeli prime minister, but it is increasingly blatant

While Benjamin Netanyahu picks fights at home and abroad, he is more closely tied than ever to the worst parts of the domestic political realm. Last week, Israel’s prime minister laid into its chief ally, the US, which has reproved him but done little to stop the war in Gaza, or avert the looming and surely disastrous conflict with Hezbollah. On Monday, Israel’s ambassador to the UN, Gilad Erdan, labelled AntΓ³nioΒ Guterres an β€œaccomplice to terror” and alleged his sole aim had been β€œto help Hamas survive this war”, after the secretary-general accused Israel (without directly naming it) of spreading misinformation about him.

Yet Mr Netanyahu will go to any lengths to keep his far-right coalition partners in the fold. He grantedΒ political legitimacy to the Otzma Yehudit partyΒ of Itamar Ben-Gvir, the national security minister, and to the Religious Zionist party of the finance minister, Bezalel Smotrich, when he invited them into power. He clings to them increasingly desperately. Without them, he faces not only the loss of his positionΒ but trial on the corruption charges that have hung over his head for so long. The far right saw off USΒ attempts to reach a ceasefire and hostage deal, laying bare the growing rift between the Israel DefenseΒ Forces and the government.

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Β© Photograph: Shaul Golan/Reuters

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Β© Photograph: Shaul Golan/Reuters

From psychological torture to pooing in a suitcase: why are the workplaces on TV so toxic?

26 June 2024 at 10:23

Be it the thankless shifts of Blue Lights or the wage-free stressfest of The Bear, onscreen employees are having a very bad day at the office. And things are about to get worse

In the first series of Slow Horses, MI5’s Jackson Lamb gives a motivational speech: β€œYou’re fucking useless. The lot of you. Working with you has been the lowest point in a disappointing career.” This is actually fairly uplifting from a man who is as likely a contender for a β€œWorld’s Best Boss” mug as The Thick of It’s Malcolm Tucker.

On TV, staff morale is at an all time low. From hellish hospitality to callous corporate overlords, going to work has never looked less appealing. Instead of bumbling idiots for bosses, we have tortured geniuses and masochistic maniacs. The daily grind is one of high stakes, long hours and limited rewards – with not an HR department in sight.

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Β© Photograph: FX Networks

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Β© Photograph: FX Networks

How could I back anyone but the SNP and the bolshie, buoyant Scotland it stands for? | Val McDermid

26 June 2024 at 09:51

Labour, the Tories and the Lib Dems are branch offices – they do what they’re told, and they won’t represent Scots’ best interests

Just a few weeks ago there were 43 SNP MPs at Westminster, almost three-quarters of the total Scottish seats. It would be hard to argue that wasn’t a mandate for revisiting the vexed question of Scottish independence.

At the 2019 election, as we made our way to the polling booths, there was still a bolshie, buoyant feeling in the country, at least among those of us who believe the country’s best future lies in becoming one of the small, socially progressive European nations within the family of the EU. Independent of the UK, obviously.

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Β© Photograph: Lesley Martin/Reuters

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Β© Photograph: Lesley Martin/Reuters

5000 picks/second

By: Dysk
26 June 2024 at 03:41
Mattias Krantz is a Swedish engineer who modifies instruments mostly by having really dumb or funny ideas, and then being stubborn and persistent enough not to give up where any sensible person would. He has done a number of weird and whacky pianos (including one previously featured on mefi) but has more recently moved on to guitars: a petrol-powered electric, an acoustic strung with Madagascan spider silk, and a spinning necked guitar which he then tries to play. Now his most recent guitar project is all about speed: picking speed, specifically. Here is his concept for a thousand-pick auto-picking guitar, like a hair metal hurdy-gurdy. [MLYT]

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Webinar | Transforming Cybersecurity with Collaborative MDR Solution – Source: www.databreachtoday.com

webinar-|-transforming-cybersecurity-with-collaborative-mdr-solution-–-source:-wwwdatabreachtoday.com

Source: www.databreachtoday.com – Author: 1 Bruce Johnson Senior Director, Enterprise Security, TekStream Bruce Johnson has over 38 years of experience in the information technology industry, including security, infrastructure architecture, software development, and management of multiple portfolios. He has experience in Splunk, security solutions, cloud migration, portal, content workflow, integration, and project management. As the senior […]

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Webinar | Everything You Can Do to Fight Social Engineering and Phishing – Source: www.databreachtoday.com

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Source: www.databreachtoday.com – Author: 1 Account Takeover Fraud , AI-Based Attacks , Anti-Phishing, DMARC Presented by KnowBe4 Β  Β  60 mins Β  Β  Social engineering and phishing are not just IT buzzwords; they are potent threats capable of causing devastating damage to your organization. Bad actors and the technology they use to infiltrate your defenses […]

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NASA Cancels Spacewalk Over Spacesuit Water Leak

24 June 2024 at 14:37
It was the second scheduled spacewalk by NASA astronauts aboard the space station that faced an interruption this month.

Β© NASA Johnson

Astronaut Tracy C. Dyson is pictured during a spacesuit fit check before a spacewalk in last month.

Would be comical if it wasn't so pitiful and disturbing in equal measure

By: chavenet
23 June 2024 at 14:48
Military contractor Erik Prince started a private WhatsApp group for his close associates that includes a menagerie of right-wing government officials, intelligence operatives, arms traffickers, and journalists. We got their messages. from Off Leash: Inside the Secret, Global, Far-Right Group Chat [The New Republic; ungated] [CW: the quiet part, out loud]

Among the group's hottest topics: β€’ The "Biden Regime," which a consensus of Off Leash participants who weighed in view as an ally of Islamic terrorists and other anti-American forces that needs to be crushed along with them and its partners in the deep state, such as former Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Mark Milley, who "deserves to burn in hell," Lara Logan shared with the group chat. β€’ The shortcomings of democracy that invariably resulted from extending the franchise to ordinary citizens, who are easily manipulated by Marxists and populists. "The West is at best a beautiful cemetery," lamented Sven von Storch, whose aristocratic German family fled the country after World War II to Chile, where their son was raised before returning to the land of his ancestors, where he married the granddaughter of the Third Reich's last de facto head of state, who was convicted at Nuremberg. β€’ Israel-Palestine, a problem that Michael Yudelson, Prince's business partner at Unplugged, which markets an allegedly supersecure smartphone, said should be handled by napalming Hamas's tunnel network. "I would burn all those bastards, and have everything above ground, everything left of Gaza, collapse into this fiery hell pit and burn!" he wrote. β€’ The Houthi rebels in Yemen, whom Yoav Goldhorn, who was an Israeli intelligence officer until last year and now works for a Tel Aviv–based security contractor headed by former senior national security veterans, thinks should be "dealt with" as soon as possible to ensure they don't grow from "an inconvenience to a festering mess [that] will eventually require an entire limb to be amputated." β€’ And most of all, Iran, which participants agreed, with a few exceptions, also needed to be wiped out. Saghar Erica Kasraie, a former staffer for Republican Representative Trent Franks when he served on the House Armed Services Committee and whom, according to her LinkedIn profile, she advised on Middle East issues, urged that the Islamic Republic's clerical leaders be targeted by weaponized drones that "take them out like flys ."

Live Webinar | Fast Track Your Cyber Insurance Initiatives with Identity Protection – Source: www.databreachtoday.com

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Source: www.databreachtoday.com – Author: 1 Ryan Terry Sr. Product Marketing Manager, Identity Protection, CrowdStrike Ryan Terry is a Senior Product Marketing Manager for Identity Protection at CrowdStrike. Ryan has 11 years of product marketing experience in the cybersecurity space and has helped security professionals develop best practices in identity, email fraud, and mobile security. Ryan […]

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Webinar | From Expense to Investment: Solutions for Modern Cybersecurity Challenges – Source: www.databreachtoday.com

webinar-|-from-expense-to-investment:-solutions-for-modern-cybersecurity-challenges-–-source:-wwwdatabreachtoday.com

Source: www.databreachtoday.com – Author: 1 Bruce Johnson Senior Director, Enterprise Security, TekStream Bruce Johnson has over 38 years of experience in the information technology industry, including security, infrastructure architecture, software development, and management of multiple portfolios. He has experience in Splunk, security solutions, cloud migration, portal, content workflow, integration, and project management. As the senior […]

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UK’s Sellafield Nuclear Waste Site Pleads Guilty To Cybersecurity Failings

By: Alan J
21 June 2024 at 17:46

Sellafield Nuclear Waste Site

The UK's Sellafield nuclear waste site has pleaded guilty to criminal charges related to various cybersecurity failings in the period spanning 2019-2023. Sellafield admitted it had failed "to ensure adequate protection of sensitive nuclear information on its information technology network." The Sellafield nuclear site has the word's largest store of plutonium and has been used to dispose of waste generated from decades of weapons programs and atomic power generation. Concerns over the nuclear site's cyber defenses have existed for well over a decade.

Sellafield Nuclear Waste Site's Cybersecurity Failings

Concerns over the site's security implementations grew after a 2012 report warned of "critical security vulnerabilities" requiring urgent attention. Due to the extreme sensitivity of the issues, problems were referred to with the codename "Voldemort." While Sellafield stated there has never been a successful cyberattack, revelations of IT failures last year raised alarms. In an investigative report last year, the Guardian uncovered that the site had been attacked by threat actors affiliated with the Russian and Chinese governments. The report found out that the site's authorities were not aware of when Sellafield's systems began to be compromised, but breaches may have gone as far back as the year 2015. In 2015, security experts had realized that Sellafield's computer systems had been compromised by sleeper malware. Sellafield had been earlier forced into β€œspecial measures” for regular cybersecurity failings by the UK's Office for Nuclear Regulation (ONR) and security services. The status of the compromised systems are unknown, but may have possibly led to the theft of sensitive information regarding moving of radioactive waste, monitoring for leaks of dangerous material, and fire checks. Sellafield stated that current protections on critical systems are robust, with isolated networks preventing external IT breaches from penetrating operational controls. An ONR spokesperson stated to the Guardian: β€œWe acknowledge that Sellafield Limited has pleaded guilty to all charges," but emphasized that there was no evidence the vulnerabilities led to compromise. A Sellafield spokesman stated in the report, β€œWe have pleaded guilty to all charges and cooperated fully with ONR throughout this process. The charges relate to historic offences and there is no suggestion that public safety was compromised."

Concerns of GMB Trade Union

With attention now focused on improving cyber resilience, officials are working to prevent sensitive materials or dangerous nuclear operations from potential disruption by hackers. Earlier the GMB trade union, which represents tens of thousands of workers across the energy industry, also expressed concerns over the security of Sellafield, with its national secretary Andy Prendergast noting a β€œlack of training and competence among staff, inadequate safety procedures and a culture of fear and intimidation.” Prendergast added, β€œGMB has repeatedly raised concerns over safety and staffing levels, which are mainly due to turnover and the age and demographic of the workforce.” Media Disclaimer: This report is based on internal and external research obtained through various means. The information provided is for reference purposes only, and users bear full responsibility for their reliance on it. The Cyber Express assumes no liability for the accuracy or consequences of using this information.

Live Webinar | Reality Hijacked: Deepfakes, GenAI, and the Emergent Threat of Synthetic Media – Source: www.databreachtoday.com

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Source: www.databreachtoday.com – Author: 1 Perry Carpenter Chief Evangelist and Strategy Officer, KnowBe4 Perry Carpenter is the Chief Evangelist and Strategy Officer at KnowBe4. He is the author of β€œTransformational Security Awareness: What Neuroscientists, Storytellers, and Marketers Can Teach Us About Driving Secure Behaviors” and coauthor of β€œThe Security Culture Playbook: An Executive Guide To […]

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EU Aims to Ban Math β€” β€˜Chat Control 2.0’ Law is Paused but not Stopped

20 June 2024 at 12:43
β€œOh, won’t somebody please think of the children?”

Ongoing European Union quest to break end-to-end encryption (E2EE) mysteriously disappears.

The post EU Aims to Ban Math β€” β€˜Chat Control 2.0’ Law is Paused but not Stopped appeared first on Security Boulevard.

Everything we have is going to go to Ukraine until their needs are met.

20 June 2024 at 14:02
A round-up of links inside on the Russia-Ukraine war. Today is day 848 of the invasion.

Russia: Russia wages a scorched-earth war in Ukraine with retrofitted bombs and new airstrips (AP) Fire at drone-hit Russian oil depot rages for second day (Reuters) Putin accuses NATO of creating a security threat for Russia in Asia (Reuters) China: Outgoing NATO chief says China should face consequences for backing Russia's war on Ukraine (CBC) Ukraine peace summit is a 'success', China key to ending war: ambassador to Singapore (South China Morning Post) China lobbying for its alternative peace plan ahead of Ukraine's summit, Reuters reports (Kyiv Independent) EU: EU passes 14th sanctions package in first major move against Russian gas (Kyiv Independent) Romania to send Patriot defense system to Ukraine (Kyiv Independent) EU envoys agree on more Russia sanctions. LNG imports are among the targets. (AP) Japan: Signing of the Accord on Support for Ukraine and Cooperation between the Government of Japan and Ukraine (Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan) Japan to finance US$188 million technology transfer to Ukrainian business (MSN) North & South Korea: Russia and North Korea sign mutual defence pact: Vladimir Putin and Kim Jong-un's agreement raises western alarm about possible Russian help for nuclear programme (Guardian) What's known, and not known, about the partnership agreement signed by Russia and North Korea (AP) Putin says South Korea would be making 'a big mistake' if it supplies arms to Ukraine (Reuters) Ukraine: Russian troops fail to advance as Ukraine garners military, financial aid (Al Jazeera) Ukraine, Russia targeting each other's energy infrastructure (NHK World Japan) Ukraine launches a national sexual assault registry for victims of Russian forces (CTV) USA: US to focus on deepening ties with Vietnam after Putin's Hanoi visit (Reuters) Exclusive: Biden to ban US sales of Kaspersky software over Russia ties, source says (Reuters) White House confirms Ukraine to get priority on air defense missile deliveries (Kyiv Independent; post title is a Biden quote from this article) Aid: Fidelity Charitable list of organizations; UNICEF; Support Sellers in Ukraine
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