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39 years since the end of white rule in South Africa     (www.theguardian.com)
submitted by 2017Fallout to whatever 1 week ago (+27/-0)
11 comments last comment...
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/apr/27/south-africa-marks-30-years-since-apartheid-amid-growing-discontent

Overshadowed by the joblessness, violent crime, corruption and near-collapse of basic services such as electricity and water that plagues South Africa in 2024.
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The science was wrong - Bonobos not the peace-loving primates once thought, study reveals     (www.theguardian.com)
submitted by Spaceman84 to whatever 3 weeks ago (+20/-1)
8 comments last comment...
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Florida workers brace for summer with no protections - bill prohibiting municipalities from enacting shade and water protection is passed     (www.theguardian.com)
submitted by paul_neri to Florida 3 days ago (+7/-2)
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bite victims urged to stop bringing snakes to Queensland hospitals     (www.theguardian.com)
submitted by paul_neri to Australia 2 weeks ago (+6/-1)
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This is exactly what they want to do with all of us     (www.theguardian.com)
submitted by fritz_maurentod to news 6 days ago (+5/-0)
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Paedophiles create nude AI images of children to extort from them, says charity     (www.theguardian.com)
submitted by MasterSuppressionTechnique to PedosExposed 2 weeks ago (+4/-0)
5 comments last comment...
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2024/apr/23/paedophiles-create-nude-ai-images-of-children-to-extort-them-says-charity

Paedophiles are being urged to use artificial intelligence to create nude images of children to extort more extreme material from them, according to a child abuse charity.

The Internet Watch Foundation (IWF) said a manual found on the dark web contained a section encouraging criminals to use “nudifying” tools to remove clothing from underwear shots sent by a child. The manipulated image could then be used against the child to blackmail them into sending more graphic content, the IWF said.

“This is the first evidence we have seen that perpetrators are advising and encouraging each other to use AI technology for these ends,” said the IWF.

Can AI image generators be policed to prevent explicit deepfakes of children?
Read more
The charity, which finds and removes child sexual abuse material online, warned last year of a rise in extortion cases where victims are manipulated into sending graphic images of themselves and are then threatened with the release of those images unless they hand over money. It also flagged the first examples of AI being used to create “astoundingly realistic” abuse content.

The anonymous author of the online manual, which runs to nearly 200 pages, boasts about having “successfully blackmailed” 13-year-old girls into sending nude imagery online. The IWF said the document had been passed to the UK’s National Crime Agency.

Last month the Guardian revealed that the Labour party was considering a ban on nudification tools that allow users to create images of people without their clothes on.

The IWF has also said 2023 was “the most extreme year on record”. Its annual report said the organisation found more than 275,000 webpages containing child sexual abuse last year, the highest number recorded by the IWF, with a record amount of “category A” material, which can include the most severe imagery including rape, sadism and bestiality. The IWF said more than 62,000 pages contained category A content, compared with 51,000 in the prior year.

The IWF found 2,401 images of self-generated child sexual abuse material – where victims are manipulated or threatened into recording abuse of themselves – taken by children aged between three and six years old. Analysts said they had seen abuse taking place in domestic settings including bedrooms and kitchens.

Susie Hargreaves, the chief executive of the IWF, said opportunistic criminals trying to manipulate children were “not a distant threat”. She said: “If children under six are being targeted like this, we need to be having age-appropriate conversations now to make sure they know how to spot the dangers.”

Hargreaves added that the Online Safety Act, which became law last year and imposes a duty of care on social media companies to protect children, “needs to work”.

Tom Tugendhat, the security minister, said parents should talk to their children about using social media. “The platforms you presume safe may pose a risk,” he said, adding that tech companies should introduce stronger safeguards to prevent abuse.

According to research published last week by the communications regulator, Ofcom, a quarter of three- to four-year-olds own a mobile phone and half of under-13s are on social media. The government is preparing to launch a consultation in the coming weeks that will include proposals to ban the sale of smartphones to under-16s and raise the minimum age for social media sites from 13 to as high as 16.
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Perception of when old age starts has increased over time     (www.theguardian.com)
submitted by paul_neri to OLDbutGOLD 2 weeks ago (+4/-1)
17 comments last comment...
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‘I love my country, but I can’t kill’: Ukrainian men evading conscription     (www.theguardian.com)
submitted by paul_neri to Ukraine 4 days ago (+3/-1)
4 comments last comment...
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Pentagon says it will help Ukrainians to adopt tactics that use M1A1 tanks more effectively. Five have been lost to Russian attacks.     (www.theguardian.com)
submitted by paul_neri to Ukraine 1 week ago (+1/-1)
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There’s a hard-right tidal wave about to hit Europe     (www.theguardian.com)
submitted by paul_neri to WorldPolitics 1 week ago (+2/-3)
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"I never thought people like me voted for the far right. I was wrong" - Khuê Phạm     (www.theguardian.com)
submitted by paul_neri to WorldPolitics 6 days ago (+2/-2)
0 comments...
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I thought I'd see some of you in the pic...but didn't [ Largely white, male group taunts pro-Palestinian protesters on campus]     (www.theguardian.com)
submitted by paul_neri to America 2 days ago (+2/-2)
2 comments last comment...
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Australia needs a plan for war to ‘focus the national mind’, Michael Pezzullo says     (www.theguardian.com)
submitted by paul_neri to Australia 2 weeks ago (+2/-1)
9 comments last comment...
https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2024/apr/18/michael-pezzullo-australia-war-plan-book-former-secretary-home-affairs

It's a good idea. Every neighbourhood could have a Militia that could double up as an aid to Police against juvenile thugs.
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Global defence budget jumps to record high of $2440bn. For the first time, government military spending increased in all five geographical regions.     (www.theguardian.com)
submitted by MasterSuppressionTechnique to Intelligence 2 weeks ago (+2/-1)
0 comments...
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/apr/22/global-defence-budget-jumps-to-record-high-of-2440bn

Global military expenditure has reached a record high of $2440bn (£1970bn) after the largest annual rise in government spending on arms in over a decade, according to a report.

The 6.8% increase between 2022 and 2023 was the steepest since 2009, pushing spending to the highest recorded by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (Sipri) in its 60-year history.

For the first time, analysts at the thinktank recorded a rise in military outlay in all five geographical regions: Africa, Europe, the Middle East, Asia and Oceania and the Americas.

Nan Tian, a senior researcher with Sipri’s military expenditure and arms production programme, warned of the heightened risk of an unintended conflagration as governments raced to arm. He said: “The unprecedented rise in military spending is a direct response to the global deterioration in peace and security.

“States are prioritising military strength, but they risk an action-reaction spiral in the increasingly volatile geopolitical and security landscape.”

Ukrainian service personnel prepare shells in Zaporizhzhia region
Global defence spending rises 9% to record $2.2tn
Read more
The two largest spenders – the United States (37%) and China (12%) – made up around half of global military spending, increasing their expenditure by 2.3% and 6% respectively.

The US government spent 9.4% more on “research, development, test and evaluation” than in 2022 as Washington sought to stay at the forefront of technological developments.

Since 2014, when Russia first invaded Crimea and the eastern Donbas region of Ukraine, the US has been shifting its focus from counter-insurgency operations and asymmetric warfare to “developing new weapon systems that could be used in a potential conflict with adversaries with advanced military capabilities”, according to Sipri’s report.

While dwarfed by the US in military spending, China, as the world’s second biggest spender, allocated an estimated $296bn in 2023, an increase of 6% on 2022. It has consistently increased defence spending over the past 29 years, although the biggest growth periods were in the 1990s and between 2003 and 2014.

The single-digit growth figure of the last year reflected China’s more modest economic performance in recent times, according to Sipri.

IDF soldiers walk on foot alongside a military tank
View image in fullscreen
Israel’s military expenditure grew by 24% largely driven by its war in Gaza. Photograph: IDF/GPO/SIPA/Rex/Shutterstock
Russia, India, Saudi Arabia and the UK – the largest spender in central and western Europe after a 7.9% year-on-year increase – follow in Sipri’s league table.

The Kremlin’s military expenditure in 2023, after a year of full-scale war with Ukraine, was 24% higher than in 2022 and 57% more than in 2014, when Russia invaded Crimea. With spending at 5.9% of GDP, equivalent to 16% of the Russian government’s total expenditure, 2023 marked the highest levels recorded since the dissolution of the Soviet Union.

Amid growing tensions with China and Pakistan, Indian spending was up by 4.2% from 2022 and by 44% from 2014, reflecting an increase in personnel and operational costs.

Sipri’s analysts noted that 75% of India’s capital outlay was on domestically produced equipment, the highest ever ratio, as India progressed towards its goal of becoming self-reliant in arms development and production.

Saudi Arabia’s 4.3% rise in spending, to an estimated $75.8bn, or 7.1% of GDP, was said to have been powered by the increased demand for non-Russian oil and rising oil prices after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Expenditure in the Middle East rose by 9% to an estimated $200bn, making it the region with the highest military spend as a proportion of GDP in the world at 4.2%, followed by Europe (2.8%), Africa (1.9%), Asia and Oceania (1.7%) and the Americas (1.2%).

The military expenditure of Israel, second behind Saudi Arabia in the region but ahead of Turkey, grew by 24% to reach $27.5bn, driven mainly by its offensive in Gaza.

Iran was the fourth largest military spender in the Middle East. Its spending went up marginally (+0.6%) to $10.3bn. Sipri said the share of total military spending allocated to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps had been increasing since at least 2019.

Ukraine became the world’s eighth biggest military spender in 2023, with an annual rise of 51% to reach $64.8bn, still only equivalent to 59% of Russia’s military spending that year.

Kyiv’s military expenditure increased by 1,270% between 2014 and 2023. The military aid received from over 30 countries is included in Sipri’s figures.

The largest percentage increase in military spending by any country in 2023 was by the government of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (+105%), which has been in a protracted conflict with non-state armed groups, mostly in the east of the country. South Sudan recorded the second largest percentage increase (+78%) amid internal violence.

The use of the military to combat organised gangs was said to be a factor in the rise in spending in Central America and the Caribbean, where expenditure was 54% higher in 2023 than in 2014.

Spending by the Dominican Republic rose by 14% in response to worsening gang violence in neighbouring Haiti.

Expenditure reached $11.8bn in Mexico, a 55% increase from 2014, albeit marginally down on 2022. Allocations to the Guardia Nacional (National Guard) – a militarised force used to curb criminal activity – rose from 0.7% of Mexico’s total military expenditure in 2019, when the force was created, to 11% last year.

Diego Lopes da Silva, a senior researcher at Sipri, said: “The use of the military to suppress gang violence has been a growing trend in the region for years as governments are either unable to address the problem using conventional means or prefer immediate – often more violent – responses.”
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"Both post-attack escalations had telling similarities. A disregard for truth. An elevation of pre-existing prejudice. The inflammatory power of social media."     (www.theguardian.com)
submitted by paul_neri to SocialMedia 1 week ago (+1/-1)
1 comments last comment...
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/apr/28/social-media-lies-can-unleash-a-dangerous-contempt-for-others-we-can-stop-it

"They also reflect something that has crept into our public square that fuels disproportionate disfunction. Contempt. More than mere disagreement, it thinks less of those with whom we disagree. We don’t just reject ideas and identities, we dehumanise those who hold them. This “othering” leads us to – as theologian Miroslav Volf puts it – exclude others from the community of humanity. In societies, contempt is kryptonite to social trust."
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The America depicted in Civil War is not half as alarming as the real one [ currently at No 1 at the US box office]     (www.theguardian.com)
submitted by paul_neri to America 2 weeks ago (+1/-1)
1 comments last comment...
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“Nyet, Moscow Marjorie” [US right turning on the extremist...Georgia congresswoman over her opposition to military aid for Ukraine].     (www.theguardian.com)
submitted by paul_neri to America 2 weeks ago (+1/-4)
0 comments...
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Biden ... warned Russia that if it used long-range ballistic missiles in Ukraine, Washington would provide the same capability to the Ukrainians. Russia has since done so.     (www.theguardian.com)
submitted by paul_neri to Ukraine 1 week ago (+1/-2)
2 comments last comment...
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X The demise of Twitter: How a ‘utopian vision’ for social media became a ‘toxic mess’     (www.theguardian.com)
submitted by paul_neri to SocialMedia 1 week ago (+1/-5)
0 comments...
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Europe must find a way to help fund the fight against Putin – for its own sake     (www.theguardian.com)
submitted by paul_neri to WorldPolitics 3 days ago (+2/-7)
3 comments last comment...