Should The US Government Break Up Google, Twitter, and Facebook? Slashdotby EditorDavid on google at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at September 22, 2018, 11:04 pm)

The Bay Area Newsgroup reports: Political momentum for a crackdown on Silicon Valley's social media giants got a boost this week when a state attorney general said he would tell U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions next week that Google, Facebook and Twitter should be broken up. Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry wants the federal government to do to the social media firms what it did to Standard Oil in 1911, according to a Louisiana newspaper report Tuesday... "This can't be fixed legislatively," Landry told the paper. "We need to go to court with an antitrust suit." He or another high official from his office will next week present the break-up proposal to Sessions... Landry, president of the National Association of Attorneys General, had spent months with his colleagues probing what they described as anti-competitive practices by Facebook, Google and Twitter, according to the paper. CNET reports: On Friday, Bloomberg reported it had obtained a draft of a potential White House executive order that asks certain government agencies to recommend actions that would "protect competition among online platforms and address online platform bias." The order, reportedly in its preliminary stages, asks US antitrust authorities to "thoroughly investigate whether any online platform has acted in violation of the antitrust laws."

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Will OPEC appease Donald Trump? AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at September 22, 2018, 11:00 pm)

OPEC and its allies are set to meet in Algeria on Sunday to discuss the price of oil.
Iran: Who was responsible for the deadly attack in Ahvaz? AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at September 22, 2018, 11:00 pm)

Ahvaziya group and ISIL claim role in the attack, while Ayatollah Khamenei blames 'US-backed regimes in the region'.
Cody Wilson, 3D-Printed Gun Pioneer, Arrested In Taiwan Slashdotby EditorDavid on printer at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at September 22, 2018, 10:05 pm)

Cody Wilson, maker of the first 3D-printed plastic gun, has been arrested in Taiwan. Long-time Slashdot reader SonicSpike quotes Reason: Earlier this week, Texas police issued a warrant for his arrest. Wilson, they claimed, found a woman on sugardaddymeet.com, a website that requires all users to assert they are 18 or over, then met her and paid for sex with her. Police say the woman was actually 16, which made that act a violation of Texas penal code 22.011 (A)(2)(a), regarding sex with a minor, which is legally considered sexual assault regardless of consent or payment. While Taiwan has no formal extradition treaty with the U.S., and Wilson was not said to have been doing anything directly criminal in Taiwan, the press there reports that he was arrested without incident because the U.S. had revoked his passport, making his mere presence in Taiwan illegal. (The U.S. government has the power to revoke the passports of people facing felony arrest warrants.) Wilson was then, according to The New York Times, "delivered...to the National Immigration Agency" in Taiwan. It is expected to deport him to the U.S. to face those charges, which carry a potential 2 to 20 years in prison and $10,000 fine. A reporter for Ars Technica visited Wilson's home weapons printing company, and was told that "A management restructuring is coming." But they also contacted Adam Bhala Lough, who directed and wrote a documentary film about Wilson. Prior to Wilson's arrest, Lough argued that "Without Cody, it can't last. It's like Tesla and Elon Musk, you can't separate the two. "If he comes home and faces the music, there is a chance Defense Distributed will survive because it is a totally independent company without a board or any regulatory body. And the buyers of these products -- not to generalize, but at least the ones I met while doing the documentary -- they won't care about buying a product from an [accused] pedophile. In fact they may be even more emboldened by the idea that Cody was 'set-up' or that it is a 'deep-state conspiracy' against him, even if (or when) he admits to it."

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Hezbollah 'financier' arrested in Brazil AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at September 22, 2018, 10:00 pm)

Assad Ahmad Barakat was arrested in the lawless Triple Frontier area between Brazil, Paraguay and Argentina.
Eight Afghan children killed playing with unexploded mortar shell AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at September 22, 2018, 10:00 pm)

More than 3,000 children were killed or wounded in 2017, accounting for one-third of total civilian casualties.
Space Junk Successfully Captured In Orbit For the First Time (with Video) Slashdotby EditorDavid on space at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at September 22, 2018, 9:04 pm)

"The Surrey Space Center successfully used a net to capture a piece of artificial space junk in orbit for the first time in history on Sunday," writes Slashdot reader dmoberhaus. "The video was just released Wednesday and is quite stunning." "Not only does the net look cool as hell, it's addressing a major problem for the future of space exploration," reports Motherboard: The test was carried about by the RemoveDEBRIS satellite, an experimental space debris removal platform built by an international consortium of space companies and university research centers. There are tens of thousands of pieces of fast-moving space junk in orbit, which range from the centimeter-scale all the way to entire rocket stages. Some of these pieces are moving faster than a bullet and all of them pose a serious danger to other satellites and crewed capsules... Removing this junk from orbit is particularly challenging because of the various sizes of the debris, its erratic tumbling motion, and the fact that some pieces are moving as fast as 30,000 miles per hour. The successful experiment follows six years of Earth-based testing, according to a professor at the lead research institution, the Surrey Space Centre. "While it might sound like a simple idea, the complexity of using a net in space to capture a piece of debris took many years of planning, engineering and coordination."

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China summons US ambassador over military sanctions AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at September 22, 2018, 9:00 pm)

Beijing protests US sanctions imposed on China's military over the purchase of Russian fighter jets and missiles.
Egypt: Court upholds Mubarak and sons' corruption convictions AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at September 22, 2018, 9:00 pm)

Court's rejection of their appeals blocks a potential political challenge to current President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi.
Michael Moore compares Donald Trump to Hitler in his new film AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at September 22, 2018, 9:00 pm)

The US activist and filmmaker has released Fahrenheit 11/9, the sequel to his controversial film about George W Bush.
Purism Launches First Security Key with Tamper-Evident Protection for Laptops Slashdotby EditorDavid on security at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at September 22, 2018, 8:04 pm)

An anonymous reader quotes Softpedia: Purism announced Thursday that its highly anticipated Librem Key security key is now available for purchase as the first and only OpenPGP-based smart card to offer a Heads-firmware-integrated tamper-evident boot process for laptops. Developed in partnership with Nitrokey, a company known for manufacturing open-source USB keys that enable secure encryption and signing of data for laptops, Purism's Librem Key is dedicated to Librem laptop users, allowing them to store up to 4096-bit RSA keys and up to 512-bit ECC keys on the security key, as well as to securely generate new keys directly on the device. Librem Key integrates with the secure boot process of the latest Librem 13 and 15 laptops... Designed to let Librem laptop users see if someone has tampered with the software on their computers when it boots, Librem Key leverages the Heads-enabled TPM (Trusted Platform Module) chip in new Librem 13 and Librem 15 laptops. According to Purism, when inserted, the security key will blink green to show users that the laptop hasn't been tampered with, so they can continue from where they left off, and blinks red when tampering has occurred. Purism's web site explains: With so many attacks on password logins, most security experts these days recommend adding a second form of authentication (often referred to as "2FA" or "multi-factor authentication") in addition to your password so that if your password gets compromised the attacker still has to compromise your second factor. USB security tokens work well as this second factor because they are "something you have" instead of "something you know" like a password is, and because they are portable enough you can just keep them in your pocket, purse, or keychain and use them only when you need to login to a secure site.

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[no title] Scripting News(cached at September 22, 2018, 8:03 pm)

I've got YAML working with my GitHub as CMS experiment. Here's an example of a post so you can see what it looks like. This is exactly equivalent to using JSON, my server converts back and forth between YAML and JSON, so my app only ever sees the JSON. Every time I have to teach my software a new text-to-binary format, I shake my fist at a cloud and curse humanity. Some kid is going to come along in five years and not like YAML and there will be ZML or JDAUGHTER or whatever. Will they all do the same thing? Yes of course they will.
US air strike in Somalia kills 18 al-Shabab fighters AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at September 22, 2018, 8:00 pm)

Deadly drone strike carried out after US and local forces on the ground came under attack.
Cholera kills 97 in Nigeria's northeast AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at September 22, 2018, 8:00 pm)

More than 3,000 cholera cases have been recorded in the states of Yobe and Borno over the past two weeks.
Did John Deere Just Swindle California's Farmers Out of Their Right to Repair? Slashdotby EditorDavid on government at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at September 22, 2018, 7:05 pm)

An anonymous reader quotes a new Wired opinion piece by Kyle Wiens and Elizabeth Chamberlain from iFixit: A big California farmers' lobbying group just blithely signed away farmers' right to access or modify the source code of any farm equipment software. As an organization representing 2.5 million California agriculture jobs, the California Farm Bureau gave up the right to purchase repair parts without going through a dealer. Farmers can't change engine settings, can't retrofit old equipment with new features, and can't modify their tractors to meet new environmental standards on their own. Worse, the lobbyists are calling it a victory.... John Deere and friends had already made every single "concession" earlier this year... Just after the California bill was introduced, the farm equipment manufacturers started circulating a flyer titled "Manufacturers and Dealers Support Commonsense Repair Solutions." In that document, they promised to provide manuals, guides, and other information by model year 2021. But the flyer insisted upon a distinction between a right to repair a vehicle and a right to modify software, a distinction that gets murky when software controls all of a tractor's operations. As Jason Koebler of Motherboard reported, that flyer is strikingly similar -- in some cases, identical word-for-word -- to the agreement the Farm Bureau just brokered... Instead of presenting a unified right-to-repair front, this milquetoast agreement muddies the conversation. More worryingly, it could cement a cultural precedent for electronics manufacturers who want to block third-party repair technicians from accessing a device's software.

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