Saturday, May 28, 2016

Intelligence: Hackers Are Spying on Presidential Candidates, Expect More Cyber Threats

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump at Trump Towers following the conclusion of primaries Tuesday in northeastern states on April 26, 2016 in New York, New York. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

Foreign hackers are spying on presidential candidates, said the Director of National Intelligence, James Clapper.
“We’ve already had some indications” of hacking, Clapper said, according to AP.
Clapper said the FBI and the Homeland Security Department are working with the current presidential campaigns to tighten up security.
Speaking at the Bipartisan Policy Center in Washington, Clapper said the intelligence community expects more cyber threats towards campaigns.
Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton. (EDUARDO MUNOZ ALVAREZ/AFP/Getty Images and Spencer Platt/Getty Images)
Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton. (Eduardo Munoz Alvarez/AFP/Getty Images and Spencer Platt/Getty Images)
Experts say neither Trump or Clinton’s campaign networks are secure enough to stop hackers.
The 2008 presidential campaign between President Obama and Sen. John McCain, and the 2012 campaign with Mitt Romney were also targeted. Those incidents were traced back to Chinese hackers.
Darren Hayes, assistant professor and director of cybersecurity at Pace University, says this election has “people a lot more concerned” because of Donald Trump’s motives, especially in Europe and Asia.
“I can imagine hacktivists going after Trump,” he said.
Hayes said hacking during the election is not a surprise because “information on servers are probably not so secure,” making it an “opportune time” to hack into them.
(Shutterstock)
Shutterstock
Because presidential candidates move around the country frequently during their campaigns, it makes them more vulnerable because their systems are mobile. Many elections have lean campaign teams, which means security may not be the best, Hayes said.
“Until somebody gets into government there will be weaknesses in their election security,” said Hayes.
He says hackers may be after personal information so they can put it online to embarrass the candidate.
Hackers may also interested in potential policies and possible allies.
“We do know there’s been Chinese and Russian hackers interested in government information before,” he said.
Hayes said finding who the hackers are is difficult, since attackers proxy through U.S. servers. But, identifying the people who are disgruntled may help, he said, as well as being cautious, and offering rewards against the hackers.
The Associated Press contributed to this report
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Vin Diesel Posts Very Emotional Tribute to Paul Walker on Set of ‘Fast 8’

Vin Diesel has posted an emotional tribute to fallen friend Paul Walker on the set of “Fast 8.”
It’s the first film in the “Fast & Furious” franchise that will not include Walker, who died two-and-a-half years ago during a break from filming “Furious 7.”
Diesel, 48, is currently shooting “Fast 8,” so he took to Instagram to share a touching account of an interaction he had with a crew member. 
“Many of the crew members who have worked on several of the past Fast films are here again to help us make something special,” Diesel wrote.
“One of them at the end of the week came up to me and said wow what we are capturing on film is excellent… And then looked at me and said Paul would be proud.”
Many fans appreciated the story, with a number chiming in to say they still miss Walker. 
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The Long Reach of China to Silence Its Critics

(L to R) Angela Gui, daughter of disappeared Hong Kong bookseller Gui Minhai; Ilshat Hassan, president, Uyghur American Association; and Su Yutong, journalist and internet activist, testify May 24, at the Congressional-Executive Commission on China on China's global efforts to silence critics. (Gary Feuerberg/ Epoch Times)


WASHINGTON—China’s repressive methods at home are well documented and embedded in our memories. The 27th anniversary of the student-led protests on Tiananmen Square and the bloodshed that followed will be upon us next Saturday, June 4. What is much less well known is the long reach of the Chinese communist regime beyond its borders to intimidate and suppress criticism of its human rights record and policies.
Today, China is in a strong position to employ its diplomatic relationships and economic and trade powers to persuade its critics to back off or self-censor.
Among the most disturbing examples of likely PRC interference in free societies concerns the American Bar Association (ABA), which had made a formal offer to well-known China human rights lawyer Dr. Teng Biao to write a book about his work in China and the country’s judicial system and the future. Although the publishing contract was signed, it was soon rescinded because of fears that Teng’s book would offend the Chinese regime.
Teng quotes the correspondent from the ABA with whom he had been working. “There is concern that we run the risk of upsetting the Chinese government by publishing your book, and because we have ABA commissions working in China, there is fear that we would put them and their work at risk.”
The source for the above quote is taken from Teng’s written testimony prepared for a congressional hearing of the Congressional-Executive Commission on China (CECC) held on May 24. The hearing’s aim was to learn firsthand from Teng and other witnesses residing outside China’s borders, who have been targets of China’s intimidation. The ABA declined the Commission’s invitation to answer questions, but sent a letter that the Chair entered into the hearing record.
Teng began testifying orally via satellite from London, when the Chair stopped his speaking because the communication became too garbled.
In his written testimony, however, he says, “For my activism, I’ve been banned from teaching, been forced out of a job, had my passport confiscated, been disbarred from practicing law, and have even been jailed and tortured.” He writes that he is one of many Chinese activists, who he says must make sacrifices for the sake of the country’s future.

Tiananmen Square Massacre Information Suppressed

 “China has long used its visa denial and censorship policies to muzzle discussion of the Tiananmen protests and their violent suppression by punishing and marginalizing the former student leaders and encouraging self-censorship among academics and foreign journalists,” states the introductory description to the hearing.
Christopher Smith (R-N.J.), Chair, Congressional-Executive Commission on China, convenes a hearing  May 24, on
Christopher Smith (R-N.J.), Chair, Congressional-Executive Commission on China, convenes a hearing May 24, on “The Long Arm of China: Global Efforts to Silence Critics from Tiananmen to Today.” (Gary Feuerberg/ Epoch Times)
Twenty-seven years after Tiananmen, “the methods used by Beijing to enforce a code of silence have gone global,” said Rep. Christopher Smith (R-N.J.), Chair of CECC. “The long reach of China extends beyond its borders to Thailand, South Korea, Malaysia, India, Kenya, at the U.N., and in the U.S.,” he said.
Some of the witnesses that the Commission sought to invite to testify declined based on very legitimate fears about what would happen to members of their family who remain in China.
— Senator Marco Rubio, Cochairman, CECC
Smith said that last year, California-based LinkedIn blocked articles related to Tiananmen that were posted inside China or by members hosted on its Chinese site.
The Cochairman of the CECC Senator Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) said that dissidents living in the safety aboard “regularly report that their family members who remain in China are harassed, detained and even imprisoned in retaliation for their truth-telling about the regime’s abuses.” Rubio was incensed that “some of the witnesses that the Commission sought to invite to testify declined based on very legitimate fears about what would happen to members of their family who remain in China.”

Daughter Misses Her Father

The hearing discussed the disappearance and alleged abduction of five Hong Kong booksellers. Angela Gui, a 22-year old undergraduate student at the University of Warwick, UK, testified regarding her father who is one of the five. She said she always had regular communication via Skype with her father, bookseller Gui Minhai, until October 13, when communication was broken off. Later she learned from one of her father’s colleagues (who would later be abducted himself) that three others who worked at the same Hong Kong bookstore and publishing business were also missing. Her father was last seen at his vacation home in Thailand. Finally, the Chinese acknowledged they had her father but they claimed he came to China voluntarily.
“In November and in January, [my father] sent me two messages in Skype telling me to keep quiet. As his daughter, I could tell he sent these under duress,” she said at the hearing.
She didn’t hear or see anything about her father until three months after his disappearance on a “clearly a staged and badly put together confession video of him aired on Chinese state TV in January.”
Her father is a Swedish citizen—the only citizenship he holds. He could not have left Thailand voluntarily because there is no record of his departure, she said. So, here is a Swedish citizen abducted by the Chinese state agents from a third sovereign country, in violation of international and China’s own law.
After eight months, “I still don’t know where he is [in China], how he is being treated, or what his legal status is,” which is especially troubling because he is Swedish citizen.

Self-Censorship

Although Dr. Teng Biao was unable to testify orally, his written testimony was especially cogent and powerful.
“The ABA is just one of the major Western institutions attempting to promote change in China—on the Communist Party’s terms,” he writes.
He said that the ABA and other Western organizations’ training programs for Chinese judges, prosecutors, police, and lawyers associations might be in jeopardy if sensitive topics were not avoided, such as the persecution of Falun Gong, the Tiananmen Square massacre, and the Party’s politics in Tibet and Xinjiang.
The ABA is just one of the major Western institutions attempting to promote change in China—on the Communist Party’s terms.
— Teng Biao, Chinese Human Rights Lawyer
“So without realizing it, Western institutions end up helping the Chinese government to silence and marginalize the individuals and groups it finds most troublesome. Self-censorship has become instinctive, and now characterizes the very basis of their interactions with the regime,” he writes.
Teng said that nearly all the funding of Western programs intended to support the rule of law and human rights wind up lining the pockets of government departments and scholars with state connections. Resources intended to further the rule of law and human rights have fallen into the hands “whose job is to trample human rights,” such as the courts, Procuratorates, public security departments, and government lawyers associations.

China’s Pressure on German Broadcaster

Su Yutong, Chinese journalist, internet activist, and former news broadcaster for Deutsche Welle, testifies May 24, at the Congressional-Executive Commission on China, on China's global efforts to silence its critics. (Gary Feuerberg/ Epoch Times)
Su Yutong, Chinese journalist, internet activist, and former news broadcaster for Deutsche Welle, testifies May 24, at the Congressional-Executive Commission on China, on China’s global efforts to silence its critics. (Gary Feuerberg/ Epoch Times)
Su Yutong, Chinese journalist and human rights activist, was kept under surveillance and periodically placed under house arrest, according to her bio, because of her activities in the commemoration events related to the Tiananmen massacre. In June 2010, her house was ransacked by the police after she made public the personal diary of former Chinese Premiere Li Peng. She was then forced to leave China. The same year she became a journalist with the Chinese section of Deutsche Welle, a German international broadcaster. She wrote nearly 1,500 articles which often included reports about Chinese dissidents.
In 2014, a Beijing media consultant claimed that some Western media, including Deutsche Welle, were unfair in their criticisms of the Chinese regime’s crushing the Tiananmen protests, she said. Deutsche Welle came under new management that wanted to take more “guidance and direction” from China, she testified. Su Yutong was outspoken in opposing this change in policy and the whitewashing of the 1989 events. She was fired in August 2014.
So without realizing it, Western institutions end up helping the Chinese government to silence and marginalize the individuals and groups it finds most troublesome.
— Teng Biao, Chinese Human Rights Lawyer

Pressures on Family in China

China has punished the political activities of Ilshat Hassan by making life difficult for his family. Hassan was born in Xinjiang, China, which he calls East Turkistan. He taught college in Xinjiang for 15 years, but had to flee China in 2003 due to the constant “harassment, threats, and persecution from the regional government’s secret service agency.” He left behind his wife and child, parents, sisters and brothers. He eventually came to the U.S. as a refugee. He currently is very politically active and president of the Uyghur American Association.
Ilshat Hassan, president of the Uyghur American Association, testifies May 24, at the Congressional-Executive Commission on China, on China's constant harassment of his family residing in China. (Gary Feuerberg/ Epoch Times)
Ilshat Hassan, president of the Uyghur American Association, testifies May 24, at the Congressional-Executive Commission on China, on China’s constant harassment of his family residing in China. (Gary Feuerberg/ Epoch Times)
“In the beginning, the Chinese government held my family members hostage, denying my wife and son passports.” This was when he was hoping to resettle his family in Malaysia, before he came to America.
After seeing that his wife would never get a passport, and also to protect her “from constant harassment from the Chinese government and secret agents,” he made the “painful decision” to get a divorce. “But that didn’t stop the Chinese [regime] from continuing to harass and threaten my ex-wife, and she was constantly under surveillance and threats,” he said.
More recently, on Aug. 17, 2014 around 1:30 a.m. Chinese authorities suddenly entered his elder sister’s house, searched the house, seized her son’s computer, and held her without charge in an undisclosed place for around nine months.
“Even though she was released, she still has to report to the local police regularly, and has to get approval even to visit her parents,” he said.
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Friday, May 27, 2016

Badjao Girl finds hope in internet fame


With her high cheekbones, morena skin and effortless beauty, this young lass caught the attention of the world wide webz — including politicians, beauty queens and even the youngest son of the incoming president.
‘Badjao Girl’ was seen and photographed by Topher Quinto Burgos during the Pahiyas Festival in Lucban town in Quezon province. The 13-year-old admitted she was initially frightened by all the attention.
“I got scared. I thought I would be arrested by the police for begging,” said Rita Gaviola in an interview with Inquirer.
Instead of getting her in trouble, however, the photos, which eventually became viral on social media, made her the new internet sweetheart.
Netizens offered to help her family and the Badjao indiggenous people in their plight.
“Give this girl a chance to show the meaning of morena. This is what you call true Mindanaoan (Filipino) beauty,” said Sebastian Duterte, son of incoming President-elect Rodrigo Duterte, on a Twitter post.
Celebrities like Miss World Philippines 2015 Hillarie Danielle Parungao, Miss International Philippines 2014 Bianca Guidotti and Miss Earth 2015 Angelia Ong already offered help to the Badjao girl.
Gaviola is from a poor family. Eating one meal a day is considered a luxury for her family. Boiled cassava mixed with whatever fish they catch from the sea is already a rare treat.
She has a simple dream: To go to school so her life and her family's will improve.
“I want to finish my studies and be a teacher someday. I want to help my siblings and the other Badjao kids to get education,” Gaviola said.
Thanks to internet magic, her dream might come true.
After hearing her story, Lucena Mayor Roderick Alcala promised that he would send Gaviola to school.
Lawyer Asis Perez, national director of the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources, also promised to provide fishing boats to all Badjao fishers in Lucena City.
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Bombshell Government Study Confirms Cellphone-Cancer Link


One of the biggest ever studies on cellphone radiation has conclusively found that mobile phones do cause cancer, ending the long-running debate on the dangers of cellphones. 
The peer-reviewed study, by the National Toxicology Program, found that rats who were exposed to cellphone frequencies got two types of brain tumors as a result.
Partial findings from the study, released on Thursday, warned that the results will likely have a huge effect on public health.
Given the widespread global usage of mobile communications among users of all ages, even a very small increase in the incidence of disease resulting from exposure to [radio-frequency radiation] could have broad implications for public health,” the report stated on Thursday.
Wsj.com reports:

A spokesperson for the National Institutes of Health, which helped oversee the study, wasn’t immediately available for comment. Earlier in the week, the NIH said, “It is important to note that previous human, observational data collected in earlier, large-scale population-based studies have found limited evidence of an increased risk for developing cancer from cellphone use.”
While not all biological effects observed in animals necessarily apply to humans, the National Toxicology Program’s $25 million study is one of the biggest and most comprehensive experiments into health effects from cellphones.
“Where people were saying there’s no risk, I think this ends that kind of statement,” said Ron Melnick, who ran the NTP project until retiring in 2009 and recently reviewed the study’s results.
Since mobile phones were launched commercially in the 1980s, the only widely agreed upon physical impact from cellphone radio-frequency energy is that it can heat human tissue at high enough levels. Cellphones are designed well below this thermal level.
The U.S. government’s official position is that the weight of scientific evidence hasn’t indicated health risks. In 2011, the World Health Organization said cellphone radiation was a group 2B possible carcinogen. Illustrating the ambiguity of the designation is the fact that certain pickled vegetables and coffee are also considered possibly carcinogenic.
There also are many studies showing no harmful health effects. Just this month, a survey of brain cancer rates in Australia found no increase since the introduction of mobile phones there almost three decades ago, a finding also seen in other countries.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration appointed the NTP to study cellphone radio-frequency radiation nearly two decades ago. The NTP, established inside the Department of Health and Human Services in 1978, is tasked with identifying and testing agents that are potentially harmful to humans.
In 2005, the NTP selected the IIT Research Institute in Chicago to carry out the experiments. The parameters of the tests took several years to design and build because of their complexity, researchers say.
The study was conducted in an underground lab with 21 specially designed radio-frequency chambers to house mice and rats. More than 2,500 rats and mice were exposed to radio-frequency energy in various intervals over two years.
The study explored effects from the most common type of wireless technologies, GSM and CDMA, at two common frequencies, 900 megahertz for rats and 1900 megahertz for mice. It exposed the rats to the frequencies every 10 minutes followed by a 10-minute break for 18 hours, resulting in nine hours a day of exposure.
Results from the study on mice weren’t released.
The two types of tumors the study identified also have been discovered in some epidemiological studies. Those studies, which have found instances of gliomas and acoustic neuromas, were key factors in the WHO’s decision to classify cellphone radiation as a possible carcinogen. The NTP report noted that its findings “appear to support” the classification.
It found the cancer association appeared in male rats, and didn’t find similar results in female rats. Rats that were exposed to radiofrequency energy in utero tended to have slightly lower birth weights.
Partial findings from the NTP study were released after the results were earlier reported by the website Microwave News. The NTP report said the complete study results would be released by the fall of 2017.
It’s not clear how the results may impact the government’s cellphone safety recommendations. The Federal Communications Commission, which administers safety guidelines for U.S. cellphone use, has been briefed on the findings.
“Scientific evidence always informs FCC rules on this matter,” an FCC spokesman said. “We will continue to follow all recommendations from federal health and safety experts including whether the FCC should modify its current policies and RF exposure limits.”
Current cellphone safety standards are centered around the heating effects from radiofrequency energy, which is the same type of energy that cooks food in a microwave. Tests for safe use of cellphones were designed in the 1990s around this heating effect. The latest findings could lead to changes in safety standards, such as only talking on a cellphone while using a headset and keeping the devices out of pants pockets.
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