Archive for February, 2020

‘A season-saving moment: Fans, media react to Syracuse basketballs win over Wake Forest – syracuse.com

Syracuse, N.Y. -- Some freshmen heroics sealed it for Syracuse basketball Saturday night in a must-win game against Wake Forest in the Carrier Dome.

With the game tied at 73, freshman center Jesse Edwards tapped a rebound to freshman guard Brycen Goodine who put it back up for the game-winning layup with 1.7 seconds to play.

A desperation shot from Wake Forest didnt fall, and the Orange escaped with a 75-73 win over the Demon Deacons.

Heres what fans and media are saying about Syracuses win over Wake Forest:

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Ben Burrows is a sports reporter for syracuse.com/The Post-Standard. He can be reached @BenMBurrows and via email.

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'A season-saving moment: Fans, media react to Syracuse basketballs win over Wake Forest - syracuse.com

Craig Whyte: ‘I edited Jim Traynor’s stories before they were printed’ – The National

FORMER Rangers owner Craig Whyte has sensationally claimed that he used to correct the stories of Jim Traynor then a journalist at the Daily Record before they went to print.

Into The Bear Pit, Whytes autobiography due to be released next Friday, sees Whyte who bought Rangers from David Murray in 2011 also claim that he was able to get stories pulled from the Scottish press whenever he wanted.

He also tells of his shock when the Record and Traynor now the PR chief at Rangers wrongly called him a billionaire in an infamous front-page headline.

Whyte claims: Jim Traynor used to send me his articles through before hed print them, and Id correct them for him.

In the pre-internet days, Murray must have had complete control.

Some journalists were happy to have a good relationship with Rangers if that meant getting stories, even if as a result it became difficult to criticise the club. Traynor had got in touch ... about a month after I went into Ibrox. We went for lunch at the Rogano restaurant and from that day he hounded me for a job.

I was never that impressed with him. I would soon discover he could fly with the wind.

Traynor hit back last night at Whytes claims, telling the Glasgow Times: The truth about him is well-known. He was merely a pawn in a strategy played perfectly by the Record team at the time.

So I can understand that he was ultimately and rightly exposed. Youd have thought the pound would have dropped by now.

In the book, Whyte also said he could phone up newspapers to get rid of bad stories. I had dinners with all the editors and learned very quickly that if there was a negative story I could call some of them up and have a pretty good chance of getting it stopped.

With the Daily Record I had a 100% chance, and it was the same with The Sun.

I used to call the editor of The Herald. I had a 50-50 chance of getting things stopped there. If it didnt get stopped, you threatened them with withdrawal of access, that they wouldnt get stories.

He then describes picking up the Daily Record on the day the newspaper printed the news he was going to buy Rangers: The front page screamed: BILLIONAIRE SCOT TO BUY RANGERS FOR 30m. What the hell?! Billionaire?! How had they come to that?

I soon found out. In response to the enquiries from journalists, Ian McKerron had put together a small biography of me, and had said I had a billion under management.

Clearly the Record hadnt understood there is a world of difference between assets under management and assets that you own. Maybe it was a reasonable mistake to make, but it wasnt true.

The piece, written by Traynor, claimed talks were at an advanced stage, though Whyte claims this was not the case after only meeting Murray once until that point.

Claims by Traynor that then Rangers manager Walter Smith would have a massive sum to spend in the following January were also wide of the mark, according to Whyte.

The Scottish Sun went further and said: RANGERS SOLD BY XMAS, added Whyte.

The Daily Record and The Scottish Sun declined to comment.

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Craig Whyte: 'I edited Jim Traynor's stories before they were printed' - The National

The View echoes right-wing media by promoting the myth that Democrats are extreme about abortion – Media Matters for America

McCains use of the infanticide falsehood and the allegation that Democrats are radical about abortion was instantaneously recycled by right-wing media. So-called straight news program Fox News @ Night later ran with the right-wing talking point when guest Tony Perkins, president of the anti-abortion and anti-LGBT group Family Research Council, commented on McCain's question. Perkins asserted that Democrats support abortion up to the day of birth and referred to the Democratic Party as radical. Host Shannon Bream, herself a purveyor of anti-abortion misinformation, didnt push back, calling it a conversation about third-trimester abortions or infanticide. Others in theright-wing media ecosystemfollowed suit, manufacturing outrage over Buttigieg's response.

This reiteration found its way out of the right-wing media nebula and was inexplicably repeated on CNN's Cuomo Prime Time. CNN contributor Scott Jennings repeated false claims of Democratic extremism about abortion, alleging that Buttigieg spoke about abortion on demand during The View segment. Host Chris Cuomo himself refuted that claim, bizarrely stating he saw the clip to prepare for this segment.

Buttigieg wasnt the first Democratic presidential candidate to face anti-abortion misinformation from McCain. During a May 2019 broadcast, after 2020 Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) commented on a restrictive abortion ban passed in Alabama, McCain asked Klobuchar if she supported late-term abortion up until birth. McCain continued to double down on her rhetoric even as her co-hosts challenged her about about how this myth was based on a lie and had been debunked.

McCains questions to Buttigieg and Klobuchar were not an outlier; she manufactured the same allegations of extremism during a June 2019 segment. McCain declared that most of the Democratic candidates are "too far to the left, particularly on abortion, to garner her support. During the segment, McCain also repeated a right-wing media talking point about later abortions, describing them as late-term abortions. Co-host Whoopi Goldberg accurately refuted McCain's claim, saying, There is no such thing. In reality, late-term abortion is a medically inaccurate phraseemployed by right-wing media to deliberately sensationalize and stigmatize abortions later in pregnancy, many of which are medically necessary.

During a February 2019 airing, McCain once again used The View as a platform to amplify the right-wing media myth that Democrats support infanticide. McCain spoke about Democrats refusing to vote for the Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act -- legislation designed to solve a fictitious problem formulated by abortion opponents. In addition, during a September 6 episode, McCain inaccurately conflated Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) remarks on climate change as an endorsement of eugenic population control. Despite McCains continued assertions, her claims have no foundation in the reality of abortion care, let alone as part of the Democratic Party platform.

Given The Views cultural relevancy and influence as an important political program, especially during the2020 election, it is imperative for the show to discuss abortion accurately and not give a platform to the repetition of sensationalized right-wing rhetoric and claims of Democratic extremism about abortion.

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The View echoes right-wing media by promoting the myth that Democrats are extreme about abortion - Media Matters for America

Facebook’s Twitter account was hijacked by hacking collective OurMine – Business Insider – Business Insider

Facebook's Twitter account was briefly hijacked by the hacking collective OurMine on Friday afternoon, but the company still appeared to retain some control over the account.

"Hi, we are O u r M i n e. Well, even Facebook is hackable but at least their security better than Twitter. to improve your accounts security Contact us: contact@o u r m i n e .org For security services visit: o u r m i n e. org," a Friday afternoon tweet announcing the takeover said.

The Twitter account belonging to Facebook Messenger was similarly compromised at the same time.

But Facebook still appeared to have some control over the account, and deleted the tweet posted at least five times within seconds. Within 30 minutes, the hack appeared to stop.

A screenshot of a now-deleted tweet Bani Sapra/Twitter

Twitter confirmed the hack to Business Insider, and said the accounts were hacked through a third-party platform.

"As soon as we were made aware of the issue, we locked the compromised accounts and are working closely with our partners at Facebook to restore them," a Twitter spokesperson told Business Insider. Facebook did not respond immediately to a request for comment.

Security researcher Jane Manchung Wong was able to take a video of the tweets getting made and deleted in real-time:

The tweet styles the hacker collective claiming responsibility for the hack as a "security group" and directs users to the company website, which offers personal security checks of social media accounts, emails, iPhones and iCloud for $30 the pricetag for enterprise security checks is available upon request, it seems.

OurMine has long been targeting the social media accounts belonging to high-profile figures and companies.

The group hacked the Twitter accounts of 15 NFL teams at the end of January. In 2016, the group managed to hack the Twitter accounts of Google CEO Sundar Pichai, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, and even Twitter's own CEO Jack Dorsey. OurMine even hacked Business Insider's website during the same year.

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Facebook's Twitter account was hijacked by hacking collective OurMine - Business Insider - Business Insider

A Dominic Cummings coup will not oust the Whitehall mandarins – The Guardian

The prime ministers senior adviser and enforcer, Dominic Cummings, says he wants what amounts to a cultural revolution in Whitehall. If by welcoming what he called weirdos and misfits with odd skills in a provocative podcast early this year, he meant risk-takers, can-doers, people who understand the digital world and information technology, Whitehall certainly needs them. The mandarins of permanent government need shaking up.

For far too long, they have been shielded from the rigours of the outside world, protected by a formidable array of weapons, notably the Official Secrets Act, a measure designed to deter whistleblowers as much as potential spies. But their arsenal includes much more subtle weapons than criminal law. One is deployed with such little effort it can be easily overlooked. It is the use of language, a craft honed over many decades and embedded deep in Whitehall subculture. It is a weapon often used against MPs.

As the late Sir Patrick Nairne, a widely respected mandarin, was honest enough to admit: The secrecy culture of Whitehall is essentially a product of British parliamentary democracy; economy with the truth is the essence of a professional reply to a parliamentary question.

Being economical with the truth is what the former cabinet secretary, Sir Robert (now Lord) Armstrong, admitted to when questioned during the governments attempt to suppress Spycatcher, the memoirs of former MI5 officer Peter Wright. Civil servants are careful not to commit to a direct lie, as Sir Clive Whitmore, Margaret Thatchers principal private secretary, once put it, but to give a misleading impression, as Armstrong explained in the Spycatcher case. Whitehall officials can even mislead themselves as they told the Scott arms-to-Iraq inquiry. And as Ian McDonald, the Ministry of Defence spokesman during the Falklands war but later involved in promoting arms exporters, told Scott: Truth is a very difficult concept.

The careful use of language has been developed into a fine craft. It is essential in Whitehall to avoid making commitments and to put off decisions. (The power of delay should never be underestimated.) It is better when challenged about a policy to say it is under review. Awkward problems are dealt with on a case by case basis, conveniently leaving the government a way out. I hear what you say, is one well-honed response, usefully combining the absence of commitment with the unspoken message to shut up. Euphemism is a useful, albeit soft, weapon to deploy.

It is all part of the attempt to protect a shared comfort zone. Sir Ian (later Lord) Bancroft, head of the civil service under Thatcher, once described how much he enjoyed Anthony Powells A Dance to the Music of Time. I actually believe as I get older that life is very much like the Anthony Powell novels in that you keep meeting the same people over and over again And, he might have added, you keep meeting them over and over again even after you have left the civil service. The number of officials (and senior military figures) who join private companies soon after retiring from public office in the so-called revolving doors syndrome has increased significantly over recent years, perpetuating a lobby system straddling the public and private sectors behind the scenes.

Despite all the populist rhetoric, Whitehalls culture of secrecy, its control of information, will be strengthened

Cummings faces an uphill struggle. Thatcher failed to open up Whitehall, bringing in people from business and political advisers who promised to provoke radical reform. Tony Blair complained about the scars on my back from his attempts to reform the public sector. Both Thatcher and Blair had big parliamentary majorities.

Even if he wins where they failed and the Sir Humphreys of this world are truly put on the back foot, Cummingss Whitehall revolution is most unlikely to extend to more open government. For those now enjoying power in Downing Street and elsewhere in Whitehall even, or especially, ministers political advisers that would be too much of a risk.

Brexit may mean taking back control from Brussels. But where will it go? Not to those members of the public who enthusiastically waved their union jacks. Not even to MPs as Johnson and his ministers have made it clear they have had enough of Commons interfering. They will not get much of a look-in, let alone influence, in the negotiations on a future deal with the EU (or Britains commercial and diplomatic relations with the rest of the world).

Despite all the populist rhetoric coming out of Downing Street, Whitehalls culture of secrecy, its control of information, will, if anything, be strengthened. Witness the recent attempts to exclude those journalists it disapproves of from official media briefings.

MPs, just like the public, rely on the media to be informed and to hold ministers to account in parliament. They have one weapon in their arsenal, the vote. But this weapon is severely blunted when the government has such a large majority. Whitehall (by which I include ministers political advisers as well as civil servants) has so many weapons at its disposal.

It would be ironic indeed that as the historic democratic deficit of EU institutions is lifting, with the European parliament increasing its power and influence, Whitehall keeps the shutters even more firmly down, with the age-old British disease of official secrecy making a mockery of claims about taking back control and restoring sovereignty.

Richard Norton-Taylor is the author of The State of Secrecy, published by IB Tauris, an imprint of Bloomsbury. A version of this piece appears on the openDemocracy website

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A Dominic Cummings coup will not oust the Whitehall mandarins - The Guardian