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Encryption: How It Works, Types, and the Quantum Future | eSP – eSecurity Planet

Encryption and the development of cryptography have been a cornerstone of IT security for decades and remain critical for data protection against evolving threats.

While cryptology is thousands of years old, modern cryptography took off in the 1970s with the help of the Diffie-Hellman-Merkle and RSA encryption algorithms. As networks evolved and organizations adopted internet communications for critical business processes, these cryptographic systems became essential for protecting data.

Through public and commercial development of advanced encryption methods, organizations from sensitive government agencies to enterprise companies can ensure protected communications between personnel, devices, and global offices. Financial institutions in the 1990s and 2000s were some of the first to incorporate encryption to protect online transactions, particularly as backup tapes were lost in transit.

The race continues for cryptographers to keep encryption systems ahead of cryptanalysts and hackers. Quantum computing attacks already present a real threat to existing standards, making the continued development of encryption pivotal for years to come.

This article looks at encryption, how it fits into cryptology, how cryptographic algorithms work, types, use cases, and more.

Encryption is the act of translating data into secret code (ciphertext) and back again (plaintext) for secure access between multiple parties. With shared protocols and encryption algorithms, users can encode files or messages only accessible to other select clients.

To no ones surprise, the study of cryptography and advancements in encryption are essential to developing cybersecurity. Individuals, small businesses, and enterprise organizations all rely on encryption to securely store and transfer sensitive data across wide-area networks (WAN) like the internet.

Application developers managing sensitive user data must especially beware of increasing regulatory action surrounding data privacy.

Cryptology is the overarching field of study related to writing and solving codes, whereas encryption and decryption are the central processes driving the computer science discipline.

As seen below, cryptography is the methodology and applications for managing encryption schemes, and cryptanalysis is the methodology of testing and decrypting these messages.

Cryptographers versed in the latest encryption methods help cybersecurity companies, software developers, and national security agencies secure assets. Cryptanalysts are the individuals and groups responsible for breaking encryption algorithms for good, bad, and ugly reasons.

Penetration testing and red teamers are critical for remaining vigilant in an ever-changing threat environment and catching the vulnerabilities otherwise missed. Alternatively, advanced persistent threats (APT) are always around the corner trying to do the same.

While there are several encryption schemes, they all share the ability to encrypt and decrypt data through a cryptographic key. This unique key is a random string specifically produced to complete the encryption transaction and the more bits in length and complex a process, the better.

Brute force attacks are among the most common cryptanalytic methods, and the time it takes to break an encrypted message is a recognized indicator of the encryption strength.

For users familiar with password management and the value of complex passwords, this makes sense. The longer and more complex the encrypted message is, the longer itll take to decrypt.

Without encryption, data from users and organizations alike would be widely available for all to see on public networks. Individuals and application developers hold responsibility for using and implementing services secured by a good encryption algorithm.

Not every application or network requires military-grade encryption however, enterprise organizations cant go wrong with the services offering the most strength.

A visible example of the role encryption plays with everyday web traffic is the transition from HTTP to HTTPS protocols witnessed in the last decade. Short for the Hypertext Transfer Protocol, HTTP was central to the World Wide Web development in the 1990s and remains a popular application layer protocol connecting users to internet content through a web browser.

In 1994, Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) emerged to give clients an encrypted method to surf the web. By 1999, its successor the Transport Layer Security (TLS) protocol offered a more robust cryptographic protocol across technical components like cipher suites, record protocol, message authentication, and handshake process. HTTP over SSL or HTTP over TLS, dubbed HTTPS, wasnt immediately adopted by the masses.

Thanks to an industry campaign led by the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) for users, website owners, and hosting providers to prioritize secure web traffic, HTTPS has overcome its less secure older sibling. In 2016, only 40% of websites protected their web pages and visiting users with HTTPS. Five years later, that number is more than 90% of websites, protecting users en masse from web attacks.

Before computer science, two individuals could use an identical key to unlock a shared mailbox or gate. Today, symmetric encryption via block ciphers or stream ciphers works much the same way, offering two or more users the ability to encrypt and decrypt messages with a single, shared key between stakeholders.

Users can establish a symmetric key to share private messages through a secure channel like a password manager. Unfortunately, while symmetric encryption is a faster method, it also is less secure.

Symmetric models rely on the integrity of the private key, and sharing it in plaintext over text or email leaves users vulnerable. Phishing and social engineering are common ways threat actors can obtain a symmetric key, but cryptanalysis and brute force attempts can also break symmetric key ciphers.

In the 1970s, the demand for more secure cryptographic systems was met with computer scientists from Stanford and MIT developing the first examples of asymmetric encryption.

Unlike symmetric cryptography, asymmetric encryption is a complex mathematical process in which two users exchange public and private components to create a shared, unique key. Though more complicated and expensive to implement, asymmetric encryption uses thousands of bits and a robust key generation process to ensure secure communications over distributed networks.

Software developers and organizations increasingly use symmetric and asymmetric encryption methods to give users speed and security in communication.

Also known as hybrid encryption, the bundle of the two methods usually starts with a handshake between users through asymmetric cryptography to establish security. Within the asymmetric connection, parties then use symmetric algorithms for the faster processing of messages.

Cryptography challenges have been met by leading computer scientists, universities, and national security and intelligence agencies. The below section looks at the most substantial standards in the evolution of encryption.

The need for a government-wide standard to encrypt sensitive information was evident in 1973, when the U.S. National Bureau of Standards, nowadays the NIST, made a public request for potential ciphers. The algorithm dubbed the Data Encryption Standard (DES) was developed and proposed by IBM and lead cryptographer Horst Feistel.

By the 1990s, DES received wide criticism for its vulnerability to brute force attacks and its short key size. Triple DES, wherein the DES cipher algorithm ran over data blocks three times, proved to be more secure but insufficient for the online ecosystem and universe of data coming.

Shortly after the release of DES, three computer scientists Whitfield Diffie, Martin Hellman, and Ralph Merkle published their research on public-private key cryptography in 1976. As it came to be known, the Diffie-Hellman-Merkle (DHM) key exchange set a precedent for asymmetric encryption before the global networking boom.

Unlike symmetric encryption methods, which previously used few bits, the DHM key exchange provided for encryption supporting key lengths of 2,048 bits to 4,096 bits.

A year after DHMs findings, three cryptographers Ron Rivest, Adi Shamir, and Leonard Adleman developed the RSA public-key cryptosystem.

The three innovators and MIT patented the RSA algorithm, a proprietary system available through RSA Security until its public release in 2000. Standing the test of time, the RSA algorithm remains the most popular public key cryptographic system today and introduced the concept of digital signatures for authentication.

In 1997, the NIST renewed its call to the public cryptography community for the successor to DES. Two Dutch cryptographers Joan Daemen and Vincent Rijmen submitted the eventual pick known as Rijndael. By 2001, the NIST dubbed it the Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) and officially replaced the use of DES.

AES offered larger and different key sizes with a family of ciphers to choose from and remains one of the most popular standards over 20 years later.

While both DES and AES use symmetric block ciphers, AES uses a substitution-permutation network wherein plaintext goes through multiple rounds of substitution (S-box) and permutation (P-box) before finalizing the ciphertext block. Similarly, a client or application can decrypt the AES message by reversing these S-box and P-box transformations.

Professors at the University of Washington and Columbia University independently published research in 1985 on elliptic curve cryptography (ECC), but it didnt come into widespread implementation until the mid-2000s.

Like RSA, ECC is an encryption algorithm for public key cryptography, but instead of prime numbers for generating key pairs, ECC uses elliptic curves. ECC is faster than RSA with a smaller key size while maintaining its security with the mathematics behind elliptic curves over finite fields.

ECC has proven to be a popular choice for web applications, blockchains, and mobile devices as a fast, lightweight yet secure alternative to RSA. ECC isnt immune to compromise, including threats like twist-security and side-channel attacks.

In 1978, Rivest and Adelman published additional research on a cryptographic method dubbed homomorphic encryption. However, it wasnt until 2009 that a graduate student published research on fully homomorphic encryption (FHE) and set off an exploration period.

Unlike conventional cryptography, homomorphic encryption allows for a set of limited operations on ciphertext without decrypting the message. Homomorphic models includes partial homomorphic (PHE) for a single operation, somewhat homomorphic (SHE) for two functions, and FHE for the broadest operational control over encrypted data.

More than a decade later, companies like Google, IBM, and Microsoft continue to explore FHE capabilities where an organization can process specific data within an encrypted message while maintaining the integrity of the data. FHE remains a maturing cryptographic system with little evidence to date of widespread adoption.

Based on quantum mechanics rather than mathematical operations, quantum computers utilizing Shors algorithm for finding prime factors can break asymmetric standards like DHM, RSA, and ECC within moments.

Post-quantum cryptography (PQC) describes the budding market working to address quantum attacks and secure the next generation of IT environments and data. Agencies like the NIST and NSA continue to release security guidelines against quantum threats, but theres still much to learn of quantum information science (QIS) and no official US standard.

Earlier this month, the White House released a national security memo outlining U.S. administrative objectives for adopting quantum-resistant cryptography. While initial standards are expected by 2024, a full mitigation architecture for federal agencies isnt expected until 2035.

The most common applications for cryptographic systems in IT environments include:

Cryptology long predates todays encryption algorithms for data stored in our pockets and moving across the web. From Julius Caesar to the Enigma code, cryptographic methods continue to become more complex to the benefit and detriment of various actors.

As cryptanalysts and threat actors poke holes in the latest implementations, its natural for the industry and users to upgrade to the most robust available algorithms. Outdated and inadequate cryptographic standards leave organizations and users vulnerable, giving those persistent or capable enough the ability to extract, sell, or ransom sensitive data.

The emergence of post-quantum cryptography is a reality stakeholders must grapple with sooner than later.

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Encryption: How It Works, Types, and the Quantum Future | eSP - eSecurity Planet

West Genesee, Westhill lead sweep of baseball sectional openers – Eagle News Online

CENTRAL NEW YORK Six area high school baseball teams faced opening games in the Section III playoffs Tuesday afternoon and all of them emerged victorious.

Seeking its first sectional title since 1977, West Genesee, the no. 2 seed in Class AA, easily cleared its first hurdle, routing no. 7 seed Syracuse City 14-3 in the quarterfinals in Camillus.

Syracuse went up 1-0 in the first inning, but the Wildcats took charge with four runs in the bottom of the first and three more runs in the second. More would follow, including a six-run fifth inning.

Only getting eight hits, WG took advantage of wildness with 10 walks and four hit batters. Eric Korzeniewski tripled and drove in four runs, with Ryan Klementowski and Jacob Severson getting two RBIS apiece as Dan Flaherty and Luis Suarez each scored three runs. Klementowski pitched five innings, allowing seven hits but striking out nine.

In Class B, the main story was that Westhill and Skaneateles earned one more shot at each other in the quarterfinals after two entertaining regular-season games that the Warriors won.

Westhill, the no. 3 seed, shut out no. 14 seed Chittenango 4-0 in a game that, for a long while, was a tense pitchers duel between Warriors ace Mike Madigan and Bears ace Carlos Torres-Carman.

Neither pitcher surrendered a run for five innings. Finally, in the bottom of the sixth Westhill got to Torres-Carman, the big blow Taden Chesters bases-clearing, three-run double as Dom Zawadzki also drove in a run.

Madigan allowed just two hits, one of them to Torres-Carman and the other to Austin Khammar, and set a career mark with 15 strikeouts to overcome three walks.

Meanwhile, no. 6 seed Skaneateles had to rally past no. 11 seed Lowville 7-3 in a game where the Red Raiders took a 1-0 lead in the first inning and then scored twice in the third after the Lakers went up 2-1 in the second.

Still trailing 3-2, Skaneateles went ahead for good when it earned a pair of fourth-inning runs. A three-run sixth put the game away as Emil Sander went two-for-four with three RBIs.

Cooper Purdy scored twice as single RBIs went to Nate Shattuck, Chad Lowe, Joe Bruna and Trey Michel. James Musso went the distance, striking out 11 to overcome seven Lowville hits.

Solvay got a double bonus. Not only did the no. 7 seed Bearcats beat no. 10 seed Phoenix 10-3, it earned a quarterfinal home game when no. 2 seed Little Falls was shocked by no. 18 seed Vernon-Verona-Sherrill 9-7.

As for its own game, Solvay struck twice in the first inning and broke it open with a four-run fourth, adding four more insurance runs in the sixth to support pitcher Dan Mrowinski, who went six innings for the win.

Jonathan Gonzalez-Perez hit a home run on his way to three RBIs. Anthony Berry had two hits and drove in two runs as Mrowinski, Jordan Dippold and Robert Tarolli had one RBI apiece.

On the road, Marcellus, the no. 12 seed, proved quite impressive against no. 5 seed Holland Patent, piling up runs in the course of a 13-2 victory over the Golden Knights to earn a spot in the quarterfinals against no. 4 seed Homer.

The Mustangs banged out 14 hits, four of them by Adam Sullivan, who tripled and scored four runs as Ethan Snyder doubled and earned four RBIs.

Snyder, Colin Johnson, Ryder Donahue and Hunter Byrne had two hits apiece as John Francesconi joined Donahue and Byrne in the two-RBI column. Francesconi also pitched six innings to earn the win, striking out nine.

Finally, there was Bishop Ludden tearing through its Class C playoff opener, the no. 10 seed Gaelic Knights blanking no. 7 seed Tully 13-0 to set up a quarterfinal showdown with no. 2 seed Beaver River.

Two runs in the first and third innings put Ludden in control, and was all pitcher Peter Dunham needed as he threw a one-hitter, amassing 13 strikeouts against just two walks.

At the plate, the Gaelic Knights used an eight-run seventh inning to put the game away. Tim Dunham singled, doubled and drove in three runs, with Peter Dunham adding three hits and two RBIs as Andrew Pullano and Mike Masterpole also drove in a pair of runs.

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West Genesee, Westhill lead sweep of baseball sectional openers - Eagle News Online

Celebrating the Class of 2022 | | herald-review.com – Herald & Review

ST. TERESA

Sydney Allison, Taylor Barry, Grace Buxton, Justice Chapman, Tyriq Cole, Denim Cook, Noah Corzine, Gavin Czerwinski, Lorenz Miel Delos Reyes, Myles Dickson, Demi Drake, Megan Dunscomb, Aiden Etchason, Erika Flickinger, Abby Gillespey, Korley Golladay, Zahki Hayes, Zachary Hollis, Bryceson Jackson, Jenna Johnson Grubaugh, Halle Kelly, Sarah Keyes, Adam Klump, Jack Kramer, Chloe Luttrell, Alexander Martinez, Chloe Mesnard, Emily Naber, Vanessa Nash, Valerie Nutakor, Lindsey Ohl, Thomas Pokrzywinski, Madison Prasun, Ryan Rayhill, Jayden Sanderfield, Lula Bella Sassano, Jack Sekosky, Griffin Smith, Kayla Smith, Tre Spence, Emilie Stogner, Emma Stoneburg, Sydney Sweeney, Dhanika Taruc, Parker Templeton, Bradley Vandercar, Heidi Vemmer, Mylee Venters,Ryenne Wagner, Rachel Whitehead, Cayden Wilkins

Valedictorian: Erika Flickinger

Salutatorian:Valerie Nutakor

ARGENTA-OREANA

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Valedictorian:Ryan Andrew Woodruff

Salutatorian:Sawyer Joseph Jones

CENTRAL A&M

Riley Adrian, Sydney Allen, Seth Bagley, Martin Bandy, Heidi Bingaman, Ezekiel Conlin, Peyten Daniels, Emily Dewitt, Justin Dilley, Abbigail Durbin, Courtney Foley, Emily Harter, Ashlyn Hennings, Olivia Houchins, Madison Hunsaker, Alexandrea Jones, Samuel Lehman, Gage Lindahl, Morgan Malone, Chancie Manley, Emily Mars, Damien Martin, Gabriel McElroy, Brooklyn McQueen, Jansen Merriman, Rainey Mitsdarffer, Josephine Moore, Chase Morgan, Delaney Nation, Michael Neece, Dalton Nichols, James Paradee, Steven Reed, Jarrett Robertson, Jade Salmons, Mallory Schmitt, Maycen Schultz, Evan Shonkwiler, Cody Sloan, Parker Smith, Makenzie Smith, Marissa Snearly, Gracie Sproles, Ethan Sunderland, Alyssa Sutton, Nathaniel Trueblood, Spencer Uphoff, Abigail Vancleve, Tiffany Webb, Lane Whitney, Olivia Wilkinson, Caleb Woods

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CLINTON

Justin James Akeman, Hayden Brody Alsup, Jordan Thomas Atchison, Eli Gideon Atkins, Caleb Stephen Atten, Blaise Logan Baker, Taylor Elizabeth Bane, Zoe Lynne Barnes, Ella Dianne Bateson, Jaylee Ann Bateson, Phoenix Rose Bieber, Cadence Lynn Bishop, Ethan Michael Boyer, Autumn Nicole Brinkoetter, Nathan Bradley Brown, Kaitlin Darlene Burton, Joshua Thomas Carter, Kylie Ann Chrispen, Damien Jacob Clymer, Allison McKinley Cox, Payton Thomas Cross, Steven Michael Crutcher, Wyatt Raymond Crutcher, Emma Grace Culbertson, Emily Elizabeth Cyrulik, Mallory Lynn Cyrulik, Braden Anthony Decker, Logan William Deerwester, Grace Addison Dempsey, Isaiah James Dial, Tierney Lynn Dial, Christian Pharrell Dimas, Stephanie Kryenn Durbin, Maycie Lynn Ellis, Matthew Vaughn Ernst, Jasmine Emily Rhea Ferguson, Blake Hunter Followell, Morgan Lynn Fortune, Emily Nicole Fought, Madelyn Noelle Fought, Gavin Wesley Francis, Fuka Fujishima, Kailea Jo Golden, Izac Matthew Graves, Chloe Loreen Griffin, Kyler James Harris, Wesley Jordan Harrold, Kayley Lynn Hart, Emma Grace Nina Hays, Maranda Jaylynn Henry, Carter David Hitchings, Clare Moira Holland, Austin Dale Jenkins, Maxwell Kent Johnson, Corinne Elise Karr, Leah Hougham Klitzing, Adam James Kroeger, Zackery Lauderdale, Cheyanne Nikole Lingo, Dillon Shelby Lively, Dennis James Lux, Kaitlyn Eve Mahoney, Wyatt Harrison Martin, Zachary Addison McGhee, Brady Blaine McReynolds, Madison Nicole Mearida, Luis Enrique Mendoza Jr., Erica Michelle Mills, Drew Michael Milton, Brady Alexander Moore, Kylee Kinyan Moore, Peyton Louise Moore, Khloe Elizabeth Morlock, Shelby Renee Morris, Trinity Claire Morris, Nathan Trent Moyer, Jocelyn Moyotl Naxi, Jose Pablo Ornelas, Cortney Sue Osgood, Taylor Anne Osgood, Alexander Michael Perhay, Trista Plotke, Lilian Elaine Queen, Fatima Guadalupe Ramirez, Kaitlyn Diane Rauch, Kylie Rene Raymer, Carly Elizabeth Reeder, Caiden Lee Rich, Aiden Jay Schlesinger, Mikayla Lynne Schultz, Halen Ann-Marie Sexton, Aidan Richard Shanks, Carson Richard Shepherd, Snorre Dahl Slinning, Kaedyn Joshua Sloat-Shannon, Noah Kaden Stephenson, Jacob Darby Sterr, Aaliyah Paige Stinebaker, Antonio Lee Sunkel, Dominick Kole Thayer, Emma Faith Thomas, Olivia Grace Totten, Kaine Brennan Trimble, Kairi Isabelle Tull, Jessie Marie Wertz, Jessica Mae West, Justyn Lee West, Mathis Jeremiah Westbrooks, Katie Alexandria Wherry, Isaiah Benjamin White, Jaxson Lee White, Trevor Marshall Willis, Emily Jean Wilson, Sophie Elleighna Young, Nathan Lane Zenger, Nicholas William Zenger, Caleb Ryan Wesley Zook

Valedictorians: Dennis James Lux, Luis Enrique Mendoza Jr., Noah Kaden Stephenson, Jacob Darby Sterr

Salutatorians:Wesley Jordan Harrold, Jessie Marie Wertz

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Valedictorians: Heidi Heldt, Tyler Heldt, Joshua House, Emmery Kovalcik, Alice Skelley, Katelyn Wendt

Salutatorian:Tetem Herdina

LUTHERAN SCHOOL ASSOCIATION

Jarrett Evan Albert, Brandon Robert Blakeman, Isabella Renea Carlton, Alicia Kate Elliott, Colton John Engle, Gannon Lowell Harshman, Kody August Hubner, Amarie Imoni Lee, Kenzie Kay Livingston, Anna Elise Lovekamp, Noah Ray Newingham, Abigail Rose Phillips, Sloan Moody Plummer, Jacob Andrew Whicker, Bobby Lynn Yardley.

Valedictorian:Kenzie Kay Livingston

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Delbert Wayne, Jr. Hamm, Codey Lavern Harbin, Shelbi Dee Harper, Aiden Joseph Hedenberg, Emma Sue Hoffman, William Paul Hoffman, Benjamin Sanford Hubbard, Luke Sanford Hubbard, Audrey Jane Ingram, LoRen Nicholas Jackson, Qaasim Jatoi, Matthew Allan Jett, Mahak Kaur, Clifton Lawrence Langhoff, Chris Lin, Aidan Johnathan Littrell, Chyenne Elizabeth Lynch, Mackenzie Renee Madsen, Madison Lynn Madsen, Connor Dayne Robert Mazander, Austin Dean Miller, Pete Nathan Mitchell, Zander Scott Mitchell, Mya Nicole Morganthaler, Elizabeth Mae Morthland, Benjamin William Motter, Reanna Paige Munjoy, Logan Anthony Nappi, Deep A. Patel, Mason Patton Penhallegon, Lindsay Poland, Keegan Falon Pryde, Nancy Nader Qatoum, Camryn Aaliyah Ralph, Jazmine Alexis Ravenscraft, Sydney Ellen Richards, Payton Lynn Roberts, Marina Nicole Rohman, Rheys Dilin Sams-Moore, Emma Kae Schmahl, Dalton Wade Scott, Olivia Danette Shepard, Paige Bliss Shull, Arshdeep Singh, Elizabeth Paige Snyder, Grace Lee Stanley, Carly Ann Stark, Reese Anna Tirpak, Van Hai Tran, Serena Helen Tuan, Wray Ann Vallier, Ryanne Reese Vangeison, Madison Wang, Raegan Noelle Watts, Drake Wiggins, Ethan Roy Willoughby, Rachel Christine Wisner, Hannah Michelle Wright, Joshua Wright, Kaylee DeAnn Yost.

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Valedictorians:Evelyn Grace Ashley and Savannah Grace Hagerman

Salutatorian:Amelia Rose Landreth

SANGAMON VALLEY

Marshall Kenneth Abel, Dyllon Wayne Albright, Caleb M. Alderson, Seth Alexander Barr, Stephanie Arlene Barringer, Gracelynn Blair, Dustyn Marshall Blankenship, Kevin Paul Book, Ashlyn Lee Brickey, Faith Josephine Buoy, William Victor Cebuhar, Daleny Kristina Chumbley, Jordan L. Closs, Nathaniel Vernon Wayne Cox, Conner Crane, Taiylor Marie Daykin, Kendall A. Durbin, Cailey Jo Eaton, Celeste M. Ellis, Jakob Dean Etter, Camdyn Force, Makenna RoseFord, Dylan Lance Gaddis, Jonathon A. Hall, Donavyn Hiser-Byrne, Christine Lynn Koontz, Madilyn Renee Livingston, Dalton Lee Loyd, Abby Lynn Marksberry, Alan James McCarty, Dylan Michael McElroy, Remi Jo Mendenhall, Sommer LaRaine Merritt, Parker Timothy Milligan, Rebecca Elizabeth Moxley, Jaden Michael Muir, Sara Nicole Netterville, Jessica Elizabeth Newlin, Abel Isaiah Noguez, Gabriel Rex Owens, Luke Wayne Perkinson, Joseph Raymond Kenneth Peters, Emily Jo Rogers, Steven Leroy Shindledecker, Beth Alma Stacey, Ashlee Grace Taynor, Vanessa Elizabeth Templeton, Benjamin Matthew Whitney, Aveary Leigh Williams, Natalie Grace Williams, Hailey Marie Zimmer.

WARRENSBURG-LATHAM

Jackson David Abner, Gregory James Allen, Kierstin Elizabeth Allen, Emma Frances Baker, Azzam Fariz Bakri, Clayten Eugene Bandy, Cory M. Beck, Grayson D. Benson, Lauren Alexis Bradshaw, Samuel James Buchholz, Kayleigh Jo Carder, Simone Eshing Chang, Austin J. Cohn, Emma Kay Cordts, Cody Cuthbertson, Ema Christine Dutcher, Evan Ashton Erwin, Chesney Ann Eschbach, Makenzie M. Franklin, Rhae Lynn Gaither, Kaitlyn Nicole Gist, Nevaeh Rhonae Gould, Jenna Renee Gulyash, Leah Kristine Hall, Luke Kristian Hall, Hayden Scott Harvey, Mason A. Hawkins, Haley S. Heil, Katherine Elyse Hill, Carmen Lee Howard, Madiso Hunt, Brooks Neil Hyden, Ashley Christine Hymes, Zachariah Lang Jalley, Abraham William Koenig, Elijah Lee Koenig, Grace Ruth Koenig, Jaelynn Mariah Lee, Joshua Matthew Lowe, Wyatt James Lowe, Kannon Dean Lynch, Conner Alan Maloney, Alexander Jeffrey Matthews, Elijah James Matthews, Jayden Dewayne Newton, Brooke Danielle Oakley, Marriah Laurice Page, Benjamin Jon Pasquariello, Ainsley Jenai Poston, Baylee A. Rambo, Sophie Corinne Rau, Harrison Quincy Reedy, Andreas Vj Robinson, Francisco Javier Rojas, Jacob Wade Sarver, Christian Kenneth Schanefelt, Connor David Schlosser, Jacob Daniel Six, Austin James Stock, Brianna Dawn Sumner, Clayton Ray Taylor, Joel R. Thompson, Aaric Benjamin Ward, Caleb Austin White, Ethan Andrew Yaroch, Joseph Austin Young

Valedictorians:Simone Chang, Ema Dutcher, Zachariah Jalley, Brooke Oakley

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Celebrating the Class of 2022 | | herald-review.com - Herald & Review

Fireproof "Handmaid’s Tale" edition is up for auction: A "symbol against censorship" – CBS News

A record number of books have been banned or challenged in the U.S. in the last year, part of a push by conservatives torein in discussionof issues that some find distasteful. Now, author Margaret Atwood is responding to the rise in censorship by auctioning a fireproof edition of her novel "The Handmaid's Tale," which ranks among the most frequently banned books in the U.S.

In a video posted onSotheby's sitefor "The Unburnable Book," Atwood is shown with a flamethrower as she takes aim at the edition, which is printed on pages made from heat-resistantCinefoil, sewn together with nickel wire. The flames lick at the book, but the pages remain intact.

"I never thought I'd be trying to burn one of my own books ... and failing," Atwood said in a statement.

The edition is "designed to protect this vital story and stand as a powerful symbol against censorship," the auction site notes.

The auction, which places the expected sale range at $50,000 $100,000, will direct all proceeds to PEN America, a group that advocates for free expression and that plans to use the money to support those efforts. "The Handmaid's Tale," first published in 1985, is a dystopian vision of a future America where women are stripped of their rights and live under a theocracy that prizes them strictly for their reproductive abilities.

Interest in "The Handmaid's Tale" has increased amid a leaked Supreme Court draft opinion that, if finalized, would pave the way for states to severely curtail abortion rights in the U.S. The prospect Roe v. Wade being overturned has sparked observations about the book's prescience and relevance to modern events.

"The Handmaid's Tale" has been among the most challenged publications in America, with the American Library Association (ALA) noting that it has been targeted for "vulgarity and sexual overtones."

Efforts to ban books have surged in the past year, with the ALA finding there were a record 729 challenges to more than almost 1,600 titles in 2021, double the number in 2020.

Atwood said in the statement that her book has been banned "by whole countries, as Portugal and Spain in the days of Salazar and the Francoists, sometimes by school boards, sometimes by libraries." She also expressed hope that society doesn't get to the point of "wholesale book burnings, as in 'Fahrenheit 451'," referring to the Ray Bradbury classic.

More recently, Barnes & Noble has faced pressure from a Virginia lawmaker and a congressional candidate to restrict sales of two books deemed "obscene" to minors without parental consent. The candidate, Tommy Altman, said he is running for Congress to protect freedom, including the right to free speech. One of the books the pair is aiming to restrict is the most challenged book of 2021, the memoir "Gender Queer" by Maia Kobabe.

"To see [Atwood's] classic novel about the dangers of oppression reborn in this innovative, unburnable edition is a timely reminder of what's at stake in the battle against censorship," Penguin Random House CEO Markus Dohle said in a statement.

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Fireproof "Handmaid's Tale" edition is up for auction: A "symbol against censorship" - CBS News

Biden’s censors want Russian-style speech controls and they haven’t given up – Fox News

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"1984" had its Ministry of Truth, the Soviets had their Gulag. Todays Russians, like their kindred spirits among the American left, may be less overt in policing speech but dont let a less visible barbarity fool anyone into believing that the goal is any less of an assault on free speech.

Current Russian law punishes speech or public engagement that questions Russias invasion of Ukraine or even protests that call it a war. As University of Massachusetts Amherst Associate Professor Lauren McCarthy puts it, "public activities aimed at discrediting the use of Russias military," become "a criminal offense if committed twice in a year."

WAPO ED BOARD ON DISINFORMATION GOVERNANCE BOARD: DHS ERRORS 'A SHOWCASE IN SOME OF THE WORST PRACTICES'

Russian law also criminalizes "spreading false information about the Russian military." What qualifies as misinformation? Apparently, calling Russias "special operation" in Ukraine by its more common name war qualifies as a crime.

In order to have a police force large enough to spy on an entire nation, Russia has ominously created "anonymous denunciation websites." The Venetian Doges, who encouraged citizens to rat out other citizens by dropping anonymous notes in the mouth of the lion (Called: bocche dei leone) would be jealous of todays technology.

In America, we have not yet granted government the police power to criminalize misinformation, but not for trying. The American Left believes that the public should be protected from anyone who questions COVID-19 orthodoxy.

If a scientist, or an elected official, questions evidence for forcing booster vaccines on teenagers, the speech police want those questions forbidden.

Recently, I went to the Senate floor to protest a policy that commands booster COVID vaccines for the pages, pointing out that there is no scientific evidence that a booster lessens hospitalization or death for teenagers and it certainly doesnt prevent transmission.

WHO Chief Scientist Soumya Swaminathan agrees with me and has stated:"There is no evidence right now that healthy children or healthy adolescents need boosters. No evidence at all."

And yet, the Democrat and Republican overlords actually forced the pages to leave the Senate floor when I spoke, so that their young minds wouldnt be tainted with what I presume they felt was disinformation. Only when I threatened to reveal the names of those involved in this ambush on Constitutional speech did they consent to allow a few pages back on the floor.

The Pandemic has caused an epidemic of efforts to police speech. The Biden Administration has, for now, shuttered the Disinformation Governance Board.

But dont for a moment accept that the lefts infatuation with censorship is over. If fact, the left is quite peeved that everyone seems to have misinterpreted their noble goals.

Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas whined in committee that Presidents Barack Obama and Donald Trump had government agencies doing exactly the same type of speech monitoring. If true, that just means the problem is more widespread than we thought.

To Mayorkas and the left, they want us to believe that they will be the nice speech police. In fact, they really want to farm out the police work to big tech. Axioss Felix Salmon recognizes this conceit when he calls Big Tech "the fourth branch of government," for effectively shutting down President Trumps access to social media.

Former White House Press Secretary Psaki admitted as much, when she recently "urged Facebook to move more expeditiously to find and remove misleading content before it is consumed by a large number of users," National Review reported.

Psaki elaborated that what the White House seeks is "robust enforcement strategy" that combines the reach of Facebook, Instagram, and Snapchat to "provide transparency about the rules." By rules, we must assume, she means censorship that will be guided by Big Brother but enforced by Big Tech.

According to Psaki, the government will helpfully flag the problematic posts as disinformation and ask the Facebook to police away the bad information.

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What could go wrong?

I wish this authoritarian urge to censor speech would die along with the Disinformation Governance Board. But I fear the impulse to regulate human behavior via unlimited regulation of the economic sphere has simply found its way down the slippery slope to regulating speech.

For sure, there are still liberal minds who recognize the dangers of censorship but the once vaunted and revered concept of free speech is under assault like never before. Journalist Matt Taibbi writes eloquently on the subject: "The traditional liberal approach to the search for truth, which stresses skepticism and free-flowing debate, is giving way to a reactionary movement that Plato himself would have loved, one that believes knowledge is too dangerous for the rabble and must be tightly regulated by a priesthood of experts. Its anti-democratic, un-American, and naturally unites the residents of even the most extreme opposite ends of our national political spectrum."

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For now, Bidens Ministry of Truth is dead but free speech advocates on the right and the left need to zealously guard and defend a right so precious that its not an overstatement to claim that our free society depends on it.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM SENATOR RAND PAUL

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Biden's censors want Russian-style speech controls and they haven't given up - Fox News