Tuesday PM ~ TheFrontPageCover

TheFrontPageCover
~ Featuring ~  
Time to Break Up 'Big Data'
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by Arnold Ahlert  
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Senate Dems introduce bill to block Trump 
from using military funds to build wall
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Senate Democrats introduced legislation on Monday to prevent President Trump from using military and disaster relief funds to construct the U.S.-Mexico border wall... should he declare a national emergency. The  legislation would prevent Trump from using funding from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers civil works funds and military construction funding "for the construction of barriers, land acquisition, or any other associated activities on the southern border without specific statutory authorization from Congress" if he declared a national emergency. Sen. Tom Udall (D-N.M.) said that while an emergency declaration to construct the U.S.-Mexico border wall would be challenged in court, "Congress should not wait for the courts to act.""We must stand up and assert our role as a co-equal branch of government, and we must prevent the president from going around Congress to raid critical funds … for a politically-motivated, unjustified national emergency declaration that isn’t based in reality," he said. Sen. Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.) added that the bill would "prevent funds designated for critical military construction and disaster response" from being used to build the wall in the event Trump declares a national emergency... The dems are going all out to stop funding for the wall.  https://thehill.com/homenews/senate/428384-senate-dems-introduce-bill-to-block-trump-from-using-military-funds-to-build 

Trump inaugural committee subpoenaed
for documents, spokesperson says
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by Samuel Chamberlain  
{foxnews.com} ~ Federal prosecutors in New York Monday issued a subpoena to President Trump's inaugural committee... a spokesperson for the committee confirmed to Fox News, a move that threatened to open another front against an administration dogged by investigations. "We have just received a subpoena for documents," the spokesperson said in a statement. "While we are still reviewing the subpoena, it is our intention to cooperate with the inquiry." The subpoena was first reported by The Wall Street Journal, which revealed that prosecutors had asked for "all documents" related to the committee's donors and vendors, as well as records relating to "benefits" that donors received after making contributions. They also requested documents relating to donations "made by or on behalf of foreign nationals, including but not limited to any communications regarding or relating to the possibility of donations by foreign nationals." The Journal reported in December that prosecutors were looking into whether the committee misspent the $107 million it raised to stage events celebrating Trump's inauguration in January 2017, as well as whether donors made contributions in exchange for political favors -- a potential violation of federal corruption laws...
'Medicare-for-all' means long waits for poor care, and
Americans won't go for it once they learn these facts
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by Sally Pipes  
{foxnews.com} ~ This week, Sen. lowlife-Kamala Harris, D-Calif., one of the front-runners in the race for the Democratic Party's presidential nomination... revealed her radical vision for American health care – outlawing private health insurance and putting the government in charge of the system. lowlife-Harris, along with 15 of her Democratic colleagues, supports Sen. commie-Bernie Sanders', I-Vt., vision of "Medicare-for-all." commie-Sanders' 2017 bill, S.1804, was explicit about outlawing private health insurance. At a town hall in Iowa last Monday, lowlife-Harris confirmed she was on board with that idea. "Let's eliminate all of that," she said. In other words, lowlife-Harris is running for president on a platform of taking away the private insurance coverage of about 200 million people, and dumping everyone into a one-size-fits-all government-run health plan that would cost taxpayers trillions of dollars. And if the experiences of other countries with single-payer health care are any indication, it would result in long waits for poor care. Support for single-payer appears to be the price of admission to the Democratic presidential race. lowlife-Harris's fellow presidential aspirants, Sens. Elizabeth dinky-Warren, D-Mass., Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., and scumbag-Cory Booker, D.-N.J., were among the co-sponsors of commie-Sanders' 2017 “Medicare-for-all” legislation. And it's only a matter of time before commie-Sanders himself, the pied piper of the "Medicare-for-all” movement, joins the race. "Medicare-for-all’s" advocates promise a health care  system that's free at the point of service – no co-pays, no deductibles, no coinsurance... What a lie.  https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/medicare-for-all-means-long-waits-for-poor-care-and-americans-wont-go-for-it-once-they-learn-these-facts
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Republican members must not forget 
promises to cut spending
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by SARAH M. ANDERSON  
{thehill.com} ~ House Republicans took a hit in the 2018 midterms, in no small part because of failure to follow through on policy measures promised to voters in past election cycles... From repealing scumbag/liar-nObamaCare to cutting spending, Republican leadership has stifled conservative members’ efforts to follow through on the promises they made to voters. Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) made significant headway in raising awareness about this in his bid for speaker of the House and then for minority leader, where he highlighted a simple message: “Do what we said.” This shouldn’t be so complicated for Republicans to do. They were elected on certain issues, and they should not expect to return to office if they fail to answer to their voters. In the case of cutting spending, this phenomenon certainly played out when Republicans lost the House majority in 2018. Thirty-one freshmen Republican members of the House came into office in the 116th Congress on the tails of the disappointing leadership of former Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wisc.). Despite being regarded as one of the biggest budget hawks of the Republican Conference prior to taking the gavel, Ryan completely failed to rein in the federal budget as speaker. In fact, under his leadership, the national debt increased nearly $4 trillion, from $18.1 trillion to $21.9 trillion...
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Should William Barr Be Barred from Confirmation?
by Cherie Zaslawsky

{americanthinker.com} ~ We're about to see justice in America once more. At least that's the picture we get from watching Fox News, as media pundits assure us that William Barr, President Donald Trump's nominee for attorney general...
 is a consummate professional and dedicated proponent of the rule of law. According to Joe diGenova, "Bill Barr is a man of great legal and ethical stature." In fact, when dirty cop-Robert Mueller uncharacteristically called out BuzzFeed for circulating a false story, diGenova was quick to point to Barr as the reason, since dirty cop-Mueller recognized that there was a "new sheriff in town" who would fire him if he failed to correct BuzzFeed's fake news. Well and good. But consider what followed scarcely a week later: the shameful pre-dawn FBI raid of Roger Stone's home, and Stone's removal in handcuffs, all gleefully filmed by CNN, which had been mysteriously tipped off so it could broadcast the theatrics for its Trump-hating viewers. Right under the new sheriff's nose, dirty cop-Mueller sent heavily armed shock troops to arrest 66-year-old Stone as if he were a dangerous criminal or a flight risk. The specter of Barr in the background was not enough to stop this Gestapo-like tactic against a law-abiding citizen. dirty cop-Mueller, who pulled this KGB-style raid before in the case of Paul Manafort – another man whose crime seems to be his support for Donald Trump – brazenly flexed his unconstitutional muscles once more...
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Time to Break Up 'Big Data'
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by Arnold Ahlert:  A story broken by Tech Crunch reveals Facebook secretly paid users between the ages of 16 and 35 to breach their own privacy since 2016. “The program is administered through beta testing services Applause, BetaBound and uTest to cloak Facebook’s involvement, and is referred to in some documentation as ‘Project Atlas’ — a fitting name for Facebook’s effort to map new trends and rivals around the globe,” the website reported.

Willing Apple iOS and Android users were paid $20 per month plus referral fees to install a virtual private network (VPN) called “Facebook Research” on their own phones, giving the tech giant root access to their devices. This allowed Facebook to view extensive data of participants’ mobile activity.

Even that wasn’t enough. Facebook also asked those users to provide a screenshot of their Amazon order history page.

The entire effort resembles Facebook’s Onavo Protect app that Apple banned last June and removed last August. That app, pitched as a way to “keep you and your data safe,” also alerted users about potentially malicious sites. In the process it gave Facebook the ability to analyze how people used their phones beyond the limits of Facebook apps. Tech Crunch noted this latest effort “sidesteps the App Store” and “may be a violation of Apple policy.”

There’s no “may” about it. As The Wall Street  Journal  reveals, Apple revoked Facebook’s permission to maintain the app, stating that it was designed to be used for internal functions within companies, not as a consumer product. Thus Facebook was in “clear breach” of Apple’s policies a statement released by the company asserted.

And in a move that caused disruption within Facebook, Apple also shut a number of internal apps used by Facebook employees, such as employee-only versions of Facebook Messenger, Workplace, and Instagram. These apps, known as “dogfood,” were heavily relied upon by company employees to communicate.

Seven hours after Tech Crunch published its story, Facebook told the website it would shut down the iOS version of the app. Yet as a little more digging by Tech Crunch revealed, Facebook failed to mention that it was being forced to do so by Apple.

Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg was sent out to defend the data collection. In an interview with CNBC, she insisted that those involved went through a “rigorous consent flow” prior to opting into the program. “The important thing is that the people involved in that research project knew they were involved and consented,” she stated.

An unidentified Facebook spokesperson also defended the company. “Despite early reports, there was nothing ‘secret’ about this; it was literally called the Facebook Research App,” the spokesperson asserted. “It wasn’t ‘spying’ as all of the people who signed up to participate went through a clear on-boarding process asking for their permission and were paid to participate. Finally, less than 5 percent of the people who chose to participate in this market research program were teens. All of them with signed parental consent forms.”

Tech Crunch refuted all of it. “As we wrote yesterday night, Facebook did not publicly promote the Research VPN itself and used intermediaries that often didn’t disclose Facebook’s involvement until users had begun the signup process,” the website countered. “While users were given clear instructions and warnings, the program never stresses nor mentions the full extent of the data Facebook can collect through the VPN. A small fraction of the users paid may have been teens, but we stand by the newsworthiness of its choice not to exclude minors from this data collection initiative.”

A couple of tech experts put Facebook’s efforts in the proper perspective. “I find this behavior shameful. Taking advantage of people who do not understand the value of the data they generate,” said Claudiu Musat, director of research for Data, Analytics and AI at Swisscom tweeted. David Heinemeir Hansson, a Danish programmer and partner of web application company Basecamp, upped the ante: “I used to think a reasonable response to Facebook was simple: ‘break them up.’ But maybe the real solution here is more akin to ‘shut them down.’ Their incessant preying on kids and teenagers is beyond pale.”

Indeed. Yet Apple’s stance as a paragon of virtue rings a bit hollow. Despite NBC’s characterization of the animosity between the companies as a “growing philosophical rift in the tech industry between companies that make money off personal data [Facebook], and those that do not [Apple],” the heart of the issue for most people remains privacy — and honesty about when that privacy is breached.

In that regard, Apple has some explaining of its own to do. “Last week, Turkish security researcher Melih Sevim contacted The Hacker News and claimed to have discovered a flaw in Apple services that allowed him to view partial data, especially notes, from random iCloud accounts as well as on targeted iCloud users just by knowing their associated phone numbers,” the website reported.

Sevim allegedly told Apple about this in October 2018 and the company ostensibly fixed the problem by November. But when contacted by Hacker News, Apple was less than forthcoming regarding how long the breach remained open, how many users were affected, and whether there was evidence of malicious exploitation.

Last week it was also revealed that Apple was forced to disable  its Group FaceTime feature because it allowed anyone to eavesdrop on iPhone, iPad, and Mac users via the microphone of those devices. And as the Sun reports, “Apple has come under further fire after it emerged the company may have known about the bug for an entire week before telling the world.”

In other words, there are no “good guys” here, only multinational corporations run by self-aggrandizing egotists. And while Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s  arrogance makes him an easier target, Dipayan Ghosh, a former Facebook employee and a fellow at Harvard’s Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, notes that Apple chief Tim Cook’s own motives with regard to this story are hardly pristine. “It’s in Tim Cook’s commercial interests to make the case that the tremendous collection of data — and processing of it by machine learning for news feed tweaks and digital advertising — implicates consumer privacy,” he said.

In other words, it’s all about the money. Moreover, despite the ostensible animosity between the two companies, Apple  restored Facebook’s ability to run the iPhone apps used by the social-media giant’s employees only two days after that ability was revoked.

Nothing to see here; move along.

Except that there is. “When a handful of monopolies control your phone service, your internet and your health care, how you pay at the grocery store and where you shop, your freedoms will also be monopolized,” warns  columnist Daniel Greenfield, who further asserts that the only way to “stop the rise of Big Brother is to break up Big Data.”

As soon as possible. We’ve got nothing to lose but our increasing collectivism — and decreasing Liberty.  ~The Patriot Post

https://patriotpost.us/articles/60931?mailing_id=4058&utm_medium=email&utm_source=pp.email.4058&utm_campaign=snapshot&utm_content=body
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