Tag: Big

  • Post Office Policy: Big news! Get the benefit of Rs 10 lakh in just

    Post Office Policy: Big news! Get the benefit of Rs 10 lakh in just

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    In this post office policy, a person can get an insurance cover of Rs 10 lakh by paying just Rs 299 and Rs 399 premium. It is necessary to renew the insurance policy every year and for this it is also mandatory to have an account with India Post Payments Bank.

    New Delhi. Insurance has become very important for every person today. Accidents can happen at any time in life. Therefore, it is necessary for everyone to have such an insurance policy that will also cover the cost of treatment on an accident and also give a claim in case of death or disability. Even today many people in India do not take insurance. One reason for this is the cost of insurance premiums. Keeping this in mind, the Indian Postal Department has come up with a Group Accident Protection Insurance Policy.

    In this policy, a person can get an insurance cover of Rs 10 lakh by paying just Rs 299 and Rs 399 premium. It is necessary to renew the insurance policy every year and for this it is also necessary to have an account with India Post Payments Bank. In the insurance policy, 60 thousand is given for IPD expenses and 30 thousand for OPD in case of accidental injury of the policyholder.

    These are the benefits

    Indian Postal Department has brought this accidental insurance policy in association with Tata AIG. It has two plans. In one, you have to pay a premium of Rs 299 annually and in the other plan you have to pay Rs 399. If a person chooses a plan of Rs 299, then he gets an insurance cover of Rs 10 lakh. If the insured becomes a victim of an accident, then in this policy he gets hospitalization expenses. During the treatment in the hospital, IPD expenses of up to Rs 60,000 and OPD claim up to Rs 30,000 are given.

     

    10 lakh to dependents on death

    In case of accidental death, Rs 10 lakh is given as compensation to the dependents. Not only this, if the insured becomes completely disabled, then he is given 10 lakh rupees. A claim of Rs 10 lakh is given only in case of partial disability. On the death of the insured, the dependents get Rs 5,000 for the funeral. If the dependents of the insured lived in another city, then the cost of commuting from there was also covered in this policy. At the same time, in the plan of Rs 399, all the above claims are available as well as an expenditure of 1 lakh is given to the 2 children of the dependent for education.

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirpublication.in )

  • Big update for pensioners, Complete this work before March 31

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    In Social Security Pension Scheme, Annual Physical Verification can also be done through Raj SSP Mobile App. After installing the mobile app from play store, click on the annual verification icon and enter the PPO number, then click on face capture.

    Pensioners Pension Update 2023: There is important news for the pensioners of Rajasthan. Those pensioners who have not yet got physical verification done under social security pension by the Department of Social Justice and Empowerment should get it done before March 31, otherwise the pension will be stopped.

    In case of non-submission of the certificate by the stipulated date, the pension payment may get stuck. The special thing is that now the physical verification is being done through biometric machine and OTP, in such a way pensioners will not only get easy verification but will also get benefits.

    You can complete the process in 4 ways

    The state government has fixed the deadline for the physical verification of the pensioners of Tonk district. Now pensioners will have to undergo physical verification by March 31 under any circumstances. The special thing is that pensioners can submit life certificate in 4 ways. Firstly, by uploading the certified life certificate on the website of the Pension Department.

    Second, through biometric machine authenticated by Aadhaar number, third through Jeevan Pramaan mobile app, by presenting digital certificate based on face verification technology and fourth, by appearing in person at the treasury office. About 8 thousand pensioners in the district Is.

    How to verify with mobile app

    Not only this, in Social Security Pension Scheme, annual physical verification can also be done through Raj SSP Mobile App. After installing the mobile app from play store, click on the annual verification icon and enter the PPO number, then click on face capture.

    After this the front camera of the mobile will be on, now the pensioners whose verification is to be done will have to keep their eyes open. The camera will automatically go off as soon as the pensioner’s face is verified with the Aadhaar portal. Finally, click on verify button and then the screen will appear saying verification done successfully.

    9500 new pensioners will be added

    In Rajsamand, 9500 pensioners will be linked to the pension scheme, for this verification will be done and three days’ time has been given to the officers. For this, a camp is being organized at the sub-division level.

    All the Village Development Officers were directed to present the report to the Sub-Divisional Officer, Kumbhalgarh after getting the pension physical verification of all the persons done in the next 3 days.

    More than 17000 accounts blocked in UP too, verify soon

    Social Welfare Department has blocked the accounts of more than 17000 pensioners due to lack of Aadhaar authentication and physical verification in Mirzapur of Uttar Pradesh, in such a situation, the next installment will not go into these accounts if Aadhaar authentication is not done.

    So far, one lakh 752 people are registered for old age pension, in which Aadhaar authentication of 80 thousand 481 people has been done and their third installment has been sent, but authentication of 5000 is left. The pensioner who could not complete the process till now Yes, he can go to the office of Social Welfare Department and get Aadhaar authentication done.

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirpublication.in )

  • Banking System Change: Big news for the customers Finance

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    Banking System Change: Big news for the customers Finance Minister issued a statement


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    Nirmala Sitharaman on Banking System: Are you trying to take a loan from any bank and are troubled by going around the bank, then you will definitely get relief from this news.

    Yes, an order has been given by Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman to simplify the banking system. It was said on behalf of the Finance Minister that banks should make banking operations simple according to the needs of the customers.

    With this, more and more customers will be able to connect with them. The Finance Minister suggested in the meeting The Union Finance Minister said last days that banks should pay attention to the facilities of the customers. This will make the process easier for the borrowers.

    On behalf of the Finance Minister, it was also told to the banks that the standards of giving loans should be correct. This suggestion was made a few days ago in a meeting between industry representatives and the Finance Minister.

    During this, Nirmala Sitharaman asked all the big banks to implement it. Following this suggestion given by the Finance Minister will benefit the customers of all banks including ICICI Bank, SBI and HDFC Bank. The Finance Minister also said that there is a need to make the banking system more and more customer friendly. You have to take care of the facilities of the customers.

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirpublication.in )

  • J&K Bank: Big Update Regarding JK Bank’s Mpay, e-Banking, UPI Services- Check Here – Kashmir News

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    Jammu & Kashmir Bank: Big Update Regarding JK Bank’s Mpay, e-Banking, UPI Services

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    Notice: Dear Customer, Our e-Banking, Mpay, UPI and NEFT/RTGS services will not be available from 01:00 hrs to 03:00 hrs on 23.02.2023 due to maintenance activity. Inconvenience caused is regretted. J&K Bank

    Massive earthquakes can hit these parts of India any time, warns NGRI- Details Here

    WhatsApp Image 2023 02 22 at 20.25.39

     


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    ( With inputs from : kashmirnews.in )

  • Big News! Govt Clears Confusion About Property Tax – Here’s Complete Calculation – Kashmir News

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    Srinagar, Feb 22 , Govt Clears Confusion About Property Tax: The Government of J&K on Wednesday said that lot of factually incorrect and misleading information is circulating in the media with regard to property tax notification, with a potential of misguiding the people, so it became important that the common public is aware of the correct and full facts of the matter.

    Why property tax in J&K?

    Property tax is being levied across the world by Municipalities to augment their resources. J&K was the only State/UT in the country which did not have. With poor finances, the ULBs across the UT were not able to deliver to their fullest! The revenue from other sources accounted for less than 15% of their operational expenses. Where are the funds for development available? Do we wish to remain entangled in the low revenue, low service level spirals? Was the any case for not collecting it in J&K? Certainly not!

    What is Property Tax?

    A robust and effective system of local self-government is foundational to the effective functioning of a democracy. A fundamental enabling condition for such a system to exist is to have adequate finances at the disposal of the institutions of self-government, and the more such finances are mobilized at the local level by these governments, the better for their effective functioning. One of the essential pillars of municipal financing the world over is property taxes.

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    Government of India and the Finance Commissions set up by it, have been strongly recommending tapping this resource from time to time. It is with this background, and with an intend to strengthen out ULBs and ramp up the urban development for the betterment of common masses, the Government has decided to impose property tax in the Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir. Is any development possible without adequate resources? Certainly not.

    Will Government take away the monies collected?

    Certainly Not! The monies will be collected by the ULBs, retained by them and then used for their development needs. If the tax is being collected from the people and spend only for their betterment, improving their quality of life, what is the problem?

    Is it very high?

    No, not at all! The Property Tax is proposed to be levied at 5% of Taxable Annual Value (TAV) of the Property in case of a Residential Property and at 6% of Taxable Annual Value (TAV), in case of Non-Residential Property. Infact, Tax rates, even in the Corporations are one of the lowest in the country, almost half that of Himachal, and one fourth to one sixth, overall, of other progressive States like Gujarat Maharashtra and Karnataka,and Delhi. Again, tax rates are 25% lower in the Municipal Councils, and 50 % in Municipalities. Moreover, it is progressive.

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    Residential houses upto a build-up area of 1000 sqft have been exempted. Smaller assets are being taxed at lower rates. The taxable annual value has been linked to circle rates – lower the circle rate, lower is the tax liability! Further, weightage to age of property, use type and construction type etc is used to arrive on Annual Taxable value in a more comprehensive manner.

    If an owner of a residential bungalow over a kanal of land in a posh colony of Gandhinagar in Jammu and Raj Bagh in Srinagar, with the value of their assets being more than five crores, is required to pay Rs 500/- pm, is it unreasonable? Or is it unreasonable to charge Rs 100/- pm or even less, from a 3BHK apartment owner?Unjustified?Certainly not!
    Similarly, all places of worship, including temples, masjids, gurudwaras, churches, ziarats, etc are exempt from payment of property tax.

    For residential establishments
    (Tax payable in Rs)
    Property
    Jammu/ Srinagar
    Chandigarh
    Delhi
    Ludhiana

    Residential House/Flat upto 1000 Sqft
    0
    600-1000
    300-7000
    150-3500

    Flat/Apartment 1500 Sqft
    100-1150
    900-1500
    500-10000
    300-10000

    Residential Independent House 2000 Sqft
    225-2500
    1200-2000
    650-14000
    400-13000

    Similarly, small commercial establishment especially shops upto size of 100 sqft and 200 sqft are also provide relief with very minimal Tax implications. It is pertinent to mention that most of the shops especially in neighbourhood areas and old markets fall in this category.

    For commercial establishments
    (Tax payable in Rs)
    Property
    Jammu/Srinagar
    Chandigarh
    Delhi
    Ludhiana

    Small Shop 100 SqFt
    50-600
    200-650
    275-3500
    275-3500

    Small Shop 200 SqFt
    150-1800
    400-1300
    550-7000
    550-7000

    As Property Tax is to be levied annually and can be paid in two equal instalment it will not be burdening common citizen. Further, as per Act 10% rebate can be availed by early submission of Property Tax.

    This new Property tax policy will help municipal bodies to generate revenue for better municipal services with minimum Tax implications to residents. Better municipal services are expected to attract more investment and encourage more people to set up businesses in the J&K. Revenue generated from property taxes will be used to improve infrastructure, and significantly enhancing the quality and levels of being services provided by Municipal bodies. Let us all be a part of this new Urban Renaissance J&K is witnessing. (KNS)


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    ( With inputs from : kashmirnews.in )

  • Republican 2024 rivals go shopping for big donors

    Republican 2024 rivals go shopping for big donors

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    The slate of donor events also neatly illustrates the current state of the nascent Republican primary: Trump and DeSantis are in a class of their own, while the rest of the burgeoning field is jostling to enter the top tier.

    Those involved in the planning for this week’s conferences describe the donor recruitment fight as intense and wide-open, with many Republican contributors — a large segment of whom are eager to move on from Trump — gravitating toward DeSantis but others still shopping around.

    “I think they’re like a lot of people,” Rove said of the roughly 350 donors and other guests expected at the Texas conference he has organized. “They might have someone who’s sort of a preliminary favorite, but they’re looking, and they want to see how they will perform.”

    The daylong conference will feature former Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley, former Vice President Mike Pence, and South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, among others. It is expected to draw a slate of mega-donors, with beer distribution executive John Nau, Omni Hotels owner Robert Rowling and real estate developer Harlan Crow are among those listed on the event invitation as co-hosts.

    Held at the 4,000-acre Omni Barton Creek Resort in Austin’s Hill Country, the meeting will be modeled after the same event Rove organized in May 2021, where members of the Texas congressional delegation interviewed would-be presidential hopefuls. Scott, who is Black, drew particular notice from donors for his performance during the 2021 event, when he spoke about his race and upbringing.

    As in 2021, candidates are jumping at the opportunity to attend the conference. Many of the co-hosts have long been part of Bush’s formidable donor network— a network that those seeking the GOP presidential nomination are eager to tap. Some candidates are expected to set up private meetings with influential givers during their visits.

    Trump’s Thursday evening event, meanwhile, will raise money for the principal super PAC supporting his candidacy, MAGA Inc. The organization started the year with $55 million in seed money, much of it transferred from Trump’s Save America PAC, which raised money over the last two years. But this week’s fundraiser will be MAGA Inc.’s first.

    According to recent filings, the super PAC has also received large contributions from several longtime Trump givers, including transportation company executive Timothy Mellon, banker Andy Beal and sanitation mogul Anthony Lomangino.

    Trump is now looking to further bolster the super PAC, which has begun using its substantial resources to hold focus groups aimed at testing out lines of attack against DeSantis and other rivals.

    Much of the attention, however, will be on DeSantis’ retreat, which is drawing donors, lawmakers and other supporters. According to a person familiar with the plans for the event, DeSantis is expected to discuss how he won a landslide 2022 reelection race and key planks of his agenda, including his ongoing fight with Disney, his decision to send planes of migrants to Martha’s Vineyard, Mass., and his battle against what he has derided as “woke” liberals. The governor’s team will also give a data-focused briefing on the reelection win.

    DeSantis also held a political retreat last year that drew a number of prominent Republican figures, including now-Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders, a former Trump White House press secretary.

    Donors are focused on whether DeSantis, who is about to publish a new book and has been upping his national travel of late, uses this week’s event to drop any hints about his anticipated presidential bid. The retreat will also be scrutinized for which donors attend — including how many of them were once Trump backers who may be looking to defect from the former president to the Florida governor.

    The list of defectors includes Arizona donor Don Tapia, a retired electrical company executive who served as Trump’s ambassador to Jamaica. Tapia was a six-figure contributor to Trump’s 2016 and 2020 campaigns — but said that he had decided to back DeSantis should he run in 2024.

    Tapia, who gave more than $50,000 to DeSantis’ reelection bid and hosted a pair of fundraisers for him, contended that donors had grown tired of Trump’s attacks on DeSantis and predicted that the retreat would “overwhelmingly” be attended by former Trump supporters.

    “The name-calling has turned a lot of people off,” Tapia said of Trump. “Let me tell you, we don’t like that.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • The West Is Avoiding the Big Question About Ukraine

    The West Is Avoiding the Big Question About Ukraine

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    In its time, the “Polish question” tore Europe apart. When the Poles started an uprising against Russia in 1830, after partitions had erased their country from the European map a generation before, Tsar Nicholas I laid out the choice: “Poland or Russia must now perish.” Free Poland and authoritarian Russia couldn’t coexist. Nicholas put down the Polish insurrection, consigning Russia — as the Russian writer Peter Chaadayev, who saw the uprising firsthand, wrote — to “her own enslavement, and the enslavement of all neighboring peoples.” A century later, Hitler started World War II to enslave his eastern neighbors; after Yalta, Stalin got Poland and the region as his prize.

    Poland became the cause célèbre in Western capitals the way Ukraine has become in the past year. In his “Sentimental Education,” Gustave Flaubert describes the feverish revolutionary mood in Paris inspired by the Polish January Uprising of 1863. He names the leaders of that failed insurrection who were executed by the Russians — among them, I should disclose, was a relative of mine. The Solidarity movement of the 1980s again stirred the Western imagination.

    The fall of the Berlin Wall didn’t settle for good the question of where the borders of freedom and autocracy are in Europe. Poland only came off the map as a prize to be fought for in 1999, when it joined NATO, and, five years later, the European Union. Those decisions stabilized Central Europe.

    Now, here we are with Ukraine. The similarities are bracing. Both the national anthems of Poland and Ukraine begin with the same line, that their nation “has not perished yet.” The Ukrainian question is shaping the Europe of the 21st century for the same reason the Polish one did: Its position in Europe, its future as a nation that desires freedom against the violent wishes of a tyrant next door, is at its heart what this conflict is about. The outcome, as the Polish experience shows, isn’t by any means certain.

    The Russia-Ukraine split

    The Ukrainian question didn’t emerge last year when Russian troops flooded over the Ukrainian borders. Nor when Vladimir Putin, breaking a taboo of the post-Cold War world ‘order’ (now coming with scare quotes), annexed Crimea in 2014 and pushed his proxies into the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine.

    You can better pinpoint its birth to the changing of the clock, and the century, on Dec. 31, 1999. On that day, the ailing Russian president, Boris Yeltsin, handed power over to his young and largely unknown prime minister, Vladimir Putin. In his near-decade at the Kremlin, Yeltsin had balanced reformers and revanchists. He had bad instincts, shelling the Russian parliament in 1993 and launching the Chechen war a year later, mixed with good. His Russia was on a slow, ugly and circuitous path toward the West. He made a critical call early on, overruling his deputy, Aleksandr Rutskoi, who pushed for military action to keep Ukraine within the Russian fold in 1991, the year the Soviet Union collapsed. He made peace with Ukraine over Crimea and struck up a close relationship with Bill Clinton. Putin was a sharp departure, the KGB Lieutenant Colonel as 21st-century Tsar. Early on, he suppressed his internal opponents. Then he turned his attention to recreating an empire.

    It was far less noticed that the rise of Putin coincided — and at first without any direct connection to what was happening in Russia — with the flowering of a civic democracy in the second largest and most important of the former Soviet republics. At that time, many Ukrainians spoke Russian not just fluently but as a first choice. But scratch off the Soviet veneer, and their political values were grounded in a culture and history of heroic opposition to oppressors going back to the 17th century. Through the worst years of official corruption and government dysfunction, the democratic impulse was the most vivid feature of its politics. The first free election was held in 1991, in which 90 percent backed independence. Voters bounced the first president of independent Ukraine, after a single term, in 1994. When the ruling party tried to subvert a free election in 2004, and Putin, for the first time, directly sought to impose his will on Ukraine, millions rose up in the Orange Revolution and secured their right to a free vote. They changed presidents in 2010, in 2014, and yet again, with Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s election, in 2019. Six freely elected presidents in three decades of independence. Only one incumbent won a second term. Ukraine is different: The other two Eastern Slavic states — Belarus and Russia — have had the same ruler this whole century.

    What’s Putin’s problem with Ukraine? It’s not NATO as such. The Kremlin shrugged when Finland — of Cold War-era Finlandization! — decided last year to join the alliance. It has little to do with Ukraine’s efforts to sign trading arrangements with the European Union that Putin forced a corrupt Ukrainian president in 2013 to tear up, sparking the protests on the Maidan. In reality, Ukraine’s outreach to NATO and the EU is just a manifestation of something far more unacceptable to an authoritarian Russia: That a democratic Ukraine would naturally seek alliances with other European democracies. Or really, since views on NATO were sharply split in Ukraine until last year’s invasion, that a democratic Ukraine could never be an ally or a vassal of an authoritarian Russia. The problem, at its heart, is Ukrainian democracy — and genuine independence.

    Free Ukraine is a rebuff to Putin’s repeated denial of its existence, as a country or people separate from Russia. But its existence presents an existential threat to a Russia ruled by a single man that sees itself as an empire. Regime survival is the top priority for any autocrat. If people who are such close cousins of Russians build a vibrant democracy that regularly chucks out leaders, someone like Putin rightly fears contagion. An independent Ukraine sets back Russia’s ambitions for control over this region.

    Now, many in the West would have preferred for the Ukrainians to slink on their way into Russia’s messy, authoritarian, pseudo-imperial world (Russkiy mir, as Putin calls it). The EU had trouble digesting the Central European countries and slow-walked their membership in the block. The West seems fine to abandon the Belarusians to Putin. But the Ukrainians never gave the West that option. Not only that, they’re showing it up, bleeding for values that, for generations, people in free countries haven’t had to fight for.

    Biden’s choices

    The U.S. and its allies have mobilized with speed to support the Ukrainians. The generosity and continued unity in Europe and America on Ukraine surely took Putin by surprise.

    But the “Ukrainian question” hangs out there, largely unanswered. The discussions in Washington, Berlin and Kyiv are consumed by what weapons to send or which extra sanctions to impose. Yes, on Javelins and eventually HIMARs, no for Patriots, then yes. The Ukrainians asked for Leopard and Abrams tanks, and after much drama, last month will receive them, though perhaps not in time for a Russian advance in the Donbas. Ukrainians want more, possibly F-16s and long-range rockets. Joe Biden says no, for now; maybe he’ll change his mind later.

    This incremental approach has some merits. American and European officials who are firm backers of Ukraine say this kind of “calibration” keeps the alliance together. It reflects the approach favored by Biden, who, above all, doesn’t want to suck America into a direct clash with Russia. Equally concerned supporters in the West, echoing Ukrainian anxieties, say the weapons are coming too slowly, that time is on Putin’s side. The Russian strongman won’t stop, they say, until he sees the West deliver overwhelming firepower to destroy, not just diminish, his military.

    This debate avoids the one thing that requires a clear answer: What outcome does the West want for Ukraine and, for that matter, Russia? We know how Ukrainians would wish this to end. Same goes for Putin, who can’t let them win. It’s the West that sometimes looks lost in the fog of war, lacking a vision for what victory looks like.

    There are plenty of good reasons for that. Look closer and divisions in the alliance become clearer. The North Americans, British, Poles and Balts are pushing hardest for Ukraine. These countries — most of which are members of NATO but not the EU — account for the bulk of the arms and economic sent to Ukraine. It’s the old Atlantic bloc, plus the “new Europeans.” The Continental powers (Germany, France, Italy) are less generous and more circumspect. As a share of its GDP, Germany gives roughly half what America has and a quarter of what Poland has last year in military aid to Ukraine. Hence the creative ambiguity in the alliance about where this is going.

    Ambiguity and risk-aversion with Putin’s Russia has a poor track record. At the 2008 NATO summit in Bucharest, Germany stopped the U.S. push to give Ukraine and Georgia an eventual path into the alliance, not wishing to offend Russia; Putin invaded Georgia four months later. In 2014, after Putin seized Crimea, President Barack Obama kept talking about “off ramps” for Putin and refused to send the Ukrainians even defensive weapons, so as not to provoke the Russian leader; Putin moved on from Crimea right past those “off ramps” into the Donbas. Before last year’s invasion, the U.S. and Europe were reluctant to spell out the costs to Putin. The pattern was familiar from the Bucharest meeting: The West has been better at deterring itself than at deterring Russia.

    These are hard decisions. The EU would be looking at many billions of euros in commitments to Ukraine. NATO would be looking to extend a formal security guarantee, possibly creating another Korea-style DMZ along Ukraine’s eastern frontier with Russia. Russia, and let’s not forget China, would be deterred from aggression elsewhere. Victory also means a Russia without Putin. “This man cannot remain in power,” Biden ad-libbed in Warsaw last March, before his cautious aides walked back this rare expression of clarity. The debate is moving, incrementally but clearly in that direction. The most famous realist of all, Henry Kissinger, now thinks Ukraine should be brought into NATO.

    Until the “Ukrainian question” of this century is answered, presumably with an unambiguous statement of ultimate objectives followed by determined action, it’s hard to imagine enduring peace in Europe. This path carries grave risks for Europe and its American patron, but the alternative may be more unappealing. As the physical scars of the Continent remind us to this day, the failure to address the Polish question left it in ruins in 1945 and divided until 1989. This is another key moment where the future of Europe will be decided.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • KSP HOME Heavy Metal Shoe Rack (5 Shelves) Foldable Open Book Shelf, Book Shelve, Shoe Rack, Shoes Storage Rack for Home Shoe Stand Shelf Big (74*60*25 cm) (Black) (5 – Tier)

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  • Big Breaking : Results of Two Border Battalions stand cancelled

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    Results of Two Border Battalions stand withdrawn and cancelled.

    Due to some Discrepancies, Two Border Battalions Results declared on 25/01/2023 stand Withdrawn & Cancelled ab initio. The Revised results is being issued Shortly.

     

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  • 4 reasons Big Tech is worried about the Supreme Court this week

    4 reasons Big Tech is worried about the Supreme Court this week

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    The case, which goes to oral arguments before the court on Tuesday, specifically tests whether social media platforms’ use of algorithms to recommend content to users is protected under Section 230. The court’s ruling could reshape the entire online ecosystem, including social media, e-commerce and job portals — all of which use algorithms to promote content to users.

    Platforms say if the liability shield doesn’t protect their use of targeted algorithms to recommend and promote content, some companies would more aggressively remove users’ speech or bar the discussion of more controversial topics for fear of being sued.

    In recent years, as social media platforms have come under increasing fire for the harms caused by content they host, Section 230 has become a target for politicians on both the left and the right who see it as granting the industry special protections not enjoyed by traditional publishers. (Both President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump have called for removing the shield. Biden has yet to back any specific proposals.) Its supporters argue it’s crucial to a free and open internet where citizens can exchange ideas without worrying they’ll get the entire system shut down.

    To date, Congress has largely failed to act outside of passing a 2019 carveout to the law related to sex trafficking. The disagreement stems from Democrats wanting platforms to remove content related to extremism and hate speech, and Republicans wanting more content — particularly conservative speech — to remain.

    Here are four things to watch going into Tuesday’s oral arguments:

    Can Clarence Thomas form a winning coalition?

    Thomas, a frequent critic of Section 230, has written two dissents urging his colleagues to take a case reviewing what he sees as the lower courts’ overly broad interpretation of the law in favor of tech companies.

    A key question Tuesday is whether Thomas can persuade four other justices to join him for a majority. Two potential allies could be Justices Samuel Alito and Neil Gorsuch. They joined a dissent with Thomas last May in a separate tech industry case before the court, NetChoice v. Paxton, seeking to uphold a Texas law requiring social media platforms to host all users’ political viewpoints.

    “Alito and Gorsuch are his most likely allies in this case, and the question I think then is whether he can grab a couple others, and it’s not clear to me whether he can,” said Anupam Chander, a professor of law and technology at Georgetown Law.

    And the bipartisan nature of the pressure to change Section 230 protections has experts watching to see if that is reflected in any decision from the justices. “There’s a kind of strange bedfellows aspect to tech regulation currently with everyone mad at tech companies for the opposite problems — the left accusing it of allowing it too much speech, and the right accusing it of censoring too much speech,” Chander said.

    The importance of algorithms

    Among those most affected by any ruling against Google could be smaller internet companies and individual website users, like volunteer moderators for Reddit, legal scholars and lawmakers said.

    Large platforms such as YouTube could afford the liability risks of continuing to use algorithms to recommend content if the justices rule against Google. But some lawmakers fear that decision would be financially crippling for small businesses and startups.

    “If you harm the little guys and you harm moderation, you’re going to reduce innovation, competition and opportunities, and give the big guys — like Facebook and Google — even more of the online market,” said Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), one of the original authors of Section 230.

    Without algorithms that rely on user preferences to push recommendations, websites would likely present content in reverse chronological order, said Jeff Kosseff, a cybersecurity law professor at the U.S. Naval Academy who wrote a book on the history of Section 230.

    “I don’t know if the American public is ready for not having personalized algorithms anymore,” Kosseff said. “How does TikTok operate without personalized algorithms? You just get any random video that’s ever been posted?”

    But some legal scholars said tech companies should be liable for their products and services that break the law, just like any other business.

    Mary McCord, the executive director of Georgetown Law’s Institute for Constitutional Advocacy and Protection, doesn’t believe tech companies’ “sky is falling” hyperbole that internet platforms will shut down if they can’t use recommendation algorithms. “They’ve just had this free pass since their inception — not even having to worry about the kinds of risks that every other company has had to face,” said McCord, who filed an amicus brief in the case on behalf of former national security officials.

    McCord, who was an acting assistant attorney general for national security in the Obama administration, said that in 90 percent of terrorist incidents, social media factored significantly into the radicalization of individuals committing the attacks.

    Republican Party split

    In amicus briefs filed with the court, Republican lawmakers are split on how the justices should rule. That division may make it harder to predict how the conservative justices will land on the case as well — either siding with arguments that tech’s legal shield is too broad or that it’s necessary to protect free speech.

    Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) called for the court to narrow its reading of Section 230 to more strictly align it with the statute — saying lower courts too broadly interpreted the law in tech’s favor. Similarly, Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), along with 16 other Republican members of Congress, argued that the court needs to narrow the scope, arguing it gives large tech too much power over which speech is allowed — or “censored” — on their sites.

    In contrast, former Pennsylvania Republican Sen. Rick Santorum’s amicus brief said narrowing the law’s interpretation would suppress speech, adding that Section 230 specifically allows companies to “filter,” “choose,” and “organize” content.

    The split in the GOP between traditionally business-friendly conservatives and a more populist anti-tech contingent creates a challenging tightrope. “Historically, conservatives have sought to reduce litigation risk for corporations,” Georgetown’s Chander said. “Section 230 very much does that.”

    But he added that, today, conservatives are taking “an anti-big business stance — and a new populism stance in doing so — that coincides with a kind of irritation with what they see as anti-conservative bias by technology companies.”

    Gonzalez ruling may influence upcoming tech cases

    How the Supreme Court rules in Gonzalez could affect its decision in a tech case scheduled for arguments the following day — Twitter v. Taamneh. That case asks whether Twitter, Google and Facebook can be held liable under the Justice Against Sponsors of Terrorism Act for allegedly aiding and abetting terrorists by sharing ISIS recruitment content.

    The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in an opinion consolidating the two cases that the plaintiffs’ Anti-Terrorism Act claims in Gonzalez were barred under Section 230. In Taamneh, it found the platforms could be held liable for aiding and abetting an act of international terrorism by permitting ISIS to post content on their sites.

    The Biden administration filed a brief recommending the Gonzalez case be sent back to the 9th Circuit, arguing that Section 230 does not immunize YouTube when its algorithm recommends ISIS content.

    Legal scholars said the justices will likely rule on the cases in tandem. Chander predicts the court will find that Section 230 doesn’t provide immunity for YouTube’s targeted algorithms in the Gonzalez case, but will rule in favor of Twitter, Google and Meta in the Taamneh case by finding they couldn’t be held liable for underlying claims they aided and abetted terrorist acts by hosting ISIS content.

    It could also tee up the justices for a potential ruling in two other cases the court likely punted to next term involving Republican laws from Texas and Florida that ban platforms from removing users’ viewpoints and deplatforming candidates. The companies said the laws violate their free speech rights.

    But Daphne Keller, a director at Stanford’s Cyber Policy Center, said a ruling in Gonzalez that finds Google’s recommendation algorithms aren’t protected under Section 230 may backfire if the court later upholds the Texas and Florida laws that ban platforms from removing content.

    “If Texas and Florida win their cases, then people can sue because platforms took their content down, even though the whole reason the platforms took the content down was to avoid the liability that Gonzalez created,” Keller said.

    “It’s so circular, and I’m not sure the court realizes that.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )