Tag: internet

  • Maher Zain’s heartfelt Naat takes internet by storm in Ramzan

    Maher Zain’s heartfelt Naat takes internet by storm in Ramzan

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    Stockholm: The holy month of Ramzan is going on and Muslims across the world offer prayers, listen and recite Quran, Naats and Hamd more than they do in other months. During this holy month, people also listen Naat-e-sharief (Poem with praise of Prophet Muhammad S.A.W) and Hamd (Poem with praise of Almighty Allah) on YouTube and from past few years, every two or three Naats trend all over the globe during Ramzan. During this year’s Ramzan, Lebanese-Swedish singer Maher Zain’s voice is trending all over the internet.

    Yes, the Naat-e Sharief ‘Muhammad (PBUH) Rahmatun Lil Alameen sung by Maher Zain is trending on the internet nowadays. Hundreds of thousands of reels and YouTube shorts are doing rounds on social media platforms which feature Maher Zain’s voice in the background. The Naat-e-Sharief has garnered more than 79 million views on YouTube within 10 months.

    About the Naat-e Sharief

    The ‘Rahmatun Lil Alameen Naat-e-Sharief’ is one of the poems Maher Zain has sung. The lyric video is produced by Awakening Music and directed by Emrah Ozbilen.  Habibi Ya, Ya Muhammad (PBUH) means ”My Beloved, O Muhammad SAW.” The lyrics and soulful voice behind this Naat-e-sharief is what made it trending. The Naat-e-sharief makes you emotional and people find peace while listening to it.

    MS Education Academy

    About Maher Zain

    Maher Zain studied Aeronautical Engineering and after graduation , he linked up with Moroccan-born Swedish producer RedOne. Zain became a very popular singer because of his voice in the US but after returning home to Sweden, he decided to not produce music anymore. He became the singer of R&B music and started singing Naat and Hamd only. Zain has worked with Awakening Records and given several hit Islamic songs. Currently, he only sings Naat and Hamd and is one of the popular Nasheed artists in the Muslim world.

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    #Maher #Zains #heartfelt #Naat #takes #internet #storm #Ramzan

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Flag marches in Punjab; suspension of mobile Internet till Monday

    Flag marches in Punjab; suspension of mobile Internet till Monday

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    Chandigarh: To prevent any untoward incident in case of the arrest of absconding Sikh radical preacher Amritpal Singh, head of ‘Waris Punjab De’, who has been declared a ‘fugitive’, the police along with CRPF personnel on Sunday conducted flag marches across Punjab.

    Punjab Police are planning to book Amritpal Singh under the provisions of the National Security Act (NSA), sources privy to the development told IANS.

    In the interest of public safety, the government extended the suspension of SMS and mobile Internet services, except the voice call, till Monday noon.

    Amritsar Deputy Commissioner of Police Parminder Singh Bhandal told the media that the police have set up 100 checkpoints in Amritsar and city outskirts to physically check vehicles. CRPF jawans were accompanying the policemen at checkpoints.

    Officials told IANS the flag marches are being conducted in towns and cities in all districts.

    Anticipating a disturbance of peace, a large contingent of the paramilitary force was deployed outside Amritpal Singh’s native village, Jallupur Khaira, in the Amritsar district.

    A special team of the police, comprising personnel from seven districts, had followed the separatist leader’s convoy while he was on his way to Jalandhar’s Shahkot tehsil on Saturday. They zeroed in on his vehicle two to three times but Amritpal Singh managed to escape.

    Section 144 has been imposed in many districts of the state. The police have also increased security in the state. In addition, all vehicles are being checked at the Punjab-Haryana border.

    Amritpal’s father, Tarsem Singh told the media the police should have arrested him before he left the house. “We don’t have any information about his whereabouts. They carried out a search at our residence for 3-4 hours but did not find anything illegal.”

    He called the police action “unjustified” and said his son was weaning the youth off drugs. “Why were the police not acting against criminals and those involved in drugs,” he asked.

    Meanwhile, Police Commissioner Kuldeep Singh Chahal said Amritpal’s six gunmen were nabbed. “A manhunt for Amritpal Singh is on and we are hopeful that he will be arrested soon. A total of 78 people have been arrested so far and further searches and raids are underway,” he added.

    “During the statewide operation, nine weapons, including one .315 bore rifle, seven rifles of 12 bore, one revolver and 373 live cartridges of different caliber have been recovered so far,” the police said in a statement on Twitter.

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    #Flag #marches #Punjab #suspension #mobile #Internet #Monday

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Canadian diaspora concerned over suspension of mobile internet in Punjab

    Canadian diaspora concerned over suspension of mobile internet in Punjab

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    Chandigarh: Diaspora in Canada is concerned over the recent development in Punjab regarding the suspension of SMS and mobile internet services, except the voice call, in the interest of public safety as the police launched action against ‘Waris Punjab De’ chief and Khalistan ideologue Amritpal Singh and his aides.

    “I am receiving calls from my residents and am deeply concerned about reports coming out of Punjab, India regarding SMS and internet blackouts,” tweeted Sonia Sidhu, Member of Parliament for Brampton South, on Sunday.

    “I hope the situation is resolved soon & Canadians travelling to the region are able to connect with their families and friends in Canada.”

    Joining the issue, Iqwinder S. Gaheer, MP for Mississauga-Malton, tweeted: “I am troubled by what I am hearing from constituents and the reports coming out of Punjab, India: authorities have enacted the mass suspension of internet services and are preventing gatherings of more than 4.”

    “Civil rights and liberties should be maintained in a democracy.”

    Calling on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and the Liberal government to immediately contact their Indian counterparts to express concern regarding the suspension of civil liberties and the safety of Canadians abroad, Jagmeet Singh, Leader of Canada’s New Democratic Party, tweeted: “I am deeply concerned by reports that India has suspended civil liberties and imposed an internet blackout throughout the state of Punjab.”

    Replying to him, one user wrote: “What a hypocrite you are! You’re concerned about suspended civil liberties and an internet blackout in Punjab but you say nothing about it happening in Canada.”

    Another user think Jagmeet Singh is being disrespectful. “Draconian measures were when truckers’ protests were crushed in Canada. Jagmeet Singh ji you supported the crushing of a democratic, peaceful movement by @JustinTrudeau now you want him to go feral over the suspension of mobile texts (home internet working fine) in Punjab!”

    “If u are so concerned about Punjab then come to India, Punjab. It’s easy to pass judgement sitting in another corner and where you actually don’t know what’s happening,” another user wrote.

    “Human rights are the basis of any democracy,” said charity United Sikhs. “The Indian state is setting up its own records for violating #HumanRights in every possible way to oppress the Sikhs in India. Why is there a mass atrocity of human rights violation against Sikhs in India? What are the grounds for Amritpal’s arrest?”

    Meanwhile, the massive police search operation continued on the second day on Sunday to arrest Sikh radical Amritpal Singh, head of ‘Waris Punjab De’.

    Jalandhar Police Commissioner Kuldeep Singh Chahal told the media that Amritpal Singh was declared a ‘fugitive’.

    The police search operations are now mainly focused in Jalandhar district from where he managed to given the police a slip when it tried to intercept his vehicle to arrest him.

    Amritpal’s father Tarsem Singh told the media the police should have arrested him before he left the house. “We don’t have any information about his whereabouts. They carried out a search at our residence for 3-4 hours but did not find anything illegal.”

    He called the police action “unjustified” and said his son was weaning the youth off drugs. “Why the police were not acting against criminals and those involved in drugs,” he asked.

    Meanwhile, Police Commissioner Chahal said Amritpal’s six gunmen were nabbed. “A manhunt for Amritpal Singh is on and we are hopeful that he will be arrested soon. A total of 78 people have been arrested so far and further searches and raids are underway,” he added.

    “During the state-wide operation, nine weapons, including one .315 bore rifle, seven rifles of 12 bore, one revolver and 373 live cartridges of different caliber have been recovered so far,” the police said in a statement on Twitter on Saturday evening.

    “Waris Punjab De elements are involved in four criminal cases relating to spreading disharmony among classes, attempt to murder, attack on police persons and creating obstructions in the lawful discharge of duties of public servants. FIR stands registered for the attack on Ajnala Police Station,” it added.

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    #Canadian #diaspora #concerned #suspension #mobile #internet #Punjab

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Watch: Elderly man’s dance on Nora Fatehi’s ‘O Saki Saki’ breaks internet

    Watch: Elderly man’s dance on Nora Fatehi’s ‘O Saki Saki’ breaks internet

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    Hyderabad: Around 90 per cent of people across the globe feel depressed at least three times a day according to a few researchers. There are various ways to cope with depression but watching Instagram reels has become popular and the easiest way to help the body to release Endorphins. People from all walks of life are sharing content on social media platforms and a few of them became overnight sensations.  

    Currently, a video of an elderly man has gone viral like wildfire on Instagram and the clip has managed to evoke reactions from the netizens. In the video, the elderly man is seen grooving to Nora Fatehi’s popular song ‘O Saki Saki’ from the movie Batla House.

    Netizens are admiring the elderly man for his dance moves and the reel has garnered millions of views within a day. One of the users wrote, ”Aj tak jitna bollywood k male actors ne mila k dance ni kia uncle ek video mai kar gaye . he’s got some real talent.”

    Another user commented.“Humare yahan talent ki kami nahin hai,” and third user commented, ‘What an electrifying dance.”

    Watch the video below

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    #Watch #Elderly #mans #dance #Nora #Fatehis #Saki #Saki #breaks #internet

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Malala’s response to Jimmy Kimmel’s query about Harry Styles spitting on Chris Pine wins internet

    Malala’s response to Jimmy Kimmel’s query about Harry Styles spitting on Chris Pine wins internet

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    Los Angeles: Nobel laureate Malala Yousafzai is receiving praise for her graceful response to American television host Jimmy Kimmel’s odd query during the 95th Academy Awards ceremony.

    Yousafzai, a Pakistani activist for girls education who miraculously survived a bullet to the head from Taliban in October 2012, attended the glitzy award ceremony as an executive producer of “Stranger at the Gate”, which was nominated for the Documentary Short Film honour.

    During the ceremony, Kimmel approached Yousafzai and read out a question from a fan named ‘Joanne’. The query was about singer Harry Styles and Hollywood star Chris Pine’s ‘spit-gate’ incident that apparently happened at the 2022 Cannes Film Festival.

    “Your work on human rights and education for women and children is an inspiration. As the youngest Nobel prize winner in history, do you think Harry Styles spit on Chris Pine?” he asked.

    “I only talk about peace,” responded a visibly uncomfortable Yousafzai.

    To this, Kimmel said, “You know what? That’s why you’re Malala and nobody else is. That’s a great answer, Malala. The winner is malala-land, everybody.”

    Yousafzai later shared a news clip about the incident on her Twitter handle.

    “Treat people with kindness,” the 25-year-old simply worded the video.

    Many on social media criticised Kimmel.

    “Why the hell did jimmy kimmel go up to malala, make that corny a** chris pine and harry styles joke and then call her malala land?? what is wrong with this man #oscars (sic)” tweeted a user.

    Another wrote, “The Oscar’s was lowkey boring. Somebody shoulda smacked Jimmy Kimmel for his corny a** slap jokes and asking Malala dumb a** questions (sic).”

    “Asian people still lost tonight because of jimmy kimmel’s horrible banter with malala,” read another tweet.

    At the ceremony, Yousafzai opted for a glittering floor-length Ralph Lauren silver-sequinned gown with an incorporated head scarf. She also wore an emerald flower ring from Santi Jewels.

    Kimmel was also criticised by Indian fans when he called the artists performing on the Oscar-nominated Telugu track “Naatu Naatu” as “Bollywood dancers”.

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    #Malalas #response #Jimmy #Kimmels #query #Harry #Styles #spitting #Chris #Pine #wins #internet

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Biden admin’s cloud security problem: ‘It could take down the internet like a stack of dominos’

    Biden admin’s cloud security problem: ‘It could take down the internet like a stack of dominos’

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    The cloud has “become essential to our daily lives,” Kemba Walden, the acting national cyber director, said in an interview. “If it’s disrupted, it could create large potentially catastrophic disruptions to our economy and to our government.”

    In essence, she said, the cloud is now “too big to fail.”

    The fear: For all their security expertise, the cloud giants offer concentrated targets that hackers could use to compromise or disable a wide range of victims all at once. The collapse of a major cloud provider could cut hospitals off from accessing medical records; paralyze ports and railroads; corrupt the software that help financial markets hum; and wipe out databases across small businesses, public utilities and government agencies.

    “A single cloud provider going down could take down the internet like a stack of dominos,” said Marc Rogers, chief security officer at hardware security firm Q-Net Security and former head of information security at the content delivery provider Cloudflare.

    And cloud servers haven’t proved to be as secure as government officials had hoped. Hackers from nations such as Russia have used cloud servers from companies like Amazon and Microsoft as a springboard to launch attacks on other targets. Cybercriminal groups also regularly rent infrastructure from U.S. cloud providers to steal data or extort companies.

    Among other steps, the Biden administration recently said it will require cloud providers to verify the identity of their users to prevent foreign hackers from renting space on U.S. cloud servers (implementing an idea first introduced in a Trump administration executive order). And last week the administration warned in its national cybersecurity strategy that more cloud regulations are coming — saying it plans to identify and close regulatory gaps over the industry.

    In a series of interviews about this new, tougher approach, administration officials stressed that they aren’t giving up on the cloud. Instead, they’re trying to ensure that rapid growth doesn’t translate to new security risks.

    Cloud services can “take a lot of the security burden off of end users” by relieving them of difficult and time-consuming security practices, like applying patches and software updates, said Walden. Many small businesses and other customers simply lack the expertise and resources to protect their own data from increasingly adept hackers.

    The problems come when those cloud providers aren’t providing the level of security they could.

    So far, cloud providers have haven’t done enough to prevent criminal and nation-state hackers from abusing their services to stage attacks within the U.S., officials argued, pointing in particular to the 2020 SolarWinds espionage campaign, in which Russian spooks avoided detection in part by renting servers from Amazon and GoDaddy. For months, they used those to slip unnoticed into at least nine federal agencies and 100 companies.

    That risk is only growing, said Rob Knake, the deputy national cyber director for strategy and budget. Foreign hackers have become more adept at “spinning up and rapidly spinning down” new servers, he said — in effect, moving so quickly from one rented service to the next that new leads dry up for U.S. law enforcement faster than it can trace them down.

    On top of that, U.S. officials express significant frustration that cloud providers often up-charge customers to add security protections — both taking advantage of the need for such measures and leaving a security hole when companies decide not to spend the extra money. That practice complicated the federal investigations into the SolarWinds attack, because the agencies that fell victim to the Russian hacking campaign had not paid extra for Microsoft’s enhanced data-logging features.

    “The reality is that today cloud security is often separate from cloud,” Anne Neuberger, the deputy national security adviser for cyber and emerging technology, said last week during a roll-out event for the new cyber strategy. “We need to get to a place where cloud providers have security baked in with that.”

    So the White House is planning to use whatever powers it can pull on to make that happen — limited as they are.

    “In the United States, we don’t have a national regulator for cloud. We don’t have a Ministry of Communication. We don’t have anybody who would step up and say, ‘It’s our job to regulate cloud providers,’” said Knake, of the strategy and budget office. The cloud, he said, “needs to have a regulatory structure around it.”

    Knake’s office is racing to find new ways to police the industry using a ‘hodgepodge’ of existing tools, such as security requirements for specific sectors — like banking — and a program called FedRAMP that establishes baseline controls cloud providers must meet to sell to the federal government.

    Part of what makes that difficult is that neither the government nor companies using cloud providers fully know what security protections cloud providers have in place. In a study last month on the U.S. financial sector’s use of cloud services, the Treasury Department found that cloud companies provided “insufficient transparency to support due diligence and monitoring” and U.S. banks could not “fully understand the risks associated with cloud services.”

    But government officials say they see signs that the cloud providers’ attitude is changing, especially given that the companies increasingly see the public sector as a source for new revenue.

    “Ten years ago, they would have been like, ‘No way,’” said Knake. But the major cloud providers “have now realized that if they want the growth that they want to have, if they want to be within critical sectors, they actually not only need to not stand in the way, but they need to provide tools and mechanisms to make it easy to prove compliance regulations,” he said.

    The push for more regulations isn’t getting immediate objections from the cloud industry.

    “I think that that’s highly appropriate,” said Phil Venables, Google’s chief information security officer.

    But at the same time, Venables argued that cloud providers are subject to plenty of regulation already, pointing to FedRAMP and the requirements cloud providers must satisfy in order to work with regulated entities such as banks, defense industrial base companies and federal agencies — the very tools Knake described as “hodgepodge.”

    The White House outlined a more aggressive regulatory regime in its new cyber strategy. It proposed holding software makers liable for insecure code and imposing stronger security mandates on critical infrastructure companies, like the cloud providers.

    “The market has not provided for all the measures necessary to ensure that it’s not being inappropriately used, that it’s resilient, and that it’s being good caretakers of the small and medium-sized business under its umbrella,” said John Costello, the recently departed chief of staff in the Office of the National Cyber Director.

    Cloud computing companies are “eager” to work with the White House on a “harmonized approach to security requirements across sectors,” said Ross Nodurft, executive director of the Alliance for Digital Innovation, a tech trade group whose members include cloud giants Palo Alto Networks, VMWare, Google Cloud and AWS — the cloud computing arm of Amazon. He also said that companies already comply with existing “extensive security requirements” for specific industries.

    A spokesperson for Microsoft, which is not a member of ADI, referred POLITICO to a Thursday blog post from a Microsoft executive making similar assertions that the company looks forward to working with agencies on crafting appropriate regulations. AWS said in a statement that it prioritizes security but did not address the question of whether it supports additional regulation. Oracle did not respond to a request for comment.

    If the government fails to find a way to ensure the resilience of the cloud, it fears the fallout could be devastating. Cloud providers have effectively become “three or four single points of failure” for the U.S. economy, Knake said.

    According to a 2017 study from the insurance giant Lloyds, an outage at one of the top three cloud providers lasting between three and six days could cause $15 billion in damages.

    Such a collapse could be triggered by a cyberattack on a major cloud provider, a natural or human-caused disaster that disrupts or cuts power to a major data center, or simply a failure in the design and maintenance of a core cloud service.

    If the White House can’t get the results it wants through using existing regulations and cajoling companies into improving practices voluntarily, it will have to hit up Congress. And that could be its biggest hurdle.

    Some Republicans have already criticized the White House’s national cybersecurity strategy for its heavy emphasis on regulation.

    “We must clarify federal cybersecurity roles and responsibilities, not create additional burdens, to minimize confusion and redundancies across the government,” Rep. Mark Green (R.-Tenn.), the chair of the House Homeland Security Committee, and Rep. Andrew Garbarino (R-N.Y.), head of its cyber and infrastructure protection subcommittee, said in a statement last week.

    As gatekeepers of the House Homeland Security Committee, Garbarino and Green wield de facto veto power over any major cybersecurity legislation that the White House might send Congress.

    In the short term, that eliminates the possibility of the more ambitious cloud policy proposals outlined or hinted at in White House’s new strategy

    That could mean that the administration will have to increase pressure on the companies to do more on their own.

    Trey Herr, a former senior security strategist who worked in cloud computing at Microsoft, said cybersecurity agencies could, for example, require the heads of the major cloud providers to appear before top government cyber brass on a semi-regular basis and prove that they’re taking adequate steps to manage the risk within their systems.

    The major cloud providers “have plenty of ways to talk about the security of one product, but few to manage the risk of all those products tied together,” said Herr, who is now the director of the Atlantic Council’s cyber statecraft initiative.

    “It’s one thing to do a good job building a helipad on the top of your house,” he said. Butno one is asking if the house is built to handle that helipad in the first place.”

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    #Biden #admins #cloud #security #problem #internet #stack #dominos
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Internet to every home in Telangana by the end of this year

    Internet to every home in Telangana by the end of this year

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    Hyderabad: The process of providing internet facilities to every home will be completed by the end of this year in the state. In connection with this initiative taken by the state government, T-Fiber officials said that the steps to provide internet facility in 75 percent of gram panchayats have been completed.

    Sujai Karampuri Managing Director T. Fiber said that by the end of this year, the process of providing internet facilities to 10 lakh houses in various villages of the state will be completed. He said that as per the instructions of the State Minister for Information Technology, KT Rama Rao, steps are being taken to provide internet facility to the houses in all the rural areas in the state by the end of this year.

    He said that they are working to provide this facility to 10 zones, 31 districts, 584 mandals, 8778 gram panchayats and 10 thousand 128 villages in the state in a phased manner. 

    In the first phase, 15 districts out of 33 districts of the state have been selected, whereas the second phase will be started only after 100 percent of the homes are connected to the Internet. The estimate prepared for the completion of the T-Fiber project in the state is 3800 crores and it is decided to connect 147 lakh houses and 1 lakh commercial establishments of the state with internet.

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    #Internet #home #Telangana #year

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Viral: Man uses Trigonometry power to guess woman’s height, internet hails him

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    New Delhi: Though trigonometry is challenging and complicated to grasp, it is unquestionably useful in a variety of real life situations. This branch of mathematics does not have a direct application in everyday life, but it is widely used in a variety of fields such as aviation, science, architecture, and others. Now, a Twitter user has used trigonometry to calculate the height of a woman, unaware that he would become a viral hit. It all started when Twitter user Pallavi Pandey posted an image to her account. The photograph shows her in all black standing in front of a flight of stairs. She captioned the photo, “Guess my height!”

    It didn’t take long for people on Twitter to come up with various responses. And one of them took the challenge seriously, answering the question with math. “”Looks like 5′ 4.5″. But now I am curious,” Mr. Nobody, a Twitter user, wrote. He also posted an image of his calculations. Despite the fact that the man dedicated his thought process to estimating her probable height and solving the problem. His response was incorrect, as confirmed by the lady herself. She praised the man’s efforts while revealing that she is much taller than his estimation. “Hats off to you man for your efforts, but I’m way taller… but wow!”

    The audience was split in half by the man’s determination to find an answer. “Waah bhai,” one user said, impressed by the man’s serious demeanour. While another expressed dissatisfaction with the man’s mathematical application, he stated, “Report the rate of error in relation to thetha as well as the size of the phone used for scale. If the coordinates of the location and time are known, I believe thetha can be calculated accurately.” After the comments started pouring in, the man explained his method. Take a look here:



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    #Viral #Man #Trigonometry #power #guess #womans #height #internet #hails

    ( With inputs from : roshankashmir.net )

  • JK reports 49 Internet Shutdowns In 2022: Access Now

    JK reports 49 Internet Shutdowns In 2022: Access Now

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    SRINAGAR:  Leading the world for the fifth consecutive year in internet blackouts, India has once again topped the list in 2022, New York based internet advocacy watchdog ‘Access Now’ said in a report on Tuesday.

    This is the fifth consecutive year India has topped the global charts on this score and recorded highest number of internet shutdowns.

    The watchdog’s report says that a total of 187 internet shutdowns were reported globally in 2022. Out of 84 such internet disruptions in India, 49 were reported in Jammu and Kashmir alone.

    As per the report, the internet shutdowns in Jammu and Kashmir were imposed due to political instability and violence.

    The report said India has accounted for 58 percent of all documented shutdowns globally since 2016.

    In 2021, around 80 per cent of all internet shutdowns in India were imposed in Jammu and Kashmir, with JK being subjected to 85 such disruptions out of a total of 106 internet shutdowns reported in India.

    The report said, “Indian authorities blocked at least 55,607 websites, URLs, mobile applications, social media posts and accounts between 2015 and 2022.  In 2021, 107 incidents of internet shutdown were recorded in India with orders to take down 6,096 social media posts, while 6,775 social media posts and accounts were ordered to be taken down last year.”

    The war torn Ukraine stands second on the list and recorded 22 internet shutdowns after it entered into an armed conflict with Russia last year.

    Pertinent to mention that Supreme Court, in 2020 declared internet access to be a fundamental right by extension, stating that the blackout could not last indefinitely and blackout orders must be published with specific reasons.

     

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    #reports #Internet #Shutdowns #Access

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Chinese Device Lets You Kiss Over The Internet

    Chinese Device Lets You Kiss Over The Internet

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    Want to blow a kiss to your distant crush? A Chinese contraption with hot, mobile silicone “lips” seems to have just the solution.

    The device, billed as a way to allow long-distance couples to share “real” physical intimacy, is causing a buzz among Chinese social media users, who have reacted with intrigue and shock.

    + Women in satisfying relationships tend to have fewer chronic illnesses, study finds

    Equipped with pressure sensors and actuators, the device is capable of imitating a real kiss, replicating the pressure, movement and temperature of the user’s lips.

    Along with the movement of the kiss, it can also transmit the sound the user makes.

    However, while many social media users saw a funny side to the device, others criticized it as “vulgar” and “creepy”. Some have expressed concern that minors might buy and use it.

    “I don’t understand (the device) but I’m totally shocked,” said one of the top comments on Weibo.

    On the Twitter-like platform, various hashtags about the device racked up hundreds of millions of views last week.

    To send a kiss, users need to download a mobile app and plug their device into their phone’s charging port. After pairing with their partners on the app, couples can start a video call and broadcast replicas of their kisses to each other.

    According to China’s state-owned Global Times, the invention was patented by the Vocational Institute of Mechatronics Technology in Changzhou.

    “At my university, I had a long-distance relationship with my girlfriend, so we only spoke on the phone. That’s where the inspiration for this device came from,” said Jiang Zhongli, the main inventor of the design, according to the Global Times.

    He said Jiang had applied for a patent in 2019, but the patent expired in January 2023 and Jiang was now hoping someone else could expand and perfect the design.

    A similar invention, the “Kissinger”, was released by the Imagineering Institute in Malaysia in 2016. But it came in the form of a touch-sensitive silicone pad rather than realistic-looking lips.

    Though advertised for long-distance relationships, the Chinese device also allows users to anonymously pair up with strangers in the app’s “kiss square” function. If two strangers match and like each other, they can ask to kiss each other.

    Users can also “upload” their kisses into the app for others to download and experience.

    On China’s largest online shopping site, Taobao, dozens of users shared their reviews of the device, which costs 288 yuan (R$ 225).

    “My partner didn’t believe that (remote) kissing could be achieved at first so her jaw dropped when she used it… This is the best surprise I gave her during our long distance relationship,” commented one user.

    “Thank you technology.”



    [ad_2] #Chinese #Device #Lets #Kiss #Internet ( With inputs from : pledgetimes.com )