Tag: News

  • My Descent Into TikTok News Hell

    My Descent Into TikTok News Hell

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    tiktok static

    WWashington recently entered full-blown panic mode about TikTok, fretting over its ties to China’s ruling Communist Party and how the world’s most popular social platform might be poisoning American discourse. There were last month’s high-profile congressional hearings, followed by a slew of bans both internationally and at the federal, state and local levels. To the app’s detractors it’s a geopolitical Trojan horse, meant to surveil the population and drag its youth into a spiral of decadent narcissism, all while sapping them of any remaining nationalistic fervor.

    To its defenders, who are nearly all much, much younger than the typical member of Congress, TikTok is more than just a diversion. It’s a powerful vehicle for personal expression, and somewhere they can make their voices heard absent the incessant chattering of clueless olds who need a refresher on the basics of home wifi. (Rep. Jamaal Bowman (D-N.Y.), one of the app’s few defenders on the Hill, described to the New York Times how he uses it to keep in touch with younger constituents and activists.)

    I decided to find out which side is right.

    My first obstacle was that I had never actually used TikTok before last week. According to the market research firm Statista, 55 percent of the app’s users are aged 18 to 34, a demographic group into which I do happen to fall — but let’s just say I’m the kind of person who still has multiple print magazine subscriptions. Accordingly, I have about as much actual first-hand knowledge of the app as many of the septuagenarian legislators who now hold its fate in their hands.

    In that spirit I decided to spend an entire day consuming my political news only via the app, to see just what TikTok did to my brain that Twitter, cable news and the fine journalism of my POLITICO colleagues weren’t already doing. The answer was unsettling — but not at all in the way that I’d expected.

    TikTok news is … kinda stale

    TikTok news is … kinda stale

    Despite the claims of TikTok’s more serious-minded fans, news is decidedly not the app’s primary function; its popularity and notoriety are based more on its parade of viral dance trends, influencer beefs and borderline-antisocial pranks.

    But a Pew survey conducted last summer showed that “the share of U.S. adults who say they regularly get news from TikTok has roughly tripled,” from merely 3 percent in 2020 to 10 percent last year. And as Rebecca Jennings pointed out in Vox before the 2022 midterm elections, organizers on both sides of the aisle are laser-focused on using it as a tool to reach voters.

    So as the app balloons in popularity (and becomes a news story in its own right), that makes it no trivial matter what its news media landscape actually looks like. And for someone far more used to Twitter’s to-the-nanosecond, deeply-in-the-weeds presentation of the news, TikTok looks utterly bewildering.

    When I opened my account I wasn’t following anyone yet, and therefore had no existing feed or meaningful recommendations. Keeping in mind that I wanted this to be serious, I opened the search window and typed in, simply, “news.”

    This was 8:01 a.m. on Monday, April 17. TikTok obligingly served up a brief digest of global news stories titled “Today’s World News”… dated the preceding Thursday, April 13. As a hardened news junkie, taking a tour through the headlines from four days ago felt a bit like staining my fingers with a linotyped edition of the Pall Mall Gazette. I was not impressed.

    But even more than being stale, it just felt disorienting: Having sworn off my normal news sources, I felt suddenly unmoored in time. When was all this stuff happening? The main “For You” tab, where TikTok’s algorithm works its wonders, didn’t make matters much better — it doesn’t timestamp videos, meaning the user has to click through to its author’s profile to find that crucial piece of information for news consumption.

    Some creators remedy this with an in-frame caption, but that doesn’t make it any less disorienting that the app seems to place zero weight on timeliness even if it otherwise detects that you’re looking for “news.” (The very next non-sponsored video I saw, from a financial influencer known as “Coach JV” was clearly marked by the creator with its publish date of April 12, even if its recommendation of crypto as the solution to early April’s rumored interest rate hikes was decidedly unhelpful.)

    The overall effect is to create a digital space that feels decidedly outside the “moment” as you might have come to understand it. TikTok exists in its own eternal “moment,” slightly adjacent to the news. What’s served up there isn’t necessarily what’s happening now, but what it senses you’re looking for now. There is no Trump or Elon-like “main character” of TikTok who can twist the platform to their will with an errant statement or news announcement, just a sprawling ecosystem of creators all vying to worm their way into as many “For You” tabs as possible.

    In a way, this was quite refreshing. The eternal “now” created by a platform like Twitter is exhausting, to say the least. Much of TikTok’s news content is reflective, whether it’s explainer videos from mainstream news outlets like the Washington Post or Morning Brew that attempt to give viewers more context about the news of the day, or independent pundits who purport to counter those outlets’ biased or elitist worldviews. (More on that later.) At least in editorial approach, it functions more like a weekly news magazine.

    As refreshingly different as that might be, the overall effect rapidly becomes surreal. News stories, per se, disappear, replaced by topics (or more accurately, occasions for content creation). What, exactly, was the nature of transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney’s association with Anheuser-Busch? Less important than why it was (supposedly) a bad business move. Even earnest attempts at capsule explainers from professional news-gatherers can only contain so much context given the format. If the knock on the pre-TikTok social media era was that it drove users to reductive conclusions given its lack of moderation, restraints on character count, or algorithmic incentives, those problems are all present here in a more video-forward format.

    Which can be a problem, considering:

    It’s us against them.

    It’s us against them.

    When it comes to the political valence of the content TikTok shows you, the algorithm is powerfully naïve. When I watched a livestream of House Speaker Kevin McCarthy railing about the debt ceiling at the NYSE (by this time, the app’s algorithmic engine was rolling), it gave me a heavy dose of Fox News’ Jesse Watters. When I yanked the tiller in the other direction with some Crooked Media videos, I got liberal comedian Jon Stewart and progressive former U.S. Secretary of Labor Robert Reich.

    Of course, this is not how the average user, or possibly any user, uses TikTok. I was aiming as much for balance and variety as I could — trying not to end up writing a piece titled “The World of Conservative Politics According To TikTok,” or “How my Feed Became an AOC Fan Account.”

    Sometimes this took unexpected forms. I did not expect to log on to Gen Z’s favorite app and be confronted with a conservative Black activist sharing a clip from the obscure, hilariously square 1960s-era anti-communist Dan Smoot. Or a liberal activist resharing Frank Zappa’s famous 1986 appearance on “Crossfire” where he railed against “fascist theocracy.” But the contemporary examples of populist anger came fast and furious, especially when it came to ideologically ambiguous conspiracies around the war in Ukraine, the World Economic Forum’s “Great Reset” or the possibility of conflict around Taiwan.

    On one hand this omnipresent conspiratorialism seems to be baked into the app. Long before it became the political flashpoint it is today, TikTok was viewed primarily as a window into the daily lives of the working class, whether via Black-powered dance trends such as the “Renegade” or the bizarrely omnipresent, “Jerry Springer”-like character of “Divorce TikTok.” If Facebook has worked hard to tether itself to real-life communities, and Twitter is largely the digital watering hole for the media and professional class, then TikTok is a direct line to the id of the common man that’s almost entirely absent from more traditional media channels.

    It’s not shocking that videos from the aforementioned former Secretary of Labor Reich, decrying low-paying jobs and income inequality, would go viral, nor those by conservatives knocking former Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi for her skill at the stock market. What is surprising, however, is the extent to which more blatantly conspiratorial content seems to exist on the platform without much attention from outside, given the immense amount of collective hand-wringing and foundation-dollar-spending that goes into fighting “misinformation” on platforms like Facebook and Twitter (at least until the latter’s “truth”-y takeover by Elon Musk).

    TikTok’s algorithm is almost platonically ideal for spreading false information, given how eagerly it caters to the viewer’s prejudices. Hence my experience, where crypto boosterism led to the Great Reset led to BlackRock’s “impending global takeover”led to apologia for Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, with a healthy dose of Alex Jones-like punditry and garbled history sprinkled in between. By the end of my journey I’d had quite a healthy dose of revelation administered to me, but I felt utterly disempowered to make sense of it all.

    You can’t help but like it.

    You can’t help but like it.

    I will confess that contrary to the spirit of goodwill, curiosity and objectivity with which a journalist is meant to approach their subject, I was primed to have a very bad time with this app. I don’t like video, for one. (Confirmed wordcel here.) I first opened and installed TikTok to familiarize myself with it over the weekend before my day-long binge. Cocooned in my safe space of Twitter, I pronounced my first encounters with the app a “massive bummer.”

    Still, by the end of the day the app doggedly learned what makes me tick. Not “me” the reporter, but me the person.

    The crypto hustle guides, meant to take advantage of the average American’s understandable fear and ignorance of complicated macroeconomic forces, gave way to modestly amusing memes about corporate power that somehow mashed up LeBron James and Teddy Roosevelt. The shrill culture-war preening of figures like The Daily Wire’s Michael Knowles gave way to amusing local news clips, the exact kind of early-social-web viral contentI have a true soft spot for. The algorithm started — I swear to God — serving up global news, featuring developments in France and Mexico. (I even laughed out loud at one point, at a clip of the former President Trump repurposed to skewer a certain type of amoral careerism.)

    It feels like it strains credulity to reiterate to the reader that I did not ask for any of this. I had a journalistic mission that I set out to accomplish with this assignment, absent my own preferences, and yet they still found their way back to my feed. I set out to find out how “people,” very broadly defined, experience TikTok, and the app built a weirdly Derek-shaped bubble right around me.

    In the United States the news has always been a commercial enterprise set on giving the people what they want, yes. But never has that goal been pursued with the technological sophistication and secrecy deployed by TikTok’s developers, which casts the Beltway class’ paranoia about the app in a new and more sympathetic light.

    The social media era has introduced an arsenal of psychological phenomena and classifications to our political discourse, meant to help us understand better how the algorithms play us. We seek out news according to our confirmation bias, or thirst to satisfy pre-existing beliefs. We accuse our opponents of suffering from the Dunning-Kruger effect, overestimating their expertise while ensconced in an impenetrable digital carapace of ignorance. Our negativity bias makes every individual news beat an opportunity to catastrophize about climate change, or the erosion of democracy or “wokeness,” or whatever.

    TikTok, almost invisibly, subsumes this all into its recommendation engine. You don’t have to think about what you’re thinking about, or how you’re thinking about it — just surrender to the feed, and unconsciously teach the app how to make you like it. With its skillful flattery, TikTok is like every other social media platform, only … better. (One analyst told the Wall Street Journal that, compared to YouTube, “The algorithm on TikTok can get much more powerful and it can be able to learn your vulnerabilities much faster.”) It does its work seamlessly behind the scenes, outside of time, outside of context, outside of choice.

    Skeptical politicians, in that light, might celebrate the app rather than accuse it of Chinese espionage. By keeping the focus solely on its user’s preoccupations, preferences and prejudices, it does a damn good job of keeping the spotlight off the analog world surrounding them, where politicians might otherwise face scrutiny and accountability. One can quite easily imagine a world where the societal lotus-eating that TikTok inspires has chipped away at not just our already-flagging idea of a “shared reality,” but any shared sense of the “present” itself — leaving that “present,” as it stubbornly persists, firmly under the control of those more engaged IRL.



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    ( With inputs from : politico.com )

  • Defence Minister Rajnath Singh to Hand Over Patrol Vessel, Landing Craft to Maldives as India’s Gift – Kashmir News

    Defence Minister Rajnath Singh to Hand Over Patrol Vessel, Landing Craft to Maldives as India’s Gift – Kashmir News

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    Defence Minister Rajnath Singh will hand over a fast patrol vessel and a landing craft to the Maldives as India’s “gift” during his visit to the island nation from May 1 to 3.

    The defence ministry said this on Sunday, noting that Singh’s visit to the Maldives will be an “important landmark” in building “strong bonds” of friendship between the two countries.

    The Maldives is one of India’s key maritime neighbours in the Indian Ocean region and the overall bilateral ties, including in the areas of defence and security, have been on an upward trajectory in the last few years.

    India’s decision to provide military platforms to the Maldives came amid China’s persistent efforts to expand its overall influence in the region.

    During his visit, Singh is scheduled to call on Maldivian President Ibrahim Mohamed Solih and hold talks with Foreign Minister Abdulla Shahid and Defence Minister Mariya Didi.

    “In tune with India’s commitment to capacity building of friendly countries and partners in the region, Defence Minister Rajnath Singh will gift one fast patrol vessel ship and a landing craft to the Maldives National Defence Forces,” the ministry said in a statement.

    Singh is also set to take stock of the implementation of various India-assisted projects in the Maldives and will interact with the Indian diaspora.

    “India and the Maldives are working closely to effectively address shared challenges, including maritime security, terrorism, radicalisation, piracy, trafficking, organised crime and natural disasters,” the ministry said.

    “India’s vision of SAGAR (Security and Growth for All in the Region) along with its ‘Neighbourhood First’ policy as well as Maldives’ ‘India First’ policy seek to work together to jointly develop the capabilities within the Indian Ocean region,” it added.

    On Singh’s talks with the Maldivian defence and foreign ministers, it said the entire gamut of defence relations between the two countries will be reviewed.

    The Maldives is also one of the biggest beneficiaries of India’s Neighbourhood First policy.

    In August last year, Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Maldivian President Solih kick-started the India-funded Greater Male Connectivity Project (GMCP), billed as the largest infrastructure initiative in the island nation.

    Under the project, a 6.74-km-long bridge and causeway link will be built to connect Maldivian capital Male with the adjoining islands of Villingli, Gulhifalhu and Thilafushi.

    Defence Secretary Giridhar Aramane visited the Maldives last month and held talks with his Maldivian counterpart, Major General Abdulla Shamaal.(PTI)

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirnews.in )

  • Power shutdown in parts of Kashmir- Details here – Kashmir News

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    Power shutdown

    SRINAGAR, APRIL 29: Power Controller Kashmir has informed that, the power supply to Receiving Stations GIS Batmaloo, Exhibition and Court Complex shall remain affected on April 30 from 10.00 am to 12 noon.

    Similarly, in order to facilitate augmentation woks of 33/11 Kv lines the power supply to receiving stations Momen, Reshipora and Landoora shall remain affected on April 30 and 3 May from 10.30 am to 4 pm.

    Likewise, the power supply to receiving stations of Chandoosa and Malpora shall remain affected on May 01 and 04 from 10 am to 3 pm.

    Similarly, the power supply to receiving stations Noorkha, Bandi, Mohra and Salamabad shall remain affected on May 02 and 04 from 10 am to 4 pm.

    Likewise, the power supply to receiving station Singhpora shall remain affected on May 01 and 03 from 10 am to 4 pm.

    Similarly, the power supply to receiving stations Zachaldra, Audoora, Phrupeth and Chanjmulla shall remain affected May 01 and 04 from 9 am to 3 pm.

    Likewise, the power supply to receiving station Arampora, Panzinara, Sheer Colony, Watlab, Tujjar, Duroo and PHE Watlab shall remain affected on May 01, 03 and 09 from 9 am to 3 pm.

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirnews.in )

  • Kashmir: Unregistered Vehicles on roads to face hefty Fines & Imprisonment under MVA – Kashmir News

    Kashmir: Unregistered Vehicles on roads to face hefty Fines & Imprisonment under MVA – Kashmir News

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    Unregistered Vehicles on roads to face hefty Fines & Imprisonment under MVA

    MVD Kashmir issues SOPs to tackle Unregistered Vehicles

    SRINAGAR, APRIL 29: In view of rising instances of unregistered vehicles plying on the roads, the Regional Transport Officer Kashmir has issued Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) to address the same.

    According to the SOPs, the first offence of an unregistered vehicle being found on roads will be met with a ₹5,000 penalty under the Motor Vehicles Act, while the second offence will result in a ₹10,000 fine or a prison sentence for the owner which may extend to one year, or both.

    Additionally, non-display of registration mark on High Security Registration Plates (HSRPs) will be similarly punishable.

    “The showrooms must adhere to the rule of releasing vehicles with registration numbers on HSRP without fail. In case it is found that dealers have violated this norm, not only will the face penalty under MVA, but they will be held liable for any crimes committed using such vehicles”, an RTO official said.

    To ensure uniform implementation of laws, Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) have been put in place. These SOPs require enforcement teams to record and preserve evidence of vehicles without registration numbers by taking photos or videos.

    Furthermore, enforcement teams must also prepare a daily report of vehicles fined or impounded and send it to the control room.

    Additionally, a fortnightly report of all vehicle challans/impounds, along with their respective Supplier Dealers, shall be presented to RTO/ARTO. This report can then be used to take action against the dealers, which may include forfeiture of their security deposits.

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirnews.in )

  • Jammu and Kashmir: Training for selected Haj Pilgrims – Kashmir News

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    Training for Haj pilgrims of Kupwara to be held on May 2 & 3

    KUPWARA, APRIL 28: According to Assistant Commissioner Revenue Kupwara, the training for Manasik-e-Hajj of selected Haj Pilgrims of District Kupwara will start from 2nd May 2023.

    Accordingly, the training for the pilgrims belonging to the tehsils of Kupwara, Trehgam, Kralpora, Keran, Karnah, Machil, Sogam, Lalpora and Drugmullah will be held at Masjid Murshideen Kupwara on 2nd May 2023 at 10:00 AM.

    Similarly, training for the pilgrims belonging to Handwara, Zachaldara, Ramhall, Langate, Kralgund, Vilgam and Qalamabad tehsils will be held at Jamia Masjid Jadeed Handwara on 3rd May 2023 at 10:00 AM.

    Training for Haj pilgrims of Kulgam to be held on April 29 & May 01

    KULGAM, APRIL 28: All the selected Haj pilgrims of Kulgam, D.H, Pora, Devsar and Pahloo Tehsils are informed that their orientation/ training programme is scheduled to be held at Markazi Jamia Masjid Kulgam on April 29 from 10 AM.

    Whereas training for selected Haj pilgrims from Tehsil Qaimoo, Frisal and Yaripora will be on May 01 at Markazi Jamia Masjid Kulgam from 10 AM.

    All selected Hajj pilgrims from Kulgam are informed to attend this phase of orientation training program as per schedule.

    Training for selected Haj pilgrims of Shopian to be held on May-02

    SHOPIAN, APRIL 28: The first orientation/training programme scheduled for the selected Hajj pilgrims of District Shopian has been fixed by State Hajj committee Srinagar on May 02.

    Accordingly all the selected aspirants of District Shopian have been requested by District Administration to attend the said orientation/ training programme at Jamia Masjid Sharief Shopian on May 02 at 10.00 am onwards.

    All selected Hajj pilgrims are informed to attend this phase of orientation training program as per schedule.

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirnews.in )

  • J&K: City Traffic Police seize 4 sports bikes for violation of rules – Kashmir News

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    City Traffic Police seize 4 sports bikes for violation of rules

    JAMMU, APRIL 28: Taking Strict action Stunt Bikers, Traffic Police City Jammu today seized 4 sports bikes for violation of traffic rules under MV Act.

    SOT Narwal, SI Amritpal Singh seized the sports bikes during a routine checking in the area.

    Meanwhile, Dy. SP Traffic City South, Bikram Kumar has appealed to parents to do counselling of their children and tell them not to indulge in dangerous driving and stunt biking on public roads.

    The SSP traffic City Jammu also stressed upon strict action under M.V Act/rule besides counselling of the public against stunt biking.


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    ( With inputs from : kashmirnews.in )

  • Power shutdown in these Jammu & Kashmir Areas – Kashmir News

    Power shutdown in these Jammu & Kashmir Areas – Kashmir News

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    Power shutdown

    JAMMU, APRIL 28: Chief Engineer (Distribution) JPDCL, Jammu has informed that the power supply to Ghatti, Jakhole, Bakhta, Chainpura, Gura Pandita, Dorsi, Purkhoo, Mishriwala, Chanuchak, part of Domana and adjoining areas shall remain affected on April 29 from 7 am to 11 am.

    Similarly, the power supply to Chakroi, Satraiyn, Pindi, Dadlehar, Chohalla, Badyal Qazian, SKUAST, Kullian, Kotli Shah Dullah, Simbal, Badyal, Kadyal, Abdullian and adjoining areas shall remain affected on April 29 from 7 am to 12 noon.

    Likewise, the power supply to Janglote, Kharote Morh, Janglote Village, PHE Installations, Hospital, Kathua City, AIR, Jammu University Campus, KV School Janglote, Krishna Colony, Indira Colony, Pranta, Padyari and adjoining areas shall remain affected on April 29 from 8 am to 2 pm.

    Meanwhile, Superintending Engineer (Distribution) JPDCL, O&M Circle Kathua has informed that the power supply to Industries under Feeder-II, IV and Rakh PHE shall remain affected on April 30 from 10 am to 2 pm.

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirnews.in )

  • Delivery Boy Steals 10 iPhones By Replacing Them With Dummies – Kashmir News

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    A delivery executive of an e-commerce firm allegedly stole 10 iPhones by replacing them with dummy phones on the way to deliver them to the customer here, police said on Thursday.

    Station in-charge of Matrix Finance Solution, which delivers Amazon’s parcel, Ravi in his complaint alleged that on March 27 delivery executive Lalit was handed over a customer’s parcel, which contained 10 iPhones and an AirPods, at his address, they said.

    However, instead of delivering the parcel, Lalit replaced the iPhones with replicas and sent his brother Manoj to deposit them back to the company claiming that the customer could not be contacted, Ravi said in his complaint.

    Suspecting some tampering with the packaging, the parcel was opened and the delivery company found the fake phones inside, police said.

    Meanwhile, upon not receiving his parcel, the customer also cancelled his order, they said.

    An FIR has been registered against Lalit under sections 420 (cheating), 408 (criminal breach of trust by employee) of the Indian Penal Code at Bilaspur police station on Wednesday, they said.

    Efforts are on to nab the accused who is absconding, they said.

    News Source PTI

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirnews.in )

  • SL vs IRE: Sri Lanka spin wizard Prabath Jayasuriya scripted history, breaks 71-year-old Test record – Kashmir News

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    Sri Lanka’s Prabath Jayasuriya became the quickest spin bowler in Test history to claim 50 wickets on Friday in Galle, breaking a seven-decade record.

    Jayasuriya got to the landmark in his seventh Test match, thereby becoming the joint second-fastest bowler to 50 wickets in the format. England’s Thomas Richardson (1896) and South Africa’s Vernon Philander (2012) got to the feat in seven matches.

    Former West Indies spinner Alf Valentine previously held the record before Jayasuriya stamped his authority. He now shares the rank with South Africa pacer Vernon Philander and former England international Tom Richardson.

    On the other hand, former Australia international Charlie Turner still holds the record of being the fastest bowler to pick 50 wickets, as he did it in just six matches. Notably, he set this record in 1888, and even after 135 years, no one has managed to break it.

     NameTestsYears
    Charlie Turner (AUS)61887-1888
    Prabath Jayasuriya (SL)72022-2023
    Vernon Philander (SA)72011-2012
    Tom Richardson (ENG)71893-1896
    Terry Alderman (AUS)81981
    Rodney Hogg (AUS)81978-1979
    Alf Valentine (WI)81950-1951
    Frederick Spofforth (AUS)81877-1883

    In the first innings of the opening Test in Galle, Jayasuriya had figures of 23-10-52-7. He picked up three wickets in the second innings to finish with a match haul of 10 wickets. Jayasuriya got five wickets in the first innings of the second Test to again stamp his authority.


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    ( With inputs from : kashmirnews.in )

  • Jammu and Kashmir Board of School Education warns private schools of action for misleading students – Kashmir News

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    Jammu and Kashmir Board of School Education warns private schools of action for misleading students

    Srinagar, Apr 28 (KNO): The Jammu and Kashmir Board of School Education (BOSE) has warned all the private schools of action for misleading parents and the students over their affiliation with the Board.

    According to the news agency—Kashmir News Observer (KNO), Secretary JKBOSE has issued a circular to all private academic institutions affiliated with them, cautioning against the use of misleading hoardings.

    As per the circular, the private schools have been accused of duping unsuspecting students by using hoardings that falsely indicate they are affiliated with other recognized boards or imparting studies on other patterns.

    To prevent such fraudulent practices, the circular states that all institutions must install signboards that clearly reflect the name of their institution with the “School Code” along with the name of the affiliating boards as “Jammu and Kashmir Board of School Education” in bold letters.

    To ensure adherence to the circular, the BOSE has directed all Deputy, Assistant, and Incharge Officers of the Sub and Branch Offices of the Kashmir Division to acquire an action taken report with GI-tagged photographic proof from all affiliated academic institutions in their respective domains.

    The schools have been asked to submit the action taken report to the office of the Joint Secretary, General, Kashmir Division, within a period of seven working days.

    An official said the directive is intended to provide the BOSE with firsthand information about the implementation of the circular.

    “Such measures will prevent any further misleading of gullible students and ensure that academic institutions affiliated with the Jammu and Kashmir Board of School Education maintain transparency in their operations,” the Board official said—(KNO)

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirnews.in )