Tag: Sell

  • Two men guilty of conspiring to sell history-changing Anglo-Saxon coins

    Two men guilty of conspiring to sell history-changing Anglo-Saxon coins

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    A jury has found two men guilty of conspiring to illegally sell a cache of Anglo-Saxon coins that experts say helps transform our understanding of ninth-century English history and Alfred the Great.

    Roger Pilling, 75, and Craig Best, 46, were caught in an undercover police operation trying to sell 44 coins which should have been declared as treasure and handed to the crown.

    Craig Best (left) and Roger Pilling had denied the charges against them.
    Craig Best (left) and Roger Pilling had denied the charges against them. Photograph: Will Walker/North News & Pictures

    The monetary value of the coins has been estimated at £766,000, but their historical value is more difficult to quantify.

    The judge, James Adkin, told Durham crown court they had “immense historical significance”. Gareth Williams, the curator of early medieval coins at the British Museum, said: “The coins literally enable us to rewrite history.”

    The coins were part of a Viking hoard discovered in a farm field in Leominster, Herefordshire, in 2015. Two metal detectorists who discovered the hoard, valued at about £12m, were found guilty of theft after failing to legally declare the findings. They were jailed for 10 and eight years respectively.

    Only 29 of around 300 coins in the hoard had been recovered until the emergence of the 44, the subject of the two-week criminal trial in Durham.

    A jury heard that Pilling, from Rossendale, Lancashire, was in possession of the coins knowing they should have been declared. Pilling has never disclosed the full identity of the person he acquired them from.

    Pilling recruited Best, of Bishop Auckland, County Durham, to try to sell the coins. The court heard how Best contacted a US radiology professor at the University of Michigan, Ronald Bude, who was also a collector and lecturer on coins.

    Bude’s first assessment of the coins was that they were fake and he said he was consulting an expert at the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge.

    The prosecution said that displeased Best, who sent an email which read: “They are a hoard as you know they are this can cause me problems all you had to do was say you didn’t want them and that was the end of it.”

    The court heard Best had also told Bude the coins were so good that he would need to fly over for them. In an email he had said: “These coins are big money I will send you a sim card with them all on if you want. I am looking at £200-250k for all of these that’s how good they are.”

    His attempt to sell the coins led to an undercover police operation being set up. Best took three of the coins to a hotel in Durham for a meeting with people he thought were representing a mystery American buyer. Those people were undercover police officers. Best was arrested and a subsequent raid of Pilling’s home recovered a further 41 coins.

    Durham constabulary was first alerted to the existence of the coins by the University of Cambridge. In 2019 it launched Operation Fantail to investigate the case, an operation Det Supt Lee Gosling said was unprecedented for the force.

    “This is an extremely unusual case,” he said. “It is not very often we get the chance to shape British history. It is astonishing that the history books need rewriting because of this find.”

    All 44 coins are now with the British Museum, which has had a chance to study them and concluded that they shine new light on our understanding of late ninth-century politics, Alfred the Great and the history of the formation of England.

    Anglo-Saxon coin found in cache.
    Photograph: Durham police

    Specifically, the coins tell an untold story of the relationship between Alfred, king of Wessex, and Ceolwulf II, king of Mercia, in the late ninth century.

    Ceolwulf is barely mentioned in history books, with accounts suggesting he was little more than a puppet for the Vikings. The coins tell a different story, showing how the two rulers stood shoulder to shoulder as allies.

    They suggest a need to reappraise the narrative of Alfred the Great, a ruler celebrated as the hero who almost single-handedly saved England from Viking rule.

    The crown accused neither Best nor Pilling, who are both keen metal detectorists, of being involved in the discovery of the coins.

    During the trial Best claimed Pilling told him that he bought the coins before the Treasure Act 1996 was brought into law.

    Pilling and Best had denied a charge of conspiring to sell criminal property. Each man also denied separate charges of possessing criminal property.

    On Thursday, the jury found both men guilty of the conspiracy charge by a majority of 10-2. Each man was found guilty of the possession charges by all jurors.

    The judge warned both men they faced jail sentences and remanded them in custody until a later date.

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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • ‘Kannadigas should rebel move to sell Amul milk in Karnataka’: Kumaraswamy

    ‘Kannadigas should rebel move to sell Amul milk in Karnataka’: Kumaraswamy

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    Bengaluru: JD(S) leader H. D. Kumaraswamy on Saturday called upon the people of Karnataka to oppose the move to sell Amul milk in the state.

    “Amul is being pushed into Karnataka from backdoor with the support of the Central government. The Amul is strangulating the Karnataka Milk Federation (KMF) and the farmers. Kannada people should rebel against Amul,” Kumaraswamy, the former chief minister, stated.

    “We as Kannadigas should oppose Amul and protect the interest of Karnataka farmers unitedly. Our people and customers should use Nandini products on priority and save the livelihood of farmers,” he stated.

    MS Education Academy

    The Karnataka government had allotted a big plot to Amul in Koramangala of Bengaluru for cheap price. When the government here had shown such a magnanimous gesture, Amul is “conspiring” against milk producers and KMF, he charged.

    Amul had to be obligated to as during the tenure of former Prime Minister Deve Gowda, special ice cream unit was established in Yelahanka and KMF is till date producing large quantity of ice cream for Amul, Kumaraswamy maintained.

    It is very clear that BJP’s double engine government is planning to push milk producers to streets and “enslave” them to people of Gujarat. The “suspicious silence” of the Karnataka BJP government and KMF has led to many suspicions, Kumaraswamy stated.

    Amul is planning to give competition to Nandini which is not required and weaken Nandini brand. The “unhealthy” competition between two cooperatives is uncalled for, he said.

    “The Amul management is bent on finishing off Kannadigas and KMF. Amul wants to stop its only competitor Nandini on its own turf. One nation, one Amul, one milk , one Gujarat seems to be the official stand of the Central government,” Kumaraswamy alleged.

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    #Kannadigas #rebel #move #sell #Amul #milk #Karnataka #Kumaraswamy

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • HMDA gears up to sell 1 BHK, 2 BHK flats in Hyderabad

    HMDA gears up to sell 1 BHK, 2 BHK flats in Hyderabad

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    Hyderabad: Are you looking for 1 BHK, or 2 BHK flats in Hyderabad? If yes, avail of the opportunity that is being provided by the Hyderabad Metropolitan Development Authority (HMDA).

    HMDA is gearing up to allot Rajiv Swagruha flats available at Bandlaguda and Pocharam. There are a total of 904 flats available for sale in both locations in Hyderabad.

    At Bandlaguda, Hyderabad, 233 1BHK flats are available for sale whereas, at Pocharam, 254 1BHK and 417 2BHK flats are ready.

    Cost of flats in Hyderabad

    The average cost of the 1 BHK flat with an average area of 545 sq. feet at Bandlaguda is Rs. 15 lakhs. However, 1 BHK Sr. Citizen flats with an average area of 653 sq. feet in the same area cost Rs 18 lakh. In Pucharam, the costs of 1 BHK and 2 BHK with average areas of 760 sq. feet and 520 sq. feet are Rs 19 lakh and Rs 13 lakh respectively.

    Once satisfied with the flat and the spot, the applicants have to pay an initial deposit of Rs. 1 lakh for 1 BHK flat and Rs 2 lakh for 2 BHK flats in Hyderabad.

    The amount has to be paid in the form of a DD in favor of the Metropolitan Commissioner, HMDA, payable at Hyderabad. It has to be submitted in the office of the Managing Director, Telangana Rajiv Swagruha Corporation Limited, Urdugally, Stree No. 17, Himayathnagar, Hyderabad on or before March 25, 2023.

    Within 60 days of the allotment, 80 percent of the total cost need to be paid and the rest can be paid within 90 days of the allotment.

    For site details, contact G. Ravinder Reddy, AE at his cellphone number 9133366750 for flats in Pocharam and Anil Kumar Reddy, AE by dialing 91333366746 for flats in Bandlaguda, Hyderabad.

    Is buying 1 BHK, 2 BHK flats in Hyderabad a better option?

    For homebuyers in Hyderabad, choosing between a plot or a flat can be a daunting task. While both options have their advantages, buying a flat in Hyderabad may be a better choice for several reasons.

    Firstly, flats come equipped with various features like security, parking, and elevators, making them a convenient and comfortable option. Secondly, flats have a better resale value compared to plots as they are in high demand due to the growing population and migration.

    Moreover, flats are a more affordable option compared to plots, making them an ideal choice for first-time homebuyers, especially those who are looking for 1 BHK or 2 BHK flats in Hyderabad.

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    #HMDA #gears #sell #BHK #BHK #flats #Hyderabad

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Hyderabad braces for Lucky Ali’s concert, tickets sell out fast – Exclusive

    Hyderabad braces for Lucky Ali’s concert, tickets sell out fast – Exclusive

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    Hyderabad: Singer Lucky Ali, who has given us timeless classics like ‘O Sanam’, ‘Ek Pal Ka Jeena’, ‘Na Tum Jaano Na Hum’ and ‘Kitni Haseen Zindagi Hai Yeh’, has always been a crowd favourite. And now, Hyderabadis are in for a treat as the legendary singer is all set to perform in their city this weekend on March 4.

    As the countdown to the concert begins, the excitement among the music lovers and his fans in the city is only set to grow. Speaking to Siasat.com, the event organisers (Sound Worth.io) said that the excitement among the fans is palpable as the ticket sales have witnessed a significant surge in the last 2-3 days.

    The organizers told us that the tickets for the concert are selling like hotcakes and the event is expected to be a full-house show.

    The concert is set to take place at Hitext Exhibition Centre in Kothaguda and the organizers are leaving no stone unturned to make it a grand affair and a memorable night for everyone in attendance. They have promised a high-energy performance by Lucky Ali and his band, and a spectacular stage setup that will add to the overall experience.

    Fans are eagerly looking forward to the concert, and many have taken to social media to express their excitement.

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    #Hyderabad #braces #Lucky #Alis #concert #tickets #sell #fast #Exclusive

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • UK PM Rishi Sunak tours Northern Ireland to sell his new Brexit deal

    UK PM Rishi Sunak tours Northern Ireland to sell his new Brexit deal

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    London: British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak on Tuesday said he is “over the moon” with the Brexit agreement inked with the European Union (EU) aimed at resolving long-standing trade issues in the region.

    Sunak is currently touring Northern Ireland to sell the new “Windsor Framework” agreed between the UK and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen in Windsor on Monday, which replaces the controversial Northern Ireland Protocol which caused trade disputes and severely strained UK-EU relations.

    Sunak later made a statement in the House of Commons to declare that the new deal delivers “free-flowing trade” for UK territory Northern Ireland with the rest of Britain by “removing any sense of the border in the Irish Sea” and creates a red lane system to resolve issues with bordering EU member-state Ireland.

    “I’m really pleased in fact, I’m over the moon that yesterday we managed to have a decisive breakthrough with our negotiations with the EU,” Sunak told local business representatives gathered at the Coca-Cola factory in County Antrim in Northern Ireland as he took questions from them on the framework.

    “It’s about stability in Northern Ireland. It’s about real people and real businesses. It’s about showing that our Union, which has lasted for centuries, can and will endure. And it’s about breaking down the barriers between us,” he said.

    Sunak insisted that the new framework puts the people of Northern Ireland in charge with active democratic consent by adding a new “Stormont Brake”.

    This indicates that the devolved Parliament at Stormont in Belfast, backed by the UK, can veto new EU goods laws not supported by all communities in Northern Ireland.

    The agreement concluded months of intensive discussions between the UK and EU to address problems with the Northern Ireland Protocol, agreed by former British prime minister Boris Johnson, who was conspicuously absent from the Commons session on Monday, as the Opposition repeatedly criticised his handling of the issue.

    In a swipe at Sunak’s former boss, Labour Party Leader Keir Starmer said, “The Member for Uxbridge and South Ruislip [Boris Johnson] told the people of Northern Ireland that his protocol meant ‘no forms, no checks, no barriers of any kind’ on goods crossing the Irish Sea after Brexit.”

    “That was nonsense. A point-blank refusal to engage with unionists in Northern Ireland in good faith, never mind taking their concerns seriously. And it inevitably contributed to the collapse of power-sharing in Northern Ireland,” Starmer said.

    He urged Sunak to be “utterly unlike his predecessor” and not pretend the deal is something it is not.

    Overall, Sunak’s statement in parliament was greeted with praise from his Conservative Party MPs and many in the opposition. The reaction of the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), which had withdrawn from the Northern Irish devolved government process over the Protocol, now remains crucial to the new Windsor Framework working in the long term. While the regional party said it is studying the deal’s fine print before giving its verdict, Sunak’s tour of the region is intended to build consensus on all sides.

    “Parties will want to consider the agreement in detail, a process that will need time and care. And there are, of course, many voices and perspectives within Northern Ireland, and it is the job of the government to respect them all,” Sunak said in Parliament.

    “As a Conservative, a Brexiteer, and a Unionist, I believe passionately with my head and my heart that it is the right way forward, right for Northern Ireland, and right for our United Kingdom,” he said.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Hyderabad Metropolitan Development Authority to sell open plots – Registration begins

    Hyderabad Metropolitan Development Authority to sell open plots – Registration begins

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    Hyderabad: Hyderabad Metropolitan Development Authority (HMDA) is going to conduct an e-auction of 123 open plots located on the outskirts of the city. The auction will be conducted on March 2, 3, and 6.

    The authority has set different upset prices based on the location. For the open plots at Bachupally, outskirts of Hyderabad, the price is Rs. 25000 per square yard whereas, for plots at Medipally, it is Rs. 32000 per square yard.

    For plots at both Medipally and Bachupally, outskirts of Hyderabad, the auction will be conducted on March 2 & 3 and March 6 respectively. The EMD amount for plots at both places is Rs 1, 00, 000.

    The sizes of the plots vary. At Bachupally, the size is 267-497 square yards whereas, at Medipally, the size is 300 sq. yards.

    LocationDistrictNumber of plotsPlots size (in sq. yards)Last date for registrationPre-bid meetingMinimum upset price (Rs per sq. yards)EMD amountE-auction date
    BachupallyMedchal-Malkajgiri73267-497Feb 28Feb 1725000100000March 2 and 3
    MedipallyMedchal-Malkajgiri50300March 2Feb 2032000100000March 6
    MannegudaRangareddy102235-300March 4Feb 2430000100000March 9 and 10
    MunaganoorRangareddy133157-453March 9Feb 2820000100000March 13, 14 and 15
    KawadipallyRangareddy91182-418March 14March 41000050000March 16 and 17

    TSIIC plots in neighbouring district of Hyderabad

    Meanwhile, Telangana State Industrial Infrastructure Corporation (TSIIC) plots located in Rangareddy, the neighbouring district of Hyderabad will be auctioned in March. A total of 326 plots will be out for e-auction. These plots are located in Manneguda, Munaganoor and Kawadipally.

    The minimum upset price ranges from Rs 10,000 to Rs 30, 000 and their auction will be conducted on March 9, 10, 13, 14, 15, 16 and 17. The EMD amount for Manneguda and Munaganoor is Rs 1, 00, 000 whereas, for Kawadipally, it is Rs 50, 000.

    Those who are interested in the e-auction of the plots located in the area that falls under the Hyderabad Metropolitan Development Authority and TSIIC need to register online by paying a non-refundable registration fee of Rs 1180.

    Registration for e-auction of plots

    For the e-auction of plots in Medipally and Bachupally, outskirts of Hyderabad, registrations can be done on the HMDA website (click here). The registrations for the e-auction of plots located in the Rangareddy district can be done on the TSIIC website (click here).

    All the plots are not only free from litigation but also have good road connectivity. Apart from this, infrastructural works related to internal roads and street lights will be completed in 18 months.

    For site visits of HMDA plots, cellphone numbers 9441740306 or 7331149457 can be dialled. In case of queries, dial 7396345623 or 7601063358. In the case of TSIIC plots, cellphone numbers 8186870687 or 9177527213 or 9701452763 or 9441218461 or 9666665401 can be dialled.

    Are flats in Hyderabad better option for homebuyers?

    For those considering buying a home in Hyderabad, the decision between investing in a plot or an apartment can be quite challenging. While flats in Hyderabad have their own advantages, investing in a plot has several benefits worth considering.

    One of the significant advantages of buying an open plot in and around Hyderabad is the assurance of a premium, independent lifestyle and complete ownership of the land. Unlike flats, plots offer the possibility of a private and more spacious living environment without sharing land space with others.

    Moreover, owning a plot gives buyers the option to design and construct their dream home with personal preferences in mind, including a backyard and ample parking space. In addition, plots tend to appreciate more than flats, providing a bigger resale value in the long run.

    Overall, while both options have their unique benefits, buying a plot in Hyderabad can be a sound investment choice for those seeking a more private, personalized, and appreciating asset.

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    #Hyderabad #Metropolitan #Development #Authority #sell #open #plots #Registration #begins

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Trump’s White House accomplishments aren’t so easy to sell on the campaign trail

    Trump’s White House accomplishments aren’t so easy to sell on the campaign trail

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    Elsewhere, Trump has praised the anti-abortion movement and his role in picking conservative justices, but has also criticized some leaders in that movement for not doing enough in the 2022 midterm election. He has also said the issue was “poorly handled” by Republicans, pointing to members and candidates who advocated for no exceptions to bans on abortion.

    Trump’s team believes that he can thread the needle between touting the work he did in facilitating the end of Roe while staying on the popular side of public opinion about abortion restrictions.

    “Especially in the primary, it’s a very strong talking point for the president. He’s got a good record, and he’s on good ground going into the primary and general election,” said John McLaughlin, a Republican pollster who advises Trump. “His position since he ran for office and since he was in office has been consistent.”

    But navigating those twin achievements from his time in office could become tricky to handle over the course of a potential primary and general election run. Trump has begun taking steps to try and maneuver that political landscape.

    At the Council for National Policy summit last weekend at Trump Doral in Miami, he called in to praise the group’s work promoting conservative policies and touted his anti-abortion legacy, according to a recording of the call shared with POLITICO. The call came amid reports that evangelicals and pro-life leaders have been keeping their options open going into the 2024 Republican primary.

    “We appointed 300 judges. We appointed, as you know, the three Supreme Court judges that made your whole right to life, and everybody was trying to get this for many, many years, for many, many decades, and we were able to get that done. And we’re very proud of it, and it was a tremendous tribute to many of the people in the room that worked so hard with us,” Trump said in the roughly five-minute call. “But it was the whole pro-life movement. They say I’m the most pro-life president in American history.”

    Steve Cheung, a Trump campaign spokesperson, called the former president’s record “unmatched” when it came to “nominating pro-life federal judges and Supreme Court justices that overturned Roe v. Wade.” Of his boss, he added, “there has been no bigger advocate for the [anti-abortion] movement.”

    Trump is not the only Republican grappling with the issues of vaccines and abortion.

    His only official challenger in the race, Nikki Haley, ignored the latter issue in her launch speech but was confronted on it after in interviews. Haley, who has said she is “pro-life” because of her experiences as a mother and as governor of South Carolina, signed a law banning abortions past 20 weeks, said she would not support a “full-out federal ban” on abortion, but wouldn’t articulate exactly what she would stand behind now, only saying that there should be “consensus” on when exactly abortion should be banned.

    The issue confronting both Haley and Trump is that any abortion policy stance that plays well in a primary may present problems in a general election. While only 35 percent of Republicans said they disagreed with the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade, the decision is overall unpopular among Americans, with a majority — 56 percent — saying they did not support the decision, according to a recent Ipsos poll.

    Trump could be rewarded by GOP voters for putting conservatives on the Supreme Court. But Erick Erickson, a conservative radio host who does not plan to endorse any candidate in the GOP primaries, said the former president had an altogether different “vulnerability” on the topic: “that it is no longer an issue.”

    “The conservative voters don’t need Donald Trump now to put conservatives on the court, he did it. If anything, he’s kind of hurt himself among social conservatives after Dobbs, by coming out and saying maybe it wasn’t a good idea,” Erickson said.

    The more complicated issue, Trump allies say, will be how he navigates his role in the Covid-19 pandemic. Privately, Trump has expressed pride in the historic efforts to produce a vaccine. But he is also quite aware that the far-right has made vaccinations and especially mandates a toxic issue. He was personally booed for telling a crowd he had gotten a booster shot.

    Cheung called Operation Warp Speed a “once-in-a-lifetime initiative that gave people the option of utilizing therapeutics if they wished to do so.” But he also stressed that Trump “fought against any attempt to federalize the pandemic response by protecting every state’s right to ultimately decide what is best for their people because of the unique challenges each state faced.”

    Since launching his campaign, Trump has attacked another likely 2024 political foe, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis for trying to “rewrite history” on his coronavirus response. Trump’s campaign has built up an arsenal of video clips showing DeSantis as supportive of the Covid vaccine even as he has become favored by the anti-vaccine right. The video moments include DeSantis personally greeting a FedEx truck with the first batch of Pfizer vaccines arriving in Florida.

    And one person close to the campaign suggested trying to turn former Vice President Mike Pence and Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner into the faces of Operation Warp Speed, noting that they had leadership roles in the vaccine’s development. But it’s unclear just how effective those lines of attack would be as time passes since the pandemic.

    “There may be a small faction in the Republican Party that this applies to, but I don’t see how many Republicans are going to hold it against anyone for promoting the vaccine back in 2020, whether it was Trump, DeSantis or anyone,” said Matt Wolking, a former Trump campaign official and Republican strategist. “The true hardcore anti-vaccine [crowd is] found on the right and the left and it’s been that way for decades. So I think most Republicans are going to continue to advocate for personal choice and not mandates.”

    But distrust of the Covid-19 vaccine — not just the mandates — has been a central theme of far-right broadcasts, including Steve Bannon’s “War Room” podcast, which regularly features skeptics on the show. Bannon, a former Trump strategist, has called vaccines and vaccine mandates a “major issue” for Republican voters and Trump’s base. He has warned against Trump leaning into his role promoting the development of the vaccine.

    Still, McLaughlin said he doesn’t see any risk to how Trump handles the vaccine. Some conservative voters may recoil at it. But, he said, the more significant dynamic was that the issue itself was no longer as animating as it once was.

    “I think people have moved on,” McLaughlin said. “I think there are more pressing issues that people are looking at. When you talk to the average person, they’re struggling to buy food or buy gas.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Drone maker offers to sell 2 Reapers to Ukraine for $1

    Drone maker offers to sell 2 Reapers to Ukraine for $1

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    The Ukrainian government had recently renewed its push for the drones, which can fly farther than 1,100 miles while carrying laser-guided munitions and advanced optics for long-range surveillance.

    Despite General Atomics’ offer to transfer the two drones, “there are limits to what an American defense company can do to support a situation such as this,” CEO Linden Blue said in a statement. “From our perspective, it is long past time to enable Ukrainian forces with the information dominance required to win this war.”

    Blue indicated some frustration with the refusal of the U.S. to greenlight sending the drones, which POLITICO had previously reported had already won approval from the Air Force.

    “We have offered to train Ukrainian operators on these systems at no cost to U.S. taxpayers or the Ukrainian government,” Blue continued. “We have offered flexible options and recommendations for delivery. We have discussed the situation endlessly at every level of the U.S. federal government, and with many international partners.”

    A spokesperson at the Pentagon did not immediately return a request for comment.

    The Air Force first floated the idea of transferring some of its repairs about a month after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and there have been some discussions over sending the Army’s version, the Gray Eagle, as well.

    The Air Force has been trying to scrap older versions of its Reaper fleet for years in order to redirect money to buy and operate more cutting-edge technology, but Congress has rejected the proposal each time.

    The Air Force is already operating the aircraft in Europe. Last year, the Air Force began flying Reaper missions from Romania.

    A person familiar with the negotiations said Ukraine had offered to share the intelligence it gathered from Reaper flights with the U.S., as well as any battle damage assessments after strikes, to no avail.

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    #Drone #maker #offers #sell #Reapers #Ukraine
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Luke Skywalker to sell signed Star Wars posters for Ukraine: May the funds be with you!

    Luke Skywalker to sell signed Star Wars posters for Ukraine: May the funds be with you!

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    Press play to listen to this article

    Voiced by artificial intelligence.

    Love Star Wars? Hate Vladimir Putin? Then there’s good news as Luke Skywalker is to start selling signed posters to raise cash for maintaining the Ukrainian army’s drone supply.

    “We decided to sign Star Wars posters, a limited amount,” Mark Hamill, the actor who played Skywalker in the iconic movies, told POLITICO in an exclusive interview. “For real hardcore collectors — especially those that have disposable income — you can get way more money … than you would imagine.”

    Exactly how the posters will be put up for sale is yet to be finalized, but the idea of “having hundreds and thousands of people enter [a competition or auction], that’s smart,” Hamill said.

    The poster sale is expected to start next week and comes ahead of the one-year anniversary of the war in Ukraine on February 24, with Ukraine’s Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov saying Russia is planning a major offensive.

    This really is the return of the Jedi — Hamill revealed he hasn’t sold autographed items since 2017, when “Star Wars: The Last Jedi” came out. “It’s just not something I do,” he said, adding that he is happy to do it to support Ukraine, whose ongoing fight against Russia is “nothing short of inspirational.”

    Hamill said that something he learned from the world(s) of Star Wars is doing the “right thing for the good of everyone, rather than being all about self-interest,” adding that comparing the two worlds shouldn’t trivialize “the true horrors of what Ukrainians face.”

    “One is really a fairy tale for children, originally that’s what Star Wars was. And the reality, the stark reality of what’s going on in Ukraine, is harrowing.”

    GettyImages 1245884318
    Ukrainian servicemen fly a drone on the outskirts of Bakhmut, eastern Ukraine | Sameer Al-Doumy/AFP via Getty Images

    The money raised from the sale of the posters will go to the Ukrainian fundraising platform United24. Hamill became an ambassador for the platform’s “Army of Drones” project in September after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy personally asked him to join the fight against “the empire of evil,” as he labeled Russia — a reference to the Galactic Empire, the brutal dictatorship led by evil Palpatine in the Star Wars saga.

    The actor says he is “thrilled” that the fundraising project has evolved to this “massive, worldwide event,” saying that “anything I can do, however small it is, is something I feel obligated to do.”

    The “Army of Drones” involves drone procurement, maintenance and training, as the drones are used to monitor the frontline, according to the project’s website. “Drones are so vital in this conflict. They are the eyes in the sky. They protect the border, they monitor,” Hamill said.

    The project is a joint venture between the Ukrainian Armed Forces, the Ministry of Digital Transformation and United24. The latter was set up by Zelenskyy and has so far raised more than €252 million.

    Other celebrities — including the band Imagine Dragons and the singer and actress Barbra Streisand — have also been named ambassadors for the platform.

    “The light will win over darkness. I believe in this, our people believe in this,” Zelenskyy told Hamill during a video call last year, thanking him for supporting the Ukrainian people.

    CORRECTION: This story has been updated to correct the amount of money raised by United24.



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    #Luke #Skywalker #sell #signed #Star #Wars #posters #UkraineMay #funds
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.eu )

  • ‘A Hard Sell’: Can Biden’s DOJ really shatter Google’s grip on digital ads?

    ‘A Hard Sell’: Can Biden’s DOJ really shatter Google’s grip on digital ads?

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    justice department google 73113

    While ambitious, the latest Google case fits squarely under current antitrust law, said Bill Kovacic, a former Federal Trade Commission chair and current professor at the George Washington University Law School. “These aren’t strange concepts,” he said. “The case has a coherent story, and it’s zeroing on missed opportunities from the past.”

    Kovacic led the FTC during its review of Google’s acquisition of DoubleClick, the ad tech company Google bought in 2007. DoubleClick was the initial centerpiece of Google’s then-burgeoning digital ad empire, and the FTC agreed at the time to let the deal through without conditions. The deal gave Google the ability to help websites sell ad space, as well as an exchange matching websites and advertisers. But in hindsight, Kovacic said he would have sought to block it. Separately from DoubleClick, the FTC also declined to bring an antitrust case against Google over some of the same conduct currently being scrutinized, but Kovacic left the FTC by the time that decision was made.

    Kovacic said that had the FTC tried to block the deal in the late Bush or early Obama years, even if it ultimately lost, “we would not be having the same conversation we’re having now about whether antitrust regulators blundered so badly in dealing with tech.” Even an unsuccessful case would have sent a message to Silicon Valley that regulators were watching, and would have also given the public a better understanding of competition in complex tech markets, he said.

    While Tuesday’s case was filed by the Biden administration’s antitrust division, led by progressive Assistant Attorney General Jonathan Kanter, it’s the continuation of work started under a department run by former Attorney General Bill Barr. It also largely tracks a case brought by Republican Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton in December 2020.

    Tuesday’s lawsuit seeks to break up Google’s ad tech business, forcing divestitures of key components. Google owns many of the most widely-used tools that advertisers and publishers use to sell space and place ads online. It also owns AdX, one of the most widely used exchanges that match advertisers and publishers in automatic auctions occurring in the milliseconds it takes to load a webpage.

    Both the DOJ and Texas-led cases accuse Google of conflicts of interest by working on behalf of publishers and advertisers as well as operating the leading electronic advertising exchange that matches the two, and selling its own ad space on sites like YouTube.

    Google rejects the assertion that it’s an illegal monopolist. In a blog post published Tuesday, Dan Taylor, Google’s vice president for global ads, claimed the DOJ is ignoring “the enormous competition in the online advertising industry.” Taylor pointed to evidence suggesting that Amazon’s ad business is growing faster than Google’s, and suggested that Microsoft, TikTok, Disney and Walmart are all rapidly expanding their own digital ad offerings.

    Not everyone agrees that the DOJ’s newest Google case falls squarely under traditional antitrust law. “The (Google) complaint alleges some traditional concerns like acquisitions and inducing exclusivity, and others like deception where there’s clear room to extend the law,” said Daniel Francis, a former deputy director of the FTC’s Bureau of Competition who’s now a law professor at NYU. “But it also includes some allegations, like self-preferencing, that — at least on traditional views — don’t seem to violate existing law.”

    “To a generally conservative and skeptical judiciary, that’s going to be a hard sell,” he added.

    Francis played a key role in shaping the FTC’s ongoing lawsuit to unwind Meta’s deals for Instagram and WhatsApp, which initially included allegations the company favored its products over rivals that rely on its platform, a practice known as self-preferencing. A judge threw out the self-preferencing allegations in the Meta complaint.

    In addition to allegations that Google broke antitrust law by preferencing its own products over those of its competitors, the DOJ claims that instances where the company refused to conduct business with rivals also constitute antitrust violations. Tech platforms self-preferencing and refusing to work with rivals are both issues that lawmakers unsuccessfully attempted to address last Congress. While current antitrust law can be used to police such conduct, the cases are difficult and rarely brought by regulators. That makes for a challenging road for the DOJ and states — though that’s not necessarily a bad thing, particularly if it means greater insight into how federal courts may approach competition issues in the digital space.

    Francis compared the new Google case to the FTC’s recent challenge to Microsoft’s takeover of video game maker Activision Blizzard, saying the former is much more on the outer bounds of antitrust law. While some questioned FTC Chair Lina Khan’s decision to bring the case, Francis said that complaint “asserts a traditional theory of harm: it’s just a bit light on details of how that theory applies.”

    Given some of its more novel claims, Francis said the new Google case is likely to be instructive regardless of its outcome. “[T]his new case is going to teach us about the meaning of monopolization in digital markets,” Francis said.

    It’s not so out there

    Florian Ederer, an economics professor at Yale University who specializes in antitrust policy, disagreed with the notion that judges will scoff at the DOJ’s latest push. “It has a trifecta of antitrust concerns,” he said: allegations against Google’s business conduct in the digital market, evidence of a pattern of supposedly anticompetitive acquisitions and signs that Google sought to block emerging competitors.

    In fact, Ederer specifically called out the FTC’s cases against both the Activision Blizzard deal and Meta’s purchase of virtual reality firm Within as closer to the boundaries of antitrust law, given that they are trying to preserve competition in markets that barely exist yet (cloud gaming and virtual reality, respectively). The FTC is “swinging for the fences’’ in those cases, Ederer said. Not so for the DOJ’s new ad tech case against Google, which Ederer said is “very economics-based.” It’s “not based on newfangled theories [such as] killer acquisitions,” he said, referring to the concept of companies buying competitors solely to eliminate a threat. Ederer himself is a proponent of such newfangled theories on killer acquisitions.

    “That doesn’t mean it will be easy to win,” Ederer said. “It’s big, it’s ambitious, but it’s not a Hail Mary.”

    No easy solution

    Google is now facing five different antitrust lawsuits in the United States, including challenges to its internet search engine and its mobile app store. Those cases are in four different courts before four different judges. Two are set for trial later this year.

    Each case is in a different federal circuit court before different judges as well, including the DOJ and Texas advertising cases (Texas is the Second Circuit Court of Appeals, and the DOJ is the Fourth Circuit), meaning different case law would apply to similar conduct.

    Despite the lawsuits stretching back to 2020, Google has just begun its factual arguments in court, with motions to throw out the search-related cases. No judge has ruled on the underlying merits of any of the cases.

    If the ad tech cases ever reached the point of divestiture, breaking up the business would be a difficult task that would likely take years, especially since Google will likely litigate each step, Ederer said. Plus, “Who is going to buy it that would not also run into antitrust hurdles?” Furthermore, figuring out remedies for Google’s separate but related search and mobile business at roughly the same time tees up even more hurdles, he said. “It’s really unprecedented.”

    In an effort to settle the DOJ case, Google offered to separate its advertising business from the rest of the company, while still keeping it under the Alphabet parent company. But that was rejected by the government, according to a person with knowledge of the matter.

    It will take years for the myriad Google cases to make their way through U.S. courts, Kovacic said. “And of course Google is being chased around by a whole host of foreign governments as well. There’s a form of regulatory swarming taking place,” he said.

    In Europe, Google is facing the Digital Markets Act, which when fully enforced in 2024 will make much of the conduct challenged in the various U.S. lawsuits illegal, full stop. EU regulators also have their own ongoing antitrust investigation of Google’s advertising business.

    “It’s a tremendous distraction from running the company, even for one with Google’s resources,” Kovacic said. “If you are Google, you begin to wonder what is the way out of this swamp?”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )