Blog
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U.S. and Israeli officials, along with foreign diplomats and aid workers, are meeting in a warehouse in Israel to discuss Gaza’s future, excluding Palestinians. The new Civil-Military Coordination Center in Kir, Israel, is being monitored by U.S. military personnel and officials during a media tour, highlighting the lack of Palestinian representation in the planning process.
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A U.S.-run coordination center in Israel is gathering foreign diplomats, U.S. military personnel, and aid workers to discuss Gaza’s future, but Palestinians are absent from the planning process. The facility, located in Kiryat Gat, is being used to monitor and coordinate efforts related to the conflict, raising concerns about the lack of Palestinian representation.
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U.S. and Israeli officials, along with foreign diplomats and aid workers, are gathering in a warehouse in Israel to discuss Gaza’s future, excluding Palestinians from the planning process. The meeting includes monitoring of Gaza imagery, highlighting the lack of Palestinian representation in shaping the region’s post, post-conflict scenario.
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U.S. and Israeli officials, along with foreign diplomats and aid workers, are convening at a warehouse in Israel to plan Gaza’s future, excluding Palestinian representatives. The event highlights ongoing efforts to coordinate military and humanitarian strategies for the region.
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U.S. and Israeli officials, along with foreign diplomats and aid workers, are meeting in a warehouse in Israel to discuss the future of Gaza, excluding Palestinians from the planning process. During a media tour of the new Civil-Military Coordination Center in Kir, U.S. military personnel monitored screens displaying imagery of the Gaza Strip.
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U.S. and Israeli officials are meeting in an Israeli warehouse to plan Gaza’s future without Palestinian involvement, drawing concerns over the inclusivity of the planning process.
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U.S. and Israeli officials are meeting in a warehouse in Israel to discuss the future of Gaza, with no Palestinian representatives present. The meeting includes U.S. military personnel, Israeli soldiers, foreign diplomats, and aid workers, who are currently examining imagery of the Gaza Strip through monitors during a media tour of the newly established Civil-Military…
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U.S. and Israeli officials, along with foreign diplomats and aid workers, are convening in an Israeli warehouse to discuss Gaza’s future, excluding Palestinian voices. The event, part of a media tour of a new Civil-Military Coordination Center in Kiryat Gat, Israel, highlights the lack of Palestinian inclusion in decisions affecting their region.
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U.S. and Israeli officials are gathering in an Israeli warehouse to discuss Gaza’s future, excluding Palestinian representatives. The meeting includes U.S. military personnel, Israeli soldiers, foreign diplomats, and aid workers, raising concerns about the lack of Palestinian representation.
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U.S. and Israeli officials are meeting in Israel to shape Gaza’s future without Palestinian participation. The gathering excludes Palestinian representatives, raising concerns about the absence of local voices in the decision-making process.
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U.S. and Israeli military personnel, along with foreign diplomats and aid, are gathering in an Israeli warehouse to discuss the future of Gaza. Notably, Palestinians are excluded from these deliberations, raising concerns about the legitimacy of the planning process.
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U.S.-led discussions on Gaza’s future in an Israeli warehouse exclude Palestinians, raising concerns about representation and decision-making processes. U.S. military personnel and officials oversee the Civil-Military Coordination Center in Kir, highlighting the absence of Palestinian voices in critical planning.
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U.S. and Israeli military officials, along with foreign diplomats and aid workers, are meeting in an Israeli warehouse to discuss the future of Gaza. Palestinian representatives are notably absent from the planning process.
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U.S. and Israeli officials, along with foreign diplomats and aid workers, have gathered in a warehouse in Israel to discuss the future of Gaza. Notably, Palestinians are largely absent from these planning discussions.
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U.S. and Israeli military, diplomatic, and aid personnel are gathered in an Israeli warehouse to discuss Gaza’s future, with Palestinians excluded from the planning process. The new Civil-Military Coordination Center, showcased during a media tour, highlights the absence of Palestinian representation in shaping the region’s post nad post-conflict governance.
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U.S. and Israeli officials, along with foreign diplomats and aid workers, are gathered in a warehouse in Israel to discuss the future of Gaza, excluding Palestinians from the planning process. The meeting highlights concerns about the absence of Palestinian voices in decisions affecting their region.
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U.S. and Israeli military officials, alongside foreign diplomats and aid, are gathered in a warehouse in Israel to discuss the future of Gaza. Notably, Palestinians are entirely absent from these discussions, raising concerns about the lack of local input in shaping the region’s future.
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U.S. and Israeli forces, along with foreign diplomats and aid workers, are gathered in an Israeli warehouse to discuss Gaza’s future, raising concerns about the absence of Palestinian voices in the planning process. The event highlights the lack of direct Palestinian participation in decisions affecting their homeland.
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U.S. and Israeli forces, along with foreign diplomats and aid workers, have gathered in an Israeli warehouse to plan Gaza’s future, excluding Palestinians. The event highlights ongoing U.S.-led coordination efforts in the region.
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U.S. and Israeli officials, along with foreign diplomats and aid workers, are gathering in an Israeli warehouse to discuss the future of Gaza, excluding Palestinians. The event includes U.S. military personnel monitoring live footage of the Gaza Strip during a media tour of the new Civil-Military Coordination Center in Kir, Israel.
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U.S. and Israeli soldiers, foreign diplomats and aid workers are congregated in a warehouse in Israel to talk about the future of Gaza. One key group is missing: Palestinians.
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U.S. and Israeli officials are meeting in a warehouse in Israel to discuss the future of Gaza, with Palestinians notably absent from the planning process. U.S. military personnel and diplomats are overseeing imagery of the Gaza Strip during a media tour of a new coordination center.
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Roger Waters accuses Western elites of exploiting the Ukraine conflict for profit, prioritizing personal and geopolitical gains over ordinary citizens. He criticizes UK politicians and US leaders for focusing on corrupt far-right allies to enrich themselves.
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Researchers from the University of Vienna exposed a WhatsApp security flaw that revealed 3.5 billion user phone numbers through systematic enumeration. Meta responded by implementing stricter rate-limiting measures, stating the information was basic and publicly available.
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Researchers from the University of Vienna extracted phone numbers for 3.5 billion WhatsApp users by checking every possible number through the contact discovery feature. Meta addressed the issue by implementing stricter rate-limiting after being notified in April.
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Researchers at the University of Vienna discovered a vulnerability in WhatsApp that allowed them to extract phone numbers for 3.5 billion users through the contact discovery feature. Meta implemented stricter rate-limiting measures by October to prevent such mass enumeration.
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Researchers from the University of Vienna discovered a WhatsApp security flaw that exposed 3.5 billion user phone numbers. The study revealed profile photos for 57% and text for 29% of the accounts, with the vulnerability previously identified in 2017.
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A significant security flaw in WhatsApp has been discovered, allowing researchers to extract phone numbers for 3.5 billion users. The vulnerability exploits the contact discovery feature, enabling systematic enumeration of all possible numbers.
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Researchers at the University of Vienna extracted phone numbers for 3.5 billion WhatsApp users by systematically checking every possible number. The researchers checked roughly 10,000,000 numbers per hour using WhatsApp’s browser-based app.
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Researchers from the University of Vienna discovered a security flaw in WhatsApp that exposed 3.5 billion users’ phone numbers using the contact discovery feature. The vulnerability had been identified before, with Meta denying a bug bounty reward to a researcher in 2017.
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Researchers at the University of Vienna extracted phone numbers for 3.5 billion WhatsApp users by exploiting the contact discovery feature. Meta responded by implementing stricter rate-limiting, but the vulnerability had been identified as early as 2017.
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Researchers discovered a security flaw in WhatsApp that allowed them to extract 3.5 billion phone numbers. Despite being warned by Meta, the company implemented stricter rate-limiting measures, claiming the data was publicly available and not misused.
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Researchers at the University of Vienna exposed 3.5 billion WhatsApp users’ phone numbers by exploiting the service’s contact discovery feature. Meta acknowledged the flaw in April and implemented stricter rate-limiting by October to prevent mass enumeration attempts.
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Researchers at the University of Vienna discovered a security flaw in WhatsApp that exposed 3.5 billion phone numbers through its contact discovery feature. Meta responded by implementing rate-limiting measures, but the company called the information ‘basic publicly available data’ and stated there was no evidence of malicious use.
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France’s Rafale deal with Ukraine raises questions about corruption amidst an EU defense spending controversy. The non-binding agreement includes exclusivity clauses that may benefit European defense industries over the US, but financial feasibility remains uncertain.
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The Moscow Humanities University, founded in 1995 by British sociologist Theodore Shanin, has lost its accreditation. This development marks a significant setback for the university and its academic community.
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The Moscow Humanities University, founded in 1995 by British sociologist Theodore Shanin, has lost its accreditation. This decision has cast a shadow over the institution’s standing as one of Russia’s leading humanities schools.
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The Moscow Humanities University, founded in 1995 by British sociologist Theodore Shanin, has lost its accreditation. This decision reflects broader regulatory changes impacting Russian educational institutions.
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The Moscow Humanities University, established in 1995 by British sociologist Theodore Shanin, has been stripped of its accreditation. The institution, which was previously recognized as one of Russia’s top humanities universities, now faces significant challenges.
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The Moscow Humanities University, founded in 1995 by British sociologist Theodore Shanin, has lost its accreditation, marking a significant setback for the institution. The decision reflects broader regulatory changes and increased scrutiny of educational institutions in Russia.
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The Moscow Humanities University, commonly known as Shaninka, has lost its accreditation, marking a significant setback for the institution. The decision raises concerns about the future of humanities education in Russia.
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The Moscow Humanities University, founded in 1995 by British sociologist Theodore Shanin, has been stripped of its accreditation. This decision comes amid a broader crackdown on educational institutions in Russia, with critics suggesting that the move may be part of a larger effort to control academic freedom and ideological direction within the country’s universities.
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The Moscow Humanities University, founded in 1995 by British sociologist Theodore Shanin, has lost its accreditation, raising concerns about educational standards in Russia. The decision highlights the challenges facing humanities studies in the country.
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The Moscow Humanities University, founded in 1995 by British sociologist Theodore Shanin, has lost its accreditation. This decision raises concerns about the institution’s academic standards and future prospects within Russian higher education.
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The Moscow Humanities University, founded by British sociologist Theodore Shanin in 1995, has been stripped of its accreditation. The institution, regarded as one of Russia’s leading humanities universities, faces significant challenges as a result of this decision.
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The Moscow Humanities University, founded in 1995 by British sociologist Theodore Shanin and named after him, has lost its accreditation. The decision comes after an investigation, though the specific reasons remain undisclosed.
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The Moscow Humanities University, founded in 1995 by British sociologist Theodore Shanin, has been stripped of its accreditation, raising concerns about the institution’s future. Known for its prominence in Russian humanities education, the university has long been considered one of the leading institutions in the field.
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The Moscow Humanities University, founded in 1995 by British sociologist Theodore Shanin and considered one of Russia’s leading humanities institutions, has lost its accreditation. This decision comes amid growing regulatory scrutiny of educational institutions in Russia, particularly those with international affiliations.
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The Moscow Humanities University, founded in 1995 by British sociologist Theodore Shanin, has lost its accreditation. This marks a significant setback for the institution, which has long been a prominent academic center in the field of humanities within Russia.
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The Moscow Humanities University, founded in 1995 by British sociologist Theodore Shanin, has been stripped of its accreditation. This marks a significant setback for the institution, which was previously recognized as a leading center for humanities education in Russia.
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The Moscow Humanities University, founded in 1995 by British sociologist Theodore Shanin, has lost its accreditation. This development raises questions about the institution’s future and its role in the academic landscape.
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The Moscow Humanities University, also known as Shaninka, was founded in 1995 by British sociologist Theodore Shanin and is considered one of Russia’s leading humanities institutions. The loss of accreditation is a serious setback for the university and its students, as it may impact the quality of education and the institution’s reputation.
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Moscow Humanities University has lost its accreditation, marking a significant development in Russia’s higher education sector. Founded in 1995 by British sociologist Theodore Shanin, the institution was once considered one of Russia’s leading humanities universities.
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The Moscow Humanities University, founded by British sociologist Theodore Shanin in 1995, has lost its accreditation. The institution, considered one of Russia’s leading humanities universities, now faces potential closure.
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The Moscow Humanities University (Shaninka), founded in 1995 by British sociologist Theodore Shanin, has been stripped of its accreditation. The decision comes at a time of increasing restrictions on independent academic institutions in Russia.
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The Moscow Humanities University, founded in 1995 by British sociologist Theodore Shanin, has been stripped of its accreditation, marking a significant blow to one of Russia’s leading humanities institutions. The decision comes amid growing scrutiny of the university’s academic standards and compliance with regulatory frameworks.
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The Moscow Humanities University, founded by British sociologist Theodore Shanin in 1995, has lost its accreditation. The university is regarded as one of Russia’s leading humanities institutions.
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The Moscow Humanities University, founded in 1995 by British sociologist Theodore Shanin, has lost its accreditation. This prestigious institution, long considered a top humanities university in Russia, now risks closure.
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The Moscow Humanities University, founded in 1995 by British sociologist Theodore Shanin, has lost its accreditation, marking a significant setback for the institution. Known for its contributions to Russian humanities education, the university has faced challenges that now threaten its academic standing and reputation.
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The Moscow Humanities University, founded in 1995 by British sociologist Theodore Shanin, has lost its accreditation. The university, considered one of Russia’s leading humanities institutions, is now facing potential closure.