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EU, US police cripple Islamic State media mouthpieces by Staff Writers The Hague (AFP) April 27, 2018 EU and US police forces have crippled the main mouthpieces of the Islamic State jihadist group in a coordinated transatlantic takedown across several countries, the European police agency said Friday. "With this ground-breaking operation we have punched a big hole in the capability of IS to spread propaganda online and radicalise young people in Europe," the head of Europol Rob Wainwright said. The two-day operation on Wednesday and Thursday was the latest stage of a campaign first launched in 2015, and targeted in particular the Amaq news agency used by IS to broadcast claims of attacks and spread its message of jihad. "With this takedown action, targeting major IS-branded media outlets like Amaq, but also al-Bayan radio, Halumu and Nashir news, IS's capability to broadcast and publicise terrorist material has been compromised," Europol said in a statement. The "simultaneous multinational takedown" was coordinated via Europol's headquarters in The Hague with the support of Eurojust, the EU agency for judicial cooperation in criminal matters. It was led by the Belgian federal prosecutor, while national police forces seized servers in the Netherlands, Canada and the United States as well as digital material in Bulgaria, France and Romania. Britain's Counter Terrorism Internet Referral Unit was also involved in identifying "top-level domain registrars abused by IS," Europol said. Europol began warning about the rise of Amaq in late 2015, stressing "the technical resilience of the terrorist online infrastructure". "Since then law enforcement agencies have, in a continuous joint effort, taken down the web assets of the media outlet," it said. IS used Amaq in 2016 to claim attacks all over the world and the Middle East, including the deadly assaults in Paris, Brussels, Barcelona and Berlin. It also used Amaq to claim the March supermarket siege in Trebes, France where a 25-year-old gunman killed four people, including a policeman who took the place of a hostage.
#MeToo activists use blockchain to skirt China censors Beijing (AFP) April 27, 2018 Attempts to silence a student who drew attention to sexual abuse allegations at a Chinese university have inspired tech-savvy activists to use blockchain technology to dodge censors and keep the fledgling #MeToo movement alive. The uproar began when a student wrote an open letter this week accusing a staff member at Peking University of trying to intimidate her over a petition she launched urging the school to make public an investigation into a 1998 sexual abuse case. The student's missive was ... read more
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