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AceNewsDesk

U.S MIGRANT CRISIS: Shifts from Texas to California border heres what is known

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AceNewsDesk – On a blustery morning last month, volunteer Adriana Jasso raised the flaps to a tent propped up against the massive steel bars of the fence that straddles this stretch of the US-Mexico border. On her side, plastic tables were piled with apples, packets of hot chocolate, mylar blankets and stacks of ponchos – supplies waiting for hungry and tired migrants who had travelled for weeks, or even months, to reach California.

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Ace Press News From Cutting Room Floor: Published:Apr.25: 2024: BBC World News: By Sumi Somaskanda & Naomi Choy Smith in San Diego TELEGRAM Ace Daily News Link https://t.me/YouMeUs2 

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Migrants wait to be transported for asylum claim processing at the US-Mexico border in Campo, California, US, on Friday, April 5, 2024
A surge of illegal border crossings has fuelled US political debate

On the other side, visible through the gaps in the towering barrier, a group of more than 100 people – from countries including Ecuador, Colombia, China and Rwanda – huddled together, waiting to be let through on to US soil. This border point south of San Diego is now one of the busiest along the entire US-Mexico frontier, which stretches around 1,950 miles (3,140km) from here to eastern Texas and the Gulf of Mexico.

A record surge of illegal border crossings in recent years has fuelled the debate over immigration and border security, emerging as a key voter concern ahead of the US presidential election in November. While the border crisis has mostly centred on Texas, where Republican Governor Greg Abbott has waged a fight with President Joe Biden over his immigration policies, recent figures show the geography of the US migration problem is shifting west to border states like Arizona and California. 

In San Ysidro, some 16 miles south of wealthy San Diego, crossings were up 85% in February from the previous year compared with Texas, which saw illegal entries dip during the same period.

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The BBC’s US partner CBS reported that in January, the border crossing in Del Rio, Texas, recorded a few hundred apprehensions a day – compared to 2,300 daily migrant crossings in December. 

The migrant flow shift is due in part to the Texas governor’s clampdown on illegal migration and Mexican authorities tightening security across the border as well. 

The sheer number of people arriving has overwhelmed resources in the San Diego area; after migrants are apprehended and processed at a facility near the border, local officials told the BBC that up to 1,000 people a day are being released at city train and bus stops.

Just after 8am, Border Patrol agents arrived and opened the gate to begin intake on the strip of land where migrants have been waiting.

Men are allowed only one layer of clothing, women and children two; they line up and pull off jackets and shoelaces (which are not allowed at the processing centre due to safety concerns), packing them into plastic bags or backpacks. From there, they file on to buses and head to a processing centre, where they are registered and can file a claim for asylum. The vast majority are heading to towns and cities across the US where they have family, friends and networks. 

The influx of migrants scattered across the country has strained communities, frustrating local officials and placing immigration at the top of the political agenda.

Wall Street Journal poll released in March ranked immigration among the top two issues for registered voters in seven battleground states – Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. At least 72% of those voters across the seven states said the country’s immigration policy and border security were heading in the wrong direction, according to the survey. 

The sheer number of people arriving has overwhelmed resources along California’s southern border

Even in California, the nation’s largest Democratic stronghold, 62% of registered voters said US borders were not secure in preventing illegal border crossings compared to 30% who said they were secure, according to a UC Berkeley Institute of Government Studies poll released in January. 

Former President Donald Trump, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, has accused Mr Biden of creating a “bloodbath” at the US-Mexico border. The president accused Mr Trump of scuppering a bipartisan immigration bill for political gain.

The border featured heavily during President Trump’s time in office – his administration built roughly 15 miles of new barriers and reinforced or increased the height along another 350 miles of existing border wall structure. That includes near San Diego, where the Trump administration completed bollard fencing in 2019 that juts into the Pacific Ocean along a stretch of beach just north of Tijuana, Mexico, to stop migrants from swimming into the country. According to a study published in the JAMA medical journal, this has led to a significant increase in migrant drowning deaths.

Nora Vargas, chairwoman of the Board of Supervisors in San Diego County, has witnessed the ups and downs of migration over several years.

Since the Biden administration in May 2023 lifted Title 42, a pandemic-era policy that allowed US officials to expel migrants who came to the border, Vargas says around 80,000 migrants have arrived through San Diego County. 

The Biden administration’s attempt to stop migrants from crossing illegally and encourage them to apply for asylum via an app has been plagued by technical issues, and it has not appeared to slow the number of people crossing, due to the push factors like violence and poverty, says Vargas.

“ We should be able to find ways to ensure that people are treated with dignity, with respect, especially if you’re fleeing persecution,” she said.

Vargas tells the BBC her county had an effective solution for mitigating the crisis: migrant transitional centres, or short-term facilities where newly arrived migrants could access food and medical treatment, charge their phones, and plan their next steps: migrants arriving here are not staying. Instead, they’re moving on to other towns and cities across the US, where they have a network of family or friends.

But as the numbers of asylum seekers arriving everyday ticked up, the county exhausted its funding. Vargas wrote an urgent letter to the White House in February, asking for federal assistance to help cover the estimated $1.5m (£1.2m) a month required to operate the facilities.

Funding didn’t arrive, however. The county was forced to close the transitional centre. Vargas blames Congress for failing to pass the Senate’s bipartisan package of measures including funding for tackling the immigration crisis at the border. 

The Trump administration built roughly 15 miles of new border barriers

In the absence of transitional centres, Border Patrol agents are now dropping off some 900 people a day at bus and train stations in San Diego, a city of around 1.3 million people. At the Iris Avenue Transit Center, a swelling crowd of migrants milled around on a Sunday afternoon earlier this month, exhausted and relieved. 

Men and women from Brazil, India, China and Latin America called family members and consulted maps, trying to plot a path to their final destination. A group of young men from Guinea told the BBC they’d fled political instability, flying to Istanbul, then to Colombia, then trekking to the US. 

“Nobody wants to leave their home,” a young woman from Ecuador said, blaming gangs and mafia groups in her home country that created an atmosphere of fear and violence.

Two men from Medellín, Colombia, told the BBC they made the journey to the US to find work. 

Jim Desmond, a member of the San Diego County Board of Supervisors, visited the Iris Transit Center recently and told the BBC that non-profits are helping many of the migrants get to the airport, where they are hoping to secure a ticket to their final destination. Now, the airport itself is becoming a shelter, he says. 

“To have tourists come, you know off a flight or they’re leaving, we don’t want it to be their first or last impression, to see people sleeping and spending the night at San Diego airport,” he said. 

Desmond is raising the alarm in his county over what he calls the unimpeded flow of people, many of whom he believes have not been properly vetted. It is not Congress, he says, but the White House that should be finding pathways to bolster legal immigration and swiftly clamp down on those who cross illegally. 

The White House has signalled that President Biden is eyeing executive action on securing the border, in lieu of a bill from Congress. California Governor Gavin Newsom, who has referred to the asylum system as “broken” and called for federal support for states and cities, has sought to put the blame squarely on Republican lawmakers and Mr Trump for rejecting border legislation.

It used to be in the Obama administration, in the Trump administration, and Bush and even Clinton, that migrants coming across the border illegally would run from border patrol agents. Now they’re running to them,” Desmond said.

“ And they’re being processed and being dropped off and jumping ahead of the line. And anytime you have some entity that allows people to jump ahead of the line, chaos ensues.” 

Back in San Ysidro, a young woman named Olga, wearing a transparent poncho over a pink winter coat, gripped a cup of coffee as she explained that she’d departed Ecuador four weeks earlier, to escape a different kind of chaos – soaring gang violence and economic hardship.

She left three children with family in Ecuador and is hoping to reunite with her fourth child, who is in the US. The journey had shaken her. “There were good people but also bad people,” she said through tears.

At Sterling Publishing & Media Service Agency, we value transparency and accountability. We want to inform you that we are not responsible for any external content, links, or posts. Nonetheless, we are dedicated to providing exceptional services and sincerely appreciate your support. Thank you.

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Ace Breaking News

U.K GOV. Backs New legislation will provide extra protections for victims’ counselling notes during criminal investigations.

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AceBreakingNews – Government backs amendment to better protect victims’ counselling records

Ace Press News From Cutting Room Floor: Published:Apr.25: 2024: TELEGRAM Ace Daily News Link https://t.me/YouMeUs2 

  • New measure to provide extra protections for victims’ counselling notes
  • Greater scrutiny and protection for victims’ privacy through statutory Code of Practice
  • Protections to encourage victims to seek professional help

New legislation to provide extra protections for victims’ counselling notes during criminal investigations received government backing today.

The amendment to the landmark Victims and Prisoners Bill, tabled by Baroness Bertin, will require the police to be satisfied that counselling information is likely to add substantial value to their investigation before they request a victim’s records.

It will also provide further protections in the new statutory Code of Practice, which will state clearly that police must start with an assumption that a request for counselling notes is not necessary and proportionate to their investigation.

The move will give greater confidence to victims – particularly those of sexual assault – in seeking the therapy they need to help move forward with their lives, without fear that information revealed in absolute trust will be used against them.

Lord Chancellor, Alex Chalk KC, said:

It is only right we do everything we can to ensure victims feel confident in accessing support services such as counselling which are vital in helping them rebuild and move on with their lives.

I want to thank Baroness Bertin for her enduring commitment to improving the experience of victims, giving them greater confidence in the justice system.

Baroness Bertin said:

I am delighted and proud that the government has accepted these much needed amendments. 

If enforced properly, this should make a material difference to the wellbeing of so many victims and survivors. 

This government is making every effort to change the approach taken to rape survivors and investigations. This is another step in the right direction. 

It should never be the case that intimate and personal notes are routinely accessed by law enforcement agencies. By raising this threshold I hope many more victims will pursue both justice and support to get their lives back on track.

Andrea Simon, Director of the End Violence Against Women Coalition (EVAW), said:

This is a significant moment for rape survivors and their right to access healing and support while pursuing justice.

Counselling should be a safe and private space to explore feelings and heal from trauma, and records must be protected from unnecessary and disproportionate requests during a police investigation. We’re pleased to see this now reflected far better in law, although much rests on its implementation, which we will be following closely.

Ciara Bergman, CEO of Rape Crisis England & Wales, said:

We are delighted that the Government has recognised the profoundly private nature of counselling notes and that such sensitive and personal material will now be afforded better protection. This is a significant step in the right direction, and we look forward to working closely with victims and survivors and criminal justice agencies, to ensure that this much-needed change in law is implemented consistently in practice.

Further amendments to the Victims and Prisoners Bill to strengthen victim support include:

  • a crackdown on the misuse of confidentiality clauses to stop victims of crime from accessing support services
  • a new statutory duty holding the police and other criminal justice agencies to account which means they must not only inform victims of their rights under the Victims’ Code – but deliver services in accordance with it
  • a bolstered role for Victims’ Commissioner to ensure support available to all victims
  • families can make impact statements at mental health tribunals

Through the Victims and Prisoners Bill, the principles of the Victims’ Code will be placed on a statutory footing, and police, prosecutors and other frontline staff will have a duty to ensure victims know the services and support that they are qualified to receive – including the entitlement to be referred to a support service, receive updates on their case and to make a victim personal statement.     

Alongside new legislation, the government is also continuing to bolster support services – quadrupling victims’ funding by 2024/25, up from £41 million in 2009/10, and using ringfenced funding to increase the number of Independent Sexual Violence and Domestic Abuse Advisors by 300 to around 1,000 – a 43% increase by 2024/5.  

Further information

Alongside new legislative clauses in the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act 2022 relating to Victim Information Requests, the government will be publishing a Code of Practice to accompany new duties, which will add clarity on the expectations on policing and promote consistency in practice.

The code will set out a best practice approach for police making requests for victim information, including giving information to the victim about what is being requested, and how the material will be used. Police will be required to have due regard for this code when making requests. The Code will be consulted on before it is published.

The amendment will be subject to agreement by both the House of Lords and the House of Commons.

At Sterling Publishing & Media Service Agency, we value transparency and accountability. We want to inform you that we are not responsible for any external content, links, or posts. Nonetheless, we are dedicated to providing exceptional services and sincerely appreciate your support. Thank you.

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Ace Security News

The Week in Ransomware – As – Attacks Ramped Up Here’s What Is Known in Just Five Days

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AceSecurityDesk – While ransomware attacks decreased after the LockBit and BlackCat disruptions, they have once again started to ramp up with other operations filling the void.

Ace Press News From Cutting Room Floor: Published:Apr.25: 2024: Bleeping Computer Security News by TELEGRAM Ace Daily News Link https://t.me/YouMeUs2 

Bitcoin in chains
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A relatively new operation called RansomHub gained media attention this week after a BlackCat affiliate used the newer operation’s data leak site to extort Change HealthCare once again.

Change HealthCare allegedly already paid a ransom, which was stolen from an affiliate in an exit scam by the BlackCat/ALPHV ransomware operation. However, the affiliate behind the attack claims to have kept the stolen data and is now extorting the company again through RansomHub.

So far, the Change Healthcare attack has cost UnitedHealth Group $872 million, with losses expected to continue.

Another disruptive attack we learned more about this week is the Daixin operation claiming the cyberattack on Omni Hotels. This attack caused the hotel chain to shut down its IT systems, impacting reservations and requiring hotel staff to let guests into their rooms.

Other attacks targeted chipmaker Nexpirathe United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)Octapharma Plasma, and the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission (ASMFC).

There were other cyberattacks this week, such as the one on Frontier Communications, but they have not been confirmed to be ransomware.

In other news, the U.S. Justice Department charged a Moldovan nationalfor running a large-scale botnet that infected thousands of computers and deployed ransomware.

Last but not least, the FBI reported that the Akira ransomware operation had earned $42 million from 250+ victims, and HelloKitty returned, rebranding as HelloGookie.

Contributors and those who provided new ransomware information and stories this week include: @billtoulas@BleepinComputer@Ionut_Ilascu@serghei@fwosar@LawrenceAbrams@malwrhunterteam@demonslay335@Seifreed@pcrisk@SophosXOps@jgreigj@JessicaHrdcstle@3xp0rtblog@AShukuhi, and @vxunderground.

April 15th 2024

Daixin ransomware gang claims attack on Omni Hotels

The Daixin Team ransomware gang claimed a recent cyberattack on Omni Hotels & Resorts and is now threatening to publish customers’ sensitive information if a ransom is not paid.

Chipmaker Nexperia confirms breach after ransomware gang leaks data

Dutch chipmaker Nexperia confirmed late last week that hackers breached its network in March 2024 after a ransomware gang leaked samples of allegedly stolen data.

Ransomware gang starts leaking alleged stolen Change Healthcare data

The RansomHub extortion gang has begun leaking what they claim is corporate and patient data stolen from United Health subsidiary Change Healthcare in what has been a long and convoluted extortion process for the company.

New ransomware variant

PCrisk found a new ransomware variant that adds the .FBIRAS extension and drops a ransom note named Readme.txt.

April 16th 2024

UnitedHealth: Change Healthcare cyberattack caused $872 million loss

UnitedHealth Group reported an $872 million impact on its Q1 earnings due to the ransomware attack disrupting the U.S. healthcare system since February.

Atlantic fisheries body confirms cyber incident after 8Base ransomware gang claims breach

A fisheries management organization for the East Coast is dealing with a cyber incident following claims by a ransomware gang that it stole data.

New Lethal Lock ransomware

PCrisk found a ransomware that appends the .LethalLock extension and drops a ransom note named SOLUTION_NOTE.txt.

New ransomware variant

PCrisk found a ransomware that appends the .Senator extension and drops a ransom note named SENATOR ENCRYPTED.txt.

New Chaos ransomware variant

PCrisk found a new Chaos ransomware variant that appends the .DumbStackz extension and drops a ransom note named read_it.txt.

New MedusaLocker ransomware variant

PCrisk found a new MedusaLocker ransomware variant that appends the .repair extension and drops a ransom note named How_to_back_files.html.

April 17th 2024

Moldovan charged for operating botnet used to push ransomware

The U.S. Justice Department charged Moldovan national Alexander Lefterov, the owner and operator of a large-scale botnet that infected thousands of computers across the United States.

‘Junk gun’ ransomware: Peashooters can still pack a punch

A Sophos X-Ops investigation finds that a wave of crude, cheap ransomware could spell trouble for small businesses and individuals – but also provide insights into threat actor career development and the wider threat landscape

April 18th 2024

FBI: Akira ransomware raked in $42 million from 250+ victims

According to a joint advisory from the FBI, CISA, Europol’s European Cybercrime Centre (EC3), and the Netherlands’ National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC-NL), the Akira ransomware operation has breached the networks of over 250 organizations and raked in roughly $42 million in ransom payments.

Ransomware feared as IT ‘issues’ force Octapharma Plasma to close 150+ centers

Octapharma Plasma has blamed IT “network issues” for the ongoing closure of its 150-plus centers across the US. It’s feared a ransomware infection may be the root cause of the medical firm’s ailment.

April 19th 2024

United Nations agency investigates ransomware attack, data theft

?The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) is investigating a cyberattack after threat actors breached its IT systems to steal human resources data.

HelloKitty ransomware rebrands, releases CD Projekt and Cisco data

An operator of the HelloKitty ransomware operation announced they changed the name to ‘HelloGookie,’ releasing passwords for previously leaked CD Projekt source code, Cisco network information, and decryption keys from old attacks.

New MedusaLocker ransomware variant

PCrisk found a new MedusaLocker ransomware variant that appends the .virus3 extension and drops a ransom note named How_to_back_files.html.

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Australian News

Racial bias impacted investigation into deaths of Indigenous teens near Bourke, coroner finds

A pair of photos of two Indigenous teenage girls.
Jacinta “Cindy” Smith (left) and Mona Lisa Smith died in 1987.(Supplied/Graphics by Chan Woo Park)

AceNewsDesk – A coroner has found that racism tainted the initial “inexplicably deficient” police investigation into the deaths of two Aboriginal cousins more than three decades ago. New South Wales State Coroner Teresa O’Sullivan has delivered her findings into the 1987 deaths of Indigenous cousins Mona Lisa Smith, 16, and Jacinta “Cindy” Smith, 15.

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Ace Press News From Cutting Room Floor: Published:Apr.25: 2024: ABC Western Plains News: TELEGRAM Ace Daily News Link https://t.me/YouMeUs2 

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers are advised this article contains the names and images of people who have died. This story contains graphic details.

Four women stand outside a courthouse holding a document.
Dawn and June Smith (front left and right) with their daughters, Kerrie (back left) and Fiona, with a copy of the coronial findings.(ABC Western Plains: Zaarkacha Marlan)normal
An Indigenous woman in a brightly-coloured T-shirt stands speaking in front of a court building.
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A pair of photos of two Indigenous teenage girls.
Jacinta “Cindy” Smith (left) and Mona Lisa Smith died in 1987.(Supplied/Graphics by Chan Woo Park)

Magistrate O’Sullivan found their deaths were not adequately investigated by detectives and accepted evidence that racial bias played a role in these failings.

The girls’ bodies were found on the side of the Mitchell Highway, about 60 kilometres north of Bourke on December 6, 1987, hours after they accepted a lift from 40-year-old non-Indigenous man Alexander Ian Grant. Farm workers found Mr Grant, drunk and unharmed, lying on a tarpaulin with his arm slung across the exposed chest of Cindy, whose clothing had been interfered with. Mr Grant was charged with indecently interfering with Cindy’s corpse and culpable driving causing the deaths of both girls.

A black and white photograph of an outback road.
The girls were found on the side of the Mitchell Highway.(Supplied)

He was acquitted at his 1990 trial after his lawyer argued that Mona was driving Mr Grant’s ute when it crashed.

The charge of sexual interference was withdrawn by prosecutors due to a technicality, without the family’s knowledge. Mr Grant died in 2018. Magistrate O’Sullivan found Mr Grant’s actions were “predatory and disgraceful” and said the evidence suggested he sexually interfered with Cindy after she passed. “ I am satisfied there was some form of sexual interference,” Magistrate O’Sullivan said. “ This was in the nature of the touching of Cindy’s breast or genital areaafter she had passed.” She accepted evidence there was an “existence of racial bias within the NSW Police Force at the relevant time” that had impacted the investigation into the girls’ deaths.

Three formally-dressed woman stand outside a court building.
Teresa O’Sullivan (right), seen here with barrister Emma Sullivan and Peggy Dwyer SC (centre) described Mr Grant’s actions as “disgraceful”.(ABC Western Plains: Zaarkacha Marlan)

‘Surprising and concerning’

Magistrate O’Sullivan noted that the families of the girls were not dealt with in a respectful or appropriate manner after their deaths. She told the inquest the families’ concerns about the investigation were “entirely vindicated” but had been “repeatedly dismissed” by authorities. “ Given the deficiencies in the initial police investigation which have not been catalogued or acknowledged until this inquest, the perseverance and strength of the Smith families in pursuing justice in the form of answers and a thorough investigation – albeit many years too late – cannot be overstated,” Magistrate O’Sullivan said.

She said former lead detective Peter Eshman’s willingness to accept at face value Mr Grant’s statement that he was not driving was “surprising and concerning” and “wrong-footed” the investigation in its early stages.

“It appeared obvious to me that Mr Eshman was not open to the clear possibility that Mr Grant could be lying,” Magistrate O’Sullivan said. “ For an experienced detective, he simply accepted Mr Grant’s account at face value.”

Outside court Mona’s sister Fiona Smith told the ABC she now had “peace of mind”.

“Today I’m just happy because of the acknowledgement, because at the end of the day I know in my heart Mona would have wanted people to know it wasn’t just a car accident that went wrong, there was so much more,” she said. “ It was nothing else but racism that got us to where we are today, because if it wasn’t for racism this wouldn’t be happening.”

Fiona Smith said she was relieved to hear the coroner’s findings.(ABC Western Plains: Zaarkacha Marlan)

A man in a dark suit stands in front of a police vehicle near a police station.
Detective Inspector Paul Quigg reinvestigated the case in 2019.(ABC Central West: Joanna Woodburn)

Intervention came ‘too late’

Detective Inspector Paul Quigg began reinvestigating the girls’ deaths in 2019 and identified numerous failures in the initial police investigation, particularly in the relation to obtaining and securing evidence. “ Investigations today in 2024 use the same investigation techniques in 1987,” he said. “ Yes there have been advances in DNA, fingerprinting, forensic examinations, but still the basic rules of securing and obtaining evidence haven’t changed.” Magistrate O’Sullivan praised former detective sergeant Raymond Godkin from the NSW Police Accident Investigation Unit, who attempted to reinvestigate the case in 1988 despite pushback from senior Bourke officers. The court heard it was “testimony to his dedication and strong moral code”, but the failure of the initial investigation meant his intervention was “too late” and critical evidence was lost.

Magistrate O’Sullivan recommended that the Commissioner of NSW Police create clear rules for reviewing investigations into deaths.

She said these rules should cover how reviews were conducted, ensure transparency regarding process, involve experts if needed, and include consultation with the deceased person’s family. The rules, she said, should follow the standard procedures used for reviewing homicide investigations. Ms Sullivan also said she would write to the Attorney-General highlighting the need for legislative reform to prevent sexual assault perpetrators and cases involving misconduct with regard to corpse from evading prosecution due to uncertainty about the timing of a victim’s death.

In a statement, NSW Police said the findings had been noted. 

“A comprehensive review of the findings will be undertaken and any recommendations that are directed to police will be considered,” the statement said.

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Categories
Australian News

Far North Queenslanders are on alert after multiple crocodile encounters over the past few days between Cardwell and Cairns.

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AceBreakingNews – Authorities respond to four-weekend crocodile encounters across Far North Queensland

Ace Press News From Cutting Room Floor: Published:Apr.25: 2024: Published: Mon 22 Apr 2024 at 1:10 PM: TELEGRAM Ace Daily News Link https://t.me/YouMeUs2 

The Department of Environment and Science and Innovation (DESI) said it was investigating reports of a “large” crocodile seen between the Cairns northern beaches suburbs of Yorkeys Knob and Holloways Beach.

The road at Hollaways beach impacted by flood waters.
The canoeists saw the crocodile near an opening of Thomatis Creek.(Supplied: Ergon Energy)normal

The Hekili Outrigger Canoe Club said members spotted a crocodile about 20 metres off Yorkeys Knob while on a training paddle on Sunday.

“It was frightening. There’s no doubt about it,” coach Sue Lockwood said. She said the paddlers were well-versed in croc safety. “ The girls did the right thing. They reacted straightaway and left,” Ms Lockwood said. DESI said wildlife rangers had targeted the animal for removal. “ The Cairns region is crocodile habitat, and this sighting is a timely reminder for people in the area that they are in croc country.”

I ‘felt or heard something’

It was at least the third crocodile encounter in Far North Queensland in as many days.

Man standing on back of boat in marina
Dean Grieves was the afterdeck of his houseboat in a marina when a crocodile came at him.(Supplied: Dean Grieves)normal

More than 150 kilometres south of Cairns, Cardwell houseboat resident Dean Grieve said he had a close call with a reptile on Friday when he “felt or heard something” that made him spin around.

“The minute I turned towards the back of the boat, this thing’s half a metre out of the water,” he said of an estimated 4-metre-long crocodile. “ At least a metre of his head would have been inside the boat and only inches away from where I was standing.” Mr Grieve said he was concerned for the safety of families holidaying at the Cardwell marina, 150km south of Cairns. “ There have been incidents of the crocodile nudging boats and sitting within metres of people fishing,” he said. DESI has declared it a problem animal that has also been targeted for removal. Wildlife officers inspected the marina on Monday and will set a floating trap when tidal conditions allow. A spokesman said a smaller animal, spotted lying on a marina pontoon on Saturday, would not be removed.

Crocodile inside stinger net

Also on Friday, Cairns photographer Rebecca Wade spotted a small crocodile in the Palm Cove stinger net in Cairns.Palm Cove Beach was closed after a crocodile was spotted within the stinger net. She said the reptile happily swam around for about half an hour. “ I couldn’t believe it. It was such an amazing experience,” Ms Wade said. Uninet, which manages the stinger nets, says it can happen “a couple of times” a season. Manager Kim Moss said the nets must be landed and cast again to free a trapped reptile. “ They will climb over.

We have seen tracks on the beach where they can come up onto the beach and then get in the same way as people do,” he said.

Cairns Surf Life Saving Club supervisor Dee Westland was not surprised. “ It’s mainly juveniles that we’ll see opportunistically chasing fish end up inside the nets, or just sit up on a boom for rest,” she said. Ms Westland believes the same crocodile caused nearby Kewarra Beach to close for four hours on Sunday afternoon.Crocodile biologist Professor Graham Webb runs Crocodylus Park in Darwin.

Crocodile expert Dr Graham Webb said flooding could offer the reptiles new territory to explore, and they could travel hundreds of kilometres in a wet season.

“They can use the seasonal or unseasonal increases in water flow to move around,” he said.Cassius is the largest saltwater crocodile in captivity in the world. He might also be one of the oldest on Earth

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Australian News

STORY: Australia’s first solar garden sprouts in Grong Grong, taking the renewables boom to the community

AceNewsDesk – Farmer Gemma Purcell doesn’t have to worry about the next drought affecting her newest ‘crop’. 

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Ace Press News From Cutting Room Floor: Published:Apr.25: 2024: ABC Business & Environment News: TELEGRAM Ace Daily News Link https://t.me/YouMeUs2 

All it needs is sunshine. In a paddock of her farm, a community garden of sorts has sprouted. But instead of producing grain and livestock, her land now helps generate enough electricity to power about 700 homes. The first hint of the Haystacks Solar Farm near Grong Grong, about five-and-a-half hour’s drive from Sydney, is a subtle glint of sunshine as it bounces off the PV panels. A plot on Gemma Purcell’s land the “size of a Bunnings car park” now hosts several rows of solar panels with the capacity to generate 1.5 megawatts of electricity. But it’s not its size or the technology of her solar farm that makes it special.

A sign for the town of Grong Grong, calling it a small, caring community of 150 people
Community spirit is alive and well in Grong Grong, a small town on the Newell Highway east of Narrandera.(ABC News: Clint Jasper)normal

As an Australian first, the Haystacks solar farm offers a share in the power of the sun to those otherwise excluded from the solar boom.

Solar inequality

In a country infamous for its political ‘climate wars’, rooftop solar is a national success story – a bipartisan winner. 

Australia has the world’s highest rates of rooftop solar per capita, with around one in every three homes generating their own power, driving a monumental transition in Australia’s electricity grid.  

Solar players benefit from cheaper electricity bills and the knowledge they are helping to reduce Australia’s greenhouse gas emissions.

But not everyone can enjoy these benefits.

With a third of Australians renting, home ownership is one of the biggest barriers for people to participate in solar.

Most landlords haven’t invested in solar panels because they don’t get the benefit of lower power bills. Another reason is landlords remain unconvinced that tenants would want to pay more for a property with solar.

As a result, 90 per cent of renters don’t have access to solar, a Macquarie University study shows.

Haystacks director Kristy Walters says the project is attractive to those keen to be part of the solar juggernaut, who for various reasons can’t host their own solar panels.

“ One of the key ones is renters, or people living in apartments … but also people that have a shady roof, or it might be heritage listed, or it has shale or something that isn’t suitable for installing rooftop solar on it,” she says.

Harvesting the sun’s energy

More than 170 people have now become ‘solar gardeners’, having purchased a ‘plot’ on the privately owned farm in Grong Grong. The solar farm started producing energy this month. Each ‘plot’ cost $4,200, which buys approximately three kilowatts of solar panels in the array. Haystacks says the solar gardeners, who mostly live in cities hours away, will get at least $455 off their power bills for the next decade, with $505 a year for the first five years locked in. This amount isn’t dependent on how the solar farm performs, and Haystacks predicts the returns will actually be higher with any future corporate power agreement.

The returns are credited directly to their electricity bills.

As well as buying their solar plot, each of them is also a member of the cooperative that oversees the project. “ We specifically chose a co-op, because we really liked the democratic values that are baked into that model, where everyone who becomes a member has a vote in any major decision,” Walters said. Haystacks might be a small fish in the pond of renewables developments, but has its own benefits. Like large-scale projects, it’s situated in an ideal location for sunshine, and uses the same single-axis tracking panels that rotate to follow the sun’s journey across the sky each day. Whereas major solar farms require expensive transmission infrastructure upgrades to take the power from the panels to people’s homes, Haystacks can plug into the existing grid with only minor adjustments.

“ It connects to the poles and wires and the distribution line that we see in all of our streets, so it’s a lot more accessible,” Walters said.

The energy equivalent to a shared garden, Haystack lets its owners ‘grow’ power away from the place they live. “ If you live in a tiny apartment and you want to grow some tomatoes but you don’t have anywhere to grow them, you would rent a plot in the community garden, ” Walters says. “ If you want to generate solar energy, but you don’t have a rooftop to do that on, you purchase a plot and you get solar energy from that.”

Furrows in solar schemes

Community solar gardens are no perfect replacement for rooftop solar and lack some of the financial benefits. Households with rooftop solar avoid some of the network fees by using the electricity before it goes into the grid, according to Dr Bjorn Sturmberg, an energy research fellow at the Australian National University. “ Your electricity bill has network charges on it, and those are calculated on a per unit basis. So the more electricity you use, the more you pay towards the upkeep of the poles and wires in your area,” he explained. Rooftop solar also reduces demand when there is pressure on the grid, such as during heatwaves, whereas solar garden owners continue to draw electricity from the grid.

“ It’s important to be clear that initiatives like the solar gardens are not as financially rewarding as rooftop solar, and that they’re never going to be,” Dr Sturmberg said.

While some experts see community renewable projects as an empowering way for communities to share in the financial windfalls from the energy transition, others say they merely highlight the frustrating gaps in policy and the lack of mandated energy efficiency standards for rentals. “ Community energy is a pretty broad term to describe how different collections of citizens acting to try and generally to try and speed up the energy transition, and often many cases, also to try and make that transition a bit fairer,” Dr Sturmberg said.

However, the energy system is favoured toward large-scale projects, according to Dr Sturmberg.

“The energy system is kind of becoming bifurcated into really large generators, such as huge wind farms and solar farms that produce hundreds of megawatts of power … and then rooftop solar,” he explained. “ It’s very difficult to kind of be in that middle ground between those two. In the case of this community solar garden, it’s fantastic to see it actually come to fruition.” But, in the absence of either carrots or sticks to coerce landlords into providing efficient homes with rooftop solar, some renters are forging ahead with community schemes to invest in renewable energy.

Sowing seeds for a cleaner future

Justine Lloyd had rented the same Randwick apartment for 17 years, a dark brick art deco block of six, typical of Sydney’s eastern suburbs. A lifelong renter, she knew it was unlikely her landlord would agree to put solar on their apartment block roof.

The landlord doesn’t want to do any repairs, let alone improvements, so we knew straight away when we moved in that we couldn’t have solar,” she said.

Ms Lloyd jumped at the opportunity to become a “solar gardener” and invest in the co-op model, where as a member she would have a say in decisions regarding the project. “ I feel principles behind the solar garden are really great, because you’re actually sharing the infrastructure. No one person has to set it up and be responsible for it,” she said. The benefits of being a ‘solar gardener’ really hit home when Ms Lloyd recently got her notice that she had to move from the place she called home for almost two decades. “ I don’t have to pick up my solar panels and take them with me every time I move,” she said. “ As a renter, my housing is probably short-term. You just never know where you’re going to be living next year.” Justine recognises this isn’t the same as having solar on your roof, but she sees it as an opportunity to invest in renewable energy. “ The power’s going in the grid and doesn’t necessarily come exactly to my house but it is by taking away the need for building more coal fired power stations or more fossil fuel investment,” she said.

“ l get to be part of that climate and energy solution.”

It was the same driver for fellow ‘solar gardener’ Haryana Dhillon, who rents a city terrace house with a skylight and attic window, making the roof space too small for solar.Haryana feels good knowing the power she uses is being generated by a renewable source. “ So climate change was a really big factor, wanting to do whatever we could to minimise the impact of climate change,” she explained. “ It was the potential that this was actually something that was feasible and could be a demonstration for other people around the country. “ And the more that other people and the government and politicians see that, I think, the more likely they are to take it more seriously.” Bjorn Sturmberg from ANU and other energy experts believe there’s an ultimate fix to these issues.

“ The best thing we can do is to accelerate the transition of the whole national electricity grid to be more renewable, [that’s] therefore cleaner and cheaper.

“Once that’s the case, there’ll be less of an imbalance between those who rent than those who own properties and have solar.” He also thinks governments should focus on the demand side of electricity: that is, how it’s used in Australian homes. “ It is absolutely inescapable, and of utmost importance that we also help rental properties, apartments and social housing have more efficient and electrified homes,” he said.

A new crop

Farmer Gemma Purcell is the perfect embodiment of the power of community energy to bring people together. Her resentment at the lack of climate action drove her to plant the first seeds for the solar farm about eight years ago, after meeting experts at a community renewables event. “ I was becoming eternally grumpy and frustrated with the inertia at government level in terms of climate action, emissions reduction, and the energy transition,” she explained, surrounded by the red dirt and gleaming metal of the panels.  Having the solar farm in the mix also helped her future-proofing her operations. “ It’s an income stream as well, which just hedges your risks through times of drought or difficulty. Goodness knows it just gets tougher and tougher,” she commented.  “ Taking action is a bit of a survival tactic in a way.”  She said she hadn’t faced any opposition to the project from the local community, which had minimal impact on its surroundings. “ People are happy to see some medium-scale infrastructure. We have big wheat silos in the landscape, things that are of a scale of this,” she said. Paving the way with the first community model for renewable energy wasn’t easy, she admitted, but she hoped others would soon follow her example. “ Most farmers are in favour of renewable energy, they’re across it, they understand it, and farmers are very high tech operators,” she said.

The solar farm has also helped Gemma Purcell future-proof her business.

“It’s exciting because it is a proof of concept, it’s replicable. “ Hopefully, the what part of the community energy side of it is that the entire process is templated, which means now that the next one should be much simpler.” The federal government committed $100 million in funding for solar banks, a shared solar system to help households that can’t install their own. Haystacks director Kristy Walters is hopeful this funding will see more projects like the farm near Grong Grong blossom. “ It’s really popular in the United States and in Europe, and countries like Germany. But this is the first time it’s come to Australia,” she said. Despite its imperfections, it seems like community energy and projects like this are here to stay, with all the plots at the solar farm sold out, and the desire to participate in the energy transition still motivating many Australians.

Credit

Reporter: Jo Lauder

Video and images: Clint JasperJess Davis

Producer: Fran Rimrod

Editors: Tim Leslie and Edwina Farley

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Ace Security News

Giving NIST Digital Identity Guidelines a Boost: Supplement for Incorporating Syncable Authenticators

AceSecurityDesk – Similarly, we are applying this same concept for the first time to our NIST SP 800-63B, Digital Identity Guidelines: Authentication and Lifecycle Management. Today, we published a supplement that provides interim guidance for agencies seeking to make use of ‘syncable authenticators’ (for example, passkeys) in both enterprise-facing and public-facing use cases. 

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What is a supplement? 

A supplement is a specific document type that is intended to enhance, augment, or elaborate on an existing NIST Special Publication (SP). They allow for targeted updates or modifications without having to go through the process of updating the entire SP. They provide a mechanism for NIST to more rapidly adapt to changes in the technology and risk environments (for example, providing requirements for new authenticator types like syncable authenticators). 

What is a syncable authenticator? 

A syncable authenticator is any cryptographic authenticator that allows for the private key to be cloned and stored separate from the authenticator to support the use of that key across different devices (for example, syncing). In practice, these are typically what are called ‘passkeys’ by the FIDO Alliance and make use of multiple standards and protocols such as the Client-to-Authenticator Protocol and World Wide Web Consortium’s (W3C) Web Authentication (WebAuthn). 

When implemented correctly, they provide a phishing-resistant authenticator with many benefits, such as simplified recovery, cross-device support, and consumer-friendly platform authentication support (for example, native biometrics). Such authenticators would have been considered non-compliant in the context of Digital Identity Guidelines, and the supplement provides additional requirements and considerations to allow for their use at Authentication Assurance Level 2 (AAL2). 

What has changed since the Digital Identity Guidelines were published? 

A lot has changed. The standards and specifications to support syncable authenticators had not been developed when the Guidelines were initially developed and published. Since that time, the standards have matured and most major consumer platforms have put in place support for syncable authenticators.  So far, FIDO Alliance estimates that over 8 billion* user accounts now have the option to use passkeys for authentication. While not yet ubiquitous, they are becoming more common by the day. 

Aren’t there risks to cloning keys? 

Yes, there are always risks. The requirements in the supplement are intended to address as many of these as possible, including methods for storing, transmitting, and protecting the keys. There are unique risks that come along with syncable authenticators, specifically the ability in some technical implementations for users to share their authentication key with other individuals. The ability to share authenticators is not unique to syncable keys – nearly any AAL2 authenticators can be shared. but contrary to years of security policies, some implementations promote syncable authenticator sharing as a secure alternative to password sharing in many consumer scenarios. 

As with all instances, organizations should evaluate every type of authenticator they offer and weigh the benefits and risks associated with them before implementing. Syncable authenticators are not going to be appropriate for every application or service, but they do represent an emerging AAL2 authenticator option with many benefits to both the end-user and the relying party.

Is there going to be a public comment period? 

Not for this supplement. Feedback from the initial public comment period on SP 800-63-4 was incorporated into this supplement.  Additional comments on syncable authenticators and the overall content of the supplement can be submitted through the upcoming second public comment period for Revision 4. This will occur later this year. 

Why not wait for Revision 4 to be completed?

As noted above, agencies strictly following the normative text of Digital Identity Guidelines would not be allowed to use syncable authenticators. This supplement addresses an immediate need for many agencies by providing direction on how to use a new security technology that provides strong, usable, phishing resistant authentication in support of the Federal Zero Trust strategy. Once Revision 4 is finalized, this supplement will be rescinded.

*This statistic was provided by Fido Alliance and does not imply that 8 billion users have opted to use the passkey feature. 

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