Is There a Way to Prevent the Next Charlottesville? – Slate Magazine (blog)

These guys aren't law enforcement. Is this about to become normal?

Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

With more white nationalist rallies planned in the coming weeks, including one this upcoming Saturday in Boston, cities across the country may soon be looking for ways to try to prevent the sort of violence that took place last weekend in Charlottesville, Virginia.

Bostons Mayor Martin Walsh is reportedly looking into legal grounds to stop the next alt-right rally from happening in his city. Those rallygoers are permitted, though, and have a First Amendment right to peaceably assemble.

Peaceablyis the key word there, however. The white supremacists who showed up in Charlottesville were reportedly armed to the teeth. Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe claimed his state police were outgunned on Saturday, while one white nationalist leader showed off his firepower in a popular Vice News documentary about the weekends events. Another rallygoer in that videoclad in camouflageseemed to be warning police that he planned to send at least 200 people with guns to gather equipment that was at the site of the rally. Heavily armed paramilitary groups barely distinguishable in appearance from law enforcement officials, meanwhile, made their own show of force in Charlottesville, saying they were there to keep the peace between white nationalist rallygoers and counter-protesters.

As my Slate colleagues Dahlia Lithwick and Mark Joseph Stern reported on Monday, those trying to exercise First Amendment rights clashed with those claiming to exercise Second Amendment rightsincluding Virginias open-carry lawsin Charlottesville, and the guns won. Current constitutional doctrine, they argued, is poorly equipped to handle a situation where one heavily armed group of assemblers is able to silence with their weaponry the free speech rights of a different group of would-be assemblers.

But University of Virginia professor Philip Zelikow argues that the Constitution does allow for restricting armed rallies. Writing in Lawfare, Zelikow notes that there is precedent for preventing groups of heavily armed white supremacists from gathering in intimidating mass assemblies:

The judge granted their request, the order worked, and the group was enjoined from displays of intimidation.

Reading a description of one white supremacist group in Charlottesville by BuzzFeed News reporter Blake Montgomery, its hard not to think of that standard for an illegal paramilitary gathering:

In his article, Zelikow went onto write that, while the Second Amendment guarantees a right to a well-regulated militia, federal courts have held that private militias do not have the right to free reign.

When private self-styled militias get organized, equipped to fight, and travel to my town for a confrontation, this is not a Second Amendment story, Zelikow told me over email. They are organized to violate civil rights and intimidate my townspeople, to show their strength not with their speech, but with their firepower.

Zelikow argues that towns and citizens have the right to sue and enjoin such heavily armed organized groups from staging such rallies. He also suggests that rallygoers like the ones in Charlottesvilleas well as some of the counter-protestersmight have fit the standard for such an injunction. [T]here were a number of clusters that deployed together with standardized dress (to recognize each other), standardized insignia, similar combat/riot gear, and similar classes of weapons, Zelikow, who worked in multiple prior presidential administrations, said over email. Not incidentally, the Antifa [anti-fascist] group also has some standardized identifiers (red neckerchiefs, for example), deploys together in an obviously coordinated way, and carried assault weapons.

(At least one leftist group was reported to have showed up armed with guns.)

Ultimately, Zelikow compares the appearance of these sorts of heavily armed groups asserting the right to mass public assembly to darker periods in world and U.S. history:

The coming weeks seem likely to continue to test that line between protected assembly and unprotected civil violence. The ability of civil authorities to respond when that line is crossed also seems likely to face some very serious challenges.

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Is There a Way to Prevent the Next Charlottesville? - Slate Magazine (blog)

Police must act fast to protect First Amendment rights: Robert Shibley – USA TODAY

Robert Shibley, Opinion contributor Published 10:22 a.m. ET Aug. 17, 2017 | Updated 10:24 a.m. ET Aug. 17, 2017

In Charlottesville, Va., on Aug. 13, 2017.(Photo: Tasos Katopodis, epa)

Americans were shocked by the naked political violence we saw this weekend in Charlottesville, Va. Commenters on the left and the right immediately blamed the usual suspects. The right blamed identity politics. The left blamed entrenched racism. But an obvious cause of injury and death is once again being overlooked: the fact that the violence was allowed to get underway at all.

State, local, and even college campus leadership appear to be telling police to stand by while some degree of unlawful violence takes place right before their eyes. Yet when that violence predictably spirals out of control, the authorities profess their inability to have done anything to stop it. Meanwhile, those inclined to violence are emboldened, secure in the knowledge that the publicity payoff is high and the odds of punishment low.

More: Three homeland security lessons from Charlottesville: Michael Chertoff

More: Trump Tower presser proved our president is far worse than a racist

This must stop. Freedom of expression is what gives us the ability to hash out societal issues through argument instead of physical conflict, but it is only meaningful when people are reasonably confident that they will be physically safe while they speak and listen. When the authorities simply stand by and let political violence occur, even in the hope of the conflict somehow de-escalating itself, they send the message that both sides have a free hand to violently attack their opponents. This makes a mockery of the First Amendment rights to free speech and assembly.

After the riot that successfully prevented Milo Yiannopoulos from speaking at the University of California, Berkeley, in February, many reported on the conspicuous lack of police involvement despite the injuriesand destruction. I personally spoke to a woman who had come to see the speech. Having been pepper-sprayed and nearly blinded by a violent protester, she told me she crawled over three layers of crowd barriers to reach a building with dozens of police inside. Yet when she reached the door, the police refused her entry.

Likewise, CNN reported that in Charlottesville, both sides agree that one group didn't do enough to prevent the violence as the crowds grew and tensions flared: the police. The organizer of the Unite the Right rally complained that police purposefully created the catastrophe that led to a melee in the streets of Charlottesville, while a Black Lives Matter leader attending the counter-protest remarked, It's almost as if they wanted us to fight each other.

More: Trump champion: Bury Confederate romanticism. It's indefensible and bad for GOP.

POLICING THE USA: A look atrace, justice, media

Its hard to think of a more thankless task than riot policing. But when authorities fail at the basic task of preventing mob violence, both political and policy questions need to be asked. When the Huffington Post reports that Several times, a group of assault-rifle-toting militia members from New York State played a more active role in breaking up fights than the police, law enforcements response needs serious rethinking.

There is one group of people who have so far consistently benefitted when political violence has been allowed to take place: the politicians who lead our localities and the de facto politicians who run our campuses. They avoid the political fallout from images of police confronting violent protesters (who may also be their supporters), they get to blame whichever side they like less for causing the violence, and get to pretend to fulfill their responsibility to keep people safe by making it harder for controversial viewpoints to be expressed.

Ann Coulter had to cancel a speech at Berkeley after the school insisted it would not be safe for her to speak on campus. Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe blamed the ACLU of Virginia and a federal judge for blocking the citys attempt to revoke the rallys permit, saying We've got to look at these permits. This week, Texas A&M and the University of Florida announced that safety concerns prevented them from hosting speeches by Richard Spencer that are several weeks away. In contrast, in the 1960s American Nazi Party founder George Lincoln Rockwell was able to speak at UCLA, Michigan State, Brown, and other colleges, before audiences containing people who might have fought or lost loved ones to actual German Nazis. How can it be that hosting a similar speaker is impossible now?

Trading our free speech rights for the opportunity to be victimized by political violence is tremendously foolish, as is turning the blame for it on our civil liberties or those who defend them. Benjamin Franklin famously told a curious Philadelphian that Americas founders had given us a republic, if you can keep it. This is exactly what he was talking about.

Robert Shibley, an attorney, is executive director of the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE).

You can read diverse opinions from ourBoard of Contributorsand other writers on theOpinion front page, on Twitter@USATOpinionand in our dailyOpinion newsletter. To respond to a column, submit a comment toletters@usatoday.com.

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Police must act fast to protect First Amendment rights: Robert Shibley - USA TODAY

Podcast: Trump, Twitter and the First Amendment – Constitution Daily (blog)

Can President Trump block citizens from following his own Twitter feed? Hear about the First Amendment aspects of this pending legal case.

The Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University has filed suit on behalf of several Twitter users who were denied the ability to follow the Presidents Twitter feed after they made comments critical of him. The Institute claims that the ban is a violation of a First Amendment right to free speech and free assembly, and that a public officials social media page is a designated public forum.

The Justice Department, defending President Trump, says the courts are powerless to tell President Trump how he can manage his private Twitter handle and the Institutes requests would send the First Amendment deep into uncharted waters.

Joining our We The People podcast to discuss these arguments are Alex Abdo, a senior staff attorney at the Knight First Amendment Institute and Eugene Volokh, the Gary T. Schwartz Professor of Law at UCLA School of Law.

CREDITS

Todays show was engineered by Jason Gregory and produced by Ugonna Ezeand Lana Ulrich. Research was provided by Lana and Tom Donnelly.

Continue todays conversation on Facebook and Twitter using @ConstitutionCtr.

Sign up to receive Constitution Weekly, our email roundup of constitutional news and debate, at bit.ly/constitutionweekly.

Please subscribe toWe the Peopleand our companion podcast,Live at Americas Town Hall, on iTunes, Stitcher, or your favorite podcast app.

We the Peopleis a member of SlatesPanoply network. Check out the full roster of podcasts at Panoply.fm.

And finally, despite our congressional charter, the National Constitution Center is a private nonprofit; we receive little government support, and we rely on the generosity of people around the country who are inspired by our nonpartisan mission of constitutional debate and education. Please consider becoming a member to support our work, including this podcast. Visitconstitutioncenter.orgto learn more.

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Podcast: Trump, Twitter and the First Amendment - Constitution Daily (blog)

Between the lines: Cops caught in the First Amendment war zone – Police News

Earlier this week, far-right groups announced intentions to organize a March on Google in response to that companys firing of an employee over a memo he wrote about the companys diversity policies. The cities the groups were targeting were Atlanta, Austin, Boston, Los Angeles, Mountain View, New York, Pittsburgh, Seattle and Washington, D.C.

Days later, citing credible alt-left terrorist threats, those right-wing groups called off their planned demonstrations. It is presently unclear whether or not those demonstrations will take place, or have indeed been called off.

What is plainly evident is that police in those cities and across America must gird for the worst. The law enforcement officers who are charged with protecting peoples First Amendment rights to free speech will be forced to hold the ground in the middle, caught between the lines formed by the warring factions of left-wing and right-wing protesters and counter-protesters.

Those cops are on the front lines of what may turn into violent conflict, whether they like it or not.

There are conflicting reports floating around the internet about whether or not political leadership in Virginia told law enforcement to stand down and allow the violence in Charlottesville to escalate to the point of murder, attempted murder and domestic terrorism.

Whether or not a stand down order was given, we must take stock of the fact that violent conflict between these groups was as predictable as the sunset. Anyone who was paying even the slightest attention to the 18 months that preceded the election of Donald Trump to the presidency could have predicted an escalation of violence.

During the campaign, we saw people shouting down the group they oppose. On both the left and the right we saw people throwing punches at each other rather than sitting down and trying to talk.

We saw protesters on both sides of the political spectrum show up at gatherings held by their perceived opposition, armed not just with grievances, but with clubs and bats and improvised shields. They came in fatigues, or dressed in all black clothing. They wore masks and bandanas over their faces. Fists flew and blood was shed on multiple occasions.

In many of those cases, these groups were separated by an emasculated force of peace officers who had neither the commands nor the capabilities to actually keep the peace. In many cases, those cops were ordered to not carry riot shields. They could not wear protective helmets. They could not carry OC spray. They were basically told, You cannot have the tools and tactics to keep these two sides apart.

This cannot be the plan going forward.

Gordon Graham, a retired California Highway Patrol Captain and risk management expert, has famously said for many years that nearly every bad outcome is predictable and that predictable is preventable.

It must be remembered that the First Amendment allows for peaceable assembly and that violence is not free speech. Mayhem and lawlessness must be stopped before it can start. This can only happen if police across the country are empowered to show up to these demonstrations in full riot gear, with well-defined marching orders to stop protests from devolving into madness.

Whether or not the announced (and then, apparently, cancelled) white nationalist demonstrations take place this weekend, we know that such events will inevitably happen in the coming weeks and months. Events will be organized by the other side too.

The politics of hate and intolerance has been worsening for too long.

Last weekend in Charlottesville ended in tragedy, and some pundits have said that we as a nation are as divided as we were during the tumultuous 1960s.

The question becomes, will political leaders have the fortitude to give the cops the authority to quell the violence in a tactically appropriate fashion?

Can police forces in the United States prevent future bloodshed? I hope so. But hope is not a strategy, and luck is not a tactic. So as a police leader, you need to lobby your elected officials to give you the permission to do whatever is necessary when your day comes.

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Between the lines: Cops caught in the First Amendment war zone - Police News

How groups use ‘First Amendment’ permits for protests at National Parks – ABC10

Alexa Renee, KXTV 3:14 PM. PDT August 17, 2017

7. Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Park (Photo: TripAdvisor)

A right wing group has been granted legal permission through the National Parks Service to protest at Crissy Field in San Francisco.

The group, Patriot Prayer, obtained a "First Amendment" permit to be at the site Saturday, Aug. 26 from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m., according to KGO.

So what is a "First Amendment" permit?

Under federal law policy, the National Park Service (NPS) recognizes freedom of speech, press, religion, and public assembly, according to their website.

However, the agency also has an interest in protecting park resources and the public's use of parks, and is given the right to regulate events held on national parks. The NPS requires a permit establishing a date, time, location, number of participants and other details related to a First Amendment event.

The content of First Amendment activities doesn't need to reflect the NPS mission or views to be reviewed for a permit.

Each national park has its own set of details and rules for a permit but in general, a group of more than 25 people are required to apply for a permit to hold a First Amendment event.

Crissy Field is apark unit of the Golden Gate National Recreation Area. A First Amendment permit is required for use of the area if a group will have more than 25 people, is utilizing special equipment such as generators and tents, if the organizers would like priority use of the area and if the group is requesting an area not otherwise open to the public, according to the NPS.

While a First Amendment permit is free to apply for at Golden Gate Park, large groups require a Special Events permit application fee of $45 and a certificate of liability insurance for $1,000,000.

Permit costs are separate from application costs and can range from free to $40,000, according to the NPS.

Ten business days is the minimum amount of time required to review most permit applications but larger events may take more time.

Some sensitive areas could be restricted and at least one park ranger needs to be present during an event as well as when loading and unloading.

For more details about First Amendment permits at national parks go to http://www.nps.gov.

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How groups use 'First Amendment' permits for protests at National Parks - ABC10

Last weekend’s violent protests prompt First Amendment conversation – WBKO

BOWLING GREEN, Ky. (WBKO) -- Free speech always poses many questions.

Last weekend's violent protests have prompted an important conversation on free speech and peaceful assembly. Several history professors and the community are weighing in on the First Amendment.

"Congress shall make no law...abridging freedom of speech," says the United States Constitution.

"There are several limitations on free speech," explains Dr. Patti Minter, History professor at Western Kentucky University.

Freedom of speech is not protected under certain circumstances.

"You can't shout fire in a theater. And so that kind of idea and incitement to violence is not protected," says Tony Harkins, Associate history professor at Western Kentucky University.

The United States Courts state that right does not include, "the right to incite actions that would harm others."

The First Amendment also reads, "(Congress shall make no law abridging)...the right of the people peaceably to assemble."

"A group of neo-nazis and white supremacists can get a permit to march... to march peacefully," explains Dr. Minter.

Peacefully being the keyword here. However, footage from last weekend in Charlottesville indicates the peace was lost.

"A group came to terrorize, got a permit claiming that they were going to have a peaceful assembly, and they did not," says Dr. Minter.

Some may think that the First Amendment is protected on social media platforms.

"Well social media is very much a double edge sword," says Harkins.

The truth is our rights are not applicable here. Private organizations like Twitter or Facebook have the right to ban anyone or any group from their platforms based on their discretion

"Social media accelerates the view with which those views get shared," says Harkins.

Facebook CEO, Mark Zuckerberg, recently made a statement behind the company's decision to remove certain groups and comments, stating, "There is no place for hate in our community. That's why we've always taken down any post that promotes or celebrates hate crimes or acts of terrorism."

At the end of the day, the Bowling Green community says we need a little more of love and respect.

"The need for civility, for conversation, for understanding," says Harkins.

"While also being respectful," says Western freshman, Ania Lander.

The professors intend to use the current events in Charlottesville as a teaching lesson on the first amendment and also as it relates to history.

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Last weekend's violent protests prompt First Amendment conversation - WBKO

Equality, Justice and the First Amendment – Common Dreams


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Equality, Justice and the First Amendment - Common Dreams

Tor Project ‘disgusted’ by Daily Stormer, defends software ethos – CNET

The Tor Project says it can't build open source tools for circumventing censorship if it also controls who uses those tools.

A day after The Daily Stormer retreated to the darknet, the organization that helped make that move possible is condemning the neo-Nazi site while grudgingly acknowledging its technology allows the site to continue to spew messages of hate.

A version of the site, dubbed the "top hate site in America," appeared Wednesday on a part of the web that can only be accessed through the Tor Project's browser, which hides users' online identities. The Daily Stormer moved to a Tor onion service after GoDaddy and then Googlepulled its domain following an offensive story it published about Heather Heyer, who was killed on Saturday while counter-protesting against white supremacist protesters in Charlottesville, Virginia.

"We are disgusted, angered, and appalled by everything these racists stand for and do," Tor member Steph wrote in a blog post Thursday. "Ironically, the Tor software has been designed and written by a diverse team including people of many religions, races, gender identities, sexual orientations, and points on the (legitimate, non-Nazi) political spectrum.

"We are everything they claim to despise," Steph wrote. "And we work every day to defend the human rights they oppose."

With the move, the Tor Project joins a slew of companies and organizations seeking to distance themselves from white supremacist activity on the web. Apple and PayPal have disabled support of their services at websites that sell merchandise glorifying white nationalists and support hate groups, while Reddit and Facebook have each banned entire hate groups.

Click to see our in-depth coverage of online hatred.

On Wednesday, internet security provider Cloudflare dropped its support for the website, essentially allowing it to be taken down with a denial-of-service attack. Twitter also joined the campaign by suspending the accounts linked to the the website.

Steph pointed out the Tor browser is designed to defeat censorship, and the organization can't and shouldn't decide who benefits from that freedom.

"We can't build free and open source tools that protect journalists, human rights activists, and ordinary people around the world if we also control who uses those tools," Steph wrote. "Tor is designed to defend human rights and privacy by preventing anyone from censoring things, even us."

Solving for XX: The industry seeks to overcome outdated ideas about "women in tech."

Special Reports: All of CNET's most in-depth features in one easy spot.

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Tor Project 'disgusted' by Daily Stormer, defends software ethos - CNET

Tech Companies Decide White Supremacists Should Wear HoodsWhich Could Make Them Harder to Track – The Root

Charlottesville, Va., will be etched into American history, but not, perhaps, only as the day a new generation of Ku Klux Klan members went maskless and white America finally called a white terrorist what he is. Textbooks might not only record it as when right-wing hatred roiled up from a maelstrom of racial tension to drown a womans life over a monument to a racist general who defended slavery. The last week might not simply be remembered as when Donald Trump, with childish petulance, was quicker to insult a black businessman who disavowed the president over his weak response to Charlottesville than he was to distance himself from Nazisma breed of hatred America once went to war against.

Rather, Charlottesville might need to be footnoted as when hate groups became harder to track when hackers fought back against white supremacists newfound anonymity for shits and giggles, and freedom of speech as it applies to the internet was forever changed in America.

After white supremacist hub the Daily Stormer released an article denigrating Heather Heyer, the victim of the hit-and-run terrorist attack, its host, GoDaddy, decided that Stormer had violated its terms of service. Stormer tried to move its domain to Google, but the towering tech company immediately Dikembe Mutombo-ed that shit. Afterward, Zoho, the Stormers email service provider, dropped them like they were hot. Not long afterward, Vanguard America, another popular white supremacist site, went dark, too.

Inside 24 hours, three tech companies did more to silence racism than Trump. It was swift, sweet catharsis. But as with many comfort foods, the health effects might turn out to be bitterfor two reasons: free speech and anonymity.

These Nazis are gonna learn that theyre being shut off from decent society, and they will have a

People often decry tech companies censorship as a violation of the First Amendment. (See: white man who just found out he isnt entitled to express vehement bile anywhere he chooses.) It isnt. The First protects you from threats and government deprivation of your freedom of speech.

Recently, the Supreme Court struck down a law that once prevented convicted sex offenders from using social mediabecause such forums are often frequented by minorsrecognizing social media as a modern public square. Consequently, blocking people from using it would be a violation of free speech.

Several Twitter users have sued Trump for blocking them on Twitter, because, after all, why should they be deprived of the opportunity to bask in the resplendent glow of Sir Cheetos Puffs wisdom?

This concept of simultaneously treating or increasingly recognizing the internet as a public sphere and protecting companies right to censor have come into conflict. Its plausible that the next decade could see a Supreme Court case calling to better codify the limitations of tech companies right to censor hate speech. As the most impactful case of tech-company censorship to date, Charlottesville and the ensuing shutdown of the Daily Stormer could have set a precedent to be cited either in favor of censoring hate speech or against it.

And there is a case to be made against censoring hate speech, as repulsive as it is. For one, the expectation that tech companies should police inflammatory comments could lead to them censoring, say, #BlackLivesMatter. Moreover, while silencing racists and pushing them ever further to the fringes of society is cathartic, it may be more important now more than ever to remember why civil rights leaders like Martin Luther King Jr. and Mahatma Gandhi, who stand tallest as historys beacons of hope, are those who chose the high roadwho chose to be empathetic, acknowledge their persecutors humanity and appeal to what moral values they did have.

Its increasingly easy for someone to tumble into echo chambers of confirmation bias, where they never intellectually interact with people with different viewsonly abstractify and insult them. Its easier to be pushed toward extremism. The Obama administration realized this and allocated a $10 million fund to counter recruitment for neo-Nazi and white supremacist organizations. Then Trumps administration slashed that funding.

Now white supremacists are being pushed to the fringes of society, and not necessarily in a productive way. In less than 24 hours after Stormer was shut down, a social media campaign began disseminating the URL to a new version of the site on the Tor Browser, the darknet.

This isnt the first time racists have huddled together in the darknet. However, the Stormer was the white supremacist hub, with 2.87 million visits a month. Thats depressingly popular, but this centrality made sites like the Stormer and Vanguard a treasure trove of data for organizations such as the Southern Poverty Law Center, which tracks hate groups. Regular websites also require IP addresses to be archived. This is useful to law-enforcement agencies when they need to track down suspects.

The Tor Browser doesnt render all users perfectly anonymous, but its considerably harder for law-enforcement agencies and hate-group researchers alike to mine info that could allow them to track white supremacists. Initial research by Motherboard cybersecurity reporter Joseph Cox has even noted that there doesnt seem to be any issues with the site that might allow users to be easily de-anonymized.

Since then, a hacker took credit for launching a distributed denial of service attack, a type of cyberattack wherein networks of internet-accessible devices are harnessed to overwhelm a system with traffic, in order to shut down the new site. The attacker or attackers claimed that they dont really care about either side. They did it because they could.

Nevertheless, if the site goes back up, white supremacists will flock together again. And in the process of deciding that white supremacists should once again wear hoods, tech companies might have just made sure theyll do so in greater anonymity.

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Tech Companies Decide White Supremacists Should Wear HoodsWhich Could Make Them Harder to Track - The Root

Nasty Locky ransomware is back, and now it’s worse than ever – Komando

Ransomware has been the largest cybersecurity threat in the world for over a year now. Over that time we've seen a number of massive attacks. The WannaCry variant that occurred earlier this year in May was extremely nasty, locking up hundreds of thousands of computers in over 150 countries.

One of the first known ransomware attacks to hit the scene was dubbed Locky, but it hasn't been prevalent in a while. Until now. A new Locky ransomware variant is spreading and you need to know what to watch for.

Researchers at Comodo Threat Intelligence Lab recently discovered a new Locky variant dubbed IKARUSdilapidated. It is being distributed through phishing emails that contain little to no content. The email does, however, have a malicious file attached to it.

The attachment is either a Word document, PDF, archive zip file, or image file. If the recipient executes the attachment, it infects their gadget with IKARUSdilapidated ransomware.

A Comodo spokesperson said, "When the user opens the attached document, it appears to be full of garbage, and it includes the phrase 'Enable macro if data encoding is incorrect' - a social engineering technique used in this type of phishing attack. If the user does as instructed, the macros then save and run a binary file that downloads the actual encryption Trojan."

Here is an example of what the email looks like:

Once the victim's gadget is infected with the ransomware, a message appears instructing them to download the Tor browser. Then, a ransom of up to $1,200 is demanded that the victim is told to pay using bitcoin.

So far, there have been tens of thousands of these phishing emails delivered. The cybercriminals are using botnets to send the malicious emails.

(Note:A botnet is a group of gadgetsthat hackers have taken over without the owner's knowledge. The hackers seize control of unwitting gadgetswith a virus, and then use the network of infected computersto perform large-scale hacks or scams.)

As you can see, this is a very elaborate scam. Phishing emails, botnets, and ransomware are all used in this attack to scam people out of money. That's why you really need to know how to avoid falling victim to this attack.

The best way to defeat a ransomware attack is to takeprecautionary steps. Here are suggestions that will help:

Backing up your critical data is an important safety precaution in the fight against ransomware. It's the best way to recover your files without paying a ransom.

We recommend using our sponsorIDrive. You can backup all your PCs, Macs and mobile devices into ONE account for one low cost! Be sureand use promo codeKimto receive an exclusive offer.

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Nasty Locky ransomware is back, and now it's worse than ever - Komando

US e-sports platform to launch $100 million cryptocurrency sale in September – Reuters

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Unikrn, a U.S. sports betting digital platform backed by some of the biggest names in media, entertainment and sports, will launch the sale of $100 million in cryptocurrency next month, the company's co-founder and chief executive officer, Rahul Sood, told Reuters in an interview earlier this week.

The sale is part of a trend in which creators of digital currencies in the blockchain space sell tokens to the public to fund their projects. Some start-ups call this mode of financing an initial coin offering (ICO); others refer to it as a "token sale."

Cryptocurrency is a digital currency in which encryption techniques help keep transactions secure. Blockchain is a digital ledger of transactions underpinning the original online currency bitcoin.

Sood explained that Unikrn embraced cryptocurrency as a way to bypass banking institutions.

"The problem when you're dealing with banks is that none of these guys are easy to work with," Sood said. "You're dealing with 20 different currencies, you're dealing across borders. There's no other reason to go this route other than to circumvent banking."

The new coin will be called UnikoinGold, which will be a cryptocurrency version of the company's existing coin UniKoin. The current UniKoin, which allows users to bet on e-sports in regulated markets and win prizes in markets where Unikrn is not licensed to operate, will be phased out once UniKoingold is launched.

Unikrn is capping its token sale at $100 million because "if we don't, it's going to go crazy," Sood said.

Sood said there will be a pre-sale of the token in the next few weeks and a crowdsale in September. There will be no discount for early investors or company founders and employees.

Sood founded Voodoo, which manufactures high-end computers for video games, when he was in high school. He eventually sold his company to Hewlett Packard after 16 years and eventually joined Microsoft and ran the company's venture fund for start-ups.

Seattle-based Unikrn, which was launched nearly three years ago, is backed by well-known investors including Mark Cuban, owner of the Dallas Mavericks professional basketball team; U.S. actor Ashton Kutcher's venture firm Sound Ventures; Elisabeth Murdoch's venture fund Freeland Ventures, as well as Shari Redstone's Advancit Capital. TabCorp, the largest betting company in Australia is also an investor.

The company raised $10 million from early investors, Sood said.

Elisabeth Murdoch is the daughter of media mogul Rupert Murdoch, while Shari Redstone is the daughter of Sumner Redstone whose family is a majority owner of several media groups including CBS Corp., Viacom, and MTV Networks.

Reporting by Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss; Editing by Bernadette Baum

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US e-sports platform to launch $100 million cryptocurrency sale in September - Reuters

Could Cryptocurrencies Replace Cash? – Investopedia


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Could Cryptocurrencies Replace Cash?
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At the beginning of the cryptocurrency boom, Bitcoin seemed to be the unquestioned leader. Up until early this year, Bitcoin accounted for the vast majority of the industry's market capitalization; then, in a span of just weeks, Ethereum, Ripple, and ...
Zen Protocol is the next step for cryptocurrency smart-contractsTNW
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Is the Neo Cryptocurrency The Ethereum of China?The Market Mogul
TheStreet.com -Bitcoin News (press release)
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Could Cryptocurrencies Replace Cash? - Investopedia

Looking for bubbles? Here are two below-the-radar trouble spots – CNBC

Federal Reserve officials lately have been pondering the question of whether risk-taking is getting out of hand. The S&P 500 is up 10.2 percent year to date and about 270 percent since the March 2009 low in the second-longest bull market on record.

Policymakers at their July meeting discussed the surge in stock prices but concluded that the rise in equity values has a fundamental backing, according to an account of the session the central bank released Wednesday.

Not mentioned in the meeting minutes, however, was the stratospheric climb of cryptocurrencies bitcoin and ethereum this year. Yardeni believes both are alarming, considering how much speculative money is going into the space.

He focused primarily on initial coin offerings, which give investors the ability to bet on the direction of freshly minted digital cash.

"They are betting that the coins will rise in value because they are issued in limited supplies, which seems to be their only selling point. This is an odd bet on demand getting stimulated by a shortage of this funny money," Yardeni wrote.

Further, he worries that fraud a familiar theme in the cryptocurrency world could wipe out the billions that investors are pouring into ICOs.

The Securities and Exchange Commission recently issued a warning that if investors are swindled by less reputable crypto operators, the ability to recoup their losses likely will be limited.

"If fraud or theft results in you or the organization that issued the virtual tokens or coins losing virtual tokens, virtual currency, or fiat currency, you may have limited recovery options," the commission said. "Third-party wallet services, payment processors, and virtual currency exchanges that play important roles in the use of virtual currencies may be located overseas or be operating unlawfully."

ICOs are estimated to have raised $1.3 billion this year [according to a recent Wall Street Journal report] and that doesn't include 48 more that are expected to come to market before Nov. 1.

The push for coin offerings come as bitcoin's price has risen more than 360 percent and ethereum has jumped more than 3,000 percent.

Should the demand go south, that could lead a lot of digital currency believers with money that vanishes into the ether.

"At some point, if the number of ICOs falls, a major source of demand for these cryptocurrencies will be declining. ICOs could stall if too many dollars are required to buy an ether or if too many of these business-plan companies fail to germinate,"" Yardeni said. "This complicated area with its own language seems to be filled with exuberance, and that rarely ends well."

WATCH: Dennis Gartman warns investors to stay away from digital currencies.

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Looking for bubbles? Here are two below-the-radar trouble spots - CNBC

Binance Remarks Cryptocurrency Industry to Build the New Echo – newsBTC

Binances co-founder, Yi He, gave The Age of Blockchain Exchange 2.0 presentation at The 4th Global Blockchain Summit 2017 on August 16th, 2017. In her presentation, Yi He shared the status quo of Binance and talked about significant strategies of Binance. The following is Yi Hes words in her presentation.

Blockchain assets enter to 2.0 age, and Binance aim to be the NYSE in cryptocurrency industry

People are familiar with the traditional exchange, and we can separate the exchange into two phases, exchange 1.0 and exchange 2.0.

In exchange 1.0, you exchange your fiat money to BTC or any other crypto currency. This is just like the currency conversion business. This is very similar to exchanging l RMB to the USD.

Let me explain this with the help of an example, you normally deposit US dollar to your account; at Binance, you deposit Bitcoin to your Binance account, and then you can trade coins just like trading stocks on the stock exchange. You can see that we are now entering a Bitcoin NYSE or NASDAQ age, and Binance is following the footstep of NYSE and revolutionizing the blockchain asset industry. These coins that you buy from Binance is comparable to shares you buy on the stock exchange.

As the fastest growing cryptocurrency exchange, Binance provides the platform to the high-quality ICO projects at the same time. The third thing to do is the blockchain media and finally the blockchain fund.

Binance will release its ICO platform soon.

The first project is TRON.

The second one is Liuliang ore, created by QvodPlayer team.

The third one is created by Yan Mu, founder of baihe.com.

All the projects have a pretty solid team and valuable products.

Binance will launch a video media for blockchain BABI Finance, and launch a 100 blockchain celebrities project as well. If you know some elites in this industry, kindly recommend them to us. Our mission is to spread the awareness about blockchain, ICO, and cryptocurrency. If everyone knows about these terminologies, people will not think we are the Ponzi Scheme or another bubble in the economy.

In order to promote this industry, Binance decides to set up the blockchain fund. The fund will choose good projects on our ICO platform and put their coins on Binance exchange. Our media will promote these high-quality projects to the market and build our own eco system. In this eco system, all the payment will be paid by BnB, include fund, primary market, secondary market and the media.

We will be a huge player in the industry only if more people know about us. The blockchain is just a newborn baby, and we will try our best to rebuild and grow.

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Binance Remarks Cryptocurrency Industry to Build the New Echo - newsBTC

Bitcoin latest news: Australia crackdown on cryptocurrency funding terrorism – Express.co.uk

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The Australian government said the threat of financial crime is constantly evolving as it introduced new measures targeting criminal use of the cryptocurrency and strengthened the Anti-Money Laundering And Counter Terrorism Financing Act.

Under the reforms, currency exchange providers of digital money, such as the bitcoin and ethereum, will be brought under the remit of the Australian Transactions and Reporting Analysis Centre (AUSTRAC).

The investigative and enforcement powers of the financial intelligence agency will also be strengthened as part of the changes.

Australia's Minister for Justice Michael Keenan said: "Stopping the movement of money to criminals and terrorists is a vital part of our national security defences and we expect regulated businesses in Australia to comply with our comprehensive regime.

"The threat of serious financial crime is constantly evolving, as new technologies emerge and criminals seek to nefariously exploit them.

"These measures ensure there is nowhere for criminals to hide."

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China has already made similar moves and promised to shut exchanges that were found to violate anti money-laundering regulations.

It is seen as a positive move for the cryptocurrencies as it helps brings them into the mainstream.

New rules in Japan mean bitcoin is now considered a legal currency.

Aurlien Menant, founder and CEO of Gatecoin, told CNBC: "It signifies the growing recognition of bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies as influential value transfer protocols by governments.

"Compliance with AUSTRAC policies will weed out the crooks and ensure that only serious bitcoin businesses are able to serve the market."

It comes after bitcoin's value smashed through the $4,000 mark this week to hit a fresh record high.

The Australian Digital Currency & Commerce Association said the government reforms will help provide regulatory certainty to digital currency businesses.

However, members of the crytocurrency community who want to remain anonymous are likely to be against the move to further regulate the sector.

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Bitcoin latest news: Australia crackdown on cryptocurrency funding terrorism - Express.co.uk

Another major country joins China and Japan in cracking down on bitcoin exchanges – CNBC

Following moves by China and Japan to regulate digital currencies, Australia is attempting to crackdown on money laundering and terrorism financing with plans to regulate bitcoin exchanges.

"The threat of serious financial crime is constantly evolving, as new technologies emerge and criminals seek to nefariously exploit them. These measures ensure there is nowhere for criminals to hide," said Australia's Minister for Justice Michael Keenan in a press release.

The Australian government proposed a set of reforms on Thursday which will close a gap in regulation and bring digital currency exchange providers under the remit of the Australian Transactions and Reporting Analysis Centre (AUSTRAC).

These exchanges serve as marketplaces where traders can buy and sell digital currencies, such as bitcoin, using fiat currencies, such as the dollar.

Bitcoin has grown massively this year. The market cap has increased to $73.93 billion and the price recently hit fresh record highs. It currently trades at $4,476 and the price has risen 348 percent year to date.

The reform bill is intended to strengthen the Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorism Financing Act and increase the powers of AUSTRAC.

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Another major country joins China and Japan in cracking down on bitcoin exchanges - CNBC

Bitcoin bond launch brings digital currency step closer to ‘world of high finance’ – CNBC

Bitcoin is getting closer to looking like a traditional financial product.

Japanese financial information firm Fisco announced Monday it is experimenting with the country's first bitcoin-backed bond. The news follows other announcements in the last several weeks for bitcoin options, futures and an exchange-traded fund tracking bitcoin derivatives in the U.S.

"I think it's a very healthy and natural progression of the space," said Adam White, Coinbase vice president and general manager of its GDAX exchange, told CNBC in a phone interview.

Derivatives products will allow for greater liquidity, better price discovery and lower volatility, White said. "I think products like derivatives or an ETF effectively allow traders to do two things: speculate and hedge risk on the price speculation."

Bitcoin price 12-month performance

Source: CoinDesk

Bitcoin has more than quadrupled in price this year, hitting a record above $4,500 Thursday and notching a market value of $74 billion amid growing institutional investor interest in the digital currency. Many governments and financial institutions see enormous potential for improving transaction security and efficiency using the blockchain technology that supports bitcoin.

But the surge in investor demand has also revealed access issues with third-party storage systems and trading platforms that fall short of the more established Wall Street markets.

Bitcoin's price is also prone to massive swings of several hundred dollars within a day. With bitcoin futures in the works, investors will be able to protect themselves from potential sharp drops in prices through hedging.

The ability to hedge bitcoin investments paves the way for other products, such as bonds.

Fisco's three-year bitcoin bond was issued by its digital currency exchange unit for an internal trial on Aug. 10, according to a Google translate of the press release.

The bond has a three percent annual interest rate and returns bitcoins when it matures, the release said. The total worth of the bond was 200 bitcoin, or $900,000 at Thursday's prices.

The bitcoin bond "brings digital currencies into the world of high finance," said Dan Doney, chief executive officer of Securrency, which plans to launch a platform at the end of the year to allow investors to buy stocks using bitcoin. Doney was chief innovation officer at the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency before co-founding Securrency in 2015.

The biggest challenge is "it is very difficult to predict the price of bitcoin tomorrow, let alone a year from now," Doney said.

A bitcoin-backed bond would allow large institutions to store value using the digital currency and potentially be more open to accepting bitcoin as payment, analysts said.

"It is interesting financial firms are trying to get their arms around the currency and what it can be," said Brian Patrick Eha, author of "How Money got Free: Bitcoin and the Fight for the Future of Finance."

In early August, the Chicago Board Options Exchange said it planned to launch bitcoin futures as soon as the fourth quarter of this year. That paved the way for VanEck, which sells gold ETFs and other investment products, to file last Friday with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission for a "VanEck Vectors Bitcoin Strategy ETF" that proposes to initially invest in bitcoin futures.

The U.S. Commodity and Futures Commission in late July also approved a digital currency trading platform called LedgerX to clear derivatives.

Historically cryptocurrencies "were very much a domain for crypto anarchists and tech-savvy people, and that has changed in the last couple years," said Niklas Nikolajsen, CEO of Swiss-based digital currency broker Bitcoin Suisse. "This means a whole new ballgame of people are going to get access to the market."

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Bitcoin bond launch brings digital currency step closer to 'world of high finance' - CNBC

Bitcoin Surged to a New High Adding $17 Billion in Just Over a Week – Fortune

Defying naysayers, Bitcoin's price surged above $4,500 for the first time early Thursday to reach a market value of $73.6 billion.

While the cryptocurrency has since pared some of its gains, falling to $4,453 by midday Thursday, it's risen by about $1,000 in the past nine days. The currency's total market value jumped $17 billion in the same period, thanks in part to the optimism traders have around plans to help Bitcoin eventually go mainstream . This includes speedier transactions, starting with its software updatedubbed Segwit2xearlier this month.

We can also speculate that it is related to the increased interest from Korean and Japanese exchanges where volumes are also increasing, William Mougayar, the founder of Startup Management, told Fortune . Another part of it is driven by the psychology of markets, as $USD 5,000 seems to be within reach, now that the $4,000 level has been easily broken.

That said, Bitcoin's sudden rise is cause for concern for some.

Goldman Sachs analyst Sheba Jafari wrote in a Sunday note that she expected Bitcoin to potentially hit and peak at $4,827.

"The market should in theory enter a corrective phase. This can last at least one third of the time it took to complete the preceding advance and retrace at least 38.2% of the entire move," she wrote. "From current levels, that would measure out to around $2,221."

Meanwhile, plans to scale up Bitcoin haven't exactly gone smoothly. Miners still appear split about how to implement SegWit2x. The first part of that plan was activated earlier this month, but the second part, an upgrade to Bitcoin's software by increasing block size to two megabytes in November, has been a point of contention. That upgrade, which was made official this week, will result in a " hard fork ."

Miners already dissatisfied with Segwit2x decided not to make that upgrade earlier this year, forming a new cryptocurrency offshoot dubbed Bitcoin Cash . If more miners shun the November upgrade, it would in theory result in yet another Bitcoin currency.

Bitcoin Cash is trading at about $373.80, 47% off its all-time high earlier this month. Ethereum, on the other hand, is trading at about $289, 26% off its all-time high earlier this year.

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Bitcoin Surged to a New High Adding $17 Billion in Just Over a Week - Fortune

Bitcoin Cash Breaks Price Doldrums to Push Past $400 – CoinDesk

Bitcoin Cash's price rose above the $400 mark today, breaking the rangebound market trend of thepast several days.

The cryptocurrency climbed as high as $406 today, according to data fromCoinMarketCap. The move followed days of steadymarketfluctuations, with the price of Bitcoin Cash trading no more than a few dollars above or below the $300 level.

The largest Bitcoin Cash market by-volume is Bithumb, which accounts for roughly 30 percent of the global trade through its Korean won-Bitcoin Cash trading pair, CoinMarketCap figures show. The exchange reports more than $145 million in volume over the past 24 hours.

At press time, Bitcoin Cash is trading at about $391 onBithumb.

As previously reported by CoinDesk, Bitcoin Cash split off from the main bitcoin blockchain earlier this month when a group of miners and developers moved to adopt software, with new network rules, that was incompatible with the rest of the network. The result: bitcoin "forked" into two distinctblockchains with their own freely-traded digital assets.

Today's upward price action comes just hours after bitcoin reached a new all-time high above$4,500.

Rollercoaster image via Shutterstock

The leader in blockchain news, CoinDesk is an independent media outlet that strives for the highest journalistic standards and abides by a strict set of editorial policies. Have breaking news or a story tip to send to our journalists? Contact us at [emailprotected].

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Bitcoin Cash Breaks Price Doldrums to Push Past $400 - CoinDesk

FOOTBALL: Caston Comets preview – pharostribune.com

State Trooper Tony Slocum is looking forward to his first season as the Caston head football coach.

Hes got a small but mighty group to work with in Year 1.

A small group of kids, smaller than what were used to, about 18 kids as of right now and hopefully well pick up some when school starts which we usually pick up one or two. But well play a game before then so were going to go with what we got, Slocum said. Nobodys going to feel sorry for us so were going to practice as hard as we can in preparation to win football games. When the parents and community members pay their $6 to watch the Comets theyre going to see a hard-nosed football team that at least plays hard. We hope that translates into wins. Were preparing to win games, thats why we play them.

With a lack of numbers, the Comet players will have to be prepared to play both ways. Slocum noted that is usually the case every year, although this is a smaller group than usual.

But he said the players who are on the team can play.

This is a good group of kids. Theyve been together for obviously four years but most of them have played together since third or fourth grade. So they know each other, theyre a tight group, and when you have a small group youve got to have the right kids in the right positions. You have to have linemen, you have to have running backs and receivers and we have enough at the various positions to compete with anybody in our conference, Slocum said.

I equate us to being a MAC school, like a MAC school playing a Big Ten school, our top 11 is as good as anybody and as long as we avoid the injury bug, well compete very well, and thats our goal.

Slocum, who is running a double wing offense and is calling the plays, is moving his returning talent around. Hes moved senior Tayt Cowell (5-11, 177) to quarterback.

He was just voted as one of the captains of the team, Slocum said. This is his first year as a starting quarterback, he has played the backup role before. Hes one of those versatile kids who can play anywhere on the football field.

Senior Kasey Ault (5-11, 182), last years leading rusher and tackler, is moving from fullback to wingback this season.

Senior Brady Hartman (5-11, 186) is moving from quarterback to fullback. The other wingbacks are senior Colton Welker (6-0, 188) and junior Blake Albright (5-10, 171).

Brady Hartman, who was our starting quarterback the last couple years, a big kid who runs very hard, hes going to start at the fullback position, Slocum said. Colton Welker, whos a senior, pretty fast kid coming back from a couple knee injuries, two years in a row hes pulled on an ACL on the different knees, but hes been working hard and hes looking good and hes got some of his speed back so were counting on him to help spread that load out this year with Kasey Ault. Then we have another wing, Blake Albright, and those three hopefully we can share the load with four different backs and not have to rely so heavily on Kasey Ault as we did last year. But obviously when you have a dynamic player such as Kasey, you still want to get the ball in his hands as much as you can.

When the Comets do spread out and utilize wide receivers, it will be the halfbacks who split out.

The starting tight ends are sophomore Gavin Hickle (5-11, 183) and junior Chris Smith (6-0, 192), a veteran starter on the offensive line who is moving to tight end for this season.

The offensive line consists of senior Payton Hedrick (6-2, 309), who is moving from tackle to center, seniors Brandon Kinser (6-0, 194) and Dillion Tabler (6-0, 204) at guards and senior Seth Johnson (6-2, 253) and sophomore Hunter Schanlaub (6-4, 220) at tackle.

Hedrick and Tabler are veteran starters.

Seth Johnson missed out on football the last couple years but hes come back. Hes a pretty big kid and hes doing well for us, Slocum said. Brandon Kinser had an accident last summer, didnt get to play football, were obviously very happy to have him back.

Hunter Schanlaub, hes a versatile kid, a tight end in past, hes doing a good job also.

The Comets are going to a 4-2-5 look on defense.

Our base defense is going to be a 4-2-5 to utilize the limited linemen we have and use the speed that we do have in the backfield with those backs, Slocum said.

Hedrick and Johnson will start at defensive tackle and Smith and Schanlaub will start at defensive end. Ault and Kinser are the inside linebackers and Hickle and Hartman are the outside linebackers. Welker will start at safety with Cowell and Albright as the cornerbacks.

The Comets are coming off a 2-8 season where their two wins were against Triton and West Central. Theyre hosting West Central to open the season on Friday night. West Central left the Hoosier North Athletic Conference for the newly reformed Midwest Conference starting this school year, leaving the HNAC with eight schools. The other MWC schools are Frontier, North Newton, North White and Tri-County.

Theyre probably going to be a little upset because we beat them last year but were going to try our best to be ready for them, Slocum said. I welcome them to the Comet Crater and I hope people come out to watch these new Comets and see what we can do.

Im excited about what weve got and these kids play hard. Obviously we have to do our best to put them in a position to win and try to keep them away from injury. If we do that I think well be successful this year.

CASTON FOOTBALL

COACH: Tony Slocum (0-0 in 1st season)

CONFERENCE: Hoosier North.

SECTIONAL: Class A, Sectional 41.

SECTIONAL OPPONENTS: Culver, LaVille, North Judson, South Central (Union Mills), Triton, West Central, Winamac.

COMETS SCHEDULE

All games start at 7 p.m. unless otherwise noted.

Friday West Central

Aug. 25 at North Judson, 7:30 p.m.

Sept. 1 at Triton

Sept. 8 Pioneer

Sept. 15 LaVille

Sept. 22 at North Miami

Sept. 29 Culver

Oct. 6 at Winamac

Oct. 13 Knox, 7:30 p.m.

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FOOTBALL: Caston Comets preview - pharostribune.com