DOJ Tells Court There No Need To Establish A Warrant Requirement For Stingray Devices – Techdirt

The DOJ is in court arguing the use of Stingray devices by the FBI and local cops shouldn't require a warrant. The government's lawyers are fighting a suppression motion by Purvis Ellis, charged with racketeering and the attempted murder of a police officer.

The events of the case happened in 2013, two years before the DOJ instructed federal agents to seek warrants when deploying Stingrays. For this investigation, the Oakland PD used a pen register order, as was the style at the time. (And perhaps still is. Despite the DOJ's internal instructions, warrant requirements are all but nonexistent when it comes to local law enforcement agencies' use of cell tower spoofers.)

As Cyrus Farivar points out, the PD's Stingray couldn't locate Ellis, so it brought in the FBI. All without warrants and all without informing the defense about the additional Stingray deployment.

Ellis was located in an East Oakland apartment several hours after a January 2013 shooting with the help of two stingrays. Prosecutors initially insisted that only one stingray was used, but, as was revealed last summer, that turned out not to be the case. The Oakland Police Department's own stingray was seemingly insufficient, so officers then called in the FBI, both times without a warrant.

The defendant is arguing the multiple warrantless Stingray deployments violated the Fourth Amendment. Considering the devices coax a location signal out of phones by aping cell towers, this differentiates Stingrays from more passive collections -- like the pen register the government didn't actually use.

The government, quite obviously, is arguing otherwise. It points out in its opposition motion [PDF] that it has all the warrant exceptions on its side:

Four gang members ambushed a young man in broad daylight, shooting him through the forehead from close range. The next day, those same men jumped, pistol-whipped and shot a police officer investigating the prior days shooting. The suspects then fled, armed with their own arsenal, as well as with the guns they had just stolen from the officer. Police surrounded the apartment complex where the men were thought to be hiding. Finding them quickly was essential. By shooting two people in a 27-hour period, the suspects including the defendant Purvis Ellis had just demonstrated an ability and willingness to kill others. So, when officers used a cell site simulator (CSS) to find Ellis, they were entirely justified by the exigent circumstances presented, rightly believing him to be armed and dangerous.

The defendants motion to suppress is meritless. The courts have not definitively decided whether use of a CSS constitutes a search triggering Fourth Amendment protections. But it largely does not matter here, since exigent circumstances amply supported a warrantless use of the device.

[...]

Other exceptions to the warrant requirement also cut against suppressing evidence. For instance, the officers acted in good faith reliance on established law the pen register statute, Supreme Court precedent, even the FBI policy at the time. Those laws and policies, combined with the dearth of binding case law on the CSS, all justified using the device without a warrant. In addition, the officers would have inevitably discovered everything they ultimately did, even had they never used the CSS. After all, they had the building surrounded by dozens of officers and SWAT team members hours before the CSS was even deployed.

It's a long list of counterarguments, most of which have some validity in this particular case. (That, of course, doesn't stop the government from using the same arguments in cases where its assertions of good faith, exigency, etc. are far more questionable. But that's how lawyering works on both sides.)

It appears the government would rather the court didn't make a determination as to whether Stingray deployments are Fourth Amendment searches. The government lets the court know what it doesn't need to do to resolve this issue in the DOJ's favor:

Whether use of a cell site simulator constitutes a search for Fourth Amendment purposes is not necessarily a question this Court needs to answer, since even if it were a search, it was amply justified under the circumstances. That said, the law supports concluding that the device in this case did not affect a search.

The following argument, however, is particularly disingenuous. The defendant argued the warrant was invalid because officers didn't let the judge know they'd be deploying a Stingray device when it got its pen register order approved. The DOJ says this shouldn't matter, as it can find very little pre-2013 evidence suggesting these devices were mentioned in previous court documents.

Since the CSS technology was still relatively new in 2013, there were simply no binding cases to direct agents and officers to disregard Smith v. Maryland and get a warrant. According to the governments research, only a few federal pre-2013 cases referenced cell site simulator, digital analyzer, triggerfish, or stingray in a relevant context. (The government found no such cases in California courts.)

Well, of course this search came up empty. For years, the FBI swore law enforcement agencies to secrecy if they acquired Stingrays, telling them to dismiss cases rather than have defendants, judges, or even some prosecutors discuss the tech in open court. The lack of DOJ search results means the NDAs the FBI forced everyone to sign worked.

By no means was CSS technology "relatively new" in 2013. Documentation of Stingray devices can be found dating back to 2006 and use of pre-Stingray "digital analyzers" dates back more than 20 years. There wasn't much courtroom discussion because the FBI actively prevented it from happening. And the DOJ knows this, as its "research" likely turned up things like this 2012 NDA on DOJ letterhead telling a New York sheriff's office to STFU about its new toy.

With no discussion, there are no binding cases. That's how the FBI wanted it. And it pays off years down the road by making it easier for the DOJ to prevail in a suppression argument without setting precedent it may find inhibiting another half-decade down the road.

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DOJ Tells Court There No Need To Establish A Warrant Requirement For Stingray Devices - Techdirt

Secret Government Watchlist Sweeps Up an American Family, and Now They’re Suing – Reason (blog)

ACLUA Somali familyimmigrants who are now legally citizens of the United Statesare suing several federal agencies over what appears to have been a particularly rough border detention and search. Their treatment, they say, stems from the government's secretive, unaccountable watchlists.

They family is being represented by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), which has spent years fighting to force a system of due process on the various watchlists that agencies use (and share among each other). Thanks to these lists, hundreds of thousands of people are subjected to increased and intrusive searches when traveling.

The lawsuit attacks two significant and well-established problems with these watchlists. One: Even though these lists supposedly exist to keep an eye on suspected terrorists, they contain hundreds of thousands of names of people with no known ties to terrorist organizations. Two: The system is handled secretly, with almost no oversight or due process. People who end up on the list often cannot find out why or even get the government to acknowledge that they're on a list; their only option is to ask to be taken off the list and hope it happens.

The plaintiffs are the Wilwal-Abdigani family, who in March 2015 traveled from their home near Minneapolis to visit relatives in Canada. According to the lawsuit, they had little trouble passing into Canada but were warned that that the father, Abdisalam Wilwal, had a notation on his records that might result in some additional questions when he attempted to return home.

That proved to be an understatement. According to the lawsuit, when the family tried to return to the United States, border agents confronted them at gunpoint and detained them for hours. The lawsuit says that the border patrol asked Wilwal if the travelers were Muslims and accused him of involvement in terrorism. They handcuffed Wilwal and left him alone in a room for hours without even questioning him. He ended up fainting, and they had to call in paramedics. They eventually questioned him for 45 minutes, though he was detained for more than 10 hours.

The other members of the family were detained separately and were not allowed to leave either. At one point the mother, Sagal Abdegani, realized the agents had neglected to take the cellphone away from one of her children and she managed to call 911 to try to get outside help. An agent snatched the phone away from her. According the lawsuit, border patrol agents also took the couple's 14-year-old son into a separate room and demanded he take off his clothes for a strip search. He refused to comply.

The family was released much later in the day and was allowed to return home. They know now that Wilwal's name is in a federal watchlist database, but they don't know why. They've petitioned the feds to have Wilwal's name removed, but per the federal government's processes, the Department of Homeland Security declined to confirm or deny whether Wilwal is actually watchlisted or whether they removed him from the list. The lawsuit notes, "At no point in the process can an individual appear in person before a neutral decision maker to challenge placement on the watchlist or its consequences."

The family is claiming violations of their Fourth Amendment rights, claiming unconstitutional searches and seizures as well as excessive force. They're also claiming violations of their Fifth Amendment rights to due process, because of the way these federal lists are managed and because of the barriers to clearing Wilwal's name.

For the Fourth Amendment claims, unfortunately, the courts have historically given federal officials very wide latitude to engage in warrantless searches with very little justification at the country's borders. But some important court rulings bolster's Wilwal due process complaint, and the ACLU knows itbecause they're involved with some of those suits as well.

These lawsuits involve the federal no-fly list, a subset of these terror watchlists. People on the no-fly list are denied the right to board aircraft under a secretive, opaque system much like the one described in this lawsuit. In 2014 a federal judge ordered the Department of Justice to develop a system where people can determine whether they are actually on the no-fly list and a mechanism for correcting mistaken inclusion on the list. One woman turned out to have been added to the no-fly list by accident (somebody checked the wrong box); she had to fight the government for years to be removed. She only found out about the mistake as a result of the lawsuit.

Read the family's lawsuit here. Read the mother's own account of the border search here.

Continued here:

Secret Government Watchlist Sweeps Up an American Family, and Now They're Suing - Reason (blog)

NRA: Washington Post abuses First Amendment – Washington Examiner

The National Rifle Association targeted the Washington Post in a new video Monday, accusing the newspaper of "doing damage to the country" and promoting the "violent left."

The release of the video comes after the Post wrote a story last week about recent NRA videos that criticize Democratic politicians and the media, but do not focus on gun policy.

"They tell us to not have an opinion unless it's about guns," says conservative talk show host Grant Stinchfield, who narrates the new video attacking the Post. "Listen to me Washington Post. We talk about more than guns because every freedom is connected. If one is threatened, they all are threatened, and the organized anarchy that you, our politicians and you're activists are pushing is destroying our country."

Stinchfield went on to condemn the Post's slogan, "Democracy Dies in Darkness," and said the newspaper "should say, "Journalism Dies at the Washington Post.'"

The Post wrote a story July 11 that mentions a recent NRA video released in late June featuring commentator Dana Loesch that received widespread criticism because it did not emphasize Second Amendment Rights.

In the video, Loesch described liberal demonstrators who "smash windows, burn cars, shut down interstates and airports bully and terrorize the law-abiding." A petition to have the Loesch video removed from Facebook argued that "the video tries to create an us-vs-them' narrative and pit Americans against one another."

Critics said the video exploited the congressional baseball shooting that had just happened prior to the video's release, in which five people were wounded, including House Majority Whip Rep. Steve Scalise, R-La., by an outspoken supporter of Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt.

The NRA is brushing off the criticism. In the new video, Stinchfield says the NRA "will never stop fighting the violent left on the battlefield of truth."

"Here's a suggestion for the Washington Post: don't worry about how many guns are in our videos, worry about how many facts are in your articles," Stinchfield said. "Because if gun owners abused our Second Amendment the way you abuse your paper and the First Amendment, our rights would have been taken away long ago. You people do more to damage our country with a keyboard than any NRA member has ever done combined with a firearm."

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NRA: Washington Post abuses First Amendment - Washington Examiner

Judge Allows First Amendment Trial – New Haven Independent

A federal judge has ruled that a local anti-police-brutality activist has a legitimate free-speech argument to present to a jury about why a former top cop barred her from a weekly CompStat data-sharing meeting.

U.S. District Court Judge Stefan R. Underhill, a Clinton appointee, agreed in a decision released last week that activist Barbara Fairs First Amendment rights might have been infringed and the case should proceed. The city had sought to have the case dismissed.

Underhill ruled that Fair may proceed to seek changes in policy through her suit, but not any money.

The alleged violation stems from a spat two years ago, when the former police chief, Dean Esserman, temporarily shut community members out of the weekly CompStat meetings, after cops complained that Fair used them as a venue to protest the departments treatment of minority communities. Fair contended that Esserman was trying to bar her from meetings until controversy blew over. The day Esserman barred the public from the meeting spurred on by discomfort of some of his officers with the presence of a vocal anti-police-brutality activist he also allowed another member of the community, preacher pal Rev. Boise Kimber, to come upstairs and attend.

In his ruling, Underhill squelched Fairs pursuit of damages, but he agreed to hear her case on injunctive relief. To win the case, the longtime activist must prove that Esserman disliked the content of her speech, rather than the manner in which she gave it, and that he intended to cut off public participation until activists lost interest in using the meeting to speak out.

Fair has continued to speak out publicly against police misbehavior and clash with the department. The police arrested her July 8 for allegedly refusing an order to keep her distance when they were arresting her nephew at a counterdemonstration against a white nationalist recruiting event on the Green. (She denied the allegation.)

And Compstat meetings, less elaborate affairs since Esserman departed the department, are open to the public again.

Fairs attorney, Norm Pattis, called the judges green-lighting of a trial an early win.

Any time that a jury can can [evaluate the conduct of a police officer], thats good to do for the republic, he said. We hope that never again will [the police] decide that some members of the public arent entitled to attend a meeting, when they have invited the public in general. When the community is given a chance to speak, the police department cant put stoppers on it based on the content of what its hearing.

As part of his community policing push, Esserman had opened up these weekly reviews of crime statistics and major cases, known as CompStat, to the public. (The name comes from comparative statistics.) The meetings revolve around reports from policing districts about crimes over the past week and plans for the upcoming week. Under Esserman, they expanded to include reports to and sometimes from the community, with dozens of local people joining the cops at headquarters on Thursday mornings to listen in on the departments crime-fighting strategies. (The department brass review pending investigations in greater detail at daily intelligence briefings, which are closed to the public.)

It was not, however, a forum for discussion, Esserman stated in his deposition. It was to let people see how the police department worked in a transparent way, and if people had presentations they wanted to make we would try to schedule them in.

Fair sought to make it a forum. In March 2015, after video of a black 15-year-olds takedown during an arrest emerged, Fair joined a protest in front of City Hall. There, she allegedly overheard cops and counter-protestors making racially charged remarks. Shortly after, Fair went to a CompStat meeting to speak up.

At the meetings end, she asked the assistant chief for permission to speak. (Esserman was absent.) Unrelated to any of the discussion that morning, she proceeded to criticize the department and called out the foul-mouthed officers. Fair said that one cop looked upset by her comments, but another officer told him to let Fair voice her concerns. I know I ruffled some feathers, she admitted in a follow-up email to the assistant chief. Still, no one present reprimanded her, asked her to sit down or escorted her out of the room.

News later reached Esserman, though, that Fair had been disruptive, loud, and argumentative. When she returned to Union Avenue for Compstat the following week, Esserman asked Fair to leave, saying she had made people very uncomfortable. After an exchange, Fair said, As long as its a public meeting, Im going to sit here. Esserman decided to close it all off.

Same thing the following week: Fair and State Sen. Gary Winfield couldnt even get past the front desk to the meeting. (Rev. Kimber, on the other hand, a friend of the chief, was buzzed in and went upstairs to attend the meeting.) Esserman maintained in his response to the suit there was no ban on Fairs attendance; she didnt subsequently try to go back.

In his initial analysis of the evidence, in which he tried to give Fairs arguments the best light possible, as a jury might similarly do, Judge Underhill explained that, to prove a First Amendment violation, the plaintiff must show (1) that her speech was protected by the Constitution, (2) that the forum was public and (3) that the justifications for excluding her speech werent up to snuff.

Fairs speech, addressing racist strains in the police department, is clearly protected speech, Underhill wrote, referencing an established right to complain to public officials.

Likewise, Essermans admittedly deliberate choice to open prior CompStat meetings made them limited public forums, Underhill added. Thats true even though observers generally didnt speak, he said. The judge cited a 1991 ruling about ACT UPs intent to hold a silent protest in a state legislatures gallery: [T]he elected officials receive the message, by the very presence of citizens in the gallery, that they are being watched, that their decisions are being scrutinized, and that they may not act with impunity outside the watchful eyes of their constituents, that precedent said.

Esserman argued that, since he opened the meetings, he could have closed them at any time.

Sure, Underhill wrote, thats true of any public forum. [H]owever, as long as the forum remains open, government regulations of speech within it must meet the standards of a public forum.

What are those standards? Underhill said speech may be limited only by content-neutral regulations time, manner, place unless theres a compelling state interest. In fact, he noted, Esserman might have been on surer footing if he had shut down the public participation entirely. But because the break was only temporary, it implied that the chief didnt like what Fair had to say on a current event, the judge noted. He referenced several rulings that arbitrariness and unpredictability about when a forum is open to the public can easily cover up censorship, as in choosing to shut down a park on the day a particular person is scheduled to speak.

It seems clear that a temporary shutdown intended to stifle discussion on a particular topic, with plans to reopen the forum after controversy surrounding that topic had been suppressed constitutes impermissible censorship under any First Amendment analysis, Underhill wrote.

Esserman argued that the case is mooted, to some extent, because hes no longer on the job. Indeed, at this past Thursdays CompStat meeting, the new chief, Anthony Campbell, said the meetings are open to the public. The only restriction might be if journalists are asked not to publish information about an imminent apprehension, he said.

Pattis responded that the First Amendment rights at issue could crop up with any police chief, not just the last one. Whats important is that the department realize that it has enduring obligations to the community, and that those do have the force of law behind them, he said. This will make sure Campbell isnt tempted to do the same.

A trial will likely be scheduled for sometime in the fall, Pattis said.

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Judge Allows First Amendment Trial - New Haven Independent

Companies Don’t Have a First Amendment Right to Talk About National Security Letters, Court Rules – Gizmodo

Cloudflare and Credo Mobile today lost their fight to speak publicly about the National Security Letters they and other tech companies receive, which demand user data and frequently forbid companies from ever disclosing the demands to their users.

The two companies received NSLs from the FBI in 2011 and 2013, requiring them to secretly disclose account information.

The Electronic Frontier Foundation, representing web performance company Cloudflare and mobile network Credo, said the gag orders accompanying the NSLs violated the companies rights to free speech. But the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled today that this nondisclosure requirement does not run afoul of the First Amendment.

The ruling is a major upset for Cloudflare and Credo, as well as for larger tech companies that have begun disclosing NSLs over the past year. Companies that receive NSLs are usually restricted from discussing them for yearssometimes foreverand, if they disclose them in transparency reports, they may only do so in ranges of 500.

The EFF argued that companies with millions of users should be allowed to disclose the specific number of NSLs they receive and to mention their experiences receiving NSLs when communicating with customers or lobbying the government. (While lobbying against NSLs in 2014, Cloudflares in-house counsel was told by a dismissive Capitol Hill staffer that it was impossible for Cloudflare to receive an NSL, and because of the gag order, he was unable to point out that Cloudflare had already received several of the letters.)

Id be lying if I didnt say this is a real setback, EFF staff attorney Andrew Crocker told Gizmodo. But the trend is going the other way. Ive seen a lot of courts questioning these blanket indefinite gag orders.

Twitter, which is also challenging NSL gag orders in court, recently secured a promising ruling from a district court judge that suggests Twitters reporting of NSLs in narrower ranges than 500 could be protected under the First Amendment.

The 9th Circuit, however, was more dismissive of the reporting bands: We decline the recipients invitation to quibble with the particular ranges selected by Congress, the court wrote.

In 2017, its really unsupportable to not give internet companies like my clients a full First Amendment set of rights that they would give to any other speaker, Crocker said, likening internet service providers like Cloudflare to traditional publishers like newspapers. The implicit assumption in this ruling is that they dont have this set of rights.

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Companies Don't Have a First Amendment Right to Talk About National Security Letters, Court Rules - Gizmodo

Campers take up defending our First Amendment rights – TWC News

HAMBURG, N.Y. -- Aspiring journalists are telling their own stories this week at Hilbert College. While they're learning everything from writing a catchy headline to how to frame an interview, there's a deeper truth here that these 12- to 18-year-olds are uncovering.

With President Donald Trump accusing the media of reporting fake news and making up sources, the students are getting an important lesson on the foundation of journalism. The hope is the junior high and high-schoolers understand the meaning behind the First Amendment and the duty they could one day have to protect the freedoms that go along with it.

"It's about wanting to do it, to be passion it about doing it, and also about defending our rights as citizens; freedom of speech, freedom of the press, it's really only the job that's protected in the constitution," Chris Gallant, associate professor of Digital Media and Communication said.

Camp may be fun and filled with field trips to the federal courthouse for example, but just two days in and Hope Artis and the others have already grasped something we strive to prove in the stories we share with you every day.

"We need to know and understand people," Artis said. "That's what news in its heart is all about."

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Campers take up defending our First Amendment rights - TWC News

Knight First Amendment Institute Files Lawsuit Against Trump for Blocking Twitter Users – India West

The Knight First Amendment Institute July 11 filed a lawsuit against President Donald Trump and his communication teams, claiming they are violating the Constitutions First Amendment by blocking people on Twitter.

The lawsuit was filed in the Southern District of New York on behalf of seven people who were blocked by the presidents @realdonaldtrump account because they criticized the president or his policies on the social media, the institute said in a news release.

The suit hopes to have the court determine that Trump and his teams actions constitute viewpoint-based blocking and is unconstitutional.

President Trumps Twitter account has become an important source of news and information about the government, and an important forum for speech by, to, or about the president, Jameel Jaffer, the Knight Institutes executive director, said in a statement. The First Amendment applies to this digital forum in the same way it applies to town halls and open school board meetings. The White House acts unlawfully when it excludes people from this forum simply because theyve disagreed with the president.

About a month prior to the lawsuit being filed, the institute wrote a letter to the White House suggesting it would file suit if the president didnt unblock the individuals.

The institute, which never received a response from the White House, said that the Trump administration has promoted the @realdonaldtrump account as a primary communication channel between the president and the public including making formal announcements thus constituting it as a public forum protected by the First Amendment.

The blocking prevents or impedes these people from reading the presidents tweets, responding directly, or participating in the discussions that take place in the comment threads generated by the presidents tweets, the institutes release said. The complaint argues that the @realDonaldTrump account is a public forum under the First Amendment, meaning that the government cannot exclude people from it simply because of their views, it added.

The lawsuit also contends that the White House is violating the seven individual plaintiffs First Amendment right to petition their government for redress of grievances.

The White House is transforming a public forum into an echo chamber, said Katie Fallow, a senior staff attorney at the Knight Institute, in a statement. Its actions violate the rights of the people whove been blocked and the rights of those who havent been blocked but who now participate in a forum thats being sanitized of dissent.

Prior to joining the Knight Institute as executive director in June 2016, Jaffer was deputy legal director at the American Civil Liberties Union and director of the ACLUs Center for Democracy.

Born in Canada to Ismaili Muslim parents originally from Tanzania, he is a graduate of Williams College, Cambridge University, and Harvard Law School.

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Knight First Amendment Institute Files Lawsuit Against Trump for Blocking Twitter Users - India West

Gladstone gold does club proud | Gladstone Observer – Gladstone Observer

MARTIAL ARTS: The Gladstone Martial Arts Academy's stocks continue to pack a punch with its latest achievements yielding more medals.

Nine students collected a total of 18 medals at the recent Queensland Brazilian Jiu-Jitsi State Titles on the Gold Coast.

The tally was made up of five gold, six silver and seven bronze in an event that attracted 515 competitors.

Among those was 13-year-old Trinity McKenzie who beat more experienced boys on her way to a gold medal for Gi and No-Gi divisions.

The teenager said enjoyment is the key to her success.

"All the people at GMAA are like my family now and it's just so much fun every class I love it, Trinity said.

What's more impressive is that she has been doing BJJ for just two years and she also trains in Mixed Martial Arts, Muay Thai and Zen Do Kai under GMAA head coach Rob McIntyre

"This was her sixth BJJ tournament, McIntyre said.

"Her favourite submission is definitely the rear naked choke and her second is the arm bar.

McIntyre said the club's athletes have excelled in the competitions they have competed in.

"It has been a big year for GMAA in Jiu Jitsu and after only three competitions, the club has earned an amazing 40 gold, 27 silver and 11 bronze medals, McIntyre said.

"The club will travel to three more tournaments this year in Rockhampton, the Sunshine Coast and the Gold Coast.

The BJJ competition is based on grappling only, with competitors earning points for take-downs, controlling top positions and reversing positions.

They can win outright with a submission making their opponent tap from chokes, arm locks or leg locks and has been made famous by its skills being used in the UFC.

People interested in BJJ can contact McIntyre on 0439739619 or visit the club's Facebook site or website http://www.gladstonemartialarts.com.au.

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Gladstone gold does club proud | Gladstone Observer - Gladstone Observer

Suspected AlphaBay founder dies in Bangkok jail after shutdown of online black market – Washington Post

Until earlier this month, AlphaBay served as a one-stop shop for illicit consumer needs online. Essentially an Internet-based black marketplace stationed on the dark Web and accessible only through an untraceable Tor browser, the platform hosted sales using bitcoin for everything from illegal drugs to stolen credit card data. With up to 300,000 listings, the site was conservatively hosting $600,000 to $800,000 a day in transactions, Wired reported, and was said to host more products than Silk Road, the illicit marketplace closed by U.S. authorities in 2014.

But on July 5, all that back alley commerce stopped when AlphaBay suddenly went dark. The shutdown was reportedly due to an effort by law enforcement across the world to bust the administrators running the website. And now the Bangkok Post and Sydney Morning Herald report that a Canadian national allegedly linked to AlphaBay has died in custody after he was arrested on the same day AlphaBay disappeared.

Canadian-born Alexandre Cazes, 26, was arrested by Thai authorities on July 5 at the request of U.S. authorities, according to the Morning Herald. Known online as DeSnake, Cazes was found last week dead in his cell at the Thai Narcotics Suppression Bureau (NSB) in Laksi district of Bangkok.

The Bangkok Post reportedCazes was discoveredin the bathroom of his cell hanging from a towel. The NSBs Major General Soontorn Chalermkiat told the paper there are no clues that suggest he didnt hang himself. Cazes was reportedly set to meet with an attorney about his extradition to the United States on drug trafficking charges an hour before his reported suicide. Another Thai official, Maj. Gen. Chayapote Hasoonha, told the Bangkok Post Cazes had been living in Thailand for about eight years and had a Thai wife.The official added Cazess spousehas been charged with money laundering.

He was a computer expert involved with international transactions of bitcoins, Chalermkiat told Agence France-Presse.He didnt have any business in Thailand but he had many houses. The Bangkok paper said he also had four Lamborghini sports cars in Thailand.

Cazes father, Martin, told Journal de Montrealhis son was an extraordinary young man, with no history, no judicial record. He never smoked a cigarette, never used drugs.

Neither the Canadian nor U.S. embassies in Thailand responded to The Washington Posts request for further detail on Cazess arrest, extradition and reported death.

The AlphaBay shutteringcomes after an uptick in law enforcement action aimed at the marketplaces users an indication that U.S. policehave figured out how to skillfully mingle within the dark Web bazaar and target users.

AlphaBay is dedicated and designed to facilitate the sale of illegal narcotics, drug paraphernalia, firearms, and counterfeit and fraud-related goods and services, a U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agent wrote in an August 2016 affidavit related to federal charges against a 50-year-old Detroit man named Robert Kenneth Decker. Illegal drugs, such as methamphetamines, heroin, and cocaine, are openly advertised and sold and are immediately and prominently visible on the Alphabay website.

Operating under the handle DIGITALPOSSI2014, Decker was tied to10,738 transactions on AlphaBay, including deals in whichhe sold and mailed hydrocodone to undercover law enforcement in exchange for bitcoins. After his arrest in late 2016, he pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to distribute controlled substances and one of conspiracy to commit money laundering. Decker was sentenced to 140 months in prison.

With the website now dark, illicit e-commerce is struggling to find a new home. Like Silk Road, AlphaBay left a gaping hole in the marketplace when it disappeared.

Its been really chaotic, Nicolas Christin, a Carnegie Mellon professor of computer science and public policy, recently told Wired. When you have asite like AlphaBay going down, it puts a lot of stress on the other players. Its stress-testing their infrastructures.

More from Morning Mix:

FBI agents spent decades searching for a mobster wanted in a cop killing. Then they found his secret room.

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Suspected AlphaBay founder dies in Bangkok jail after shutdown of online black market - Washington Post

Assassins and child porn; a darknet offers everything – The Slovak Spectator

The Slovak Spectator spent several days on the Darknet.

It is used by the mafia, journalists and activists. Tens of thousands of people do trade there without knowing the identity of their partners while using a currency that does not officially exist. Thus unwritten rules had to be created to ensure the entire system does not collapse.

A darknet or the Dark Web is becoming a widely used because it allows users to hide their tracks on the Internet, according to Tom Zako, the CEO of the Citadelo firm.

This tool is important in countries with strong censorship, Zako told The Slovak Spectator. The original purpose was not to aid criminals.

However, it is obvious that criminals, including Slovaks, have discovered it. Police recently arrested two Slovak citizens for the illegal sale of drugs via the darknet. At the same time they seized the electronic hard-to-track cryptocurrency Bitcoin (BTC) being used as a means of payment on the darknet. This currency hit a historic high on June 11, reaching $3018 per Bitcoin and fell to around $2200 in mid July.

The Slovak Spectator spent several days on the Darknet. It bought bitcoins, visited drugstores, weapons shops and sites with illegal pornography.

A darknet is formed by individual pages which can only be opened if a person knows their exact address and knows which program to use. Guessing a page name is not possible as they look like this: anonywebix6vi6gz.onion.

To open such sites users need the Tor browser originally developed by the US Army for the secure communication of its employees.

Entering a darknet is not difficult. The process can easily be found on the Internet. The user just needs to download Tor for free, find the list of websites working only through this program, and start exploring the dark corners of the Internet.

Soon a person finds that many of the published darknet websites, probably up to 80 percent, do not really work.

It is mostly because they are operated by individuals who have cancelled them for various reasons. Another possibility is that one company is running a number of sites, and when it ends, all of its sites end as well, according Polish internet security expert Marcin Koziej.

Websites accessible through Tor come and go, Koziej told The Slovak Spectator. They are mostly maintained by individuals, and can easily be discontinued.

This is also the case of websites belonging to Slovak drug dealers. Today there was only the announcement that they were locked by the police due to a decision of the Bratislava District Court.

Among those pages whose links are commonly available on the Internet, The Slovak Spectator has found, for example, a child pornography page aimed at the spanking of small children. The operator offers five albums for download, the possibility of commenting on them and discussion of the topic in a forum.

There is a freely available page of a false passport vendor promising that the customer will not only receive ID, but will also be registered in official databases and will be able to travel freely with the document.

On another page, people were offering 92-percent uncut cocaine from Peru for $75 a gram.

On the contrary, sites with crowfunding for an assassin or ordering a hacker attack did not work.

The websites do not always offer illegal activities though. For example, there are forums where people anonymously discuss ongoing protests in their countries.

There are actually many more sites running but people have to learn about them in locked forums or personally from other users.

When surfing a darknet, community and personal references are important, according to Koziej.

The community is also a source of trust in some hidden sites, Koziej says. A trust network is reason to believe a particular site is legit, and not police bait.

In general, dealers ask for bitcoins in exchange for goods. For example, a Walther PPK gun was available for BTC0.434, which is around 852.

The currency is produced by complex mathematical operations under the rule that only 21 million bitcoins can ever be created, preventing its inflation. The process is gradually slowing, which should resemble gold, a precious metal that has become increasingly rare following the start of its mining.

People can access their bitcoin via a unique key granted after creating a virtual wallet.

The Slovak Spectator has downloaded the mobile application that provided the key for BTC. Using this app, the editors bought BTC worth 10 at a special ATM in the centre of Bratislava in mid May.

The entire operation passed quickly and ended without a receipt. The machine only produced a confirmation QR code, which appeared on the display and the amount of 0.005 bitcoin appeared in the mobile wallet. If the transferred euros had immediately disappeared, the police or any bank would not have done anything about it.

All BTC transactions are visible, but the trading parties are anonymous. The trader does not know who is buying the goods, and the customer does not know who is selling it to him. So users therefore have to solve the issue of who has first turn: the one sending the goods or the one sending the money.

For example, a system of intermediaries has been created. The customer first sends the money to a third party they both trust. After the salesperson learns that money has been transferred he or she sends the goods. After the customer receives what they paid for the seller gets their money from that third party.

In order to gain trust, salespeople in a darknet are much more customer-focused than their counterparts in ordinary life, British journalist Jamie Bartlett says in one of his lectures. He spent several months on a darknet, made contacts with the users, and bought marijuana in order to report on how the whole system works.

Now, this kind of consumer-centric attitude is the reason why, when I reviewed 120,000 pieces of feedback that had been left on one of these sites over a three-month period, 95 percent of them were five out of five, said Bartlett. The customer, you see, is king.

The Slovak Spectator did not buy any illegal goods and neither did it use its bitcoins.

Though it could be surprising that the vast majority of goods, even illegal ones, arrive via standard postal service, according to Zako.

People in the European Union only focus on a sender operating in the Schengen area so that the package doesnt go through scanners, Zako said.

18. Jul 2017 at 17:14 |Roman Cuprik

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Assassins and child porn; a darknet offers everything - The Slovak Spectator

What is the ‘Dark Web’ and How to Access this Scary Part of Internet? – MobiPicker

Dark Web or Deep Web is the term that you might have heard a lot of times in the recent past. The news publishers have always told you the scary stories about the Dark Web and how it is accessed to carry out the illegal activities. While all that may be true, the news outlets generally interchange the words Dark Web and Deep Web. There is a difference between the two and we need to first understand what makes one different from other to better understand what Dark Web is.

To understand the basic idea, the Deep Web is a much wider concept and the Dark Web is a small part of it. The Deep Web is the portion of the internet that hasnt been listed on the conventional search engines. Deep Web is a significant portion of the internet and many might not believe but we use the Deep Web in our daily lives.

Most of the password protected pages of the websites that you use daily arent listed on any of the search engines, hence are a part of the Deep Web. Your bank page, the editing page of your profile, and even the dashboard of this blog isnt listed on the search engines and is a part of the Deep Web. When you read in the news that 90% of the internet is Dark Web, they really want to say is Deep Web instead of Dark Web. That percentage is, however, more or less accurate.

If you are wondering what is the Dark Web, it is a much smaller part of the Deep Web that can only be accessed with specialized software and authorization, as we mentioned earlier. The Dark Web uses the same internet but exists on darknets and other overlay networks. Since that part of the internet isnt available for all just like any other websites, the Dark Web is host to a lot of illegal activities.

The Dark Web uses a strong encryption and the user needs a software with the same encryption technology to access the content. If both the parties, the content providers and the users, are cautious enough, their identity and location will remain hidden. This is the reason why criminals find the Dark Web a perfect place for carrying out their activities. And if the users identity is revealed, it could lead them to some serious consequences.

By activities, we mean terrorism, hitman services, smuggling, money laundering, child trafficking, drug dealing, forged documents, hacking and phishing attacks, the sale of firearms and ammunitions, illegal pornography, and human organ trade. By now you might have realized what extreme consequences can happen to the users whose identity got leaked.

By now, you probably understood what is the Dark Web. Keep reading if you want to know further about the topic including how to access the Dark Web and whether all the content listed on the Dark Web is bad.

After all this, you might think that accessing the Dark Web would be some kind of rocket science. But it is just the opposite; accessing the Dark Web is as easy as downloading a web browser and entering the website URL you want to visit, at least for the most part. You are indeed required to download a browser for the Dark Web called Tor.

A major portion of the Dark Web is hosted on Tor network and it can only be decrypted and accessed using the Tor browser. The Tor Browser Bundle needs to be downloaded, which contains all the necessary tools, including the Vidalia Control Panel that will automatically configure the browser to exact network setup required to access the Dark Web. The files downloaded can be extracted and installed like you would do with any other software.

Once everything is done, the browser window will open and it will be your gateway to anonymity. Being a part of Deep Web, there is no search engine here, so you need to know the URLs of the websites that you want to access from the Dark Web. The URLs for these websites have .onion top level domain and the URLs are intentionally made lengthy, making them even more difficult to remember.

Grams is a search engine based on Tor but it has a fairly limited approach. However, it can help you with your first ride into the Dark Web, you just need to double check what you are about to click for being safe. Talking about safety, it is always recommended to use a strong VPN service at least while accessing the Dark Web, and maybe cover your webcam with a white tape, in case someone is tracking your activities.

In fact, many users have reported to receive blank calls or being followed physically right after accessing something the Dark Web that they shouldnt have. Forums are filled with such scary stories that will make you think twice before accessing the Dark Web. It is always advisable to stay safe and use all the means available to maintain your anonymity from the surface web as well as the criminals and hackers on the Dark Web.

Now that you know how to access the Dark Web, it is not necessary that you have to access it. Since all the good and informative websites are already available publicly, it is advisable that you should avoid accessing the Dark Web.

Not necessarily. But the most part is. There is a certain section of the society that needs anonymity, like activists, reporters, and whistle-blowers. The best example of this is WikiLeaks, which was started on the Dark Web, and is used by many of the whistle-blowers all around the world to reveal the corrupt side of the governments. Mere accessing the Dark Web isnt illegal but what matters is which websites you visit or what content you access once inside.

This piece is, of course, intended to serve as a guide to what is believed to be unknown by many. We certainly dont endorse or encourage you to access the Dark Web and indulge in any illegal activity. For an individual, there is nothing that the Dark Web can do; a VPN service, along with common sense, should be more than enough to maintain your privacy and other threats on the internet.

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What is the 'Dark Web' and How to Access this Scary Part of Internet? - MobiPicker

Cryptocurrency explainer: Everything you need to know

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Cryptocurrency explainer: Everything you need to know

Cryptocurrency Hit Record Low Values Over the Weekend – Futurism

In BriefCryptocurrencies fell over the weekend, reaching record lowsand loosing billions in market cap. While they've since recoveredthe losses, it shows just how unpredictable the cryptocurrencymarket truly is. Cryptos Rise (& Fall)

Over the weekend, cryptocurrencies suffered one of the most severe decreases in value in history when their market cap fell from a record high of $116 billion in June to $60 billion on Sunday July 17. Early this week, themarket has started to rise again, but the plummet will not soon be forgotten:throughout the day on Sunday, Bitcoin dropped from over $2,000 to as low as $1,758.20, and Ether fell 20percent to $130.26.Click to View Full Infographic

As of Tuesday morning, it seems thedownward trend has ended, with all major cryptocurrencies reporting rising rates again: Bitcoin is back over $2,000 once more, with Coin Market Cap reporting the currency is now trading at $2,307 (9:00 EST), while Ether has risen from a low over the weekend to a current value of $196.58. The total market cap has regained losses of around $10 billion,according to Coindesk.

Despite the improvement, however, cryptocurrencies are a long way off the meteoric successes they enjoyed in June, where they saw a market cap as high as $116 billion. Since then, Bitcoin has lost around 30 percent of its value, with its highpoint being $3,000 in contrast to todays figure of roughly $2,000. Ethereum has suffered even more severely, dropping from $395 to $164. Despite these falls, 2017 remains a record breaking year for cryptocurrency overall.

There have been, according to Venture Beat, three main reasons for the 48 hour cryptocurrency flop.

First, the bitcoin civil war that seems imminent as of August 1st when the Bitcoin improvement proposal 148 is set to activate. For one, theproposal concerns the possibility of increasing the cryptocurrencysblock size, (a decision which has divided miners and investors).At any rate, and regardless of the eventual decision, the uncertainty right now has caused many investors to liquidate their virtual assets.

Second, a flurry of startups have chosen to get out of the game afterprofitable rounds of investment derived from initial coin offerings (ICOs). Two particularly striking examples are EOS: after raising $200 million worth of Ether earlier this month, they have been offloading it to Bitfinex and TenX, which raised 200,000 ETH ($67 million at the time) in its token sale 30 percent of which has already been sold. This contributes to uncertainty and danger in the marketplace, which can precipitatedecreasing value.

Third, the presence of amateur sellers that the bitcoin market attracts through its fundamental lack of regulation and policing can have a multiplier effect on every market movement, namely throughfrantic, if not occasionally panicked, buying and selling practices.

While the ultimate success of cryptocurrencies remains speculative, one thing we know for sure after observingtheir activity over the last few days is that financial currencies remain volatile and prone to unpredictability.

Disclosure: Several members of the Futurism team, including the editors of this piece, are personal investors in a number of cryptocurrency markets. Their personal investment perspectives have no impact on editorial content.

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Cryptocurrency Hit Record Low Values Over the Weekend - Futurism

As Cryptocurrency Prices Recover, Bitcoin War May Be Averted – Futurism

In Brief After a rough weekend, Bitcoin investors, miners, and developers are cautiously optimistic: after hitting historic lows, the cryptocoin's price went back up on Monday.

After a rough weekend of historic lows, Bitcoin prices began to recoveron Monday, reachingover $2,300, signaling a crisis averted for now.Its also an optimistic sign that the potential network hard fork may be avoided, with more bitcoin shareholders, miners and developers,warming up to a proposed solution.

Bitcoin prices dropped dramatically beginning Friday and continuing well into the weekend. Economic forecasts had suggested that the most turbulent period in the cryptocoins history wasimminent. It didnt come as a complete surprise, as many were expecting the so-called Bitcoin Civil Warto ensue between miners and developers, after a deadlock in deciding what direction the cryptocurrency should take amidst increased blockchain traffic.

Miners wanted to increase Bitcoins block-size limit, while developers have proposed moving data off the main blockchain network, which would diminish the influence miners wield. The scaling solution in question is the Bitcoin Improvement Protocol (BIP) 91, which makes theSegWit2x update and the BIP 148compatible. Essentially, it would make it easier for the SegWit2x update to be adopted, while at the same time avoiding the split that BIP 148 might cause.

To lock in by July 31, BIP 91 only needs 80 percent miner support unlike BIP 148, which would require 95 percent. With increased support for BIP 91, the expected July 31 to August 2 bitcoin splitcould still be averted.

Disclosure: Several members of the Futurism team, including the editors of this piece, are personal investors in a number of cryptocurrency markets. Their personal investment perspectives have no impact on editorial content.

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As Cryptocurrency Prices Recover, Bitcoin War May Be Averted - Futurism

Hackers Just Stole $7 Million in a Brazen Ethereum Cryptocurrency Heist – Fortune

Hackers hijacked cryptocurrency trading platform CoinDash on Monday just as it was in the middle of its initial coin offering, or ICO. It's the first known breach of an ICO, this season's hottest fundraising method.

CoinDash, an Israeli startup, planned to raise capital by selling its own digital tokens in exchange for the cryptocurrency Ethereum , which is similar to Bitcoin . But just 13 minutes into the token sale, which began at 9 a.m. ET Monday, an "unknown perpetrator" hacked CoinDash's website and changed the address for sending investments to a fake one, the company later announced on its website . That diverted millions of dollars in contributions to the attacker.

While the CoinDash ICO still managed to raise $6.4 million from early investors, the hacker stole $7 million worth of Ethereum before the company was forced to pull the plug on the token sale. Despite the losses, CoinDash promised to dole out its tokens accordingly to everyone who participated in the ICO before it was shut down, whether or not they sent funds to the correct address.

"Reminder: We are still under attack. Please do not send any [Ethereum] to any address, as the Token Sale has been terminated," CoinDash said in the statement.

The incident is likely to put a damper on the enthusiasm surrounding ICOs. The offerings are similar to stock market initial public offerings, or IPOs. But there are two key differences: ICO investors receive cryptocurrency instead of equity, and the offerings face far less regulation.

ICOs have had a banner year. In 2017 alone, such token sales have raised at least $540 million, my colleague Jeff John Roberts reported in a recent Fortune Magazine story, "Why Tech Investors Love ICOsand Lawyers Dont." A month ago, a single ICO raised as much as $147 million; another raised $35 million in just 30 seconds .

The CoinDash hack is reminiscent of another large-scale Ethereum heist last year, when attackers breached a blockchain organization called the DAO and stole more than $50 million that had been raised in an ICO a month earlier. But the DAO hack occurred after the token sale had already ended.

To CoinDash, which hyped its ICO with modified promotional imagery for HBO's Game of Thrones , the breach is a blow both financially and in terms of its relationship with customers, some of whom suggested on social media that the attack could have been an inside job.

For its part, CoinDash pledged to investigate the breach and move on. "This was a damaging event to both our contributors and our company but it is surely not the end of our project," the company said in its statement.

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Hackers Just Stole $7 Million in a Brazen Ethereum Cryptocurrency Heist - Fortune

Trading Cryptocurrency the eToro Way – newsBTC

Digital currencies are decentralized, peer to peer currencies that are not influenced by the actions of governments or central banks. They run on open source platforms, and can be traded against fiat currencies, or as funds, at leading trading platforms. Blockchain technology has revolutionized e-commerce and financial services, and more banks are adopting this dynamic technology to process financial transactions.

Digital currencies have come a long way since inception after the global financial crisis of 2008/2009. Bitcoin was created by Satoshi Nakamoto, an individual, or group of individuals, who have since disappeared from the scene. Their legacy remains however, with a myriad of digital currencies now available on the market. These include Bitcoin, Litecoin, Dogecoin, Ethereum and hundreds of others which are rapidly garnering the attention of e-commerce retailers, traders, banks, financial institutions, and even regulatory authorities around the world.

One of the worlds premier financial trading platforms, eToro has launched a CryptoFund. This fund tracks the activity of cryptocurrency such as Bitcoin and others. The precise asset allocation in the CryptoFund is as follows:

The bulk of the CryptoFund 84% is comprised of Bitcoin, Ripple and Ethereum. In June, the fund tracked negatively with losses of 4.65%, followed by month-to-date declines in July of 25.64%. The eToro CryptoFund is a trading option, meaning that registered clients can benefit from price movements in the fund regardless of direction. At eToro, there are currently over $300,000 worth of assets under management (daily reading) with the CryptoFund, with hundreds of traders.

Since this is a CopyFund, it is possible to follow successful traders, copy their trades and profit accordingly. The increasing popularity of cryptocurrencies is a result of several factors, notably their increasing adoption in e-commerce, their rarity, and the anonymity that is afforded to traders. Compared to fiat currency which is completely controlled by governments and central banks, cryptocurrency offers multiple trading opportunities. This fund has a market capitalization of at least $1 billion with monthly trading volumes in excess of $20 million.

eToro management carefully monitors the individual components of the fund and if any of them dips beneath $1 billion, or if trading volumes are less than $20 million, a currency could be dropped from the fund. The cryptocurrency with the highest market capitalization is Bitcoin at $40 billion, but others like Ethereum and Litecoin also have high market capitalizations. The precise weighting assigned to individual currencies in the fund is determined by the portfolio manager at eToro.

The Crypto Copyfund is traded as a CFD (contract for difference) which is a derivative trading instrument. eToro management protects traders with the limits imposed on the daily trading activity of the CryptoFund. If the limit is exceeded, the funds trading activity will be closed for the day. This is done to maintain stability in trading activity, much like the major indices on Wall Street.

eToro is a strictly regulated financial trading enterprise. Only traders from accepted jurisdictions can register, deposit, and trade cryptocurrency online. In the United Kingdom, eToro is registered by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and operates under the name eToro UK. The minimum required deposit is $5,000, and clients are required to be UK residents.

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Trading Cryptocurrency the eToro Way - newsBTC

The bitcoin bump has turned into a beating – VICE News

Two of the most popular cryptocurrencies have a bit of a hangover after a wild weekend theyre only now starting to recover from.

Bitcoin and ether bothtech-based alternative currencies essentially crashed over the weekend before rebounding sharply on Monday, racking up the kind of gains in one day that normally takesix months or a year in the stock market.

Though no single news event drovethe last few days dramatic swings, a few occurrences, taken together, help explain the roller coaster.

But whatever causedthe weekends fluctuations, the markets stabilized on Monday. Ether rose almost 9 percent, while bitcoin gained 10 percent. Both, however, aretrading well below their June highs; ether is down almost 30 percent, and bitcoin, almost 60 percent.

On the bright side, early buyers of cryptocurrencies have still made a ton of money. Despite the recent downward trend, the price of bitcoin has still nearly tripled over the last 12 months, while ether is up more than 10 times its price a year ago.

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The bitcoin bump has turned into a beating - VICE News

This New Tool Can Help Bitcoin Users Deal With Stuck Transactions – Bitcoin Magazine

Samourai Wallet is becoming increasingly popular as a wallet that focuses on privacy and security for its users above all else, but a recent tool released by this wallets team of developers has a focus on user experience. The new app, called Bitcoin Afterburner, allows users of many different bitcoin wallets to boost transactions that have become stuck due to low fees.

The app works for transactions that have been sent or received, and it is compatible with all BIP 39 and BIP 44 wallets. Examples of compatible wallets include Mycelium, Blockchain.info, Airbitz and Electrum.

To get more details about Bitcoin Afterburner and the concept of fee bumping in general, Bitcoin Magazine reached out to the anonymous CEO of Samourai Wallet.

Afterburner is one more example of how we are experimenting and developing ways of monetizing our business without resorting to accepting fiat or exposing our users to harmful KYC/AML collection, said the CEO.

Samourai Wallet monetizes the Bitcoin Afterburner app by adding a $5.99 fee for helping users with their stuck transactions. This fee is added to the child-pays-for-parent (CPFP) transaction that is used to bump the users bitcoin transaction fee. CPFP is a process by which the recipient of a transaction can spend the inputs of an unconfirmed transaction by using them in a new transaction that has a higher fee (and incentivizes miners to mine both transactions at once).

The full question and answer session with the CEO of Samourai Wallet can be read below.

Samourai Wallet: We believe that over time as legitimate transactions start to fill block space, and a fee market begins to mature, wallets that have implemented sophisticated fee management mechanisms such as fee bumping will provide their users with the most competitive transaction fees and confirmation times. The tech is there today, the challenge and it isn't a small challenge is entirely UX. We're working on this today while others are playing catch-up.

SW: The difference between the miner operated TX Accelerators is that Afterburner is not an off-chain 1-to-1 with a specific miner. Instead, Afterburner broadcasts a bitcoin transaction to all miners using the standard bitcoin p2p network. All the miners on the network compete for the new transaction with the higher fee, meaning it often works much quicker than the miner operated TX Accelerators. Afterburner was very much a defensive response to the miners who have been blocking SegWit activation and broadcasting empty blocks, some of those same miners are the ones who run the TX Accelerators.

SW: Afterburner has a good number of installs, but not many paid 'Boosts.' A few days after we released Afterburner the transaction backlog that was driving up fees and confirmation times completely dried up. The fees required for next block confirmation dropped from 300 sat/b to 25 sat/b. Once the mempool gets saturated again, we will have a much better idea of the potential utility of the app.

SW: Many wallet providers inexplicably the most well-funded ones are the most guilty haven't invested any time into proper fee estimation and management until very recently. A misguided industry-driven quest to make the bitcoin wallet for grandma resulted in an unusable bitcoin wallet for actual users. Samourai has focused from inception on actual bitcoin users first.

SW: Samourai Wallet provides the exact same functionality as Afterburner natively. Afterburner was designed to allow users of any other BIP 44 HD wallet to boost their stuck transaction using CPFP (Child-Pays-for-Parent) under the hood. Hopefully they move over to Samourai Wallet if they are satisfied with the service. In addition to CPFP-based boosting more advanced users may opt-in to RBF-based boosting which is also available in the wallet. Both options are available to Samourai Wallet users free of charge.

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This New Tool Can Help Bitcoin Users Deal With Stuck Transactions - Bitcoin Magazine

Ex-Comets coach Green part of growing trend – Rome Sentinel

(AP) Rick Tocchet is the kind of coach who doesnt mind if a player calls him at 9 p.m. to share a thought.

He doesnt expect that to change as he goes from a Pittsburgh Penguins assistant to head coach of the Arizona Coyotes. Tocchet has done it before, and his 148 games as an NHL head coach make the 53-year-old one of the more experienced hires this offseason as teams look for the next new idea rather than recycling from the past.

Three vacancies were filled by first-timers: the Buffalo Sabres Phil Housley, Florida Panthers Bob Boughner and Vancouver Canucks Travis Green. Tocchet and the Los Angeles Kings John Stevens are longtime assistants with some time running a bench, while the Dallas Stars Ken Hitchcock and Vegas Golden Knights Gerard Gallant represent the only seasoned coaches.

Almost every general manager cited communication skills as a major reason for prioritizing youth over experience.

Its clear for me: (Tocchet is) one of the best communicators Ive come across, not only in hockey but probably professionally as well, Coyotes GM John Chayka said. He can just relate to the players. Hes very firm. He can motivate. He can be aggressive in his approach, but he can also be that big brother kind of approach.

Tocchet, Housley, Boughner, Green, Stevens and Gallant all played in the NHL in the 1990s and represent the new-school concept of a players coach, mixing positive relationships with accountability. Likable Jon Cooper took the Tampa Bay Lightning to the 2015 Stanley Cup Final in his first go-round, while other experiments like Dallas Eakins, Claude Noel, Ron Rolston and Mike Johnston didnt go so well.

More time is needed to determine the success of some, like the Philadelphia Flyers Dave Hakstol, New Jersey Devils John Hynes and Colorado Avalanches Jared Bednar, but teams are more willing than ever to take a risk on coaching rookies. Ten of the 31 coaches are in their first head jobs in the NHL as some prominent experienced coaches like Lindy Ruff, Jacques Martin, Jack Capuano and Marc Crawford have accepted roles as assistants.

Florida GM Dale Tallon went through an exhaustive, extensive search before Boughners interview blew him away, and Chayka talked to more than 25 coaches before calling Tocchet the best candidate by a wide margin.

Kings GM Rob Blake said there was literally no search as Stevens was the natural fit to succeed Darryl Sutter, and the Canucks didnt interview anyone but Green, who coached their top minor league affiliate for the past four seasons.

Buffalo GM Jason Botterill said Housley was uniquely qualified for the job based on his playing and coaching careers. Hockey experience on the ice and at other levels may be just as valuable to executives picking coaches.

Ive been a player, Ive been an owner, Ive been an executive, Ive been a head coach, an assistant coach, Boughner said with a significant nod to his time in junior hockey. I know this league and I know the game and Im ready for this challenge.

One of the biggest challenges in the transition from assistant to head coach is the different dynamic with players. Panthers captain Derek MacKenzie had Boughner as an assistant in Columbus and considered him approachable but someone who knew when to put his foot down.

MacKenzie acknowledged it wont be exactly the same with Boughner in charge. After winning the Stanley Cup the past two seasons with the Penguins, Tocchet figures he wont alter his approach in Arizona.

Thats the million-dollar question to me because I dont want to change as a person, Tocchet said. I dont think that because you carry a title head coach that all of a sudden youve got to be distanced from your players.

His old boss disagrees. Mike Sullivan, who spent several seasons as an assistant under John Tortorella between head-coaching gigs and was hired by the Penguins midway through the 2015-16 season, insists theres a delineation in day-to-day duties.

Ultimately I have to make difficult decisions, whether it be playing time or lineup decisions or power-play combinations, Sullivan said. I think by nature of the head-coaching position, its a very different relationship. ... Thats just reality.

Tocchet was credited with helping Phil Kessel, Housley with Ryan Ellis and other Nashville defensemen, and Boughner with Sharks Norris Trophy winner Brent Burns. But perhaps more in common than their hands-on work in improving players, these first-time head coaches all sold their styles as fast and exciting.

I dont want to take the stick out of guys hands, Tocchet said. I want them not to think too much. I want them to play. ... You have to give players freedom, especially in todays NHL, to play.

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Ex-Comets coach Green part of growing trend - Rome Sentinel

J&J’s New Psoriasis Drug Approved by FDA – Drug Discovery & Development

Like many other conditions, a one-size-fits-all therapy does not apply to patients with plaque psoriasis. Now, there is another treatment option for those not responding to current available therapies.

Janssen Biotech, Inc., a division of Johnson & Johnson, has announced U.S. FDA approval of guselkumab (Tremfya) for the treatment of moderate to severe plaque psoriasis.

Approval comes after an expedited regulatory review following application of an FDA Priority Review Voucher. Its the first drug approved that selectively blocks interleukin (IL)-23, a cytokine thought to play a role in the disease.

The treatment is administered as a 100 mg subcutaneous injection every eight weeks, following two starter doses at weeks 0 and 4. It is indicated for adults with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis who are candidates for systemic therapy or phototherapy.

Regulators made the approval based on results from Phase III clinical studies that included more than 2,000 patients. The VOYAGE 1, VOYAGE 2, and NAVIGATE studies showed 7 out of ten patients receiving the treatment achieved at least 90 percent improvement in skin clearance at week 16.

The VOYAGE 1 AND VOYAGE 2 trials tested guselkumab against placebo and adalimumab (Humira).

Patients receiving guselkumab experienced significant improvement in skin clearance and greater improvement in symptoms of plaque psoriasis including itch, pain, stinging, burning and skin tightness when compared with placebo at week 16.

In a head-to-head analysis against adalimumab, more than seven out of ten patients treated with guselkumab reported at least 90 percent clearer skin at week 24 compared with more than four out of ten patients treated with adalimumab.

NAVIGATE findings demonstrated the effectiveness of guselkumab in patients who had an inadequate response to treatment with J&Js IL-12 and IL-23 antagonist ustekinumab (Stelara). At week 28, 31 percent of guselkumab-treated patients were considered cleared or almost cleared versus 14 percent of ustekinumab-treated patients 12 weeks after randomization to continue ustekinumab or transition to guselkumab.

Tremfya represents a significant milestone in the treatment of moderate to severe plaque psoriasis as evidenced by the proven skin clearance demonstrated in the majority of study patients receiving this IL-23specific therapy at week 16 and up to week 48," said Andrew Blauvelt, M.D., M.B.A., President of Oregon Medical Research Center, and study investigator in the companys announcement. "We continue to make progress in understanding the science of psoriasis and the important role IL-23 plays in the pathogenesis of this disease, which is another reason why today's approval of Tremfya is exciting, both as a researcher and a practicing dermatologist."

"The approval of new and effective treatment options is always welcome news for the plaque psoriasis patient community, as not all patients respond similarly to currently available treatments," said Michael Siegel, Ph.D., Vice President of Research Programs for the National Psoriasis Foundation in a statement from Janssen. "For the more than one million Americans living with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis, the approval of Tremfya is a meaningful addition and offers physicians and patients an effective new, first-in-class therapy that selectively inhibits IL-23."

There is an ongoing Phase III study evaluating guselkumab as a treatment for active psoriatic arthritis and a Phase III trial evaluating efficacy compared to secukinumab (Cosentyx) for moderate to severe plaque psoriasis.

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J&J's New Psoriasis Drug Approved by FDA - Drug Discovery & Development