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Депутата Київради Кримчака заарештували із заставою 1,4 млн гривень

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Солом’янський районний суд Києва обрав запобіжний захід у вигляді утримання під вартою депутату Київської міської ради Сергію Кримчаку (фракція «Єдність») з альтернативою застави 1,4 млн гривень.
Солом’янський районний суд Києва обрав запобіжний захід у вигляді утримання під вартою депутату Київської міської ради Сергію Кримчаку (фракція «Єдність») з альтернативою застави 1,4 млн гривень.
Про це Українським новинам сказав його адвокат Ігор Черезов.
«Спеціалізована антикорупційна прокуратура просила арешт з альтернативою застави 25 млн гривень. Суд обрав арешт із заставою 1,4 млн гривень», – повідомив він.
Зі слів адвоката, Кримчака правоохоронці вже відвезли до Лук’янівського СІЗО.
Нагадаємо, 13 вересня детективи Національного антикорупційного бюро затримали Кримчака.
Раніше Військова прокуратура провела обшуки в квартирі депутата Київської міської ради Олександра Березнікова (фракція «Всеукраїнське об’єднання «Батьківщина»).

© Source: http://zik.ua/news/2017/09/16/deputata_kyivrady_krymchaka_zaareshtuvaly_iz_zastavoyu_14_mln_gryven_1168691
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Alibaba affiliate Ant Financial ‘will push for third time’ to get US approval of MoneyGram deal

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Reports come amid greater scrutiny of Chinese investments in the United States this year
Ant Financial, an affiliate of Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holding, will attempt for the third time to get approval from authorities for its takeover of United States payments firm MoneyGram International, according to media reports, amid greater scrutiny of Chinese investments in the US.
In April, MoneyGram, a US-based money transfer service, accepted a US$1.2 billion takeover offer from Ant Financial. The deal is considered sensitive as it will give a Chinese company access to the US financial infrastructure.
Ant Financial, which operates China’s biggest online payments platform Alipay, is now preparing to resubmit its application for review by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS), according to Bloomberg and Reuters which quoted people familiar with the matter.
CFIUS is the body responsible for making a ruling on whether a deal threatens US security.
Both Ant Financial and MoneyGram filed for CFIUS approval soon after the deal was agreed upon, but this was not granted within the 75-day period. They submitted an application again, but reports said they had not received the green light despite the second 75-day period coming to an end soon.
Other cases of Chinese investment in the United States have also come under scrutiny. On Wednesday, US President Donald Trump blocked the Chinese-owned Canyon Bridge Fund’s acquisition of Lattice Semiconductor Corporation on the grounds of national security, after the deal failed to obtain approval from CFIUS.
A CFIUS filing is a voluntary procedure, but the US president has the right to block any non-CFIUS approved deal on the basis of national security.
Chinese conglomerate HNA Group’s acquisition of US fund management firm SkyBridge Capital is also awaiting regulatory approval. On July 28, SkyBridge said in a statement that it was hopeful the deal would get the go-ahead within 45 days.
A China-based spokeswoman for Ant Financial declined to comment, referring the Post to colleagues in the United States. Neither they nor MoneyGram responded to requests for comments sent in the early hours of Saturday in the United States.
Ant Financial is an affiliate of Alibaba Group, which also owns the South China Morning Post .

© Source: http://www.scmp.com/news/article/2111492/alibaba-affiliate-ant-financial-will-push-third-time-get-us-approval-moneygram
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‘Dress-wearing’ students must submit photos before dances, Wisconsin high school says

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Some say the requirement is sexist.
PEWAUKEE, Wis. — A school district in Wisconsin is requiring all „dress-wearing“ students and guests to send photos of their attire before they can buy tickets to its homecoming dance next month.
The Pewaukee High School policy, an extension of the Pewaukee School District’s dress code, is aimed at keeping students from being ejected from the event for showing too much skin, according to Pewaukee Superintendent Mike Caty. And it’s not new. It’s been around since January 2015.
But a reminder emailed to families on Tuesday has some students and parents chafing at the requirement, calling it sexist and micromanaging. And it comes as girls and women nationally are pushing back at dress codes they see as body-shaming and directed almost exclusively at the female body.
„The girls are essentially being held responsible for the wayward thoughts (administrators) think boys have,“ said Rebecca Shepherd, whose daughter is a freshman at Pewaukee this year.
„They’re being told, ‚You are the problem,‘ “ she said. „These are the roots of rape culture, frankly.“
More: Some students defend teacher who allegedly called teen ‚busty‘
More: Yearbook photo, quote slam high school’s dress code
Caty said the policy isn’t sexist. The dress code includes items that appear to be directed at boys; for example, students can’t wear low-hanging pants that expose their underwear or behinds. But he said it was girls who forced the district to impose the pre-dance check by pushing the boundaries of appropriate attire at school formals.
„It’s really out of a sensitivity to our students,“ Caty said. „We want (school dances) to be a positive experience. We don’t want anyone to show up and have to be sent home because of a dress-code violation.“
Dress codes have been around for years; most districts have one. But they have become increasingly controversial in recent years — and not just those directed at young people or girls.
This spring, a female journalist was barred from interviewing lawmakers in a chamber outside the House of Representatives because her dress was sleeveless. The uproar prompted House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Janesville) to announce this month that the code, which also bans open-toed shoes, would be „modernized.“
And in June, about 30 boys at a British prep school donned uniform skirts to protest its no-shorts policy that left them sweltering during a summer heat wave, according to the Guardian.
But much of the attention has been on school policies that appear to disproportionately affect girls. Teens are taking to social media to air their grievances, including boys who in some cases have posted photos of themselves in dresses to make their points.
And there have been hundreds of petitions filed on the website change.org aimed at forcing school districts to revamp their policies. Some districts have responded, revising policies to eliminate language that could be seen as sexist or discriminatory against any student, including those who are transgender or gender-non-conforming.
The Pewaukee dress code, like many others, prohibits clothes deemed too revealing. It explicitly bans „tops that have spaghetti straps, are backless, and/or that cover only one shoulder… blouses that do not cover the midriff“ and requires shorts and skirts to „extend below the mid-thigh.“
More: S. D. high school dress code unfairly targets girls, students and parents say
More: Maryland elementary school bans students, staff from wearing Redskins clothing
Pewaukee’s pre-dance policy appears unusual, if not unique, in southeastern Wisconsin, based on a quick survey of districts on Friday. A Minnesota school rescinded a similar policy in February, a day after it was announced, because of blowback. In that case, girls were told they should wear dresses they would „feel comfortable wearing to a formal event at your church.“

© Source: http://rssfeeds.freep.com/~/459351718/0/freep/home~lsquoDresswearingrsquo-students-must-submit-photos-before-dances-Wisconsin-high-school-says/
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Суд не обрав для Сакварелідзе запобіжний захід

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Суд залишив Сакварелідзе без запобіжного заходу
Давід Сакварелідзе
КИЇВ. 16 вересня. УНН. Галицький суд Львова задовольнив клопотання захисту і не обрав запобіжний захід колишньому заступнику Генерального прокурора Давіду Сакварелідзе. Про це Сакварелідзе повідомив на своїй сторінці в Facebook, передає УНН.
„Галицький суд … задовольнив наше клопотання і залишив мене без жодного запобіжного заходу, розуміючи, напевно, що вручена підозра, як і вся справа в цілому, абсолютно „порошкові“ й не мають під собою реальних підстав“, – повідомив Сакварелідзе.
Нагадаємо, прокуратура просила суд обрати Сакварелідзе запобіжний захід у вигляді особистого зобов’язання .

© Source: http://www.unn.com.ua/uk/news/1688124-sud-ne-obrav-dlia-sakvarelidze-zapobizhnyi-zakhid
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Суд не избрал для Сакварелидзе меру пресечения

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Суд оставил Сакварелидзе без меры пресечения
Давид Сакварелидзе
КИЕВ. 16 сентября. УНН. Галицкий суд Львова удовлетворил ходатайство защиты и не избрал меру пресечения бывшему заместителю Генерального прокурора Давиду Сакварелидзе. Об этом Сакварелидзе сообщил на своей странице в Facebook, передает УНН.
„Галицкий суд … удовлетворил наше ходатайство и оставил меня без всякого пресечения, понимая, наверное, что врученное подозрение, как и все дело в целом, абсолютно „порошковые“ и не имеют под собой реальных оснований“, – сообщил Сакварелидзе.
Напомним, прокуратура просила суд избрать Сакварелидзе меру пресечения в виде личного обязательства .

© Source: http://www.unn.com.ua/ru/news/1688124-sud-ne-izbral-dlya-sakvarelidze-meru-presecheniya
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Mathematicians Measure Infinities, and Find They're Equal

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Proof rests on a surprising link between infinity size and the complexity of mathematical theories
From Quanta Magazine ( find original story here).
In a breakthrough that disproves decades of conventional wisdom, two mathematicians have shown that two different variants of infinity are actually the same size. The advance touches on one of the most famous and intractable problems in mathematics: whether there exist infinities between the infinite size of the natural numbers and the larger infinite size of the real numbers.
The problem was first identified over a century ago. At the time, mathematicians knew that “the real numbers are bigger than the natural numbers, but not how much bigger. Is it the next biggest size, or is there a size in between?” said Maryanthe Malliaris of the University of Chicago, co-author of the new work along with Saharon Shelah of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and Rutgers University.
In their new work, Malliaris and Shelah resolve a related 70-year-old question about whether one infinity (call it p) is smaller than another infinity (call it t). They proved the two are in fact equal, much to the surprise of mathematicians.
“It was certainly my opinion, and the general opinion, that p should be less than t,” Shelah said.
Malliaris and Shelah published their proof last year in the Journal of the American Mathematical Society and were honored this past July with one of the top prizes in the field of set theory. But their work has ramifications far beyond the specific question of how those two infinities are related. It opens an unexpected link between the sizes of infinite sets and a parallel effort to map the complexity of mathematical theories.
The notion of infinity is mind-bending. But the idea that there can be different sizes of infinity? That’s perhaps the most counterintuitive mathematical discovery ever made. It emerges, however, from a matching game even kids could understand.
Suppose you have two groups of objects, or two “sets,” as mathematicians would call them: a set of cars and a set of drivers. If there is exactly one driver for each car, with no empty cars and no drivers left behind, then you know that the number of cars equals the number of drivers (even if you don’t know what that number is).
In the late 19th century, the German mathematician Georg Cantor captured the spirit of this matching strategy in the formal language of mathematics. He proved that two sets have the same size, or “cardinality,” when they can be put into one-to-one correspondence with each other—when there is exactly one driver for every car. Perhaps more surprisingly, he showed that this approach works for infinitely large sets as well.
Consider the natural numbers: 1,2,3 and so on. The set of natural numbers is infinite. But what about the set of just the even numbers, or just the prime numbers? Each of these sets would at first seem to be a smaller subset of the natural numbers. And indeed, over any finite stretch of the number line, there are about half as many even numbers as natural numbers, and still fewer primes.
Yet infinite sets behave differently. Cantor showed that there’s a one-to-one correspondence between the elements of each of these infinite sets.
Because of this, Cantor concluded that all three sets are the same size. Mathematicians call sets of this size “countable,” because you can assign one counting number to each element in each set.
After he established that the sizes of infinite sets can be compared by putting them into one-to-one correspondence with each other, Cantor made an even bigger leap: He proved that some infinite sets are even larger than the set of natural numbers.
Consider the real numbers, which are all the points on the number line. The real numbers are sometimes referred to as the “continuum,” reflecting their continuous nature: There’s no space between one real number and the next. Cantor was able to show that the real numbers can’t be put into a one-to-one correspondence with the natural numbers: Even after you create an infinite list pairing natural numbers with real numbers, it’s always possible to come up with another real number that’s not on your list. Because of this, he concluded that the set of real numbers is larger than the set of natural numbers. Thus, a second kind of infinity was born: the uncountably infinite.
What Cantor couldn’t figure out was whether there exists an intermediate size of infinity—something between the size of the countable natural numbers and the uncountable real numbers. He guessed not, a conjecture now known as the continuum hypothesis.
In 1900, the German mathematician David Hilbert made a list of 23 of the most important problems in mathematics. He put the continuum hypothesis at the top. “It seemed like an obviously urgent question to answer,” Malliaris said.
In the century since, the question has proved itself to be almost uniquely resistant to mathematicians’ best efforts. Do in-between infinities exist? We may never know.
Throughout the first half of the 20th century, mathematicians tried to resolve the continuum hypothesis by studying various infinite sets that appeared in many areas of mathematics. They hoped that by comparing these infinities, they might start to understand the possibly non-empty space between the size of the natural numbers and the size of the real numbers.
Many of the comparisons proved to be hard to draw. In the 1960s, the mathematician Paul Cohen explained why. Cohen developed a method called “forcing” that demonstrated that the continuum hypothesis is independent of the axioms of mathematics—that is, it couldn’t be proved within the framework of set theory. (Cohen’s work complemented work by Kurt Gödel in 1940 that showed that the continuum hypothesis couldn’t be disproved within the usual axioms of mathematics.)
Cohen’s work won him the Fields Medal (one of math’s highest honors) in 1966. Mathematicians subsequently used forcing to resolve many of the comparisons between infinities that had been posed over the previous half-century, showing that these too could not be answered within the framework of set theory. (Specifically, Zermelo-Fraenkel set theory plus the axiom of choice.)
Some problems remained, though, including a question from the 1940s about whether p is equal to t. Both p and t are orders of infinity that quantify the minimum size of collections of subsets of the natural numbers in precise (and seemingly unique) ways.
The details of the two sizes don’t much matter. What’s more important is that mathematicians quickly figured out two things about the sizes of p and t. First, both sets are larger than the natural numbers. Second, p is always less than or equal to t. Therefore, if p is less than t, then p would be an intermediate infinity—something between the size of the natural numbers and the size of the real numbers. The continuum hypothesis would be false.
Mathematicians tended to assume that the relationship between p and t couldn’t be proved within the framework of set theory, but they couldn’t establish the independence of the problem either. The relationship between p and t remained in this undetermined state for decades. When Malliaris and Shelah found a way to solve it, it was only because they were looking for something else.
Around the same time that Paul Cohen was forcing the continuum hypothesis beyond the reach of mathematics, a very different line of work was getting under way in the field of model theory.
For a model theorist, a “theory” is the set of axioms, or rules, that define an area of mathematics. You can think of model theory as a way to classify mathematical theories—an exploration of the source code of mathematics. “I think the reason people are interested in classifying theories is they want to understand what is really causing certain things to happen in very different areas of mathematics,” said H. Jerome Keisler, emeritus professor of mathematics at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.
In 1967, Keisler introduced what’s now called Keisler’s order, which seeks to classify mathematical theories on the basis of their complexity. He proposed a technique for measuring complexity and managed to prove that mathematical theories can be sorted into at least two classes: those that are minimally complex and those that are maximally complex. “It was a small starting point, but my feeling at that point was there would be infinitely many classes,” Keisler said.
It isn’t always obvious what it means for a theory to be complex. Much work in the field is motivated in part by a desire to understand that question. Keisler describes complexity as the range of things that can happen in a theory—and theories where more things can happen are more complex than theories where fewer things can happen.
A little more than a decade after Keisler introduced his order, Shelah published an influential book, which included an important chapter showing that there are naturally occurring jumps in complexity—dividing lines that distinguish more complex theories from less complex ones. After that, little progress was made on Keisler’s order for 30 years.
Then, in her 2009 doctoral thesis and other early papers, Malliaris reopened the work on Keisler’s order and provided new evidence for its power as a classification program. In 2011, she and Shelah started working together to better understand the structure of the order. One of their goals was to identify more of the properties that make a theory maximally complex according to Keisler’s criterion.
Malliaris and Shelah eyed two properties in particular. They already knew that the first one causes maximal complexity. They wanted to know whether the second one did as well. As their work progressed, they realized that this question was parallel to the question of whether p and t are equal. In 2016, Malliaris and Shelah published a 60-page paper that solved both problems: They proved that the two properties are equally complex (they both cause maximal complexity), and they proved that p equals t.
“Somehow everything lined up,” Malliaris said. “It’s a constellation of things that got solved.”
This past July, Malliaris and Shelah were awarded the Hausdorff medal, one of the top prizes in set theory. The honor reflects the surprising, and surprisingly powerful, nature of their proof. Most mathematicians had expected that p was less than t, and that a proof of that inequality would be impossible within the framework of set theory. Malliaris and Shelah proved that the two infinities are equal. Their work also revealed that the relationship between p and t has much more depth to it than mathematicians had realized.
“I think people thought that if by chance the two cardinals were provably equal, the proof would maybe be surprising, but it would be some short, clever argument that doesn’t involve building any real machinery,” said Justin Moore, a mathematician at Cornell University who has published a brief overview of Malliaris and Shelah’s proof.
Instead, Malliaris and Shelah proved that p and t are equal by cutting a path between model theory and set theory that is already opening new frontiers of research in both fields. Their work also finally puts to rest a problem that mathematicians had hoped would help settle the continuum hypothesis. Still, the overwhelming feeling among experts is that this apparently unresolvable proposition is false: While infinity is strange in many ways, it would be almost too strange if there weren’t many more sizes of it than the ones we’ve already found.
Reprinted with permission from Quanta Magazine, an editorially independent publication of the Simons Foundation whose mission is to enhance public understanding of science by covering research developments and trends in mathematics and the physical and life sciences.

© Source: https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/mathematicians-measure-infinities-and-find-theyre-equal/
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Solidarność protestuje przed siedzibą KE w Warszawie

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Od 3 do 5 tys. osób, według szacunków organizatorów, bierze udział w proteście Solidarności przed siedzibą Komisji Europejskiej w Warszawie. Związkowcy…
W trakcie przemówienia przed siedzibą KE Piotr Duda zaznaczył, że pikieta w tym miejscu odbywa się po raz pierwszy, ale prawdopodobnie nie ostatni. – Dlatego że urzędnicy brukselscy, ci biurokraci z KE mają czelność mówić o tym, że w Polsce, naszej kochanej ojczyźnie, Polki są dyskryminowane, co jest po prostu nieporozumieniem – wskazał przewodniczący NSZZ „Solidarność“. Duda zaznaczył, że przywrócenie poprzedniego wymiaru wieku emerytalnego było konieczne, a walka o to trwała dłuższy czas.
Od 1 października 2017 roku wiek emerytalny w Polsce zostanie obniżony do 60 lat dla kobiet i 65 lat dla mężczyzn. Jak wynika z ustaleń Reutersa, który dotarł do pisma Komisji Europejskiej do minister rodziny, pracy i polityki społecznej Elżbiety Rafalskiej, Komisja ma zastrzeżenia do tego rozwiązania. Według KE obniżenie wieku emerytalnego w ten sposób może uderzyć „w kluczowy filar” Unii Europejskiej, jakim jest równe traktowanie kobiet i mężczyzn. Mimo tych zastrzeżeń, polski rząd zapowiada, że nie wycofa się z reformy.

© Source: https://www.wprost.pl/kraj/10076046/Solidarnosc-protestuje-przed-siedziba-KE-w-Warszawie.html
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Equifax releases more information on its massive cyberattack

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The Equifax credit reporting agency suffered a data breach that affects the information of 143 million Americans.
Equifax, as one of the largest credit reporting agencies, possesses a massive cache of sensitive private information. As is generally known, the firm was recently hacked, with the breach putting 143 million Americans at risk of having sensitive data stolen.
As originally reported by the New York Times, the cyberattack occurred sometime between the middle of May 2017 and July 29 when the intrusion was discovered. What makes the Equifax attack particularly troublesome is the company’s status as a central clearinghouse for sensitive credit-related information including social security numbers, driver’s license numbers, and other data that can be used in a variety of ways to harm those affected.
While the Equifax breach isn’t the largest in terms of the number of victims — Yahoo’s attacks involved more people, for example — it’s of concern because of the kind of personal information that was stolen. Examples of sensitive information include 209,000 credit card numbers, personal information relating to credit disputes for 182,000 victims, and data that could be further used to access medical histories, bank accounts, and more.
This isn’t the first attack to target Equifax. An earlier hack stole W-2 data from the credit giant, and other attacks have occurred against the company’s subsidiaries. This breach, however, is by far the company’s largest.
On September 15, Equifax released more information about the hack, and also noted that two senior executives — the Chief Information Officer and Chief Security Officer are “retiring.” Given recent events, however, there is likely more to the story than mere retirement. Equifax further revealed that its internal investigation is still ongoing, and that the company “continues to work closely with the FBI in its investigation.” Thus far, it’s been revealed that Equifax first noticed suspicious activity on July 29,2017, but waited until August 2 to contact a cybersecurity firm and conduct a “comprehensive forensic review.”
As Pamela Dixon, executive director for the nonprofit research group World Privacy Forum, said in a statement that “This is about as bad as it gets. If you have a credit report, chances are you may be in this breach. The chances are much better than 50 percent.”
According to a press release issued by the office of U. S. Senator Mark Warren, the Equifax attack raises important questions about the role of government in responding to the ongoing threat to personal information.
“While many have perhaps become accustomed to hearing of a new data breach every few weeks, the scope of this breach – involving Social Security numbers, birth dates, addresses, and credit card numbers of nearly half the U. S. population – raises serious questions about whether Congress should not only create a uniform data breach notification standard, but also whether Congress needs to rethink data protection policies, so that enterprises such as Equifax have fewer incentives to collect large, centralized sets of highly sensitive data like SSNs and credit card information on millions of Americans.”
In calling such attacks “a real threat to the economic security of Americans,” it’s likely that Warren and other government officials will push for legislation creating stronger consumer protections from data theft. Warner has been working on developing just that sort of legislation, and that’s likely to accelerate.
In the meantime, Equifax has established a website that individuals can visit to learn more about the attack, find out if they’re affected, and enroll in free identity theft protection and file monitoring services. It’s a good idea to head over to the site sooner rather than later.
Update: Equifax released more information about the hack.

© Source: https://www.digitaltrends.com/computing/equifax-data-breach-affects-143-million-americans/
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EU-U. S. data pact faces first major test of credibility

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A pact underpinning billions of dollars of transatlantic data transfers will undergo its first annual review on Monday, with Europe seeking to ensure Washington has lived up to its promises to protect the data of European citizens stored on U. S. servers.
BRUSSELS (Reuters) – A pact underpinning billions of dollars of transatlantic data transfers will undergo its first annual review on Monday, with Europe seeking to ensure Washington has lived up to its promises to protect the data of European citizens stored on U. S. servers.
Feted as a milestone in transatlantic relations, which had soured after revelations of mass U. S. surveillance four years ago, the EU-U. S. Privacy Shield data pact has been in place for just over a year.
It was hammered out after the European Union’s top court struck down a previous data transfer pact in 2015 because it allowed U. S. spies excessive access to people’s data, plunging everyday cross-border data transfers into legal limbo.
However, it is already subject to two legal challenges in European courts on the grounds that it does not offer adequate privacy protections for European citizens’ data, and EU data protection watchdogs have also expressed misgivings.
The first annual review taking place on Monday and Tuesday will be an opportunity for the European Commission, which negotiated the Privacy Shield, to ensure it is functioning well and that the U. S. administration is keeping its part of the deal.
“My expectation is that we will find Privacy Shield functioning, we might find some space or room for improvement,” Vera Jourova, EU Justice Commissioner, told Reuters in an interview. OMBUDSMAN
The Privacy Shield seeks to strengthen the protection of Europeans whose data is moved to U. S. servers by giving EU citizens greater means to seek redress in case of disputes, including through a new privacy ombudsman within the State Department who will deal with complaints from EU citizens about U. S. spying.
However a new ombudsman has not been appointed under the new U. S. administration, something Jourova said she will push for.
Companies wanting to transfer Europeans’ personal data outside the bloc have to comply with tough EU data protection rules which forbid them from transferring personal data to countries deemed to have inadequate privacy protections unless they have special legal contracts in place.
The Privacy Shield allows firms to move data across the Atlantic without relying on such contracts, known as model clauses, which are more cumbersome and expensive.
Over 2,400 companies are signed up to the scheme including Alphabet Inc’s Google ( GOOGL. O), Facebook ( FB. O) and Microsoft ( MSFT. O).
“Virtually every transaction in the trillion-euro transatlantic trade relationship, from the movement of services and capital to the movement of goods and people, heavily relies on the transfer of data between the EU and U. S.,” said Thomas Boue, Director General, Policy, EMEA for BSA, which represents the likes of Apple ( AAPL. O), Microsoft and IBM ( IBM. N).
The Commission is also seeking to find out figures for how many requests for people’s data companies had received from U. S. authorities.
“The million dollar question was how many times they were asked by the national secret service,” Jourova said. “This is of big relevance for assessing whether Privacy Shield is successful.”
The Commission will produce a report with its conclusions on the review of the Privacy Shield in October.

© Source: http://www.reuters.com/article/us-eu-dataprotection-usa/eu-u-s-data-pact-faces-first-major-test-of-credibility-idUSKCN1BR09W?feedType=RSS&feedName=technologyNews&utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+reuters%2FtechnologyNews+%28Reuters+Technology+News%29
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「やばい。衣装ハンガーに掛けたまま…」首位の本田真凜

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フィギュアスケートの USインターナショナルクラシックは15日(日本時間16日)、 米ユタ州ソルトレークシティーで第2日が行われ、 女子ショートプログラム(SP)で、 ともに今季シニアデビューとなる本田真凜…
フィギュアスケートのUSインターナショナルクラシックは15日(日本時間16日)、米ユタ州ソルトレークシティーで第2日が行われ、女子ショートプログラム(SP)で、ともに今季シニアデビューとなる本田真凜(まりん、大阪・関大高)と坂本花織(神戸ク)は明暗が分かれた。本田はミスなく滑りきって、自己ベストまで1・45点に迫る66・90点で首位に立った。坂本は転倒があり、56・82点で5位だった。カレン・チェン(米)が66・18点で2位、3位は63・81点の長洲未来(米)。 アイスダンスのショートダンス(SD)の村元哉中(かな)、クリス・リード組(木下ク)は60・00点で2位と好発進。ペアはフリーがあり、須藤澄玲(神奈川ク)、フランシス・ブードロオデ(カナダ)組が8位。合計153・60点で総合8位だった。 ■衣装をホテルに忘れて リンクに入る15分前、荷物を開いて本田は青ざめた。「やばい。ハンガーに掛けたまま」。しわにならないようにと思い、直前に詰めようと思っていた衣装をホテルに忘れていた。 急いで取りに行ってもらい、届いたのは演技直前、6分間練習が始まる3分前。それまで頭の中を支配していた「どういう演技をしようか」「(標高の)高さが気になる」という考えが吹っ飛んだ。 「衣装が届いたことがうれしくて。シニアデビューの演技だーとうれしくて」にこやかに滑り始めた。序盤の連続3回転も、後半の二つのジャンプも、きれいに決まった。投げキスをするようなしぐさでフィニッシュすると、「よかった~というポーズ」と、ゆっくり伸びをするように両手を突き上げた。 普段、衣装に着替えるのはもっ…

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