Adam Robinson
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Born | Manhattan |
New York | |
United States | |
Founded | The Princeton Review |
Official site | iamadamrobinson.com |
Education | University of Oxford |
University of Pennsylvania | |
Evanston Township High on School | |
Nominations | Goodreads Choice Awards Best Poetry |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 1382343 |
Cracking the SAT
Adam Robison and Other Poems
The Princeton Review Word Smart
The Rocket Review Revolution: The Ultimate Guide to the New SAT®
Bin Laden: Behind the Mask of the Terrorist
Cracking the GRE
Cracking the LSAT
Princeton Review Cracking the SAT
Cracking the LSAT 2005: With Sample Tests
The Princeton Review Word Smart II: Building an Even More Educated Vocabulary
Word Smart & Grammar Smart
The SAT & PSAT: Cracking the System
Cracking the Lsatwith Sample Tests: 2000 Edition
Cracking the SAT with Sample Tests on CD-ROM
Cracking the LSAT: With Sample Tests on CD-ROM
Cracking the LSAT 2002
Cracking the SAT and PSAT with Sample Tests On
Cracking the SAT, 1999 Edition
Cracking the New SAT
Cracking the System: The LSAT
Cracking the SAT 2008
Cracking the GMAT 2004
Cracking the GRE 1999
Cracking the PSAT/NMSQT
Cracking the SAT II: Writing and Literature Subject Tests, 2003-2004 Edition
Cracking the GRE, 2004 Edition
Cracking the GMAT: With Practice Tests on CD-ROM
PR Crkg Sat'97 Disks
Cracking the SAT 2002
Cracking the SAT 2001
Cracking the LSAT 1998
Adam's Heart: An Inspiring Story about One Man's Fight Against Heart Disease
Cracking the GRE, with Four Full-length Practice Tests on CD-ROM
PR Crkg Lsat'97 Mac/win
Words Smart II: How to Build an Even More Educated Vocabulary
Cracking the GRE: With Four Complete Practice Tests on CD-ROM
PR Crkg GRE '97 Mac/Wind
Cracking the LSAT 2001
Cracking the GRE 1998
Terror on the Pitch: How Bin Laden Targeted Beckham and the England Football Team
The GRE: Cracking the System
Cracking the GMAT Premium Edition with 6 Practice Tests 2015
Cracking the SAT Premium Edition with 8 Practice Tests 2019
More Word Smart
PR Cracking the SAT CD-ROM 98
Cracking the LSAT: 2011 Edition
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Cracking the LSAT Premium Edition with 6 Practice Tests, 2015
Princeton Review Cracking the GRE 1997
WORD SMART
Word Smart 1
Word Smart: Building an Educated Vocabulary
The Best Team Wins: Build Your Business Through Predictive Hiring
Adam Robinson Life story
Adam Robinson is an American educator, freelance author, and a US Chess Federation life master. He is the co-founder of The Princeton Review. He currently works as a global macro advisor to the heads of some of the world's largest hedge funds through his company Robinson Global Strategies.
Ukraine war: The Russians hunting for cheap flats in occupied Mariupol
...By Adam Robinson, Erwan Rivault and Olga RobinsonBBC VerifyIt is one year since the Ukrainian city of Mariupol was largely destroyed by Russian forces and captured...
Kyiv missile strikes: Tracking the rise of Russian attacks
...By Adam Robinson and Kayleen DevlinBBC Monitoring and BBC VerifyThe Ukrainian capital Kyiv has been repeatedly hit by missiles and drones over the past few weeks...
Pentagon leaks: How the secret files spread online
......
The haters and conspiracy theorists back on Twitter
......
Ukraine war: What does facial recognition software make of Putin's backdrop crowd?
...By Jake Horton, Adam Robinson & Paul MyersBBC Reality Check & BBC MonitoringSocial media is awash with claims, repeated on news websites, that Russian President Vladimir Putin surrounded himself with actors for his New Year s address and at previous events...
Ukraine war: Russians kept in the dark by internet search
...By Adam Robinson, Olga Robinson & Kayleen DevlinBBC MonitoringIn many places, searching the web is a gateway to a wider world of information, but in Russia, it is part of a system that helps trap people in an alternate reality...
Pentagon leaks: How the secret files spread online
By Olga Robinson, Shayan Sardarizadeh & Jake HortonBBC News
Dozens of classified US documents which were leaked and circulated online have started to disappear, or at least become much more difficult to find. But where did they come from?
We've pieced together what we know about how they first appeared, where they spread, and who's been discussing them.
Documents postedThe first screenshots of the documents we've been able to verify were posted on 1 March. More appeared a few days later.
They appeared on Discord - a Social Media platform popular with gamers - and were shared on several discussion Channels .
These Channels aren't about politics or Military Intelligence , they're for players of the computer game Minecraft and another for fans of a Filipino YouTube celebrity.
In one of The Channels , after a brief argument about Minecraft and The War in Ukraine, a user says " here, have some leaked documents" and posts several screenshots.
One of those on the chat group claims to have taken the images from Another Channel on Discord which has since been deleted, Making It impossible to verify.
The investigative website That some documents could have been posted in January or even earlier.
These documents remained on Discord largely undetected, before spreading to other platforms in early April and eventually being picked up by US officials and the mainstream press.
Spread across Social MediaOn 5 April, screenshots of the documents appeared on The Message board 4chan, one of the biggest and most controversial hubs of Internet subculture.
They were shared on one of 4chan's most notorious boards known as /pol/ - standing for Politically Incorrect - by anonymous users during an argument about the exact number of Ukrainian and Russian casualties there had been in The Conflict .
Just a few hours later, these documents began appearing on pro-Kremlin Telegram Channels and were also picked up by prominent military bloggers.
One Image - widely circulated by Russian Channels - was edited to reduce The Number of Russian troops killed and inflate the Ukrainian losses.
By 7 April, the documents were also circulating on some of The Major Social Media platforms, such as Twitter and Reddit.
Russian responseInitially, pro-Kremlin Telegram Channels who shared the screenshots did not dwell much on the authenticity of the documents, focusing largely on their content.
But soon several prominent Channels and media outlets started to lean towards portraying the documents as at least partly fake.
An expert quoted by ultranationalist news website Regnum suggested the documents may be a deliberate leak aimed at providing a smokescreen for The Coming Ukrainian counter-offensive.
On state TV, Yuri Podolyaka , a prominent war commentator, said This Was " planted information" intended to mislead Russia about the counter-offensive.
Olga Skabeyeva , host of state Rossiya 1 TV's 60 Minutes Talk Show said The West had been doing " all it can to create The Image of a weak Ukraine whose shells are running out and which has Nothing Left at all".
Questions about the authenticity of the documents have been raised in Ukraine too, with some commentators accusing Russia of planting fake documents ahead of the Ukrainian counter-offensive.
Disappearing documentsMultiple screenshots of the documents - often of poor Quality - are still circulating on Twitter, Telegram and Reddit.
But The Originals are much harder to find. A lot of the original copies have now disappeared from The Chats where they first emerged.
Others who shared the screenshots on Discord , Telegram and Twitter have either wiped out their feeds or deleted their Social Media profiles altogether.
And there's a great deal of paranoia too.
One user who has previously shared screenshots of the documents on Discord told fellow users they'd been trying to get rid of all the copies they had on their phone.
Another was quick to respond to a plea to share more documents on The Forum with: " Nice try FBI".
The Disappearance of the original copies prompted speculation That The Pentagon was trying to get platforms like Twitter to remove posts containing the documents.
Twitter's owner Elon Musk responded by saying he would not be directing his staff to actively find and remove the documents.
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The Bbc is not responsible for the content of external sites." Yeah, you can totally delete things from The Internet - That works perfectly and doesn't draw attention to whatever you were trying to hide at all, " he tweeted.
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com