The Passions photograph

The Passions

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OriginShepherd's Bush
London
United Kingdom
AlbumsThirty Thousand Feet Over China
Michael & Miranda
GenresPost-punk
New Wave
Record labels Polydor Records
Fiction Records
Skos genreR&B/Soul
Dance/Electronic
Rock
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID2345574
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About The Passions


The Passions were a British post-punk/new wave band which formed in 1978 and disbanded in 1983. The Passions' music was grounded mainly in Barbara Gogan's voice and Clive Timperley's delicate Echoplex guitar work.

E2E encryption: Should big tech be able to read people's messages?

E2E encryption: Should big tech be able to read people's messages?
Jul 4,2023 9:40 pm

... Undermines privacy Also on Wednesday, as if to highlight The Passions on both sides of the debate, 68 prominent security and privacy researchers have published a letter saying the Online Safety Bill would effectively break end-to-end encryption...

Gary Lineker revolt sees BBC in bigger crisis than tweet row

Gary Lineker revolt sees BBC in bigger crisis than tweet row
Mar 11,2023 7:00 pm

... The Passions provoked by Lineker s political tweets and the decision to keep him off air until he and the BBC resolve this issue has poured petrol on a fire that was already well alight, the debate about the BBC s role in British politics and perceptions of bias both to the left and the right...

Italy elections: Far-right Meloni scents power in a divided country

Italy elections: Far-right Meloni scents power in a divided country
Sep 19,2022 9:50 pm

...Elections may be around the corner, but at the Ballarò market in the Sicilian capital of Palermo, The Passions are not political but culinary...

Tom Hiddleston: Why we all need monsters and myths

Tom Hiddleston: Why we all need monsters and myths
May 12,2022 3:40 am

... " He said making the series " felt very wild, and mirrored The Passions of the story we were telling...

George Floyd's death: the trump suit denies protests forced him in the bunker

George Floyd's death: the trump suit denies protests forced him in the bunker
Jun 4,2020 1:07 am

... Trump s actions are trying to serve, The Passions of his base and has not traffic in fear and division ...

George Floyd's death: More big protests in the US, but violence falls

George Floyd's death: More big protests in the US, but violence falls
Jun 3,2020 11:31 am

... Trump for the use of the crisis to appeal to his supporters, said he was with The Passions of his base ...

Iran attack: US troops targeted with ballistic missiles

Iran attack: US troops targeted with ballistic missiles
Feb 16,2020 9:52 am

... in view of the importance of the General Soleimani and The Passions that aroused his killing of Iran military strike against American bases in Iraq was a modest answer...

USA and Iran-escalation questions answered: What can the world do?

USA and Iran-escalation questions answered: What can the world do?
Feb 16,2020 9:47 am

... The extent of this attack - The Passions aroused in many respects rather modest in comparison with the ranking and the fame of Soleimani and the suffering to his death, maybe both sides will give the opportunity to take a step back from the abyss...

E2E encryption: Should big tech be able to read people's messages?

Feb 16,2020 2:39 am

By Joe TidyCyber correspondent

Meta's Mark Zuckerberg is on a Collision Course with The UK government over continued plans to build super-secure messaging into all his apps despite a potential landmark law that could effectively outlaw The technology. Around The World , governments that also oppose The popular technology are watching The Showdown closely to see who will blink first.

" End-to-end encryption" " backdoors" and " client-side scanning" - The biggest row in technology sounds very complicated.

But really It Comes down to a very simple question. Should technology companies be able to read people's messages?

That is The Crux of a row that has been brewing for years between Silicon Valley and The governments of at least a dozen countries around The World .

WhatsApp, iMessage, Android Messages and Signal all use The super-secure system called end-to-end encryption.

The technology means only The Sender , at one end, and The Receiver , at The Other , can read messages, see media or hear phone calls. Even The app makers cannot access The content.

Big switchover

In The Past 10 Years , end-to-end encrypted apps have become increasingly popular, with billions of people using them Every Day .

Most governments and security agencies reluctantly accepted The technology's Rise - until Four Years ago, when Mr Zuckerberg announced On Stage The Messenger app And Then Instagram would move to end-to-end encryption as standard.

" We're going to enable More Than two billion people around The World to have their most personal conversations with each other privately, " He Said .

Since then, Mr Zuckerberg and his army of engineers have slowly and quietly been cracking on with The Project . The Company is refusing to speak to reporters on The record about how The mammoth task is going or when The big switchover will be. " By The End of 2023, " is all it will say publicly.

Meanwhile, The calls to stop The switchover or build in safeguards have been growing louder.

Authorities in The UK, Australia, Canada, New Zealand , The United States , India, Turkey, Japan and Brazil - Plus law-enforcement agencies such as Interpol - have criticised The technology.

But no government in The democratic world has risked passing a law that will interfere with these popular apps - Until Now .

Making technology companies build in some sort of technical backdoor to allow messages to be scanned for illegal material is one of The central tenets of The UK's wide-reaching Online Safety Bill, which looks likely to be passed into law in The near future.

Police officers, if they can no longer ask Meta for The contents of people's messages, will miss out on a key source of evidence they regularly use to convict criminals or terrorists, The government says.

And there is a particular concern about children being groomed online In Secret .

End-to-end encryption " will be a huge boon to anyone who wants to hurt a child" Home Secretary Suella Braverman wrote to Mr Zuckerberg on Monday.

And on Wednesday, The National Society for The Prevention of Cruelty to Children (NSPCC) has released a YouGov survey it commissioned, suggesting The British public wants police officers to be able to access people's messages, to protect children.

Of The 1,723 adults surveyed across The UK, 73% said technology companies should, by law, have to scan private messaging for child sexual abuse and disrupt it in end-to-end encrypted environments.

Most already scanned for child sexual abuse on their services, leading to many successful convictions, The NSPCC said.

" It is now clear that companies who wish to pit children's fundamental right to safety against The privacy rights of adults are out of step with The Public and, ultimately, their user base, " Richard Collard, at The Charity , said.

In response to The survey, a Meta spokesman said The Company had " developed safety measures that prevent, detect and allow us to take action against this heinous abuse" - age restrictions for contacting strangers, for example.

'Undermines privacy'

Also on Wednesday, As If to highlight The Passions on both sides of The Debate , 68 prominent security and privacy researchers have published a letter saying The Online Safety Bill would effectively break end-to-end encryption.

The Bill puts The onus on tech firms to find a way to implement child safety measures whilst maintaining privacy for users but The Experts say this is impossible.

" Our concern is that surveillance technologies are deployed in The Spirit of providing Online Safety , " The Letter says.

" This act undermines privacy guarantees and, indeed, safety online. "

It also sets a precedent for repressive regimes around The World to monitor and control what people are sharing, experts say.

Rebuilding trust

WhatsApp and Signal, meanwhile, have said from The UK than degrade end-to-end encryption security.

And to make matters worse for critics of The technology, Elon Musk announced, in May, he too was, into Twitter messages.

Switching to The technology is complex and expensive, as evidenced by Meta, but ultimately Worth It tech bosses think.

After years of data scandals, big tech sees it as key to rebuilding trust in its services.

And in a happy coincidence, end-to-end encryption makes these embattled companies' tricky job of moderation a lot easier - if they cannot see what users are sharing, then neither can they police it.

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Source of news: bbc.com

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