Sunday, January 7, 2018

Mark Zuckerberg Says Facebook to Look Into Cryptocurrency - Bloomberg

Mark Zuckerberg Says Facebook to Look Into Cryptocurrency
By Dave Liedtka and Julie Verhage
January 5, 2018, 7:17 AM GMT+11 Updated on January 5, 2018, 9:28 AM GMT+11
Facebook's Future With Cryptocurrencies
Facebook Inc. Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg gave cryptocurrency enthusiasts a little optimism for the new year.
Zuckerberg referenced cryptocurrencies in a posting Thursday in which he laid out how he will spend 2018 trying to correct persistent problems -— including the proliferation of hate speech and misinformation -— that have dogged his wildly popular social network for the past two years.
“There are important counter-trends to this -- encryption and cryptocurrency -- that take power from centralized systems and put it back into people’s hands,” Zuckerberg wrote. “But they come with the risk of being harder to control. I’m interested to go deeper and study the positive and negative aspects of these technologies, and how best to use them in our services.”
Zuckerberg isn’t the only Facebook executive expressing interest in the space. David Marcus, the company’s vice president of messaging products, joined the board of Coinbase Inc., one of the largest crypto exchanges, late last year.
“I’ve been involved with, and fascinated by cryptocurrencies since 2012, and I’ve witnessed how Coinbase has started democratizing access to this new asset class,” Marcus said on Coinbase’s blog Dec. 12.
What all this may mean for the digital currency world remains to be seen.

What the heck does Steve Bannon do now? - CNN Politics

What the heck does Steve Bannon do now?
Chris Cillizza
Analysis by Chris Cillizza, CNN Editor-at-large
Updated 2056 GMT (0456 HKT) January 5, 2018
Guest at Ailes-Bannon dinner details experience
Guest at Ailes-Bannon dinner details experience 02:30
(CNN)This time last year, Steve Bannon was on top of the world. He had shepherded Donald Trump to the most unlikely presidential victory ever. He was preparing to go with Trump to the White House as a senior strategist. He was the new hot thing.
Fast-forward to today. Bannon was not only fired from his job but has been exiled from Trumpville for his comments to author Michael Wolff about the President and the Trump family. Rebekah Mercer, a wealthy Bannon benefactor, has disowned him. Breitbart, the conservative media organization Bannon leads, is weighing whether to keep him around.
Bannon is, suddenly, a man without a friend left in the world. So what's his next act? Or is he done?
To answer that I reached out to my friend Josh Green, who wrote the incredible Bannon biography "Devil's Bargain: Steve Bannon, Donald Trump, and the Storming of the Presidency." Our email conversation about all things Bannon is below.
Cillizza: Josh, as the foremost Bannonologist in the country -- if that's not a thing, I am making it a thing right now -- I turn to you for wisdom at this amazing moment.
Steve Bannon appears to be totally and completely on the outs with Donald Trump, his political patron, after talking (at length) to Michael Wolff for "Fire and Fury." Trump said that Bannon lost his mind!
Trump appears to be WAY angrier at Bannon than when he actually fired him a few months back. So is this the end of the end? A seven-year political friendship turned into "Sloppy Steve"?
Green: What Bannon did by talking to Wolff for this book -- and by extension, probably, talking to me for my book -- is pour a can of gasoline over his head and light a match. Trump appears to have broken with him in a way that seems final and ultimate, even tagging him with a dreaded nickname, "Sloppy Steve," which I think we can all admit is pretty fantastic.
Bannon has been in the doghouse before and come back. I hear that he thinks he can come back from this, too. We'll see; nothing's ever quite impossible in Trump's world. You can never say never.
As Bannon has told people in the past, Trump is entirely transactional. But if he loses his platform at Breitbart News, then it's hard for me to see how he'll be able to wield the kind of influence that I describe in "Devil's Bargain," and that he seemed to have regained after leaving the White House last year.
Cillizza: Let's talk about Bannon and Breitbart. There's reporting out there they may oust him. And Rebekah Mercer, one of the major financial patrons of Breitbart (and Bannon), said publicly that she and he are not on speaking terms and she's not going to be funding what he does anymore.
What's weird to me is that it appears Bannon's quotes on Trump to Wolff have had a far more profound effect on his role at Breitbart -- and in the conservative firmament more generally -- then when he was fired by Trump! After that, he was welcomed as a conquering hero back into Breitbart!
What the hell happened? Is it solely the Wolff book? The Roy Moore debacle?
And is Bannon really in danger of losing his Breitbart platform?
Green: The reason uber-wealthy people like the Mercers become involved in politics is to exert influence. Bannon was an agent of that influence, and the architect. And he did, for a time, have a profound influence on American politics that culminated in Trump's election. Bannon was the real force behind Breitbart; the head honcho at GAI, which produced the "Clinton Cash" book so damaging to Hillary's candidacy; and a board member at Cambridge Analytica, the data research firm that worked on the Trump campaign.
So as an investment, Bannon really did pay off for the Mercers like early-'80s Apple stock. The problem is that effectiveness waned almost immediately upon entering the White House, and that, coupled with his megalomania and his belief that he was the true leader of the nationalist movement, backfired on him big time.
Trump obviously doesn't value him the way that he did a year ago. With the humiliation of Moore's loss in Alabama and the devastating quotes in Wolff's book attacking Trump's family, there was really no reason to keep him around. And when Trump turns on someone, he really TURNS on them!
Cillizza: I am STUNNED that Bannon ever entertained the idea of a presidential bid. That would, um, never work.
But let's assume -- just for the purpose of the conversation -- he hangs on at Breitbart. How does he start to rebuild what he's lost? Can he?
And just for the thought experiment: If Breitbart jettisons Bannon -- where does he go then?
Green: Look, here on planet Earth we're all rightly astonished that Bannon holds (held?) presidential ambitions. But the psychology would work as follows: Bannon has always thought that Trump was riding a global nationalist wave that'd swept across Europe, the UK and now the US. Trump embraced that politics -- Bannon's politics -- and got elected. So clearly the ideas resonate in the US. If Trump were to decide against running for re-election, Bannon, believing he's the true carrier of the faith, must've thought, "Why not me?"
Like his ex-boss, he's always been a guy with a healthy ego. But if he were to lose the Breitbart platform, it's hard for me to envision what vehicle he would use to lead such a movement and how he would fund it. He's rich. But he's not self-fund-a-presidential-campaign rich.
Cillizza: OK. So a presidential bid is off. [Shakes hands, nods, walks away.]
BUT, what then does Bannon do? This guy is a news animal. He appears to be totally obsessed with the media, the battle of ideas between the two parties, all of it.
It feels impossible for someone like Steve Bannon to just disappear from, well, anywhere -- especially a world in which Donald Trump is president.
Green: In the near term, Bannon does (and is doing) what everybody who wants to influence and ingratiate themselves to Trump does: Flatter him with obsequious praise. It shouldn't be lost on anyone that after Bannon called Trump a "great man" on his radio show on the evening of his own defenestration, Trump quickly learned about it (probably from a cable TV chyron) and mentioned this to reporters at the White House pool spray on Thursday.
I'm skeptical it'll work. But that's the only path back for Bannon that I can imagine. Or, heck, why doesn't he run for president? It's an automatic way to get in front of the cameras and spread a message.

Donald Trump's extraordinary defence of his 'mental stability', in full - Independent

6/1/2018
Donald Trump's extraordinary defence of his 'mental stability', in full
US President claims he is 'a very stable genius' as he launches go-to attack on 'fake news mainstream media'
Lucy Pasha-Robinson @lucypasha
It comes just a day after a new tell-all book renewed the world's focus on the former real estate mogul's mental health
Trump says he has been '100 per cent proper' over Russia probe
Donald Trump has launched a staunch defence of his mental capacity, claiming he is "like, really smart" and "a very stable genius".
In an extraordinary series of tweets, the US President attacked what he described as the "fake news mainstream media" and claimed the investigation into Russian collusion in his 2016 election campaign was a "total hoax on the American public."
It comes just a day after a new tell-all book renewed the world's focus on the former real estate mogul's mental health, with the author claiming he was unfit to lead.
Twitter explains why it still hasn't suspended Donald Trump
Here are Mr Trump's tweets in full:
"Now that Russian collusion, after one year of intense study, has proven to be a total hoax on the American public, the Democrats and their lapdogs, the Fake News Mainstream Media, are taking out the old Ronald Reagan playbook and screaming mental stability and intelligence.....
"....Actually, throughout my life, my two greatest assets have been mental stability and being, like, really smart.
"Crooked Hillary Clinton also played these cards very hard and, as everyone knows, went down in flames.
"I went from VERY successful businessman, to top T.V. Star.....
"....to President of the United States (on my first try).
"I think that would qualify as not smart, but genius....and a very stable genius at that!"

Trump 'absolutely' willing to talk to Kim Jong-un - Al Jazeera

7/1/2018
Trump 'absolutely' willing to talk to Kim Jong-un
Donald Trump also took credit for the diplomatic breakthrough between North and South Korea
Donald Trump also took credit for the diplomatic breakthrough between North and South Korea
Look ahead 2018: Rohingya flee Myanmar crackdown
today
Indonesia modern art museum challenges intolerance
today
Korean Peninsula: Will upcoming talks ease tensions?
yesterday
Tokyo fish auction Bluefin tuna sold for $323,195
yesterday
US President Donald Trump said he would be willing to talk to North Korean leader Kim Jong-un on the phone, but not without conditions.
"I always believe in talking," Trump briefly told reporters on Saturday.
"Absolutely, I would do that," he said when asked if he would be willing to talk to the North Korean leader.
Trump also said he hoped the upcoming talks between North and South Korea on Pyongyang's participation in the 2018 Winter Olympics would ease tensions over the North Korea's missiles and nuclear programme.
The high-level talks, to be held on January 9, will be the first such communications in more than two years.
Trump said he "very much" wants to see "it work out between the two countries," and took credit for the rapprochement.
"Without my rhetoric and tough stance," he said, "they wouldn't be talking".
The US president and the North Korean leader have repeatedly traded barbs in the past - Trump has called Kim "rocket man", while Kim described Trump as a "dotard".
Earlier this week, Trump responded furiously to Kim's taunt of a nuclear button, by saying his button was "bigger and more powerful".
The offer for talks on Olympic cooperation also came after South Korea and the US announced they would postpone joint military exercises that rile North Korea. Pyongyang says the war games held multiple times each year are a precursor to an American-led invasion.
North and South Korea to hold high-level talks
Trump described the inter-Korean dialogue as a "big start".
"If something can happen and something can come out of those talks, that would be a great thing for all of humanity, that would be a great thing for the world," he said.
South Korea's Yonhap news agency said on Sunday that North Korea's five-member delegation to the talks will be led by Ri Son Gwon, head of the Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of the Fatherland.
Cho Myoung-gyon, South Korea's unification minister, will head the delegation from Seoul.
The talks are to be held in the border village of Panmunjom.

Donald Trump book 'will end his presidency', says author of explosive Fire and Fury exposé- Independent

6/1/2018
Donald Trump book 'will end his presidency', says author of explosive Fire and Fury exposé
Michael Wolff says book has exposed a 'very clear emperor-has-no-clothes effect' that will lead to US President's downfall
Lucy Pasha-Robinson @lucypasha
Trump says he has been '100 per cent proper' over Russia probe
At least nine crews tackle fire at Bristol University listed building.
Barcelona announce £142m Coutinho transfer from Liverpool
A tell-all book on Donald Trump's first year in the White House will be the final nail in the coffin for his presidency, according to its author.
Michael Wolff said his revelations about the US President were filtering into the public consciousness and would result in his term coming to an end.
Allegations that the former real estate mogul acts like a "child" and has "less credibility than perhaps anybody who has ever walked on Earth at this point" have already made global headlines since excerpts emerged this week.
The new Trump book isn't really about Trump at all
White House says Michael Wolff 'made up facts to sell a lot of books'
Who is Michael Wolff, author of the explosive new Trump book?
Michael Wolff: Trump acts 'like a child' and has no credibility
“I think one of the interesting effects of the book so far is a very clear emperor-has-no-clothes effect,” Mr Wolff told BBC Radio 4.
“The story that I have told seems to present this presidency in such a way that it says he can’t do his job."
He added: “Suddenly everywhere people are going ‘oh my God, it’s true, he has no clothes’. That’s the background to the perception and the understanding that will finally end ... this presidency.”
Trump 'did not know what Brexit was' two weeks before EU referendum
Mr Trump has repeatedly dismissed the book as "full of lies". It depicts a chaotic White House, a president who was ill-prepared to win office in 2016, and Trump aides who scorned his abilities.
The President renewed his attacks on Mr Wolff on Twitter on Friday, and on his former top aide Steve Bannon who was quoted in the book.
“Michael Wolff is a total loser who made up stories in order to sell this really boring and untruthful book,” he said. “He used Sloppy Steve Bannon, who cried when he got fired and begged for his job. Now Sloppy Steve has been dumped like a dog by almost everyone. Too bad!”
In his interview with the BBC, Mr Wolff was asked if he believed that Mr Bannon felt Mr Trump was unfit to serve as president and would try to bring him down. “Yes,” Wolff replied.
Mr Trump, up until Wednesday, had been complimentary of his former strategist, saying in October that the two “have a very good relationship” and had been friends for “a long time.”
In the book, Mr Bannon also speaks critically of Mr Trump’s daughter and White House adviser, Ivanka, calling her “dumb as a brick.”
“A little marketing savvy and has a look but as far as understanding actually how the world works and what politics is and what it means – nothing,” he is quoted saying.
Michael Wolff: Trump did not know what Brexit was two weeks before EU referendum
Mr Wolff also hit back at claims that the book was untruthful in the interview.
“This is what’s called reporting. This is how you do it.” he said. “You ask people, you get as close as you can to the event, you interview the people who were privy to the event, you interview other people who were privy to the event, you come to know the circumstance as well as anybody and then you report it.”


He also suggested the leader was unaware what the term Brexit meant, two weeks before the UK's referendum on leaving European Union.

President Trump finally made a briefing room appearance. Sort of. - NBC News

JAN 4 2018, 4:15 PM ET
President Trump finally made a briefing room appearance. Sort of.
by ALI VITALI
WASHINGTON — More than a few D.C. residents opted to work remotely Thursday, looking to dodge potential commuting headaches as one of the strongest winter storms in recent history hit the East Coast.
The president of the United States did the same — even though his commute would have been just a few dozen feet. And completely indoors.
Instead of making the walk from the Oval Office to the press briefing room to speak to reporters in person Thursday afternoon, President Donald Trump appeared via a taped video instead.
Trump makes big screen appearance at White House briefing
The message, which touted the purported impact of recently passed tax cuts and other elements of the Trump White House agenda, was projected on two flatscreen televisions flanking Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders at the lectern.
With the briefing broadcast on most cable news networks, using the video message to start off the session meant the president could celebrate his agenda at the daily press briefing without taking questions from the press.
"Thank you, Mister President," Sanders said to the screen when the taped message concluded. The display prompted a range of reactions from briefing watchers.
@davidmackau
what is happening
6:17 AM - Jan 5, 2018
@bterris
Live from the White House press briefing:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VtvjbmoDx-I …
6:18 AM - Jan 5, 2018
@IsaacDovere
interesting turn for the briefing room Skype seat https://twitter.com/jcartillier/status/948997197609226240 …
6:30 AM - Jan 5, 2018
As president, Trump has not appeared in the briefing room to take questions from journalists, something his predecessors did from time to time.
Trump has been known to entertain questions from a small pool of reporters at photo opportunities and other events, but has avoided more traditional exchanges with the White House press corps — including bucking precedent by not holding an end-of-year news conference last month.

These are the Best Cities for College Students - Fortune

These are the Best Cities for College Students
San Francisco
By CLAIRE ZILLMAN November 23, 2015
When high school seniors decide which college to attend, the academic and extracurricular offerings of certain universities are usually their top consideration. On Monday, the American Institute for Economic Research released another set of criteria that they may want to contemplate: the best cities for college students.
Despite its extraordinarily high rent, San Francisco was the top city for college students among “major metro” areas—those with 2.5 million residents or more. It secured that spot thanks in part to ranking No. 1 in bars and restaurants and diversity and No. 2 in city accessibility, share of college-education population, and economic activity.
While some college listings rank universities by prestige, academics, and financial aid, the AIER data is intended to help students “weigh the value of the wider community” when choosing a college, Rosalind Greenstein, director of research and education at AIER, said in a statement.
In compiling its list, AIER weighed 11 different of criteria: youth unemployment rate, share of college-educated population, economic vitality, STEM workers, the price of rent, public transportation, availability of arts and entertainment, employees in cultural institutions, clubs and restaurants, cost of living minus rent, and diversity. The Institute also filtered its results by the size of the city.
Among midsize metro areas with populations between 1 million and 2.5 million, San Jose, California came out on top. For small metros—250,000 to 1 million residents—Boulder, Colorado was the winner, and Ames, Iowa was No. 1 for college towns with fewer than 250,000 people.

New Philadelphia DA shakes up office, firing 31 on 4th day in job- Fox News

6/1/2018
New Philadelphia DA shakes up office, firing 31 on 4th day in job
By Bradford Betz | Fox News
Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner's campaign platform included reducing incarceration rates, ending cash bail and favoring lighter punishments for gun and drug offenders.
Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner's campaign platform included reducing incarceration rates, ending cash bail and favoring lighter punishments for gun and drug offenders. (Philadelphia District Attorney's Office)
Philadelphia's new district attorney fired 31 staffers Friday as part of a promised shakeup of an office tarnished by scandal.
DA Larry Krasner, 56, made the personnel moves on only his fourth day on the job.
Spokesman Ben Waxman said the changes shouldn’t be surprising, given that Krasner, a longtime civil rights lawyer, campaigned on a promise to clean up the DA’s office, which he previously called "off the rails," the Philadelphia Inquirer reported.
“Reorganization and a change in some key personnel are necessary to fulfill that promise,” Waxman said.
@NotesFromHeL
Hearing from several families of homicide victims who are very concerned about how these firings will affect their upcoming cases. Many have waited a long time for their cases to go to court, others have bonded with the ADA’s on cases. http://www.philly.com/philly/news/crime/larry-krasner-philly-da-firing-prosecutors-20180105.html …
9:27 AM - Jan 6, 2018
Krasner fires 31 from Philly DA's Office in dramatic first-week shakeup
Dozens of prosecutors have been asked to leave the Philadelphia District Attorney's Office, according to sources, the first major office shake-up engineered by new top prosecutor Larry Krasner.
philly.com
Krasner's campaign platform included reducing incarceration rates, ending cash bail and favoring lighter punishments for gun and drug offenders.
His disgraced predecessor, Seth Williams, was sentenced to five years in prison for accepting bribes.
Assistant DAs fired Friday included some veterans of the office.
The head of the Republican Party of Philadelphia said the firings were “what we might expect from a defense attorney who made a career out of suing the police. Krasner places victims on the back burner from day one.”
“Change is never easy," spokesman Waxner said. "But DA Krasner was given a clear mandate from the voters for transformational change.”