tv Mandatory Sentencing Al Jazeera June 27, 2018 9:00am-10:01am +03
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to manage the all parties coalition and the whole thing is have committed crimes and crimes against humanity and yemen and in particular against shoulder and they got them out they will move them out of schools they recruit them they do all kind of violations that are actually it's a violation to the local and the international laws and i think this is all these people you know militias and the coalition need to be held accountable this is not new and to be honest this is only a fraction of what has been done to the shoulder and the future of yemen these are the future of yemen and to kill the future of yemen killing the shoulder of yemen and without any accountability would i would any transparency this is a serious problem going into the future and i think the u.n. has an obligation to do what's right for yemenis and to hold those who committed these crimes accountable and how can it hold these parties accountable they are still engaged in a war as you've said this isn't new and crimes against humanity and war crimes are
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terms that are used often in this conflict but what can actually be done to stop this or should be done. while one is that first of all i think the un has a credibility issue in yemen the kind of information they've gotten from the guy on the groups that i work on with which you're going to complain and all along that they are one sided i think there is a problem that needs to be addressed in terms of you know accountability and transparency the other part of it is that the u.n. needs to not only to let us know about numbers but also need to let us know that i'm talking about the many people in the international community need to know one about the names of these individuals where were they killed who they were recruited by and where and i would have you know the world to know and to hold those who committed these crimes accountable and the u.n. has an obligation to report on that to bring it to the. security council to bring
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it to the u.n. human rights council to be able to push security council to say to refer these crimes into the international criminal court there are things that needs to be done by the u.n. but the u.n. times and again fails to basically stand by the yemeni people to stand by the u.n. principles you know are beholden the international laws and make sure that the yemeni shoulder and i'm not being used as you know. there any sort of a school do you think any of this could happen while the war is still ongoing the u.n. envoy martin griffiths is right now meeting with the different sides to try and find a political solution to end the war do you think that he'll be successful. oh of course i mean one in terms of like stopping the recruitment of children can be done that are there are people that you want to talk into the whole thing is talking to somebody led coalition is talking to the yemeni government and they can
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you know for some of what i want to block list that these people are these commissions or the governments are committing crimes against children let alone against you know the yemeni people as a whole that's a problem that can be resolved immediately by push in and create in pressure and these groups the other part i mean it's it's hard to have some sort of a mediation why all these crimes are going on all across the country without any accountability so they need to prepare through one exposing these crimes to try and to find all mechanisms including the you want to basically bring these were criminals and individuals and to the international criminal court make sure and clear to the yemeni people to the international community that justice will be served yemenis and the other part i don't think that we can talk about peace and mediation while you know yemen being blockaded by the saudi led coalition cities within yemen like that has been blockaded by the whole of the militias i'm talking about you know yemenis cannot go in and out of country medical and and other
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humanitarian supplies as cannot go into the country so we have a serious issues and i think the international community have some sort of moral ethical and legal obligations toward yemenis and in particular children of yemen thank you as always for your time we appreciate it that's it for him coffey joining us live from new york thank you. still ahead on the bulletin we visit a conservative part of germany where people want more border controls to stem the flow of migrants. closely follow my pages and as protests started out as several u.s. states take action to get my one children back with their parents. i. mean the weather sponsored by cattle i always.
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place to say we have got some dry weather now coming into southern parts of china following on from the weekend right still a little bit of weather down towards the southwestern corner northern parts of vietnam where of course we have had some flooding and those showers extend their way or aud across china will be downpours coming in here but as you can see by thursday it should be a little try to southern parts of china few showers just slide in the way towards more than parts of the philippines want to showers in the south as well the usual rush of showers the heat of the day shows you can see the the clouds just bubbling up there across much of malaysia indonesia fine and dry some heavy showers into that western side of borneo maybe over towards some monstrous towards the malaysian peninsula the heavier rain will be just to the north of ching still some showers in the forecast for a k.l. for the good parts of thailand and then we go with that wet weather that we have pushing a rod across the bow have been go into me and ma the northeast of india still
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plenty of clout there just around the west and gas and more big down pulls coming through here for wednesday's and now lets up in the summer rains as one would expect but notice the cloud in right it's nothing a little further north would so not as hot in the day thirty four celsius here on a wednesday and forty but it's just thirty one. the weather sponsored by qatar airways. it was a war that united egypt and syria and against israel but in the heat of the battle that different agendas soon became apparent i suppose the dream was to avenge to see tonight's a sixty seven when president sadat came to power he told us just give me two metres of land in the east the second of a three part series the israeli population were told that their troops were on the west bank of the series connex floors the second week of the war in october on al-jazeera.
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good to have you with us on al-jazeera these are our top stories the u.s. supreme court has now only voted to uphold president donald trump's travel ban on people from five muslim majority countries calls that a tremendous victory for the american people the ban prohibits most people from libya somalia syria and yemen from entering the u.s. pro syrian government forces to the retaken two towns in the strategic province that are the u.n. says at least forty five thousand have fled the intensified fighting in the south there heading for the border the government there says that the men. and amnesty international is accusing me of carrying out a planned and systematic campaign against. its latest report names thirteen
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military personnel it says of responsible for war crimes including murder rape and for starvation the human rights group says they should be tried at the international criminal court. watch to germany now the southern state of bavaria is one of the country's most conservative regions and it's gotten prominence in recent weeks as politicians they have pushed chancellor angela merkel to take a harder line on immigration dominic kane reports. on an early summer's day at hurting looks like a picture postcard the town has been a place of pilgrimage for more than five hundred years it's the c.s. use heartland a formidable conservative election winning party machine for five decades but the recent influx of refugees has changed things the rise of the anti immigrant anti has seen the c.s.u. move further to the right fearful of losing votes in this october's state election
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in early goodies to go through and sort of overall it would be good if there were european solutions however no european solution was achieved in three years and i believe it's important to send a clear signal that we too can reach european measures which are everyday practice in other countries that is code for more of this police controls along the border with austria officially removed more than twenty years ago but temporarily reestablished once the flow of migrants and refugees into germany began growing if the c.s.u. has its way then scenes like these will become commonplace not just in bavaria but also across many of germany's other borders something angular machall and the e.u. institutions strongly oppose because of their commitment to the shang in order free area of the c.s.u. proposals don't stop at just policing borders. asylum seekers would be prevented from working and receiving benefits of violent applicants who'd be jailed alongside criminals then deported such moves go way beyond what chancellor merkel has
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proposed the price for not toppling her coalition in urging many people agree with them. merkel invited them all now she can't handle it see the other european countries don't want to play along either they have had enough we are a christian country and we want to stay like that in two hundred fifty years you will barely find a german. right to be humane but at some point we have to protect ourselves it doesn't work anymore it's not about racism it was ever phobia but at some point we have reached the point where we have to say me first country then the others at a state wide level there are some voicing opposition to the c.s. use plans to buy the ship that shot one million one and one adds the bad variant economy and millions of jobs in our companies depend on a united europe with open borders new border controls turnstiles finances and walls
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simply question our prosperity they question our strength this is a responsible and it also questions the barbarian identity privately some in the c.s.u. like to think that theirs is the most influential party in germany and with their deadline to angle americal drawing ever closer perhaps right now they're the most influential party in europe dominic king and his era in bavaria. seventeen u.s. states or so when president donald trump's of ministration for splitting up migrant families the states want to force officials to reunite children with their parents they say families are separated despite trumps executive order to end the practice gabriel elizondo has this report. oh now they protest in america and texas and across the u.s. people are demanding answers to why the u.s. government is still detaining undocumented migrants and keeping children in
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shelters it's been one week since president donald trump signed an executive order abruptly ending the policy of family separation of migrants a policy he put into place that's only added to the confusion on how to implement rapidly changing policies from the administration especially as video emerges from inside the detention centers of suffering children from all political. on tuesday senators were reminded that the government is legally limited on how long it can keep migrant families together in detention right now i would gladly put these children back with their parents in the custody of ice or customs and border patrol but i legally can't because at the twenty day mark i'll just have to be sent back we need congress to change this twenty day limit on parent unification or we need to stop criminally prosecuted them allow them to terms under time but far from the holes of power more than two thousand children are still separated from their parents some for months with no end in sight to the crisis on the
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southern border it's easy to start to just think of this as nothing more than a story of policy what's the latest news out of washington what's the latest thing trump has tweeted or think of it as nothing more than numbers how many families remain separated but in the end it's not about any of that it's about the human condition real people fleeing poverty and violence in their home countries to try to come to the united states across this border and when they finally get here many are now discovering it's not what they expected for miriam. the pain of separation from her four year old son is real. i couldn't say anything to him because they took him from me when he was asleep they took my son don it was friday night going on saturday the man from immigration told me get your son ready because we're going to take him with migrant detention centers
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a capacity to more are being built on military bases migrant families the lucky few reunited the rest wondering the same as everyone else what comes next gabriel's oddo al-jazeera brownsville texas. the u.s. military has sent a third aircraft carrier to patrol the south china sea washington has been critical of china's growing military strength on new manmade islands the u.s.s. ronald reagan docked in the philippines capital manila after saving through the south china sea as part of a mission to reassure allies in the area. this continued presence in the indo-pacific. has supported our ability to defend our nation. but it also promotes the ability to safeguard freedom of the sea. to deter conflict to
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worship it to promote it here to rule international order. now u.s. defense secretary james mattis is in the chinese capital beijing where he's expected to hold talks with senior military leaders were north korean denuclearize ation is expected to be the main discussion point whether china being north korea's main ally that is is there less than a week after north korean leader kim jong only was in beijing for a meeting with president xi jinping mass this visit comes at a delicate time but the trade for escalating between the u.s. and china. doesn't bob way now with the two main political leaders have failed to attend a peace pledge signing in the run up to next month's election president m.s.n. money and d.c. laden nelson chamisa missed the meeting in the capital had already it comes days after the president escaped unhurt from a grenade attack at a rally in the city of boulder two people were killed and dozens and just the election will be the first in almost forty years without deposed president robert
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mugabe. south sudan's foreign ministers as president sell the care and rapidly direct machar have agreed on some points to end the civil war kerry has been attending the latest round of peace talks with his former deputy the time in the sudanese capital khartoum the un has given both sides until the end of the monks. to reach a deal or face sanctions now aid workers in northeastern nigeria are warning for more people are at risk of being displaced by the armed group. the norwegian refugee council says more than four thousand people sleeping without shelter in the town of the choir there are concerns about the spread of fatal diseases during the rainy season in northern areas of nigeria. now it was another dramatic day at the world cup in russia argentina beat nigeria to advance to the final sixteen while secured a late when iceland and earlier denmark drew with france to book its place in the knockout stages and. their first one at
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a world cup since the one nine hundred seventy eight and the richardson reports from st petersburg. argentina came into this game with their stomach for the fights in the form of their leading lights both being questioned but you write little messi off at your peril after a couple of disappointing games he was back with an early goal in this match against nigeria nigeria needed at least a point to have a chance of reaching the last sixteen or equalized early in the second half with a penalty from victor moses but argentina got the winner they needed through marcus rowe and they will now face france in the last sixteen caray should finish top of the group and they'll be taking on denmark looking ahead to wednesday's action and russia and group f. south korea takes on two thousand and fourteen champions germany and mexico to face a sweden the koreans have already been eliminated but any of the other three could still secure spots in the round of sixteen mexico currently leads the group. wraps
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up its game serbia takes on preventing powerhouse brazil and switzerland play costa rica this group has been surprisingly competitor with only costa rica out of the running and you can find much more on our web site the address is al-jazeera dot com. hello again i'm of the problem and the headlines on al-jazeera the u.s. supreme court has voted to uphold president donald trump's travel ban on people from five muslim majority countries trump calls that a tremendous victory for the american people and prohibits most people from libya somalia syria and yemen from entering the u.s. . this is a create politically for our constitution we have to be tough and we have to be safe and we have to be secure at
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a minimum we have to make sure that we vet people coming into the country we know who's coming in we know where they're coming from we just have to know who's coming here. amnesty international is accusing me of carrying out a planned and systematic campaign against the hendra its latest report names thirteen military personnel it says of responsible for war crimes including murder rape and for starvation the human rights group says they should be tried at the international criminal court. pro syrian government forces so the retaken two towns in the strategic problems of that are the u.n. says at least forty five thousand people have fled the intensified fighting in the south they're heading for the jordan border but the government there says it won't let them. navy divers have reentered a flooded cave in the entire then to search for a football team missing for three days twelve boys and their coach had gone exploring on saturday when rising water from
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a heavy rainstorm blocked their only exit rescuers are confident this didn't live because the cave is several kilometers long prayer of rituals of being held for a safe return. the u.s. military has sent a third aircraft carrier to patrol the south china sea washington has been critical of china's growing military strength on new manmade islands the u.s.s. ronald reagan docked in the philippines capital manila after sailing through the south china sea as part of a mission to reassure allies in the region. south sudan's foreign minister says president salva care and rebel leader react machar have agreed on some points to end the civil war here has been attending the latest round of peace talks with his former deputy this time in the sudanese capital khartoum the un has given both sides until the end of the mobs to reach a deal or face sanctions writes those are the headlines on al-jazeera do stay with us inside story is coming up next thank you very much for watching.
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facebook on the defensive again it now says no european uses data was shared in the privacy scandal which is the reverse of what it said before so why the flip and will it change anyone's mind this is inside story. and i welcome to the program i'm peter w. now facebook says no european uses information may have been shared with the u.k.
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for at the center of the privacy scandal after all but at the hearing the social media networks executives that they still had to conduct an internal audit to confirm that facebook had previously said data from up to two point seven million e.u. users had been improperly shared with cambridge analytical that's the reportedly hired to influence britain's breaks that referendum and the u.s. election campaign that saw donald trump getting into the white house the facebook founder mark zuckerberg has apologized and pledged to apply new european data protection rules globally but has that happened yet well that's the key question for our guests in just a moment before we get to the discussion here's a reminder of how the facebook scandal unfolded amongst the seventeen for millions of facebook users woke up to the news that their personal information had been acquired by the data company cambridge analytics the revelations coming from the co-founder of the u.k. based company
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a man called christopher wiley the days. it was reportedly sold to cambridge analytical and used for political purposes linked to the twenty sixteen u.s. presidential election campaign and also the brics it campaign the company said the data was destroyed in twenty fifteen but there were reports not all of it was actually deleted facebook then confirmed that up to eighty seven million users details may have been improperly shared it also goes back to twenty fourteen when two hundred seventy thousand users took an online personality survey via a third party quiz this gave access not only to their facebook information but to that of their friends facebook says it was a violation of company policy ok let's get going let's bring in our guest joining us here on inside story from palo alto california on skype is laurie majid c.e.o. of connect safely dot org that's an internet safety and privacy and security organization in london is sense esprit senior lecturer in the department of
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informatics at king's college london and joining us from brussels on skype even a member of the european parliament and the chair of the parliament science and technology options assessment a warm welcome to you all let's just talk to you first in a sense us tree in london what does this mean for the people who thought their data had been accessed well that basically means that there are there are details have not been doing deals to some company so it's good news for these people but it's not so good news still for the u.s. citizens and others whose data has been leaked to. and larry in california does this mean that people trust facebook less or more than they did back in may when the scandal broke. i doubt if it has much impact on people trust their facebook and it was said it's good that europe may not have been impacted in the
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way the us was but it's still a big issue in the us and i must say that the victim of there not just those who the information with taken but everybody who believes in democracy who vote may not have been counted in the way or maybe this counted but who knows who the election outcomes may have been influenced by the result of this and other campaigns even kylie in brussels the scope of the g.d.p. all it does that go far enough because that basically means that people that you click on except with they have to tell you they have to confess and say no your information will or will not go to other people. does that let me say that police did get me on all right maybe we should have been faster but it's there and beef and create some global standards on how they so this means people citizens have now the option to control that they can take them oh wait they care less
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for transparency with what these hot and we think and basically they could choose if they should deny access so i think giving them back and so is the first thing that happened but because of the. if you have who to be of more requirements welcomes the citizens to be able to understand who the. who you're sorry if you say that we. the consequence is you were being. a grandparent spam. no. not. on the list that it's more letters and it. has to be misused so we're seeing proof that we have a hornet's nation coming about and think that me who's both us and we. ok
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back in california facebook is promising an internal audit what are the key questions for you that it has to address why he did the main question is are there systems in place today that could prevent this type of thing from happening again have they tightened up sufficiently the access that their third party developers have to the data and also have they increased their own surveillance techniques and by surveillance i don't mean spying on people but the ability to in such a veil the apps that they know that the things can't happen again so they have to have very robust systems with their software in their service to prevent these types of things from happening in the future. and this incense tree in london i mean people users and politicians they were frustrated i guess by the reality of the revelations but also by facebook's reaction to other people's reaction to the revelation surely yeah so i guess the part of the
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predicament is that we have all started to use facebook in such and it's embedded in such deep place in our daily lives that the feel as if we are betrayed by these kind of revelations that somebody that you trusted with sort of the basic bits of your life has now given away that data to someone else now so it should be read clear that facebook has been tightening up and has cleaned up for itself in quite significant ways but it still feels as though they could be doing a little bit more it also feels like they have already given of a some amount of data and that's part of the first station and i think this is this is all of those in some ways the normal in the sense that the technology is evolving very fast as they were saying and in many of the tech companies are
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putting up new functionality before completely allies ing what the consequences of these are and so it's a consequence of the of the evolving landscape that we have here even is that part of the problem in your last answer you were talking about more legislation still to come but unless the legislation chimes perfectly with where the technology is going people like yourself the european m.e.p. you're always going to be playing catch up. well that's true but you listen because of the you know nation cannot follow the rules you know vacation takes place by thinking as the books so we have to move fast as we can. because then we can see the innovation what i can say is that you know there's not a company we have to make sure the secret understands their perceptions can be funny should be eighty five being you speed so this is not about to use the hook and the c.c.c. if you see a lot of people in this county condon this could change or lose this could affect
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your options and use choice contests to educate people to understand less the team and make so that by the fourth day newspeak is not being manipulated you know the sun gets the size and that they said from the legion of you please again the sensory information that sexualization that i think we're going to be left behind because we haven't understood exactly identified the main problem which was a manipulation of the perceptions to create an uncertainty and people to vote. for an understanding of the war. some because of the different phones and i think that's why i mentioned. we should understand the technology and try and set up the right principles there in order to see who called to the citizens and allow them to use the application but not all of their use their state does to make profits sense
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and then we need to screen nations we need to encompass companies that we will be successes affect them from larry magid in california it would appear to me that these two point seven million europeans are safe they are home and dry when it comes to that data what they will how they will react to say advertising how they were yet to echo chamber conversations but that's just two point seven million europeans there are surely other europeans. who were in the united states say when this was all going on so how do you come up with global legislation such as the legislation that eva is involved with to make everyone that uses facebook as safe as these two point seven million europeans. well first of all i want to make a general comment about legislation i certainly agree with the con common even made about principles but it's very difficult for regulators to micromanage companies
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what we need are principles that can last for potentially decades about privacy and security that are independent of the specific technology because technology will change very quickly but general principles can can last for a long time as per global regulations well the good news is that the g.d.p. are even though it only affects europe actually it having an impact of global a because some of these companies at least are trying to apply g.d.p. are on an international level because it's actually easier for them to have one set of rules for the entire population and to have to break it down country by country and the famous through for example with the children's online privacy protection act in the united states it doesn't affect directly any other country but most of the internet service providers have complied complied with it globally so i think that we're all benefiting through g.d.p. our but having said that i know there will continue to be discussions in washington about way the u.s. can tighten our privacy laws that's inevitable i think mark zuckerberg realizes
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that his goal i think is to try to make it so it it doesn't hurt his business but they all know it's coming and i think europe set the pace for the entire world in a sense it may sound like a slightly idiotic question but is there anything that one can do to make oneself safe for him in the scandal broke one point eight million australians deleted their accounts but off the back of that we discovered that sixty six percent of facebook users don't know how to set their previously settings and if you look at the facebook screen even if you want to log off your account eva's noting she's able to go through the same process if you want to logo if your account you have to go to that small triangle top right hand side and if your on your i pad or your i phone it's difficult to see maybe sleeve yourself loek in even more at the end of the day . innocent wants you to be logged in for as long as possible because facebook is a multi-billion dollar company and he wants to monetize you a use as
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a resource. sure i mean so just to the last point about well as being the product that is certainly the case today and with legislation such as g.d.p. or another thinks that that proposition is sort of drying up a little bit traces of it presumably in the near future we're going to start seeing new business models for new internet companies or even for old internet companies to be mint themselves so i said we're not the product but rather the service they're offering is the product as it should be but a going back again to what you're saying yes it is extremely difficult today for even well informed user so one of the things that i've been trying to do since g.d.p. is every new web say that i was it i make sure to see what their policies and what kind of cookies are they starting on me and so forth this is information that i could have figured out before but was not so easy to figure out before and now
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a new sort of a pop up comes up for me that says are you ok that i'm collecting such and such cookies and i go through and figure out what the cookies are and it is a tedious process it's actually affecting my work because i'm no longer able to browse in the same way same seamless way that i used to before so even with things like consent that doesn't necessarily go far enough in preserving the same kind of browsing experience that we used before and again so this is this is because of the advertising based business model that we have and it's also because with social platforms it becomes even more difficult to think about what has privacy mean so if i gave access to the world to see a photograph of me and my friends would my friends who happened to be in the picture be ok with that how do they prevent that from happening if they're not ok
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with that this are difficult thorny questions. and somehow the governor then have to figure out ways that around this and we are they are going forward but are not quick enough ok even carly in brussels i mean still surely is the case facebook doesn't seem to want to admit or concede what it actually is it is not some some organization of the vanguard of freedom is it a news organization is it a broadcaster is it i've used the phrase before on the show an echo chamber for people's your friends opinions and you know other broadcasters other publishers are monitored people do monitor them because they've got to because there are legal issues to do with that and yet facebook wants to still be above all that perhaps. when on the legislation for such a lot firms and their responsibilities to see this is especially is now in the opinion unions so i'm going to work on these five and i was tried to make sure
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those that are a few cities in a state and the average stand how lots of. the source of business is to be able to you see if the cation but to be subpoenaed and that's what i think you can see i was informed that you mention these does not speak the old if you nation question what facebook and other not. something new i would like i can see this is different so this is actually and we have the only nation to what's the also so maybe as i said we have to make sure that we. must friends in the nation. for every month of the for some of the this is for the first spending that we have to make so this year and that you have many options to be able to say yes i want you can. i can use it meaning you will be there were to use it but the rest of my. family you
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know you see who's for science or hans or send them so you know you can access without my knowledge and my phone so i also gave them the night access so fuck you because you're in for somebody and if you do so call me maybe you excuse it and then even one discriminate and get on the line so basically we have to suffer specific usually we send the guys a sense of peace and privacy and not speak and then to give more options the cities and. towns are ready for loose once we are sure and certain that we want to do so for me. to do and since there is no border something that lets you. so you could be are if you want to warn you of and those that. actually do want to hear they have to comply we have the right people gone and we have the
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right information we have the right to privacy as we have to find this new balance between the rights that we have so it's an ongoing process meaning we have to learn from what happened and make sure that people who we not be manipulative especially incensed like political decisions and understood understood and i just want to boil that point done for a second to put that in california larry clearly the essence of what we're discussing here when it comes to these two point seven million people in europe is pushback but how do you strike the balance i mean is faintly ridiculous because for example the chicago tribune website a perfectly reputable newspaper website you can't see it in europe then you put up a v.p.n. and you can see it in europe i mean how does that work. well first of all and i've been to facebook safety advisory board for a number of years right so far and these conversations come up all the time and i
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just want to make it clear that often it's nuanced for example i agree that there should be a lot of privacy controls but the more private they control the ad the more complicated they become so that there is a tradeoff between simplicity and control and i'm not suggesting that facebook couldn't do a better job i know they could but but these are things that facebook and their advisers have been struggling with for years i also want to point out that consumer education is critical you can have the safest platform in the world but if people aren't using it in a safe way then their information is going to be a getting into the wrong hands because ultimately social media is about sharing and the question isn't whether we share information i wouldn't have any use for facebook if i weren't using it to reach out to my friends and share information the question of how do we keep control over our information yet still have the ability to share it and with that freedom to share means we have the freedom to go too far if we're not careful so it's a it's a balance of government has a role obviously industry has a role but the rest of it have
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a role and that's where i think consumer education is so important. in london using social media and trusting it without question of those days now gone. i think you'll find that there are people who have very very different conceptions of your privacy means and what privacy means to them there are still a number of people who don't care that much of our privacy and oftentimes the argument that here are being made is i don't have anything to hide so why do i need to care about privacy there are others who are privacy extremists and whom i. go to great lengths to keep themselves private from from from these big huge companies like so given the specs some of the friend kinds of users that there are there's not going to be a single right balance and which is why you need users to have more control or exactly what how their data being stored and what are the services that are being
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offered in the turn for or in exchange for a certain lack of privacy the fact that web site can be can be tailored to your needs can be tailored to the way you want it to look and the functionality that you want it to be there is necessarily intense a lot of play with the the web site needs know a bit more about you logging details and so forth so but maybe others don't actually want that they could have a much more genetic looking website without actually having to log in and so this is the kind of balance where users need to exercise control but on the other hand if you give too much control as the previous speaker was saying it could end up being decision fatigue if each website as i'm doing now with each website i need to go in and look and see what cookie their work with cookies to any to allow what i'm comfortable with doing that actually is a huge mental and cognitive load which takes away from the rich experience that we
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get from browsing the internet and from getting all the information that we're getting and the way our lives have been touched on so it's a very very delicate line and i don't envy the job that the legislators whether in europe or outside whether it's. thing where we need to think beyond these a knee jerk reactions to oh cam generalistic a happened to harvey prevent that from happening short i was elected as i'm going to happen and yet again something else is going to happen so you need to come up with broader principles broader part of things which which lost the test of time and work for all these different people and their different conceptions of privacy and they're different needs even in the context of the decision for tea in a sentence talking about the arts of london is what is what we're seeing a birthing pain for facebook and if facebook is reinventing itself can it reinvent itself with mark zuckerberg at the talk or basically understand what you have the principles and so forth these principles once you have. clear
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on what we are asking and let me say also that these days we're looking also for copyrights this means there will be an obligation for the people not forms you q. to create their users of the home or the open rights i know more than any act and just great so do that and whatever finds so you really are slowly slowly building up a very concrete station based on it's. the whole thing ok eva i'm going to interrupt you there which i apologize last word to larry in california clearly larry this is the starting point for where social media is going what's the end point that we're going to get well ideally the end point is that people are going to feel comfortable like they get control their own social media they have complete transparency of where their data is and who have access to it and they can enjoy sharing with the education in the knowledge that they need to limit what they share
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if they want privacy but at the same time they can take advantage of all the great feature it in social media offers ok. thank you all very much for your time today here on inside story thanks to i guess larry i'm a g.d. in california innocent sastry who joined us from london a colleague who joined us out of brussels and thank you to you too for watching the program over the past half hour you can see the show again any time on the web site al jazeera dot com and for further discussion to check out facebook page that's facebook dot com forward slash a.j. inside story you can also join the conversation on twitter handle is at a.j. inside story or tweet me i'll take you back i'm at one for me and everyone on the team here in doha thanks for watching we'll see you soon.
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demain the intersection of reality and comedy and post revolution tennessee a. mission to entertain educate and prevent debate through satire. how weapon of choice. and internet look at what inspires one of tennessee his most popular comedians to make people laugh. my tune is yeah hang on al-jazeera. volcano kill way erupted explosively last thing boiling clouds of steam ash and rock high into the
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atmosphere scientists say it's not unusual for eruptions to stop and start up again later as for kill way it has been spilling lava continually for more than thirty years native hawaiian spiritual beliefs say eruptions reflect the mood so of the goddess pale a. native hawaiians that the family is always nice to us whether she takes our home or not we accept this type of event. the story of a british italian man experiencing life close up in a palestinian refugee camp in beirut it's. coming face to face with the daily lives of its residents some of whom have lived there for seventy years but there has been all refugio muscle in his life it's not been known to show seven days in beirut that. on al-jazeera.
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we understand the differences. and the similarities of cultures across the well said i matter how you take it al-jazeera will bring in the news and current affairs that matter to you al-jazeera. the problem and the headlines on al-jazeera the u.s. supreme court has upheld donald trump's travel ban on paper from five muslim majority countries the judges mally voted to accept that the u.s. president was acting legally when he people from every game and somalia libya and syria from entering the united states she have autonomy has more from washington d.c. . the five four ruling was not on the expected but protesters were still incensed.
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but the majority of justices how degreed with a troubled ministration this was not a muslim this policy was the result of a careful global interagency analysis of vetting procedures for travelers to the u.s. from libya syria somalia yemen and iran. and it was the president's right to impose a ban because national security is his responsibility donald trump was clearly delighted this is a great victory for our constitution we have to be tough and we have to be safe and we have to be secure but in what was described as a furious dissent from the bench of liberal justice sonia sotomayor referred to cannes that trumps only comparison of the travel ban to the decision that mandated the detention of japanese americans during world war two sort of my all said taking all the relevant evidence together a reasonable observer would conclude that the proclamation was driven primarily by
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anti muslim animus rather than by the government's asserted national security justifications. politicians and activists are now expressing concern that the supreme court is a own opinion that he and he alone is in control of the country's national security and that he can act without oversight in deciding who comes into this country with this. we are concerned that donald trump will move beyond the five muslim majority countries that are in the current version to not only target more countries but should we even go after u.s. citizens and lawful permanent residents i say who's going to be. is the president going to issue an executive order yes mexicans is he going to give orders against people coming from honduras guatemala what's next and now the supreme court has ruled the tricks on donald trump's powers to set immigration policy himself have been weakened considerably. washington. seventeen u.s.
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states is so in president donald trump's administration for splitting up migrant families the states including washington new york and california want to force officials to reunite children with their parents two thousand three hundred children have been separated in recent weeks trump signed an executive order this month to set and separations but the states say families a still not being very united. amnesty international is accusing me of carrying out a planned and systematic campaign against the hinge or its latest report names thirteen military personnel it says that responsible for war crimes including murder rape and for starvation the human rights group says they should be tried at the international criminal court. pro syrian government forces so the retaken two towns in the strategic province of that are the u.n. says at least forty five thousand people have fled the intensified fighting in the south there heading for the jordan border but the government there says it won't let the men. the u.n.
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says it's counted more than eight hundred cases of children being used in the fighting in yemen a new report accuses boy who the rebels and the saudi a morality coalition of recruiting child soldiers some as young young as eleven years many guarded checkpoints and government buildings and took equipment to military positions now navy divers have reentered a flooded cave in northern thailand to search for a football team that's been missing for three days twelve boys and their coach had gone exploring on saturday when rising water from a heavy rainstorm blocked their only exit this is a live picture from the opening of the cave rescuers are confident they're still alive because the cave is several kilometers long prayer rituals are being held for a safe return. south sudan's foreign minister says president salva care and rebel leader react machar have agreed on some points to end the civil war those are the headlines on al-jazeera produce stay with us the war in october is coming up next.
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on the sixth of october nine hundred seventy three the tenth day of ramadan the muslim holy month and young kapoor the holiest of holy days in the jewish calendar egypt and syria launched an all out war against israel. this first liberation of land occupied by israel in the one nine hundred sixty seven six day war provoked an enthusiastic response across the arab world. that in the
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show a little bit. of the moroccan people were so enthusiastic about the war that was evident in the campaign organized a more open cities especially the big ones to donate blood and it was a very popular campaign and it away as it. ever is and what it will give them in algeria and president bush took up the cause and gave a blank check to the soviets and said spend it as you like on weapons one hundred million dollars for egypt and one hundred million for syria to cover everything they need in the way of ammunition weapons spare parts and so on that. area. in october one thousand nine hundred seventy three the arab world seemed to have united behind a single precious sky. but the common purpose
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of egypt and syria the two countries who started this war was about to dissolve into acrimony and mistrust. the syrian golan heights. occupied by israel and the one nine hundred sixty seven six day war. still occupied to this day. this high plateau is a tranquil and beautiful place. but it is also scarred and defaced by the bloody fighting that took place here in october one thousand nine hundred seventy three. memorial stand to the israeli forces before to desperate battle to stop the syrian thrust
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which threatened to reach right to the heart of israel. in the first five days of warhead on the golan israeli losses alone amounted to two hundred fifty tanks and hundreds of men. it was and vicious for the syrians to think that they could enter tricked significantly into the israeli rare over the course of twenty four hours but it was not wholly under realistic how the israelis not being able to respond flexibly it is entirely possible about a syrian exploitation force could have had a trade into northern israel with an attack. but it was not to be and less than twenty four hours israel had mobilized two armored divisions which soon turned the syrian advance into retreat. on the tenth of
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october and after suffering huge losses and tanks the syrians withdrew from the golan heights. back behind the one nine hundred sixty seven cease fire line the same place they had started their assault five days earlier. now the israelis faced a crucial choice what should be the next move. the decision taken in tel aviv was typically bold to go on the attack to push on into syria itself. to make it go the other side and the game of fire. and we are going to read. and out. and out right. and right by race. and alcohol every week there you have
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a guy. there. the effort to take syria out of the war had already started the previous day with strikes by the powerful israeli air force. in the worst possible conditions we penetrated deep into syria to damascus and blew up their air force headquarters and the general staff most of them and full of fear. these were the first of a string of attacks targeting syrian infrastructure. and at that stage certain population give up on the roof to watch the bombs fall in the
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store rather excited. truth has had sunk in the country was mortal danger. alongside the heavy aerial strikes israel would launch its ground offensive. to arm the divisions would attack across the nine hundred sixty seven cease fire line known as the popular line along the damascus road towards the syrian capital sixty kilometers to the east. at first light on the eleventh of october the assault began. despite fierce syrian resistance the israelis advanced capturing territories deep inside the syrian mainland. but. in the. the retreat began when the israelis launched a massive counterattack the first division started to retreat before the israeli
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army. when it did it had almost two hundred fifty tanks and the infantry brigades behind it they started to retreat to this resulted in the advance of the israeli army i remember that day the president issued an order dismissing the commander of that division and appointing another in his place. stories emerged that assad's punishment for his commanders went beyond mere dismissal. and as. i remember yes more than one officer was arrested and it said that some of them were executed. there was one senior commander that president assad summoned and asked him to account for himself that the commander then shot himself in front of the president. assad's rage was borne of the anger he felt towards his allies in cairo.
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