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Passing judgment on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict was never going to be simple for the International Criminal Court

Arash Azizi, writing in The Atlantic »

Naama Lazimi, a progressive member of the Knesset, called Thursday “a sad day for Israel” and put the blame for the decision on Netanyahu, not the court. “This was unnecessary,” she wrote on X, adding that it could have been avoided if the Israeli government had undertaken an independent inquiry and pursued a settlement to end the war and return the hostages held by Hamas. “But Netanyahu chose and still chooses his own position and cynical and personal interests,” she concluded: “The Hague has come out against Netanyahu, Netanyahu against Israel.” The Israeli organization Peace Now has taken a similar position, blaming the country’s leadership.

The long-term interests of Israel and those of enthusiasts for international law need not diverge. As a small country with many ill-wishers, surrounded by militias that clamor for its destruction, Israel often feels itself under siege and classifies any action against it as an unforgivable betrayal. But the country owes much of its past success to its recognition under international law and its membership in the community of democratic nations. Illegally occupying the Palestinian territories, and disregarding competent international forums such as ICC, serve to undermine that status. A world where liberal democratic norms, such as respect for international legal institutions, are more prevalent will ultimately be a safer one for Israel, especially if it wishes to fulfill the dream of its founders to be a Jewish and democratic state.

The call from The Hague should thus be seen as an urgent message that the country needs to correct its course and step back from the campaign it has pursued since October 2023. True friends of Israel are not those who attempt to shield it from international justice. They are those who remind it that as a sovereign nation, it has the right to defend itself—but not the right to be immune from legal judgment.

Read the whole article in The Atlantic »

Military dating site leaves database with 1M records exposed

Cybersecurity Researcher Jeremiah Fowler discovered an online non-password-protected database that contained more than 1.1 million records for a service that offers dating services, and social networking for military members and their supporters.

Jeremiah Fowler, writing in vpnMentor »

The publicly exposed database was not password-protected or encrypted. It contained a total of 1,187,296 documents. In a limited sampling, a majority of the documents I saw were user images, while others were photos of potentially sensitive proof of service documents. These contained full names (first, last, and middle), mailing addresses, SSN (US), National Insurance Numbers, and Service Numbers (UK). These documents also listed rank, branch of the service, dates, locations, and other information that should not be publicly accessible.

Upon further research, I identified that the records belonged to Forces Penpals, a dating service and social networking community for military service members and their supporters. I immediately sent a responsible disclosure notice, and public access was restricted the following day. It is not known how long the database was exposed or if anyone else gained access to it. Only an internal forensic audit could identify additional access or potentially suspicious activity.

Elsewhere » Bitdefende | Biometric Update

Australian journalists will no longer face criminal prosecution for merely receiving secret government documents

Karen Middleton, at the The Guardian »

Journalists will no longer face criminal prosecution for merely receiving some secret government information even without making it public, under changes the federal attorney general has announced to national secrecy laws.

Mark Dreyfus has also agreed to repeal parts of the law that make it a criminal offence to publish any information stamped “protected”, “secret” or “top secret” – meaning actual or likely harm is determined by the content of a document, not just the label on it.

Australia a step closer to being the world’s first country to ban social media for people under 16 years old

Tech Xplore »

Australian lawmakers moved a step closer to banning under 16s from social media platforms Wednesday, threatening companies that fail to comply with multimillion-dollar fines.

The landmark legislation passed parliament’s lower chamber Wednesday and is now set to be debated by the Senate.

The new rules would mean the likes of Facebook, Instagram, TikTok and Snapchat have to take “reasonable steps” to prevent young teens from having accounts.

Social media firms—who could face fines of up to Aus$50 million (US$32.5 million) for failing to impose the ban—have described the laws as “vague”, “problematic” and “rushed”.

SCMP »

The leaders of all eight Australian states and mainland territories have unanimously backed the plan, although Tasmania, the smallest state, would have preferred the threshold was set at 14.

Australia’s House of Representatives on Wednesday passed a bill that would ban children younger than 16 years old from social media. That leaves it up to the Senate to finalise the world-first law.

Also » Le Monde / Al Jazeera / VoA

A spike in COVID deaths has driven a decline in Australian life expectancy for the second year running

ABC News Australia »

“Despite this decrease, Australians still have a higher life expectancy than many comparable countries, like New Zealand, the United Kingdom, the United States of America, and Canada,” Ms Cho said.

The latest comparable data from overseas showed only Japanese (84.1 years), Swiss (83.7 years) and Koreans (83.6 years) lived longer than Australians, who shared the same life expectancy as Spaniards (83.2).

Sweden, Luxembourg, Israel, Italy and Ireland rounded out the top 10.

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