Thursday, March 16, 2023

Israeli president warns of a looming, bloody ‘real civil war’ amid battle over court reform BY RON KAMPEAS (JTA) “In this moment, of all moments, in the 75th year of the state of Israel, the abyss is within reach,”

 

THE DAILY EDITION
Thursday, March 16, 2023
 
Israeli president warns of a looming, bloody ‘real civil war’ amid battle over court reform
BY RON KAMPEAS (JTA)
“In this moment, of all moments, in the 75th year of the state of Israel, the abyss is within reach,” says Isaac Herzog in primetime televised address to nation
 
UK diplomats convey controversial message after taking part in Palestine marathon
BY JN REPORTER
Team of eight British runners were photographed for a post on the UK in Israel Consulate General’s official Twitter account wearing T-shirts for the race that included a map which appeared to erase Israel
 
‘Vast majority’ of Holocaust survivors back Westminster memorial, says Sir Ben Helfgott
BY LEE HARPIN
“There is no obligation on those of us who survived the Holocaust to share identical opinions on all issues,” says Shoah iconic survivor and president of the 45 Aid Society
 
OPINION: The Netanyahu family’s extravagance makes me long for humble leaders of the past
BY ASHER MAOZ
The lavish, tax-funded lifestyle of the Israeli prime minister and his wife makes Asher Maoz hark back to simpler times when the second president of Israel lived in a wooden hut.
 
Pro-Corbyn Islington councillor quits Labour in ‘Starmer protest’
BY LEE HARPIN
EXCLUSIVE: Cllr Matt Nathan now sits as an independent, with allies of Corbyn hoping his move sparks a further wave of resignations in protest at Keir Starmer’s decision not to restore whip to the former leader
 
OPINION: Why are Orthodox Zionist leaders silent on Israel’s political direction?
BY DR SHELDON PAUL STONE
Dr Sheldon Paul Stone calls for Orthodox leaders to get off the fence and take a moral position on the new Netanyahu coalition, based on an explicitly religious Zionist perspective.
 
Jewish Leadership Council embraces equity for International Women’s Day
BY MICHELLE ROSENBERG
Faith leadership journeys, menopause policy and government initiatives: Jewish Leadership Council bring gender debate to the table
 
Meet Rabb.AI, your Passover commentator for the new intelligent Haggadah
BY JENNI FRAZER
Why is this night different from any other night? Because this year, two Israelis have created an artificial intelligence rabbi to help you navigate the seder
 
Daughters of late envoy who survived assassination bid: ‘He was devoted to Israel’
BY JOTAM CONFINO IN ISRAEL
Shlomo Argov, who died 20 years ago this week, survived an attempt on his life by Palestinian terrorists in 1982 while serving as the Israeli ambassador to the UK.

Russian hackers could be regrouping ahead of elections, Microsoft warns NBC Universal KEVIN COLLIER March 16, 2023, 9:25 AM

 

Russian hackers could be regrouping ahead of elections, Microsoft warns

Russia may push its hackers to become more aggressive in the coming months, after being stymied by Ukrainian resistance both on the battlefield and in cyberspace, Microsoft says.

In a report published Wednesday analyzing Russia’s cyber tactics in the year since it invaded Ukraine, Microsoft declared: “Should Russia suffer more setbacks on the battlefield, Russian actors may seek to expand their targeting of military and humanitarian supply chains by pursuing destructive attacks beyond Ukraine and Poland.”

As the company behind Windows, the world’s most popular operating system, Microsoft has particular insight into hacker activity. Like several major American companies and U.S. agencies, it has given cybersecurity aid to Ukraine.

During the course of the past year, Russia has deployed at least nine new “wiper” attacks, designed to worm their way into a victim’s computer network and delete files, the Redmond, Washington-based company said.

Those attacks didn’t have a significant spillover to the rest of the world, though there is precedent for that happening. The GRU, Russia’s military intelligence agency, infamously released a destructive strain of malicious software in 2017 called NotPetya, causing international condemnation. While NotPetya was intended to target Ukraine, it quickly spread around the world, causing an estimated $1 billion in damages.

Russia has previously denied responsibility for NotPetya. The Russian Defense Ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The Microsoft report came on the same day that a cybersecurity company said that the GRU had been able to exploit a previously unknown vulnerability in Microsoft’s flagship email program, Outlook, for almost a year.

Microsoft revealed the flaw Tuesday and issued a patch to fix it. Mandiant, a cybersecurity company owned by Google, said Wednesday that the GRU had been using it to hack targets for months.

A spokesperson for Mandiant said in an email Wednesday that the GRU had exploited it to spy on government computers and infrastructure in Poland, Ukraine, Romania and Turkey. A hacker with knowledge of how to exploit it could craft an email to a potential victim and gain access to computer networks without the victim’s input or knowledge.

John Hultquist, Mandiant’s head of cyber intelligence, said that security professionals need to move swiftly to patch their systems, noting that such flaws can be used by a wide variety of hackers now that it has been made public.

The Outlook flaw is “gonna get used by everyone,” Hultquist said in a text message. “Spies and criminals.”

Concerns about Russia’s hacking capabilities persist, most notably with elections on the horizon in many countries.

Two NATO members, Poland and Estonia, have elections this year that could affect how strongly those countries support Ukraine, as does Finland, which is applying for membership into the trading bloc.

The report warned that Russia likely has strong incentive to use cyber-enabled influence operations to meddle in the elections in a bid to undermine NATO and European Union support for Kyiv.

Analysts have argued that Russia’s cyber campaigns against Ukraine have been relatively lackluster so far, in part because the Kremlin likely only planned for its invasion to have quick success.

In February, Andrew Boyd, the head of the CIA’s cybersecurity division, gave a rare assessment of Russia’s cyber strategy in Ukraine on an episode of the Risky Business podcast. In it, he agreed with that view.

“I would argue they didn’t plan particularly well in cyberspace for an enduring campaign,” he said.

In March, Ukraine’s top civilian cyber defense agency released a study on Russia’s tactics in cyberspace in the first year of the invasion. As the Kremlin’s military forces pivoted to directly attacking civilian infrastructure, its hackers began campaigns to go after similar targets, though often without success, it found.

“[W]e recorded a shift in the focus of Russian hackers from the media and telecommunications industries,” the study said. “Moreover, the purposes of Russian hackers have changed as well, from a large quantity of attacks aimed at disruption to spying and data theft. This indicates that the Russian authorities are aware of the importance of the cyber component for their military operations.”

Wellesley College students vote to admit trans men and nonbinary students NBC Universal JULIANNE MCSHANE March 15, 2023, 1:12 PM

 

Wellesley College students vote to admit trans men and nonbinary students

Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Students at Wellesley College, the elite Massachusetts women's school that counts Hillary Clinton and Madeleine Albright among its alumnae, voted Tuesday night to make transgender men and nonbinary students eligible for admission in a nonbinding ballot initiative.

Despite this vote, Wellesley does not plan to change its admissions policies, which do not allow transgender men to enroll, school President Paula Johnson said in a statement released Wednesday.

The ballot initiative passed as part of the college government election process, according to a spokesperson, who said the school does not release vote counts or percentages. It also proposed using gender-inclusive language at the college, according to the student newspaper, the Wellesley News, which reported that two students originally proposed the ballot measure last month.

"Although there is no plan to revisit our mission as a women’s college or our admissions policy, we will continue to engage all students in the important work of building an inclusive academic community where everyone feels they belong," Johnson said Wednesday.

Wellesley’s “gender policy” states that it “invites applications from all those who live as women and consistently identify as women,” including transgender women, as well as nonbinary people “who were assigned female at birth and who feel they belong in our community of women.” The college also states that it supports students who transition after being admitted and that they are allowed to remain and graduate.

Of the approximately 30 women's colleges that exist, several of the top ones — including Spelman CollegeScripps CollegeBryn Mawr CollegeBarnard College and Smith College — have similar policies, mainly allowing admission only for students who identify as women. Wellesley was part of a slate of women’s colleges that in 2015 announced they would begin admitting transgender women.

Mount Holyoke College, also in Massachusetts, admits students regardless of gender, including transgender men and nonbinary students.

Students demand stronger support for trans people

The vote comes at a time when the rights of transgender people — and transgender youth in particular — are at the center of national politicized debates about how gender identity and sexual orientation are discussed in schools, and the accessibility of gender-affirming health care, among other related issues.

More than 400 bills targeting the rights of LGBTQ people have been introduced in state legislatures across the country so far this year, according to the American Civil Liberties Union, creating what many transgender people describe as a climate of fear.

Students who support the Wellesley ballot measure say the school's administrators have not done enough to support transgender students in the light of these political realities.

After Johnson wrote a letter earlier this month defending officials' refusal to amend its gender-based admissions policies, the editorial board of the student newspaper wrote that its members “disapprove of and entirely disagree" with her email and characterized the college’s rhetoric as “transphobic.”

Johnson wrote in that letter that the school continues "to challenge the norms and power structures that too often leave women, and others of marginalized identities, behind," and claimed that "some transgender male and nonbinary students whose identities have evolved during their time here ... feel that their individual identities are not embraced."

She said that Wellesley also plans to appoint a new director for its office of LGBTQ+ programs and services to help teach faculty and staff members about gender identity and pronoun use, among other topics, and that it was working to expand the number of all-gender bathrooms on campus.

'Trans students exist at Wellesley'

Alexandra Brooks, president of the college government, told the student newspaper earlier this month that she sees the divergent views between students and the administration about who should be able to enroll at Wellesley as proof of a generational "disconnect."

The board of trustees "represents a Wellesley from 50 years ago, which is very much not the Wellesley of today, even Wellesley five years ago is very different from the Wellesley of today,” she told the Wellesley News.

"I think the goal of this ballot initiative is to show the board of trustees and the college administration that this isn’t just something that a few people care about or something that only the trans students care about, but it’s something that is a large opinion of the student body," Brooks added.

Another student, Ailie Wood, who helped author the ballot initiative, told the student newspaper that the proposal sought to help the college live up to its mission.

“Wellesley was founded as a women’s college because they wanted to create a safe and supportive learning environment for people who were marginalized based on gender," she said. "Such a place should welcome and support trans women, trans men and nonbinary people as well."

Founded in 1870, Wellesley sits on a 500-acre campus 12 miles west of Boston and educates more than 2,300 undergraduates. A Wellesley spokesperson said the university does not have data on how many transgender or nonbinary students are enrolled.

In a 2021 editorial, the student newspaper decried the lack of inclusion of transgender and nonbinary identities in the school's official data collection, characterizing it as "archival silence and continual, active administrative silencing."

"Anecdotally, it is clear that trans students exist at Wellesley, but we aren’t given the numbers needed to prove that to the outside world," the editorial board said.

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