Thursday, 31 October 2024

 

They Are Scrubbing the Internet Right Now

Instances of censorship are growing to the point of normalization. Despite ongoing litigation and more public attention, mainstream social media has been more ferocious in recent months than ever before. Podcasters know for sure what will be instantly deleted and debate among themselves over content in gray areas. Some like Brownstone have given up on YouTube in favor of Rumble, sacrificing vast audiences if only to see their content survive to see the light of day. 

It’s not always about being censored or not. Today’s algorithms include a range of tools that affect searchability and findability. For example, the Joe Rogan interview with Donald Trump racked up an astonishing 34 million views before YouTube and Google tweaked their search engines to make it hard to discover, while even presiding over a technical malfunction that disabled viewing for many people. Faced with this, Rogan went to the platform X to post all three hours. 

Navigating this thicket of censorship and quasi-censorship has become part of the business model of alternative media. 

Those are just the headline cases. Beneath the headlines, there are technical events taking place that are fundamentally affecting the ability of any historian even to look back and tell what is happening. Incredibly, the service Archive.org which has been around since 1994 has stopped taking images of content on all platforms. For the first time in 30 years, we have gone a long swath of time – since October 8-10 – since this service has chronicled the life of the Internet in real time. 

As of this writing, we have no way to verify content that has been posted for three weeks of October leading to the days of the most contentious and consequential election of our lifetimes. Crucially, this is not about partisanship or ideological discrimination. No websites on the Internet are being archived in ways that are available to users. In effect, the whole memory of our main information system is just a big black hole right now. 

The trouble on Archive.org began on October 8, 2024, when the service was suddenly hit with a massive Denial of Service attack (DDOS) that not only took down the service but introduced a level of failure that nearly took it out completely. Working around the clock, Archive.org came back as a read-only service where it stands today. However, you can only read content that was posted before the attack. The service has yet to resume any public display of mirroring of any sites on the Internet. 

In other words, the only source on the entire World Wide Web that mirrors content in real time has been disabled. For the first time since the invention of the web browser itself, researchers have been robbed of the ability to compare past with future content, an action that is a staple of researchers looking into government and corporate actions. 

It was using this service, for example, that enabled Brownstone researchers to discover precisely what the CDC had said about Plexiglas, filtration systems, mail-in ballots, and rental moratoriums. That content was all later scrubbed off the live Internet, so accessing archive copies was the only way we could know and verify what was true. It was the same with the World Health Organization and its disparagement of natural immunity which was later changed. We were able to document the shifting definitions thanks only to this tool which is now disabled. 

What this means is the following: Any website can post anything today and take it down tomorrow and leave no record of what they posted unless some user somewhere happened to take a screenshot. Even then there is no way to verify its authenticity. The standard approach to know who said what and when is now gone. That is to say that the whole Internet is already being censored in real time so that during these crucial weeks, when vast swaths of the public fully expect foul play, anyone in the information industry can get away with anything and not get caught. 

We know what you are thinking. Surely this DDOS attack was not a coincidence. The time was just too perfect. And maybe that is right. We just do not know. Does Archive.org suspect something along those lines? Here is what they say:

Last week, along with a DDOS attack and exposure of patron email addresses and encrypted passwords, the Internet Archive’s website javascript was defaced, leading us to bring the site down to access and improve our security. The stored data of the Internet Archive is safe and we are working on resuming services safely. This new reality requires heightened attention to cyber security and we are responding. We apologize for the impact of these library services being unavailable.

Deep state? As with all these things, there is no way to know, but the effort to blast away the ability of the Internet to have a verified history fits neatly into the stakeholder model of information distribution that has clearly been prioritized on a global level. The Declaration of the Future of the Internet makes that very clear: the Internet should be “governed through the multi-stakeholder approach, whereby governments and relevant authorities partner with academics, civil society, the private sector, technical community and others.”  All of these stakeholders benefit from the ability to act online without leaving a trace.

To be sure, a librarian at Archive.org has written that “While the Wayback Machine has been in read-only mode, web crawling and archiving have continued. Those materials will be available via the Wayback Machine as services are secured.”

When? We do not know. Before the election? In five years? There might be some technical reasons but it might seem that if web crawling is continuing behind the scenes, as the note suggests, that too could be available in read-only mode now. It is not.

Disturbingly, this erasure of Internet memory is happening in more than one place. For many years,  Google offered a cached version of the link you were seeking just below the live version. They have plenty of server space to enable that now, but no: that service is now completely gone. In fact, the Google cache service officially ended just a week or two before the Archive.org crash, at the end of September 2024.

Thus the two available tools for searching cached pages on the Internet disappeared within weeks of each other and within weeks of the November 5th election.

Other disturbing trends are also turning Internet search results increasingly into AI-controlled lists of establishment-approved narratives. The web standard used to be for search result rankings to be governed by user behavior, links, citations, and so forth. These were more or less organic metrics, based on an aggregation of data indicating how useful a search result was to Internet users. Put very simply, the more people found a search result useful, the higher it would rank. Google now uses very different metrics to rank search results, including what it considers “trusted sources” and other opaque, subjective determinations.

Furthermore, the most widely used service that once ranked websites based on traffic is now gone. That service was called Alexa. The company that created it was independent. Then one day in 1999, it was bought by Amazon. That seemed encouraging because Amazon was well-heeled. The acquisition seemed to codify the tool that everyone was using as a kind of metric of status on the web. It was common back in the day to take note of an article somewhere on the web and then look it up on Alexa to see its reach. If it was important, one would take notice, but if it was not, no one particularly cared.

This is how an entire generation of web technicians functioned. The system worked as well as one could possibly expect.

Then, in 2014, years after acquiring the ranking service Alexa, Amazon did a strange thing. It released its home assistant (and surveillance device) with the same name. Suddenly, everyone had them in their homes and would find out anything by saying “Hey Alexa.” Something seemed strange about Amazon naming its new product after an unrelated business it had acquired years earlier. No doubt there was some confusion caused by the naming overlap.

Here’s what happened next. In 2022, Amazon actively took down the web ranking tool. It didn’t sell it. It didn’t raise the prices. It didn’t do anything with it. It suddenly made it go completely dark. 

No one could figure out why. It was the industry standard, and suddenly it was gone. Not sold, just blasted away. No longer could anyone figure out the traffic-based website rankings of anything without paying very high prices for hard-to-use proprietary products.

All of these data points that might seem unrelated when considered individually, are actually part of a long trajectory that has shifted our information landscape into unrecognizable territory. The Covid events of 2020-2023, with massive global censorship and propaganda efforts, greatly accelerated these trends. 

One wonders if anyone will remember what it was once like. The hacking and hobbling of Archive.org underscores the point: there will be no more memory. 

As of this writing, fully three weeks of web content have not been archived. What we are missing and what has changed is anyone’s guess. And we have no idea when the service will come back. It is entirely possible that it will not come back, that the only real history to which we can take recourse will be pre-October 8, 2024, the date on which everything changed. 

The Internet was founded to be free and democratic. It will require herculean efforts at this point to restore that vision, because something else is quickly replacing it.

Authors

  • Jeffrey Tucker is Founder, Author, and President at Brownstone Institute. He is also Senior Economics Columnist for Epoch Times, author of 10 books, including Life After Lockdown, and many thousands of articles in the scholarly and popular press. He speaks widely on topics of economics, technology, social philosophy, and culture.

    View all posts
  • Debbie Lerman, 2023 Brownstone Fellow, has a degree in English from Harvard. She is a retired science writer and a practicing artist in Philadelphia, PA.

    View all posts

 

“There’s nothing to sustain life” in northern Gaza city; Biden admin ignores illegal use of US weapons in genocide – Day 389

The municipality made the declaration on Wednesday after an overnight attack that reportedly killed eight people. The strikes extended an Israeli onslaught that has killed about 350 people in the north of the enclave in the past seven days, according to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).

From the Washington Post: The Biden administration has received nearly 500 reports alleging that Israel used U.S.-supplied weapons for attacks that caused unnecessary harm to civilians in the Gaza Strip, but it has failed to comply with its own policies requiring swift investigations of such claims, according to people familiar with the matter.

At least some of these cases presented to the State Department over the past year probably amount to violations of U.S. and international law, these people said.

The reports are received from across the U.S. government, international aid organizations, nonprofits, media reports and other eyewitnesses. Dozens include photo documentation of U.S.-made bomb fragments at sites where scores of children were killed, according to human rights advocates briefed on the process.

Yet despite the State Department’s internal Civilian Harm Incident Response Guidance, which directs officials to complete an investigation and recommend action within two months of launching an inquiry, no single case has reached the “action” stage. More than two-thirds of cases remain unresolved, with many pending response from the Israeli government, which the State Department consults to verify each case’s circumstances.

On Tuesday, after an Israeli strike on an apartment building killed more than 90 people, including 25 children, according to the Gaza Health Ministry, the State Department said Washington was seeking a “full explanation” from Israel. The Israeli military said it was “aware of reports that civilians were harmed”…

(Read the full article here.)

Nearly all the publicly available information on U.S. arms transfers to Israel comes from leaks reported by the media. The Biden administration says very little about the weapons it delivers to Israel or how the Israeli military uses them.
Nearly all the publicly available information on U.S. arms transfers to Israel comes from leaks reported by the media. The Biden administration says very little about the weapons it delivers to Israel or how the Israeli military uses them. (photo)

The US Is Funding 70% of Israel’s Wars

A new report by the Israeli outletCalcalist reviewed Israeli military spending on wars since October 7, finding that Washington is funding 70% of Tel Aviv’s military costs. In a little over a year, the US has provided Israel with more than $20 billion in military aid.

“The scope of American aid since the beginning of the war is about 85 billion shekels… According to official estimates by the Bank of Israel, the total cost of the war is…approximately NIS 118 billion.” It continues, “Therefore, according to a simple calculation, The Americans financed about 70% of the war effort.”

According to the Cost of War Project, the US has given Israel $22.57 billion in military aid since the Hamas attack. Calcalist concludes without US support, Tel Aviv’s war would simply be unaffordable.

RECOMMENDED READING: Hezbollah says will only accept ‘suitable’ truce as Israel pounds Lebanese city of Baalbek
A view of the US-origin weapons and ammunition that were used by the Israeli Army in the ground operation following their withdrawal from Khan Yunis city where they carried out a ground attack for four months, in Khan Younis, Gaza on May 16, 2024.
A view of the US-origin weapons and ammunition that were used by the Israeli Army in the ground operation following their withdrawal from Khan Yunis city where they carried out a ground attack for four months, in Khan Yunis, Gaza on May 16, 2024. (Anas Zeyad Fteha/Anadolu via Getty Images)

Hamas rejects ceasefire proposal that would keep Israeli troops in Gaza

Hamas has rejected a ceasefire proposal that would have brought the release of a small number of Israeli captives and a 30-day cessation of hostilities, but no withdrawal of Israeli forces from the Gaza Strip.

Sources close to the Palestinian group told Middle East Eye that they had officially dismissed the proposal put forward by mediators Qatar and Egypt, and the US, despite reports in Israeli media that it was still under consideration.

Hamas has been adamant that any ceasefire deal must eventually lead to the total withdrawal of Israeli forces from the Gaza Strip.

In November, a prisoner swap deal led to the release of about 100 Israeli captives in exchange for about 240 Palestinian detainees.

The first phase of the new proposed deal would have seen between 11 and 14 Israelis – including women and elderly – released in exchange for an unspecified number of Palestinian detainees and a 30-day ceasefire.

Despite the current proposals being an apparent non-starter, officials told Israeli news outlet Maariv that American officials involved in the talks were hoping for a ceasefire deal before the US election on 5 November.

West Bank: Israeli special forces assassinate Palestinian man

On Wednesday night, undercover Israeli soldiers infiltrated the Tulkarem refugee camp, in Tulkarem, in the northwestern part of the occupied West Bank and assassinated a Palestinian man.

Media sources reported that the undercover soldiers broke into a supermarket near the refugee camp’s main entrance.

The soldiers fired multiple live rounds at Husam Bassam Yousef Mallah, 30, from point-blank range, and immediately withdrew from the refugee camp.

Eyewitnesses said the undercover soldiers used a confiscated taxi and a pickup truck to infiltrate the camp.

It is worth mentioning that Husam is the brother of Yousef, who is held by Israel under arbitrary Administrative Detention orders without charges or trial, and Mohammad, who was exiled by Israel and is currently in Qatar.

Since the beginning of the Israeli military onslaught against the Gaza Strip on October 7, 2023, Israeli forces have killed 764 Palestinians in the West Bank, including 166 children, and injured 6,300.

A Palestinian activist holding a national flag stands by as an Israeli army bulldozer moves during an ongoing raid on the Tulkarm camp for Palestinian refugees in the north of the occupied West Bank on September 12, 2024. [ZAIN JAAFAR/AFP via Getty Images]
A Palestinian activist holding a national flag stands by as an Israeli army bulldozer moves during an ongoing raid on the Tulkarm camp for Palestinian refugees in the north of the occupied West Bank on September 12, 2024. [ZAIN JAAFAR/AFP via Getty Images] (ZAIN JAAFAR/AFP via Getty Images)

Israel threatens to bomb Baalbek Citadel, Lebanon calls for UNESCO intervention

Lebanon’s Minister of Culture, Mohammed Wissam Al-Murtada, stated that recent Israeli threats have targeted the renowned archaeological site of Baalbek, designated a UNESCO World Heritage site.

Al-Murtada announced his formal request to Lebanon’s permanent mission to UNESCO in Paris to expedite follow-up actions with UNESCO’s director-general and relevant international bodies regarding recent complaints.

“Every remaining trace of conscience in the world must prevent Israel from carrying out its threats to bomb Baalbek Citadel, a cultural legacy inscribed on UNESCO’s World Heritage list,” Al-Murtada said. “This heritage belongs not just to Lebanon but all of humanity.”

The city is known for the ruins of the Baalbek temple complex from the Roman period, housing two of the largest and grandest Roman temples: the Temple of Bacchus and the Temple of Jupiter. It was inscribed in 1984 as a UNESCO World Heritage site.

NOTE: As of 17 September 2024, UNESCO has verified damage to 69 culturally significant sites in Gaza: 10 religious sites, 43 buildings of historical and artistic interest, two repositories of movable cultural property, six monuments, one museum and seven archaeological sites. Other reports give a much higher number of affected sites. 
These assessments are made in very difficult situations, in the midst of constant bombardment, thanks to testimonies and studies on the ground and supported by satellite images.
Baalbek is UNESCO World Heritage Site in Lebanon.
Baalbek is UNESCO World Heritage Site in Lebanon. (Véronique Dauge, CC BY-SA 3.0 igo, )

Palestinian gov’t church group condemns Israel law banning UNRWA

The Higher Presidential Committee for Church Affairs in Palestine condemned a recent law passed by the Israeli Knesset that prohibits the activities of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA), declaring it a “terrorist organisation”.

In a message on its official account on Facebook, the committee urged churches around the world to “act against Israel’s ban on UNRWA,” citing the catastrophic impact this decision will have on refugee rights.

The Committee emphasised that this law represents a direct threat to the right of return for Palestinian refugees and constitutes a violation of the UN Charter. It asserted that the enactment of such legislation sets a dangerous precedent, as no permanent member of the United Nations has previously prohibited the activities of a UN agency.

It called on churches and Christian institutions worldwide to take action against Israel’s restrictive laws, urging them to support the continuation of UNRWA’s essential work.

A view of the UNRWA building in East Jerusalem, with the UN flag flying at half mast, on October 30, 2024.
A view of the UNRWA building in East Jerusalem, with the UN flag flying at half mast, on October 30, 2024. (Saeed Qaq – Anadolu Agency])
MORE NEWS:
The Intercept: They Got 60 Days in Jail for Protesting Israel’s Largest Arms Maker — and Say That’s a “Huge Victory”
Committee to Protect Journalists: Israel, Haiti top list of states where journalist murders go unpunished
Middle East Eye: How many other Shuva’el Ben-Natans are in Gaza now, fired up with enthusiasm?

STATISTICS OCTOBER 7, 2023 – OCTOBER 30, 2024:

Palestinian death toll from October 7, 2023 – October 30, 2024: at least 43,927* ( 43,163 in Gaza* – 69% are women and children, according to Gaza’s Media Office). [The Ministry’s figures have been contested by the Israeli authorities, although they have been accepted as accurate by Israeli intelligence services, the UN, and WHO. These data are supported by independent analyses, comparing changes in the number of deaths of UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) staff with those reported by the Ministry, which found claims of data fabrication implausible.]

This is expected to be a significant undercount since thousands of those killed have yet to be identified – and at least 764 in the West Bank (~166 children). This does not include an estimated 10,000 more in Gaza still buried under rubble (4,900 women and children). Euro-Med Monitor reports 49,032 Palestinian deaths.

Lancet: “Applying a conservative estimate of four indirect deaths per one direct death to the 37,396 deaths reported, it is not implausible to estimate that up to 186,000 or even more deaths could be attributable to the current conflict in Gaza.

Ralph Nader earlier estimated 300,000 Palestinians may have been killed in Gaza.

  • At least 45 Palestinians have died in Israeli prisons (27 from Gaza, 25 from West Bank).
  • At least 41 Palestinians have died due to malnutrition (at least 37 of them children)**.
  • About 1.9 million of Gaza’s 2.3 million population are currently displaced.
  • Almost 500,000 Gazans are currently experiencing catastrophic levels of food insecurity.

Palestinian injuries from October 7 – October 30, 2024: at least 107,810 (including at least 101,510 in Gaza and 6,300 in the West Bank, including 830 children). [It remains unknown how many Americans are among the casualties in Gaza.]

Reported Israeli death toll from October 7, 2023 – October 30, 2024: ~1,570 (~1,139 on October 7, 2023, of which ~32 were Americans, and ~36 were children); 392*** military forces since the ground invasion began in Gaza (most recent: Oct 29); 39 military and civilians in the West Bank, East Jerusalem, and Israel) and~10,000 injured.

The death toll in Lebanon since October 8, 2023 is at least 2,820, with 12,937 injuries. An estimated 1.34 million have been displaced.

NOTE: It is unknown at this time how many of the deaths and injuries of Israelis on October 7 were caused by Israeli soldiers.

*Previously, IAK did not include 471 Gazans killed in the Al Ahli hospital blast since the source of the projectile was being disputed. However, given that much evidence points to Israel as the culprit, Israel had previously bombed the hospital and has attacked many others, Israel is prohibiting outside experts from investigating the scene, and since the UN and other agencies are including the deaths from the attack in their cumulative totals, if Americans knew is now also doing so.

**Euro-Med Monitor reports that Gaza’s elderly are dying at an alarmingly high rate. The majority die at home and are buried either close to their residences or in makeshift graves dispersed across the Strip. There are currently more than 140 such cemeteries. Additionally, according to Euromed, thousands have died from starvation, malnourishment, and inadequate medical care; these are considered indirect victims as they were not registered in hospitals. 

***The figure does not include the reportedly 56 Israeli soldiers – nearly 16% of the total Israeli military deaths – killed due to friendly fire in Gaza and other military-related accidents. 

† For most of the conflict, women and children accounted for about 70% of deaths in Gaza, with children making up a little over 40% of those killed, according to official statistics.

Find previous daily casualty figures and daily news updates here.

Hover over each bar for exact numbers.
Source: IsraelPalestineTimeline.org
 

 

Kick Israel Off the United Nations! - VT Foreign Policy


VT Condemns the ETHNIC CLEANSING OF PALESTINIANS by USA/Israel

$ 280 BILLION US TAXPAYER DOLLARS INVESTED since 1948 in US/Israeli Ethnic Cleansing and Occupation Operation; $ 150B direct "aid" and $ 130B in "Offense" contracts
Source: Embassy of Israel, Washington, D.C. and US Department of State.

The United Nations has never expelled any member state.

However, in 1974, an attempt was made to expel apartheid South Africa: a case that presents several analogies with today.

Now the cup is full.

The State of Israel can no longer be in the United Nations.

(by Former Deputy Secretary General of the UN Professor Pino Arlacchi)

It has become an outlaw state that breaks one after another the cornerstones of international law and that flaunts its impunity by being able to count on the political protection and unlimited military support of the United States.

If this were not the case, Netanyahu would never have dared to insult the UN, in full General Assembly, calling it “a swamp of anti-Semitic bile”, and he would not have had, during 2023 alone, 230 UNRWA employees killed during bombings, fires and attacks on schools, food depots, and UN-branded humanitarian aid convoys.

UNRWA is the agency created in 1949 by the General Assembly to assist the Palestinian refugees created by the “Nabka”, the catastrophe of 1948 that saw 700,000 Palestinians violently driven from their homes and their land by the Zionist militia that became Israel’s army.

All this while making a mockery of the settlement plans established by the UN, and inaugurating a long series of crimes and illegalities that continues to this day.

And which is at the root of the foundation of the State of Israel as well as Al Fatah, Hamas, Hezbollah and the like.

Alongside UNRWA, the second largest victim of Israeli hostility towards the United Nations is UNIFIL, a mission composed of 50 countries, created in 1978 by the Security Council to promote peace in Lebanon.

UNIFIL has paid so far with 337 human lives for the implementation of its mandate.

Not all its losses are due to Israeli attacks, but it is precisely in these weeks that all the impatience of Tel Aviv against possible witnesses of atrocities planned and about to be implemented has exploded.

From 1948 until today, there are over 24 Security Council resolutions that criticize or condemn the illegal occupation of territories and the cruelties of Israel against the Palestinians.

Some of these resolutions have become famous for being frequently invoked during crises triggered by Israel.

Resolution 242 of 1967 establishes the withdrawal of Israel from the territories occupied after the Six-Day War in order to promote lasting peace in the Middle East.

Resolutions 446 of 1979, 904 of 1994, 1073 of 1996 and 1394 of 2002 join the 155 resolutions approved by the General Assembly since 2015 and which concern the three military interventions in Lebanon preceding the current one, the illicit settlements in the West Bank, the withdrawal from occupied territories, the massacres and deportations of Palestinian civilians.

These resolutions of the global majority are so many stages in the gap that has been dug between the governments of Israel on the one hand, and the United Nations and the rest of the world on the other.

The 41,000 dead in Gaza, the 100,000 wounded, the millions of displaced people in Lebanon and Gaza, the repeated attacks on Iran, Yemen and Syria, the targeted assassinations of individual foreign personalities that have occurred over the last year are in no way justifiable.

They are not excesses of legitimate defense caused by the massacre of 1,200 Israeli civilians.

We are faced with a UN member state affected by a degenerative process.

It has become a serial aggressor that cannot refrain from committing crimes against humanity, war crimes, attempted genocides and repeated massacres and then plays the victim and takes refuge behind the shield of the United States.

No member state has ever been expelled from the United Nations.

However, the organization came very close, in 1974, in the case of South Africa, a case that presents clear analogies with today’s case of Israel. The debate at the UN on the expulsion of South Africa was not only sparked by growing international aversion to apartheid, but also by the continued South African occupation of Namibia, which the International Court of Justice has ruled illegal, as is the case with the current Israeli occupation of Lebanon and the West Bank.

It all started in 1969, with Resolution 269, which stated that if South Africa did not withdraw from Namibia, the Security Council would “convene forthwith to determine effective measures” to be taken.

The issue of the application of Article 6 of the UN Charter was raised, which concerns the procedure for expelling a member state, to be voted on by the General Assembly on the proposal of the Security Council.

South Africa was not expelled from the UN only because three out of five members of the Security Council – the US, France and the UK – vetoed the proposal. It was still an anti-communist bastion that needed to be protected.

But the General Assembly circumvented the obstacle in 1974 by refusing to accept, by an overwhelming majority, the credentials of the South African delegation. South Africa thus remained excluded from participation in the General Assembly for twenty years, until 1994, returning only after the end of apartheid.

The current situation in Israel is much more serious than that of South Africa in the 1970s.

In both cases, we are faced with rogue, “delinquent” regimes on the margins of the international community.

But the white racist state – faced with attacks committed by the terrorist wing of the liberation movement led by the young Mandela and with huge street demonstrations – did not attempt genocide or the deportation of the black population.

The years of transition to democracy, therefore, cost black South Africans “only” 14,000 deaths.

In the last decades of its life, the Johannesburg regime did not wage war on the UN or on UN missions. Its demise occurred with an agreement between the parties and with the promise of future reconciliation.

Sending Israel out of the UN is a drastic, but necessary, measure.

We need to break the bubble of hysteria and omnipotence in which a regime of psychopaths lives, who do not realize that they are at war not against the Palestinians and the Middle East, but against the entire world.

The shock can also be healthy for its protector, a declining superpower tempted to go in the same dangerous direction.

By Pino Arlacchi Former Deputy Secretary General of the UN


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