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thunderball

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  1. Bom dia a todos! vamos premiar o usuario que mais lançar no mês, com uma seedbox! de 400GB, de Espaço, / Download/Upload - 1GBPS/250MBPS Tráfico e Torrent Ilimitado, Rutorrent, Cria ScreenShots, Compacta e Descompacta Arquivos, Cria Torrent, Processador - Intel Xeon E3 1225v2, Memória RAM - 32 GB DDR3, Inicio - Dia 20/02/ 2018, a 21/03/2018. Patrocinio http://megaseedbox.com.br GOOGLE TRANSLATION: Good morning everyone! we will reward the most launch user in the month with a seedbox! Rewriting, Creates ScreenShots, Compacts and Unzips Files, Creates Torrent, Processor - Intel Xeon E3 1225v2, Memory RAM - 32 GB DDR3, Start - Day 20/02/2018, the 21/03/2018. Sponsorship http://megaseedbox.com.br
  2. Fishermen off the coast of Holland made a startling discovery when they hauled in a skull fragment belonging to the “oldest Dutchman.” The fragment dates back over 13,000 years to when the North Sea was a large plain, and not a sea, according to the Dutch National Museum of Antiquities. “This discovery yields important clues regarding the colonization and occupation of this vast sunken landscape and the early cultural expressions of the last hunters of the Ice Age,” it explained in a statement. Experts published their analysis of the skull in the journal Antiquity. GRUESOME MYSTERY: 8,000-YEAR-OLD SKULLS FOUND IMPALED ON WOODEN STAKES Found near a dredged navigation channel, the fragment is the left parietal bone of a skull. “It is the oldest find of a modern human from the North Sea,” explained the Dutch National Museum of Antiquities, in its statement. “Physical anthropological research indicates the fragment belonged to an adult person, who may have suffered and recovered from a condition such as anemia.” The fragment was donated to the museum by the North Sea Fossils group in 2013. Details of another North Sea find were also revealed in the Antiquity article. A decorated bison bone, which is about 13,500 years old was fished from the North Sea in 2005. The Dutch National Museum of Antiquities later received the bone as a long-term loan from a private collector. TEMPLE OF DOOM: GRISLY 'SKULL CULT' DISCOVERY AT ANCIENT SITE “The piece is a fragment of a metatarsal with a striking zig-zag decoration on five panels,” explained the museum, in its statement. “It is the earliest piece of art to come from the North Sea.” The decorated bone fragment is only the fourth of its type ever discovered – the others, all similarly decorated, were found in Wales, France and Poland. It is not clear, however, what the North Sea artifact was used for, although experts have speculated that it may have been the handle of a tool or a ritual object. INTERLOCKED SPIRAL OF ANCIENT SKELETONS UNEARTHED IN MEXICO CITY Archaeologists from the Dutch National Museum of Antiquities and the University of Leiden in Holland were among the researchers that analyzed the skull fragment and bone. Carbon dating was performed by experts at the University of Groningen. Other discoveries of human remains have also been generating buzz. Archaeologists in Sweden, for example, uncovered mysterious 8,000-year-old skulls mounted on wooden stakes that shed new light on grisly Stone Age rituals. In Mexico, archaeologists recently discovered an interlocked spiral of ancient skeletons. Last year archaeologists in Turkey revealed that human skulls may have once decorated an ancient temple. CANNIBAL RITUAL REVEALED: CARVED BONE TELLS GRISLY TALE A carved human bone from an archaeological dig in the U.K. is also offering new insight into the grisly culture of prehistoric cannibals
  3. Scientists have harnessed sophisticated X-ray and imaging technology to reveal a lost painting and other details hidden in a Picasso masterpiece. The painting, “La Miséreuse accroupie” (The Crouching Woman), is a major work from Picasso’s Blue Period. High-tech analysis of the 1902 painting, however, has revealed how Picasso painted over a landscape by another painter. Buried images linked to other works by Picasso have also been found. Owned by the Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO) in Toronto, the painting of the crouching and cloaked woman was analyzed by an international team of experts. SECRET GHOSTLY PORTRAIT OF MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS, DISCOVERED BENEATH 16TH-CENTURY PAINTING In addition to researchers from the AGO, the Northwestern University/Art Institute of Chicago Center for Scientific Studies in the Arts (NU-ACCESS) and the National Gallery of Art in Washington worked to unravel the painting’s secrets. The identity of the landscape artist is unknown, although experts believe that the work was likely created by another painter in Barcelona, where Picasso spent part of his early life. Picasso painted over the landscape after rotating it 90 degrees to the right and also incorporated some of the features into “La Miséreuse accroupie,” according to the researchers. Some of the lines from the cliff edge were incorporated into the woman’s back, they noted. VAN GOGH DISCOVERY: PREVIOUSLY UNKNOWN DRAWINGS BY DUTCH MASTER IDENTIFIED “Picasso had no qualms about changing things during the painting process,” explained Marc Walton, a research professor of materials science and engineering at Northwestern University, in a statement. “Our international team – consisting of scientists, a curator and a conservator – has begun to tease apart the complexity of ‘La Miséreuse accroupie,’ uncovering subtle changes made by Picasso as he worked toward his final vision.” Scientists, for example, identified a compositional change in the painting – Picasso had initially painted the woman holding a disk in her right hand. However, these features, along with her right arm, were painted over with a cloak in the completed version of “La Miséreuse accroupie.” Experts note that the hidden arm is similar to a woman’s right arm in “Femme assise, robe bleue,” (Seated woman, blue dress), a 1902 Picasso watercolor, that was sold at auction for $45 million last year. GEORGE WASHINGTON'S FAMOUS REVOLUTIONARY WAR TENT FOUND IN NEWLY-DISCOVERED PAINTING While previous X-rays had already identified an underlying landscape beneath “La Miséreuse accroupie,” the latest research has given a much clearer insight into the artwork’s secrets. John Delaney, senior imaging scientist at the National Gallery of Art, used infrared reflectance hyperspectral imaging, which identifies underlying images based on the relative transparency of their paint layers, to reveal the painted-over arm and disk. NU-ACCESS scientists then garnered additional detail by scanning the painting with an X-ray fluorescence scanner. “We now are able to develop a chronology within the painting structure to tell a story about the artist’s developing style and possible influences,” said Sandra Webster-Cook, AGO’s senior conservator of paintings, in a statement. LEONARDO DA VINCI'S $450 MILLION 'SALVATOR MUNDI' PAINTING HEADS TO THE LOUVRE ABU DHABI Scientists revealed their findings Saturday during the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Austin. In a separate project, experts from the Musée national Picasso-Paris and NU-ACCESS also performed high-tech analysis of 39 bronzes and 11 painted sheet metal sculptures by Picasso. The sculptures were studied using X-ray fluorescence spectrometry and an extensive database of alloy “fingerprints” from other early 20th-century bronzes. Alloy analysis revealed that five of the bronzes were cast during 1941 and 1942 in a Paris foundry owned by Émile Robecchi, a relatively little-known collaborator of Picasso. Silver was also found in the facial features of one of the sheet metal sculptures. The research findings were also revealed Saturday at the AAAS meeting. LONG-LOST 'NIGERIAN MONA LISA,' VALUED AT OVER $280G, FOUND IN 'MODEST' NORTH LONDON APARTMENT Other artworks have also been revealing their secrets. Last month, for example, experts in the Netherlands identified two previously unknown drawings as works by Vincent van Gogh. In 2017, a secret portrait of Mary, Queen of Scots that had been hidden for centuries beneath another painting was discovered. Last year it also emerged that a recently discovered 235-year-old panoramic painting has the only known wartime depiction of George Washington’s Revolutionary War field tent.
  4. Though slightly lopsided, the towering, Great Pyramid of Giza is an ancient feat of engineering, and now an archaeologist has figured out how the Egyptians may have aligned the monument almost perfectly along the cardinal points, north-south-east-west — they may have used the fall equinox. The fall equinox occurs halfway between the summer and winter solstices, when Earth's tilt is such that the length of the day and nightare almost the same. About 4,500 years ago, Egyptian pharaoh Khufu had the Great Pyramid of Giza constructed; it is the largest of the three pyramids — now standing about 455 feet (138 meters) tall — on the Giza Plateau and was considered a "wonder of the world" by ancient writers. [In Photos: Looking Inside the Great Pyramid of Giza] Turns out, the pyramid builders somehow designed this ancient wonder with extreme precision. "The builders of the Great Pyramid of Khufu aligned the great monument to the cardinal points with an accuracy of better than four minutes of arc, or one-fifteenth of one degree," wrote Glen Dash, an engineer who studies the Giza pyramids, in a paper published recently in the Journal of Ancient Egyptian Architecture. The pyramid of Khafre (also located at Giza) and the Red Pyramid (located at the site of Dahshur) are also aligned with a high degree of accuracy, Dash noted. "All three pyramids exhibit the same manner of error; they are rotated slightly counterclockwise from the cardinal points," Dash wrote. For over a century, researchers have proposed different methods used by the ancient Egyptians to align the pyramids along these cardinal points with such accuracy. In his paper, Dash demonstrates how a method that makes use of the fall equinox could have been used. Shadows in Connecticut and Giza In his experiment, which he conducted in Pomfret Connecticut on Sept. 22, 2016 (the day of the fall equinox), Dash placed a rod (sometimes called a gnomon by modern-day surveyors) on a wooden platform and marked the location of the rod's shadow throughout the day. "On the equinox, the surveyor will find that the tip of the shadow runs in a straight line and nearly perfectly east-west," Dash wrote. The degree of error is slightly counterclockwise, similar to the error found in the Great Pyramid, Khafre Pyramid and Red Pyramid, Dash found. The tilt of Earth on the fall equinox allows the shadow to run in this east-west direction, Dash wrote. Though the experiment was conducted in Connecticut, the technique should also work at Giza, Dash said. For the technique to work, the ancient Egyptians (or any surveyor) would ideally need a "clear sunny day, like most of the days at Giza. An occasional cloud would not be a problem," Dash told Live Science. The rod could have been placed on a wooden platform or the ground at Giza, Dash said. The Egyptians could have determined the day of the fall equinox by counting forward 91 days after the summer solstice, Dash said. Did the Ancient Egyptians actually use it? The recent experiment shows that the fall equinox could have been used to align the three pyramids, Dash explained. However, whether the ancient Egyptians used this technique is unknown. Experiments conducted over the past few decades suggest that several different methods that make use of the sun or stars could also have been used to align the pyramids, Dash said. The ancient Egyptians left no surviving records that say which methods they used. "The Egyptians, unfortunately, left us few clues. No engineering documents or architectural plans have been found that give technical explanations demonstrating how the ancient Egyptians aligned any of their temples or pyramids," Dash wrote in the article. In fact, it's possible that multiple methods were used to align the pyramids, Dash told Live Science. The fall equinox method does have an advantage — it's relatively simple to use; other methods require more steps and are generally more complicated, he said. "It is hard to imagine a method that could be simpler, either conceptually or in practice," than the fall equinox method, Dash wrote. Dash is the founder of the Glen Dash Foundation for Archaeological Research. He conducts work on the Giza Plateau with Ancient Egypt Research Associates (AERA) and has conducted radar work in the Valley of the Kings.
  5. Using sophisticated laser surveying technology, archaeologists have discovered a “lost city” in western Mexico that may have been home to as many buildings as Manhattan. A team of researchers, led by Colorado State University archaeologist Chris Fisher, was able to use LiDAR technology to determine that the ancient city of Angamuco had around 40,000 buildings spread over an area of 10 square miles. That’s roughly about the same number of buildings as Manhattan, but on a much smaller plot of land as the New York City borough is 22 square miles. Fisher told Fox News that without the use of the LiDAR technology figuring out the number of buildings at the Angamuco site might have taken his entire career. But with just two flights using LiDAR, one in conjunction with the National Center for Airborne Laser Mapping, his team was able to determine the size of the city and also find previously uncovered structures. “I almost started crying,” Fisher said of seeing the LiDAR images of the city for the first time. “It was incredible to see these buildings in such clear definition.” LiDAR uses a laser to measure distances to the Earth’s surface and can prove extremely valuable to study what is hidden in heavily forested areas. LiDAR is also used extensively in other applications, including autonomous cars where it allows vehicles to have a continuous 360 degrees view. Fisher is quick to point out that Angamuco is not technically a “lost city” as it was first discovered in 2007 and his team has been conducting research there since 2009. “We don’t call it a lost city,” he said. “We call it an undocumented city.” Despite this, the archaeologist is not downplaying the impact the discovery could have his field of research and science overall. “This is another demonstration that this is the 21st Century and we still know so little about our world and there is still so much to be discovered,” Fisher said. “This city is in a highly trafficked area of Mexico and nobody knew that it was right there the whole time.” Angamuco was built around 900 AD by the Purépecha, a civilization that was a rival of the Aztec empire in central Mexico, and reached its peak population of around 100,000 residents somewhere between 1000 and 1350 AD. "There are roughly a similar number of buildings but the size of the ancient buildings is obviously much smaller so the population density or number of people involved is not comparable," Fisher added. At its height it was the largest city in western Mexico and much larger than the Purépecha imperial capital of Tzintzuntzan, although most likely not as densely populated. “[Angamuco] was the real core of the empire,” Fisher said. The city was built over a lava flow and has been hidden for centuries due to the dense forest and rugged terrain that surrounds it. Researchers have found a number of interesting features that make Angamuco different from other pre-Colombian cities in Mexico. The majority of the city’s temples and open plazas sit in eight places around the edges of Angamuco, rather than the center, which is more common. The city also had numerous gardens and the Purépecha were known for their ability to divert water flow to grow crops and cultivate green spaces. “We can learn a lot from the Purépecha in regards to modern city planning,” Fisher noted. “They had green spaces, they did things with water that we’re still trying to implement. These guys had it all figured out.” Radio carbon dating of artifacts discovered at the site suggests that the city went through two separate periods of expansion before its eventual collapse preceding the European arrival in the Americas in the 15th Century.
  6. The story of the brutal small-town stabbing death of a 15-year-old girl by her jilted ex-boyfriend was by itself enough to warrant front-page news in Germany, where such crimes are exceedingly rare. But what made the killing in Kandel, in the country's south, the talk of everyone of the European nation from politicians to beerhall patrons was that the girl was German, and the ex-boyfriend an Afghan migrant. “I am mother of three children, and we are here together to protest against the aggressivity of people who are grabbing our children, and who are — who bring fear in our country,” Martina Boeswald, a lawyer in Kandel, told PBS. “We want to live in peace. And this is the fault of Angela Merkel.” That sentiment typifies concerns around the country, where there is increasing concern about safety since Chancellor Merkel opened the country’s gates two years ago to more than one million migrants fleeing the Middle East, North Africa and Central Asia. Complicating the discussion is a burgeoning rightist political movement led by the Alternative for Germany party (AfD), which has used attacks like the one in Kandel – along with the 2016 Berlin Christmas market attack and a slew of sexual assaults in Cologne – to attack the newly formed coalition of Merkel's Christian Democratic Union, the Christian Social Union in Bavaria and the center-left Social Democratic parties. “Merkel’s ‘Open Door’ policy to immigrants was roundly criticized by voters,” Michael Geary, a history professor at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology and a global fellow at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington, told Fox News. “The AfD have tapped into this anger and the popular perception (whether accurate or not) that immigrants are the cause of violent crime.” There's also a widely publicized report that cites refugees as responsible for a spike in crime. Conducted by the Zurich University of Applied Sciences, and paid for by Germany's Ministry of Family Affairs, the report noted police in the German state of Lower Saxony witnessed about a 10 percent increase in reported violent crimes in 2015 and 2016, with 90 percent of that increase being attributed to migrants. The study's authors cite a number of contributing factors for their correlation between the rise in violent crime and the refugee crisis in Germany. First, the study found, crimes committed by migrants were twice as likely to be reported as those committed by German nationals. It also found that males ages 14-30 were both the most likely group to commit serious crimes, and the largest age bracket of migrants in Lower Saxony. The report also noted a significant difference in the number of crimes committed by migrants from various regions. Those from Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan were significantly less likely to commit a violent crime than those from North Africa, the report said. Some 17 percent of the violent crimes reported in Lower Saxony were thought to have been perpetrated by North African migrants, who comprise less than 1 percent of the state’s total registered refugees. Other reports released over the past two years appear to contradict the link between migrants and increased violent crime rates.
  7. Authorities say two skiers were killed by an avalanche in the French Alps, and two more people were injured by an avalanche in Switzerland near the border with France. The prefecture in France's Savoie region said the fatal avalanche occurred Sunday at the Val-d'Isere ski resort, close to the Italian border. Local newspaper Le Dauphine said on its website that the two victims were a 44-year-old man and his 11-year-old daughter from the Paris region. Le Dauphine reported the two were skiing on a run that was closed due to the avalanche risk. Swiss media initially reported that 10 people were buried by the other avalanche, in the southern canton (state) of Valais. But Valais police spokesman Stefan Leger says only two people pulled from the snow Sunday were hospitalized.
  8. JAKARTA, Indonesia – The eruption of Indonesia's Mount Sinabung that shot ash 5 kilometers (3 miles) high also "annihilated" the mountain's summit. Before and after images from Indonesia's Center for Volcanology and Geological Hazard Mitigation show an enormous chunk missing from the peak. Volcanologist Devy Kamil Syahbana said the chunk, known as the "lava dome," had a volume of at least 1.6 million cubic meters (56.5 million cubic feet). The volcano in North Sumatra, which has been active since 2010, erupted explosively on Monday morning. Hot ash clouds rolled down its slopes, traveling as far as 4.9 kilometers from the crater. No-one was injured. Video showed screaming children fleeing a school outside the exclusion zone that surrounds the volcano as a billowing column of ash rose in the background.
  9. BERLIN – A German man has been fined 208,000 euros ($258,000) for cheating at a supermarket self-service till. Munich's district court convicted the 58-year-old businessman of theft for trying to pass off 47 euros-worth of veal liver as cheaper fruit. The man, who wasn't identified, had done the same thing three times before and also had past convictions for theft and tax evasion. The court based the high fine on the man's monthly income of 24,000 euros. He was released from jail, where he had been held since the theft in December. Munich court spokesman Klaus-Peter Juengst said Tuesday that the defendant didn't appeal the verdict, which was issued last month.
  10. BANGKOK – A Thai court has granted legal custody of 13 babies carried by surrogate mothers to a Japanese millionaire who is their biological father. Bangkok's Central Juvenile and Family Court on Tuesday gave Mitsutoki Shigeta sole legal custody of the children he fathered using Thai surrogate mothers, ruling that he's financially stable and showed his plans to care for them. Shigeta's case raised eyebrows in 2014 when police raided a Bangkok condominium and found nine babies and nine nannies living in unfurnished rooms. Shigeta was identified as the father. The case helped usher in a Thai law prohibiting commercial surrogacy for foreign clients. The court ruling said Shigeta had a right to custody because the children were born before the new law, and because the surrogate mothers waived their custody rights.
  11. JOHANNESBURG – South African President Cyril Ramaphosa is winning some fans with his habit of early morning jogs and walks in which he interacts with the public. Ramaphosa, who took office on Feb. 15 after predecessor Jacob Zuma resigned, walked with a crowd for nearly six kilometers (3.7 miles) in the Cape Town area early Tuesday. He also jogged along the city's waterfront and stopped for selfies with passers-by during the South African power transition late last week. After his walk, the 65-year-old president told onlookers that the exercise is a positive way to start the day and he encouraged South Africans to do the same. Ramaphosa says people can start with short walks and increase the distance. "In no time you won't even feel it," he says.
  12. WELLINGTON, New Zealand – Parts of New Zealand have declared an emergency as a powerful storm hits, causing flooding and forcing some people to evacuate their homes. The storm system is the remnants of Cyclone Gita, which last week ripped through the Pacific nation of Tonga, destroying homes, churches and the historic Parliament House. The winds have weakened as the storm has arced through the Pacific, but it is still causing disruptions in New Zealand. National carrier Air New Zealand canceled flights Tuesday afternoon from the capital, Wellington, in anticipation of the storm, while the city of Christchurch declared an emergency. The military has been deployed to some towns where the storm is expected to have the biggest impact. Dozens of schools have been closed and power outages were affecting thousands of homes Tuesday.
  13. MADRID – A leading Catalan politician is vowing to carry on advocating for Catalan independence from her current base in Switzerland where she is evading a Spanish judicial probe for her role in last year's illegal secession attempt. Anna Gabriel, the leader of the anti-establishment Catalan CUP party, has told Swiss newspaper Le Temps that the Spanish Supreme Court probe is politically motivated and that she will be more useful to her party in Geneva than "behind bars." "I will not go to Madrid," she says in remarks published Tuesday. She also adds that she has looked for a country that can protect her rights since she "will not have a fair trial at home." Former Catalan president Carles Puigdemont has also ignored a court summon and is in Belgium.
  14. A Syrian monitoring group and paramedics say government shelling and airstrikes on rebel-held suburbs of the capital, Damascus, killed at least 98 people on Monday. Damascus, killed at least 98 people on Monday. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights says it was the deadliest day in three years in the area known as Eastern Ghouta. The Syrian Civil Defense, also known as White Helmets, said the shelling and airstrikes killed 98 and that some people are still under the rubble. The Guardian reported that four hospitals were bombed. The Observatory says 20 children and 15 women were among those killed on Monday. A doctor described the scene to The Guardian. “A little while ago a child came to me who was blue in the face and barely breathing, his mouth filled with sand. I emptied it with my hands. I don’t think they had what we do in any of the medical textbooks. A wounded child breathing with lungs of sand,” he said. You get a child, a year old, that they saved from the rubble and is breathing sand, and you don’t know who he is. All these humanitarian and rights organizations, all that is nonsense. So is terrorism. What is a greater terrorism than killing civilians with all sorts of weapons? Is this a war? It’s not a war. It’s called a massacre.” The targeted suburbs have been subjected to weeks-long bombardment that has killed and wounded hundreds of people. The Guardian, citing local counts, reported that more than 700 people have been killed in three months. Opposition activists say government forces have brought in reinforcements in preparation for a wider offensive on the area — the last main rebel stronghold near Damascus.
  15. We are quickly approaching the day when people who suffer from the most common causes of vision loss and blindness, such as macular degeneration, glaucoma, cataracts, corneal visual impairment, diabetic retinopathy, and even near and far-sightedness can kiss goodbye to their glasses or contact lenses and even forget about considering Lasik operations... This is thanks to a breakthrough from a retired United States Marine Corps along with a medical researcher, with over 26 years experience, that is going to change everything we thought we knew about deteriorating vision... No more corrective lenses or dangerous eye operations! Would you be willing to try a "Delicious Smoothie" that could stop and even reverse the problem of deterioration in your vision naturally? Mr. Bill Campbell, a retired Sergeant in the United States Marine Corps, in a brave (and lucky) attempt to save his wife from going blind discovered a remote Aboriginal army unit deep in the Australian Outback. The eyesight of these Aboriginal is up to FOUR TIMES better than ours (all because of their diet). Against all odds he was able, with the help of Bunji, an Aboriginal soldier and independent medical researcher, to develop a natural recipe that is up to 3 TIMES MORE POWERFUL than those consumed by the Aboriginal. This recipe is now clinically proven for reversing even the worst cases of visual impairment and also protect against devastating eye diseases and blindness for life. He said that he just couldn't see his wife becoming blind, losing her independence, and becoming more and more depressed. He wanted to find a better future for her. Now, after months of extensive research, study and experiments later, David Lancaster, the independent medical researcher has discovered a surprisingly simple way to turn the ancient Aboriginal recipe to a simple recipe that can be made at home and that actually can reverse even the worst cases of visual impairment and protect against devastating eye diseases and blindness for life, giving you back the perfect 20/20 vision. This new method was met with harsh criticism from the optometry industry, but he was never criticized by those who actually try it; most of them experienced success in just a few weeks. 93% of the participants in the trials achieved 20/20 vision while the rest reported dramatic improvements in their vision. Bill says that this method has proven results, and these results can speak for themselves. By now you’re probably wondering why you’ve never heard of this method. The answer is pretty simple really; the 36 billion dollar optometry industry will never tell you that there’s a quick, easy and natural way to restore your vision, because almost nobody would ever need a pair of glasses ever again! The optometry industry NEVER attempt to get to the root cause of the problem in order to actually make your eyesight better – because that would destroy their business model! Even though Mr. Campbell was heavily pressured by Big optometry companies to let the issue go, he went ahead and created this presentation to let people around the world know that they can make a change and free themselves from the failing eyesight. There has been quite a shocking response to the presentation, which has been shared and seen by many eye vision communities thanks to the power of the internet. Some viewers are outraged over the information being suppressed and hidden, while others are just happy to find out that their lives can improve significantly and they can get achieve 20/20 vision again. Bill is keen to stress that everyone can follow this method. He says that you would be surprised how powerful these ingredients when consumed at the right time and dosage each day. Of course, viewers must exercise common sense and check their eye vision regularly. This video could be pulled down any moment, so make sure you click on it and watch all of it if it’s still up for you.
  16. TEHRAN, Iran – Iranian state television is airing the first images of the site of an airplane crash in southern Iran that killed 65 people. The footage aired on Tuesday shows the plane crash site against the side of a snow-covered mountain near Yasuj, some 780 kilometers, or 485 miles, south of Tehran, Iran's capital from which the flight took off on Sunday. The tail of the plane could be seen in the footage. Separately, Iran's Revolutionary Guard released a still image of the site captured by one of its drones, which it said showed corpses in the snow. The Aseman Airlines ATR-72, a twin-engine turboprop used for short-distance regional flying, went down on Sunday in foggy weather. All on board Flight EP3704 were killed, including 59 passengers and six crew members.
  17. WARSAW, Poland – The European Union's top advocate says Poland has infringed environmental laws with its massive logging of trees in one of Europe's last pristine forests. The opinion published Tuesday by Advocate General Yves Bot could bring a ruling from the EU's Court of Justice against Poland's actions in the Bialowieza Forest a step nearer. Observers say the opinions from the advocate general are often adopted in final rulings. Poland's new Environment Minister Henryk Kowalczyk said the government will abide by any ruling. In 2016, the previous minister authorized massive logging in the forest, saying he was fighting an outbreak of bark beetle infestation. Environmentalists and EU experts say the felling of trees destroys rare animal habitats and plants, in violation of regulations. They brought the case before the court last year.
  18. LONDON – Britain's top Brexit official says his country wants to lead a "race to the top" in global standards, in a speech aimed at allaying European fears of a deregulated, laissez-faire U.K. economy. Brexit Secretary David Davis said Tuesday in Vienna that Brexit won't lead to "an Anglo-Saxon race to the bottom, with Britain plunged into a 'Mad Max'-style world borrowed from dystopian fiction." Davis is touring European capitals as Britain tries to persuade EU leaders to strike new deals on trade and security with the U.K. Britain wants to retain close economic ties with the EU after it leaves in March 2019, while also becoming free to strike new trade deals around the world. But EU leaders warn Britain can't have both freedom from the bloc's regulations and frictionless trade.
  19. DHAKA, Bangladesh – Former Bangladesh Prime Minister Khaleda Zia has appealed a five-year prison sentence in a corruption case. In their appeal, defense lawyers argued that the verdict was politically motivated and influenced by the government, an allegation authorities have denied. The conviction means that Zia, the opposition leader and archrival of the current prime minister, could be barred from running in December national elections. Zia was convicted of embezzling some $250,000 in donations meant for an orphanage trust established when she first became prime minister in 1991. Zia faces more than 30 other charges, ranging from corruption to sedition. Bangladesh politics are deeply fractious, with current Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and Zia ruling the country alternately since 1991, when democracy was restored.
  20. The Oslo District Court has effectively given a Danish law firm the go-ahead to target up to 21,804 potential pirates with cash settlement demands. Njord Law ran into trouble at the Supreme Court last year when it was found that its evidence against alleged pirates failed to show serious levels of infringement. This time around it has clearly learned from its earlier experiences. Last January it was revealed that after things had become tricky in the US, the copyright trolls behind the action movie London Has Fallen were testing out the Norwegian market. Reports emerged of letters being sent out to local Internet users by Danish law firm Njord Law, each demanding a cash payment of 2,700 NOK (around US$345). Failure to comply, the company claimed, could result in a court case and damages of around $12,000. The move caused outrage locally, with consumer advice groups advising people not to pay and even major anti-piracy groups distancing themselves from the action. However, in May 2017 it appeared that progress had been made in stopping the advance of the trolls when another Njord Law case running since 2015 hit the rocks. The law firm previously sent a request to the Oslo District Court on behalf of entertainment company Scanbox asking ISP Telenor to hand over subscribers’ details. In May 2016, Scanbox won its case and Telenor was ordered to hand over the information. On appeal, however, the tables were turned when it was decided that evidence supplied by the law firm failed to show that sharing carried out by subscribers was substantial. Undeterred, Njord Law took the case all the way to the Supreme Court. The company lost when a panel of judges found that the evidence presented against Telenor’s customers wasn’t good enough to prove infringement beyond a certain threshold. But Njord Law still wasn’t done. More than six months on, the ruling from the Supreme Court only seems to have provided the company with a template. If the law firm could show that the scale of sharing exceeds the threshold set by Norway’s highest court, then disclosure could be obtained. That appears to be the case now. In a ruling handed down by the Oslo District Court in January, it’s revealed that Njord Law and its partners handed over evidence which shows 23,375 IP addresses engaged in varying amounts of infringing behavior over an extended period. The ISP they have targeted is being kept secret by the court but is believed to be Telenor. Using information supplied by German anti-piracy outfit MaverickEye (which is involved in numerous copyright troll cases globally), Njord Law set out to show that the conduct of the alleged pirates had been exceptional for a variety of reasons, categorizing them variously (but non-exclusively) as follows: – IP addresses involved in BitTorrent swarm sizes greater than 10,000 peers/pirates – IP addresses that have shared at least two of the plaintiffs’ movies – IP addresses making available the plaintiffs’ movies on at least two individual days – IP addresses that made available at least ten movies in total – IP addresses that made available different movies on at least ten individual days – IP addresses that made available movies from businesses and public institutions While rejecting some categories, the court was satisfied that 21,804 IP addresses of the 23,375 IP addresses presented by Njord Law met or exceeded the criteria for disclosure. It’s still not clear how many of these IP addresses identify unique subscribers but many thousands are expected. “For these users, it has been established that the gravity, extent, and harm of the infringement are so great that consideration for the rights holder’s interests in accessing information identifying the [allegedly infringing] subscribers is greater than the consideration of the subscribers’,” the court writes in its ruling. “Users’ confidence that their private use of the Internet is protected from public access is a generally important factor, but not in this case where illegal file sharing has been proven. Nor has there been any information stating that the offenders in the case are children or anything else which implies that disclosure of information about the holder of the subscriber should be problematic.” While the ISP (Telenor) will now have to spend time and resources disclosing its subscribers’ personal details to the law firm, it will be compensated for its efforts. The Oslo District Court has ordered Njord Law to pay costs of NOK 907,414 (US$115,822) plus NOK 125 (US$16.00) for every IP address and associated details it receives. The decision can be appealed but when contacted by Norwegian publication Nettavisen, Telenor declined to comment on the case. There is now the question of what Njord Law will do with the identities it obtains. It seems very likely that it will ask for a sum of money to make a potential lawsuit go away but it will still need to take an individual subscriber to court in order to extract payment, if they refuse to pay. This raises the challenge of proving that the subscriber is the actual infringer when it could be anyone in a household. But that battle will have to wait until another day. The full decision of the Oslo District Court can be found here (Norwegian)
  21. GOOGLE TRANSLATION: OPERATION "PETITIONS" Who wants to take a USB 3.0 Hard Drive from a Tera? Well to work it out. Forum text: The Dopplerteam has developed the brilliant idea of giving an external HDD to some user. More than a gift will be a prize. The semipaso is a shabby one. He told me: - Do something, they will not take it in the face. It would be good! ... So, the uploader that fulfills the most requests during the month of March will send it to his house. Again the semipaso: Do not even think about sending it full of music from the tracker !!! - There is no one who can with these people In case of a tie, the completed requests of each uploader will be evaluated as follows: - External ripping 1 point. - Rip own 2 points. If there is still a tie, the seniority of the completed requests of each uploader will be assessed, adding the result to the previous valuation: - The oldest request gets 3 points. - The second oldest 2 points. - The third oldest 1 point. If still there is still a tie the semi tells me that like Solomon, we split it in half. I have sent it to take for ... One for each one. eye! Be attentive to the Petitions because surely a lot more will be created during that month. Good luck to you all.
  22. sorry, you were right, here are a little different as elsewhere, as a read under section about what goes in tracker news.
  23. Tracker news was only for private tracker news, other news about bittorrent world and piracy goes in this section ( torrentworld discussion ), so you see you make wrong posts. I will always put those message here regardless if you put them in tracker news, which is wrong way.
  24. Kära medlemmar. Vet inte riktigt hur man ska sammanfatta året ordentligt. Det har varit ett hårt år för oss i Norden. Vi har Rarat som åkte ner med stor sorg och saknad naturligtvis. Sedan åkte Hounddawgs ner och infility samt ett gäng andra trackers. Ett stort slag för oss pirater som vill få tag i det senaste inom film och serier m.m. Det är bara att bita ihop och gå vidare. Inom Superbits har vi vuxit till oss och blivit en stor tracker tack vare det dramatiska som har hänt. Vi har erbjudit alla ett hem under en viss tid och många har tagit chansen att kommit hit. *Det har tillkommit flera kategorier *Tillkommit en P2P avdelning *Ladda upp knappen har kommit till på varje avdelning. *Vi har blivit några flera staff-medlemmar under året som har gått. *Går att ladda upp subs till de Nordiska språket samt Engelska. *Det syns klart och tydligt vad en film eller serier innehåller för subs samt ljudspråk. *Tillkommit flera genre inom musikdelen. *Syns även vilka genre som en viss serie eller film tillhör. *Förbättrat sökfunktionen. *Vi har även en egen Irc-Server Säkert en hel del vi har missat att informera er om. Ni kan väl dela med er av eran erfarenhet från det gångna året. Med allt detta vill vi från Staff tacka er medlemmar för det gångna året, utan er hade detta inte var möjligt.Vi firar detta med Fri leech till Söndag 25/2 23.59. Grattis Superbits på 2 årsdagen! GOOGLE TRANSLATION: Dear Members. Do not really know how to summarize the year properly. It has been a hard year for us in the Nordic region. We have Rarat who went down with great sorrow and missing of course. Then Hounddawgs went down and infility as well as a bunch of other trackers. A big blow for us pirates who want to get the latest in movies and series etc. Just biting and moving on. In Superbits, we have grown to become a big tracker thanks to the dramatic events that have happened. We have offered everyone a home for a certain time and many have taken the opportunity to come here. * There have been several categories * Added a P2P department * Upload button has been added to each department. * We have become a few more staff members during the year that have passed. * Can upload subs to the Nordic language and English. * It clearly shows what a movie or series contains for subs as well as audio languages. * Added several genres within the music section. * Also, see what genre a particular series or movie belongs to. * Improved search function. * We also have our own Irc Server Certainly, we have missed to inform you. You can share your experience with the past year. With all this, we would like from Staff to thank you for members of the past year, but this would not be possible. We celebrate this with Fri leech until Sunday 25/2 23.59. Congratulations Superbits on 2 anniversary!
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