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In the video 2 players said you destroy lm.. About the other guy maybe he broke his lm. ( If you have full demo. put it here ) Also you didn't get a ban, so why did you submit for request unban?3 points
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The clip is cut and not complete. You had Memo with you when you broke his laser, and he told that in the public chat, and you went to another place as shown in the video. You did not publish the full clip. You recorded it after you broke it, and you know that very well. You broke it and went to another place to hide, and look at chat. Memo’s words in the Arabic language will be understood by all Arab admins he say your name in chat and told you don't broke my LM Memo said "yzm fajer al laser" that's mean he broke the LM Let the arab admins who was in the game talk because they was watching everything2 points
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★Nickname: CoD @ SSS ★CSBD username: @Codrut1001 ★Rank: Administrator ★Nickname: SaFa7 ★CSBD username: @SaFa7 ★Rank: Administrator ★Please make sure to read the rules and make sure to respect them ( Admin Rules ) ( Player Rules ) (A Guide for New Admins) ★ Don't forget to create your (Banlist) and (Registration)2 points
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You are in the wrong section The video not clear, we can't see what happened before. Report #Rejected! T/C.1 point
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The Department of Work and Pensions (DWP) has revealed plans to widen its use of the technology to tackle fraud. Campaigners say more information is needed to ensure the system does not make biased referrals for benefit investigations. The department insists it has safeguards in place, and it plans to share more information with MPs. The DWP has put new technology at the heart of its plan to tackle fraud, which went up during Covid when some in-person checks were suspended. An estimated £8.3bn was overpaid in benefits this year, down from the year before but double the £4.1bn in the last year before the pandemic. Public sector urged to be open about algorithm use How are universal credit rules changing? Since last year, it has used an algorithm to flag potentially fraudulent claims for Universal Credit (UC) advances. These are interim payments for those in urgent need, which are then repaid monthly. It uses machine learning, a widely-used form of artificial intelligence (AI), to analyse historical benefits data to predict how likely a new claim is to be fraudulent or incorrect. Claims scored as risky are then referred to civil servants to investigate, with payments put on hold until the referral has been dealt with. In its annual accounts last week, the DWP disclosed plans to pilot "similar" models to review cases in four areas with high overpayment rates, including undeclared earnings from self-employment and incorrect housing costs. A date for the full deployment of the models has not been given by the department. 'Serious risks' The department says it continually monitors the algorithms to guard against the "inherent risk" of unintended bias, and says caseworkers are not told when cases have been flagged by the model. But campaign group Privacy International said it had "ongoing concerns" over a "persistent lack of transparency" over how it was being used. The group told the BBC the DWP had failed to provide "substantive information" about the tools it is using. It added that an outside body should be handed an oversight role, given the "well-documented serious risks to fundamental rights" from decisions informed by algorithms. Child Poverty Action Group said it was alarmed by plans for greater use of machine learning, adding "key flaws" in DWP's digitalisation approach had not yet been addressed. "Expanding the technology while ignoring calls for transparency and rigorous monitoring of and protections against bias will risk serious harm to vulnerable families," added chief executive Alison Garnham. Transparency 'challenge' Gareth Davies, the boss of the National Audit Office, the UK's spending watchdog, has also urged the department to publish details of any potential bias in its machine learning tools to "improve public confidence" in the systems. In his statement on the accounts, he said the DWP had conceded that its ability to test for unfairness relating to protected characteristics - such as age, race and disability - was "currently limited". This was partly because claimants did not always respond to optional questions on their background, but also because certain information had been taken out of its systems for security reasons, he wrote. The department says it is taking steps to integrate the data in its systems soon, and has committed to reporting to MPs annually on how AI-powered tools are affecting different groups of claimants. It also argues it faces a "challenge" in balancing calls for more transparency with a desire not to "tip off" potential fraudsters by revealing too much information about how it identifies potential fraud. The department is expected to respond to the NAO's recommendations later in the year. Labour has also backed the use of AI to tackle fraud, with shadow work and pensions secretary Jonathan Ashworth saying it could help tackle criminals "taking the taxpayer for a ride". In a speech on Tuesday to the Social Market Foundation, he added that the department's use of the technology had yet to be "properly scaled". The party says it is committed to safeguards to prevent bias in the use of algorithms, although it is yet to set out detailed proposals https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-661336651 point
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huge Burmese python has been caught in Florida with a clutch of 60 eggs that were "just days from being laid." Hunter Mike Kimmel captured and killed the 16-foot-long (5 meters) snake in the Everglades, where the invasive species has been wreaking havoc on local ecosystems for decades. "A python this size can eat anything in the Everglades, as I've proven with the multiple adult alligators I've rescued from being eaten by pythons (3 separate times)." Kimmel wrote in an Instagram post after the catch. A huge Burmese python has been caught in Florida with a clutch of 60 eggs that were "just days from being laid." Hunter Mike Kimmel captured and killed the 16-foot-long (5 meters) snake in the Everglades, where the invasive species has been wreaking havoc on local ecosystems for decades. "A python this size can eat anything in the Everglades, as I've proven with the multiple adult alligators I've rescued from being eaten by pythons (3 separate times)." Kimmel wrote in an Instagram post after the catch. One of the reasons the po[CENSORED]tion is difficult to control is the number of offspring they produce. Burmese pythons mate in spring, with each sexually mature female laying up to 100 eggs about three months after mating. After the eggs are laid, the female coils around them to incubate them for six to eight weeks, until they are ready to hatch. A study published 2016 found the number of Burmese python eggs that go on to successfully hatch was 77%. In 2022, researchers caught the biggest Burmese python ever found in the Everglades — an 18-foot-long (5.5 m) behemoth weighing 215 pounds (98 kilograms). It carried 122 egg follicles — spherical structures that mature into eggs after fertilization. And in April this year, a team led by the U.S. Geological Survey caught a python that had laid 96 eggs in one go — setting a new record for Florida, New Scientist reported. https://www.livescience.com/animals/snakes/enormous-burmese-python-killed-in-florida-everglades-was-about-to-lay-60-eggs1 point
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report published by the Turkish newspaper "Yeni Akit" stated that tensions rose in Kosovo after the local elections held in May, and reached their peak on September 24, with an attack carried out by Serb militants. Writer Ayhan Demir said that the attack that took place in the village of Banska in the city of Zveshan in northern Kosovo, caused the death of a policeman and the injury of another. The clashes that continued for hours also resulted in the killing of gunmen and the arrest of two of them, while the other gunmen were able to flee to Serbia through the areas. Mountainous. The writer stated that the Serbian groups - which he described as terrorist - had been launching rapid attacks (hit and run) since the first decade of the 21st century in the north of the country, but the decisive interventions of the police of the Special Forces in Kosovo spoiled the goals of all those attacks. Not a normal attack He continued that the operation launched by the Kosovo police and NATO peacekeeping forces on the Orthodox Monastery of Banska (where the militants were hiding) revealed that “the matter was not just a terrorist attack,” as the operation resulted in the confiscation of weapons worth 5 million euros, and many This ammunition is of the type that can only be found in army depots. For example, a document was found proving that the seized grenade launcher belonged to the Serbian army. According to the writer, it is believed that the Serbs transported this ammunition using ambulance-like vehicles and forces belonging to the NATO peacekeeping force, wondering, why were the Kosovo intelligence services not aware of this? The report stated that Kosovo's border with Serbia is rugged and mountainous, and this makes it very difficult to control the entire border line. In addition, Serbs use different methods to cross the border. Kosovar intelligence and NATO peacekeeping forces, of course, learned of the efforts to arm the Serbs. Kosovo Prime Minister Albin Kurti has constantly warned the international community against arming the Serbs. However, little attention has been paid to these warnings. Serbian support According to the writer, it is clear that the attack was carried out with the full support and planning of the Serbian state, and there are many signs in this direction. He added that the declaration by Serbia and the Serbian List party operating in Kosovo of mourning for the militants who were killed in Kosovo is the greatest evidence of who is behind the operation, as if to say, “Be careful here: the mourning is not for the Kosovo policeman who was martyred, but for the Serbian terrorists.” He continued, that days before the attack, the militants received training at the Basulyanski Livadi and Kopaonik military bases, affiliated with the Serbian army. In addition, British MP Alicia Cairns stated - two months before the attack - that Serbia was using religious sites in northern Kosovo as weapons depots. The pictures published by the Kosovo authorities show that Milan Radovic was the leader of the “Serbian terrorist group,” according to the writer, who said that Radovic, vice-president of the Serbian List Party and a member of the Kosovo Parliament, and nicknamed the “Baron of the North,” was moving on the orders of Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic. It controls areas inhabited by the Serb majority in Kosovo. Radovic was also accused in the case of the murder of Serbian politician Oliver Ivanovic, who was killed on January 16, 2018, and he was also included on a blacklist from the United States and the United Kingdom. As for Bojan Milojevic, who was killed during the attack, he was a bodyguard for Serbian intelligence director Aleksandar Volin, in 2013. He also actively participated in the election campaign of Serbian President Vucic. According to the writer, what he described as the “terrorist group” that carried out the attack consisted of people who received professional military training. In addition, this attack was the result of a large preparation, as Serbia seeks to create conflict zones in northern Kosovo, and wishes to spread the image that the Republic of Kosovo is an unsafe country. Ultimately, it wants to separate the north of the country from Kosovo completely. The danger is not over yet According to the writer, many churches in the north of the country may contain similar ammunition stores, and in addition, there are many armed formations; Such as: Wagner and others in the region, under the control of the state of Serbia. However, Serbia's main strategy is not to enter Kosovo with tanks and heavy weapons, but rather to create a corridor to provide weapons and soldiers in the north of the country, create conflict zones, and then pass the theory of "Serb uprising in Kosovo against the 'injustice' and 'terrorism' to which they were subjected" to The international community, and then the final annexation of the region. The writer concluded in his report that the Serbs in Kosovo do not have any problem with the Albanians. The Serbs in Kosovo need protection from “acts of terrorism carried out by Serbia, and they do not need protection from the state of Kosovo.” https://www.aljazeera.net/news/presstour/2023/10/5/كاتب-تركي-صربيا-تلعب-بالنار-في-البلقان1 point
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★Nickname: Alien! ★CSBD username: @Alien ★Rank: Administrator ★Please make sure to read the rules and make sure to respect them ( Admin Rules ) ( Player Rules ) (A Guide for New Admins) ★Enter groups Required:https://csblackdevil.com/forums/forum/19058-~●-social-groups-●~/1 point
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An armed man demanding to speak to the Wisconsin governor was arrested in the state capitol, posted bail, and returned - only to be arrested again. The shirtless man, who had a holstered handgun, was taken into custody on Wednesday afternoon for illegally carrying a firearm in the building. But he posted bail and returned that evening with an assault-style rifle. Governor Tony Evers, a Democrat, was not in his capitol office at the time, according to a state official. But the governor's office itself declined to comment, telling the BBC "we do not comment on specific security threats or the governor's security detail". Mr Evers had been present in the Capitol earlier on Wednesday to meet individuals testifying against a series of bills. Speaking to reporters at an event in Oregon on Thursday, he said: "The capitol police took control of the situation so it's over, but it's always something you don't want to see happen." "I never, ever talk about what my security detail does or what they're planning on doing. But anytime something like this happens, obviously they re-evaluate," he added. The armed man approached Mr Evers' office around 15:00 EST (19:00 GMT) on Wednesday, according to Tatyana Warrick, a spokeswoman for the Wisconsin Department of Administration. She said he had a leashed dog with him when he appeared at the security desk outside the governor's office and refused to leave until he met Mr Evers. A single police officer sits at the desk on the building's first floor, which also houses a conference room and offices for the attorney general. The public has free access to the capitol building and there are no metal detectors at entryways. Weapons can be brought into the building if they are concealed and the carrier holds a valid permit, but the man was carrying it openly and did not have a permit. _131342229_gettyimages-1230643043.jpg.we But after being booked into the local Dane County Jail, he posted bail and returned again to the capitol grounds just before 22:00 EST carrying a loaded AK 47-style rifle. The building closes at 19:00 EST. Officers spoke to him, asked to search his backpack and found "a collapsible police-style baton, which is illegal as the man did not have a valid concealed carry permit," Ms Warrick said. The would-be assailant was taken into custody a second time on Wednesday night for a psychiatric evaluation "based on concerning statements", she said. Ms Warrick could not confirm to the BBC if the man remains in custody. Police for the city of Madison also did not confirm the man's whereabouts, but said in a police report: "The subject was taken into protective custody and conveyed to a local hospital." The man has not yet been publicly identified, but capitol police named the man in a bulletin sent to lawmakers and their staff on Thursday with his photo attached. Police said he told them he "would continue coming to the capitol until he spoke to the governor about domestic abuse towards men". They added that he "likely has access to a large amount of weapons and is comfortable using them", and that lawmakers should "use extreme caution when in contact" with him. No court charges appeared to have been filed against the man as of Thursday. Evers has become a target of violent threats Public and elected officials across the US currently face a rising number of threats in violence. They include high-profile figures, such as governors and Supreme Court judges, as well as lesser-known individuals like local school board members. Mr Evers was elected Wisconsin's governor in 2018 and was re-elected last year, both times by narrow margins in a state that is closely contested between the two parties. The former educator's governorship has effectively served as a one-man veto against several pieces of Republican-backed legislation. In June, a Madison resident was sentenced to one year in prison for making dozens of threats, via voicemail, email, Facebook and other methods, against Mr Evers and other state officials. His warnings to Mr Evers were of a highly graphic nature, including messages that referred to the governor as a "dead man walking" and "a marked man". Thursday's incident comes more than a year after Mr Evers appeared on the hit list of a gunman previously accused of zip-tying and fatally shooting a retired county judge at his Wisconsin home. The hit list with Mr Evers' name on it also included those of Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and Michigan's Democratic governor Gretchen Whitmer, the target of a kidnapping plot in 2020. https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-670224041 point
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A workman died when a wall collapsed at a house in Manchester. Police, fire and ambulance services all attended the "workplace accident" in Lloyd Street at about 14:50 BST on Saturday. Attempts were made to save the man, who was in his 40s, but he died at the scene. A spokesman for Greater Manchester Police said officers were called to "reports of concerns for welfare of a man" at an address. "It was established that a man in his 40s was involved in a workplace accident and despite the best efforts of emergency services, he was sadly pronounced dead at the scene," the spokesman added. "Enquiries are ongoing at this stage." The Health and Safety Executive confirmed it had been made aware of the incident and said it was "liaising with police and making initial enquiries into the circumstances". link : https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-manchester-668337701 point
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The US has issued a sanctions waiver for banks to transfer $6bn (£4.8bn) of frozen Iranian funds from South Korea to Qatar, paving the way for the release of five Americans held by Iran. Secretary of State Antony Blinken told Congress that the money would provide "limited benefit" to Iran as it could only be used for humanitarian trade. He also confirmed that five Iranians detained in the US would be freed as part of the prisoner exchange deal. Republicans condemned the transfer. One senator accused President Joe Biden of paying a "ransom to the world's worst state sponsor of terrorism". Last month, US officials said four American-Iranian dual nationals had been taken out of Evin prison in Tehran and moved to house arrest. Three of the prisoners were named by a lawyer as Siamak Namazi, Emad Shargi and Morad Tahbaz, who also has British citizenship. The fourth was not identified, nor was the fifth, who was already under house arrest. Who are the dual nationals jailed in Iran? Tens of billions of dollars owed to Iran for oil and other exports are believed to have been frozen in bank accounts across the world since 2018, when then-President Donald Trump abandoned an international nuclear deal with Iran and reinstated US sanctions. The waiver issued by the US means that certain banks in Europe, Asia and the Middle East will not face punishment for moving the $6bn held in South Korea to Qatar's central bank. "Allowing these funds to be transferred from restricted Iranian accounts held in the [Republic of Korea] to accounts in Qatar for humanitarian trade is necessary to facilitate the release of these US citizens," Mr Blinken said in a letter to Congress on Monday. Last month, he stressed that Qatar had agreed to ensure the funds were used by Iran "strictly for humanitarian purposes and in a strictly controlled way". He also said Iran would not have direct access to the funds and there would be "significant oversight" from the US. Despite such assurances, the Republican chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee criticised the Biden administration for moving forward with what he called "its $6bn hostage deal". "The Americans held by Iran are innocent hostages who must be released immediately and unconditionally," Rep Michael McCaul said in a statement. "However, I remain deeply concerned that the administration's decision to waive sanctions to facilitate the transfer of $6 billion in funds for Iran, the world's top state sponsor of terrorism, creates a direct incentive for America's adversaries to conduct future hostage-taking." White House spokeswoman Adrienne Watson insisted that the waiver was only a "procedural step" in what remained "a sensitive and ongoing process". Iranian foreign ministry spokesman Nasser Kanani meanwhile expressed optimism that the prisoner swap would take place "soon". link : https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-667848171 point
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n the village of Ouirgane in the Atlas Mountains, residents gather on piles of debris around the home of a mother and daughter buried underneath. Like many mountain communities, Ouirgane suffered major losses in the earthquake that struck Morocco on Friday night. Buildings have been destroyed and most residents are now either sleeping in tents or have left. Police and rescue workers tell us more than 30 people died here. The cemetery is dotted with new graves covered in branches. For now, everyone is focused on the two missing women: Fatima and Hajar. They lived on the ground floor of a three-storey building in the centre of the village. It now tilts to one side and is surrounded by piles of rubble, and small traces of lives now destroyed: a teapot, a child's Disney rucksack, a floral scarf. Crowds gather around the building and pray for good news, as rescue workers use a sniffer dog to search for signs of life. Residents tell us they will not leave until Fatima and Hajar are found, dead or alive. "In our culture, we eat from the same plate. We share food and we share plates. We're a family," one man says, as a crowd around him nod in agreement. "They're our sisters," says another. Among the crowd is Fatima's sister-in-law Khadija, who lived in the top two floors of the building. She was in Marrakesh when the earthquake struck. She tells us that Fatima's husband was pulled from the debris but later died, while her young son is in hospital after spending hours trapped in the rubble. She says Fatima and Hajar, 40 and 17, had the "same nature", describing them as "peaceful" people. "Fatima never argued with anyone, or had problems with anyone," she tells me. "Hajar would keep to herself. She was shy. She was studying and was among the top students." But hopes of finding them alive are slim, and fade throughout the day. In the late afternoon, a body is found. Rescue workers move slowly and carefully as they take the body out of the rubble and onto an orange stretcher, covering it with blankets. It is Hajar, they say. They lift the stretcher and carry it through the streets towards a clearing in front of the local cemetery. The crowds follow solemnly behind. After the body is washed, the stretcher is placed on the ground, and the men file in rows behind it. And then they pray. After the burial, the crowds file back to the building, waiting for news on Fatima. No one we speak to now has any hope of finding her alive, but they say it is important that her body is recovered. Morocco earthquake movement mapped from space Why Morocco is wary of earthquake help from abroad 'We need help from whoever will give it' "Everyone underground here has been brought out - alive or dead. Fatima is the only one left," one man says. "I can't eat, I can't sleep, I can't drink until we take Fatima from underground." "The whole village needs to get her body out. It needs to happen today, not tomorrow," another man says as he walks back from the cemetery. Fatima's neighbour Said echoes this. "We can't do anything until we get her body out. Please God, let it be today." Among the crowds is rescue worker Mohamed Khoutari, who is taking a short break after days of searching through the rubble. "When we started we thought maybe they would be alive but with time we have realised it's not possible," he tells me. "There are no signs of life - no movement, no sound." But he says the workers must put the same effort into retrieving bodies as finding survivors. "I cannot move from here until we find Fatima," he says. As night falls, blankets are passed up to the search teams, and in low murmurs among the crowd, word spreads that Fatima's body has been found. She is moved onto a stretcher as the Muslim call to prayer rings out through the mountains. Khadija sobs, and is supported by family members. Residents again follow the stretcher through the streets towards the cemetery. When the burial is over, they return to makeshift tents, and those who have travelled from outside to help get in their cars and drive away. The streets fall quiet. But questions linger over how Ouirgane and other stricken communities can move forward. "I never imagined that I would see my neighbours pulled from the ground like this," Said says. "The problem now is the future of this region. What will the future of our village and the people here be?" link : https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-667857291 point