Anonymous ID: 5ccc0e Oct. 11, 2023, 7:44 p.m. No.19718730   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>9399

China's State Media Accused of Spreading Anti-Israel Disinformation

By Micah McCartney On 10/11/23 at 11:37 AM EDT

As Israeli strikes in the Gaza Strip continue after the attacks and kidnappings carried out by Hamas militants over the weekend, Chinese state-run media has spread the unverified rumor that Israeli forces are using white phosphorus bombs against civilians in a manner that contravenes international law.

More than 1,600 combined Israelis and Palestinians have reportedly been killed since Hamas launched attacks on Saturday, according to the Associated Press, and hundreds of others have been injured. Israel has been conducting airstrikes on the sealed-off and densely populated Gaza Strip after the deadliest Palestinian militant attack in its history. Hamas, which is funded and armed by Iran, is sworn to Israel's destruction.

A post by the China Internet Information Center web portal, run by Beijing's propaganda office, surfaced Tuesday accusing Israel of deploying phosphorus munitions in densely populated parts of Gaza. The post repeated the claims of media such as the Tasnim News Agency, which is associated with Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, and included photos allegedly showing phosphorus showering down upon Gaza rooftops.

A user on X, formerly Twitter, said that two photos were from Israeli actions against Hamas two and seven years ago.

Newsweek confirmed that the other two images were not captured in Gaza but in Syria. One is an Agence France-Presse file photo taken in Damascus in 2018, and one is from a video of an apparent phosphorus attack in Aleppo in 2016.

The Chinese internet is known for its fast-acting, hypervigilant censors when it comes to topics the Chinese Communist Party deems sensitive, often deleting offending posts within minutes. However, disinformation that supports the party line is often left alone or even actively promoted.

Anti-Israel and antisemitic rhetoric has become prevalent on China's insular social media in recent years, in part because of Israel's close association with the U.S. and the West. U.S. officials have complained that China has not gone for enough to condemn Hamas for launching its latest attacks.

Though the post has since been taken down from the China Internet Center page, the damage is done for the "hundreds of thousands of Chinese netizens who'd seen it," tweeted Tuvia Gering, a researcher at the Tel Aviv University-affiliated Institute for National Security Studies.

The post remains elsewhere on the Chinese social media app Weibo, including on the account of the nationalist Guancha news outlet, which boasts roughly 2.5 million followers.

Though mainly used to obscure the positions of friendly forces, white phosphorus is hazardous to the human body, causing burns, intense pain, blistering, and even organ damage and death if exposed to a substantial amount.

A U.N. protocol on the 1980 Convention on Prohibitions or Restrictions on the Use of Certain Conventional Weapons prohibits the use of phosphorus and other corrosive chemicals in highly populated civilian areas.

The Israeli authorities previously admitted to using white phosphorus munitions against Hezbollah in 2006 and in the 22-day offensive against Hamas in Gaza that started in December 2008. They denied using it in civilian areas.

Though the country is not a signatory to the U.N. protocol, the Israel Defense Forces has said it has taken steps to avoid future phosphorus-related civilian casualties.

The Gaza Strip is one of the most densely populated areas on Earth, with more than 15,000 people per square mile.

Newsweek reached out to the Israeli Ministry of Defense for comment.

https://www.newsweek.com/china-social-media-israel-gaza-strip-hamas-war-1833781

Anonymous ID: 5ccc0e Oct. 11, 2023, 7:54 p.m. No.19718815   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>8861

Internet companies report biggest-ever denial of service operation

October 11, 2023 โ€” 02:27 pm EDT

By Raphael Satter

WASHINGTON, Oct 11 (Reuters) - Internet companies Google, Amazon and Cloudflare say they have weathered the internet's largest-known denial of service attack and are sounding the alarm over a new technique they warn could easily cause widespread disruption.

Alphabet Inc owned Google said in a blog post published Tuesday that its cloud services had parried an avalanche of rogue traffic more than seven times the size of the previous record-breaking attack thwarted last year.

Internet protection company Cloudflare Inc NET said the attack was "three times larger than any previous attack we've observed." Amazon Inc's AMZN web services division also confirmed being targeted by "a new type of distributed denial of service (DDoS) event."

Denial of service is among the web's most basic form of attack and it works by simply overwhelming targeted servers with a firehose of bogus requests for data, making it impossible for legitimate web traffic to get through.

As the online world has developed, so too has the power of denial of service operations, some of which can generate millions of bogus requests per second. The recent attacks measured by Google, Cloudflare and Amazon - which began in late August and which the tech giants say are ongoing - were capable of generating hundreds of millions of request per second.

Google said in its blog post that only two minutes of one such attack "generated more requests than the total number of article views reported by Wikipedia during the entire month of September 2023."

All three companies said the supersized attacks were enabled by a weakness in HTTP-two - a newer version of the HTTP network protocol that underpins the World Wide Web - that makes servers particularly vulnerable to rogue requests.

The firms urged companies to update their web servers to ensure that they do not remain vulnerable.

None of the three companies said who was responsible for the denial of service attacks, which have historically been difficult to attribute.

https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/internet-companies-report-biggest-ever-denial-of-service-operation

Anonymous ID: 5ccc0e Oct. 11, 2023, 9:14 p.m. No.19719388   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>9397 >>9408

>>19719348

>Learn to refresh, idiot boy.

If you were doing your job properly then you would have to resort to back tracking and editing a previous post derelict baker

 

>>19719204

>If you never been here from a long time

ESL

> from time to time

practically every fucking night

 

bread title always "comfy"

an indication both of baker's level of satisfaction with depth of subversive infiltration and an acronym

COMFY Communist Foreign Yes (Y)

Anonymous ID: 5ccc0e Oct. 11, 2023, 9:37 p.m. No.19719506   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

>>19719492

>Just search for Ammonium Nitrate theft from May of this year

Was searching for car crash into San Francisco Chinese Consulate two days ago today. Instead found car crash into Beijing US Embassy 8 years ago. Which search engine you use can really make a difference.