Afghanistan

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  • An American ISAF solider from team Apache of Task Force Geronimo, 4th Platoon Delaware of the United States Army,  collects biometric information from an Afghan villager in the village of Mans Kalay in Sabari, Khost district on August 4, 2012. ISAF has noted a surge in attacks in recent months since the start of the Taliban's annual summer offencive.

    Biometric devices sold on eBay reportedly contained sensitive US military data

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    12.27.2022

    German researchers who purchased biometric capture devices on eBay found their memory cards stored a US military database containing sensitive data.

  • Afghan immigrants land at a beach on the Greek island of Kos after crossing a portion of the south-eastern Aegean Sea between Turkey and Greece on a dinghy early May 27, 2015. Despite the bad weather at least a dingy with over thirty migrants made the dangerous voyage to Greece. REUTERS/Yannis Behrakis      TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY

    Airbnb doubles its pledge to house Afghan refugees

    by 
    Igor Bonifacic
    Igor Bonifacic
    09.23.2021

    With help from hosts and donors from across the US, Airbnb announced today it's prepared to house as many as 40,000 refugees temporarily.

  • Businessman using fingerprint scan. Fingerprint scan provides access with biometrics identification on the digital convergence. Technology, Security and identification concept.

    Privacy advocates raise concerns about US-built biometric system for Afghans

    by 
    Mariella Moon
    Mariella Moon
    09.01.2021

    Privacy advocates raise concerns about a biometric system containing Afghans' information the Taliban could use to target individuals.

  • This illustration picture taken on November 22, 2019, shows the logo of the online lodging service Airbnb displayed on a tablet in Paris. (Photo by Lionel BONAVENTURE / AFP) (Photo by LIONEL BONAVENTURE/AFP via Getty Images)

    Airbnb says you don't need to be a host to help it house Afghan refugees

    by 
    Kris Holt
    Kris Holt
    08.26.2021

    The company pledged to provide at least 20,000 refugees with a place to stay.

  • UKRAINE - 2021/05/20: In this photo illustration Facebook, Inc. logo seen displayed on a smartphone and in the background. (Photo Illustration by Igor Golovniov/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)

    Facebook launches tool to help people in Afghanistan lock down their accounts

    by 
    Karissa Bell
    Karissa Bell
    08.19.2021

    Facebook's introducing new tools to help people in Afghanistan lock down their accounts’ privacy settings.

  • LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM - AUGUST 18, 2021: Demonstrators including former interpreters for the British Army in Afghanistan protest in Parliament Square against Taliban and demand human rights in Afghanistan as MPs hold a debate on the crisis in Afghanistan in the House of Commons on August 18, 2021 in London, England. The British Parliament has been recalled for one day from summer recess as the Taliban regained control over Afghanistan and its capital Kabul in recent days following the withdrawal of international troops and the collapse of the Western-backed Afghan government. (Photo credit should read Wiktor Szymanowicz/Barcroft Media via Getty Images)

    Taliban content is the latest issue for social media companies

    by 
    Devindra Hardawar
    Devindra Hardawar
    08.18.2021

    While Facebook and Twitter are already struggling to handle vaccine misinformation and extremist content, there's an increased focus on how social networks are handling Taliban-related content, following America's sudden withdrawal from Afghanistan.

  • Shutterstock

    Apple's App Store is coming to 20 more countries

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    03.24.2020

    Apple is planning the largest expansion of its App Store since 2012 by adding 20 new countries, according to an article on its developer portal. The company asked developers to log into their accounts to accept the latest license terms so their apps will be available in those regions. Apple didn't say when the rollout would begin, but it asked devs to update their info by no later than April 10th.

  • Orlando Sentinel via Getty Images

    Recommended Reading: The making of Star Wars Galaxy's Edge

    by 
    Billy Steele
    Billy Steele
    11.23.2019

    A journey to Galaxy's Edge, the nerdiest place on Earth Adam Rogers, Wired By now, even people who aren't Star Wars fans have heard something about Galaxy's Edge: the massive and detailed new attraction at Disneyland. Wired spoke to "Imagineers" who created the 14-acre expansion at the park to offer a glimpse at the work that went into making it a reality.

  • holwichaikawee via Getty Images

    Quika promises free satellite internet for developing countries

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    01.15.2018

    Facebook's plans for free satellite internet access may have run into some... setbacks, but another company is promising to make that ubiquitous data a practical reality. Quika, a company led by the chief of satellite provider Talia, is launching a free satellite broadband service in the second quarter of 2018. It's promising speedy, low-latency Ka-band data in developing countries where income inequality and a lack of infrastructure (especially in rural areas) make conventional internet access impractical for most. Service will begin with Afghanistan, Iraq and most of Africa, but there are promises of more countries afterward.

  • AFP/Getty Images

    Afghanistan government wants to temporarily ban WhatsApp

    by 
    Mallory Locklear
    Mallory Locklear
    11.03.2017

    According to reports from the New York Times, Afghanistan is currently in the midst of a temporary WhatsApp ban. Yesterday, government letters to private telecommunications companies asking them to suspend the messaging service began making the rounds on social media. And while some customers of the government-owned communications company Salaam Telecom reported that WhatsApp and Telegram had both stopped working for them, private companies are reportedly still considering whether to comply with the government's request.

  • Montes-Bradley via Getty Images

    Afghanistan will soon have free mobile access to Wikipedia

    by 
    Rob LeFebvre
    Rob LeFebvre
    10.09.2017

    Afghanistan has been rapidly improving its technological infrastructure since the Taliban was ousted in 2001. A group of film historians in the country recently digitized films that had been saved from destruction during Taliban rule. An all-girl robotics team fought a recent travel ban and finally got the chance to compete in the US. And in 2010, the country moved ahead with plans for national electronic ID cards. Now, thanks to a partnership between regional provider Roshan and the Wikimedia Foundation, people in Afghanistan will get free access to Wikipedia via their phones for the next year.

  • Omar Sobhani / Reuters

    Afghanistan team digitizes films saved from Taliban destruction

    by 
    Swapna Krishna
    Swapna Krishna
    09.13.2017

    During the brutal reign of the Taliban rule in Afghanistan, which was in power from 1996–2001, popular entertainment such as films and music were banned. The Taliban systematically destroyed all the movies they could find, specifically targeting Afghanistan's state-run movie production company. They burned all the movie reels they could find before leaving, and tried to destroy generations of culture in the process.

  • a_Taiga via Getty Images

    Afghanistan’s all-girl teen robotics team denied entry to US

    by 
    Mallory Locklear
    Mallory Locklear
    06.30.2017

    Next month, the inaugural FIRST Global Challenge robotics competition will bring together high school teams from around the world. Taking place in Washington, DC, over 150 teams are set to participate. However, while the team from Afghanistan's robot will be there, the team itself won't because the US has denied their visa applications.

  • Library of Congress

    Library of Congress repatriates 163,000 files to Afghanistan

    by 
    Jessica Conditt
    Jessica Conditt
    09.22.2016

    The Library of Congress has completed a three-year project to digitize 163,000 documents relating to the cultural history of Afghanistan, and this week officials handed over these hard drives to the Afghan Minister of Information and Culture, Abdul Bari Jahani, and Abdul Wahid Wafa, Executive Director of the Afghanistan Centre at Kabul University. The collection will reside in 10 Afghan institutions, including the National Library of Afghanistan, National Archive of Afghanistan, American University of Afghanistan, Kabul University and Kandahar University. This concludes a project that began in January 2013 with a grant from the Carnegie Corporation of New York.

  • Government testing smart parachutes that stay on target

    by 
    Andrew Tarantola
    Andrew Tarantola
    01.15.2016

    GPS is not foolproof -- especially on the modern battlefield, where electronic warfare systems can interfere with the satellite guidance. And when packages miss their mark, soldiers often have to venture into hostile territory to retrieve them. That's why the US Army is developing a joint precision airdrop system, or JPADS, that guides equipment towards its target using only visual cues.

  • America's drone strike program needs a low-tech fix

    by 
    Andrew Tarantola
    Andrew Tarantola
    10.21.2015

    Last week, The Intercept released a trove of classified documents (provided by an unnamed source) relating to America's use of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) as weapons of assassination. These activities took place between 2011 and 2013, throughout both active combat areas in Iraq and Afghanistan and nations like Yemen and Pakistan. And while plenty of people are discussing the shortcomings of human-controlled UAVs, nobody's talking about how to fix them. Could the answer be more technology like the fully autonomous weapon and surveillance platforms that the Department of Defense (DoD) is developing? Or, when it comes to aerial assassinations, is less more?

  • Netflix is producing a satirical war movie starring Brad Pitt

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    06.08.2015

    Netflix has scored some big names for its exclusive content in the past, but its latest coup is one of its largest yet. The streaming video service is teaming up with Brad Pitt's Plan B Entertainment to produce War Machine, a satirical movie about the war in Afghanistan that will have Pitt playing a "rock star" general trying to juggle politics, the press and the realities of combat. The flick will reach Netflix sometime in 2016, although you'll also find it in "select" movie theaters that year if you have to see yet another Brad Pitt war movie on the silver screen.

  • Snowden documents reveal how the NSA searches voice calls

    by 
    Andrew Tarantola
    Andrew Tarantola
    05.05.2015

    The Intercept has released a new document from Edward Snowden's cache of government files describing how the NSA has been converting voice calls to searchable text documents for nearly a decade. The NSA has long monitored signals intelligence (SIGNIT) around the world (as is its primary function), especially in active combat zones like Afghanistan and Iraq as well as in Latin America. Traditionally, this sort of data gathering required that a live operator listen in on calls and translate them in real-time. However, the NSA has reportedly developed what it calls "Google for Voice"; an automated system that provides a rough but keyword searchable transcription. According to the documents, the NSA has also developed analytical programs and sophisticated algorithms to flag conversations for human review.

  • Wikileaks: US government recording every call from Afghanistan

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    05.23.2014

    When The Intercept revealed mass NSA "full-take" call recording in the Bahamas and other nations, it declined to name another, sensitive country, citing US concerns about violence. Now Wikileaks has claimed that the nation in question is Afghanistan and said the NSA is bluffing about any possible danger to folks there. In the Wikileaks blog, Julian Assange said that the US has made such statements before and it has never seen any evidence of increased violence following leaks. On the other hand, it's easy to see why the US government wouldn't want such information public, given its war against terrorists in Afghanistan. But Assange countered that the press has no obligation to protect a country like the US if it engages in "ongoing crimes" against an entire nation. He added that's especially true when such calls are sometimes used to target drone strikes, which often kill innocent civilians. The US government has yet to comment on the matter.

  • UK Ministry of Defence puts Black Hornet spy copter in Afghani skies

    by 
    Joseph Volpe
    Joseph Volpe
    02.04.2013

    It's been a few years since news of Prox Dynamics' Black Hornet mini-copter has swung our way. But now it appears the wee reconnaissance drones have moved out of the prototype phase and into the war zone. As part of the British government's £20 million contract with the Norway-based outfit and defense contractor Marlborough Communications, 160 of these camera-equipped spy copters have been commissioned, with a portion of those units employed by troops stationed in Afghanistan. That might seem like a huge sum to pay for a fleet of remote-controllable war toys, but these 4 x 1-inch copters do present a definite advantage: they can deliver full video and stills, ably maneuver in high winds and help navigate troops past "insurgent firing points" and open terrain. All of which has the Ministry of Defence quite pleased, even prompting one Minister to call the fleet of Black Hornets a "key component" of the MoD's current budget. That's not surprising really, considering the governmental arm's plans to pump nearly £20 billion into the development of similar tech for its ISS (Information Systems and Services) and ISTAR (Intelligence, Surveillance, Target Acquisition and Reconnaissance) programs. So, as of today, we have mini copters with cameras. But, tomorrow always brings the promise of lasers...