Conor McGregor, Khabib Nurmagomedov Suspended, Fined for UFC 229 Brawl

UFC lightweight champion Khabib Nurmagomedov holds the trophy belt during a news conference in Moscow, Russia, Monday, Nov. 26, 2018. The Russian professional mixed martial arts fighter Nurmagomedov, said he can imagine a reconciliation with Conor McGregor after the bitter feud around last month's title fight, but said he would like to fight Floyd Mayweather Jr. (AP Photo/Pavel Golovkin)

Pavel Golovkin/Associated Press

The punishments for Khabib Nurmagomedov and Conor McGregor were decided upon Tuesday in the wake of the post-fight brawl that took place after Nurmagomedov defeated McGregor at UFC 229 in October.

The Nevada Athletic Commission agreed to a $500,000 fine and a nine-month suspension for Nurmagomedov, per Lance Pugmire of the Los Angeles Times, though that suspension could potentially be reduced. 

Marc Raimondi @marc_raimondi

It would be a six-month suspension if Khabib does the PSA. The commission will have approval over the PSA and its distribution.

McGregor was fined $50,000 and suspended for six months, per Brett Okamoto of ESPN.com. Ariel Helwani of ESPN.com added McGregor would be cleared to return April 6, though Helwani added he was “hearing late spring/summer is more likely a timeframe for his return at this time.”

McGregor was also put on notice about the outlandish and insensitive nature of his pre-fight promoting style:

Brett Okamoto @bokamotoESPN

Right now, Nevada commission is essentially telling Conor McGregor, who is not here, if he continues to ramp up his pre-fight talk in a similar way he has, they will consider taking disciplinary action against him, which they’ve never done for verbal actions.

Kevin Iole @KevinI

Marnell: Verbal part of promotion so out of line that it’s embarrassing. But not appropropriate to insert at this time until we give published guidance about language.

Nurmagomedov’s cousin Abubakar Nurmagomedov and teammate Zubaira Tukhugov were also punished for their involvement in the brawl and each given a one-year suspension and $25,000 fine, per Marc Raimondi of MMAFighting.com.

Helwani noted he doesn’t expect Khabib Nurmagomedov to fight before either of those suspensions, which are retroactive to the date of the fight, expires next October.

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How Google’s Jigsaw is trying to detoxify the internet

The internet can feel like a toxic place. Trolls descend on comment sections and social media threads to hurl hate speech and harassment, turning potentially enlightening discussions into ad hominem attacks and group pile-ons. Expressing an opinion online often doesn’t seem worth the resulting vitriol.

Massive social platforms—including Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube—admit they can’t adequately police these issues. They’re in an arms race with bots, trolls, and every other undesirable who slips through content filters. Humans are not physically capable of reading every single comment on the web; those who try often regret it.

Tech giants have experimented with various combinations of human moderation, AI algorithms, and filters to wade through the deluge of content flowing through their feeds each day. Jigsaw is trying to find a middle ground. The Alphabet subsidiary and tech incubator, formerly known as Google Ideas, is beginning to prove that machine learning (ML) fashioned into tools for human moderators can change the way we approach the internet’s toxicity problem.

Perspective is an API developed by Jigsaw and Google’s Counter Abuse Technology team. It uses ML to spot abuse and harassment online, and scores comments based on the perceived impact they might have on a conversation in a bid to make human moderators’ lives easier.

Perspective Amidst the Shouting Matches

The open-source tech was first announced in 2017, though development on it started a few years earlier. Some of the first sites to experiment with Perspective have been news publications such as The New York Times and sites such as Wikipedia. But recently, Perspective has found a home on sites like Reddit and comment platform Disqus (which is used on PCMag.com.)

CJ Adams, product manager for Perspective, said the project wanted to examine how people’s voices are silenced online. Jigsaw wanted to explore how targeted abuse or a general atmosphere of harassment can create a chilling effect, discouraging people to the point where they feel it’s not worth the time or energy to add their voice to a discussion. How often have you seen a tweet, post, or comment and chosen not to respond because fighting trolls and getting Mad Online just isn’t worth the aggravation?

“It’s very easy to ruin an online conversation,” said Adams. “It’s easy to jump in, but one person being really mean or toxic could drive other voices out. Maybe 100 people read an article or start a debate, and often you end up with the loudest voices in the room being the only ones left, in an internet that’s optimized for likes and shares. So you kind of silence all these voices. Then what’s defining the debate is just the loudest voice in the room—the shouting match.”

Jigsaw and Google

It’s been a rough year for Jigsaw’s sister company, Google, which has grappled with data security issues, employee pushback on its involvement in projects for the Pentagon and China, and revelations over its handling of sexual harassment. Not to mention a contentious Congressional hearing in which CEO Sundar Pichai was grilled by lawmakers.

Over at Jigsaw, Alphabet’s altruistic incubator, things have been a bit less dramatic. The team has spent its time examining more technical forms of censorship, such as DNS poisoning with its Intra app and DDoS attacks with Project Shield. With Perspective, the goal is more abstract. Rather than using machine learning to determine what is or isn’t against a given set of rules, Perspective’s challenge is an intensely subjective one: classifying the emotional impact of language.

To do that, you need natural language processing (NLP), which breaks down a sentence to spot patterns. The Perspective team is confronting problems like confirmation bias, groupthink, and harassing behavior in an environment where technology has amplified their reach and made them harder to solve.

AI Is ‘Wrong and Dumb Sometimes’

Improving online conversations with machine learning isn’t a straightforward task. It’s still an emerging field of research. Algorithms can be biased, machine learning systems require endless refinement, and the hardest and most important problems are still largely unexplored.

The Conversation AI research group, which created Perspective, started by meeting with newspapers, publishers, and other sites hosting conversations. Some of the first sites to experiment with the technology were The New York Times, Wikipedia, The Guardian, and The Economist.

In 2017, the team opened up the initial Perspective demo via public website as part of an alpha test, letting people type millions of vile, abusive comments into the site. It was kind of like Microsoft’s infamous failed Tay chatbot experiment, except instead of tricking the bot into replying with racist tweets, Jigsaw used the crowdsourced virulence as training data to feed its models, helping to identify and categorize different types of online abuse.

The initial public test run did not go smoothly. Wired’s “Trolls Across America,” which broke down toxicity in commenting across the country based on Perspective scoring, showed how the algorithm inadvertently discriminated against groups by race, gender identity, or sexual orientation.

Adams was candid about the fact that Perspective’s initial testing revealed major blind spots and algorithmic bias. Like Amazon’s scrapped recruiting tool, which trained on decades of flawed job data and developed an inherent bias against female applicants, the early Perspective models had glaring flaws because of the data on which it was trained.

“In the example of frequently targeted groups, if you looked at the distribution across the comments in the training data set, there were a vanishingly small number of comments that included the word ‘gay’ or ‘feminist’ and were using it in a positive way,” explained Adams. “Abusive comments use the words as insults. So the ML, looking at the patterns, would say, “Hey, the presence of this word is a pretty good predictor of whether or not this sentiment is toxic.”

For example, the alpha algorithm might have mistakenly labeled statements like “I’m a proud gay man,” or, “I’m a feminist and transgender” with high toxicity scores. But the publicly transparent training process—while painful—was an invaluable lesson for Jigsaw in the consequences of unintended bias, Adams said.

When training machine-learning models on something as distressing and personal as online abuse and harassment, the existence of algorithmic bias also underscores why AI alone is not the solution. Social companies such as Facebook and YouTube have both touted their platforms’ AI content-moderation features only to backtrack amid scandal and course-correct by hiring thousands of human moderators.

Jigsaw’s tack is a hybrid of the two. Perspective isn’t AI algorithms making decisions in a vacuum; the API is integrated into community-management and content-moderation interfaces to serve as an assistive tool for human moderators. Perspective engineers describe moderating hate speech with and without ML using a haystack analogy: AI helps by automating the sorting process, whittling vast haystacks down while still giving humans the final say over whether a comment is considered abusive or harassment.

“It’s this new capability of ML,” said Adams. “People talk about how smart AI is, but they often don’t talk about all the ways it’s wrong and dumb sometimes. From the very beginning, we knew this was going to make a lot of mistakes, and so we said, ‘This tool is helpful for machine-assisted human moderation, but it is not ready to be making automatic decisions.’ But it can take the ‘needle in a haystack’ problem finding this toxic speech and get it down to a handful of hay.”

What Is a Toxicity Score?

The most divisive aspect of Perspective’s modeling is putting numbers to a variable as subjective as “toxicity.” The first thing Adams pointed out is that Perspective’s scores are an indication of probability, not severity. Higher numbers represent a higher likelihood that patterns in the text resemble patterns in comments people have tagged as toxic.

As for what “toxic” actually means, the Perspective team defines it broadly as “a rude, disrespectful, or unreasonable comment that is likely to make you leave a discussion.” But how that manifests can be subtle. In 2018, Jigsaw partnered with the Rhodes Artificial Intelligence Lab (RAIL) to develop ML models that can pick up more ambiguous forms of threatening or hateful speech, such as a dismissive, condescending, or sarcastic comment that’s not openly hostile.

Up to this point, most of Perspective’s models have been trained by asking people to rate internet comments on a scale from “very toxic” to “very healthy.” Developers can then calibrate the model to flag comments above a certain threshold, from 0.0 to 1.0. A score above 0.9 indicates high probability of toxicity, and a score of 0.5 or below means a far lower degree of algorithmic certainty. Perspective also uses what’s called score normalization, which gives developers a consistent baseline from which to interpret scores. Adams explained that depending on forum or website, developers can mix and match models. So when a community doesn’t mind profanity, that attribute can be weighed down.

Adams showed me a demo moderation interface integrated with the Perspective API. In the admin panel, next to the options to sort comments by top, newest, and so on, is a small flag icon to sort by toxicity. There’s also a built-in feedback mechanism for the human moderator to tell Perspective it scored a comment incorrectly and improve the model over time.

He clicked through a demo interface for moderating Wikipedia Talk page comments scored by different Perspective models, and a histogram graph breaking down which comments are likely to be an attack on a page author or an attack on another commenter.

“We want to build machine-assisted moderation tools to flag things for a human to review, but we don’t want some central definition or someone to say what is good and bad,” said Adams. “So if I sort by toxicity, you see mean comments come to the top. But if you care more about, let’s say, identity attacks or threats than metrics like swearing, maybe you wouldn’t use a general toxicity model. These are the ingredients that you can mix. We offer these, and developers weight them.”

The RAIL experiment is taking a more granular approach. The Oxford grad students are building a data set of tens of thousands of comments from Canadian newspaper Globe and Mail‘s comments section and Wikipedia Talk pages. They’re asking human “annotators” to answer questions about each comment related to five sub-attributes of “unhealthy content”: hostile or insulting (trolls), dismissive, condescending or patronizing, sarcastic, and unfair generalizations.

Homing in on these more subtle attributes has revealed new complex problems with unintended bias toward specific groups and false positives with sarcastic comments. It’s part of AI growing pains, feeding models more and more data to help it understand implied, indirect meanings behind human speech. The team is still combing through and annotating thousands of comments, and it plans to release the final dataset early this year.

“What we want to work toward is something where the community can score a set of comments, and then we can make them a custom mix of Perspective models to match,” said Adams.

Reddit’s Curious Testbed

Reddit is a microcosm of everything that’s good and terrible about the internet. There’s a subreddit community for every topic and niche, bizarre interest you can think of. Jigsaw doesn’t work with Reddit on a corporate level, but one of the most intriguing places in which Perspective’s AI moderation is being tested is on a subreddit called r/changemyview.

Surprisingly, there are corners of the internet where genuine debate and discussion still happen. Change My View, or CMV, is not like most other subreddits. The idea is to post an opinion you accept may be flawed or are open to having changed, then to listen to and understand other points of view to see whether they can change your mind on an issue. The threads range from mundane topics such as the proper viewing order for Star Warsmovies to serious discussions on issues including racism, politics, gun control, and religion.

Change My View is an interesting testbed for Perspective because the subreddit has its own detailed set of rules for starting and moderating conversations that incite argument and heated debate by design. Kal Turnbull, who goes by u/Snorrrlax on Reddit, is the founder and one of the moderators of r/changemyview. Turnbull told PCMag that the Perspective API lines up particularly well with the sub’s Rule 2, which basically prohibits rude or hostile speech.

“It sounds like a simple rule, but there’s a lot of nuance to it,” said Turnbull, who is based in Scotland. “It’s hard to automate this rule without being clever about language. Reddit gives you this thing called AutoModerator, where you can set up filters and keywords for flagging. But there are so many false positives, and it can be quite hard to catch, because someone can say a bad word without insulting someone, and they can also insult someone without using any bad words.”

Jigsaw reached out to Turnbull in March 2018. The collaboration began with Rule 2, but soon the team was building Perspective models for other rules as well. It’s not a full integration of the open-source Perspective API but rather a Reddit bot that lets moderators flag comments scored above a given toxicity threshold.

For the past six years, Turnbull and the other mods have been doing all of this manually from the queue of AutoModerator reports (flagged keywords) and user reports. Jigsaw used years of rule-violation notes from moderators, which they tracked through a browser extension, and built Perspective models based on that data combined with some of Perspective’s existing toxicity models. Throughout 2018, the CMV mods gave feedback on issues such as excess false positives, and Jigsaw tweaked the scoring thresholds while continuing to model more of CMV’s rules.

Complex Judgments in Online Debate

Perspective isn’t live for all of the subreddit’s rule moderation. Some of the more complicated or abstract rules are still beyond the scope of what this kind of ML can understand.

Rule 4, for example, governs the sub’s Delta points system, while Rule B stops users from playing devil’s advocate or using a post for “soapboaxing.” Nuanced moderation like that requires contextual data and plain ol’ human understanding, to discern whether someone is arguing a point for genuine reasons or simply trolling.

For the foreseeable future, we’ll still need human mods. These more complex judgment scenarios are where the CMV moderators are beginning to see cracks in the AI modeling, and more clever automation could determine whether all of this is scalable.

“I think the reason why this is so complicated is because it’s a combination of our judgment on their original post and their interactions throughout the entire conversation. So it’s not just one comment that triggers a model,” said Turnbull. “If an argument is going back and forth, and at the end is a comment saying ‘thank you’ or an acknowledgement, we let it go even if a rule was broken earlier in the thread. Or a light-hearted joke that in context might appear to be rude—it’s a nice little human thing, and that’s something the bot doesn’t get yet.”

Change My View is the only subreddit actively using Perspective ML models for moderation at the moment, although Adams said the team has received access requests from several others. The specific rule set of CMV made it an ideal test case, but Perspective models are malleable; individual subreddits can customize the scoring algorithm to match their community guidelines.

The next step for Turnbull is taking CMV off Reddit because the community is outgrowing it, he said. For the past six months, the moderators’ newly formed startup has been working with Jigsaw on a dedicated site with deeper functionality than Reddit’s mod interface and bots can provide.

The project is still only in alpha testing, but Turnbull talked about features such as proactive alerts when a user is typing a comment that might break a rule, built-in reporting to give moderators more context, and historical data to make decisions. Turnbull stressed that there are no plans to shut down or migrate the subreddit, but he’s excited about the new experiment.

All the Comments Fit to Print

Depending on the day of the week, The New York Times’ website gets anywhere from 12,000 to more than 18,000 comments. Until mid-2017, the paper’s comments sections were moderated by a full-time community management staff who read every single comment and decided whether to approve or reject it.

Bassey Etim, who until this month was the community editor for the Times, spent a decade at the Community desk and was its editor since 2014. At the height of a weekday, the team might have a few people moderating comments on opinion stories while other tackled news stories. A spreadsheet split up and tracked different responsibilities, but the team of approximately a dozen people were constantly reassigned or moved around depending on the top news of the moment. They also fed tidbits from the comments back to reporters for potential story fodder.

Eventually, it became clear that this was more than 12 humans could handle. Comment sections on stories would have to close after reaching a maximum number of comments the team could moderate.

The newspaper’s audience development group had already been experimenting with machine learning for basic, obvious comment approvals, but Etim said it wasn’t particularly smart or customizable. The Times first announced its partnership with Jigsaw in September 2016. Since then, its comments sections have expanded from appearing on less than 10 percent of all stories to around 30 percent today and climbing.

From Jigsaw’s perspective, the incubator saw the opportunity to feed Perspective anonymized data from millions of comments per day, moderated by professionals who could help refine the process. In exchange for the anonymized ML training data, Jigsaw and Times worked together to build a platform called Moderator, which rolled out in June 2017.

Inside Moderator, the NYT Comment Interface

Moderator combines Perspective’s models with more than 16 million anonymized, moderated Times comments going back to 2007.

What the community team actually sees in the Moderator interface is a dashboard with an interactive histogram chart that visualizes the comment breakdown above a certain threshold. They can drag the slider back and forth, for instance, to automatically approve all comments with only a 0 to 20 percent summary score, which is based on a combination of a comment’s potential for obscenity, toxicity, and likelihood to be rejected. There are quick moderation buttons below to approve or reject a comment, defer it, or tag the comment, to continue improving Perspective’s modeling.

“For each section of the website, we analyzed incoming comments and the way Perspective would tag them. We used both the public Perspective models and our own models unique to The New York Times,” said Etim. “I would analyze comments from each section and try to find the cutoff point where we’d be comfortable saying, ‘OK, everything above this probability using these specific toxicity tags, like obscenity for instance, we’re going to approve.”

Machine learning is approving a comparatively small percentage of comments (around 25 percent or so, Etim said) as the Times works to roll out comments on more stories and ultimately even to customize how the models filter and approve comments for different sections of the site. The models only approve comments; rejection is still handled entirely by human moderators.

Those manual comment cutoffs are gone. Comments typically close on a story either 24 hours after it publishes online or the day after it publishes in print, Etim said.

‘We’re Not Replacing You With Machines’

The next phase is building more features into the system to help moderators prioritize which comments to look at first. Increasingly, automating what has always been a manual process has enabled moderators to spend time proactively working with reporters to reply to comments. It’s created a feedback loop where comments lead to follow-up reporting and additional stories—can save and reallocate resources to create more journalism.

“Moderator and Perspective have made the Times a lot more responsive to readers concerns, because we have the resources to do that, whether it’s by writing stories ourselves or working with reporters to figure out stories,” said Etim. “The cool thing about this project is that we didn’t lay anybody off. We’re not replacing you with machines. We’re simply using the humans we have more efficiently and to make the really tough decisions.”

The paper is open to working with other publications to help the rest of the industry implement this kind of technology. It can help local news outlets with limited resources to maintain comment sections without a large dedicated staff and to use comments as the Times does, to find potential leads and fuel grassroots journalism.

Etim likened AI-assisted moderation to giving a farmer a mechanical plow versus a spade. You can do the job a lot better with a plow.

“If Perspective can evolve in the right way, it can, hopefully, create at least a set of guidelines that are repeatable for small outlets,” he said. “It’s a long game, but we’ve already set up a lot of the foundation to be a part of that reader experience. Then maybe these local papers can have comments again and establish a little beachhead against the major social players.”

Screaming Into the Abyss

At this point, most of us have seen people attacked or harassed on social media for voicing an opinion. Nobody wants it to happen to them, except trolls who thrive on that sort of thing. And we’ve learned that shouting at a stranger who’s never going to listen to a rational argument isn’t a valuable use of our time.

Perspective is trying to upend that dynamic, but CJ Adams said the broader goal is to publish data, research, and new open-source UX models to create new structures of conversation—a daunting task. Making the internet a healthy place that’s worth people’s time means scaling these systems beyond news comment sections and subreddits. Ultimately, the AI tools must be able to handle the gargantuan social apps and networks that dominate our everyday digital interactions.

Putting aside what Facebook, Twitter, and other social giants are doing internally, the most direct way to accomplish this is to push the technology from moderators to users themselves. Adams pointed to the Coral Project for an idea of what that might look like.

The Coral Project was initially founded as a collaboration between the Mozilla Foundation, The New York Times and the Washington Post. Coral is building open-source tools such as its Talk platform to encourage online discussion and give news sites an alternative to shutting down comment sections. Talk currently powers platforms for nearly 50 online publishers, including the Post, New York Magazine, The Wall Street Journal, and The Intercept.

Earlier this month, Vox Media acquired the Coral Project from the Mozilla Foundation; it plans to “deeply integrate” it into Chorus, its content management and storytelling platform.

Perspective has a plugin for the Coral Project that uses the same underlying tech—ML-based toxicity scoring and thresholds—to give users proactive suggestions as they’re typing, Adams said. So when a user is writing a comment containing phrases flagged as abuse or harassment, a notification might pop up for the user saying, “Before you post this, be sure to remember our community guidelines” or “The language in this comment may violate our community guidelines. Our moderation team will review it shortly.”

“That little nudge can help people just take that second to think, but it also doesn’t block anyone,” said Adams. “It’s not stopping the discussion.”

It’s a mechanism that video game chat and streaming platforms have integrated to stem abuse and harassment. Twitter users could clearly benefit from such a system, too.

It speaks to an idea that MIT research scientist Andrew Lippmann brought up in PCMag’s Future Issue: He talked about built-in mechanisms that would let people stop and think before they shared something online, to help stem the spread of misinformation. The concept applies to online discussion, too. We’ve created frictionless communication systems capable of amplifying a statement’s reach exponentially in an instant, but sometimes a little friction can be a good thing, Lippmann said.

Perspective isn’t about using AI as a blanket solution. It’s a way to mold ML models into tools for humans to help them curate their own experiences. But one counterpoint is that if you make it even easier for people to tune out the online noise they don’t like, the internet will become even more of an echo chamber than it already is.

Asked whether tools like Perspective could ultimately exacerbate this, Adams said he believes online echo chambers exists because there are no mechanisms to host a discussion where people can meaningfully disagree.

“The path of least resistance is ‘These people are fighting. Let’s just let them agree with themselves in their own corners. Let people silo themselves,’” he said. “You let people shout everyone else out of the room, or you shut down the discussion. We want Perspective to create a third option.”

Adams laid out a sample scenario. If you ask a room of 1,000 people, “How many of you read something today that you really cared about?” most internet users will point to an article, a tweet, a post, or something they read online. But if you then ask them, “How many of you thought it was worth your time to comment on it or have a discussion?” all the hands in the room will go down.

“For so many of us, it’s just not worth the effort. The structure of discussion that we have right now just means it’s a liability. If you have a current reasonable thought or something you want to share, for most people, they don’t want to take part,” said Adams. “That means that of that 1,000 people that could be in the room, you have only a handful represented in the discussion; let’s say, 10 people. I have deep faith that we can build a structure that lets that other 990 back into the discussion and does it in a way that they find worth their time.”

    This article originally published at PCMag
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    Anthony Davis Trade Rumors: Raptors, Bucks Expected to Make Offers for Star

    New Orleans Pelicans' Anthony Davis smiles during the second half of an NBA basketball game against the Los Angeles Lakers, Friday, Dec. 21, 2018, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

    Jae C. Hong/Associated Press

    The Toronto Raptors and Milwaukee Bucks are reportedly among the teams expected to make the New Orleans Pelicans an offer for star Anthony Davis before the NBA‘s Feb. 7 trade deadline.

    According to Kevin O’Connor of The Ringer, the Los Angeles Lakers and New York Knicks are also expected to speak with the Pelicans.

    On Monday, ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski was informed by Davis’ agent, Rich Paul, that Davis will not re-sign with the Pels and is seeking a trade.

    Paul said the following regarding Davis, who can become a free agent after next season:

    “Anthony wants to be traded to a team that allows him a chance to win consistently and compete for a championship. Anthony wanted to be honest and clear with his intentions and that’s the reason for informing them of this decision now. That’s in the best interests of both Anthony’s and the organization’s future.”

    The Pelicans acknowledged the trade request in a statement but stressed they will operate at their own pace:

    “Although we are disappointed in this decision, our organization’s top priority is to bring an NBA championship to our city and build our team for long-term success. Relative to specific talks of a trade, we will do this on our timeline. One that makes sense for our team and it will not be dictated by those outside of our organization. We have also requested the League to strictly enforce the tampering rules associated with this transaction.”

    The Bucks and Raptors are the top two teams in the Eastern Conference, and if either of them manages to acquire Davis this season, it could make them the favorite to win the NBA championship over the Western Conference-leading Golden State Warriors.

    Milwaukee has the NBA’s best record at 35-13, spearheaded by the play of MVP candidate Giannis Antetokounmpo.

    The Bucks could send the Pelicans some talented, young players as part of a deal, including center Thon Maker and 2017 NBA Rookie of the Year Malcolm Brogdon.

    Toronto is second in the Eastern Conference at 37-15, and it has seemingly reached a new level thanks to the addition of Kawhi Leonard.

    Veteran point guard Kyle Lowry could potentially go to New Orleans in a deal for Davis as could younger players such as guard Fred VanVleet, small forward OG Anunoby and rising star Pascal Siakam.

    The price will be steep for either team to acquire Davis, but it may be worth it given his high level of production.

    Davis is averaging 29.3 points, 13.3 rebounds, 4.4 assists, 2.6 blocks and 1.7 steals per game for a Pelicans team that is just 22-28.

    The 25-year-old five-time All-Star is currently out with a volar plate avulsion fracture of his left index finger.

    The NBA trade deadline is coming up fast, but there is no pressure on the Pelicans to make a deal until the offseason.

    If New Orleans does decide to wait, then Milwaukee could have the advantage over Toronto since it is possible that the Raptors will lose Leonard in free agency, thus making it a less attractive landing spot for Davis.

    Since Paul represents both Davis and LeBron James, though, the Lakers are shaping up to be the favorite to acquire him, especially since they can offer a bevy of young talent, including Brandon Ingram, Kyle Kuzma and Lonzo Ball.

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    On the border, Venezuelans leave notes at the ‘Wall of Laments’

    La Garita, Colombia – Marielis del Carmen Velacio walked up to a small cantina shack beside a Colombian highway and sat down. Tears began rolling down her face.

    She thought about her sick mother and three children whom she left three days earlier as she gazed up at the hundreds of handwritten notes, hung by others who had made the journey over the past days and months.

    Velacio broke down when the cantina’s owner, Marta Alarcon, brought her and the others seated nearby a cup of juice, a piece of bread and an acetaminophen pill. She buried her head in a friend’s shoulder, not saying anything, but experiencing the pain felt by so many who have come to Alarcon’s cantina before.

    Velacio said she hadn’t eaten a hearty meal in years, yet here was another stranger in Colombia giving her food.

    For Alarcon, it was a scene that repeats daily in the small roadside store which she has opened as a humanitarian space for the migrants and refugees on the outskirts of Cucuta, Colombia.

    “There’s sadness like this, every day,” she said, motioning to the coloured notes that Venezuelans have left at her business, many scrawled on banknotes rendered worthless by that country’s economic collapse.

    Velacio cries into a friend’s shoulder after leaving her home in Venezuela [Dylan Baddour/Al Jazeera] 

    ‘Wall of Laments’

    Locals call Alcaron’s cantina the “Wall of Laments”, although the collection of notes months ago outgrew the wall and now they hang from the ceiling as well.

    The notes thank Alcaron, who feeds migrants and refugees a snack and lets them sleep on the concrete floor beneath her roof. They list the names, ages, hometowns and destinations of those who pass through – most are young and headed for Peru or Ecuador.

    Many of the notes also dwell on a common theme – the pain of leaving behind family.

    “It isn’t easy to leave the country … and [face] so many risks,” one said. “But we had to humbly leave behind our siblings and friends for the good of ourselves and our family. Without more to say we bid farewell, and it gives us much nostalgia to experience so many things. But we continue onward. Thank you. Who we are: Yessica, Marta, Yackson, Deivi, Pedro, Keny and Juan from Yaracuy state, Venezuela.”

    Venezuelan migrants and refugees who recently arrived at the cantina read the notes left behind by others [Dylan Baddour/Al Jazeera] 

    A blue sign with the portrait of a young boy reads: “We come through here fighting for our family and in search of happiness for our son. For them, we are fighting. I give thanks to Mrs Marta for her help.”

    Another said: “I come with hope and faith on high that everything will be all right and that God will help me to help my mother, my father and my son.”

    High rates of family separation

    At least three million people have fled the crisis in Venezuela, according to UN figures, most leaving since 2015. More than a million of them reside in Colombia, where the foreign ministry predicts the number of Venezuelans fleeing to the country could hit four million by 2021.

    An estimated 5,000 people migrate across the Colombian border each day, most searching for opportunities to support families back home.

    Hyperinflation, among other factors, has caused the collapse of the Venezuelan economy, rendering people without access to basic foods or medical care while street violence runs rampant.

    Mass migration has also helped drive a soaring family separation rate among Venezuelans, according to Trish Bury, a deputy director with the International Rescue Committee at the Venezuelan border.

    IRC surveys show that five to 10 percent of children are separated from their families in most situations of mass displacement, while a survey of Venezuelans in Colombia put that rate at 49 percent.

    In mass migrations caused by war, families typically flee together, Bury said, but in Venezuela, uncertainty over food and shelter drives adults and teenagers to set out on behalf of the children and elders they support. Often, extended families delegate a few members to make the trip, find a job, rent a living space and send money home to fund the migration of the more fragile members.

    Migrants and refugees write notes at this cantina about why they’ve fled Venezuela [Dylan Baddour/Al Jazeera]

    Such was the case for 38-year-old Yelitza Sotillo, who travelled with her three adult nieces. For more than a year, the middle-class family had eaten only yuca root and green plantains. Sotillo’s mother was also sick, but they didn’t know what she had because they didn’t have money to pay for a medical examination.

    Sotillo, a beautician, and her older sister, a doctor, agreed that Sotillo would take the three oldest of the family kids to Peru, where they had cousins, to find a job. More than half the population of her small town had already fled, she said. Her three children, 12, 10 and seven, cried when she told them she was leaving.

    “I told them they had stay because the trip would be hard,” she said through tears, sitting down to rest at night beside the wall of Venezuelan laments. “I never imagined leaving my children. It’s hard to see them cry and to know that this won’t be over in one day or two.”

    ‘It broke my heart’

    Alarcon, the property owner, said all the heartbreak of the migrants and refugees passing through has left her traumatised. 

    The effects peaked in December when she had a nervous breakdown. She began to feel unwell at her shop and asked a friend to take her home. There she started wailing, begging her friend not to leave her alone, not to let her die there. Doctors told her it was an anxiety attack. She is sure it stems from her service to the Venezuelans.

    She also said she’s lost weight from staying up so late to attend to the migrants.

    Her service started about a year ago, she said, when she saw a group of teenagers walk by with backpacks and duffle bags. She called them over and asked where they were going. They said Ecuador, which is a mountainous 1,500km journey away.

    “It broke my heart,” she said. So she offered them snacks and drinks, and hasn’t stopped since.

    Marta Alarcon (right) says she is heartbroken by the daily suffering she experiences every day [Dylan Baddour/Al Jazeera] 

    Back then there was only a trickle of migrants and refugees arriving on foot but Alarcon watched as the number grew. By June 2018 she had met so many migrants that she couldn’t remember each one of them and their stories, so she asked one group to write her a note that she hung on the wall. Then, her collection grew.

    More than 100 people pass through here most days, sometimes more and sometimes less, Alarcon said. Most continue their march up into the mountains but those who arrive after dark often stay to sleep on the ground.

    The most to ever sleep at the cantina was about 150 people, she said, on the night of January 23. It was the same day that US-backed opposition leader Juan Guaido swore himself in as interim president, challenging the presidency of Nicolas Maduro.

    Since her cantina sits a six-to-10 hour walk from the Venezuelan border, it is here where many who are fleeing sleep outside for the first time.

    “These are experiences that one never imagines they would have, having grown up in a house,” said 18-year-old Raidelys Asnio, who left Venezuela on Saturday morning then walked all day until reaching Alcaron’s cantina.

    The path onwards from Alarcon’s cantina heads upwards, ascending almost 3,000 metres, passing from the sunny tropical lowlands up through the clouds into a cold treeless plain near the top of the Andes.

    Then it goes on, down the mountains and back up, through Colombia and across the continent. Thousands of Venezuelans have hiked this route already and more begin it every day.

    Velacio left her family earlier this month in search of opportunities outside of Venezuela  [Dylan Baddour/Al Jazeera]

    At Alarcon’s cantina, Velacio only stopped to rest a short while. After she cried with her friend, Alarcon gave her canned tuna. Then she stood up, determined to walk two more hours before resting that night, resigned to sleep wherever she found herself then. 

    A long road lay ahead, she said, and the sooner she finds her destination, the better.

    “The second I have a job that is stable I will bring my kids and my mom,” she said. “All I want is the best for my kids.”

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    Miley Cyrus Supports Lindsay Lohan With A Brief But Bold Cover Of ‘Rumors’



    Getty Images

    By Trey Alston

    Miley Cyrus’s latest flash of her powerful vocal range comes in the form of a brief performance of Lindsay Lohan’s breakout hit “Rumors.” Early Tuesday morning (January 29), Miley posted a clip of her singing the lead single from Lohan’s debut 2004 album, Speak, on Twitter and tagged her. The clip is only 13 seconds long but Miley manages to soar absurdly high and it looks like she’s in pure, genuine glee.

    Miley’s support of Lohan, a fellow former child star, goes farther than a car cover of her song. She hopped on Instagram to support Lohan’s latest foray into TV, Lindsay Lohan’s Beach Club, saying “It’s the best show ever.”

    Miley just showcased her singing capabilities on Ellen on Monday when she performed “Nothing Breaks Like a Heart” with Mark Ronson for the host’s 61st birthday. Back in December, the star duo played the tune along with a cover of John Lennon and Yoko Ono’s Christmas song “Happy Xmas (War Is Over)” on Saturday Night Live. Hopefully another album comes soon; Miley’s last LP was 2017’s Younger Now.

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    Vulnerable software that helped cause Equifax breach still being used by major U.S. corporations

    Many Fortune 500 companies have downloaded the same vulnerable software that led to the Equifax breach.
    Many Fortune 500 companies have downloaded the same vulnerable software that led to the Equifax breach.

    Image: Thomas Trutschel/Photothek via Getty Images

    2018%252f06%252f26%252fc2%252f20182f062f252f5a2fphoto.d9abc.b1c04.jpg%252f90x90By Matt Binder

    Someone at these companies, please update your software!

    Hundreds of major U.S. corporations are using the same flawed version of server software that led to the 2017 Equifax breach, according to open source software automation firm, Sonatype. 

    In a report published by TechCrunch, Sonatype’s data shows that two-thirds of Fortune 500 companies downloaded unsecure versions of the software, Apache Struts, in the last six months of 2018. Close to 150 million people had their personal information stolen by hackers who broke into the credit reporting agency’s systems. Some of the data stolen included names, social security numbers, birth dates, and addresses. 

    SEE ALSO: Everything you need to know about the massive Equifax data breach

    Since the breach, there have been more than a dozen Struts patches released, with the most recent one being earlier this year. However, a majority of the biggest corporations in the country have downloaded the vulnerable versions. According to Sonatype, more than 18,000 businesses downloaded vulnerable versions of Struts.

    On Tuesday, Sonatype announced that the company would be partnering with Equifax in order to help the credit reporting agency prevent future breaches. The company will monitor Equifax’s network-wide open source libraries.

    In the fallout of the Equifax hack, a report came out showcasing just how preventable the breach was. Judging by Sonatype’s data, it seems like we may see at least a few more similarly preventable breaches in the future.

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    Every cigarette in the first episode of ‘Mad Men’ replaced with a kazoo… by hand

    Kevin Urgiles

    MSCHF Internet Studios, the people who brought you this and this, are back! This time they’re going after smoking with a side project, Cignature Films, whose mission is to replace cigarettes in movies and shows with a cute li’l orange kazoo. So far they tackled the 48 minute pilot of “Mad Men,” and they want to do “Stranger Things” next.

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    Qatar thrash UAE to reach Asian Cup football final

    Qatar thrash UAE to reach Asian Cup football final
    Qatar is yet to conceded a goal at this year’s tournament [Suhaib Salem/Reuters]

    Qatar beat hosts United Arab Emirates 4-0 to reach the final of the 2019 AFC Asian Cup.

    The win, coming in front of a hostile Abu Dhabi crowd, sealed Qatar’s progress to the title match for the first time where it will face Japan on Friday.

    Qatar opened the scoring with Boualem Khoukhi in the 22nd minute with Almoez Ali adding a second 15 minutes later. 

    Hassan al-Haydos added a third in the 80th minute with a chip over the UAE goal-keeper and Ismaeil sealed Qatar’s progress with a goal in injury time.

    The match was marred by crowd trouble twice where shoes and bottles were thrown at Qatari players celebrating after scoring. 

    The crowd could be heard chanting and booing during the playing of Qatar’s national anthem minutes before the start.

    Fans throwing shoes at the Qatari players after they score their 2nd goal 😲 pic.twitter.com/zCxyhZeWOc

    — Jordan Gardner (@mrjordangardner) January 29, 2019

    UAE had been hoping to reach the Asain Cup final for the second time, but instead look likely to face sanctions after the crowd trouble.

    The tournament has been played against the backdrop of a regional dispute, which saw Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain and Egypt cut political, diplomatic and economic ties with Qatar and impose a land, air and sea blockade on the Gulf nation in June 2017.

    Showing sympathy for Qatar is punishable in the UAE, with a jail term of up to 15 years.

    Dubbed the Blockade Derby, the match was the first meeting between the two regional rivals since the start of the Gulf crisis.

    Free tickets were distributed among “loyal” Emirati fans on Sunday by the Abu Dhabi Sports Council, which bought all the remaining ones for Tuesday’s semi-final.

    Meanwhile, non-Emiratis attempting to avail the free entry were turned away, UAE news outlet, The National reported.

    Japan is the most successful team in the Asian Cup with four titles, followed by Iran and Saudi Arabia with three apiece. 

    UAE goal-keeper Khalid Eisa clears shoes thrown on the field at Qatari players by the crowd [Thaier Al-Sudani/Reuters]

    SOURCE:
    Al Jazeera News

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    Roger Stone pleads not guilty to Mueller lying charges


    Roger Stone

    Roger Stone, 66, has been under investigation for more than two-and-a-half years over accusations he was working with WikiLeaks to release stolen Democratic emails during the 2016 election. | Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

    Legal

    The longtime Trump associate has been under investigation over accusations he was working with WikiLeaks to release stolen Democratic emails during the 2016 campaign.

    Roger Stone, the longtime Donald Trump associate, pleaded not guilty Tuesday to charges he lied to Congress and obstructed the House’s investigation into Russian election meddling.

    Appearing briefly in federal district court in Washington, D.C., Stone and his lawyers signaled they intend to seek a trial to fight back against the seven-count indictment brought by special counsel Robert Mueller.

    Story Continued Below

    Stone, 66, has been under investigation for more than two-and-a-half years over accusations he was working with WikiLeaks to release stolen Democratic emails that would damage Hillary Clinton’s 2016 White House campaign.

    Mueller’s prosecutors last week ultimately brought charges against Stone that center around him misleading lawmakers about his efforts to communicate with Trump campaign officials and WikiLeaks. He’s also been charged with attempting to intimidate Randy Credico, another witness in the Mueller probe who was in touch with WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange in 2016.

    Stone, a famously fashion-conscious political operative, appeared at his arraignment in a navy suit and with a powdered blue pocket square tucked into his shirt. He was surrounded by a legal team that included South Florida-based defense attorneys Robert Buschel, Grant Smith and Bruce Rogow, a First Amendment expert who in the early 1990s represented the rap group 2 Live Crew.

    Stone agreed to the same restrictions he accepted last week in Fort Lauderdale federal court when he was released on a $250,000 personal surety bond. He isn’t allowed to travel outside of court districts in New York, South Florida and the Washington D.C. area. He can’t have a U.S. passport and must call a D.C. pretrial agent once a week.

    Magistrate Judge Deborah Robinson said Stone’s attorneys must come up with a list of potential witnesses in the case that their client can’t have any contact with.

    Stone stood briefly while the magistrate judge read off the restrictions he faces. His answers were all perfunctory: simple acknowledgments of what he must do.

    Near the end of the proceedings, attorneys for both sides told the magistrate judge that they agreed the case is complex, a decision that waives Stone’s right to a speedy trial. They also agreed to an order that limits what evidence will ultimately end up in the public record.

    The run-up to the arraignment did hit some bumpy patches after the federal magistrate judge twice on Monday reprimanded Stone’s attorneys for failing to properly fill out the paperwork naming a local counsel who could vouch for them because they aren’t members of the D.C. bar.

    The attorneys blew about 90 minutes beyond their deadline on Tuesday morning before Peter Farkas, a Washington-based antitrust and intellectual property lawyer, entered a notice on behalf of Stone.

    Unlike most defendants in the Mueller probe, and in criminal cases overall, Stone has remained his blunt self since his indictment by continuing to speak publicly with reporters. He did his first media interview after his arrest last Friday with the conspiracy theory website InfoWars and then spoke to reporters outside the courthouse amid a din of boos and chants of “Lock him up.”

    Stone also spoke on the Sunday morning television circuit and answered reporters’ questions from the driveway of his Fort Lauderdale home and upon his arrival Monday at the airport in Washington.

    On Monday night, Stone appeared with Sean Hannity on Fox News and denounced the Mueller prosecutors for charging him with “errors of memory” during his House testimony.

    “You can watch CNN. They’ll tell you this is a slam dunk,” Stone said. “My attorneys don’t think so.”

    Attorneys for both sides agreed that Stone’s first status hearing before Judge Amy Berman Jackson will be at 1:30 p.m. on Feb. 1.

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