Twitter experiments with ‘Original Tweeter’ tag on threaded conversations

Twitter is going all in on conversations.
Twitter is going all in on conversations.

Image: Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto via Getty Images

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

Twitter is about to make life a lot harder for fake Elon Musk cryptocurrency scammers.

Twitter users are reporting seeing an ‘Original Tweeter’ tag under their name on posted tweets. According to Techcrunch, the feature has only been rolled out to a small percentage of Twitter users on iOS and Android so far.

The tag appears to show up in threaded Twitter conversations in order to clearly mark the user who started the thread.

“Twitter’s purpose is to serve the public conversation,” said Twitter Director of Product Management, Sara Haider, in a statement provided to Mashable. “As part of this work, we’re exploring adding more context to discussions by highlighting relevant replies – like those from the original Tweeter.”

At this year’s CES, Twitter made it very clear that the company was going to start prioritizing conversation on the service. The microblogging service teased a number of new, upcoming features at the event that are clearly meant to facilitate more interaction between users. Some of these new features include status updates and indicators to let other user’s know where you are and if you’re available to chat and a new design for replies that thread tweets much like a website’s comment section would do.

The ‘Original Tweeter’ tag is very reminiscent of features that mark the ‘OP’ or ‘Original Poster’ on old-school message boards or forums. Coupled with the company’s CES announcements, it should be very clear that Twitter is putting a focus on what’s happening underneath tweets, in the replies section.

SEE ALSO: China is cracking down on the country’s Twitter users

This new feature also helps Twitter deal with another problem that was very prevalent last year on the platform: scammers. Malicious users would often set up fake accounts resembling high-profile tweeters and attempt to fool the individual’s fans in the replies to their tweets. 

For example, scammers would respond to Elon Musk’s tweets, pretending to be the Tesla CEO, and try to scam other user’s of cryptocurrency. These scammer’s would even find ways to access verified accounts for their scheme, making the real account and the impersonator harder to distinguish. An ‘Original Tweeter’ tag for the thread starter appears to be impossible to fake.

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Emiliano Sala Search Called off by Authorities After Plane Went Missing

In this his picture taken on Nov. 4, 2018, Argentine soccer player, Emiliano Sala, of the FC Nantes club, western France, reacts after scoring during a soccer match against Guingam, in Nantes, France. The French civil aviation authority says Emiliano Sala was aboard a small passenger plane that went missing off the coast of the island of Guernsey. (AP Photo/David Vincent)

David Vincent/Associated Press

The search for the missing plane carrying Cardiff City striker Emiliano Sala was officially called off on Thursday.

The Guernsey Police released the following statement regarding the decision:

Guernsey Police @GuernseyPolice

3.15pm Update.

Please read the attached statement.

Unless there is a significant development, there will be no further updates https://t.co/jbEIFMB3zi

As seen in the following video from ITV News, search plane pilot Mike Tidd said there is “absolutely no chance” of finding Sala or the pilot of the missing plane alive at this stage:

ITV News Channel TV @itvchanneltv

Mike Tidd, the pilot flying the Channel Islands Air Search plane looking for the missing Piper PA-46 Malibu says “there is absolutely no chance of finding anybody alive.” He does not think the search from the skies will continue either. https://t.co/BlibbDxbUG

The plane went missing Monday off Guernsey while taking Sala from Nantes in western France to the Welsh capital of Cardiff.

Per ESPN.com, the search began in the English Channel around the island on Tuesday and went on for two days before getting called off on Thursday.

Sala, 28, is an Argentina native who spent the past four seasons at Nantes in Ligue 1.

During his time at Nantes, Sala scored 42 goals across 117 appearances, which led to Cardiff agreeing a club-record £18 million fee with the club to take him to the Premier League. 

While the official search has concluded, the Guernsey Police’s statement noted that all vessels and aircrafts in the area will be asked to keep an eye out for any sign of the missing plane, Sala or pilot Dave Ibbotson.

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UN’s Guterres: World is losing the race against climate change

The world is “losing the race” against climate change, the United Nations chief Antonio Guterres has warned during a speech at the elite Davos forum, demanding bolder action from governments to arrest catastrophic warming.

A World Economic Forum (WEF) survey ahead of the Davos meeting found climate change was the leading concern for forum participants from around the world, noting in particular the growing frequency of extreme weather events.

“Climate change is the defining issue of our time. We are losing the race,” said Guterres. “It is absolutely central to reverse this trend.”

UN’s Guterres: No deal in Poland climate talks will be ‘suicidal’

Following a UN summit in Poland last month, which was designed to advance the Paris climate accord, Guterres said he was “not hopeful” that nations would find the necessary resolve.

But he stressed: “We need political will and we need governments who understand this is the most important priority of our times.”

The Paris accord has been shaken by the withdrawal of the United States under President Donald Trump, and by threats to do the same by Brazil’s new far-right leader, Jair Bolsonaro.

The UN secretary-general said the commitments made in Paris were already “not enough”. 

“If what we agreed in Paris would be materialised, the temperature would rise more than 3C,” he said.

“We need countries to make stronger commitments,” Guterres said, calling for more measures to mitigate against climate change and adapt to it, along with financial aid for poorer countries.

‘Suicide pact’

Many companies have touted their moves towards creating a greener economy, such as Patrick Pouyanne, CEO of French energy giant Total, who told the AFP news agency that “natural gas and renewables” are the best way forward. 

But activists say companies are not doing nearly enough.    

One vocal voice in Davos this week has been Swedish 16-year-old Greta Thunberg, who has inspired a wave of climate protests by schoolchildren around the world after delivering a fiery speech at the UN climate summit last month. 

“They [companies] have known exactly what priceless values they have been sacrificing to continue making unimaginable amounts of money,” she told AFP in an interview.

Former US secretary of state John Kerry, who signed the Paris accord for Washington in 2016, said 38 out of the 50 US states were implementing their own climate policies despite Trump’s withdrawal and vocal scepticism on climate change.

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J. Cole Is The ‘Middle Child’ Of Rap’s Generations On First New Song Of 2019



Suzi Pratt/WireImage

“They act like two legends cannot coexist.”

J. Cole raps this line about 50 seconds into his new song, “Middle Child,” which dropped on Wednesday (January 23), in reference to Drake — specifically about the Rolex Drake gave Cole as a gift when they were perceived as rivals. It’s amid a larger point Cole makes on the song: “But I’d never beef with a n—- for nothin’ / If I smoke a rapper, it’s gon’ be legit.”

That’s essentially the takeaway from “Middle Child,” a horn-heavy triumph where Cole positions himself as the titular son of two vastly different hip-hop eras: the current one, led by rappers like Kodak Black and 21 Savage (who both get shouted out), and the one Cole grew up listening to, represented by Jay-Z (who also gets a nod).

“Middle Child,” produced by T-Minus, is Cole’s first new song of 2019, and on Twitter, he referred to it as “how I’m coming all year.” He also hyped that it’ll be an equally good year for his label, Dreamville, which makes sense given the forthcoming upcoming all-star compilation album called Revenge of the Dreamers III, set to drop sometime later this year.

Cole also had a lovely Twitter interaction with one of the most famous middle children of them all, Frankie Muniz (a.k.a. Malcolm, who was once in the middle).

Listen to “Middle Child” above and get ready for the rest of J. Cole’s 2019.

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‘Farming Simulator’ is revving up its own esports league

Hang onto your straw hats, folks, Farming Simulator is getting its own esports league.

After testing the water with the Farming Simulator Championships in 2018, the folks at Giants Software announced the Farming Simulator League for 2019, a new esports league that pits teams of Farming Simulator players against each other in farm-related activities for huge cash prizes.

SEE ALSO: We hired a game tutor to get better at Fortnite. Here’s what we learned.

If you don’t know what Farming Simulator is, it’s a video game series where players simulate the day-to-day activities of operating a modern farm, which involves a whole lot of driving realistic tractors back and forth across fields. It may not sound like much to people who haven’t played it, but the series is wildly popular in Europe and has been picking up steam in other areas of the world in recent years.

To make the game into something that you can actually compete in, Giants Software had players baling hay and stacking those hay bales for the Farming Simulator Championship. You can check out the funny promo video to see what that looks like in action.

Giants Software said in its announcement that competitors won’t be baling hay in the new Farming Simulator League, and instead there will be a new competitive 3v3 mode, although they didn’t go into much more detail than that.

“The game will, of course, stand true to its roots in farming and combine real field work like harvesting with fun and challenging game elements,” Giants Software noted.

For its first year, the Farming Simulator League will have 10 tournaments across Europe which will culminate in a final competition to become Farming Simulator champion with prizes totaling €100,000. Including the other tournaments, the League will be awarding €250,000 in prizes.

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A bunch of 5G smartphones are coming this month

Super-fast mobile internet is coming.
Super-fast mobile internet is coming.

Image: Joan Cros/NurPhoto via Getty Images

2016%252f09%252f16%252f6f%252fhttpsd2mhye01h4nj2n.cloudfront.netmediazgkymdezlza1.53aea.jpg%252f90x90By Stan Schroeder

Mobile World Congress, which kicks off on Feb. 25 in Barcelona this year, will be hot. Besides foldable phones and hole-punch cameras, another trend we’ll see at this year’s event will be 5G. 

And we’re not just talking about tests and promises of crazy-fast internet speeds sometime in the future — we’ll actually see several new 5G phones at the show. 

SEE ALSO: This flexible smartphone unfolds to become a 7.8-inch tablet

Today, two major smartphone manufacturers, LG and Huawei, announced they would be launching 5G devices at the show. 

LG, which is known for trickling out details about upcoming devices ahead of major launches, said on Thursday it would unveil its first-ever 5G smartphone at the MWC. 

It’s unclear whether this is a variant of the LG G8, which is also likely to be launched at the event, or a different device. We know some of its specs, though: It will be powered by Qulacomm’s latest and greatest chip, the Snapdragon 855. It’ll also have a 4,000mAh battery and a vapor chamber cooling system which should do a better job at keeping the phone cool than traditional systems, including heat pipes (see diagram below). 

5G, better cooling. Gotcha.

5G, better cooling. Gotcha.

Image: LG

As for LG’s other announcement, the company recently released a teaser video hinting at a new, touch-less UI for its devices. No other details were unveiled. 

Huawei will also have a 5G phone at the show, the company announced at a Beijing event Thursday (check out the video below at 1:11:00 . Even better: Huawei will combine this year’s major trends into one by launching a foldable 5G smartphone. 

No other details about the phone were revealed, but it sounds like it’ll be a separate device from Huawei’s P30 Pro, which is also expected to launch at MWC or shortly afterwards. With companies such as Samsung and Xiaomi teasing foldable phones of their own, it’ll be interesting to see what the world’s second-largest smartphone manufacturer has in stock. 

While we don’t know much about Huawei’s upcoming phone, we know a little bit about its 5G chip, Balong 5000. It can achieve download speeds up to 4.6Gbps or 6.5Gbps, depending on the spectrum used. We’ll see the chip in phones, home routers and other 5G devices, though don’t expect to see it used much in the U.S., whose officials have lately been publicly warning against the use of Huawei equipment due to fears of espionage. 

Image: Huawei

We’re likely to see other 5G smartphones at or MWC. Samsung is rumored to be launching a 5G variant of its Galaxy S10 flagship in 2019, though it’s unclear whether this launch will happen at its February 20 “Unpacked” event ahead of the MWC, or later in the year.

Other manufacturers which might launch or at least unveil more details about their 5G phones during the MWC include OnePlus and Oppo, though details about those phones are non-existent. 

In any case, 2019 will definitely be the year of 5G. With major manufacturers announcing 5G devices, and carriers such as AT&T, Verizon and Sprint launching or expanding their 5G networks this year, we’re finally moving into the era of super-fast mobile internet.

We’ll be there at this year’s Mobile World Congress to check out all those 5G in person; stay tuned for our coverage. 

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Where Are They Now? James Harrison Recalls His Super Bowl Heroics

TAMPA, FL - FEBRUARY 01:  James Harrison #92 of the Pittsburgh Steelers scores a touchdown after running back an interception for 100 yards in the second quarter against the Arizona Cardinals during Super Bowl XLIII on February 1, 2009 at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Florida.  (Photo by Al Bello/Getty Images)

B/R

For an undrafted linebacker who started only eight games in his first four NFL seasons, James Harrison accomplished plenty during his 15-year NFL career.

He went to five Pro Bowls, recorded 84.5 regular-season sacks, forced 34 fumbles, was named a first-team All-Pro twice, won a Defensive Player of the Year award and won two Super Bowls with the Pittsburgh Steelers.

One thing Harrison didn’t do much of is score. In fact, he carried the ball into the opposing end zone only twice in his 215 career regular-season and playoff games.


Editor’s note: This is the third installment in B/R’s “Where Are They Now?” series, which profiles some former NFL postseason greats, their historic moments and what they’re doing now.

Part 1: Freddie Mitchell

Part 2: Willie Roaf

Part 3: James Harrison

Part 4: Jacoby Jones (1/31)

Part 5: Tracy Porter (2/1)

Part 6: Coming soon


One of those two touchdowns remains the longest play from scrimmage in Super Bowl history.

Said play—a jaw-dropping 100-yard interception return as the first half expired in Super Bowl XLIII—might have been the difference between a Steelers victory and a Steelers loss. After all, Pittsburgh beat the Arizona Cardinals by only four points that night at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Florida, and Harrison’s pick-six likely represented at least a 10-point swing.

The play

Friday, Feb. 1, will mark the 10-year anniversary of Harrison’s signature moment, but the now-retired 40-year-old can recall the details like it happened yesterday. In a recent conversation with Bleacher Report, he did so while noting none of it would have happened had he not decided to freelance.

“The defensive call was an all-out blitz,” he remembered. “So we were supposed to blitz, but that whole night we were getting there just a step too late. We’d get there, [Cardinals quarterback Kurt Warner would] throw, and somebody would hit him. So I’m like, ‘I’m gonna take a gamble and play for the quick slant in,’ and it worked. I dropped back, and I’m looking at him, and I think he’s looking at me. And I see his arm go up, and I’m like, ‘Oh, he’s about to throw it.’ And he throws the ball, and I’m like, ‘I can’t believe he just threw the ball.’ I catch it, and the rest is history.”

Specifically, 15.2 seconds of history.

That’s how long it took Harrison to rumble, stumble and do everything in his power not to fumble en route to the opposite end zone. And because the snap came with 18 seconds remaining, that left no margin for error. Had Harrison not made it to the end zone, the Steelers would have had to settle for a field-goal attempt.

Prior to the pick, it looked like the Cardinals, who trailed 10-0 earlier in the second quarter, were bound to steal both the lead and the momentum just before halftime. Down 10-7 following an interception of their own, Warner had moved them 33 yards to the Pittsburgh 1-yard line in the waning seconds of the half.

Warner had been sacked only once despite facing near-constant pressure. He had been getting rid of the ball quickly on a lot of short passes, so—despite the call for a blitz—Harrison decided it was time to drop back into coverage.

Screenshot from NBC broadcast

“I had a lot of things going on in my head at the time,” he said. “When I initially caught the ball, I just thought, ‘It’s over with, I’m gone.’ There was nothing in front of me. And then I’m over there hand-fighting with [teammate] Deshea [Townsend], it seemed like forever. I was trying to tell him, ‘I’m not giving you the ball—just go block somebody!’”

Harrison had to fight off teammate Deshea Townsend early in the return.

Harrison had to fight off teammate Deshea Townsend early in the return.Michael Zagaris/Getty Images

Townsend understandably figured he would be a better candidate to attempt the daunting 100-yard dash, since he was about 50 pounds lighter and certainly faster. But he eventually relented and ran ahead to block.

Delayed by his brief interaction with Townsend, Harrison was less confident about his chances of making it to the end zone.

“Then I looked up,” he recalled, “and I’m like, ‘Dude, where did all these red jerseys come from? I’m not going to make it.’”

Screenshot from NBC broadcast

Soon after that, he was sandwiched on the right sideline by Warner and Cardinals tight end Leonard Pope, but he somehow managed to evade them and was free again. 

Screenshot from NBC broadcast

“Then I look off to my left,” he said, “and there’s some damn running back there. I’m like, ‘Dude, I’m not about to make it.’”

The running back in question was Tim Hightower, and at this point, only fellow Steelers linebacker LaMarr Woodley stood between the two players. 

Screenshot from NBC broadcast

Woodley made a hell of a block, and when Harrison jumped over his teammate, he looked to have a clear path to the end zone. 

Harrison was slowed down by a critical LaMarr Woodley block at the Arizona 27-yard line.

Harrison was slowed down by a critical LaMarr Woodley block at the Arizona 27-yard line.Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images

Still, he was a big guy with smaller and faster guys chasing him down. He was running on fumes, and just when it occurred to him that the clock might be on the verge of zeros, he noticed someone else was suddenly in pursuit. 

“There’s like a lineman coming out of nowhere,” he remembered. “I’m like, ‘This dude is running hard as hell and he might catch me, but I gotta make it.’ So I ended up getting past him—I believe he dove at my feet.”

That was Mike Gandy, Arizona’s 310-pound left tackle.

Mike Gandy clipped Harrison just enough at the feet to give Larry Fitzgerald (left) a shot at a touchdown-saving play.

Mike Gandy clipped Harrison just enough at the feet to give Larry Fitzgerald (left) a shot at a touchdown-saving play.Al Bello/Getty Images

And while Harrison did indeed get past Gandy following that dive, the tackle attempt allowed Cards wide receiver Larry Fitzgerald to close in. 

“Out of nowhere, Fitzgerald comes and he goes to slap at the ball, but he misses,” Harrison remembered. “And when he misses, he hits my chest, and it gives me enough time to cover up the ball. I never saw him coming. If he had good aim and hit the ball, it would have just popped out of my arms.”

John Bazemore/Associated Press

Fitzgerald and Arizona receiver Steve Breaston essentially tackled Harrison into the front right corner of the end zone. Had Breaston’s hit come one yard earlier, Harrison would have been down inside the 1-yard line with two seconds on the clock. But instead, after landing on Fitzgerald and tumbling, he cleared the goal line with his head by about a 12-inch margin. 

TAMPA, FL - FEBRUARY 01:  James Harrison #92 of the Pittsburgh Steelers scores a touchdown after running back an interception for 100 yards in the second quarter against the Arizona Cardinals during Super Bowl XLIII on February 1, 2009 at Raymond James St

Al Bello/Getty Images

Out of gas, Harrison laid spread-eagle on the edge of the end zone while catching his breath, unaware that a penalty flag had been thrown more than 90 yards downfield. A trainer reached him and checked to make sure he was OK as referee Terry McAulay announced the penalty was against Arizona and would be declined. 

Harrison eventually rose to his feet, still huffing and puffing and likely thankful that he wouldn’t have to take the field again until Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band were through with their extended halftime show. He spent the majority of an ensuing three-minute review wearing an oxygen mask.

The aftermath

A few hours later, the Steelers beat the Cardinals to become Super Bowl champions. And although Harrison played nine more NFL seasons, he never won another Super Bowl. 

He and the Steelers made it back two years later, and he had a sack and three quarterback hits against Aaron Rodgers and the Green Bay Packers that night in Dallas. However, Pittsburgh fell short, 31-25, in an experience Harrison said was as painful as winning was joyful. 

“It’s a deep, dark depression,” he said. “You don’t even want to look at sports. You don’t want to turn on the TV for fear of [seeing it]. Because you don’t want to relive any of it.”

He spent two more seasons in Pittsburgh following the Super Bowl loss to Green Bay, joined the Bengals after becoming a cap casualty in 2013, rejoined the Steelers in more of a part-time role in 2014 and controversially jumped to the rival Patriots after the Steelers released him in December 2017. 

Now

After starting for the Patriots in their Super Bowl LII loss to the Philadelphia Eagles, Harrison decided it was time, at the age of 39, to devote himself to his family. His oldest son, 12-year-old James III, started playing contact football in the fall, and 10-year-old Henry isn’t far off. He reveled in watching James III’s team win a championship this past year, noting that he wouldn’t have had that chance if he was still grinding in the NFL. 

But that doesn’t mean Harrison is necessarily done with football. A glance at his Instagram feed confirms he’s still in impeccable shape, in part because he’s developing a fitness app that will offer four- and six-day programs featuring his large repertoire of exercises. He also wants to keep up with his kids. 

“I gotta be able to do the things that the average person does,” said Harrison, who trains religiously at his home base in Arizona, “especially with me having young boys. They’re going to want to go outside and play and do things, and I gotta still be able to move a little bit.”

Instagram/jhharrison92

And if the NFL comes knocking?

“I would say not likely,” he said. “But I never for sure 100 percent won’t be playing again. I dunno, it depends. If the right situation comes along, you may see me on the field for a short period of time. And maybe coaching or something like that. Who knows.”

If he were to come back for a curtain call, it’d be nice for that to take place in Pittsburgh. But although he spent all but 20 of his 215 career games in a Steelers uniform, his relationship with the team and its fans is complicated at the moment. 

After the Steelers cut Harrison last season, Pittsburgh fans were outraged that he joined the Patriots for a playoff run. Former teammates felt spurned, and black and gold No. 92 jerseys were burned.

And while Harrison received a loud ovation when he returned to Heinz Field in December for a ceremony commemorating the 10-year anniversary of that Super Bowl XLIII victory, he has no plans to apologize for making a business decision after the team made one of its own. 

“It may be that some fans are upset,” he said, “but for the most part, I hold no ill will toward the organization. They did what they thought was the right thing to do, and at the end of the day, it’s business. You’ve gotta be able to be comfortable with business decisions.”

For now, Harrison is keeping busy not just with his boys and his training app, but also with his clothing line, with the supplements company that he co-owns, with occasional commentary for Fox Sports and with a part-time acting career (he’ll appear in an episode of the CBS drama S.W.A.T. on Feb. 7). 

100 yards and 18 seconds that won’t go away

Days after his 100-yard return and his team’s Super Bowl XLIII victory, Harrison was portrayed by Saturday Night Live‘s Kenan Thompson in a Weekend Update sketch, with Thompson depicting Harrison as still being out of breath. 

NBC.com

In that scene, host Seth Meyers asks Thompson to “talk us through the play.”

“Talk you through it?” Thompson says while gasping for air. “Can’t you just show the tape?”

When asked what he was thinking during the play, Thompson’s Harrison character said that he was “mostly thinking, ‘Oh God, no. Somebody tackle me. I mean, end this. How far can 100 yards be? My lungs! Oh God, my lungs,’” before reaching for an oxygen mask below the desk.

But the real Harrison seems to have a perfect recollection of the entire play. He wasn’t watching it when he relived it with us, but he didn’t miss a detail.

It helps that the play is remembered fondly and routinely praised in the media. Looking back recently, NFL Network named it one of the 10 most iconic touchdowns in Super Bowl history. In 2016, Alex Marvez of Fox Sports listed it as the third-greatest moment in Super Bowl history. In 2011, ESPN.com’s Greg Garber said it might have been “the greatest play in league history.”

Harrison is reminded of those details frequently.

“For every Steelers fan, that’s the first thing they bring up if they run into me,” he said.

Brad Gagnon has covered the NFL for Bleacher Report since 2012.

Follow @Brad_Gagnon

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Extended US-Taliban peace talks in Qatar raise Afghan hopes

Talks between US and Taliban officials in Qatar have now gone on for four days with the two sides trying to establish a mechanism for a ceasefire in the 17-year Afghan war and open dialogue with the Afghan government.

US special peace envoy Zalmay Khalilzad’s meeting with Taliban representatives was originally slated to run over two days, and its unexpected extension was a positive sign, according to two senior Taliban leaders in Afghanistan who have been kept informed of the progress made in Qatar.

During the first two days, the talks focused on a roadmap for the withdrawal of the foreign forces and a guarantee that Afghanistan would not be used for hostile acts against the United States and its allies, according to one of Taliban leaders, who wished to remain anonymous.

“The mechanism for a ceasefire and ways to enter into an intra-Afghan dialogue were the two other big topics that were supposed to be discussed on Thursday,” the official told Reuters news agency.

Members of Afghanistan’s High Peace Council (AHPC), a body which oversees peace efforts but does not represent the government, said they were hoping that positive news would emerge from Doha. 

Is the Taliban using a strategy of ‘attacks and talks’? | Inside Story

“When talks take a long time, it means the discussion is in a sensitive and important stage, and the participants are getting close to a positive result,” said Sayed Ehsan Taheri, the spokesman for AHPC in Kabul.

“I hope this meeting opens a way for an intra-Afghan dialogue.”

The Taliban, who are fighting to oust foreign troops, have repeatedly rejected the offer to hold direct talks with President Ashraf Ghani’s government, which they consider an illegitimate foreign-imposed regime.

The US and regional powers insist that the peace process should be “Afghan-led and Afghan-owned”.

Diplomatic efforts to end the United State’s longest running conflict intensified last year after the appointment of the Afghan-born Khalilzad to lead direct talks with the Taliban.

Khalilzad has held at least four meetings with the Taliban representatives. He also visited Pakistan last week holding meetings with various Pakistani officials.

On Thursday, Pakistan Foreign Office spokesperson Muhammad Faisal told reporters that “the ongoing peace talks in Qatar have been facilitated by Pakistan”.

“Pakistan, as a part of the shared responsibility, is facilitating the ongoing round of talks between US and the Taliban in Doha,” said Faisal.

“Negotiations are between the two parties for which Pakistan and Qatar are providing the necessary support and facilitating the talks.”

Khalilzad is last known to have met the Taliban last month in Abu Dhabi, capital of the United Arab Emirates, which has jockeyed for influence versus Gulf rival Qatar on spearheading diplomacy with the Taliban.

Despite the talks in Doha, there has been no let up in the violence in Afghanistan.

On Monday, dozens of Afghan security forces were killed when armed Taliban fighters attacked a military base about 44km southwest of Kabul. 

A day earlier, a Taliban car bomb targeted a convoy of vehicles carrying the provincial governor of Logar in Afghanistan, killing at least eight Afghan security forces and wounding 10 others.

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Netflix’s ‘Conversations with a Killer: Ted Bundy Tapes’: Review

Modern celebrity serial killer culture arguably started with Ted Bundy, a man known for his normcore good looks, charisma, and brutal rape and murder of at least thirty women in the 70s.

In the new four-part Netflix docuseries Conversations with a Killer: The Ted Bundy Tapes, true-crime aficionados get to hear excerpts from never-before-released interviews with Bundy while he was on death row. 

SEE ALSO: Netflix’s Fyre Festival documentary is even more disturbing than we had imagined

Ted Bundy is known as the mild-mannered guy you could easily find yourself enjoying a beer with — before realizing he’s describing the location of his victims’ decapitated bodies. In the upcoming Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil and Vile film, the notorious murderer will be played by none other than Zac Effron. That’s not playing against type, either, since Effron easily fits Bundy’s persona as the nice guy with an aw schucks kind of handsomeness. 

At its best, The Ted Bundy Tapes forces us to sit with the sheep in wolf’s clothing, and what he represents as the dimpled, smiling face of Good Guy misogyny.

The docuseries does take some time to get the perspective from one of Bundy's only survivors

The docuseries does take some time to get the perspective from one of Bundy’s only survivors

Image: netflix

Out of all the famous serial killers, it is perhaps Ted Bundy who is most disconcerting to listen to in conversation simply because of how easy he makes it for you to forget about the heinous sadism he inflicted upon dozens of female victims. It’s undeniably disturbing to listen to the ease and charm of Bundy’s small talk with the interviewer, who uncomfortably admits to finding lots of common ground with the serial killer. At first.

Unlike, say, Richard Ramirez or John Wayne Gacy, Bundy terrifies because he feels like one of us rather than some evil outlier. In todays world, you could imagine the young republican Ted Bundy getting his own Richard Spencer-style profile focusing on his dapper charm and politeness. Only instead of neo-Nazism, Bundy would be known for dressing up his violent hatred of women as a perfectly reasonable counter argument to the rise of 1970s second-wave feminism.

Bundy terrifies because he feels like one of us rather than some evil outlier.

That’s what gives the conversation part of The Ted Bundy Tapes so much weight. 

If you ignore the details, he sounds like any other privileged white guy overestimating his own importance and respectability, confident in his belief that doing whatever he wants is his god-given right. His sheepish stumbles through discussions of his crimes carries the same tone of countless men who excuse past bad behavior with a “boys will be boys” shrug.

But aside from a few truly disturbing moments, the newness of the material the series advertises feels all-in-all a bit overstated.

Those who know the case well will likely be disappointed by the amount of time spent on a cursory summary of Bundy’s case, instead of the 100 hours of tapes. Outside of the excerpts, you won’t find many fresh takes, information, or insights into the man behind the monster. 

Yet those unfamiliar with Bundy won’t find much of a comprehensive introduction here either, and will miss out on some of the more notorious details about his crimes and execution. The four-part series feels like a content dump to feed our insatiable true-crime appetite, rather than a well thought out portrait of Bundy with a unique perspective.

Despite its flaws, though, Conversations with a Killer: The Ted Bundy does capture what’s disturbingly compelling and oddly relevant about Bundy to today’s politics. 

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