Tag Archives: raids

Dozens arrested in Israeli forces’ raids in occupied West Bank – Al Jazeera English

  1. Dozens arrested in Israeli forces’ raids in occupied West Bank Al Jazeera English
  2. IDF says 360 Palestinians, including 210 Hamas members, arrested in West Bank raids The Times of Israel
  3. ‘They want revenge. They’re saying, either we die or you die’: West Bank residents fear rising tide of violence The Guardian
  4. Israeli forces have arrested a number of Hamas members during raids in the Occupied West Bank Al Jazeera English
  5. Deadly violence surges in West Bank as war rages in Gaza region The Times of Israel
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Pokemon GO Adventure Week 2023: Research tasks, Raids, Mega Tyranitar, Shiny debuts & More – GameRant

  1. Pokemon GO Adventure Week 2023: Research tasks, Raids, Mega Tyranitar, Shiny debuts & More GameRant
  2. Pokémon Go Adventure Week, Sightseeing Adventure or Studious Adventure and Collection Challenges Eurogamer.net
  3. Should you pick the Sightseeing or Studious path for Adventures Near and Far Timed Research in Pokémon Go? Dot Esports
  4. Pokemon Go Adventures Near and Far Timed Research tasks & rewards Dexerto
  5. Pokemon Go choose a path: Should you pick Sightseeing or Studious Adventure? CharlieINTEL.com
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Wizards Of The Coast Raids YouTuber’s House To Take Back Magic: The Gathering Cards [Update] – Kotaku Australia

  1. Wizards Of The Coast Raids YouTuber’s House To Take Back Magic: The Gathering Cards [Update] Kotaku Australia
  2. Magic ‘Raid’: Wizards of the Coast and Pinkertons Update Gizmodo
  3. Wizards Of The Coast Has Reportedly Used Pinkertons Multiple Times TheGamer
  4. Card game makers sent private detectives to raid YouTuber’s house after he streamed unreleased version New York Post
  5. Wizards Of The Coast Reportedly Threatens Jail Time Against Player Who Was Accidentally But Legally Sold Upcoming Magic: The Gathering Set Ahead Of Official Street Date Bounding Into Comics
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‘Hear Us Niantic’ Trends On Social Media In Response To Pokémon GO Remote Raids Update – Nintendo Life

  1. ‘Hear Us Niantic’ Trends On Social Media In Response To Pokémon GO Remote Raids Update Nintendo Life
  2. Pokemon Go Players Write Open Letter to Niantic Over Remote Raid Controversy ComicBook.com
  3. Leaks point to Niantic moving ahead with Pokémon Go’s controversial Remote Raid changes Dot Esports
  4. “#HearUsNiantic”: Pokemon GO community appeals against Niantic’s latest Remote Raid Pass nerfs Sportskeeda
  5. Pokémon Go ‘Save Remote Raiding’ Petition Amasses Over 50K Signatures in Four Days CBR – Comic Book Resources
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Pokémon Go Fans Angry As Remote Raids Get Worse, More Expensive – Kotaku

  1. Pokémon Go Fans Angry As Remote Raids Get Worse, More Expensive Kotaku
  2. Pokémon Go Remote Raid Passes are getting new restrictions, price hike Polygon
  3. Pokémon Go developer teases “blockbuster slate” of summer features, amidst major Remote Raid changes Eurogamer.net
  4. Pokémon GO Developer Teases the Future Beyond Remote Raid Changes | Pokémon GO Hub Pokémon GO Hub
  5. Amid accessibility concerns, Pokemon Go fans call Remote Raid Pass changes the beginning of the end Gamesradar
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Ukraine Carries Out Anticorruption Raids Ahead of Visit From EU: Live Updates – The New York Times

  1. Ukraine Carries Out Anticorruption Raids Ahead of Visit From EU: Live Updates The New York Times
  2. Big win for Putin in Donetsk; Russian Army ‘liberates’ strategic village in Donbas I Watch Hindustan Times
  3. Ukraine war live updates: U.S. reportedly readying $2 billion aid package for Ukraine; Kyiv signals reforms ahead of EU summit CNBC
  4. US News Live | Russia-Ukraine war: 26% Americans feel aid to Ukraine is too much | WION Live WION
  5. Ukraine war: Russian forces massing in east, bounty on Western tanks, sanctions evasion network Euronews
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Ukraine raids home of billionaire in war-time anti-corruption crackdown

  • Security services make sweeping raids before EU summit
  • Homes of billionaire, former interior minster searched
  • New U.S. weapons would nearly double Ukraine’s range
  • Ukrainian soldier says fighting Russian forces in Bakhmut

KYIV, Feb 1 (Reuters) – Security services searched the home of one of Ukraine’s most prominent billionaires on Wednesday, moving against a figure once seen as President Volodymyr Zelenskiy’s sponsor in what the authorities called a war-time anti-corruption purge.

The action, days before a summit with the European Union, appears to reflect determination by Kyiv to demonstrate that it can be a steward of billions of dollars in Western aid and shed a reputation as one of the world’s most corrupt states.

It came as Kyiv has secured huge pledges of weapons from the West in recent weeks offering new capabilities – the latest expected this week to include rockets from the United States that would nearly double the firing range of Ukrainian forces.

Photographs circulating on social media appeared to show Ihor Kolomoiskiy dressed in a sweatsuit and looking on in the presence of an SBU security service officer at his home.

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The SBU said it had uncovered the embezzlement of more than $1 billion at Ukraine’s biggest oil company, Ukrnafta, and its biggest refiner, Ukrtatnafta. Kolomoiskiy, who has long denied wrongdoing, once held stakes in both firms, which Zelenskiy ordered seized by the state in November under martial law.

Separate raids were carried out at the tax office, and the home of Arsen Avakov, who led Ukraine’s police force as interior minister from 2014-2021. The SBU said it was cracking down on “people whose actions harm the security of the state in various spheres” and promised more details in coming days.

“Every criminal who has the audacity to harm Ukraine, especially in the conditions of war, must clearly understand that we will put handcuffs on his hands,” Ukraine’s security service chief Vasyl Malyuk was quoted as saying on the SBU Telegram channel.

The prosecutor general’s office said the top management of Ukrtatnafta had been notified it was under suspicion, as were a former energy minister, a former deputy defence minister and other officials.

Kolomoiskiy, who faces a fraud case in the United States, has been at the centre of corruption allegations and court disputes for years that Western donors have said must be resolved for Kyiv to win aid.

Zelenskiy, who first came to fame as the star of a sitcom on Kolomoiskiy’s TV station, has long promised to rid Ukraine of so-called oligarchs, but had faced accusations that he was unable to move decisively against his former sponsor.

In an address overnight before the raids, he alluded to new anti-corruption measures in time for Friday’s summit, at which Ukraine is expected to seek firm steps towards joining the EU.

“We are preparing new reforms in Ukraine. Reforms that will change the social, legal and political reality in many ways, making it more human, transparent and effective,” he said, promising to reveal the details soon.

LONGER RANGE MISSILES

Ukrainian forces which recaptured swathes of territory from Russian troops in the second half of 2022 have seen their advance stall since November. Kyiv says the key to regaining the initiative is securing advanced Western weaponry.

Two U.S. officials said a new $2 billion package of military aid to be announced as soon as this week would for the first time include Ground Launched Small Diameter Bombs (GLSDB), a new weapon designed by Boeing. (BA.N)

The cheap gliding missiles can strike targets more than 150 km (90 miles) away, a dramatic increase over the 80 km range of the rockets fired by HIMARS systems which changed the face of the war when Washington sent them last summer.

That would put all of the Russian-occupied territory on Ukraine’s mainland, as well as parts of the Crimea peninsula seized by Moscow in 2014, within range of Kyiv’s forces.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the arrival of longer range U.S. weapons would escalate the conflict.

Western countries pledged scores of advanced main battle tanks for the first time last week, a breakthrough in support aimed at giving Kyiv the capability to recapture occupied territory this year.

But the arrival of the new weapons is still months away, and in the meantime, Russia has gained momentum on the battlefield, announcing advances north and south of the city of Bakhmut, its main target for months.

Kyiv disputes many of those claims and Reuters could not independently verify the full situation, but the locations of reported fighting clearly indicate incremental Russian advances.

Troops were fighting building to building in Bakhmut for gains of barely 100 metres (yards) a night, and the city was coming under constant Russian shelling, a soldier in a Ukrainian unit of Belarusian volunteers told Reuters from inside the city.

Ukraine’s general staff said late on Tuesday its forces had come under fire in Bakhmut and the villages of Klishchiivka and Kurdyumivka on its southern approaches.

South of Bakhmut, Russia has also launched a major new offensive this week on Vuhledar, a longstanding Ukrainian-held bastion at the junction of the southern and eastern front lines. Kyiv says its forces have so far held there.

PURGE

The infusion of Western military and financial aid creates new pressure on Zelenskiy to demonstrate his government can clean up Ukraine.

Last week, he purged more than a dozen senior officials following a series of scandals and graft allegations in the biggest shakeup of Ukraine’s leadership since the invasion.

Following Wednesday’s raids, the parliamentary leader of Zelenskiy’s Servant of the People party, David Arakhamia, wrote on Telegram: “The country will change during the war. If someone is not ready for change, then the state itself will come and help them change.”

Reporting by Reuters bureaux
Writing by Peter Graff
Editing by Philippa Fletcher

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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US Equips Ukraine With ‘Fake’ Missile Defense Systems To Confuse Russian Fighter Pilots & Suppress Air Raids

The US has delivered Ukraine with ‘threat emitters’ or what can also be called fake radars intended to confuse Russian fighter pilots to make up for the loss of Ukraine’s diminishing inventory of surface-to-air missile systems.

More than ten months into the war, the Russian Aerospace Forces (VKS), which is numerically and technologically superior to Ukraine’s air force, has still not managed to gain complete control over Ukrainian airspace.

As EurAsian Times discussed earlier, the war in the air domain was not as much about air superiority for Ukraine as it was about denying airspace to Russian combat aviation assets by using an array of air defense systems.

Ukraine fielded medium and long-range air defenses, like the S-300s and Buk-M1s, which forced the Russian fighter jets to fly at altitudes below 4500 meters, right into the range of the man-portable air defense systems (MANPADS) that have accounted for a significant number of shoot-downs of Russian aircraft.

However, as of present, Ukraine’s inventory of these SAMs and launchers for the SAMs appears to be dwindling at a rate that could potentially present a massive problem for the Ukrainian military.

Ukraine Losing S-300s Rapidly!

Ukraine has lost around 36 S-300 launchers so far, according to the figures compiled by the military tracking blog Oryx based on visual confirmations. It is possible that the actual number of losses may be higher.

Reports in July suggested that Ukraine’s air defenders are losing S-300 launchers at a rate of at least three or four a week.

File Image: S-300

Additionally, in recent months, the Russian military has repeatedly been filling the Ukrainian skies with a salvo of missiles and loitering munitions to overwhelm the Ukrainian air defense systems, which has been depleting Ukraine’s stockpile of surface-to-air missiles at a heavy rate.

Therefore, as recently announced by Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov, Kyiv is in discussions with other countries to replenish Ukraine’s stock of S-300 missiles.

“S-300, they work very well. The fact is that they were not made in Ukraine; that is, we do not have S-300 missiles, so we use stocks. Therefore, with colleagues-ministers of defense of countries in which there are also S-300, we are negotiating the possibility of replenishing this reserve of missiles from their warehouses and arsenals,” Reznikov said.

It appears that the US may have provided threat suppliers to Ukraine to bolster its air defenses until Kyiv finds another source of S-300 systems.

US Provides Ukraine With Fake S-300 Radars?

The supply of threat emitters by the US to Ukraine was first reported by Aviation Week on December 4. Threat emitters emit a radio signal similar to an air defense radar without having the same signal-processing systems.

Militaries generally use them for training their aircrews to identify and react to threats in simulated combat scenarios, where pilots learn the signatures of hostile aircraft and missiles and get to know how their sensors would detect such threats in real-world circumstances.

One such system is the Joint Threat Emitter developed by Northrop Grumman. It comprises a command unit operated by soldiers and trailer-mounted radar threat emitters. A command unit can control up to 12 different threat emitters, and each emitter can simulate up to six threats simultaneously.

Joint Threat Emitter (US Air Force)

However, when deployed in an actual conflict, these threat emitters could fool an enemy fighter pilot by giving them the impression that local defenses are more powerful than they actually are, thereby potentially dissuading them from conducting a raid.

Employing threat emitters is just a tactic of deception, one that Russia and Ukraine have used against one another since the start of the war by deploying mock-ups or dummies of weapon systems like HIMARS and S-300 air defense systems, as discussed previously at great length by EurAsian Times.

It is not clear yet, exactly which threat the emitters provided to Ukraine would be replicating. Reports suggest the threat emitters in question could be replicating the 36D6M1-1 air defense radar sold to the US Army in 2018 by Iskra, a Ukrainian radar manufacturing company.

The 36D6M1-1, also dubbed as ‘Tin Shield,’ is a mobile 3D air space surveillance radar capable of detecting low-flying air targets under active and passive jamming protection. It is said to be associated with the S-300 air defense system.

36D6M1-1 air defense radar (Facebook)

The Chief of Staff of the US Air Force (USAF), General Charles Q. Brown Jr., reportedly said that providing threat emitters to Ukraine is an example of how the Pentagon can find quick ways to address problems during a crisis while also pointing out the delivery of Raytheon AGM-88 High-speed Anti-Radiation Missiles (HARM) to Ukraine in August.

Brown said that before the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the idea of modifying a HARM to integrate it with a Mikoyan MiG-29 would have been immediately dismissed as very difficult, but in the face of crisis, the Pentagon and contractors managed to make it work.

“So there are ways to work with industry and those who actually build systems to figure out the details and move forward in certain areas because of a need and driving a sense of urgency,” Brown was cited as saying by Aviation Week.

The military and industry need to continue doing this thing and not “go back to our regularly scheduled program,” he continued. “We’ve got to think crisis-like ahead of a crisis so that we are better postured and prepared.”



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Pokémon Go to have Elite Raids that don’t sound very player-friendly

There have been several questionable additions to Pokémon Go by developers Niantic, but the recently announced Elite Raids seem to take the cake for the boldest and most anti-player gameplay mechanic introduced yet. The first Elite Raid to arrive will appear this Sunday, October 16, featuring Hoopa Unbound.

How an Elite Raid will work is similar to the previous one, three, and five-star raids already in the game. When an Elite Raid egg appears at a gym, it will take 24 hours for the egg to hatch before the raid Pokémon appears, and players can battle it. Therefore, an Elite Raid Pokémon will only appear for 30 minutes, and players can only enlist the help of those in proximity; no one can use a remote raid ticket to participate. Elite Raids will happen at 11 AM, 2 PM, or 5 PM depending on when the egg appears in a player’s local area.

Related: Should you get Field Notes: Trick of the Light Community Day Special Research ticket in Pokémon Go?

Players will undoubtedly find the length of time it takes for an Elite Raid to be obscene, especially if these follow the same mechanics of other raids. When a raid egg appears above the Gym, it essentially locks down the Pokémon players have placed into them, preventing other players from challenging them or taking it over. Everything freezes for the raid until the Pokémon hatches and is defeated. Normally, a raid egg takes an hour to hatch, and then it’s available for another hour. The Elite Raid freezes the Gym for an entire day, preventing players from doing anything with it until it’s defeated.

This type of format doesn’t sound too player-friendly in the grand scheme. We can see Niantic trying to make it community-centric by having specific times when these Elite Raids will be available. Even if the Pokémon featured was only available at one specific time in the past, locking down a Gym for 24 hours feels pretty hurtful, especially for players who only have access to one Gym in their local area. Not every street has one to three Gyms that players can readily access.

On top of this, preventing players from inviting others through remote raid passes is a wasted opportunity. However, we shouldn’t be too surprised, given that for the past few months, Niantic has been slowly pulling away from remote raid passes and has already increased their prices, trying to make them less used by the community.

We did reach out to Niantic to comment regarding the upcoming Elite Raids. Alex Moffit, director of product management, said, “We’re always thrilled at the sight of raid groups meeting up for Wednesday Raid Hours and weekend Raid Days; those raid groups are going to love Elite Raids because it gives players more options for raiding in person. The unique Pokémon which can be battled in Elite Raids, combined with its longer hatch timer and general air of mystery, should provide an opportunity for new local raid groups to form and existing ones to grow even stronger.”

Given this response, it looks like the Niantic team is hoping to use this as a new challenge ring for players to try reaching, along with tempting new players to get involved with raids. With the difficulty going up, the timers behind the raid don’t feel friendly for most players who likely can’t meet the requirements to take on this difficult Pokémon awaiting them, and waiting for a Gym to become available feels weird, given how long it takes. For some, this can be frustrating if it’s the only Gym nearby.

The Elite Raids will continue to appear throughout the course of Season of Light. It’s likely they will continue to feature Hoopa Unbound, with more hard-to-get Mythical or Legendary Pokémon releasing in the future seasons. We foresee a good amount of the Pokémon Go Community backlash when Elite Raids arrive on October 16.

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YouTube Live stole one of Twitch’s best features and managed to make raids better

A few years ago, YouTube added Live Redirects as a way for creators to hold livestreams that ended by pointing viewers to another video on their own channel for premiere events, like BTS engaging fans before showing off a new music video. Now it has adjusted Live Redirects so that live streamers on the service can bounce their audience to another livestream when they go offline. A premiere launch event for the film Top Gun: Maverick on Wednesday will be one of the first big events to take advantage of the new addition.

On Twitch, this behavior is called a raid. On one hand, it’s a good way to help grow audiences and find new content, but it has also been a conduit for harassment on the platform as “hate raids” would target marginalized streamers with abuse from hundreds of accounts at a time.

YouTube Live Redirect example flow
Image: YouTube Support

YouTube clearly took note of the issues Twitch has struggled to contain and is launching Live Redirects with settings that could make bot-fueled harassment something streamers don’t have to worry about as much.

On Twitch, by default, channels are set to allow raids from anyone, and while users can change that setting to only allow raids from “friends, teammates, and followed channels,” many don’t do it. From the start, however, YouTube Live Redirects can only point to channels that subscribe to the streamer or that have explicitly added that channel to an allowed list. In addition, only channels with more than 1,000 subscribers and no active community guideline strikes can send a Live Redirect.

Now that the feature is live, we’ll be able to see how streamers use it, but building in default settings that give streamers one less thing to worry about should be a good start. YouTube previewed Live Redirects in a March video along with several other new features that are coming as it tries to convince creators that this is the platform they should use instead of competitors like Twitch, Facebook, or TikTok.



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