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News

News quiz, week ending June 10

 

Who won the French Open men’s and women’s titles?

Ramadan began on Monday for most of the world’s Muslims. What does the holiday celebrate?

What two teams are competing in the Stanley Cup finals?

Bernie Sanders said he would continue his presidential campaign until the last primary this Tuesday. Where will the last primary be held?

Why are some people outraged by a screenwriter’s wanting Leonardo DiCaprio to play Rumi, the 13th-century Persian poet, in an upcoming biopic?

What tennis star was suspended from competition for two years after testing positive for a performance-enhancing substance?

At least four people died and several others were injured in a shooting at a market in which Israeli city?

What country has the world’s longest-serving monarch?

What head of state addressed the U.S. Congress?

Name at least three of the eulogists at the memorial service for Muhammad Ali?

 

 

 

 

 

 

Answers

Novak Djokovic, Garbine Muguruza

God’s revealing the Quran

The Pittsburgh Penguins and San Jose Sharks

Washington, D.C.

Rumi wasn’t white

Maria Sharapova

Tel Aviv

Thailand, where on Thursday King Bhumibol Adulyadej marked 70 years on the throne

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi

Lonnie Ali, Maryum Ali, Rasheda Ali-Walsh, Natasha Mundkur, John Ramsey, Billy Crystal, Bryant Gumbel, President William J. Clinton

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News

News quiz, week ending June 3

How many times was Muhammad Ali the world heavyweight boxing champion?

The World Health Organization said last Saturday there was “no public health justification” for doing what?

President Francoise Hollande of France and German Chancellor Angela Merkel traveled on Sunday to eastern France to commemorate the 100th anniversary of which battle of World War I?

What is “Rolling Thunder”?

Whom did the U.S. Libertarian Party select as its presidential and vice presidential nominees?

Who won the Indianapolis 500?

Iraqi forces are battling with the Islamic State to retake what city?

Who was Harambe?

Where did the world’s longest and deepest rail tunnel open?

What caused Prince’s death?

 

 

 

 

 

Answers

Three

Postponing or canceling the Rio de Janeiro Olympics because of the Zika outbreak

The Battle of Verdun

An annual motorcycle rally that takes over the National Mall in Washington each Memorial Day weekend

Former New Mexico Governor Gary Johnson and former Massachusetts Governor William Weld

Alexander Rossi, a 24-year-old American rookie

Fallujah

A 17-year-old gorilla at the Cincinnati Zoo who was killed by zoo officials last Saturday to protect a child who had climbed through a public barrier and entered the gorillas’ enclosure

Switzerland

An accidental overdose of fentanyl, a synthetic opiate

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News

News quiz, week ending May 27

Who won the Preakness Stakes?

Who is the new manager of Manchester United?

Who was Mullah Mansour?

The U.S. lifted its decades-old arms embargo on what country?

A strike by oil refinery workers in what country led to shortages at gas stations?

Baltimore police officer Edward Nero was found not guilty of criminal charges in who’s death?

What musical was the top-grossing show on Broadway last season?

Which member of the European Union reached an agreement with creditors?

President Obama became the first sitting U.S. president to visit which Japanese city?

Who bankrolled Hulk Hogan’s lawsuit against Gawker Media?

 

 

 

 

 

 

Answers

Exaggerator
José Mourinho
The leader of the Afghan Taliban, who was killed by the U.S. in a drone strike last Saturday
Vietnam
France
Freddie Gray, a 25-year-old Baltimore man who died last year after suffering a spinal cord injury in police custody
“The Lion King”
Greece
Hiroshima, where the U.S. dropped an atomic bomb on Aug. 6, 1945
Peter Thiel, a billionaire co-founder of PayPal who asserted that he was outed as being gay by Gawker in an article published in 2007

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News

News quiz, week ending May 20

Which country won this year’s Eurovision song contest?

Who won the Man Booker Prize?

In what company did Warren Buffett invest $1 billion?

Who is the embattled president of Venezuela?

Who is the new president of Taiwan?

To what city was EgyptAir Flight 804 headed when it disappeared over the Mediteranean Sea?

Which medical testing company reportedly voided two years of test results?

CBS’s chief executive said the following this week about whom: “He broke ground in war reporting and made a name that will forever be synonymous with 60 Minutes?”

How many words (to the nearest billion) does Google translate a day, according to a presentation by the company at its IO 2016 conference this week?

The price of milk in the U.S. fell to a six-year low. How much, on average, does a gallon of whole milk in the U.S. cost?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Answers

Ukraine

South Korean author Han Kang and her translator Deborah Smith for “The Vegetarian,” a three-part novel

Apple

Nicolás Maduro

Tsai Ing-wen

Cairo

Theranos

Morley Safer, the newsman and 60 Minutes correspondent who died on Thursday

143,280,496,726

$3.15

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News

News quiz, week ending May 13

Who won the Kentucky Derby?

Who is Khalid al-Falih?

Who reportedly said he won’t use nuclear weapons unless his country’s sovereignty is threatened?

Why did the U.S. Department of Justice and North Carolina sue each other?

The Philippines have their own Trump. Who is he?

A redesign of what social network for sharing images sparked a split of opinion among users?

What is the charge against Brazil’s president that led to a vote by senators to impeach her?

Two pieces of debris discovered in South Africa and the Mauritian island of Rodrigues are almost certainly from what aircraft, according to authorities in Malaysia?

Which social network responded to charges that it downplays news about conservatives?

Which U.S. senator tweeted at Donald Trump, “Your policies are dangerous. Your words are reckless. Your record is embarrassing. And your free ride is over.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Answers

Nyquist

The chairman of state oil company Saudi Arabian Oil Co. who was appointed Saudi Arabia’s oil minister.

North Korean leader Kim Jung Un

The government charges that a North Carolina law that requires people who use bathrooms and locker rooms in state and local facilities use the facilities that correspond to the sex listed on their birth certificates discriminates against transgender people. The state’s governor charges the Justice Department with misinterpreting federal civil rights laws.

Rodrigo Duterte, the incoming president, who has an unrestrained style that some have likened to Donald Trump.

Instagram

She is charged with using state-run banks and funds to conceal a deficit by paying, in advance of an election in 2014, benefits payments and other government expenses.

Malaysia Airlines MH370, which disappeared in March 2014 with 239 passengers and crew on board

Facebook

Elizabeth Warren, a first-term Democratic senator from Massachusetts

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News

News quiz, week ending May 6

Who is Craig Wright and what did he claim to have done?

What is the significance in U.S. politics of the numbers 1,237 and 2,383?

What soccer club won the English Premier League?

What country put its wild animals up for sale, saying it needed buyers to step in to save the beasts from a devastating drought?

Which six countries are the most popular tax havens, according to the United Nations?

What bank note is the European Union abandoning?

Who told investors not to worry, “My desk is at the end of the production line.”

Who is Ahmet Davutoglu and what did he announce?

Sadiq Khan won the mayoral election in London. What “first” does Khan’s victory represent?

Who posted a photo of himself eating a taco bowl for Cinco de Mayo with the message: “I love Hispanics!”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Answers

A tech entrepreneur from Australia who claimed to have invented the virtual currency known as bitcoin

The number of delegates needed to clinch the U.S. Republican and Democratic presidential nominations, respectively

Leicester City, which overcame odds of 5,000-to-1 to win the title

Zimbabwe

Netherlands, the U.S., U.K., Luxembourg, Switzerland and Ireland

The 500 euro bill

Elon Musk, co-founder and CEO of Tesla, who announced plans to produce 500,000 cars over the next two years

The prime minister of Turkey, who said he would step down following a power struggle with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan

Khan will become the city’s first Muslim mayor

Donald Trump

Categories
News

Global oil glut fuels thaw in US-Iran relations

The glut of global oil may be accelerating the thaw in relations between the U.S. and Iran.

The announcement on Saturday that economic sanctions against Iran have lifted frees roughly $100 billion to flow into Iran, which can resume oil exports. The end to the embargo came after United Nations inspectors certified that Iran honored commitments to dismantle major parts of its nuclear program.

The Iranians reportedly met their nuclear-related promises months ahead of schedule. The speed reflected in part a determination by Iranian President Hassan Rouhani to boost the flow of funds into the treasury before parliamentary elections slated for next month.

“They were highly motivated to get it done,” an American official told the Times, which notes that the falloff in oil prices has slashed the Islamic Republic’s national revenue.

Iran says it can produce 500,000 barrels of oil a day. That would add to an oversupply that has pushed prices to below $30 a barrel, their lowest in a dozen years.

The action by Iran to dismantle its nuclear program and the lifting of sanctions culminates a deal reached in July between the Iran and six world powers: the U.S., Britain, France, China, Russia and Germany.

The end of sanctions means that Iran can connect with the international financial system, and that Iranian business can trade with the EU. Details for trade between Iran and the U.S. may take longer to hammer out.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Categories
Finance News

How the blockchain benefits financial transactions

A patent filing in early December by Goldman Sachs hints at the promise of digital currency to speed financial transactions.

The investment bank aims to create a cryptocurrency called SETLcoin, which would guarantee execution and settlement of securities trades within minutes, according to the filing.

The move, which was reported by American Banker, mirrors similar efforts by banks worldwide. At least 42 financial institutions, including JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, Bank of America and Barclays, have joined a consortium that is developing distributed ledger technologies. Some of the same banks also have teamed up with the Linux Foundation to develop open-source software for business transactions.

To appreciate the potential of peer-to-peer technologies for exchanging stocks, bonds and other assets, consider the process as it exists currently. As described in the filing by Goldman:

“As implemented by [SETL.coin], a trader no longer trades securities by meeting at an exchange with an indication of cash for security and then settles the transaction seconds, hours, or days later, meanwhile bearing all of the associated credit risk in the interim.

Traders using the described technology exchange securities by presenting an open transaction on the associated funds in their respective wallets. SETLcoin ownership is immediately transferred to a new owner after authentication and verification, which are based on network ledgers within a peer-to-peer network, guaranteeing nearly instantaneous execution and settlement.”

The promise of the network turns on the so-called blockchain, a database for recording and verifying transactions that was developed in connection with the exchange of bitcoin, a digital currency that is traded independent of banks and governments.

In “Digital Gold,” his book about the origins of bitcoin, Nathaniel Popper summarizes the steps that form the process for exchanging bitcoins. As Popper describes a hypothetical exchange:

“To recap, the five basic of the bitcoin process were laid out as follows:

Alice initiates a transfer of bitcoins from her account by signing off with her private key and broadcasting the transaction to other users.

The other users of the network make sure Alice’s bitcoin address has sufficient funds and then add Alice’s transaction to a list of other recent transactions, known as a block.

Computers take part in a computational race to have their list of transactions, or block, added to the blockchain.

The computer that has its block added to the blockchain is also granted a bundle of new bitcoins.

Computers on the network start compiling a new list of unconfirmed recent transactions, trying to win the next bundle of bitcoins.”

For bitcoin, the blockchain enables the movement of money without a bank or central authority. For banks, the blockchain promises to virtually eliminate the risk that arises during the lag between a transaction and its settlement.

As Oliver Bussmann, chief information officer of UBS explained in August to CIO.com, instantaneous settlement means that someone who buys a share of stock for $100, for example, would settle the trade at $100, compared with a trade that takes days to clear, during which time the value of the share might fall, with the buyer bearing the risk.

Magnify that and you can understand why banks are experimenting with the blockchain. “The ability to do those changes within minutes or seconds instead of waiting two days for an execution… is a big change,” Bussmann said.

 

 

 

Categories
News

Paris, Beirut attacks

https://twitter.com/jean_jullien/status/665305363500011521

https://twitter.com/MGHuff/status/665966897775706113

https://twitter.com/dmascret/status/665820842224435200

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News

FTC ends probe of data breach at Morgan Stanley, offers guidance to businesses

If they haven’t already, companies that handle customers’ personal information should read a letter released recently by the Federal Trade Commission that concludes an investigation by the agency into data security practices at Morgan Stanley.

The probe by the FTC followed Morgan Stanley’s firing in January of a financial adviser who downloaded and took home with him details for the accounts of 350,000 of the firm’s roughly 3.5 million wealth-management clients. Morgan Stanley later discovered some of the information on Pastebin, a file-sharing site.

Though the information reportedly included account names and numbers, account values and states of residence, the bank said that no clients incurred financial harm as a result of the breach. Law-enforcement officials later investigated whether hackers obtained the information from the adviser’s computer and posted the details online.

Two factors influenced the FTC’s decision to end its investigation without charging Morgan Stanley with failing to secure the information in violation of federal law, which prohibits unfair or deceptive acts or practices by businesses.

First, the FTC found that Morgan Stanley maintained “comprehensive policies designed to protect against insider theft of personal information.” According to the agency, the firm limits access by employees to data for which they have a business need, monitors data transfers by employees, prohibits use of USB flash drives and other devices that can be used to remove data, and blocks access by employees to websites the firm regard as high-risk.

Second, although the adviser was able to obtain a “narrow set of reports” for which Morgan Stanley had configured controls improperly, the company fixed the problem quickly after the breach came to its attention.

“We continue to emphasize that data security is an ongoing process,” the FTC wrote. “As risks, technologies, and circumstances change over time, companies must adjust security practices accordingly. As employees increasingly use personal websites and a host of online applications, companies should deploy appropriate controls to address the potential risks of broad access to such resources on work devices.”