Kimia Scientific group proudly presents: 🎙🔠Free Discussion sessions
📖📌Topic: Friends🙍♂️🙍♀️ 🔹What do your friends mean to you? 🔹 What makes you a good friend? 🔹 Is it easy for you to make friends? 🔹 What’s the nicest thing you’ve ever done for your friends? 🔹 Do you ever worry about losing your friends?
⏰🗓 Date and time: Sunday & Monday at 4:30 pm to 6 pm
🏛 Place: Chemical and Petroleum Engineering department, Class number 11
👥Everyone is allowed to participate and we hope you do.
Kimia Scientific group proudly presents: 🎙🔠Free Discussion sessions
📖📌Topic: Friends🙍♂️🙍♀️ 🔹What do your friends mean to you? 🔹 What makes you a good friend? 🔹 Is it easy for you to make friends? 🔹 What’s the nicest thing you’ve ever done for your friends? 🔹 Do you ever worry about losing your friends?
⏰🗓 Date and time: Sunday & Monday at 4:30 pm to 6 pm
🏛 Place: Chemical and Petroleum Engineering department, Class number 11
👥Everyone is allowed to participate and we hope you do.
Despite Telegram's origins, its approach to users' security has privacy advocates worried. Messages are not fully encrypted by default. That means the company could, in theory, access the content of the messages, or be forced to hand over the data at the request of a government. Multiple pro-Kremlin media figures circulated the post's false claims, including prominent Russian journalist Vladimir Soloviev and the state-controlled Russian outlet RT, according to the DFR Lab's report. Right now the digital security needs of Russians and Ukrainians are very different, and they lead to very different caveats about how to mitigate the risks associated with using Telegram. For Ukrainians in Ukraine, whose physical safety is at risk because they are in a war zone, digital security is probably not their highest priority. They may value access to news and communication with their loved ones over making sure that all of their communications are encrypted in such a manner that they are indecipherable to Telegram, its employees, or governments with court orders. "The inflation fire was already hot and now with war-driven inflation added to the mix, it will grow even hotter, setting off a scramble by the world’s central banks to pull back their stimulus earlier than expected," Chris Rupkey, chief economist at FWDBONDS, wrote in an email. "A spike in inflation rates has preceded economic recessions historically and this time prices have soared to levels that once again pose a threat to growth."
from es