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Egpa UN chief:    Pivotal moment    for fighting global warming
 On Sept. 6, 2006, President George W. Bush delivered the first detailed formal public representation about the effectiveness of the CIA   enhanced interrogation technique. This is according to the Senate Intelligence Committee Report on CIA Interrogation that was released Tuesday.In his speech, delivered from the White House, President Bush outlined the U.S.s successes in capturing and questioning high-level terrorists involved with the 9/11 attacks. The president also lauded the contributions of intelligence officers in their quest to bring those responsible for the attacks to justice. But according to the Senate report, some of the intelligence the president referenced was based on false information provided by the CIA.In his speech, President Bush referenced detainee Abu Zubaydah, a senior terrorist leader and associate of Osama bin Laden. He said that information obtained from Zubaydah during an  alternat stanley cup ive set of procedures  used during questioning led to information that helped stop a terrorist attack being planned for inside the U.S. 8 stanley cup 220;We knew that Zubaydah had more information that could sa stanley cup ve innocent lives. But he stopped talking.As his questioning proceeded, it became clear that he had received training on how to resist interrogation. And so, the CIA used an alternative set of procedures. According to the report, Zubaydah did not respond any differently to  enhanced interrogation techniques. Abu Zubaydah   inability to provide i Kqzv Chinese jets conduct unsafe intercept of Navy aircraft, says Pentagon
 BOSTON  AP  鈥?In early June, sporadic but serious service disruptions plagued Microsoft   flagship office suite 鈥?including the Outlook email and OneDrive file-sharing apps 鈥?and cloud computing platform. A shadowy hacktivist group claimed responsibility, saying i stanley cup t flooded the sit stanley cup es with junk traffic in distributed denial-of-service attacks.Initially reticent to name the cause, Microsoft has now disclosed that DDoS attacks by the murky upstart were indeed to blame.But the software giant has offered few details 鈥?and did not immediately comment on how many customers were affected and whether the impact was global. A spokeswoman confirmed that the group that calls itself Anonymous Sudan was behind the attacks. It claimed responsibility on its Telegram social media channel at the time. Some聽security researchers聽believe the group to be Russian.Microsofts explanation in a聽blog post Friday evening聽followed a request by The Associated Press two days earlier. Slim on details, the post said the attacks  temporarily impacted availability  of some services. It said the attacke jordan rs were focused on  disruption and publicity  and likely used rented cloud infrastructure and virtual private networks to bombard Microsoft servers from so-called botnets of zombie computers around the globe.Microsoft said there was no evidence any customer data was accessed or compromised.While DDoS attacks are mainly a nuisance 鈥?making websites unreachable without penetrating them 鈥?security experts say th