Tag: ‘shady’
Eminem objects to Real Housewives trademarking their podcast brand Reasonably Shady
LobbyLeaks is a new EU platform to combat shady lobbying
LobbyLeaks is a joint effort by a group of MEPs and two non-governmental organizations (NGO) working to oppose shady lobbying and “astroturfing” tactics aimed at influencing the European policymaking process. Their website is designed to unveil the “political clout” of big tech companies, and provides a tool to safely leak…
Microsoft – stop it already with the shady tricks to push Windows 11 upgrades
New Love Island feud erupts as Tasha hits out at former villa co-stars’ shady swipes
LOVE Island’s Tasha Ghouri has slammed a podcast featuring her former villa co-stars Jay Younger and Charlie Radnedge.
Several couples from the most recent summer series were savagely mocked in a recent episode.
Charlie Radnedge and Jay Younger appeared with Miles Nazaire[/caption]
It is the latest feud to emerge from their series of the show, which was won by Davide Sanclimenti and Ekin-Su Cülcüloğlu.
Charlie, who hosts Playtime with ex Made In Chelsea cast member Miles Nazaire, was talking about who is still together from the series.
He said: “There are a few couples that are still going strong, like Tasha and Andrew and Ekin-Su and Davide.”
At that point they all started giggling – with Miles saying sarcastically: “Yeah they’re strong man, real strong.”
The three of them then collapsed in fits of laughter.
Charlie, 28, asked: “Dami and Indiyah are definitely still together, aren’t they?”
Tasha, 24, who is dating Andrew Le Page, tweeted after the broadcast: “Some people really don’t have anything else to talk about.
“Find it mad how youse keep using our names for views on your channel, it’s getting boring honestly X.”
Asked to name who she was talking about, she added: “All imma say is it’s a certain podcast x.”
There are three couples still going strong from the previous version of Love Island: Tasha and Andrew, Ekin-Su and Davide and Indiyah and Dami.
The podcast also laughed about Gemma Owen’s ex Luca Bish – after Jay said he’d met up with him the previous night.
Asked how he was, the 29-year-old said: “Yeah I think he’s good man,” at which the hosts collapsed with laughter.
Miles said: “F*** off. I love that. ‘Yeah he’s… he’s good.’”
Scottish investment analyst Jay appeared on the previous series of Love Island on day nine and lasted 29 days on the show.
Charlie arrived a day earlier but lasted only eight days.
Miles backed him when he went in, posting on Instagram: “The secret is out, Charlie is on Love Island. We’ve known for weeks and it’s been killing us to not say anything.
“Me and the boys obviously knew this and this is why he’s not been on social media or we haven’t been hanging out with him.”
Reality TV stars Miles and Charlie host a podcast called Playtime[/caption]
Love Island 2023 cast revealed
Here’s your rundown of the 2023 Love Island contestants
- All about Bond actress Olivia Hawkins
- The villa’s first partially-sighted star Ron Hall
- Who is Tanyel Revan?
- Everything to know about Kai Fagan
- Make-up artist to the stars Lana Jenkins
- Who is TikTok farmer Will Young?
- All about science student Tanya Manhenga
- Everything to know about Shaq Muhammad
- Who is Love Island‘s Anna-May Robey?
- All about Haris Namani
- Bombshell and footballer Tom Clare
- Who is Love Island bombshell Zara Lackenby-Brown?
- Australian beauty Jessie Wynter explained
- All about Aaron Waters
- The full Love Island cast revealed
How Shady Ships are Spoofing Their Locations with Fake GPS Coordinates
The article, by Anatoly Kurmanaev, highlights the Cyprus-registered tanker Reliant, which was observed taking on oil at a Venezuelan refinery last December. At the same time, however, the ship was reporting its position as some 300 nautical miles (about 500 kilometers) away, “drifting innocuously off the coast of St. Lucia.”
It’s illegal (under international law), but the rapidly-growing practice lets ships circumvent international laws and sanctions, the Times reports, and “could transform how goods are moved around the world, with profound implications for the enforcement of international law, organized crime and global trade.”
Its use has included Chinese fishing fleets hiding operations in protected waters off South America, tankers concealing stops in Iranian oil ports, and container ships obfuscating journeys in the Middle East. A U.S. intelligence official, who discussed confidential government assessments on the condition of anonymity, said the deception tactic had already been used for weapons and drug smuggling. After originally discovering the deception near countries under sanction, Windward has since seen it spread as far as Australia and Antarctica.
“It’s a new way for ships to transmit a completely different identity,” said Matan Peled, a founder of Windward. “Things have unfolded at just an amazing and frightening speed….” The spread of AIS manipulation shows how easy it has become to subvert its underlying technology — the Global Positioning System, or GPS — which is used in everything from cellphones to power grids, said Dana Goward, a former senior U.S. Coast Guard official and the president of Resilient Navigation and Timing Foundation, a Virginia-based GPS policy group.
“This shows just how vulnerable the system is,” he said.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.