Manchester City anuncia parceiro oficial de câmbio de criptomoedas OKX

OKX se torna Parceira Oficial de Criptomoedas do Manchester City

OKX se torna Parceira Oficial de Criptomoedas do Manchester City

  • Manchester City e OKX anunciaram hoje uma nova parceria de vários anos
  • A parceria abrangerá as equipes masculinas e femininas do Manchester City, além das operações de esports do Clube

VICTORIA, Seychelles, March 04, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Os campeões da Premier League Manchester City anunciaram hoje uma parceria global com o segundo maior câmbio de criptomoedas do mundo, a OKX, com a sua nomeação como Parceira Oficial de Câmbio de Criptomoedas do Clube.

Primeiro empreendimento da OKX no mundo dos esportes e entretenimento, a parceria abrangerá equipes masculinas e femininas do Manchester City, além das operações de esports do Clube.

Mais de 20 milhões de pessoas em mais de 180 mercados confiam na OKX para a troca rápida, segura e inovadora de criptomoedas em um lugar ondem podem explorar o poder da criptomoeda.

Manchester City fecha contrato com parceira de criptomoedas OKX

OKX se torna Parceira Oficial de Criptomoedas do Manchester City OKX se torna Parceira Oficial de Criptomoedas do Manchester City Manchester City fecha contrato com parceira de criptomoedas OKX

A OKX e a Man City acreditam em inspirar inovação contínua, desenvolvimento de talentos e avanços tecnológicos – um importante alinhamento de parceria das organizações.

Os novos parceiros colaborarão em várias experiências exclusivas para a base de clientes global da OKX, além da sua presença nos Etihad Stadium e Academy Stadium. Os novos parceiros também irão explorar em conjunto futuros projetos de inovação.

Roel De Vries, Diretor de Operações do City Football Group, disse: “É com prazer que recebemos a OKX como Parceira Oficial do Manchester City hoje, na sua entrada no mundo dos esportes. A nova parceria alinha nossos valores compartilhados de inovação, impulsiona o sucesso e está na vanguarda dos nossos respectivos setores. Sua abordagem ampla e inclusiva para atingir diversos públicos é semelhante à nossa abordagem. Estamos prontos para trabalhar juntos nesta parceria.”

Manchester City Stadium

Manchester City Stadium

“Estamos muito contentes com a nossa parceria com o Manchester City, uma das equipes mais amadas e bem-sucedidas do mundo. O futebol e as criptomoedas compartilham algo importante; são para todos e criam inclusão na sociedade. Para a OKX, o Manchester City é um clube que representa o efeito que o futebol tem de fazer uma diferença positiva na vida das pessoas, de unir as pessoas em torno de uma paixão compartilhada pelo belo jogo. Estamos entrando na Premier League pela primeira vez como parceiro oficial de criptografia do City, comemorando esse espírito comunitário no mundo do futebol compartilhado por nós”, disse Jay Hao, CEO da OKX.

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Richard Kay
richard.kay@okx.com

Pulitzer Winner Walter Mears Dies, AP’s ‘Boy On The Bus’

Walter R. Mears, who for 45 years fluidly and speedily wrote the news about presidential campaigns for The Associated Press and won a Pulitzer Prize doing it, has died. He was 87.

“I could produce a story as fast as I could type,” Mears once acknowledged — and he was a fast typist. He became the AP’s Washington bureau chief and the wire service’s executive editor and vice president, but he always returned to the keyboard, and to covering politics.

Mears died Thursday at his apartment in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, eight days after being diagnosed with multiple forms of cancer, said his daughters Susan Mears of Boulder, Colorado, and Stephanie Mears of Austin, Texas, who were with him.

They said he was visited on his last night by a minister, with whom he discussed Alf Landon, the losing Republican presidential candidate in 1936, a year after his birth.

Mears’ ability to find the essence of a story while it was still going on and to get it to the wire — and to newspapers and broadcasters around the world — became legend among peers. In 1972, Timothy Crouse featured Mears in The Boys on the Bus, a book chronicling the efforts and antics of reporters covering that year’s presidential campaign.

Crouse recounted how, immediately after a political debate, a reporter from The Boston Globe called out to the man from AP: “Walter, what’s our lead? What’s the lead, Walter?” The question became a catchphrase among political reporters to describe the search for the most newsworthy aspect of an event — the lead. “Made me moderately famous,” Mears cracked in 2005.

It was a natural question. Mears had to bang out stories about campaign debates while they were still underway. Newspaper editors would see his lead on the wire before their own reporters filed their stories. So it was defensive for others on the press bus to wonder what Mears was leading with, and to ask him.

Early in his Washington career, he was assigned to write updates on the 1962 congressional elections. His bureau chief asked a senior colleague to size up how Mears worked under pressure and report back. “Mears writes faster than most people think,” the evaluator wrote, then, tongue in cheek, “and sometimes faster than he thinks.”

“Walter’s impact at the AP, and in the journalism industry as a whole, is hard to overstate,” said Julie Pace, AP executive editor and senior vice president. “He was a champion for a free and fair press, a dogged reporter, an elegant chronicler of history and an inspiration to countless journalists, including myself.”

Kathleen Carroll, a former AP executive editor, said he taught generations of journalists “how to watch and listen and ask and explain.”

“Walter was also a wonderful human being,” she said. “He loved his family — being a grandfather was one of the great joys of his life. He loved golf and the Red Sox, in that order. He loved politics and he loved the AP.”

Mears didn’t seem to mind being known as a pacesetter. “I came away with a slogan not of my making, but one that stuck for the rest of my career,” he recalled in his 2003 memoir, Deadlines Past. Over four decades, Mears covered 11 presidential campaigns, from Kennedy-Nixon in 1960 to Bush-Gore in 2000, as well as the political conventions, the campaigns, debates, the elections and, finally, the pomp and promise of the inaugurations.

In tribute, Jules Witcover, who covered politics for The Sun in Baltimore, said Mears combined speed and accuracy with an eye for the telling detail.

“His uncanny ability to cut to the heart of any story and relate it in spare, lively prose showed the way for a generation of wire service disciples, and he did so with a zest for the nomad’s life on the campaign trail,” Witcover said.

At other times in his career, Mears served AP as Washington bureau chief and as the wire service’s primary news executive, the executive editor in the New York headquarters. But he missed writing and went back to it.

He left once, to be Washington bureau chief for The Detroit News, but returned to AP nine months later. “I couldn’t take the pace,” he said. “It was too slow.”

In 1977 he was awarded a Pulitzer Prize for his work covering the election in which Democrat Jimmy Carter defeated a sitting president, Gerald R. Ford, who had inherited his office through the resignation in disgrace of Richard M. Nixon.

It was the Pulitzer, not the Crouse catchphrase, for which Mears thought he would be remembered. Asked to address a later crop of Pulitzer winners, he told them they would never have to wonder what would be the first words of their obituaries: They would be, he said, “Pulitzer Prize-winning.”

Winning his Pulitzer, Mears said, was “the sweetest moment in a career that is like no other line of work.”

In his lead paragraphs, Mears captured the essence of events, not just the words but the music.

• When the 1968 Democrats, in a convention held in the midst of antiwar rioting on the streets of Chicago, finally chose their nominee, he wrote: “Hubert H. Humphrey, apostle of the politics of joy, won the Democratic presidential nomination tonight under armed guard.”

• When, earlier that year, a gunman killed John Kennedy’s brother: “Robert F. Kennedy died of gunshot wounds early today, prey like his president brother to the savagery of an assassin.”

• And, in 1976, when former peanut farmer Carter took the presidency from its accidental occupant: “In the end, the improbable Democrat beat the unelected Republican.”

Said Terry Hunt, former AP White House correspondent and deputy bureau chief in Washington: “You can’t talk about Walter without using the word legendary. He was a brilliant writer, astonishingly fast, colorful and compelling.”

David Espo, former special correspondent and assistant Washington bureau chief agreed. “No one ever wrote faster or with more clarity, nor worked harder and made it look easier than Walter did,” he said. “He took care to mentor those less talented than he, in other words, all of us.”

Mears was born in Lynn, Massachusetts, and grew up in Lexington, the son of an executive of a chemical company. He graduated, Phi Beta Kappa, from Middlebury College in Vermont in 1956 and within a week joined the AP in Boston.

In those days, news was written on typewriters and transmitted on teletypes. “They were slow and they clattered,” Mears once wrote, “but the din was music to me.”

His first assignment was far from the din. He single-handedly covered the Vermont Legislature. “It was fun covering a citizen legislature with a representative from every hamlet in the state” — 276 of them, he recalled years later, including one elected by his townspeople to keep the fellow from being eligible for welfare.

Mears covered John F. Kennedy in 1960 whenever Kennedy campaigned in New England and covered Barry Goldwater’s hapless race against Lyndon Johnson four years later. He was back at it every presidential year, even after he retired in 2001.

On election night, 2008, he wrote an analysis of Barack Obama’s victory, and the challenge before him.

“Obama is the future,” he wrote, “and it begins now, in troubled times, for a president-elect with a costly agenda of promises that would be difficult to deliver in far better economic circumstances.”

No cheerleading from Mears there. He didn’t believe in reporters expressing political opinions and he kept his own to himself. Although he got to know the candidates he covered, sometimes shared after-hour drinks and played golf with them, he always addressed them by their titles.

He considered a distance between newsperson and newsmaker to be appropriate. He once explained: “I can’t really say I ever felt close to any of them, maybe because I always felt that there’s a line there, there’s sort of a reserve that I think needs to be maintained because you’re not covering a friend. You’re covering somebody who’s trying to convince the American people to give him the most important job they’ve got at their command.”

After retiring, Mears taught journalism for a time at the University of North Carolina and made his home there, in Chapel Hill.

His wife, Frances, died in January 2019. His first wife and their two children were killed in a house fire in 1962. Mears directed that a portion of his ashes be distributed with Frances’ remains and the rest in Massachusetts with those of his first wife and two children lost in the fire.

Source: Voice of America

To Fight Its War, Russia Closing Digital Doors

Russia’s blocking of Facebook is a symptom of its broader effort to cut itself off from sources of information that could imperil its internationally condemned invasion of Ukraine, experts say.

The often-criticized social network is part of a web of information sources that can challenge the Kremlin’s preferred perspective that its assault on Ukraine is righteous and necessary.

Blocking of Facebook and restricting of Twitter on Friday came the same day Moscow backed the imposition of jail terms on media publishing “false information” about the military.

Russia’s motivation “is to suppress political challenges at a very fraught moment for (Vladimir) Putin, and the regime, when it comes to those asking very tough questions about why Russia is continuing to prosecute this war,” said Steven Feldstein, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

Russia thus joins the very small club of countries barring the largest social network in the world, along with China and North Korea.

Moscow was expected to quickly overpower its neighbor but the campaign has already shown signs that it could go longer and could lead to the unleashing of its full military ferocity.

“It’s a censorship tool of last resort,” Feldstein added. “They are pulling the plug on a platform rather than try to block pages or use all sorts of other mechanisms that they traditionally do.”

Earlier this week independent monitoring group OVD-Info said that more than 7,000 people in Russia had been detained at demonstrations over Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.

Web monitoring group NetBlocks said Russia’s moves against the social media giants come amid a backdrop of protests “which are coordinated and mobilized through social media and messaging applications.”

The war is meanwhile taking place during a period of unprecedented crackdown on the Russian opposition, with has included protest leaders being assassinated, jailed or forced out of the country.

‘No access to truth’

Since Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine last week, Russian authorities have stepped up pressure against independent media even though press freedoms in the country were already rapidly waning.

In this context, Facebook plays a key information distribution role in Russia, even as it endures withering criticism in the West over matters ranging from political division to teenagers’ mental health.

Natalia Krapiva, tech legal counsel at rights group Access Now, said social media has been a place where independent, critical voices have been talking about the invasion.

“Facebook is one of the key platforms in Russia,” she said, adding that its loss is “a devastating blow to access to independent information and for resistance to the war.”

Russia has been hit with unprecedented sanctions from the West over the invasion, but also rejections both symbolic and significant from sources ranging from sporting organizations to U.S. tech companies.

Facebook’s parent Meta and Twitter however have engaged on the very sensitive issue of information by blocking the spread of Russian state-linked news media.

Russia’s media regulator took aim at both, with Roskomnadzor accusing Facebook of discrimination toward state media.

Big U.S. tech firms like Apple and Microsoft have announced halting the sale of their products in Russia, while other companies have made public their “pauses” of certain business activities or ties.

On Friday U.S. internet service provider Cogent Communications said it had “terminated its contracts with customers billing out of Russia.”

The Washington Post reported Cogent has “several dozen customers in Russia, with many of them, such as state-owned telecommunications giant Rostelecom, being close to the government.”

It’s exactly the kind of measure Ukrainian officials have been campaigning heavily for as they ask Russia be cut off from everything from Netflix to Instagram.

Yet experts like Krapiva worry about what that would mean for dissenting or critical voices inside Russia.

“There’s a risk of people having no access to truth,” she said.

“Some Ukrainians have been calling for disconnecting Russia from the internet, but that’s counterproductive to disconnect civil society in Russia who are trying to fight.”

Source: Voice of America

Angolans in Ukraine expected home Sunday

Luanda – Two hundred Angolans who were living in Ukraine are returning to the country this Sunday as of 08pm, the minister of Social Action, Family and Women Promotion, Faustina Alves, announced this on Saturday in Luanda.

The Angolan government will send an aircraft of the flag carrier TAAG to Warsaw, Poland, where the refugees are staying after fleeing Ukraine, due to the conflict with Russia.

Faustina Alves said that Angolan citizens, including children and adults, are currently under the control of the Angolan Embassy in Poland, which is providing humanitarian assistance.

Upon their arrival, the national citizens will be accommodated in two of the Luanda-based hotel units for seven days, as part of the institutional quarantine period imposed by Covid-19.

The minister added that the Executive is monitoring the situation of all Angolans in Ukraine and pledged to provide all necessary information to the family members.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

Angola, El Salvador committed to bilateral cooperation

Luanda – Angola and El Salvador Saturday analysed the re-launch of cooperation relations at a meeting between the two countries’ diplomatic representatives based in the Kingdom of Morocco.

The Angolan ambassador to Morocco, Baltazar Diogo Cristóvão, and his El Salvador’s counterpart, Ignácio Pérez de Mendoza, talked on various issues, with stress to the sectors of agriculture, industry, tourism and sports.

A press release from the Angolan Embassy in Morocco states that the meeting also addressed issues related to the international development.

The parties also seized the opportunity to discuss the activities that mark the 2nd and 8th March, respectively, Angolan Women´s Day and International Women´s Day.

The ambassador Baltazar Diogo Cristóvão, who was speaking at a lecture attended by members of the diplomatic mission and the Angolan community residing in Morocco, praised the contribution of this group of society to the development of Angola and the world.

Source: Angola Press News Agency