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Bomb threat suspect used Bitcoin, Google Voice An US-Israeli teen who was arrested in Israel on suspicion of making bomb threats against Jewish community centers in the United States, Australia and New Zealand over the past three month, is seen before the start of a remand hearing at Magistrate's Court in Rishon Lezion, Israel March 23, 2017.. (photo credit:REUTERS) The Israeli American suspected of perpetrating more than 100 bomb threats against Jewish institutions used technologies including Google Voice, a call forwarding service, and Bitcoin, a digital currency, to make the threats.According to an article in The Daily Beast, the 19-year-old suspect, whose name is under gag order, was arrested by Israel’s anti-fraud squad at the suspect's home in southern Israel, where the squad searched the premises on Thursday.The suspect was also accused of a series of threats made in Europe, Australia and New Zealand in the past six months, according to reports in Israel.The suspect was reported to have also called in threats to the Israel Police two months ago regarding Israeli educational institutions.

Be the first to know - Join our Facebook page.To mask identity, the suspect used a technology called SpoofCard that masks a number’s caller ID, according to the Daily Beast.When police subpoenaed SpoofCard’s parent company to trace the call’s real number, they learned that the suspect had called from a disposable Google Voice number.The suspect paid for SpoofCard through Bitcoin, also untraceable, and routed his internet through proxies, making his IP address untraceable as well.In addition, the suspect masked his voice in the calls to sound like a woman.Wave of bomb threats called to Jewish commmunity centers across the US , possible antisemitism(credit: REUTERS)The suspect was caught after forgetting to trace the internet connection through a proxy server, allowing police to trace the suspect's IP address, which led to the suspect's home.By JOY BERNARD By JEREMY SHARON Sponsored Content By BEN LYNFIELD Sponsored Content By GIL HOFFMAN Sponsored Content By UDI SHAHAM, ELIYAHU KAMISHER, YONAH JEREMY BOB Sponsored Content

A report by Michael Wolff that The Daily Beast lost $100 million dollars during Tina Brown’s time as editor, is “wildly inaccurate,” a spokesman for the publication told TheWrap on Thursday.“Those numbers are wildly inaccurate,” said the Daily Beast spokesman.In a scathing takedown of Brown in GQ UK magazine, Wolff wrote with what some might call breathless schadenfreude: “She oversaw the loss of $100m (£60m) on the Daily Beast… One hundred million dollars!In its five struggling years, the Daily Beast, may never have taken more than $3m in revenue a year.And yet it lost $100m.” Wolff told TheWrap that that staggering number came from “a well-sourced insider from within Daily Beast.” Also read: Tina Brown Reacts to Newsweek Bitcoin Story: ‘I’m Glad I’m Not The Editor!’But an individual with knowledge of the Beast’s finances said the revenue number was “multiples off.” Daily Beast was never profitable, said the insider, but the addition of Newsweek made the task immeasurably harder.

Nonetheless, the revenue numbers were not in that ballpark.Now newly trimmed down to 45 editorial staffers – about a third of the staff at its height losing red ink – the Daily Beast recently hit an all-time traffic high of 16 million monthly uniques, as measured by Omniture.
bitcoin gift card walmartThe insider said the publication, now free of about $40 million in printing costs, is on an “accelerated path to profitability.” Wolff wrote: “This is not just an unsuccessful business.
bitcoin mining web browserNot even a really messed up one.
bitcoin western union exchangeIt’s a kind of disproportion that may have no equivalent.” In late 2013, Brown announced she was leaving The Daily Beast after a tumultuous tenure that left the company struggling to figure out next steps.
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Last fall, TheWrap reported that under Brown’s tenure as editor, The Daily Beast and Newsweek lost at least $60 million at IAC, citing an executive with knowledge about the situation.
bitcoin gratis verdienenNeither publication achieved profitability as standalones under Brown.
bitcoin casino no deposit bonus 2015Nonetheless in his piece, Wolff sharpened his knife on Brown’s reputation, using the Beast as an example of her serially losing money as an editor at Talk and elsewhere.
behind bitcoins wild rideIn a screed that he acknowledges may smack of sexism, Wolff writes: She went from being mentored by men older than she was to being a courtier to men who were richer than she was.
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It was a key part of her talent set, the care and feeding of rich patrons.As some people always, cannily, have another job they are prepared to jump to, she always had another patron to whom she was ready to make the move Also read: Daily Beast Will Continue Post-Tina Brown, Embrace Digital (Exclusive) Since leaving IAC, Brown started a new media company called “Tina Brown Live Media,” which hosts live events and panels similar to the Women in the World conference she began in 2010.
bitcoin ukash exchangeThe veteran editor is expected to detail her struggles in the online publishing world with a new memoir entitled “The Media Beast,” set to be published in early 2016 by Metropolitan Books, an imprint of Henry Holt & Company.Brown recently made headlines when she commented on Newsweek’s return to print and their controversial cover story about the alleged Bitcoin founder, saying “I’m glad I’m not the editor.” TheWrap reached out to Brown for comment and did not hear back as of press time.