Facebook Initiates Notification Of Stolen Passwords

n a bid to keep its users’ accounts safe, social networking site Facebook has created an automated service that monitors the web for stolen email addresses and passwords.

The service checks credentials to see if they match those being used on Facebook.

Once it finds a set of stolen credentials, it passes the data into a programme that analyses it in computer language.

An automated system then checks it against the Facebook database to see if any of the email addresses and hashed passwords match login information on Facebook.

“Theft of personal data like email addresses and passwords can have larger consequences because people often use the same password on multiple websites,” Facebook’s security engineer Chris Long wrote in a Facebook post.

“We built a system dedicated to further securing people’s Facebook accounts by actively looking for these public postings, analysing them and then notifying people when we discover that their credentials have shown up elsewhere on the Internet,” he said.

If it finds a match, Facebook notifies the affected user the next time they log in and guides them through a process to change their password.

1. Once we find a set of stolen credentials, we pass the data into a program that parses it into a standardized format.

2. After the data has been downloaded and parsed, an automated system checks each one of them against the Facebook internal databases to see if any of the email addresses and hashed passwords match valid login information on Facebook. We hash each password using our internal password hashing algorithm and the unique salt for that person. Since Facebook stores passwords securely as hashes, we can’t simply compare a password directly to the database. We need to hash it first and compare the hashes.

3. If the email and hash combination doesn’t match, we don’t take any action. A mismatch indicates that the stolen password is different than the password you use on Facebook, and therefore an attacker wouldn’t be able to use that password to access your Facebook account.

4. If the email address and hash combination does match, we will notify you the next time that you use Facebook and guide you through a process to change your password. Changing your password will invalidate the stolen password and help protect Facebook account.

Source and Original Content by ndtv.com

Confession Aftermath: Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church Releases Statement

Board of Trustee Chair Lee Sandford released the following statement Friday:

“The members of Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church have felt and we appreciate the outpouring of love and support from the community of faith in Montgomery, the surrounding area and throughout the country as we worked to resolve this difficult situation while ensuring that we stayed within the will of God. Oftentimes we are faced with circumstances that test our faith yet we know that God is in control. We are appreciative of God’s grace which covered us during these difficult times and it is God who gave us the strength to carry on. To God be the Glory for the things he has done and continues to do in our lives.

First, the Shiloh church family would like to thank Judge Price for his granting of the Preliminary Injunction and we count it as a victory in God’s name. We extend heartfelt thanks to Rev. Leon Ross and the Weeping Willow Baptist Church family for opening their doors to us to allow us to worship as a church family on October 12th. We would also like to thank Rev. Jay Joye and the Young Meadows Presbyterian Church family for their offer to welcome us to their worship service this Sunday. Special thanks go out to Resurrection Catholic Church and Father Emmanuel for opening up their facility to us and providing spiritual support and guidance as we went through the storm and to our excellent legal counsel, McPhillips Shinbaum, LLP Law Firm.

We, the Shiloh Church family are extremely blessed that we will be able to resume our regular worship services in Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church on this Sunday. We invite all members of the community of faith to come out and worship with us. We pray God’s blessings on all parties involved as we move forward during this period of healing and restoration… Read More

Source and Original Content by BCNN 1

House Of Commons Approves Women Bishops

The House of Commons yesterday approved women bishops without a vote following the passing of legislation in the House of Lords last week.

The proposal was passed by the General Synod in July but required the consent of Parliament. The Queen must also now approve the measure.

Speaking before the Commons yesterday, Second Church Estates Commissioner Sir Tony Baldry said, “I hope this whole debate will be joyful, because this is a very joyful day for the Church of England and society as a whole.”

“Over the past 20 years many women have given outstanding leadership to the Church of England and to our communities as vicars, archdeacons and cathedral deans,” he said.

“Now every type of post will be open to them. It is right to acknowledge the immense patience among many women in the Church who have waited for this day. We acknowledge, as we need to, the pain and hurt that there has often been as a consequence of the delay in arriving at where we are at today.”

Referring to Justin Welby’s address in the House of Lords last week, in which the Archbishop affirmed that “the Church of England is deeply committed to the flourishing of all those who are part of its life in the grace of God,” Baldry added: “Indeed, I think we would all hope that every part of the Church of England can now flourish and thrive.”

He said women priests could be eligible for consideration as bishops as early as November 17.

MP for Bishop Aukland Helen Goodman urged her fellow peers to support the legislation. “I am proud to have been able to speak in this debate,” she said.

“The time of crying is past; the time of singing has come.”

There was some debate as to which diocese will appoint the first female bishop. MP Diana Johnson recommended her own city of Hull.

“I want to put in an early bid. The Bishop of Hull is leaving his post and moving on, and, as Hull is a pioneering city – remember William Wilberforce and Amy Johnson – I believe that the bishopric of Hull would be an ideal starting place for the first woman bishop in the House of Lords,” she said.

Baldry, however, added that “there might be some competition from around the country”.

“The Bishop of Oxford is retiring shortly. There are many excellent women in senior posts in the Church, and I have absolutely no doubt that the first women bishops – and, indeed, all those women who are made bishops – will be excellent candidates,” he said.

“This measure is long overdue. The ability of the Church of England to consecrate women bishops is long overdue. The arrival of women bishops in the House of Lords is long overdue. I commend the Measure to the House.”

The proposal was passed without a vote, much to the delight of campaigners.

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Three Christians Jailed For Six Years In Iran

A court in Iran has sentenced two pastors and a deacon to six years behind bars.

Pastor Behnam Irani who is already serving a jail term will now spend a total of 12 years in prison.

He was initially arrested in December 2006, and sentenced in 2011 to six years imprisonment for “action against the state” and “action against the order.”

Pastor Matthias Haghnejad, and Deacon Silas Rabbani, who previously had capital charges against them dropped were also jailed.

All three of the men are being transferred to prisons in the north of the country which have extremely hot climates. The prisons they will be held in are hundreds of miles away from their family’s home.

The sentences are seen as an indication of the surge in repression under the Rouhani presidency targeting religious and ethnic minorities.

This has occurred despite his earlier promise to uphold the rights of religious minorities during the run up to elections last year.

Christian Solidarity Worldwide’s Chief Operating Officer Andy Dipper said, “We are deeply concerned by the six-year sentences given to Pastors Irani and Haghnejad and Deacon Silas Rabbani, and the fact that they will serve these sentences so far from their families and home towns.

“We are particularly appalled by the extra six years given to Pastor Irani, who has already endured ill-treatment whilst in prison and now faces nearly a decade in prison on trumped-up charges.

“We urge the Iranian government to release without delay every person who is imprisoned for their faith.

“Their incarceration contravenes international covenants guaranteeing freedom of religion or belief, to which Iran is party.”

Source and Original Content by Premier Radio News

Archbishop Of Canterbury Initiates 3 Month Prayer Event For Great Britain

Justin Welby has said his first priority as Archbishop of Canterbury is for “a renewal of prayer and of communities that pray”.

“There has never been a renewal of Christian life in this country without there being a renewal of prayer,” he added.

Under the banner ‘The Festival of Life’, the event launched three months of prayer across the UK, supported by Hope Together.

Churches working together is essential to seeing transformation, the Archbishop said. “You keep finding them popping up here and there making things happen, bringing people together and doing the right thing, in the right way, at the right time.”

“When Christians pray, things change,” Director of HOPE Together, Roy Crowne, said.

“We hope that thousands of people will join us over the next three months as we pray for the UK.”

Source and Original Content by BCNN 1

Church Leaders In Iraq Call On EU To Aid Thousands of Displaced Christians

With all the focus on the rise of the Islamic State (IS) and related turmoil in the region, one important and tragic story has been left out of the popular narrative: the plight of the Middle East’s ancient Christian communities. These once vibrant communities, numbering in the hundreds of thousands, face additional duress as winter approaches. The European Union must take concrete action immediately in order to avoid the loss of many lives and of humanity’s cultural heritage, which they represent.

With no support from the central government in Baghdad, and Christian families largely unregistered for international humanitarian aid, the Iraqi churches’ emergency committee has been looking after refugees of all ages and backgrounds mainly in Erbil and Dohuk in the Kurdish region. The situation in Erbil illustrates the problems the displaced face. More than 70,000 people have been forced to take shelter in the Kurdish capital in church halls, sports centres and classrooms. These spaces have all been turned into makeshift accommodation, with up to 15 families sharing a classroom. As the need exceeds the available facilities, many families have been sleeping in public spaces such as parks and car parks.

The large majority of these displaced families left their homes with only the clothes on their backs, facing the dire choice of renouncing their faith or paying high amounts of money to the IS. A religious minority, the Yazidis, were hunted all the way up to the Sinjjar Mountains, and the media images moved the US to order its air force to the area.

These examples are indicative of the larger catastrophe facing the region’s Christians. According to estimates from Iraq’s Chaldean Catholic church, 120,000 Iraqi Christians have been displaced, out of a total estimated 240,000-260,000 (a number already greatly diminished by persecution following the fall of Saddam Hussein). Altogether, about 50 per cent of Iraqi Christians have been displaced or left the country.

Selective media coverage has led to the mistaken impression that Christians have not been persecuted, but only other minorities. As a result the Chaldean patriarch Louis Raphael Sako was confronted during his information visits to Brussels in July and September, with the lack of knowledge about the situation of the Christians even among high level EU officials. And yet, Christians face horrific persecution, rape, women sold in markets, children pulled out of their mothers’ arms and other abuses. Since IS seized the towns where Christians were living, there have been many martyrs.

Christians and other refugees need immediate help with the most basic living necessities. Patriarch Raphael Sako said, “They need everything because the IS terrorists have taken all they had, physically, morally and psychologically. The greatest challenge at the present time is the provision of living accommodation… the winter is very cold in Iraqi Kurdistan, and the people cannot possibly stay in tents.” In the absence of state support, the church has been bearing the burden of feeding and providing medicine and other necessities for the refugee families who fled IS.

Patriarch Sako and other church representatives called on EU policymakers to take two concrete steps to help Christians: exert political pressure on the government of Iraq and its neighbours to protect the civilians, and give more humanitarian aid via channels other than the UN agencies. “Many people refuse to register with the UN, they believe that if they stay outside the camps they have more chances to find a job and be quicker to return to their homes once the Nineveh plains are liberated”, said patriarch Sako. “They do not want to depend 100 per cent on aid and the church can support them temporarily in this effort”. The EU shares this view, but it has to make it a reality and extend its vision of the conflict to the Syrian and Iraqis who happen to be Christian.

Source and Original Content By BCNN 1

Religious Leaders Unite To Stop Persecution of Middle East Christians

At an October 13 press conference in Jerusalem, prominent leaders of major Jewish and Christian global organizations announced a historic joint initiative calling on world leaders to take urgent, determined actions to halt the brutal persecution of Christians in the Middle East.

The joint initiative was unveiled at the Feast of Tabernacles celebration sponsored by the International Christian Embassy Jerusalem, with some 4,500 Christians from 80 nations in attendance.

The alarming situation for Christian minorities across the Middle East continues to worsen while world leaders have largely ignored this on-going human rights tragedy, laments a letter recently sent to heads of state and/or government for 95 democratic countries and co-signed by ICEJ Executive Director Dr. Jürgen Bühler, World Jewish Congress president Ronald S. Lauder and Dr. William M. Wilson, co-chairman of the Empowered21 Global Council and president of Oral Roberts University.

Dr. Bühler noted that the participation of Lauder as head of the main umbrella organization, representing world Jewry, together with leading evangelical ministries, makes this a historic initiative.

“The current plight of Middle East Christians is heart-breaking, and even Western churches have to do more to bring the suffering of our fellow believers to the forefront worldwide,” Bühler said. “But to have a prominent global Jewish leader lend his voice to this moral call for protecting the region’s persecuted Christians is unprecedented in modern times. We welcome all others of goodwill who will take a stand now for these vulnerable ancient Christian communities.”

“Just as Christians defend Jews against anti-Semitism, just as Christians support Israel, we Jews have an obligation to speak out against the growing persecution of Christians in many parts of the world,” Lauder said in explaining his participation as head of the World Jewish Congress. “Islamist extremists have launched a full-fledged assault on our Western values, on our civilization, and Jews and Christians must work hand in hand to defeat this threat. For too long, the world has remained silent in the face of this evil. We must act before it is too late.”

“This letter gives an important voice to Christians who are being persecuted and even killed for their faith around the world, especially in the Middle East,” said Dr. Wilson of Oral Roberts University and Empowered21, a major network of evangelical leaders worldwide. “In this age of technology, we have a greater awareness of these types of alarming oppressions and a greater responsibility to protect Christian communities. Most Christ followers in these difficult situations will not respond with violence and therefore need global governmental authorities to stand with them against these injustices.”

All three signatories on the letter addressed the press conference on Monday afternoon at the new Jerusalem Pais Arena, where the ICEJ’s annual Feast of Tabernacles was being held. Also on hand to speak was Canon Andrew White, known as the ‘Vicar of Baghdad,’ an Anglican cleric who has become the leading voice of the battered Christians of Iraq.

Later that evening, Israel President Reuven Rivlin along with Lauder delivered greetings to the mass Christian gathering for the biblical festival of Sukkot. The audience included some two dozen parliamentarians from around the globe attending the yearly Chairmen’s Conference of the Israel Allies Foundation, an inter-parliamentary forum of pro-Israel legislators.

The lawmakers also spoke out against the persecution of Christians in the Middle East during the Chairmen’s Conference.

Source and Original Content by Charisma News

Hillsong Pastor Says He Believes in Traditional Marriage

Hillsong’s Brian Houston has stated that he believes in traditional marriage, despite recent rumors of the contrary. The megachurch pastor recently made headlines after refusing to directly state what the church’s position was on gay marriage.

According to Christian Today, Houston stated at a press conference last week that the issue of gay marriage was “too important for us to reduce [down to a] yes or no answer.”

Houston’s remarks sparked a New York TImes headline that read, “Megachurch Pastor Signals Shift in Tone on Gay Marriage.”

Houston has now clarified his position on the issue. In e-mail to the Christian Post, Houston wrote, “Nowhere in my answer did I diminish biblical truth or suggest that I or Hillsong Church supported gay marriage. I challenge people to read what I actually said, rather than what was reported that I said. My personal view on the subject of homosexuality would line up with most traditionally held Christian views. I believe the writings of Paul are clear on this subject.”

Source and Original Content by Christian Headlines

WHO Report: Ebola No Longer Threat In Nigeria

The World Health Organization announced today (Oct. 20) that Ebola is no longer a threat in Nigeria.

According to the AP, health officials were able to monitor every person that came in contact with infected individuals. Isolation wards were constructed quickly and it has now been 42 days (twice the Ebola incubation period) since anyone in Nigeria has tested positive for the deadly virus.

At the same time, almost all of the people who have been quarantined after coming in contacted with Dallas Ebola victim Thomas Eric Duncan have been released from isolation. The 43 people who were released completed the 21-day incubation watch period and did not show any symptoms during that time.

The AP reports that one more person will be released later today, bringing the total of people declared in the clear of the virus to 44. Four more health care workers who cared for Duncan while he was a patient at the Dallas hospital will be released in few days.

Duncan’s family and fiancee Louise Troh were among those cleared of the disease.

Dallas City Administrator Clay Jenkins confirmed, “After 21 days of being on this watch list, there is zero chance that any of those young men or Louise carry the Ebola virus.”

Source and Original Content by Christian Headlines

“US Pastors Should Send Sermons, Bibles to Houston Mayor”, Mike Huckabee

Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee said pastors from across the United States should send “thousands and thousands” of Bibles and sermons to the Houston mayor who demanded pastors turn over their sermons to the government due to their objection to an LGBT discrimination city ordinance.

“I hope she gets thousands and thousands of sermons and Bibles,” Huckabee said on his Fox News show Saturday, referring to Mayor Annise D. Parker.

“It ought to make you mad that the mayor thinks she can turn in her pastors. And so I got an idea,” Huckabee explained. “If she wants a sermon, here is my suggestion. I would like to ask every pastor in America, not only the ones in Houston, to send her your sermons and go ahead. Obviously she could use a few. And everybody watching the show ought to send her a Bible.”

Huckabee, an ordained Southern Baptist minister, also criticized attempts to “silence the voices and prevent the votes of people.” He suggested that Christians are being targeted because they refuse to bow down to “intolerant desperates … and false gods of hate and religious bigotry.”

The subpoenas were issued by Houston’s city attorney in response to a lawsuit filed by opponents of the Houston Equal Rights Ordinance that allow men and women who identify as transgender or opposite sex to use the facilities, such as restrooms, of their choice.

The subpoenaed sermons incident derived from months of debate over the controversial ordinance.

The Houston City Council approved the ordinance, known as HERO, in a vote of 11 to 6 in May. Parker was a strong proponent of the measure. It amended Chapters 2, 15 and 17 of Houston’s Code of Ordinances, prohibiting discrimination in public facilities and private employment on the basis of “protected characteristics.”

The list of protected characteristics include race, color, ethnicity, national origin, age, sex, familial and marital status, military status, disability, religion, genetic information, pregnancy, sexual orientation and gender identity.

Parker later denied she knew about the city’s attempt to subpoena the sermons and correspondence of five pastors. But one of those pastors, Dave Welch, who is the executive director of the Houston area U.S. Pastor Council, told The Christian Post earlier that the mayor herself initiated the action in response to a legal battle over the ordinance.

“I support the right of the clergy to say whatever they want to say, even if I disagree with them,” Parker said in a statement Friday. “This is not about what they may be preaching from the pulpit. It is about proving that the petition gathering process organized by these pastors did not meet the requirements of the city charter.”

Houston attorney David Feldman filed a motion Friday to remove the reference to sermons from the original subpoenas.

“The city must respect the First Amendment and abandon its illegitimate mission to invade the private communications of pastors for the purpose of strong-arming them into silence in a lawsuit that concerns nothing more than the authenticity of citizen petitions,” Alliance Defending Freedom Senior Legal Counsel Erik Stanley said in a statement.

Source and Original Content by Christian Post