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Facebook New VIP Featured Photos 2021 | Fb New VIP Account Hindi

 


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New Mac Ransomware Found in Pirated Mac Apps
There's a new 'EvilQuest' Mac ransomware variant that's spreading through pirated Mac apps, according to a new report shared today by Malwarebytes. The new ransomware was found in pirated download for the Little Snitch app found on a Russian forum. Right from the point of download, it was clear that something was wrong with the illicit version of Little Snitch, as it had a generic installer...

Facebook Gave Us Featured Photo With Number Nine To Make Our Profile VIP🙂

© Illustration by James Bareham / The Verge
After launching a dark mode for its desktop interface, Facebook confirms it is testing a dark mode for its mobile apps as well. As first noted by SocialMedia Today, Facebook has made the dark mode available to a very small percentage of people globally, a spokesperson told The Verge in an email Sunday. The mobile version of the dark mode Facebook introduced last month for desktop is “meant to cut down on glare,” particularly in low-light environments, the spokesperson said. There’s no timeline yet for when the dark mode will be available to all mobile users, however.

Why We Use Facebook VIP Featured Photo To Our Profile? 

Pressure on Facebook to toughen its content moderation practices increased in late May when Twitter tagged a post by President Donald Trump that appeared to advocate violent action against protesters, saying that it glorified violence.
When Facebook resisted calls to take similar action, a number of the company’s longtime staffers wrote an open letter to CEO Mark Zuckerberg, calling the company’s refusal to fact-check or label political speech “cowardly.” Employees later staged a virtual walkout to demand stronger action against objectionable content.

How to add Facebook Featured Photo

Have you ever considered adding a color frame to your pictures in order to make them more appealing for print? This is possible via the many image editing tools out there, but it can also be done via Microsoft Word if you know what you’re doing.

What were going to do here, is use the page border feature in Word since it will allow you to create a frame that best fits your photo. If you’ve had experience with using page borders before, then chances are you might already know of what to do.

For those who are still in the dark, then we urge all of you to continue reading in order to learn more.


Facebook New VIP Featured Photo

Copyright AFP 2017-2021. All rights reserved.

As the Myanmar military continued a deadly crackdown on dissidents, photos circulated in Facebook posts alongside a claim they show members of an ethnic armed group seizing a town. The claim is false: the photos have circulated online in various news reports since at least 2011.

The photos were posted here on May 31, 2021. The post was shared more than 1,200 times.

“This is what we called the battle of seizing the town. KIA soldiers took up positions in Kamaing,” the Burmese-language caption reads, referring to a town in northern Myanmar.

The Kachin Independence Army (KIA) is an ethnic armed group in Myanmar.

Rebels have stepped up attacks on the military after February’s coup, which ousted civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi and triggered mass uprisings. 

More than 800 people have been killed by security forces in a crackdown that has left the country in turmoil.

The same photos were shared here, here, here, here, and here, alongside a similar claim.

However, the claim is false. 

First photo

A reverse image search on Google found the first photo actually shows this image published by Invisible Photographer Asia-IPA on March 26, 2014.

The photo's caption reads: “Soldiers of Kachin Independence Army (KIA) patrol around the town in the evening. Recent fight between Myanmar government and KIA at the Mansi area awakes Laiza to stay alert.” 

The photo was featured in a series of images called “Burma’s Hidden War” by Yangon-based photojournalist Htoo Tay Zar.

It documents the ongoing conflict between the Myanmar military and the KIA.

The photo can also be found on Htoo Tay Zar’s website.

Below is a screenshot comparison of the photo in the misleading Facebook photo (L) and IPA’s photo (R).

Second photo

Another reverse image search found the second photo was published in a report by Myanmar news outlet Irrawaddy here on October 17, 2011.

“Burmese Army Mounts Multi-front Offensive Against KIA,” the headline reads.

The photo’s caption reads: “KIA troops leave Laiza for the front line (Photo: Jinghpaw Kasa Blog)”.

The photo was shared in the Jinghpaw Kasa Blog, which describes itself as pro-KIA. It was published in this post on October 7, 2011.

Below is a screenshot comparison of the misleading Facebook photo (L) and the photo on Jinghpaw Kasa blog (R):


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