Daily Mirror - 06.09.2019

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(^2) DAILY MIRROR FRIDAY 06.09.
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THE LOTTERY


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The Daily Mirror is published by MGN Ltd, a

CORRECTIONS & COMPLAINTS


10 MIN CROSSWOR


D


3 Deride (4)
4 Native of Bangkok? (4)
5 Amount wagered (4)
9 Choose (3)
10 French word for yes (3)
11 Tom Hanks film (3)
12 Relatives (3)
13 Remove lumps (4)
14 North Wales resort (4)
15 Bare (4)
16 Covetous feeling (4)
17 Neat (4)

ACROSS
6 Cost (5)
7 Female fowl (3)
8 Two-wheeled vehicle (9)
13 Strict (9)
18 Cook in lard (3)
19 Retired footballer,
— Beckham (5)
DOWN
1 Junk e-mail (4)
2 Case of crowd trouble (4)
THURSDAY’S SOLUTIONS ACROSS: 1 Acrimony, 6 Sky,
7 NSPCC, 9 Opal, 11 Lino, 12 Anti, 14 Stye, 16 Tower, 18 Pub,
19 Reveille. DOWN: 1 Absolute, 2 Rayon, 3 Mona, 4 Nip,
5 Scribble, 8 Slay, 10 Pose, 13 Nepal, 15 True, 17 Woe.

20 YEARS OF PRIDE OF BRITAIN


Find out more on Pride of Britain 2019 at prideofbritain.com


people, including ex-cons. “After
prison, the only way to get a job is
not tick the box declaring spent
convictions, which is breaking the
law,” he said. “I was keen to help
people break that cycle.”
Duane sold KashFlow in 2013 for
£20million and immediately wrote
a cheque for £100,
to the Prince’s Trust.
The 40-year-old, from
Hove, East Sussex, got the
Prince’s Trust Achiever of
the Year Award at the
2015 Pride of Britain.
He’s since released his
autobiography and set up
code4000.org, teaching
prisoners coding.
Duane said: “They have
hope and relate to me.”
The dad-of-three also has a
payroll software company.
“I hate not being busy,” he says.
“But winning Pride of Britain made
me stop briefly and realise what I’d
achieved.”

Hopes over


pilots’ strike
BRITISH Airways strikes
next week could be
ditched if the airline agrees
to new talks, a union says.
Members of the British
Airline Pilots Association
will walk out next Monday
and Tuesday over pay.
But the union said it has
put a new proposal in a
letter to BA chief executive
Alex Cruz and could call
off action if the airline
comes back to the table.

Rev Paisley


bomb claim
CLAIMS the Reverend Ian
Paisley funded a bomb
attack on a reservoir which
threatened the water
supply to Belfast are set
to be aired by the BBC.
The documentary will
also screen archive footage
of former IRA leader
Martin McGuinness
showing children a gun.
Spotlight On The Trou-
bles: A Secret History will
be shown on BBC 4 on
September 10 at 8.30pm.

Atiyah set to


blow us away


STORM Atiyah will be the
first to blow in this winter,
weather forecasters reveal.
Following it will be
Brendan, Ciara, Dennis
and Ellen, among others.
The full list was chosen
by the public in a Name
Our Storms campaign by
the Met Office and Irish
and Dutch forecasters.
The Met Office, said:
“We were delighted with
the response.”

WHEN Duane Jackson was caught
trying to smuggle 6,500 ecstasy
tablets into America, he feared his
life was over. After bouncing around
care homes and being expelled from
school twice, he was now facing a
lengthy prison sentence.
Aged 19 and unemployed, his
friends were trafficking
drugs into America.
“It just seemed like an
easy way to make money,”
he said. He was caught on
his third go and sent back
here for trial. The judge
decided he deserved a
second chance, giving him
a lenient five-year term.
Duane used this time to
develop his computer-
programming skills. Freed
in 2002, he was determined to go
straight, especially as childhood
sweetheart Nadia was pregnant.
Duane asked the Prince’s Trust to
help him set up his software firm,
KashFlow. It went on to employ 40

A NEW
CODE
Duane with
the Prince of
Wales, 2015

How can


you trust


Facebook?


Analytica scandal, where 80 million
profiles were “scraped” to help iden-
tify swing voters in the 2016 US
Presidential election.
Kate Bevan, computing
editor at Which?, said: “If
you’ve uploaded your
phone number to Face-
book at any point, it’s
worth being extra-vigi-
lant about calls claiming
that your computer has
been compromised.”
[email protected]
@Grahamhiscott
BIG BROTHER WATCHING: PAGE 8

and “appear to have information
obtained before we made changes
last year to remove people’s ability to
find others using their
phone numbers.
“We have seen
no evidence that
accounts were
compromised.”
The exposure
is the latest secu-
rity lapse to rock
Facebook, run by
billionaire founder Mark
Zuckerberg. The firm is still
reeling from the Cambridge

Data of 18m UK users


left unprotected online


FACEBOOK was yesterday
branded the “poster child for
mistrust” after it was rocked by
yet another data scandal.
The cyber giant was slammed
after more than 419 million records
of Facebook users were found on an
online database.
The information – including 18
million records of UK users –
included people’s Facebook IDs and
phone numbers. The fear is the infor-
mation could, if accessed by crooks,
be used to commit fraud, although
there is no evidence that it was.
Several databases were found
online by the website TechCrunch.
It said that, because they were not
password protected, anyone could
have got into them.

HARASSMENT
Experts said the latest Facebook
security lapse could have exposed
users to danger online.
Paul Bischoff, privacy advocate at
Comparitech.com, said: “The expo-
sure of this database puts millions of
Facebook users at risk of spam,
harassment and SIM swap fraud.”
Others said it raised wider ques-
tions about Facebook. James Fisher,
of data firm Qlik, said that Facebook
acts “as the poster child for
mistrust in the use of data”.
Sam Curry, chief secu-
rity officer at tech firm
Cybereason, said: “Users
should be holding the
company accountable
about getting serious
about privacy.”
Facebook said the
databases revealed
this week were
“o l d ”

e
FOUNDER Boss
Mark Zuckerberg

BY GRAHAM HISCOTT
Head of Business

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80m
Number of users that had
profiles “scraped” during
run up to 2016 US election
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