Digital Rights Weekly | February 23 to 27

Team CommUNITY team at digitalrights.community
Fri Feb 27 16:53:40 CET 2026


Hello Digital Rights Defenders!

Here is your weekly update on digital rights around the world for the 
week of February 23 to 27. As a reminder, you can submit your news for 
the newsletter here:
https://www.digitalrights.community/weekly-newsletter
___________________

What is in this issue:

TCU
Community News
NEW Job Opportunities
Community Resources
Digital Rights in the Wider World
Events Calendar
Grants, Fellowships, & Awards
__________________________________________

### TCU ###
__________________________________________

1. GG Program Proposals Will Open March 19! More Skillshare Workshops on 
the Horizon

We will begin accepting program proposals for the Global Gathering on 
March 19th. For security reasons, only participants whose application to 
join the GG has been approved, can submit a proposal. Thus, to avoid 
delays, make sure you apply for your ticket soon!

This year, we plan to increase skill-share workshops, which will be 
co-hosted with partners. This also includes offering virtual digital 
workshops pre-event, especially for new at-risk communities. This year’s 
themes include:

- Surveillance and Censorship
- Alternative Infrastructure and Digital Sovereignty
- Emerging and Urgent Tech Challenges: Disinfo, AI, Platform 
Accountability, Shutdowns, Etc.
- Civil Society Reflections on Tech Regulation
- Ecosystem Security, Sustainability, and Health

https://wiki.digitalrights.community/index.php?title=Global_Gathering_2026


2.The First Step in Building Your Autonomous Tech Infrastructure |  March 19

On March 19, we will ALSO be hosting our next Digital Rights Social on 
our Mattermost. The topic will be exploring tips and advice on building 
autonomous tech infrastructure. This may be a good time as well to ask 
questions about GG programming :) Many TCU staff will be present.

https://wiki.digitalrights.community/index.php?title=Community_Updates

__________________________________________

### Community News ###
__________________________________________

1. Cellebrite Used to Crack the Phone of Kenyan Activist and Politician 
Boniface Mwangi

Following the widely-condemned arrest in July 2025 of prominent Kenyan 
activist and opposition voice Boniface Mwangi, the Citizen Lab analyzed 
artefacts from devices seized during the arrest. They found that 
Cellebrite’s forensic extraction tools were used on his Samsung phone 
while it was in police custody. This case adds to the concerning pattern 
of the misuse of Cellebrite technology by government clients.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/feb/17/trim-slugs-to-kenya-authorities-israel-tech-crack-activists-phone-report

Full report:

https://citizenlab.ca/research/cellebrite-used-on-kenyan-activist-and-politician-boniface-mwangi/


2. Prominent Angolan Journalist Hacked with Predator Spyware

A new Amnesty International investigation has established that Predator 
spyware was used in 2024 to target Teixeira Cândido, a prominent Angolan 
journalist, press freedom activist, jurist and former Secretary General 
of the Syndicate of Angolan Journalists (SJA). Predator is a highly 
invasive mobile phone spyware, developed and sold by Intellexa – a 
mercenary spyware company – for use by governments in surveillance 
operations. This is the first forensic confirmation of its use in Angola.

https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2026/02/angola-spyware/

Researchers have recently issued a new iPhone spyware warning after they 
found the Predator spyware can suppress iOS camera and microphone 
recording indicators.


3. 2026 Digispace Africa Fellowship

Digispace African is a women-led initiative committed to empowering 
individuals and communities at the intersection of internet governance, 
digital rights, and media. Their current four-month virtual fellowship 
supports emerging African researchers, journalists, technologists, and 
civil society practitioners to critically engage with digital policy, 
rights, and governance across the continent. Apply via form by February 
28, 2026.

https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSdDCKPwFL9mXHrJ-JCzaj5_dppdRtMBqAae8KechA_8z4WLNg/viewform


4. Surveillance Tech: No Place Left to Hide | February 27 in San Francisco.

This in-person media briefing will explore critical questions 
surrounding the dramatic expansion of surveillance technology, from data 
dragnets to facial recognition systems, driven by the mass deportation 
campaign. The event will take place in San Francisco, starting at 11:00am PT

https://americancommunitymedia.org/events/on-site/surveillance-tech-no-place-left-to-hide/


5. How Do Museums Resist Censorship? February 23rd from 7:30pm – 9:30pm PT.

Join an in-person discussion on how museums can resist censorship on 
February 23 from
7:30pm – 9:30pm PT. The event will take place during the Los Angeles art 
week, and is being co-presented by Zocalo Public Square, Japanese 
American National Museum, and the Museum of Contemporary Art.

https://www.zocalopublicsquare.org/how-do-museums-resist-censorship/


6. Paradigm Initiative’s DRIBLE Tour Educates Namibian Students on 
Digital Safety, Inclusion

The Paradigm Initiative has launched the Digital Rights and Inclusion 
Board Learning Experience (DRIBLE), a gamified learning initiative which 
will be touring throughout Africa. The first event, held on February 23, 
2026, introduced students to key issues surrounding digital rights, 
online safety, and inclusion. The goal is to encourage young people to 
think critically around their role in shaping Africa’s digital future.

https://hallmarknews.com/paradigm-initiatives-drible-tour-educates-namibian-students-on-digital-safety-inclusion/


7. Trump's Aid Freeze is Killing US-Funded Privacy Tools like TOR

The US government spent decades funding the development of tools like 
Tor, which helps millions of people route around censorship and 
surveillance in countries like Iran, China, Cuba, and North Korea. On 
January 20, 2025, Trump signed Executive Order 14169 — "Reevaluating and 
Realigning United States Foreign Aid" — and the State Department pulled 
the plug on funding to hundreds of groups worldwide. The collateral 
damage includes some of the most effective anti-censorship and privacy 
infrastructure on the planet, the EFF warns.

https://boingboing.net/2026/02/17/trumps-aid-freeze-is-killing-us-funded-privacy-tools-like-tor.html

The Guardian has also recently published an article discussing the 
gutting of US funding for global Internet Freedom.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/feb/19/us-funding-for-global-internet-freedom-effectively-gutted


8. Powerful Interests are Driving Digital Repression in Southeast Europe

Across Southeast Europe, cases of criminal prosecutions, coordinated 
disinformation campaigns, and online harassment against individuals and 
civic groups are becoming widespread. Over the past two months, digital 
attacks in the region have overwhelmingly targeted environmental 
activists, anti-corruption institutions and independent media, BIRN’s 
monitoring of Western Balkan countries, Turkey and Hungary has shown. 
These actors are not targeted at random, but because they disrupt 
established systems of control.

https://balkaninsight.com/2026/02/19/powerful-interests-are-driving-digital-repression-in-southeast-europe/


9. New INSM Study: Technology-Facilitated Violence Against Women and 
Girls in Iraq

The new INSM study examines the legal and institutional framework of 
technology-facilitated violence against women and girls in Iraq, with a 
particular focus on groups most exposed to this type of abuse, such as 
women, human rights defenders, and journalists, among others. The study 
calls on the Iraqi state to adopt a more comprehensive approach by 
addressing TFV through national legislation, training judicial and 
security institutions, and establishing specialized units to receive and 
effectively investigate digital complaints. It also recommends launching 
national awareness, and strengthening partnerships between government 
institutions and civil society organizations in building protection and 
response policies.
.
https://insm-iq.org/en/


10. Tech Companies Shouldn’t Be Bullied Into Doing Surveillance

The US Secretary of Defense has given an ultimatum to the artificial 
intelligence company Anthropic in an attempt to bully them into making 
their technology available to the U.S. military without any restrictions 
for their use. EFF shares that the company should stick by their 
principles and refuse to allow their technology to be used in the two 
ways they have publicly stated they would not support: autonomous 
weapons systems and surveillance.

https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2026/02/tech-companies-shouldnt-be-bullied-doing-surveillance

_________________________________________
### NEW Job Opportunities  ###
__________________________________________

These are new jobs we have received in the past week. You can access 
these and other jobs by visiting our job board: 
https://www.digitalrights.community/job-board

+ Research Fellow, Digispace Africa
- Remote

+ Technical Partner, Civicus
- Remote- Open globally, with preference for applicants from the Global 
South

+ Assistant Director, De|Center
- Remote

+ Research and Operations Assistant, De|Center
- Remote

+ Associate Director of Campaigns, The Humane League
- Remote

+ Admin and Finance Officer, 7amleh
- Remote

+ Managing Director, Programs (Asia), OSF
- Seoul, Colombo, Kuala Lumpur, Singapore

+ Enterprise Architect, OSF
- Rio de Janeiro

+ Managing Director, Programs (Middle East), OSF
- Amman

+ Managing Director, Programs (Latin America), OSF
- Bogota

______________________________________

### Community Resources  ###
______________________________________


1. AI Governance: Three Lessons from the Global Digital Compact

2026 is shaping up to be a pivotal year for global AI governance. As the 
UN works to keep pace with a technology evolving in real time, the 
Global Digital Compact negotiations offer three lessons in translating 
technical complexity into political consensus.

https://unfoundation.org/blog/post/ai-governance-three-lessons-from-the-global-digital-compact/


2. From Egypt to Gabon: 33 African Countries That Have Imposed Social 
Media Bans

Check out the list of 33 African countries that have banned social media 
at some point. The impact is heavy — economies lose billions of dollars 
in trade and investment while people lose access to services and 
communication. Most importantly, trust in institutions declines. 
Regional courts such as the ECOWAS Court of Justice have ruled that 
shutdowns violate freedom of expression. As of February 2026, several 
countries still maintain active or repeated bans.

https://techcabal.com/2026/02/19/african-countries-that-have-banned-social-media/


3. The Spy in Your Pocket: How Mercenary Malware Is Silencing African 
dissent

 From remote Predator infections in Angola to physical device ‘cracking’ 
in Kenya, new forensic reports expose how governments are utilising 
sophisticated commercial tools to shadow journalists and activists.

https://www.theafricareport.com/409409/the-spy-in-your-pocket-how-mercenary-malware-is-silencing-african-dissent/


4. Protecting Digital Rights in Nigeria

As Nigeria prepares for another election cycle, digital rights activists 
are preparing for online spaces to be flooded with political 
conversations, opinions and civic engagement, thus making online rights 
ever more urgent.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IVXZsYOTZM4

Check out this in-depth piece, “Ballots Without Bandwidth: The Silent 
Disconnection Weakening Nigeria’s Democracy”

https://www.dataphyte.com/topic/governance/ballots-without-bandwidth-the-silent-disconnection-weakening-nigerias-democracy


5. The 2026 Ugandan Election Was Marked by Digital Strangulation Rather 
Than Hope

As Ugandans prepared to vote, a familiar darkness descended upon the 
country. From 13 to 18 January, a nationwide internet shutdown digitally 
silenced over 45 million people. While the Ugandan Communication 
Commission (UCC) framed this as a necessary measure to prevent online 
misinformation, the reality is that it was a textbook example of 
strangling political dissent online.

https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/africaatlse/2026/02/20/the-2026-ugandan-election-was-marked-by-digital-strangulation-rather-than-hope/


6. Explained: Doxxing & Data Privacy | Jaimee Kokonya

NTV Kenya recently hosted Jaimee Kokoyna, a digital rights lawyer, for 
an in-depth one-hour discussion on doxxing and data privacy, 
contextualized specifically for Kenya.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FdEEie_Ch3k


7. Big Tech Still Dreams of Mass Surveillance — Now People Are Pushing Back

The global spike in authoritarianism couldn’t possibly be as efficient, 
or as widespread, if not for the metastasizing mass surveillance tech 
apparatus following our every movement. However, finally, a lot of 
people seem to be waking up to this “Blade Runner” nightmare - recent 
backlash
caused Ring to cancel a deal with tech surveillance company Flock 
Safety, which sells its tools to police and governments under the guise 
of stopping crime.

https://www.salon.com/2026/02/20/big-tech-still-dreams-of-mass-surveillance-now-people-are-pushing-back/

___________________________________

### Digital Rights in the Wider World ###
______________________________________


1. When Governments Pull the Plug on Dissent, Citizens From Iran to 
Uganda Fight to Stay Online

Experts agree that Internet blackouts are becoming more frequent. But in 
recent weeks, as shutdowns have rocked countries from Uganda to Iran, a 
parallel trend is also clear: Citizens are fighting back.

https://www.csmonitor.com/World/2026/0219/iran-starlink-protests-speech


2. Putin Signs New Measure Tightening FSB Control Over Russian Internet

President Vladimir Putin signed into law a new measure giving Russia's 
main domestic intelligence agency new power to shut down the Internet 
inside the country. The legislation, signed into law on February 20, was 
the latest in a series of regulations drastically tightening 
authorities' ability to restrict news and information inside of Russia.

https://www.rferl.org/a/russia-internet-law-restriction-tech-censorship/33684027.html

Russia Is also closer to banning telegram app, saying it foments terrorism

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/24/world/europe/russia-telegram-pavel-durov-terrorism.html


3. EU Drops Revised GDPR Personal Data Definition Amid Regulatory Pressure

Governments across the EU have withdrawn the revised definition of 
personal data from the GDPR omnibus package, softening earlier proposals 
that had prompted strong resistance from regulators and civil society. A 
decision that signals a preference for maintaining the original scope of 
the General Data Protection Regulation instead of reopening sensitive 
debates that risked weakening long-standing protections.

https://dig.watch/updates/eu-drops-revised-gdpr-personal-data-definition-amid-regulatory-pressure

In January, NGOs Corporate Europe Observatory and LobbyControl published 
an analysis claiming that the “Digital Omnibus” is largely the result of 
extensive lobbying by major technology companies and affiliated lobby 
organisations.

https://www.business-humanrights.org/en/latest-news/eu-ngos-accuse-technology-companies-and-associations-of-lobbying-the-eu-to-weaken-existing-human-rights-protections-and-prevent-the-adoption-of-new-safeguards-incl-company-responses/


4. The Splinternet: How Online Shutdowns Are Getting Cheaper and Easier 
to Impose

Censorship technologies are growing more powerful at the same time as 
programmes designed to stymie them have been decimated. The internet is, 
by design, a decentralised and deeply inter-dependent network. But 
Iran’s recent example indicates that it is becoming far more plausible. 
Russia has been attempting to create a similar cut-off internet for some 
years, and other authoritarian regimes appear to share the ambition. It 
will become cheaper and easier to achieve.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/feb/21/splinternet-online-shutdowns-are-getting-cheaper-and-easier-to-impose-iran-blackout


5. Palestinian Central Elections Commission Launches Digital Election 
Integrity Initiative

The Palestinian Central Elections Commission announced on Sunday the 
launch of the “Alliance for Election Information Verification and 
Digital Rights,” a strategic initiative aimed at enhancing the integrity 
of the digital electoral environment and protecting Palestinian 
cyberspace from misinformation and election-related content violations.

https://english.wafa.ps/Pages/Details/167626


6. Thai Activist’s Jail Term for Royal Insult Extended to 30 Years

A Thai court sentenced a prominent lawyer to more than two years for 
royal insult on Friday, a rights group said, bringing his combined 
sentence for monarchy reform activism to over three decades. Human 
rights lawyer Arnon Nampa rose to prominence in youth-led protests in 
2020, calling for reform of the military-drafted constitution and the 
monarchy. Nampa has been
jailed since 2023 on multiple royal defamation convictions linked to the 
protests and his social media posts.

https://www.digitaljournal.com/world/thai-activists-jail-term-for-royal-insult-extended-to-30-years/article


7. Bennet and Warren Lead Call for US Treasury and State to Justify 
Lifting Sanctions on Spyware Enablers

Colorado Senator Michael Bennet, along with Senators Elizabeth Warren 
and Jeanne Shaheen, has urged the Treasury and State Departments to 
explain the recent lifting of sanctions on three individuals affiliated 
with the Intellexa Consortium, known for providing spyware that targets 
Americans and journalists.

https://www.quiverquant.com/news/Press+Release%3A+Bennet+and+Warren+Lead+Call+for+Treasury+and+State+to+Justify+Lifting+Sanctions+on+Spyware+Enablers


8. Gabon Shuts Down Social Media Nationwide Over Protest and Social Unrest

Last week, Gabonese authorities shut down social media nationwide until 
further notice, citing the spread of misinformation, hateful speech and 
content threatening national security. Amid the social media ban, 
telecom operators have been instructed to block Gabonese access to 
popular platforms, including WhatsApp, Facebook, Instagram and TikTok.

https://technext24.com/2026/02/18/gabon-shuts-down-social-media-protest/.


9. Leaked Ring Emails Suggest Controversial Tech Won’t Stop at Finding Pets

Ring’s controversial, AI-powered “Search Party” feature isn’t intended 
to always be limited only to dogs, the company’s founder, Jamie 
Siminoff, told Ring employees in an internal email obtained by 404 Media.

https://www.404media.co/leaked-email-suggests-ring-plans-to-expand-search-party-surveillance-beyond-dogs/


10. Nigeria’s Rights Commission Expresses Concern Over Misuse Of 
Personal Data

Nigeria’s executive secretary of the National Human Rights Commission 
(NHRC) has expressed concern over the widespread misuse of personal data 
for malicious purposes, cyber harassment and defamation in the country. 
The disclosure was made during the national conference on digital rights 
organized by Avocats Sans Fronieres France in partnership with Spaces 
for Change and Centre for Information Technology and Development. A 
highlight of the event was the launch of a national report examining the 
state of digital rights in Nigeria.

https://leadership.ng/rights-commission-expresses-concern-over-misuse-of-personal-data/


11. Human Rights Watch Director: ‘AI, in the hands of autocratic 
governments, will accelerate their ability to control and surveil the 
population’

Philippe Bolopion warns that ‘there is a risk that the U.S. switching 
sides on the global scene may strengthen the authoritarian wave that has 
been taking over the world.’ He argues that resistance will only succeed 
if the countries that still believe in democracy can unite strategically

https://english.elpais.com/international/2026-02-22/human-rights-watch-director-ai-in-the-hands-of-autocratic-governments-will-accelerate-their-ability-to-control-and-surveil-the-population.html


12. US Lawmakers Introduce Iran Human Rights, Internet Freedom Bill

Two US lawmakers - House Foreign Affairs Middle East and North Africa 
Subcommittee Chairman Mike Lawler and Ranking Member Brad Sherman - have 
introduced bipartisan legislation aimed at supporting human rights and 
expanding internet access in Iran.

https://www.iranintl.com/en/202602240592

Meanwhile, a planned U.S. government website to subvert what they claim 
is European content blocks is a geopolitical nightmare.  The project is 
overseen by Sarah Rogers, under secretary for public diplomacy; and 
Edward Coristine, a former member of Elon Musk’s Department of 
Government Efficiency (DOGE), is reportedly working on the site’s 
design. Officials have discussed incorporating a built-in virtual 
private network (VPN) function.

https://www.fastcompany.com/91496996/trump-freedom-gov-plan-geopolitical-nightmare


13.  China Supplies Iran with Radar, Surveillance Tech to Track US 
Stealth Aircraft: Report

China’s Ministry of State Security (MSS) has provided Iran with new 
technology in an effort to prevent infiltration by US and Israeli 
intelligence, and to help Tehran defend itself from advanced US and 
Israeli warplanes in the case of a renewed war, according to a 10 
February report by Modern Diplomacy.

https://thecradle.co/articles/china-supplies-iran-with-radar-surveillance-tech-to-track-us-stealth-aircraft-report


14. Dublin Passengers Scanned with Controversial Tech by UK Border Force

Thousands of passengers travelling from Dublin to Holyhead will be 
scanned by live facial recognition technology this week as part of a UK 
immigration enforcement pilot. The use of the controversial technology 
at the Welsh port comes as police forces in England and Wales prepare a 
major expansion of the powerful surveillance tactic.

https://www.thedetail.tv/articles/dublin-passengers-scanned-with-controversial-tech-by-uk-border-force


15. Firm Launches Platform for Election Transparency in West Africa

Observe West Africa, a data-driven platform focused on transparency, 
accountability, and decision-making across West Africa, has hosted its 
official virtual launch. It is designed to reduce misinformation, 
support election transparency, strengthen trust in democratic processes, 
and provide data for advocates, policymakers, journalists, and researchers.

https://businessday.ng/technology/article/firm-launches-platform-for-election-transparency-in-west-africa/

_____________________________________

### Events Calendar ###
______________________________________

Did you know you could submit your events for inclusion in our 
newsletter? It takes a few minutes to submit: 
https://www.digitalrights.community/weekly-newsletter

Additionally, we maintain a calendar of events in our wiki: 
https://wiki.digitalrights.community/index.php?title=Calendar_of_Events

Digital Rights Social
February 19, 2026 @ 14 UTC
TCU's Mattermost
https://wiki.digitalrights.community/index.php?title=Community_Updates

Digital Rights Social / Focus: Building Autonomous Infrastructure
March 19, 2026   @ 14 UTC
TCU's Mattermost
https://wiki.digitalrights.community/index.php?title=Community_Updates

Palestine Digital Activism Forum (PDAF) 2026
March 30 to 31, 2026
https://pdaf.net/about-theme

Cables of Resistance Event
April 10 to 12
https://cableresist.de/

Digital Rights and Inclusion Forum
April 14-16
Abidjan, Ivory Coast
https://sessionize.com/digital-rights-and-inclusion-forum26/

International Journalism Festival (IJF)
April 15 to 18, 2026
Perugia, Italy
https://www.journalismfestival.com/

Digital Rights Social / Focus: Spyware Protection and Transnational 
Repression
April 16, 2026   @ 14 UTC
TCU's Mattermost
https://wiki.digitalrights.community/index.php?title=Community_Updates

UNESCO World Press Freedom Day 2026 Global Conference
May 4–5, 2026
Lusaka, Zambia
https://www.unesco.org/en/articles/world-press-freedom-day-2026-global-conference-shaping-future-peace

RightsCon 2026
May 5-8
Lusaka, Zambia
https://www.rightscon.org/

Digital Rights Social / Focus: Regional Updates
May 21, 2026   @ 14 UTC
TCU's Mattermost
https://wiki.digitalrights.community/index.php?title=Community_Updates

Digital Rights Asia-Pacific Assembly (DRAPAC)
June 8 to 10
Manila, Philippines
https://engagemedia.org/2025/drapac26-manila/

Global Media Forum
June 23 and 24, 2026
Bonn Germany
https://corporate.dw.com/en/gmf-2026-your-ideas-deserve-the-spotlight/a-75222151

All Things in Moderation 2026: Call for Contributions
June 25 to 26
Online and on demand
https://www.allthingsinmoderation.org/call-for-contributions

Free and Open Communications on the Internet (FOCI)
July 20, 2026
Hybrid, co-located with PETS in Calgary, Canada
https://foci.community/

Global Gathering
September 4 to 6, 2026
Portugal
https://www.digitalrights.community/blog/applications/global-gathering-2026-applications-open

Digital Commons:Infrastructures, Design, and the Ethics of Autonomy
October 8 to 10
Athens, Greece
www.digicommons.org
__________________________________________

### Grants, Fellowships, & Awards ###
__________________________________________

- Carr-Ryan Center Fellowship
- Global LGBTQI+ Human Rights Fellowship
- Racial Justice Fellowship
- Technology and Human Rights Fellowship.
Deadline: February 22, 2026
https://www.hks.harvard.edu/centers/carr-ryan/opportunities/fellowship-opportunities/technology-and-human-rights-fellowship

Digital Spark Call: Eastern Europe and Central Asia Digital Democracy
Deadline is February 23, 2026
https://metamorphosis.org.mk/en/aktivnosti_arhiva/call-for-grants-digital-spark/

Nigeria’s Digital Rights Litigation Surgery Program
February 25, 2026
https://digicivic.org/call-for-applications-to-the-digital-rights-litigation-surgery-drls/

Countering Mis and Disinformation in Zambian Elections
Deadline: February 27, 2026
http://web.civicus.org/DDI-Zambia

Digispace Africa Fellowship
Deadline: February 28, 2026.
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSdDCKPwFL9mXHrJ-JCzaj5_dppdRtMBqAae8KechA_8z4WLNg/viewform

2026 Oxford AI and Media Policy Summer Institute July 20 to 31
Deadline: Early decision March 14; Final deadline April 21
https://www.law.ox.ac.uk/oxford-ai-and-media-policy-summer-institute/2026-oxford-ai-and-media-policy-summer-institute

InDiCo-Global. Deadline
Deadline: June 30, 2026
https://indico-global-grants.eu/indico-global-third-open-call

__________________________________________

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