Sunday, July 11, 2021

கிளம்பிட்டாய்ங்கய்யா... ‛வாட்ஸ் ஆப் வெரிபிகேஷன் ஸ்கேம்' திருடர்கள்: ஓ.டி.பி.,யை சொல்லிடாதீங்க

கிளம்பிட்டாய்ங்கய்யா... ‛வாட்ஸ் ஆப் வெரிபிகேஷன் ஸ்கேம்' திருடர்கள்: ஓ.டி.பி.,யை சொல்லிடாதீங்க

Updated : ஜூலை 11, 2021 10:39 | Added : ஜூலை 11, 2021 10:34

மதுரை: 'அடிச்சு கூட கேட்பாங்க சொல்லிடாதீங்க' என வடிவேலு காமெடியில் வருவது போல் 'ஓ.டி.பி.,யை - ஒன் டைம் பாஸ்வேர்டு' சொல்லிடாதீங்க... 'வாட்ஸ் ஆப் வெரிபிகேஷசன் ஸ்கேம்' என்ற திருடர்கள் கிளம்பிட்டாங்கய்யா... கிளம்பிட்டாய்ங்க'... என சைபர் வல்லுனர்கள் எச்சரிக்கின்றனர்.

வாட்ஸ் ஆப் செயலியை 'கூகுள் பிளே ஸ்டோரில்' பதிவிறக்கி நம் அலைபேசி எண் பதிவு செய்து பயன்படுத்துகிறோம். நம் அலைபேசி எண்ணை தங்கள் போனில் உள்ள வாட்ஸ் ஆப் செயலில் பதிவு செய்து நம் தகவல்களை திருடுபவர்கள் தான் 'ஸ்கேம்' திருடர்கள். இவர்கள் நம் எண்ணை அவர்கள் வாட்ஸ் ஆப்பில் பதிவிடும் போது நம் அலைபேசி எண்ணுக்கு 4 இலக்க ஓ.டி.பி., எண்கள் வரும். உடனே நமக்கு போன் செய்து 'தவறாக உங்கள் எண்ணுக்கு ஓ.டி.பி.,வந்து விட்டது தயவு செய்து கூறுங்கள்' என மூளைச் சலவை செய்கிறார்கள்.

நாமும் ஏதோ ஒரு அவசரத்தில் யார், என்ன என்று கேட்காமல் ஓ.டி.பி.,யை கூறி விட்டால் அவ்வளவு தான் நம் 'வாட்ஸ் ஆப் சாட்' முழுதும் திருடர்கள் அலைபேசியில் ஓப்பனாகும். இந்த நேரத்தில் நம் அலைபேசியின் வாட்ஸ் ஆப் செயலி 'லாக் அவுட்' ஆகிவிடும். ஆனால் அதை கவனித்து மீண்டும் நாம் 'லாக் இன்' ஆகும் இடைப்பட்ட நேரத்தில் நம் தகவல்கள் திருடப்பட்டிருக்கும். வாட்ஸ் ஆப்பில் நண்பர்கள், குடும்பத்தினருக்கு நாம் அனுப்பிய ஏ.டி.எம்., பாஸ்வேர்ட், ஆதார் எண் உள்ளிட்ட பல ரகசியங்கள் திருடர்கள் கையில் சிக்கினால் நம் கதை கந்தல் தான்.

இதில் இருந்து தப்பிக்க நம்பகமான நபர்கள் தவிர வேறு யார் போன் செய்து ஓ.டி.பி.,யை கேட்டாலும் சொல்லவே கூடாது. பிரவுசிங் சென்டர் உள்ளிட்ட இடங்களில் ஏதாவது ஆவணங்கள் பெற செல்லும் போது நம் அலைபேசிக்கு வரும் ஓ.டி.பி.,யை அங்குள்ளவர் ஆவணத்திற்காக தான் பயன்படுத்துகிறாரா என்றும் கவனிக்க வேண்டும்.

'வாட்ஸ் ஆப் செட்டிங்ஸ்' மாற்றுங்கள்

தகவல் திருட்டை தடுக்க சில 'செட்டிங்'குகளை மாற்ற வேண்டும். வாட்ஸ் ஆப் செட்டிங், பிரிவில் அக்கவுண்ட் தேர்வு செய்து 'டூ ஸ்டெப் வெரிபிகேஷன்' கிளிக், எனேபில் செய்து 6 இலக்க பின் நம்பர் கொடுக்கவும். இதை செய்தால் திருடர்கள் ஓ.டி.பி., வைத்து நம் அலைபேசி எண்ணுள்ள வாட்ஸ் ஆப்பில் நுழையும் போது பின் நம்பர் கேட்கும்.

Rural teachers fight a losing battle to keep kids in ‘class’


TOI+

Rural teachers fight a losing battle to keep kids in ‘class’

In Bihar alone 1.4 crore students are without digital devices. To make sure education reaches all, teachers are trying everything from evening classes to phone recharges

Manash.Gohain@timesgroup.com

11.07.2021 

With lockdowns shutting schools across the country, students have struggled to access remote learning. In some places, they wait for their parents to return from work so that they can access lessons sent by the teacher on WhatsApp. Some land up at neighbours’ homes asking to use their smartphones. Others watch non-interactive recorded lessons on TV. But the struggle isn’t theirs alone.

Teachers across rural India spoke about how they were attempting to ensure their students didn’t fall behind with measures that range from open-air classes to recharging phones.

Biswajeet Bodo, head teacher of Jugal High School in Bamunpukhuru village in Assam’s Tezpur district, and his colleagues have been conducting classes in open spaces or in Nam Ghars, places of congregational worship, since only around 150 of the 480 students in the school have access to smartphones.

“During the first wave of Covid, we picked five venues in five villages around the school, called the students of that particular area and taught them in the open. But that had to stop as the number of cases was very high in the second wave,” Bodo said. “Then we made arrangements with families that have mobile phones to lend them for 90 minutes to those who don’t have devices,” he said.

The lack of digital devices among students was acknowledged by the education ministry in a submission on six states to a parliamentary standing committee last month (see box). In states like Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh and Jammu and Kashmir, nearly 70% of students don’t have access to a digital device. In Bihar, as many as 1.4 crore or 38% don’t have a device.

Teachers are trying their best to be flexible. Nasim Ahmad, who heads an Urdu medium primary school in the Khijurtoli village near Ranchi, said that 100 of the 186 students have access to their parents’ mobile phones. “We have two-hour open-air classes for those without phones. For those who do, we conduct classes from 7 pm onwards, after their parents return from work,” he said.

Anil Kumar Pradhan, who teaches in a government school in the Lahanda village of Odisha’s Sundargarh district, said that even when students had access to a smartphone, they didn’t have access to the internet. “So, once a week we visited their homes to teach them whatever is possible,” he said.

Even in a state like Kerala, that ranks high on development indicators, internet access has been a problem in rural areas. Michael Sebastian, from the organisation Samagra Siksha Kerala in Idukki, said students in the state have been watching classes that are aired on television. But in Idukki, where there are many tribal hamlets, many homes don’t have continuous power supply.

Sebastian said they set up public study centres where education volunteers can help the children. “More than 1,000 students, including the tea estate workers’ children, attend TV classes in these public study centres,” he said.

OUT-OF-REACH RECHARGES

Even when there’s a phone and internet, there are hurdles like lack of money. “The parents told us when there is no food in the house how can they recharge the phones? There are many children whom we assisted by recharging their parents’ mobile phones,” said Ahmad, the teacher from Jharkhand.

In Andhra Pradesh, Satnarayan Sastry said that the state government had deposited Rs 15,000 in the bank accounts of mothers whose children are enrolled in the schools but only a few bought phones with the money. “The government offered a laptop or Rs 15,000, and a majority opted for the money. But that money was mostly spent on other essential things as many don’t even have enough for food,” he said.

GETTING THEM BACK IN SCHOOL

Most teachers also admitted that there is a growing learning gap with students’ performance declining significantly. Educationist and former CBSE chairperson Ashok Ganguly pointed out that online education is an interim measure and not a real education. “Learning loss can be addressed through innovative measures such as SMSes which assign students engaging activities,” he said.

Then there is the problem of dropouts. The education ministry said nearly 55 lakh children are out of school just in the two states of Jharkhand and UP. Educationist Meeta Sengupta said dropout rate can be reversed with school-wapsi or Back to School programmes. “This is an opportunity to get schooling right, where schools reach children, rather than forcing children to come into regimented schooling,” she said.


BRIDGING THE GAP: With no internet or digital devices, students are forced to attend classes in the open in Odisha’s Sundargarh district

WHO to decide on Covaxin in 4-6 weeks


WHO to decide on Covaxin in 4-6 weeks

11.07.2021 

The World Health Organization is likely to take a decision on including Bharat Biotech’s Covaxin in the emergency use list within four to six weeks, Soumya Swaminathan, the global health body’s chief scientist has said. At a webinar on Friday, Swaminathan said BB is uploading safety and efficacy data and a decision on its inclusion will be taken by an expert advisory group. PTI

The difference between tennis elbow and golfer’s elbow


The difference between tennis elbow and golfer’s elbow

11.07.2021 


The difference between golfer’s and tennis elbow is mainly to do with which part of the elbow becomes inflamed. In tennis elbow, the inflammation is on the outside of the elbow, while with a golfer’s elbow, the inflammation is on the inner side. Golfer’s elbow can also cause numbness or tingling in your ring and little fingers.

Tennis elbow affects the extensor tendons of the arm which connect to the muscles that stretch your wrist backward and spread your fingers. Golfer’s elbow affects the flexor tendons attached to the muscles that flex your wrist and screw up your fingers, like when you grip something.

— DAILY MIRROR


Talk it Out


Talk it Out

11.07.2021 

Times of India 

Why it’s so hard for parents to let their adult children leave home
To help readers cope with their anxieties in these stressful times, TOI has launched Talk it Out, a series under which our panel of expert counsellors will answer your mental health queries. This week’s advice comes from psychiatrist Dr Prabha Chandra

We are seniors with a young daughter who wants to excel in her career. We were shell-shocked when she took a separate accommodation and left us. She also said that she will find her own life partner as she feels traditionally brought up boys are dominating and don’t share household work. We are worried about her living separately and her safety. We are more experienced and can get someone in our community matching her requirements. But she is very stubborn and not accepting any proposal. Please advise.

— Anonymous anxious parents

This is such a common scenario in India. Parents and adult children need to establish new ways of communication and negotiation. There are two issues you seem to be concerned about. First, her moving out and feeling that she has ‘left’ you. All adult children have to individuate and separate from their parents, if not physically then symbolically. It is admirable and a testimony to your parenting that your daughter can live on her own, be responsible for her own finances, food and safety. She has not left you. She is just learning to find her wings and fly on her own. There are many ways in which you can support that. To handle your concerns about her safety, having a discussion about alarms, locks etc may help. Your daughter seems to be an intelligent young woman. As her parents, you would want her to find a partner who will respect her and treat her like an equal. In her quest for independence, she may stumble a bit, but she should know that you are around to support her. Being open to her need for independence and respecting her decision also gives you the opportunity to stay connected and have open conversations, including about your own anxieties.

My husband had to travel abroad for a new job. My son and I will join him next year. My mother, sister and brother came to our place to help as we are expecting our second baby. My mom says she isn’t liking it here and wants to go back. Initially I was patient but gradually, it became unbearable because of the unspoken pressure. I feel she is not even making an effort to settle down and just wants to go back, even though she isn’t particularly happy there. I feel like I can’t talk to my mother and am angry at her. Am I a bad daughter?

— Anonymous

I’d like to reassure you that this is quite common. Neither are you a bad daughter, nor is she an unhelpful mom. Firstly, the pandemic has taken a huge toll on our emotions, especially older people who thrived on social connections and now feel lonely and anxious. When we feel distressed, we’d like to be back in our familiar surroundings which is what your mother probably wants. Secondly, our expectations from our parents may result in us taking them for granted. It looks like you really care for your mother, so acknowledge that she is doing you a huge favour, discuss how you can help her feel more comfortable, negotiate a shorter stay and respect her wishes if she still wants to go back.

I was in an on/off relationship for about seven years. I have cut all connections with my ex-boyfriends who he didn’t like, but he hasn’t. I love him a lot and I know this is very toxic because he makes talking to him very hard. He asks me to support him and says he wants to be with me. I feel his actions and words are completely different. I want to confront him but am worried that it’ll be hard to let him go since I’ve shared a significant portion of my life with him.

— Anonymous

Seven years is a long time. By now both of you should be aware of what is negotiable and non-negotiable. Ex-boyfriends or a platonic girlfriend are not the real problem. Patterns of faulty communication and jealousy may set in early and are related to each partner’s own personal insecurities. Trusting someone and being open with each other means letting go of one’s own fears. Being secretive, confrontational, withdrawing, and being accusatory are all indicative of unhealthy communication. However, these can be resolved by working on one’s own insecurities. In a healthy romantic relationship, one need not stop being friends with others or expect that the partner share every small detail of their life. I would suggest couples counselling because there seem to be things keeping you together.

2 Baroda Medical College students drown in Mahi


2 Baroda Medical College students drown in Mahi

Were Part Of Group That Had Gone For Picnic

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Vadodara:11.07.2021 

Two students of the Baroda Medical College drowned in the Mahisagar river near Rasulpur in Savli taluka of Vadodara district on Saturday.

The students were members of a group that had gone for picnic there.

According to sources, a group of 12 second year MBBS students had gone to Rasulpur which is a popular site for outings and picnics amongst residents of Vadodara.

The group entered the river to bathe. However, the heavy current in the river dragged away four students including the deceased Siddhi Shah (20) and Amogh Goel (20).

While two students managed to hold on to rocks and returned to safety, Shah and Goel drowned in a deep depression in the river. Other members of the group too rushed out of the river and raised an alarm to get help.

Villagers rushed to the spot and brought out Shah and Goel from the river albeit after some delay as they could not be found immediately. The students called for an ambulance and even performed CPR on Shah and Goel. The two students, in critical condition, were rushed to the SSG Hospital in the city to which the college is attached. The doctors at the hospital could not save them despite all efforts.

The two other students who had started drowning along with Shah and Goel were stable. Sources said that the entire group was in a state of shock and was given succour by teachers at the college.

Sources said that the depression at the site is known. In the past too similar incidents have been reported there.

The two students were rushed to SSG hospital in critical condition

Aadhaar’s catch-22: To get missing man’s info, trace him!


Aadhaar’s catch-22: To get missing man’s info, trace him!

Hear Him Before Ordering Us To Reveal Details: UIDAI To HC

Saeed.Khan@timesgroup.com

Ahmedabad:11.07.2021 

A 19-year-old boy, Jigar Jadav, went missing from his school in Devas village in Banaskantha in 2011. A decade later, when the local police sought help from the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) to provide any and every available detail on Jadav to help trace him, the Aadhaar authority cited the right to privacy of the person--missing in this case.

In March this year, the Gujarat HC directed Banaskantha police to launch an investigation to trace Jadav and ordered UIDAI to cooperate with the police to trace Jadav through Aadhaar card, if it was issued at all to him.

Reluctant to share Aadhaar information, if it has any, on missing Jadav, the UIDAI authorities informed the Gujarat high court that the HC can order it to furnish information only after hearing the authority and the person whose information is being sought for. Ironically, in this case, it is a missing person!

In March, the Gujarat HC had directed police to launch a probe to find Jigar

Cooperate with cops: HC to UIDAI

The insistence on part of the Aadhaar authority on following the law perplexed the HC which directed UIDAI on Wednesday to cooperate with the police in its investigation into the disappearance of Jadav after 10 years following a habeas corpus petition filed by Jadav’s father, Nagjibhai. Jadav had disappeared from Dr Babasaheb Ambedkar Kumar Chhatralay in Devas village in Banaskantha. His father frantically inquired with the schools and hostel authorities and pursued the matter with high-ups in the government. When no trace of his son was found, he approached the high court through advocate Nayanavati Jethva.

Following the HC order, the Deesa police wrote to UIDAI seeking information about Jadav, if it has any. In reply, the authority said that it would be difficult to identify a person merely on the basis of his birth date and name and without Aadhaar number.

The authority later reiterated this in its affidavit filed in the high court and asserted that it would not be feasible to trace him on the basis of cursory details. It also cited various provisions of laws and court orders by which the right to privacy restricts disclosure of details pertaining to an Aadhaar card holder.

The Aadhaar authority further submitted that the court can order it to furnish information about an Aadhaar card holder only after hearing UIDAI and the person concerned. It cited provisions of section 33(1) of UIDAI Act. “It is pertinent to mention that since Mr. Jigar Kumar Nagji Bhai Jadav has now attained majority (as per the information provided by state police authorities), he is also required to be heard by the Court along with the authority in view of the aforesaid Section 33 (1) of the said Act (as amended), in case if he has enrolled himself for an Aadhaar number and subsequently allotted the same by the Authority,” the affidavit reads.

Meanwhile, the Banaskantha police submitted its report on the probe during the hearing. The HC has posted the matter for further hearing on July 26.

NEWS TODAY 07.07.2026