that what you envisaged when you bought twitter? you bought twitter? i must confess to you bought twitter? i must confess to some you bought twitter? i must confess to some delight i you bought twitter? i must confess to some delight in | confess to some delight in removing the verified badge from the new york times. that was. that was great. anyway, there s they re still alive and well, so they re doing fine. ., ., , and well, so they re doing fine. ., ., , ., fine. but on a serious note, it could flame fine. but on a serious note, it could flame disinformation i could flame disinformation again if you have verified accounts that are from anyone who can pay money. they go off to potentially the topper feeds. they get more action on twitter and traditional media that may not pay for verification doesn t. do you see how that could potentially be a driver of misinformation? well, i mean, ithink the be a driver of misinformation? well, i mean, i think the media is a driver of
quote, commits to work toward complete denuclearization to the korean peninsula and kim jong-un reaffirmed his firm and unwavering commitment toward working toward the denuclearization. that s different, working towards. there s nothing that defines the denuclearization. it doesn t mention the missiles. you can t verify anything unless you first have the details of what it is you have. people need to understand that verification doesn t mean you go searching around the country with a flashlight and a magni magnifyimagnif magnifying glass looking for things. you have a comprehensive, accurate inventory of everything that s relevant and go into basically corroborate it. there s the argument that, look, it hasn t worked in the past all the things u.s. and various administrations, republican and democrat have tried haven t worked. perhaps this kind of top down approach where rather than having bilateral meetings or
you can t verify anything unless you first have the details of what it is you have. people need to understand that verification doesn t mean you go searching around the country with a flashlight and a magnifying glass looking for things. you have a comprehensive, accurate inventory of everything that s relevant and go into basically corroborate it. there s the argument that, look, it hasn t worked in the past all the things u.s. and various administrations, republican and democrat have tried haven t worked. perhaps this kind of top down approach where rather than having bilateral meetings or multicountry meetings initially, having the two leaders meet off the get go might break it in? from your mouth to god s ear. i would love that to be so. everyone ought to hope this happens. to simply base it all on trust and a personal relationship seems to me extraordinarily optimistic to say the least. to commit to working toward
nic robertson in kuala lumpur. joining us, sonar expert arnold par. the australian prime minister says he s, quote, confident the signals, the four signals detected from the flight 370 black boxes are, in fact, signals coming from those black boxes. are you confident he s right? i can t say i m confident. i m very hopeful. things are looking good for an number of reasons. that being there are repeated signals being derived from the pingers. granted, they seem to be weakening. that s important, where you can repeat something. i won t be confident until we have verification. verification doesn t necessarily mean you need a camera on side looking at some recognized piece from the aircraft. i would be confident with the verification through sonar of a debris field that resembles the plane and hopefully that debris field will be a relatively