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Want to land a spot in Google’s Knowledge Panel? 🧠✨ It’s not just SEO—it’s entity optimization. Discover how to build credibility, structure data, and own your niche in Google’s brain. 👨💻📊 Make your brand unmissable.
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Understanding the Google Knowledge Panel

Have you ever taken notice as to why there is always that info box on the right side of the Google search results? It is called the Knowledge Panel and it should be noted that it significantly helps to improve therowsing results. Here’s a quick rundown: Why You Need a Knowledge Panel: 1. Boosts Credibility: It proves to you or your business that Google considers you to be of significance. 2. Increases Visibility: Ensures that your brand is among the first ones, that people will be able to type when searching for services. 3. Builds Trust: A good panel assists the users to believe the information that concerns you or your business. 4. Gives Control: This way you are able to control the information you put in and format a way that allows you to bring in updates. How to Get One: 1. Create a Strong Online Presence: Has a regularly updated website and is present in the major social media platforms. 2. Use Structured Data Markup: Segregate. to explain to Google what is where on your site, use proper org markup on the site. 3. Consider a Wikipedia Page: No, it is not required, but it proves useful as often Google incorporates data from Wikipedia into its results. 4. Set Up Google My Business: Criticically important for local-based businesses in a particular local community to ensure that they stake their claims in the locality. 5. Gain Media Coverage: This is because the search engine can only notice you if you are visible More visibility is going to help Google notice you.
Read more: The Google Knowledge Panel
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Participate now! #ElevatorQuiz #KnowledgePanel. Your answer in comments!...
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Discover how Zero-Click Search Strategies can skyrocket your online visibility! 📈 Click Take Technologies, we help businesses capture attention directly on search engines—with featured snippets, knowledge panels, and more! 🚀💡 Get found. Get noticed. Even without the click. ���✨ 👉 Let us show you how! 🔗 https://clicktaketech.com/ 📞 +44 7751 553879 . . . . . . #ZeroClickSearch #SearchEngineVisibility #FeaturedSnippets #ClickTakeTechnologies #SEOStrategies #DigitalMarketing #NoClickSEO #SEOTrends #ContentMarketing #SearchEngineMarketing #ZeroClickSEO #MarketingTips #SERPFeatures #KnowledgePanel #GoogleSearchTips #SearchOptimization #DigitalGrowth #SmartSEO #MarketingSolutions #OnlineMarketingTools #MarketingAgencyUK #WebsiteOptimization #OrganicSearch #UserEngagement #SEOExperts #SearchWithoutClicks #SocialMediaMarketing #ClickTakeTech #UKDigitalAgency
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Ipsos/Reuters Poll: Trump Leads Harris On Economic Issues

A new Reuters/Ipsos poll finds that economic issues are the top priority for American voters. According to the survey, conducted a month before the Nov. 5 election, 26% of Americans say the economy, unemployment, and jobs are the most important issues facing the country today.
Political extremism and threats to democracy follow at 17%, with immigration close behind at 16%. The poll highlights inflation and the cost of living as the most pressing economic concerns, with 70% of registered voters saying the next president should focus on tackling affordability.
Former President Donald Trump is seen by more registered voters as having a better plan for handling economic challenges, compared to Vice President Kamala Harris. He holds a 15-point lead over Harris when it comes to managing the stock market, and a 9-point lead on improving Americans' financial well-being and in overseeing the broader U.S. economy, and a 4-point lead on taxes.
As Election Day closes in, the poll suggests that economic issues, and particularly addressing inflation, will be top-of-mind for a majority of voters. Early voting is already underway in some states.
The Ipsos poll was conducted Oct. 4-7, 2024, on behalf of Reuters using the KnowledgePanel®. It's based on a representative sample of 1,272 U.S. residents, age 18 or older, with a margin of error ± 2.8 percentage points for results based on the entire sample of adults.
Kate McManus ✉
Kate McManus is a New Jersey-based Newsmax writer who's spent more than two decades as a journalist.
© 2024 Newsmax. All rights reserved.
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The more Ageist attacks that our Israeli-loyal MSM makes on Biden, the more pissed off I get.
" ABC News/Ipsos PollConducted by Ipsos using the probability-based KnowledgePanel®A survey of the American general population (ages 18+)Interview dates: February 9-10, 2024, Number of interviews, adults: 528"
Bottom line, it's pretty clear that Bibi Netanyahu and HIS backers are not pleased with having someone so Pro-American, in the White House. We were supposed to be toast, by now. It should not be up to Israel, whom we have as our representative.
#Bibi Netanyahu#Israeli Influence#Anerican Media & Politics#President Biden#Jill Biden#CBS#ABC#NBC#MSNBC#CNN#The Hill#Politico#Washington Post#Wall Street Journal#ALL OF OUR MEDIA IS INFLUENCED BY ISRAEL AND RUSSIA#Anto-American Media
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Speaking of narratives- there was an article in the Washington Post yesterday (7/11/24) titled "Most Democrats want Biden to drop out, but overall race is static, poll finds" (https://wapo.st/3LFSXKl). Which surprised me, because while the news has been full of this opinion I'd only heard it voiced by two actual people in my life (my parents, who'd still vote Democratic even if it was for a ham sandwich). So while it's *possible* I just live in a bubble, the assertion that "Overall, 2 in 3 adults say the president should step aside, including more than 7 in 10 independents" is jarring.
But if you get all the way to the end of the article...
The Washington Post-ABC News-Ipsos poll was conducted July 5-9 among 2,431 U.S. adults through the Ipsos KnowledgePanel, a survey panel recruited through random sampling of households across the country. Overall results have a margin of sampling error of plus or minus two percentage points; the error margin is 3.5 points among the sample of 825 self-identified Democrats and three points among the sample of 1,255 Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents. [Emphasis mine]
2,431 people were polled, and used to represent the political views of over 200 million adult voters. That's not representative of a varied & volatile concept, that's building a narrative - a narrative rooted in ableism and ageism, rather than substantive critiques of policy, platform, or behavior.
You know ever, since I started working with two stutterers, I've grown a lot less tolerable of the "Biden is on a mental decline because he's stuttering" crowd.
"He's putting in weird pauses" that's a stutter" "He's switching words" that's also the stutter" "He's doing a bunch of filler words" that's a stutter too "he's declining" I could literally look up a video of him in 2013 of him doing all this. He's doing it more thanks to his age, yes, but that's not inherently a sign of cognitive decline.
Hollywood has really screwed over people who stutter by giving them this blatantly false representation of them as stupid or scared or just plain not showing how it w-w-w-w-works (yes, that's a form of stutter, but it's not the only form a stutter can take). A stutter is not a sign of weakness or stupidity and even if you don't give a shit about Biden you should realize how that's rebounding onto every person that stutters.
#it's a media frenzy rooted in ableism and ageism & fed by a handful of doners & ranking Dems feeling uncomfortable#there are PLENTY of substantive areas of criticism- his heavyhandedness at the US/Mexico border & failure to rein in Israel come to mind#but also - to force someone to drop their campaign on the words of a few politically & financially powerful people#and ignoring the results of primaries so far (where nobody meaningfully challenged Biden)#leaves an awfully bad taste in my mouth
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Damn smh #google #knowledgepanel #discriminated #telegram https://www.instagram.com/p/CV5JXbjrikJ/?utm_medium=tumblr
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Google Knowledge Panel for Company.💥💥💥 #companyknowledgepanel #googleknowledgepanel #knowledgepanel If you want Inbox #DM ✅✅✅ https://www.instagram.com/p/CVLPseHJnho/?utm_medium=tumblr
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Have you ever noticed on Google when you’re searching for a brand or a service and they have a panel next to their brand? Google Knowledge Panels are the results of Google’s Knowledge Graph. Effectively, it’s lots of data that is linked with that business.
In our blog we’ll tell you how you can get some of your information stored here... Check it out.
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Follow me, & stream my music on your favorite platform 💯 Give me a follow, like, subscribe, etc. on all social media 🗣️ Be sure to also check out my official site: https://otovibezzz.com #OTOVibezzz & Lastly take a look at my #Google #knowledgepanel Thanks for the support 💪����😌💯 https://www.instagram.com/p/CBJ8Fc2JIb2/?igshid=whx69cmv9k9s
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via Politics – FiveThirtyEight
Welcome to an emergency edition of FiveThirtyEight’s politics chat. The transcript below has been lightly edited.
sarah (Sarah Frostenson, politics editor): Very early Friday morning, President Trump tweeted that he and First Lady Melania Trump had tested positive for COVID-19. That news came just after reports on Thursday that White House senior advisor Hope Hicks had tested positive.
There’s a lot we still don’t know at this point, including the extent of White House staff affected or the severity of the president’s symptoms, but with about a month until Election Day, this is … an October surprise, to say the least.
Let’s start with one of the big questions: What does this mean for the election?
natesilver (Nate Silver, editor in chief): So for some reason I’m finding it hard to think through the electoral implications this morning. Maybe I need even more coffee. My thoughts right now are mostly some combination of:
Seriously how the F*CK does this happen? Shouldn’t everybody in the president’s orbit have been tested constantly?
And, OF COURSE this happened because 2020 and because the president clearly was not taking that many precautions
perry (Perry Bacon Jr., senior writer): My overall answer is, “I have no idea how this affects the election.” This is truly unprecedented, as far as I know, in American elections — the president getting a serious virus weeks before the election. I can’t think of any leader abroad who has gotten a virus like this weeks before the election either (though I am not an expert on elections outside of the United States).
So while I have some general thoughts, I wanted to lay that out first. I truly have no idea what to expect, how voters will react to Trump’s positive test, how the media will cover it or how other candidates will react.
I.
Don’t.
Know.
ameliatd (Amelia Thomson-DeVeaux, senior writer): Yeah — it’s such a black box and honestly so dependent on what happens next. Does Trump get really sick? Does he stay mostly asymptomatic? How far did the virus spread in the White House? All questions we can’t answer right now, of course. But hugely important for how people respond.
natesilver: Yeah. We’re going to be saying “I don’t know” a lot in this chat. I don’t think there’s anything wrong with thinking through the electoral implications. There’s an election happening literally NOW — millions of people have already voted. So Americans are wrestling with this stuff. We just don’t have a lot of good answers.
ameliatd: And, of course, there’s an open question about whether Joe Biden will test positive, after he and Trump were at the debate together on Tuesday.
natesilver: Right, and one thing I’m not sure people realize is that there can be several days between exposure and a positive test. So we won’t know for sure which people have or don’t have COVID-19 for a bit here.
ameliatd: In the meantime, though, this does mean that Trump can’t campaign for at a while, right? And what about the debates, which were supposed to be on Oct. 15 and 22? Do those still happen?
How much does it matter if Trump can’t campaign, though? This was already a deeply bizarre year and I’m not sure his rallies were going to put him over the edge.
natesilver: Zoom debates?
ameliatd: Everyone wanted that automatic mute last time!
natesilver: At a very basic, square-one level, COVID-19 is a huge liability for the president, and so placing more focus on COVID-19 probably isn’t great for him. But I don’t know how useful that is as a prior. Could Trump getting COVID-19 change his messaging around the virus and pandemic? Maybe. But this is Donald Trump we’re talking about. He’s not inclined to be overly disciplined or deferential to scientists, etc. He’s pretty unpredictable, and we don’t yet know a lot about how serious his symptoms are. And this is a bad disease that can have cognitive effects in addition to physical ones.
Also in terms of very, basic, non-debatable priors: the president’s re-election bid was in DEEP trouble going into this, at least by conventional measures. And the smattering of post-debate polls we’d gotten had been particularly bad for him. So just worth keeping that in mind.
sarah: Absolutely. But on the question of how this happened … The Trump campaign has not taken precautions seriously. They’ve continued to hold large, in-person events. And they’ve even mocked the Biden campaign for wearing masks.
Is one possible scenario from this that Americans take the coronavirus more seriously? Views on COVID-19 and Trump’s response to it are polarized by party, but how could Trump’s positive test change public opinion?
ameliatd: I think what happens with public opinion really depends on how sick Trump gets. As I wrote over the summer, a big part of the reason Republicans are not as into COVID-19 restrictions is that they are much, much less likely to view the virus as a personal health threat to them.
And research has indicated that Trump downplaying the virus is probably a significant driver of that. So I could see this playing out at least two ways …
Trump gets moderately or very sick and this does prompt Republicans to think, “Oh geez, this actually is serious and if it could happen to Trump it could happen to me”;
Trump remains mostly asymptomatic and it bolsters the idea that this is actually not such a big deal.
perry: So, writing this on Friday morning, here’s what I expect …
The overwhelming majority of people, even those who are older, don’t die from COVID-19. So the most likely outcome is that Trump and some of his staffers have COVID-19, stay somewhat distanced from everyone for two weeks and then Trump returns to campaigning for reelection (I am not sure if he has the big rallies, but I wouldn’t rule that out.) I am not even sure the next two debates have to be canceled — particularly the Oct 22 one. And basically nothing has shaken Trump’s job approval ratings or really the race overall. I don’t really expect this to shift things either.
The president testing positive for COVID-19 is obviously hugely significant, but it’s not revelatory. We already knew Trump was not taking the virus seriously enough. Now, we have a much more obvious manifestation of that fact, but nothing is really different. Biden may not be able to attack Trump as bluntly on COVID now, for decorum reasons, but this positive test reinforces Biden’s message that Trump has let this crisis get out of hand. So this matters, but I’m not sure it matters electorally in terms of shifting a lot of people’s votes.
ameliatd: I know we’re thinking way down the line now, but is it possible that battling and surviving COVID-19 could actually make Trump more popular in some corners? Especially if he doesn’t get very sick?
natesilver: Amelia, I’m not sure I really buy that. I mean, somehow if it made the president into a more empathetic person, maybe, I suppose? But (i) I’m not sure that’s how he’s likely to react as opposed to sending 6,000 tweets about the “China Virus” or something; and (ii) he’s been trying to project a lot of macho-ness/dominance and to portray Biden as old and feeble and I’m not sure how contracting a serious disease himself fits into that.
ameliatd: Well, but if he contracts a serious disease and doesn’t get very sick and recovers fairly quickly — that certainly doesn’t seem as bad for him.
natesilver: I guess if he recovers in a couple of weeks, which is still what happens for most people, maybe he’ll say he kicked COVID’s ass and/or it wasn’t that serious. But I don’t think that necessarily affects anything electorally.
ameliatd: So, is the main impact potentially less about politics and more about the way Americans think about the virus? Either prompting Republicans to take it more seriously or reinforcing their sense that this really isn’t a big deal?
There was research back in March indicating that COVID-19 spreading at CPAC helped drive a brief moment when Republicans and Democrats were on the same page about the seriousness of the virus.
perry: So I don’t buy this idea that Trump will get COVID-19, be fine and then start calling it “Fake News.” We just learned Ronna McDaneil, the RNC chair, has also tested positive. So has Hope Hicks, a top Trump adviser. I think enough people in Trump’s circle may have the virus that THOSE PEOPLE start taking this more seriously, basically forcing him to as well.
natesilver: This is one sort of message we might hear, I guess:
Remember: China gave this virus to our President @realDonaldTrump and First Lady @FLOTUS.
WE MUST HOLD THEM ACCOUNTABLE.
— Kelly Loeffler (@KLoeffler) October 2, 2020
sarah: But this question of whether it will change how seriously people perceive the coronavirus is an interesting one. Americans overall, as we saw in our debate polling with Ipsos, listed the coronavirus as their No. 1 issue:
COVID-19 and the economy are Americans’ top two issues
Share of respondents who named each issue as the top one facing the U.S., according to a FiveThirtyEight/Ipsos poll
issue share of all Respondents COVID-19 31.7%
–
The economy 21.6
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Health care 7.9
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Racial inequality 7.4
–
Climate change 5.2
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Violent crime 4.8
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The Supreme Court 4.5
–
Economic inequality 3.0
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Immigration 2.8
–
Education 2.6
–
Abortion 2.3
–
Gun policy 1.9
–
Other 1.6
–
Data comes from polling done by Ipsos for FiveThirtyEight, using Ipsos’s KnowledgePanel, a probability-based online panel that is recruited to be representative of the U.S. population. The poll was conducted Sept. 21-28 among a general population sample of adults, with 3,133 respondents and a margin of error of +/- 1.9 percentage points.
However, among potential Trump supporters a much smaller share (15.5 percent) said the coronavirus was their most important issue, many more were concerned about the economy:
Potential Trump voters care most about the economy
Among respondents who were more likely to vote for Trump than Biden, share who named each issue as the top one facing the U.S., according to a FiveThirtyEight/Ipsos poll
issue share of trump supporters The economy 38.4%
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COVID-19 15.5
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Violent crime 9.5
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The Supreme Court 6.2
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Abortion 5.4
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Health care 4.9
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Immigration 4.8
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Education 3.9
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Gun policy 3.4
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Other 2.4
–
Racial inequality 1.8
–
Economic inequality 1.6
–
Climate change 0.5
–
Respondents were asked to rate how likely they were to vote for each candidate on a scale of 0-10. Respondents were deemed more likely to vote for whichever candidate they gave a higher score. Respondents who gave both candidates the same score are not included.
Data comes from polling done by Ipsos for FiveThirtyEight, using Ipsos’s KnowledgePanel, a probability-based online panel that is recruited to be representative of the U.S. population. The poll was conducted Sept. 21-28 among a general population sample of adults, with 3,133 respondents and a margin of error of +/- 1.9 percentage points.
I think you could argue that the economy is probably linked to coronavirus among Trump supporters, but this could be a moment that has public health repercussions, yes?
ameliatd: Well, there was a jobs report this morning — one that I suspect is now going to get a LOT less attention. It was kinda positive — if you can consider the unemployment rate falling just under 8 percent positive.
perry: I think there could be a bunch of real, important health outcomes from this …
GOP governors and mayors may be a bit more hesitant to lift COVID restrictions;
Democratic mayors and governors may cite Trump’s positive test as part of their messaging on keeping restrictions in place;
Republican voters may become a bit less dismissive of COVID, in part because GOP elites take it more seriously;
Overall, this news could be important and have a positive impact in terms of Americans taking the virus more seriously.
ameliatd: Yeah, I’m also wondering if this will change the way Republican governors approach restrictions, which are all but completely lifted in some states.
Although I do think it’s important to note that the vast majority of Americans say they’ve been complying with public health guidelines like mask-wearing, even if Republicans are much less likely to agree with government restrictions on businesses.
perry: To take an example: Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, a Republican, is never going to give a press conference and say something like, “I was downplaying COVID-19 but then Trump got it and it reinforced how serious this was.” At least, I think that will never happen?
natesilver: I suppose I’m skeptical that this will necessarily change all that much. As you can see from the Kelly Loeffler tweet above, there are lots of partisan responses that don’t necessarily involve taking the disease more seriously per se.
Now, if Trump said something like what Perry just layed out, i.e. “I wasn’t taking this seriously enough, and I now understand the error of my ways…” then OK! That could make a difference! But I’m not sure that’s necessarily the most likely outcome.
ameliatd: But for regular people, I think a lot of this is about the gut-level fear that this might happen to them. Trump downplaying it, not wearing a mask, and not getting sick almost certainly helped reinforce the feeling among Republicans that it’s not a big deal. So I also think the way this is presented in conservative media, how visible Trump’s illness is — all of that matters for how people respond.
It’s true that the partisan response is pretty baked in at this point. But if Trump gets really sick, I could see that changing. Of course, if Republican governors start being more cautious with restrictions again and more people lose their jobs — that raises questions for whether a new stimulus package might actually get off the ground, too. I remain skeptical that will happen! But maybe there’s more pressure to break the stalemate in Congress?
sarah: There are a number of possibilities here, the most pressing one, of course, is that Trump can’t campaign — not to mention if Vice President Mike Pence has to step in. What should we be looking for as this story develops?
ameliatd: Trump’s symptoms are obviously a big one. And if they’re serious, there might be calls to take him off the ballot.
Also, Biden’s testing status — which we should know sooner than Trump’s symptoms, I would think.
natesilver: Right, part of what makes this tough to predict — and I’m not against prediction! — is that we don’t yet know if Trump will have a mild or severe case, how many people in his orbit are also infected, whether Biden is infected, etc.
perry: Assuming Trump recovers, what does his campaign look like on Oct. 16? Is he still holding big rallies? Is he wearing a mask? Are his staffers? Does the Oct. 22 debate take place, and in person? What about the Oct. 15 one? Is he further dismissing the virus because he survived it?
natesilver: Let’s also keep in mind that the recovery process isn’t quick for some people. It can take months, or longer — long-term COVID symptoms are scary.
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Google ナレッジパネルが認証されるまでは顔写真付き身分証のマイナンバーカードは公開し続けることに決めました。 #knowledgepanel #認証バッジ #マイナンバーカード — view on Instagram https://ift.tt/37cFLHd
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Google Feature: Knowledge Panel
Source: http://digitalmarketingauthority.blogspot.com.au/
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During Watergate, Americans were also against impeaching Nixon. But as Americans learned more, 57% of Americans wanted Nixon removed from office.
Currently, 52% want Trump removed. But the percentage should increase once Americans learn about emails from the Pentagon that warned Trump multiple times that the Ukraine aid freeze was illegal.
A FOX NEWS poll from Dec. 15, 2019 ‘showed that 50% of voters want to impeach and remove Trump from office’. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ Fox Viewers
Trump must resign as Nixon did or be removed.
And according to our impeachment and removal polling trackers, there isn’t broad public support for that either — just 47 percent of Americans favor removing Trump.
But in the latest installment of our survey with Ipsos, where we use Ipsos’s KnowledgePanel to poll the same group of respondents every two weeks,
57 percent of Americans said they think Trump committed an impeachable offense.
52 percent said they think Trump’s actions regarding Ukraine or his refusal to cooperate with the impeachment inquiry constitute enough evidence to remove him from office.
“Most Americans want the trial to expand on the evidence in the impeachment articles”
57 percent of Americans think it would be better if the upcoming trial included new witnesses who could potentially shed light on Trump’s conduct
PEW Research: How the Watergate crisis eroded public support for Richard Nixon
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