Good Morning Australia! - Investigators confirm a Russian Missile brought down MH17 - At least four people are dead in Israel and the Palestinian territories as clashes and attacks get worse - Decades of printed full-frontal nudity has been left obsolete by the Internet - And more in your CareerSpot World News Briefs:

Dutch investigators did not assign blame for the downing of Malaysian Airlines Flight MH17 over Ukraine, but they did get pretty specific about the cause:  They confirm it was a Russian-made Buk missile that exploded above the left-hand side of the Boeing 777's flight deck in July 2014, causing catastrophic damage.  Killed were 298 passengers and crew, including 27 Australians.  The report says the airspace over eastern Ukraine should have been closed. The west blames Russia for supplying the missile to Ukrainian rebels, Moscow denies it.

The situation is rapidly deteriorating in Jerusalem, central Israel, and Palestinian territories.  Three Israelis died in stabbing attacks.  Police shot and killed two Palestinians after they entered a bus, shut the doors and attacked passengers.  Another was stabbed when the attacker rammed a bus stop before stabbing pedestrians.  These knife attacks have been building in gore and frequency over the past fortnight, and they have Israel on edge.  Unlike rockets from Gaza, there are no sirens to warn Israelis.  One Israeli was bent on revenge and went out to stab a Palestinian, but wounded a fellow Israeli in a case of mistaken identity

A Palestinian was killed in later clashes in Bethlehem, called "A Day Of Rage".  The pattern is familiar:  Palestinians come out with rocks, Israeli troops respond with tear gas and rubber bullets.  The Palestinians say this latest wave of violence was provoked by Israeli police raids on the Al Aqsa Mosque.  Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is vowing new security measures, and to "settle accounts".

Several people were injured when two shells struck the Russian Embassy in Damascus, Syria, as dozens of loyalists demonstrated in support of Russia's military support of the ruling regime of Bashar Al Assad.  Rebel forces based in the suburbs of Damascus have previously targeted the embassy.

The Taliban is acknowledging is has withdrawn from the northern Afghanistan city of Kunduz.  The Islamists attacked the city last month in its boldest military move since 2001, and held Kunduz for three days before being slowly pushed out by Afghan forces backed by US air strikes.  But the toll of reclaiming the city was awful, with US bombs killing more than 20 people in mistakenly targeted Medecins Sans Frontieres hospital.

The US will not press Colombia to extradite Marxist FARC rebels who have been convicted of crimes from the five decade civil war.  In the past, a number of FARC were extradited to the US to serve long sentences for drug trafficking.  "If you want to see that as the US's contribution to the peace process, you're welcome to do so," said US Ambassador to Colombia Kevin Whitaker.

Myanmar's elections will go ahead on 8 November, despite talk of a possible delay.  The election commission discussed possibility of postponing the poll because of the impact of flooding and landslides.  This will be Myanmar's first openly contested general election in 25 years.

The body of the man known as "Africa's Che Guevara" was riddled with bullets, according to a new autopsy.  The remains of former Burkina Faso President Thomas Sankara were hastily buried after he was deposed and summarily executed in 1987.  Sankara is revered in Africa for his attempts to end corruption and debt, while increasing women's rights, education, and access to healthcare during his tragically short presidency.  He was replaced by the dictator Blaise Campaore, who was chased from office only last year - Campaore's loyalists were responsible for the short-lived coup in Burkina Faso a few weeks ago that briefly delayed plans for democratic elections.

America's foremost nudie magazine Playboy says it will no longer publish photos of naked women, pretty much because every single variation anyone would want to see is already on the Internet.  So , if you're still spankin' it like it's 1959, time to upgrade.  But at least if you tell someone that you only get the magazine for the articles, they'll believe you.

Author Marlon James won the Man Booker Prize for his work "A Brief History Of Seven Killings", his third novel.  It's about an attempted assassination on the Reggae Legend Bob Marley.  James is the first Jamaican to win the literary award.