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Olives boosted

Looking through someone’s phone is infinitely more intrusive than searching their home. Border authorities regularly search people’s phones without a warrant - another unhinged border control practice we’re challenging in a new court case. privacyinternational.org/legal

Olives boosted

🚨 BREAKING 🚨

ORG’s investigation into the Prevent duty has uncovered shocking widespread data sharing due to finding a poorly redacted FOI, as revealed in The Observer today.

Find out more ⬇️

#Prevent #PreventDuty #surveillance #freedomofexpression #dataprotection #policing #ukpolitics

theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/d

truthout.org/articles/report-t

"A new two–part report from the Wren Collective, an organization that seeks to “reimagine the way our country approaches criminal justice,” showcases how dozens of capital punishment convictions in Harris County, Texas, over the past two decades featured instances of court-appointed lawyers failing to provide adequate defenses for their clients.

These failures include neglecting to demonstrate important background on their clients’ lives that could have helped defendants during the punishment stage following conviction. The report also demonstrates that lawyers repeatedly failed to meet with their clients enough times to understand their situation or form a proper narrative to help them at trial."

truthout.org/articles/incarcer
More disturbing cases of prisoners being treated like guinea pigs for research in the past. This time involving women.

Disturbing read but an important one.

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Olives boosted
Olives boosted

truthout.org/articles/profitee Since I already brought up the subject of historical scientific ethics being poor, here's another story of inhumane experiments.

To Germany, treating criminals like guinea pigs for research is not okay, and there needs to be a serious human rights reckoning there.

I think it's partly to convey emotion.

Brian Dear  
Perhaps an expert on #anime film could explain: I rarely go to an anime film—usually it’s for a Studio Ghibli film. But I always wondered about the...

blog.ericgoldman.org/archives/ That is good. It would otherwise set a very dangerous precedent, if someone could point to "this case" or "that case" where something wasn't moderated perfectly (i.e. quickly enough, in this case), and would be a threat to people's rights (as it would lead to great collateral damage).

Olives boosted

Let's just hope it won't start generating nonsense.

Rob Whiting 📓  
An interesting look at work being done by Swindon Borough Council on “… helping to shape an innovative Generative AI (#GenAI) solution that convert...

Let's just hope it won't start generating nonsense.

Rob Whiting 📓  
An interesting look at work being done by Swindon Borough Council on “… helping to shape an innovative Generative AI (#GenAI) solution that convert...

Worth mentioning that there was a snap election in 2019 in the U.K. and a far more populist government was elected. While the precise timing might or might not jive with that particular incident in 2019, it might jive with the other shrill behavior.

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arstechnica.com/tech-policy/20
reason.com/volokh/2023/12/14/i

"Criminal suspects can refuse to provide phone passcodes to police under the US Constitution's Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination, according to a unanimous ruling issued today by Utah's state Supreme Court."

Olives boosted

theguardian.com/australia-news
"There's an app for that" took a weird twist with one cop's idea of having an "app to track consent".

An example of techno-solutionism...

Since someone brought them up, and seem curious as to why they talk a lot of nonsense, it's worth mentioning the IWF has a lot of cops in it. Hell, the comms director who likes to write a lot of shrill nonsense used to work for the police.

Reminder that the police is currently run by a very conservative British party probably making them even worse than they usually are. Also, I don't think the IWF actually operates legally, they have an "agreement" with the police that they won't prosecute them, so long as they operate within "certain parameters". There is plenty of incentive here then to "get on their good side".

The rest of it can be chalked up to virtue signalling, fund raising (it has a lot in similar to a protection racket), and well, an org like this is bound to involve a certain number of crazy people who are fairly obsessive.

Also, analysing their rhetoric, they became more shrill around 2019 (the year when they lied about the number of child porn images, then quietly backed down on it by blaming most of it on false reports from the public, is anyone stupid enough to buy this excuse? more recently, they appear to have conflated *spam links to sites which may contain images* with *images*), when previously they used less heated language.

They're very activist and it would be extremely foolhardy to take anything they say at face value.

Also, you have to think, would we take extreme rights violating measures to deal with, say, murders across a country?

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From what I remember, the reason they keep focusing on the number of images is because the number of victims of abuse is actually really small in comparison.

coe.int/en/web/cybercrime/-/cy

"In a number of countries, such legislation on cybercrime includes provisions on criminalising the “dissemination of false information”, “offensive messages”, “causing annoyance”, “spreading of rumours” and other conduct. In some instances, such provisions appear to be vague and overly broad, and raise concerns of whether such restrictions to the freedom of expression are consistent with human rights and rule of law requirements."

That does sound very problematic, doesn't it.

Another one which I wouldn't want to see being censored, and seems to be a worry mentioned a fair bit, would be "porn" of "fictional / non-existent minors".

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