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link.springer.com/article/10.1
"We exploit variations in the timing of decriminalization of same-sex sexual intercourse across US states to estimate the impact of these law changes on crime through difference-in-differences and event study models. We provide the first evidence that sodomy law repeals led to a decline in the number of arrests for disorderly conduct, prostitution, and other sex offenses. Moreover, in line with the hypothesis that sodomy law repeals enhanced mental health and lessened minority stress, we show that these repeals led to a reduction in arrests for drug and alcohol consumption."

Intuitively, it makes sense that being oppressed might drive drug / alcohol consumption.

Olives  
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00148-023-00953-1 "We exploit variations in the timing of decriminalization of same-sex sexual intercour...

link.springer.com/article/10.1
"We exploit variations in the timing of decriminalization of same-sex sexual intercourse across US states to estimate the impact of these law changes on crime through difference-in-differences and event study models. We provide the first evidence that sodomy law repeals led to a decline in the number of arrests for disorderly conduct, prostitution, and other sex offenses. Moreover, in line with the hypothesis that sodomy law repeals enhanced mental health and lessened minority stress, we show that these repeals led to a reduction in arrests for drug and alcohol consumption."

natlawreview.com/article/new-h
"SB 255 applies to persons that “conduct business” in New Hampshire (“NH”) or persons that “produce products or services that are targeted to residents of” NH that, in the period of a year: (1) “controlled or processed the personal data of not less than 35,000 unique consumers, excluding personal data controlled or processed solely for the purpose of completing a payment transaction; or” (2) “controlled or processed the personal data of not less than 10,000 unique consumers and derived more than 25 percent of their gross revenue from the sale of personal data.”"

"Similar to most of the comprehensive state privacy laws, SB 255 contains fundamental data minimization, purpose limitation and data protection requirements."

Olives boosted

Frankly, freaking out about minors possibly seeing porn is also fairly stupid.

Olives  
https://www.heise.de/news/EU-Kommission-untersucht-AliExpress-wegen-moeglicher-Verkaeufe-illegaler-Waren-9655579.html Come on, there are easier way...
Olives boosted

heise.de/news/EU-Kommission-un
Come on, there are easier ways for minors to acquire "pornography" than ordering it off some site like Amazon. This is ridiculous.

Olives boosted

eff.org/deeplinks/2024/03/safe
"The Security and Freedom Enhancement (SAFE) Act would make some much-needed and long fought-for reforms, but it also does not go nearly far enough to rein in a surveillance law that the federal government has abused time and time again."

"The first and most important reform the bill would make is to require the government to obtain a warrant before accessing the content of communications for people in the United States."

"this does not stop the IC or law enforcement from querying to see if the government has collected communications from specific individuals under Section 702—it merely stops them from reading those communications without a warrant"

"The second major reform the SAFE Act provides is to close the “data brooker loophole,” which EFF has been calling attention to for years. As one example, mobile apps often collect user data to sell it to advertisers on the open market. The problem is law enforcement and intelligence agencies increasingly buy this private user data, rather than obtain a warrant for it."

"This provision does include a potentially significant exception for situations where the government cannot exclude Americans’ data from larger “compilations” that include foreigners’ data."

"Unfortunately, the SAFE Act contains at least one truly nasty addition to current law: an entirely new crime that makes it a felony to disclose “the existence of an application” for foreign intelligence surveillance or any of the application’s contents. In addition to explicitly adding to the existing penalties in the Espionage Act—itself highly controversial— this new provision seems aimed at discouraging leaks by increasing the potential sentence to eight years in prison."

Olives boosted

reason.com/2024/03/15/the-gove
"Reason filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request to the Air Force in January 2020 for drafts or alternate designs for the logo of the nascent Space Force"

"the Air Force released 122 pages of communications between the public servants who designed the uniforms, logo, and seal for Star Fleet—excuse me, Space Force."
Haha, this is bound to be one interesting .

"the Air Force redacted all images of the draft versions, citing Exemption (b)(5) of the FOIA"
Oh.

reclaimthenet.org/supreme-cour
"In a landmark decision, the US Supreme Court has established a significant precedent for free speech in the digital realm. On Friday, the court unanimously ruled that, under certain conditions, government officials may face lawsuits for violating the First Amendment if they block critics on social media. This decision introduces a critical test for assessing whether officials are acting within their governmental capacity when they silence online dissent."

The DMCA was such a stupid idea and Congress never should have passed it.

Olives  
https://www.ftc.gov/news-events/news/press-releases/2024/03/ftc-doj-file-comment-us-copyright-office-supporting-renewal-expansion-exemptions-facili...
Olives boosted

ftc.gov/news-events/news/press
"The Federal Trade Commission and the Department of Justice’s Antitrust Division (DOJ) have submitted a comment to the U.S. Copyright Office to advocate for regulations that would facilitate consumers’ and businesses’ right to repair their own products.

The FTC-DOJ submitted the comment as the Copyright Office considers whether to recommend that the Librarian of Congress renew and expand temporary exemptions to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act’s (DMCA) prohibition against the circumvention of technology protection measures that control access to copyrighted content."

Olives boosted

reason.com/2024/03/06/your-loc
"Pennsylvania is far from the only state that has banned acronyms from vanity plates. New York doesn't allow NOTPOLCE or, for whatever reason, AY000000. Tennessee banned ILVTOFU back in 2014 for a vegan application. In 2017, Georgia banned Donald Trump's infamous COVFEFE gaffe. Kentucky said no to KARMA."

Olives boosted

eff.org/deeplinks/2024/03/san-
"In a stunning reversal against the popular Transparent & Responsible Use of Surveillance Technology (TRUST) ordinance, the San Diego city council voted earlier this year to cut many of the provisions that sought to ensure public transparency for law enforcement surveillance technologies."

"The city kept the ordinance unapplied and untested, and then in the late summer of 2023, a little over a year after passage, the mayor proposed a package of changes that would gut the ordinance. This included exemption of a long list of technologies, including ARJIS databases and record management system data storage. These changes were later approved this past January.

But use of these databases should require, for example, auditing to protect data security for city residents."

"are vowing to introduce even more amendments to further erode the gains of this ordinance so that San Diegans won’t have a chance to know how their local law enforcement surveils them, and no democratic body will be required to consent to the technologies, new or old"

Olives boosted

cbc.ca/news/business/vending-m
"An Ontario university is pulling dozens of vending machines that were tracking the age and gender of customers in the latest example of pushback against technology that tests the boundaries of rules."

Olives boosted

nichegamer.com/steam-bans-orde
By the way, that was also NCOSE (a group of puritanical Christian fundamentalists led by Mormon fundamentalists).

Back in 2018, they bragged about lobbying (and misled them), and took responsibility for it. They would probably rather Steam bans all sexual content though.

Olives  
So, there is a consultation where a puritanical anti-porn Tory appointee[1] wants to censor free expression. She made a highly disturbing rant, and...
Olives boosted

According to the same database, it appears that Apple also censored an app in 2024 for "pornography", although with a wider scope than just in one country.

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Olives boosted

reclaimthenet.org/jpmorgan-to-
"America’s largest bank and one of the largest in the world, J.P. Morgan, is preparing to launch biometric payments next year and is currently carrying out pilot projects.

J.P. Morgan has chosen PopID – which verifies a person’s identity via facial recognition, among other methods – as the backbone for the project."

"The ultimate goal is to expand authentication based on individuals’ fingerprints, palms, and faces to anyone interested, but with a focus on stores, restaurants, and various event venues.

J.P. Morgan says this will be a faster and safer, as well as “personalized” way for customers to pay, while those with things to sell are promised higher turnover and improved customer loyalty, but also a centralized place to access transactions and marketing data, say reports."

Olives boosted

According to the E.U. "transparency database", the website known as "", is very puritanical and removes content left and right.

There is a literal tidal wave of entries relating to it.

Are there going to be spaceships and laser guns? Lol.

Olives  
https://reason.com/2024/03/15/the-government-doesnt-want-you-to-see-the-unused-space-force-logos/ "Reason filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)...

reason.com/2024/03/15/the-gove
"Reason filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request to the Air Force in January 2020 for drafts or alternate designs for the logo of the nascent Space Force"

"the Air Force released 122 pages of communications between the public servants who designed the uniforms, logo, and seal for Star Fleet—excuse me, Space Force."
Haha, this is bound to be one interesting .

"the Air Force redacted all images of the draft versions, citing Exemption (b)(5) of the FOIA"
Oh.

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