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Arresting someone for posting spoilers has got to be the biggest abuse of criminal copyright laws so far. Surprising even for Japan.

Copyright.

reason.com/2023/09/09/a-cop-ja

"A Minnesota woman has resuscitated her effort to sue a police officer who jailed her as a teenager for two years on false charges associated with a sham sex trafficking investigation that the FBI once billed as its largest human trafficking crackdown."

"St. Paul police officer Heather Weyker"

"Some of those problems included Weyker lying under oath, coercing witnesses, editing police reports, and making up evidence."

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techdirt.com/2023/09/07/south-

"It’s OK to be a “HELLCAT,” but not a “HELLBOY.” Don’t tell anybody to “HLDMYBR,” but it’s fine to go on a “BEERRUN.” And don’t say “IH8U,” but “YUH8ME” is acceptable.

Those are some of the inconsistencies in state government’s evaluation of specialized vehicle license plate requests, according to the American Civil Liberties Union of South Dakota. The ACLU sent a letter to state officials Tuesday citing what the organization described as actual examples of approvals and denials."

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techdirt.com/2023/09/08/elon-m

"However, there was another bill we wrote about that got a bit less attention: AB 587 which was pitched as a “transparency” bill."

"But it’s a bad law. It limits the ability of companies to respond and adjust tactics against bad actors in real time. It assumes (incorrectly) that content moderation is a static thing. It also requires that companies have policies in place to deal with 1st Amendment protected content, even though the government can’t legislate that."

techdirt.com/2023/09/08/two-of

"But history has shown time and time again that in highly dynamic and emerging areas of innovation, no one is particularly good at accurately weighing the risks and benefits, and being overly proscriptive about that technology, often means trying to prevent a harm that is not really at risk, while limiting many of the benefits."

reason.com/2023/09/08/dea-fina

"Those who take drugs on the Drug Enforcement Administration's (DEA) list of controlled substances can now have their prescriptions transferred to another pharmacy.

The revised rule, which was announced last week, went into effect on August 28. Before, any prescriptions for Schedule II–V drugs could only be filled at the pharmacy location where it was sent. The rule applies only to electronic prescriptions, and prescriptions for drugs not on the controlled substance list remain free to be transferred."

"The revision scraps the need to involve your prescribing physician, but that doesn't mean the process is streamlined: Even now, according to the DEA's announcement, "a prescription can only be transferred once between pharmacies." It further "must remain in its electronic form; may not be altered in any way; and the transfer must be communicated directly between two licensed pharmacists." And finally, "any authorized refills transfer with the original prescription, which means the entire prescription will be filled at the same pharmacy.""

"As The New York Times reported last month, "Parents and caregivers across the country are spending hours each month hunting down pharmacies with A.D.H.D. medication in stock and asking their doctors to either transfer or rewrite prescriptions, a process many equate to having a second job.""

"The rule was intended to prevent "pharmacy shopping," or when a patient fills a single prescription at multiple pharmacies in order to get more pills than prescribed."

I mean... David's colleague used to go on about something 3% - 5% of the population being child abusers (which presumably led to people accusing him of secretly being one, ouch).

He probably did this to try to get people to "take crime seriously". This kind of tactic is very patronizing, when you're trying to protect civil rights (a common one being privacy).

That particular number probably comes from surveys with tortured proxy variables, ambiguous questions, poor / inconsistent definitions, and selection bias (people with certain traits being more prominent than in the general population). Also, I've seen data, which if you were to interpret the same way, would produce 20%+, which is obviously nonsense.

Another possibility is that someone counts every "report" on the Internet as a "person". This is also a dodgy assumption.

Or it might rely heavily on participants from forensic / clinical / clinical adjacent settings? Let's suppose that a clinical setting already does research, participating in yet another study might be easier, in that case. I'm leaning more with the other two though.

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The latest attack on #migrants is an attack on their health and privacy. The government has directed the NHS to store Home Office reference numbers in migrants’ health records.

"When we go to a hospital, clinic or doctor’s surgery, we have a right to #privacy and our health records should be confidential. Doctors and nurses shouldn’t have to act on behalf of the Home Office." – ORG Programme Manager @sarahalsherif

Read more about the use the NHS for #surveillance: theguardian.com/society/2023/a

nandgame.com/ Here's a little game where you can play with things like logic gates to build a little computer of sorts.

I'm not making a particular argument for, or against it (although, I'm not a fan of censorship), but it's getting annoying the E.U. keeps going full "do this!" "no this!".

It is... Another great case study in how governments trying to get involved in social media governance just doesn't work.

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By the way, a committee in the E.U. doesn't want large social media platforms to moderate posts by news sites.

You have too much misinformation on your platform!

Why are you moderating these sources of misinformation?!

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@rose Uh, are you getting my messages or is the federation borked?

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Get Ready for Epicness with Final Fantasy VII - Plushies, figures, keychains and more. Check them out at the link below!
🛑meccha-japan.com/en/search?con
#FinalFantasy #FinalFantasy7 #FF7

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Anti puritan starter kit:

Unsurprisingly, a lot of puritanical arguments involve porn.

tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.108
psyarxiv.com/ehqgv/
Porn is not associated with sexism.

qoto.org/@olives/1104622745318 Meta analysis of 59 studies didn't find that porn is linked to sex crimes.

psychologytoday.com/us/blog/al
qoto.org/@olives/1104002886657
There are even studies showing less crime with higher levels of porn use, even among criminals.

sciencedirect.com/science/arti
In regards to "sexualization in video games", some studies have chosen cut offs which are very difficult to distinguish from noise.

This drastically increases the number of false positives. Even here, they have often found results which appear to contradict their hypothesis.

The meta analysis fails to find a link between this and sexism or mental well being.

Olives boosted

#introduction
Hello, I am Skyflare, a Free Software fan. who is interested in #Libregaming, decentralization and customizing my stuff.

I like Free/Libre Games would love to contribute to them, although under the pretense of "research" I don't mind "researching" non-free games.

I am always happy to discuss stuff (excluding irrelevant politics) so feel free to to reply to me or to message me.

My Interests also include: #I2P #LibreHardware #OpenHardware #gamedev #anime #CustomKeyboards #gaming

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