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reclaimthenet.org/spain-revers
"Spain, a European Union member, has joined – even if only for a short while – China, Iran, Cuba, Pakistan and Thailand in blocking the encrypted messaging app Telegram.

The country’s High Court made the decision and said the ban was temporary, citing alleged copyright infringements happening on the app as the reason. The judge in charge of the case, Santiago Pedraz, first tried to get Telegram to hand over “certain information” regarding the case."

reclaimthenet.org/uk-high-cour
"In a preliminary victory against censorship, Julian Assange has been granted a temporary lifeline in his legal battle to avoid extradition to the US."
Notice she doesn't say anything about him being discriminated against for using his right to a fair trial.

Someone being out in the community is ideal compared to locking them up in the mental hospital.

Police can be notorious for using questionable technologies / techniques, and on "just closing cases" rather than serving justice (which could mean punishing innocent people, although even if this was less so, there would still be enough there that would lead to innocent people being punished).

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Olives boosted

📢 Today at 14 CET we will be holding our very first Reddit #AMA! 📢

Join in to ask us any questions you might have related to Tuta, #encryption, #surveillance, #privacy, our favorite ice cream flavors, and more!

👉 reddit.com/r/IAmA/comments/1bo

We hope to see you there!

When you look at a few groups, at first glance, they might appear a bit like a civil society group, or a technical partner.

When you dig a bit deeper, you discover the people running it are either from the police, used to work for the police, or are in something strongly associated with the police, in one case, it was a "Police University".

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After doing a bit of research into an... interesting bunch.

Quite a few groups pushing for this internet control crap (mainly chat control) in the E.U. appear to be either cops or groups strongly associated with them.

It isn't just the "fake foundation" (run by the U.S. / U.K.) or "foreign dark money" from Oak going into apparent "local groups" (quite a few which sprang up out of thin air right when the E.U. pushed the E-Privacy Directive and have a tendency towards making misleading claims).

theguardian.com/technology/202
"Revealed: a California city is training AI to spot homeless encampments"
This is very likely going to be used to oppress homeless people.

reason.com/2024/03/25/ron-desa
"Ron DeSantis Signs Social Media Age-Verification Bill
The law would require platforms to use invasive measures to prevent most teenagers under 16 from making social media accounts and bar all minors from sexually explicit sites."

"The bill further states that any "commercial entity" that publishes content that is "harmful to minors" on a website or social media application must use age-verification measures to ensure that users under 18 cannot access the material."
This violates the . "" is bad for .

nichegamer.com/microsoft-cauti
really should mind their own business about what kinds of characters players want to play. It's okay for a character to be "sexy". I think that ultimately, the style of the game is going to depend a lot on the game. It's silly to pretend that every game should fit awfully particular and seemingly utilitarian criteria.

sciencedirect.com/science/arti
There also isn't really a scientific basis for it.

Olives boosted

⚡ BREAKING: Huge win for #Privacy

German government publishes law to guarantee 'right to encryption' 🔒 💪

We at Tuta Mail applaud the #German government for this move in the right direction. 👏 👏 👏

Here's our comment: tuta.com/blog/german-governmen

tuta.com/blog/german-governmen
"While most countries want to introduce new surveillance laws, Germany is taking the opposite approach: The Federal Ministry for Digital and Transport Affairs (BMDV) has published a draft bill that will require email, messenger and other cloud providers to use strong end-to-end encryption. The bill is celebrated by cryptography experts as well as privacy enthusiasts as it enshrines the digital secrecy of correspondence."

Reading about someone apparently needing lolis is reminding me of that episode of Spongebob all of a sudden.

The one where he tries to make do without water.

thespinoff.co.nz/society/25-03
"CCTV cameras, self-checkout machines, data-gathering loyalty cards, facial recognition: supermarkets gather an obscene amount of information about customers. Can they be trusted with it?"

Undermining security is a lot like... Imagine there is a door which you can lock from one side. Then, imagine there is a big hole in it which you can put your hand through to open it.

Lolis can be pretty strong. They could probably even beat Superman up and shoot past him like a rocket. If someone tries to force her, don't they risk being beaten up? Lol. A high end loli could even destroy a galaxy.

Since it came up, I'm not a fan of "guilt by association" either. There's a great deal of injustice there.

If that was in 2024, they might have a social media handle which looks a lot like this: "hitlerfan111"

Well, maybe.

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