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Records show well-timed trades by executive branch employees and congressional aides. Even if they had no insider information, ethics experts say such trading undermines faith in government and the markets.

 

In March, officials at the US State Department revealed that they would use artificial intelligence to revoke the visas of “foreign nationals who appear to support Hamas or other designated terror groups.” The new program, known as “Catch and Revoke,” will scan social media accounts and is part of a broader uptick in the US government’s use of AI-powered surveillance, with the goal of combating antisemitism, terrorism, and illegal immigration. And the word “uptick” may be a significant understatement. According to the Brennan Center of Justice, the Trump administration is planning to gather social media identifiers of more than 33 million people, “including those applying for permanent residence or adjustment of their immigration status.”

Social media monitoring is not new, nor are US immigration policies necessarily an outlier when compared to other democracies. However, the US changes, which are in keeping with a global trend of increasing state surveillance of noncitizens, have implications for the free expression and due process rights of the population as a whole.

Social media surveillance differs legally and technically from other forms of surveillance. Because it is based on publicly available information, law enforcement agencies generally do not need to follow the robust legal safeguards that are associated with wiretaps and other covert types of monitoring. Autocratic leaders have used monitoring tools to silence political opponents and repress minority populations. In democracies, courts have found that security and law enforcement agencies have sometimes overstepped their authority and even abused antiterrorism policies to target protected speech. As monitoring has increasingly been outsourced to the private sector, a new industry of data brokers can collect, analyze, and share with law enforcement agencies people’s personal data without their knowledge, undermining privacy and due process. Ubiquitous monitoring of speech, even public speech, has a chilling effect on free expression.Further, the automated tools officials use during investigations can produce costly errors, such as misinterpreting speech or context to arrest the wrong individual.

Laws and technologies first launched to combat the threat of terrorism and foreign invasion have now been repurposed to curtail migration. All governments have a responsibility to secure their borders from potential threats and enforce immigration policy in line with the rule of law. Without appropriate oversight, however, the growing use of AI surveillance technologies could exacerbate errors and injustices. Recent moves by the Trump administration to sidestep due process for undocumented immigrants and even legal residents have generated legal scrutiny around the rights of noncitizens in a democracy. Across the Atlantic, European governments have taken this further by expanding powers to revoke the citizenship of naturalized citizens.

 

Police in France have uncovered a vast child abuse network operating through encrypted chats on Telegram, leading to the arrest of 55 men across 42 departments.

 

After Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential election win, an anthropologist set out across the U.S. to understand the nation’s deepening divides. In the new book Something Between Us, he grapples with these rifts and how to repair them.

 

In this report, we monitored through open sources data, the erosion of green vegetation and the cutting down of trees, as a result of the accelerated pace of settlement expansion in seven settlements and an industrial zone in the occupied West Bank.

 
  • Russian attacks in Ukraine since January 2025 have killed and injured more civilians than in the same period in 2024.
  • The attacks violated the international law prohibition on indiscriminate and disproportionate attacks. Such attacks, when committed deliberately or recklessly, constitute war crimes under international law.
  • Diplomatic efforts should prioritize protection of civilians and justice for violations. This means continued support for investigations and prosecutions of war crimes and crimes against humanity.
 
  • Russian attacks in Ukraine since January 2025 have killed and injured more civilians than in the same period in 2024.
  • The attacks violated the international law prohibition on indiscriminate and disproportionate attacks. Such attacks, when committed deliberately or recklessly, constitute war crimes under international law.
  • Diplomatic efforts should prioritize protection of civilians and justice for violations. This means continued support for investigations and prosecutions of war crimes and crimes against humanity.
[–] Pro@programming.dev -2 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (1 children)

Drinking a Cup of hot water works better to relax me better than anything else.

[–] Pro@programming.dev 11 points 1 week ago (3 children)

Not to ruin your expectations, but at the current amount of users on Lemmy, there is basically no way any movement at any country in the world can be brewed here.

Happy to be proven wrong, but I don't expect that to happen.

[–] Pro@programming.dev 4 points 1 week ago (2 children)

I am confused, why?

[–] Pro@programming.dev 3 points 1 week ago (1 children)

No disrespect, but I laughed when I read your comment.

That is exactly what I am asking, Where do I do that?

🌹

[–] Pro@programming.dev 7 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (2 children)

I just wanted to add my valuable insight to the discussion here: Fuck Cars.

[–] Pro@programming.dev 1 points 2 weeks ago

That is a hard one, you might look into ope source drive solutions, but that would require some setup and if you use a lot of space then also money.

To answer your question, I don't endorse the following solution, but I think it would still be 1% better than using Discord: If you already have Telegram, you can use Whitehole.

[–] Pro@programming.dev 30 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (1 children)

Q: Can I donate?

A: We appreciate that people want to support us, but we never have and never will accept donations. We maintain this project because its fun and we want to help others, not make money.

Via their FAQs.

[–] Pro@programming.dev 8 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

I really hope you keep believing in the value of your app and never stop developing it. It might sound like a small step towards overall more privacy, but every kid who use your opensource and private app instead of the ads and trackers filled closed source apps is a person who is not benefiting the Capitalism which is killing people privacy.

[–] Pro@programming.dev 2 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

So... Who to blame for this? The parents who did not care enough to restrict their kids phone time or the good developer who is trying to preserve kids privacy by offering a open-source game?

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