Flock haters cross political divides to remove error-prone cameras
Flock Safety—the surveillance company behind the country’s largest network of automated license plate readers (ALPRs)—currently faces attacks on multiple fronts seeking to tear down the invasive and error-prone cameras across the US.
This week, two lawmakers, Senator Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) and Representative Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-Ill.), called for a federal investigation, alleging that Flock has been “negligently handling Americans’ personal data” by failing to use cybersecurity best practices. The month prior, Wyden wrote a letter to Flock CEO Garrett Langley, alleging that Flock’s security failures mean that “abuse of Flock cameras is inevitable” and that they threaten to expose billions of people’s harvested data should a catastrophic breach occur.
“In my view, local elected officials can best protect their constituents from the inevitable abuses of Flock cameras by removing Flock from their communities,” Wyden wrote.
Flock haters cross political divides to remove error-prone cameras
Lawmakers’ calls for Flock probe may help kill local contracts, expert says.Ashley Belanger (Ars Technica)
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Sandwich thrown by protester 'exploded' and left mustard stain on border agent, court hears
Customs and Border Patrol agent Gregory Lairmore told the jury the snack "exploded all over him" and he "could smell the onions and mustard" on his uniform.
Neither side disputes that Sean Dunn, 37, did in fact lob obscenities and a deli-style sandwich at officers deployed by President Donald Trump to patrol the nation's capital in August. But Mr Dunn's lawyer argues it was not a criminal act.
The incident was captured on video and went viral, making Mr Dunn a symbol of opposition in Washington DC to Trump.
Government prosecutors initially tried to secure felony charges against Mr Dunn, but a grand jury declined to indict him. Prosecutors have instead charged him with a lower-level misdemeanour assault.
Sandwich thrown by protester 'exploded' and left mustard stain on border agent, court hears
Sean Dunn's attorney acknowledged he threw the sandwich, but argued it was a "harmless gesture".Kayla Epstein (BBC News)
Sandwich thrown by protester 'exploded' and left mustard stain on border agent, court hears
Customs and Border Patrol agent Gregory Lairmore told the jury the snack "exploded all over him" and he "could smell the onions and mustard" on his uniform.
Neither side disputes that Sean Dunn, 37, did in fact lob obscenities and a deli-style sandwich at officers deployed by President Donald Trump to patrol the nation's capital in August. But Mr Dunn's lawyer argues it was not a criminal act.
The incident was captured on video and went viral, making Mr Dunn a symbol of opposition in Washington DC to Trump.
Government prosecutors initially tried to secure felony charges against Mr Dunn, but a grand jury declined to indict him. Prosecutors have instead charged him with a lower-level misdemeanour assault.
Sandwich thrown by protester 'exploded' and left mustard stain on border agent, court hears
Sean Dunn's attorney acknowledged he threw the sandwich, but argued it was a "harmless gesture".Kayla Epstein (BBC News)
Zohran Mamdani victory shows how to defeat rightwing populism, says UK MP
Zohran Mamdani victory shows how to defeat rightwing populism, says UK MP
Labour’s Luke Charters and London mayor Sadiq Khan hail result while Israeli minister claims New York ‘walking into the abyss’Oliver Holmes (The Guardian)
Alex Padilla passes on California governor bid
Alex Padilla passes on California governor bid - E&E News by POLITICO
A concerted campaign to draft Padilla spoke to the unsettled state of the field.Cheyanne M. Daniels, Jeremy B. White, Calen Razor (E&E News by POLITICO)
RRF Caserta. Cultura. Forattini. Il re della satira
Chief Justice Roberts Calls Trump’s Tariffs ‘Taxes on Americans’ While Grilling Admin Lawyer
Chief Justice Roberts Calls Trump’s Tariffs ‘Taxes on Americans’ While Grilling Admin Lawyer
“But, who pays the tariffs? If a tariff is imposed on automobiles, who pays them?” Roberts interjected, appearing skeptical of the Trump admin's argumentAlex Griffing (Mediaite)
Mamdani Brings Lina Khan Onto His Team After Historic Election Win
Mamdani Brings Lina Khan Onto His Team After Historic Election Win
Zohran Mamdani has named his transition team—and it’s amazing.The New Republic
UK opts out of flagship fund to protect Amazon and other threatened tropical forests
UK opts out of flagship fund to protect Amazon and other threatened tropical forests
Decision is bitter blow to Brazil ahead of fund’s launch at Cop30 – and an embarrassment to Prince WilliamFiona Harvey (The Guardian)
Pennsylvania Gas Producer Sues Capital & Main Over Its Reporting on Health Risks
Pennsylvania Gas Driller: Our Operations Pose No Health Risk. You Can't Be Serious, Activists Say.
With billions up for grabs and scores of air quality violations to its name, CNX tries to recast itself as a climate warrior.Audrey Carleton (Capital & Main)
China's J-36 evolving fast to outfly slower-advancing US rivals
China's J-36 evolving fast to outfly slower-advancing US rivals - Asia Times
China's stealth revolution just kicked into overdrive, as a rapidly evolved J-36 prototype signals its audacious bid to outpace the US in the race forGabriel Honrada (Asia Times)
When Will the AI Bubble Burst? (Gary Marcus with Murad Hemmadi) | Attention: Govern Or Be Governed
- YouTube
Profitez des vidéos et de la musique que vous aimez, mettez en ligne des contenus originaux, et partagez-les avec vos amis, vos proches et le monde entier.www.youtube.com
Republicans Swiftly File Lawsuit in Bid to Block California’s New House Maps
Republicans asked a federal court to block newly approved maps in California that were designed to flip as many as five House seats for Democrats.
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Roland Emmerich – „Das Arche Noah Prinzip“ (1984)
Roland Emmerich steht für Spektakel. Für Kino, das kracht, brennt, zittert, für Explosionen, die zu großen Erzählungen wurden. Doch bevor der Regisseur zum „Master of Disaster“ wurde, schuf er ein fast intellektuelles und stilles Debüt. Sein Studentenfilm von 1984 wird nun in der ARD wiederholt. Das ist exakt der eine Film, den ich mir aus Anlass von Emmerichs 70. Geburtstag gewünscht habe. Herzlichen Glückwunsch, Herr Emmerich! (ARD, Wh.)
Zum Blog: nexxtpress.de/mediathekperlen/…
crossgolf_rebel - kostenlose Kwalitätsposts likes this.
Lemmy Development Update October 2025
During the past month, we've been working rapidly on adding features to lemmy-ui. We also finished up the last major backend changes. This means we can soon go to the beta phase for 1.0, which will focus on testing, bug fixing and helping Lemmy clients to start updating for the new API. After that will be the release candidate phase when version 1.0 will be live tested on lemmy.ml.
You can see the changes in action on the test server voyager.lemmy.ml (which was recently wiped). Registration is open, you are welcome to try things out. To stay up to date with our progress look at the lemmy-ui 1.0 and lemmy 1.0 milestone issues.
The major changes during October were:
- Speeding up migrations for 1.0 and reducing database size
- Notify users about moderation actions
- Default data for new instances (welcome post and popular communities)
- Card views for post listing
- Showing community sidebar on create post page
- Blurhash for images
::: spoiler Full list of changes by user
matc-pub
dullbananas
SleeplessOne1917
MV-GH
dessalines
- Remove special BanFromCommunityResponse in favor of PersonResponse.
- Multi-community-feeds should be at /m/ , not /c/
- Fixing a few issues with federation-view exports.
- Fix release builds by remove space in platforms.
- Add comment for
is_upvoteAPI fields. - Make sure creator_banned uses item_creator for ReportCombinedView
- Make all the serde tagged types snake_case
- Adding read bool to mark_many_as_read API.
- Make sure create_multi_community_entry returns the community.
- Fixing admin instance block expires_at to use a unix timestamp, with a check.
- Making multi-community follow and edit return a MultiCommunityResponse.
- Add wait after delete user to fix federation CI tests.
- Changing NotePerson response from SuccessResponse to PersonView
- Adding follow_state to MultiCommunityView
- Adding creator and community indexes for post_aggregates.
- Clean up post and comment actions bars
- Adding enable_animated_images, and hide_media setting.
- Adding support for stay_logged_in to login and signup fields
- Adding community description to form and community sidebar.
- Add blurhash image using unlazy.
- Adding collapse_bot_comments setting, and doing that action.
- Upgrading for new API updates
- Adding card and small card views
- In instance settings move admin list to users tab
- Fixup instance_blocks.tsx
- Add more settings
- Fix link-dark issues
- Remove tables in favor of bootstrap columns
- Use btn-sm for post and comment actions buttons.
Nutomic
- Remove some unused code
- Small compile speed optimizations
- Revert changes to crud trait which slowed down compilation (ref #5874)
- Retry tests in ci on failure (ref #5925)
- Handle plain identifiers in markdown
- Setup default data for new instance
- Fix wrong federation error and simplify code (fixes #4363)
- Implemente federated instances view (fixes #6063)
- Expire logins after one week by default, add param
stay_logged_in - Create plugin hook for new notifications and reports (fixes #1027, fixes #5349)
- Fix for NodeBB compat and updated test assets
- Include caller information in error logs
- Include id for CommunityHasNoFollowers
- Auto-follow community when enabling notifications (fixes #6081)
- Serialize enum variants in snake_case (fixes #6062)
- Dont send duplicate notification in case of reply with mention
- Include keyword blocks and discussion languages in backup (fixes #5811)
- Use proper title for replies and mentions in RSS feed (fixes #5357)
- Private community fixes
- Add build.rs to update db migrations macro (fixes #6005)
- Allow users to view comments of deleted posts (fixes #6044)
- Multi-community fixes
- Proper error message for image upload (fixes #6042)
- Case insensitive comparison for read_from_apub_id (fixes #6037)
- Move some errors to not be translated
- ReportCombined: add missing column creator_ban_expires_at
- Allow mods to resolve removed posts (fixes #6018)
- Split apub code into multiple crates, other changes for faster building
- Notify mod actions
- Remove env var LEMMY_UI_HTTPS (fixes #3573)
- Check for untranslated error messages (fixes #3478)
- Use localhost as testhost
- Private community
- Use upstream status code for error responses (fixes #3085)
- Change format for inserted person/community links (fixes #1743)
- Consistent size for action buttons (ref #3503)
- Disable comment form if post is removed or deleted
- Revert "Add button to expand all images"
- Enable some lint rules for jsx
- Block community from context menu (fixes #3306)
- In comment search results show post and community (fixes #1959)
- Open link for markdown help in new tab (fixes #2129)
- Add rel=nofollow to markdown links (fixes #542)
- Show sidebar on create post page (fixes #1522)
- Add audio player for direct links to audio files (fixes #2529)
- Fix "show context" (fixes #3496)
- Indicate removed/deleted comments (fixes #1144)
- Use lint to disallow console.log
- Filter community selection for posting (fixes #2604)
:::
Or see the full list of changes at the links below:
An open source project the size of Lemmy needs constant work to manage the project, implement new features and fix bugs. Dessalines and Nutomic work full-time on these tasks and more. As there is no advertising or tracking, all of our work is funded through donations. Even so there is barely enough time in the day, and no time for a second job. The only available option are user donations.
To keep it viable donations need to reach a minimum of 5000€ per month, resulting in a modest salary of 2500€ per developer. If that goal is reached we can stop worrying about money, and fully focus on improving the software for the benefit of all users and instances. We especially rely on recurring donations to secure the long-term development and make Lemmy the best it can be.
LemmyNet/lemmy-ui
The official web app for lemmy. Contribute to LemmyNet/lemmy-ui development by creating an account on GitHub.GitHub
A crowd-sourced review service for OpenStreetMap - General talk - OpenStreetMap Community Forum
A crowd-sourced review service for OpenStreetMap
Hi folks, As someone who’s been trying to move away from Google Maps, one thing I really struggled with was the lack of user reviews for places, which is a problem in all major OSM-based apps that I’ve tried: Organic Maps / CoMaps, and OsmAnd.OpenStreetMap Community Forum
copymyjalopy likes this.
lib.reviews seems to be just a five-star rating and a text box. We desperately need an open source review platform, but it needs to be simple, just a like/dislike, a question and answer tips box, ands taggable categories like foursquare had.
I really miss foursquare, and am convinced google and yelp killed it. I could go to any city in the western hemisphere, filter by vegetarian/vegan friendly, and always get incredible recommendations. Google and yelp by comparison are entirely gamed.
Mamdani Won, And Also Cuomo Lost [Aftermath]
Mamdani Won, And Also Cuomo Lost - Aftermath
Mamdani can't solve all our problems, but at least he solved the problem of having to talk about Andrew Cuomoaftermath.site
COP30: Could Brazil’s ‘Tropical Forest Forever’ fund help tackle climate change?
COP30: Could Brazil’s ‘Tropical Forest Forever’ fund help tackle climate change? - Carbon Brief
Billed as the “Amazon COP”, COP30 will see the debut of Brazil’s flagship fund to “reward” tropical countries for keeping their forests intactCarbon Brief Staff (Carbon Brief)
America’s Dumbest Billionaires Fail to Stop Zohran Mamdani
Andrew Cuomo, an elderly has-been, the lesser son of a greater sire, who as governor literally conspired with Republicans to hand them control of the New York state Senate for half a decade; who resigned from office in disgrace after he was credibly accused of 13 instances of sexual harassment; and whose campaign quite obviously had no purpose other than satisfying his own lust for accumulating personal power, along with that of his billionaire donors.
As the campaign progressed and Mamdani’s victory became ever more likely, Cuomo descended into vindictive gutter racism. He did not disagree with a right-wing radio host who said that Mamdani would be “cheering” another 9/11, suggested that Mamdani would have Muslim women “completely covered up,” and that he “doesn’t understand New York culture” because he’s a “citizen of Uganda.”
Cuomo happily took Donald Trump’s endorsement and went on Fox News to tout it. His closing campaign message, as The Nation’s Jeet Heer pointed out on Bluesky, smacked of Vidkun Quisling—implicitly threatening New Yorkers with a Trumpian occupation if they voted for anyone but Cuomo.
It was disgusting stuff. But it also was palpably desperate, and coming from one of the worst candidates imaginable...
...
What we see, I think, are a bunch of rich guys who have been comically out of touch with normal people for many decades, and more recently have blowtorched their brains into a smoking pile of ash on Elon Musk’s Twitter/X and in various group chats. It’s why they got so worked up about Mamdani in the first place—the New York City mayoralty is not some omnipotent office, and there are a dozen ways to hem it in at the state and local level if they so wished. What these oligarchs spent to stop Mamdani feels like less on an annual basis than he wants them to pay for a better future for all New Yorkers, a joke Mamdani himself has made.
In any case, his slight tax increase on rich people, free buses, and city-run grocery stores are pretty far from a communist revolution. But that’s not how it appears to rich people, surrounded on all sides by yes-men and toadies, who spend several hours a day marinating in an online Nazi sewer.
America’s Dumbest Billionaires Fail to Stop Zohran Mamdani
It’s encouraging on many levels: New York City didn’t submit to a campaign of flagrant bigotry from disgraced two-time loser Andrew Cuomo, and Americans, particularly young ones, can still be politically inspired by a good candidate with a good messa…Ryan Cooper (The American Prospect)
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Why cities around the world are uniting to keep cool
From the desert of Phoenix in the United States to the humid streets of Quezon City in the Philippines, mayors are facing the same new reality: Heat is here to stay, and it is impacting every element of city life. That’s why we — along with more than 30 other mayors from C40 Cities, a global network of nearly 100 of the world’s biggest cities tackling the climate emergency — are joining forces to protect our people today and prepare our communities for a hotter tomorrow. Through the new C40 Cool Cities Accelerator, we’ll work together to speed up bold and inclusive climate action that meets the urgency of this growing threat.
Why cities around the world are uniting to keep cool
A new global initiative is helping cities from Phoenix to Quezon City address extreme heat with shared solutions and local action.Grist Creative (Grist)
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Inverse Knowledge Search over Verifiable Reasoning: Synthesizing a Scientific Encyclopedia from a Long Chains-of-Thought Knowledge Base
This paper comes up with a really clever architectural solution to LLM hallucinations, especially for complex, technical topics. The core idea is that all our knowledge, from textbooks to wikis, is "radically compressed". It gives you the conclusions but hides all the step-by-step reasoning that justifies them. They call it a vast, unrecorded network of derivations the "intellectual dark matter" of knowledge. LLMs being trained on this compressed, conclusion-oriented data is one reason why they fail so often. When you ask them to explain something deeply, they just confidently hallucinate plausible-sounding "dark matter".The solution the paper demonstrates is to use a massive pipeline to "decompress" all of the steps and make the answer verifiable. It starts with a "Socrates agent" that uses a curriculum of about 200 university courses to automatically generate around 3 million first-principles questions. Then comes the clever part, which is basically a CI/CD pipeline for knowledge. To stop hallucinations, they run every single question through multiple different LLMs. If these models don't independently arrive at the exact same verifiable endpoint, like a final number or formula, the entire question-and-answer pair is thrown in the trash. This rigorous cross-model consensus filters out the junk and leaves them with a clean and verified dataset of Long Chains-of-Thought (LCoTs).
The first benefit of having such a clean knowledge base is a "Brainstorm Search Engine" that performs "inverse knowledge search". Instead of just searching for a definition, you input a concept and the engine retrieves all the diverse, verified derivational chains that lead to that concept. This allows you to explore a concept's origins and see all the non-trivial, cross-disciplinary connections that are normally hidden. The second and biggest benefit is the "Plato" synthesizer, which is how they solve hallucinations. Instead of just generating an article from scratch, it first queries the Brainstorm engine to retrieve all the relevant, pre-verified LCoT "reasoning scaffolds". Its only job is then to narrate and synthesize those verified chains into a coherent article.
The results are pretty impressive. The articles generated this way have significantly higher knowledge-point density and, most importantly, substantially lower factual error rates, reducing hallucinations by about 50% compared to a baseline LLM. They used this framework to automatically generate "SciencePedia," an encyclopedia with an initial 200,000 entries, solving the "cold start" problem that plagues human-curated wikis. The whole "verify-then-synthesize" architecture feels like it could pave the way for AI systems that are able to produce verifiable results and are therefore trustworthy.
Inverse Knowledge Search over Verifiable Reasoning: Synthesizing a Scientific Encyclopedia from a Long Chains-of-Thought Knowledge Base
Most scientific materials compress reasoning, presenting conclusions while omitting the derivational chains that justify them.arXiv.org
Inverse Knowledge Search over Verifiable Reasoning: Synthesizing a Scientific Encyclopedia from a Long Chains-of-Thought Knowledge Base
This paper comes up with a really clever architectural solution to LLM hallucinations, especially for complex, technical topics. The core idea is that all our knowledge, from textbooks to wikis, is "radically compressed". It gives you the conclusions but hides all the step-by-step reasoning that justifies them. They call it a vast, unrecorded network of derivations the "intellectual dark matter" of knowledge. LLMs being trained on this compressed, conclusion-oriented data is one reason why they fail so often. When you ask them to explain something deeply, they just confidently hallucinate plausible-sounding "dark matter".
The solution the paper demonstrates is to use a massive pipeline to "decompress" all of the steps and make the answer verifiable. It starts with a "Socrates agent" that uses a curriculum of about 200 university courses to automatically generate around 3 million first-principles questions. Then comes the clever part, which is basically a CI/CD pipeline for knowledge. To stop hallucinations, they run every single question through multiple different LLMs. If these models don't independently arrive at the exact same verifiable endpoint, like a final number or formula, the entire question-and-answer pair is thrown in the trash. This rigorous cross-model consensus filters out the junk and leaves them with a clean and verified dataset of Long Chains-of-Thought (LCoTs).
The first benefit of having such a clean knowledge base is a "Brainstorm Search Engine" that performs "inverse knowledge search". Instead of just searching for a definition, you input a concept and the engine retrieves all the diverse, verified derivational chains that lead to that concept. This allows you to explore a concept's origins and see all the non-trivial, cross-disciplinary connections that are normally hidden. The second and biggest benefit is the "Plato" synthesizer, which is how they solve hallucinations. Instead of just generating an article from scratch, it first queries the Brainstorm engine to retrieve all the relevant, pre-verified LCoT "reasoning scaffolds". Its only job is then to narrate and synthesize those verified chains into a coherent article.
The results are pretty impressive. The articles generated this way have significantly higher knowledge-point density and, most importantly, substantially lower factual error rates, reducing hallucinations by about 50% compared to a baseline LLM. They used this framework to automatically generate "SciencePedia," an encyclopedia with an initial 200,000 entries, solving the "cold start" problem that plagues human-curated wikis. The whole "verify-then-synthesize" architecture feels like it could pave the way for AI systems that are able to produce verifiable results and are therefore trustworthy.
Inverse Knowledge Search over Verifiable Reasoning: Synthesizing a Scientific Encyclopedia from a Long Chains-of-Thought Knowledge Base
Most scientific materials compress reasoning, presenting conclusions while omitting the derivational chains that justify them.arXiv.org
Death of beloved neighborhood cat sparks outrage against robotaxis in San Francisco
Death of beloved neighborhood cat sparks outrage against robotaxis in San Francisco
KitKat, affectionately known as ‘mayor of 16th Street’ was struck and killed by a Waymo in the city’s Mission DistrictCy Neff (The Guardian)
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Trump’s widening war on the left started with Palestine
cross-posted from: news.abolish.capital/post/5821
The Trump administration's recent efforts to target left-wing groups started with attacks on the Palestine movement, following the strategy established by pro-Israel organizations that worked for decades to pave the way for such repression.
In September, Trump issued an executive order claiming to designate “Antifa” as a “domestic terrorist organization” and a presidential memorandum (NSPM-7) that targets charities and advocacy groups over alleged national security concerns.
These efforts were seemingly driven by the assassination of right-wing commentator Charlie Kirk, which the Trump administration has continually blamed on the left despite a complete lack of evidence.
“The last message that Charlie sent me … was that we needed to have an organized strategy to go after the left-wing organizations that are promoting violence in this country,” declared White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller shortly after Kirk’s killing. “With God as my witness, we are going to use every resource we have at the Department of Justice, Homeland Security, and throughout this government to identify, disrupt, dismantle, and destroy these networks.”
While Kirk’s death provided the spark for Trump’s recent moves, the administration’s war on the left effectively began with its targeting of Palestine advocates.
Almost immediately upon arriving in the White House, the Trump team revoked visas, snatched people off the streets, detained legal citizens, and launched a McCarthyite campaign against university administrations for allowing anti-Israel sentiment to foment on their campuses.
“We ought to get them all out of the country,” declared Trump, referring to students who protested the genocide. “They’re troublemakers. They’re agitators. They don’t love our country. We ought to get them the hell out.”
From Mondoweiss via This RSS Feed.
Trump’s widening war on the left started with Palestine
The Trump administration’s recent efforts to target left-wing groups started with attacks on the Palestine movement, following the strategy established by pro-Israel organizations that worked for decades to pave the way for such repression.Michael Arria (Mondoweiss)
problemi di gaming per la dimenticanza cosmica, e finisco così super perduta nel rotting senza più giocare (mi sono dimenticata di nuovo lo Switch a casa)
Ommiao, oggi… solita noia, non c’è proprio niente da fare, non ho proprio via di scampo. Ommeglio: si potrebbe invero fare del gran gaming, come ideale tentativo di distrarsi dagli orrori, ma anche il gaming è divenuto ormai più difficile del dovuto. Cioè: una volta dentro, è sempre gaming, per fortuna, e c’è ben poco […]
This Whole Thing Really Snuck Up On Us | Looking back, and ahead, on the anniversary of a White House warning.
This Whole Thing Really Snuck Up On Us
Looking back, and ahead, on the anniversary of a White House warning.Dave Levitan (Gravity Is Gone)
Scientists Need a Positive Vision for AI
... in the United States, public investment in science seems to be redirected and concentrated on AI at the expense of other disciplines. And Big Tech companies are consolidating their control over the AI ecosystem. In these ways and others, AI seems to be making everything worse.This is not the whole story. We should not resign ourselves to AI being harmful to humanity. None of us should accept this as inevitable, especially those in a position to influence science, government, and society. Scientists and engineers can push AI towards a beneficial path. Here’s how.
The essential point is that, like with the climate crisis, a vision of what positive future outcomes look like is necessary to actually get things done. Things with the technology that would make life better. They give a handful of examples and provide broad categories if activities that can help steer what is done.
Scientists Must Push AI Toward Responsible AI
Scientists have a unique role in guiding AI's future. Learn how they can steer it towards ethical and equitable outcomes.Bruce Schneier (IEEE Spectrum)
EU countries weaken 2040 climate plan in eleventh-hour deal | Member states, including Italy, make last-minute push to delay carbon pricing and outsource emissions cuts
No gift link right now.
The sticking point is the use of carbon credits — which are mostly fraudulent — to claim emissions reductions.
FT
The latest UK and international business, finance, economic and political news, comment and analysis from the Financial Times optimised for your device on app.ft.com.Financial Times
Republicans try to turn national Democratic candidates into Mamdani copycats
Republicans got their midterms bogeyman in Zohran Mamdani. Now comes the challenge: making the incoming New York City mayor’s brand of democratic socialism sink candidates outside his liberal bubble.
They’re getting right to it.
Republicans’ House campaign arm launched digital ads Wednesday morning across 49 battleground districts tying Democrats to the “socialist mayor” who “built his movement on defunding the police and abolishing ICE.”
Archive article: archive.is/Ym8Za
copymyjalopy likes this.
The PR firm that planted the Palestine Action/Iran story has direct ties to the Zionist lobby
The PR company CMS Strategic that reportedly planted a false story in the Times about Palestine Action has a series of intimate connections to the shadowy pro-Israel lobby group We Believe in Israel (WBII). This is of course the same WBII that boasted its role in machinating the proscription of the group.
What’s more, vis-a-vis these WBII ties, the firm appears to have a wealth of links to the Labour Party and key figures in government.
Palestine Action Iran funding smear: PR firm exposed
As the Canary’s Alex/Rose Cocker detailed, the article in question had claimed – completely without basis – that the Home Office was investigating Palestine Action receiving funding from Iran.
However, repeated Home Office denials over the allegations had suggested for a while that something else was afoot.
Private Eye had previously approached the Home Office over the Times article. However, according to the magazine, this was only for it to come back and say that it did not recognise the claim.
The Canary had also submitted a Freedom of Information (FOI) request to the Home Office. But once again, the Home Office confirmed that it had not supplied any information directly to the Times for the story.
At the time, there was a mainstream media frenzy from the usual suspects. GB News, the Daily Mail, the BBC, the Telegraph, and the Spectator all ran a series of stories trumpeting the potential Iran link. Declassified UK traced them all back to the dubious claims in the Times article.
Now, Private Eye has revealed how:
CMS Strategic has acted as Elbit’s UK PR firm for some years. A witness known by the Eye heard Georgia Pickering, CMS’s managing director and owner, claiming credit for getting a story into newspapers about Palestine Action, the “direct action” group that damaged Elbit factories and other premises the group says are linked to the war in Gaza.
Source of the Times claims – long unclear
Since the Times published the article, multiple outlets have speculated over the source of the claims.
The Guardian had highlighted how We Believe in Israel had tweeted just two days before the Times article calling Palestine Action a “shell front” and stating:
Behind Palestine Action’s theatre of resistance stands a darker puppeteer: the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.
It’s well documented that the Zionist lobby group was chief among those lobbying for Palestine Action’s proscription. In June, just weeks ahead of Palestine Action’s ban, it published a report titled Palestine Action: A Case for Proscription under the Terrorism Act 2000. And notably, the Guardian pointed out how home secretary Yvette Cooper’s statement on the decision to proscribe Palestine Action was “similar” to the wording from this report. WBII even boasted it was thanks to its briefing that the government decided to proscribe Palestine Action.
What’s more, the Canary has identified how WBII’s current director, Catherine Perez-Shakdam, had in the year leading up to Palestine Action’s proscription, penned op-eds not only calling for the ban, but also insinuating a link to Iran. Notably, in November 2024, she wrote an article calling Palestine Action activists “Tehran’s ideological sentries” and arguing that:
To look at Palestine Action is to see not an “activist” group, but an ideological proxy for the Iranian regime, operating as Tehran’s enforcers in a country they otherwise could never reach.
The piece goes to great lengths to paint Palestine Action as “proxies of a foreign power”, describing them as:
foot soldiers whose purpose is to inject Tehran’s twisted worldview into the heart of Britain’s public discourse.
At points, the article implies Palestine Action tactics are “inspired” by the Iranian regime. In others, she goes further to almost imply they are active foreign agents, making baseless claims like:
Tehran, unable to influence Britain directly, deploys groups like Palestine Action to project its authoritarian ethos across borders.
Of course, opinion article that it is, for the Zionist Times of Israel no less, Perez-Shakdam was compelled to provide no evidence for her conspiracist diatribe.
We Believe in Israel: cropping up again, naturally
To date, the Canary has been unable to source evidence of Perez-Shakdam and the numerous organisations she heads lobbying the Home Office. However, the Home Office has obviously categorically denied any role in seeding the story anyway – at least directly.
Now, these facts take on new significance in light of Private Eye’s revelations.
This is because, if CMS Strategic really did plant the story in the Times, its worth emphasising some particular links to WBII – and their timing.
To start with, there’s the company’s senior account executive Kira Lewis. Lewis joined CMS Strategic in March 2025 from the infamous Israel lobby group British Israel Communications and Research Centre (BICOM).
Of course, this was just months before the Labour government announced the proscription of Palestine Action. As the Canary’s Ed Sykes previously highlighted, We Believe in Israel is:
“a side-project” of BICOM – “Britain’s most active pro-Israeli lobbying organisation”. And its longstanding director was awful Labour right-winger and self-proclaimed “Zionist shitlord” Luke Akehurst (who isn’t Jewish, by the way).
And Lewis evidently has clear connections to the group, not least through her role with BICOM.
In July 2022, they penned an op-ed for Jewish News about their trip to Israel with:
the Labour Friends of Israel and the We Believe In Israel campaign group.
Then, in June 2024, they were out on the campaign trail for Akehurst. Akehurst only stepped down from his near 13-year stint as We Believe in Israel director that very same June.
What’s more, it appears CMS Strategic has made use of Lewis’s links with the parachute North Durham MP. In May, Labour First (where incidentally, Lewis also previously worked), hosted an event with chancellor Rachel Reeves.
In a LinkedIn post, Pickering posted chummy photos with the chancellor and thanked Akehurst for arranging for the company to support the event.
Labour links in abundance
What’s also apparent is that CMS Strategic has tangible inroads with this current Labour government as well.
Pickering is a Bracknell Labour Party councillor. Alongside this, she is also co-chair of Labour in Communications’ (LIC) defence and aerospace policy network group. The organisation describes its remit as:
Labour’s fastest-growing professional network of supporters working in the communications, media and public affairs industry.
In a LinkedIn post, Pickering put out a call to recruit new Labour Party members from the PR and defence sectors to the group. A group gathering together Labour members with defence lobbyist experience – nothing to see there of course.
Lewis, a Young Labour member, is also a Labour Party councillor, for Higham Hill. In 2023, they resigned their role as junior whip on the Waltham Forest council after posting a tweet stating that:
What Israel is doing is bad – killing thousands of innocent people, including children. But not evil. Hamas is evil.
Additionally, Lewis’s LinkedIn details a number of short-term gigs as an organiser for the party.
However, perhaps most significantly, as mentioned above, Lewis previously worked for Labour First. Journalist and author Paul Holden has described the group in his explosive new book as the “base camp for the Labour right’s overt fightback” against Corbyn and the party’s left-wing. By this, he was referring to the organisation’s very public efforts to oust Corbyn and his allies, namely by spearheading repeated coup attempts during his leadership.
And low and behold, Akehurst had his fingers in this pie too. He co-founded Labour First alongside former LFI vice-chair and MP John Spellar and Labour councillor Keith Dibble. Naturally, Akehurst is still a director.
CMS staff were also at the Labour Party’s 2025 conference arranging “1-1 discussions” for ministers, MPs, and “industry voices”.
CMS Strategic shilling for DSEI
Moreover, CMS is no stranger to publicly gloating about helping defence companies get coverage in the corporate media either:
So despite the company denying the claims from the Eye, it would be quite on-brand for Pickering to have boasted this – and for the company to be the actor behind the scenes.
As the Eye underscored, CMS has shilled for notorious Israel-linked arms corporation Elbit Systems. Of course, Palestine Action has long made the number one Israel arms manufacturer the main target of its direct action. The magazine also highlighted that in 2024 Palestine Action targeted CMS over its lobbying for the company.
Indeed, the PR firm is one of just two companies the arms producers has employed in recent years to lobby the UK government. CMS isn’t currently listed as its lobbyist.
However, CMS itself has maintained a murky menagerie of arms manufacturers amid its clientele. It was none other than CMS running media and comms for the UK’s largest arms fair Defence and Security Equipment International (DSEI). In fact, Pickering was bragging about CMS delivering this for DSEI for the 10th time:
linkedin.com/posts/georgia-pic…
This was the same DSEI that exhibited arms giants that have armed and sustained Israel’s genocide. It included drone and F35 manufacturers Elbit, Rafael, Lockhead Martin, and BAE.
Times peddling propaganda for CMS Strategic? What’s new
The Canary approached CMS Strategic and the Times for comment. We asked the Times whether it had verified that the Home Office were purportedly “understood” to be investigating Palestine Action’s funding and links to Iran. In addition, we queried if CMS/Georgia Pickering were the source for its article. The outlet did not respond by the time of publication.
Meanwhile, CMS Strategic came back with an identical comment to what it told the Eye:
Any suggestion that CMS was involved with The Times article dated 23 June 2025 or discussed being involved with it are categorically untrue.
Ultimately, the Times in its top-quality due diligence journalism, published what appear to be outrageously fabricated claims. Those claims may have originated from a long-term lobbyist and PR outfit for major arms companies abetting Israel’s genocide.
There’s no definitive proof – at present – that WBII had a hand in this. However, these connections to CMS Strategic do raise significant questions nonetheless. As its swagger around Palestine Action’s proscription underscores – pumping out propaganda sure wouldn’t be out of character.
DSEI sees Israel banned from UK's biggest arms fair
Of course, it would be too much for Labour to also ban Israeli arms companies from DSEI - so, it has made just a token gestureThe Canary
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