meduza.io/en/feature/2025/09/0…
‘The best place to meet is the hero city Moscow’
Putin refuses to meet Zelensky in a third country. Here’s how hopes for a summit rose, then fizzled.Meduza
The final market value milestone is $8.5tn - more than double the value of chip giant Nvidia, the world's most valuable company.
bbc.com/news/articles/cdx29qv4…
Tesla proposes $1tn award for Elon Musk if he hits ambitious targets
The car firm boss's enormous pay package depends on him hitting sky-high targets.Mitchell Labiak (BBC News)
Fall gardening at JSCRSEA | News - All For Gardening
After the long, hot summer, thoughts turn to cooler weather and fall gardening, ready for green, gold, orange and brown foliage, flowers and vegetables.Gardening (All For Gardening)
Recording police is ‘violence’? Absolutely not.
It was bad enough when government officials claimed that journalists incite violence by reporting. But now, they’re accusing reporters of actually committing violence.
The supposed violence by reporters? Recording videos. At least three times recently, a government official or lawyer has argued that simply recording law enforcement or Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers is a form of violence.
In July, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem proclaimed during a news conference following ICE raids on California farms that videotaping ICE agents performing operations is “violence.” Noem lumped video recordings in with other forms of actual violence, like throwing rocks or Molotov cocktails at agents.
Then, in August, Justice Department lawyer Sean Skedzielewski argued, during a court hearing over the Los Angeles Police Department’s mistreatment of journalists covering protests, that videotaping law enforcement officers “can be used for violence.” He claimed recording is violent because it can reveal officers’ identities, leading to harassment, and can encourage more protesters to join the fray.
Also in August, the government applied similar logic as it fought against the release of Mario Guevara, the only journalist in U.S. custody after being arrested for newsgathering. Guevara, who is originally from El Salvador, was detained while covering a protest in Georgia and turned over to ICE for deportation. In a bond hearing before an immigration court in July, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists, the government argued that Guevara’s recording and livestreaming of law enforcement “presents a safety threat.”
At the risk of stating the obvious, videotaping someone is not the equivalent of throwing a firebomb at them. Actually, recordings of law enforcement officers made by journalists and members of the public allow the public to see what the police are up to and hold officers accountable for abusing their authority or breaking the law.
That includes holding officers who are violating the First Amendment accountable in court. Adam Rose, chair of the press rights committee for the LA Press Club, said that Skedzielewski also denied in court that DHS officers had pointed weapons at journalists, despite video evidence submitted to the court of them doing exactly that.
Skedzielewski “wound up making our case for us,” Rose told us. “His own argument showed how the government can try to lie in court, and why filming in public is critical to ensure the truth comes out.”
Video recording police in public is also protected by the First Amendment, as both Rose and Mickey Osterreicher, the general counsel for the National Press Photographers Association, point out. “The claim that journalists and others video recording police are engaged in ‘acts of violence’ is not only absurd on its face but flies in the face of the law and common sense,” said Osterreicher.
That constitutional right applies even if officers would prefer not to be identified. The government often claims that officers must not be identified because they’re at risk of (real) violence or harassment. But the correct response to those threats is to prosecute and punish those who actually break the law by harassing or physically attacking police, not make up crimes to go after those who exercise their First Amendment right to record them.
The government claims at other times that officers should not be recorded because they’re undercover. The government has been known to abuse this argument, including by making bizarre claims that any officer who may, at some point, go undercover should be treated as undercover at all times. Plus, journalists have no way of knowing whether a particular agent participating in an immigration raid or officer policing a protest is undercover at the moment they’re recording. The responsibility of preserving officers’ cover is on the officer and the government, not journalists and the public who can observe them working in plain view.
These justifications, however, are mere pretext for the government’s true purpose. Officials want courts and the public to believe that recording agents and officers is a violent act because it justifies officers’ own violent response to the press.
In LA, government attorney Skedzielewski didn’t just argue that video recording is violent. He said that meant that justified officers in using force against people videotaping them. This claim—made in a court that’s already restrained police from attacking journalists after they were documented violently assaulting and detaining reporters repeatedly —should seriously alarm journalists and anyone who wants to record police.
“For an officer of the court to conflate the use of recordings to reveal police officers’ identities with the actual making of those recordings, in order to justify the use of excessive force against those doing the recording, shows complete ignorance of the law, disregard for the Constitution, a blatant attempt to demonize those who would dare risk their health and safety to provide visual proof of police behavior, or all three,” said Osterreicher.
That demonization is working, unfortunately, especially when it comes to ICE officers’ beliefs about how they can respond to being recorded. In recent months, ICE officers have knocked phones out of the hands of those recording them, pulled weapons on people photographing or videotaping them, and even arrested U.S. citizens for filming them.
The escalating attacks on journalists and citizens who are recording police show the danger of the government’s rhetoric. All who care about press freedom and transparency must push back on claims equating filming to violence.
When officials say at news conferences that video recording is violent, journalists should challenge that assertion and cite the law.
When attorneys argue that recording police justifies violence or arrest, they should have their arguments confronted by opposing counsel and the judge, who has the power to sanction lawyers who ignore First Amendment jurisprudence to make frivolous arguments on behalf of the government.
And when ICE officers harass or detain someone for videotaping them, everyone else should take out their phones and hit the record button.
Recording the police isn’t violence. Don’t let officials get away with loud, incorrect claims to the contrary to diminish our First Amendment rights.
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Zivilgesellschaft: Familienministerin will Demokratieprojekte mit Verfassungsschutz durchleuchten
KillBait - News highlights delivered clearly and responsibly—no clickbait, no sensationalism.
KillBait is a news aggregator developed by students and professionals in journalism and web development. Our focus is on providing readers with clear and relevant summaries of each news story.killbait.com
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This MagSafe suction cup mount gets your iPhone on everything from glass to steel for $8 Prime shipped
https://9to5toys.com/2025/09/05/joyroom-magsafe-suction-cup-mount-2/?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Posted into Apple Deals @apple-deals-9to5mac
This MagSafe suction cup mount gets your iPhone on everything from glass to steel for $8 Prime shipped
JOYROOM MagSafe Suction Cup Mount Buy for $8 (Reg. $20) What we love If there’s smooth surface where you’d like to mount your iPhone, this MagSafe accessory can help.Simon Walsh (9to5Toys)
150-million-year post-mortem reveals baby pterosaurs perished in a violent storm
The cause of death for two baby pterosaurs has been revealed by University of Leicester paleontologists in a post-mortem 150 million years in the making.University of Leicester (Phys.org)
Apple’s big India push is paying off in billions
https://9to5mac.com/2025/09/05/apples-big-india-push-is-paying-off-in-billions/?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Posted into All Stories @all-stories-9to5mac
Apple’s big India push is paying off in billions - 9to5Mac
For the last few months, there’s been no lack of news involving Apple and India. Now, according to Bloomberg, the investment is starting to pay off.Marcus Mendes (9to5Mac)
Santander fora do ar? App do banco dá erro nesta sexta (5)
https://canaltech.com.br/apps/santander-fora-do-ar-app-do-banco-da-erro-nesta-sexta-5/?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Posted into Software @software-canaltech
We almost had a Spielberg Call of Duty movie…
https://mobilesyrup.com/2025/09/05/we-almost-had-a-spielberg-call-of-duty-movie/?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Posted into MobileSyrup @mobilesyrup-mobilesyrup
We almost had a Spielberg Call of Duty movie...
It's a sad day for Call of Duty fans since it's now known that Steven Spielberg isn't going to be directing the movie.Brad Bennett (MobileSyrup)
Lux mysteriosa ✨
Outside with the cat one last time this evening & I noticed Antares (ɑ Sco) sneaking across the horizon just above the communication towers with their red lights on the Königstuhl.
It was twinkling, so I wondered if I could capture its changing colours, as I usually do with Sirius in wintertime.
I could & I did, by panning slowly across the scene in a 10 sec exposure. The result turned out rather lovely in an abstract kind of way.
CEO says the game is projected to meet expectations, but there are cuts anyway.
arstechnica.com/gaming/2025/09…
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Piccola ma strategica manifestazione ieri a #Venezia, ben in vista per i vaporetti da/per San Marco.
Personalized AI companion app Dot is shutting down | TechCrunch
Dot, a personalized AI companion, is shutting down.Maxwell Zeff (TechCrunch)
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EU fines Google €2.95B for abusing dominance in adtech by favoring its own services over rivals. Google has 60 days to propose remedies or face further action.
ec.europa.eu/commission/pressc…
#Antitrust #AdTech #Google #EUtech
Commission fines Google €2.95 billion over abusive practices in online advertising technology
The European Commission has fined Google €2.95 billion for breaching EU antitrust rules by distorting competition in the advertising technology industry (‘adtech\'). It did so by favouring its own onliEuropean Commission - European Commission
You know how everyone came to respect the personal sacrifice of the Vichy leadership, who gave up their integrity to make the #Nazi conquest of #France more peaceful? Oh wait, no that never happened, did it? Pétain was tried, and sentenced to death for Treason.
If #TimCook is thinking history will judge him any less harshly for protecting the interests of #Apple shareholders, understand Timmy-boy, you're not wading across a river of blood, you're walking down the beach and into the sea of it.
Regionali Puglia, Emiliano ci ripensa: «Se si candida Vendola mi candido anche io»
https://www.open.online/2025/09/05/regionali-puglia-emiliano-nichi-vendola-antonio-de-caro-trattative/?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Pubblicato su ULTIME NEWS @ultime-news-OpenGiornale
Regionali Puglia, Emiliano ci ripensa: «Se si candida Vendola mi candido anche io»
Il presidente uscente avrebbe detto ai suoi: «Caduto il problema politico per lui cade anche per me, ovviamente». Le voci durante la delicata trattativa per avere Decaro candidato presidenteStefania Carboni (Open)
What B.C.'s Mount Polley mine expansion means | The Narwhal
B.C. has consented to Mount Polley expanding the site of one of the province’s worst mining disasters. Xatśūll First Nation is challenging the decision in courtSteph Kwetásel’wet Wood (The Narwhal)
Ya que no estoy en Argentina puedo decir #MeCagoEnLaVedaElectoral
Si votás a la Libertad va de culo prepara vaselina porque te van a romper el orto!!!!
No, non mi faccio prendere da questi soggetti, non rappresentano i miei ideali. È che mi faccio solo delle domande.
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E' uno dei grandi interrogativi della mia vita, non da dove vengo, dove vado, perché sono qui ma "come cazzo è possibile che gente così abbia tutto quel seguito". E non mi riferisco solo a Vannacci eh, certo lui è gretto a livello agonistico, ma comunque sono una mandria...
Rosita C likes this.
El Gobierno alemán destina un millón de euros a una campaña para impulsar el vino nacional
La medida busca apoyar a los viticultores ante la amenaza de cierres por la caída de precios y la crisis del sectorVinetur
El sector vitivinícola alemán afronta su mayor crisis pese a la calidad histórica de la vendimia
Bodegas y productores alertan de cierres masivos por caída de precios, descenso del consumo y dificultades en la exportaciónVinetur
Heroku's Basilisk
in reply to Heroku's Basilisk • • •Noodlemaz
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