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Social media at a time of war


Social media at a time of war
WELCOME BACK TO DIGITAL POLITICS. I'm Mark Scott, and I have many feelings about Sora, OpenAI's new AI-generated social media platform. Many of which are encapsulated by this video by Casey Neistat. #FreeTheSlop.

— The world's largest platforms have failed to respond to the highest level of global conflict since World War II.

— The semiconductor wars between China and the United States are creating a massive barrier between the world's two largest economies.

— China's DeepSeek performs significantly worse than its US counterparts on a series of benchmark tests.

Let's get started:


WHEN PLATFORM GOVERNANCE MEETS GLOBAL CONFLICT


OCT 7 MARKED THE 2-YEAR ANNIVERSARY of Hamas militants attacking Israel, killing roughly 1,200 citizens and engulfing the region in a seemingly endless conflict. Tens of thousands of Palestinians have died, many more have been displaced, and attacks (or the threat of attack) against both Israelis and Jews, worldwide, have skyrocketed.

I won't pretend to understand the complexities of the Israeli-Hamas war (more on that here, here and here). But the last two years have seen a slow degradation of the checks and safeguards that social media companies once had in place to protect users from war-related content, propaganda and illegal content now rife wherever you look online.

First, let's be clear. This isn't just an Israeli-Hamas issue. As we hurtle toward the end of 2025, there are currently almost 60 active state-based conflicts worldwide and global peace is at its lowest level in 80 years, according to statistics from the Institute for Economics and Peace.

That is not social media's fault. As much as it's easy to blame TikTok, YouTube and Instagram for the ills of the world, real-world violence is baked into generational conflicts, multitudes of overlapping socio-economic issues and other analogue touch-points that have nothing to do with people swiping on their phones.

But it's also true the recent spike in global conflicts has come at a time of collective retrenchment on trust and safety issues from social media giants that, at the bare minimum, have failed to stop some of the offline violence from spreading widely within online communities. Again, there's a causation versus correlation issue here that we must be careful with. But at a time of heightened polarization (and not just in the US and Europe), the capacity for tech platforms to be used to foment real-world instability and violence has never been higher.

Before I get irate complaints from those of you working within these companies, social media platforms have clear terms of service supposed to limit war-related content from spreading among users. You can review them here, here, here and here. But there's one thing to have clear-cut rules, and it's another to actively implement them.

Thanks for reading the free monthly version of Digital Politics. Paid subscribers receive at least one newsletter a week. If that sounds like your jam, please sign up here.

Here's what paid subscribers read in September:
— A series of legal challenges to online safety legislation challenge how these rules are implemented; The unintended consequences of failing to define "tech sovereignty;" Where the money really goes within the chip industry. More here.
— What most people don't understand about Brussels' strategy toward technology; Unpicking the dual antitrust decisions against Google from Brussels and Washington; AI chatbots still return too much false information. More here.
— The next transatlantic trade dispute will be about digital antitrust, not online safety; Washington's new foreign policy ambitions toward AI; The US' spending spree on data centers. More here.
— An inside look into the United Nations' takeover of AI governance; How the United Kingdom embraced the US "AI Stack;" People view the spread of false information as a higher threat than a faltering global economy. More here.
— Washington's proposed deal to untangle TikTok US from Bytedance is not what it first appears; How social media companies are speaking from both sides of their mouths on online safety; AI's expected boost to global trade. More here.

Social media companies' neglect related to conflicts outside the Western world has been a feature for years (more on that here.) Now, that same level of omission has seeped into conflicts, including those within the Middle East and Ukraine, that are closer to home for the Western public.

There are many reasons for this shift.

Companies like Alphabet and Meta have pared back their commitments to independent fact-checking which provided at least some pushback to government and non-state efforts to peddle falsehoods associated with these global conflicts. A shift to crowdsourced fact-checking — initially rolled out by X, and then followed by Meta — has yet to fill that void. That's mostly because companies have found it difficult to find consensus among their users about often divisive topics (including those related to warfare) which is required before these crowdsourced fact-checks are published.

Social media platforms have similarly spent the last three years gutting their existing trust and safety teams to the point where the industry is on life support. This was initially done for economic reasons. Faced with a struggling advertising sector in 2022, company executives sought cost savings, wherever they could, and internal trust and safety teams felt the brunt of those efforts. Fast forward to 2025, and there has been an ideological shift to "free speech" among many of these firms which makes any form of content moderation anathema to the current (US-focused) zeitgeist.

Third: politics. The current White House's aversion to online safety is well known. So too is the US Congress' accusations that other country's digital regulation unfairly infringes on American citizens' First Amendment rights. But from India to Slovakia, there are growing local efforts to quell platforms' content moderation programs — and the associated domestic legislation that has sprouted up from Brazil to the United Kingdom. In that geopolitical context, social media firms have instituted a "go slow" on many of their internal systems — even if (at least in countries with existing online safety regulation) they still comply with domestic rules.

Making things more difficult is the platforms' increasingly adversarial relationship with outsiders seeking to hold these firms to account for their stated trust and safety policies. (Disclaimer: My day job puts me in this category, though my interactions with the companies remain cordial.) Researchers have found it increasingly difficult to access publicly-available social media data. Others have faced legal challenges to analyses which cast social media giants in an unfavorable light. Industry-linked funding for such independent "red-teaming" of platform weaknesses has fallen off a cliff.

Taken together, these four points represent a fundamental change in what had been, until now, a progressive multi-stakeholder approach to ridding global social media platforms of illegal and gruesome content — and not just related to warfare.

Before, companies, policymakers and outside groups worked together (often with difficulty) to make these social media networks a safe space for people to express themselves in ways that represented free speech rights and safeguarded individuals from hate. That coalition has now disintegrated amid a combination of hard-nosed economics, shifting geopolitics and fundamental differences over what constitutes tech companies' trust and safety obligations.

Each of the above points occurred separately. No one set out thinking that cutting back on internal trust and safety teams; ending relations with fact-checkers; kow-towing to a shift in geopolitics; and reducing ties to outside researchers would make it easier for conflict-related content to spread easily among these social media networks.

And yet, that is what happened.

Go onto any social media platform, and within a few clicks (if you know what you're doing), you can come face-to-face with gruesome war-torn content — or, at least, purportedly material associated with one of the 59 state-based conflicts active worldwide. Even if you're not seeking out such material, the collective pullback on trust and safety has raised the possibility that you will stumble over such content in your daily doomscroll.

That is the paradox we find ourselves in at the end of 2025.

In many ways, social media has become even more ingrained in everything from politics to the latest meme craze (cue: the rise of OpenAI's Sora.) But these platforms are less secure and protected than they have ever been — at a time when the world is engulfed in the highest level of subnational, national and regional warfare in multiple generations.


Chart of the Week


THE US CENTER FOR AI STANDARDS AND INNOVATION ran a series of tests — across four well-known sectors associated with the performance of large language models — between services offered by OpenAI, Anthropic and Deepseek.

You have to take these results with a pinch of salt, as they come from a US federal agency. But across the board, China's LLM performed significantly worse than its US rivals.
Social media at a time of warSource: Center for AI Standards and innovation


THE AI WARS: SEMICONDUCTOR EDITION


COMMON WISDOM IS THAT YOU NEED three elements to compete in the global race around artificial intelligence. In your "AI Stack," you need world-leading microchips, you need cloud computing infrastructure that's cheap and almost universal, and you need applications like large language models that can sit on top and drive user engagement. On that first component — semiconductors — China and the US are increasingly going down different paths.

Looking back, it almost was inevitable. Washington has long safeguarded world-leading chips (from both American firms and those of its allies) from Beijing via export bans and other strong-arm tactics. The goal: to ensure China's AI Stack was always one step behind its US counterpart.

Yet that strategy is starting to backfire. Yes, Western AI chips are still better than their Chinese equivalents. But the lack of access to such semiconductors has forced the world's second largest economy to invest billions in domestic production in the hopes of eventually catching up — and surpassing — the likes of Nvidia or Taiwan's Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company.

What has galvanized this Chinese resolve is the repeated efforts by both the Trump and Biden administrations to hobble Chinese firms' ability to access the latest semiconductors. In this never-ending 'will they, or won't they?' game of national security ping-pong, the Trump 2.0 administration agreed in August to allow Nvidia and AMD to sell pared-down versions of their latest chips to China — as long as they gave the US federal government a 15 percent slice of that export revenue. Principled diplomacy, it was not.

That plan appears to have backfired. Nvidia is now under an antitrust investigation from Chinese authorities for its takeover of Israeli chipmaker Mellanox in 2020. The Cyberspace Administration of China has also reportedly told the country's largest tech firms, including Alibaba, ByteDance and Baidu, to not buy Nvidia's semiconductor. Jensen Huang, chief executive of the US chip firm, said he was "disappointed" with that move (which has never been officially confirmed.)

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Nvidia has invested millions to design China-specific microchips that both meet the national security limitations demanded by Washington and can be sold directly into the Middle Kingdom in ways that placate Beijing. If Chinese officials close the door — and require local firms to use domestic alternatives, many of which are reportedly almost on par with their Western rivals — then it's another indicator the US and China are on diverging paths when it comes to technological development.

Again, a lot of this was foreseeable. Repeated White House administrations urged American and Western chip and equipment firms to steer clear of China. In response, Beijing invested billions into local semiconductor production, much of which has remained at the lower level of sophistication. But as in other tech-related industries, Chinese manufacturers have steadily risen through the stack to now offer world-beating hardware. It's not unusual for that, eventually, to be the case in semiconductors.

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What does this all mean for the politics of technology?

First, Western semiconductor firms offering pared-back versions of their latest chips to China may have the door shut on them. Beijing may need these manufacturers, in the short term. But don't expect that welcome to remain warm — especially as Western officials continue to rattle sabres.

Second, the need for Chinese firms to rely on (currently sub-par, but rapidly advancing) homegrown chips will lead to scrappy innovation once associated just with Silicon Valley. We can debate whether the meteoric rise of DeepSeek was truly as unique as first believed (based on the company's ties to the wider Chinese tech ecosystem.) But relying on second-tier semiconductors will force Chinese AI firms to be more nimble compared to their US counterparts with seemingly unlimited access to chips, compute power and data.

Third, the "splinternet" will come to hardware. I wrote this in 2017 to explain how the digital world was being balkanized into regional fiefdoms. The creation of rival semiconductor stacks — one led by the US, one led by China — will extend that division into the offline world. Companies will try to make the respective hardware interoperable. But it won't be in the interests of either party, as the separation expands between which semiconductors can work with other infrastructure worldwide, to maintain such networking capability.

In short, the global race between AI Stackshas entered a new era.


What I'm reading


— The Wikimedia Foundation published a human rights impact assessment on artificial intelligence and machine learning. More here.

— The European Centre of Excellence for Countering Hybrid Threats assessed the current strengths and weaknesses in the transatlantic fight against state-backed disinformation. More here.

— The Canadian government launched an AI Strategy Task Force and outlined its agenda for public feedback on the emerging technology. More here.

— The Appeals Centre Europe, which allows citizens to seek redress from social media companies under the EU's Digital Services Act, published its first transparency report. More here.

— Researchers outlined the growing differences between how countries are approaching the oversight and governance of artificial intelligence for the University of Oxford. More here.



digitalpolitics.co/newsletter0…



Homebrew Dam Control System Includes all the Bells and Whistles


The site controller board

Over on brushless.zone, we’ve come across an interesting write-up that details the construction of a dam control system. This is actually the second part, in the first, we learn that some friends purchased an old dysfunctional 80 kW dam with the intention of restoring it. One friend was in charge of the business paperwork, one friend the mechanical side of things, and the other was responsible for the electronics — you can probably guess which ones we’re interested in.

The site controller is built around a Nucleo-H753 featuring the STM32H753ZI microcontroller, which was selected due to it being the largest single-core version of the dev board available. This site controller board features a dozen output light switches, sixteen front-panel button inputs, dual 24 V PSU inputs, multiple non-isolated analog inputs, atmospheric pressure and temperature sensors, multiple analog multiplexers, a pair of SSD1309 OLED screens, and an ESP32 for internet connectivity. There’s also fiber optic TX and RX for talking to the valve controller, a trio of isolated hall-effect current sensors for measuring the generator phase current, through current transformers, four contactor outputs (a contactor is a high-current relay), a line voltage ADC, and the cherry on top — an electronic buzzer.

The valve controller has: 48 V input from either the PSU or battery, motor phase output, motor field drive output, 8 kV rated isolation relay, limit switch input, the other side of the optical fiber TX and RX for talking to the site controller board, and connectors for various purposes.

If you’re interested in seeing this dam control system being tested, checkout the video embedded below.

youtube.com/embed/8laQxXGqc38?…


hackaday.com/2025/10/08/homebr…



Qualcomm acquisisce Arduino per rafforzare la presenza nell’IoT e nella robotica


Qualcomm ha annunciato martedì l’acquisizione di Arduino, azienda italiana nota per la produzione di circuiti stampati programmabili a basso costo. La società, che diventerà una sussidiaria indipendente del colosso statunitense, rappresenta un tassello strategico nel piano di Qualcomm per rafforzare la propria presenza nel settore della robotica e dell’Internet of Things (IoT).
Il valore economico dell’operazione non è stato reso pubblico.

L’acquisizione permette a Qualcomm di entrare in contatto diretto con la base della comunità dei maker, degli hobbisti e delle startup di robotica. I prodotti Arduino, pur non essendo destinati all’uso commerciale, sono strumenti essenziali per la prototipazione e la sperimentazione di nuove idee grazie alla loro semplicità e accessibilità.

Secondo Nakul Duggal, direttore generale di Qualcomm per i settori automotive, industriale e embedded IoT, la partnership consentirà agli sviluppatori di iniziare dai prototipi per poi passare alla produzione commerciale, un ambito in cui Qualcomm vanta un’ampia esperienza.

La strategia dell’azienda arriva in un momento di stagnazione nel mercato degli smartphone e di crescente indipendenza di Apple nello sviluppo dei propri chip modem. Qualcomm sta così diversificando le sue fonti di ricavo, spostando l’attenzione verso robotica, veicoli connessi e applicazioni industriali. Nel trimestre più recente, infatti, le attività legate all’IoT e al settore automotive hanno rappresentato circa il 30% delle vendite complessive di chip.

Per anni, i prodotti Qualcomm sono stati poco accessibili ai piccoli sviluppatori, poiché venduti principalmente in grandi lotti a imprese consolidate. Al contrario, concorrenti come Nvidia hanno introdotto kit di sviluppo per la robotica acquistabili direttamente dai rivenditori a partire da 249 dollari, posizionandosi come punto di riferimento per la comunità degli sviluppatori.

Negli ultimi dodici mesi Qualcomm ha acquisito anche Foundries.io ed Edge Impulse, con l’obiettivo di potenziare le proprie soluzioni per la robotica e l’intelligenza artificiale. Duggal ha dichiarato che l’obiettivo finale è quello di fornire la potenza di calcolo necessaria a sostenere robot umanoidi, comparabile a quella utilizzata nelle auto a guida autonoma.

Contestualmente all’annuncio, Arduino ha presentato la sua prima scheda equipaggiata con un chip Qualcomm, denominata Uno Q. Il dispositivo, che sarà in vendita tra 45 e 55 dollari, integra il processore Dragonwing QRB2210, capace di eseguire software Linux e Arduino, oltre a funzioni di visione artificiale per l’analisi delle immagini provenienti da telecamere.

Tradizionalmente, le schede Arduino si basano su microcontrollori leggeri di produttori come STMicroelectronics, Renesas Electronics, Microchip e NXP Semiconductors, con prestazioni insufficienti per le applicazioni di intelligenza artificiale più avanzate. Qualcomm ha confermato che Arduino continuerà comunque a distribuire chip di questi marchi, mantenendo la compatibilità con l’ecosistema esistente.

L'articolo Qualcomm acquisisce Arduino per rafforzare la presenza nell’IoT e nella robotica proviene da il blog della sicurezza informatica.



“La Risurrezione di Cristo ci insegna che non c’è storia tanto segnata dalla delusione o dal peccato da non poter essere visitata dalla speranza.


La sovranista, donna, madre e cristiana Sempre più "sovranista", vero?


Gaza, l’Idf ferma la nuova Flotilla, 9 italiani a bordo. A Sharm Hamas apre al disarmo

[quote]GAZA – Un’altra Flotilla, un altro abbordaggio. La missione congiunta della Freedom Flotilla, che aveva raccolto il testimone della precedente spedizione, è stata fermata nella notte dall’esercito israeliano, a 120…
L'articolo Gaza, l’Idf ferma la nuova Flotilla, 9



Fallieuropa fallisce in tutto, politica, ricerca, democrazia, auto elettriche, politiche green, ecc. Solo per le buffonate eccelle...


giusto per capire quanto sia coglione e approssimativo questo governo


la germania ha bloccato chat control: un'idea liberticida. la gente critica la germania in italia, ma io rimango dell'idea che come cittadini italiani dobbiamo di più al governo tedesco che non a quello italiano. in italia poi abbiamo fascismo allo stato sempre-puro ed è ovvio che piaccia l'idea di un tecnocontrollo totale.


USB (Unione Sindacati di Base) ha aperto un CAF vicino alla mensa, stanno facendo volantinaggio per avvisare della cosa.

Uno ha preso il volantino e ha detto "USB che è, CGIL?".

Per dire come stiamo messi...



Il Comitato organizzatore locale (Col) della Giornata mondiale della gioventù di Seoul 2027 insieme al Dicastero per i Laici, la famiglia e la vita, annuncia il lancio del Concorso per l’inno della Gmg, invitando musicisti e compositori di tutto il m…




"Il camminare insieme è lo stile della Chiesa”. Lo scrive il Papa, nel messaggio inviato tramite il cardinale segretario di Stato, Piero Parolin, a dom Matteo Ferrari, priore generale della Congregazione Camaldolese dell’Ordine di San Benedetto, in o…




ORRIPILANTE!!! Sono state bloccate 9 barche della Sumud con a bordo medici, infermieri e medicinali ilfattoquotidiano.


Hacker nordcoreani: 2 miliardi di dollari rubati in criptovalute in nove mesi di frodi


Una rete di hacker legata alla Corea del Nord ha rubato oltre 2 miliardi di dollari in criptovalute nei primi nove mesi del 2025. Gli analisti di Elliptic definiscono questa cifra la più grande mai registrata, con tre mesi rimanenti alla fine dell’anno.

Si stima che l’importo totale rubato abbia superato i 6 miliardi di dollari e, secondo le Nazioni Unite e diverse agenzie governative, sono questi fondi a finanziare i programmi missilistici e di armi nucleari della Corea del Nord.

Secondo Elliptic, la cifra reale potrebbe essere più elevata, dato che risulta complicato attribuire a Pyongyang furti specifici, operazione che necessita di analisi blockchain, esami del riciclaggio di denaro e attività di intelligence. In alcuni casi, gli incidenti corrispondono solo in parte ai modelli caratteristici dei gruppi nordcoreani, mentre altri episodi potrebbero non essere stati segnalati.

La principale fonte di perdite record è stato l’attacco hacker di febbraio all’exchange Bybit , che ha portato al furto di 1,46 miliardi di dollari in criptovalute. Altri incidenti confermati quest’anno includono attacchi a LND.fi, WOO X e Seedify. Elliptic collega inoltre oltre 30 ulteriori incidenti non segnalati pubblicamente alla Corea del Nord. Questa cifra è quasi il triplo di quella dell’anno scorso e supera significativamente il precedente record stabilito nel 2022, quando furono registrati furti di asset da servizi come Ronin Network e Horizon Bridge.

Allo stesso tempo, il vettore di attacco è cambiato in modo significativo. Mentre in precedenza i criminali informatici sfruttavano le vulnerabilità nell’infrastruttura dei servizi crittografici, ora utilizzano sempre più spesso metodi di ingegneria sociale. Le principali perdite nel 2025 sono dovute all’inganno, non a difetti tecnici.

Gli utenti facoltosi privi di meccanismi di sicurezza aziendale sono a rischio. Vengono attaccati tramite contatti falsi, messaggi di phishing e schemi di comunicazione convincenti, a volte dovuti a connessioni con organizzazioni che detengono grandi quantità di asset digitali. Pertanto, l’anello debole del settore crittografico sta gradualmente diventando l’elemento umano.

Allo stesso tempo, si sta sviluppando una corsa tra analisti e riciclatori. Con l’aumentare dell’accuratezza degli strumenti di tracciamento blockchain, i criminali stanno diventando più sofisticati nei loro schemi per trasferire i beni rubati. Un recente rapporto di Elliptic descrive nuovi approcci per nascondere le loro tracce: mixaggio di transazioni in più fasi, trasferimenti cross-chain tra blockchain di Bitcoin, Ethereum, BTTC e Tron, l’uso di reti oscure con bassa copertura analitica e lo sfruttamento di “indirizzi di ritorno” che reindirizzano i fondi verso nuovi wallet. A volte, i criminali creano e scambiano i propri token emessi direttamente all’interno delle reti in cui avviene il riciclaggio. Tutto ciò trasforma le indagini in un gioco del gatto e del topo tra investigatori e gruppi altamente qualificati che operano sotto il controllo statale.

Tuttavia, la trasparenza della blockchain rimane un vantaggio chiave per le indagini. Ogni moneta rubata lascia una traccia digitale che può essere analizzata e collegata ad altre transazioni. Secondo i ricercatori, questo rende l’ecosistema delle criptovalute più resiliente e riduce la capacità della Corea del Nord di finanziare i suoi programmi militari.

I 2 miliardi di dollari rubati in soli nove mesi sono un segnale preoccupante della portata della minaccia. Le unità informatiche nordcoreane stanno diventando sempre più inventive, ma gli strumenti forensi basati sulla blockchain contribuiscono a mantenere l’equilibrio, garantendo trasparenza e aumentando la responsabilità degli operatori di mercato. Questa costante battaglia per il controllo dei flussi digitali sta decidendo non solo il destino del mercato delle criptovalute, ma anche questioni di sicurezza internazionale.

L'articolo Hacker nordcoreani: 2 miliardi di dollari rubati in criptovalute in nove mesi di frodi proviene da il blog della sicurezza informatica.




Fragilità

@Politica interna, europea e internazionale

Le democrazie non sono deboli, sono fragili. La loro fragilità è preziosità e delicatezza, rientrano fra le cose umane che devono essere volute – meglio se amate – ma non imposte. Si può fermare, anche con la forza, chi voglia aggredire la libertà, ma non si può imporla a chi non la desidera e non […]
L'articolo Fragilità proviene da fondazioneluigieinaudi.it/frag…



Building the DVD Logo Screensaver with LEGO


Just a simple Lego bouncy DVD logo screensaver mechanism. (Credit: Grant Davis, YouTube)
The completed Lego DVD screensaver. (Credit: Grant Davis, YouTube)The completed Lego DVD screensaver. (Credit: Grant Davis, YouTube)
There’s something extremely calming and pleasing about watching a screensaver that merely bounces some kind of image around, with the DVD logo screensaver of a DVD player being a good example. The logical conclusion is thus that it would be great to replicate this screensaver in Lego, because it’d be fun and easy. That’s where [Grant Davis]’s life got flipped upside-down, as this turned out to be anything but an easy task in his chosen medium.

Things got off on a rocky start with figuring out how to make the logo bounce against the side of the ‘screen’, instead of having it merely approach before backing off. The right approach here seemed to be Lego treads as used on e.g. excavators, which give the motion that nice pause before ‘bouncing’ back in the other direction.

With that seemingly solved, most of the effort went into assembling a functional yet sturdy frame, all driven by a single Lego Technic electromotor. Along the way there were many cases of rapid self-disassembly, ultimately leading to a complete redesign using worm gears, thus requiring running the gears both ways with help from a gearbox.

Since the screensaver is supposed to run unattended, many end-stop and toggle mechanisms were tried and discarded before settling on the design that would be used for the full-sized build. Naturally, scaling up always goes smoothly, so everything got redesigned and beefed up once again, with more motors added and multiple gearbox design changes attempted after some unfortunate shredded gears.

Ultimately [Grant] got what he set out to do: the DVD logo bouncing around on a Lego ‘TV’ in a very realistic fashion, set to the noise of Lego Technic gears and motors whirring away in the background.

Thanks to [Carl Foxmarten] for the tip.

youtube.com/embed/1sPK42-fzqU?…


hackaday.com/2025/10/08/buildi…




Sarà arrivato un drone russo da dietro e non l'ha visto.

Crosetto operato d’urgenza al colon, condizioni buone
Il ministro della Difesa, Guido Crosetto, è stato sottoposto lunedì 8 ottobre a un intervento chirurgico presso l’ospedale Fatebenefratelli di Roma per l’asportazione di tre polipi al colon. Secondo il comunicato ufficiale del Ministero, l’operazione è andata a buon fine, senza complicazioni e Crosetto è vigile e stabile. L’equipe medica ha eseguito l’intervento con tecniche tradizionali, in un quadro clinico stabile e il ministro è stato seguito nelle ore successive in regime di degenza ordinaria. Il personale medico è in attesa dell’esame istologico per accertare la natura delle formazioni rimosse. Al momento non è stato comunicato alcun dettaglio ufficiale sui tempi di recupero né sull’eventuale ripresa dell’attività istituzionale del ministro.

L'indipendente



Autunno visionario 2025 – La poetica del nord ovest
freezonemagazine.com/news/autu…
Seconda edizione della rassegna che, lo scorso anno, aveva sancito la nascita del sodalizio artistico tra il Black Inside e Visioni Musicali. Paolo Zangara (direttore artistico del Black Inside) ha assecondato l’idea di Fabio Baietti (ormai più curatore artistico di eventi live che blogger musicale) di allestire un prestigioso cartellone di quattro concerti,


GOLEM - Linux Day 2025


blog.golem.linux.it/2025/10/li…
Segnalato da Linux Italia e pubblicato sulla comunità Lemmy @GNU/Linux Italia
Sabato 25 ottobre 2025 torna il Linux Day: la principale manifestazione comunitaria italiana dedicata al software libero, alla cultura aperta e alla condivisione! L’evento è coordinato a livello nazionale da ILS –



il mondo non ruota attorno alla Segre, ma perché non voler usare la parola genocidio se questa descrive accuratamente quello che sta avvenendo? è come sostenere che israele al momento come stato fa "onco ai bai" (come si dice a livorno) ma negare il reale motivo di base per cui fa schifo. non è questione da poco compiere un genocidio, azione che va avanti da 50 anni... difficile non notarlo in così tanto tempo.




“Riprendiamoci il web”. Non è mica come dirlo…
freezonemagazine.com/articoli/…
Giovedì 2 ottobre, primo antefatto Leggo una notizia ANSA: Tim Berneers-Lee, l’informatico che ebbe l’intuizione del WWW e lo mise a disposizione gratuitamente, lancia l’appello: “Oggi il web non è più libero (…) Possiamo ridare potere agli individui e riprenderci il web. Non è troppo tardi”. Lunedì 6 ottobre, secondo antefatto Scrivo a Gianni Zuretti, […]
L'articolo


GAZA. Assaltata la Freedom Flotilla 2, gli attivisti portati a Ashdod


@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo
A bordo della The Coscience c'erano 93 persone tra medici, giornalisti e attivisti. Altre decine di volontari sono sulle barche della Thousand Madleens To Gaza
L'articolo GAZA. Assaltata la Freedom Flotilla 2, gli attivisti portati a Ashdod proviene da Pagine Esteri.




Ilaria Salis è salva, l’Europa no


@Giornalismo e disordine informativo
articolo21.org/2025/10/ilaria-…
Ilaria Salis, per fortuna, non dovrà tornare in Ungheria. Non cadrà fra le grinfie di un governo illiberale, pericoloso e anti-europeista come quello di Orbán e questo è un bene. Il Parlamento europeo, infatti, nel momento decisivo, l’ha salvata per appena un voto, frutto



Neppure Scilla, …somos Flotilla


@Giornalismo e disordine informativo
articolo21.org/2025/10/neppure…
Non ho altro in testa. Mi butterei senza salvagente da una di quelle bellissime barche dai nomi new age. E nuoterei ..fino a non poterne più!..raggiungendo a nuoto la terra dell’umanità, che non si trova in acque internazionali, dove i ciclopi attendono famelici e pronti a sferrare



Il ritorno della Mutua dopo il collasso del SSN


@Giornalismo e disordine informativo
articolo21.org/2025/10/il-rito…
La crisi (pietoso eufemismo) del SSN, è il prodotto di politiche che nel corso degli anni hanno costantemente delegato al privato la responsabilità della salute pubblica. Il business della sanità a pagamento ne è la logica




“Senza Parole. Gaza, l’informazione negata”. Gubbio, 8 ottobre


@Giornalismo e disordine informativo
articolo21.org/2025/10/senza-p…
Gubbio, Biblioteca Sperelliana Martedì 8 ottobre 2025 – ore 18.00–19.30/19.40 18.10 – 18.20 Introduzione del moderatore (D. Morini) Tema: giornalismo e libertà di stampa nel mondo Dati emblematici




REPORT UMANITARIO -SITUAZIONE NELLA STRISCIA DI GAZA...

REPORT UMANITARIO -SITUAZIONE NELLA STRISCIA DI GAZA (2023–2025)
absppodv.org/notizie/report-um…



Tovaglia Natalizia


La Tovaglia Natalizia è lavabile, pratica e perfetta per sala da pranzo, picnic, feste o per aggiungere stile alla decorazione.


È stato approvato oggi al Senato il disegno di legge sulle “Disposizioni in favore degli alunni e degli studenti ad alto potenziale cognitivo e delega al Governo per il riconoscimento dei medesimi”, un provvedimento che valorizza le capacità di tutte…


EU-Überwachungspläne: Unionsfraktion jetzt gegen Chatkontrolle, Innenministerium will sich nicht äußern


netzpolitik.org/2025/eu-ueberw…




Ecco il programma della decima edizione di JAZZMI
freezonemagazine.com/news/ecco…
Nel 2025, JAZZMI celebra il suo decimo anniversario, un traguardo significativo che ne conferma il ruolo di riferimento per il jazz a Milano e oltre. In dieci anni, il festival ha trasformato un’idea in un progetto culturale stabile, riconosciuto a livello nazionale e internazionale, capace di raccontare il jazz nella sua dimensione più ampia, dinamica […]


Pirates win 18 seats in Czech parliament!


Congratulations to the Czech Pirates for their win in the October 3-4th parliamentary election. They went from four seats in the 2021 election when they were part of the Pirates and Mayors (STAN) alliance to eighteen seats in this election in alliance with the Greens. The Greens will get two of the eighteen seats.

The Czech Pirates are an inspiration to Pirates in the United States and around the world. They, like Pirates in Luxembourg are in their country’s legislatures and continue to fight for Pirate policies there.


masspirates.org/blog/2025/10/0…



Bypassing Sora 2's rudimentary safety features is easy and experts worry it'll lead to a new era of scams and disinformation.

Bypassing Sora 2x27;s rudimentary safety features is easy and experts worry itx27;ll lead to a new era of scams and disinformation.#News #AI


Sora 2 Watermark Removers Flood the Web


Sora 2, Open AI’s new AI video generator, puts a visual watermark on every video it generates. But the little cartoon-eyed cloud logo meant to help people distinguish between reality and AI-generated bullshit is easy to remove and there are half a dozen websites that will help anyone do it in a few minutes.

A simple search for “sora watermark” on any social media site will return links to places where a user can upload a Sora 2 video and remove the watermark. 404 Media tested three of these websites, and they all seamlessly removed the watermark from the video in a matter of seconds.
playlist.megaphone.fm?p=TBIEA2…
Hany Farid, a UC Berkeley professor and an expert on digitally manipulated images, said he’s not shocked at how fast people were able to remove watermarks from Sora 2 videos. “It was predictable,” he said. “Sora isn’t the first AI model to add visible watermarks and this isn’t the first time that within hours of these models being released, someone released code or a service to remove these watermarks.”
youtube.com/embed/QvkJlMWUUxU?…
Hours after its release on September 30, Sora 2 emerged as a copyright violation machine full of Nazi SpongeBobs and criminal Pickachus. Open AI has tamped down on that kind of content after the initial thrill of seeing Rick and Morty shill for crypto sent people scrambling to download the app. Now that the novelty is wearing off we’re grappling with the unpleasant fact that Open AI’s new tool is very good at making realistic videos that are hard to distinguish from reality.

To help us all from going mad, Open AI has offered watermarks. “At launch, all outputs carry a visible watermark,” Open AI said in a blog post. “All Sora videos also embed C2PA metadata—an industry-standard signature—and we maintain internal reverse-image and audio search tools that can trace videos back to Sora with high accuracy, building on successful systems from ChatGPT image generation and Sora 1.”

But experts say that those safeguards fall short. “A watermark (visual label) is not enough to prevent persistent nefarious users attempting to trick folks with AI generated content from Sora,” Rachel Tobac, CEO of SocialProof Security, told 404 Media.

Tobac also said she’s seen tools that dismantle AI-generated metadata by altering the content’s hue and brightness. “Unfortunately we are seeing these Watermark and Metadata Removal tools easily break that standard,” Tobac said of the C2PA metadata. “This standard will still work for less persistent AI slop generators, but will not stop dedicated bad actors from tricking people.”

As an example of how much trouble we’re in, Tobac pointed to an AI-generated video that went viral on TikTok over the weekend she called “stranger husband train.” In the video, a woman riding the subway cutely proposes marriage to a complete stranger sitting next to her. He accepts. One instance of the video has been liked almost 5 million times on TikTok. It didn’t have a watermark.

“We're already seeing relatively harmless AI Sora slop confusing even the savviest of Gen Z and Millennial users,” Tobac said. “With many typically-savvy commenters naming how ‘cooked’ we are because they believed it was real. This type of viral AI slop account will attempt to make as much money from the creator fund as possible before social media companies learn they need to invest in detecting and limiting AI slop, before their platform succumbs to the Slop Fest.”

But it’s not just the slop. It’s also the scams. “At its most innocuous, AI generated content without watermarking and metadata accelerates the enshittification of the internet and tricks people with inflammatory content,” Tobac said. “At its most malignant, AI generated content without watermarking and metadata could lead to every day people losing their savings in scams, becoming even more disenfranchised during election season, could tank a stock price within a few hours, could increase the tension between differing groups of people, and could inspire violence, terrorism, stampede or panic amongst everyday folks.”

Tobac showed 404 Media a few horrifying videos to illustrate her point. In one, a child pleads with their parents for bail money. In another, a woman tells the local news she’s going home after trying to vote because her polling place was shut down. In a third, Sam Altman tells a room that he can no longer keep Open AI afloat because the copyright cases have become too much to handle. All of the videos looked real. None of them have a watermark.

“All of these examples have one thing in common,” Tobac said. “They’re attempting to generate AI content for use off Sora 2’s platform on other social media to create mass or targeted confusion, harm, scams, dangerous action, or fear for everyday folk who don’t understand how believable AI can look now in 2025.”

Farid told 404 Media that Sora 2 wasn’t uniquely dangerous. It’s just one among many. “It is part of a continuum of AI models being able to create images and video that are passing through the uncanny valley,” he said. “Having said that, both Veo 3 and Sora 2 are big steps in our ability to create highly visual compelling videos. And, it seems likely that the same types of abuses we’ve seen in the past will be supercharged by these new powerful tools.”

According to Farid, Open AI is decent at employing strategies like watermarks, content credentials, and semantic guardrails to manage malicious use. But it doesn’t matter. “It is just a matter of time before someone else releases a model without these safeguards,” he said.

Both Tobac and Farid said that the ease at which people can remove watermarks from AI-generated content wasn’t a reason to stop using watermarks. “Using a watermark is the bare minimum for an organization attempting to minimize the harm that their AI video and audio tools create,” Tobac said, but she thinks the companies need to go further. “We will need to see a broad partnership between AI and Social Media companies to build in detection for scams/harmful content and AI labeling not only on the AI generation side, but also on the upload side for social media platforms. Social Media companies will also need to build large teams to manage the likely influx of AI generated social media video and audio content to detect and limit the reach for scammy and harmful content.”

Tech companies have, historically, been bad at that kind of moderation at scale.

“I’d like to know what OpenAI is doing to respond to how people are finding ways around their safeguards,” Farid said. “We are seeing, for example, Sora not allowing videos that reference Hitler in the prompt, but then users are finding workarounds by simply describing what Hitler looks like (e.g., black hair, black military outfit and a Charlie Chaplin mustache.) Will they adapt and strengthen their guardrails? Will they ban users from their platforms? If they are not aggressive here, then this is going to end badly for us all.”

Open AI did not respond to 404 Media’s request for comment.


#ai #News #x27


Court records show that the narrative Flock and a Texas Sheriff's Office has told the public isn't the whole story, and that police were conducting a 'death investigation' into the abortion.

Court records show that the narrative Flock and a Texas Sheriffx27;s Office has told the public isnx27;t the whole story, and that police were conducting a x27;death investigationx27; into the abortion.#Flock #Abortion


Police Said They Surveilled Woman Who Had an Abortion for Her 'Safety.' Court Records Show They Considered Charging Her With a Crime


In May, 404 Media reported that the Johnson County Sheriff’s Office in Texas searched a nationwide network of Flock cameras, a powerful AI-enabled license plate surveillance tool, to look for a woman who self-administered an abortion. At the time, the sheriff told us that the search had nothing to do with criminality and that they were concerned solely about the woman’s safety, specifically the idea that she could be bleeding to death from the abortion. Flock itself said “she was never under criminal investigation by Johnson County. She was being searched for as a missing person, not as a suspect of a crime.”

But newly unearthed court documents about the incident show that when the search was performed, police were conducting a “death investigation” into the death of the fetus, and police discussed whether they could charge the woman with a crime with the District Attorney’s office on the same day that they performed the Flock search. The documents, obtained by the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) and shared with 404 Media, also show that the Flock search was performed more than two weeks after the woman had the abortion. The documents were created as part of an arrest affidavit against the woman’s partner, who was arrested for allegedly abusing and threatening her at gunpoint on the day she took the abortion pill.

In documents created prior to the publication of our article, there is zero mention of concern about the woman’s safety. The records show that the police retroactively created a separate document about the Flock search a week after our article was published, in which they justify the search by saying they were concerned for her safety.

404 Media’s initial reporting on the incident became national news, has been cited in several government investigations into how Flock is used by police, and has led to several reforms by Flock itself. The company and its CEO, Garrett Langley, have repeatedly used it as a high-profile example of an ‘activist’ media that is biased against his company. The documents show that the narrative pushed by the Johnson County Sheriff’s Office and repeated by Flock is not the full story, and that police did consider charging the woman with a crime.

“For months, Flock Safety and the Johnson County Sheriff insisted that she was being searched for as a missing person and accused journalists and advocates of spreading 'clickbait' misinformation,” Rin Alajaji, legislative activist at the EFF, told 404 Media. “Now we have the official records, and they prove the exact opposite: Texas deputies did investigate this woman's abortion as a ‘death investigation,’ they did use Flock Safety’s ALPR network to track her down, and they did consult prosecutors about charging her. The only misinformation came from the company and the sheriff trying to cover their tracks. We’ve warned about this for over a decade now: when a single search can access more than 83,000 cameras across nearly the entire country, the potential for abuse is enormous. This makes it crystal clear that neither the companies profiting from this technology nor the agencies deploying it can be trusted to tell the full story about how it's being used.”

The documents highlight how Flock, whose cameras are installed in thousands of communities around the country, and which 404 Media has revealed police use on behalf of ICE, ultimately may not know what its customers are using the technology for. Flock declined to comment for this article.

According to the documents obtained by the EFF and shared with 404 Media, police came to the woman’s house to investigate the incident on May 9, after the woman’s partner called the police to report that she had an abortion on April 23, more than two weeks earlier. The arrest report states that they had opened a “death investigation case” regarding the fetus. The woman was not at the house at the time, though there is no indication in the arrest report that the man or the police were concerned about her whereabouts at the time.

“The incident of the abortion/miscarriage occurred on April 23, 2025,” an affidavit for the arrest of her partner says. The partner told police that he was “unaware” that the woman “had ordered a medication, off the internet, from California, that would cause her to abort or miscarry.”

The woman “aborted/miscarried while he was outside and he came in and found blood in the bathroom with what he believed was the non-viable fetus,” it says. They “got into a verbal argument and she left and had not been back to [the house] since that day. [He] collected what he thought was the fetus and put it in the freezer. When [he] was asked why he waited so long to report the incident, his answer was he had to process the event and call his family attorney.”

“Detective [Calvin] Miller [a detective on the scene] was provided FedEx packaging the pill was sent in, photographs of what [the man] believed to be a fetus and the instructions on how to take the medication,” it adds.

Crucially, the affidavit notes “it was discussed at the time with the District Attorney’s Office and learned the State could not statutorily charge [the woman] for taking the pill to cause the abortion or miscarriage of the non-viable fetus.”

That same day, Johnson County Sheriff’s Department officials searched the national Flock network—consisting at the time of 88,345 cameras across the country—for the license plate belonging to a Land Rover. The stated reason was “had an abortion, search for female.” The documents do not say the time when the conversation with the District Attorney about possibly charging the woman took place, so it is unclear whether this happened before or after the Flock search. The Johnson County Sheriff’s Office and District Attorney’s Office did not respond to requests for comment for this article sent via email, phone, and fax.

Several days later, on May 14, the woman went to the police and told them that she wanted to tell them her side of the story. According to the affidavit, she said that her partner assaulted her the day she took the pill, and she showed them text messages “where they discussed her ordering the pill and taking the pill.” At some point on April 23, the day she took the pill, the two began arguing. The woman said the man allegedly put a gun to her head in front of the couple’s toddler. She says that he hit her with the butt of the gun, threw her on the bed, choked her, put the gun to her head and demanded that she “beg for your life.” “Scream all you want, no one can hear you, no one is coming to help you,” he said, according to the arrest report. “I’ll kill you right now and take off with the baby.” The man was arrested and charged with assault on May 22.

On May 28, nearly a week after the woman’s partner was arrested for assault, 404 Media learned of the May 9 Flock search by the Johnson County Sheriff’s Office using records that were obtained using a public records request. The documents showed thousands of Flock searches throughout the United States, and the reason police stated for doing a given search. We learned that Johnson County performed a search on a Land Rover for the reason of “had an abortion, search for female,” which was particularly notable because abortion rights experts have worried that police surveillance would be turned against women seeking abortions.

On May 29, we reached out to Flock for comment on the incident. Flock told us that the stated reason for the search was not the full story, and that we should call Johnson County Sheriff Adam King to learn more (we had already reached out to the sheriff’s office for comment). “According to the sheriff's office, the deputy did not search for a woman seeking an abortion. In fact, it appears as though the woman may have had self-induced wounds from an unsafe abortion, and the family called the sheriff's office looking for her because she went missing,” a Flock spokesperson said at the time.

404 Media called King, and had a nine-minute phone call with him, during which he asked multiple members of his staff for details about why the search was done and what happened. King told 404 Media that “I wanted to make sure y’all understood what that was: It wasn’t us trying to block a woman from having an abortion. It was a self-administered abortion she gave herself and her family was worried that she was going to bleed to death, and we were trying to find her to get her to a hospital. We weren’t trying to block her from leaving the state or whatever. That wasn’t the case. We just wanted to get her some medical help and that’s why we did the query on Flock.”

“The family was worried she was bleeding and needed immediate medical attention and we weren’t able to get her on the phone, they weren’t able to get her on the phone, that’s why we were checking Flock trying to find her, but it was for her safety,” he said. “That’s all it was about, her safety.”

The only family member mentioned in the court documents is the woman’s partner, who was arrested for allegedly abusing and threatening her. The Flock search is also not mentioned in the court documents, but it makes clear that the police were told at the time they learned about the abortion that it had actually taken place more than two weeks prior. There is no mention of concern about the woman’s safety in the narrative of events in the arrest report, though there is discussion of police considering whether they would be allowed to charge her with a crime.

On June 5, more than a week after 404 Media’s article was published and following subsequent national attention on the story, the Johnson County Sheriff’s Office created a new “supplemental report” about the incident in which the officer who ran the Flock search retroactively explained that he was worried about the woman’s safety and used both Flock and another powerful surveillance tool, TLO, to look her up. This supplemental report was also obtained by the EFF and shared with 404 Media.

“Deputies started to ask communication’s [sic] about looking up the victim due to a large amount of blood being found in the residence,” it states. “I never made scene on this call, just was assisting with trying to locate the victim and her children to check their welfare. I began to believe the victim may have been hurt by the [reporting person, the woman’s partner] due to the call and it not making sense […] I wanted to use resources available to help find where the victim and her children could be to make sure they were okay.”

The report, which does not mention the word “abortion” anywhere, then states that they found her license plate and an address in Dallas. The officer ran a Flock search as well as “a TLO report,” which gave him an additional address to search. TLO is a powerful lookup tool that uses information pulled from credit report header data. 404 Media has reported extensively on this tool in the past.
The case supplemental report shows it was created only after our article was initially publishedFrom the case supplemental report, created June 5
“I entered the vehicle into FLOCK to see if we could see where the victim and her children might be at due to multiple different locations being given for the victim and her children. Deputies had attempted to try and contact the female, but were unsuccessful. The FLOCK hit showed the victim had been in Dallas prior but nothing recent. The reason for the FLOCK search was to find out what city the victim and her children might be in and give us an idea of where to look for them, due to the large area of where the victim and her children cold [sic] be at.”

On June 13, King separately told the Dallas Morning News that “There was no big conspiracy there to be the abortion police [...] That wasn’t our deal, it was all about her safety.” The Dallas Morning News cited a “partial report” that it obtained which appears to be this June 5 document, which notes the “large amount of blood.”

Since we first reported on this incident, Flock and its CEO, Garrett Langley, have repeatedly stated that our reporting on the incident and an EFF blog post about it was “clickbait,” misleading, and that it oversold what happened in Johnson County. It is not clear if Flock has seen the arrest report or what Johnson County Sheriff’s Office told the company. But Flock and Langley have used King’s initial narrative of the incident to criticize media reporting of the company.

“In this case, it was an unfortunate example of where an activist journalist had a narrative in their mind and they didn’t want to look at the facts of the story, because the facts are, we have one of the most transparent systems one could build,” Langley told Forbes last month. “There was a single word ‘abortion,’ in the search. The natural conclusion is, ‘Oh, they’re searching for this woman because she had an abortion.’ But when you talk to the police department, it’s actually quite a more nuanced story, which is the family called the police department because they were worried for her well-being. It was a missing person’s case because she did administer a self-abortion. They found that woman not too far away eventually. And so when I look at this, I go ‘This is everything’s working as it should be.’”

“A family was concerned for a family member. They used Flock to help find her when she could have been unwell. She was physically OK, which is great, but due to the current political climate, this was really good clickbait,” Langley said.

The only adult “family member” of the woman who’s mentioned in police reports is her partner, who the woman left after he attacked her with a gun.

Flock and Langley also posted a blog in the aftermath of our reporting and the EFF’s own blog post about the incident in which he said the story was “clickbait-driven reporting and social media rumors,” about the case, and that the Texas abortion case “was purposefully misleading reporting.”

The EFF, he wrote, “is actively perpetuating narratives that have been proven false, even after the record has been corrected.”

“The Sheriff’s Office has reported that a local family called to ask for help–a relative had self-administered an abortion and subsequently ran away. Her family feared she was hurt and asked the Sheriff’s deputy to search for her to the best of their abilities. Deputies performed a nationwide search in Flock, the broadest search possible within the system, to try to locate her as quickly as they could,” Langley wrote. “Luckily, she was found safe and healthy in Dallas a couple of days later. No charges were ever filed against the woman and she was never under criminal investigation by Johnson County. She was being searched for as a missing person, not as a suspect of a crime.”

King, the Johnson County Sheriff, previously told 404 Media Flock was not responsible for ultimately finding the woman.

Separately, King was arrested by his own deputies in August on charges of harassing multiple female members of his staff and threatening to arrest them after they reported the harassment. King allegedly made repeated comments about the women’s appearance. Last week, King was additionally charged with aggravated perjury after allegedly lying to a grand jury about what happened. As part of his bond agreement, he has been ordered by a court to not perform background checks on his alleged victims, is not allowed access to “Global Positioning System Data” from Johnson County, and is not allowed access to a video surveillance system owned by the county.

“This update is so disappointing,” a Flock source said when 404 Media told them about the new details of the case. 404 Media granted multiple current and former Flock employees anonymity because they were not permitted to speak to the press. “As much as Flock tries to be good stewards of the powerful tech we sell, this shows it really is up to users to serve their communities in good faith. Selling to law-enforcement is tricky because we assume they will use our tech to do good and then just have to hope we're right.”

The Flock source added “Even if Flock took a stance on permitted use-cases, a motivated user could simply lie about why they're performing a search. We can never 100% know how or why our tools are being used.” A second Flock source said they believe Flock should develop a better idea of what its clients are using the company’s technology for.

“Reproductive dragnets are not hypothetical concerns. These surveillance tactics open the door for overzealous, anti-abortion state actors to amass data to build cases against people for their abortion care and pregnancy outcomes,” Ashley Kurzweil, senior policy analyst in reproductive health and rights at the National Partnership for Women & Families, told 404 Media. “Law enforcement exploitation of mass surveillance infrastructure for reproductive health criminalization promises to be increasingly disruptive to the entire abortion access and pregnancy care landscape. The prevalence of these harmful data practices and risks of legal action drive real fear among abortion seekers and helpers—even intimidating people from getting the care they need,” she added.

“Given Flock's total failure to prevent abuses, law enforcement that have paid for this surveillance technology should immediately lock down their settings for which other agencies can access their data, and should seriously reconsider whether this technology should be installed in their communities in the first place,” Senator Ron Wyden told 404 Media in a statement. “And Republican officials need to stop harassing and harming women.”


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