Blast reported in Lebanon’s capital Beirut
A loud blast has been reported and a plume of smoke could be seen rising in the southern suburbs of Beirut.
Read MoreWhere Skepticism Meets Insight
A loud blast has been reported and a plume of smoke could be seen rising in the southern suburbs of Beirut.
Read MorePeople in the Lebanese capital are fearful that an Israeli operation following Golan Heights attack could hit Beirut.
Read MoreMasoud Pezeshkian is expected to unveil his cabinet within two weeks.
Read MoreUS army lieutenant was only person convicted for role in 1968 massacre of hundreds of Vietnamese civilians.
Read MoreOn today’s Ron Paul Liberty Report:
After innumerable US-backed coup attempts in Venezuela – including the almost comical Juan Guaido fiasco – one might think Americans would become skeptical when the old “stolen election” and “regime change” narrative is rolled out again. But as in Hollywood, when you have a successful story you keep rolling out sequels. Does it matter who runs Venezuela? Only if you are in oil or minerals… or the regime change business. Also today: Pentagon accountants find another two billion dollars for Ukraine… and US debt reaches $35 trillion.
GET YOUR TICKETS NOW to the RPI 2024 DC Conference.
Reprinted from The Ron Paul Institute for Peace & Prosperity.
Read MoreWarning: This has graphic narrative content, discretion is advised.
Yesterday, Israeli police detained Israeli soldiers who were suspected of raping a Palestinian prisoner at the notorious Sde Teiman prison in southern Israel. Israeli soldiers at the facility refused to leave and barricaded themselves in. They also reportedly used pepper spray on the military police. Members of the Israeli Knesset joined protesters as they stormed Sde Teiman.
Antiwar.com news editor Dave DeCamp wrote up this story last night.
Video below is from Breaking Points today:
The reaction of Israeli officials is described in this video, it is appalling.
Read MoreOne Israeli from a local settlement security team was killed by a falling Hezbollah rocket
Read MoreIf you’re tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net.
Meta’s decision to shut down a content surveillance tool called CrowdTangle, announced earlier in the year and about to take effect next month, has met with opposition from a group of US lawmakers.
CrowdTangle, which the giant bought in 2016, has over the years been “repurposed” by “fact-checkers,” researchers focusing on “disinformation” as well as media who flag it.
Meta said it is replaced by the Meta Content Library, available to some researchers but not commercial entities (such as media outlets, a number of whom are currently running “fact-checking” operations).
Now 17 lawmakers (three Republicans among them) have written to Meta asking that it reconsider this decision, referring to CrowdTangle as a “transparency tool” both for researchers and journalists.
The letter, addressed to CEO Mark Zuckerberg, says CrowdTangle is being used to “view and study” content on Facebook and Instagram, but also other platforms, searching for content ranging from foreign influence, and terrorism, to mental health.
We obtained a copy of the letter for you here.
And these members of Congress, led by senators Bill Cassidy (R) and Chris Coons (D) assert that the new tool, Meta Content Library, has “significant limitations” compared to CrowdTangle, urging at the same time the company not to discontinue the latter for at least another six months. I.e., until after the US elections.
But the lawmakers didn’t quite explain this timeframe in that way, mentioning first national security, then the children – in this case, protecting their mental health – then the perceived threat of AI, and elections in the US, but also around the world, as the reason to make sure CrowdTangle continues to be available, “while additional functionality and access is developed for the Meta Content Library.”
Some of those using CrowdTangle are the agency Agence France Presse (AFP) – also a major “fact-checker” and one of Facebook’s partners in this business – which found it useful in “debunking” content around topics like Covid.
AFP was searching for keywords and using Meme Search to find the targets of the debunking efforts and “report misinformation.”
Poynter Institute’s PolitiFact, another of Facebook’s third-party fact-checkers, was also among those who have “for years” been using CrowdTangle to focus its “fact-checking” on content slated for censorship that was likely to reach the widest audience.
If you’re tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net.
The post Lawmakers Request Delay on Meta’s Shutdown of “Fact-Checker” Favorite Content Surveillance Tool appeared first on Reclaim The Net.
Read MoreA Japanese American veteran finds his friend who saved his life when he was mistaken for the enemy in the Vietnam War.
Read MoreThe latest attempt at an AI-powered wearable is an always-listening pendant. But it doesn’t help you be more productive, it just keeps you company.
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