military base with 10,000 missiles on our heads in the last two decades. what exactly are we supposed to do? sit by and be killed? that s the tragedy we face. and the world has many people who financed the war machine and is playing and has danced with the devil, and they will have to look in the mirror and say to themselves, we have helped to develop an empire of monstrosity of criminals and terrorists who must be removed from our area. i wish we had even more time today. there are so many other topics to discuss and so many facets to the current situation and the war against hamas. thank you, mr. president, for taking the time. we appreciate it and i hope we are able to speak again soon. thank you. absolutely. that does it today. josé diaz-balart picks up our coverage right now. i am josé diaz-balart. right now israel is ordering hundreds of thousands of palestinians to evacuate. the human suffering in gaza intensifying once again. the u.n. warning an even more he
House Freedom Caucus members gave a hardy push for adding a warrant requirement to an upcoming bill that would extend the nation’s warrantless surveillance program without the favored provisions from privacy advocates. The House this week is set to review a bill to reauthorize Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), which allows…
(FOX40.COM) — Law enforcement agencies will soon be prohibited from requesting access to civilian’s Ring video camera footage amid concerns from privacy advocates. “Today, we’re announcing some changes to the Neighbors app based on what we’ve heard from our customers,” the Amazon-owned company said on its website on Wednesday. The Neighbors app is an application […]
Amazon-owned Ring will stop allowing police departments to request doorbell camera footage from users, marking an end to a feature that has drawn criticism from privacy advocates.
The worst could harm us or our society and planet in such “innovatively bad” ways that a panel of self-described dystopia experts has judged them “Worst in Show.” “From easily hackable lawn mowers to $300 earbuds that will fail in two years, these are products that jeopardize our safety, encourage wasteful overconsumption, and normalize privacy violations,” says the group of consumer and privacy advocates judging the awards. The judges represent groups including Consumer Reports, the Electronic Frontier Foundation and right-to-repair advocates iFixit.