A federal jury on Thursday acquitted a man accused of putting a $10K murder-for-hire bounty on Border Patrol Commander Greg Bovino.

Feed icon
Capitol News Illinois
CC BY-ND🅭🅯⊜

A federal jury on Thursday acquitted a man accused of putting a $10K murder-for-hire bounty on Border Patrol Commander Greg Bovino.

36 minutes

Mundiario
Feed icon

El triunfo ante el Lille reafirma al equipo vigués como valiente, capaz de sufrir y seguir soñando en Europa.

Feed icon
Mundiario
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

El triunfo ante el Lille reafirma al equipo vigués como valiente, capaz de sufrir y seguir soñando en Europa.

Mientras el balance de fallecidos asciende, los juzgados de Montoro reciben las primeras denuncias de afectados y hasta siete solicitudes de personación como acusación popular, un escenario que anticipa una instrucción larga y compleja.

Feed icon
Mundiario
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

Mientras el balance de fallecidos asciende, los juzgados de Montoro reciben las primeras denuncias de afectados y hasta siete solicitudes de personación como acusación popular, un escenario que anticipa una instrucción larga y compleja.

44 minutes

Freedom of the Press Foundation
Feed icon

When federal agents raided Washington Post reporter Hannah Nantanson’s home earlier this month, it reignited discussions about how reporters can protect confidential sources and sensitive information. “Having reported from dozens of countries with various levels of surveillance, I’ve found that the safest method for interacting with sources who would face the most jeopardy if exposed is to meet in person and cover your tracks,” said Steve Herman, executive director of the Jordan Center for Journalism Advocacy and Innovation, in a recent statement by the National Press Club Journalism Institute. That’s good advice. But “covering your tracks” when meeting sources isn’t always easy. And a new Supreme Court case, Chatrie v. United States, could make it harder. The dangers of geofence warrants At the heart of the Chatrie case are legal orders known as geofence warrants. This controversial tool allows police to demand location data from tech companies (usually Google) to see every device in a specific area at a specific time. Imagine drawing a digital fence around a crime scene and demanding a list of every phone that crossed into it. These demands can reveal precise details about people’s movements and locations. Authorities can pinpoint where someone stood within a couple of yards and whether they were on the first or second floor of a building. But geofence warrants are also imprecise: They sweep up the movements not just of suspects but also of innocent people who happen to be within the digital fence. Demanding location data for a 150-yard radius of a bank in the hour before it was robbed, for example, may show the movements of people who worked at the bank, visited the psychiatrist’s office next door, worshipped at the church on the neighboring block, or dropped into the nearby strip club. Lower courts disagree about whether these demands violate the Fourth Amendment’s protection against unreasonable searches and seizures. Some have held that they’re categorically unconstitutional. Others, like the appeals court that made the initial decision in Chatrie, have held that geofences are not a “search” under the Fourth Amendment and would be perfectly constitutional even without a warrant. Now, the Supreme Court will decide. If the court holds that the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement does not apply to the use of geofences to obtain location data, it could greenlight mass surveillance on an enormous scale. The government could require tech companies to turn over location data, enabling it to surveil protesters, members of dissenting groups, and even the press. A direct threat to journalists and sources For journalists, the threat of their location data landing in the government’s hands is real. As our digital security training team at Freedom of the Press Foundation (FPF) explains: “Consider a sensitive story in which you are meeting a high-risk, anonymous source in person. Your adversaries could use location data to determine that you and the source were in the same spot at the same time, leading to the possible exposure of the source’s identity. “Or perhaps you need to visit a particular location (e.g., a government building) that could put a given department or agency on notice that you are investigating them, in turn making the reporting process more challenging.” Geofence warrants could easily expose confidential sources or tip off powerful government institutions that a reporter is investigating them. A single geofence warrant centered on a newsroom, for instance, could reveal everyone who’s visited, from whistleblowers to workers. Even reporters who take precautions, like meeting sources in neutral locations, might not be safe. A geofence warrant could place them within yards of each other in the same parking garage or cafe, revealing their connection. Holding that the Fourth Amendment applies to geofence warrants would prevent some of these abuses. Under the Fourth Amendment, courts must only approve warrants if there’s probable cause, which is unlikely to exist in fishing expeditions targeting journalists to uncover their confidential sources. Why this matters, even after Google’s changes Google took an important step in 2023 by changing how it stores user location data and for how long, making it harder for the government to use geofence warrants. But these protections aren’t foolproof. Other location data collected by Google or other companies could be vulnerable to geofence warrants. As a result, the court’s decision in Chatrie still matters, and journalists may still want to take steps to limit exposure of their location data. The outcome of Chatrie also touches on a deeper Fourth Amendment issue that could reverberate beyond geofence warrants: the “third-party doctrine.” This decades-old legal rule says that people lose their reasonable expectation of privacy once they share information voluntarily with third parties, like a phone company or a bank. The court has limited the third-party doctrine in recent years, most famously in its decision in Carpenter v. United States. But its ruling in Chatrie has the potential to swing the pendulum back toward less privacy. That could impact Fourth Amendment protections for all kinds of data shared with third parties, such as information stored in the cloud or sensitive searches. Every journalist, source, and citizen should be paying attention and demanding greater privacy protections from the courts and from Congress. If privacy is restricted in this case, our First Amendment rights are too. The free press can’t exist in a surveillance state.

Feed icon
Freedom of the Press Foundation
CC BY🅭🅯

When federal agents raided Washington Post reporter Hannah Nantanson’s home earlier this month, it reignited discussions about how reporters can protect confidential sources and sensitive information. “Having reported from dozens of countries with various levels of surveillance, I’ve found that the safest method for interacting with sources who would face the most jeopardy if exposed is to meet in person and cover your tracks,” said Steve Herman, executive director of the Jordan Center for Journalism Advocacy and Innovation, in a recent statement by the National Press Club Journalism Institute. That’s good advice. But “covering your tracks” when meeting sources isn’t always easy. And a new Supreme Court case, Chatrie v. United States, could make it harder. The dangers of geofence warrants At the heart of the Chatrie case are legal orders known as geofence warrants. This controversial tool allows police to demand location data from tech companies (usually Google) to see every device in a specific area at a specific time. Imagine drawing a digital fence around a crime scene and demanding a list of every phone that crossed into it. These demands can reveal precise details about people’s movements and locations. Authorities can pinpoint where someone stood within a couple of yards and whether they were on the first or second floor of a building. But geofence warrants are also imprecise: They sweep up the movements not just of suspects but also of innocent people who happen to be within the digital fence. Demanding location data for a 150-yard radius of a bank in the hour before it was robbed, for example, may show the movements of people who worked at the bank, visited the psychiatrist’s office next door, worshipped at the church on the neighboring block, or dropped into the nearby strip club. Lower courts disagree about whether these demands violate the Fourth Amendment’s protection against unreasonable searches and seizures. Some have held that they’re categorically unconstitutional. Others, like the appeals court that made the initial decision in Chatrie, have held that geofences are not a “search” under the Fourth Amendment and would be perfectly constitutional even without a warrant. Now, the Supreme Court will decide. If the court holds that the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement does not apply to the use of geofences to obtain location data, it could greenlight mass surveillance on an enormous scale. The government could require tech companies to turn over location data, enabling it to surveil protesters, members of dissenting groups, and even the press. A direct threat to journalists and sources For journalists, the threat of their location data landing in the government’s hands is real. As our digital security training team at Freedom of the Press Foundation (FPF) explains: “Consider a sensitive story in which you are meeting a high-risk, anonymous source in person. Your adversaries could use location data to determine that you and the source were in the same spot at the same time, leading to the possible exposure of the source’s identity. “Or perhaps you need to visit a particular location (e.g., a government building) that could put a given department or agency on notice that you are investigating them, in turn making the reporting process more challenging.” Geofence warrants could easily expose confidential sources or tip off powerful government institutions that a reporter is investigating them. A single geofence warrant centered on a newsroom, for instance, could reveal everyone who’s visited, from whistleblowers to workers. Even reporters who take precautions, like meeting sources in neutral locations, might not be safe. A geofence warrant could place them within yards of each other in the same parking garage or cafe, revealing their connection. Holding that the Fourth Amendment applies to geofence warrants would prevent some of these abuses. Under the Fourth Amendment, courts must only approve warrants if there’s probable cause, which is unlikely to exist in fishing expeditions targeting journalists to uncover their confidential sources. Why this matters, even after Google’s changes Google took an important step in 2023 by changing how it stores user location data and for how long, making it harder for the government to use geofence warrants. But these protections aren’t foolproof. Other location data collected by Google or other companies could be vulnerable to geofence warrants. As a result, the court’s decision in Chatrie still matters, and journalists may still want to take steps to limit exposure of their location data. The outcome of Chatrie also touches on a deeper Fourth Amendment issue that could reverberate beyond geofence warrants: the “third-party doctrine.” This decades-old legal rule says that people lose their reasonable expectation of privacy once they share information voluntarily with third parties, like a phone company or a bank. The court has limited the third-party doctrine in recent years, most famously in its decision in Carpenter v. United States. But its ruling in Chatrie has the potential to swing the pendulum back toward less privacy. That could impact Fourth Amendment protections for all kinds of data shared with third parties, such as information stored in the cloud or sensitive searches. Every journalist, source, and citizen should be paying attention and demanding greater privacy protections from the courts and from Congress. If privacy is restricted in this case, our First Amendment rights are too. The free press can’t exist in a surveillance state.

47 minutes

GroundUp
Feed icon

Hundreds of homes were damaged by floods in uMshwati in November

Feed icon
GroundUp
CC BY-ND🅭🅯⊜

Hundreds of homes were damaged by floods in uMshwati in November

55 minutes

West Virginia Watch
Feed icon

WASHINGTON — The House Thursday passed four appropriations bills to fund the government and avert a partial shutdown, but Democrats largely objected to spending on the Department of Homeland Security amid aggressive immigration enforcement in communities across the country.  Democrats have pushed for tougher oversight of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency. In addition, members of […]

Feed icon
West Virginia Watch
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

WASHINGTON — The House Thursday passed four appropriations bills to fund the government and avert a partial shutdown, but Democrats largely objected to spending on the Department of Homeland Security amid aggressive immigration enforcement in communities across the country.  Democrats have pushed for tougher oversight of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency. In addition, members of […]

The city of Stockton announced more changes in its executive leadership this week, confirming the departure of two deputy city managers and the arrival of a new one.  2 deputy city managers depart, 1 gets hired in shake up at Stockton City Hall is a story from Stocktonia News, a rigorous and factual newsroom covering Greater Stockton, California. Please consider making a charitable contribution to support our journalism.

Feed icon
Stocktonia News
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

The city of Stockton announced more changes in its executive leadership this week, confirming the departure of two deputy city managers and the arrival of a new one.  2 deputy city managers depart, 1 gets hired in shake up at Stockton City Hall is a story from Stocktonia News, a rigorous and factual newsroom covering Greater Stockton, California. Please consider making a charitable contribution to support our journalism.

Selama satu juta tahun, salah satu kerabat terakhir umat manusia hidup di Flores, NTT. Mengapa mereka punah?

Feed icon
The Conversation
CC BY-ND🅭🅯⊜

Selama satu juta tahun, salah satu kerabat terakhir umat manusia hidup di Flores, NTT. Mengapa mereka punah?

Sous pression américaine, la Chine cherche de nouveaux débouchés. Résultat : ses produits inondent l’Afrique, creusant un déséquilibre commercial record, tandis que les exportations africaines vers Pékin progressent beaucoup plus lentement. Un virage stratégique qui interroge l’avenir industriel du continent.

Feed icon
Radio France Internationale
Attribution+

Sous pression américaine, la Chine cherche de nouveaux débouchés. Résultat : ses produits inondent l’Afrique, creusant un déséquilibre commercial record, tandis que les exportations africaines vers Pékin progressent beaucoup plus lentement. Un virage stratégique qui interroge l’avenir industriel du continent.

Interior Secretary Doug Burgum has invited all seven Colorado River Basin governors and their negotiators to meet in Washington D.C. next Friday as states approach a federal deadline to reach a voluntary agreement to replace river operating guidelines. Nevada Gov. Joe Lombardo and the state’s top river negotiator, Southern Nevada Water Authority General Manager John […]

Feed icon
Utah News Dispatch
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Interior Secretary Doug Burgum has invited all seven Colorado River Basin governors and their negotiators to meet in Washington D.C. next Friday as states approach a federal deadline to reach a voluntary agreement to replace river operating guidelines. Nevada Gov. Joe Lombardo and the state’s top river negotiator, Southern Nevada Water Authority General Manager John […]

1 hour

West Virginia Watch
Feed icon

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s ban on transgender troops came under scrutiny again in federal court Thursday — this time before a three-judge appeals panel considering the merits of the president’s executive order. The policy has been challenged in two major federal cases, one of which the administration appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court’s emergency […]

Feed icon
West Virginia Watch
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s ban on transgender troops came under scrutiny again in federal court Thursday — this time before a three-judge appeals panel considering the merits of the president’s executive order. The policy has been challenged in two major federal cases, one of which the administration appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court’s emergency […]

1 hour

West Virginia Watch
Feed icon

WASHINGTON — The U.S. House failed Thursday to back a resolution curbing President Donald Trump’s military operations abroad, following U.S. intervention to remove Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro. Thursday’s resolution tied at 215-215. If passed, it would have directed “the President to remove United States Armed Forces from Venezuela, unless explicitly authorized by a declaration of war […]

Feed icon
West Virginia Watch
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

WASHINGTON — The U.S. House failed Thursday to back a resolution curbing President Donald Trump’s military operations abroad, following U.S. intervention to remove Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro. Thursday’s resolution tied at 215-215. If passed, it would have directed “the President to remove United States Armed Forces from Venezuela, unless explicitly authorized by a declaration of war […]

Täzelikler
Attribution+

1 hour

Azat Ýewropa we Azatlyk Radiosy
Feed icon

Dünýäniň dürli regionlarynda we Türkmenistanda şu günki bolan we bolup duran soňky wakalar barada gysgaça habarlar.

Feed icon
Azat Ýewropa we Azatlyk Radiosy
Attribution+

Dünýäniň dürli regionlarynda we Türkmenistanda şu günki bolan we bolup duran soňky wakalar barada gysgaça habarlar.

De responsables tribals dels Estats Units an denonciada l’arrestacion de ciutadans autoctòns pels servicis de l’immigracion pendent de recentas operacions dins lo Midwest. Segon Excelsion California, la polemica a esclatat après l’interpelacion, la setmana passada a Minneapòlis, de quatre membres de la tribu oglala lakota pendent una intervencion menada per l’agéncia de Contraròtle de l’Immigracion e de las Doanas (ICE, segon sa sigla en anglés) dins un campament de personas sens domicili. Continua llegint

Feed icon
Jornalet
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

De responsables tribals dels Estats Units an denonciada l’arrestacion de ciutadans autoctòns pels servicis de l’immigracion pendent de recentas operacions dins lo Midwest. Segon Excelsion California, la polemica a esclatat après l’interpelacion, la setmana passada a Minneapòlis, de quatre membres de la tribu oglala lakota pendent una intervencion menada per l’agéncia de Contraròtle de l’Immigracion e de las Doanas (ICE, segon sa sigla en anglés) dins un campament de personas sens domicili. Continua llegint

Dins son editorial, Jornalet propausa de metre l’occitanitat dins lo debat public local per las Municipalas de 2026 dins la part francesa d’Occitania. Jornalet propausèt lo Libre blanc municipal occitan coma aisina per interpelar las listas e los candidats sus lors engatjaments en matèria d’occitan. Aquel trabalh es inspirat del Llibre Blanc de Catalunya Nord de l'associacion culturala dels Angelets de la Terra creada en 2001. Continua llegint

Feed icon
Jornalet
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

Dins son editorial, Jornalet propausa de metre l’occitanitat dins lo debat public local per las Municipalas de 2026 dins la part francesa d’Occitania. Jornalet propausèt lo Libre blanc municipal occitan coma aisina per interpelar las listas e los candidats sus lors engatjaments en matèria d’occitan. Aquel trabalh es inspirat del Llibre Blanc de Catalunya Nord de l'associacion culturala dels Angelets de la Terra creada en 2001. Continua llegint

6a Fablas Chausidas   Fablas en lemosin (bibliotèca del CCOA) ESTUDI DE JOËLLE GINESTET L’Associacion Internacionala d’Estudis Occitans s’es recampada a Lhèida al mes de junh de 2014 per son XIen congrès. Joëlle Ginestet, de l’universitat Tolosa - Joan Jaurés, i a presentada la comunicacion «Fablos, fablo, fablas, faulas…du XIXe siècle: traductions, imitations, transpositions, création». Continua llegint

Feed icon
Jornalet
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

6a Fablas Chausidas   Fablas en lemosin (bibliotèca del CCOA) ESTUDI DE JOËLLE GINESTET L’Associacion Internacionala d’Estudis Occitans s’es recampada a Lhèida al mes de junh de 2014 per son XIen congrès. Joëlle Ginestet, de l’universitat Tolosa - Joan Jaurés, i a presentada la comunicacion «Fablos, fablo, fablas, faulas…du XIXe siècle: traductions, imitations, transpositions, création». Continua llegint

Lo bòsc vertical
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

1 hour

Jornalet
Feed icon

Uèi fa 10 ans que foguèt creat lo Bòsc Vertical de Milan. E cal ara agachar dètz ans endarrièr e veire cossí aquela estructura a afectat d’autres edificis e tanben cossí es la vida dels sieus abitants: son mai aüroses o en melhora santat? En 2007, l’arquitècte italian Stefano Boeri poguèt observar cossí bastissián una vila dins lo desèrt de Dubai. Las bastidas èran de veire, ceramica e metal. Continua llegint

Feed icon
Jornalet
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

Uèi fa 10 ans que foguèt creat lo Bòsc Vertical de Milan. E cal ara agachar dètz ans endarrièr e veire cossí aquela estructura a afectat d’autres edificis e tanben cossí es la vida dels sieus abitants: son mai aüroses o en melhora santat? En 2007, l’arquitècte italian Stefano Boeri poguèt observar cossí bastissián una vila dins lo desèrt de Dubai. Las bastidas èran de veire, ceramica e metal. Continua llegint

Adissiatz mond de Ràdio Lenga d’Òc e adishatz plan. L’armada bèlga en 1940, a anticipat l’invasion alemanda. L’aparelh industrial a fabricat lo material indispensable. Avèm vist pels blindats ambe los caçadors de carri T13 e T15. Costat aviacion los avions bèlgas son pauc nombroses e d’una tecnologia vielhòta. Aquò rai, crean un caçador de reconeissença original, pro performant e ben nomemat: le Renard. Continua llegint

Feed icon
Jornalet
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

Adissiatz mond de Ràdio Lenga d’Òc e adishatz plan. L’armada bèlga en 1940, a anticipat l’invasion alemanda. L’aparelh industrial a fabricat lo material indispensable. Avèm vist pels blindats ambe los caçadors de carri T13 e T15. Costat aviacion los avions bèlgas son pauc nombroses e d’una tecnologia vielhòta. Aquò rai, crean un caçador de reconeissença original, pro performant e ben nomemat: le Renard. Continua llegint

1 hour

West Virginia Watch
Feed icon

WASHINGTON — The Trump administration on Thursday asked a federal judge to deny Arizona Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly’s request to halt efforts within the Defense Department to punish him for appearing in a video where he urged members of the military not to follow illegal orders. Attorneys for the Department of Justice asserted in a 52-page […]

Feed icon
West Virginia Watch
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

WASHINGTON — The Trump administration on Thursday asked a federal judge to deny Arizona Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly’s request to halt efforts within the Defense Department to punish him for appearing in a video where he urged members of the military not to follow illegal orders. Attorneys for the Department of Justice asserted in a 52-page […]

1 hour

Rhode Island Current
Feed icon

WASHINGTON — The House Thursday passed four appropriations bills to fund the government and avert a partial shutdown, but Democrats largely objected to spending on the Department of Homeland Security amid aggressive immigration enforcement in communities across the country.  Democrats have pushed for tougher oversight of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency. In addition, members of […]

Feed icon
Rhode Island Current
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

WASHINGTON — The House Thursday passed four appropriations bills to fund the government and avert a partial shutdown, but Democrats largely objected to spending on the Department of Homeland Security amid aggressive immigration enforcement in communities across the country.  Democrats have pushed for tougher oversight of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency. In addition, members of […]