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10 votes
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Fascism for first time founders
16 votes -
Nick Fuentes breaks with US President Donald Trump and MAGA over Jeffrey Epstein
19 votes -
An “anti-government militia” called ‘Veterans on Patrol’ is “targeting” Oklahoma weather radars because they believe the radars control the weather
34 votes -
Social media can support or undermine democracy — it comes down to how it’s designed
11 votes -
What can we learn from Estonia?
12 votes -
Mass tech layoffs from 2022 onward linked to US tax code change by first Donald Trump administration
45 votes -
1-1 political conversations to help mend the political divide
13 votes -
Crypto's new bailout fund: your savings account
24 votes -
Bill Gates to give most of his $200bn fortune to Africa
22 votes -
Donald Trump taps Palantir to create master database on every American
43 votes -
EU is proposing far-reaching data retention laws and is asking for feedback
37 votes -
US President Donald Trump threatens 50% tariffs on EU and 25% penalties on Apple as his trade war intensifies
25 votes -
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau quietly kills rule to shield Americans from data brokers
16 votes -
US Republican Party sneaks decade-long AI regulation ban into spending bill
21 votes -
New Hampshire becomes first state in US to sign Bitcoin reserve bill into law
16 votes -
Donald Trump administration announces plans to shut down the US Energy Star program
40 votes -
At US Social Security, these are the days of the living dead
21 votes -
Denmark planning to hold discussions with member states on the EU Cloud and AI Development Act and the Digital Networks Act when it takes the lead of the EU meetings in July
6 votes -
The Signal clone the Donald Trump administration uses was hacked
21 votes -
Finland restricts use of mobile phones during school day – latest country to act amid evidence of impact on young people, including attention and self-esteem
10 votes -
Elon Musk’s X sues to overturn Minnesota political deepfakes ban
22 votes -
"Is democracy a fad?" Ben Garfinkel’s sobering forecast for democracy in the automation age.
18 votes -
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. intends to launch disease registry tracking autistic people by collecting US private medical records
45 votes -
Debugging Washington D.C. - Why political representatives can seem inconsistent (2014)
2 votes -
Should public and visible allyship on the Internet be demanded?
18 votes -
Sweden has the tanks, Finland has the troops – Nordic countries, hawkish on Russia, pool resources to punch above their weight
20 votes -
US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth said to have shared attack details in second Signal chat with his wife and brother
51 votes -
The Donald Trump administration has replaced covid.gov with a White House website blaming Chinese lab for the virus and attacking Joe Biden's pandemic policies
33 votes -
US says it is now monitoring immigrants' social media for antisemitism
40 votes -
European Commission allegedly issues burner phones to staff travelling to US for fear of espionage
24 votes -
Haiti turns to weaponized drones in fight against gangs
6 votes -
How the Atlantic’s Jeffrey Goldberg got added to the White House Signal group chat
29 votes -
Amazon said to make a bid to buy TikTok in the US
14 votes -
US Department of Government Efficiency plans to rebuild Social Security administration codebase in months, risking benefits and system collapse
25 votes -
The Donald Trump US administration accidentally texted me its war plans
107 votes -
What can a software engineer do to help the US?
The current political climate in the US sucks, and I want to do something about it. I'm a software engineer and I've been feeling lately that I need to apply my skills towards something more...
The current political climate in the US sucks, and I want to do something about it. I'm a software engineer and I've been feeling lately that I need to apply my skills towards something more important and impactful than building a product for a private company. Honestly, I like my current job for many reasons, and it's been mostly quite fulfilling up to this point, but every executive order by Trump feels like a step backwards and makes me less comfortable with not being involved in the opposition.
I'm looking for advice on what I can do to meaningfully contribute to progressive causes and resist the threat that this administration poses to our democracy and society. What kinds of organizations are doing the most in this area, and would be in need of a software engineer? How can building software help with this problem (if at all)?
For context, I live in Massachusetts, so while I feel proud of how my community and local government is pushing back against Trump, I'm also well-aware of how much worse things are, and will get, for people elsewhere.
29 votes -
lobsters admin discusses the impact of the UK Online Safety Act
15 votes -
Internet shutdowns for political and social control at record high in Africa
17 votes -
Denmark's state-run postal service is to end all letter deliveries at the end of 2025 – cites a 90% decline in letter volumes since the start of the century
37 votes -
Resistbot: A chatbot that turns your texts into faxes, postal mail, or emails to your representatives in minutes
18 votes -
US President Donald Trump calls for an end to the Chips Act, redirecting funds to national debt
25 votes -
Sweden and Finland's defence sectors are benefiting from their countries joining NATO – both aim to raise defence spending to between 2.6% and 3% of GDP in the next three years
11 votes -
Denmark is to ban mobile phones in schools and after-school clubs on the recommendation of a government commission
10 votes -
US Democrats want to repeal Section 230?
29 votes -
US President Donald Trump shares bizarre AI vision of what Gaza will look like under his rule
29 votes -
US Department of Housing and Urban Development workers greeted by AI video of Donald Trump licking 'Real King' Elon Musk's (two left) feet
52 votes -
It is no longer safe to move our governments and societies to US clouds
49 votes -
The Palantir guide to saving America's soul
10 votes -
TikTok ban fueled by Israel, not China: US Congressional insiders spill the beans on how the law was passed
17 votes