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4 d

BC Ostrich Farm Fined $10K by Tribunal for Not Reporting Avian Influenza Symptoms
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BC Ostrich Farm Fined $10K by Tribunal for Not Reporting Avian Influenza Symptoms

Ostriches eat their feed at the Universal Ostrich Farms in Edgewood, B.C., on May 17, 2025. The Canadian Press/Aaron HemensThe Canada Agricultural Review Tribunal has upheld a $10,000 fine against a B.C.…
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4 d

RAM shortage chaos expands to GPUs, high-capacity SSDs, and even hard drives
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RAM shortage chaos expands to GPUs, high-capacity SSDs, and even hard drives

GPU makers may prioritize more profitable models; large SSDs are harder to find. The GeForce RTX 5070 Ti is one GPU that may become a casualty of the RAM supply crunch. Credit: Andrew Cunningham Big Tech’s…
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4 d

How Some People Get Drunk Without Drinking
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How Some People Get Drunk Without Drinking

There's an extremely rare condition that afflicts at least 100 people around the world called auto-brewery syndrome, or ABS. Scientists aren't sure how many people have ABS largely because of the stigma…
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YubNub News
4 d

Disclosure, deception, and the last days
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Disclosure, deception, and the last days

[View Article at Source]The Tenpenny Files – Official disclosures about unidentified aerial phenomena move from secrecy into public record, raising questions that extend beyond technology and defense.…
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YubNub News
4 d

California’s $1 trillion wealth tax disaster and why New York is next
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California’s $1 trillion wealth tax disaster and why New York is next

[View Article at Source]The Hidden Lightness with Jimmy Hinton – California’s aggressive wealth tax accelerates capital flight, job losses, and economic instability as investors and businesses leave…
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4 d

Dems Allotted $1 Million to Somali Addiction Center Tied to ISIS Sympathizer
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Dems Allotted $1 Million to Somali Addiction Center Tied to ISIS Sympathizer

Democrats reportedly planned to give a million taxpayer dollars to an apparently phony Somali fraud front with a tie to a major Islamic terrorist group.Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) sent a letter to Attorney…
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4 d

Baton Rouge Acquires a Straight-Up Military Surveillance Drone
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Baton Rouge Acquires a Straight-Up Military Surveillance Drone

The Baton Rouge Police Department announced this week that it will begin using a drone designed by military equipment manufacturer Lockheed Martin and Edge Autonomy, making it one of the first local police…
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
4 d

Scientists Figured Out a Standard Measure For Cannabis Use
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Scientists Figured Out a Standard Measure For Cannabis Use

The limit does exist.
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Nostalgia Machine
Nostalgia Machine
4 d

Life in 1940s Florida in Gorgeous Kodachrome
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flashbak.com

Life in 1940s Florida in Gorgeous Kodachrome

Founded in 1949, The Sailor Circus Academy is Sarasota’s “premier youth circus training program” (yes, there are others). Florida is where in the 1940s the Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus wintered. The circus and sideshow industries were headquartered in Sarasota, Tampa and Gibsonton. Photographer Joseph Janney Steinmetz moved to Florida in 1941. He loved the circus. For one of his most memorable assignments, Steinmetz travelled with the circus, photographing the performers’ life on the road. Here we look through his archive of Kodachrome images from 1940s Florida.   Handing out copies of The Evening Independent: St. Petersburg, FloridaMarch 19, 1947 Group portrait of the Sarasota Sun-Debs: Lido Beach, FloridaDate: ca. 1950 Hunting with Texas Jim Mitchell and friends in the Florida EvergladesDate: July 23, 1947 Asolo Theatre: Sarasota, FloridaDate: February 17, 1961   Lazaros Coffee Shop: Tarpon Springs, FloridaDate: April 13, 1947 John M. Gonatos in his curio shop with assistant Niki Vasilikis: Tarpon Springs, Florida, 1942   ‘Seminole mother and children: Brighton Reservation, Florida, 1949’ Identified as Mrs. Lonnie Buck, son Roly and daughter Poly. Nora Carrol and Lois Duncan Steinmetz: Sarasota, FloridaNovember 1949 New Year’s Eve on the the shantyboat Lazy Bones, December 31, 1947 Everglades Lounge at the Clewiston Inn: Clewiston, FloridaJanuary 1948. The mural in the Everglades Lounge was created by J. Clinton Shepherd in the 1940s. Venetian Pool: Coral Gables, FloridaDate: ca. 1945.  The Venetian Pool, located at 2701 De Soto Blvd. in Coral Gables, Florida. National Container Corporation Mill: Jacksonville, Florida  ca. 1945 Laurence A. Kavanaugh painting his work “The Fundamental Triangle” at the Ringling Art School in Sarasota, Florida, 1947 H.G. Champlin at the L&N Freight Depot at Pensacola, Florida 1945 Unidentified young woman picking cottonDate: ca. 1945 Ringling Circus performer Lois Duncan Steinmetz gazing at the Suwannee River Date: 1949 Born in Philadelphia in 1905,  Steinmetz, moved to Sarasota Founded in 1949, in 1941 and passed away there in 1985. . His work is now at the State Archives. The post Life in 1940s Florida in Gorgeous Kodachrome appeared first on Flashbak.
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DeepLinks from the EFF
DeepLinks from the EFF
4 d

Congress Wants To Hand Your Parenting to Big Tech
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Congress Wants To Hand Your Parenting to Big Tech

Lawmakers in Washington are once again focusing on kids, screens, and mental health. But according to Congress, Big Tech is somehow both the problem and the solution. The Senate Commerce Committee held a hearing today on “examining the effect of technology on America’s youth.” Witnesses warned about “addictive” online content, mental health, and kids spending too much time buried in screen. At the center of the debate is a bill from Sens. Ted Cruz (R-TX) and Brian Schatz (D-HI) called the Kids Off Social Media Act (KOSMA), which they say will protect children and “empower parents.”  That’s a reasonable goal, especially at a time when many parents feel overwhelmed and nervous about how much time their kids spend on screens. But while the bill’s press release contains soothing language, KOSMA doesn’t actually give parents more control.  Instead of respecting how most parents guide their kids towards healthy and educational content, KOSMA hands the control panel to Big Tech. That’s right—this bill would take power away from parents, and hand it over to the companies that lawmakers say are the problem.   Kids Under 13 Are Already Banned From Social Media One of the main promises of KOSMA is simple and dramatic: it would ban kids under 13 from social media. Based on the language of bill sponsors, one might think that’s a big change, and that today’s rules let kids wander freely into social media sites. But that’s not the case.    Every major platform already draws the same line: kids under 13 cannot have an account. Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, X, YouTube, Snapchat, Discord, Spotify, and even blogging platforms like WordPress all say essentially the same thing—if you’re under 13, you’re not allowed. That age line has been there for many years, mostly because of how online services comply with a federal privacy law called COPPA.  Of course, everyone knows many kids under 13 are on these sites anyways. The real question is how and why they get access.  Most Social Media Use By Younger Kids Is Family-Mediated  If lawmakers picture under-13 social media use as a bunch of kids lying about their age and sneaking onto apps behind their parents’ backs, they’ve got it wrong. Serious studies that have looked at this all find the opposite: most under-13 use is out in the open, with parents’ knowledge, and often with their direct help.  A large national study published last year in Academic Pediatrics found that 63.8% of under-13s have a social media account, but only 5.4% of them said they were keeping one secret from their parents. That means roughly 90% of kids under 13 who are on social media aren’t hiding it at all. Their parents know. (For kids aged thirteen and over, the “secret account” number is almost as low, at 6.9%.)  Earlier research in the U.S. found the same pattern. In a well-known study of Facebook use by 10-to-14-year-olds, researchers found that about 70% of parents said they actually helped create their child’s account, and between 82% and 95% knew the account existed. Again, this wasn’t kids sneaking around. It was families making a decision together. A 2022 study by the UK’s media regulator Ofcom points in the same direction, finding that up to two-thirds of social media users below the age of thirteen had direct help from a parent or guardian getting onto the platform.  The typical under-13 social media user is not a sneaky kid. It’s a family making a decision together.  KOSMA Forces Platforms To Override Families  This bill doesn’t just set an age rule. It creates a legal duty for platforms to police families. Section 103(b) of the bill is blunt: if a platform knows a user is under 13, it “shall terminate any existing account or profile” belonging to that user. And “knows” doesn’t just mean someone admits their age. The bill defines knowledge to include what is “fairly implied on the basis of objective circumstances”—in other words, what a reasonable person would conclude from how the account is being used. The reality of how services would comply with KOSMA is clear: rather than risk liability for how they should have known a user was under 13, they will require all users to prove their age to ensure that they block anyone under 13.  KOSMA contains no exceptions for parental consent, for family accounts, or for educational or supervised use. The vast majority of people policed by this bill won’t be kids sneaking around—it will be minors who are following their parents’ guidance, and the parents themselves.  Imagine a child using their parent’s YouTube account to watch science videos about how a volcano works. If they were to leave a comment saying, “Cool video—I’ll show this to my 6th grade teacher!” and YouTube becomes aware of the comment, the platform now has clear signals that a child is using that account. It doesn’t matter whether the parent gave permission. Under KOSMA, the company is legally required to act. To avoid violating KOSMA, it would likely  lock, suspend, or terminate the account, or demand proof it belongs to an adult. That proof would likely mean asking for a scan of a government ID, biometric data, or some other form of intrusive verification, all to keep what is essentially a “family” account from being shut down. Violations of KOSMA are enforced by the FTC and state attorneys general. That’s more than enough legal risk to make platforms err on the side of cutting people off. Platforms have no way to remove “just the kid” from a shared account. Their tools are blunt: freeze it, verify it, or delete it. Which means that even when a parent has explicitly approved and supervised their child’s use, KOSMA forces Big Tech to override that family decision. Your Family, Their Algorithms KOSMA doesn’t appoint a neutral referee. Under the law, companies like Google (YouTube), Meta (Facebook and Instagram), TikTok, Spotify, X, and Discord will become the ones who decide whose account survives, whose account gets locked, who has to upload ID, and whose family loses access altogether. They won’t be doing this because they want to—but because Congress is threatening them with legal liability if they don’t.  These companies don’t know your family or your rules. They only know what their algorithms infer. Under KOSMA, those inferences carry the force of law. Rather than parents or teachers, decisions about who can be online, and for what purpose, will be made by corporate compliance teams and automated detection systems.  What Families Lose  This debate isn’t really about TikTok trends or doomscrolling. It’s about all the ordinary, boring, parent-guided uses of the modern internet. It’s about a kid watching “How volcanoes work” on regular YouTube, instead of the stripped-down YouTube Kids. It’s about using a shared Spotify account to listen to music a parent already approves. It’s about piano lessons from a teacher who makes her living from YouTube ads. These aren’t loopholes. They’re how parenting works in the digital age. Parents increasingly filter, supervise, and, usually, decide together with their kids. KOSMA will lead to more locked accounts, and more parents submitting to face scans and ID checks. It will also lead to more power concentrated in the hands of the companies Congress claims to distrust.  What Can Be Done Instead KOSMA also includes separate restrictions on how platforms can use algorithms for users aged 13 to 17. Those raise their own serious questions about speech, privacy, and how online services work, and need debate and scrutiny as well. But they don’t change the core problem here: this bill hands control over children’s online lives to Big Tech. If Congress really wants to help families, it should start with something much simpler and much more effective: strong privacy protections for everyone. Limits on data collection, restrictions on behavioral tracking, and rules that apply to adults as well as kids would do far more to reduce harmful incentives than deputizing companies to guess how old your child is and shut them out. But if lawmakers aren’t ready to do that, they should at least drop KOSMA and start over. A law that treats ordinary parenting as a compliance problem is not protecting families—it’s undermining them. Parents don’t need Big Tech to replace them. They need laws that respect how families actually work.
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