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Ofcom’s Crisis Censorship Protocol Arrives Just as Belfast Erupts
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Ofcom’s Crisis Censorship Protocol Arrives Just as Belfast Erupts

If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. The timing is so perfect it almost looks scripted. On June 8, 2026, a 30-year-old Sudanese asylum seeker named Hadi Alodid stabbed a man named Stephen Ogilvie on Belfast’s Shankill Road, slashing his eyes, face, and back in what witnesses and police described as an attempted beheading. Ogilvie, 44, is in hospital. By the following evening, the Northern Ireland city was on fire. Cars, houses, and a bus were torched. Masked protesters kicked in doors along the Lower Newtownards Road. Riots spread to Portadown, Antrim, and more. Protests erupted in Glasgow, Edinburgh, Southampton, and outside Parliament in London. And on that very same day, June 9, Britain’s speech regulator Ofcom published its finalized “crisis response protocol,” a new set of rules pressuring every major platform in the country to build censorship infrastructure that activates whenever someone at Ofcom or in government decides a “crisis” is happening or about to happen. The protocol was written because of the 2024 Southport riots. If you wanted a clearer illustration of how these powers will be used, you couldn’t commission one. The Official Response Tells You Everything Within hours of the Belfast stabbing, the political class was already running the Southport playbook. PSNI Chief Constable Jon Boutcher warned: “The challenge we face with today’s online toxic nature is that people are incited by people who are faceless and know nothing about this brilliant, vibrant place. Do not be fooled or duped by people online.” First Minister Michelle O’Neill said: “of those people out there who are stoking up tensions in that social media space who are happy to raise tensions, they do not represent us. We are good people and I don’t want to see anybody living in fear.” Justice Minister Naomi Long blamed “bad faith actors” online for stoking tension. UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer called the stabbing “sickening” and made clear there was “no tolerance” for street violence. Notice the pattern. The question of why people are angry gets replaced by the question of who shared the video. The people who are upset about the attack online become the problem and a censorship target. And the regulator that just published new tools for suppressing online speech during exactly this kind of event gets to look prescient instead of opportunistic. The script never changes. The censorship methods, though, keep growing. What the Protocol Actually Does Ofcom’s crisis response protocol, added to its Codes of Practice under the Online Safety Act (OSA), pressures social media platforms, messaging apps, forums, dating services, and essentially any website where humans can talk to other humans to build standing censorship systems for “crisis” situations. The OSA’s Codes aren’t technically mandates. Platforms can theoretically ignore them and “use other effective measures to protect users from illegal content and activity.” This is like saying you don’t have to wear a suit to court. Technically true; inadvisable if you plan on winning. Under the protocol, covered platforms must build systems to identify and respond to spikes in “illegal” content and “content harmful to children” during what Ofcom defines as an “extraordinary situation in which there is a serious threat to public safety in the United Kingdom.” They should deploy a temporary crisis response team “as soon as reasonably practicable if the provider determines that a crisis is occurring or is likely to occur.” They should run post-crisis reviews to evaluate how effective the censorship was. And large platforms should open a dedicated communication channel with law enforcement, so police can phone in their content complaints on a priority line during the crisis. A direct hotline between police and a platform’s moderation desk, activated during civil unrest, is a state-to-delete pipeline. There’s no court order, just a cop calling a content moderator and saying “this one,” and the post vanishes. “Likely to Occur” Is a Loaded Gun Pointed at Every Trending Topic The most dangerous word in the entire framework is “likely.” Platforms don’t need an actual crisis and they don’t even need burning cars. They need a feeling that trouble might be on the way. Ofcom expects them to activate the protocol when a crisis is “likely to occur,” which is a subjective, future-tense judgment call being outsourced to private companies with every financial incentive to over-comply. Think about what this means in the context of Belfast. A video of a stabbing goes viral. People start posting angry reactions. Some of those reactions call for protests. Under this protocol, a platform looking at rising engagement around the Belfast attack could decide that a crisis is “likely,” activate its response team, and start suppressing content before a single car has been set on fire. The censorship arrives before the crisis. By the time anyone asks whether the deleted posts were actually illegal, the moment has passed. And the definition of “crisis” is elastic enough to be meaningless. Ofcom says an “extraordinary situation” can include “local or regional crises” and even “an overseas event.” A protest in one neighborhood. A political incident in another country. Something trending on X that makes a regulator nervous. Ofcom gave itself a rubber stamp that reads “CRISIS” and left the ink bottle open. Who Gets Caught? Three categories of “user-to-user services” are expected to comply: large platforms rated high-risk for “terrorism, hate, harassment, stalking, threats and abuse, and foreign interference;” large platforms “likely to be accessed by children” rated medium-risk for “abuse, hate, and violent content;” and any platform of any size “likely to be accessed by children” rated high-risk for those categories. The OSA covers basically any website where one human can communicate with another. Social media, messaging apps, forums, dating apps, video and photo sharing, online marketplaces, multiplayer games, and AI services whose output can be shared. The exemptions are email, SMS, MMS, and one-to-one voice calls. So the technologies of 1995 are exempt. Everything invented since is in scope. If you wanted to design a system where the government could control what people say during the exact moments when free speech is most essential, you’d build something very close to what Ofcom just published. And you’d probably have the nerve to call it a safety measure, too. If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. The post Ofcom’s Crisis Censorship Protocol Arrives Just as Belfast Erupts appeared first on Reclaim The Net.

Caught Again: Meta Says NSO Still Stalking WhatsApp
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Caught Again: Meta Says NSO Still Stalking WhatsApp

If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. A spyware company that a US court ordered to stay away from WhatsApp went back to targeting its users anyway, according to Meta, which is now asking a federal judge to hold NSO Group in contempt. The Israeli firm behind Pegasus, already blacklisted by the US government, allegedly kept sending malicious links to people through the same encrypted app it was barred from touching. Meta filed the contempt motion on June 8, 2026, in the US District Court for the Northern District of California. We obtained a copy of the motion for you here. The company says NSO crossed a line drawn by a permanent injunction issued on November 12, 2025, which became enforceable on January 28, 2026. That order forbade NSO from using WhatsApp’s systems or building anything that interacts with the platform. The injunction was meant to shut down a surveillance operation that had already reached roughly 1,400 people in 2019, among them journalists and human rights workers. According to Meta, the surveillance never stopped. The company says that in February and April 2026, NSO customers relied on delivery systems run by NSO to push one-click malicious URLs to targets over WhatsApp, with the most recent attack it documented dated April 19, 2026. These were designed to lure someone into tapping a link that carries them off the platform and toward whatever waits on the other side. “We successfully disrupted NSO-linked social engineering attempts, after investigating user reports,” Meta wrote, describing how it traced the activity. “They tried to trick people into clicking on malicious links to drive them to external websites outside of WhatsApp, similar to previously reported 1-click phishing campaigns linked to NSO.” The company added, “We also caught them creating test accounts and groups on WhatsApp, which we took down.” The tactics reveal what surveillance-for-hire firms actually sell. NSO does not need to break WhatsApp’s encryption to reach a target. It needs the target to click. One tap on a crafted link can route someone to systems built to compromise their phone, turning a private messaging app into the opening move of a much wider intrusion. The encryption protecting your messages stays intact while the company works around it completely. NSO’s reach was never limited to one app and the company has said so itself. Its CEO confirmed in court that the firm looks for “vectors, or ways to access the phone” beyond WhatsApp, targeting browsers, operating systems, and other applications. Closing one door into someone’s device does not close the others and a company in the business of selling access will keep looking for whichever one is still open. The US government placed NSO on its Entity List for conduct contrary to national security, a designation that restricts American companies from doing business with it. A firm under that kind of sanction continuing to operate against a federal court order tells you how seriously the spyware trade treats accountability. NSO is fighting the underlying rulings, taking its appeal of the injunction to the Ninth Circuit. The original case ended last year with a jury awarding Meta about $168 million, later cut to roughly $4 million after the judge capped the punitive damages. The injunction itself survived. District Judge Phyllis Hamilton found that NSO’s conduct “causes irreparable harm” and that there was “no dispute that the conduct is ongoing,” language that reads differently now that Meta says the conduct continued past the order that was supposed to end it. The cost of all this lands on the targets. Surveillance-for-hire customers have aimed these tools at journalists, government officials, military personnel, and humanitarian workers, according to public reporting on the industry. The people most likely to end up in the crosshairs are the ones whose work depends on being able to communicate without a government or a paying client reading along. If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. The post Caught Again: Meta Says NSO Still Stalking WhatsApp appeared first on Reclaim The Net.

Your Town for $300M: Surveillance State, On Sale
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Your Town for $300M: Surveillance State, On Sale

This Post is for Paid Supporters Reclaim your digital freedom. Get the latest on censorship and surveillance, and learn how to fight back. SUBSCRIBE Already a supporter? Sign In. (If you’re already logged in but still seeing this, refresh this page to show the post.) The post Your Town for $300M: Surveillance State, On Sale appeared first on Reclaim The Net.

The White House’s AI Deal: Kill State Laws, Demand Your ID
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The White House’s AI Deal: Kill State Laws, Demand Your ID

If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. The White House is dangling something the technology industry has wanted for years: a federal block on state AI laws and the price is a national age verification push that chips away at anonymous internet use. The administration is negotiating a federal preemption of state AI laws in exchange for its support of key tech policy priorities from the Hill, according to Axios, and the bills it would back include the Kids Online Safety Act, the NO FAKES Act, and age verification requirements. Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) is steering the talks. “Senator Blackburn is spearheading the negotiation with the White House to finalize legislative text of an AI preemption package that includes protections for kids, creators, and communities through the Senate version of KOSA, the NO FAKES Act, and age verification requirements,” a Blackburn spokesperson said. The administration kept its own language vague. “The White House continues to proactively engage across government and industry,” a White House official said. Strip away the framing and the age verification piece asks something concrete of you. To prove you are old enough, you upload a government ID, submit to a face scan, or let a service study your behavior closely enough to guess your age. None of those confirms age and nothing else. They confirm identity and they leave a record that outlives the check. The internet that once let you be a username starts to demand your legal name, your face, or your documents. The bigger trade sits underneath the child-safety language. States have been writing their own AI rules, some addressing how companies collect biometric data and automate decisions about residents. Preemption would freeze that, removing one of the few places people have to push back on how these systems handle their data. The maneuvering also signals which bill is fading. A bipartisan proposal from Reps. Jay Obernolte (R-Calif.) and Lori Trahan (D-Mass.) isn’t the likely vehicle for AI policy in this Congress. That bill would preempt state AI laws for three years and require certain developers to address risks before releasing models. If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. The post The White House’s AI Deal: Kill State Laws, Demand Your ID appeared first on Reclaim The Net.

How a Bad AI Camera Hit Put the Wrong Man in a San Diego Jail Cell
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How a Bad AI Camera Hit Put the Wrong Man in a San Diego Jail Cell

If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. Hugo Parra lost nearly a month of his life to a license plate camera that read the situation wrong. He sat in a San Diego jail cell through Thanksgiving, charged with an armed carjacking that happened five miles from where he actually was. A Flock automated license plate reader had pointed police toward his friend’s red Alfa Romeo and they decided that was enough. Flock is the private company whose cameras now line San Diego streets, photographing every passing plate and feeding the data to law enforcement. The pitch from city officials has long been that this kind of mass surveillance pays for itself by producing hard proof of guilt or innocence. The afternoon before Thanksgiving last year, on November 26, 2025, San Diego Police responded to an attempted carjacking in the 2800 block of E Street in Golden Hill. They tried to stop a red Alfa Romeo on Broadway about ten minutes later. The driver fled at speeds reaching 100 miles per hour and officers lost the car near Little Italy without ever reading its plate. They were left with a description of a red Italian sports car with tinted windows and not much else. Then a Flock reader five miles away in Old Town photographed a red Alfa Romeo on the 2200 block of Moore Street. Detective Gary Gonzales, one of the officers who had been chasing the carjacker, got the image and, according to his report, “recognized the vehicle in the image as the vehicle [we] were pursuing due to the red paint and black tinted windows.” There was a problem with the timing that should have ended the case right there. The Old Town photo was taken 23 seconds after officers in Golden Hill tried to stop the fleeing suspect. No car covers five miles of city streets in 23 seconds. “This Flock hit was obviously the wrong car, as it could not have been in both places simultaneously,” said attorney Alex Coolman to the Times of San Diego, who represents Parra and the driver, 23-year-old Ariel Beltran. Police arrested Parra, Beltran, and a third man, Christian Lopez, anyway, pulling them out of a cigar lounge they had walked into after parking the car. The signs that they had the wrong men kept stacking up while the arrest went forward. An officer described one of the men as wearing a white hoodie, while the victim had described the carjacker in a gray one. A search of the car turned up no weapons, though the crime involved a man brandishing a handgun. The route Parra and Beltran had taken to Old Town passed several other Flock cameras that could have confirmed where they came from, and the location data on their phones could have done the same. None of it stopped anything. What police did instead was drive the carjacking victim to Old Town for a curbside identification and the victim picked Parra. “I know, because the jacket and the beard. The skin color,” reads the police report. An identification built on a beard and a jacket that didn’t match became the spine of the case. During his interview, Parra told officers where he had been. “My friend picked me up from my apartment in his red Alfa Romeo, then drove straight to the Cigar Shop right there,” Parra said. “Nothing else happened. I am on probation, and I have a fourth waiver.” That account moved no one. Parra went to Central Jail and stayed nearly a month, missing Thanksgiving and other family events, until the assault with a firearm and evasion charges were dropped. Beltran bailed out the next day and spent it trying to get someone to listen, calling and emailing the detective and even showing up at the Central Division station to clear his name. “It seemed like he was there, but just didn’t care to talk to me,” Beltran said. “The only time he answered was when the case was dismissed, stating I was able to go pick up my phone.” The arrest landed while San Diego keeps expanding the very system that failed here. The city signed a $7 million contract with Flock Systems and Ubicquia in November 2023 to put up streetlight cameras and plate readers, plus another $2 million a year to run them. In December 2025, weeks after Parra’s arrest, the police department moved to grow the program, signing on to pilot a Flock platform called Flock Nova. According to a contract obtained by the Times, the platform lets the cameras capture audio and video and pull data from connected devices. The department told Axios it did not plan to use the new platform. Other cities have walked away from Flock, declining to renew contracts that shared data with federal agencies. San Diego presses ahead. The argument for all of it is that more cameras mean more truth, that surveillance clears the innocent as readily as it catches the guilty. Parra’s month behind bars is the counterargument. The same system that was supposed to prove where he was instead placed him somewhere he never went. Officers trusted the hit over the 23-second impossibility, the missing weapon, the wrong-colored hoodie, and the three men telling them plainly they had come from downtown. The failure shows how easily a documented machine output overrides every human signal around it. Coolman framed the broader problem in an interview. “Mass surveillance without any sense of skepticism, or common sense, is a recipe for disaster,” he said. “Law enforcement will come up with false positives all the time, the broader the surveillance net is cast.” Parra and Beltran filed tort claims in April, arguing that San Diego Police misread its own surveillance system and ignored exculpatory evidence in a rush to judgment. The two are seeking $1.5 million apiece. The city has denied the claims, which means Coolman will soon file a lawsuit for civil rights violations and negligence. San Diego Police and the city attorney’s office declined to comment on pending litigation. If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. The post How a Bad AI Camera Hit Put the Wrong Man in a San Diego Jail Cell appeared first on Reclaim The Net.