Putin is urgently hiding his yacht — no more cruises for Kabaeva
According to The Telegraph, the 82-meter Graceful, a yacht repeatedly used by the Kremlin leader — including during a Black Sea trip with Alexander Lukashenko — is now heading to Murmansk along the Norwegian coast under the escort of the Severomorsk anti-submarine warfare ship and the rescue vessel Voevoda.
The yacht's deck has been covered with special anti-drone nets. And the purpose of the voyage is apparently not to evacuate Alina Kabaeva but, according to the newspaper, to move the vessel out of reach of Ukraine's long-range strike capabilities.
⚡️ Zelensky: “Russia will get a response for today’s strike on Kyiv — that is beyond doubt”
“We are for a just peace, a just end to the war, and until there is none — for just responses,” Zelensky said when asked whether there would now be a response targeting Moscow.
He added that if partners had fulfilled their promises on time, Ukraine would not have so many casualties today.
It is likely that this refers to deliveries of air defense systems, which Ukraine is still experiencing shortages of.
Пока депутат Госдумы Бекхан Агаев оказывает помощь российским военным, его брат Батыр получил паспорт Бельгии и участвует в инвестфондах, которые уже вложили в европейскую недвижимость ≈€100 млн.
Расследование @istories_media в рамках международного проекта #OpenLux 🔽
https://t.co/b3epPVP96f
Police go directly for the circuit breaker panel to avoid being filmed
This post will be in English, because there apparently is a lot of interest in what happened to me yesterday.
I'm a libertarian danish privacy activist and former police officer and I have been doing activism for about 15 years.
I have had a bit of time to think about my arrest and the actions of the masked police that broke down my door - with no prior warning.
The prefece to the story is, that I in a kind of roundabout and (I think) humorous way published "my two favorite numbers" by spelling out a 10 diget and a 8 diget number with letters. I didn't tell what they ment, but they where prime minister Mette Frederiksen's social security and phone number.
I also published a screenshot of me trying to interview Mette Frederiksen on what app, asking her about her wanting to ban encryption (CSA) and introducing mass surveillance via granting the police intelligence services access to all sorts of information (medical journals, social media posts, DNA registers ment for research and so on).
That resulted in me being arrested by armed and masked police breaking down my door without me having any chance of opening it for them.
When the two civilian dressed masked men entered the apparentment one of them immediately went for the circuit breaker panel to shut off the power to my router. They then removed my Google Nest cameras - because they knew that the cameras contains local storage.
That way they could avoid having video of the (in my view) illegal arrest. Only the few moments before the power is cut was filmed. There is video of me asking them for the charges - and them refusing to tell me (which is illegal). But I can't access it, because they took the cameras.
I'm not even sure if that is legal. In Denmark it is (nominally) totally legal to film the police. That way it is possible to know what happened and it's not just your word against there's.
Denmark and the West are moving in the wrong direction, and it makes me sad.
💰 Australia has been searching for a lottery winner for an entire year — and they still haven’t come forward to claim their prize of AUD 100 million
The winning ticket was purchased at a small newsagent and internet café in a Sydney suburb. When the jackpot was announced, the shop owners even decorated the store with balloons, expecting to welcome the country’s newest multimillionaire.
But days turned into weeks, weeks into months, and eventually a full year passed. No one showed up.
Now Australians are left wondering what happened. Did the winner forget to check the ticket? Lose it? Or perhaps it belonged to a tourist who has long since left the country?
The lottery operator has kept the ticket details secret and is still waiting for the winner to come forward. There’s still time: under Australian law, lottery prizes can be claimed for up to seven years after the draw.
For comparison, the odds of winning a jackpot like this are roughly 1 in 134 million.
Bulgaria threatens to block the EU’s new sanctions package against Russia
Rumen Radev said Sofia could veto the EU’s 21st sanctions package unless Patriarch Kirill and several measures that could harm Bulgaria’s economy are removed.
According to Radev, the restrictions could affect Lukoil’s refinery operations, spare parts supplies for the Sofia metro, and fertilizer imports.
It seems the EU has once again found a country willing to argue that Russian interests deserve special consideration.
You've likely seen the headlines from bills C-34, C-36, and C-22 in the media.
Each may sound reasonable on their own: protect kids online, modernize privacy, help police catch criminals.
But buried within is an emerging Digital Regulatory Superpower unlike anything Canadians have ever seen.
These bills hand one unelected commission power over what Canadians can say, what stays private, and who the state can watch.
As of today, the Federal Government is rushing to enact massive Internet Surveillance Reform into law without proper debate.
NEW: U.K. advances proposal to force Apple, Google, Signal, & other platforms to scan private content on users’ devices — executives could face prison if they refuse.
For everyone asking how close the Trump Phone is to the HTC U24 Pro, here’s the inside view.
The answer is: very.
The internals line up almost part for part, down to the board layout, cameras, shields, cables, and battery placement. This is what a rebrand looks like when the back cover comes off.