@kresbung Lha lo ngapain di situ paijem? Klo lo nggak suka ya ga usah salah masuk dapur orang juga, aku dengerin toa tiap hari B aja ga mikir aneh2 juga,
Begini doang jadi konten 🥲
Eks Wakil Menteri Luar Negeri RI Dino Patti Djalal, lewat akun IG pribadinya, menyampaikan kritik kepada pemerintah RI yang terkesan menyepelekan udangan Iran ke pemakaman Ayatollah Ali Khameini yang tewas dibunuh Israel pada 28 Februari 2026 lalu.
Pemerintah nggak memenuhi undangan dari Iran dengan mengutus delegasi resmi, dan yang hadir hanya Dubes RI di Teheran. Hal ini, oleh Teheran, dianggap sebagai sikap menyepelekan undangan.
NEW UPDATE OF SIWON'S LEGAL ACTION IN FEBRUARY 2026
Choi Siwon, a singer and actor who is a member Super Junior, has filed a lawsuit against individuals who posted malicious online content targeting him. It has recently been confirmed that he successfully obtained identifying information about the defendants through a U.S. court.
According to reporting by Sisa Journal on July 3, the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California granted Choi Siwon's request on July 2 for pretrial discovery against 10 users of overseas platforms, including X (formerly Twitter) and YouTube.
In May, Choi filed a civil lawsuit with the Seoul Central District Court seeking damages from the 10 individuals for defamation and insult. To identify the defendants so the lawsuit could proceed, he also petitioned the U.S. court to compel X and Google, which operate the platforms, to disclose identifying information such as their names, dates of birth, and addresses.
Choi's legal team argued that, based on the Korean language used in the posts and the account location information, there was no reason to believe any of the users were U.S. citizens or located in the United States, and therefore requested that the discovery application be granted.
The U.S. court approved the request. In particular, the judge cited legal precedent that the First Amendment's free speech protections do not apply to foreign nationals outside U.S. territory. The court found that the posts concerned a resident of South Korea and that there was no evidence the authors were U.S. citizens, meaning there was little risk of infringing First Amendment rights. The judge also determined that the requested disclosure was narrowly limited to information necessary to identify the defendants and was not overly broad.
As a result of the ruling, Choi Siwon can now continue his lawsuit in South Korea. His agency, SM Entertainment, had previously stated that it was collecting evidence of false information and mocking posts to protect its artists and would progressively expand legal action against verified unlawful conduct, suggesting that further legal measures are expected.
🔗https://t.co/i3quD79BQa
#시원 #SIWON #최시원 #CHOISIWON
@siwonchoi