• House Passes Bill to Ban Sharing of Revenge Porn, Sending It to Trump - The New York Times
    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/28/us/politics/house-revenge-porn-bill.html

    The Take It Down Act, which united a coalition of conservative and liberal lawmakers, criminalizes the nonconsensual sharing of sexually explicit images of others and requires companies to remove them.
    Listen to this article · 5:21 min Learn more

    Senator Ted Cruz, Republican of Texas, at a news conference on the Take It Down Act last year. The bill passed both the Senate and the House with strong bipartisan support.Credit...Eric Lee/The New York Times
    Michael GoldCecilia Kang

    By Michael Gold and Cecilia Kang

    Reporting from Washington
    April 28, 2025

    The House on Monday overwhelmingly passed bipartisan legislation to criminalize the nonconsensual sharing of sexually explicit photos and videos of others — including A.I.-generated images known as “deepfakes” — and to mandate that platforms quickly remove them.

    The vote of 409 to 2 cleared the measure for President Trump, who was expected to quickly sign it.

    The legislation, known as the Take It Down Act, aims to crack down on the sharing of material known as “revenge porn,” requiring that social media companies and online platforms remove such images within two days of being notified of them.

    The measure, which brought together an unlikely coalition of conservatives and liberals in both parties, passed the Senate unanimously in February. The support of Mr. Trump, who mentioned it during his joint address to Congress last month, appears to have smoothed its path through Congress.

    The legislation, introduced by Senators Ted Cruz, Republican of Texas, and Amy Klobuchar, Democrat of Minnesota, is the first internet content law to clear Congress since 2018, when lawmakers approved legislation to fight online sex trafficking. And though it focuses on revenge porn and deepfakes, the bill is seen as an important step toward regulating internet companies that have for decades escaped government scrutiny.

    #Internet #Revenge_Porn #Cyberharcèlement #Régulation

  • [Drame du philanthrocapitalisme] The Zuckerbergs Founded Two Bay Area Schools. Now They’re Closing.
    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/24/us/school-closure-zuckerberg-chan.html

    The Primary School opened in 2016, just a couple miles from Facebook’s headquarters. Its mission was to serve as a tuition-free hub where children from low-income families could be educated and have access to health care and social workers under one roof.

    Dr. Priscilla Chan, a pediatrician married to Mark Zuckerberg, the founder of Facebook, worked with Meredith Liu, an educator and friend, to build the school in East Palo Alto, Calif., a diverse town that rarely reaps the benefits of its far wealthier Silicon Valley neighbors.

    They talked about how low-income children were more likely to have experienced trauma early in life, and how that trauma would have lasting effects. The Primary School, its website declared, tried to overcome the systemic racism and poverty that hurts communities of color.

    This week, however, school officials stunned families when they told parents the campus will shutter in the summer of 2026.

    […]

    Mommy, the guy who’s been giving money to our school doesn’t want to give it to us anymore,” he told her.

  • 100 days of DOGE: lots of chaos, not so much efficiency | Reuters
    https://www.reuters.com/world/us/100-days-doge-lots-chaos-not-so-much-efficiency-2025-04-24

    Summary
    • DOGE efforts lead to bottlenecks, longer wait times for public, and brain drain
    • Musk to step back from DOGE, future of cost-cutting uncertain
    • Critics question DOGE’s claimed savings and its lack of transparency

    WASHINGTON, April 24 (Reuters) - At the Social Security Administration, lawyers, statisticians and other high-ranking agency officials are being sent from the Baltimore headquarters to regional offices to replace veteran claims processors who have been fired or taken buyouts from the Trump administration.

    But most of the new arrivals don’t know how to do the job, leading to longer wait times for disabled and elderly Americans who depend on these benefits, according to two people familiar with the situation. Asked about the changes, an SSA official said in an email that reassigned employees “have vast knowledge about our programs and services.”

    At the Internal Revenue Service, the internet has become so patchy since President Donald Trump ordered remote workers back to overcrowded offices that staff are resorting to personal hotspots, crashing their computers at the height of tax processing season, two IRS officials told Reuters. The IRS did not respond to a request for comment.

    Nearly 100 days into what Trump and tech billionaire Elon Muskhave called a mission to make the federal bureaucracy more efficient, Reuters found 20 instances where the staff and funding cuts led to purchasing bottlenecks and increased costs; paralysis in decision-making; longer public wait times; higher-paid civil servants filling in menial jobs, and a brain drain of scientific and technological talent.

    “DOGE is not a serious exercise,” said Jessica Riedl, a fellow at the Manhattan Institute, a fiscally conservative think tank that supports streamlining government. She estimates DOGE has only saved $5 billion to date, and believes it will end up costing more than it saves.
    The examples - previously unreported - span 14 government agencies and were described in Reuters interviews with three dozen federal workers, union representatives and governance experts.
    Although these accounts do not provide a comprehensive picture of the project by Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency to drastically cut the cost and size of the federal bureaucracy, they do reveal collateral damage resulting from DOGE’s efforts to make the sprawling federal bureaucracy more efficient.

    In response to questions about the impact of DOGE’s cuts on government efficiency, White House spokesman Harrison Fields said in a statement that Musk’s team “has already modernized government technology, prevented fraud, streamlined processes, and identified billions of dollars in savings for American taxpayers.”

    Fields did not offer examples of improvements to government computer systems or workforce efficiency.

    SAVING BILLIONS
    Musk confirmed on Tuesday he will step back next month from his role overseeing DOGE. His 130-day mandate as a special government employee was set to expire at the end of May. He said he will continue to help Trump overhaul the government, but not full-time. His reduced role leaves DOGE’s future in doubt, but governance experts said they believe the cost-cutting will continue.
    Musk and his lieutenants have to date provided little concrete evidence about how the government is operating more efficiently as a result of the mass layoffs and terminated government contracts.
    DOGE teams that have burrowed into a swath of government agencies and their computer systems operate in great secrecy, dozens of government officials have told Reuters.

    A DOGE website that gives regular updates on what it claims it has saved U.S. taxpayers - $160 billion to date - has been riddled with errors and corrections.

    The White House provided Reuters with examples of cost savings including: the uncovering of more than $630 million in fraudulent loans made by the Small Business Administration to applicants over the age of 115 and under the age of 11 in 2020-2021; $382 million in fraudulent unemployment payments by the Labor Department since 2020; and trimming $18 million in leasing costs at the Environmental Protection Agency by moving staff out of a building in Washington.

    Reuters was unable to independently verify those claims.

    DOGE did not respond to requests for comment. In an interview with Fox News’ Bret Baier on March 27, Musk said his team is careful how it makes cuts, admits to and fixes errors, and has discovered “astonishing” amounts of waste and fraud.

    CANNOT BUY DRY ICE
    In its drive to cut costs, DOGE says it has canceled almost 500,000 government credit cards. It has placed a $1 limit on many others, and centralized decision making within some agency headquarters. That means managers in some regional offices can’t buy basic supplies.
    At one center at the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, it took a scientist a month to get authorization to buy $200 of dry ice to preserve urine samples, a purchase usually made at a local supermarket. Because the administration has barred many employees from making purchases, a colleague in another regional office who still has a government credit card paid for the dry ice, but it had to be shipped to the lab - at an additional cost of $100, according to a source familiar with the matter.

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which oversees NIOSH, did not respond to a request for comment.

    DOGE and the White House have also banned many agencies from communicating with outside vendors as they halt thousands of federal contracts.

    One casualty of the ban: a nearly half-a-million dollar chemical analysis instrument at a CDC facility in Cincinnati, which has sat idle for months because scientists can’t schedule training with the vendor to start using the machine, according to a person familiar with the situation.

    The CDC did not respond to a request for comment.

    At the Social Security Administration, in a four-day period in the first week of March, computer systems crashed 10 times. Because a quarter of the agency’s IT staff have quit or been fired, it’s taking longer to get the systems online again, disrupting the processing of claims, one IT worker told Reuters.

    Few dispute the SSA’s computer systems are old, often crash and need updating. Musk told Baier the agency’s computer systems are “failing”, and “we’re fixing it.”

    HUMANITARIAN AID CUT
    Since its founding on Trump’s first day in the White House, DOGE has largely shut down the U.S. Agency for International Development, which provides aid to the world’s needy, canceling more than 80 percent of its humanitarian programs. Almost all of the agency’s employees will be fired by September, all of its overseas offices shut, with some functions absorbed into the State Department.
    At home, the government overhaul has resulted in the firing, resignations and early retirements of 260,000 civil servants, according to a Reuters tally.

    Over 20,000 probationary workers - recently hired or recently reassigned employees - were fired in February. After court rulings they were reinstated but most were sent home on full pay. Most are now being fired again after further court decisions.

    Trump and Musk have said the U.S. government is beset by fraud and waste. Few civil servants and governance experts dispute efficiencies can be made, but say there are already people inside the federal bureaucracy trying to save taxpayer dollars. Yet some of these offices have been targeted for cuts by DOGE.

    In January, Trump fired 17 inspectors general, whose mission as government watchdogs includes reducing waste and fraud.
    Christi Grimm, who was fired as the Department of Health and Human Services inspector general, told Reuters she had identified for expected recovery $14.5 billion - “cold hard cash expected to come back to the U.S. Treasury” - over three years from audits and fraud investigations.

    Last month, DOGE eliminated one of the few government units charged with streamlining technology across the federal government, a 90-member team known as 18-F.

    Waldo Jaquith, who worked for 18F between 2016 and 2020, said the team had saved the Pentagon $500 million during one three-day project alone after discovering two departments were unwittingly doing the same work.

    Reuters was not able to independently verify that figure.

    “18F worked just how Musk and his team pretend that they want government to work. But when his team found it, they destroyed it,” Jaquith said.
    18F was deemed “non-critical” by Thomas Shedd, a Trump appointee at the General Services Administration, in an email to staff last month.

    • The errors and obfuscations underlying DOGE’s claims of savings are well documented. Less known are the costs Mr. Musk incurred by taking what Mr. Trump called a “hatchet” to government and the resulting firings, agency lockouts and building seizures that mostly wound up in court.

      The Partnership for Public Service, a nonprofit organization that studies the federal work force, has used budget figures to produce a rough estimate that firings, re-hirings, lost productivity and paid leave of thousands of workers will cost upward of $135 billion this fiscal year. At the Internal Revenue Service, a DOGE-driven exodus of 22,000 employees would cost about $8.5 billion in revenue in 2026 alone, according to figures from the Budget Lab at Yale University. The total number of departures is expected to be as many as 32,000.

      Neither of these estimates includes the cost to taxpayers of defending DOGE’s moves in court. Of about 200 lawsuits and appeals related to Mr. Trump’s agenda, at least 30 implicate the department.

      Not only is Musk vastly overinflating the money he has saved, he is not accounting for the exponentially larger waste that he is creating,” said Max Stier, the chief executive of the Partnership for Public Service.

      https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/24/us/politics/musk-cuts.html?unlocked_article_code=1.CE8.tiEd.CGCV7RMNn_DP&smid=nytcore-i

  • Muhammad Shehada on X: “Autopsies prove Israel executed the paramedics with direct gunshots to the head, chest &/or back before burying them in a mass grave & LYING about it Israel shot each multiple times at point blank despite wearing clear uniforms, & driving in ambulances with sirens & lights on! https://t.co/x9H5D4QuyD” / X

    A propos des ambulanciers assassinés à Gaza.

    Autopsies prove Israel executed the paramedics with direct gunshots to the head, chest &/or back before burying them in a mass grave & LYING about it

    Israel shot each multiple times at point blank despite wearing clear uniforms, & driving in ambulances with sirens & lights on!

    Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/15/world/middleeast/gaza-medics-autopsies-israel.html

  • Trump Waved Off Israeli Strike After Divisions Emerged in His Administration
    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/16/us/politics/trump-israel-iran-nuclear.html

    Israeli officials had recently developed plans to attack Iranian nuclear sites in May. They were prepared to carry them out, and at times were optimistic that the United States would sign off. The goal of the proposals, according to officials briefed on them, was to set back Tehran’s ability to develop a nuclear weapon by a year or more.

    Almost all of the plans would have required U.S. help not just to defend Israel from Iranian retaliation, but also to ensure that an Israeli attack was successful, making the United States a central part of the attack itself.

    For now, Mr. Trump has chosen diplomacy over military action. In his first term, he tore up the Iran nuclear deal negotiated by the Obama administration. But in his second term, eager to avoid being sucked into another war in the Middle East, he has opened negotiations with Tehran, giving it a deadline of just a few months to negotiate a deal over its nuclear program.

  • Trump takes aim at a key Cuban export: Its worldwide medical missions | WLRN
    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/14/world/americas/trump-cuba-medical-missions-doctors.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSo

    The Trump administration reversed moves made by the Biden administration, returning Cuba to the list of state sponsors of terrorism, which limits its ability to do business around the world, and restoring the right of Americans to sue over property confiscated on the island decades ago.

    Cuban officials have had their visas yanked and the administration has prohibited business transactions with companies controlled by Cuba’s military, intelligence and security services, which manage vital interests such as tourism and imports.

    Republican administrations have tried to target Cuba’s medical missions before, but Mr. Trump is taking a harder line: In February, for the first time, the U.S. government said it would withdraw the travel visas of officials in countries that host the medical brigades.

  • Blue Origin’s First All-Female Spaceflight Stunt - The New York Times
    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/14/arts/blue-origin-lauren-sanchez-katy-perry.html

    Blue Origin’s all-female flight proves that women are now free to enjoy capitalism’s most extravagant spoils alongside rich men.

    Bezos’ company has promoted this as the “first all-woman spaceflight” since the Soviet Union cosmonaut Valentina Tereshkova became the first woman in space when she made a solo trip to the Earth’s orbit in 1963. Tereshkova spent three days in space, circled the Earth 48 times and landed an international celebrity and feminist icon. The Blue Origin flight attempted to reverse-engineer that historic moment: By taking established celebrities and activists and launching them into space, it applied a feminist sheen to Blue Origin and made its activities feel socially relevant by association.

    Blue Origin pitched the flight as a gambit to encourage girls to pursue STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) careers and to, as Sánchez put it in an Elle cover story on the trip, inspire “the next generation of explorers.” But the flight was recreational, and its passengers are not space professionals but space tourists. Their central mission was to experience weightlessness, view the Earth from above, and livestream it. They are like payload specialists with a specialty in marketing private rockets. If the flight proves anything, it is that women are now free to enjoy capitalism’s most decadent spoils alongside the world’s wealthiest men.

    Though women remain severely underrepresented in the aerospace field worldwide, they do regularly escape the Earth’s atmosphere. More than 100 have gone to space since Sally Ride became the first American woman to do so in 1983. If an all-women spaceflight were chartered by, say, NASA, it might represent the culmination of many decades of serious investment in female astronauts. (In 2019, NASA was embarrassingly forced to scuttle an all-women spacewalk when it realized it did not have enough suits that fit them.) An all-women Blue Origin spaceflight signifies only that several women have amassed the social capital to be friends with Lauren Sánchez.

    Sánchez arranged for her favorite fashion designers to craft the mission’s suits, leveraging it into yet another branding opportunity. Souvenirs of the flight sold on Blue Origin’s website feature a kind of yassified shuttle patch design. It includes a shooting-star microphone representing King, an exploding firework representing Perry and a fly representing Sánchez’s 2024 children’s book about the adventures of a dyslexic insect. Each woman was encouraged to use her four minutes of weightlessness to practice a different in-flight activity tailored to her interests. Nguyen planned to use them to conduct two vanishingly brief science experiments, one of them related to menstruation, while Perry pledged to “put the ‘ass’ in astronaut.”

    The message is that a little girl can grow up to be whatever she wishes: a rocket scientist or a pop star, a television journalist or a billionaire’s fiancée who is empowered to pursue her various ambitions and whims in the face of tremendous costs. In each case, she stands to win a free trip to space. She can have it all, including a family back on Earth. “Guess what?” Sánchez told Elle. “Moms go to space.” (Fisher, the first mother in space, went there in 1984.)

    The whole thing reminds me of the advice Sheryl Sandberg passed on to women in “Lean In,” her memoir of scaling the corporate ladder in the technology industry. When Eric Schmidt, then the chief executive of Google, offered Sandberg a position that did not align with her own professional goals, he told her: “If you’re offered a seat on a rocket ship, don’t ask what seat. Just get on.” It is the proximity to power that matters, not the goal of the mission itself.

    As Blue Origin loudly celebrates women as consumers of private space travel, it has elided the experiences of professional female astronauts — including the little details that humanized their own flights. Elle suggested that the Blue Origin flight “will be the first time anybody went to space with their hair and makeup done.” As Perry put it, “Space is going to finally be glam.” But in fact, female astronauts have long brought their beauty work into space with them. Life magazine published an image of Tereshkova at the hairdresser, explaining that she was “primping for orbit.” The astronaut Rhea Seddon, who first flew to space in 1985, took NASA-tested cosmetics onboard, knowing that she would be heavily photographed and the images widely circulated.

    #Espace #Tourisme #Féminisme_de_pacotille #Jeff_Bezos #Blue_Origin #Amazon

  • Trump Signs Orders Punishing Those Who Opposed His 2020 Election Lies
    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/09/us/politics/trump-executive-orders-law-firm-krebs.html

    The executive orders reflected Mr. Trump’s desire for political payback. Mr. Trump has fixated on punishing — among others — elected Republicans and officials in his administration who have defied him or later opposed him.

    Mr. Trump has also sought to rewrite the history of his defeat in 2020, and has continued to repeat his lie that the election was stolen from him. Mr. Krebs, leading the agency tasked with protecting election machinery from foreign interference, shot down many of Mr. Trump’s false claims of widespread fraud, and Mr. Trump fired Mr. Krebs days after his loss. Mr. Trump has continued to harbor deep resentments against the agency.

    “This guy, Krebs, was saying ‘oh the election was great,’” Mr. Trump said Wednesday as he signed the order. He added, of Mr. Krebs,:“He’s the fraud. He’s a disgrace.”

  • menteurs et assassins depuis 1948

    Video Shows Aid Workers Killed in Gaza Under Gunfire Barrage, With Ambulance Lights On - The New York Times
    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/04/world/middleeast/gaza-israel-aid-workers-deaths-video.html

    The video appears to contradict Israel’s version of the incident, which described the vehicles as “advancing suspiciously” without headlights or emergency signals.

    #sionisme

  • Prosecutors to Seek Death Penalty for Luigi Mangione, Bondi Says - The New York Times
    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/01/us/politics/luigi-mangione-death-penalty.html

    On est là franchement dans quelque chose de très intéressant. Mis à part le fait qu’il faut interdire la peine de mort, il y a un hiatus entre la perception de l’affaire par une large partie du public, pour qui Luigi Mangione est une sorte de « Robin des bois » qui se venge de tout ce que l’Amérique endure de la part des compagnies d’assurance, et de l’autre la procureure générale des États-Unis pour qui c’est un « innocent ».
    La quantité de mort en jeu d’entre pas dans la formule (sinon, Trump avec les milliers de morts qui interviennent et vont intervenir après sa décision de supprimer les crédits de l’USAID et aujourd’hui de licencier 10 000 personnes dans le département de la santé serait largement sur la sellette). Mais cela nous dit quelque chose de la nature idéologique des débats actuels.
    Qu’il faille condamner Luigi Mangione ne fait pas de doute (sinon, on revient à la loi du talion). Mais les arguments échangés sont d’une autre nature : cela s’appelle la justice aveugle devant les puissants.

    Attorney General Pam Bondi announced on Tuesday that she would seek the death penalty for Luigi Mangione, who was charged with murdering the UnitedHealthcare executive Brian Thompson in front of a hotel in midtown Manhattan last December.

    Ms. Bondi said her decision came after “careful consideration” and was in line with President Trump’s executive order directing the Justice Department to renew use of the death penalty requests after President Biden declared a moratorium on capital punishment for most federal offenders in 2021.

    The move, which was widely anticipated, represented the intersection of Mr. Trump’s anti-crime agenda with a horrific, headline-grabbing murder case — the killing in broad daylight of a 50-year-old health care executive targeted because Mr. Mangione saw him as a symbol of callous corporate greed, according to prosecutors.

    “Luigi Mangione’s murder of Brian Thompson — an innocent man and father of two young children — was a premeditated, coldblooded assassination that shocked America,” Ms. Bondi said in a statement.