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monh Feds With Massive Conflict of Interest Find Zero Reports About Trump s DC Hotel

Posted: Sun Jan 05, 2025 4:01 pm
by MethrenDoumb
Oxnh Stranger Things 3 Is Like an 8-Hour Summer Blockbuster, Here s Our Non-Spoiler Review
against California enacting its own net neutrality rules. The news, spotted by Ars Technica, means the federal government is letting the state do what it wants when it comes to net neutrality, which is in line with the Biden Administrations promise to reinstate the laws at the federal level. Federal stanley us Communications Commission Acting Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel said in a statement that she is pleased by the turn of events. The California Internet Consumer Protection and Net Neutrality Act was signed into law on Sept. 30, 2018, in response to the FCCs move to repeal net neutrality. Designed to fill the void left by the Ajit P stanley cup ai-led FCC, the law prevents internet service providers from: blocking and slowing lawful traffic; paid prioritizati stanley cups on of service; getting paid for zero-rating some content in a category, but not all content in that category looking at you, AT 038;T ; and not being transparent about network management practices, performance, and commercial terms. Hours after the law went into effect, the Trump-era DOJ filed a lawsuit against California, claiming that states have no jurisdiction over the Internet. As a result, California agreed to not enforce the law in exchange for the DOJ not moving ahead with the lawsuit. In August of last year, the Trump administration resumed its lawsuit against California, but the District of Columbia Circuit ruled that the FCC could not force individual states to uphold the net neutrality repeal鈥攁lthough it did say the FCC Yvpt Elon Says Cage Match With Zuck Will Stream Live on Twitter鈥擨f They Go Through With It
As it stands, police in some states are able to acquire a persons cellphone location history without demonstrating probable cause, and they do so tens of thousands of times each year. But due to the amount of private information contained in these historical records鈥攜ou could tell, for example, if a person visited a therapist or an abortion clinic, or with whom they spent the night鈥攇roups such starbucks stanley cup as the American Civil Liberties Union ACLU argue that, without a warrant, this constitutes an invasi stanley canada ve search and violates a persons Fourth Amendment rights. Sometime after October, SCOTUS will hear arguments in the case of Carpenter v. United States, to which the ACLU is co-counsel. Timothy Carpenter and his accomplices were convicted in 2014 of robbing a string of cellphone stores. Due to his prior convictions for dealing cocaine, and because five of the six robberies were armed, Carpenter received a particularly harsh, 119-year prison sentence. But whether Carpenter is guilty or not is not the issue. Police obtained months worth of cellphone records after the 29-year-old was arrested revealing nearly 13,000 separate points of location data. The records were acquired under a provision of the federal Stored Communications Act, which means that investigators were stanley thermos not required to demonstrate probable cause that a crime was committed鈥攊nstead, it was simply explained to a judge that the records were likely to show Carpenters location at the time of the robberies. And in this case, th