Society's ChildS


Eye 1

'Blatant violation of privacy laws': FTC complaint filed over Amazon's spying that puts kids at risk

Amazon Echo surveillance
The investigation "revealed that Echo Dot Kids... violates the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA) in many ways. Amazon collects sensitive personal information from kids, including their voice recordings and data gleaned from kids’ viewing, reading, listening, and purchasing habits, and retains it indefinitely."
Amazon, already under fire this year for employing teams of people to listen into Echo voice recordings to help train the system's AI and fill in gaps in its understanding, has now been accused of spying on our kids as well. The company's family-friendly Echo Dot Kids has been accused of listening in when it shouldn't, and even keeping recordings made by the devices after parents have tried to delete them.

Many smart-speaker owners don't realize it," reported the Washington Post this week, "but Amazon keeps a copy of everything Alexa records after it hears its name. Apple's Siri, and until recently Google's Assistant, by default also keep recordings to help train their artificial intelligence."

The smart speaker market is forecast to hit 200 million globally this year and 500 million by 2023. The Echo Dot Kids is an attempt by Amazon to broaden the market still further, in what was claimed and should be a family-friendly, secure and safe way. Apparently not. The Campaign for a Commercial Free Childhood has published the results of an investigation into Echo Dots Kids and is "calling on the FTC to investigate Amazon for this and other blatant violations of children's privacy law ."

The news that Amazon had people actually listening in was disturbing enough, especially with claims that staff had heard crimes and assaults being committed but were powerless to act or trace the source. The extension of this type of privacy breach into our children's bedrooms and private lives will take such angst significantly further.

The investigation "revealed that Echo Dot Kids... violates the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA) in many ways. Amazon collects sensitive personal information from kids, including their voice recordings and data gleaned from kids' viewing, reading, listening, and purchasing habits, and retains it indefinitely."

Comment: Alexa knows far more about you and your family than you realize, yet Amazon is not content with its current methods of home invasion:


Wolf

R. Kelly's lawyers say he can't read; judge reinstates civil sex abuse lawsuit

R Kelly
© Matt Marton, APMusician R. Kelly leaves the Daley Center after a hearing in his child support case Wednesday, May 8, 2019, in Chicago.
A default judgement against R. Kelly has been withdrawn after his lawyers say the singer didn't respond to a lawsuit because he's illiterate.

Cook County Judge Moira Johnson reinstated the civil sex abuse lawsuit Wednesday after Kelly's attorneys, Raed Shalabi and Zaid Abdallah, said the embattled singer didn't respond because he couldn't read the documents, according to the Associated Press and Chicago Sun-Times.

"The Defendant suffers from a learning disability that adversely affects his ability to read, in essence he cannot," Shalabi and Abdallah said in an April 26 filing obtained by the Sun-Times.

Comment: R. Kelly is a vile human being.

See also:


Cut

Judge orders California couple to pay nearly $600k for uprooting 180-year-old oak tree

180-year-old oak tree
© Crystal Simons/Sonoma Land Trust via APThis photo shows the 180-year-old heritage oak tree being excavated from an easement property in Sonoma, Calif.
A judge ordered a Northern California couple this week to pay nearly $600,000 for uprooting an almost 200-year-old oak tree from their property that was protected under a conservation easement.

Peter and Toni Thompson removed the 180-year-old heritage oak tree to move it to another home they built adjacent to the property. More than 3,000 cubic yards of dirt was also removed in the process.

The tree, two others they removed and a dozen others along a previously undisturbed path they bulldozed died, along with surrounding vegetation.

The Sonoma County Superior Judge sided with the Sonoma Land Trust, saying the Thompsons knowingly violated the conservation deal and said they demonstrated "arrogance" and "disregard" over the terms of the easement. The fine of $586,000 will go toward environmental restoration on the property.

Target

What is happening at the Venezuelan embassy is outrageous says on-scene activist Medea Benjamin

Medea Benjamin
© Andrew Harnik/APActivist Medea Benjamin leads a protest outside the Venezuelan Embassy, Washington, D.C.
Right here in Washington, D.C., an unprecedented showdown is unfolding. Venezuelan supporters of self-declared interim president Juan Guaido have been trying to take over the Venezuelan Embassy. This goes against international law, the wishes of the government in control in Venezuela, and the dogged determination of a group of U.S. citizens called the Embassy Protection Collective, who have been living in the Embassy since April 15.

A takeover of the embassy of a sovereign nation whose government holds power and is recognized by the United Nations would be illegal according to the 1961 Vienna Conventions on Diplomatic Relations, which says that diplomatic premises are inviolable and the receiving State must protect the premises against any "intrusion, disturbance of the peace or impairment of its dignity."

This has nothing to do with whether one likes Nicolas Maduro or considers the Venezuelan elections fair. My Saudi friends in Washington, D.C., hate Mohammad bin Salman - a man who has never been elected by anyone - but the US government would never let them take over the Saudi Embassy. Chinese dissidents say that "winners" of Chinese rigged elections - with only the Communist Party allowed to exist - should not be recognized by the rest of world, but they would never get access to the Chinese Embassies. Likewise for dissidents from Egypt, Honduras, Syria, Zambia, Congo, Romania, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, etc. - all countries with highly questionable elections, to put it mildly.

Comment: See also:
Coup flops in Venezuela and Guaido's shadow 'ambassador' flees in failure as DC embassy protectors hold their ground


Dollars

'Great RESPONSIBILTY': New Aussie banknotes fail spell check

aussie dollars
© banknotes.rba.gov.au
Reading the fine print may lead to astounding discoveries. Just look at this Australian who found a typo in the minuscule text printed on the nation's brand new and improved AU$50 note.

The new bill is part of next-generation currency currently being rolled out by the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA). It was first revealed in February and entered circulation in October, with some 46 million printed.

It took the public several months to notice that something was wrong with it. It may be distinctive and hard to counterfeit, as advertised by the RBA, but it also misspells the maiden speech delivered by Edith Cowan, the first Australian female MP. "I stand here today in the unique position of being the first woman in an Australian parliament. It is a great responsibilty," the near-microscopic text over her shoulder reads, missing an "i".

NPC

Cenk Uygur as Deep State puppet: Young Turks host believes Trump's irritation at Bolton proves president is taking orders from Putin

trump
© REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst / REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz
Donald Trump is reportedly irritated that John Bolton failed to deliver a quick and easy victory in Venezuela. But one US journalist says it proves the US president is taking direct orders from Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Last week, Washington's chosen guy to take power in Venezuela, Juan Guaido, tried and failed to stage "a military coup". Senior US officials, like National Security Advisor John Bolton, were first cheering him and celebrating the imminent "liberation" of the Venezuelan people. Then they were struggling to find an explanation for President Nicolas Maduro remaining in power.

The embarrassing flop didn't dissuade Washington from continuing their backing of Guaido, of course. But President Trump is reportedly quite frustrated with not getting what he was promised by Bolton and Co. The Washington Post printed a lengthy piece about it on Wednesday, citing anonymous insiders. The White House is preparing for the long haul now, expecting Maduro to eventually fall under the crippling sanctions imposed by the US on Venezuela, the newspaper said.

Syringe

Against parents' wishes, judge orders Tampa boy with leukemia to resume chemotherapy

Michael Minardi, Joshua McAdams, Taylor Bland-Ball
© TONY MARRERO l TimesAttorney Michael Minardi speaks with reporters Tuesday while flanked by his clients Joshua McAdams, left, and Taylor Bland-Ball, who are trying to convince a judge that they should be able to treat their son’s Noah leukemia with medical marijuana, not chemotherapy.
Standing in front of a row of news cameras, Joshua McAdams had a simple answer when asked how he felt about a judge ordering that his 3-year-old son resume chemotherapy treatment.

"It could have been worse," said the 28-year-old father.

Moments earlier, Hillsborough Circuit Judge Caroline Tesche Arkin ruled Wednesday that Noah McAdams must immediately resume the first phase of chemotherapy to treat his leukemia against the wishes of his parents. Joshua McAdams and Taylor Bland-Ball wanted to use medical marijuana and other natural remedies to treat their son instead of chemotherapy, which experts say is the most effective treatment to keep the child's cancer from returning.

Star of David

Australian, Canadian & German firms pull out of tramway expansion linking Israeli settlements in occupied West Bank

jerusalem light rail, illegal settlements West Bank
© Faiz Abu Rmeleh / Active StillsThe Jerusalem light rail which links Israel’s illegal West Bank colonies is a symbol of oppression to Palestinians.
The Electronic Intifada can exclusively reveal that Canadian engineering giant Bombardier has pulled out of a bid to expand and operate an Israeli tramway linking settlements in the occupied West Bank.

Bombardier is one of several global firms - two others being Australia's Macquarie and Germany's Siemens - to drop out of the tender to build the next phase of the Jerusalem light rail.

The light rail system links settlements to each other and to Jerusalem, helping to entrench and facilitate Israel's colonial expansion in the occupied territory - a war crime.

The tramway is a symbol of oppression for Palestinians.

Last month Israeli business publication Globes reported that investment fund Macquarie was withdrawing its support from the bidding consortium that includes Bombardier and Austrian company Wiener Linien.

According to Globes, the consortium was "looking for an investment fund to replace Australian fund Macquarie."

However, a spokesperson for Macquarie confirmed to The Electronic Intifada on Wednesday that not only had the Australian financier withdrawn, but the entire consortium spearheaded by Bombardier had pulled out altogether.

Comment: Perhaps if the names of corporations who profit from illegal settlements were more widely circulated, the bad publicity and threat of a consumer backlash would deter more investments: UN fails to name and shame firms profiting from illegal settlements in West Bank


Heart - Black

UN calls for Julian Assange's release from UK high-security jail citing human rights violations

assange
© Justin Lane/EPA
UN experts have called for Julian Assange to be released from prison and criticised the British government for breaching his human rights.

The WikiLeaks publisher was jailed for 50 weeks on Wednesday for breaking bail conditions imposed seven years earlier by seeking asylum in the Ecuadorian embassy in London.

The UN working group on arbitrary detention (WGAD) said it was deeply concerned by the "disproportionate sentence" imposed on Assange for violating the terms of his bail, which it described as a "minor violation".

The group has twice previously called for Assange to be freed, after it judged his confinement to the Ecuadorian embassy by the threat of arrest should he leave amounted to arbitrary detention.

Shopping Bag

Auschwitz urges online store to stop selling mini-skirts and tote bags showing images of the infamous Nazi death camp

Auschwitz Redbubble mini-skirt
© Red BubbleThe mini-skirt for sale on Redbubble covered with an image of the Nazi death camp at Auschwitz.
The Auschwitz Memorial criticized an online marketplace for selling mini-skirts and tote bags covered with images of the Nazi death camp where 1.1 million people were murdered.

In messages posted on Twitter, staff who run the memorial highlighted items sold by Redbubble, a US online marketplace for independent designers.

Auschwitz listed the following items which feature photos of the death camp, the most notorious of the sites used by Nazi Germany for the mass murder of Jews and other minorities.
  • A $45 throw cushion with a photo of Auschwitz's train tracks - used to transport hundreds of thousands of victims to their deaths.
  • A $15 tote bag with an image of Auschwitz's electric fence, used to deter escapees, with the German for "Attention! High voltage! Risk of death!" on it.
  • A $40 mini-skirt depicting an image of the main Nazi guardhouse at Auschwitz.