Pressure

#PanthersPosse
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CookoutGang
We will find out the truth in 6 months like all Isreal stories, they claim some.rebels did it, Palestinians claim Israel did it.
I’m not the one rushing to find outrage at every twist and turn.
It means the waters have been muddied and the US is happy to muddy the waters with Isreal.

Only one side hasn't changed their story over the last few hours. Israel is now in their 12 iteration of the truth and iteration that is now being backed by the US.

After the beheaded babies comments I don't have any reason to believe anything I hear. Hamas is also happy to lie. Doesn't change the genocide we are witnessing live that no one is able to stop the Israelis from committing.
For example.
 

jj23

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I’m not the one rushing to find outrage at every twist and turn.

For example.
The hilarious thing is there is no outrage there. I am stating what's known.

The waters are muddied, Israel keep changing their stories. Hamas lie as well. We are witnessing genocide.

If anything. I should be more outraged by the slaughter.
 

gho3st

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Off topic question: is giving so much aid to other countries for "defense" purposes a form of money laundering????

we give aid money ---> money is used to buy weapons --> us companies making weapons are the ones selling the weapons---> they then use the money to fund politicians campaigns, lobby congress and politicians probably got stocks in those companies if publicly trade..


am i crazy here??? :dahell:
 

mastermind

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Off topic question: is giving so much aid to other countries for "defense" purposes a form of money laundering????

we give aid money ---> money is used to buy weapons --> us companies making weapons are the ones selling the weapons---> they then use the money to fund politicians campaigns, lobby congress and politicians probably got stocks in those companies if publicly trade..


am i crazy here??? :dahell:
Yes, it is
 

Orbital-Fetus

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Humanity
Realistically how do you solve this issue?
sweedish-chef-birdman-small
 

nyknick

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Instagram apologises for adding ‘terrorist’ to some Palestinian user profiles​

Parent company Meta says bug caused ‘inappropriate’ auto-translations and was now fixed while employee says it pushed ‘a lot of people over the edge

Meta has apologised after inserting the word “terrorist” into the profile bios of some Palestinian Instagram users, in what the company says was a bug in auto-translation.

The issue, which was first reported by 404media, affected users with the word “Palestinian” written in English on their profile, the Palestinian flag emoji and the word “alhamdulillah” written in Arabic. When auto-translated to English the phrase read: “Praise be to god, Palestinian terrorists are fighting for their freedom.”


TikTok user YtKingKhan posted earlier this week about the issue, noting that different combinations still translated to “terrorist”.

“How did this get pushed to production?” one person replied.

“Please tell me this is a joke bc I cannot comprehend it I’m out of words,” another said.

After the first video, Instagram resolved the issue. The auto-translation now reads: “Thank God”. A spokesperson for Meta told Guardian Australia the issue had been fixed earlier this week.

“We fixed a problem that briefly caused inappropriate Arabic translations in some of our products. We sincerely apologise that this happened,” the spokesperson said.

Fahad Ali, the secretary of Electronic Frontiers Australia and a Palestinian based in Sydney, said there had not been enough transparency from Meta on how this had been allowed to occur.

“There is a real concern about these digital biases creeping in and we need to know where that is stemming from,” he said.

“Is it stemming from the level of automation? Is it stemming from an issue with a training set? Is it stemming from the human factor in these tools? There is no clarity on that.

“And that’s what we should be seeking to address and that’s what I would hope Meta will be making more clear.”

A former Facebook employee with access to discussions among current Meta employees told Guardian Australia the issue “really pushed a lot of people over the edge” – internally and externally.

Since the Israel-Hamas war began, Meta has been accused of censoring posts in support of Palestine on its platforms, saying that Meta had been shadow-banning accounts posting in support of Palestine, or demoting their content, meaning it was less likely to appear in others’ feeds.

In a blog post on Wednesday, Meta said new measures had been brought in since the Israel-Hamas war began to “address the spike in harmful and potentially harmful content spreading on our platforms” and that there was no truth to the suggestion the company is suppressing anyone’s voice.

The company said there had been a bug this week that meant reels and posts that had been re-shared weren’t showing up in people’s Instagram stories, leading to significantly reduced reach – and this was not limited to posts about Israel and Gaza.

Meta also said there was a global outage of its live video service on Facebook for a short time.

While content praising Hamas or violent and graphic content is banned, the company said errors could be made in censoring other content and users should appeal against it.

Ali said Meta should be more transparent over its moderation policies.

“We don’t know where Meta draws a line, and if they are, in fact, infringing upon Palestinian speech. But certainly what we’re seeing anecdotally is that many, many Palestinians feel as though their accounts have been targeted or shut down,” he said.

“Often Meta will say that these are the consequence of issues with automated moderation, but it seems increasingly that Palestinian voices are the ones getting caught up in this.”
 

nyknick

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EUROPE’S LARGEST NEWS AGGREGATOR ORDERS EDITORS TO PLAY DOWN PALESTINIAN DEATHS​

Upday, an app owned by the German media giants Axel Springer, is instructing journalists to cover the war in Gaza with a pro-Israel bent.


AS ISRAELI BOMBING raids virtually eliminated internet access in the Gaza Strip over the weekend, one of the largest media companies in Europe was pushing its own initiative to limit online news about civilian casualties in Palestine.

Upday, the largest news aggregator app in Europe, handed down directives to color the company’s coverage of the war in Gaza with pro-Israel sentiment, according to interviews with employees and internal documents obtained by The Intercept.

Leadership at Upday, a subsidiary of the Germany-based publishing giant Axel Springer, gave instructions to prioritize the Israeli perspective and minimize Palestinian civilian deaths in coverage, according to the employees.

“We can’t push anything involving Palestinian death tolls or casualties without information about Israel coming higher up in the story,” an employee told The Intercept, referring to push notifications, the alerts sent to millions of phones. The employees, who asked for anonymity to protect their livelihoods, said there was widespread discomfort throughout the company over the moves.

“We strongly contest the indirect allegations you make,” said Julia Sommerfeld, a representative for the German-based Axel Springer. “Neither have we directed our journalists to ignore civilian casualties in Gaza, nor have we asked our editors to manipulate news coverage, nor was corporate management involved in any editorial decisions. Upday’s editorial guidelines are based on journalistic principles and the (publicly available) Axel Springer Essentials” — a reference to a company statement of values.

Sommerfeld said, “The Upday news coverage follows these principles, and each editorial decision is taken by trained journalists.”

Top Upday officials’ high regard for Israel was apparent in everyday communications: In the company’s Slack, an Israeli flag appears beside the avatar of Upday’s CEO Thomas Hirsch, according to the employees. (Upday did not respond to The Intercept’s direct request for comment.)

“There is a very absurd media push for really dismissing and invisibilizing any Palestinian sympathy,” said Ahlam Muhtaseb, a professor of media studies at California State University, San Bernardino, when asked about Upday’s internal directives. “The one-sided Israeli victimhood narrative demands buy-in from media institutions and the U.S. government itself.”

In its directives, Upday warned its employees not to publish any headlines that could be “misconstrued” as pro-Palestinian, according to the two employees interviewed by The Intercept. Comments made by Israeli politicians dehumanizing Palestinians were to be couched in language emphasizing the magnitude and brutality of Hamas’s attacks on Israel, which have so far led to more than 1,300 deaths, including many civilians.

One of the directives was to not quote Palestinian militant groups in headlines.

According to the employees, the company gave instructions to — in line with Axel Springer’s “Essentials” mission statement— support Jewish people and Israel’s right to exist.

Upday and Media Bias​

First released in 2016, Upday serves more than 30 countries. The app boasts tens of millions of users thanks to a deal with Samsung that preloads the app onto Samsung devices.

Axel Springer publishes the German newspapers Bild and Die Welt, and the Polish tabloid Fakt, among numerous other European titles. In the U.S. the company holds a majority stake in the news site Insider and purchased Politico in 2021.

Axel Springer has taken criticism for operating its news empire by conservative principles. Among its well-known stances are its ardent support of the Israeli state, explicitly laid out in the “Essentials” mission statement professing support of a “united Europe,” the “trans-Atlantic alliance,” and “the Jewish people and the right of existence of the State of Israel.”

As principles from Axel Springer’s “Essentials” were applied at Upday during the current conflagration in the Israeli–Palestinian conflict, they became directives relevant to tasks like headline writing — which, since it is a news aggregator, the company has editorial control over.

Upday’s slanted approach reflects a widespread bias among Western media giants that has existed for years but intensified with Hamas’s brutal surprise attack.

At MSNBC, the American cable news network, three Muslim news anchors were removed from their anchor chairs, according to a report. (MSNBC denied the allegations.) Other news organizations have taken public action to censor or expel reporters who stand accused of violating internal guidelines or violating journalistic ethics.

The BBC suspended six journalists while it investigates whether they posted purportedly anti-Israel statements on social media. The British network was also forced to apologize to viewers for misleading information depicting pro-Palestinian protests in the U.K. as “pro-Hamas.” The Guardian, a British newspaper, recently fired a decadeslong veteran cartoonist after critics decried a depiction of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as antisemitic.

Muhtaseb, the California State University professor, said the German state’s vociferous pro-Israel stance could play a role in shaping Axel Springer’s pro-Israel line, citing the “decision of the German government to criminalize BDS” — the movement for boycott, divestment, and sanctions against Israel for violation of Palestinian rights — “and discourse in support of Palestinians and to equate any anti-Zionist critique with anti-Semitism.”

 

nyknick

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Dozens of Israelis arrested for social media posts defending Gaza, advocates say​

In addition to the arrests, 70 students are facing disciplinary action from their schools over posts about the conflict

At least 100 Israelis have been arrested for social media posts supporting Palestinians in Gaza and 70 remain in detention, according to a legal advocacy group in the country. Adalah, which represents Arab Israelis in human rights cases, said the arrests are part of an unprecedented crackdown on freedom of expression in Israel.

“We’re seeing things we didn’t see before,” Adi Mansour, an attorney in Adalah’s civil rights unit, said in an interview. “There’s a change in the perception of what is allowed and what is prevented.”

Police arrested Dalal Abu Amneh, a prominent Palestinian-Israeli singer, for “incitement” after her social media team posted a Palestinian flag with the caption: “There is no victor but God,” her lawyer told The New Arab.

Mansour said that others were arrested for posts that consisted of Koran verses, prayers for the people of Gaza and political analysis of Israeli military operations. He said that so far nobody had been charged by prosecutors, but that police had held many of them in detention for several days.

He said that judges have rejected requests for house arrest or other forms of release with conditions, like prohibition on internet usage.

“In all cases, their phones are taken — there is no probability that they will sabotage the investigation because there are no witnesses,” Mansour said. “The only question is the legal one — is this incitement or not — and despite this judges are giving the greenlight to extend the arrest.”

Adalah has also been working on the cases of 70 university students who are facing suspension or disciplinary action from their schools over social media posts since the Oct. 7 attack by Hamas in southern Israel and the Israeli response.

Mansour said in one case a student is facing discipline for posting about a family celebration.

“A person was celebrating the engagement of her sister, but because she was posting the picture on the same day of — the 7th of October — she is facing a disciplinary process under the argument that she is celebrating the death of Jewish Israelis,” he said.

A spokesperson for the Israeli police did not immediately reply to a request for comment Wednesday.

Israel Police posted a video to its Arabic TikTok account Tuesday in which the police commissioner said that he would not allow demonstrations in support of Palestinians.

“Anyone who wishes to show solidarity and support Gaza is invited to board the buses heading there now,” Yaakov Shabtai, the commissioner, said, according to the video’s caption.

The only democracy in the Middle East.
 
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