Yokohama, Japan 横浜

Mr Mikage (ミスター御影) posted a photo:

Yokohama, Japan 横浜

Found Kodachrome Slide, The Morgan Collection

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Found Kodachrome Slide, The Morgan Collection

Found Photograph

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Found Photograph

handwritten on negative envelope, “Seal Pleasant Week and Party, April 1941"

Yokohama, Japan 横浜

Mr Mikage (ミスター御影) has added a photo to the pool:

Yokohama, Japan 横浜

this isn't happiness.

ART, PHOTOGRAPHY, DESIGN & DISAPPOINTMENT INSTAGRAM ★ ELSEWHERES

Hole in the sky, James Turrell (fotos: Florian Holzherr)


Florian Holzherr © ARoS 2026


Florian Holzherr © ARoS 2026


Florian Holzherr © ARoS 2026

Hole in the sky, James Turrell (fotos: Florian Holzherr)

VK: Voorpagina

Volkskrant.nl biedt het laatste nieuws, opinie en achtergronden

‘Ik zou er altijd voor opblijven. Als Nederland wint, heb je het toch maar mooi gezien’

The Register

Biting the hand that feeds IT — Enterprise Technology News and Analysis

Supreme Court rules cops need a warrant to vacuum up phone location data

The US Supreme Court on Monday ruled that people have a reasonable expectation of privacy with regard to mobile phone geolocation data, a decision privacy advocates have sought for years. The Court's ruling in Chatrie vs. United States [PDF] concluded, "Police officers conducted a Fourth Amendment search when they acquired Chatrie’s location data from Google because an individual has a reasonable expectation of privacy in his cell-phone location information." Police did so through a so-called geofence warrant. The warrant required Google to provide mobile phone Location History collected from within a 150-meter radius of a credit union during the hour around when it was robbed. The Fourth Amendment protects against unreasonable searches and seizures by requiring authorities to obtain a warrant based upon probable cause. The Court's conclusion does not resolve Chatrie's case, which has been remanded to the US Court of Appeals to assess the disputed warrant's validity. But it does make clear that Location History data requires a warrant. And it amplifies the impact of Carpenter v. United States [PDF], a 2018 ruling that limited warrantless searches of cell-site location information (CSLI). In a social media post, Stanford Law School professor Orin Kerr expressed surprise that Justice Kavanaugh joined the majority in the 6-3 decision. "If you're a privacy advocate, Chatrie is just about the best possible outcome you could have expected," said Kerr, who in 2024 argued Chatrie had no Fourth Amendment right to his location data because Chatrie had opted in to Google's Location History. Privacy advocates, who have been asking US courts for at least two decades to affirm that the Fourth Amendment protects location data, are thrilled with the decision. EFF Surveillance Litigation Director Andrew Crocker, who co-authored the EFF amicus brief in the case, said, "We applaud the Supreme Court's decision in Chatrie vs. United States. The Court reaffirmed that you have an expectation of privacy in location data that reveals your movements in the physical world, and that even short-term surveillance of these movements is a search subject to the Fourth Amendment." Crocker said that in recent years police have come to rely on geofence warrants and have violated the privacy of many innocent bystanders. He said while the Court stopped short of disallowing geofence warrants entirely, the EFF intends to push for their elimination in lower courts. The US government argued that the Fourth Amendment didn't apply because Chatrie had opted into sharing his Location History with Google. But the Court found that argument "meritless." "That argument ignores how and why Google users turn on Location History: Google repeatedly prompts users to turn on the service, often warning that devices will not 'work correctly' otherwise … while not disclosing in that prompt how frequently users’ location information would be recorded, how precise it would be, or how it might be given to the government," the Court's majority said. Eden Heilman, legal director of the ACLU of Virginia, told The Register in a statement that the Court's decision confirms that law enforcement cannot use new technology to conduct warrantless surveillance. "We do not lose our right to privacy simply because we use a cellphone," said Heilman. Google in 2021 reported that geofence warrants began taking off around 2018 and by 2020 represented about 25 percent of all US warrants it received. Two years later, in an effort to reduce its role as a law enforcement data dispenser, the search biz announced changes to its handling of location history data by storing the data on-device instead of on its servers. Alas, there's an entire data broker industry that has been selling notionally private data to customers, whether that's the government or businesses. Purchase histories, browsing history data, chatbot logs, and the like continue to be bought and sold. In March, a bipartisan set of US Senators attempted to close the so-called data broker loophole with the introduction of a bill called the Government Surveillance Reform Act. It was designed to reauthorize Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) "with necessary Fourth Amendment protections to block the federal government from buying Americans’ private data from shady sources." Yet events have overtaken the bill. In June, Section 702 of FISA, a law that has allowed the warrantless collection of information, was allowed to expire – a decision that can be read as a vote of no confidence in the current administration. There's now an opportunity to rethink how personal data is collected, stored, and sold. Come August in California, data brokers will be required to process opt-out requests from the state's Data Request and Opt-out Platform (DROP). That's the way forward for privacy: Minimize data collection and storage, and provide a privacy enforcement mechanism. ®

Israel will come to terms with Donald Trump’s Iran deal

Yet the unstable peace may veer off track even without attempts to derail it, writes Dalia Dassa Kaye.


STAMCAFÉ LIVE! Nederland - Marokko

HUP HOLLAND

Het Parool ging op pad om Amsterdammers te vragen naar Nederland - Marokko. De Amsterdammers: Omar, Galid, Mo, Semi, Ilias, Rachid. Heel toevallig hopen zij allemaal dat Marokko wint. Nee, ze hopen dat Nederland verliest. Wij weten wel beter. De Leeuw van de Atlas met z'n verwijfde schoudertasje legt het af tegen de macht van de Rotondeleeuw. Wij Nederlanders laten de Rotondeleeuw niet in z'n hempie staan. Wij laten de Rotondeleeuw JUICHEN. Wij laten de Rotondeleeuw op de rotonde dansen, dronken van geluk, gloeiend van de jenever. Wij staan achter de mannen van Ronald Koeman, een anagram van 'Rotondeleeuw'. We zetten de wekker, we zijn nog wakker, we drinken schizofreen (bier én koffie), we schreeuwen en we juichen en we springen, het liefst op de muziek van de Dikdakkers. En het is niet dat dat Marokko nou zo goed is hè. De beste speler is een rechtsback en rechtsbacks werden vroeger altijd als laatste gekozen met gym. Verder staan die Marokkanen vooral bekend om stelen (van handdoeken, in die belachelijke Afrika Cup-finale, zeg maar de Donald Duck Divisie van de landentoernooien). Marokko verlóór die wedstrijd trouwens van Senegal. Welnu, Nederland tegen Marokko, helemaal geen zin in mocrohoon de komende jaren dus doe maar gewoon WINNEN. We gaan effe een paar uurtjes voorslapen en dan gaan we om 03.00 uur LIVE LIVE LIVE in dit LIVEBLOG. Praat mee, wollah!

Update 22:05 - Snaveltjes toe mensen! Tot straks

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xiffy

Public posts from @xiffy@mastodon.nl

My screen is all covered in dots. The current was back online for half an hour, but then, you guessed it.
So 9 hours no electricity in Rotterdam, train from N. got canceled because disruption of the electricity for the train on the HSL.
Hopefully she can join me in France tomorrow.