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submitted 2 years ago by MonyetAdmin to c/cafe
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submitted 58 minutes ago by alapakala@quokk.au to c/world@quokk.au

There have been more than a dozen cases around the country where police use Flock to obsessively and illegally stalk people.
🗃️

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submitted 1 hour ago by veggibles@lemmy.wtf to c/world@quokk.au
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Scary indeed. (lemmy.world)
submitted 1 hour ago by Dis32@lemmy.world to c/memes@lemmy.ml
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Scary indeed. (lemmy.world)
submitted 1 hour ago by cm0002@literature.cafe to c/memes@sopuli.xyz
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Playtest My Game (hexbear.net)
submitted 43 minutes ago by bingus_bongus@hexbear.net to c/games@hexbear.net

https://soft-cactus.itch.io/lunokhod

I have been working on a small game for the last few months. It is ready for playtesting. I am trying to make one game every few months to improve my skills.

Unfortunately I think I have hit a bit of a wall with this one, the gameplay is a bit too linear and simple to be very fun. That's a signal in itself and will inform the design of my next game. In the meantime, I need to finish polishing this one.

Please play with a critical eye and let me know what issues the game has.

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submitted 48 minutes ago by bashghost2600@lemmy.world to c/privacy@lemmy.ml

That question came up to me, when recently working on one project I needed to restart my PC several times. And therefore, while I used 3-5 web apps I needed to log back in to each one of them again, after each restart. And I started wondering if privacy-wise that auto-clear feature is worth it or not? Has anyone maybe tested that?

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submitted 1 hour ago by yogthos@lemmy.ml to c/memes@lemmy.ml
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cross-posted from: https://scribe.disroot.org/post/9448083

Archived link

Sino-Canadian trade is becoming increasingly intertwined with national-security issues.

...

A bilateral law-enforcement working group is meeting in Beijing this week to discuss enhanced police co-operation in combating transnational crimes. The tête-à-tête comes in the wake of a memorandum of understanding between the RCMP and Beijing’s Ministry of Public Security. It was signed in January, but the terms remain secret.

If you’re confused about how China has so quickly evolved from being Canada’s biggest security threat [PM Mark Carney said in April 2025 that China is one of the largest threats with respect to foreign interference in Canada and is an emerging threat in the Arctic] to its trusted ally in information sharing, you’re not alone.

...

Now consider this: A pair of confidential intelligence reports from the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada, or FinTRAC, previously warned the federal government of financial crime risks related to China, including through trade.

FinTRAC, Canada’s anti-money laundering watchdog, prepared the strategic intelligence backgrounders months before Prime Minister Mark Carney’s trip to China in January.

Heavily redacted versions of those documents were obtained by Ottawa-based researcher Ken Rubin through a request made under the Access to Information Act and then shared with The Globe and Mail. The details that managed to escape government censorship prompt one to question if Canada is disregarding its own intelligence.

One confidential report, titled Canada’s Cross-Border Money Laundering and Threat Financing Risks, was prepared in August of 2025. It states, in part, that “professional money launderers use international trade transactions to launder and move the proceeds of crime between jurisdictions and currencies.”

Although FinTRAC does not provide its own estimate for Canada, trade-based money laundering is a global problem estimated to be worth as much as US$1-trillion a year. It taints supply chains and compromises the integrity of international trade as cleansed criminal proceeds re-enter countries’ economies.

“These schemes may involve falsified customs, shipping and trade finance documents that misrepresent the quality or type of goods shipped and move value between jurisdictions,” states the FinTRAC report.

China, India among countries active in foreign interference and spying in Canada, CSIS says

China is Canada’s second-largest trading partner after the United States, with two-way goods and services trade totalling $130.9-billion in 2024.

...

FinTRAC has identified Canadian examples of what is known as the Black Market Peso Exchange, a form of trade-based money laundering that facilitates foreign-currency conversions using underground banking schemes, involving Latin America, Hong Kong, China and the U.S., according to its intelligence report.

The Black Market Peso Exchange remains a favourite tool of narcotics traffickers. The illegal drug trade is just one of the issues that is expected to be discussed by Canadian and Chinese law-enforcement officials in Beijing this week.

Drug trafficking is Canada’s largest money-laundering threat, according to FinTRAC, which also noted that illicit monies end up contaminating the property market.

“FinTRAC has also identified incoming electronic funds transfers structured below currency restrictions imposed by other countries, such as China and Iran, and sent to individuals in Canada, which are then invested in real estate,” its report said.

...

FinTRAC also warns that underground banking is a vector for foreign interference and espionage by the Chinese Communist Party. Those activities not only harm members of the Chinese diaspora living in Canada but also pose a national-security threat.

...

The second intelligence report, titled Threats to Security: China-linked Professional Money Laundering via Underground Banking, is dated July, 2025. It states that China’s currency controls, which limit individuals from transferring out of China the equivalent of US$50,000 a year, are driving demand for underground banking.

The business model of China-linked professional money-laundering organizations has “two distinct customer groups,” including individuals trying to move capital out of China and transnational criminal groups sending dirty money abroad, according to the report.

...

FinTRAC notes that “China-linked money launderers are squeezing out Mexican and Colombian rivals, and undercutting them on price by more than half by levying fees on both sides of the transaction.” That, in turn, allows transnational criminal organizations to pocket more money, the report said.

FinTRAC’s report also notes that suspected money mules receiving large cash deposits or wire transfers from parties located in China and Hong Kong end up funnelling those funds into bank drafts payable to individuals or entities in sectors including casinos, real estate, securities, automotive and the legal profession.

Additionally, the regulator identified the use of Chinese mobile banking applications, such as Alipay and WeChat Pay, by underground banking networks. Those apps, however, sometimes intersect with Canadian payment processors, providing a glimpse into the problem, the report added.

Mr. Wang, China’s Foreign Affairs Minister, recently said boosting bilateral trade depends on Canada having “strategic independence” from the U.S.

Canada’s own financial intelligence suggests Ottawa should take that approach with Beijing, too.

...

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Archived link

Four original case studies released today highlight Indigenous-led research with implications for Canada’s national priorities—from expanding and interconnecting the electricity grid, to evaluating major resource development projects.

"This year’s analyses reframe climate policy through Indigenous ways of knowing and relationships to the land, while offering guidance on energy systems, infrastructure, climate knowledge, and Indigenous rights," says Maria Shallard, Director for Indigenous Research at the Canadian Climate Institute.

The research by First Nations and Métis scholars and authors, presented by the Canadian Climate Institute and the Centre for Indigenous Environmental Resources (CIER), is part of the Indigenous Perspectives program. Now in its sixth year, the annual program profiles Indigenous expertise and solutions in climate policy.

...

Case study authors will discuss their work in two online roundtables happening on June 22 and 23. The first roundtable will focus on Indigenous leadership in the energy transition with authors Raylene Whitford, Frank Busch and Kwatuuma Cole Sayers. The second roundtable will focus on Indigenous climate policy beyond Western metrics with authors Tara Marsden/Naxginkw and Conor Kerr.

Those interested in attending the 2026 Indigenous Perspectives roundtables on June 22 and 23 can register at the linked site and read this year’s case studies online.

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submitted 57 minutes ago by Scotty@scribe.disroot.org to c/canada@lemmy.ca

A Canadian court has ordered the government of Iran to pay $200 million to a British Columbia mechanic who was branded an ‘infidel’ and tortured for criticizing the Islamic regime.

...

The Ontario Superior Court of Justice awarded $100 million in compensation and another $100 million in punitive damages to Zahed Haftlang.

The court said Haftlang, an Iranian refugee who fled to Canada in 2001, merited the unusually large sum because of the “years of mistreatment” and “lifetime of mental trauma” he suffered.

Justice Lee Akazaki wrote that while a single judgment might not deter Iran’s abuses, the “accumulation of damage awards, often executed against Iran’s frozen foreign assets, has some effect.”

Although foreign governments are generally immune from Canada’s civil courts, Justice Akazaki ruled that Iran’s torture of Haftlang was motivated by the regime’s politics, religion and ideology.

...

As a result, it amounted to “terrorist activity” akin to staging attacks on foreign soil intended to silence opposition to the regime, so Iran did not benefit from state immunity, the judge ruled.

“Iran is therefore liable to Mr. Haftlang and answerable to a civil judgment by this court for his loss caused by the acts committed against him,” according to the 13-page decision handed down on May 29.

The decision is the latest against Iran by a Canadian court under the Justice for Victims of Terrorism Act, which allows those impacted by terrorism to sue state sponsors of the groups that harmed them.

...

It marked the first time a court in Canada had found that terrorist activity included Iran’s atrocities against its own citizens, and could potentially open the door for many more such lawsuits.

...

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submitted 1 hour ago by git@hexbear.net to c/news@hexbear.net
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submitted 2 hours ago by Zapados@sh.itjust.works to c/world@quokk.au
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submitted 9 minutes ago by WizardGed@lemmy.ca to c/canada@lemmy.ca

June 10, 202612:07 PM EDT:

WASHINGTON, June 10 (Reuters) - U.S. President ​Donald Trump ‌said on Wednesday ​that he ​might not renew ⁠the ​USMCA free ​trade deal with Canada and ​Mexico. Speaking ​at the White House, ‌the ⁠president said he was ​discussing ​the ⁠matter with Mexican ​and ​Canadian ⁠leaders.

Reporting by Bo Erickson ⁠and ​Gram ​Slattery; Editing by ​Doina Chiacu

archive.org archive link: https://web.archive.org/save/https%3A%2F%2Fwww.reuters.com%2Fworld%2Ftrump-says-he-might-not-renew-usmca-2026-06-10%2F

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submitted 31 minutes ago by supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz to c/solarpunk@slrpnk.net
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