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WIRED @WIRED
“We’re still spending hundreds or thousands of dollars on phones and laptops which are essentially disposable, and that is completely ridiculous when we have the capacity to build things that can last.” https://t.co/gr8aamS9KL — PolitiTweet.org
WIRED @WIRED
As technology continues to advance, whether your right-handed or left-handed may not mean as much anymore... https://t.co/PNNph8LvRl — PolitiTweet.org
WIRED @WIRED
This week on Gadget Lab, WIRED senior cybersecurity writer and author of the book Tracers in the Dark digs into all the ways investigators, government agents, and how hackers can track down online criminals by “following the money.” https://t.co/0U22OXdAOn — PolitiTweet.org
WIRED @WIRED
Get your first year of WIRED for $5 a month and get unlimited access to our longform features, buying guides, and tech news. https://t.co/XsNSled5nG 11/ https://t.co/oRE3bIkASt — PolitiTweet.org
WIRED @WIRED
For more on how this shadowy industry—one that has remained unaccountable to basic regulation for decades as it profits from fraying democracies, and the author’s own personal encounter with non-lethal weapons in Washington D. C. click here: https://t.co/iJK0nIlksL 10/ — PolitiTweet.org
WIRED @WIRED
But weapons like Venom are marketed to militaries and police forces around the world and sales have quietly grown over the past few decades. The non-lethal weapons industry is now estimated to be a multibillion-dollar business. 9/ — PolitiTweet.org
WIRED @WIRED
Colombia’s clampdown against demonstrators in 2021 was the first time Venom had ever been used in Latin America, and one of the most brutal examples of its indiscriminate use by police against civilians anywhere in the world. 📸: Wil Sands 8/ https://t.co/pTsBvsWURQ — PolitiTweet.org
WIRED @WIRED
Like manufacturers of firearms, Combined Systems have federal firearm licenses and federal explosive licenses. However, there is no federal regulation that distinguishes lethal from less-lethal firearms. 7/ — PolitiTweet.org
WIRED @WIRED
When the smoke cleared that night in Popayan, protester Sebastian Munera was lying on the ground with a fist-sized hole in his neck, bleeding out onto the pavement. The result of a canister fired by the "non-lethal" Venom. 📸: Wil Sands 6/ https://t.co/mgxH2FlVm1 — PolitiTweet.org
WIRED @WIRED
The Venom multi-launchers are manufactured, assembled, and shipped from nearly 3,000 miles away, in the Rust Belt of western Pennsylvania. 📸: Wil Sands 5/ https://t.co/9PIR5MBGC1 — PolitiTweet.org
WIRED @WIRED
The projectiles were launched from a remote-controlled launcher called a Venom, made by the US firm Combined Systems, Inc. Long used by the US Marine Corps for combat operations in Iraq, Venom is capable of firing up to 30 tear-gas or flash-bang canisters at a time. 4/ — PolitiTweet.org
WIRED @WIRED
Without warning, a rapid succession of deafening blasts echoed down the block. A barrage of blunt, barely visible projectiles ricocheted against the shuttered windows, off shields and bodies, as the street filled with a dense fog of tear gas. 📸: Wil Sands 3/ https://t.co/xAb2PHdJPc — PolitiTweet.org
WIRED @WIRED
In Popayán, Colombia, a small city about 250 miles southwest of Bogotá, in the spring of 2021, scores of young demonstrators were crouching behind a line of homemade shields, trying to hold back the authorities. 2/ — PolitiTweet.org
WIRED @WIRED
Since the 1920s, law enforcement and military experts have described less-lethal crowd-control devices as a “humane” alternative to conventional arms. Here’s how America’s sketchy “less-lethal” weapons industry exports its brand of violence world-wide: https://t.co/iJK0nIlksL 1/ https://t.co/6d0joa9gVl — PolitiTweet.org
WIRED @WIRED
It's time to give up on ranking, rating, and grading. It'll never be enough. https://t.co/a2BNR0qL86 — PolitiTweet.org
WIRED @WIRED
Can you teach yourself coding? What does 'front end' and 'back end' mean? @chrispiech, professor of computer science at Stanford University, is here to answer all of your coding questions: https://t.co/OP6iaprukw — PolitiTweet.org
WIRED @WIRED
Get your first year of WIRED for $5 a month and get unlimited access to our longform features, buying guides, and tech news. https://t.co/XsNSled5nG 11/ https://t.co/pSVORBXIZw — PolitiTweet.org
WIRED @WIRED
For more on how this shadowy industry—one that has remained unaccountable to basic regulation for decades as it profits from fraying democracies, and the author’s own personal encounter with non-lethal weapons in Washington D. C. click here: https://t.co/iJK0nIlksL 10/ — PolitiTweet.org
WIRED @WIRED
But weapons like Venom are marketed to militaries and police forces around the world and sales have quietly grown over the past few decades. The non-lethal weapons industry is now estimated to be a multibillion-dollar business. 9/ — PolitiTweet.org
WIRED @WIRED
Colombia’s clampdown against demonstrators in 2021 was the first time Venom had ever been used in Latin America, and one of the most brutal examples of its indiscriminate use by police against civilians anywhere in the world. 📸: Wil Sands 8/ https://t.co/5DMCNgICas — PolitiTweet.org
WIRED @WIRED
Like manufacturers of firearms, Combined Systems have federal firearm licenses and federal explosive licenses. However, there is no federal regulation that distinguishes lethal from less-lethal firearms. 7/ — PolitiTweet.org
WIRED @WIRED
When the smoke cleared that night in Popayan, protester Sebastian Munera was lying on the ground with a fist-sized hole in his neck, bleeding out onto the pavement. The result of a canister fired by the "non-lethal" Venom. 📸: Wil Sands 6/ https://t.co/xsBqofRDc1 — PolitiTweet.org
WIRED @WIRED
The Venom multi-launchers are manufactured, assembled, and shipped from nearly 3,000 miles away, in the Rust Belt of western Pennsylvania. 📸: Wil Sands 5/ https://t.co/KCaZZMctPl — PolitiTweet.org
WIRED @WIRED
The projectiles were launched from a remote-controlled launcher called a Venom, made by the US firm Combined Systems, Inc. Long used by the US Marine Corps for combat operations in Iraq, Venom is capable of firing up to 30 tear-gas or flash-bang canisters at a time. 4/ — PolitiTweet.org
WIRED @WIRED
Without warning, a rapid succession of deafening blasts echoed down the block. A barrage of blunt, barely visible projectiles ricocheted against the shuttered windows, off shields and bodies, as the street filled with a dense fog of tear gas. 📸: Wil Sands 3/ https://t.co/m7Cw7jQb4D — PolitiTweet.org
WIRED @WIRED
In Popayán, Colombia, a small city about 250 miles southwest of Bogotá, in the spring of 2021, scores of young demonstrators were crouching behind a line of homemade shields, trying to hold back the authorities. 2/ — PolitiTweet.org
WIRED @WIRED
Since the 1920s, law enforcement and military experts have described less-lethal crowd-control devices as a “humane” alternative to conventional arms. Here’s how America’s sketchy “less-lethal” weapons industry exports its brand of violence world-wide: https://t.co/iJK0nIlksL 1/ https://t.co/emnv3XRJsF — PolitiTweet.org
WIRED @WIRED
Have you met Big Agnes? The Copper Spur UL1 is the best ultralight backpacking tent on the market, but if you want the best, sometimes you have to pay for it. https://t.co/nKhK8VwQpo 📷: Big Agnes https://t.co/zMJ0atfd3V — PolitiTweet.org
WIRED @WIRED
Take a peek at the Rolls-Royce Spectre, the company's ultimate high-end EV preproduction prototype. WIRED got two hours behind the wheel of it. We could have gone all day: https://t.co/z6SyiRs02T 📸 Rolls Royce Motor Cars https://t.co/XMEX6y4U4x — PolitiTweet.org
WIRED @WIRED
For years, there hasn't been any clarity around what Twitter's inbuilt tools for deleting your messages actually do. What none of the tools seems to do, however, is really delete your messages. https://t.co/93NTLjm6pS 📷: Getty https://t.co/zOKcTElz77 — PolitiTweet.org