Trump's Racist Post Sparks Controversy, State Department Deletes X Posts, and Boycott Against Big Tech Gains Momentum
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Former President Donald Trump's recent posting of a racist video on his Truth Social feed, depicting Barack and Michelle Obama's faces superimposed on apes, has ignited controversy and drawn criticism. The post, which was a 62-second video, was quickly deleted. Simultaneously, the State Department announced it would be deleting all pre-January 20, 2025, posts from its X accounts, archiving them internally, a move that deviates from standard government archiving practices. These events come as a boycott against major tech companies gains momentum, fueled by concerns over immigration enforcement.
According to Vox, the post was quickly removed. The State Department's decision, confirmed by the department, requires public access to older content through Freedom of Information Act requests, reflecting a shift in information accessibility. This action follows the Trump administration's pattern of removing information from government platforms, according to NPR News.
The "Resist and Unsubscribe" campaign, initiated by business commentator Scott Galloway, encourages consumers to financially impact companies perceived as insufficiently critical of the current administration's policies. This movement highlights the growing intersection of political activism and consumer behavior within the tech industry, as reported by NPR News.
In other news, a Fortnite account using the name "littlestjeff1," which surfaced in connection to the Jeffrey Epstein files, is not linked to Epstein, according to Epic Games, as reported by The Verge. The company stated that a player recently changed their username to the alias after it was found in the Epstein files, debunking online speculation about the account's origins.
The events surrounding Trump's post and the State Department's actions are unfolding against a backdrop of other significant developments. Reports from multiple news sources, including Hacker News, indicate that malicious code injected into open-source packages on npm and PyPI is targeting dYdX users and developers, potentially leading to wallet compromise and cryptocurrency theft. Additionally, Anthropic's Claude Opus 4.6 AI model, using its new "agent teams" feature, autonomously created a 100,000-line Rust-based C compiler, demonstrating advancements in AI-driven coding.
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