Archive for the ‘Social Networking’ Category

Ex-US President Donald Trump expects to be arrested on Tuesday – BBC

18 March 2023

Image source, Getty Images

Donald Trump says he expects to be arrested on Tuesday and has urged his supporters to launch mass protests.

However his lawyer said there had been no communication from law enforcement and the former president's post was based on media reports.

Prosecutors have been looking at a possible indictment of Mr Trump. Reports say it could come next week.

If he is indicted, it would be the first criminal case ever brought against a former US president.

This case focuses on alleged hush money paid on Mr Trump's behalf by his lawyer to porn star Stormy Daniels prior to the 2016 presidential election.

It is one of several cases in which the 76-year-old is currently being investigated, although he has not yet been charged in any and denies wrongdoing in each.

Mr Trump has pledged to continue his campaign to become the Republican nominee in the 2024 presidential election, even if he is indicted.

Past efforts to investigate him, including two impeachment trials, the Russia investigation and the Mar-a-Lago raid, have tended to make him more popular with his base, so an indictment could have a similar effect.

It is not yet known if he is going to be criminally charged this week or even, beyond broad strokes, what those charges might be.

But with the former president predicting an arrest, and calling for mass protests, this is a journey into unknown territory.

Mr Trump has a loyal base of followers, and the 6 January 2021 attack on the US Capitol by his supporters following his repeated calls to protest has proven that a fraught situation can quickly escalate into violence.

On Saturday Mr Trump wrote on his social networking site Truth Social that "illegal leaks" from the Manhattan district attorney's office "indicate" he would be arrested on Tuesday.

The district attorney's office has not yet commented. Mr Trump's lawyer, Susan Necheles, said her team had not heard anything from law enforcement officials.

"Since this is a political prosecution, the district attorney's office has engaged in a practice of leaking everything to the press, rather than communicating with President Trump's attorneys as would be done in a normal case," she said.

Image source, Getty Images

The case of Stormy Daniels is one of several legal woes facing the former US president

The Republican Speaker of the US House of Representatives, Kevin McCarthy, has hit out at the investigation, calling it "an outrageous abuse of power by a radical DA [district attorney]".

In a tweet, he also promised to investigate whether federal money was being used to interfere in elections "with politically motivated prosecutions".

Any indictment would create a complicated calculation for Mr Trump's rivals within the Republican Party, as they decide whether to up their attacks on the former president while he is potentially distracted or keep their heads down and hope for the best.

If history is any guide, it will be the latter.

Grand jury finishes its investigation

Trump's former personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, and ex-aides Kellyanne Conway and Hope Hicks, are among those understood to have given evidence so far. The Trump team has said the former president declined an invitation to appear, a sign the case is almost over, according to experts. Reports suggest one final witness could give evidence, possibly on Monday.

Prosecutors decide whether to indict

Once the investigation is complete, the grand jury votes on whether to recommend criminal charges. However, their verdict is not binding. Ultimately, it is up to Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg to determine what, if any, charges to bring. There is no deadline for this. It is a legal decision - what does he believe can he prove beyond a reasonable doubt to win a conviction - but also a deeply political one.

A possible Trump court appearance in New York

A former US president has never been indicted before but Mr Trump's lawyer said he would follow normal procedure. Typically, a defendant is either arrested or surrenders to the authorities - if they are facing a more serious felony charge they would be handcuffed. They then have their photo and fingerprints taken. After an initial hearing - called an arraignment - a defendant in a white-collar crime case like this is usually released until the next court date.

The Stormy Daniels case is about how Mr Trump reimbursed his lawyer Michael Cohen after Cohen paid Ms Daniels $130,000. The record for the payment reimbursing Cohen says the payment was for "legal fees". Prosecutors may say this amounts to Mr Trump falsifying business records, a misdemeanour in New York.

US media organisations say law enforcement agencies in New York are preparing for the possibility of Mr Trump being indicted and appearing in a Manhattan courtroom as early as next week.

According to the Associated Press, they are considering the practicalities of taking a former president into court, including questions around security.

Donald Trump faces a separate criminal investigation over efforts to overturn his narrow loss in the state of Georgia in the 2020 presidential election - though it is not known if the former president is being directly investigated.

The Department of Justice is also looking at whether classified government documents were handled incorrectly after Mr Trump left office, as well as broader efforts to undermine the results of the presidential election three years ago - including the 6 January attack.

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Ex-US President Donald Trump expects to be arrested on Tuesday - BBC

Chief, the $5,800-per-year womens networking startup, is worth $1 billion and has a waiting list of 60,000. Some members say the club isnt living up…

Carolyn Childers and Lindsay Kaplan like to say they met at a networking event in early 2017a bad one. We rolled our eyes at each other, says Kaplan, of the stiff sit-down dinner at a Manhattan restaurant. Two years later, the pair officially founded what they consider an alternative: Chief, an exclusive, $5,800-per-year and up networking club for female executives, now worth more than $1 billion. I always joke that if a bad networking event can bring together two co-founders to build something new, just imagine what could happen if you really build an intentional one, says Childers, Chiefs CEO.

If Chief is any guide, what such a network can dofirst and foremostis explode in size. By October 2022, it had hit 20,000 members, adding them at a pace of roughly 900 per month. The club now has a much-vaunted waiting list of 60,000 women who are eager to add Chiefs mission statement to their LinkedIn bios: to drive more women to the topand keep them there.

The same year Childers sat down at that restaurant in Manhattan, she left her position as an executive at household services startup Handy to become entrepreneur-in-residence at Primary Venture Partners. In brainstorming sessions with Ben Sun, a tech VC and Primarys co-founder, Childers had been inspired by clubs including the Young Presidents Organizationa discreet nonprofit for young CEOsand decided to build off of YPOs model of exclusivity and group coaching. But her startup would be different in two ways: It would be for high-ranking women executivesvice presidents and upand it would aim to make money. In late 2017, Childers approached Kaplan, then a vice president at Casper, a VC-backed mattress company, where she was behind such marketing initiatives as an insomnia chatbot and a sleep-themed magazine called Woolly. Kaplan eventually joined Childers venture as chief brand officer and co-founder.

Chiefs stratospheric rise was far from certain. When the company launched in February 2019 out of a warmly lit clubhouse in New Yorks Tribeca area, it was quickly compared to The Wing. That buzzy womens coworking business, launched three years earlier, cast a long shadow from its own clubhouse nearby.

Yet the aftermath of the pandemic officially killed The Wing, already weakened by allegations it mistreated employees of color and flogged a brand of shallow, Instagram-friendly feminismand little else. (Founder Audrey Gelman had vowed to do better, but ultimately resigned in 2020.)

Chief, meanwhile, thrivedso much so, in fact, that some members are wondering whether a private club that promised exclusivity and individually tailored coaching has grown too fast.

Kimberly WhiteGetty Images for TechCrunch

Comparably light on real estateit has five clubhousesChief switched its operations to digital during the pandemic, expanded to new cities, and watched membership climb. In March 2022, the company, then over 12,000 members strong, raised $100 million in a Series B round led by Alphabets VC fund, CapitalG. The series brought its total backing to $140 million and pushed it into the ranks of the unicorns, with a valuation of $1.1 billion.

With annual membership dues of up to $8,900, revenue could now be as high as $130 million per year, based on average membership fees. (Chief declined to provide revenue figures.) In January, the company said it had signed corporate deals with giants like Morgan Stanley and IBM to provide bulk memberships for their senior female executives. (Chief says companies already sponsor around 70% of their members.) In February, the company opened its first international clubhouse, in London.

Chief is now bigger by membershipand likely far more lucrativethan The Wing ever was.

Fueling that growth, at least in part, is what fans and critics alike agree is Chiefs powerful observation: that senior women in corporate America are stressed out, and often lonely. That was the case before the pandemic, but COVIDs erosion of support systems, from childcare to industry networks to a night out with friends, left professional women even more desperate to find peers who understand the demands of their jobs, members interviewed for this story say.

Current and former members who spoke to Fortune say they were surprised by how well Chiefs pitch landedand just how little competition its mix of coaching and support had among the reams of womens networking groups. (Fortune offers its own membership groups for executives, including one for women.)

Several members pointed to remarkable shifts in their careers during their time with Chief, largely due to their close friendships with other members. They bounced back from a layoff, successfully asked for a raise, or, in the case of New York City member Sandhya Jain-Patel, finally landed her dream job as a manager of diversity and inclusion at Lucasfilma jump she says her fellow Chief members coached her through.

But interviews with 15 current and former members suggest that some among Chiefs customer base are struggling to see its value beyond the initial introductions it makes. Many of them say that membership turnover is high and the relationship between some of Chiefs most engaged members and its leadership is fraying. (Chief disputes these claims.) As Chief continues to grow, the question now is whether scaling up aligns with the companys initial purpose: to build a business founded on exclusivity, and to give members the connections and guidance they had been struggling to find elsewhere.

Chiefs London clubhouse smells like fresh paint. Its just a couple hours before the launch party for the companys latest outpost, a five-story Georgian townhouse tucked in a leafy Bloomsbury square. Its cozy English period fixtures are interspersed with jewel-toned sofas, bright modern art, and stacks of color-coordinated books by the likes of Sheila Heti and Annie Leibovitz. There is a conspicuous lack of pink, the Wings signature color.

The Wing made money as a real estate business, renting women flexible coworking spaces with chic bathrooms; evening events and networking opportunities were thrown in.

By contrast, Chief offers members services including group leadership coaching, meet-ups and member forums, and events and Q&As with speakers like Michelle Obama, Shonda Rhimes, Amy Poehler, and Amal Clooney. Sometimes events take place at Chiefs clubhouses in New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago and London, but it has also held on to a pandemic-era policy: Its Core meetings are held virtually, often combining members from different cities.

Women who arent signed up by their company are either approached by Chief to joinusually via LinkedIn, the only social network the company usesor apply on their own, often via references from other members.

The cost of a membership is based on seniority$5,800 per year for VP-level members, and $7,900 for C-suite members (the prices are 5,800 and 7,900 for U.K. members). And while access to clubhouses used to be included, last year it became a $1,000 add-on for new members. Childers and Kaplan say 15% to 20% of members receive grants of varying sizes, and its 20,000 members are split nearly evenly between the VP and C-Suite levels.

Membership, like corporate America at large, skews white. The company says 32% of its members are women of color.

Chiefs 60,000-person waiting list, meanwhile, is mostly made up of applicants in places where the company hasnt opened yet, as well as those who are too junior to join, the co-founders say. Men are technically allowed to join, even if there arent any among the ranks yet.

Despite the glitzy clubhouse events, Chiefs co-founders say its tentpole offering is really its Core groupscohorts of eight to 12 women who meet for two hours once a month, moderated by an executive coach. Some Core meetings follow a structured coaching curriculum; others are more of a once-a-month catch-up on the members work and personal lives, members told Fortune.

Lukas SchulzeSportsfile for Collision via Getty Images

In 2022, the company started using an algorithm to match women into Core groups, factoring in industry and job title and ensuring no individual woman was the only in her groupthe only woman of color, or the only woman who is married or has children. A human manually reviews each group before its launched, the company says.

That technology component and the focus on corporate membership deals appealed to Laela Sturdy, the now-head of CapitalG, who led Chiefs Series B round and sits on Chiefs board. She also recognized the size of Chiefs potential market: Chief says that 6 million women are at VP-level and above in the U.S. and U.K. combined, based on analysis commissioned from LinkedIn.

What is amazing about this business model is its very similar to product-led growth software companies, of which Ive invested in quite a few, says Sturdy.

But current and former members interviewed by Fortune have cited glitches in Chiefs business model. Some complain that Chiefs main offeringits Core groupsare hit or miss, while others charge that the network isnt living up to its mission to change the face of corporate leadership.

On March 8International Womens DayDenise Conroy, founder of professional coaching business Themy and a founding Boston member, announced on LinkedIn she was quitting Chief.

Im quitting because I had bigger hopes for this organization. Bringing 20k accomplished women together has the potential to change the world. Yet, mobilization doesnt seem to be on the agenda, she wrote.

The organization seems to have chosen the performative over the meaningful, she argued, saying that there had been no appetite to take a stand on Roe v. Wade, and that three women of color she had referred for membership had all been ghosted.

Conroy told Fortune that shed complained to Chief leadership privately for months; she acknowledged in a separate LinkedIn post that Chief had reprimanded her for self-promotion on the platform last fall.

Pay attention: this is white feminism at its core, Conroy wrote in the March 8 post. She stated in a follow-up post that Chief had ended her membership and shed received a refund for the quarter. As of Thursday, her initial post had been liked more that 5,000 times and had been shared over 200 times.

In a letter signed by Childers and Kaplan, Chief responded publicly that intersectional feminism has informed every facet of who we are, pointing to its many members of color, its internal programming on diversity, and donations to womens rights organizations. (Fortune spoke to seven members of color for this story; all said they never felt discriminated against.) The organization also said it donated $250,000 to organizations fighting to protect reproductive rights and held events on reproductive rights with the ACLU and Planned Parenthood.

The company said in a statement to Fortune that it was rolling out a series of listening tours this week, but argued that Conroys post had led to significant misinformation being spread about the business.

Thousands of members support us and sent us emails saying so, they just have no interest in inserting themselves in a public social media forum, a spokesperson for the company said.

For some of the current and former members Fortune spoke to, the post and the response to it represented a public explosion of long-simmering discontent within the private club. While some are frustrated that Chief isnt living up to its ideals, the most common complaint among the 15 current and former Chief members Fortune interviewed is that as Chief has grown rapidly, operations havent seemed to catch up. The Core experiencealways spottyhas become patchier, they say; emails have gone unanswered, and customer service has dropped. The ghosting Conroy complained of is now widespread, say several members interviewed for this story.

Jessica Clifton, a former member in Los Angeles and head of brand and marketing advisory at Media.Monks, said that while she considers Chief a brilliant concept, it took almost four months for the company to match her with a Core group after she joined in March 2021. When she asked for a transfer, she was put in one that felt pieced together from the remnants of past groups, she says.

It wasnt the best fit, either, she adds. Ultimately, most people I knew in Chief two years ago have canceled their memberships due to lack of value.

In the past, a member unhappy with her Core group could easily ask to be reassigned. But several members say they now email a generic inbox that is slow to respondif it responds at all.

Like all companies, we have our growing pains. Our biggest has been with Core Group transitions, but we are proud of how weve iterated and fixed that process, Chief said in a statement to Fortune in response to the criticism.

The company also said that while response times for members looking to switch groups were arduous and inexcusably long a few months ago, they have fixed this problem; it now takes less than a week on average to change groups, the company says.

Some current and former members Fortune spoke to echo Chiefs own argument that the companynow four years oldis trying to nail whats admittedly a lofty objective: create real and lasting chemistry between strangers, at scale.

And members frustration isnt universal. Dolores Estrada, chief operating officer at PEAK Grantmaking and a former member in D.C., said her Core group gelled immediately.

I really walked away with such a great experience, she said. Still, she declined to renew, because she felt Chief had served its purpose.

I got everything I needed to figure out how to better maneuver the next portion of my life, she said.

Members interviewed for this story who are satisfied with Chief say some of their peers expect Chief to provide a ready-made network, but thats not the case.

Chief is not a done-for-you experience (and I dont know any community that is), says Osnat Benari, a product management consultant and a New York member. But just like in life, if you dont show up you cant control your experience.

But even members Fortune spoke to with positive experiences claim the patchiness of the Core groups is exacerbating the companys turnover. In April last year, Chief instituted a policy that bars members from missing more than two Core sessions per year without explanation, or else be kicked out of the group. Members say the approach backfired, coming across as patronizing and failing to recognize the demands on senior womens time. Chief says the policy was instituted at members request.

Multiple current and former members interviewed for this story estimate that Chief is losing up to 50% of its members every year, based on the non-renewal rate in their own Core groups.

Chief said the turnover estimate of 50% is false and misleading, and that churn in the Core groups wasnt representative of retention. The company declined to share its renewal rate.

As Chief has grown, so too have the complaints of some of the networks most engaged members who run popular off-shoot groups. There are groups for members focused on career transitions or joining a board, and there are groups specifically for Black and South Asian members.

Late last year, Eugina Jordan, chief marketing officer at the Telecom Infra Project and then a member in Boston, read a Chief blog post about corporate women suffering from burnout, and decided to take the articles advice on when to step back. She quit Chief.

Jordan, who calls Chief a career-transforming experience, said she was spending six to seven hours a week organizing and moderating groups and meet-ups, from a Boston-themed group to events bringing in LinkedIn experts and career coaches. Something had to give, she saysplus, she had already converted her Chief network into what she calls her board of advisors, only ever a text or a lunch date away.

I wanted the community. I wanted to belong. I wanted a support groupand thats what I got, she says.

Groups like Jordans are started, administered and led almost exclusively by members themselves, multiple women who spoke to Fortune say. While starting and running the groups is entirely voluntary, one former member characterized the free labor dynamic as ironic given Chiefs membership fees.

We want to be clear that we never expect our members to spearhead niche groups or host get-togetherswe launched the meet-ups tool to make it easier for them to gather within the community, if they choose to, the company told Fortune. Chief also says its actively hiring community managers to help organize programming in major metro areas and to support members own events.

The popular off-shoot groups also showcase a recurring dynamic of Chief: members say they are deeply loyal to each other, but less devoted to the business itself. That sentiment raises questions about how Chief can retain members once theylike Jordanhave recreated their Chief support group on WhatsApp.

Chief says its influence makes a difference. Citing a March 2022 member survey, Kaplan says 80% of members feel more confident and supported in their roles since joining Chief, and 50% of members have received a promotion or a raise while belonging to Chief.

The frustration among some members who spoke to Fortune raises questions not just about the operational strains of growing a VC-backed startup, but about the inherent tensions of building a business based around womens identitiesand ultimately, their marginalization in the workplace.

One former member suggested that tension could grow as Chief shifts towards more stable corporate contracts. Blue-chip companies may see Chief as a relative bargain compared to other womens networks and supportand as a way to tick a supporting women box without risking real change. The things that matter most for womens careerspay raises, promotions, stock options, job security, good parental leave and other protectionscost money; most of them much more than $5,800 and up.

Some members interviewed for this story also worry that serving more corporate clients will leave the network with less incentive to take a stand on political issues and less of a stake in helping individual members negotiate raises or find new jobs. Its a worry that Chief says is unfounded since most members were already sponsored by their companies.

The hurdle we saw was women being comfortable asking for that sponsorship, the company said in a statement to Fortune. This isnt about allowing companies to box check. Its about making it easier for women who want to be part of Chief to get the support they deserve.

Childers and Kaplan, sitting in the brand-new sitting room on an upper floor of the London clubhouse, say they arent worried about the economic downturn hitting their bottom line. They say the corporate contracts they announced in January prove companies understand the need to retain and support senior women regardless of market fluctuations.

The pair say theyre not considering another fundraising round right now. We dont need to raise capital, Childers says. They also say they feel no pressure from investors to scale beyond Chiefs current size. We have the right investors who understand that the mission comes first, says Childers. And that if youre not true to that mission, short term scaling doesnt mean anything.

Ken Chenault, chairman and managing director at General Catalyst and the former CEO of American Express, who invested in both of Chiefs fundraising rounds, acknowledged the tension between scaling up and exclusivity. But hes convinced Chief can maintain its specialness even as it grows.

I think theyll continue to work on curating member experiences, he said.

Thats ultimately what current membersand even some former oneswant for the startup. Getting female executives from different industries into the same rooma rarity in businesswas often enough to power Chiefs early years. Now that Chief has assembled tens of thousands of women, the question is whether it can fine tune its matchmaking and develop programming that satisfies more members, justifies its dues, and fulfills the promise of its tagline.

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Chief, the $5,800-per-year womens networking startup, is worth $1 billion and has a waiting list of 60,000. Some members say the club isnt living up...

United Way of Monroe/Lenawee Counties: Project Ramp – Monroe Evening News

Collin Keehn| United Way of Monroe/Lenawee Counties

At a glance, Project Ramp in Lenawee and Monroe counties looks similar to any charitable service project in any other community across Michigan or even the country. But that notion is easily dismissed once a volunteer shows up and begins the hard work of building a barrier-free access ramp for a neighbor or community member in need. Lets walk through a day as a volunteer at a Project Ramp build to see just how unique and empowering this program can be:

8 a.m. Volunteers meet at the worksite and see a massive pile of lumber waiting for volunteers at the site. For newcomers, this initial sight can be shocking and overwhelming. But to veterans of other ramp builds this stack of lumber is just a starting point that will become the answer to a community members need for mobility independence.

8:10 a.m. A brief safety meeting and planning session so all volunteers can understand the goal of the work to be done and everyone can go home at the end of the day just as safe as when they arrived. After brief introductions, volunteers will have met people from organizations, labor unions, agencies and businesses from across this community. This mini-social networking session goes to show that volunteers from all parts of our community are here to help.

8:30 a.m. More experienced volunteers begin unloading the tool trailer and separating different sizes of lumber. At this point, many new volunteers can be nervous or unsure about what to do! At Project Ramp theres a job for everyone. Volunteers who have built a ramp before will take the time to explain the process, show tool safety, and even guide a new volunteer through using any of the power tools that could be used that day.

10:30 a.m. The lumber pile begins to shrink as groups of volunteers begin to frame and build portions of the ramp. As sections become finalized, they are lifted and attached to the legs built from another group. Small teams of volunteers, both experienced or otherwise, work with each other to turn a large pile of uncut lumber into the skeleton of the soon-to-be ramp.

Noon Just as volunteers begin to finalize the frame of the ramp, a car pulls up to the worksite. Its a staff member from the United Way of Monroe/Lenawee Counties there to deliver lunch to the hard working volunteers. This lunch is likely donated by a local business, who was able to support the program and volunteers by providing a delicious lunch.

12:45 p.m. Now that lunch has wrapped up and the frame of the ramp is put into place, its time to put the deck boards on. The process of installing the deck boards to a wooden ramp is slow and repetitive, but its when everyone comes together as a team. Volunteers would work as an assembly line to finish the process. Measure, cut, drill, repeat. The longer the ramp is the longer this portion of the build is. But its a great time to teach a new volunteer how to use a drill or miter saw! Cutting deck board is a great way to practice for a new volunteer because every cut is going to be the same length, so there is lots of practice to be had.

2 p.m. Adorning the handrails is the next step. This process is a little more technical but always enjoyable to see a volunteer who has grown in confidence, ability and skill over the day volunteer for this portion.

3:30 p.m. Around this time of the day, any volunteer can step back and see the work theyve done. What began as a large pile of lumber is now a fully functional and safe ramp. For a person who's in need of a wheelchair ramp, their day began as it has any day in the recent past, stuck in their home relying on friends and family for help to get out. Now their day will end with a way to be a part of their community again. All that is left to do is sand and clean up.

4:30 p.m. Finished. Complete. Done. For new volunteers, they can step back and look at what they were a part of. Volunteers can look at the way theyve helped a community member while also learning new, handy skills. Whether it is learning how to use a saw or drill for the first time or reading a tape measure correctly, its an invaluable skill and a confidence boost. Experienced volunteers will end the day knowing that theyve not only helped a community member in need but also passed on valuable lessons while instilling confidence in carpentry in the new volunteers. But for all volunteers on a ramp build the day ended just as it had planned to go: a new ramp for a person in need, everyone going home safely at the end of the day and new skills that can be used in life.

For questions on how to donate, volunteer or apply for a ramp please contact Collin Keehn, AFL-CIO community services liaison and Project Ramp coordinator, at ckeehn@unitedwayMLC.org or call the United Way of Monroe/Lenawee Counties at 517-264-6821 or 734-242-1331 or visit http://www.unitedwayMLC.org.

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United Way of Monroe/Lenawee Counties: Project Ramp - Monroe Evening News

‘I’M BACK’: Trump returns to Facebook, YouTube after two-year ban – FRANCE 24 English

"I'M BACK," Trump exclaimed, alongside a 12-second video clip that appeared to show him giving his victory speech after winning the 2016 election saying: "Sorry to keep you waiting -- complicated business."

The 76-year-old Republican leader -- who is running for president again -- has been unable to post any content for his 34 million Facebook followers and 2.6 million YouTube subscribers.

The platforms benched Trump days after the January 6, 2021 insurrection, when a mob of his supporters seeking to halt the certification of his election defeat to Joe Biden stormed the US Capitol in Washington.

He was sanctioned for posting content that the platforms said incited unrest, with YouTube announcing his reinstatement on Friday, two months after Facebook said it was unlocking his account.

The former reality TV star had spent weeks falsely claiming that the presidential election was stolen from him, and he was subsequently impeached for inciting the riot.

"Starting today, the Donald J. Trump channel is no longer restricted and can upload new content," YouTube said in a statement.

"We carefully evaluated the continued risk of real-world violence, while balancing the chance for voters to hear equally from major national candidates in the run up to an election."

Republican leaders raged against Trump being booted from Facebook, while a group of Democrats in Congress had urged parent company Meta to extend the ban to keep "dangerous and unfounded election denial content off its platform."

The social networking giant announced in January it was reinstating Trump's accounts on Facebook and Instagram with "new guardrails."

Trump's lawyer Scott Gast had written to the company, based in California's Bay Area, saying it had "dramatically distorted and inhibited the public discourse."

The former president's Twitter account, which has 87 million followers, was also blocked after the riot, leaving him to communicate through his own platform Truth Social, where he has fewer than five million followers.

New Twitter owner Elon Musk reinstated Trump last November, days after Trump announced a fresh White House run, but he has yet to post there.

The American Civil Liberties Union, which has filed more than 400 legal actions against Trump, applauded Meta's decision.

"Like it or not, President Trump is one of the country's leading political figures and the public has a strong interest in hearing his speech," executive director Anthony Romero said in a statement.

"Indeed, some of Trump's most offensive social media posts ended up being critical evidence in lawsuits filed against him and his administration."

But advocacy groups such as Media Matters for America vehemently oppose allowing Trump to exploit the social networking reach of the Big Tech giants.

Media Matters accused Meta of "ignoring his continued 'risk to public safety,' which is the bar the company set for his return."

"Meta's decision is a green light for Trump to promote harmful content on its platforms, and it shows that the company still prioritizes profit -- and appeasement of right-wing figures -- over public safety," it added in a statement.

Trump's shock victory in 2016 was credited in part to his leverage of social media and his enormous digital reach.

A US congressional committee recommended in December that he be prosecuted for his role in the US Capitol assault.

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'I'M BACK': Trump returns to Facebook, YouTube after two-year ban - FRANCE 24 English

Meta Explores Mastodon, Will the fediverse Survive? – PIA VPN – Privacy News Online

In November last year, I pointed out that the outages and uncertainty plaguing Twitter under the ownership of Elon Musk had led many people to look at alternatives.

One in particular, Mastodon, based on the ActivityPub decentralized networking protocol, has gained many new users as a result. According to the Mastodon Analytics site, the collection of federated social media servers saw a surge in new users at this time: rising from around 3.5 million users to 6.4 million more recently. Over the same period, the number of Mastodon servers rose from around 3,000 to 10,000.

In an instance of if you cant beat them, join them, WordPress and Medium are now looking to follow their users on Mastodon, and rumor has it that Meta is trying to do the same.

Since December 2022, the number of active Mastodon users has seen a decline from a peak of 2.4 million to around 1.2 million. Some fall-off was inevitable, as many people tried the new system, some either found it too hard or simply too different from Twitter.

But in the last few weeks there has been a marked rise in interest from major companies, which could result in many millions more joining the Mastodon world. Thats particularly the case if one of those companies Meta turns a new research project into a full-blown Mastodon-compatible service.

Metas move into the fediverse would also raise important questions about whether the entrance of the social media giant would ultimately be good or bad for the Mastodon world and for privacy.

Things began to hot up in January, when the online publishing platform Medium, originally launched by Twitter co-founder Evan Williams, announced that it was creating its own instance. That is, it has set up a new Mastodon server specifically for Medium authors and publications. A post by Tony Stubblebine, CEO of Medium, lists some of the features that he believes will make this new instance different from existing servers:

With so many Mastodon instances to choose from, we plan for me.dm to have a few important benefits out of the gate: reliable infrastructure and moderation, a short domain name to make sharing your username easier, better onboarding for new users, and an interesting local feed.

Thats not just a vote of confidence in the decentralized approach to social networking. Its also an example that other publishing platforms could follow.

One of the strengths of the federated approach is that each instance can serve particular communities by setting its own code of conduct, terms of service, moderation rules and privacy policy. Indeed, its easy to imagine any larger company setting up a Mastodon instance specifically for its customers rather as companies set up web servers 25 years ago. Doing so would solve many of the moderation problems that arise from using a general social media service like Twitter or Facebook.

The news and social network aggregator Flipboard has also set up a dedicated instance for its users, flipboard.social. In addition, according to TechCrunch, the Flipboard app for iOS will allow Mastodon users to visually flip through their timeline to view posts from the people they follow, much like theyve been able to do with Twitter.

Even more significant is the news that Automattic, the company behind WordPress, has acquired an ActivityPub plugin for the platform. A post on the WPTavern site explains what this means in practice:

The ActivityPub plugin makes it possible for readers to follow a WordPress site in the fediverse using the ActivityPub protocol. This includes Mastodon, one of the most popular platforms using the protocol, and other platforms like Pleroma, Friendica, HubZilla, Pixelfed, SocialHome, and Misskey. For those using Mastodon, this plugin will automatically send posts to the network and replies to it will become comments on the post.

According to figures on Wikipedia, as of May 2021, WordPress is used by 64.8% of all the websites whose content management system is known. This is 41.4% of the top 10 million websites. If even a small proportion of sites using WordPress add the ActivityPub plugin, this will provide a huge boost to the ActivityPub and Mastodon worlds.

But even the WordPress boost pales in comparison with news that Meta is exploring the idea of creating a standalone text-based app that will support ActivityPub. According to MoneyControl, which first revealed Metas P92 project, features of Metas potential new service are still in a state of flux:

Some of the other features including tappable links in posts with previews (like Twitter), user bio, username, verification badges, images and videos would be made shareable on the initial versions of the app, according to the plan. It would also allow followers and likes, but it is unclear whether features for commenting and messaging would be there in the first version of the product. However, these will be included eventually.

A lot depends on the details, but anything from Meta that supports ActivityPub is likely to have a massive impact on decentralized social media. For example, it would make signing up for a Mastodon-like service much simpler: one of the main criticisms of todays approach is that it is too hard for most people.

If P92 supported fully the ActivityPub protocol, that would allow users to move from Metas service to others finally escaping the famous walled garden of that company. People could choose to move to instances offering better privacy protections, putting pressure on Meta to improve its own policies in this area.

But there are also risks. If Metas P92 project became as popular as its other online services, with hundreds of millions of users, it could also swamp the rest of the fediverse. In that case, Meta would be able to diverge from the open standards, for example by blocking the ability of users to migrate to other instances, in a classic case of embrace, extend, and extinguish.

Excerpt from:
Meta Explores Mastodon, Will the fediverse Survive? - PIA VPN - Privacy News Online