>
World War III has Already Begun
H.R.1919 - Anti-CBDC Surveillance State Act
Deadly Clashes in Syria's Sweida: What's Really Going On? | Vantage with Palki Sharma | N18G
"False, Malicious, Defamatory" - Trump Demands Unsealing Of Epstein Files,...
Magic mushrooms may hold the secret to longevity: Psilocybin extends lifespan by 57%...
Unitree G1 vs Boston Dynamics Atlas vs Optimus Gen 2 Robot– Who Wins?
LFP Battery Fire Safety: What You NEED to Know
Final Summer Solar Panel Test: Bifacial Optimization. Save Money w/ These Results!
MEDICAL MIRACLE IN JAPAN: Paralyzed Man Stands Again After Revolutionary Stem Cell Treatment!
Insulator Becomes Conducting Semiconductor And Could Make Superelastic Silicone Solar Panels
Slate Truck's Under $20,000 Price Tag Just Became A Political Casualty
Wisdom Teeth Contain Unique Stem Cell That Can Form Cartilage, Neurons, and Heart Tissue
Hay fever breakthrough: 'Molecular shield' blocks allergy trigger at the site
Roman Storm never laundered money. He never moved funds for North Korea. He never managed anyone's crypto. He didn't run a dark web operation, sell stolen identities, or traffic anything illegal. What he did do was write code — open-source, decentralized code — that became part of a privacy tool some people used to break the law. For that, he now faces over 40 years in prison.
Sound familiar? Think Silk Road and Ross Ulbricht.
Welcome to America in 2025, where writing code that empowers privacy is more dangerous than running a hedge fund into the ground or bombing a hospital in Gaza. Where developers are prosecuted not for what they did, but for what someone else might have done using their tools. And where the state has made it clear: if you dare give people privacy, you are the enemy.