ActivityPub Viewer

A small tool to view real-world ActivityPub objects as JSON! Enter a URL or username from Mastodon or a similar service below, and we'll send a request with the right Accept header to the server to view the underlying object.

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{ "@context": "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams", "type": "OrderedCollectionPage", "orderedItems": [ { "type": "Create", "actor": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628", "object": { "type": "Note", "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/entities/urn:activity:900133192689020928", "attributedTo": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628", "content": "PAY CLOSE ATTENTION TO THIS.", "to": [ "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public" ], "cc": [ "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/followers", "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/460070430934306817" ], "tag": [], "url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/900133192689020928", "published": "2018-10-19T21:27:56+00:00", "inReplyTo": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/460070430934306817/entities/urn:activity:900015926220554240", "source": { "content": "PAY CLOSE ATTENTION TO THIS.", "mediaType": "text/plain" } }, "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/entities/urn:activity:900133192689020928/activity" }, { "type": "Create", "actor": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628", "object": { "type": "Note", "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/entities/urn:activity:875013736352546816", "attributedTo": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628", "content": "Can someone please review my account and either opt me in (which i thought i had done), or do whatever has to be done to preserve my 64k tokens?", "to": [ "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public" ], "cc": [ "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/followers" ], "tag": [], "url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/875013736352546816", "published": "2018-08-11T13:52:11+00:00", "source": { "content": "Can someone please review my account and either opt me in (which i thought i had done), or do whatever has to be done to preserve my 64k tokens?", "mediaType": "text/plain" } }, "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/entities/urn:activity:875013736352546816/activity" }, { "type": "Create", "actor": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628", "object": { "type": "Note", "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/entities/urn:activity:829108852596920320", "attributedTo": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628", "content": "NOT 50 MILLION, NOT 90 MILLION :: \"NEW YORK (AP) — Facebook’s acknowledgement that most of its 2.2 billion members have probably had their personal data scraped by “malicious actors” is the latest example of the social network’s failure to protect its users’ data.<br /><br />Not to mention its apparent inability to even identify the problem until the company was already embroiled in scandal.<br /><br />CEO Mark Zuckerberg told reporters Wednesday that Facebook is shutting down a feature that let people search for Facebook users by phone number or email address. Although that was useful for people who wanted to find others on Facebook, it turns out that unscrupulous types also figured out years ago that they could use it to identify individuals and collect data off their profiles.<br /><br />The scrapers were at it long enough, Zuckerberg said, that “at some point during the last several years, someone has probably accessed your public information in this way.”<br /><br /><a href=\"https://inhomelandsecurity.com/facebook-public-data-scraped/\" target=\"_blank\">https://inhomelandsecurity.com/facebook-public-data-scraped/</a>? ", "to": [ "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public" ], "cc": [ "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/followers" ], "tag": [], "url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/829108852596920320", "published": "2018-04-06T21:42:34+00:00", "source": { "content": "NOT 50 MILLION, NOT 90 MILLION :: \"NEW YORK (AP) — Facebook’s acknowledgement that most of its 2.2 billion members have probably had their personal data scraped by “malicious actors” is the latest example of the social network’s failure to protect its users’ data.\n\nNot to mention its apparent inability to even identify the problem until the company was already embroiled in scandal.\n\nCEO Mark Zuckerberg told reporters Wednesday that Facebook is shutting down a feature that let people search for Facebook users by phone number or email address. Although that was useful for people who wanted to find others on Facebook, it turns out that unscrupulous types also figured out years ago that they could use it to identify individuals and collect data off their profiles.\n\nThe scrapers were at it long enough, Zuckerberg said, that “at some point during the last several years, someone has probably accessed your public information in this way.”\n\nhttps://inhomelandsecurity.com/facebook-public-data-scraped/? ", "mediaType": "text/plain" } }, "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/entities/urn:activity:829108852596920320/activity" }, { "type": "Create", "actor": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628", "object": { "type": "Note", "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/entities/urn:activity:828448210760978432", "attributedTo": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628", "content": "WORSE THAN WE THOUGHT :: \"On Wednesday, Facebook announced that an estimated 87 million people have been affected by the Cambridge Analytica data breach that originally was thought to have touched 50 million people, based on accounts from former employees of the firm and documents reported on by the The New York Times and others.<br /><br />Mike Schroepfer, Facebook’s Chief Technology Officer, shared the news in a corporate blog post on Wednesday. He also said that on April 9 — this Monday — Facebook will show users a link at the top of the News Feed that shows all the apps they use and what information they are sharing with those apps — and they ostensibly will be able to easily remove them if they want.<br /><br />“As part of this process we will also tell people if their information may have been improperly shared with Cambridge Analytica,” Schroepfer writes in the blog post.\"<br /><br /><a href=\"https://www.inverse.com/article/43275-cambridge-analytica-87-million-facebook-accounts-affected\" target=\"_blank\">https://www.inverse.com/article/43275-cambridge-analytica-87-million-facebook-accounts-affected</a>? ", "to": [ "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public" ], "cc": [ "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/followers" ], "tag": [], "url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/828448210760978432", "published": "2018-04-05T01:57:25+00:00", "source": { "content": "WORSE THAN WE THOUGHT :: \"On Wednesday, Facebook announced that an estimated 87 million people have been affected by the Cambridge Analytica data breach that originally was thought to have touched 50 million people, based on accounts from former employees of the firm and documents reported on by the The New York Times and others.\n\nMike Schroepfer, Facebook’s Chief Technology Officer, shared the news in a corporate blog post on Wednesday. He also said that on April 9 — this Monday — Facebook will show users a link at the top of the News Feed that shows all the apps they use and what information they are sharing with those apps — and they ostensibly will be able to easily remove them if they want.\n\n“As part of this process we will also tell people if their information may have been improperly shared with Cambridge Analytica,” Schroepfer writes in the blog post.\"\n\nhttps://www.inverse.com/article/43275-cambridge-analytica-87-million-facebook-accounts-affected? ", "mediaType": "text/plain" } }, "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/entities/urn:activity:828448210760978432/activity" }, { "type": "Create", "actor": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628", "object": { "type": "Note", "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/entities/urn:activity:827897365513433088", "attributedTo": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628", "content": "STOP SINCLAIR/TRIBUNE MERGER (THIS IS EXTREMELY DANGEROUS TO OUR DEMOCRACY) :: SIGN AND SHARE ASAP :: \"Sinclair Broadcasting has been covertly forcing its local stations to broadcast pro-Trump propaganda -- and now they want to take over one of the most influential media companies in the country.<br /><br />Will you sign Democracy for America's petition calling on regulators to stop the Sinclair-Tribune merger now?<br /><br />Last month, millions of local TV news viewers heard eerily similar versions of this Trump-esque speech from dozens of seemingly unrelated news anchors across the country:<br /><br /> “The sharing of biased and false news has become all too common on social media.”<br /><br /> “Some members of the media use their platforms to push their own personal bias.”<br /><br /> “This is extremely dangerous to our democracy.”<br /><br />The source of the script was Sinclair Broadcasting -- the country's largest broadcaster, which owns 193 television stations and 589 channels in 89 markets.<br /><br />Over the weekend, a Deadspin video which edited together anchors from coast to coast reading Sinclair's propaganda went viral. And that's not the only way that Sinclair is using its power to advance a radical agenda. The New York Times has reported that the company sends its stations \"must-run\" news segments that are full of fear-mongering and pro-Trump rhetoric.\"<br /><br /><a href=\"http://act.democracyforamerica.com/sign/stop-sinclair-tribune/\" target=\"_blank\">http://act.democracyforamerica.com/sign/stop-sinclair-tribune/</a>? ", "to": [ "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public" ], "cc": [ "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/followers" ], "tag": [], "url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/827897365513433088", "published": "2018-04-03T13:28:33+00:00", "source": { "content": "STOP SINCLAIR/TRIBUNE MERGER (THIS IS EXTREMELY DANGEROUS TO OUR DEMOCRACY) :: SIGN AND SHARE ASAP :: \"Sinclair Broadcasting has been covertly forcing its local stations to broadcast pro-Trump propaganda -- and now they want to take over one of the most influential media companies in the country.\n\nWill you sign Democracy for America's petition calling on regulators to stop the Sinclair-Tribune merger now?\n\nLast month, millions of local TV news viewers heard eerily similar versions of this Trump-esque speech from dozens of seemingly unrelated news anchors across the country:\n\n “The sharing of biased and false news has become all too common on social media.”\n\n “Some members of the media use their platforms to push their own personal bias.”\n\n “This is extremely dangerous to our democracy.”\n\nThe source of the script was Sinclair Broadcasting -- the country's largest broadcaster, which owns 193 television stations and 589 channels in 89 markets.\n\nOver the weekend, a Deadspin video which edited together anchors from coast to coast reading Sinclair's propaganda went viral. And that's not the only way that Sinclair is using its power to advance a radical agenda. The New York Times has reported that the company sends its stations \"must-run\" news segments that are full of fear-mongering and pro-Trump rhetoric.\"\n\nhttp://act.democracyforamerica.com/sign/stop-sinclair-tribune/? ", "mediaType": "text/plain" } }, "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/entities/urn:activity:827897365513433088/activity" }, { "type": "Create", "actor": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628", "object": { "type": "Note", "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/entities/urn:activity:826430616315731968", "attributedTo": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628", "content": "My comment on the IVN.US survey that asks: \"Tired of BOTH parties rigging the rules? We want to hear from YOU. What is the best way to fix the system?\"<br /><br />(SURVEY @ <a href=\"HTTPS://BRIDGE.IVN.US\" target=\"_blank\">HTTPS://BRIDGE.IVN.US</a>)<br /><br />\"Citizen involvement and oversight in the day to day operations of every government agency, in the form of the authorization of independent (volunteer) auxiliary groups of persons interested in supporting the missions of same. From VA operations auxiliaries in hospitals and clinics on the federal level, to local and state agencies such as driver license bureaus to county tax property offices (and perhaps an important example would be ELECTIONS AUXILIARIES, to serve in the over 3000 elections bureaus in the nation). In short, anywhere that public monies are being spent. I call the enabling proposed legislation the AUXILIARY ACT, and it would require any public agency to respond affirmatively to a request and proposal for recognition from any bonafide interested party of one or more persons. A recognized auxiliary would have access to all public records of the agency at any time and be invited to all public meetings as participants, apart from a general audience.\" - Mike Trout<br /><br />Some of my other proposals at <a href=\"http://CampaignforGoodGovernment.com\" target=\"_blank\">http://CampaignforGoodGovernment.com</a> ", "to": [ "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public" ], "cc": [ "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/followers" ], "tag": [], "url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/826430616315731968", "published": "2018-03-30T12:20:13+00:00", "source": { "content": "My comment on the IVN.US survey that asks: \"Tired of BOTH parties rigging the rules? We want to hear from YOU. What is the best way to fix the system?\"\n\n(SURVEY @ HTTPS://BRIDGE.IVN.US)\n\n\"Citizen involvement and oversight in the day to day operations of every government agency, in the form of the authorization of independent (volunteer) auxiliary groups of persons interested in supporting the missions of same. From VA operations auxiliaries in hospitals and clinics on the federal level, to local and state agencies such as driver license bureaus to county tax property offices (and perhaps an important example would be ELECTIONS AUXILIARIES, to serve in the over 3000 elections bureaus in the nation). In short, anywhere that public monies are being spent. I call the enabling proposed legislation the AUXILIARY ACT, and it would require any public agency to respond affirmatively to a request and proposal for recognition from any bonafide interested party of one or more persons. A recognized auxiliary would have access to all public records of the agency at any time and be invited to all public meetings as participants, apart from a general audience.\" - Mike Trout\n\nSome of my other proposals at http://CampaignforGoodGovernment.com ", "mediaType": "text/plain" } }, "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/entities/urn:activity:826430616315731968/activity" }, { "type": "Create", "actor": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628", "object": { "type": "Note", "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/entities/urn:activity:826061245143293952", "attributedTo": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628", "content": "RED STATE BLOG WRITES DOUBLE AMPUTEE IRAQ WAR VETERAN DUCKWORTH \"DOESN'T HAVE A LEG TO STAND ON\" :: \"Iraq War veteran and U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.) hit back at the conservative Red State blog for using a particularly awful phrase in an article attacking her support of Miguel Perez Jr., a veteran who served two tours in Afghanistan but was still deported to Mexico.<br /><br />Last week, Duckworth, a Black Hawk helicopter pilot who received the Purple Heart for her service in Iraq, appealed to the Department of Homeland Security to review Perez’s deportation case, arguing that deporting him would be a “shocking betrayal” of a veteran who fought for the United States.<br /><br />“Unfortunately, Duckworth really doesn’t have a leg to stand on in making this argument,” the article read ― a highly insulting attack on the senator, who lost both her legs fighting in Iraq when her helicopter was struck by a rocket-propelled grenade.\"<br /><br /><a href=\"https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/tammy-duckworth-shuts-down-conservative-blog-saying-she-doesnt-have-a-leg-to-stand-on_us_5abc31e2e4b03e2a5c790d65\" target=\"_blank\">https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/tammy-duckworth-shuts-down-conservative-blog-saying-she-doesnt-have-a-leg-to-stand-on_us_5abc31e2e4b03e2a5c790d65</a>? ", "to": [ "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public" ], "cc": [ "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/followers" ], "tag": [], "url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/826061245143293952", "published": "2018-03-29T11:52:28+00:00", "source": { "content": "RED STATE BLOG WRITES DOUBLE AMPUTEE IRAQ WAR VETERAN DUCKWORTH \"DOESN'T HAVE A LEG TO STAND ON\" :: \"Iraq War veteran and U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.) hit back at the conservative Red State blog for using a particularly awful phrase in an article attacking her support of Miguel Perez Jr., a veteran who served two tours in Afghanistan but was still deported to Mexico.\n\nLast week, Duckworth, a Black Hawk helicopter pilot who received the Purple Heart for her service in Iraq, appealed to the Department of Homeland Security to review Perez’s deportation case, arguing that deporting him would be a “shocking betrayal” of a veteran who fought for the United States.\n\n“Unfortunately, Duckworth really doesn’t have a leg to stand on in making this argument,” the article read ― a highly insulting attack on the senator, who lost both her legs fighting in Iraq when her helicopter was struck by a rocket-propelled grenade.\"\n\nhttps://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/tammy-duckworth-shuts-down-conservative-blog-saying-she-doesnt-have-a-leg-to-stand-on_us_5abc31e2e4b03e2a5c790d65? ", "mediaType": "text/plain" } }, "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/entities/urn:activity:826061245143293952/activity" }, { "type": "Create", "actor": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628", "object": { "type": "Note", "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/entities/urn:activity:826035338284195840", "attributedTo": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628", "content": "\"At the root of this is the American obsession with self-reliance, which makes it more acceptable to applaud an individual for working himself to death than to argue that an individual working himself to death is evidence of a flawed economic system. The contrast between the gig economy’s rhetoric (everyone is always connecting, having fun, and killing it!) and the conditions that allow it to exist (a lack of dependable employment that pays a living wage) makes this kink in our thinking especially clear. Human-interest stories about the beauty of some person standing up to the punishments of late capitalism are regular features in the news, too. I’ve come to detest the local-news set piece about the man who walks ten or eleven or twelve miles to work—a story that’s been filed from Oxford, Alabama; from Detroit, Michigan; from Plano, Texas. The story is always written as a tearjerker, with praise for the person’s uncomplaining attitude; a car is usually donated to the subject in the end. Never mentioned or even implied is the shamefulness of a job that doesn’t permit a worker to afford his own commute.<br /><br />There’s a painful distance between the chipper narratives surrounding labor and success in America and the lived experience of workers. A similar conflict drove Nathanael West, in 1934, to publish the novel “A Cool Million,” which satirized the Horatio Alger bootstrap fables that remained popular into the Great Depression. “Alger is to America what Homer was to the Greeks,” West once wrote. His protagonist in “A Cool Million,” Lemuel Pitkin, is an innocent, energetic striver, tasked with saving his mother’s house from foreclosure. A series of Alger-esque plot twists ensue. But Pitkin, rather than triumphing, ends up losing his teeth, his eye, his leg, his scalp, and finally his thumb. Morris Dickstein, in his book “Dancing in the Dark: A Cultural History of the Great Depression,” notes, “The novel ends with Lem as a vaudeville clown being beaten nightly until he simply falls apart.” A former President named Shagpoke Whipple gives a speech valorizing Pitkin’s fate, extolling “the right of every American boy to go into the world and . . . make his fortune by industry.” Whipple describes Pitkin’s dismemberment—“lovingly,” Dickstein adds—and tells his audience that, through Pitkin’s hard work and enthusiastic martyrdom, “America became again American.”<br /><br /><a href=\"https://www.newyorker.com/culture/jia-tolentino/the-gig-economy-celebrates-working-yourself-to-death\" target=\"_blank\">https://www.newyorker.com/culture/jia-tolentino/the-gig-economy-celebrates-working-yourself-to-death</a> ", "to": [ "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public" ], "cc": [ "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/followers" ], "tag": [], "url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/826035338284195840", "published": "2018-03-29T10:09:31+00:00", "source": { "content": "\"At the root of this is the American obsession with self-reliance, which makes it more acceptable to applaud an individual for working himself to death than to argue that an individual working himself to death is evidence of a flawed economic system. The contrast between the gig economy’s rhetoric (everyone is always connecting, having fun, and killing it!) and the conditions that allow it to exist (a lack of dependable employment that pays a living wage) makes this kink in our thinking especially clear. Human-interest stories about the beauty of some person standing up to the punishments of late capitalism are regular features in the news, too. I’ve come to detest the local-news set piece about the man who walks ten or eleven or twelve miles to work—a story that’s been filed from Oxford, Alabama; from Detroit, Michigan; from Plano, Texas. The story is always written as a tearjerker, with praise for the person’s uncomplaining attitude; a car is usually donated to the subject in the end. Never mentioned or even implied is the shamefulness of a job that doesn’t permit a worker to afford his own commute.\n\nThere’s a painful distance between the chipper narratives surrounding labor and success in America and the lived experience of workers. A similar conflict drove Nathanael West, in 1934, to publish the novel “A Cool Million,” which satirized the Horatio Alger bootstrap fables that remained popular into the Great Depression. “Alger is to America what Homer was to the Greeks,” West once wrote. His protagonist in “A Cool Million,” Lemuel Pitkin, is an innocent, energetic striver, tasked with saving his mother’s house from foreclosure. A series of Alger-esque plot twists ensue. But Pitkin, rather than triumphing, ends up losing his teeth, his eye, his leg, his scalp, and finally his thumb. Morris Dickstein, in his book “Dancing in the Dark: A Cultural History of the Great Depression,” notes, “The novel ends with Lem as a vaudeville clown being beaten nightly until he simply falls apart.” A former President named Shagpoke Whipple gives a speech valorizing Pitkin’s fate, extolling “the right of every American boy to go into the world and . . . make his fortune by industry.” Whipple describes Pitkin’s dismemberment—“lovingly,” Dickstein adds—and tells his audience that, through Pitkin’s hard work and enthusiastic martyrdom, “America became again American.”\n\nhttps://www.newyorker.com/culture/jia-tolentino/the-gig-economy-celebrates-working-yourself-to-death ", "mediaType": "text/plain" } }, "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/entities/urn:activity:826035338284195840/activity" }, { "type": "Create", "actor": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628", "object": { "type": "Note", "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/entities/urn:activity:825423878660071424", "attributedTo": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628", "content": "i can't find a link to this help group on my profile page so i made a link in my info area, mostly for me, but for others who land there as well.", "to": [ "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public" ], "cc": [ "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/followers" ], "tag": [], "url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/825423878660071424", "published": "2018-03-27T17:39:48+00:00", "source": { "content": "i can't find a link to this help group on my profile page so i made a link in my info area, mostly for me, but for others who land there as well.", "mediaType": "text/plain" } }, "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/entities/urn:activity:825423878660071424/activity" }, { "type": "Create", "actor": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628", "object": { "type": "Note", "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/entities/urn:activity:825404753943605248", "attributedTo": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628", "content": "GARDENA'S GUNRUNNING COPS :: \"Det. Carlos Miguel Fernandez, 42, Officer Edward Yasushiro Arao, 47, face a combined five felony counts, including conspiring to deal in firearms without a license, according to the indictment unsealed Friday in U.S. District Court.<br /><br />In one 2017 sale, Fernandez knew he was selling to a straw buyer who wasn't the actual person getting the gun, according to the indictment. The person who eventually received the weapon was a convicted felon banned from possessing firearms.\"<br /><br /><a href=\"http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-gardenapolice-guns-dealing-20180326-story.html\" target=\"_blank\">http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-gardenapolice-guns-dealing-20180326-story.html</a> ", "to": [ "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public" ], "cc": [ "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/followers" ], "tag": [], "url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/825404753943605248", "published": "2018-03-27T16:23:48+00:00", "source": { "content": "GARDENA'S GUNRUNNING COPS :: \"Det. Carlos Miguel Fernandez, 42, Officer Edward Yasushiro Arao, 47, face a combined five felony counts, including conspiring to deal in firearms without a license, according to the indictment unsealed Friday in U.S. District Court.\n\nIn one 2017 sale, Fernandez knew he was selling to a straw buyer who wasn't the actual person getting the gun, according to the indictment. The person who eventually received the weapon was a convicted felon banned from possessing firearms.\"\n\nhttp://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-gardenapolice-guns-dealing-20180326-story.html ", "mediaType": "text/plain" } }, "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/entities/urn:activity:825404753943605248/activity" }, { "type": "Create", "actor": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628", "object": { "type": "Note", "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/entities/urn:activity:825055654760935424", "attributedTo": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628", "content": "Here's the direct link to the FB \"ad preferences\" information that is part and parcel of the type of info Cambridge Analytica used to Gaslight you -- do with it what you will. <a href=\"https://www.facebook.com/ads/preferences\" target=\"_blank\">https://www.facebook.com/ads/preferences</a><br /><br />The direct link for \"App preferences\" including what permissions and information you grant each:<br /><a href=\"https://www.facebook.com/settings?tab=applications\" target=\"_blank\">https://www.facebook.com/settings?tab=applications</a><br /><br />Remember to LIKE, COMMENT, and SHARE this post with Friends and Contacts. Spread the word.", "to": [ "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public" ], "cc": [ "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/followers" ], "tag": [], "url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/825055654760935424", "published": "2018-03-26T17:16:36+00:00", "source": { "content": "Here's the direct link to the FB \"ad preferences\" information that is part and parcel of the type of info Cambridge Analytica used to Gaslight you -- do with it what you will. https://www.facebook.com/ads/preferences\n\nThe direct link for \"App preferences\" including what permissions and information you grant each:\nhttps://www.facebook.com/settings?tab=applications\n\nRemember to LIKE, COMMENT, and SHARE this post with Friends and Contacts. Spread the word.", "mediaType": "text/plain" } }, "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/entities/urn:activity:825055654760935424/activity" }, { "type": "Create", "actor": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628", "object": { "type": "Note", "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/entities/urn:activity:825009771713392640", "attributedTo": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628", "content": "WASHINGTON — \"The Trump administration expelled 60 Russian diplomats on Monday and ordered Russia’s consulate in Seattle to close, as the United States and European nations sought to jointly punish Moscow for its alleged role in poisoning an ex-spy in Britain.<br /><br />Senior Trump administration officials said all 60 Russians were spies working in the U.S. under diplomatic cover, including a dozen at Russia’s mission to the United Nations. The officials said the administration was taking the action to send a message to Russia’s leaders about the “unacceptably high” number of Russian intelligence operatives in the U.S.<br /><br />The expelled Russians will have seven days to leave the U.S, said the officials. They weren’t authorized to be identified by name and requested anonymity. They added that the Seattle consulate is a counter-intelligence concern because of its proximity to a U.S. Navy base.\"<br /><br /><a href=\"https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/trump-administration-to-expel-60-russian-diplomats-and-close-seattle-consulate\" target=\"_blank\">https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/trump-administration-to-expel-60-russian-diplomats-and-close-seattle-consulate</a>", "to": [ "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public" ], "cc": [ "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/followers" ], "tag": [], "url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/825009771713392640", "published": "2018-03-26T14:14:17+00:00", "source": { "content": "WASHINGTON — \"The Trump administration expelled 60 Russian diplomats on Monday and ordered Russia’s consulate in Seattle to close, as the United States and European nations sought to jointly punish Moscow for its alleged role in poisoning an ex-spy in Britain.\n\nSenior Trump administration officials said all 60 Russians were spies working in the U.S. under diplomatic cover, including a dozen at Russia’s mission to the United Nations. The officials said the administration was taking the action to send a message to Russia’s leaders about the “unacceptably high” number of Russian intelligence operatives in the U.S.\n\nThe expelled Russians will have seven days to leave the U.S, said the officials. They weren’t authorized to be identified by name and requested anonymity. They added that the Seattle consulate is a counter-intelligence concern because of its proximity to a U.S. Navy base.\"\n\nhttps://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/trump-administration-to-expel-60-russian-diplomats-and-close-seattle-consulate", "mediaType": "text/plain" } }, "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/entities/urn:activity:825009771713392640/activity" } ], "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/outbox", "partOf": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/461043398321647628/outboxoutbox" }