se

Prince Harry sparks frenzy because of his ‘terrorizing' plans for Christmas

Prince Harry sparks frenzy because of his ‘terrorizing' plans for Christmas

Prince Harry’s terrifying effect on Christmas in 2024, for the Windsors has just become a point of conversation.

So much so that one expert has even stepped forward to offer his thoughts on the...




se

Priyanka Chopra, daughter Malti pose with 'Citadel' season 2 crew

Priyanka Chopra introduces daughter Malti to 'Citadel' world

Priyanka Chopra is keeping a smooth balance between work and life as shooting for the second season of Citadel begins.

The actress, 42, just announced the return via an Instagram post where the crew for...




se

New coronavirus case emerges in Gilgit-Baltistan, Pakistan's tally rises to 20

The 14-year-old boy, a resident of Skardu, was held at an isolation centre where he tested positive for COVID-19




se

ANF seizes 643 kg of drugs in 10 nationwide raids

At least 10 suspects, including a woman, arrested as ANF seizes drugs worth more than Rs 80 million




se

Karachi's marine life and coastline under threat from waste and sewage pollution

Karachi’s coastline is deteriorating due to plastic and sewage waste, putting marine life at serious risk.




se

Ten arrested PTI leaders attend NA session after speaker issues production orders

All arrested members are currently under police custody on physical remand




se

PTI reschedules Lahore rally to September 21

Party also announces a seminar in connection with Eid Milad-un-Nabi (SAW) on September 17




se

Senate panel moves to criminalise necrophilia

Bill, making necrophilia punishable by life imprisonment, highlights the disturbing occurrences in Pakistan




se

US imposes sanctions on Chinese institute, firms for supporting Pakistan's ballistic missile program

Washington had sanctioned China-based companies in October 2023 for supplying missile-applicable items to Pakistan




se

Pakistan sees Rs47.54 per litre drop in fuel prices since May, reports petroleum minister

Musadik Masood Malik says rate of petroleum levy to also decrease with increase in tax-to-GDP ratio




se

Hinduism being masqueraded as secularism in India, says AJK president

Masood says 13,000 Kashmiri boys have been abducted and kept in prison houses where they're being subjected to torture




se

Virus cases in Indian Occupied Kashmir top 7,000

2,700 infections, including 41 virus-linked deaths, confirmed in last 2 weeks



  • World
  • Jammu & Kashmir

se

Another case of police excesses surfaces

The report further showed that the additional SHO had been previously found guilty of framing a man in a fake case




se

Poor internet access for students echoes in K-P assembly

Debate on Rs55.42b supplementary budget completed




se

First phase of HingIaj road construction completed

Project was approved at a cost of Rs120 million




se

Balochistan collects Rs2.5b from mineral sector

Computerised weighing scales have been installed




se

Letter to Punjab IGP seeks ban on PUBG video game

Official says excessive violence in game triggers aggressive behaviour among youth




se

2,179 people diagnosed with coronavirus in Sindh

CM Murad says province's daily testing capacity has been stretched to 12,000




se

CJP Isa slams bureaucrats' job quota for children, calls for merit-based hiring

Supreme Court reviews a case concerning government jobs allocated through a statutory regulatory order (SRO)




se

PM welcomes interest rate cut, promises further economic growth

Shehbaz expresses optimism that interest rate cut will boost investor confidence and increase investments in Pakistan




se

Analog Equivalent Rights (5/21): Where did Freedom of Assembly go?

Privacy: Our analog parents had the right to meet whomever they liked, wherever they liked, and discuss whatever they liked, without the government knowing. Our digital children have lost this, just because they use more modern items.

For a lot of our digital children’s activities, there’s no such thing as privacy anymore, as they naturally take place on the net. For people born 1980 and later, it doesn’t make sense to talk of “offline” or “online” activities. What older people see as “people spending time with their phone or computer”, younger see as socializing using their phone or computer.

This is an important distinction that the older generation tends to not understand.

Perhaps this is best illustrated with an anecdote from the previous generation again: The parents of our parents complained that our parents were talking with the phone, and not to another person using the phone. What our parents saw as socializing (using an old analog landline phone), their parents in turn saw as obsession with a device. There’s nothing new under the sun.

(Note: when I say “digital children” here, I am not referring to children as in young people below majority age; I am referring to the next generation of fully capable adult professionals.)

This digital socializing, however, can be limited, it can be… permissioned. As in, requiring somebody’s permission to socialize in the way you and your friends want, or even to socialize at all. The network effects are strong and create centralizing pressure toward a few platforms where everybody hang out, and as these are private services, they get to set any terms and conditions they like for people assembling and socializing – for the billions of people assembling and socializing there.

Just as one example to illustrate this: Facebook is using American values for socializing, not universal values. Being super-against anything even slightly naked while being comparatively accepting of hate speech is not something inherently global; it is strictly American. If Facebook had been developed in France or Germany instead of the US, any and all nudity would be welcomed as art and free-body culture (Freikörperkultur) and a completely legitimate way of socializing, but the slightest genocide questioning would lead to an insta-kickban and reporting to authorities for criminal prosecution.

Therefore, just using the dominant Facebook as an example, any non-American way of socializing is effectively banned worldwide, and it’s likely that people developing and working with Facebook aren’t even aware of this. But the Freedom of Assembly hasn’t just been limited in the online sphere, but also in the classic analog offline world where our analog parents used to hang out (and still do).

Since people’s locations are tracked, as we saw in the previous post, it is possible to match locations between individuals and figure out who was talking to whom, as well as when and where this happened, even if they were only talking face to face. As I’m looking out my window from the office writing this piece, it just so happens that I’m looking at the old Stasi headquarters across from Alexanderplatz in former East Berlin. It was a little bit like Hotel California; people who checked in there tended to never leave. Stasi also tracked who was talking to whom, but required a ton of people to perform this task manually, just in order to walk behind other people and photograph whom they were talking to — and therefore, there was an economic limit to how many people could be tracked like this at any one time before the national economy couldn’t sustain more surveillance. Today, that limit is completely gone, and everybody is tracked all the time.

Do you really have Freedom of Assembly, when the fact that you’ve associated with a person — indeed, maybe just spent time in their physical proximity — can be held against you?

I’m going to illustrate this with an example. In a major leak recently, it doesn’t matter which one, a distant colleague of mine happened to celebrate a big event with a huge party in near physical proximity to where the documents were being copied at the same time, completely unaware and by sheer coincidence. Months later, this colleague was part of journalistically vetting those leaked documents and verifying their veracity, while at this time still unaware of the source and that they had held a big party very close to the origin of the documents.

The government was very aware of the physical proximity of the leak combined with this person’s journalistic access to the documents, though, and issued not one but two arrest-on-sight warrants for this distant colleague based on that coincidence. They are now living in exile outside of Sweden, and don’t expect to be able to return home anytime soon.

Privacy, including Privacy of Location, remains your own responsibility.




se

Analog Equivalent Rights (6/21): Everything you do, say, or think today will be used against you in the future

Privacy: “Everything you say or do can and will be used against you, at any point in the far future when the context and agreeableness of what you said or did has changed dramatically.” With the analog surveillance of our parents, everything was caught in the context of its time. The digital surveillance of our children saves everything for later use against them.

It’s a reality for our digital children so horrible, that not even Nineteen Eighty-Four managed to think of it. In the analog surveillance world, where people are put under surveillance only after they’ve been identified as suspects of a crime, everything we said and did was transient. If Winston’s telescreen missed him doing something bad, then it had missed the moment and Winston was safe.

The analog surveillance was transient for two reasons: one, it was assumed that all surveillance was people watching other people, and two, that nobody would have the capacity of instantly finding keywords in the past twenty years of somebody’s conversations. In the analog world of our parents, that would mean somebody would need to actually listen to twenty years’ worth of tape recordings, which would in turn take sixty years (as we only work 8 out of 24 hours). In the digital world of our children, surveillance agencies type a few words to get automatic transcripts of the saved-forever surveillance-of-everybody up on screen in realtime as they type the keywords – not just from one person’s conversation, but from everybody’s. (This isn’t even exaggerating; this was reality in or about 2010 with the GCHQ-NSA XKEYSCORE program.)

In the world of our analog parents, surveillance was only a thing at the specific time it was active, which was when you were under individual and concrete suspicion of a specific, already-committed, and serious crime.

In the world of our digital children, surveillance can be retroactively activated for any reason or no reason, with the net effect that everybody is under surveillance for everything they have ever done or said.

We should tell people as it has become instead; “anything you say or do can be used against you, for any reason or no reason, at any point in the future”.

The current generation has utterly failed to preserve the presumption of innocence, as it applies to surveillance, in the shift from our analog parents to our digital children.

This subtle addition – that everything is recorded for later use against you – amplifies the horrors of the previous aspects of surveillance by orders of magnitude.

Consider somebody asking you where you were on the evening of March 13, 1992. You would, at best, have a vague idea of what you did that year. (“Let’s see… I remember my military service started on March 3 of that year… and the first week was a tough boot camp in freezing winter forest… so I was probably… back at barracks after the first week, having the first military theory class of something? Or maybe that date was a Saturday or Sunday, in which case I’d be on weekend leave?” That’s about the maximum precision your memory can produce for twenty-five years past.)

However, when confronted with hard data on what you did, the people confronting you will have an utter and complete upper hand, because you simply can’t refute it. “You were in this room and said these words, according to our data transcript. These other people were also in the same room. We have to assume what you said was communicated with the intention for them to hear. What do you have to say for yourself?”

It doesn’t have to be 25 years ago. A few months back would be sufficient for most memories to be not very detailed anymore.

To illustrate further: consider that the NSA is known to store copies even of all encrypted correspondence today, on the assumption that even if it’s not breakable today, it will probably be so in the future. Consider what you’re communicating encrypted today — in text, voice, or video — can be used against you in twenty years. You probably don’t even know half of it, because the window of acceptable behavior will have shifted in ways we cannot predict, as it always does. In the 1950s, it was completely socially acceptable to drop disparaging remarks about some minorities in society, which would socially ostracize you today. Other minorities are still okay to disparage, but might not be in the future.

When you’re listening to somebody talking from fifty years ago, they were talking in the context of their time, maybe even with the best of intentions by today’s standards. Yet, we could judge them harshly for their words interpreted by today’s context — today’s completely different context.

Our digital children will face exactly this scenario, because everything they do and say can and will be used against them, at any point in the future. It should not be this way. They should have every right to enjoy Analog Equivalent Privacy Rights.




se

Analog Equivalent Rights (7/21): Analog Libraries Were Private Searches for Information

When our analog parents searched for information, that activity took place in libraries, and that was one of the most safeguarded privacies of all. When our digital children search for information, their innermost thoughts are instead harvested wholesale for marketing. How did this happen?

If you’re looking at one particular profession of the analog world that was absolutely obsessed with the privacy of its patrons, it was the librarians. Libraries were where people could search for their darkest secrets, were it literature, science, shopping, or something else. The secrecy of libraries were downright legendary.

As bomb recipes started appearing on the proto-Internet in the 1980s — on so-called BBSes — and some politicians tried to play on moral panics, many of common sense were quick to point out, that these “text files with bomb recipes” were no different than what you would find in the chemistry section of a mediocre-or-better library — and libraries were sacred. There was no moral panic to play on as soon as you pointed out that this was already available in every public library, for the public to access anonymously

So private were libraries, in fact, that librarians were in collective outrage when the FBI started asking libraries for records of who had borrowed what book – and that’s how the infamous warrant canaries were invented. Yup, by a librarian, protecting the patrons of the library. Librarians have always been the profession defending privacy rights the hardest – in the analog as well as the digital.

In the analog world of our parents, their Freedom of Information was sacramount: their innermost thirst for learning, knowledge, and understanding. In the digital world of our children, their corresponding innermost thoughts are instead harvested wholesale and sold off to market trinkets into their faces.

It’s not just what our digital children successfully studied that’s up for grabs. In the terms of our analog parents, it’s what they ever went to the library for. It’s what they ever considered going to the library for. In the world of our digital children, everything they searched for is recorded — and everything they thought of searching for but didn’t.

Think about that for a moment: something that was so sacred for our analog parents that entire classes of professions would go on strike to preserve it, is now casually used for wholesale marketing in the world of our digital children.

Combine this with the previous article about everything you do, say, and think being recorded for later use against you, and we’re going to need a major change in thinking on this very soon.

There is no reason our children should have less Freedom of Information just because they happen to live in a digital environment, as compared to the analog environment of our parents. There is no reason our digital children shouldn’t enjoy Analog Equivalent Privacy Rights.

Of course, it can be argued that the Internet search engines are private services who are free to offer whatever services they like on whatever terms they like. But there were private libraries in the analog world of our parents, too. We’ll be returning to this “it’s private so you don’t have a say” concept a little later in this series.

Privacy remains your own responsibility.




se

Analog Equivalent Rights (8/21): Using Third-Party Services Should Not Void Expectation of Privacy

Privacy: Ross Ulbricht handed in his appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court last week, highlighting an important Analog Equivalent Privacy Right in the process: Just because you’re using equipment that makes a third party aware of your circumstances, does that really nullify any expectation of privacy?

In most constitutions, there’s a protection of privacy of some kind. In the European Charter of Human Rights, this is specified as having the right to private and family life, home, and correspondence. In the U.S. Constitution, it’s framed slightly differently, but with the same outcome: it’s a ban for the government to invade privacy without good cause (“unreasonable search and seizure”).

U.S. Courts have long held, that if you have voluntarily given up some part of your digitally-stored privacy to a third party, then you can no longer expect to have privacy in that area. When looking at analog equivalence for privacy rights, this doctrine is atrocious, and in order to understand just how atrocious, we need to go back to the dawn of the manual telephone switchboards.

At the beginning of the telephone age, switchboards were fully manual. When you requested a telephone call, a manual switchboard operator would manually connect the wire from your telephone to the wire of the receiver’s telephone, and crank a mechanism that would make that telephone ring. The operators could hear every call if they wanted and knew who had been talking to whom and when.

Did you give up your privacy to a third party when using this manual telephone service? Yes, arguably, you did. Under the digital doctrine applied now, phonecalls would have no privacy at all, under any circumstance. But as we know, phonecalls are private. In fact, the phonecall operators were oathsworn to never utter the smallest part of what they learned on the job about people’s private dealings — so seriously was privacy considered, even by the companies running the switchboards.

Interestingly enough, this “third-party surrender of privacy” doctrine seems to have appeared the moment the last switchboard operator left their job for today’s automated phone-circuit switches. This was as late as 1983, just at the dawn of digital consumer-level technology such as the Commodore 64.

This false equivalence alone should be sufficient to scuttle the doctrine of “voluntarily” surrendering privacy to a third party in the digital world, and therefore giving up expectation of privacy: the equivalence in the analog world was the direct opposite.

But there’s more to the analog equivalent of third-party-service privacy. Somewhere in this concept is the notion that you’re voluntarily choosing to give up your privacy, as an active informed act — in particular, an act that stands out of the ordinary, since the Constitutions of the world are very clear that the ordinary default case is that you have an expectation of privacy.

In other words, since people’s everyday lives are covered by expectations of privacy, there must be something outside of the ordinary that a government can claim gives it the right to take away somebody’s privacy. And this “outside the ordinary” has been that the people in question were carrying a cellphone, and so “voluntarily” gave up their right to privacy, as the cellphone gives away their location to the network operator by contacting cellphone towers.

But carrying a cellphone is expected behavior today. It is completely within the boundaries of “ordinary”. In terms of expectations, this doesn’t differ much from wearing jeans or a jacket. This leads us to the question; in the thought experiment that yesterday’s jeans manufacturers had been able to pinpoint your location, had it been reasonable for the government to argue that you give up any expectation of privacy when you’re wearing jeans?

No. No, of course it hadn’t.

It’s not like you’re carrying a wilderness tracking device for the express purpose of rescue services to find you during a dangerous hike. In such a circumstance, it could be argued that you’re voluntarily carrying a locator device. But not when carrying something that everybody is expected to carry — indeed, something that everybody must carry in order to even function in today’s society.

When the only alternative to having your Constitutionally-guaranteed privacy is exile from modern society, a government should have a really thin case. Especially when the analog equivalent — analog phone switchboards — was never fair game in any case.

People deserve Analog Equivalent Privacy Rights.

Until a government recognizes this and voluntarily surrenders a power it has taken itself, which isn’t something people should hold their breath over, privacy remains your own responsibility.




se

Analog Equivalent Rights (11/21): Our parents used anonymous cash

Privacy: The anonymous cash of our analog parents is fast disappearing, and in its wake comes trackable and permissioned debit cards to our children. While convenient, it’s a wolf in sheep’s clothing.

In the last article, we looked at how our analog parents could anonymously buy a newspaper on the street corner with some coins, and read their news of choice without anybody knowing about it. This observation extends to far more than just newspapers, of course.

This ability of our parents – the ability to conduct decentralized, secure transactions anonymously – has been all but lost in a landscape that keeps pushing card payments for convenience. The convenience of not paying upfront, with credit cards; the convenience of always paying an exact amount, with debit cards; the convenience of not needing to carry and find exact amounts with every purchase. Some could even argue that having every transaction listed on a bank statement is a convenience of accounting.

But with accounting comes tracking. With tracking comes predictability and unwanted accountability.

It’s been said that a VISA executive can predict a divorce one year ahead of the parties involved, based on changes in purchase patterns. Infamously, a Target store was targeting a high school-aged woman with maternity advertising, which at first made her father furious: but as things turned out, the young woman was indeed pregnant. Target knew, and her own father didn’t.

This is because when we’re no longer using anonymous cash, every single purchase is tracked and recorded with the express intent on using it against us — whether for influencing us to make a choice to deplete our resources (“buy more”) or for punishing us for buying something we shouldn’t have, in a wide variety of conceivable ways.

China is taking the concept one step further, as has been written here before, and in what must have been the inspiration for a Black Mirror episode, is weighting its citizens’ Obedience Scores based on whether they buy useful or lavish items — useful in the views of the regime, of course.

It’s not just the fact that transactions of our digital children are logged for later use against them, in ways our analog parents could never conceive of.

It’s also that the transactions of our digital children are permissioned. When our digital children buy a bottle of water with a debit card, a transaction clears somewhere in the background. But that also means that somebody can decide to have the transaction not clear; somebody has the right to arbitrarily decide what people get to buy and not buy, if this trend continues for our digital children. That is a horrifying thought.

Our parents were using decentralized, censorship resistant, anonymous transactions in using plain cash. There is no reason our digital children should have anything less. It’s a matter of liberty and self-determination.

Privacy remains your own responsibility.




se

kunstform BMX Shop Team - Season 2015/2016



We are very happy to announce officialy the kunstform BMX Shop Team for the season 2015/2016! Our focus with the choice of riders is to cover every BMX Freestyle disciplines like BMX Park, BMX Street and BMX Flatlen and to give them support and motivation. For BMX Flatland we could get Kevin Nikulski and John Krämer. Shawn Hammer from Berlin and Miguel Franzem from Sindelfingen represent BMX Park. Both of them have a very nice attitude! For BMX Street is riding David "Arthur" Biedermann, a local rider from Stuttgart and Robin Kachfi who won the kunstform "Can you Sponsor me" Video Competition. Jonas Bader and Miguel Smajlji feeling home everywhere! We have planned some projects, so stay tune!




se

wethepeople Autumn Session 2015 - Zuppermarkt - Trier





wethepeople Autumn Session 2015 - Zuppermarkt - Trier


3rd / 4th of october nearly the whole kunstform BMX Shop team went to the wethepeople autumn Session at the "Zuppermarkt" Skatehall in Trier! Our buddy Nitsche did a little edit about the trip and it was a lot of fun to hang out with all the buddies! Looking forward to come back next near! Much respect to Axle Reichertz for runnin the Zuppermarket and for the good accommodation!

Riders of the Videos are:

Kevin Nikulski
Robin Kachfi
Miguel Smajlji
John Krämer
Miguel Franzem
Sebastian Pospischil
Moritz Kuhn
Daniel Tünte
Daniel Fuhrmann
Dima Prykhodko


Musik: Danny Seth - I Arise Because
Video: Sebi Nitsche


Cheers Daniel!




se

BMX Autumn Session - Shawn & Robin - Mellowpark Berlin





BMX Autumn Session - Shawn & Robin - Mellowpark Berlin



Robin Kachfi & Shawn Hammer spend some time at Mellowpark in Berlin and made this edit for us! Nice autumn mood and chilled vibes out there!

Kamera: Robin Kachfi, Meo Kunze & Markus Lange
Music: Danny Brown - 25 bucks instrumental




se

kunstform BMX Shop - Stock Session 2015




kunstform BMX Shop - Stock Session 2015



On 5th of december we opened our warehouse to run a little bmx jam with free beer and good vibes! Well, the height of our stock room is quite tuff so we could just put little obstacles and streetrails but every rider killin in it and it was a lot of fun. At the end we were runnin a best trick contest with the following result:

Best Trick:
1. Miguel Smajlji
2. Adrian Warnken
3. Robin Kachfi

Best Crash:
Stefan Barnickel


Thanks for the support: sundaybikes & Subrosa

Kamera & Edit: , Vincent Doczekala
Music: Herb Shuttles - the Underachievers

Thanks for everyone who was there!

Daniel




se

kunstform BMX Shop - sunday session - Darmstadt





kunstform BMX Shop - sunday session - Darmstadt


We went with few BMX riders of our team to Darmstadt to run our first sunday session! Darmstadt is very close to frankfurt and have a very nice skatepark runnin by riders! It was a lot of fun to spend a good time together!

Rider:
Shawn Hammer
Miguel Franzem
Miguel Smajlji
Robin Kachfi
Vincent Doczekala
Daniel Fuhrmann

Camera:
Robin Kachfi & Vincent Doczekala

Music:
Foxwedding - U Should Chill

Stay motivated!

Daniel




se

Final BOOST Session - Stuttgart







Final BOOST Session - Stuttgart

When: 05th March 2016 (from 2 p.m.)
Where: BOOST Skatehall Stuttgart
Classes: Pro / Master (Amateur inkl. BMX Kids Wertung bis Alter 12 Jahre)
Price: 500 Euro
Supported by: Sunday Bikes

Last session at BOOST Skatehall in Stuttgart. More infos soon!




se

kunstform BMX Shop Team - Season 2016/2017



We are very happy to announce officialy the kunstform BMX Shop Team for the season 2016/2017! Our focus with the choice of riders is to cover every BMX Freestyle disciplines like BMX Park, BMX Street and BMX Flatland and to give them support and motivation. For BMX Flatland we could get Kevin Nikulski, John Krämer and Markus Schwital. Shawn Hammer from Berlin and Miguel Franzem from Sindelfingen represent BMX Park. For BMX Street is riding David "Arthur" Biedermann, a local rider from Stuttgart and Robin Kachfi who won the kunstform "Can you Sponsor me" Video Competition. Jonas Bader,Miguel Smajlji and Sven Avemaria feeling home everywhere! We have planned some projects, so stay tune!




se

Simple Session 17 - Livestream Public Viewing - Stuttgart



Simple Session 17 - Public Viewing, Stuttgart

When:
Saturday 04.02.2017 (14 - 21 o'clock)
Sunday 05.02.2017 (16 - 21 o'clock)
Wo: kunstform BMX Shop, Rotebühlstr. 63, 70178 Stuttgart

Simple Session 17 is one of world's most iconic action sport events. We will watch the live stream of Simple Session 17 in our BMX Shop in Stuttgart. Feel free to join us.



All the best

Your kunstform BMX Shop Team




se

Simple Session 17 - kunstform BMX team - Webisode





Simple Session 17 - kunstform BMX team - Webisode practice, qualification & party


kunstform BMX Shop team riders Miguel Smajlji, Miguel Franzem and Robin Kachfi entered to Simple Session 17 in Tallinn Estonia. This video is about there time at one of world's most iconic action sport event. Riding with one of the best BMX riders, watchin the new wethepeople foundation dvd and party.

Kamera & Edit: Robin Kachfi
Music:
Ryan Little - Drowning
JI Beats - DBZ


Supported by kunstform BMX Shop https://www.kunstform.org

Contest Simple Session 17 http://session.ee

https://www.instagram.com/kunstformbmxshop/
https://www.instagram.com/robinkachfibmx/

Follow our youtube account on: https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/kunstformbmxshop




se

BMX Street Session in Stuttgart 2017 - Felix, Miguel, Robin





BMX Street Session in Stuttgart 2017 - Felix Prangenberg, Miguel Smajlji, Robin Kachfi


Felix Prangenberg and Robin Kachfi have visited Miguel Smajlji for a few days in Stuttgart to work on their BMX video projects. Before the BMX street session starts the boys had a little warm up session in our BMX stock room. What else they have done you can check here. All the best your kunstform BMX Shop Team

Kamera & Edit: Robin Kachfi
Music: JI Beats

Subscribe our youtube channel: https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/kunstformbmxshop




se

BMX Street & Skatepark Session - Robin, Miguel & Felix





BMX Street & Skatepark Session - Robin, Miguel & Felix


Miguel Smajlji and Felix Prangenberg have visited Robin Kachfi for a few days in Mannheim, Germany to continue their BMX video projects. What else they have done you can check here. All the best your kunstform BMX Shop Team

Video: Robin Kachfi

Music: JI Beats - Honey Berry

Subscribe our youtube channel: https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/kunstformbmxshop




se

Robin Kachfi BMX - Webisode#14 - BMX spring session 2017





Robin Kachfi BMX - Webisode#14 - BMX spring session 2017


Unser bro Robin Kachfi has produced a new webisode for his youtube channel at the skatepark in Mannheim Feudenheim in which you feel the summer vibes! If you want to see more of Robin, you can subscribe to his YOUTUBE Channel. All the best your kunstform BMX Shop Team

Video: Robin Kachfi

Subscribe our youtube channel: https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/kunstformbmxshop




se

Miguel Smajlji - Welcome to SIBMX, Sunday & Odyssey





Miguel Smajlji - Welcome to SIBMX, Sunday & Odyssey


Miguel Smajlji is riding through SIBMX for Sunday Bikes and Odyssey and filmed with Robin Kachfi a solide "Welcome to SIBMX" Video.

Video: Robin Kachfi

Subscribe our youtube channel: https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/kunstformbmxshop




se

19.08.2017 - Brickyardmafia Season Ender Jam 2.0 (Brackenheim)



On august 19th 2017 will happend the famous Brickyardtrails Season Ender Jam 2.0. in Brackenheim next to Heilbronn (Germany). It doesn't matter if you ride BMX or MTB, if you love trails then this will be the place for you. There will be a lot of contest like Whip Off, Ring the bell, Best Trick or Highest Air.

When: 19.08.2017 (from 2pm)

Wo: Brickyardtrails, Im Sommerrain 8, 74336 Brackenheim, Germany

Wettbewerbe: Whip Off, Ring the bell, Best Trick, Highest Air

Webpage: https://www.brickyardmafia.de/ oder Facebook Event




se

Parksessions with the Nike-Team





Parksessions with the Nike-Team


Felix Prangenberg was after the Vans BMX Street Invitational Contest in Huntington Beach with his Nike team mates Garrett Reynolds , Chad Kerley and Dennis Enarson in Nevada, where the guys filmed a little skatepark video for Vitalbmx . Enjoy the video, your kunstform BMX Shop.

Video: Vitalbmx

Subscribe our youtube channel: https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/kunstformbmxshop





se

Wethepeople Autumn Session 2017



Wethepeople Autumn Session 2017

On 1st of October, the Wethepeople Autumn Session will take place again at the Zuppermarkt in Trier. This year, there is a new format which's a Jam-format with "Cash for Tricks". Tip: It is recommended to start on Saturday, because the skatepark will stay open longer, for a Nightsession.

Adresse: Projekt X Skatehalle aka ZUPPERMARKET, Trier Aachener Str. 65 54294 Trier-West

Weitere Infos zur Wethepeople Autmn Session findest du auf Facebook.




se

Kunstform Stock Session 2017



Kunstform Stock Session 2017

On the 2nd of december 2017, the kunstform Stock Session 2017 aka the unofficial "BaWü BMX Christmas party" will take place again. This year the session will start again like last year at 3p.m. - 5p.m. at the "Pragfriedhof" in Stuttgart, where you can win "Voucher for Tricks" whether if you're a kid, rookie, amateur or pro! From 6p.m. - 10p.m. the session will take place at the kunstform stock room where you can ride different obstacles like a Subrosastreetrail, wallride, bank and ledge where you have the chance to win some prize money of 1000€. Also we'll open our "Bar" again, to celebrate with you all together! The whole event is supported by Sunday Bikes and Subrosa! #bmx

Adress:
1. Stop
Pragfriedhof Skatepark
Friedhof-/ Eckartstraße
70191 Stuttgart

2. Stop
Kunstform BMX Shop
Rotebühlstr. 63,
70178 Stuttgart


More infos on Facebook.




se

Kunstform Stock Session 2016 Video





Kunstform Stock Session 2016 Video

You can't wait for the upcoming Stock Session?
Here you can watch our video from last years stock session again!

On the 2nd of december 2017, the kunstform Stock Session 2017 aka the unofficial "BaWü BMX Christmas party" will take place again. This year the session will start again like last year at 3p.m. - 5p.m. at the "Pragfriedhof" in Stuttgart, where you can win "Voucher for Tricks" whether if you're a kid, rookie, amateur or pro! From 6p.m. - 10p.m. the session will take place at the kunstform stock room where you can ride different obstacles like a Subrosastreetrail, wallride, bank and ledge where you have the chance to win some prize money of 1000€. Also we'll open our "Bar" again, to celebrate with you all together! The whole event is supported by Sunday Bikes and Subrosa! #bmx

Adress:
1. Stop
Pragfriedhof Skatepark
Friedhof-/ Eckartstraße
70191 Stuttgart

2. Stop
Kunstform BMX Shop
Rotebühlstr. 63,
70178 Stuttgart


More infos on Facebook.




se

Kunstform Stock Session BMX Flatland Contest 2017



Kunstform Stock Session BMX Flatland Contest 2017

Save the date! 02.12.2017 Stuttgart During the pre-session at pragfriedhof in Stuttgart we will run a little bmx flatland jam + best trick comp! As well the german bmx flatland championship 2017 ceremony will happen there! If the weather is nice we will held the jam outside at the bmx flatland spot in stuttgart. Note: Our stock room is quite small but to ride a bit for fun it will work perfectly! Let‘s meet one more time and ride together in 2017! thx heresybmx for support! All the best, your kunstform BMX shop team!

Adress:
1. Stop
Pragfriedhof Skatepark
Friedhof-/ Eckartstraße
70191 Stuttgart

2. Stop
Kunstform BMX Shop
Rotebühlstr. 63,
70178 Stuttgart


More infos on Facebook.




se

Kunstform Stock Session 2017 - Photos & Results



Kunstform Stock Session 2017 - Photos & Results

On the 2nd of december 2017, our stock session took place again and it was absolutely amazing to met all the homies again. We had also run a BMX Flatland contest in our Stock room during the others went for a skatepark session to the Pragfriedhof, where you had the chance to win some vouchers for tricks. After the pre-session, the main contest started, in which different groups had the chance to show their skills on the different obstacles we had built up. Even though the ceiling was kissed many times, it was a great end to 2017. You'll find all photos and results on freedombmx. Thanks to everyone for coming down and for the amazing time! Hopefully see you next year, your kunstform BMX shop team!

Photos: Smail Mast




se

Kunstform Pragfriedhof Pre-session Video 2017





Kunstform Pragfriedhof Pre-session Video 2017

On the 2nd of december 2017, our stock session took place again and it was absolutely amazing to met all the homies again. We had also run a BMX Flatland contest in our Stock room during the others went for a skatepark session to the Pragfriedhof, where you had the chance to win some vouchers for tricks. After the pre-session, the main contest started, in which different groups had the chance to show their skills on the different obstacles we had built up. Even though the ceiling was kissed many times, it was a great end to 2017. You'll find all photos and results on freedombmx. Thanks to everyone for coming down and for the amazing time! Hopefully see you next year, your kunstform BMX shop team!

Video: Robin Kachfi




se

kunstform Stock Session video 2017 | freedombmx





kunstform Stock Session Video 2017 | freedombmx


The Stock Session 2017 went finally online, which you can watch right now on Freedombmx! On the 2nd of december 2017, our stock session took place again and it was absolutely amazing to met all the homies again. We had also run a BMX Flatland contest in our Stock room during the others went for a skatepark session to the Pragfriedhof, where you had the chance to win some vouchers for tricks. After the pre-session, the main contest started, in which different groups had the chance to show their skills on the different obstacles we had built up. Even though the ceiling was kissed many times, it was a great end to 2017. You'll find all photos and results on freedombmx. Thanks to everyone for coming down and for the amazing time!

Hopefully see you next year, your kunstform BMX shop team!

Rankings:

Pro Street:
1. Felix Donat
2. Robin Kachfi
3. Aaron Paffenholz
4. Georg Senger

Pro Flatland:
1. Wolfgang Sauter
2. Kevin Nikulski
3. Markus Schwital
4. John Krämer

Amateur Street:
1. Artur Meister
2. Lukas Schmidt
3. Benedikt Krug
4. Timo Schmidt
5. Fridolin Ewald

Amateur Flatland:
1. Benny Hill
2. Malte Orth
3. Mike Speer
4. Thomas Vucic

Kids Street:
1. Nikola Drugčević
2. Moritz Kuhn
3. Louis Trieb
4. Mika Köhler
5. Rico Fioralba

Video: Freedombmx

Subscribe our youtube channel: https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/kunstformbmxshop




se

Robin Kachfi & Justin Rudd - BMX Christmas Session





Robin Kachfi & Justin Rudd - BMX Christmas Session


Our team riders Robin Kachfi and Justin Rudd have met on Christmas Eve for a quick BMX session in Mannheim Feudenheim. Viel Spaß beim Video, Dein kunstform BMX Shop Team!

Video: Robin Kachfi

Music: Lil Yello x Cartierrudd - Diamonds Lit
Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/user-861137051

Abonnier unseren youtube channel: https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/kunstformbmxshop




se

Simple Session 18 - Tallinn, Estonia



Simple Session 18 - Tallinn, Estonia


The 18th edition of the annual Simple Session contest series, one of the world's most iconic action sports events will take on the heart of the notorious Nordic winter in 2018, taking place on February 3 –4, in Tallinn Estonia.

The world-renowned international contest will once again host 140 contestants from 30 countries and their newest show-stopping tricks at the cozy Saku Arena, the place that everyone has come to love through the series. As one of the most international action sports events out there, Simple Session 18 pits the globe’s best BMX riders and skateboarders against each other on it’s magnificent one-off contest course, so watch out for the ultimate show of progressive riding ever seen!

The contests will again be held in pro BMX street/park and Pro skateboarding street/park + additional shows/demos. The electrifying contest will be followed by non-stop after-parties and make up one unforgettable festival experience.

When:
Thursday 01.02.2018: Training Sessions
Friday 02.02.2018: Training Sessions
Saturday 03.02.2018: Qualification BMX Street and BMX Park
Sunday 04.02.2018: Finals BMX Street and BMX Park

Where: Saku Arena, Tallinn, Estonia

Infos: www.simplesession.net

Supported by: KellyBar, GoPro, Heimon, PRFOODS, Etnies, Subaru, Worm, Subway, kunstform BMX Shop, etnies, Vapiano, VisitEstonia, European Union

Tickets: Piletilevi.ee (25.90 EUR - 199.90 EUR)

We see us in Tallinn!

All the best

Your kunstform BMX Shop Team