ee

'I struggle with body positivity. How can I feel good about myself?'

Hi Haya,

I’m in my mid-20s and struggle to remain body-positive. I have been working out and taking care of my diet, but this feeling of not looking the best just keeps me mentally exhausted.

It has affected my self-esteem a lot and leaves me...




ee

India greenlights $1.3b incentive plan to boost electric vehicle adoption

Scheme to give subsidies worth INR36.79 billion on e-two wheelers, e-three wheelers, e-ambulances and e-trucks




ee

Teenager arrested in connection with cyberattack on London transport network

Transport for London said it was contacting around 5,000 customers whose bank account data may have been accessed




ee

Afghan girls, barred from school, seek education through TV classes

Afghan girls are part of a TV channel that is broadcasting the entire Afghan curriculum for girls out of school




ee

Greece introduces cash incentives, tax breaks to address declining birthrate

Greece has one of Europe's lowest fertility rates, a dire demographic state driven by a decade-long economic crisis




ee

Muslim, European FMs to meet in Madrid on Israel-Palestine two-state solution today

Spanish FM Jose Manuel Albares will host the meeting with EU officials and Arab-Islamic Contact Group for Gaza




ee

Top 10 Most Pirated Movies of The Week – 11/11/2024

Every week we take a close look at the most pirated movies on torrent sites. What are pirates downloading? 'Deadpool & Wolverine' tops the chart, followed by 'Joker: Folie à Deux'. 'The Substance' completes the top three.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.





ee

Chinese teenager takes 7th gold of Paris Paralympics

Jiang Yuyan breaks the Paralympic world record in the women's 100m backstroke




ee

National cricketers uncertain about fees for Champions One-Day Cup

With mentors securing higher salaries, national cricketers unclear about their match fees for Champions One-Day Cup.




ee

Prince Andrew's desperate bid to keep Royal lodge for THIS reason

Prince Andrew's desperate bid to keep Royal lodge for THIS reason

Prince Andrew is fighting to keep his home, Royal Lodge, despite King Charles wanting him to move out after cutting off his financial assistance.

According to Royal experts, the “disgraced” Duke of York is...




ee

Meghan Markle to put an end to cold war with Royal family: ‘Needs to swallow pride'

Meghan Markle to put an end to cold war with Royal family: ‘Needs to swallow pride’

Meghan Markle has realized that in order to build a reputation in the US, she needs to rebuild relationships with the members of the Royal family.

According to Closer Magazine, the...




ee

Pamela Anderson slays in classic style at ‘The Last Showgirl' screening

Pamela Anderson slays in classic style at ‘The Last Showgirl' screening

Pamela Anderson exuded elegance in New York City, as she attended the special screening of The Last Showgirl.

As reported by MailOnline, 57-year-old actress who attended the star-studded event at...




ee

Channing Tatum teases possible on-screen reunion with Ryan Reynolds

Channing Tatum teases possible on-screen reunion with Ryan Reynolds

Channing Tatum hinted at the possibility of reuniting with Ryan Reynolds for a future project.

On November 12, Tatum shared an Instagram post from Reynolds where the Deadpool & Wolverine actor hinted at a...




ee

Buckingham Palace releases new statement amid Queen Camilla health scare

Buckingham Palace releases new statement amid Queen Camilla health scare

Buckingham Palace made a special announcement, revealing that Queen Camilla has resumed her public duties after a brief health-related hiatus.

The Queen Consort stepped back from Royal duties after she was...




ee

Queen Camilla addresses health concerns after resuming Royal duties

Queen Camilla addresses health concerns after resuming Royal duties

Queen Camilla addressed her health concerns after returning to Royal duties following chest infection, due to which she took a brief break from work.

The Queen attended The Booker Prize Foundation at Clarence House...




ee

'Euphoria' season three big update revealed

'Euphoria' season three big update revealed

After a long wait, HBO has confirmed that season three of Euphoria will air in January 2025.

Casey Bloys, the network's head, shared the update after rumours of delays dogged the series.

"We are shooting 'Euphoria,'" the head honcho...




ee

Meghan Markle gives major giveaway by exposing true feelings about Harry appearance

Meghan Markle gives major giveaway by exposing true feelings about Harry appearance

Meghan Markle and Prince Harry’s body language, as well as major ‘giveaway’ from his wife gets exposed.

Royal expert Darren Stanton made these comments during his interview on...




ee

Aleema Khan alleges plot to assassinate Imran Khan in Adiala Jail

Former PM and PTI founder’s sister draws parallels to the death of Egypt's former president Mohamed Morsi




ee

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




ee

Bilawal, Mengal agree on joint strategy for budget

Both leaders express concern over spread of coronavirus in country




ee

Letter to Punjab IGP seeks ban on PUBG video game

Official says excessive violence in game triggers aggressive behaviour among youth




ee

‘Jihad for democracy’: Imran Khan urges PTI to prepare for nationwide street movement

Nawaz Sharif has been kept in check with a scare, otherwise he would have fled long ago, says PTI founder




ee

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.




ee

Analog Equivalent Rights (19/21): Telescreens in our Living Rooms

Privacy: The dystopic stories of the 1950s said the government would install cameras in our homes, with the government listening in and watching us at all times. Those stories were all wrong, for we installed the cameras ourselves.

In the analog world of our parents, it was taken for completely granted that the government would not be watching us in our own homes. It’s so important an idea, it’s written into the very constitutions of states pretty much all around the world.

And yet, for our digital children, this rule, this bedrock, this principle is simply… ignored. Just because they their technology is digital, and not the analog technology of our parents.

There are many examples of how this has taken place, despite being utterly verboten. Perhaps the most high-profile one is the OPTIC NERVE program of the British surveillance agency GCHQ, which wiretapped video chats without the people concerned knowing about it.

Yes, this means the government was indeed looking into people’s living rooms remotely. Yes, this means they sometimes saw people in the nude. Quite a lot of “sometimes”, even.

According to summaries in The Guardian, over ten percent of the viewed conversations may have been sexually explicit, and 7.1% contained undesirable nudity.

Taste that term. Speak it out loud, to hear for yourself just how oppressive it really is. “Undesirable nudity”. The way you are described by the government, in a file about you, when looking into your private home without your permission.

When the government writes you down as having “undesirable nudity” in your own home.

There are many other examples, such as the state schools that activate school-issued webcams, or even the US government outright admitting it’ll all your home devices against you.

It’s too hard not to think of the 1984 quote here:

The telescreen received and transmitted simultaneously. Any sound that Winston made, above the level of a very low whisper, would be picked up by it, moreover, so long as he remained within the field of vision which the metal plaque commanded, he could be seen as well as heard. There was of course no way of knowing whether you were being watched at any given moment. How often, or on what system, the Thought Police plugged in on any individual wire was guesswork. It was even conceivable that they watched everybody all the time. But at any rate they could plug in your wire whenever they wanted to. You had to live — did live, from habit that became instinct — in the assumption that every sound you made was overheard, and, except in darkness, every movement scrutinized. — From Nineteen Eighty-Four

And of course, this has already happened. The so-called “Smart TVs” from LG, Vizio, Samsung, Sony, and surely others have been found to do just this — spy on its owners. It’s arguable that the data collected only was collected by the TV manufacturer. It’s equally arguable by the police officers knocking on that manufacturer’s door that they don’t have the right to keep such data to themselves, but that the government wants in on the action, too.

There’s absolutely no reason our digital children shouldn’t enjoy the Analog Equivalent Rights of having their own home to their very selves, a right our analog parents took for granted.




ee

Analog Equivalent Rights (21/21): Conclusion, privacy has been all but eliminated from the digital environment

Privacy: In a series of posts on this blog, we have shown how practically everything our parents took for granted with regards to privacy has been completely eliminated for our children, just because they use digital tools instead of analog, and the people interpreting the laws are saying that privacy only applies to the old, analog environment of our parents.

Once you agree with the observation that privacy seems to simply not apply for our children, merely for living in a digitally-powered environment instead of our parents’ analog-powered one, surprise turns to shock turns to anger, and it’s easy to want to assign blame to someone for essentially erasing five generations’ fight for civil liberties while people were looking the other way.

So whose fault is it, then?

It’s more than one actor at work here, but part of the blame must be assigned to the illusion that that nothing has changed, just because our digital children can use old-fashioned and obsolete technology to obtain the rights they should always have by law and constitution, regardless of which method they use to talk to friends and exercise their privacy rights.

We’ve all heard these excuses.

“You still have privacy of correspondence, just use the old analog letter”. As if the Internet generation would. You might as well tell our analog parents that they would need to send a wired telegram to enjoy some basic rights.

“You can still use a library freely.” Well, only an analog one, not a digital one like The Pirate Bay, which differs from an analog library only in efficiency, and not in anything else.

“You can still discuss anything you like.” Yes, but only in the analog streets and squares, not in the digital streets and squares.

“You can still date someone without the government knowing your dating preferences.” Only if I prefer to date like our parents did, in the unsafe analog world, as opposed to the safe digital environment where predators vanish at the click of a “block” button, an option our analog parents didn’t have in shady bars.

The laws aren’t different for the analog and the digital. The law doesn’t make a difference between analog and digital. But no law is above the people who interpret it in the courts, and the way people interpret those laws means the privacy rights always apply to the analog world, but never to the digital world.

It’s not rocket science to demand the same laws to apply offline and online. This includes copyright law, as well as the fact that privacy of correspondence takes precedence over copyright law (in other words, you’re not allowed to open and examine private correspondence for infringements in the analog world, not without prior and individual warrants — our law books are full of these checks and balances; they should apply in the digital too, but don’t today).

Going back to blame, that’s one actor right there: the copyright industry. They have successfully argued that their monopoly laws should apply online just as it does offline, and in doing so, has completely ignored all the checks and balances that apply to the copyright monopoly laws in the analog world. And since copying movies and music has now moved into the same communications channels as we use for private correspondence, the copyright monopoly as such has become fundamentally incompatible with private correspondence at the conceptual level.

The copyright industry has been aware of this conflict and has been continuously pushing for eroded and eliminated privacy to prop up their crumbling and obsolete monopolies, such as pushing for the hated (and now court-axed) Data Retention Directive in Europe. They would use this federal law (or European equivalent thereof) to literally get more powers than the Police themselves in pursuing individual people who were simply sharing music and movies, sharing in the way everybody does.

There are two other major factors at work. The second factor is marketing. The reason we’re tracked at the sub-footstep level in airports and other busy commercial centers is simply to sell us more crap we don’t need. This comes at the expense of privacy that our analog parents took for granted. Don’t even get started on Facebook and Google.

Last but not least are the surveillance hawks — the politicians who want to look “Tough on Crime”, or “Tough on Terrorism”, or whatever the word of choice is this week. These were the ones who pushed the Data Retention Directive into law. The copyright industry were the ones who basically wrote it for them.

These three factors have working together, and they’ve been very busy.

It’s going to be a long uphill battle to win back the liberties that were slowly won by our ancestors over about six generations, and which have been all but abolished in a decade.

It’s not rocket science that our children should have at least the same set of civil liberties in their digital environment, as our parents had in their analog environment. And yet, this is not happening.

Our children are right to demand Analog Equivalent Privacy Rights — the civil liberties our parents not just enjoyed, but took for granted.

I fear the failure to pass on the civil liberties from our parents to our children is going to be seen as the greatest failure of this particular current generation, regardless of all the good we also accomplish. Surveillance societies can be erected in just ten years, but can take centuries to roll back.

Privacy remains your own responsibility today. We all need to take it back merely by exercising our privacy rights, with whatever tools are at our disposal.

Image from the movie “Nineteen-Eighty Four”; used under fair use for political commentary.




ee

Bitcoin, the Bitcoin Cash roadmap, and the Law of Two Feet

Bitcoin: As the dust settles after the November 15 bitcoin upgrade, the roadmaps have been updated with the new state of the protocol and people are starting to looking ahead to the next set of features. I thought I’d take the opportunity to give my view on it.

The new set of features ahead has been published on bitcoincash.org, which is for the most part spearheaded by the Bitcoin ABC implementation, but where Bitcoin Unlimited also deserves significant credit for research and development.

Clarification: “Bitcoin” refers to Bitcoin-BCH, or Bitcoin Cash
In this post, I’m talking about the “bitcoin roadmap”. As there’s more than one bitcoin, I should clarify that I’m referring to Bitcoin-BCH, or the “Cash” version of Bitcoin, as opposed to Bitcoin-BTC, the “Blockstream” fork of bitcoin. For those familiar with the subject, this would be obvious, as the Bitcoin-BTC version doesn’t have a roadmap to scale, such as I’m describing here.

This is the current “you are here” map as of end-2018:

The Bitcoin Cash roadmap as of end-2018, as published at bitcoincash.org.

I like this roadmap for two reasons. Or rather, for two levels of reasons.

The first is that I see bitcoin as the path to a world currency. In order to be so, it will need to carry an insanely heavier load, and because of the typical velocity of money, each bitcoin must be valued far higher than it is today — to a point where single satoshis are no longer a small unit, but represent maybe a few cents. That quanta (smallest possible discrete value) is not small enough to provide frictionless automated microtrade, which is why I’m looking forward to — and have been discreetly applauding — the fractional satoshis on the roadmap. The bigger footprint a network gets, the more inertia it takes to change something, so getting these two items in with reasonable speed is something I regard as key.

The third key item is extensibility — the ability to extend the protocol without asking permission, akin to how early browsers started supporting random new HTML markup tags left and right. This drove the standards forward and allowed for rapid feedback cycles with the user community, and something similar will be needed for permissionless innovation on top of bitcoin to really take off.

These three taken together happen to represent the final phase of the three tracks that the roadmap lists. I have some understanding that each of them have necessary prerequisites that are being filled in some sort of logical order.

This brings me to the Law of Two Feet.

You see, it doesn’t really matter what I think of a feature, whether I like it or not. I am a diehard proponent of the Law of Two Feet: It simply means that if you don’t like something, then it is your responsibility — both toward yourself and the community you don’t like — to walk to a place you do like.

(Just to be clear, the Law of Two Feet is inclusive. It also applies to people who don’t have two actual feet.)

This is what I worded as the Freedom of Initiative and the Freedom to Follow, and it is absolutely key for permissionless innovation. You don’t get that the moment somebody is trying to give somebody else permission on what road they may choose.

Each of us have the freedom to take any initiative we want.

Each of us also have the freedom to follow any initiative we like.

But no one of us may tell another what they must or may not do.

I happen to very much approve of the above roadmap from where I’m sitting. But even if I didn’t, the freedom of initiative and freedom to follow are far more important than my opinion on this particular initiative.




ee

Health Circumstances Demand a Longer, Deeper Timeout

Personal: I ran headfirst into a bit of a classic burnout two years ago. I’m still recovering from it. I’ve been trying to maintain a presence and not make this condition show too much, but I need to scale down the rest of my presence too for a while in order to reset and recharge.

I’ve been starting and re-starting writing this post way too many times now. I’ve decided to just post it as a stream of consciousness, readable or not as it may be, rather than my usual bar of having some sort of clear red thread with step-by-step logical coherence.

Two years ago, while moving from Stockholm to Berlin, I hit the infamous brick wall. I became incapable of most work that required any form of vehicular travel — I was literally limited to walking distance. Yes, it felt as ridiculous as it sounds, but it was just a matter of accepting the lay of the land and working with it. At the time, I was able to maintain some illusion of normality while starting to wind down and recover behind the scenes, thanks to being able to work remotely. I’ve since stopped working altogether — or so I thought, at least — and focusing on recharging.

When you drive a solar-powered rover too aggressively in Kerbal Space Program and the sun goes down, the batteries deplete quickly. You can’t start driving the rover again when the sun goes up from its state of depleted batteries, not even at its rated speed; you have to wait until the batteries have recharged, even if the circumstances (i.e. shining sun) should otherwise make you able to operate nominally. This is a little bit the state I’m in: I should nominally be fine, with most of the everyday load reduced significantly, but my batteries are still not recharging at the rate I had expected them to. (Yes, I’m impatient, which is admittedly part of the problem in the first place.)

So to all people who have written to me over this past time that I haven’t responded to: Please accept my apologies. It’s not out of malice or disinterest I haven’t responded, I’m simply getting done in a month what I used to get done in a day, and even that is a marked improvement. The “need to respond” queue is silly long by now, and includes conference invites and whatnot, that I would normally have responded to within minutes. It includes pings from near friends, that I had hoped to spend a lot more time with here in Berlin, as well as distant friends.

A close friend of mine pointed at a recent study about stress, a study looking at burnout symptoms in places with very good work-to-life balance, and the study concluded that the body doesn’t make a difference between obligations for work or obligations that are felt outside of work for any other reason than money. And she’s right: I’ve been feeling a pressure to shoot video, to code open-source projects, to participate in the community. I need to, bluntly speaking, drop all of these expectations for the foreseeable future. “Go off-grid” is a little too harsh, but I’ll need to turn off the expectation heartbeat on literally everything. I’ll do random things from time to time when I have the energy and desire for it, which unfortunately won’t be most of the time.

These recoveries basically take whatever damn time they please. I could have recharged batteries in six months, in a year, in ten years. I have honestly no idea and therefore I’m not setting any expectations, in either direction.

Time for a deeper and longer break.

I’d like to say “I’ll be back”, but I don’t think the person on the other side of this recovery is going to be the same person I am today. I am sure I will still want to change the world for the better, somehow. I just can’t tell today how I’ll be wanting to change the world tomorrow. So even though I’ll very likely be back doing something, it’ll very likely not be the exact same things I’ve done up until this point.




ee

DHL GoGreen



National as well as international we ship all our packages with DHL. For all national shippings we now can use the GoGreen option from DHL. For a little additional charge apiece (wich kunstform BMX Shop & Mailorder is paying!) DHL will send the package as low emission as possible. We really want to support that especially DHL will use that extra money to support climate friendly projects. Of course we or DHL will not save the planet with that but it´s a beginning. By the way, for you as a customer that costs no extra money and also it doesn`t slow down the transit time. More about the whole project here.




ee

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




ee

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





ee

Pro Freestyle The Hague 2017 x Radiobikes





Felix Prangenberg Wethepeople Endstate Part


Felix Prangenberg has produced a lot for his WTP "Endstate" part during his Cali trip, in which each clip is just sick! enjoy the video! Best regards, your kunstform BMX Shop

Video: Grant C.

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




ee

AWESOME BMX Street POV 2017 - Felix Prangenberg & Robin Kachfi





AWESOME BMX Street POV 2017 - Felix Prangenberg & Robin Kachfi


Our team riders Felix Prangenberg and Robin Kachfi were on a BMX trip in Denmark last week, where they rode some really awesome BMX street spots which they've captured with a actioncam. Check their adventure right here! enjoy the video! Best regards, your kunstform BMX Shop

Video: Robin Kachfi

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




ee

Miguel Franzem - freedombmx Interview 2017 "the damn knee"



Our Bro & team rider Miguel Franzem Has destroyed his knee last winter, at the Simple Session ,so he was forced to put his BMX aside for a while. freedombmx has asked Miguel about his BMX break. You will find the interview here: LINK




ee

Robin Kachfi BMX - Webisode#18 - BMX STREET FRANKFURT 2017





BMX STREET FRANKFURT 2017


Our bro Robin Kachfi was recently with his homies Jan Mihaly , Michael Dunger , Michael Lorenz , Yannic Hammel , Leon Ditzel and Philipp Becker in Frankfurt, where the guys filmed a lot of good clips. Enjoy the video, your kunstform BMX shop team!

Video: Robin Kachfi

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




ee

Robin Kachfi & Jan Mihaly x Freedombmx Paris Interview





Robin Kachfi & Jan Mihaly taking home the 2nd Place at the Soshurbanmotion Contest 2017


Robin Kachfi and Jan Mihaly just taking home silver at the Soshurbanmotion maincontest. Freedombmx did an Interview with the guys to explane their success. You'll find all Infos about their paris trip on Freedombmx . Congrats Boys!!!

All the best, Your kunstform BMX Shop Team!

Interview: Markus Wilke

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





ee

Felix Prangenberg - freedombmx Interview 2017



Our Bro & team rider Felix Prangenberg has injured his knee last august so badly, that he will be back on his bike in a few months. Freedombmx has asked Felix about his Injury for a little interview which you'll find right here: LINK
Get well soon Felix!




ee

SIBMX X Sunday Bikes: Three Days in Berlin





SIBMX X Sunday Bikes: Three Days in Berlin


The new SIBMX X Sunday Bikes video just went online on Freedombmx, in which Mark Burnett, Markus Reuss, Daniel Portorreal and our team rider Miguel Smajli have produced a lot of crazy stuff in the streets of berlin last summer! Check it now! Enjoy the video, your kunstform BMX Shop Team!

Video: Freedombmx

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





ee

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




ee

Freedombmx Awards 2017 - nominations



We're really stoked that our team riders Felix Prangenberg, Robin Kachfi, Kevin Nikulski and also our own shop got nominated for the Freedombmx Awards 2017, thanks to everyone for voting our team riders and for us! If you haven't voted yet, click: VOTING
Vote for your favorite german Street,Park,Flatland oder Dirtfahrer, you can also vote for germanys best skatepark, germanys best webvideo 2017, best company and last but not least best international rider.

More infos here: Freedombmx.de





ee

freedombmx - kunstform BMX Shop Check



freedombmx - kunstform BMX Shop Check
The freedombmx BMX Magazine visited us at the BMX Shop in Stuttgart. Daniel Fuhrmann takes them on a little tour of the sales room, the workshop, the office and the storerooms.

If you want to visit us in Stuttgart, to get up on new parts, to repair your bike or just to hang out and drive the little streeto obstacles in our Stock Room, then you will find us in the Rotebühlstraße 63 in Stuttgart, directly at the S-Bahn station "Feuersee".

We would like to take this opportunity to thank freedombmx again for the visit and the opportunity. Check out the latest BMX Scene News on www.freedombmx.com .

We hope you enjoy the tour.




ee

Simple Session 2018 - BMX Street & Park Finals





Simple Session 2018 - BMX Street & Park Finals

The 18th edition of the annual Simple Session contest series, one of the world's most iconic action sports events took place again on February 3 –4, in Tallinn Estonia. Over 140 riders from all over the world competed at this years Simple Session. Check out the highlights from the BMX Street & Park finals now!

Enjoy the video! All the best, your kunstform BMX Shop Team!

Video: Robin Kachfi




ee

Felix Prangenberg X kunstform - BMX Street Video 2018






Felix Prangenberg X kunstform - BMX Street Video 2018


We're very proud to finally present you the new BMX video of our bro Felix Prangenberg which he filmed together with Robin Kachfi over the past year across Germany, Denmark and the Netherlands. Felix invested a lot of miles ,time and pain for it and this is why you'll not be disappointed!

Enjoy the Video, your kunstform BMX Shop Team!

Video: Robin Kachfi

Additional filming: Callum Earnshaw

Music: Datura - Voyage

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





ee

Robin Kachfi - GoPro BMX Street Session 2018






Robin Kachfi went for a bmx session with his homies on the streets, to test his brand new Actioncam. Check their adventure right here!


Enjoy the video, your kunstform BMX Shop Team!



Video: Robin Kachfi



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




ee

Kevin Nikulski - Freedombmx Bikecheck 2018



Kevin Nikulski - Freedombmx Bikecheck 2018


Our Bro Kevin Nikulski was voted as germanys best BMX Flatlander by the BMX-Community for the third time in a row, but unfortunately Kevin couldn't come to Munich for the awards, because the release party for his new signature frame took place in Berlin on the same day. The freedombmx BMX Magazine has asked Kevin for some details on his new Bike, which you can check out right here!

Check freedom BMX Magazine for daily BMX News www.freedombmx.de.



All the best, your kunstform BMX Shop Team!




ee

Easter-Street Session 2k18 - hosted by KSHZLE Crew



On the 31.03.2018, the KSHZLE Crew is hosting the famous "Eastersession" in Karlsruhe again, where you have the chance to meet all the homies and have a great time! BTW you have also the chance to win some prizes and vouchers. meeting point is at the Karlsruhe Central Station at 12am (local time), where it starts directly with a street session through Karlsruhe and ends with a chilled night session at the illuminated ODP Skatepark.

All the best, your kunstform BMX Shop Team!

What:
Easter-Street Session 2k18 - hosted by KSHZLE Crew

When:
31th March 12am - 22pm (local time)

Where:
Karlsruhe Central Station
76137 Karlsruhe


More infos on Facebook.