• The ACLU will take on the case of the artist whose commissioned BART artworks were turned down, in part, by the transit agency. [Chron]
  • Today’s Supreme Court challenge over redistricting out of Texas could have impacts on California, too. [California Report]
  • AT&T is soon to offer its GigaBit broadband service, which is 4x faster than Comcast's fastest, in SF, Oakland, and San Jose. [Merc]
  • Order in the court: The Shrimp Boy case resumes. [Ex]
  • Founder of the cycling group the Wigg Party leaves SF for Toledo [Hoodline].
  • A Ken Fulk-designed luxury condo development is hitting the market. [Curbed]
  • SF’s middle class, where art thou? [Chron] [Curbed]
  • Rumors of Dropbox’s impending demise surely won’t be quelled by the company's plan to shut down Mailbox, which they bought for $100M. [Wired]
  • Terrorists mock government, social media companies' attempts to mitigate their threats. [NYT]
  • The NFL might be the developer for a proposed Oakland Raiders stadium. [Business Times]
  • Porn performer and alleged rapist James Deen breaks his silence, addresses allegations and speaks specifically with regard to working at Kink.com. [The Daily Beast]
  • An SF firefighter delivered his wife’s baby in a Santa Cruz parking lot. [Merc]
  • What will end up in Lake Merced’s former gun club space? [Chron]
  • UCSF and UC Hastings team up for a 1,200 student housing unit development in the Tenderloin. [Chron]
  • Here's how Muni’s streetcars got their letters. [SFMTA]
  • Well-known developer and landlord Angelo Sangiacomo has died. [Business Times]