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in reply to geneva_convenience

Wouldn't it be better to call it Rainbow Washing, though? Pink can't carry the whole spectra.
in reply to Øπ3ŕ

en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pinkwa…

Pinkwashing, also known as rainbow-washing,[1] is the strategy of deploying messages that are superficially sympathetic towards the LGBTQ community for ends having little or nothing to do with LGBTQ equality or inclusion,[2] including LGBTQ marketing.[3]


Today I learned that that is also a term for it.



LA SCIENZA DI BREAKING BAD feat @chimicazza PARTE 1 | Slim Dogs




Half of companies planning to replace customer service with AI are reversing course


Pro doesn't like this.




Google’s test turns search results into an AI-generated podcast


Get an audio overview of Search results in Labs, then click through to learn more.

Today, we’re launching a new Search experiment in Labs – Audio Overviews, which uses our latest Gemini models to generate quick, conversational audio overviews for certain search queries. Searching for a topic you’re not familiar with? An audio overview can help you get a lay of the land, offering a convenient, hands-free way to absorb information whether you're multitasking or simply prefer an audio experience.

Want to explore a topic further? We display helpful web pages right within the audio player on the search results page so you can easily dive in and learn more.

To try it out, opt into the experiment in Labs. When our systems determine it might be useful, you’ll see the option on the search results page to tap to generate a short audio overview on the topic of your query. You can give a thumbs up/down on each discussion, and the experiment as a whole in Labs.

Questa voce è stata modificata (3 mesi fa)


Google’s test turns search results into an AI-generated podcast


Get an audio overview of Search results in Labs, then click through to learn more.

Today, we’re launching a new Search experiment in Labs – Audio Overviews, which uses our latest Gemini models to generate quick, conversational audio overviews for certain search queries. Searching for a topic you’re not familiar with? An audio overview can help you get a lay of the land, offering a convenient, hands-free way to absorb information whether you're multitasking or simply prefer an audio experience.

Want to explore a topic further? We display helpful web pages right within the audio player on the search results page so you can easily dive in and learn more.

To try it out, opt into the experiment in Labs. When our systems determine it might be useful, you’ll see the option on the search results page to tap to generate a short audio overview on the topic of your query. You can give a thumbs up/down on each discussion, and the experiment as a whole in Labs.

Questa voce è stata modificata (3 mesi fa)


Democrats Back Resolution Thanking Federal Agents For Handcuffing Alex Padilla




MLS over ActivityPub Draft


Good news in privacy for ActivityPub. The first early draft of the MLS over ActivityPub specification went out this week. It’s been part of my work on our E2EE for ActivityPub project at the Social Web Foundation.

Good news in privacy for ActivityPub. The first early draft of the MLS over ActivityPub specification went out this week. It’s been part of my work on our E2EE for ActivityPub project at the Social Web Foundation.

Messaging Layer Security (MLS) is an IETF standard for end-to-end encrypted (E2EE) messaging. It lets people on laptops and phones communicate with each other in a secure way that no one in between can see.

MLS is designed to use pluggable lower-level protocols. This specification defines an envelope format for distributing MLS messages through the network, and an Activity Streams 2.0 profile for the packets of application data stored inside the messages.

This specification is ready for review from both ActivityPub developers and security analysts. It’s time to start making proof-of-concept implementations and testing interoperability.

The best place to make comments or report problems is on the ActivityPub E2EE GitHub repo issues list. I’m looking forward to these next steps!

Questa voce è stata modificata (3 mesi fa)

reshared this

in reply to Evan Prodromou

Re: MLS over ActivityPub Draft


The use case seems clear: actual DMs on the fediverse. How does this interop with existing implementations that utilise direct addressing (and intentional omission of as:Public) as a form of direct messaging?

As usual I am assuming we will have to support both.




6 Android apps that are so slick, I thought Google made them


in reply to sabreW4K3

That wavelet suggestion must have been sponsored. There's no way otherwise


Do you trust Xi with your 'private' browsing data? Apple and Google app stores still offer China-based VPNs.


The Apple and Google app stores continue to offer private browsing apps that are surreptitiously owned by Chinese companies, more than six weeks after they were identified in a Tech Transparency Project report. Apple and Google may also be profiting from these apps, which put Americans’ privacy and U.S. national security at risk, TTP found.

The apps are virtual private networks (VPNs), which promise to mask a user’s identity as they browse the internet. But Chinese-owned VPNs raise serious privacy and security concerns for Americans because Chinese companies can be forced to share user data with the Chinese government under the country’s national security laws. VPNs have access to particularly sensitive user data since they see all of a person’s web activity.

Questa voce è stata modificata (3 mesi fa)

Nobilmantis doesn't like this.



Do you trust Xi with your 'private' browsing data? Apple and Google app stores still offer China-based VPNs.


The Apple and Google app stores continue to offer private browsing apps that are surreptitiously owned by Chinese companies, more than six weeks after they were identified in a Tech Transparency Project report. Apple and Google may also be profiting from these apps, which put Americans’ privacy and U.S. national security at risk, TTP found.

The apps are virtual private networks (VPNs), which promise to mask a user’s identity as they browse the internet. But Chinese-owned VPNs raise serious privacy and security concerns for Americans because Chinese companies can be forced to share user data with the Chinese government under the country’s national security laws. VPNs have access to particularly sensitive user data since they see all of a person’s web activity.

Questa voce è stata modificata (3 mesi fa)


in reply to woelkchen

I wonder how they know which are russian drone and which are ukrainian


109 children rescued, 244 arrested in Operation Soteria Shield, exposing widespread child exploitation in North Texas


The North Texas Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force and FBI Dallas’s North Texas Child Exploitation Task Force announce the conclusion of Operation Soteria Shield, a month-long collaborative enforcement effort conducted in April 2025 aimed at rescuing children from online sexual exploitation and bringing perpetrators to justice. This operation was run in conjunction with the National Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force and was jointly managed by the FBI Dallas Division, Dallas Police Department, Plano Police Department, Wylie Police Department, and Garland Police Department.

More than 70 Texas law enforcement agencies joined forces throughout the month of April to combat the exploitation of children in the digital space. These agencies leveraged the expertise of highly skilled computer crimes investigators that worked around the clock to identify victims and apprehend offenders engaged in the production, distribution, and possession of child sexual abuse material.

Operation Soteria Shield resulted in the rescue of 109 children and the arrest of 244 offenders. In addition to these enforcement actions, investigators seized extensive volumes of digital evidence, including terabytes of illicit data stored on electronic devices that were used in the commission of these crimes. These devices are undergoing forensic analysis and may lead to further arrests and the identification of additional victims.

https://www.fbi.gov/contact-us/field-offices/dallas/news/fbi-dallas-and-the-north-texas-internet-crimes-against-children-task-force-announce-the-results-of-operation-soteria-shield

Questa voce è stata modificata (3 mesi fa)


Gulf states anxious about being drawn into Israel lran fight


in reply to Jerb322

Its worse than that, there were undoubtedly US assets which were involved, and all of the US bases a few kilometers away from Iran are in Gulf states.
in reply to nom_nom

Who has that pic of the two rocket volleys being fired at each other that says "my tax dollars" and "also somehow my tax dollars"?
Questa voce è stata modificata (3 mesi fa)

in reply to spaghettiwestern

10 years ago I wouldn't have imagined this, but this is me every time I have to use Windows (e.g., occasionally for work) or help someone else with it.
in reply to bobbyfiend

Same. I just switched a few months back. My laptop runs cool and quiet on Linux. When I need to boot to Windows, I hear that poor cooling fan laboring even when Windows is idle, plus everything is much slower and poorly organized. Why does my context menu have 14 selections?! Going back to Linux feels like coming home.
in reply to spaghettiwestern

BRO is that Katy Perry after her space trip, I haven’t heard anything about that in a hot minute



in reply to sabreW4K3

Pretty ironic considering they don't play any sports of their own.
in reply to sabreW4K3

Sure would be good if people by and large just stopped watching sports because of this bullshit.


1337x.to seems to be playing up - here's some alternative domains


According to 1337x-status, they own the following domains:

Official domains (May 2024):

1) 1337x.to
2) 1337x.st
3) x1337x.ws
4) x1337x.eu
5) x1337x.se
6) x1337x.cc NEW May 2024

in reply to AI Horde Bot

sorry, bot don't know memes :/
Questa voce è stata modificata (3 mesi fa)

in reply to IndustryStandard

Where are the videos from the Iranian perspective?

Why are we giving Israel a stage, but not Iran?



Seyed Mohammad Marandi: Israel Attacks Iran - Reality vs. Deception


in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆

It was crazy seeing DSA 3rd worldists on Xitter roasting this guy for saying that Iran would retaliate like they have every time before. He's one of the only guys who has called out Yemeni media people for promoting Jackson Hinkle's schtick.


[Live] Explosions Heard Across Israel As Iran Fires Missiles In Response For Israeli Strikes



in reply to fckreddit

National identity is definitely taught, but it's also acquired naturally. We like to belong, so even if we weren't assigned a specific nationality, i believe we'd eventually be making our own, just more freely and dynamic.
in reply to lath

Identity is aquired naturally. National Identity isn’t.

In other systems our core identity might be city, or village, or lake, or mountain range, or tribe, or class, or job, or beliefs, or culture, or relgion, or clan, or langauge, or dialect etc.

National Identity (Nationalism) is a rather new thing to be mainstream. Only a couple centuries.

Questa voce è stata modificata (3 mesi fa)


Iran launches missile attack on Tel Aviv




Every one really shits on brave so i decided to use Fennec from now on


I'm on android

So i downloaded fennec today and it seems to be pretty good, and quick aswell. But the settings are kinda confusing, for now tho!

I have already enabled ublock, Clearurls and Privacy Badger.

What other settings would you recommend to make fennec even more privacy hardened?

in reply to kingpepe8006

If you really want privacy than have a look at Ironfox, its a continuation of Mull.

gitlab.com/ironfox-oss/IronFox

They implement the settings from this project, like arkenfox's user.js but with regular updates:

codeberg.org/celenity/Phoenix

in reply to kingpepe8006

Definitely have multiple browsers. IronFox is a great option. I use Brave as it simply works with the onboard filters and hardening. There are a few easy guides to walk through the settings changes that improve the picture.


Japan vows to work with G7 partners to ease Middle East tensions (Al Jazeera, 2025-06-13, 15:50 GMT)


Japan vows to work with G7 partners to ease Middle East tensions (Al Jazeera, 2025-06-13, 15:50 GMT)

aje.io/auoxkc?update=3772588
------

>> Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba has condemned the attack on Iranian nuclear and military sites, and promised to work with other G7 members to ease tensions in the Middle East.

>> Ishiba was quoted as saying by the local media that Israel’s move was “totally intolerable” and “extremely regrettable,” adding, “any actions that could further escalate the situation must be refrained from”...

Oh, wow... 😮 “TOTALLY INTOLERABLE” !!

#Japan #StopIsrael @palestine@a.gup.pe @israel






No, Freddy Mars, the Western Allies Did Not Liberate Your Country from the Nazis—They Saved Your Nazis from the Soviets.


No, Freddy Mars, the Western Allies Did Not Liberate Your Country from the Nazis, They Saved Your Nazis from the Soviet Union, Ask Adolf Heusinger

By Мочка comrade@mochka.cc

President Trump struggled with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz's name during their June 5, 2025 White House meeting, calling him "Friedrich Mars" instead of Merz. An
appealing nickname for the dull atlanticist, Deadly Freddy Mars. When the conversation turned to D-Day, the mispronunciation became the least of the diplomatic awkwardness.

"May I remind you tomorrow is June 6, the D-day anniversary when the Americans once ended a war in Europe," Merz told the President. Trump, in his characteristic bumbling manner, responded that D-Day was "not a pleasant day for you... This was not a great
day."

bsky.app/profile/mochka.cc/pos…

Questa voce è stata modificata (3 mesi fa)


France Escalates War on Sports Piracy with Real-Time IP Blocking


The French Senate has passed a new anti-piracy bill that opens the door to automated IP-address blocking. This legislative push is bolstered by a parallel, "secret" agreement between sports rightsholders and major ISPs, which aims to automate anti-piracy efforts and streamline direct blocking requests. Rightsholders hope these new powers will help to tackle the "mafia-like" piracy economy.
in reply to Pro

I wonder how well that'll work against the 340,282,366,920,938,463,463,374,607,431,768,211,456 (that's the real number) ipv6 addresses.
Questa voce è stata modificata (3 mesi fa)
in reply to Pro

instead of automated IP-blocking in false time?

in reply to ByteOnBikes

✨Police State Things✨
Questa voce è stata modificata (3 mesi fa)


PSA: Get Your Parents Off the Meta AI App Right Now-This is bad, folks. Very bad.


As Moore notes, users are throwing all sorts of prompts into Meta AI without knowing that they’re being displayed publicly, including sensitive medical and tax documents, addresses, and deeply personal information—including, but not limited to—confessions of affairs, crimes, and court cases. The list, unfortunately, goes on. I took a short stroll through the Meta AI app for myself just to verify that this was seemingly still happening as of writing this post, and I regret to inform you all that the pain train seems to be rolling onward. In my exploration of the app, I found seemingly confidential prompts addressing doubts/issues with significant others, including one woman questioning whether her male partner is truly a feminist. I also uncovered a self-identified 66-year-old man asking where he can find women who are interested in “older men,” and just a few hours later, inquiring about transgender women in Thailand.


H&M entra da Galerie Lafayette — Ma la Francia non era pronta a fare la guerra al fast fashion?


Lo sbarco di H&M nei corner delle prestigiose Galerie Lafayette a Parigi sembra stridere con la recente approvazione al Senato francese di una legge contro l’ultra-fast fashion (come riportato nel nostro post).

La mossa conferma le contraddizioni nel contrasto al fenomeno: da un lato, si colpiscono marchi low-cost come Shein (accusati di dumping ambientale e sociale), dall’altro si accoglie un gigante del fast fashion "tradizionale" in un tempio del lusso.

Protezionismo o incoerenza?

Il governo francese giustifica la legge come lotta allo sfruttamento, ma questa notizia aggiunge dubbi: sembra proprio una mossa per proteggere il mercato dalla Cina (Shein e Temu sono nel mirino). Intanto, H&M — europeo ma con supply chain globale — sembra sfuggire alla retorica anti-fast fashion.



Abolish Time


cross-posted from: quokk.au/post/19931

[reposted meme i stole and did not make] concept of time


Introducing the Fediverse: a New Era of Social Media


geteilt von: feddit.org/post/14121936

"This video is a colorful introduction to the Fediverse, guided by filmmaker & Fediverse advocate Elena Rossini. Watch now to discover a whole new world of social media, one where privacy is respected, users are empowered, and Big Tech has no say."
in reply to caos

It's a great video but it overemphasis the ubiquitousness of interoperability quite a lot. But its still good to see a well designed campaign video on the subject.


NixOS printing problems


A friend and I are trying to get a machine set up to work as my school's library's printing computer instead of Windows ones. It is running NixOS. We got it bound to active directory, applications installed, etc., but the issue is that we can't get it to print. It'll say that it's printing but the print job never reaches the print server. To access the print server you're supposed to authenticate, but it doesn't ever give a prompt to. I tried turning off the firewall temporarily to see if that was the issue but it made no difference.

In configuration.nix, services.printing.enable=true and services.printing.drivers = [ pkgs.cups pkgs.hplip ]; (it is an HP printer that we're currently testing on).

I'm thinking that either SAMBA is configured incorrectly and/or the syntax that I put into CUPS for the printer is incorrect.

Current SAMBA config:

services.samba = {
enable = true;
openfirewall = true;
settings = {
public = {
path = "/srv/public";
browseable = true;
writable = true;
"guest ok" = true;

In CUPS it shows the syntax for a Windows printer via SAMBA as follows: smb://[workgroup/]server[:port}/printer

The issue is that I don't know what it means by that. I know the print queue, domain, IP, and port (although I'm under the impression that I don't need the port for this case), but I don't know how it would fit into this. I tried looking around on the CUPS wiki but it was vague and confusing to me. Any help with this is much appreciated.

in reply to linuxsnail

1) Verify CUPS can actually print from that machine
2) If that's your samba config, it seems a bit light
3) Enable guest_ok and see if it works then. If so, you need to delve deeper into your access permissions

documentation.ubuntu.com/serve…

You also just share print targets via CUPS without Samba: cups.org/doc/sharing.html

in reply to linuxsnail

The printers require AD authentication to print but no prompt? Is Kerberos setup correctly for CUPS?

in reply to federal reverse

In Copenhagen, meteorologists predict the city will receive 30% more rainfall by the end of this century.


Oh shit



RXKNephew “ john fetterman “ (Video 2mins)



in reply to RedWizard [he/him, comrade/them]

This article is terrible.

In less than three months' time, almost no civil servant, police officer or judge in Schleswig-Holstein will be using any of Microsoft's ubiquitous programs at work.

Instead, the northern state will turn to [an unnamed, gaping information hole] open-source software to "take back control" over data storage and ensure "digital sovereignty", its digitalisation minister, Dirk Schroedter, told AFP.

"We're done with Teams!" he said, referring to Microsoft's messaging and collaboration tool and speaking on a video call -- via an [unnamed, gaping information hole] open-source German program, of course.


What will they use instead? Who the fuck knows! The article omits this crucial piece of information.

And don't say it's TBD; they're not going to say they're "done with Teams" without knowing what they're switching to. Or, even if they haven't put the final nail in the decision, they have a short list.

Questa voce è stata modificata (3 mesi fa)
in reply to 𝕽𝖚𝖆𝖎𝖉𝖍𝖗𝖎𝖌𝖍

Probably BigBlueButton, or maybe Jitsi. Or, they’re still using Teams but didn’t want it mentioned in the article.
in reply to 𝕽𝖚𝖆𝖎𝖉𝖍𝖗𝖎𝖌𝖍

What will they use instead? Who the fuck knows! The article omits this crucial piece of information.


Whole bunch of shit going by different sources and the state itself from german, to supplement here

MS Office -> LibreOffice
Exchange / Outlook -> Open-XChange / Thunderbird
Sharepoint -> Nextcloud
Windows -> Linux
MS Active Directory -> Unknown, but currently Testing things
Telephones use, among others, Kamailio, RTPEngine, Asterisk, GenieACS, Loki and Grafana
For all the Software to do like specific work, i.e. the software that helps manage industrial permits or whatever, it's case by case with them trying to replace them with mostly web based solutions so they're OS-Agnostic.

They're doing this together with Dataport, which is a sort of special government structure in the sense that it does IT for the states of Schleswig-Holstein, Hamburg, Bremen and Saxony-Anhalt who share the costs. They've been at this whole thing of trying to make a FOSS standard software enviroment for years now, steadily improving, so things might actually be happening. Video conferencing should be Jitsi, that's already in the portfolio, the chat components will in all likelihood be based on the Matrix Protocol which is aswell, I think they offer an offshoot of Riot.

It's a good thing. That said, the way the german government works this only really includes the actual state level bureaucratic engines. Everything at the county and municipal level will also have to make the switch themselves so that's 83 more government entities that would have to do this before the state runs on FOSS.

And like with all of them in germany they're all flat out broke and can't get personnel for this so this type of project, if attempted at all, is usually headed by a 60 year old who's also the equivalent of a CIO because he once built an excel table with pivot functions and the general level of digital competency of the workforce is dire, as in people are printing out excel tables to do the calculations with a calculator and things of that nature.

in reply to 7bicycles [he/him]

Thanks! That's all great information.

I'd bet there are a bunch of college students involved in the implementation, too. I don't see ongoing maintenance taking much more manpower than MS; we certainly had dedicated teams for it at my last company, so maybe that will be a budgetary wash, and what they save will be the probably significant licensing.

in reply to 𝕽𝖚𝖆𝖎𝖉𝖍𝖗𝖎𝖌𝖍

I think the main issue that usually gets trod out is how Microsoft makes the most ergonomical and useable software which I think is an argument you can only arrive at if you've just literally used nothing else, ever. The supposed point is that large swathes of the work force in the public sector would be unable to cope with the new software and be unable to do their job, albeit I point at my printing out excel tables example there to say they already don't know how to use software so at least save on the licensing fees
in reply to enemenemu

Thanks. I wonder why both jitsi and Matrix. Someone in the thread said it was too bad Matrix's video conferencing wasn't good enough that they had to add an extra software component, but I wonder what, exactly, the evaluation found wrong with it.

I have a lot of issues with Matrix, but the video conferencing didn't seem worse than the horrible key management.

in reply to 𝕽𝖚𝖆𝖎𝖉𝖍𝖗𝖎𝖌𝖍

I guess only internals know. It could be the case that jitsi may be used across institutions and with companies and matrix for internal stuff. An external shareholder wouldn't need to create a matrix account just to talk to you.
in reply to enemenemu

An external shareholder wouldn't need to create a matrix account just to talk to you.


That's a really good point. I have forgotten whether there are anonymous accounts in Matrix for rooms, but even if so it wouldn't be the same as scheduling a meeting and sending a specific meeting link a-la Zoom.

Yeah, this is the reason.

in reply to 𝕽𝖚𝖆𝖎𝖉𝖍𝖗𝖎𝖌𝖍

I'm not 100% sure. The "new" element call does not need an existing matrix account. But the people who decide upon the software aren't always up to date or maybe element call will change
in reply to enemenemu

Ah. Also, such a large organization probably doesn't want to bet the farm on a relatively new and unproven feature.

I'm guessing they have some minimum standards for age and stability.

in reply to 𝕽𝖚𝖆𝖎𝖉𝖍𝖗𝖎𝖌𝖍

That's also a good question. I wouldn't consider matrix too new or unstable. Also, there are too many huge and important stakeholders in matrix. Matrix won't go away in the next years.
in reply to enemenemu

Not Matrix itself, but the new call mechanism.

They've chosen Matrix; they've just chosen something else for the video calling. Maybe because the anonymous video call link feature is too recent an addition, and is unproven.



Deficit Between a $35/hr Federal Minimum Wage and Cost of Living of US States


Out of curiosity, I wanted to see what a reasonable federal minimum wage might look like if implemented.

Looking at historical information from a time when a single individual’s income could support a family of four, I settled at the late 1950s.

The minimum wage in 1956 was finally raised to one whole dollar, the equivalent of about $12 today by raw inflation. However, its key to remember that this was an era when women were not paid on par with men, and when children younger than 13 commonly were in the workforce.

So instead I found average wage and salary numbers for 1958. In 1958, the average among all adult male wages was $4,888, and salaried men (doctors, lawyers, etc not included) averaged $6,514. Taking the salary figure and adjusting it for inflation gives you roughly $72k, or close to $35/hr.

If the average person had anywhere near the purchasing power of an individual in 1958, then no one could be making less than $35 per hour for their labor. Effectively, to return people to that level of financial security this is what it would take, while everything would simultaneously have to remain the same price. Meaning this wage increase would necessarily have to come out of the pockets of shareholders/owners.

The map shows quite clearly that even with such a high minimum wage, it would still be unaffordable in 100% of the country on 40 hours of work per week alone.

Trickle down economics have doomed this country on a path toward economic ruin, and have pushed most people in the US to such a precarious point financially that they have no hope of living as comfortably as the average worker in 1958. The average salaried worker today earns just $61k per year, over $10k shy of what the average worker made back in the day. Meanwhile, the cost of goods and services are astronomically higher.

$1 in 1956 bought you 4 gallons of gasoline. I pay $20 for that, even though by raw inflation the dollar is worth $12 today. Although gas is highly influenced by many factors that are unstable.

In the late 1950s, a cheap American car cost about $14k. The equivalent of over $168k today by inflation. By average salary, an individual could buy a car within 3-4 years easily by saving intentionally for it. At modern wages, this would be impossible. At $72k per year it becomes about as feasible as it was back then to reach that $168k mark.

These rough concepts are how I landed on $35 per hour as an appropriate measure. As well as the fact that wages today are almost entirely earned by adults, considering modern labor laws and the decline of the teenage workforce.

Questa voce è stata modificata (3 mesi fa)
in reply to ToastedRavioli

I wonder if this is influenced by the fact the worst states on this map tend to have the best welfare?

Like as a disabled person on social security in Massachusetts you get a bunch of things like energy payments and carer payments you would not get in Arkansas.

Questa voce è stata modificata (3 mesi fa)


🍹 Log Out @ Roma


24 giugno 2025 19:15:00 CEST - GMT+2 - 568, 00145, Roma, Italia
Giu 24
🍹 Log Out @ Roma
Mar 19:15 - 21:30
Tech Workers Coalition Italia

Martedì 24 giugno ci vediamo a Garbatella con il Logout di TWC Roma, il ritrovo per tech worker che vogliono incontrarsi dopo lavoro: un'occasione per socializzare, conoscersi, parlare del nostro lavoro e come organizzarci nei prossimi mesi!

Ci vediamo martedì 24 giugno, alle 19.15, alla birreria 568 di Garbatella!

Unisciti al Gruppo telegram!

Questa voce è stata modificata (3 mesi fa)

reshared this