Israel running low on Arrow missiles amid rising threat from Iran
Israel is facing a shortage of Arrow missile interceptors, raising concerns over its capacity to counter long-range ballistic attacks from Iran, the Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday, citing a senior US official.
The Jerusalem Post has reached out to the IDF and other sources for comment, but cannot verify this report at this time.
According to the report, the US has been aware of the issue for several months and has taken steps to bolster Israel’s missile defense systems by deploying additional US assets across multiple domains – land, sea, and air.
Israel running low on Arrow missiles amid rising threat from Iran | The Jerusalem Post
Since the beginning of Operation Rising Lion, the US Defense Department has increased the number of missile defense systems stationed in the region.The Jerusalem Post | JPost.com
like this
Maeve likes this.
like this
Maeve likes this.
Ryanair to fine unruly passengers €500 or more
The fines will be a "minimum" punishment, and it will continue to seek civil damages for compensation for the costs incurred in more serious cases.
Ryanair, Europe's largest airline, announced Thursday that it will impose fines starting at €500 ($579) on passengers whose disruptive behavior leads to their removal from a flight.
The budget carrier said it hopes the fine will serve as "a deterrent to eliminate this unacceptable behavior onboard our aircraft."
"It is unacceptable that passengers are made to suffer unnecessary disruption because of one unruly passenger's behavior," a Ryanair spokesperson said.
like this
Lasslinthar likes this.
China-backed militia controls rare earth mines in Myanmar
A Chinese-backed militia is protecting new rare earth mines in eastern Myanmar, according to four people familiar with the matter, as Beijing moves to secure control of the minerals it is wielding as a bargaining chip in its trade war with Washington.
China has a near-monopoly over the processing of heavy rare earths into magnets that power critical goods like wind turbines, medical devices and electric vehicles.
But Beijing is heavily reliant on Myanmar for the rare earth metals and oxides needed to produce them: the war-torn country was the source of nearly half those imports in the first four months of this year, Chinese customs data show.
https://www.bangkokpost.com/world/3048041/china-backed-militia-controls-rare-earth-mines-in-myanmar
Good post, doesn't seem too biased
The post misses it with them claiming they need Myanmar, saying that it is heavily reliant (debatable)
it focuses mainly on mining and china has lead to a stable area in the north (even if it was for their own purpose) preventing any fighting nearby
LAPD Chief Denies Trump’s Claim That Police Asked for National Guard Help: ‘We’re Nowhere Near’ That
LAPD Chief Denies Trump’s Claim That Police Asked for National Guard Help: ‘We’re Nowher ...
LAPD Chief Jim McDonnell denied on CNN that he asked President Donald Trump for help with the ongoing protests in the city.Charlie Nash (Mediaite)
like this
Atelopus-zeteki, classic, Chickadeelight e Lasslinthar like this.
like this
Blackout likes this.
Trump Voter Gets Choked Up After ICE Detains a Third of His Staff
Trump Voter Gets Choked Up After ICE Detains a Third of His Staff
A Florida roofing boss backed the president’s tough immigration policies. Then six of his workers were taken away...Tom Latchem (The Daily Beast)
like this
Atelopus-zeteki, classic, aramis87, Chickadeelight, Lasslinthar e Perrin42 like this.
like this
Atelopus-zeteki, dcpDarkMatter, Chickadeelight e Blackout like this.
like this
andyburke likes this.
Sounds like someone is having the day they voted for.
But also fuck him for making me have the day he voted for, more broadly speaking.
like this
Nougat likes this.
Yes, which should give ICE supporters a moment to pause and consider two things. First, anyone could be an immigrant. It could be their neighbors and coworkers. Documentation can be faked or doctored or just expired, and the immigration process is deliberately complex.
Second, ICE isn't being careful about who they abduct and deport. There's no process, much less due process, and it can literally happen to any person, immigrant or native born, legal or otherwise.
I genuinely don't know what to do with people like him. On the one hand... Yeah. He ~~knowingly hired undocumented people, making him a hypocrite, and he~~ just voted to have those people forcibly deported against his own interests, making him a fucking dumbass.
At the same time, he seems to be showing actual remorse, and that should definitely be encouraged. The only - only - way this country has even the slightest shot at recovery is by flipping large numbers of the orange shit-gibbon's supporters, like this guy.
I really want to believe that's possible. I don't think it is, but I want to believe it.
Edit: Missed the part in the article where these guys had valid work visas.
Fuck him. Stupidity must have consequences.
We should rub his nose in the turd he laid. Mock him and ridicule him relentlessly and mercilessly.
Make him cry? Good. Make him angry? We need to keep mocking him until we break his spirit.
To hell with kindness and forgiveness. That’s not how you defeat Fascism.
Somebody needs to punch him in the dick.
Was going to start with thinking that, but then watched the video. I'm hearing far more "My friend runs a land scaping business, and he lost 10 or so, he's going out of business". Then comments on how they don't live in a big city and they don't know how they are going to find people to hire. Finally in the last 15 seconds he tears up and says he got to know them as friends and he hates seeing what it did to them and their families.
So yeah... feels like "I won't make money", "I'll lose my business", and "oh yeah they were good people who I hate to see their lives ruined".
like this
dcpDarkMatter likes this.
Trump voter: 'He's not hurting the people he needs to be hurting'
I've seen plenty of memorable quotes from Trump voters, but "he's not hurting the people he needs to be hurting" is among the most striking.Steve Benen (MSNBC)
like this
Chickadeelight likes this.
He heard Trump describing migrants as criminals and asylum seekers as frauds and thought that couldn't possibly be describing his workers, who are not criminals or frauds.
He didn't stop to consider that the characterization was a lie.
like this
andyburke, Lasslinthar e Atelopus-zeteki like this.
Trump “is not the same person that I dealt with just four years ago, and he’s incapable now of even a train of thought. He’s making things up.”
Reminder: It was the Peaceful LA Protests of June 2025
He is Biden’s age, a year or two makes little difference. Alzheimer’s runs in Trump’s family too.
Biden presented with the standard waxing and waning of dementia. He probably was aok some days. That’s how it works. Dementia onset is more like a picture that gets hit by the sun part of the day, when it’s sunny, not a total erasure. A gentle fading.
Alzheimer’s, however, presents with anger, erratic behavior, and paranoia on the trajectory of a downward spiral. Aggression is a hallmark.
To be fair, Newsom is sorta right, but Newsom's also kinda slimey, self-serving and angling for a presidential run. I don't want him to be the next Dem pres candidate...
Also, Trump has always been Trump. Stupid sounding hot air is his thing, way before politics.
The strongman’s MO | A study of political movements worldwide assesses the populists’ playbook — and how Donald Trump fits in
This post uses a gift link with a view count limit. There is a archived copy of the article for when it runs out
Notably:
“Economic damage from populist rule is typically severe,” they find. “Over 15 years, real GDP per capita is 10 per cent lower compared to the nonpopulist counterfactual.”
And
they rarely leave after losing elections, but more often amid “major scandals that lead to impeachment or resignations, constitutional crises and refusals to step down, as well as coups, suicides, or deadly accidents”. One of the paper’s authors, Schularick, has said it’s “totally naive” to imagine Trump will simply walk away in 2028
The strongman’s MO
A study of political movements worldwide assesses the populists’ playbook — and how Donald Trump fits inSimon Kuper (Financial Times)
like this
aramis87 likes this.
Senate GOP plan would sell millions of acres of Western public land
TL;DR; Selling off land in places without jobs doesn't create useful housing for people. What it does do is turn what had been public space into private space for the wealthy.
Access options:
* gift link - registration required
* archive.today
Every eight years we experience another turn of the Ratchet.
Republicans: We've privatized, deregulated, overpoliced, and gutted civil rights for another corner of civil society.
Democrats: Sorry, there's nothing we can do to fix this. You guys just should not have voted Republican. Anyway, here's Richie Torres, keynote speaker at Welcomefest, to tell progressives to fuck off.
Or Democrats: Hey, we started making some changes as part of this term. We are going to need more support to get additional items done.
Leftists: This isn't good enough so I'm not voting for you as punishment.
Republicans: Great, now we can deregulate more!
Hey, we started making some changes as part of this term.
Trump does more in six months than Biden managed in four years, despite having thinner Congressional margins and far less popular support.
Again, this goes back to DeJoy. It goes back to ICE administration. It goes to Biden's intervention to kneecap labor during the COVID era strike wave. It goes to Merrick Garland sitting on his hands for four fucking years while Republicans continued to commit crime after crime.
Biden didn't make progressive changes. He squandered his time in office, refused to impede Project 2025, and sent hundreds of billions of dollars into the pockets of Republican mega-donors that ultimately wrecked his VP's chances at an electoral win.
For what? So he could keep funding a genocide in Gaza?
Republicans: Great, now we can deregulate more!
Why did Jared Polis veto the anti-price gouging renter bill?
Jared Polis vetoes bill that would have restricted use of rent-setting software - The Durango Herald
Gov. Jared Polis on Thursday vetoed a measure that would have banned the use of many computer algorithms to set rent in Colorado, saying it could have outlawed some legitimate technologies used by lan...The Durango Herald
Torture and Forced Disappearances: Inside Wagner’s Secret Prisons in Mali
Since arriving in Mali in 2021, Russian Wagner mercenaries have abducted and detained hundreds of civilians in former UN bases and military camps shared with the Malian army. Our investigation, as part of the Viktoriia project, reveals secret prisons where abuse and torture are carried out with total impunity.
Torture and Forced Disappearances: Inside Wagner’s Secret Prisons in Mali - Forbidden Stories
For more than three years in Mali, Wagner mercenaries have detained and tortured civilians in secret prisons located in military bases, according to Forbidden Stories’ investigation.Louise Berkane (Forbidden Stories)
like this
Lasslinthar likes this.
Bernie Sanders leads Democratic effort in Congress to ward off war with Iran
Democratic US Senator Bernie Sanders from Vermont introduced legislation on Monday to prevent the use of federal funds for any "illegal wars” in or against Iran without approval from Congress.
Sanders introduced the "No War Against Iran Act", which contains an exception for self-defence as enshrined in the War Powers Act and applicable US law.
“It is imperative that we make clear that the President has no authority to embark on another costly war without explicit authorization by Congress,” Sanders said in a statement on Monday.
Bernie Sanders leads Democratic effort in Congress to ward off war with Iran
Democratic US Senator Bernie Sanders from Vermont introduced legislation on Monday to prevent the use of federal funds for any "illegal wars” in or against Iran without approval from Congress.MEE staff (Middle East Eye)
thisisbutaname likes this.
Pentagon suspends Israel adviser from Joint Staff after discovering posts calling Israel a 'death cult' and the country's 'worst ally'
A senior officer at the Pentagon has come under scrutiny over a series of social media posts sharply critical of Israel, its leadership, and US foreign policy in the region.
Colonel Nathan McCormack, who leads the Levant and Egypt branch at the Joint Chiefs of Staff’s J5 planning directorate, has used a semi-anonymous account to post numerous comments targeting Israeli actions and US support.
The posts, reportedly written since the 7 October 2023, have sparked outrage among pro-Israel circles in Washington. Here’s what he said:
- “Netanyahu and his Judeo-supremacist cronies are determined to prolong the conflict for their own goals: either to remain in power or to annex the land.”
- “Israel’s actions over decades have prompted the accusations of ethnic cleansing and genocide.”
- “The Western states go to great lengths to avoid criticism of Israel, much out of Holocaust guilt.”
- “Our worst ‘ally.’ We get literally nothing out of the ‘partnership’ other than the enmity of millions of people in the Middle East, Africa and Asia.”
- “The US has not been an honest broker. We have overwhelmingly enabled Israel’s bad behavior.”
- Responding to the idea of relocating Gaza’s population, McCormack wrote that Israel wants “to expel them and cleanse ‘Eretz Israel’ (Greater Israel) of ethnic Palestinians.”
- Since June 2024 he also called Israel a “death cult”
like this
Maeve likes this.
like this
Limitless_screaming e Maeve like this.
This is how they control the narrative.
Either support Israel, or suffer the consequences.
like this
Maeve likes this.
Remember during the election when the Trump admin was supposed to be good for Palestine. So many people on ML specifically were convinced that Trump was going to solve the crisis.
it's almost like the issues with the United States government run deeper than the President.
well we experienced different posts at different times then I know obviously it's not a homogeneous board, nowhere is, but I can tell you that's the subset I dealt with did.
that being said I'm not so interested in laying blame as I am with getting people to engage with the Democratic process outside of major elections.
1) nobody said that, and
2) I don't see how that's in any way relevant to an advisor being removed from his post because he ain't frothing at the mouth chanting death to all Arabs
leave it to ML users to debate subjective experience
here's the needlessly incendiary part of this exchange.
leave it to ML users to debate subjective experience.
Then support your “subjective experience” with Lemmy comment links of actual examples.
Don’t you think you’re being needlessly incendiary?
You libelled our community, which was incendiary.
"You said this!"
"What? No I didn't!"
"How dare you debate my subjective experience!"
- I definitely saw a lot of people from ml who were saying stuff like that when trump started talking to Israel in the first week or so of his presidency. They're not representative of all of .ml, but they were quite a vocal minority
- Absolutely right
So many people on ML specifically were convinced that Trump was going to solve the crisis.
That’s ridiculous—no they weren’t. Links or it didn’t happen.
it’s almost like the issues with the United States government run deeper than the President.
They do run deeper, and that is fundamental to Marxist historical materialism.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historic…
"Great man" historyMarx rejected the enlightenment view that ideas alone were the driving force in society or that the underlying cause of change was guided by the actions of leaders in government or religion. The "great man" and occasionally "great woman" view of historical change was popularized by the 19th-century Scottish philosopher Thomas Carlyle (1795–1881) who wrote "the history of the world is nothing but the biography of great men". According to Marx, this conception of history amounted to nothing more than a collection of "high-sounding dramas of princes and states".
So many people on ML specifically were convinced that Trump was going to solve the crisis.
Literally no one said this; you're lying through your teeth because you're bitter your genocider of choice lost.
like this
geneva_convenience likes this.
Australian Red Cross Lifeblood loosens rules around LGBTQIA+ donating blood and plasma
ABC News
ABC News provides the latest news and headlines in Australia and around the world.Lewis Wiseman (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
FundMECFS likes this.
Australia overtakes China in the Pacific as the U.S vacates the lane: Public perceptions of influence see Australia surge ahead as the “permanent contest” unfolds | Lowy Institute poll
Something interesting is happening in how Australians think about their own country’s influence in the Pacific. According to the Lowy Institute’s 2025 poll, 39 per cent of Australians now see Australia as the most influential power in the Pacific Islands, a notable increase from last year’s result of 31 per cent.
Australia has overtaken China, previously seen by Australians as the dominant player, which holds steady at 34 per cent.
These figures suggest a shifting perception domestically, perhaps reflecting Canberra’s energetic “listening” diplomacy, through which Australia has ramped up diplomatic effort and significantly increased financial assistance to the Pacific over the past three years. Canberra’s approach of marrying generous aid packages with not-so-subtle diplomatic leverage on security matters appears to have resonated at home.
[...]
While Australia is undeniably the largest aid donor in the region, and uniquely maintains a diplomatic presence in every PIF member state, Beijing’s bare-faced influence-building is plain as day.
The China-Pacific Island countries Foreign Ministers’ meeting last month foreshadowed increased Chinese presence in security and policing, development, and stronger economic ties with those Pacific countries that recognise China over Taiwan. Beijing’s blend of visa-waivers, economic incentives, infrastructure financing, and diplomatic duchessing, ensures its presence is both felt and appreciated across island capitals.
In 2024, China registered 26 Coastguard vessels with the Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission, signalling a more assertive regional maritime presence. It is not clear how China intends to deploy its more than two-dozen vessels, but if the dynamics in the South China Sea are any indication, it will likely result in Chinese vessels harassing other countries, while protecting its own fishing fleet – widely understood as often responsible for illegal fishing in the Pacific Ocean.
[...]
To Canberra’s chagrin, plenty of Pacific countries are evidently happy to buy what China is selling, even while some countries including PNG and Fiji are aligning more closely to Australia’s worldview.
Therein lies the rub: while perceptions do matter, it is Pacific countries’ own strategic choices that will ultimately be the deciding factor in who has influence and how the regional balance of power is shaped for decades to come.
Australia overtakes China in the Pacific as America vacates the lane
Public perceptions of influence measured in the latest Lowy Institute Poll see Australia surge ahead as the “permanent contest” unfolds.www.lowyinstitute.org
We have to solve the money problem!
We have to solve the money problem!
On the Fireside Fedi interview with Jerry ( the admin of Infosec.Exchange Mastodon instance ) a scary truth was suddenly revealed ( on 34:11 ): Just to keep the instance up and running he needs to spend up to $5000 a month, pretty much out of his poc…blenderdumbass . org
And if he will ask people to pay to use it, they will, rightfully so, switch to a different instance.
Ok? What on earth would be the motivation to let these people keep spending your money instead of letting them go spend someone else's?
ETA: Especially if their reason for leaving is that you had the audacity to ask them to pitch in for the cost of the resources that they're using. Oh, the humanity.
like this
Endymion_Mallorn likes this.
like this
Endymion_Mallorn likes this.
That's a decision for each server admin to decide for themselves. This particular admin has apparently decided that $5000/mo is worth it to them to run a server without ever asking people to pitch in, which I find absolutely bizarre, but whatever.
They can go a long way towards reducing that cost themselves by..... asking their users to pitch in. Some people will pitch in, and reduce their out of pocket expenses. Others will leave, further reducing their out of pocket expenses.
If they haven't done the bare minimum that they can do to help themselves, then this isn't a problem for the broader fediverse community to solve.
The admin of the third largest mastodon instance is constantly asking for donations and still has trouble to pay his own rent.
If it was an exceptional case, I'd be glad to help. but when it happens every other month, it shows that this continued behavior of sacrificing your own well-being is irresponsible.
Ooof 😟 this morning i got the server bills and currently im still a massive €470+ short..Upcoming week I'm gonna dedicate go clean up servers, merge some to cut costs
Unofrt active users has gone down but the cost do keep return and even increase every month
Please, if you can and want, help me out with these bills
paypal.me/stuxOS
patreon.com/mstdn
ko-fi.com/mstdn
bunq.me/stuxhost
stux.me/donate
liberapay.com/mstdnBoosts would also be a help❤️
stux.me:~$ Support By Donation
Most if not all the work I do (online) I give away for free! Personally I dislike advertisements so I won't apply those either.stux (stux.me:~$)
then this isn’t a problem for the broader fediverse community to solve
This is the natural end result of every volunteer run instance, you don't find it odd that over the last 40 years of the internet not one fediverse like server or community has survived or even been mildly popular?
I'll repost this because for some reason the other post got deleted, it was regarding lemm.ee shutting down, they were concerned that one of the largest Lemmy instances is shutting down and the future of Lemmy:
You're 100% right to be concerned and to be honest I have doubts lemmy will ever crack more than a few million users, the same thing happened with Mastodon, something that relies so heavily on volunteers running the infra almost inevitably results in burnout because the fediverse works on a disincentive basis:
Basically the more popular a server is, the more funding it requires, the more admins it requires, the more work it requires, and all of this is on a slim margins or more likely requiring on people to donate time/money/effort 'for free' is a huge ask.
The supply of people sitting around doing nothing all day who care enough to dedicate their time/effort/money to running a social network... for free... is a very small group, almost as small as the amount of people who are willing to donate every month to a social network.
You can find mods of communities are usually fans of the communities they mod, it's a topic they enjoy and so the incentive for them to invest their time is to keep their community clean and great. But running a social network which has hard costs not just time is a whole other thing
This is opposed to a regular website or social media network, where as it gets bigger, it makes more money through ads/subscriptions, the incentive is to get bigger to make more money
And then they can simply pay for the hard costs like hosting costs/bandwidth and people to do the shit no one wants to.
The reality for me is that the money has to come from somewhere, you can do a paywall like newspapers do or beg for donations every page visit like the guardian/wikipedia do, or the usual suspect allow advertising, but the money has to come from somewhere.
Thus the fediverse has a disincentive to growing larger, it is simply easier and more sustainable to remain small
Let's get rid of open registration instances and look for alternative models that are actually sustainable:
- Small servers run by self-hosting enthusiasts for their friends and family.
- Institutional servers (schools/universities running servers for faculty and students, companies running servers for their own employees)
- Servers run by media institutions for journalists + maybe for subscribers (on a separate domain)
- Servers provided by telcos, tied to their phone service (get a contract for mobile and that gives you access to our AP server)
- Commercial providers who charge a flat subscription for access (mastodon.green, omg.lol, my own communick)
We need to get rid of the idea that we can have a sustainable Fediverse infra running on volunteers alone. It is not working, all the growth potential that we have is stunted because people keep lying to themselves.
Community is not enough
They can invite to join the party, but you are still going to need those nasty capitalists to fill your cupRaphael Lullis
Let’s get rid of open registration instances
How?
Nobody is stopping any of your bullet points from happening. Those are all options today. Any one of those groups can spin up an instance and nobody is going to stop them. Some already have
But isn't the idea of forcing someone to (not) run their own server however they want antithetical to the whole concept of the fediverse?
You can defederate your personal server from open registration servers if you want. But you can't "get rid of open registration instances." That's just stupid.
Endymion_Mallorn likes this.
I am not saying that there should be an executive order to make open registrations illegal, or to force anyone to do it.
What I am saying is that the admins themselves should change their attitude about it. I understand that most of them are doing out of generosity and because they hope that by offering free spaces they will get more people to join, but I'd hope that by now most people would have realized that this is (a) not sustainable and (b) counterproductive. The reason that we don't see a lot of the alternative models around is because the open registration instances suck out the air of everyone else in the economy.
If we keep working with this assumption that open registrations are fundamental to the Fediverse, we are going to continue is the slow decline to irrelevance. The Fediverse is never going to die, but it will be forever stunted in its potential.
That I can agree with. But I think it's just inevitable growing pains. Free and open instances will, over time, shut down because they're obviously unsustainable, so they won't be sustained.
As they do, people will be left searching for instances to move to, and more and more, they'll find that free instances just aren't an available.
Free and open instances will, over time, shut down because they’re obviously unsustainable, so they won’t be sustained.
How many of the 5.5k users from lemm.ee are going to say "Lesson learned. If I want an instance that is sustainable I should look for a professional instance or run my own"? I'm not going to say zero, but I really doubt it's going to be "more than 3".
The problem here is that while individual instances may die, there is always a new ~~sucker~~ enthusiast coming up thinking "my server will be different".
The problem here is that while individual instances may die, there is always a new ~~sucker~~ enthusiast coming up thinking “my server will be different”.
Not the nicest way to talk about @ada@lemmy.blahaj.zone, @Shadow@lemmy.ca or @Demigodrick@lemmy.zip
I didn't insult anyone. You are putting names out there of admins of existing instances when I was talking about the general story of about how there are constant wheel of new people coming up.
You are gasping as straws, as if ostracizing me would ever validate your arguments. This is getting tiring.
Lemm.ee didn't shut down because it was financially unsustainable though. It shut down because the admin team didn't want to do it anymore.
Plenty of people have offered to take lemm.ee on and AFAIK nothing has progressed, but handled in a different way there could have been continuity and no need for users to transition away.
Given that the issue wasn't one of finance and rather one of effort/will, how does charging for access change anything? The owner could decide they have had enough, walk away, and shut everything down anyway, no?
It shut down because the admin team didn’t want to do it anymore.
It shut down because the admin team didn't want to do it for free anymore. There were just too many people, too many bad actors for little reward. By charging for access, you manage to both increase the reward and reduce the amount of people, so the whole equation changes significantly.
how does charging for access change anything? The owner could decide they have had enough, walk away, and shut everything down anyway, no?
Sure, but the amount of pain that I get from my ~50 paying customers is infinitely less than the headaches that you'll be getting.
like this
Endymion_Mallorn likes this.
like this
Endymion_Mallorn likes this.
like this
Endymion_Mallorn likes this.
Small instances dies all the time
Small hobbyist instances die all the time. Just like the medium ones and the large ones.
Lemmy fully managed open source service | Elest.io
Deploy Lemmy on Elest.io and get a working dedicated instance in less than 3 minutes. You can Relax knowing that we are taking care for you of install, configuration, encryption, backups, software updates, os upgrades, live monitoring, alerts, live m…elest.io
- Institutional servers (schools/universities running servers for faculty and students, companies running servers for their own employees)
This is the best long term strategy. News orgs should be hosting their own Mastodon instances at the very least. Same with schools and government.
It solves a number of problems - for them. So many news organizations and government offices are reliant on Xitter. That means that they are at the mercy of the owner of the platform for their messages to the public. Hosting their own instance puts them in charge. They can get out messages reliably and the public can trust that they are who they say... Just like an email address or URL.
Schools pay lots of money to private corporations to run bespoke university messaging systems, and are likewise reliant on those companies to provide administrative services such as moderating. Moving those communications in-house will be cheaper and simpler.
We should all be pressuring schools and local governments to adopt these technologies.
If you get rid of open registration instances and start charging, you'll immediately lose huge amounts of users back to Reddit or whatever alternative is free to them. The echo chamber will be even more pronounced, and whatever success Lemmy/Mbin/Piefed have had will dry up.
Most people don't want to self host. And most people aren't willing to pay. So you have an issue in front of you. Do you actually want users and interactions? Or do you just want a place where very dedicated nerds can crow to each other about whatever self-hosting tricks they pulled off while occasionally backed by an addicted whale (who, upon noting the monotony and small userbase, will probably move on quickly)?
Everything, especially digital things, is backed by a small group of whales supporting everyone else. It's a mix between addiction and community-building instincts. Right now, said whales are the server hosts and a handful of users. Because of the desire to lead a community, and the addiction of social media, it keeps going. You say it isn't sustainable. I say it's a cycle. The specific instances don't matter until it becomes a corporate situation. All that matters is that there's at least one instance with enough people active to provide the gratification to the whale.
If you get rid of open registration instances and start charging, you'll immediately lose huge amounts of users
That is not necessarily true. you can have for example just a bunch of people that like to self host and they will invite their friend. This will be just a small constellation of smaller instances and they don't have to be completely open registration.
Most people don't want to self host.
You don't need most. If 1% of the people can show initiative to self host and serve 100 people, it should be enough.
Everything, especially digital things, is backed by a small group of whales supporting everyone else.
Bad economics and bad incentives. What you are describing is not just a natural law that can be avoided, but it is part of the reason that we are in this mess.
Software has this amazing property of being virtually free to copy. But the things that we do it and the labor that is required of us still has a cost. We need to bring back some sense of human scale to digital platforms, and the only way to do it is by letting us set a limit to the size of the organizations.
The reason is easy: one likes the fediverse, wants to contribute for it and wants to enabled people to use it even if they can't afford to pay for it.
On a smaller scale, that's not much of a problem. I'm glad I can host for some people who don't have money at all. Some of the others donate and some don't and that's fine as well.
@jerry@infosec.exchange , I'm sorry to bother but is it really true? Are you paying almost $5000/month out of your own pocket?
If true, why? This is not sustainable. Don't you think that by letting so many people free ride on your generosity, you end up hurting yourself and the possibility of cottage-industry of professional hosting providers?
like this
Endymion_Mallorn likes this.
SSD/NVMe Servers: Ultra-Fast Performance for Demanding Workloads - Optimize Performans Düşük Bütçe
Unlock unparalleled speed with our SSD and NVMe server solutions. Engineered for high-performance tasks and data-intensive applications, our packages deliver top-tier responsiveness. Browse our options and elevate your hosting experience.www.prientecloud.com
like this
Endymion_Mallorn likes this.
Storage. In the video he says that backups alone costs $500/month.
Also, given that the instance is called "infosec.exchange", you can be sure that he is not running this on some cheap VPS.
Endymion_Mallorn likes this.
Maybe the problem is that they are using ridiculously overpriced enterprise services like AWS or Azure, which provide their own solutions for a lot of common things like backups, replicas, logging, etc, but cost 100x more than what you can get with DIY on some cheap VPS if you're fine with spending 1.25x more time.
Also, given that the instance is called “infosec.exchange”, you can be sure that he is not running this on some cheap VPS.
Why not, though.
Why not, though.
because cheap VPS will not give you enough bandwidth, or they oversubscribe their datacenters and their advertised speeds are far from real, or they have terrible support and if something goes down you are going to have a hard time to bring things up while having to explain to 10-15k people why things stopped working, or because the reason they manage to get such low prices is because they are selling user data on the side...
I'm not saying that the only correct alternative is to go to the big cloud providers, but there is a reason why "cheap" is not the sole criteria to choose a service provider.
Thank you for chiming in, Jerry!
Great interview, I only watched a part of it, but it was very interesting and refreshing to see your perspective on things. Thank you!
Ok, so you are not taking anything out of pocket at all? That's better than most, I suppose.
Still, during the interview you touch on the subject of how the donation model is not sustainable and it can only works at the scale that Fedi is right now. Wouldn't you consider then switching to a different model?
The only real option is to charge people.
Hosting isn't free. It costs money to run a website. That money needs to come from somewhere. If it doesn't come from advertisers, it must come from users.
There could be a verity options for that. But I like the simple annual subscription. Each and every user pays. Spread out the cost as much as possible. It's only fair.
like this
NoneOfUrBusiness likes this.
Provided there is an "upper limit" on what scale we are talking, Ive often wondered, couldn't private users also host a sharded copy of a server instance to offset load and bandwidth? Like Folding@Home, but for site support.
I realize this isn't exactly feasible today for most infra, but if we're trying to "solve" the problem, imagine if you were able to voluntarily, give up like 100gb HDD space and have your PC host 2-3% of an instance's server load for a month or something. Or maybe just be a CDN node for the media and bandwidth heavy parts to ease server load, while the server code is on different machines.
This kind of distributed "load balancing" on private hardware may be a complete pipe dream today, but it think if might be the way federated services need to head. I can tell you if we could get it to be as simple as volunteers spinning up a docker, and dropping the generated wireguard key and their IP in a "federate" form to give the mini-node over to an instance, it would be a lot easier to support sites in this way.
Speaking for myself, I have enough bandwidth and space I could lend some compute and offset a small amount of traffic. But the full load of a popular instance would be more than my simple home setup is equipped for. If contributing hosting was as easy as contributing compute, it could have a chance to catch on.
like this
Endymion_Mallorn likes this.
- This is not how the fediverse works. Each server keeps a whole copy to themselves of all that they've accessed in the federation.
- Cost of hardware is only a fraction of the total cost. Even if we solved the issue of running the Fediverse at scale with negligible costs, we still are not accounting for all the labor of volunteers, instance admins and developers.
like this
NoneOfUrBusiness e Endymion_Mallorn like this.
I realize that is not how the fediverse works. I'm not speaking about the content delivery as much as the sever orchestration.
That's why I'm saying if somehow it could work that way, it would be one way to offset the compute and delivery burdens. But it is a very different paradigm from normal hosting. There would have to be some kind of swarmanagement layer that the main instance nodes controlled.
My point was only that, should such a proposal be feasible one day, if you lower the barriers you could have more resources.
I myself have no interest in hosting a full blown private instance of Lemmy or mastodon, but I would happily contribute 1tb of storage and a ton of idle compute to serving the content for my instance if I could. That's where this thinking stemmed from. Many users like me could donate their "free" idle power and space. But currently it is not feasible.
A Plan for Social Media - Rethinking Federation
This is part of a series of posts about the current state of Social Media. I talked about Mozilla’s failed strRaphael Lullis
like this
Endymion_Mallorn likes this.
I responded above, but my point kind of was that it doesn't work that way, but as we rethinking content delivery we should also rethinking hosting distribution. What I was saying is not a "well gee we should just do this..." type of suggestion, but more a extremely high level idea for server orchestration from a public private swarm that may or may not ever be feasible, but definitely doesn't really exist today.
Imagine if it were somewhat akin to BitTorrent, only the user could voluntarily give remote control to the instance for orchestration management. The orchestration server toggles the nodes contents so that, lets say, 100% of them carry the most accessed data (hot content, <100gb), and the rest is sharded so they each carry 10% of the archived data, making each node require <1tb total. And the node client is given X number of pinned CPUs that can be used for additional server compute tasks to offload various queries.
See, I'm fully aware this doesn't really exist on this form. But thinking of it like a Kubernetes cluster or a HA webclient it seems like it should be possible somehow to build this in a way where the client really only needs to install, and say yes to contribute. If we could cut it down to that level, then you can start serving the site like a P2P bittorrent swarm, and these power user clients can become nodes.
Most people are only willing to pay with non-monetary resources (PII, ad data, etc.). You can't approach this with charging money in mind, because people will just go back to the places where they aren't expected to pay. Start charging for Mastodon? The majority will go to Bluesky, Twitter, and Threads. Lemmy would just feed back to Reddit. Either that or they'll drop off social media altogether.
We've already got proof of this: PeerTube. Most PeerTube instances either charge a fee to upload (call it a 'donation' if you prefer, but if you're gating an action behind money, that's a fee), or simply don't allow any users not connected to the admin to upload. YouTube, Twitch, Dailymotion, and a few other sites are free. The sites where it's free to perform the core activity will keep winning, especially as we see rising inflation and increasing costs.
It's not about the software. I am just pointing out that Communick's instances are only available for paying customers, so his argument (everyone should pay a little bit) is at the very least backed by his own actions.
Regarding Peertube: I see the problem of Peertube on the other end of what you are saying. People are not using that much because even those that have a presence on PeerTube still depend on YouTube to make money. If PeerTube had a way to help with monetization, then more creators would be interested in publishing exclusively on PeerTube, even if they had to pay something to upload/distribute videos.
I just watched the section of the interview where Jerry (admin of fedia.io and infosec.exchange), and he said that
There are a lot of people who aren't that lucky. Even charging a 1$ fee is too much. That is their lifeline, it's their way to connect to friends, and search for jobs. To me, I don't think it's appropriate to gatekeep it with a monthly fee.
like this
NoneOfUrBusiness e Endymion_Mallorn like this.
like this
NoneOfUrBusiness e Oofnik like this.
like this
NoneOfUrBusiness likes this.
like this
NoneOfUrBusiness likes this.
And if he will ask people to pay to use it, they will, rightfully so, switch to a different instance.
I joined my instance's patreon and donate $1 / month. I know it is not a lot, but so far the admin says he is doing fine on cash flow, should that change I will up my donation if able.
like this
NoneOfUrBusiness e Endymion_Mallorn like this.
He missed a bit:
they will, rightfully so, switch to a different instance ... or go somewhere else entirely
Endymion_Mallorn likes this.
Just to keep the instance up and running he needs to spend up to $5000 a month, pretty much out of his pocket.
Wtf!?
I just watched the section of the interview where Jerry (admin of fedia.io and infosec.exchange), and he said that
There are a lot of people who aren't that lucky. Even charging a 1$ fee is too much. That is their lifeline, it's their way to connect to friends, and search for jobs. To me, I don't think it's appropriate to gatekeep it with a monthly fee.
video.firesidefedi.live/w/1yNa…
For the host question, it's at 34:11
No questions from my side, just a big thank you to mention Mbin, Lemmy, the Fediverse in that interview. It's probably the first time for me where I watch a video talking about all of this, which is curious with how part of my daily life it is.
I still haven't watched everything, but one of your quotes sounded resonated with me "We're only here for a short time. Why should we be a-holes to each other, and not just try to enjoy ourselves?"
Anyway, thank you for everything, take care!
Seems to be some misunderstanding somewhere - Jerry states elsewhere that the costs are covered by donations.
The Mastodon instance I'm on has around 200 people (not all of them active), and received around €800 in donations last year,. Total costs were less than €300.
I think the problem of scaling kicks in when we go after demographics that are less charitable on average.
I have donations from members that cover the costs.
like this
Fitik likes this.
Hi all. It’s Jerry from the interview talking about infosec.exchange. I think it’s important to understand some apparently missing context in the discussions below. I was talking about a hypothetical future where we saw tens/hundreds of millions of active accounts on the fediverse. I don’t believe the current funding model can support that, and I also don’t think the “spin up your own host” model will work for the masses, either.
I host close to two dozen different fediverse services, from lemmy to mastodon to mbin to peertube and lots more, and all that takes some significant hardware to run at larger scales. My objective has been to provide a fast and reliable fediverse experience, and so I’ve focused more on that than on making my servers scream, and so I’ve landed on hosting the fleet on a series of Hetzner Dell servers with 10GB interfaces, and that is not cheap.
Freemium is the way to go. All the essential features are free; you can pay for extra stuff like special emojis, coins(like Reddit silver/gold), or customizable profiles. It could be either a subscription or à la carte.
Simply giving something in return would incentivize people to donate more.
Unlike Reddit, the profit should give back to the communities by adding more features, paying developers to maintain open source projects, giveaways etc.
like this
Fitik likes this.
Misskey is probably the only fediverse software that actually allows admin instance to put ads.
Its flagship instance, misskey.io (which also the second/third (?) biggest instances on fediverse), use freemium scheme for running the server.
They have to do this as they have 600K users, with 20K visits per day.
Their paid tier upgrades are mostly adding non-essentials stuff, such as drive capacity from 5GB to 30-100GB, profile and avatar decoration (similar to Discord stuff), or more webhook.
They runs community ads, from indie games, vtuber promotion, comic release, or local art event.
They also have one corporate backer, Skeb.jp, which an art commissioning platform.
Not saying that all instance should do this, but it could be a great learning.
Tonga Poised to Be the First Country to Recognize Rights of Whales
Tonga Poised to Be the First Country to Recognize Rights of Whales - Inside Climate News
At the U.N. Ocean Conference, Tonga’s princess called for recognition of whales’ legal rights. The move is one of several rights of nature initiatives happening at the conference.Inside Climate News
like this
Lasslinthar, karashta, Drusas, massive_bereavement e ElcaineVolta like this.
Tonga porpoised to be first country to recognise the rights of whales.
Terrible pun aside, go Tonga!
UK and Spain strike ‘historic’ deal over Gibraltar’s future and borders
UK and Spain strike ‘historic’ deal over Gibraltar’s future and borders
People to be able to move freely across land border, and airport to have Eurostar-style dual border checksEleni Courea (The Guardian)
like this
themadcodger likes this.
Air India plane crashes at India’s Ahmedabad airport
London-bound Air India plane with 242 people on board crashes soon after take-off
The aircraft hit a medical hostel as it plunged to the ground. Read more at straitstimes.com.The Straits Times
More Gazans killed trying to get food, healthcare near to ‘full disaster’
More Gazans killed trying to get food, healthcare near to ‘full disaster’
Gaza’s health system is at breaking point, overwhelmed time and again by scores of people killed or injured near aid distribution sites, the UN World Health Organization (WHO) said on Tuesday.UN News
Fediverse Support Line [Podcast] #2 - Migrating
Fediverse Support Line #2 - Migrating
Non-techy restless activist do-gooder Jeremy Flatt has found himself having to administer a mastodon instance at nwt.social and has some questions to ask of slightly more techy Paige Saunders. @jer...AbnormalBeingsTube
Israeli gunfire, strikes kill 120 Palestinians in Gaza, many at aid sites
Israeli gunfire, strikes kill 120 Palestinians in Gaza, many at aid sites
Palestinian death toll in Israel’s genocidal war surpasses 55,000 amid ongoing bombardment and killings at aid sites.Al Jazeera
like this
faizalr, Maeve, NoneOfUrBusiness, massive_bereavement e Lasslinthar like this.
Resurrecting a dead torrent tracker and finding 3 million peers
Resurrecting a dead torrent tracker and finding 3 million peers
So I was uh, downloading some linux isos, like usual. It was going slowly, so I opened up the Trackers tab in qBittorrent and saw the following:Kian Bradley (Kian Bradley’s Blog)
adhocfungus likes this.
Canvas 2025
July 12th, 2025 @ 4am UTC
✨ just as it was last year, the entire Fediverse is invited ✨
follow via microblog @canvas@fediverse.events
join the chat on matrix or on discord (bridged)
are you an app developer? check out the fediverse.events api 👀 (matrix room also linked there)
What’s Canvas?
canvas is a 48 hour event were anyone apart of the fediverse can contribute to a pixel canvas, one pixel at a time
Matrix - Decentralised and secure communication
You're invited to talk on Matrix. If you don't already have a client this link will help you pick one, and join the conversation. If you already have one, this link will help you join the conversationmatrix.to
like this
Fitik likes this.
Awesome! Looking forward to it.
Adding this to the list of relevant links !canvas@toast.ooo
like this
Fitik likes this.
Mudita Kompakt
Mudita Kompakt, a minimalist E Ink® phone.
Mudita Kompakt is a minimalist phone designed for mindful living. Featuring an E Ink screen, long battery life, and distraction-free tools, this E Ink phone helps you stay focused and unplug with ease.mudita.com
Basso Daniele likes this.
Donald Trump Manufactured the Crisis in Los Angeles
like this
Maeve, FerretyFever0, Australis13, NoneOfUrBusiness, SuiXi3D, Blackout e Chickadeelight like this.
like this
NoneOfUrBusiness likes this.
Radiohead - The King of Limbs (2011)
Come si diceva, un nuovo disco va assaporato lentamente, se poi il disco in questione è dei Radiohead, allora la regola va moltiplicata. The King of Limbs non è un disco facile, chi conosce e ama i Radiohead è preparato a questo. Molte loro uscite hanno spiazzato e anche The King of Limbs, in parte, mantiene questa promessa... Leggi e ascolta...
Radiohead - The King of Limbs (2011)
Come si diceva, un nuovo disco va assaporato lentamente, se poi il disco in questione è dei Radiohead, allora la regola va moltiplicata. The King of Limbs non è un disco facile, chi conosce e ama i Radiohead è preparato a questo. Molte loro uscite hanno spiazzato e anche The King of Limbs, in parte, mantiene questa promessa. Chiamiamole ricerche, esperimenti, poco cambia, il loro percorso sonoro è sempre all'insegna dell'innovazione e dello stile progressivo... (Continua a leggere... artesuono.blogspot.com/2014/07…)
Ascolta: album.link/i/1109714965
Home – Identità DigitaleSono su: Mastodon.uno - Pixelfed - Feddit
Radiohead - The King of Limbs (2011)
di Silvano Bottaro Come si diceva, un nuovo disco va assaporato lentamente, se poi il disco in questione è dei Radiohead, allora la ...Silvano Bottaro (Blogger)
- YouTube
Profitez des vidéos et de la musique que vous aimez, mettez en ligne des contenus originaux, et partagez-les avec vos amis, vos proches et le monde entier.www.youtube.com
like this
originalucifer, andyburke, Maeve, wagesj45, FerretyFever0, NoneOfUrBusiness, Australis13, SuiXi3D, essell, Dantpool, celeste e Chickadeelight like this.
Hong Kong bans video game using national security laws
Hong Kong bans video game using national security laws
Hong Kong authorities have warned their residents against downloading a Taiwan-made game called Reversed Front: Bonfire, which they're accusing of advocating...Mariella Moon (Engadget)
like this
xep e FartsWithAnAccent like this.
Excerpt from the dev's website (very bottom of the page):
This game is a work of NON-FICTION. Any similarity to actual agencies, policies or ethnic groups of the PRC in this game is INTENTIONAL.
Tankies can go fuck themselves whinging about this.
I cannot encourage everyone enough play this game.
Sadly a mobile game so it's not really worth your time as it has in app purchases.
But what could be worth your time is Devotion, a Taiwanese horror game which is not available on any store front (but their own) after an easter egg criticial of Xi Jinping was found.
Bragg Soldiers Who Cheered Trump's Political Attacks While in Uniform Were Checked for Allegiance, Appearance
Internal 82nd Airborne Division communications reviewed by Military.com reveal a tightly orchestrated effort to curate the optics of Trump's recent visit, including handpicking soldiers for the audience based on political leanings and physical appearance. The troops ultimately selected to be behind Trump and visible to the cameras were almost exclusively male.One unit-level message bluntly said "no fat soldiers."
"If soldiers have political views that are in opposition to the current administration and they don't want to be in the audience then they need to speak with their leadership and get swapped out," another note to troops said.
Cherry picking your fan boys, very Alpha move.
Bragg Soldiers Who Cheered Trump's Political Attacks While in Uniform Were Checked for Allegiance, Appearance
As President Donald Trump viciously attacked his perceived political foes, he whipped up boos from the gathered troops directed at California leaders, including Gov. Gavin Newsom.Konstantin Toropin, Steve Beynon (Military.com)
like this
Maeve, LoveDragon, Australis13 e IAmLamp like this.
For this story, Military.com reached out to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's office as well as the Army and the 82nd Airborne Division directly with a series of questions that ranged from the optics of the event to social media posts showing the sale of Trump campaign merchandise on the base, to the apparent violation of Pentagon policies on political activity in uniform.Internal 82nd Airborne Division communications reviewed by Military.com reveal a tightly orchestrated effort to curate the optics of Trump's recent visit, including handpicking soldiers for the audience based on political leanings and physical appearance. The troops ultimately selected to be behind Trump and visible to the cameras were almost exclusively male.
One unit-level message bluntly said "no fat soldiers."
. . . Service officials declined to comment when asked about the extent to which troops were screened, whether soldiers displaying partisan cheers on television -- a violation of long-standing Pentagon rules -- would be disciplined or if soldiers who objected to participating in the event, citing disagreements with the administration, would be disciplined or admonished in any way.
"This has been a bad week for the Army for anyone who cares about us being a neutral institution," one commander at Fort Bragg told Military.com on the condition of anonymity to avoid retaliation. "This was shameful. I don't expect anything to come out of it, but I hope maybe we can learn from it long term."
The military has always been heavily populated by some of the shittiest people. The prospect of carrying a weapon and killing others or just wielding power over others, attracts a certain type of person. In the US since at least 9/11, there's been a disgusting amount of military propaganda that has certainly brought in some people that care and want to do the right thing (for the ignorant wrong reasons) but also the shits that are all in because they think they're tough shit.
Service people don't deserve any more respect than any other profession, and I'd argue in many cases, they deserve less respect. There's hasn't been a draft in a hot minute, so everyone currently in is voluntary. Some soldiers do wind to in life threatening situations, but it's far from the most dangerous job and to me, killing innocence in the middle east for no good reason doesn't earn you any valor in my book.
They're all a bunch of pawns, and I've seen about 2 out of all of them actually stand up and oppose the Trump admin and thousands of others bend over, take it, and ask for more. This article and LA further reenforces my belief that being in the military isn't something noble, but more akin to being in a gang where all of the members are brainwashed and have no spines.
like this
Australis13 likes this.
Firms led by US military veterans deliver aid in Africa and Gaza, alarming humanitarian groups
Firms led by US military veterans deliver aid in Africa and Gaza, alarming humanitarian groups
ON A PLANE OVER UPPER NILE STATE, South Sudan (AP) — Swooping low over the banks of a Nile River tributary, an aid flight run by retired American military officers released a stream of food-stuffed sa...feedloaderapi (Winnipeg Free Press)
West Virginia Republican Gets Cold Feet About GOP Plan to Make Families 'Poorer, Hungrier, and Sicker'
West Virginia Republican Gets Cold Feet About GOP Plan to Make Families 'Poorer, Hungrier, and Sicker'
"Sen. Jim Justice says people 'might get upset' about SNAP cuts," said a government watchdog that's fought against the bill. "No kidding."julia-conley (Common Dreams)
like this
aramis87, wildncrazyguy138, KaRunChiy, wagesj45, frustrated_phagocytosis e Drusas like this.
like this
aramis87 likes this.
He doesn't care about that, he cares that voters will blame Republicans.
It's why traditionally they give everyone tax breaks and then set the ones for the poors to expire when a Dem will likely be in office, and the ones for the wealthy never expire.
There's none of that now, shits going to get bad and there's no one to blame that doesn't have an R by their name.
there's no one to blame that doesn't have an R by their name.
Are you kidding? They'll be scapegoating Biden's corpse so long and so hard even the DNC will blush. And then there's always Obama as a backup plan.
Life is cake when absolutely nothing is your fault.
Oh little buddy, it’s too late now. You’ve made your bed with Nazis, and it’s full of piss and shit, but now you have to lie in it.
If you’re not rich or powerful enough to float to the top – and you’re not – you’re going to have to deal with the Nazi filth. Too bad absolutely nobody warned you. Oh well.
"If we don't watch out, people are going to get hurt, people are going to be upset. It's going to be the No. 1 thing on the nightly news all over the place," Justice, who served as West Virginia's governor for eight years before winning his Senate seat last year, told Politico.
Because, apparently, no one of any value has been hurt yet. He never figured it out, there’s just a personal consequence now. He looks old as shit, I hope hell claws him under the earth soon and cooks him for eternity.
Israel’s Attack on Iran and Its Potential Fallout
Israel’s Attack on Iran and Its Potential Fallout
Dr. Alon Ben-Meir is a retired professor of international relations, most recently at the Center for Global Affairs at NYU. He taught courses on international negotiation and Middle Eastern studies.Inter Press Service
Why Abby Stein—a transgender rabbi raised ultra-orthodox—stands up for Palestine
Why Abby Stein—a transgender rabbi raised ultra-orthodox—stands up for Palestine
“Queer people know what it means to struggle against the government, know what it means to struggle against the status quo. And, most importantly, we're not as easily controlled…”Marc Steiner (The Real News Network)
like this
Oofnik, Atelopus-zeteki, Lasslinthar, aramis87 e KaRunChiy like this.
like this
Atelopus-zeteki e KaRunChiy like this.
like this
KaRunChiy likes this.
Seven for the dwarf-lords in their halls of stone,\
Nine for Mortal Men doomed to die,\
One for the Dark Lord on his dark throne,\
In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows lie.\
One Ring to rule them all, One Ring to find them,\
One Ring to bring them all and in the darkness bind them\
In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows lie.
Meanwhile:
Kamala Harris didn't receive a single vote in one NY county...
Lawsuit Challenging 2024 Election Results Moves Forward After Kamala Harris Received Zero Votes in a New York County
Lawsuit Challenging 2024 Election Results Moves Forward After Kamala Harris Received Zero Votes in a New York County
A lawsuit disputing the results of the 2024 election has moved forward after it was revealed that former Vice President Kamala Harris received no votes a New York county.Maryam Khanum (Latin Times)
like this
frustrated_phagocytosis likes this.
What is the Global March to Gaza all about?
What is the Global March to Gaza all about?
The Global March to Gaza aims to pressure world leaders to end Israel’s genocidal war in the Palestinian enclave.Al Jazeera
like this
Oofnik, Lasslinthar, NoneOfUrBusiness e faizalr like this.
Bragg Soldiers Who Cheered Trump's Political Attacks While in Uniform Were Checked for Allegiance, Appearance
Bragg Soldiers Who Cheered Trump's Political Attacks While in Uniform Were Checked for Allegiance, Appearance
As President Donald Trump viciously attacked his perceived political foes, he whipped up boos from the gathered troops directed at California leaders, including Gov. Gavin Newsom.Konstantin Toropin, Steve Beynon (Military.com)
like this
Azathoth, Atelopus-zeteki, Oofnik, Drusas, Lasslinthar, offendicula, aramis87 e tiredofsametab like this.
like this
andyburke likes this.
like this
andyburke likes this.
I would like to speak to some of those ~~cretins~~ ~~morons~~ ~~dumbasses~~ folks regarding some beach front property located in Kansas...
Spectacular views...
🙄 🤦♀️ 🖕 💩
Technically Kansas has beach front property, rivers and lakes have beaches. Kansas is lacking oceanfront property though.
Source: I am a Californian who gets impressed by a puddle of water, I know what a body of water looks like and the features common to them.
Sorry, my bad...
Was, of course, thinking "oceanfront" but stupidly typed "beach front" instead... 🤦♀️ 🙄
Opposite statements. Either they follow orders or they are loyal to the constitution. Can't do both right now.
I can't fathom the industrial amounts of pure propagandium that Americans must have been huffing to think the military will ever be on their side. Blind and unconditional obedience is literally the only way militaries can function properly and everything about them is organized to promote that.
US military apologists (even before Trump) will say "but soldiers are legally obligated to follow the constitution first and must refuse unlawful orders" like Abu Ghraib didn't happen in my lifetime. We all know that 90 % of soldiers will wipe themselves with the original copy of the declaration of independence if Trump orders them to. And those that refuse will be dishonorably discharged, or worse.
The divide absolutely exists. There is a lot of conditioning for following orders and working as a team. That doesn't erase conflicting ideologies, beliefs, or even personality conflict. At the extreme the military will remove outliers from the military, but at the individual level you learn who you trust and who you can rely on. Then you do what you can to mitigate those who you don't trust.
Militaries all over the world also have a long history of killing their own people for not fitting whatever the group around them wants. Sometimes for justifiable reasons, like incompetent leaders likely to get their subordinates killed. Other times for things like someone being uncomfortable with blatant war crimes.
There is nothing magical or special about the military. They just have more weapons. So the solutions are violent more often than the average office job.
I am more than mildly surprised at the amount of brown people in the above article's picture. I can almost understand a certain type of white person cheering for him, deluded as they may me.
However I can not fathom why a non white person would even think about it. They are not only traitors to their country, but also to their race AND to what their race has had to fight for for generations. It boggles the mind.
Translation:
Trump is not able to generate a positive audience response without packing it with loyalists.
Even within the armed forces.
He's fully aware that he's a complete fraud.
like this
osaerisxero likes this.
He's fully aware that he's a complete fraud.
Correction: an amateurish autocrat.
I remember when we used to hang traitors.
There sure are fucking truck loads of them in that picture.
I remember when the French helped us beat some tyranny away from our borders, and although I wouldn't ask them to get their hands dirty when we start wrestling ourselves, I sure wish we could channel some of their energy into the people who "oppose" things like this.... From their couch.
I long to see French level of protesting here in the states.
Oofnik likes this.
Republicans Plan to Ditch Trump’s Birthday Military Parade
Just seven of 50 surveyed GOP lawmakers are planning to actually attend the president’s birthday festivities over the weekend, reported Politico. [...] Those sticking around include some of Trump’s most stalwart MAGA supporters: Representatives Marjorie Taylor Greene (who told Politico “of course” she’d be there), Byron Donalds, and Elise Stefanik are all planning to celebrate. Representatives Cory Mills, Rich McCormick, John McGuire, and Lisa McClain are also expected to be in attendance.
Republicans Plan to Ditch Trump’s Birthday Military Parade
Only seven Republicans have confirmed they plan to attend Trump’s military parade in Washington, D.C.The New Republic
like this
Oofnik, frustrated_phagocytosis, KaRunChiy, Atelopus-zeteki, Lasslinthar e Drusas like this.
1. They know some serious shit is liable to go down.
2. They know some serious shit is intended to go down.
like this
RandomStickman e Drusas like this.
- It was all a massive grift and they never intended to do it well to begin with.
They could be busy with shit in their states, they could not want photos/videos/records of them attending the events to exist in the future.
When your opponents say you are trying to become a police state and trample peoples rights, you probably don't want to be featured standing next to a tank on civilian streets.
In 1-3 years when they believe they will be running for office during an election that will potentially have far more people fleeing the MAGA agenda as people see the results, they will want to distance themselves and appear to have maybe been a more "moderate" Republican candidate. Hard to do standing next to a military vehicle resembling those that you rolled into metropolitan cities and whatever ensued occured because of it.
like this
RandomStickman likes this.
That’s reminds me of a time I got in a small argument with a friend back in high school.
He said, “I hope a plane crashes into your house… but it will only kill you. It won’t hurt your family or break your house or anything.”
After that, the argument was over as we were both laughing so hard.
We should all just boycott the parade. Don't go, don't watch it, don't talk about it.
That would be the worst outcome for the Narcissist in Chief
like this
classic likes this.
I don't know mate. Standing in front of a tank and shutting down down Fat Boy Hitler's farcical thuper duper birthday parade would be one for the history books. There's not a farts chance in a hurricane that this doesn't go down as a comical clusterfuck.
This whole parade is getting shut down, I promise you.
like this
Drusas likes this.
Major news outlets will not cover the protests. They will happily film the parade though. They will put forth an air of cautious optimism to endear dear leader to their outlet. The only way this gets any MAJOR public attention is if people stop the parade. It will be stopped, there will be a LOT of police action, which will prompt riots, which will prompt more attention. Trump may use it to enact martial law, but he'll do so at his own detriment. It will not look well at all, but the cancellation of his parade, plus the chaos that will be martial law will only spark more civil discourse throughout the nation.
It's about to get hairy, folks.
The only reason I'd watch.
Other than if people just started pelting the parade with tacos...
Let's do this in the most American way possible. To quote The Bloodhound Gang:
"Like that dude in Tienimen square, with a six-pack and a folding chair"
Not so fun fact: Trump is actually a fan of the way China handled that. Here's the quote:
"Then they were vicious, they were horrible, but they put it down with strength.That shows you the power of strength. Our country is right now perceived as weak... as being spit on by the rest of the world."
Mossad’s Former Director Calls the War in Gaza ‘Useless’
Mossad’s Former Chief Calls the War in Gaza ‘Useless’
An interview with Tamir Pardo, who argues that Israel’s military campaign has been flawed from the startHanna Rosin (The Atlantic)
Lemm.ee communities migration megathread
Every community with 10 or more MAU listed below
Community | Moved to? |
---|---|
Television | PieFed |
Casual Conversation | PieFed, European spinoff on PieFed |
movies | PieFed |
Trump Watch | Lemmy World |
YUROP | split into CasualEurope on PieFed and YUROP on Feddit.org |
Cyanide % Happiness | Discuss Online |
Meta (lemm.ee) | 😀 |
Ask | PieFed |
Cartography Anarchy | deleted trom Lemm.ee and recreated on sh.itjust.works lol |
Broligarchy Watch | Moist |
Animation | PieFed |
Stardew Valley | PieFed |
Palestine | made aware... |
Collapse | made aware... |
Crappy Correlations | not yet... |
Middle East and North Africa | orphaned. |
GOP | Lemmy World |
Balatro | PieFed |
Israeli Crimes | orphaned. |
Crumbgrabber | not yet... |
Lego | PieFed |
BrainWorms | not yet... |
InflectionPointUSA | orphaned. |
artporn | Piefed |
Football | Sopuli |
Fedigrow | Lemmy.zip |
Indian Country & Beyond | not yet... |
Internet is Beautiful | PieFed |
EU_Economics | not yet... |
Two Goobers — Just the Two of Us | not yet... |
Clown Population | not yet... |
Kei Trucks & Cars | not yet... |
India | made aware... |
The Elder Scrolls | not yet... |
bertstrips | Moist |
Antiwork | duplicate. |
Adventure / Point-and-Click / Narrative Games | RetroLemmy considered... |
Hybrid War Lost | not yet... |
Raygun Gothic | PieFed |
I Made This | discussion... |
Mass Brain Damage | not yet... |
European Graphic Novels+ | aware... |
Stop Killing Games | /0 |
Bloom County | Sopuli |
Full movies on YouTube | PieFed |
Understand USA | not yet... |
Babel Tower ARG | not yet... |
Attention USA | not yet... |
California | not yet... |
Cassette Futurism | aware... |
Nose Ears | lemy.lol |
🦋 Bluesky Social | Lemmy.zip |
jschlatt | Lemmy.ca |
covid19 | not yet... |
Forage Fellows 🍄🌱 | discussion... |
NonCredibleAstronomy | not yet... |
Piracy | low activity, existing one on /0 has been already recommended |
Europe | duplicate and orphaned. |
ReelsMemes | aware... |
State Level DOGE Inspired Task Forces Watchlist | not yet... |
Faces of ICE | not yet... |
Obscure Music | PieFed |
Cringe Nation | not yet... |
Friendly Carnivore | Dubvee |
Castles | aware... |
Pokémon | Sopuli |
Spotify | not yet... |
Ask Lemmy | probably a duplicate |
Conservative | sh.itjust.works, but mod mentions other communities |
rateme | dead. |
Assert Good | not yet... |
Armored Core | not yet... |
TheBullWins | not yet... |
The World News | duplicate. |
Censored Content by Reddit Owners / Admins, not moderators | not yet.. |
Markiplier | Lemmy.ca |
Leopards Ate My Face | duplicate. |
The Global South | orphaned. |
Radio Lemmy | Blåhaj Lemmy |
theydidthemath | discussion... |
CraftBeerMemes | may even disappear... |
Joyce ARG | not yet... |
Schizoposting | not yet... |
Capitalismvsocialism | orphaned. |
Repurposed Headlines | not yet... |
All Things Saxophone | not yet... |
(旧)パン部🍞 | Fedibird (sic!) |
Pottery And Ceramics Discussion | not yet... |
Russia | squat but active... |
Latin Language | PieFed |
Support (lemm.ee) | 😀 |
European Systems Collective | not yet... |
Simple Living | mod inactive! discussion... |
Mexico | mod inactive! not yet... |
OpenChristian | Lemmy.ca |
Dunder Mifflin | Dubvee considered... |
Monitors | PieFed |
Horror movies | not yet... |
Northampton, Massachusetts | dead. |
Great Seal of the United States of America | not yet... |
Random Acts Of Gaming / Giveaway | aware... |
EMS | PieFed |
gondaily | not yet... |
Deapple | PieFed |
Rag & Bone Paranormal Community | not yet... |
cute bugs | not yet... |
streetart | unique yet orphaned! |
New York State | not yet... |
Engrish | orphaned but somewhat active... |
Fuckable Cars | free estate! |
Buy From EU | Feddit UK |
Diary of Anne Frank | not yet... |
casualiama | empty. |
Cosmic Horror | made aware... |
Huawei | de facto Lemmy.ml |
economics | orphaned but active... |
Listen To This | not yet... |
AI Copyright | not yet... |
What Could Go Wrong | Lemmy World |
More Blunt | not yet... |
Generative Art | squat but active... |
quotes | empty. |
This is not my Life | not yet... |
Toyota Rav4 | not yet... |
not the onion | orphaned and duplicate. |
Nepal | /0 |
Wales (Cymru) | not yet... |
Muslim | not yet... |
Jacksepticeye | Lemmy.ca |
Harry Potter Art, comics and more | Literature.cafe proposed... |
sousvide | dead. |
esp | discussion... |
Ultra Processed Food | not yet... |
Saudi Arabia | orphaned |
observations | not yet... |
Cyberdecks | programming.dev |
Counter Surkov Governing techniques / methods | not yet... |
2025 Papal Conclave | obsolete topic. only PieFed makes sense |
Grimes | not yet... |
Barcelona | PieFed |
Malala Yousafzai | not yet... |
Age of Mythology | aware - may be shuttered... |
Star Trek | squat and duplicate. |
Gamemusic | aware... |
pictures | orphaned but somewhat active? |
NiftySquidPictures | not yet... |
World News | squat and duplicate. or not yet... |
Laser Cutting | not yet... |
shittyaskscience | orphaned. but Mander proposed... |
Plural - for those who are never alone | aware - Blåhaj Lemmy proposed... |
Remedial Morality | not yet... |
music | squat and orphaned. |
Post the most downvoted comments from all around Lemmy | not yet... |
Open Source Gaming | Midwest Social |
Street photography | squat and orphaned. but somewhat active? |
needadvice | orphaned but somewhat active... |
Construction | dead. |
Pyrotechnics | not yet... |
graffiti | little active... |
Third Rail | not yet... |
Total Mockery | not yet... |
Steam Achievements | Lemmy.zip as Achievement Hunters |
Indiasocial | not yet... |
Federal News | not yet... |
Nintendo Switch Console & Games | not yet... |
Deamazon | PieFed |
Mark My Words | not yet... |
photoshopbattles | little activity... |
IDM | Lemmy.zip |
webcomics | orphaned, little activity... |
explainlikeimcalvin | sh.itjust.works |
Solus | PieFed |
Ram Pickup | not yet... |
flask - the python framework | PieFed, which uses Flask btw |
Prophecies | inactive. |
Social Media Ate My Face | not yet... |
Job References | dead. |
Chevy Silverado | not yet... |
Tenacity Audio Editor | not yet... |
youtube-dl | de facto /0, under different name |
business | orphaned, somewhat active? |
Masturbatory Egoism | not yet... |
Anime armor and swords pics | not yet... |
Mr. Bungle | not yet... |
dccomics | not yet... |
Romania | Lemmit.ro |
James Joyce | not yet... |
asiancuties | empty. |
After and before | dead. |
Media Cults | not yet... |
Martial Arts Movies | not yet... |
ZanClan | Lemmy.ca |
beetlejuicing | Lemmy.zip |
Video Game Music | not yet... |
Web Revival | not yet... |
asiangirlsbeingcute | empty. |
Revolt | not yet... |
Progressive_islam | Lemmy.ca |
Computer Vision | not yet... |
Unified Theory Fiction & Non-Fiction | not yet... |
Doodles | dead. |
whatisthisthing | dead. |
crazyideas | dead. |
Eesti (Estonia) | discussion... |
PaRappa | low activity... |
RuPaul Drag Race | not yet... |
irelephant | not yet... |
UnlockThread | not yet... |
AtheismIndia | |
Lemm.ee: Furry | de facto Pawb Social |
Zig Programming Language | not yet... |
VoxeLibre | not yet... |
Haiku | not yet... |
Small Content Creators | dead. |
Arcade Racing | not yet... |
offmychest | duplicate. |
Favorite Songs Ever | not yet... |
Films and TV | duplicate. |
James Joyce Experience | not yet... |
Metroid | discussion... |
legaladvice | dead. |
physicsgifs | orphaned, with only one external poster. discussion... |
Roleplaying Games Design | not yet... |
whatisthisbug | inactive. |
stocks | dead. |
Golf | duplicate. |
Woman | dead. |
Isle Of Man TT | not yet... |
Serpent OS | PieFed as AerynOS |
NFL | duplicate. |
Maritime Forum | inactive. |
Mauritius | low activity. |
unsolvedmysteries | orphaned. |
The Great Problem | not yet... |
LoneWolfs | not yet... (single post) |
askmenover30 | dead. |
smallbusiness | dead. |
carfree | not yet... |
Android Auto | not yet... |
!adultswim@adultswim.fan
!civ@lemmy.ca
Friendly Carnivore (carnivore@dubvee.org)
# Carnivore The ultimate, zero carb, elimination diet Meat Heals. We are focused on health and lifestyle while trying to eat zero carb bioavailable foods.dubvee.org
like this
joshg253 likes this.
Does the share button on pixeled do nothing?
like this
Fitik likes this.
like this
Fitik likes this.
Fediverse Report – #120
cross-posted from: lemmy.zip/post/41049427
Fediverse Report – #120Fediforum happened this week, porting your social graph cross-protocol with Bounce, Bonfire gets closer to release, a prominent Lemmy server shuts down, and much more.
I also run a weekly newsletter, where you get all the articles I published this week directly in your inbox, as well as additional analysis. You can sign up right here, and get the next edition this Friday!
FediForum and related announcements
The FediForum unconference was this week, with three days of sessions, keynotes and demos. The event was originally scheduled for April, but got cancelled at the last minute due to drama around transphobic statements made by one of the co-organisers. The individual in question left FediForum, and instead FediForum set up an advisory board with a number of community members. This edition of FediForum had keynotes for the first time, by ActivityPub co-creator Christine Lemmer-Webber, author Cory Doctorow, and Ian Forrester, who lead a Mastodon instance at the BBC. There were also a large number of demos (list here) and unconference sessions about a wide variety of subjects. I’ll write more about both the demos and the keynotes once the videos of them will become available online, likely next week.Bounce is a newly-announced tool that allows people to migrate their social graph across protocols. It is made by A New Social, the organisation behind Bridgy Fed. The ability to port a social graph from AT Protocol to ActivityPub reshapes what is possible within the Open Social Web. For that reason, I think Bounce is a meaningful release, with its power mainly being in altering the shape of these networks. I wrote an essay on that this week that goes into the philosophical side of Bounce. For more practical information I can recommend this coverage by TechCrunch and The Verge. Meanwhile, A New Social’s CTO Ryan Barrett has shared all the updates and new features that have happened to Bridgy Fed over the recent months.
Music sharing platform Bandwagon shared more information during Fediforum on their development work, and how they are working on integrating album sales. A dev blog by Bandwagon recently shared their plans on adding a premium subscription, and how album sales work. During a Fediforum session, developer Ben Pate shared some screenshots on what this looks like. WeDistribute has a deep dive into Bandwagon and the current state of development based on the latest FediForum session.
Bonfire is an upcoming fediverse platform that has slowly been reaching the end of the line for development, and they announced the release candidate version of Bonfire 1.0. It is a framework and platform for building communities on the fediverse, and has a large variety of features and extensibility. One of the standout features is circles and boundaries. Circles allow users to define lists of accounts, and boundaries allows users to determine on a per-post basis to what circles each post gets shared. This creates a significant amount of flexibility on how to handle private posts, something which is in huge demand within the open social web. Bonfire also gives users a large amount of control over how they see and filter their feed. For more of a philosophical take on that, I recently wrote about how Bonfire’s approach on custom feeds compares to Bluesky’s approach. The developers are inviting people to install their own instance and experiment with the new features. It is unknown when Bonfire will be ready for a full 1.0 release. For another look at Bonfire, TechCrunch also covered the story.
Filmmaker and fediverse evangelist Elena Rossini has released her fediverse promotion video, which was highly anticipated by the community. The video can be viewed here, and tells the story of why the fediverse matters for a lay audience. The video is worth paying attention to for two reasons: first of all, it is a well-produced promo video for the fediverse that explains some of the core ideas in an accessible manner. Secondly, the video has gotten a huge amount of support from within the fediverse community, with a large number of prominent people within the community supporting Rossini’s work. One of the challenges of analysing a decentralised community is that there is no singular decentralised community, there are a wide variety of different groups and cultures. However, by seeing how and who responded positively to the video, it becomes clear that Rossini’s video does represent a dominant and popular understanding of what the fediverse is, and why it matters. In that way, analysing the video does provide good insight into the one of the more dominant and popular cultures of the fediverse.
Shutdown of Lemmy and opportunity for PieFed
Lemm.ee, one of the biggest Lemmy servers, is shutting down at the end of June. The team says: “The key reason is that we just don’t have enough people on the admin team to keep the place running. Most of the admin team has stepped down, mostly due to burnout, and finding replacements hasn’t worked out.” This has some significant impact on the wider Threadiverse community, as the lemm.ee hosted a significant number of popular communities. This makes server shutdowns on Threadiverse platforms signficantly more impactful, as they also impact people who do not have an account on the platform. Community migration is challenging, and there are no specific tools to help with a community with migrating to a different server.The shutdown of the Lemm.ee server provides an opportunity for PieFed, a link-aggregator platform similar to Lemmy. PieFed is over a year old, that has seen significant development and new features beyond Lemmy, but has not managed to gain traction yet, with growth of users being slow. However, now that communities on the lemm.ee. server need to find a new place, PieFed is emerging as one of the main destinations. In turn, this is giving PieFed some much need promotion and awareness within the Threadiverse community, with PieFed doubling the number of accounts within a week. Lemmy clients are also starting to add support for PieFed, with the Lemmy client Interstellar already supporting PieFed. PieFed also uploaded two PeerTube video walking through all the moderation and administration features the platform has.
Platform updates
Ghost’s work on implementing ActivityPub is getting close to an official release. In their latest update, Ghost said that their ActivityPub integration will be part of the Ghost 6.0 release, which will come in ‘a few weeks’. The team has been working on ActivityPub for over a year, and have grown from 3 people to 8 people now working on their social web integration. For Ghost, the ActivityPub integration is more than just another connector, describing it as ‘a statement that the open web still matters’.Mastodon is planning to release a new update, version 4.4, with the first beta now available. Some of the new features include the ability to set more feature content on user profiles, more list and follow management tools. For admins, there are better tools for setting legal frameworks, moderation tweaks and more. The biggest feature of the patch is that it will display quoted posts. The highly requested feature will only be fully available in version 4.5, which will include the ability for users to create quoted posts. Mastodon CTO Renaud Chaput says that he expects version 4.4 to be released at the end of June, with version 4.5 scheduled a few months later in September of October. The organisation also shared their monthly engineering update for May.
PeerTube released their latest version, 7.2, with a new design for video management and publication pages. PeerTube also now has more features for handling sensitive content. Creators can now add an explanation of why the content is marked as sensitive. Users also have more flexibility with how they want sensitive content to be handled, with various different configurations between hiding, blurring or warning about a video with sensitive content. PeerTube is also running a crowdfunding campaign for the mobile app, which has now crossed the halfway mark at 35k EUR. This milestone is for video management from the mobile app, with the next milestone being for livestream support in-app. The PeerTube app developer also shared a blog post with his thoughts on the technical framework considerations for building the app.
Hollo is a single-user microblogging platform, and their latest release has a significant number of new features, including better OAuth and various upgrades to the UX. Developer Hong Minhee also announced that independent fediverse developer Emelia Smith will join as a co-maintainer for Hollo.
The Links
- I Posted to Mastodon 1 Mile Away from an Internet Connection – Tom Casavant
- Backfilling Conversations: Two Major Approaches – Julian Lam
- The Power of a Niche – FediHost
- This week’s fediverse software updates.
That’s all for this week, thanks for reading! You can subscribe to my newsletter to get all my weekly updates via email, which gets you some interesting extra analysis as a bonus, that is not posted here on the website. You can subscribe below:
fediversereport.com/fediverse-…
📺 Introducing the Fediverse: a New Era of Social Media
A 4 minute video that aims to introduce the Fediverse to people not familiar with itElena Rossini
like this
Fitik likes this.
Trade war truce between US and China is back on
Trade war truce between US and China is back on
Donald Trump says agreement struck with Beijing covers rare earths.Financial Times (Ars Technica)
Disney and Universal Sue A.I. Firm for Copyright Infringement
Link to the article without the paywall
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/11/business/media/disney-universal-midjourney-ai.html
like this
KaRunChiy likes this.
like this
Azathoth, RandomStickman e DaGeek247 like this.
American law works on precedents, this will be one
It doesn’t matter it was the evil empire getting that result
It doesn’t matter it was the evil empire getting that result
It does if it only benefits evil empires. The open source tools can't afford the price which only leaves the big AI companies that can and Disney who holds the data.
All this will do is add a fat price tag and censorship. Artists will not get paid and AI will not go away, the jobs will still be lost. It's the worst of both worlds.
There are solid gold or platinum asteroids out there, but God only gave us the resources of earth in the bible.
So God is definitely richer than Disney.
like this
massive_bereavement e magnetosphere like this.
And they just fired Terry Moran for the mildest tweet critical of the current administration imaginable.
I legit just cancelled my Disney+/hulu/espn account over it.
Link to the article without the paywall
New York Times Sues Fediverse Commenter for Copyright Infringement
like this
magnetosphere e TheFederatedPipe like this.
like this
RandomStickman e Beacon like this.
I dunno, we've seen corporations come at each other many times before.
Most of you people won't understand this, but copyright and patent laws aren't going to be around forever. They don't help the working class and it's only a matter of time before new generations rise above our tunnel vision and indoctrination.
I mean, just look at this case a prime example. Who is the one suing? Disney. Who stands to benefit? Disney.
Are the random joe's suing? No, they can't afford it. The laws do not exist to protect them. It's another reason why we never see big corporations challenge copyright and patent laws. They know they make more money with them.
I don't see the irony. They perceive AI as a loop hole and need to squash it to keep their grip on things. If anybody can just prompt a movie in ten years, their business is dead. If a small group of indie animators can make a fully fledged movie, their business is dead.
They made it fucked up in their favor, this lawsuit is a continuation of that.
like this
Beacon likes this.
It seems like we're going back to the 90s.
When Microsoft wanted to destroy Linux, Another similar arc is coming. I wonder if there will be other Halloween docs.
Disney isn't fighting for the little guy. They will still agressively use it to cull their own workforce. They want to control who can use it and don't want to compete against an indie animation scene.
This is corporate AI against open source AI.
like this
DaGeek247 likes this.
This is corporate AI against open source AI.
Show me where I can download Midjourneys full model to run it locally and then we can agree to call it "open weights". Unless their base model and training data is also available, it's not open source.
YouTube relaxes moderation rules to allow more controversial content. Videos are allowed if "freedom of expression value may outweigh harm risk"
YouTube relaxes moderation rules to allow more controversial content
The Google-owned site has provided moderators with new guidelines and training on how to deal with inflammatory content that breaks YouTube's code of conduct, writes The New...Rob Thubron (TechSpot)
like this
SuiXi3D, Dantpool, Lasslinthar e PokyDokie like this.
like this
FerretyFever0 e DaGeek247 like this.
like this
SuiXi3D, FerretyFever0, missingno e Lasslinthar like this.
like this
SuiXi3D, FerretyFever0, osaerisxero e Lasslinthar like this.
I assume you mean fascist propaganda over and above the right wing rabbit holes that already exist on YouTube….
Ugh, this is terrible.
like this
Lasslinthar likes this.
Fuck this place
Are you implying you don't use YT at all? Or you use it and choose to be unhappy with it?
Just curious, I often get mad because they need to censor words, but not to the degrees to say 'fuck this place" and move to the other (unborn) alternative.
like this
Lasslinthar likes this.
I'm not sure of what you mean at the end there.
I see youtube content. I do not pay for it and they are likely unhappy that I get to use it as they get zero benefit from it.
like this
FerretyFever0, DaGeek247, HarkMahlberg e Lasslinthar like this.
This is such bad news. I'm sympathetic to content creators who have to step on eggshells to please the algorithm/advertisers... But this?
Yeah, this is not that. We all know who this is for.
like this
SuiXi3D, DaGeek247, HarkMahlberg, Lasslinthar e PokyDokie like this.
Videos are allowed if "freedom of expression value may outweigh harm risk"
oh it's that easy huh. why didn't we think of this before lol.
Do people still have to say unalive?
Censorship is goddamn stupid.
They should just tag content & let people decide what to filter.
"Muh ~~freedums~~ profit" outweighs life. The silent bit spoken aloud. Cool cool.
As expected from this timeline and this garbage conglomerate.
Good. I don't really care about youtube, but less censorship is always a good thing.
How can you people say you respect science when you support silencing any criticism of it? That's not science. That's religion.
That said, this criteria clearly only exists to protect "influencers" who make youtube a proportional amount of money. If you have a channel with very little traffic and you say something controversial, you'd better believe your "freedom of expression value" will not be high enough to outweigh the corporation's perceived "harm risk."
like this
Lasslinthar likes this.
Intention: YouTubers can stop with the whole self censoring shit.
Example: Unaliving; PDF file; grape; etc.
Reality: Ben Shapiro, Matt Walsh, and other right wing grifters receive zero censorship while YouTubers still have to self censor to receive monetization.
like this
PokyDokie likes this.
How long before Google locks YT down only to Chrome on Windows, Mac, ChromeOS, or Android, and blocks it from loading at all on non-Chrome browsers and on Linux or iOS, blocks it from loading at all if ad blockers, including hardware-based ad blockers ala PiHole, are implemented, and enforces hardware security measures ala TPM2 for authentication, and ensures that no one can download and re-upload YT vids, with DRM?
Basically, I wouldn't put it above them to ensure their video platform only runs on their browser, on hardware and OS platforms they deem worthy of running it, even down to somehow implementing a Vanguard-style rootkit.
they are working on it
- sh.itjust.works/post/2147959
- monero.town/post/989081
- lemmy.ml/post/2546109
- github.com/chromium/chromium/p…
don't worry, they didn't abandon it. they have continued development hidden from sight in the android version of the chromium engine
A peaceful protest againt Web Environment Integrity by cosmic-zip · Pull Request #187 · chromium/chromium
A peaceful protest is underway against mega corporations attempting to impose DRM on the web, aiming to gain control over all content possible and making our lives worse.GitHub
Intention: YouTubers can stop with the whole self censoring shit.
lol. that's not the intention.
See the issue here is Google/Youtube still get to be the ones to decide what "may outweigh the harm risk". And the answer I bet will usually be whichever one serves their financial interests.
Which on one hand sure, it is their platform after all. But don't do me dry and claim you used lube.
like this
PokyDokie likes this.
I still wouldn't trust Google not to nuke my channel on a whim even in spite of those relaxed moderation rules. What's stopping a little bribe from the right company or political party from causing them to backpedal or even tighten their grip further?
This is why one should at least mirror their content to PeerTube or a similar alternative platform like that even if they're not going to just outright post future content to said alternative and give up on YT altogether.
Wait what??? This came out of nowhere ??
YouTube not cracking down on free speech??
Moderators were previously told to remove videos if one-quarter or more of the content violated YouTube policies. Now, that limit has been increased to half.
This seems like alien speak to me. They announce that shit, someone read it, and then repeated it in an article. But what does it mean?
Can you have 6 contents and make 2 really crazy? Can you tell people to commit violence for 5 minutes and then review a game for 6 minutes? Is there a dude with tvtropes open going through and marking the contents of content?
It depends on who is being targeted.
If you make a video calling for attacks on women, palestinians, gay people, etc., that's all good!
If you talk about taxing rich people, that's extreme violence. Immediate ban.
"Free speech" under capitalism means the freedom to promote fascism, rascism, misogyny, homophobia, genocide, etc...
But if you post half a second of a Disney movie, your account will be permanently deleted.
MAGA Makes Food More Expensive
MAGA Makes Food More Expensive · Consumer Federation of America
This morning, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics released new data on inflation confirming what many of us have felt at the register: grocery prices are rising again.nrubando (Consumer Federation of America)
like this
andyburke, KaRunChiy e Atelopus-zeteki like this.
like this
Atelopus-zeteki e Rascal7748 like this.
‘Wildly underprepared’: National Guard troops seen sleeping on floors in exclusive photos
National Guard troops seen sleeping on floors in exclusive photos
‘Wildly underprepared’: National Guard troops sent by President Trump to Los Angeles amid immigration protests are seen sleeping on floors in exclusive photosMatthias Gafni (San Francisco Chronicle)
I empathize with the hope that the national guard would side with protesters in violation of their orders, but is there any historical precedent for that?
On the other hand, there have been plenty of historical confrontations where the national guard has engaged in violence against demonstrators.
Maybe it can be different this time, but I don't know.
UK watchdog fines 23andMe for 'profoundly damaging' data breach
UK watchdog fines 23andMe for 'profoundly damaging' data breach
The fine comes as the DNA testing firm, which filed for bankruptcy in March, is set to be sold to a new owner.Liv McMahon (BBC News)
thisisbutaname likes this.
This Is What Trump Does When His Revolution Sputters
This Is What Trump Does When His Revolution Sputters
His military deployment in Los Angeles follows a long, disturbing tradition.Anne Applebaum (The Atlantic)
like this
Atelopus-zeteki, andyburke, Lasslinthar, KaRunChiy e Dantpool like this.
like this
KaRunChiy likes this.
like this
KaRunChiy likes this.
Nothing special, that's how urls with unicode, non ascii chatacters look like. It's called punycode, more info: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internat…
Emoji domains work the same, e.g. ❤️🍺.ws is the same as xn--qei8618m.ws/
I assume it's done that way to prevent an IDN homograph attack.
For example if I sent you a link to "gооgle.com" you'd be like, sure. Except that isn't a link to "google" it's a link to "xn--ggle-55da.com".
The first step toward meaningful change begins with us. We must abandon our craving for glossy (and therefore glassy) devices, and instead embrace hardware that may not be as immediately pleasing to the eye (as it is the case with e.g. Fairphones or the PinePhone), but is built to be slightly more durable, somewhat repairable, and capable of outlasting even today’s limited commitments to software updates.
Fairphone and PinePhone being only mentioned anecdotally for being too pretty, and I guess not as sturdy as the author wants, is quite weird for an article about reducing fragility and improving repairability.
I mean phone durability has become a lot better. I use my iPhone 14 Pro without a case, and I have dropped it a few times and more than once it has flown across the room. Just last Saturday it fell on concrete from like 4 feet high. It’s good as new.
It is also the consumer who is mostly at fault anyways. There are many durable phones out there, none of them sell like the shiny sleek phone. Do people really want devices that are more durable? If so, why aren’t they buying them?
The article is disappointing. It appears author of that article only has one narrow view and assumes the rest of the world has the same.
They buy the most fragile and aesthetically pleasing phones, and complain they are fragile. They advocate for manufacturers to stop making fragile aesthetically pleasing phones, and only make rugged or repairable phones instead. They make an inference that phones should be repairable like cars with accessible parts and non-proprietary tools, but they appear to not know that today's cars have difficulty getting replacement parts and absolutely contain mechanical and electronic proprietary tools to repair the cars.
Mr/Ms author, if you want a phone that doesn't break so easily when dropped, you can buy such a thing right now. Something like CAT phones:
... or other ruggedized Android phones.
I think the last time I dropped a phone an broke the screen on it was maybe 2007. I don't even use phone cases. If your particular use case has you dropping your phone more, buy one that exists and is designed to take those kind of conditions. There's no shame in that, but don't advocate for an entire industry shift because of just your own use case.
Smartphones/technology are still incredibly young in the grand scheme of things. Each of the new generation of devices that comes out adds more functionality for features that people want. Until that stops, it doesn't make sense to try to switch everyone to a "buy it for life" approach. My Commodore 64 computer still works, and is very easy to service, however I wouldn't have wanted technology to stop back then just because its a sturdy built machine. Today I have the paper thin laptops with 8 hours of battery and high speed CPUs are not as rugged or repairable as my venerable C64, but I'm quite glad to have the fragile laptop instead.
Smartphones are fragile without a case. They should have one, and maybe manufacturers should make that clearer, but a world where removable cases didn't exist would just mean that the case you get is the one that the manufacturer chooses for you and permanently attaches to the smartphone. Less options for you.
Just get a case.
I am also more than willing to carry a slightly thicker device if it means greater durability and easier repairability.
Me too. It's why I have a case.
And I am certain many others would gladly trade their bulky, overpriced cases and bumpers for a sturdier device that inherently provides the protection we now have to purchase separately.
If you want a built-in case, you can get them. There is a whole collection of "ruggedized" smartphones from various manufacturers in China that are large, usually have a hefty battery, and have shielding built into the device.
Look at Doogee for one such manufacturer.
Oukitel for another:
Ulefone for another:
Personally, I think that the built-in case isn't very interesting relative to a removable case, but the large battery might be, depending upon your needs.
EDIT: A number of manufacturers will even make official cases for their phones, if you can tolerate a removable case and just want something endorsed by the manufacturer.
Apple, for example:
apple.com/shop/iphone/accessor…
Or Google:
store.google.com/product/pixel…
DOOGEE Official Website & Mall | World Leading Rugged Phone Brand
Discover Doogee and shop rugged phones, smartphones, tablets, smartwatch, portable, and more.doogee.com
like this
bluGill likes this.
The global smartphone screen protectors market size was estimated at $49.73 billion in 2022and the global protective cover market was anticipated to reach $21.89 billion in that same year.
That's insane, are screen protectors really twice the market size of phone cases??
Smartphone Screen Protector Market Size, Share Report, 2030
The global smartphone screen protectors market size was estimated at USD 49.73 billion in 2022 and is expected to grow at a CAGR of 6.9% from 2023 to 2030www.grandviewresearch.com
It makes total sense to me. A phone case is just a cheap piece of plastic that's made using cheap mold-manufacturing, and cases last for the entire life of the phone, sometimes even living on through a couple of phone lifetimes.
But screen protectors have to be more rigorously designed, - making sure that the material works well between finger and each particular touchscreen, and it's made using relatively much more expensive manufacturing processes like curved glass cutting, and people have to replace them every once in awhile because the purpose of a screen protector is to take all the damage that otherwise would've happened to your screen.
I'm honestly quite happy with my Samsung XCover 6 pro:
- physical headphone jack
- notification LED
- removable and replaceable battery
- rugged and without a screen that bends around the edge of the phone
- relatively recent and quite powerful imo
- some samsung's default apps are surprisingly good
- two extra freely mappable physical buttons
- gps and all the other stuff
- dual sim
- good battery life
- it's an enterprise device
- you can get it new for 350€, if not less
Only drawback: utterly dogshit camera. It looks to be interpolated. 50MP never looked that much like 8MP
Can't wait for this to get LOS/EOS support
Most "50 MP" cameras are actually quad Bayer sensors (effectively worse resolution) and are usually binned 2x to approx 12 MP.
The lens on your phone likely isn't sharp enough to capture 50 MP of detail on a small sensor anyway, so the megapixel number ends up being more of a gimmick than anything.
That doesn't match my experience with phone hardware. Everyone i know has a bunch of old phones that've been handed down to kids and even more sitting in junk drawers, because they all still work. Yes a couple of them have cracked screens, but even with those the only reason why the screen wasn't repaired is because people wanted or already had a newer phone.
Software is a totally different matter though. The OS and apps stop getting updates at some point even though the hardware is still totally capable of doing what most people want their phone to do. And even worse, many companies don't allow a phone to revert to an older OS version, so the company pushes out an update that slows the phone down and then there's no way to fix that.
The HARDWARE isn't designed to fail, because the SOFTWARE is designed to let the company force the device to fail at whatever exact moment the company later decides on.
A 20 minute video on how to replace your battery with batteries that are glued down and you need a pry tool to remove them and hopefully not puncture them is not exactly what I would call user-replaceable batteries:
I'm talking about ones like the Samsung Galaxy S3, Nintendo DSi and Nintendo 3DS, etc had where you could just open the cover, take the battery out, and then put the new one in.
- YouTube
Profitez des vidéos et de la musique que vous aimez, mettez en ligne des contenus originaux, et partagez-les avec vos amis, vos proches et le monde entier.www.youtube.com
I have had few phones over the years, few of them I damaged by using them in bad conditions, mainly on construction sites.
As far I can remember I have never cracked the screen. Phones are and always were fragile, its a piece of condensed technology, with large glass screen. What do people expect from glass dropped from 1m? Just take care of your shit.
It always amazes me how can people cary their phones in back pocket or just throw it in the bag with keys or other sharp objects.
There are tons of rugged smartphones out there, also some brands that focus on easy to repair phones.
The fact that they're not well known kind of shows that the majority of the market doesn't really care about those things.
like this
Beacon likes this.
The main issue is the lack of software support. They keep making each new Android version more bloated so you can't update more than once or maybe twice. If it wasn't for that, you could keep using the same 5G phone until they shut down the 5G network as long as the battery is replaceable.
I wish Android was more like Debian where it's lightweight, uses stable versions of software and runs well on old hardware.
like this
Beacon likes this.
The newer Android versions aren't that much more bloated. Sure. If you compare Android KitKat with Android 14 it is gonna be a bit more demanding probably especially on graphics, but overall there were a lot of improvements to the battery usage and memory management over the years and I have an experience of newer Android versions running better than the older ones. You can have a 6 years old phone that will run the newest Android version just fine because you flashed it with a custom ROM.
When we get to the manufacturer's custom Android skins... Well that's a different story. Most of them are gonna be more or less bloated than stock Android, but this is a problem of manufacturers and the fact that mobile OS market and ecosystem is so much locked down compared to desktop, which makes it harder to remove manufacturer's bloat from your OS, install different ROMs and tinker with it, rather than Android being bloated as an OS.
Samsung used to have rugged mainline Galaxy phones. Guess what? They didn’t sell well so they don’t make them anymore.
Mass market doesn’t want this, is that simple. The people who want it are over represented online. It’s a similar case with people who want small phones, why do you think they don’t make them anymore? Because hardly anyone buys them.
I think this highlight the problem with this approach. $500 MSRP would likely not be cost effective for a phone manufacturer to invest in the design, construction, inventory of replacement parts, and multi-year long support of the rugged and long lasting phone. An important part of the premise of the author is that the phone lasts a long time, and your stated desire for long software support.
This is likely a money loser for a phone manufacturer from day one. My guess is that this phone would likely have to cost $2000 to $3000 for a chance to be economically viable. The biggest expenses are going to be on the human labor parts of a staff to provide the regular software updates, maintaining humans that run the manufacturing lines for the replacement parts, and the repair staff to effect the repairs over time for customers. Considering the only time the phone manufacturer gets money is from the initial sale of the phone, they have to price it high enough to cover many years of these support operations.
At the higher, more realistic, phone sale price it likely drops the number of potential customers so low to not even pay for the initial design and tooling to be created.
This is likely why no manufacturer makes this theoretical phone.
like this
Beacon likes this.
I've recently learned that the device Sun first made Java for was, well, almost a smartphone in idea. So those Java phones and now Android are not a perversion of the initial intent.
I also think that, if you only compare various places in reality and various casinos by the amount of endorphine per minute spent, you'll choose casinos (OK, maybe brothels).
The reason you don't choose a casino is because you know that in average the casino always wins. That's a knowledge of how casinos work.
The reason you don't choose a brothel is because you know that many people working there are disadvantaged, and because you can control your impulses. That's also a knowledge of how brothels work.
This means, that if we make an analogy between casinos, brothels and the computer industry, including smartphones and the web, the user has to know how it works to make the right decisions.
So the commonly repeated point about grandmas and casual users is simply wrong. There's no way they don't get deceived by the other side profiting from their ignorance, other than learning how things work.
So - I think we need a global social network. We have siloed services because it doesn't bring profits to make such a global service, and the one Sun, Netscape, Macromedia (yes) and many universities made in the 90s has gone obsolete. The Internet itself allows to make a global Facebook. But instead of solving the problems of technical debt and adoption for that, it's simpler to use a centralized service which was relatively easy to launch initially.
From Facebook (or others) you ultimately need 1) search of 1.a) contacts, 1.b) groups and 1.c) posts, 2) storage of 2.a) contacts, 2.b) groups and 2.c) posts, 3) universal forward identifiers of 3.a) contacts, 3.b) groups and 3.c) posts.
With cryptography and #3 you can use untrusted services for #1 and #2.
If they can be untrusted, services for #1 (indexer crawling the network and answering search requests in a standardized way, similar to RSS, maybe just with RSS ; the crawler service and the search result storage can be separated too) and #2 can be contributed to their respective pools like with SETI@home or other projects.
There is the question of a financial incentive to providing such a service. That can be done with using, say, (maybe number 4), a pool of billing services. A user makes a payment and before requesting a search service or a storage service, requests a billing service on which they are registered, providing it with the identifier of a resource they are going to use, that billing service and that resource interact in the sense of payment in background, giving the user a token with which they request the service itself. To pay for used storage or a heavy search request (or a request above a threshold).
Well, that looks ugly, maybe some other way is possible.
Those search results from search services and objects fetched from storage services are presented in a native application similar to Facebook, perhaps.
Contacts would be just PKI certificates or something, with a valid certificate for a registrar domain someplace in chain.
So you'd request in DNS (or someplace else, I dunno) pool.search.nihilsoc.org for a bunch of uniform indexer services, pool.store.nihilsoc.org for a bunch of uniform storage services (if we don't have a paid service saved, probably even encrypted on some available storage service), pool.relay.nihilsoc.org of a bunch of notification servers similar to IRC (except not used for chat directly, or maybe even that), pool.billing.nihilsoc.org to pay for services requiring it. It wouldn't matter much which ones you'd hit, because every post, contact and group identifiers would be global, containing parent identifiers and such.
It would supposedly be seamless for the user. You search for a group on a few indexers, you get a few lists of results showing on which storage services it's present and how much of it, you deduplicate those and you ask those directly by global identifiers, check signatures yadda-yadda.
Seems very archaic, I dunno why nobody is doing this, probably because things seeming simple are complex.
###
OK, about smartphones and casinos - just like the way to fight gambling lies in knowing that the casino always wins and there's no luck, the way to fight enshittification lies in users caring what they use. Yep, technologies and systems involved are complex, then maybe those should be made simpler for users to understand. Simpler inside, like OpenBSD, not simpler outside, like ChatGPT.
Software side too: Linux's deliberate choice to not have a stable driver interface is detrimental to atomic distros with the usually shitty proprietary vendor drivers. Causing you to get no updates after a few years or get a new device.
Which is why i think BSD would have been a better fit for Android.
like this
bluGill likes this.
Starbelliedboy
in reply to lesserprophet • • •like this
RandomStickman likes this.