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Inside the ghost museums of Ukraine: exhibits replaced by fragments of war and occupation


The curators of shattered historical buildings near the eastern frontline are preserving wartime memories as they reconstruct their collections


Archived version: archive.is/newest/theguardian.…


Disclaimer: The article linked is from a single source with a single perspective. Make sure to cross-check information against multiple sources to get a comprehensive view on the situation.



Drop by parachute: Polish president Duda threatened NATO allies to close the hub in Rzeszow


This statement was made after Poland was not invited to a number of events where the details of providing military assistance to Ukraine, including those related to supplies to Kiev through Polish territory, were discussed. This really offended the leader of Poland.

"Both Ukrainians and our allies (in NATO. — Ed.) simply believe that the airport in Rzeszow and our highways belong to them. I'm sorry. It's not theirs. This is ours. In this regard, if someone does not like something, then we close it - and goodbye.

We have repairs. We are closing the airport in Rzeszow, and make deliveries to Drop Ukraine by sea, by air, by parachutes, if you don't think you need us, " said Duda, quoted by RIA Novosti.




Who Benefits From the Dollar’s Dominance?


The US dollar is used by governments and investors around the world for trade and as a safe asset. Jacobin asked economist Mona Ali if Donald Trump’s tariffs are destroying trust in the currency and what effect this instability will have on ordinary people.
#USA



Google Gemini flaw hijacks email summaries for phishing


Google Gemini for Workspace can be exploited to generate email summaries that appear legitimate but include malicious instructions or warnings that direct users to phishing sites without using attachments or direct links.

https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/google-gemini-flaw-hijacks-email-summaries-for-phishing/

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The Empire Is A Nonstop Insult To Our Intelligence


The US has imposed sanctions on UN Human Rights Council Special Rapporteur Francesca Albanese for using her position to oppose the most thoroughly documented genocide in history.

At the same time, the US has removed Syria’s Al Qaeda franchise HTS from its list of designated terrorist organizations, because its leader successfully carried out the regime change in Damascus that the western empire had been chasing for years.

At the same time, the UK has added nonviolent anti-genocide activism group Palestine Action to its list of banned terrorist organizations for opposing the Gaza holocaust.

At the same time, the Israeli prime minister who is carrying out that holocaust has nominated the American president who is helping him perpetrate genocidal atrocities for a Nobel Peace Prize.

At the same time, Israel has continued its ban on foreign journalists entering Gaza, while also arresting the Israeli journalist who helped expose the IDF officials who cooked up fake atrocity propaganda about burnt babies on October 7.

At the same time, the Trump administration has enraged its MAGA base by concluding that Jeffrey Epstein had no client list for any kind of sexual blackmail operation and definitely committed suicide.

The western empire is one nonstop insult to our intelligence. The peace advocates are terrorists, the genocide architects deserve peace prizes, the journalists are dangerous, and Epstein was just a wealthy socialite who made a few mistakes

#USA
in reply to geneva_convenience

Fun fact, that's not an existing person, just a pseudonym of someone using libertarian terms, writing in libertarian places and having designed (not "invented", he didn't stumble upon it one morning yelling "eureka") a libertarian system - something that libertarians then would write a lot about.
in reply to rottingleaf

I didn't know that Libertarians invented Japanese too.

Can you point to where Satoshi claimed to be Libertarian?

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)

Unknown parent

lemmy - Collegamento all'originale
chingadera
Very true. Thanks for the education. SSH to me is just magic portal that lets me talk to my server in my closet lmao
in reply to chingadera

I've þought about how to do ðis myself. Ðe best idea I've had is to build a virus, or simply someþing destructive, or a program ðat downloads CP and emails it to the FBI; and use Justine's APE to build an executable and call it "bitcoin_wallet.exe". Entice ðe hacker to download a malicious program and execute it on ðeir computer.

Ðen I lose interest and spend the time instead doing someþing to furðer tighten security on my VMs.


in reply to geneva_convenience

Honestly fuck off with that. Perpetuating stereotypes is not 'great' just because it helps your point.


As the Texas Floodwaters Rose, One Indispensable Voice Was Silent


cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/32947699

Opinion - Zeynep Tufekci
July 9, 2025

[as usual, independent thinking from #ZeynepTufekci ]

"What Kelly didn’t mention, but which has since become well known, is that the Weather Service employee whose job it was to make sure those warnings got traction — Paul Yura, the long-serving meteorologist in charge of “warning coordination” — had recently taken an unplanned early retirement amid cuts pushed by the so-called Department of Government Efficiency. He was not replaced.

To a Washington bean counter, his loss might have looked like one tiny but welcome subtraction in a giant spreadsheet, but not in a region so prone to these perilous events that it’s known as Flash Flood Alley. Hundreds of kids at summer camps slept in cabins along the river. The plan was for folks at the upstream camps to send word to the downstream camps if floodwaters got scary. But if even the highest official in the county wasn’t on high alert, how were the camp counselors supposed to understand the danger — or, in an area without reliable cellphone coverage, to act on it?"

archive.ph/lh7ET



As the Texas Floodwaters Rose, One Indispensable Voice Was Silent


Opinion - Zeynep Tufekci
July 9, 2025

[as usual, independent thinking from #ZeynepTufekci ]

"What Kelly didn’t mention, but which has since become well known, is that the Weather Service employee whose job it was to make sure those warnings got traction — Paul Yura, the long-serving meteorologist in charge of “warning coordination” — had recently taken an unplanned early retirement amid cuts pushed by the so-called Department of Government Efficiency. He was not replaced.

To a Washington bean counter, his loss might have looked like one tiny but welcome subtraction in a giant spreadsheet, but not in a region so prone to these perilous events that it’s known as Flash Flood Alley. Hundreds of kids at summer camps slept in cabins along the river. The plan was for folks at the upstream camps to send word to the downstream camps if floodwaters got scary. But if even the highest official in the county wasn’t on high alert, how were the camp counselors supposed to understand the danger — or, in an area without reliable cellphone coverage, to act on it?"

archive.ph/lh7ET


https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/09/opinion/texas-floods-nws.html



As the Texas Floodwaters Rose, One Indispensable Voice Was Silent


cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/32947699

Opinion - Zeynep Tufekci
July 9, 2025

[as usual, independent thinking from #ZeynepTufekci ]

"What Kelly didn’t mention, but which has since become well known, is that the Weather Service employee whose job it was to make sure those warnings got traction — Paul Yura, the long-serving meteorologist in charge of “warning coordination” — had recently taken an unplanned early retirement amid cuts pushed by the so-called Department of Government Efficiency. He was not replaced.

To a Washington bean counter, his loss might have looked like one tiny but welcome subtraction in a giant spreadsheet, but not in a region so prone to these perilous events that it’s known as Flash Flood Alley. Hundreds of kids at summer camps slept in cabins along the river. The plan was for folks at the upstream camps to send word to the downstream camps if floodwaters got scary. But if even the highest official in the county wasn’t on high alert, how were the camp counselors supposed to understand the danger — or, in an area without reliable cellphone coverage, to act on it?"

archive.ph/lh7ET



As the Texas Floodwaters Rose, One Indispensable Voice Was Silent


Opinion - Zeynep Tufekci
July 9, 2025

[as usual, independent thinking from #ZeynepTufekci ]

"What Kelly didn’t mention, but which has since become well known, is that the Weather Service employee whose job it was to make sure those warnings got traction — Paul Yura, the long-serving meteorologist in charge of “warning coordination” — had recently taken an unplanned early retirement amid cuts pushed by the so-called Department of Government Efficiency. He was not replaced.

To a Washington bean counter, his loss might have looked like one tiny but welcome subtraction in a giant spreadsheet, but not in a region so prone to these perilous events that it’s known as Flash Flood Alley. Hundreds of kids at summer camps slept in cabins along the river. The plan was for folks at the upstream camps to send word to the downstream camps if floodwaters got scary. But if even the highest official in the county wasn’t on high alert, how were the camp counselors supposed to understand the danger — or, in an area without reliable cellphone coverage, to act on it?"

archive.ph/lh7ET


https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/09/opinion/texas-floods-nws.html

#USA



[SOLVED] Podman quadlet adding files to container - Europe Pub


i just ended up going with a new image with the components installed, which i've been informed is best practice.
Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)
in reply to Nico198X

I think you won't regret it. If the container startup installs stuff, you might lock yourself out when the remote server has issues, your network has issues, or if the package you install changes due to an update.

With it baked into an image, you have reproducible results. If you build a new image and it doesn't work anymore, you can immediately switch back to the old one and figure out the issue without pressure.

in reply to aksdb

great thoughts, thank you for sharing! i'm still quite new to containerization.



[JS] Let me pay for Firefox!


Hackernews.
Questa voce è stata modificata (1 settimana fa)


in reply to Davriellelouna

Absolute clown government in charge of an absolute clown country.
in reply to Davriellelouna

Google is paying a pittance to achieve vendor lock-in.

The training may be free but there will be other services which will not be free and the other services will integrate better with the existing 'free' Google services better than anything else.


in reply to NanoooK

Is that suse-on-a-phone just a tease, or something awesome I have yet to discover?
in reply to xia

I believe Tumbleweed is available for Pinephone.
in reply to NanoooK

That's a joke...I remember downloading opensuse, there was a warning that forbids me to use if I was in a country targeted by the USA something like that 😆
IMO, If you really want independance dont use things from corporations.
Many people complains about overstaffing in administrations, so why not have them work on a distro from scratch ?


Okay why is your distro the best?


I made the unfortunate post about asking why people liked Arch so much (RIP my inbox I'm learning a lot from the comments) But, what is the best distro for each reason?

RIP my inbox again. I appreciate this knowledge a lot. Thank you everyone for responding. You all make this such a great community.

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)
in reply to POTOOOOOOOO

I use Debian and Mint. As others have said, it's because it just works and I don't have to screw with it.
in reply to POTOOOOOOOO

Void. Minimal, all the programs I need are in the repos, which is a first for me. Very fast.


Which Kubernetes is the Smallest? Examining Talos Linux, K3s, K0s, and More - Sidero Labs


in reply to ikidd

I find this comparison unfair becuase k3s is a much more batteries included distro than the others, coming with an ingress controller (traefik) and a few other services not in talos or k0s.

But I do think Talos will end up the lighest overall because Talos is not just a k8s distro, but also a extremely stripped down linux distro. They don’t use systemd to start k8s, they have their own tiny init system.

It should be noted that Sidero Labs is the creator of Talos Linux, which another commenter pointed out.

in reply to ikidd

I've been looking at K3s deployed on FCOS, but I have no clue how I'm supposed to use Terraform to deploy FCOS.

My understanding is that FCOS is supposed to be ephemeral and re-deployed every so often, which would imply the use of a hypervisor like Proxmox on the host, but Proxmox does not play well with Terraform.

I also considered OpenStack, but it's way over my head. I have a very simple single-node Kubernetes setup to deploy using GitOps, and nothing seems to fit the bill.


in reply to ikidd

What's the advantage of something like FOKS compared to gnupg or openPGP servers?
in reply to Strit

Right at the top:

FOKS is like Keybase, but fully open-source and federated, with SSO and YubiKey support.
in reply to just_another_person

I guess the reason I am asking is that I have never understood the use-case for Keybase either.

So your answer does not really answer my question. 😀

in reply to Strit

My understanding of Keybase is that it was some kind identity aggregator. You were able to link identities not just by keys, but also by external services, like Twitter (at a time), email and other things.
in reply to alexcleac

Ah, so the main difference from gnupg and openpgp servers is that it can use other methods than email to identify the owner of a key. Thank you.
in reply to ikidd

Is the data and public keys being replicated in the communication between instances? it's not made clear how the federation actually works, because "enabling users on different servers to share data with end-to-end encryption" (from foks.pub/) is something all services with TLS / HTTPS support already do...

Also.. one big plus for the OpenPGP HKP protocol is that technically you can self-host your own key in a static HTTPS server with predefined responses and be able to have it interact with other servers and clients without issue. I'm expecting the more complex nature of FOKS might make self-hosting in this way difficult. I'd rather minimize the dynamic services I expose to the outside publicly if I'm self hosting.

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)





How can you make stock Android as private as possible?


I know that stock Android itself is spyware.

What tips about setting up my stock Android phone would you give me?
It's not factory unlocked so I'm sticking with Google Android.

Things I've done:
- Stopped and disabled all apps that I don't use or need.
- Replaced all apps that I can with FOSS alternatives from github using Obtainium.
- Not installed things that I can just check on my laptop like email.

Is there anything else that I can do?
Thanks in advance

Edit
I've also:
- Changed my DNS to Mullvad DNS
- Restricted app permissions to only what they need
- Not signed into the phone. I don't even have Gmail account.

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)
in reply to unicornBro

Things I have done:

-install adguard and route all my traffic through it

  • enable always on VPN and block connections without

-firewall all apps to block internet connection

-only allow apps the apps i want to use internet on

-replace everything I possibly can with FOSS software

-disable everything google and use helioboard as keyboard

-install shizuku and canta to debloat as much as I can

-route all traffic through orbot (except apps that require me to login)

This is probably overkill but that's the best I could do on stock android 🤭

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)
in reply to unicornBro

To the extent that you still need to use standard apps, consider disabling your advertising ID. EFF has a guide to this at eff.org/deeplinks/2022/05/how-…

This won't stop google of course. You should probably also install a firewall, like other people here have suggested. And keep in mind, disabling features entirely is different from not using them. For example, if location services is turned off, then even google maps doesn't know your location (in theory anyway), whereas if it is merely unused then google will still check periodically.




China's ultimatum to Myanmar rebels threatens global supply of heavy rare earths


Myanmar is ruled by an illegitimate military junta which literally seized power by simply jailing its democratically elected leader in 2021 and declaring "no more democracy". Rebel forces have been fighting against the junta since. In the northernmost state of Kachin, China is putting pressure on a rebel group to stop fighting the junta. China wants access to the region's heavy rare earth minerals. Unrest and instability make that more difficult.

https://www.reuters.com/world/china/china-risks-global-heavy-rare-earth-supply-stop-myanmar-rebel-victory-2025-07-08/



in reply to brem

The American dream: owning your own klansman robe
The American government: you have to rent the klansman robe


YouTube Forces Dubs Now


Saw this video on another platform and I thought let me go to YouTube so I can share it, only to hear AI voices. I'm like WTF? I investigate and find out that it's auto dubbed and that there's no option to disable it. Huh?

youtube.com/shorts/9V90gOkOJBc

in reply to sabreW4K3

Newpipe defaults to the original dub without the ai slop


Record escape attempt: 19-year-old Lviv resident tried to illegally cross the border 13 times


in reply to Bobr

Don't forget to thank our Lord and Saviour Mr. Zelensky (and the brave heroes protecting Ukraine's borders!) that this criminal was caught!

Just imagine what would happen if he actually managed to escape, and god-forbid lived a happy life instead of being kidnapped in a few years (or earlier..) off the streets and sent into meat grinder to die? That would be terrible!

God bless western democracy.

And some people are really surprised how can people say that Russia is liberating Ukraine... Yeah, those must be tankies. Obviously freedom is slavery.

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)
in reply to Bobr

right?!

imagine the pandimonium taking place if all of these criminals got away scott free to live the rest of their lives instead of patriotically dying in the war that the united states fooled the country into starting with russia.

and just like the american ice agents, the border guards don't want the public to know what their faces look like.

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)
in reply to Bobr

War sucks but lets not elevate Russia from starting this invasion. They have the possibility to end the meat grinder.
Even if the US had a hand in it, starting war can never be the correct awnser.
In the end the regular people suffer for the rich oligarchs power games.


How checklists lie with facts, and are bad for figuring out privacy of apps etc.


cross-posted from: beehaw.org/post/20989376

Where Soatok goes over why checklists are meaningless when trying to figure out if something is private or just for comparisons in general.



How checklists lie with facts, and are bad for figuring out privacy of apps etc.


Where Soatok goes over why checklists are meaningless when trying to figure out if something is private or just for comparisons in general.


in reply to Lime Buzz (fae/she)

Interesting article, and I feel that it's pretty fair. At first, I thought they were talking about this checklist, but I see they're different. The version I followed doesn't seem to have the same issues (lists jurisdiction but doesn't give it a rating, doesn't list or rate encryption methods at all, no summary at the beginning, etc.).

I think checklists/matrices still have their place, as listing all the branches/options might get too cluttered for a diagram, but I do understand why flowcharts (or the neat venn diagrams that get posted here often) can express information better. I don't think checklists are inherently biased, I just think you need a good decision maker behind the list.

in reply to Lime Buzz (fae/she)

I think the article was an interesting read. From a laymen's perspective it felt like it got to side tracked by the examples mentioned in the intro (the initial list example and signal vs mls).

When I initially started reading I had thought there would be more information for how someone that is new to a subject could spot and differentiate these lists from the ones the author says the article isn't about without being an expert.

Instead it feels like the title of the article ends up being more of a sub header and the sub header "How Do You Compare Signal to MLS?" was actually a more appropriate title.

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)

in reply to HiddenLayer555

Rust introduces novel features and makes notable changes from its ancestors.

Arch was just blue Gentoo.

in reply to Nate Cox

Arch was just blue Gentoo


I don't know if that ever was true but I definitely disagree with that nowadays because Arch is in my opinion significantly more approachable and easier to daily-drive than Gentoo.



How to make Zoom more private


I have to use Zoom for a online class and I was wondering how I can make my Zoom experience more private? Is there a Zoom client that I can use like how there are privacy-focused Discord clients? What privacy tips would you recommend?
in reply to starlight

I refuse to use the Zoom client on my computer and instead use the web client. There might not be 1:1 feature parity, but it's never been a problem for me with other people.
in reply to bamboo

That's what I usually do when I'm forced to use Zoom. Will definitely stick with using the web client.
in reply to starlight

The best what u can do,it's run in the browser with addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firef…



Canon PIXMA G550 Linux compatibility?


I'm in the process of getting a new printer and since I recently (December 2024) switched to Linux it would be nice if it would be Linux compatible. So far I've decided on the Canon PIXMA G550 printer but I can't find anything about it's compatibility so I figured I would just ask here in the hopes someone might have the same printer or knows someone who has the same printer and can tell me if this printer works with Linux. If all else fails I could still use the printer with my tablet or phone using Canons app but using it with my desktop would be much more comfortable.
in reply to Tywèle [she|her]

Anything that supports AirPrint (this one does from what it looks like) will work with CUPS driverless printing on Linux.
in reply to dblsaiko

I think network printer made by big manufacturer recent years should be fine with IPP driverless. They found Printer Working Group of IEEE, this organization maintains IPP standard and IPP Everywhere™ Certification. AirPrint can be treated as Apple version of IPP Everywhere, the difference between them is AirPrint requires Apple Raster but IPP Everywhere requires PWG Raster (and JPEG JFIF file format if color printer).

pwg.org/ipp/everywhere.html

in reply to Coelacanthus

Ah, so they are actually differences between IPP Everywhere and AirPrint (apart from AirPrint including the whole autodiscovery stuff)? Good to know. The latter is usually more prominently advertised though which is why that’s the one I mentioned.

But yeah, it should be very common for these to be supported with anything remotely recent.

in reply to dblsaiko

  1. IPP Everywhere also include full autodiscovery stuff (mDNS and DNS-SD, of course, Apple call this combination as Bonjour). So I said raster is the only difference.
  2. Raster is unimportant in Linux situation because CUPS support both PWG Raster (It's actually a subset of original CUPS Raster) and Apple Raster. Whichever one your device supports, CUPS will work fine.
in reply to Tywèle [she|her]

I have this printer and it works flawlessly using the proprietary drivers.
in reply to ZeStig

When you say proprietary drivers, I assume that means they are only available for x86_64 platform... leaving ARM64/aarch64 devices, like Pi's and such, out of luck?

Something I've experienced with similar printer drivers. Hence the ask.

in reply to ZeStig

Since you have this printer, can you tell me what volume the ink tanks hold? This info seems impossible to find.
Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)



Does anyone have any experience with sending raw HID commands on Linux? Trying to make a project work


I've currently been messing around trying to make the Switch 2 Pro Controller work on Linux using the raw HID commands from this website, to potentially build into a driver as a bit of a project to get better at C. However, seemingly nothing I use can send any commands properly, or at least in a way that makes the controller work. I've tried both echo, sending bytes to the /dev/hidraw6 device (that device at least on my system, may vary on others), as well as hidapitester (a wrapper for hidapi). I know the device works, as a WebUSB tool that uses the same commands makes the controller work on this system. Is anyone more familiar with this, and can point me in the right direction? I'm on Fedora Linux 42 if that info helps.
in reply to heythatsprettygood

You might want to try this matrix channel:

matrix.to/#/#simracing:matrix.…

It's a channel for sim racing, but there are pretty knowledgeable people around that can get all sorts of obscure peripherals working on Linux.


in reply to ordnance_qf_17_pounder

They remind me of that spinning statue at the beginning of Banjo Kazooie that you shoot eggs into its mouth


Installing Guix as a Complete GNU/Linux System - System Crafters


Trying out Guix for the first time! Waiting for packages to download.

I'm a long time Arch user. Any tips?!

I've heard there aren't as many packages for Guix as other distros, but I was thinking Flatpak and distrobox will help bridge the gap for me.

in reply to projectmoon

I use Emacs on the daily, and I just can’t get into Scheme.


Do you find that Elisp and Scheme are too different? I don't know either, so they look almost the same to me.



The destruction of Palestine is breaking the world


Israel’s war in Gaza is chipping away at so much of what we – in the United States but also internationally – had agreed upon as acceptable, from the rules governing our freedom of speech to the very laws of armed conflict. It seems no exaggeration to say that the foundation of the international order of the last 77 years is threatened by this change in the obligations governing our legal and political responsibilities to each other.
in reply to greenfire

In truth, none of that ever mattered. Gaza is just a very blatant example of that.
in reply to ComradeSharkfucker

I would rather have a poor attempt at setting up a system to prevent genocide than none at all.
in reply to HobbitFoot

Yeah but alliances like NATO and the UN weren't built to prevent genocide. They were built to protect certain power structures and to keep certain nations in control. Stopping genocide was sometimes useful in accomplishing this but nothing more. They never actually cared about people and never will.
in reply to greenfire

The world was already like this. What’s being destroyed is people’s false consciousness of the world, especially people in the imperial core.
in reply to davel

That's so true. 30 years ago the US, with the help of it's vassals, hid its Imperial wars and resource extraction under the banner of globalization and human rights.


China retaliates against EU with a ban on European medical devices


in reply to rumimevlevi

Makes sense after the terror attack on lebanon. All euro products are potential terror weapons.
in reply to rumimevlevi

ec.europa.eu/commission/pressc…

ec.europa.eu/commission/pressc…


After the commission found that China has asymmetrical trade barriers for EU medical devices, it recommended some actions. For the past year EU was trying to negotiate China opening their medical market to the same level EUs market is open to China. It failed.

More symmetrical tarrifs incoming (from both sides).

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)