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in reply to Davriellelouna

Glad to hear that he is still listening to the people.
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in reply to Davriellelouna

Poor bastard: there IS active, & onging, Russian interference in EVERYthing in Ukraine, & he's got his hands tied in many ways, while Russia doesn't have rule-of-civil-rights law, at all..

Yes, Justice must be independent ( as that protestor's sign states, in English, in the image above ), but when you've got the world's greatest machiavellian having their tentacles in all your institutions, how do you make it independent of THEIR molestation, too, when they're already operating outside of the law?

Poor bastard..

this war's grinding on him, grinding on his values & his frame-of-reference, both, it seems..

_ /\ _


in reply to Davriellelouna

Among other problems that it causes, child malnutrition has lifelong impacts on the brain.

Remember this when Israelis do surprised Pikachu faces in 10-15 years when the next October 7th style atrocity happens and they ask like pearl clutching fuckfaces "why do they hate us?". THIS. THIS is why they will hate you deeply and viscerally for the rest of their lives. You literally used reinforcement learning to train them to profoundly hate you.


in reply to return2ozma

In France, they repressed palestinian strike, canceled meeting and media defended Israel, he told us he won't arrest Netanyahu, despiste the CPI decision. There is so many things wrong.

Even if he does it, i don't trust him, he could act long before.

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Tea isn’t doing enough for users after breach, not that the users seem to care


Original article from Hypertext, republished under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.

  • Tea, a dating safety app for women, is the subject of an incredibly alarming data breach.
  • Tens of thousands of images submitted by users, including selfies, have been ripped from a Tea server and were posted to 4chan before being removed.
  • Despite claiming that the breach only affected users who registered before February 2024, it has now come to light that hackers could read DMs between users as recently as a few weeks ago.

No business wants to shout from the rooftops that it has been breached and that the data their users entrusted them with may be circulating on the internet. It’s bad for public relations and destroys trust. However, just because it feels bad doesn’t mean that the custodians of this data can just sweep a breach under the rug.

Case in point is Tea. Tea is a dating safety app where women can share information about their previous partners in a bid to help other women who may encounter these men in the wild. Tea takes the Facebook groups and cobbled-together websites of old and puts a modern, more easily accessible twist on the practice.

Last week, however, the platform was the subject of a breach.

“We discovered unauthorised access to an archived data system,” Tea wrote in a post on its Instagram page.

“This archived system stored about 72 000 user-submitted images including approximately 13 000 images of selfies and selfies including photo identification submitted during account verification. These photos can in now way be linked to posts within Tea,” the developer wrote.

The company claimed that users who signed up for Tea after February 2024 were safe and that no email addresses or phone number were compromised. However, that’s ignoring the thousands of users who now have their data exposed. Worse still, that data system Tea mentions was posted to 4chan before it was eventually removed.

While photos can’t be linked to accounts, that’s besides the point because even just having one’s ID photo in the data dump could be incredibly dangerous for women.

And to make matters worse, somehow there has been a second incident.

As reported by [404 Media, a security researcher has discovered that it was possible for hackers to access messages between users as recently as last week. This flies in the face of Tea’s statement that no current user data is in danger. As the publication puts it, “it was trivial for 404 Media to find the real world identities of some users given the nature of their messages.”

All this while Tea continues to downplay how serious this is for its users.

Even the developer’s reasoning for why the data was breached is weak as it gets.

“During our early stages of development some legacy content was not migrated into our new fortified system. An unauthorized actor accessed our identifier link where data was stored before February 24, 2024. As we grew our community, we migrated to a more robust and secure solution which has rendered that any new users from February 2024 until now were not connected to the images involved in this incident,” Tea writes in an FAQ.

Excuse us, but what? There was an unsecured database just left somewhere in its system since last year, and Tea did nothing about it. That doesn’t sound like “dating safety tools that protect women” as the app proclaims on its website.

This should be grounds for a business-ending fine because, for the users, there is frankly nothing they can do. Their photos, possibly their messages, and more are now compromise,d and while the database containing that info was removed from 4chan, it could now be just about anywhere.

However, Tea’s social media posts about this breach are awash with users who are begging for Tea to accept their application to join the platform. One user even told the platform, “we don’t care about the leak” which is mighty concerning. There are some who are calling for Tea to rebuild and return with a safer app for the users, but the most vocal commenters simply want access.

What’s next for Tea? We honestly don’t know. A breach like this should be the end for a company, but it seems that Tea’s popularity has outweighed the danger of this incident and will likely grow as time marches on because, despite its security failings, there is a demand for this sort of thing.



The Australian government recalls Google Pixel 6a


cross-posted from: lazysoci.al/post/31141099


'Fair Use' Prevails as Library of Congress Wins DMCA Anti-Circumvention Battle


Medical device associations behind a lawsuit challenging a Library of Congress exemption to the DMCA's anti-circumvention provisions, have failed to have the exemption ruled illegal. Motions for summary judgment from both sides went in favor of the defendants after a district court judge found that the exemption, granted for the maintenance and repair of medical devices, permits a non-infringing, transformative fair use.


Hungary bans Irish rap group Kneecap from entering ahead of festival performance


The POV presented in the article is one POV in Hungary, the country is divided on the issue but mostly does not care beyond a small minority.

People cite the band shouting "Up Hamas, up Hezbollah" on as justification for the ban.

in reply to ℍ𝕂-𝟞𝟝

Lol, banned from Hungary is a badge of honour. Orban doesn't get to lecture anyone on anything.
in reply to ℍ𝕂-𝟞𝟝

CEARTA

“Is cuma liom sa foc faoi aon gharda!”

(I don’t give a fuck about any cop)

I’ve been listening to these guys for years, and thanks to the Streisand effect, Bob Vylan is now in my playlist too. Death death to the IDF

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Anti-Hungarian hate graffiti and arson in Ukraine: A coordinated false flag operation involving the Orbán Cabinet?


I know it's not the best source, but all the relevant news from outlets that are not outright Russian disinfo are only in Hungarian.

These are trusted, well read and researched articles in Hungarian if you want to check:

hu.euronews.com/2025/07/19/a-h…

telex.hu/kulfold/2025/07/20/uk…

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in reply to floofloof

Why has liberal-ruled Britain become attack dogs for Israel?
in reply to RandAlThor

Britain was never liberal.

The very same people harping about "gay rights" would also be writing scatting opinion articles against something or other they believe was a moral perversion (for example, men who used sex dolls) with not the least bit self-awareness about how those articles were very much like those that used to be written against homosexuality, just with a different group being targeted.

The middle class in that place is big on doing what is fashionable and makes them look good socially (keeping up with appearances) which means certain minorities which are now fashionable to support get a lot of loud, performative support, but those actions are seldom driven by actual Principles about Freedom (quite the contrary, the place is big on people "knowing their place" and has a ton of laws meant to silence and push-back on those who are loudly contrarians outside a few "permitted" domains).

Having lived in a couple of places in Europe, including Britain and The Netherlands, in my opinion Britain is actually unusually conservative for an European country.

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in reply to RandAlThor

Well, it's American-style "liberal": hard neoliberal with some of performative (rather than principled) moral liberalism.

It's definitely not Liberal in the sense of taking a principled stance for people's freedom, as made painfully obvious by what they're doing against anti-Genocide protestors.

I would even say they're more towards the Authoritarian side than the Liberal one.

in reply to RandAlThor

Money says AIPAC money bought their politicians like they have in America. If I could wipe any organization off the Earth, AIPAC would be right behind Fox News. Fucking poison.
in reply to shalafi

I just don't get how AIPAC has so much leverage over the US
in reply to FEIN

Lobbyists spend very little money to catch political ears. Look into it! I have. Stunning that a major company can drop $20,000 in pocket change and get in their pants.

AIPIC has got extra juice! Since WWII, being branded an anti-Semite is political poison. They don't have to spend much money, just tell the pol, "Do as I say or we go scorched Earth on your happy ass!" Works. FFS, we have video and images of Israel actively committing genocide, murdering woman and children and people trying to get food. And what are the headlines? "$group warns of genocide!" "$group warns of mass starvation!" You mean shit that's already happening YESTERDAY?!

Try saying anything negative, in any way, in any venue, use the word Jew. You will be excoriated and banned. Notice how every single post here makes certain to make the distinction between "Jew" and "Zionist"? I mean, it's true, preaching to the choir guys, but the eggshell fire-walking is kinda nuts. And Jews don't seem to have clue why international antisemitism is on the rise.

Not being snarky, I'm actually afraid to use the word, anywhere. That's how deep the insanity goes. Watch me catch a ban for saying I'm uncomfortable using "Jew", in any context. Watch 12 people explain that Jews are not necessarily Zionists. I GET that. But someone will comment!

in reply to shalafi

(can't edit my own posts)

For context, I'm a 54yo atheist and had always supported Israel. Poor underdogs! Nah. Now Israel is the Third Reich, and fuck them, all of their supporters.

Sickening how we have to repeat history every time our grandparents die out.

in reply to shalafi

And Jews don’t seem to have clue why international antisemitism is on the rise.


Maybe I'm the commenter you're looking for, but this seems like an overgeneralization. I have several Jewish friends who are under no illusions about Israel, and who are quite clear about how Netanyahu and his ilk are consciously and cynically fueling antisemitism, not least by throwing around accusations if it against anyone who criticizes the genocide they are perpetrating. So saying "Jews don't seem to have [any] clue" feels heavy-handed.

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in reply to shalafi

Labour had to defend themselves against anti-semitism claims for years (usually from extremely low level Muslim councillors), so now they're going the other way entirely. And Tories aren't going to get in the way of that, because they fucking love cruelty.

But the next prime minister of the UK is going to be the one who promises to bring back all the free porn, so we don't have to ask for permission to have a wank to take our mind off everything.

in reply to RandAlThor

Because liberalism is a hypocritical ideology.

The USA built itself off genocide and colonialism and has spent the last three centuries expanding its empire to every continent (and has long-since been an attack dog for Israel).

France endorsed liberty, equality, and fraternity at home and horrors abroad in Haiti and Algeria.

To the credit of the Liberal Party, they were much less imperialist than the Whigs they derived from or Tories. This is not to say that they were truly opposed to imperialism. Cecil Rhodes was a Liberal.

In all of these cases, the colonial adventures did not occur despite liberalism but were justified by it. We must bring enlightened civilization to the savages, you see. Locke and Mill, two foundational British figures of liberalism, were both supporters of colonialism.

in reply to floofloof

Astonishing this kind of fascist action can take place under a labour government
in reply to floofloof

I would like the conservative party to be the conservative party and the labour party to be the labour party 🙁
in reply to ztwhixsemhwldvka

So would a lot of people, and there was a chance of that with Jeremy Corbyn until the right-wingers in Labour stabbed him in the back with the help of the Tories and all of the media. They are terrified of workers figuring out where their real interests lie.

Interesting to read yesterday that Corbyn is forming a new party. It's a big mountain to climb and he's no spring chicken, but if it's done right the UK could once again have a party true to Labour's original principles.

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in reply to ztwhixsemhwldvka

The Labour Party is just a mainstream party from a system with First Past The Post (where power is pretty much a doupoly) which was captured and the ideology of those who captured it isn't even left of center.

Remember that not that long ago they were purging Leftwingers in that party.

They're Neoliberals so far to the Right that they're actively supporting a foreign ethno-Fascist regime committing a Genocide along ethnic lines now entering a Holocaust phase, and do so using authoritarian measures against the population of their own country, all of this whilst wearing a Labour Party suit.

I lived in Britain for over a decade until a little after the Leave Referendum and kept track of British politics for a while after that, and this surprises me not one bit after the style and nature of the coup against Jeremy Corbyn done by the very people now in Government there.


in reply to vegeta

Translation: Elon, please don't mention me being in the "Epstein Files" again

in reply to Twoafros

Very cool, just used it and found a bunch of new accounts to follow. Thanks!
in reply to Twoafros

I find it doubtful and regret using it. It showed me a bunch of people I already follow, and proposed that I follow them. I'm expecting to get some spam now :/

in reply to mesa

One final nail in the open web coffin, just hammer it in there real good. RIP.
in reply to mesa

I've switched to startpage and have no complaints. Not that Google has deployed much of its latest crap in Europe, but it's been shit for quite some time anyway.

in reply to Pearl

fuck nvidia

also fuck Donald Trump, illiterate pedophile fuck.





Polish Train Maker Is Suing the Hackers Who Exposed Its Anti-Repair Tricks


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in reply to Pro

Don't you love the anti-circumvention clause?


BBC News and news agencies warn journalists in Gaza at risk of starvation


"We once again urge the Israeli authorities to allow journalists in and out of Gaza. It is essential that adequate food supplies reach the people there."
In a separate joint statement, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), Save the Children and Oxfam, said their colleagues and the people they serve were "wasting away".
But Israel, which controls the entry of supplies into Gaza, has accused the charities of "serving the propaganda of Hamas".
in reply to MyEdgyAlt

But Israel, which controls the entry of supplies into Gaza, has accused the charities of “serving the propaganda of Hamas”.


when reality has an anti-IDF bias


in reply to brachiosaurus

I guess we can't expect any orcanization to step in the "negotiations"... right?
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Germany Approves Deployment Of Two Taliban Diplomats To Berlin, Bonn as part of efforts to facilitate the deportation of Afghan nationals with criminal convictions




India's illegal expulsions to Bangladesh target Muslims




Governors Urge Japan Govt to Address Population Decline


in reply to alphacyberranger

Earth's population was meant to decline. Degrowth of a sort, because 8 billion is too many.

Why have children when their future is guarenteed to be fucked?

in reply to StinkyFingerItchyBum

8 billion people isnt too many people if resources were used appropriately and we had less severe inequality. The real issue is that of the 8 billion people on earth, way too many of them are on the older side and no society has a good plan to deal with it. South Korea has been doing some interesting things with turning children’s infrastructure, like elementary schools and daycares, into daycare for aging seniors. Theres a lot of overlap in the need for physically safe environments and their recreational activities, so it makes sense. But its not a holistic solution

The world population is virtually guaranteed to cap out at about 10B people in 2050 or so before entering decline, and at that point virtually every country in the world will be dealing with the same issue Japan, South Korea, Italy, etc are dealing with right now. There wont be enough young people to care for the old people because the majority of countries are already seeing below replacement level births right now.

As much as people think overpopulation is an issue, we will never have to deal with that problem. The problem we will actually have to deal with is steep population decline, caused by periods in the past where some or almost all countries had birth levels well over necessary replacement levels

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in reply to ToastedRavioli

I don't want my children or anyone elses to take care of me, or other old folks. No one should place that burden on our youth. When it's time, its time. I'm reminded of a friend who had to take leave off work because his dad was in a home and couldn't feed himself and they had insufficient staff to care for the old folks feedings and washings. What a disgusting way to live. I'll never be that burden on anyone.

I'll take care of myself and when I can't do that anymore I'll take care of myself. ಠ_ಠ

With any luck, society will learn sensible limits to eldercare.

in reply to StinkyFingerItchyBum

You do you. After slaving away to support the capitalist utopia for 50 years, if all I need it someone to come by and stuff some mashed potatoes in my mouth and I'm not otherwise in any pain or hardship, that seems like a reasonable enough trade to me.
in reply to cornshark

If you can't stuff mashed potatoes in your own mouth, what are you living for?
in reply to ToastedRavioli

Agreed with all that except that I think 8 billion is way too damned high. 73% of the animals on this planet have disappeared since I was was born, and back then we had "only" 3.7 billion people. I've seen radical declines in my local ecosystem in just the last 5 years. That's in a hood on the very edge of town, surrounded by rivers, creeks, woods and swamps.

People blame global warming, but that's very recent and only the tip of the iceberg. Human activity is directly killing everything.

in reply to StinkyFingerItchyBum

Thats something i think of daily, and i have 2 kids.

It was a mistake, i am sorry for them, for their future.

in reply to StinkyFingerItchyBum

We don't have too many people!

We have too many greedy and sociopathic people. We currently have the tech and knowledge to provide (of course not over night) for every human... While also protecting and restoring the environment. We don't have a space or resource problem. We have a economic system(s) and morality problem.

in reply to StinkyFingerItchyBum

Because when western society says too many people, they mean too many POC. I know you mean everyone should be having less children, but it's impossible to apply that logic equally everywhere. Improve everyone's standards (through wealth equity) of living and the population will naturally reduce then stabilize.
in reply to NatakuNox

Yes, we do have too many. While we could provide for 8 billion, that many humans is destroying our ecosystems.

old.lemmy.world/comment/184183…

World population has more than doubled in my lifetime. Society might be able to support 8 billion, the planet cannot.



Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds - Push The Sky Away (2013)


Nick cave è un Grande musicista, questo va detto subito, ad onor del vero. Va detto soprattutto come riparo da pareri contrastanti e come salvaguardia di un "patrimonio" musicale tra i più interessanti degli ultimi trent'anni... Lerggi e ascolta...


Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds - Push The Sky Away (2013)


immagine

Nick cave è un Grande musicista, questo va detto subito, ad onor del vero. Va detto soprattutto come riparo da pareri contrastanti e come salvaguardia di un “patrimonio” musicale tra i più interessanti degli ultimi trent'anni. Bisogna ricordare infatti che il nostro Nick, tra “Boys Next Door”, “Bad Seeds”, “Grinderman”, “Warren Ellis” e alcune colonne sonore, ha inciso ventisei dischi, quasi uno all'anno, mica... artesuono.blogspot.com/2014/10…


Ascolta: album.link/i/577620744


HomeIdentità DigitaleSono su: Mastodon.uno - Pixelfed - Feddit




Big Pharma is increasingly reliant on Chinese biotech advances


archive.is/rS9Cg

AstraZeneca, Pfizer and other multinational drug companies have spent a record amount on medicines developed by Chinese biotechs this year

AstraZeneca has signed the most licensing deals with Chinese biotechs, at least $13.6bn of licensing deals with five companies so far this year

US pharmaceutical companies AbbVie, Merck, Pfizer and Regeneron also signed multibillion-dollar licensing deals in the first half of 2025.

Pfizer signed the biggest Chinese licensing deal this year, a $6bn agreement with 3Sbio to develop a cancer drug

All this [pharmaceutical] money has gone into China because China has invested in their industry while the US government has not,” Axelsen said.

in reply to schizoidman

The political administration in USA is basically saying they don't want to be a leader in scientific advances. What else do we expect to happen?
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in reply to friend_of_satan

Put us behind the rest of the world so that we would be forced to play catch-up by investing a bunch of money, and then have the government funnel that money into private corporations owned by tech billionaires
in reply to friend_of_satan

US spent the better part of the 20th century becoming a science and technology powerhouse. We are pissing away that advantage at lightning speed.


US contractor recounts gruesome details of Gaza aid delivery



in reply to acargitz

Even if their involvement is just a middle finger to Trump, I’m happy it’s getting traction.
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in reply to womjunru

It's not a middle finger to Trump. The Brazilian government has had that position for a long time.
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in reply to Tm12

Ignore. Plug your ears and avert your eyes. Anything bad you see is propaganda. Ignorance is strength.
in reply to Tm12

If you're from a country materially contributing to this madness, ruin your government's day until they stop. Especially if you're from an EU country, push for a repeal of the EU-Israel treaty and sanctions. If you're not, then unfortunately nothing.
in reply to NoneOfUrBusiness

I'm proud to be from a country that wrote a sternly written statement
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in reply to NotSteve_

Hell yeah, buddy! Jolie is THE Queen for signing that sternly worded letter with twenty five other people! So massively proud of her, I could just Kiss her all over. I don't even care that her and Gibeault (my Rep) were completely silent on the issue for the past two years.

Edit: shit, forgot it's Anand now.

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in reply to NotSteve_

China is the king of those.

We don't like this. But we like trade so we literally won't change anything.
in reply to Tm12

At this point? Not much. For americans the last major chance was elections, but too many of us either voted for this or abstained (which allows the R party the most efficient path to arm Israel).
in reply to InternetCitizen2

That's what they want you to think. The people's power doesn't end where the ruling class decides. Elections didn't end the Vietnam war; mass popular resistance did. Most things you believe the government "gave" to you were actually taken by force.
in reply to NoneOfUrBusiness

mass popular resistance did.


Neat, where is it? I am not trying to be an asshole here, but many of my fellow lefties here keep acting as if the elections didn't have a consequence. There aren't mass protests, certainly not at the scale we need them. Insofar as what the relief Palestine needs; nothing is in place and it will take months we no longer have.

in reply to InternetCitizen2

I'm not saying that the election had no consequences; I'm only saying that things can (and usually do) change without elections, so elections weren't really the last chance for anything. Whether they will this time aside, they at least in theory can; the problem is lack of popular will, not lack of opportunity. Again not dismissing the impact of the election, just keeping things in perspective.
in reply to NoneOfUrBusiness

I don't know that the suppression by the government during those protests was anything like what is going on today though. The government has been detaining regular protestors alongside movement leaders/organisers to scare people into thinking that nobody is safe. The Trump administration has even been targeting people for deportation based on the fucking Canary Mission.

Another big difference is the fact that many of the protestors back then were at risk of being directly affected via the draft, whereas the impact of the Palestinian genocide on the majority of Americans is minimal to nonexistent.

in reply to markko

I don't know that the suppression by the government during those protests was anything like what is going on today though.


The 60s and 70s were the height of COINTERPRO and CIA shenanigans so if anything protesters today have it good, but that aside:

Another big difference is the fact that many of the protestors back then were at risk of being directly affected via the draft, whereas the impact of the Palestinian genocide on the majority of Americans is minimal to nonexistent.


True, but we're really not looking at just the genocide here. There's a whole full-speed march to fascism that already is and will continue affecting the majority of Americans, so really what we should be seeing is mass anti-fascist resistance that would naturally have strong anti-Zionist presence. The fact that there's no mass anti-fascist resistance is the big problem here, but that's not due to lack of impact on the average American. Also given that the IDF trains American cops using lessons learned from their subjugation of Palestinians, I'd say there's a fair bit of impact on minority communities.

in reply to NoneOfUrBusiness

What I meant was the difference in who was targeted. My understanding, which could be wrong, is that specific groups (and more specifically, their leaders) were primarily targeted by the operations carried out back then, whereas today they are also detaining/deporting etc people who genuinely have no offenses or ties to such groups. Even Trump supporters and their family members are being persecuted. I think it's these seemingly indiscriminate actions that make the average person less willing to take a stand, especially if they don't feel as though they've been affected badly enough yet to risk sticking their neck out.

In any case it's a terrifying and truly fucked situation.

in reply to Tm12

I've been wondering a lot, for over a year. The solution is to donate money. Right now that's the most important thing you can do, because people are dying of starvation, and this is their only chance to buy something to eat.

And yes, it's really hard to find a legit way to donate. It's not like Ukraine, where there's an easy central donation platform like united24 plus various other foreign platforms. Since the world fails to even acknowledge the genocide, individual people must take the matter into their hands. Everyone. Every single person who considers themselves a human.

Here's an example:
chuffed.org/project/121561-urg…

I briefly talked to one of the kind family members on Mastodon in an attempt to verify whether it's a scam, and it seems very legit. And they really appreciate all donations.

I guess, there are plenty of other similar fundraisers as well. Do some background check, and donate, and share the link!

Another important act was this:
apnews.com/article/greece-isra…

Protest! Show some solidarity towards Palestine.

And last but not least, do vote on elections. Preferably for those who are not completely incompetent for leading your country, and their foreign policy is in its place as well.

in reply to RandAlThor

The Israelis are going to regret this for decades to come. The world will not forget.
in reply to acargitz

They really don't care. They are indoctrinated into thinking they are the victims and the world hates them for being chosen by God.

As long as they exterminate all the Palestinians it's mission accomplished. They have enough puppets in the West to make sure the blowback isn't too severe.

in reply to Mrkawfee

The west is falling. I pray history will bring justice for Palestine. Stay strong comrade.
in reply to acargitz

Only if the world makes them regret it. I wish I could say that with the mountain of documented evidence (mostly by IDF soldiers themselves) that the history will bring justice for Palestine.

But, I didn't think we could be 655 days into a genocide and still have the New York fucking Times running articles saying "it's totally not. Because not enough babies have died yet. Israel could kill so many more babies if they wanted to".

The one thing that will be true with time though is that Israel will collapse. Fascist Ethnostates are by their very nature self destructive and cannot maintain themselves.

I just want to live long enough to see it fall and the children of Palestinian today be able to serve out the justice to the western world that they deserve.

I want everyone from Israeli officials all the way to New York Times writers to be brought to justice and answer for their crimes.

One day; everyone will 'have always been against' this.


And those people that today still spread genocide propaganda will pretend they were always against. It is important we don't let those demons get away with it.

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in reply to wheezy

It won't happen overnight, but it will happen. Support the Hind Rajab Foundation. We'll make the fuckers pay.


The Death Of Industrial Design And The Era Of Dull Electronics


in reply to mesa

Picked a great time to follow my dream as an industrial designer, only to graduate during COVID and realize that not a single company actually cares to improve the user experience of their products or systems.

Feels like I got a more exclusive and more expensive art degree.

in reply to PerogiBoi

Go create something, im not sure the market is but I want non dominant designs and less dark patterns.

in reply to silence7

The International Court of Justice issued a strongly worded opinion


Gotta love the meaningless symbology of the UN. Sometimes I think it exists just to keep good politicians occupied while the shitty ones really lead.

in reply to silence7

Spoiler Alert: We are absolutely not going to meaningfully address climate change before it's too late. Not going to happen.
in reply to DarkFuture

We already lowered the rate of emissions growth, taking us from 4°C by 2100 to ~3°C by then. Getting more is on us; you can't sit around hoping somebody else acts
in reply to meco03211

2°C is likely to be ecologically and economically quite damaging, and also at the edge of where we can be reasonably assured that agriculture remains viable. Its not an everybody-dies-instantly threshold
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in reply to DarkFuture

History lesson: The same thing was said about the ozone layer. The global community dealt with that.
in reply to Arkouda

Tell that to Israel, who is opening up a new hole with all their missile launches
in reply to SecretSauces

Tell that to Israel, who is opening up a new hole with all their missile launches


You must have me confused with someone who has contact with, and political sway over, Israel.

Can you explain to me how you came to the conclusion that I have the ability to tell Israel anything?



Announcing the Lancet Global Health Commission on anti-corruption in health: a call for a novel approach


Some excerpts:

Corruption—commonly defined as the abuse of entrusted power for private gain—is a pervasive threat to health, health systems, and societies worldwide.1 Corruption compounds inequities, disproportionately harms marginalised populations, and undermines the right to health and the health system by diverting resources from their intended purpose and limiting access to essential services.

Corruption can affect countries at every income level. High-income countries have experienced major corruption scandals, such as during the COVID-19 pandemic.10 These same countries are often complicit in enabling global corruption by hosting financial institutions and tax havens that allow illicit profits to be hidden.

Despite decades of reform, anti-corruption efforts have had limited success.11 Most initiatives emphasise transparency and legal enforcement, yet overlook deeper institutional and political drivers. Focusing solely on sanctioning individuals fails to address underlying systemic incentives and structural weaknesses,1 many of which originate from outside of the health sector. Tackling corruption effectively, therefore, requires engaging with the broader political economy.

The Lancet Global Health Commission on anti-corruption in health will respond to this challenge with a novel approach. Corruption is not merely a moral failure but a deeply embedded structural issue that requires evidence-based, context-specific solutions. We recognise that health systems are shaped by both formal rules and by informal networks, kinship ties, and political allegiances. Tackling corruption could involve high political and practical costs and might even worsen conditions in the short term. The Commission will move beyond punitive approaches to champion pragmatic, politically realistic solutions that build trust, strengthen institutions, and drive progress towards universal health coverage.

The Commission will highlight the mechanisms linking corruption to health outcomes, making it harder for policy makers to ignore root causes. We will examine how governance structures, labour rights, and economic conditions interact with health policy. Our recommendations will address the incentives facing actors at every level—from rural clinics to global financial hubs—and promote the role of civil society in holding power to account. We will identify the opportunities that prompt actors to engage in corruption and will propose ways to strengthen appropriate checks and balances in health systems and beyond. Health institutions need to embed safeguards and early warning mechanisms to foster integrity and resilience. Addressing low pay and poor working conditions is crucial to curbing misconduct driven by desperation. Above all, proposed measures should consider unintended consequences, including the misuse of anti-corruption policies to target political opponents.

Our commissioners, drawn from diverse backgrounds, will rely on evidence synthesis, exemplar case studies (especially those that have had demonstrable results), and extensive stakeholder consultations. By engaging policy makers, health workers, civil society, and researchers, we aim to ensure that our recommendations are practical and adaptable across all contexts. This approach will support stakeholders in navigating political realities and implementing effective, evidence-informed responses to corruption.

We will measure our success not by the publication of a report, but by the movement we want to spark—a movement that catalyses sustained action, fosters accountability and resilience, and ensures that health resources reach those who need them most.

https://www.thelancet.com/journals/langlo/article/PIIS2214-109X(25)00215-3/fulltext?rss=yes




US | Three dead in small plane crash off California coast


All three people aboard a small twin-engine Beechcraft 95-B55 Baron (registration N8796R) that crashed into the Pacific Ocean off Point Pinos, near Monterey, California, have died, officials confirmed. The aircraft departed San Carlos Airport (SQL) at 22:11 on Saturday, July 26, and was last tracked near its destination, Monterey Regional Airport (MRY) at 22:37.

https://www.aviation24.be/miscellaneous/accidents/three-dead-in-small-plane-crash-off-california-coast/




Switzerland | Two rescued after small plane crashes into Lake Lucerne


A small aircraft crashed into Lake Lucerne near Kehrsiten NW on the morning of Monday, July 28. Both occupants — a 78-year-old Austrian pilot and a 55-year-old Swiss woman — were rescued alive. The pilot was uninjured, while the passenger was taken to hospital with injuries.

https://www.aviation24.be/miscellaneous/accidents/two-rescued-after-small-plane-crashes-into-lake-lucerne/


in reply to CaptainBasculin

I agree, she deserves a medal of honor!
in reply to CaptainBasculin

I tried but he didn't come for tea. So I just sprayed the Roundup on the English ivy.


The mathematics of starvation: Why aid can't fix the lethal shortage of food in Gaza


Archive article: archive.ph/4jbAr
in reply to RandAlThor

Article assumes every single person in Gaza needs aid of 3 meals per day, i.e. are 100% aid dependant

I'm not sure that's true but it might end up that way if Israel continues as it is

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to ryannathans

It is true.

Israel has enacted a total blockade on Gaza. Even before the full blown genocide Israel already starved Gaza for years by limiting calories allowed to enter.

Israel is killing fishermen off the coast of Gaza and systematically destroyed agriculture in Gaza since 2023.

The point you refer to has been reached about two month ago. This is why now people drop in the streets from starvation.

in reply to Saleh

They do grow food, only last week I saw street stalls with fresh produce getting destroyed by the IDF
in reply to RandAlThor

Short answer, it can't get to the palestinians because of the Israeli embargo assisted by US forces. They are gunning them down in line for food, not handing it out to those in need. Genocides tend to not care about the genocidees, not sure y'all are aware of this?!


Le Punizioni dei Pirati nell'Epoca d'Oro della Pirateria


Il più crudele di tutti i pirati fu l’inglese Edward Low, attivo nei Caraibi e nell’Atlantico orientale dal 1721 fino al 1724. “Ned” Low costruì un catalogo di spregevoli crimini. Nel 1722 fece a pezzi e impiccò un gruppo di passeggeri portoghesi tra i quali due frati.

(Cartwright, Mark. “Punizioni dei Pirati nell’Epoca d’Oro della Pirateria.” Tradotto da Omayma Ghendi. World History Encyclopedia. Modificato il ottobre 07, 2021)

Da Wikipedia: William Kidd (Greenock, 22 gennaio 1645 – Londra, 23 maggio 1701) è stato un pirata scozzese. Uno dei più celebri corsari di sempre, era stato incaricato inizialmente di combattere contro i pirati, ma si unì in seguito alla pirateria e finì per essere catturato e giustiziato



in reply to protist

The US has plenty of areas with a shitton of sun in the winter. Very dry areas, like southern Spain, or Israel, produce year round and with little available water, but well managed.

The Netherlands produce vegetables, competitive for export, with half the sun or heat.

Vegetables are one of the few sectors that can be repatriated in a short time through tariffs.

When you get into tree crops and such is when you have the same problem as with factories, years until production.

in reply to elucubra

Given that tomatoes suffer when nighttime temperatures start going below 55°F (13°C), there is pretty much nowhere in the continental US where they can be grown successfully year-round without some sort of environmental control or protection.
in reply to protist

Yes they can. See Almeria, Spain. Similar to Arizona/NM weather, and as dry.
Also, the Dutch do it, in climate controlled greenhouses, price competitive.

It can definitely be done.

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to elucubra

The temperature in Almeria has never gone below freezing in all of recorded history, which is not the case anywhere in Arizona or New Mexico. Even Yuma, AZ goes well below freezing sometimes, and winter averages are well below the comfort threshold for tomatoes, where in Almeria average lows are warmer. And the summer highs in the US southwest (tomatoes also suffer and will not set fruit when temps are consistently above 95° (35°C) blow Almeria and everywhere in Europe out of the water.

I'm not saying you can't grow in greenhouses and still be able to afford tomatoes, but there's no situation in which growing in a greenhouse doesn't cost more than growing outdoors in a suitable climate. Mexico has that suitable climate year-round, and the US does not, and as a result this tariff on Mexican tomatoes is going to significantly raise tomato prices in the US.

in reply to protist

I imagine you have searched for data, and have looked up Almería (city) not the province. The city is on the shore. Almeria province is hilly. As soon as you go some few hundred meters up climate becomes way more extreme.

temps are consistently above 95° (35°C) blow Almeria and everywhere in Europe out of the water.
Hate to tell you, but in Madrid (and it's not the hottest) it's been between 34 and 40ºC since June. Albox, in the province of Almeria for example had a max in 2021 of 45º C.


For most vegetables, passive methods, such as greenhouses, with shade systems and ventilation, these extremes can be reduced.

in reply to protist

environmental control or protection.


That's what they elsewhere call "greenhouse".



Extremist Israeli politicians and right-wing settlers hold Gaza annexation conference


in reply to Saleh

All zionists should go to hell.
Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to Saleh

Sounds like the Netanyahtzees are already drooling over the prospect of more lebensraum.

in reply to realitista

Wait. Foreign nation bombed the shit out of you and you are not in war?
in reply to Talaraine

I mean, it was Israel who suddenly started bombing Iran. Iran doesn't want war with Israel, but they're rightly not going to drop their nuclear program for it. I don't think that was part of the ceasefire deal.
in reply to NoneOfUrBusiness

Iran has said they want to destroy Israel for decades.. I'm not sure how that means they don't want a war.
in reply to Talaraine

Every thinking human being with a moral compass should want to see Israel (as in the apartheid state, not the people) destroyed. That's one thing and active belligerent action is another. Iran policy with Israel has always been one of low-level proxy conflict, not war.


VPN use surges in UK as new online "safety" rules kick in


Technology reshared this.

in reply to herseycokguzelolacak

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The above was added to my copy... Get fecked FT, this is well within fair use

But to evade the new rules, a growing number of people in the UK are turning to tools more often used by citizens in authoritarian regimes to get around internet censorship.


This should say something like the following to explicitly call out the UK goberment for their shit

"But to evade the new rules, a growing number of people in the UK are turning to tools to bypass an authoritarian regime and to get around internet censorship."



UK households could face VPN 'ban' after use skyrockets following Online Safety Bill


Prominent backbench MP Sarah Champion launched a campaign against VPNs previously, saying: “My new clause 54 would require the Secretary of State to publish, within six months of the Bill’s passage, a report on the effect of VPN use on Ofcom’s ability to enforce the requirements under clause 112.

"If VPNs cause significant issues, the Government must identify those issues and find solutions, rather than avoiding difficult problems.” And the Labour Party said there were “gaps” in the bill that needed to be amended.

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to themachinestops

Labour has already spoken out and said they will make no attempts to ban VPNs.
in reply to inkrifle

This makes me feel like they were in a bind here. The so called "online safety bill" was a tory concoction that took years to pass through the courts because of how invasive it is and how anyone could easily bypass it.

If labour want to stop it, they'll be accused of not wanting to protect children.

Whatever anyone thinks of labour, I'd ask people to ask themselves, if you were in that position, what option do they have other than to let it play out as the spectacular failure it was always going to be and making sure everyone knows who's fault that was afterwards?

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to inkrifle

I doubt their corpo overlords would allow a VPN ban considering the amount of companies that use them.


The Epochalypse: It’s Y2K, But 38 Years Later


in reply to KairuByte

Yeah it only felt like it wasn’t a big deal because it became a big deal early enough for there to be plans made. And because good people doing hard work to prevent a problem wasn’t newsworthy after the fact.
in reply to KairuByte

That's the thing though: It was well-prepared and due to that there was no big issue.

2038 is the same: very well prepared and thus it will not be a big issue.

Of course, if ignored, both would be very problematic, but that's not the point.


in reply to jimerson

Fun fact! I'm studying for my amateur radio technician license and learned that ham came from calling amateur telegraph operators' sloppy work 'ham-fisted'. The amateur radio community decided to lean into it, and thus the ham radio operator was born


I'll assume FCC Technician license; it's a fun hobby. I have had a General license since the 1990s when the FCC still required a proficiency in morris code. At a cost of $35 to renew and the ability to have a cellphone alternative while traveling long distance by car, it's worth keeping.

Have fun, find your Ham niche and enjoy it for the rest of your life!

in reply to comador

That's the one, and thanks! My son and I got into Meshtastic as a hobby, and I guess ham radio was the next logical direction for our interest. It's fun learning the science behind how it works.


Rilasciato Linux 6.16: prestazioni migliori, NVIDIA Blackwell Open Source e Intel APX


Come previsto, il kernel Linux 6.16 è stato promosso a stabile. Linux 6.16 ora accoglie il mondo con diversi miglioramenti delle prestazioni, il supporto per i driver GPU open source NVIDIA Hopper e Blackwell in Nouveau, la preparazione per Intel Advanced Performance Extensions (APX) e molti altri interessanti miglioramenti.

reshared this


in reply to miss_demeanour

Honestly, that he lived this long, given his drugs and party lifestyle for many years, is pretty impressive. Now Keith Richards, on the other hand, will likely live to be 200 years old just because he's indestructible.

I got to see Ozzy once at Ozzfest. I'm glad for that.



Fediverse Report – #126 - selling music albums on Bandwagon and more


  • Music sharing platform Bandwagon adds the ability for artists to sell albums, create paid channels for exclusive content, and announces upcoming premium subscription tier for artists
  • @Bonfire Social is getting close to release, and team already working on other features as well
  • some good articles on what its like to be a moderator, and the impact of LLMs on small communities on the fediverse

Fediverse Report – #126

The News


Bandwagon is a fediverse platform for artists to share their music, similar to platforms like Bandcamp. Artists can now use Bandwagon to sell their music albums with the latest update. Bandwagon has added support for Stripe, and does not charge a payment fee for albums sold via the platform. Selling albums via Bandwagon will not be completely free however: once Bandwagon Premier launches at the end of the year, selling albums will only be available for this premium subscription tier of $10/month. Bandwagon promises the platform will always be available for free for artists to upload and share their albums. Another new feature for Bandwagon is Circles, which allows users to share content with specific people. When you add accounts to a circle, you can create content that will only be visible to people within that circle, similar to how Bonfire’s boundaries system works. What is different about Bandwagon’s circles is that access to a circle can be put behind a paywall, where people can pay a monthly subscription fee for continued inclusion in that circle and to see exclusive content by the artist.

The upcoming premium subscription will give paying members the ability to sell albums, sell access to circles/memberships, and get higher quality streaming. Some further thoughts:

  • With circles, Bandwagon is placing itself in competition with Patreon. It is not the first project to try to put fediverse content behind a paywall: sub.club tried to make this work last year and had to shut down due to a limited uptake. Sub.club focused on microblogging and Mastodon, will targeting the music sector make a difference for Bandwagon?
  • Platforms on the fediverse has historically struggled with becoming financially sustainable, with most relying on donations, grants and volunteer labour. Bandwagon has a clear story on how it plans to become a financially sustainable platform. The big question is: can they pull it off?
  • One of the major challenges in building a new social network is in getting critical mass on the community size to made sure there is enough interesting content to keep users interested in visiting. Projects like Radio Free Fedi show that the fediverse has a dedicated community of musicians and other artists on the fediverse. Bandwagon also already has over 200 artists who are sharing their music on the platform. It indicates that music and artists might be a worthwhile direction to look for when building critical mass in communities.
  • How much will the connection to the fediverse matter for artists on Bandwagon? Bandwagon is open-source and encourages self-hosting, and that it uses ActivityPub provides clear value for creating a network of interoperable Bandwagon servers. But will people use the native connections with the rest of the fediverse as well? For artists, having a wider reach is beneficial, especially if they are selling albums. But will people use the interoperability of microblogging platforms like Mastodon to follow artists on Bandcamp, or will these interoperable networks stay mostly separate in practice?

Bonfire is an upcoming modular social networking platofrm that the team is working on getting ready for an official release. In the launch version (‘Bonfire Social’) the platform focuses on features that are more familiar to microblogging and long-form writing, but the platform is highly extendable and customisable: Bonfire is also experimenting with adding geodata and Mosaic, a bridge to connect other datasets to the platform. Bonfire also reported that they have their first organisation that will build their community on Bonfire: CrowdInBlue is a platform that wants to “connect water projects with funding sources”, and they will build this platform using Bonfire.

The Links


“The upside is that moderation gives me some control. Watching a fascist autocracy unfold before your eyes is terrifying. Everything is collapsing on a massive scale in myriad ways. It’s enough to make a person feel helpless. While it’s not monumental, I do get to curb some of that fascism through moderation. I get to push buttons with labels that read “delete post” and “suspend.” When some ignorant sociopath is harassing people, I get to wave a magic wand and make them disappear. At least from our corner of Mastodon. That’s empowering. And meaningful. It does make a difference because I get to silence them. I can’t begin to describe how good that feels. Just a little tiny bit of justice.”

An excellent writeup of what it’s like to be a moderator for Mastodon. It explains what the day-to-day experience of being a moderator on Mastodon is like, and what some of the main challenges are, such as dealing with targeted harassment and getting exposed to traumatic content. The quote above highlights why people put up with these challenges, and indicates the value of a social network that gives people agency.

“I don’t know how to run a community forum in this future. I do not have the time or emotional energy to screen out regular attacks by Large Language Models, with the knowledge that making the wrong decision costs a real human being their connection to a niche community. I do not know how to determine whether someone’s post about their new bicycle is genuine enthusiasm or automated astroturf. I don’t know how to foster trust and genuine interaction in a world of widespread text and image synthesis—in a world where, as one friend related this week, newbies can ask an LLM for advice on exploring their kinks, and the machine tells them to try solo breath play. In this world I think woof.group, and many forums like it, will collapse.

A worrying account of how LLMs make the current systems of keeping spam out of closed social networks unfeasible. There are communities who need some form of anonymity of their members to function, such as the queer kink community woof.group. These communities ask for some form of applications by new members. The ability of LLMs to cheaply generate bullshit on a grand scale is being used spammers to join these private communities and use it for spam. There is a clear need for new ways to build and maintain communities while keeping spammers out, and it is currently unclear how such a system would look like.

My goals now are more modest: planting seeds in people’s minds that another way to interact online is possible. And when people ARE READY and willing, help them set up an account on the Fediverse software best suited for their needs, helping them out and acclimatizing them to the culture of this place.

Elena Rossini writes about how her thoughts on the fediverse and growth have shifted, and her plans for the next year of her blog. It echoes a trend I wrote recently about as well: the previous conceptualisation of growth for the new social networks does not hold up anymore, and we need new stories on how these networks can be used to build new communication structures.

And some more links:

connectedplaces.online/reports…


in reply to wisdomchicken

Bandwagon Premier launches at the end of the year, selling albums will only be available for this premium subscription tier of $10/month.


This is kinda stupid? I don't see anyone wanting to use this. If you don't sell anything, you still have to pay. Also, as time passes, your older releases are sold less. If you don't release anything new in a while, it makes little sense to keep being subscribed until your next release. Fees are way better, especially for small / little known artists. I think it makes more sense to host some free stuff here for advertisement, and then post a link to your Bandcamp in your profile to let people buy there, because their model is better.

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to hisao

Yeah... I'm not sure that's a good monetization model... I feel like even the standard taking a small cut of every transaction is a better idea than that :/

It feels really overly punishing for small artists while being very reasonable for established larger artists, which sucks




Creating Your First Game with Ebitengine (Go game engine)


Technology reshared this.

in reply to trevor

This video complements the text tutorial at trevors-tutorials.com/0004-cre…

Trevors-Tutorials.com is where you can find free programming tutorials. The focus is on Go and Ebitengine game development. Watch the for more info.