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UK government trial of Microsoft's M365 Copilot finds no clear productivity boost


cross-posted from: programming.dev/post/36865760


UK government trial of Microsoft's M365 Copilot finds no clear productivity boost


in reply to Pro

"speeding up some tasks yet making others slower due to lower quality outputs"


So use it for the tasks that were made more efficient, and stop using it for the ones that slowed down or were low quality.

in reply to jaykrown

I think they mean that the output that makes task X more efficient slows down task Y that uses the previous output.
in reply to Pro

Given that it's people who work for the government, expectations are already low, if no training is provided results will be even worse and last but not least, if the product is absolutely crap, why would you continue using it?


England Trials Smartphone Rail Payment System with Real-Time Phone Location Tracking


cross-posted from: programming.dev/post/36878714


England Trials Smartphone Rail Payment System with Real-Time Phone Location Tracking


reshared this

in reply to Pro

So they've created a dependency on your phone's location service being always on for what reason, exactly?

Why is this not needed anywhere else that contactless payment for transit services has been successfully implemented?

in reply to phutatorius

One of them actually being London. They had contactless pay with Google pay there for years already, without location service. You tab to go on and tab when you exit the metro



Addressing the unauthorized issuance of multiple TLS certificates for 1.1.1.1


cross-posted from: programming.dev/post/36881324

::: spoiler Comments
- Hacker News.
:::



Addressing the unauthorized issuance of multiple TLS certificates for 1.1.1.1


::: spoiler Comments
- Hacker News.
:::


reshared this

in reply to Pro

I like cloudflares transparency they are always good with that. My only issue with them is that they are essentially mitm all traffic.
in reply to Pro

This is a good overview of TLS, but thanks for the post! And kudos to Google, Mozilla, Apple, et al who didn't support that CA!


People prefer chatbots when buying embarrassing stuff


cross-posted from: programming.dev/post/36882952


People prefer chatbots when buying embarrassing stuff


reshared this

in reply to Pro

So they want to go through one more party, that will collect and sell information about their purchase?
Questa voce è stata modificata (5 giorni fa)
in reply to Pro

I personally want a sales rep that has used the product. I want them to know how it felt the first time it was inserted as well as the hundredth time. How else will you know whats quality. How does it hold up when seated and how well when spanked. These are important things!




Google deletes net-zero pledge from sustainability website








Marking things as adult content?


I'm sure there's a lot of discussion about age-verification laws around here right now and for the sake of keeping things on topic I won't really broach the subject here, but it has gotten me thinking that there really isn't much that can be programmatica

I'm sure there's a lot of discussion about age-verification laws around here right now and for the sake of keeping things on topic I won't really broach the subject here, but it has gotten me thinking that there really isn't much that can be programmatically marked as adult content on the fediverse.

I haven't dived too much into researching the subject, it looks like Lemmy lets you set posts as NSFW, but most activity is centered around microblogging and that appears to have coalesced around Mastodon's approach of freeform content warnings. This seems like a disaster in the making if "don't show adult content to minors" becomes something that has to be more strictly enforced; these content warnings can be used for everything from benign spoiler warnings to very obviously signposting sexually explicit fetish content. Computers can't really understand this level of nuance unless you throw something that does natural language processing at it, and that will almost certainly come up with a lot of false positives and wasted energy in the process; I can't imagine this going over well with anyone really.

So, I've been wondering, how difficult would it be to standardize a separate mature-content warning from the content warnings currently in place? This idea has clearly been floated before (see this issue on Mastodon's GitHub and this blog post written by someone who was a minor and directly affected by this issue at the time) but I haven't actually seen any work towards anything beyond paying lip service to the subject. Maybe it could be a boolean toggle, like how the former Cohost did it (on top of content warnings) or something closer to how Bluesky does it where you have a few set moderation labels that you can apply yourself (see below).

fa27b379-2053-4343-ba74-c86f326c9c6f-image.png

We could also consider moving this distinction beyond posts; the Mastodon issue that I linked above also mentioned applying this to users and even entire instances.

There are a few caveats here in that people historically don't really appreciate being hidden/deboosted for posting adult works, and there is the potential for backlash if something gets marked as adult when it really isn't. I'm not entirely sure how this could be addressed beyond leaving this to implementers and maybe leaving some strong advice to be understanding and not shove people in a corner because they draw kink art for example.

I'd definitely appreciate more thoughts on the subject, please let me know what you think.

in reply to eblu

Hi! We’re actually working on a specification for content labels:

github.com/swicg/activitypub-t…

essentially a Note (or other object ) can have many labels associated with it, and these labels would exist as part of well known vocabularies, such that software can give users better choice over what they see and don't see.

Yes, that does mean software may provide methods of complying with age verification laws may mean certain categories of content are unavailable without some form of age verification (but that's between you, your server software, and you instance administrator as to what that is). Currently there are some tools for instance administrators, particularly of mastodon to completely filter certain content from their servers, making their servers somewhat explicitly child-friendly.

This would also allow for third-party labellers in the future if needed (through annotations), which allow for bluesky style labellers which can catch content not self-labelled.

I want to stress that the goal of content labels is not to moderate the adult content nor queerness from the fediverse, but rather to give creators and consumers of content more control over what they publish and who sees it or what they see.

It is unfortunate and terrible the way that age verification is being rolled out as a means to censorship and authoritarianism, and these laws should be fought in the courts and politically to be repealed or changed. Adults must be able to exist on the internet, not everything is for children.


in reply to return2ozma

My job just had mandatory training that was an ad for AI services. Not for any service in particular, just AI services in general.
in reply to return2ozma

I already have shitty companies ask questions in their job form about which AI tools I use to write software and how much percentage of my final code is from AI, fuck me like this job didn't suck enough now I have to prompt the fuckin AI multiple times to do something just so that it ticks a metric that upper management can use to justify spending money on AI and firing actual engineers



in reply to RegularJoe

Is this good? I can’t tell if it’ll just be used as one more invasive information gathering data points for Amazon and google
in reply to RegularJoe

Is this good? I can’t help but think it’s just another datapoint for google to scrape


love2d stavolta che gira, nonostante la octo-oriented programming!


Sorprendentemente, appena qualche ora di sonno e qualche ora di scrittura magica un pochino avanti e indietro più tardi, e ho effettivamente trovato una soluzione al problema problemoso delle prestazioni imbarazzanti di Love2D caricato di una tale OOP che non gira affatto bene su una viemmina come quella di Lua… e, anche se come previsto […]

octospacc.altervista.org/2025/…



DOJ does damage control as staffer admits Republicans will be redacted from Epstein files


Not a big fan of O'Keefe, but I like this!


The United Nations Turns Eighty







Download from Kobo Broken?


I have a book in my Kobo library that I want to put in Calibre. When I try to download it on my computer or phone, all that downloads is a URLLink.acsm file. Anyone know what's going on?
in reply to Kraven_the_Hunter

That’s the Adobe Digital Editions resource file. Put that link into the ADE application and it’ll download the ebook.
in reply to ohulancutash

There is also a Calibre plugin that's supposed to deal with .ascm files. I've never managed to get it to work personally but maybe someone else will have more luck.
in reply to Kraven_the_Hunter

This tool is easy to use and works well, and then just use something like calibre to strip the DRM.
Questa voce è stata modificata (6 giorni fa)


Any Resistance Will Hurt Our Investors


This was made with Barra's Error Message Generator
Questa voce è stata modificata (6 giorni fa)



Project 2025 group wants huge changes to policy to encourage more kids


The right-wing think tank behind Project 2025 is now crafting new policy suggestions, including an incentive for married couples to have more children, according to a report.

Following its controversial 900-page blueprint for President Donald Trump’s second term, the Heritage Foundation is now drafting a new position paper that includes calls for a “Manhattan Project to restore the nuclear family,” referring to the program to develop the first nuclear weapons, the Washington Post reported.

The forthcoming paper, titled “We Must Save the American Family,” reportedly urges the government to pour funds into individual families rather than child care programs, like Head Start, according to the Post.

The Heritage Foundation is also urging the president to issue orders that require all proposed policies to “measure their positive or negative impacts on marriage and family.” If a program scores poorly, it should be revamped, according to the Post.

“For family policy to succeed, old orthodoxies must be re-examined and innovative approaches embraced, but more than that, we need to mobilize a nation to meet this moment,” the paper reportedly reads.

#News
in reply to Basic Glitch

What could possibly spook The Heritage Foundation of all groups to make this tiny leftward shift just a few years after their big evil strategy was released? They’re still an evil organization, but they’re that last group I’d expect to say the government needs to spend more money on more people.






3 in 4 Gaza Detainees Held Without Trial by Israel Are Civilians, Military Database Says


3 out of 4 of the Palestinian detainees from Gaza held without trial as "unlawful combatants" by Israel are civilians, according to data from a classified Israeli military database.


Archived version: archive.is/newest/commondreams…


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.



Xi Jinping holds talks with Kim Jong Un




By chasing ideology and empty slogans, the EU has handed its energy lifeline to China and completely subordinated itself to U.S. interests.


At the recent Shanghai Cooperation Organization summit in Beijing, Russia, China, and Mongolia signed a legally binding memorandum for the Power of Siberia 2 pipeline. Stretching 2,600 km and carrying a price tag of $13.6 billion, this pipeline will deliver 50 bcm/year of Russian gas from the Arctic directly to northern China via Mongolia, bypassing Europe entirely.

In Europe, 50 bcm of Russian gas is worth $16.5 billion today. U.S. LNG for the same volume costs around $25 billion, while direct purchase from Russia, based on recent Gazprom deals with China, would've been roughly $6–6.5 billion. Europe’s cheap Russian pipeline gas, once the backbone of German industry, will now flow to China securing a stable, cheap energy supply.

Pushing Europe to sever its energy ties with Russia has inadvertently transferred strategic leverage to China. Europe now overpays for U.S. LNG, loses industrial competitiveness, and slides toward recession creating a perfect scenario for intra-European tensions.

President Xi framed PoS2 as a cornerstone of the “no-limits” strategic partnership with Russia, guaranteeing China a reliable, land-based energy corridor. Russia secured a guaranteed buyer, China locked in long-term supplies, meanwhile Europe faces the erosion of its industrial and geopolitical position.

By divorcing itself from affordable Russian gas, Europe has eliminated any realistic chance of industrial recovery and viable economic future. The global energy map is being rewritten with European decline accelerating, while China and India continue to rise strategically and economically.

Europe faces the final collapse of its industrial and geopolitical relevance, while the US loses its only truly successful historical project which was the "rules based international order".

in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆

Why would they have to buy solar panels from China? Europe is more than capable of manufacturing their own.

Russia and China working together, does not mean that Europe loses anything. It's not a zero-sum equation, where success is mutually exclusive.

And your article is over a year old. You are intentionally ignoring the current assessment.

☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆ doesn't like this.

in reply to Archangel1313

Why would they have to buy solar panels from China? Europe is more than capable of manufacturing their own.


If that was the case then they would be manufacturing them. Also, in case you weren't aware, stuff like solar panels needs rare earths which China has an effective monopoly on.

Russia and China working together, does not mean that Europe loses anything. It’s not a zero-sum equation, where success is mutually exclusive.


Yeah it does because the US is taking advantage of the vulnerable position that Europe is in, and the Europeans are simply accepting it because they have no other choice.

As Sabine Weyand, Directorate-General for Trade at the EU commission, admits: "If you didn't hear me say the word 'negotiation'—that's because there wasn't one." The U.S. dictated terms in a "strategic compromise, not an ideal economic solution" that European leaders know will destroy their economies.

Europe agreed because it is unable to manage its own security. "We have a land war on the European continent. And we are completely dependent on the United States," Weyand explains. Member states were not prepared to risk further escalation, so they chose economic submission out of fear and total dependence on the U.S.

sz-dossier.de/tiefgaenge/das-w…

And your article is over a year old. You are intentionally ignoring the current assessment.


I'm intentionally ignoring propaganda and focusing on the actual facts. The type article you linked have been written on daily basis for the past three years and were proven false each and every time. I guess you happen to be the kind of credulous person who's not capable of learning from past experience that these types of articles are aimed at.

in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆

If that was the case then they would be manufacturing them. Also, in case you weren't aware, stuff like solar panels needs rare earths which China has an effective monopoly on.


Europe already does manufacture solar panels...and China does not have an "effective monopoly" on the materials used.

As Sabine Weyand, Directorate-General for Trade at the EU commission, admits: "If you didn't hear me say the word 'negotiation'—that's because there wasn't one." The U.S. dictated terms in a "strategic compromise, not an ideal economic solution" that European leaders know will destroy their economies.


That's a criticism of the negotiation tactics used by the US...not an admission that the EU has no choice but to accept those terms. Especially if, as indicated in that last sentence, that it would "destroy their economies".

I'm intentionally ignoring propaganda and focusing on the actual facts.


That's weird. Your original article was citing the IMF as if it were a reliable source of information. The article I posted was also citing the same source, just using a more current assessment. It seems you only trust information that confirms your bias, and ignore it when it doesn't...even when the source is the same?

☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆ doesn't like this.

in reply to Archangel1313

Europe very obviously isn't manufacturing solar panels in anywhere near the volume they would need to make a dent in energy transition. Again, if that was the case Europe wouldn't be in an energy crisis right now.

And yes, China does in fact have an effective monopoly, it's 69% for most rare earth and around 90% actual processing of them
mining-technology.com/analyst-…

That’s a criticism of the negotiation tactics used by the US…not an admission that the EU has no choice but to accept those terms. Especially if, as indicated in that last sentence, that it would “destroy their economies”.


It's a clear admission that Europe was forced to take an incredibly bad deal. European economies are literally collapsing as we speak, and the US is making their exports more expensive while forcing them to buy overpriced LNG, invest money in the US, and ramp up military spending. Anybody with even a minimally functioning brain can see what this all means for Europe.

That’s weird. Your original article was citing the IMF as if it were a reliable source of information. The article I posted was also citing the same source, just using a more current assessment.


I don't know what you find weird about the fact that Russian economy has in fact grown as the last assessment indicated while there is zero reason to expect that to change going forward. Russian industry is growing, Russia just secured a whole bunch of trade deals with BRICS countries, there is zero reason to expect that the trajectory of Russian economy will change for the negative.

The article you linked talks about falling oil revenues, but if you bothered looking at Russian economy you'd see that oil exports are not a major part of the overall economy nowadays. Western sanctions have already been turned up to the max, and there's nothing left to sanction. That's why the west was trying to do secondary sanctions on India which caused India to get closer to Russia and China instead. If the sanctions were going to achieve anything that would've happened early on. Now Russia has already restructured its economy away from the west. Meanwhile, it's hilarious to talk about Russian deficit exploding when western deficits are far higher. If Russia is in trouble with a €56 billion deficit what can we say about the US?

It seems you only trust information that confirms your bias, and ignore it when it doesn’t…even when the source is the same?


It seems like I'm using my brain to think about the situation, and relying on historical precedent to extrapolate what we might expect in the future. You should try doing that some time.

in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆

Lol! I'm not sure you understand what the word "monopoly" means. Sure, China currently controls the majority of rare earth production...but that's based largely on the convenience that results from China's investment in its own infrastructure. It doesn't mean that other sources cannot be utilized. It's always nice to go with the cheapest option, but that hardly amounts to a "monopoly".

And I also think you misunderstand how EU law works, regarding trade agreements. The "deal" that was recently "agreed to", is not binding. It simply represents the first round of negotiations, and consists of a proposed outline. It has also been harshly criticised by nearly all European leaders, and will most likely not be ratified. At least not with the current conditions.

☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆ doesn't like this.

in reply to Archangel1313

Controlling vast majority of production is precisely what it means to have a monopoly on a resource. Literally nobody else has significant infrastructure to do refining and processing right now. Building out this infrastructure would take decades. Here's what NPR has to say on the subject:

Many so-called rare earth elements are actually quite common, and they are mined globally, but China has a near-monopoly on refining them for use in everyday electronics, like smartphones and speakers, as well as for crucial defense systems, like fighter jets.

When China decided to tighten control over supply chains for seven rare earth elements this spring, O'Connor says he felt the pinch immediately. One investor touring the company's vault at the time offered on the spot to buy O'Connor's entire inventory of terbium and dysprosium, two valuable "heavy" rare earth elements, he says.


npr.org/2025/07/23/nx-s1-54751…

Nah, I understand how the EU "works" perfectly fine. In fact, I wrote about it in detail here and I pointed out precisely this problem:

Yet, there is an obvious problem with this scheme: the EU lacks an independent treasury. It is merely an administrative organization where individual countries must actually provide funds. Every Euro Brussels spends must be squeezed from member state budgets, making any deal signed by Ursula von der Leyen only as good as the day countries actually pony up.


If the EU "leadership" keeps pushing their agenda there likely won't be an EU for much longer because countries will prioritize their national interest over the promises Ursula made to daddy.

in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆

Why would they have to buy solar panels from China? Europe is more than capable of manufacturing their own.


How are people like this? I'm used to the lib bingo stuff by now but somehow every day we reach new levels of detachment from reality that shouldn't even be possible.

in reply to NotMushroomForDebate

I expect that the retreat from reality will intensify as the collapse of the western model continues to progress.


US jobless claims rise, private payrolls growth slows


The number of Americans filing new applications for unemployment benefits increased more than expected last week, while hiring by private employers slowed in August, offering further evidence that labor market conditions were softening.

The reports were released a day after government data showed there were more unemployed people than positions available in July for the first time since the COVID-19 pandemic. Job growth has shifted into stall-speed, with economists blaming President Donald Trump's sweeping import tariffs and an immigration crackdown that is hampering hiring at construction sites and restaurants.

The Fed's "Beige Book" report on Wednesday noted that "firms were hesitant to hire workers because of weaker demand or uncertainty." The softening labor tone was reinforced on Thursday with the release of the ADP National Employment Report, which showed private employment increased by 54,000 jobs last month after advancing by 106,000 in July.

The downbeat assessment of the labor market was also evident in the Institute for Supply Management survey, which showed a measure of services sector employment contracting for a third straight month in August.
Economists, as a result, are bracing for another month of tepid job growth when the Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics publishes its closely watched employment report on Friday. A Reuters survey of economists estimated nonfarm payrolls increased by 75,000 jobs last month after rising by 73,000 in July.

https://www.reuters.com/business/us-jobless-claims-rise-private-payrolls-growth-slows-2025-09-04/


in reply to themachinestops

Reminds me of how after WW2 people stopped calling their kids Adolf or even changed their name Adolf into something else. I mean, I'm not saying Zuckerberg is literally Hitler or something, but it sure is funnily similar.
in reply to ɯᴉuoʇuɐ

Same thing happened after WW1 too btw. The strong anti-German sentiments across the US and Europe prompted multiple changes. William and Vilhelm became Bills or Ville; Müller became Miller; Schmidt became Smith.

I had a lot of Swedish family who did this from around 1915-1930 and as you said, again after WW2.

in reply to ArmchairAce1944

As an Austrian, this comment saying that 'Berg' translates to both hill and mountain explains a lot about what I've seen Germans refer to as Berg. To me it only means mountain.
in reply to Droggelbecher

Most of the time it does mean mountain. But I did hear it used for hill once, but that's it.
in reply to ArmchairAce1944

A LOT of the ones I've seen Germans refer to as that are hills to me, so maybe it's normal for some. The way we use it, Berg has to go over the tree line, or at the very least be steep enough at the top to not have vegetation there.
in reply to Droggelbecher

Yeah, isn't hill hügel/hüble? Currently hiking in DE and just climbed one and it had the signs, too. Now the real question is - at what point is it considered a mountain?
in reply to Paper_Phrog

Our definition: either high enough or steep enough to have no vegetation at the top. For some people, only the former definition counts. But from experience, the definition must be different in Germany. Maybe someone from there can chime in to share their definition!
in reply to themachinestops

See? I knew the different instances of this bot would start fighting each other one day.


Idaho attorney general says officers who fatally shot autistic teen won't be charged


Four Idaho police officers who fatally shot an autistic, nonverbal teenage boy who was holding a knife on the other side of a chain-link fence in April were justified in their actions and will not face criminal charges, the state attorney general said Wednesday.

Victor Perez, 17, was in a coma for a week before dying April 12 after doctors removed nine bullets during several surgeries and amputated his leg.

The shooting in the southeast Idaho city of Pocatello, which was captured on video, drew outrage from members of the community who questioned why the officers opened fire within 12 seconds of exiting their vehicles.

The Bannock County Prosecutor's Office asked Idaho Attorney General Raúl Labrador to review the case to determine whether the officers committed a crime and if their use of force was justified. Labrador said the investigation showed that the officers did not know Perez's age or disabilities, and they were only told an intoxicated man was threatening people with a knife.



Newsom says Trump’s deployment of National Guard to LA cost taxpayers $120M


Newsom’s office evaluated the costs incurred since June when Trump sent more than 4,200 National Guard soldiers and 700 Marines to LA, posting its estimates on X.

According to the office that included $71 million for food and other basic necessities, $37 million in payroll, $4 million in logistic supplies, $3.5 million in travel. “The list goes on,” Newsom’s said.

Most of the soldiers were sent home last month, though 300 remain in Los Angeles, per The Los Angeles Times.



Republicans end TPS deportation protections for hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans


The Department of Homeland Security said that the agency had reviewed conditions in Venezuela in collaboration with the State Department, and that DHS Secretary Kristi Noem had determined that the 2021 TPS designation for Venezuela was “contrary to the national interest.”

The decision leaves about 257,000 Venezuelans, including many in South Florida, vulnerable to being deported to a homeland deep in crisis and under the repressive governance of leader Nicolas Maduro.

The decision will also be heavily felt in South Florida, the heart of the Venezuelan community in the United States. On Wednesday, advocates and leaders were already reeling from the announcement.



Google’s $45 Million Contract With Netanyahu's Office to Spread Israeli Propaganda


cross-posted from: anarchist.nexus/post/103595




September 2025 ForumWG Meeting


Monthly meetings are held on the first Thursday of each month, at 13h00 to 14h00 Eastern Time (currently 17h00 to 18h00 UTC). You can find them listed in the SocialCG Calendar. The next meeting will be held (today) on 4 September 2025. Meeting link: https

Monthly meetings are held on the first Thursday of each month, at 13h00 to 14h00 Eastern Time (currently 17h00 to 18h00 UTC). You can find them listed in the SocialCG Calendar. The next meeting will be held (today) on 4 September 2025.

Meeting link: meet.jit.si/ap-forum-wg

This month's meeting has no set agenda. Discussions will continue re: FEP 7888/f228 adoption and ongoing FEP drafts.

Connected Places reshared this.

in reply to julian

i'll try to make it but i am very tired right now recovering from my first-ever covid infection, so there's a chance i won't be able to make it
in reply to julian

hi! following up on this, were there any minutes from the meeting?
in reply to infinite love ⴳ

Re: September 2025 ForumWG Meeting


trwnh@mastodon.social there were! Yes, I'll get them up over the weekend hopefully.

The main news was updating everybody on context collection adoption (which I've posted about on ActivityPub.Space), plus TallTed brought up how this was handled in the nntp space

in reply to julian

Recent context collection news, in case you've missed:

- Mastodon: PR open
- Lemmy: PR merged

in reply to silverpill

Thanks, I totally missed this development. I blame the conference I was at. 😄

@jesseplusplus Can I ask here, what's the ultimate scope of what you're upstreaming? I see github.com/mastodon/mastodon/p… is a building block, will you be pushing for Mastodon to publish context collections later? It's not clear from what I'm seeing here if that's part of the plan.

@julian@community.nodebb.org @swicg-threadiverse-wg

in reply to Julian Fietkau

Re: September 2025 ForumWG Meeting


julian@fietkau.social the work by jesseplusplus@mastodon.social is split into two PRs.

The first allows Mastodon to start serving context collections. This is the critical piece that allows others to backfill conversations.

The latter half to be introduced in another PR will allow Mastodon to consume context collections for backfill purposes.

in reply to julian

thanks @julian@community.nodebb.org! and sorry @julian@fietkau.social, my wording of the PR title is a little confusing. I'm using the existing mastodon Conversation model to publish the context property. That PR will publish the collection as part of the AP json-ld for all notes.

I'll follow that up with a PR that will allow mastodon to backfill missing replies from the context on any Create-Notes that come to the inbox with a context collection.

in reply to Jesse Karmani

I've taken a closer look at the actual commits, and yeah, there's more already in there than I had first understood. Thanks for elaborating and best wishes for the process!
in reply to silverpill

Re: September 2025 ForumWG Meeting


silverpill@mitra.social oh you better believe I was aware of it 😁

It is a significant step toward broad adoption of context collections in order to enable backfill.