Salta al contenuto principale


in reply to fne8w2ah

They claimed to have a trademark over the phrase "rest easy"... How can such insanity even be allowed to reach court? This is the kind of thing that should be thrown out immediately after an initial reading and force the litigators to pay a hige fine for wasting the time and resources of the judicial system.


Exclusive: Russia close to cutting oil output due to drone attacks, sources say


  • Pipeline monopoly Transneft is restricting oil storage - sources
  • Warns oil firms it may accept less oil - sources
    • Ukraine steps up attacks on Russian ports, refineries
    • Transneft describes the news as 'fake'


LONDON, Sept 16 (Reuters) - Russia's oil pipeline monopoly Transneft (TRNF_p.MM)
,has warned producers they may have to cut output following Ukraine's drone attacks on critical export ports and refineries, three industry sources said on Tuesday.

In a statement on its website, Transneft described the news as "fake" and part of the West's "information war" against Russia.

https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/russia-close-cutting-oil-output-due-drone-attacks-sources-say-2025-09-16/

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

As a centrist, I say roast them all. Leave no oil infrastructure in Russia standing. Make Zelenskyy the new face of Just Stop Oil just for the heck of it.


Reuters || Under US pressure, Syria and Israel inch toward security deal


Highlights: Druze insiders state that Israel has been arming and supplying Hijri's militias

https://archive.md/We2VV



The End of the American Experiment. 1776 to 2025. (Or more realistically: How we got where we are today)



in reply to greenbelt

Are you, are you
Coming to the tree?
Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to greenbelt

Asymmetric warfare is the only way these people can effectively fight back against the injustices from the US. It's why the US has spent the past 20 years convincing this generation that terrorism is bad.


Fediverse Report – #134


Fediverse Report 134 - this week's #fediverse news

  • Mastodon shows their quote post implementation, coming next week
  • A New Social's Bridgy Fed makes it easier to see interactions to your post on other networks with a new DM feature

Fediverse Report – #134

The News


Mastodon is finally introducing quote posts to their software, with the feature rolling out next week to the servers managed by Mastodon itself, and becoming available in Mastodon 4.5 soon after. Mastodon always had a significant worry that quote posts would lead to ‘dunking’ behaviour, where people would quote post someone else for clout. This is visible in how Mastodon has implemented the feature, and how their blog posts introduces the feature: it sees quote posts as a powerful tool that can easily be misused. That is why Mastodon has focused on giving users control over who can quote their posts; you can select per post if you want nobody, everybody, or only your followers to be able to quote your posts. You are also able to change this after you’ve made a post and somebody quotes your post in a manner you are do not want. In that case you can remove your original post from the other person’s quote post.

Giving people more control over how their data can be used is a great thing, and Mastodon adding quote posts in a manner that allows for people to determine how and if their posts can be quoted is a good implementation choice. Mastodon’s concern regarding the potential for harm with dunking does need some context however, researcher Hilda Bastian has a highly detailed overview of over 30 studies on quote posts on Twitter and their impact. Bastian notes: “There’s conflicting evidence on whether QTs increase or decrease incivility, and whatever effect there is, it doesn’t seem to be major.” Bluesky added a similar feature for quote posts in summer 2024, also allowing people to select when their posts can be quoted, and also described them as anti-toxicity features. I’m not aware of any study on how this feature on Bluesky affected toxic behaviour.


Bridgy Fed, the software that connects ActivityPub with Bluesky’s AT Protocol, has gotten a new feature where you will get notified of interactions from non-bridged accounts. When you ‘bridge’ your account, it allows people on the other social network to interact with your posts. When someone replies to you on the other protocol, and they also have your account bridged, the replies show up on your posts, as if you were interacting with each other over the same protocol. But if the other person on the other network replies to a post, and they have not bridged their account, these replies are not visible, as they’ve not consented to getting their data send out on the other protocol. As such it becomes easy to miss interactions with your post that happen on the other protocol.

A New Social, the organisation behind Bridgy Fed, has launched an update where you will now get an hourly digest DM with links to the interactions on the other network. And if you do not want to receive the DMs, you can alter this in the Bridgy Fed settings page, or with a simple ‘mute’ as a reply.


The .world cluster is a group of fediverse servers all managed by FediHosting Foundation. The cluster contains servers such as the mastodon.world server and the lemmy.world server, which makes it one of the largest admins of fediverse users. The organisation shared an update, where they announced that they’ve expanded with a new piefed.world server. They also gave an update on their finances, with costs around 2000 USD per month, but income having dropped to around 1300 USD due to less donations. As the .world cluster of servers represents a significant portion of the fediverse, and contains the largest threadiverse server with lemmy.world, the financial health of the cluster is worth paying attention to.


A small piece of news that I think is worth highlighting: the iOS client IceCubes will not have support for the GoToSocial software, because the GoToSocial Code of Conduct prohibits contributions that are generated by AI. Every software is political in some form, and fediverse software makes the political aspect of software much more explicit. The fediverse talks about the plural politics of people often in terms of servers and moderation. By having many different servers, people can join the community that they align with. What’s interesting to me about this disagreement between GoToSocial and IceCubes is that this can extent to software itself as well. There is value in having multiple different clients that all offer roughly the same function, and having multiple different microblogging platforms that all do the same thing of posting. Software is political, and that people can express their politics via the software they choose is a good thing about the fediverse.

The Links


#nlnet

connectedplaces.online/reports…




At UN, western powers push phantom 'Palestine' recognition to safeguard Israel


Rather than act to end Israel's genocide in Gaza, western leaders rally behind a French-Saudi scheme for fictive statehood that entrenches Israeli supremacy and props up the PA
in reply to technocrit

I didn't realise just how biased Middle East Eye was until this article. What a shitrag.
in reply to FishFace

I'm not sure what you mean. It seemed relatively on point.
in reply to FishFace

I didn't realize how biased you are till i read your comment
in reply to FishFace

Polls say that the entire world thinks zionists are shitrags right? and their payments to the UN must not be working anymore. I know these things take time, but I do want to see Netenyahoo, Smotrich and ben gvir pay for their war crimes in the usual manner we deal with genociding war criminals-- after a fair trial of course. And, all the Israelis who supported this regime should each stand trial after. The whole stolen country is full of genocidal criminals. murderers, and land thieves.

By your comment I assume you're a zionist. Might be time for you and yours to start pretending you never supported any of this.

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in reply to kreskin

I support a two-state solution, whatever that means in your lexicon. But yes, the Israeli officials ought to be tried and sentenced for crimes against humanity.


British soldier goes on trial for Bloody Sunday massacre


For the first time, a British soldier has gone on trial for murder over the 1972 Bloody Sunday massacre of Northern Irish protesters. Families have spent half a decade fighting to get the case to court, blaming authorities for whitewashing the killings.
in reply to technocrit

That is actually pretty amazing. Too little too late but damn, it happened.

in reply to ExtremeDullard

This is a known issue. It should be fixed in the next release (hopefully).

in reply to schizoidman

Good article. Will finish it later but it seems pretty neutral and relevant painting both the US and China's history and recent actions. Many interesting parts, guy knows LLMs are not the way to AGI, wonder how much more the American LLM bubble can hold. From what I read, he seems like a real, brilliant scientist, driven by wanting to understand consciousness, but also an Oppenheimer type.
Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to schizoidman

The leads buried pretty deep:

It was in summer 2020, in the early months of Covid, Zhu says, that he made the decision to leave the US. He cited his disaffection with the direction of the AI community and the hothouse of American politics – both its leftwing brand of campus progressivism and the Trump-era national security crusades. There was also a personal factor. His younger daughter, Zhu Yi, is a figure skater who was recruited in 2018 to compete for China in the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics


In general he seems more angry at the direction silicon valley ai is going rather then how US politics are going. He thinks larger more traditional explainable statistical models are the way forward as opposed to the black box neural networks and transformers that power llms and most other models in this recent wave.

China is giving him hundreds of millions in grants to pursue those theories, whereas silicon valley vcs probably won't give him a dime unless it's got an llm in it and US research grants are drying up in general but especially to Chinese professors.



What are the activity_id formats for various platforms?


TL;DR: Any of you who are more familiar with Fediverse platforms that aren't Lemmy/Piefed, can you let me know what the AP_IDs look like for users, posts, comments, and, if applicable, communities?

So, I've rewritten the search / search boxes in Tesseract to skip the search and directly resolve activity pub URLs for users, posts, comments, and communities. I'm loving this as it makes things so much faster and easier.

To make that work, and reduce false positives/negatives, I have to do some pre-flight checks on the URL that's submitted to the search.

Currently, it checks if the domain is to a known federated instance and looks for specific paths in the URL. If it detects the URL is an AP_ID URL, it will only resolve the object and redirect you to it (skipping the lengthy search step). For false negatives, it will pass it to the regular search but still try a federated lookup along with the search.

For Lemmy and Piefed, those are:
- /u/ for users
- /c/ for communities
- /post/ for posts
- /comment/ for comments.

For Mbin, I think it's the same except it uses /m/ for communities (they call them "magazines" I believe).

I think mastoon uses /user or maybe /username/ in the AP identifiers?

Any of you who are more familiar with Fediverse platforms that aren't Lemmy/Piefed, can you let me know what the AP_IDs look like for users, posts, comments, and, if applicable, communities?

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in reply to Admiral Patrick

Re: What are the activity_id formats for various platforms?


admiralpatrick@lemmy.world I think you would be better served by checking for the Link header. NodeBB and WordPress do it, if that gives you some idea of implementation?
in reply to julian

Re: What are the activity_id formats for various platforms?


It took me a minute to find, but it is detailed in evan@cosocial.ca's write up about HTTP Discovery of ActivityPub Objects.

This is probably exactly what you're looking for.

swicg.github.io/activitypub-ht…

I think your current approach has merit but is limited. If you know the instance software by URL and can resolve it using path matching without the use of a pre-flight request, that's absolutely a better way forward. The downside is you have to know the URL patterns of every software. You'll never "catch 'em all"!

However, if that method fails, doing a pre-flight check to grab Link also works and is a viable way forward.

You can test against NodeBB users or posts.

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in reply to julian

I think you would be better served by checking for the Link header


Can't really do that, client-side, in a browser application. CORS is a perpetual cockblock (though I understand why it is), and I'd rather not make an internal API endpoint to do the lookup.

The application polls Lemmy's getFederatedInstances API endpoint at startup, so it has a list of every activity pub server your instance knows about. That's the first and primary check for the URL that's being searched.

The second check is just to rule out non activity pub URLs that point to a federated instance (e..g. lemmy.world/modlog, lemm.world/pictrs/image/blah.w… etc).

Goal isn't to "catch 'em all" but to catch the most used ones. If there's one I don't account for, either by omission or because the federated platform didn't exist when I made the patterns, then it will just fall back to a regular search which also includes trying to resolve it as a federated URL (which is the current behavior in all prior versions).

The goal is just to simply short-circuit the search behavior if the query is a known ap_id URL in order to avoid a lengthy search process and quickly redirect you to your instance's local copy.

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in reply to Admiral Patrick

I maintain my own Lemmy client (Blorp), and this sounds like a cool idea. How do you get your known list of federated instances?

I currently have my own threadiverse crawler I wrote, but I disregard any Lemmy/PieFed instance with <20 monthly active users. That brings the list down to about 63 Lemmy instances and 7 PieFed. I wonder if that list is extensive enough to implement the resolve object mechanism you mentioned.

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in reply to Lee Duna

I think the countries that refuse to compete in the genocide song festival should just get together and organise their own genocide-free song festival.

Disgusting that so many countries haven't protested yet, and even more disgusted at Germany for insisting that Israel should be part of it, but good on the slowly increasing number of countries that are finally taking a stand.

in reply to mcv

The name is already there. You said it. "The genocide-free song festival."


Gaza Is Burning, and We Are Living It


Man… Gaza is burning. Right now, people I know, families like mine, are trapped, scared, and running for their lives. Israel says it’s targeting Hamas, but it’s us, the civilians, paying the price. Homes are being destroyed, kids are terrified, and the streets are chaos.

This isn’t just news to me, it’s my reality. Every explosion, every death, every piece of rubble is part of our lives right now. People are fleeing south with whatever they can carry, selling what little they have just to survive. And the world… it’s mostly watching.

I’m from Gaza. This is my home, my people, my life—and seeing it called a “military operation” while families suffer breaks something inside me.

https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/israel-says-gaza-is-burning-it-launches-huge-ground-assault-2025-09-16/

in reply to InsideGaza

We don't allow editorializing headlines. The OG headline here is "Israel says 'Gaza is burning' as it launches ground assault"

You can editorialize in the body of the post or as a comment, but not the headline.

(I'd personally lead with "no shit Israel, you're burning it!" but you do you.)

Please revert the headline or we'll have to remove the post.


in reply to silence7

Permafrost melting also plays into it I guess. Think about that: large areas - larger than many countries - have adapted to permafrost, i.e. below a certain depth the ground is always frozen - and now it's melting. We're so fucked.
in reply to A_norny_mousse

This study critically reviews the existing models and concludes that focused deep heat and gas from below the permafrost may be the key factor allowing the formation of GECs, while atmospheric heating indirectly triggers their formation by accelerating cryogenic process rates and the formation of new lakes and rivers. GECs appear to be associated with faulting in the area and form where sub-lake or sub-river talik structures meet local thinning of the permafrost.

in reply to RandAlThor

So today I learned that that Meme with the Burley mountain man nodding at you, yeah that one, that's Robert Redford. I would never have guessed that in 100 years.
in reply to njm1314

Sorry, you seem to be confused. That’s Jeremiah Johnson in the GIF.
in reply to RandAlThor

Well that's dumb! Why not at other ages? 115 fox example? 89?! That's not even a round number! Nah nah nah! We demand he come back for at least one more year.


Tensions flare as Chinese and Philippine ships collide near disputed shoal in South China Sea


China’s coast guard accused a Philippine ship of deliberately ramming one of its vessels on Tuesday near Scarborough Shoal, a disputed territory that both countries claim in the South China Sea. The Philippines denied it, saying China’s forces used powerful water cannons that damaged its ship and injured a crew member.

https://apnews.com/article/philippines-south-china-sea-scarborough-shoal-collision-fc31a170189e4747b8314fb605ca7d0c

in reply to RandAlThor

From the sound of it, this was a commercial Filipino fishing vessel that likely rammed the Chinese ship by accident because the Chinese navy damaged that ship with powerful water cannons.



Israel has committed genocide in Gaza, says UN commission of inquiry


UN commission of inquiry has concluded that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza and accused senior Israeli officials including Benjamin Netanyahu of inciting it.

The United Nations independent international commission of inquiry (COI), which does not speak on behalf of the UN and has been criticised strongly by Israel, cited the scale of the killings, aid blockages, forced displacement and the destruction of a fertility clinic in the territory to support its genocide finding.

in reply to geneva_convenience

Brilliant. Now we've got the obvious out of the way, what the fuck is anyone or anything with power going to do about it?


Anwar: Malaysia to take firm Gaza stand in Trump meeting, urges decisive action against Israel


He said that while many nations have strongly voiced their positions, mere statements and calls are not sufficient, and must instead be followed up with decisive actions.

in reply to Lee Duna

Hell, I don't want to live here--- why the fook would any Canadian who aren't braindead stupid want to come to this shit hole with its shit hole government???
in reply to selkiesidhe

Exactly my question. Why is anyone still even trying to come here to live?
in reply to thatradomguy

ive met a few, they are quite literally, in the most literal sense. very, very, very stupid people.
in reply to Lee Duna

News flash: smart people with resources don't want to live in an authoritarian shithole run by a wannabe dictator.


Can you be sued for defaming virtual K-pop stars? South Korea court says yes


cross-posted from: lemmy.zip/post/49220518

They may be fictional characters, but they are voiced by real people, the court says.




Can you be sued for defaming virtual K-pop stars? South Korea court says yes


They may be fictional characters, but they are voiced by real people, the court says.





Trump boasts he ordered another lethal strike on a cartel boat in international waters


in reply to ExLisper

The media is really careful about using “alleged” in cases where they obviously dont need to, in order to sow doubt, and not using it in cases where they definitely need to, to pretend that some bullshit narrative is certain even though the opposite is true
in reply to ExLisper

It's shocking how the media just repeat the statements of this government without any questions asked. They're really functioning as propaganda distributors rather than journalists these days. We're seeing it also with them repeating uncritically the FBI's claims about the Charlie Kirk shooting suspect.
in reply to floofloof

Bold move admitting to war crimes cotton. Let's see if it pays off.
in reply to Doomsider

When have war crimes ever come back to bite a US President? Getting away with it is a long tradition.
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No Other Land director recounts ‘horrific’ raid on his home by Israeli forces


By MEE staff
Published date: 14 September 2025 16:18 BST

Adra said the raid followed an attack by Israeli settlers on his village in Masafer Yatta on Saturday, in which two of his brothers and one cousin were wounded. He accompanied them to hospital, while nine Israeli soldiers stormed his home in his absence.

He said he had been unable to return home since, as soldiers had blockaded the village entrance.

Adra, who has long worked as a journalist and filmmaker documenting settler violence in Masafer Yatta, reported that he and his co-director, Hamdan Ballal, had faced intensified attacks and targeting since they won an Oscar for best documentary.

Palestine reshared this.



No Other Land director recounts ‘horrific’ raid on his home by Israeli forces


cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/36189837

By MEE staff
Published date: 14 September 2025 16:18 BST
Adra said the raid followed an attack by Israeli settlers on his village in Masafer Yatta on Saturday, in which two of his brothers and one cousin were wounded. He accompanied them to hospital, while nine Israeli soldiers stormed his home in his absence.

He said he had been unable to return home since, as soldiers had blockaded the village entrance.

Adra, who has long worked as a journalist and filmmaker documenting settler violence in Masafer Yatta, reported that he and his co-director, Hamdan Ballal, had faced intensified attacks and targeting since they won an Oscar for best documentary.




No Other Land director recounts ‘horrific’ raid on his home by Israeli forces


By MEE staff
Published date: 14 September 2025 16:18 BST

Adra said the raid followed an attack by Israeli settlers on his village in Masafer Yatta on Saturday, in which two of his brothers and one cousin were wounded. He accompanied them to hospital, while nine Israeli soldiers stormed his home in his absence.

He said he had been unable to return home since, as soldiers had blockaded the village entrance.

Adra, who has long worked as a journalist and filmmaker documenting settler violence in Masafer Yatta, reported that he and his co-director, Hamdan Ballal, had faced intensified attacks and targeting since they won an Oscar for best documentary.





New details about the development of the SLCM-N sea-based nuclear missile


The United States has decided to return nuclear-tipped cruise missiles to its arsenal of nuclear attack submarines. The new promising sea—based missile will be developed by six companies, of which five are responsible for the rocket itself, and the sixth for the engine. This is reported by Navy Recognition.

The objective of this project is to develop a missile that will be included in the arsenal of nuclear submarines of the Virginia type. According to the Pentagon's plans, the American fleet should receive the first missiles in 2034.

In order not to delay the development too much and not to spend fabulous sums on it, it was decided to create the SLCM-N based on existing missiles, i.e. the same Tomahawk. At least in terms of exterior design and dimensions. This is necessary in order for the new missile to fit the launchers of nuclear submarines.

At the same time, the commissioning of the new missile will be fraught with certain difficulties, since the Virginia-class submarines are not designed to accommodate nuclear weapons on them.

It is assumed that the SLCM-N will receive an adapted modification of the W80-4 nuclear warhead, which is still under development. This warhead is specially designed for long-range missiles.

https://www.realcleardefense.com/articles/2024/04/04/the_us_is_building_a_nuclear_sea-launched_cruise_missile_1022949.html



Timor-Leste students protest government plan to buy new cars for parliamentarians


Timor-Leste police have fired tear gas at protesters who rallied against a plan to buy new official cars for MPs, which triggered anger in one of the poorest nations in South-East Asia.

More than 1,000 people, mostly university students, rallied near the National Parliament in Dili to protest against the plan approved last year to procure cars for each of the 65 members of parliament.

The plan was the latest flashpoint in the resource-dependent country, where more than 40 per cent of its population lives below the poverty line, according to the World Bank.



Netanyahu and Rubio stick to established Israeli-US narrative on Gaza war


Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and U.S. Senator Marco Rubio recently held a joint press conference in Jerusalem, reiterating their aligned positions on the ongoing Gaza conflict. Netanyahu accepted "full responsibility" for the Israeli strike on Qatar, while Rubio supported Israel’s stance, emphasizing the need for Hamas to be neutralized as an armed entity.

This event highlights the continued strong coordination between Israel and the U.S., even as regional and international criticism grows. Meanwhile, the Arab-Islamic summit in Doha is meeting to discuss the escalating crisis and potential collective responses.

in reply to Ahmed Abu Ouda

It’s not the ‘Gaza war’. As if it’s a battle between equals. It’s the Gaza genocide, a mass slaughter of mostly innocent and defenseless people.
in reply to Ahmed Abu Ouda

Did the source say Senator Marco Rubio instead of Secretary of State or was that a mistake you made?


Huge piles of rusty WWII ammunition are poisoning the Baltic Sea


Approximately 1.6 million tons of old ammunition are lying on the bottom of the North Sea and Baltic Sea, posing a considerable danger: their casings are slowly rusting and emitting toxic substances such as TNT compounds.

Most of the ammunition was deliberately sunk in the ocean after the war because the Allies were concerned that Germans would resume hostilities against them again at some point, and ordered that Germany destroy all ordnance. At the time the easiest way to do so seemed to be to simply dump everything into the sea.

in reply to Lee Duna

Every time I read something like this the laziness and lack of foresight is just baffling. It's hard to comprehend.
in reply to NecroParagon

Or possibly the mentality of "it is now someone else's problem".
in reply to NecroParagon

It’s hard to overstate just how systemic “we can fix it later” was in the mid 20th century. Progress had happened quickly since the turn of the century, many centuries old problems were solved overnight by new inventions (like penicillin) and it was assumed that that progress would continue.

For instance, the century date problem, later known as the Y2K problem, was first realized in the 1950s. Then brought to light again in the 1970s. But nobody did anything about it until the mid 90s.

in reply to atomicbocks

Eeehh? The Y2K problem is result because of decisions taken in the 70's (for very good reasons) and nothing was done until the 90's because it wasn't an issue before. Y2K did not exist even as an idea in the 1950's
in reply to atomicbocks

Old science fiction books are exactly like this. They just assumed we'd have technological solutions to everything.

Also, they weren't living in a largely collapsed ecosystem. Today we view this story in horror, but back then there were 1/4th the people, wildlife and nature was bountiful. It was probably hard to imagine that we humans could substantially alter the world. Hell, people today look into the sky and say global warming is bunk. Yeah, looks huge from down here! Take a look from space, paint on a marble.

in reply to Lee Duna

Classic mentality of 'lets dump it in the sea'


Linux security


Hi there,

Win10 is soon not supported. Tbh Linux have been on my radar since I started to break from the US big tech.

But how is security handled in Linux? Linux is pretty open-source, or am I not understanding it correctly.
So how can I as a new user make sure to have the most secure machine as possible?

in reply to BCsven

Can I use it to run pirated games through WINE and Lutris?
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in reply to KernelTale

I'm sure you could. I personally haven't tried that, but games work well for me, as do the random windows engineering tools I gathered in the 2000s

in reply to acargitz

When it comes to climate policy, i.e., the policy that directly impacts the future survival of human civilization, a stark choice seems to arise: US is force for evil; China is a force for good. If that makes us uncomfortable, my fellow westerners, well, cold hard facts don't care about our feelings. If you want to save liberal democracy as a concept, we have to deeply, deeply reform the West.
in reply to acargitz

Exclude the US in trade, make us suffer, let people here die, but don't give in to tyranny


Pro-Palestine actors use Emmy Awards platform to slam Gaza genocide


"it is my obligation as a Jewish person to distinguish Jews from the state of Israel. Our religion and our culture is such an important and long-standing institution that is separate to this sort of ethnonationalist state"

"I cannot work with somebody who justifies or supports the genocide. I can't. It's as simple as that, and we shouldn't be able to do that. In this industry, and in any other industry,"

in reply to solo

I hate awards shows because of all the preaching these rich assholes do.

Still, I appreciate that they did this. (And still glad I didn't sit through it.)

in reply to FlashMobOfOne

Bardem doesn't come across that way to me

Einbinder later told Variety that "it is my obligation as a Jewish person to distinguish Jews from the state of Israel. Our religion and our culture is such an important and long-standing institution that is separate to this sort of ethnonationalist state".


Einbinder seems pretty legit too

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in reply to etuomaala

Trump's suggestion that the incident could have been accidental.


PicardFacepalm.png

in reply to etuomaala

"Accidentally" drone bombing a separate, uninvolved country, may be more concerning than doing it deliberately.


'My wife died giving birth after Trump cut funding to our clinic'


For decades, America has been the largest donor to Afghanistan, and in 2024, US funds made up a staggering 43% of all aid coming into the country.

The Trump administration has justified withdrawing it, saying there were "credible and longstanding concerns that funding was benefiting terrorist groups, including... the Taliban", who govern the country. The US government further added that they had reports stating that at least $11m were "being siphoned or enriching the Taliban".

The report that the US State Department referenced was made by the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR). It said that $10.9m of US taxpayer money had been paid to the Taliban-controlled government by partners of USAID in "taxes, fees, duties, or utilities".

The Taliban government denies that aid money was going into their hands.

in reply to Lee Duna

you will never win over conservatives by showing them how policies hurt people in a stan shaped country
Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)


Japan again makes no mention of Koreans' forced labor at Sado memorial event - The Korea Times


cross-posted from: lemmy.zip/post/48702462

The Sado Mines, once famous as a gold mine in the 17th and 19th centuries, was mainly used to produce war supplies for the Japanese Imperial Army during World War II. More than 1,500 Koreans are reported to have been forced into labor at the mines from 1940-45.




Farewell to the fediverse


in reply to ghedin

This does remind me that I wish that Fediverse clients would have RSS reader functionality built in by default. I have a sneaking suspicion some do and I just don't know how to use the feature. Effectively allowing people to "boost" aka repost with backlink RSS updates on a Fediverse client would enable most of what a blogger would want from the Fediverse, with the exception of receiving all the comments on the posts they share.

Bridgy does that, but then it is essentially just a mirror so it does have the server inefficiency of redundant hosting built in.

That you might say is the fundamental design decision of Activity pub, shifting the hosting burden from a single host to a distributed network of server instances. This enables a more robust network, with instances holding content the users have interacted with regardless of if the original host instance goes down. It also reduces time to load for content after it has beed federated to a user's local instance, assuming it is closer in proximity and capable enough. At the same time, this makes content ownership and control a challenge.

Functionally the Fediverse is a public commons with content ownership practically distributed across the network of instances, whether copyright says so or not. Attempts to impose universal author controls on this framework face a lot of dissonance because it is fundamentally at odds with the underlying concept of federation as distributed hosting. The minute a host begins hosting content over which they have no control (such as encrypted posts) the potential for abuse skyrockets.

Since the popularization of the Distributed Social Network concept I have wondered whether pre-existing content distribution infrastructure like RSS might not be more advantageous as a backbone for social networking, with the development load entirely shifted to the client side and away from protocols. The IndieWeb project is playing with some of these ideas, and I have seen some prototypes online of RSS based social networks, so my question is, what is the fundamental advantage of ActivityPub over the combination of these other existing protocols with longer histories and broader existing implementation? RSS, email, XMPP, etc. Is lower latency really a good enough justification for widely redundant data distribution?

This question becomes increasingly relevant when it comes to multimedia, and the minute that you offload multimedia to central servers by link embedding instead of hosting within the instance, boom you are back to the old centralized architecture and why are you federating?

So I am going to pose this question to the Fediverse myself, what is the reason that federated content distribution should be adopted for general use rather than distributed aggregation? That is to say of a client performed with the same features as a Fediverse front end, but all of the content was self-hosted and listed via RSS or Atom with comments handled via Webmention, direct messages via email or XMPP, and moderation handled at the level of aggregation via instances (meaning a user "joins" or "subscribes" to an instance, and that instance provides a ban list, list of feeds subscribed to by its users for discovery, provides a user directory) what would be the features that this type of system would lack that ActivityPub based systems have in place?

There are three advantages I see, and I'm not completely sure they justify mass adoption vs. the cost of broad redundancy of content and authorship issues.:

  1. Choosing local instance for faster loading, but this only is an advantage after content is brought in for the first time, in which case it actually is slower as first the instance has to pull the cintent and then serve it to the user.
  2. "all" content in the protocol is of the same type, allowing for easier interoperability between clients and services. I'm thinking this is the root of what most people will say is the big advantage of ActivityPub vs. older protocols, but I'd like to hear more about why this is enough of a reason to overcome the inertia of existing mass adoption and support of the alternatives.
  3. It isn't based in XML, and modern devs don't want to use XML. As I'm not a coder, I cant say how big an influence this has, but from what I have seen it seems to be a substantial factor. Can anyone explain why?
in reply to Coopr8

Some interesting thoughts - and questions - here. Seems you posted them in the wrong place, given the paltry response. Or possibly at the wrong time (i.e. 6 hours after the herd had moved on, a perennial problem with social media).

It isn’t based in XML, and modern devs don’t want to use XML. As I’m not a coder, I cant say how big an influence this has, but from what I have seen it seems to be a substantial factor. Can anyone explain why?


XML is space-inefficient with lots of redundancy, and therefore considered to be ugly. Coders tend to have tidy minds so these things take on an importance that they don't really merit. It's also just fashion: markup, like XML and HTML, is a thing of the 90s, so using them is the coder equivalent of wearing MC Hammer pants.

in reply to JubilantJaguar

Thanks for clarifying, I figured fashion had at least something to do with it given the number of actively used protocols and services that still use it, XMPP being the one I use the most myself.

Even on XMPP I have seen several projects to "translate" the protocol into other languages (specifically Rust in one).

Efficiency makes sense, but then also the number of devs proficient in a language due to shifts in the emphasis of training and education is just as strong a force.

in reply to ghedin

Blogs are already “social” by nature (comments)


Most Blogs require you to create an account and login to your specific blog. I ain't doin that. But if it appears in my feed on my account that I control, I might throw in my $0.02, which will improve engagement on your blog.

In practice, ActivityPub’s distributive nature replicates content across a multitude of servers (every server where someone follows the blog), which, while not catastrophic here, is at least inefficient.


I mean, that's kinda the point though, also. Any federated product will do the same.

Given that — and the fact that few people follow and almost nobody interacts via ActivityPub — I’ve been considering removing Manual from the fediverse for several months.


I mean, that's fair, but also, what is it costing you to keep it? You're greatly improving visibility of your blog.


in reply to Novi Sad

Not conservative. Keep them propoganda mills. The other heirs wanted it to shift to more reliable news.
in reply to Novi Sad

As long as they are allowed to spread nazi propanda, there will be nazis killing your children, or doing everything they can to get them in their weird death cult.



This is what solidarity looks like


While most of this post is about Blacksky, there are a couple of sections that focus on the fediverse -- "And yet..." and "A great learning opportunity for the ActivityPub Fediverse"
in reply to flamingos-cant (hopepunk arc)

I do think some kind of separation of user data from servers, like what AT Proto does, is actually quite desirable.


Curious as well to see how Blacksky develops, having that split would be useful.

I just don’t like that PDSes can have their data harvested by whoever, I think data sharing with a server should be opt-in.


Same

in reply to Blaze (he/him)

Also agreed that sharing should be opt-in (and here on fedi as well).

In terms of Blacksky's approach to private data, Rudy shared this earlier today blog.smokesignal.events/posts/… ... the working group on private data is having its first meeting this week, and there are a couple of other proposals as well, so it'll be interesting to see how things converge. Bluesky has said they're going to add it to the protocol but the timeframe isn't clear. My guess is people will go ahead with off-protocil implementations initally and plan to adapt once it's standardized (famous last words).



U.S. Deputy State Secretary Landau expresses regrets over detention of S. Koreans | Yonhap News Agency


According to Seoul’s foreign ministry, Landau conveyed his deep regrets over the detention of hundreds of South Korean workers in an immigration crackdown earlier this month at an electric vehicle battery plant construction site for a joint venture between Hyundai Motor Group and LG Energy Solution in Bryan County, Georgia.

A total of 316 South Korean workers returned home Friday, after being held in a detention center for a week.

in reply to spaghettiwestern

Did anyone even acknowledge that they straight up murdered those North Koreans? Or the Venezuelans? Or whatever I probably missed.
in reply to Björn

Oh, of course not.

But these are skilled workers and, whoopsie!, we kinda need them.

in reply to rc__buggy

You will never see them come back again. This is gonna cost billions for the us.

I will have popcorn and laugh.

in reply to Björn

silly liberal, those aren't people /s

But seriously no, and no one of relevance ever will. We live in the bad place.


in reply to CrazyHorse

There absolutely is justification for violence, political or otherwise. To say there is none is a violators way of ensuring they can continue to violate unchecked. Tagging politics as a motivator for such violence is also a misdirection. Hate is not political, race is not political. What makes them seem political is the fact that they are accepted and pushed by our elected officials. Those officials fully believe they are and should be immune to any repercussions for what they do and say. This belief is what gives them the will to ignore the protests and laws on the books that go against their wishes. What other option does anyone have but to show them in the strongest way possible that they are destroying everything they touch?
Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to Sam_Bass

There absolutely is justification for violence, political or otherwise.


Blessed are they who praise peace, for they shall bury the peacemakers.

in reply to CrazyHorse

the post I had commented this on was deleted so I'm going to put it here for no reason.

I hold the following opinions:

  1. political violence is probably a bad idea. this is for multiple reasons, one of which being that it usually doesn't create the intended effects.
  2. charlie kirk might have been the worst piece of shit commentator of that era. i'm glad he shut the fuck up.
  3. there are a lot of political commentators like him. the benefit of having one less of them is overshadowed by the detriment of the reaction to a political assassination.
  4. his family is the absolute least of my concerns. i don't think about them at all.


#contraapecdabandidagem #anistiaéocaralho


cross-posted from: lemmy.eco.br/post/16747384