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North Korea | Kim Jong Un says dialogue with US possible if denuclearisation demands dropped


North Korea's leader, who has been building the country's nuclear programme despite economic sanctions and arms embargoes from the UN Security Council, has stated that he would be open to dialogue with the US should President Donald Trump rescind his denuclearisation demands.


Archived version: archive.is/newest/france24.com…


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.

in reply to BrikoX

On the one hand we have Ukraine as a warning example of what can happen to nations that give up their nuclear weapons.
On the other hand South Africa did the same and haven't been invaded.

Something something geography visavi aggressors.

I don't think NK would ever give up their nuclear arms. But maybe calls for democratization could be raised and leveraged against lessened sanctions?

in reply to guy

"<...> calls for democratization <...>" by US? They despise democracy and are doing everything possible to get rid of it at this moment.
Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)


Modi urges Indians to get rid of foreign products amid strained US ties


The PM has been encouraging the use of “Swadeshi”, or made-in-India goods.


Archived version: archive.is/newest/straitstimes…


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.



South Africa marks World Rhino Day as poaching slows but one still killed daily


Conservationists mark world rhino day on Monday while they are still in a constant battle against poaching. In South Africa, the fight has been going on for decades.


Archived version: archive.is/newest/apnews.com/a…


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.

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)


Anger in Australia after telecom outage linked to deaths


The outage left hundreds of people unable to contact emergency services and has been linked to multiple deaths.


Archived version: archive.is/newest/bbc.com/news…


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.



Al-Sharaa arrives in New York for first UN visit by a Syrian president in nearly six decades


Syrian President Ahmad al-Sharaa arrived in New York on Sunday to attend the UN General Assembly, the first Syrian head of state to do so in nearly six decades. The last time a Syrian president addressed the gathering was in 1967, underscoring the visit’s historic nature.


Archived version: archive.is/newest/france24.com…


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.

in reply to BrikoX

ISIS terrorist arrives in New York. Fixed the title for you.
in reply to It'sbetterwithbutter

No better place for terrorists to gather than US. US created all the terror groups in Arab world after all.


[SOLVED] my var directory on debian 13.1 has only 500 MiB free space and I cannot update flatpak anymore. How do I solve this?


[SOLVED] too many unsuccessful flatpak updates lingered in this directory. It sorted itself out after rebooting the system.

var capacity 11.1 GiB, var usage 10.6 GiB

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

I installed baobab 48.0.2 with sudo apt.

should I install ncdu 2.9.1 with uniget install ncdu? the apt version is older than that

in reply to arsus5478

You do you, but I think it's rarely worth it having the absolutely newest version of something. The Debian version of a package may be older, but often has the advantage of being well-tested. And the Debian version of ncdu is all I've ever used and it has worked well.

uniget, huh? That's not a package manager I've ever heard of before.



Lockdown Notice: This community is temporarily closed


Because of the behaviour I’ve seen in recent discussions, I’m placing !fediversenews@piefed.social on lockdown until further notice.

The problem isn’t disagreement or debate—that’s always welcome. The problem is brigading: people from outside the community piling in, not to engage in good faith, but to stir conflict and derail conversation. When that happens, it ceases to be discussion and turns into harassment.

This community was created to provide a space where people can follow Fediverse news, share perspectives, and talk about developments in a civil manner. I won’t let that be undermined by targeted disruption. For the time being, no new posts will be allowed. Once things cool down, I’ll review the situation and reopen the community.

Thank you to everyone who has contributed in good faith—you’re the reason this community exists.

reshared this



Largest Caucus in House Endorses Bill to Block US Bombs to Israel | Common Dreams


cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/36498075

Jon Queally
Sep 21, 2025
The Congressional Progressive Caucus over the weekend officially endorsed a bill that would block the sale of many offensive US weapons to Israel. This move coincides with growing outrage from US voters from across the political spectrum who say they have seen enough of American complicity with the genocidal humanitarian blockade and bombardment of the Gaza Strip.

The Block the Bombs Act, first introduced in May by Rep. Delia C. Ramirez (D-Ill.) and now backed by 49 co-sponsors, calls for a prohibition on the sale of a variety of US weapons and a limitation on military services to the Israeli government, accused of committing a genocide in Gaza.

The vote by the caucus, which took place Saturday and was first reported by Zeteo, marks a historic shift—even for the most progressive group of lawmakers on Capitol Hill—that provides “a significant boost to efforts to hold Israel accountable for its genocidal war in Gaza.”




Largest Caucus in House Endorses Bill to Block US Bombs to Israel | Common Dreams


Jon Queally
Sep 21, 2025

The Congressional Progressive Caucus over the weekend officially endorsed a bill that would block the sale of many offensive US weapons to Israel. This move coincides with growing outrage from US voters from across the political spectrum who say they have seen enough of American complicity with the genocidal humanitarian blockade and bombardment of the Gaza Strip.

The Block the Bombs Act, first introduced in May by Rep. Delia C. Ramirez (D-Ill.) and now backed by 49 co-sponsors, calls for a prohibition on the sale of a variety of US weapons and a limitation on military services to the Israeli government, accused of committing a genocide in Gaza.

The vote by the caucus, which took place Saturday and was first reported by Zeteo, marks a historic shift—even for the most progressive group of lawmakers on Capitol Hill—that provides “a significant boost to efforts to hold Israel accountable for its genocidal war in Gaza.”





Largest Caucus in House Endorses Bill to Block US Bombs to Israel | Common Dreams


cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/36498075

Jon Queally
Sep 21, 2025
The Congressional Progressive Caucus over the weekend officially endorsed a bill that would block the sale of many offensive US weapons to Israel. This move coincides with growing outrage from US voters from across the political spectrum who say they have seen enough of American complicity with the genocidal humanitarian blockade and bombardment of the Gaza Strip.

The Block the Bombs Act, first introduced in May by Rep. Delia C. Ramirez (D-Ill.) and now backed by 49 co-sponsors, calls for a prohibition on the sale of a variety of US weapons and a limitation on military services to the Israeli government, accused of committing a genocide in Gaza.

The vote by the caucus, which took place Saturday and was first reported by Zeteo, marks a historic shift—even for the most progressive group of lawmakers on Capitol Hill—that provides “a significant boost to efforts to hold Israel accountable for its genocidal war in Gaza.”




Largest Caucus in House Endorses Bill to Block US Bombs to Israel | Common Dreams


Jon Queally
Sep 21, 2025

The Congressional Progressive Caucus over the weekend officially endorsed a bill that would block the sale of many offensive US weapons to Israel. This move coincides with growing outrage from US voters from across the political spectrum who say they have seen enough of American complicity with the genocidal humanitarian blockade and bombardment of the Gaza Strip.

The Block the Bombs Act, first introduced in May by Rep. Delia C. Ramirez (D-Ill.) and now backed by 49 co-sponsors, calls for a prohibition on the sale of a variety of US weapons and a limitation on military services to the Israeli government, accused of committing a genocide in Gaza.

The vote by the caucus, which took place Saturday and was first reported by Zeteo, marks a historic shift—even for the most progressive group of lawmakers on Capitol Hill—that provides “a significant boost to efforts to hold Israel accountable for its genocidal war in Gaza.”



#USA


Inside Zohran Mamdani's Campaign


cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/36497627

Ryan Grim
Sep 21, 2025
Today we’re publishing an excerpt from Theodore Hamm's new book Run Zohran Run!

It’s now available for pre-order via OR Books — which also published Refaat Alareer’s collection “If I Must Die” — and it’s an inside account of Mamdani's stunning upset victory over Andrew Cuomo in the June Democratic primary for New York City mayor. (Hamm covered the primary for Drop Site.)

Six weeks before the June 24 primary in the New York City mayoral race, Andrew Cuomo led Mamdani by over 20 points in the polls.

The following excerpt is a look at how the genocide in Gaza became the turning point in the New York City race. Read it below.

—Ryan Grim




Inside Zohran Mamdani's Campaign


Ryan Grim
Sep 21, 2025

Today we’re publishing an excerpt from Theodore Hamm's new book Run Zohran Run!

It’s now available for pre-order via OR Books — which also published Refaat Alareer’s collection “If I Must Die” — and it’s an inside account of Mamdani's stunning upset victory over Andrew Cuomo in the June Democratic primary for New York City mayor. (Hamm covered the primary for Drop Site.)

Six weeks before the June 24 primary in the New York City mayoral race, Andrew Cuomo led Mamdani by over 20 points in the polls.

The following excerpt is a look at how the genocide in Gaza became the turning point in the New York City race. Read it below.

—Ryan Grim





Inside Zohran Mamdani's Campaign


cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/36497627

Ryan Grim
Sep 21, 2025
Today we’re publishing an excerpt from Theodore Hamm's new book Run Zohran Run!

It’s now available for pre-order via OR Books — which also published Refaat Alareer’s collection “If I Must Die” — and it’s an inside account of Mamdani's stunning upset victory over Andrew Cuomo in the June Democratic primary for New York City mayor. (Hamm covered the primary for Drop Site.)

Six weeks before the June 24 primary in the New York City mayoral race, Andrew Cuomo led Mamdani by over 20 points in the polls.

The following excerpt is a look at how the genocide in Gaza became the turning point in the New York City race. Read it below.

—Ryan Grim




Inside Zohran Mamdani's Campaign


Ryan Grim
Sep 21, 2025

Today we’re publishing an excerpt from Theodore Hamm's new book Run Zohran Run!

It’s now available for pre-order via OR Books — which also published Refaat Alareer’s collection “If I Must Die” — and it’s an inside account of Mamdani's stunning upset victory over Andrew Cuomo in the June Democratic primary for New York City mayor. (Hamm covered the primary for Drop Site.)

Six weeks before the June 24 primary in the New York City mayoral race, Andrew Cuomo led Mamdani by over 20 points in the polls.

The following excerpt is a look at how the genocide in Gaza became the turning point in the New York City race. Read it below.

—Ryan Grim





Mondoweiss - New York Times and Zionism (3min Video)




GE-Proton10-16 Released


  • wine updated to latest bleeding-edge
  • dxvk updated to latest git
  • vkd3d-proton updated to latest git
  • vkd3d updated to latest git
  • dxvk-nvapi updated to latest git
  • proton build updated to use latest sdk (steam runtime)
  • protonfixes: fix added for ue4ss mod for stellar blade
  • added patch to workaround star citizen "unsupported os" popup
  • etaash (em-10/wine-wayland) patches updated and rebased

Nothing major this release, just the regular updating + rebasing ontop of upstream.



Baffled at PC freezing on Linux, but not on Windows for the same workload


This issue is a long time coming. I got a mini pc (Asrock Deskmini h110, i5-6400, 16gb) that I have used for a long time with Kubuntu/Kde Neon, and most of its life, it worked great. Some years ago, it started freezing, especially at Graphic intensive workload, so I thought some hardware issue and converted it into a NAS and it worked absolutely fine as well for a couple of years there too. Recently my wife needed a Windows PC to do some work, and since I had upgraded my NAS, I repurposed the same PC and installed Windows on it, and it worked absolutely fine for her too. Then I decided to check some Graphics intensive workload, like 3d benchmarking stuff, and it didn't freeze once. I was delighted, and thought maybe I didn't investigated the issue the first time, and the PC was fine all along. So I reinstalled Debian 13, and lo behold, the issue came back. I found out while I was using IKEA's 3d kitchen planner. So I replaced distros, and it froze on Ubuntu and CachyOS as well. I tried switching between Wayland and X11, switched browsers, but PC freezes seconds logging into IKEA's kitchen planner (as soon as 3d graphics are loaded). I reinstalled windows, and my wife has been designing a kitchen in IKEA's 3d kitchen planner for over an hour now, and it hasn't frozen once. What's going on? How do I even investigate this?

I have reinstalled Linux and had sudo dmesg -w running, but no logs are captured before it's frozen. I have reproduced the issue multiple times now on Linux, and not once it froze on Windows. I have also done memtests, and tried multiple disks both nvme and sata. Also have tried multiple browsers with apt and flatpaks. I really need Lemmy's collective intelligence to help me here.

Update: Well system stopped hanging with 'nomodeset' as boot parameter, confirming that it's Intel 915 driver. I tried variety of Intel related kernel parameters like psr, dc, guc, even messed with Intel cstate, but it hanged every time Intel 915 driver is even loaded. So ???

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to atk007

I feel like it possible bug in i915 driver at least it sounds so from symptoms , try add to boot parameters

i915.enable_psr=0 i915.enable_rc6=0

About log try enable debugfs

mount -t debugfs debugfs /sys/kernel/debug



Old laptop suddenly won't recognize Linux boot drive


I'm in a really weird situation, yesterday I installed Linux (Fedora Kinoite) on my mothers laptop (An old Asus F550C) and it worked perfectly fine. Great! Or so I thought.

We needed a few files from Windows 10, so I put that drive in, put the files on a USB stick, put the Linux drive back in and... Nothing? It recognizes the drive, but not the Linux boot option.
I put the drive in my pc and it works fine, the boot drive is also still detected in the laptop just fine.

What the hell could it be??

  • The laptop is fine (Windows drive works perfectly)
  • The drive is recognized in bios (But not the boot option)
  • The drive works fine in my desktop and can boot to Fedora
  • The laptop can boot to the USB drive I used to create the install
  • Yesterday it worked just fine
  • I went through the bios, but can't find any settings related to this (Secure boot did not fix it)

Update: the issue is solved! Windows somehow wiped the efiboot entry.

I mounted the drive from a live usb and ran

sudo efibootmgr --create --disk /dev/sda --part 1 --label "Fedora" --loader '\EFI\fedora\shimx64.efi'


After rebooting, the system works again!

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

I've dealt with something similar to this on a lenovo ideapad.

The BIOS picks up UEFI info from windows and messes up the boot config and order. I solved it by using grub2 rescue, booting to the correct Linux entry and using grub to update UEFI and write the config correctly again.

Super pain in the a**.

in reply to non_burglar

This ended up being the issue! Booted up a live USB, mounted the disk and ran

sudo efibootmgr --create --disk /dev/sda --part 1 --label "Fedora" --loader '\EFI\fedora\shimx64.efi'


After rebooting it worked again!

Now to never plug a windows drive into that PC again...



Cosmic Beta on September 25th!


Ive been running cosmic for the last couple of weeks and im very happy with it already. I think the future of linux desktops has never looked this bright.
in reply to mrmanager

I have an old laptop running it since a year ago. It's getting there. If you use it long enough, you will still regularly stumble on little things that are nicer to use on gnome or kde but it's getting there. I plan on switching my primary desktop to it for the 26.04 release
in reply to mrmanager

I was very excited for COSMIC but I have kind of moved on the Niri now. I am not sure it will lure me back.

That said, I have been using COSMIC Term and COSMIC Panel with Niri. So they still have their hooks in me.



Pre-Flight Check


This may seem like edging towards paranoia, however, how many of you do a pre-flight check of your network before you use your devices?

Every morning when I start up my computer, I do a pre-flight check against sites like DNSLeakCheck, and several others. It's a back check to make sure my network is operating in as private, secured, and an anonymous manner as possible, and perhaps give me a little more peace of mind.

To facilitate this in an expedient manner, I wrote a simple bat script to do just that.

@echo off
echo Opening websites in succession...

:: List of websites to open
set "websites=grc.com cloudflare.com/ssl/encrypted-sni browserleaks.com/dns dnscheck.tools ipleak.net"

:: Delay between opening each website (in seconds)
set "delay=5"

:: Loop through each website and open it
for %%i in (%websites%) do (
    echo Opening %%i...
    start "" "https://%%i"
    timeout /t %delay% /nobreak >nul
)

echo All websites opened.
# pause

Critique, input always welcomed.
in reply to guy

Well, I'm working on a python script that could be called with a cron. I'm also contemplating automating it with N8N since I selfhost it. However, tho I can code in basic terms in several languages, I am not the most competent coder, so it takes me a while. LOL

But again, I do appreciate your first comment and that you were concerned about my well being. I assure you I am a stable genius. lol Hey, it worked for one nut bag.....

in reply to irmadlad

Hope it works out and take care! Mistrust in fine as long as paranoia is kept in check 😀


Quality info on the aid situation in Gaza


Really great maps and info on how the aid stations are distributed and operate.

You hear that basically no aid is getting distributed, but the details of the aid stations being hours away and only open 20 minutes a day if at all really clarifies how performative and meaningless the "aid" is.

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

I had never heard of forensic-architecture.org before but the do some really impressive work


Israel attack on Yemeni newspaper was second deadliest on journalists ever recorded


Thirty one journalists and media staff were killed by Israeli strikes on newspaper offices in Yemen last week in what the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) said on Friday was the deadliest attack on journalists in the last 16 years.

Israel struck a newspaper complex in Sana’a, Yemen’s capital, which housed three Houthi-connected media outlets on 10 September. At the time, members of the Yemeni army’s press arm were finishing the weekly print edition, according to the publication’s editor-in-chief, which increased the number of journalists present during the strike.

At least 35 people were killed in the attack, including one child who accompanied a journalist to the office, and 131 were wounded, according to the Houthi ministry of health. All of the journalists worked for either the Houthi-affiliated 26 September newspaper or Yemen newspaper.

The attack was the second-deadliest against journalists that the CPJ had ever recorded, after the Maguindanao massacre in the Philippines in 2009.




The problem with Bernie Sanders’s ‘it is genocide’ admission - The US senator recognises the genocide of the Palestinian people but ends up blaming them for it.


History will judge us for whether we could see genocide for what it is, without asterisks, without exceptions, without the comfortable lies that let the powerful sleep while children starve to death or get torn to pieces. If we fail to grasp this fundamental truth, we do not just fail Palestinians. We fail every occupied, colonised, and oppressed people who might one day be told their resistance justifies their extermination.
Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to technocrit

Bingo. Took him years to admit it, but immediately opens up by blaming the genocide on Al-Aqsa Flood and the resistance groups fighting against nearly a century of settler-colonial genocide. Bernie's a sheepdog.
in reply to technocrit

Anyone who prefaces every criticism of Israel with a condemnation of KHAMMAS is an imperialist. And yet he still tries to cling on to his reputation as an egalitarian with hollow words of support for "oppressed people".


Six lessons I Learned From the Suspension of Jimmy Kimmel


Six lessons I Learned From the Suspension of Jimmy Kimmel #kimmel #chrisbowers #us #politics
wolvesandsheep.substack.com/p/…

in reply to kingofras

Would that actually do anything? There are allegations that he was an intelligence asset or so?
Or would they sacrifice Doland to avoid further investigation and others getting caught?


New to Proxmox, Facing Issues with Homelab Setup - Need Advice


cross-posted from: lemmy.buddyverse.net/post/5454

Hello everyone, I’m fairly new to Proxmox and struggling with my homelab setup. I have two machines running Proxmox 9: an HP EliteDesk 800 G5 Mini (Core i7-9700) and a Dell OptiPlex 7070 Micro (Core i3 9th gen). I’m running into several issues and would appreciate your insights.
  1. Networking Issue on EliteDesk: I have two VMs (both Ubuntu Server 24.04 LTS) on the same bridge (default vmbr0, I haven't modified any network settings in proxmox). If I stop or shut down one VM, the other loses internet connectivity. I can still access the applications from my home network using IP address (192.268.x.x).



  1. Backup Setup on OptiPlex: I’m running a Proxmox Backup Server VM with Backblaze B2 as an S3 datastore. This is working fine so far.
  2. Backup Problems on EliteDesk: I’m using default LVM-thin for VMs. Backups take a very long time and often freeze at 1-2%. Shutting down the VM cleanly afterward is nearly impossible. I’ve tried both Stop and Snapshot modes, but the issue persists. When a VM becomes unresponsive, it triggers the networking issue above. Would switching to ZFS help? If so, how can I migrate without losing any data?
  3. Hardware Acceleration for Jellyfin: On the EliteDesk, I’d like to enable hardware acceleration for a VM running Jellyfin (in Docker) using the i7-9700’s UHD 630 iGPU. Can anyone recommend a clear guide specific to this CPU? The Proxmox documentation isn’t very detailed for Intel GPUs.

The networking issue is the most frustrating. Has anyone encountered similar bridge problems? Any advice on fixes or next steps would be greatly appreciated. Thank you!

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

this is odd, if everything in in a bridge, then a physical port to your switch/router should be your uplink. Check for MTU mismatches, and CRC errors on the cabling.
in reply to RCSM

I don't think MTU mismatch or CRC error is the root cause. So far, I haven't modified any proxmox settings. I've updated the post. ❤️


FLX1s is Launched


Mobile phone Debian based

Edit: more alternative sailmates.net/actors/

Companies selling phones with alternative mobile OSes

Name URL Available pre-installed OSes
Furi Labs furilabs.com/ FuryOS
Murena murena.com/ /e/OS
Pine64 pine64.org/, pine64eu.com/ postmarketOS, Mobian, Manjaro+Plasma Mobile
Purism puri.sm/ PureOS
Volla volla.online/ Ubuntu Touch, Volla OS
Jolla/Reeder jolla.com/ Sailfish OS

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

NOT ON THAT PAGE:

  • a description as to what the FLX is.

I can make a guess, but it's easier to hit Next.

in reply to cyrano

Always excited to see more "buy here" alternatives rather than "just" an OS or custom ROM. Obviously we need that too but all too often we get stuck having to buy another phone we do not want (e.g. Pixel because Google) or hardware that's not supported enough for daily driving (e.g. PinePhone with camera still not supported properly on Pro, years later, power management unable to handle a day of use).

Unfortunately "FuriOS" doesn't look like a reliable alternative just based on the number of eyes, and hands, on it, cf github.com/FuriLabs so unless they can somehow pull all that weight on their own then I'd let others try before me and read reviews on the whole experience, not solely the quality of the hardware or the architecture of the software.





Starmer set to announce UK recognition of Palestinian state


in reply to sabreW4K3

Are they recognising them so that they can add Palestine's dogtags to their collection once they've wiped them out?


Cirrus app dev informing the app will stop working on certified android devices in '26/'27


Opening my weather app this morning I was greeted by this warning:

Google has announced that, starting in 2026/2027, all apps on certified Android devices
will require the developer to submit personal identity details directly to Google.
Since the developers of this app do not agree to this requirement, this app will no longer
work on certified Android devices after that time.


It's the first time I hear about this, seems to be about:

Tech crunch article from august, "google will require developer verification for android apps outside the play store"

Cirrus app:
Github

Was this a big thing I somehow missed? I hope more devs will follow suit.

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

I got this message the other day. It sucks how the app won't work on certified devices next year.
in reply to Ertain

Agreed. Google just didn't consent to you getting an app without ads. My hope is maybe we can circumvent it for a while with PWA or browser website bookmarks. Maybe long enough for alternatives to arrive or consumer protection to kick in. I refuse to give up hope even though I might need to abandon android. For now I guess I will just not buy another phone since androids time seems limited. Really hard to find something to recommend to family and friends that just works. My goto grapheneOS also seems more and more cut down with more and more apps refusing to work outside play store downloads or refusing to work on 3rd party OS.
in reply to Akip

I got the same alert on Gmaps WV (google map wrapper found f drood)
Google is giving us more reasons to switch to a custom ROM


Israel’s Strike on Yemen Newspaper Offices Was ‘Deadliest Global Attack’ on Journalists in 16 Years: Press Freedom Group


cross-posted from: lemmy.zip/post/49108510

Israel's attack on two newspaper offices in Yemen last week killed 31 journalists, making it the single largest massacre of the press in 16 years, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists.

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.



Israel’s Strike on Yemen Newspaper Offices Was ‘Deadliest Global Attack’ on Journalists in 16 Years: Press Freedom Group


Israel's attack on two newspaper offices in Yemen last week killed 31 journalists, making it the single largest massacre of the press in 16 years, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists.


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.




Marxism plus Leninism


I'd just like to interject for a moment. What you're referring to as Leninism,
is in fact, Marxism-Leninism, or as I've recently taken to calling it, Marxism
plus Leninism. Leninism is not an ideology unto itself, but rather another free
component of a fully functioning Marxist ideology made useful by the
『Manifesto』 , 『Capital』 and vital ideology components comprising a full
ideology.

Many communists run a modified version of the Marxism ideology every day,
without realizing it. Through a peculiar turn of events, the version of Marxism
which is widely used today is often called Leninism, and many of its users are
not aware that it is basically the Marxism ideology, developed by Marx and
Engels.

There really is a Leninism, and these people are using it, but it is just a
part of the ideology they use. Leninism is the methodiology: a set of working
methods for achieving the goal of communism. The methodiology is an essential
part of an ideology, but useless by itself; it can only function in the context
of a complete ideology. Leninism is normally used in combination with the
Marxism ideology: the whole ideology is basically Marxism with Leninism added,
or Marxism-Leninism. All the so-called Leninism distributions are really
distributions of Marxism-Leninism!

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

My man Freezy E wrote the best introductory texts to Marxism which hold up to this day,a taxonomy of the family and how it's shaped by the mode of production and hardly anyone ever mentions him unless it's to acknowledge he bankrolled Marx.
in reply to Seoun (she/her)

And just like Linux, Marxism-Leninism marketshare is currently low.



Plasma Crash?


After a random amount of time plasma just crashes. No other graphical issues and I am not sure what is causing this. I am assuming some config somewhere copied over with my home folder? because i did a clean install for the lols. If anyone knows what I am doing wrong respectfully let me know. sorry for being stupid

https://privatebin.net/?faa1cf29ae4b4a73#GNXD2BhKVAXxHpc7sC8htrScmzL7C4Vj3ywzkTVTb6qi

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

Time usually means Heat or Memory issues.

1) What are your system specs?
2) How much times passes before it crashes?
3) Does this happen with a brand new user you e created and logged in as, or just this one user?
4) There are errors for core apps in those logs. Do Kontact and Discover actually launch?

in reply to Wintry

That can't be the full log. I don't see anything indicating a crash there.


Venezuela Announces Capture of Alleged DEA Agent With Massive Drug Shipment


According to Cabello, the detainees confessed the shipment was part of a "false flag operation" designed to incriminate Venezuela in international drug trafficking and justify external aggression. "The four detainees are saying they work for the DEA," Cabello told state television, calling the alleged plan a "maneuver for destabilization."

Authorities said the boat originated in Colombia's Guajira region and was connected to a trafficking group called "Los Orientales," allegedly led by Gersio Parra Machado. Cabello argued that the operation demonstrated Venezuela's commitment to combating narcotics without resorting to lethal force. "We don't apply the death penalty," he said, drawing a contrast with U.S. military strikes on alleged drug vessels in the Caribbean.

in reply to Kazumara

That assumes a level of competence the administration hiring and directing these "operatives" has failed to show again and again, I honestly wouldn't be surprised if the agents in question are still teenagers.
in reply to PapaStevesy

Okay sure, they are a bunch of idiots, yes men, and fascists. I'm happy to agree on that.

But how would that even fit into the plans? They are currently just sinking drug ships and calling that a win, ignoring due process and international outcry like usual. They don't need a false flag bust for that strategy, nor does it make sense to assume they'd suddenly use a more complex plan than "lob rocket uga buga" which has so far been the cleverest they came up with in terms of foreign policy.

And then, assuming someone with some planing capability stuck around and actually came up with this international false flag drug smuggling operation for some indecipherable reason, why would they immediately after go back to brain-dead-mode and start sending a fresh-hire teenager to pose as a hardened Venezuelan smuggler?


in reply to Five

This is another cut, among thousands. It's bad because we can see the motivation behind it. Free speech only for one team.

I don't want to be victim-blaming when I say expecting any big US corp to protect your privacy is futile. I know they want the reach of Insta and that's of course not a bad thing. But it's a threat considering who runs it. Another threat is editorializing the content. Don't put music on it, don't opine on the shamefulness of what the jackboots are doing, just post it. It's the best chance of this dying in the courts before the independence of the judiciary has completely gone. Constant dripping wears the stone and the MAGAs are pissing on it full force.

Another consideration must be at this point to host or mirror your content on servers outside the US. Countries that already didn't give an eff about the US or cooperating with its authorities. If you run your digital opposition on US-run/controlled infrastructure, you'll be shut down soon.

in reply to FriendOfDeSoto

It can't be a US company though at all. They have already said US law Trump's any other countries.


Ehab from Northern Gaza — My Family Has Lost Everything, We Sleep on the Streets — Please Help Us Survive


My name is Ehab, from northern Gaza. I have a family with four children — we have lost everything. Our home was destroyed, and I lost parts of my family: my sister and her children are among the dead and wounded. Now, we sleep on the streets, with no shelter and no safety.

The warplanes never leave the skies above us — we cannot sleep from the noise and fear. Tanks and raids are frighteningly close, and the gunboats fire from the sea. The situation is terrifying — the children cry from fear, and the elderly cannot endure the cold and hunger.

I have lost so much weight from hunger and this genocide. We have no source of income, no money to evacuate to the south where it may be safer. We desperately need funds to move my family to safety, and to buy food and medicine. You are our only hope.

Please, share this story and donate if you can. Every amount, no matter how small, can save us right now..

May God protect us and our families. From the depths of my heart, thank you to anyone who reaches out a hand to help.
gofund.me/00439328



Is there a phone I can buy that out the box is rooted, private, and does not install bloat apps?


I'm frustrated. I'm a long time fan of Motorola. Their phones have been pretty simple and easy to remove junk apps. Recently I got an update that forced perplexity on my phone.
in reply to LAN_Mower

You should never buy a phone that's rooted out of the box, no matter what the company promises. Never.
in reply to LAN_Mower

shop.fairphone.com/the-fairpho… is an option


Tar did a weird thing today


I'm so baffled I had to ask – why this behaviour?

cd /var/www/html
tar czf ~/package.tgz admin/* api/* mobile/*

I do this, and the resulting package doesn't include a couple of hidden files – api/.htaccess and admin/.htaccess. However...
cd /var/www/html
tar czf ~/package.tgz *

This time the hidden .htaccess files are there.

Does anybody have enlightenment to offer as to why?

in reply to tasankovasara

This is potentially a great 'weeder' question for junior Unix admin interviews, as it requires some knowledge about shell globbing and tar dir traversal.

I admit it took me a sec (and a second read) before I got it, so it was a fun "hey what" exercise.

Excellent question.

in reply to corsicanguppy

Dang as soon as you said globbing I realized what had happened but didn't see it right away either


A 1978 promo for Intellivision—just a year before it hit shelves


Even 47 years later, this thing gets me hyped. The “Master Component” had a 16-bit microprocessor?! Three-part harmony music? A display they called an “extraordinarily high level of resolution”? That sounded like the future. Sign me up.

And when they start hyping up ROM cartridges to a general audience, most people probably had no clue what that meant. But it must have felt like home electronics had just landed on the moon.

This was the first real console war: Intellivision vs Atari 2600. And wild to think—two years ago, Atari finally bought Intellivision.


in reply to ColdWater

I've put a GNU sticker over one, and a Tux sticker over another. I should see if there's a Debian spiral sticker I can get (or even custom keycaps) for future keyboards.


Together for Gaza! German comrades: Join us next week in Berlin!


I don't know if there is a better place to post this, but let's make this the biggest demonstration for Gaza in the history of Germany.
Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to mathemachristian [he/him]

Thank you very much! I'll try to make another account tomorrow. 😀 I'll reach out if I need any help. Again thank you very much!
in reply to redbear

Oh please its nothing at all, thank you for your outreach efforts



Giga vaxxed


(im pro non-nudged-vax, fr)
in reply to lol669

Can I just get all the vaccines so that I become invincible?


Software taking the principle of Track-Me-Not and AdNauseam further?


Is there more software that, like TrackMeNot and AdNauseam, generate random internet activity so as to reduce the accuracy of any profiles tracking companies keep about you? E.g. software that carries out complete plausible-looking surfing journeys in the background: not just issuing searches (like TrackMeNot) and following ads (like AdNauseam), but also clicking on other links, scrolling, going back, perhaps even watching a YouTube video every once in a while and browsing Facebook? (All this, of course, respectful of the environment and the limited resources of small projects.) Or apps for the smartphone to generate false but plausible-looking position data and the like?

(Background: As many of you know, trackmenot is a browser extension that enhances your privacy by generating random search queries in the background, watering out the profiles that Google, Microsoft (and Yahoo, Baidu and AOL) have of you. It's available in the Firefox extension store; whereas for Chrome, Google has banned it from its store for unfathomable reasons. There's also AdNauseam, which works towards the same goal by randomly clicking ads in the background.)

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

I'm actually not in favour of obfuscation methods, as recent events have shown - authorities questioning a dude for wearing the same innocuous shirt?

Random traffic might turn out to be 'traffic of interest' for just being the at the wrong place, wrong time. I would prefer actual strong cryptography and isolation.

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

I agree, it could be a last resort when things like ghostery or such fail, but otherwise there's enough crap saturating the wires, no need to artificially inflate that
in reply to icelimit

authorities questioning a dude for wearing the same innocuous shirt?


Why wouldn't they tho? Both persons had the same shirt on. That seems like a no brainer to me. Maybe I'm missing something. It's one of the reasons when I go out in public, I do not wear clothing that are emblazoned with logos, graphics, words, etc. For one, it doesn't do anything for me to wear logos, graphics, words. To me, it's akin to having a political yard sign or bumper sticker. What do you gain from it? What's it do for you? Some guy wearing a t-shirt with a cannabis leaf across the front, again why?, and it's an easy identifier and puts another tick mark for complimentary evidence.

I’m actually not in favour of obfuscation methods


I'm a big fan of it all.

in reply to irmadlad

Maybe I should clarify - I'm not a fan of human noise (there's probably a more precise term) - I'm more in favour of privacy/anonymity in the midst of actual, randomized noise, that isn't just random human activity.

I don't even mean t shirts with a logo. It could've been a pair of jeans on a specific date at a place in conjunction with 5 other (random obfuscated) things that a poi also happened to do. Like googled 'how to fold a swan' or whatever.

Even if you didn't do these things but was instead random generated traffic, it would generate unnecessary attention.

One might argue that if enough people adopted such methods, authorities would have too many leads to follow up. But then again, the chances of a random string of generated activity coinciding with that of a poi isn't high, so there likely will be a manageable number of leads.

Even if the number were higher, they have proven to have no qualms about skipping due process. As long as they might've gotten the actual poi, they have no problems subjecting many more unrelated to the same treatment because everyone is some sort of terrorist now.

They could also arrest you just because you have higher than normal randomized traffic and activity that you can't or won't answer for.

"Why did you search how to fix a sink leak and then how to fold a parachute within 2 minutes of each other?? You must be a terrorist generating random activity to hide your true actions. What do you have to hide?" - "found coke stuffed in all the couches and beds boss"

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in reply to icelimit

They could also arrest you just because you have higher than normal randomized traffic and activity that you can’t or won’t answer for.


I hear what you're saying, and I'm not going to call it paranoia, however, that isn't in my threat model. Entities that can come into your home, arrest you, and ship you off to Guantanamo for buying a parachute and a drain kit for the sink are not in my scope. Frankly speaking, that is probably not in 90% of most people's threat model, who care about privacy, anonymity, and security. Those entities don't even need to fabricate an excuse like a couch full of coke, to give you that full Guantanamo experience.

To tell the truth, I probably couldn't account for 75%+ of the websites I've visited just today. When I get to researching something, it's usually pages and pages, from many, many different sites. Highlight, search, read, nothing here, go back, highlight, search, bingo! Now for more in depth reading. Highlight, search....ad nauseam. This process happens very quickly. I don't watch TV at all, and I don't read fiction. 99.99% of what I do read tho, comes off the internet. So, they'd have to sift through a bunch of data.

Even if you didn’t do these things but was instead random generated traffic, it would generate unnecessary attention.


I'm quite certain that all of my privacy, anonymity, security, and obfuscation efforts has put me on someone's list, but again, that's not in my threat model. I'm not hiding from the government. I send them tax forms every year. I vote prolifically in both local and nationwide elections. I pay property taxes, etc. They know who, and where, when it comes to finding me. If I were a person of interest, they'd come visit. Now, I'm certainly not going to overshare with them in the least either. Hell, I'm not hiding from anyone. I'm just preventing unauthorized access. That is what keys and locks do.

Rock on bro!

in reply to Novi Sad

There’s also AdNauseam, which works towards the same goal by randomly clicking ads in the background.)


Funny thing that I found out is that you actually have to have advertisements allowed on your network for it to work. LOL


in reply to sabreW4K3

Only took two years for Corporate media to start reporting what these Zionist psychopaths say to each other in their language rather than rely on official propaganda.
in reply to Mrkawfee

They will probably scold them in two more years




Developer / Potential Contributor Question: how to add a custom post/comment ranking algorithm to Lemmy?


How would I add a new ranking algorithm to Lemmy as a contributor? I'm a developer by trade, but unfamiliar with Rust and the codebase of Lemmy specifically. It doesn't seem like Lemmy has a concept of 'ranking plugins', so whatever I do would have to involve an MR.

Specifically, I'd like to introduce a ranking system that approximates Proportional Approval Voting, specifically using Thiele's elimination methods, like is used in LiquidFeedback.

I'm pretty sure that with a few tweaks to Thiele's rules, I can compute a complete ranking of all comments in a thread in O(ClogC + E + VlogC), where C is the number of comments, E is the total number of likes, and V is the number of users. This would also support partial approvals, upvotes could decay with age.

I believe this would mitigate the tendency towards echo chambers that Lemmy inherits from Reddit. Lemmy effectively uses Block Approval Voting with decays to rank comments and posts, leading to the same people dominating every conversation.

in reply to Nutomic

I was thinking of it as a drop-in replacement for "hot" just so that it doesn't require any changes on the UI to implement. I'm a bit rusty with UI development, lol. The frontends wouldn't have to add a new button, and the Lemmy API wouldn't need to add a new sort type. That said, maybe that sort of thing is easy to do?

As far as it would work, Thiele's elimination rules is computed roughly as follows (I'm assuming that only upvotes are counted; I haven't considered yet if the process works if disapprovals count as a vote of "-1" or how the process could remain scalable if an abstention counts as a vote of "0.5":

begin with the list of posts, list of users, and list of votes

# initial weighting, takes O(E)
for each post:
    for each vote on the post:
        lookup the user that voted on the post
        based on the number of votes the user has given, determine how much the user would be made "unhappy" if the current post was removed
        # the basic idea here is that if the user didn't vote for a post, then they won't care if its removed
        # if the user did vote for a post, but also voted for 100 others, then they probably won't care if one gets removed as long as 99 remain
        # if the user did vote for a post, but only voted for 2 or 1 others, then they'll care more if this one gets removed
        # if this is the only post the user voted for, then they'll care a lot if it gets removed
        # LiquidFeedback uses a formula of "1/r", where r is the total number of votes the user has given
        # as posts get removed, the votes get removed too, so surviving votes get more weight
        # for the sake of efficiency, I'll probably use a formula like "if r > 20 then 0 else 1/r" so that users only start to contribute weight to posts once they only have 20 approvals left. Replace 20 with a constant of your choice
        add the user's resistance to the post being removed to the post

# initial heap construction, takes O(C)
construct a min-heap of the posts based on the sum of the users' resistances to the post being removed

# iterative removal of posts
while posts remain in the heap: # O(C)
    remove the first post in the heap - this has the least resistance to this post being marked 'last' in the current set # O(logC)
    yield the removed post

    for each vote for the removed post: # in total, O(E) - every vote is iterated once, across the entire lifetime of the heap
        lookup the user that voted on the post
        compute this user's resistance to this post being removed
        remove this vote from the user
        based on the number of remaining votes the user has given, compute the user's resistance to the next post being removed
        compute how much the user's resistance to their next post being removed increased (let this be "resistance increase")
        if "resistance increase" is nonzero (based on my formula, this will happen whenever they have less than 20 votes remaining, but not if they have more than 20 votes remaining):
            for each vote for a different post by this user:
                increase the post resistance to removal by "resistance increase"
                perform an "increase_key" operation on the min-heap for this post # this will be O(logC)

               # worst-case, each user will perform 20 + 19 + 18 + ... "increase_key" operations - 
               # they only begin once there are 20 votes remaining 

               # when they have 20 votes remaining, they have 20 increase_key's to do
               # when they have 19 votes remaining, they have 19 increase_key's to do
               # etc.

               # because this is a constant, it doesn't contribute to the time complexity analysis.
               # so each user performs at worst a constant number of O(logC) operations
               # so the overall time complexity of the "increase_key" operations is O(VlogC)

For this algorithm, the yield the removed post statement will return the sorted posts in reverse order. So worst to best. You could also interpret that statement as "Give the post a rank in the final sorting of count(posts) - (i++)".

Thiele says that process can be used to elect a committee of size N by stopping your removal when N votes remain. But because it's a "house monotonic" process (electoral speak for "increasing the size of the committee by one and re-running an election is guaranteed not to cost any existing members their seat), I figure it could be repurposed to produce a ranking as well - the top one item is "best one", the top two items are the best two, the top three are the best three, etc.

To make the above process work for approvals that decay over time, we'd just treat a decayed approval as a partial approval. I still have some work to do on how exactly to integrate partial approvals into the "resistance to removing each post" calculations without ruining my time complexity. But basically it's a proportional score voting election instead of proportional approval.

in reply to CrashLoopBackOff

Adding a new sort type is not a big deal, so dont worry about it. And a new admin setting for this would also require UI changes, so the new sort type is easier overall.

The current sort options calculate the rank for each post only from the data on that post (number of votes, creation time). Your suggested algorithm looks much more complicated than that, as it requires two iterations and needs to access data from multiple posts at once. Im not sure if this can really be implemented in a way thats performant enough for production use. Anyway feel free to open a pull request, then hopefully other contributors can help you to get it working.

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How to protect my identity while running an online store?


Hello, Sorry if this is the wrong place for this.

I am looking to start an online store for some art projects/crafts/stickers mostly as a creative outlet for some of my current frustrations.

Since some kinds of people take art way too personally, I want to take precautions from doxxing or being harassed.

What are some best practices for an online shop? Are there any recommended storefronts or something like that? I’m sure there’s a lot of things I’m not even considering.

Any help would be much appreciated, Thanks

in reply to philophilsaurus

Whatever you do don't get a domain name (website) and register it with your name and other info they want like email, phone nunber and address. Anyone could whois you and find out all that information in literally 1 second by just typing in your website and it's usually public data unless you request and pay extra for them to hide your info
in reply to Aether Crescent 🌙

Most domain registrars make whois info private by default these days. It's typically just a toggle. Same with DNSSEC