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in reply to geneva_convenience

Okay but do you seriously think, in this political climate where everyone is cucked by Israel, that he could have gotten anywhere near the attention and support to win his election by not saying Oct 7 was bad? He was the most progressive/socialist candidate on the field, and honestly it's stupid that he has to repeatedly talk about Israel in the first place, when he had zero power to change anything about our relations with Israel/the genocide.

And even then, the most I've ever seen him 'denounce imperialism' is to say Oct 7 was bad, which if you think that crosses the line you are out of touch with our political reality. Hell, I think in one of the debates he refused to even do the whole 'i condemn hamas' bit, and was pretty much fully critical of Israel

in reply to astropenguin5

He won his primary without capitulating to Zionists. So yes. We already know from Corbyn that Zionists don't care. They went into a hissy fit over the second part of his post.

Zohran would have done good to shut up but he had to suck off the occupation.

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 settimane fa)


Israel and Hamas begin indirect ceasefire talks in Egypt; U.S. strikes another Venezuelan boat; ICE raids intensify in Chicago


cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/37214820

Israel has dropped 200,000 tons of explosives on Gaza over the last two years, Gaza’s government media office reports. Technical negotiations begin in Egypt over Trump’s 20-point plan for Gaza. Strikes hit Gaza City over the weekend, despite President Donald Trump’s boasts about a cessation. The U.S. strikes yet another Venezuelan boat, the fourth in weeks, and hints at its plans for a ground invasion. ICE raids in Chicago intensify with helicopter raids and tear gas near schools. A federal judge blocks the Trump administration from deploying the National Guard to Portland. Iran’s foreign minister says cooperation with the UN nuclear watchdog is “no longer relevant” in the wake of last week’s snapback sanctions. Russia launches hundreds of missiles into Ukraine overnight, killing 5. Palestinian solidarity protests overtake major cities in Western Europe. Detained Global Sumud Flotilla participants launch a hunger strike in Israeli prison, while an additional 170 participants are deported to Europe. Take action to demand the release of participants including Drop Site’s journalist Alex Colston here.



Israel and Hamas begin indirect ceasefire talks in Egypt; U.S. strikes another Venezuelan boat; ICE raids intensify in Chicago


Israel has dropped 200,000 tons of explosives on Gaza over the last two years, Gaza’s government media office reports. Technical negotiations begin in Egypt over Trump’s 20-point plan for Gaza. Strikes hit Gaza City over the weekend, despite President Donald Trump’s boasts about a cessation. The U.S. strikes yet another Venezuelan boat, the fourth in weeks, and hints at its plans for a ground invasion. ICE raids in Chicago intensify with helicopter raids and tear gas near schools. A federal judge blocks the Trump administration from deploying the National Guard to Portland. Iran’s foreign minister says cooperation with the UN nuclear watchdog is “no longer relevant” in the wake of last week’s snapback sanctions. Russia launches hundreds of missiles into Ukraine overnight, killing 5. Palestinian solidarity protests overtake major cities in Western Europe. Detained Global Sumud Flotilla participants launch a hunger strike in Israeli prison, while an additional 170 participants are deported to Europe. Take action to demand the release of participants including Drop Site’s journalist Alex Colston here.




Israel and Hamas begin indirect ceasefire talks in Egypt; U.S. strikes another Venezuelan boat; ICE raids intensify in Chicago


cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/37214820

Israel has dropped 200,000 tons of explosives on Gaza over the last two years, Gaza’s government media office reports. Technical negotiations begin in Egypt over Trump’s 20-point plan for Gaza. Strikes hit Gaza City over the weekend, despite President Donald Trump’s boasts about a cessation. The U.S. strikes yet another Venezuelan boat, the fourth in weeks, and hints at its plans for a ground invasion. ICE raids in Chicago intensify with helicopter raids and tear gas near schools. A federal judge blocks the Trump administration from deploying the National Guard to Portland. Iran’s foreign minister says cooperation with the UN nuclear watchdog is “no longer relevant” in the wake of last week’s snapback sanctions. Russia launches hundreds of missiles into Ukraine overnight, killing 5. Palestinian solidarity protests overtake major cities in Western Europe. Detained Global Sumud Flotilla participants launch a hunger strike in Israeli prison, while an additional 170 participants are deported to Europe. Take action to demand the release of participants including Drop Site’s journalist Alex Colston here.



Israel and Hamas begin indirect ceasefire talks in Egypt; U.S. strikes another Venezuelan boat; ICE raids intensify in Chicago


Israel has dropped 200,000 tons of explosives on Gaza over the last two years, Gaza’s government media office reports. Technical negotiations begin in Egypt over Trump’s 20-point plan for Gaza. Strikes hit Gaza City over the weekend, despite President Donald Trump’s boasts about a cessation. The U.S. strikes yet another Venezuelan boat, the fourth in weeks, and hints at its plans for a ground invasion. ICE raids in Chicago intensify with helicopter raids and tear gas near schools. A federal judge blocks the Trump administration from deploying the National Guard to Portland. Iran’s foreign minister says cooperation with the UN nuclear watchdog is “no longer relevant” in the wake of last week’s snapback sanctions. Russia launches hundreds of missiles into Ukraine overnight, killing 5. Palestinian solidarity protests overtake major cities in Western Europe. Detained Global Sumud Flotilla participants launch a hunger strike in Israeli prison, while an additional 170 participants are deported to Europe. Take action to demand the release of participants including Drop Site’s journalist Alex Colston here.




Israel and Hamas begin indirect ceasefire talks in Egypt; U.S. strikes another Venezuelan boat; ICE raids intensify in Chicago


Israel has dropped 200,000 tons of explosives on Gaza over the last two years, Gaza’s government media office reports. Technical negotiations begin in Egypt over Trump’s 20-point plan for Gaza. Strikes hit Gaza City over the weekend, despite President Donald Trump’s boasts about a cessation. The U.S. strikes yet another Venezuelan boat, the fourth in weeks, and hints at its plans for a ground invasion. ICE raids in Chicago intensify with helicopter raids and tear gas near schools. A federal judge blocks the Trump administration from deploying the National Guard to Portland. Iran’s foreign minister says cooperation with the UN nuclear watchdog is “no longer relevant” in the wake of last week’s snapback sanctions. Russia launches hundreds of missiles into Ukraine overnight, killing 5. Palestinian solidarity protests overtake major cities in Western Europe. Detained Global Sumud Flotilla participants launch a hunger strike in Israeli prison, while an additional 170 participants are deported to Europe. Take action to demand the release of participants including Drop Site’s journalist Alex Colston here.

in reply to uszo165

Looks like Stanford disagrees, 13% of entry level work has been replaced by AI.

digitaleconomy.stanford.edu/wp…

in reply to Hacksaw

So, reading that study, I have a few concerns about how it was conducted and my concerns generally aligns with their findings. Primarily, their source for information is the payroll system of the companies studied, which in my experience is nothing more than an HR drone entering into the system what they're told to enter. If the prescribed reason is AI even when it was really business performance, then that kind of aligns with the study in the OP.

Their graphs of roles most and least exposed to AI disruption is dandy, but if you think about it (with the exception of customer service roles) the jobs that are threatened are typically not production roles for the company, and are moreso ancillary positions for most companies. I'm a software engineer for a company that doesn't sell software, which means I'm more of a luxury than a necessity; this is true for the majority of software engineers.

The roles least exposed to AI, according to the study, are production roles that play a core role in the product delivery of the company. Things like construction workers, nurses, cooks, etc. are only in businesses where they are the core of the business model. I've never seen a movie theater chain employ nurses or cooks in droves, but they have employed secret shoppers (auditors), accountants, software engineers, etc. and are likely to trim that fat when times get tough. I think this is more of an economic health indicator than anything, IMO.

in reply to uszo165

This is because the real economy is going into recession and all the job cuts are actually because of that. AI is a big facade to try to conceal this.
Questa voce è stata modificata (2 settimane fa)


Body Camera Video Betrays DHS Account of Chicago Border Patrol Shooting, Attorney Says


Parente said body camera footage called the account of federal prosecutors and Border Patrol into question, as it showed a Border Patrol agent saying to Martinez, “Do something, bitch” before pulling over and shooting her at least five times.

“We need a zero tolerance policy for lying by law enforcement,” said Jonathan Cohn, political director of Progressive Mass.



Evan Prodromou on OpenChannels.FM


A quick note that Evan is interviewed by WordPress social networking lead Matthias Pfefferle on the OpenChannels.FM podcast about the history of the Fediverse and where we’re going next. How Decentralized Social Platforms Grew from Identica to Modern-Day Mastodon covers a 15+-year period as the Fediverse was born and developed. The shownotes alone are extremely detailed and a great resource.


Matthias Pfefferle discusses the Fediverse's origins and evolution with Evan Prodromou, highlighting decentralized social networks, protocols, privacy, and the future of federated systems.
Questa voce è stata modificata (3 settimane fa)

reshared this


in reply to uszo165

AI isn’t taking the jobs, dipshit rich assholes are cutting the jobs. Taking a job implies doing the job, and from that perspective, the remaining people who weren’t laid off are taking the jobs, not AI.


Pam Bondi updates: Senators question attorney general on Epstein, Comey


Whitehouse questions Bondi about "suspicious activity reports" relating to Jeffrey Epstein, compiled by the US Treasury Department.

Whitehouse then asks Bondi if the FBI has looked into reports that Epstein "showed people photos of President Trump with half naked young women".

"Do you know if the FBI found those photographs in their search of Jeffrey Epstein's safe or premises?" Whitehouse asks.

Earlier:

Democrat senator Durbin then asks Bondi why she said in February that the client list of Jeffrey Epstein - the late, convicted paedophile financier - was sitting on her desk ready for review.

He says Bondi produced information on Epstein that was already public and did not reveal a client list.

Bondi responds that she only said that because she had not yet reviewed the files at the time. She then says that a July 6 memo pointed out that there was never an Epstein client list.



Mullvad VPN Speeds


I've been a user of Mullvad for a while and love there stance on privacy. I really like how they have stayed focused. But recently I feel like there speeds have gotten way worse.

For example I may be able to get 150ish up and down without a VPN but once I add Mullvad it gets way slower. Still very useable for most tasks but limiting when I have bigger downloads. This is across several different networks to eliminate it just being an individual network problem.

Has anyone else been experiencing this?

don't like this

in reply to obsidianfoxxy7870

Always.

Edit jesus h christ, scratch þe numbers below. I just checked and I'm still getting 900Mbps wiþout VPN, but now I can't get better þan 12Mbps from any Mullvad exit node.

Edit 2 created an ivpn account and set it up on þe router, and now I'm getting 245Mbps. Still not great, but better. I may switch. I need to do þe "find þe fastest exit node" dance - I just picked þe geographically closest, which IME is not reliable. I found wiþ Mullvad þe highest bandwidth nodes for me were usually halfway across þe country.


Original comment

I have fiber; wiþ VPN off, I get low-mid 900's up and down. Wiþ VPN on, I get 3-600, depending on þe exit node.

Every node selector tool I've tried only tests pings, which I'm not convinced is sufficient to predict þroughput, but via trial and error I've chosen 3 exit nodes which give me low 600s; I've never seen 700Mbps over Mullvad. I've only gotten fiber recently, þough, so I can't say it's gotten worse; it is disappointing, þough.

I haven't tried tweaking settings; Wireguard is running on my router which is running OpenWRT, which impedes my desire to mess wiþ fine-grained network settings.

I love Mullvad and have been a customer for years, but þe þroughput is disappointing. I don't believe would be a viable option for anyþing more þan our casual home use, and even so, I've started exploring oþer options. I feel it's not unreasonable to expect in þe 800's when I can get mid-900's from direct connections.

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 settimane fa)
in reply to Ŝan

Hey just a heads up, and I noticed this with your posts yesterday, but check the language settings on your keyboard. your "th" is being replaced with "þ" when you post.

Just wanted to let you know.

in reply to rozodru

its intentional, heres one of their old comments:

Just ðe opposite! You train wiþ public data, you
should be giving ðe models away for free.

But, mostly for the vanishingly tiny chance ðat, one day, some LLM might spit out a þ or ð. It's a humble dream, but it keeps me going.

in reply to Ŝan

Okay. Þis is coded for US nodes, but it aught to be clear how to adjust it. þis script will tell you which ivpn exit node has þe best ping:

\#!/usr/bin/zsh
#
# ivpn servers -cc -ping US | grep '.wg.'
# https://api.ivpn.net/v5/servers.json

k="$(curl -s https://api.ivpn.net/v5/servers.json | jq -r '.wireguard[] | select( .country_code == "US" ) | .hosts[] | .hostname')"
SRVRS=( ${(f)k} )

best_srv=""
best_t=""
for srvr in ${SRVRS[@]}; do
  printf "%s " $srvr >&2
  r=$(ping -qc1 $srvr 2>&1 | awk -F'/' 'END{ print (/^rtt/? "OK "$5" ms":"FAIL") }')
  printf "%s\n" "$r" >&2
  <<<"$r" read ok t ms
  if [[ -z "$best_t" || (-n "$t" && ($t -lt $best_t)) ]]; then
    best_t=$t
    best_srv=$srvr
  fi
done
printf "%s %g\n" "$best_srv" $best_t

Dependencies:
  • zsh
  • ripgrep
  • curl
  • jq

Best run when VPN is off. Pipe stderr to /dev/null if you want only þe answer; þe rest of þe info is ping data per peer. It's similar to the built-in ivpn command:

ivpn servers -cc -ping US | grep '.wg.'
Questa voce è stata modificata (2 settimane fa)
in reply to obsidianfoxxy7870

when I used Mullvad I would notice this every now and again also. Generally it was related to whatever city I was connecting to. I'm assuming you've already tried several though.


Wikipedia is resilient because it is boring


When armies invade, hurricanes form, or governments fall, a Wikipedia editor will typically update the relevant articles seconds after the news breaks. So quick are editors to change “is” to “was” in cases of notable deaths that they are said to have the fastest past tense in the West. So it was unusual, according to one longtime editor who was watching the page, that on the afternoon of January 20th, 2025, hours after Elon Musk made a gesture resembling a Nazi salute at a rally following President Donald Trump’s inauguration and well into the ensuing public outcry, no one had added the incident to the encyclopedia.

Then, just before 4PM, an editor by the name of PickleG13 added a single sentence to Musk’s 8,600-word biography: “Musk appeared to perform a Nazi salute,” citing an article in The Jerusalem Post. In a note explaining the change, the editor wrote, “This controversy will be debated, but it does appear and is being reported that Musk may have performed a Hitler salute.” Two minutes later, another editor deleted the line for violating Wikipedia’s stricter standards for unflattering information in biographies of living people.

But PickleG13 was correct. That evening, as the controversy over the gesture became a vortex of global attention, another editor called for an official discussion about whether it deserved to be recorded in Wikipedia. At first, the debate on the article’s “talk page,” where editors discuss changes, was much the same as the one playing out across social media and press: it was obviously a Nazi salute vs. it was an awkward wave vs. it couldn’t have been a wave, just look at the touch to his shoulder, the angle of his palm vs. he’s autistic vs. no, he’s antisemitic vs. I don’t see the biased media calling out Obama for doing a Nazi salute in this photo I found on Twitter vs. that’s just a still photo, stop gaslighting people about what they obviously saw. But slowly, through the barbs and rebuttals and corrections, the trajectory shifted.

Wikipedia is the largest compendium of human knowledge ever assembled, with more than 7 million articles in its English version, the largest and most developed of 343 language projects. Started nearly 25 years ago, the site was long mocked as a byword for the unreliability of information on the internet, yet today it is, without exaggeration, the digital world’s factual foundation. It’s what Google puts at the top of search results otherwise awash in ads and spam, what social platforms cite when they deign to correct conspiracy theories, and what AI companies scrape in their ongoing quest to get their models to stop regurgitating info-slurry — and consult with such frequency that they are straining the encyclopedia’s servers. Each day, it’s where approximately 70 million people turn for reliable information on everything from particle physics to rare Scottish sheep to the Erfurt latrine disaster of 1184, a testament both to Wikipedia’s success and to the total degradation of the rest of the internet as an information resource.

But as impressive as this archive is, it is the byproduct of something that today looks almost equally remarkable: strangers on the internet disagreeing on matters of existential gravity and breathtaking pettiness and, through deliberation and debate, building a common ground of consensus reality.



Lawsuit challenges vote to gift prime Miami real estate for Trump's presidential library


A Miami activist alleges that city officials violated Florida’s open government law when they gifted a sizable plot of prime downtown real estate to the state, which then transferred it to the foundation for Donald Trump’s future presidential library.

The nearly 3-acre (1.2-hectare) property is a developer’s dream and is valued at more than $67 million, according to a 2025 assessment by the Miami-Dade County property appraiser. One of the last undeveloped lots on an iconic stretch of palm tree-lined Biscayne Boulevard, one real estate expert wagered that the parcel could sell for hundreds of millions of dollars more.

Marvin Dunn, an activist and chronicler of local Black history, filed a lawsuit Monday in a Miami-Dade County court against the Board of Trustees for Miami Dade College, a state-run school that previously owned the property. He alleges that the board violated Florida’s Government in the Sunshine law by not providing sufficient notice for its special meeting on Sept. 23, when it voted to give up the land, and he’s seeking to block the land transfer.

https://apnews.com/article/trump-presidential-library-lawsuit-miami-e5f6d8662e39b280cd17b5552b21f7e7




One Vigilante, 22 Cell Tower Fires, and a World of Conspiracies


archive.is link

As dawn spread over San Antonio on September 9, 2021, almond-colored smoke began to fill the sky above the city’s Far West Side. The plumes were whorling off the top of a 132-foot-tall cell tower that overshadows an office park just north of SeaWorld. At a hotel a mile away, a paramedic snapped a photo of the spectacle and posted it to the r/sanantonio subreddit. “Cell tower on fire around 1604 and Culebra,” he wrote.

In typical Reddit fashion, the comments section piled up with corny jokes. “Blazing 5G speeds,” quipped one user.

“I hope no one inhales those fumes, the Covid transmission via 5G will be a lot more potent that way,” wrote another, in a swipe at the conspiracy theorists who claim that radiation from 5G towers caused the Covid-19 pandemic.

The wisecracks went on: “Can you hear me now?”

“Free hotspot!”

“Great, some hero trying to save us from 5G.”

That self-styled hero was actually lurking in the comments. As he followed the thread on his phone, Sean Aaron Smith delighted in the sheer volume of attention the tower fire was receiving, even if most of it dripped with sarcasm. A lean, tattooed—and until recently, entirely apolitical—27-year-old, Smith had come to view 5G as the linchpin of a globalist plot to zombify humanity. To resist that supposed scheme, he’d spent the past five months setting Texas cell towers ablaze.

Smith’s crude and quixotic campaign against 5G was precisely the sort of security threat that was fast becoming one of the US government’s top concerns in 2021. Just two weeks after Smith’s fire popped up on Reddit, then FBI director Christopher Wray discussed the latest trends in political violence in a speech marking the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks. “Today, the greatest terrorist threat we face here in the US is from what are, in effect, lone actors,” he said, describing these people as moving “quickly from radicalization to action, often using easily obtainable weapons against soft targets.” And an increasing number of these individuals, Wray stressed, were turning violent after marinating in bizarre conspiracy theories.

https://www.wired.com/story/22-cell-towers-one-vigilante-world-of-conspiracies/


in reply to silence7

This problem will resolve itself when the National Guard is spending 100% of their time cosplaying policemen and have no capacity for anything else.
in reply to silence7

Trump is fine with letting cities go to shit from natural disasters. Giving aid to ravaged cities doesn't make money. But stirring up fake crisis does keep the Epstein files away.


psa: snapd leads to massive slowdowns in boot time


i run debian 13 on my laptop. it runs on a 5200rpm hard disk, so some bootup slowdown is to be expected, but it got really bad for some reason. booting up could take up to 3 minutes just to get to the display manager

after running systemd-analyze blame i found the two main culprits: docker and snapd. i had snapd and flatpak installed so that i could have access to as many applications as i could, but it seems that snaps have a huge amount of overhead. i knew about the one million mountpoints caused by snaps, but the amount of services they have to start on boot surprised me. snapd alone took 30 seconds to start and then there were its dependencies

my boot time is now down to 1min 50s. i recommend anyone who still has snapd installed on a non-ubuntu distro to uninstall it

in reply to JTskulk

I don't have the exact numbers with me right now but according to systemd-analyze

before: ~3min

after removing snapd and docker: 1min 50s

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 settimane fa)


Dutch chips star exec slams EU for overregulating AI


EINDHOVEN, The Netherlands — The European Union’s rules on artificial intelligence are driving tech workers and companies to Silicon Valley, a top executive from the Dutch chipmaking giant ASML has said.

“Why is it so difficult to get AI done in Europe? Simply because we started with regulating, to keep AI under the thumb,” ASML’s Chief Financial Officer Roger Dassen told an event in Eindhoven on Monday evening.

“Someone who has a talent for artificial intelligence, the first thing they do with their hard-earned money … is buying a ticket to Silicon Valley,” Dassen said.

The comments — made during a campaign event for Dutch center-right party Christian Democratic Appeal ahead of national elections Oct. 29 — are another shot across the bow of the EU’s embattled artificial intelligence law.


...

With friends who work in AI, I can tell you not all are motivated by money alone, some of them actually do want the scary potential (aka Flock, etc) regulated and are working from Europe.

Technology reshared this.

in reply to tomatolung

With friends who work in AI, I can tell you not all are motivated by money alone, some of them actually do want the scary potential (aka Flock, etc) regulated and are working from Europe.


If they are in favor of the AI Act, they don't know the AI Act. But never mind... I'm curious what your friends are working on (and if it has a future in the EU). That's Flock.io, promising decentralization?



Why most polls overstate support for political violence


A new poll from NPR, PBS, and Marist College published on Wednesday, Oct. 2, shows a “striking change in Americans’ views on political violence.” We have grown much more violent as a country over the last year, NPR reports, with the share of U.S. adults who agree with the statement “Americans may have to resort to violence to get the country back on track” growing from 20 to 30% over the last 18 months.

This is scary data indeed. In NPR’s coverage of the poll, Cynthia Miller-Idriss, a professor at American University, says the data is “horrific”: “It’s just a horrific moment to see that people believe, honestly believe that there’s no other alternative at this point than to resort to political violence.” Where does America go from here?

But here’s the thing: The NPR/PBS/Marist poll did not ask people if they believed “there’s no other alternative at this point than to resort to political violence.” The survey asks adults whether or not they agree with the statement that people “may have to resort to violence in order to get the country back on track.” This is comparatively a much weaker statement and comes with a potentially heavy dose of measurement error. Respondents are asked to imagine a hypothetical scenario in which they’d have to commit acts of violence against a vague, unspecified victim. Maybe that means taking up arms against the government or their neighbors, or perhaps it just means throwing a rock at a cop or through a shop door.

The problem with polls and reports like this, in other words, is that they are not asking about the “political violence” we are imagining in our heads: An insurrection at the Capitol; driving a car through a crowd of protestors; shooting an activist you don’t like with a sniper rifle. The unfortunate reality (especially for those of us who care about democracy and what the people think) is that this survey does not ask whether Americans support certain acts of violence against their neighbors, even though that’s what the poll is being used as evidence for.

This disconnect between what is being polled and what is being talked about is part of a broader pattern I’ve pointed out in my recent coverage of political violence: Most polls overestimate mass support for political violence. I explain why this is the case, and why this is important for everyone from pollsters to elite journalists to casual news consumers to reckon with.



ICE violence caught on camera featured among evidence in new lawsuit





Trump’s plan for Gaza rewards Israel’s genocide and punishes its victims


Two years on, complicit governments back a US plan to safeguard Jewish supremacy and mute global outrage, while Israel revives Nazi torture methods to force Palestinian surrender


Arduino (Italian Electronics Company) acquired by US-Based Qualcomm


cross-posted from: lemmy.world/post/37022550

Today we’re sharing some truly exciting news: Arduino has entered into an agreement to join the Qualcomm Technologies, Inc. family! This is a huge step in our journey – one that allows us to keep growing, thriving, and making technology accessible to everyone, while bringing our values of openness, simplicity, and community spirit to an […]


Denver, CO.


(I’m not actually in Denver anymore, I’m back home in Cascadia, but this was shot out that way a few days ago, and I’m trying to post only one work a day or less, so I don’t flood the community, and to give each of my works, and each of yours, greater appreciation. Thank you for understanding.)

This was shot in Union Station; I was completely new to Denver, having been there for less than thirty seconds, drinking in new architecture and taking the culture in. I think I took 120 exposures in this train station alone, and I think this is the one I liked the best. It’s such a simple image, and yet the color in it is delicious, almost food-like.

Thank you for seeing my work!




White House memo says furloughed federal workers aren't entitled to back pay


Furloughed federal workers aren't guaranteed compensation for their forced time off during the government shutdown, according to a draft White House memo described to Axios by three sources.

Why it matters: If the White House acts on that legal analysis, it would dramatically escalate President Trump's pressure on Senate Democrats to end the week-old shutdown by denying back pay to as many as 750,000 federal workers after the shutdown.

https://www.axios.com/2025/10/07/trump-memo-furloughed-federal-workers-backpay




Tip #758

Return to the top of the page on Vivaldi Social by clicking the feed header.

To see the latest posts on Vivaldi Social after having made your way down the feed, you need to scroll to the top of the page, where the newest posts are waiting for you automatically or require a simple click to load (aka slow mode). There are a few ways you can do it, so find what works for you.

To jump to the top of the page:

  • Click the feed header (Home, Trending, Notifications, etc.)
  • Press “Home” on your keyboard.
  • Scroll with the mouse wheel until you reach the top of the page.
  • Create a Keyboard Shortcut or Mouse Gesture for the action in the Vivaldi browser.


Vivaldi Social's homepage open in the Vivaldi browser. An arrow points at the header of the feed.
#Mastodon #Vivaldi #VivaldiSocial

vivaldi.com/blog/tips/tip-758/



How to manage configuration files


I'm trying to find a better solution to manage configuration files, both user's dotfiles and system files in /etc.
I'm running an ubuntu server where I have a bunch services with custom configurations, and systemd drop-in files, but on top of that I also have some scripts and user dotfiles that I need to track.

What I'm doing right now is that I have a folder full of symlinks in the admin user's directory (poor username choice, btw) and I'm using bindfs to mount this directory inside a git repository, this way git won't see them as symlinks, and will version them as regular files. The problem with doing this is that as git deletes and rewrites files, bindfs fails to track the changes and converts the symlink to regular files.

I looked into chezmoi, but that is only meant to track user dotfiles and will refuse to add a file from /etc, that is unless doing some extra work. But even so, chezmoi will not track the user:group of files, so I would still have to manage that manually.

I also looked into GNU Stow, and that would not complain about files from /etc or anywhere, but it similarly will not track permissions and I would have to manage that manually.

I see that some people are using ansible to manage dotfiles, but at that point, it would make sense to just migrate to ansible, except I don't want to rebuild my server from scratch to use ansible. Also it looks like a lot to learn.

Is there a better solution I'm not seeing? Maybe something using git hooks?

Edit:

I ended up using pre-commit and post-merge git hooks to launch a python script. The python script reads from a yaml file where I annotate the file paths and permissions, and then copies to or from the file location to the git repository.

I used the sudoers file to allow the admin user to run this specific script with specific arguments as root without password (because the git commands are run from VS Code and not manually), which is dangerous, be careful when doing that. I have taken special care to make this secure:
* I used absolute paths for everything, to avoid allowing running from a different pwd as a way to copy different files
* The script itself is installed in a root-owned location, so an unprevileged user cannot edit it
* The configuration yaml is root-owned, so an unprevileged user cannot modify which files are copied or their permissions
* Configuration files that can grant permission are not managed by this script (the yaml, /etc/passwd, /etc/groups, polkit rules, the sudoers file, ...)

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 settimana fa)
in reply to edinbruh

You could use aliases on your .bashrc for git (and a bare repo), that would let you manage your $HOME and /etc directly with git without using symlinks, only downside is having them separated in two aliases and two repos.

# user config repo
alias dotfiles='git --git-dir=$HOME/.dotfiles --work-tree=$HOME'

# system config repo
alias etcfiles='sudo git --git-dir=$HOME/.etcfiles --work-tree=/etc'

It is also recommended that you run:
<alias> config --local status.showUntrackedFiles no

in the terminal for both the dotfiles and etcfiles aliases (you can pick the aliases and git-dir names you want)

The aliases help you have a custom named folder instead of .git located in a custom path, and you can manage them without symlinks as you use git directly on the file's original location, this would solve your issue of other solutions that depend on symlinks

Note: you could technically have the root directory --work-tree=/ as a work tree to use only one command, but It is not recommended to give git the possibility to rewrite any file on the entire file system.

Some reference links:

Text

Questa voce è stata modificata (3 settimane fa)
in reply to edinbruh

I have a simple bash script that manages folders and files with a way to route them to whatever location. Then I run the script and it does all the symlinking for me. This is what I do for systemd unit files and my own dotfiles


UK Age Verification Data Confirms What Critics Always Predicted: Mass Migration To Sketchier Sites


A month old now, but it's important on the unnecessary surveillance creep we keep having. First this, then digital ID.

Worrying levels of authoritarianism that solves nothing. Government are supposed to represent us, not ignore us and treat us like children. Who are they working for?



in reply to schizoidman

Many governments are astonishingly dumb. If I were in charge and wanted to make pro-Israel politics, I would let them demonstrate whatever they want. Just would keep completely ignoring those demonstrations and avoid the theme altogether.

Peaceful demonstrations are completely useless, no need to fight them.

Luckily, most governments are dumb.

in reply to Lembot_0004

They do it already basically, but Bologna is a peculiar setting and this ban is an unsurprising ragebait


Major US Midwest port [Cleveland] begins electrifying operations to reduce emissions


For those wondering how a mid-continent city has a port, the Great Lakes are connected to the ocean via the St. Lawrence, and have a system of locks allowing mid-sized cargo ships to travel substantially inland.
Questa voce è stata modificata (3 settimane fa)


Microsoft makes it even harder to install Windows 11 without a Microsoft Account or internet


The company has already blocked the popular oobe\bypassnro command that people used to skip parts of the initial setup, and now, Microsoft is doubling down on its efforts. In the latest Windows 11 preview builds, the software giant makes it much harder to install Windows 11 without a Microsoft Account.

https://www.neowin.net/news/microsoft-makes-it-even-harder-to-install-windows-11-without-a-microsoft-account-or-internet/

#tech


How Mark Carney is complicating Canada’s climate progress


From cancelling the carbon tax to pausing the electric vehicle mandate, the Carney government is making sweeping changes to the country’s environmental rules
in reply to CompactFlax

We kinda need both.

Oil isn’t just for cars and power plants. Oil is a chemical used in so many things, from asphalt to medicine.

But we should be transitioning to green energy, which is less centralized than a few big power plants, less polluting, and therefore more secure from threats. It’s also getting cheaper and cheaper by the month.

I want a strong Canada that can run our own critical supply chains, and I want a green Canada that doesn’t let our mines throw their tailings into our drinking water and our air is clean. And I want a secure Canada that can stand up to bullies without fear.

in reply to panda_abyss

You make good points about our dependency on oil and gas for chemistry. I think it makes it even more important to reduce our reliance on it globally for personal transportation.



Anyone else live somewhere that has had people joining in a WiFi naming joke?


My WiFi is ‘Secret Rebel Base’.

My neighbours have added ‘Java the Hub’, ‘Obi Lan Kenobi’, and ‘Red WiFi-ve Standing By’. This makes me happy.

Anyone else live in a neighbourhood that embraces this kind of WiFi silliness?

in reply to Hossenfeffer

Sadly in my apartment complex they seem to all use the default name given by the router (like Carrier-randomnumbers).

I have a friend who named his WiFi "Connecting..." which is diabolical


in reply to Severus_Snape

A good person would be more concerned about some other kind of persecutions taking place right now.

Seems almost like Donald and Elon advocating against whites discrimination in South Africa.



CommunityHasNoFollowers error


It appears that some instances have not resolved the unsubscribes properly, and I'm seeing errors like the below:
2025-10-07T12:20:11.488023Z  WARN Error encountered while processing the incoming HTTP request: lemmy_server::root_span_builder: CommunityHasNoFollowers: CommunityHasNoFollowers
   0: lemmy_apub::activities::community::announce::receive
             at crates/apub/src/activities/community/announce.rs:161
   1: lemmy_server::root_span_builder::HTTP request
           with http.method=POST http.scheme="http" http.host=lemmy.domain.ext http.target=/inbox otel.kind="server" request_id=02568c66-9ed6-4eb0-b533-77b19rcdef56 http.status_code=400 otel.status_code="OK"
             at src/root_span_builder.rs:16

Is there a way to determine which communities are throwing this error, and force the unsubscribe?
in reply to fmstrat

Is that the whole log? Have you enabled the trace level?
in reply to asudox

This was with the default logging:
RUST_LOG=warn,extism=info,lemmy_server=debug,lemmy_api=debug,lemmy_api_common=debug,lemmy_api_crud=debug,lemmy_apub=debug,lemmy_db_schema=debug,lemmy_db_views=debug,lemmy_routes=debug,lemmy_utils=debug,lemmy_websocket=debug

Any idea which one I should set to trace?


Matthias Pfefferle discusses the Fediverse's origins and evolution with Evan Prodromou, highlighting decentralized social networks, protocols, privacy, and the future of federated systems.


in reply to DeathByBigSad

I’m an amnesiac and one of the first things I learned is that memories don’t really matter. The past is over, what matters is what you choose to do and not what you did. Obviously people do terrible and sometimes unforgivable things. I can sympathize with people who can’t let stuff go, but I personally just can’t be bothered by it anymore though. I have and will offer support to even my abusers.

To me, a person is how they act and what they want in the present. Lived experience affects everything a person does, the parts of a person’s past that are relevant reveal themselves in the present through how a person is.



Anime su mangaka: Jun Fukuyama nel cast di Egao no Taenai Shokuba Desu; è Masayuki Todo, ex editor di Futami


Nuovo ingresso d’autore per l’anime Egao no Taenai Shokuba Desu (Un posto di lavoro stranamente meraviglioso per mangaka): Jun Fukuyama si unisce al cast nel ruolo di Masayuki Todo, ex editor della protagonista Nana Futami. L’aggiunta rafforza un ensemble vocale già ricco e conferma l’attenzione della produzione verso interpreti di primo piano.

TUTTI I DETTAGLI E DOVE VEDERLO IN STREAMING: Anime su mangaka: Jun Fukuyama nel cast di Egao no Taenai Shokuba Desu; è Masayuki Todo, ex editor di Futami



Blanca 3, anticipazioni terza puntata del 13 ottobre 2025: Blanca si riavvicina a Liguori, Eva è gelosa di Domenico


La terza puntata di Blanca 3 andrà in onda lunedì 13 ottobre 2025 in prima serata su Rai 1. L’episodio “Il Delfino” intreccia il caso di puntata con i nodi sentimentali: Blanca e Liguori tornano a indagare fianco a fianco, mentre Eva Faraldi fatica a nascondere la gelosia per il legame tra Blanca e Domenico.

LEGGI LE ANTICIPAZIONI: Blanca 3, anticipazioni terza puntata del 13 ottobre 2025: Blanca si riavvicina a Liguori, Eva è gelosa di Domenico



Dell Latitude Touchpad Deadzone and Fingerprint


I recently got my hands on a Dell Latitude E7470 and installed Fedora Workstation. Even though I enabled two finger scroll (and disabled touchpad edge scroll), the right side of the touchpad still has a dead zone of considerable size. So, when I start a mouse movement too far on the right side, it wont register.

I tried a few things, like adding quirk configs, but the zone is still there. Bios had no option to disable. (I reinstalled with UEFI, prior installation was legacy uefi / bios, so I have to give it a look again).

Does someone have a way to disable the dead zone?

Also, the fingerprint sensor doesn't work. From what I could research, it is a broadcom device with officials drivers for MS and Ubuntu. I tried some stuff to get this thing running, but it didn't work out. I still have to try a bios update after the reinstall. Is there a way to get this thing running under Fedora? It's not a crucial feature, but a nice to have for sure.

in reply to xtapa

So it looks like the touchpad problem is a known issue with that particular model. A web search turned up an Arch Linux forum post from 2017 with the same issue. Unfortunately, there was no solution posted.

Your touchpad shows up as a PS/2 device, right? I have a ThinkPad A475 with a PS/2 trackpad that won’t function at all in Linux unless I add i8042.reset as a GRUB argument.

Maybe see if that helps?

in reply to Fives

Your touchpad shows up as a PS/2 device, right?


Yes.

I am not an expert with GRUB at all. For some reason, this sounds very aggressive and with a high chance of side effects. Theres nothing of worth on the device though, so I guess I'll give it a try.

in reply to xtapa

If you enter it in at boot time it’s not permanent, so it’ll either work or it won’t, but it shouldn’t break anything.
in reply to xtapa

maybe playing around some values in synclient can fix it. that's how i created a dead zone in my panasonic laptop. (some area is keep touched while using keyboard so)


Autoproduzione sementi ortaggi


Ciao a tutti.
Qualcuno di voi si autoproduce le sementi per l'orto?

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This Month’s Quote

Give to every human being every right that you claim for yourself.

Robert G Ingersoll

#blog #quotes #zenmischief