Salta al contenuto principale




US Defense Bill Would Fill Israel’s Weapons ‘Gaps’ Caused by Embargoes


Since Israel launched its genocidal war in Gaza in 2023, several nations – including Japan, Canada, France, Italy, and Spain – have moved to enact various arms embargoes against Israel. The US, which has supported, supplied, and financed Israel’s assault, could now help backfill any weapons that Israel may be missing, under the defense bill released Sunday night.

A provision buried deep in the proposed National Defense Authorization Act calls for the “continual assessment of [the] impact of international state arms embargoes on Israel and actions to address defense capability gaps.”

The measure can be found more than 1,000 pages into the 3,000-page NDAA. The bill is considered a piece of must-pass legislation, and is expected to move quickly. The massive bill typically passes with bipartisan support.



US Defense Bill Would Fill Israel’s Weapons ‘Gaps’ Caused by Embargoes


Since Israel launched its genocidal war in Gaza in 2023, several nations – including Japan, Canada, France, Italy, and Spain – have moved to enact various arms embargoes against Israel. The US, which has supported, supplied, and financed Israel’s assault, could now help backfill any weapons that Israel may be missing, under the defense bill released Sunday night.

A provision buried deep in the proposed National Defense Authorization Act calls for the “continual assessment of [the] impact of international state arms embargoes on Israel and actions to address defense capability gaps.”

The measure can be found more than 1,000 pages into the 3,000-page NDAA. The bill is considered a piece of must-pass legislation, and is expected to move quickly. The massive bill typically passes with bipartisan support.

#USA



Valve CEO Gabe Newell’s Neuralink competitor is expecting its first brain chip this year


Unlike his other products, it’s not powered by Steam.

Technology Channel reshared this.





Google says Chrome's new AI creates risks only more AI can fix


'User Alignment Critic' will review agentic actions so bots don't do things like emptying your bank account


Florida governor designates Muslim rights group as terrorist organisation


Florida Governor Ron DeSantis has signed an executive order designating one of the country’s most prominent Muslim civil rights groups, the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), as a “foreign terrorist organisation,” citing their alleged support for the Palestinian group Hamas.

DeSantis became the second high-profile Republican governor to make a similar move in recent weeks. The designation, which triggers heightened oversight by state law enforcement agencies and establishes financial and operational restrictions, was also declared against the Muslim Brotherhood last month.

CAIR, which has denied any ties to Hamas, was expected to announce a lawsuit against Florida.

in reply to geneva_convenience

Where are the zionists terrorist orgs on the western countries lists?
in reply to mrdown

Well to be fair they sanctioned like four whole settlers. What more can you wish for



Bullets in Luigi Mangione’s bag convinced police that he was UnitedHealthcare CEO killing suspect


Moments after Luigi Mangione was handcuffed at a Pennsylvania McDonald’s, a police officer searching his backpack found a loaded gun magazine wrapped in a pair of underwear.

The discovery, recounted in court Monday as Mangione fights to keep evidence out of his New York murder case, convinced police in Altoona, Pennsylvania, that he was the man wanted in the killing of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson in Manhattan five days earlier.

https://apnews.com/article/mangione-unitedhealthcare-hearing-evidence-cb21b939cb6966c66b5b46546d75b7de

#News
Questa voce è stata modificata (1 settimana fa)
in reply to King

Thats impossible bro we were playing Civ VI together that night


Justice Department can unseal Ghislaine Maxwell sex trafficking case records, judge says


A federal judge on Tuesday granted the Justice Department’s request to publicly release grand jury transcripts and other material from Ghislaine Maxwell’s sex trafficking case, citing a new law that requires the government to open its files on Jeffrey Epstein and his longtime confidant, but he cautioned that people shouldn’t expect to learn much new information from them.

Judge Paul A. Engelmayer, who along with other judges had previously rejected Justice Department unsealing requests before the transparency law was passed, said the materials “do not identify any person other than Epstein and Maxwell as having had sexual contact with a minor.”

“They do not discuss or identify any client of Epstein’s or Maxwell’s,” Engelmayer wrote. “They do not reveal any heretofore unknown means or methods of Epstein’s or Maxwell’s crimes.”

https://apnews.com/article/epstein-maxwell-sex-trafficking-case-records-8e3985dd977cb94ef41b9581115ef61b



Unequivocal War Crimes





in reply to GertrudGoethe

Krugman is a worthless hack. Sensational headline with implicit endorsement of prohibition is a prime example.

Edit about the "nobel": Everybody who's talking about this "nobel prize". There is no nobel prize in econ. It's a phony award made up by bankers. That's how pathetic the pseudo-science of economics is. They need to make up their own fake awards for relevancy. So please don't tout the phony awards of this pseudo-scientists. I could make up an award for flat earthers but that wouldn't legitimize flat earthism.

(And even if there were a nobel for econ... Who cares about awards if the underlying "science" is still trash?)

Questa voce è stata modificata (6 giorni fa)
in reply to technocrit

Here's one of the best traders talking about the same issue:

invidious.nerdvpn.de/watch?v=b…

It's eloquent and funny at the same time.

I included a timestamp to jump (almost) directly to the most relevant bit (also 33m, but 31m sets up a better context for an extra 2min of time compared to going directly to the 33m mark). But the whole video is worth watching.

Yes, Krugman is a hack.

Questa voce è stata modificata (6 giorni fa)


The Plan is to Make the Internet Worse. Forever. | Aaron Bastani Meets Cory Doctorow



in reply to SpontaneousCombustion

This post is anti-Israel propaganda. Israel has been working hard to reduce hospitalization rates by leveling the hospitals and murdering the children before they can starve.
Questa voce è stata modificata (1 settimana fa)
in reply to SpontaneousCombustion

But nobody is willing to force Israel to hold to the "ceasefire" and allow in the agreed upon aid.


Leaked Memo: DOJ To List, Target Anti-Trump Activists as ‘Domestic Terrorists’


The Department of Justice (DOJ) will potentially treat opponents of President Donald Trump’s policies as “domestic terrorists,” according to a leaked memo from Attorney General Pam Bondi to all U.S. law enforcement agencies.

The document, which was first published over the weekend by investigative journalist Ken Klippenstein, appears to represent the first attempt to implement Trump’s calls to target left-wing activists and others who protest his administration’s policies as “terrorists” affiliated with antifa, an anti-fascist movement that often serves as a boogeyman for the right.



I bambini che piangono quando viene tolto lo schermo: Alberto Pellai racconta la mutazione antropologica che ha cambiato l’infanzia


Da ricerche interne di Instagram del 2021, la piattaforma ha scoperto che il 45 per cento delle ragazze dichiara di stare peggio da quando usa il social. “Loro lo sanno benissimo, le loro ricerche le hanno tenute tutte occultate”,

https://www.orizzontescuola.it/i-bambini-che-piangono-quando-viene-tolto-lo-schermo-alberto-pellai-racconta-la-mutazione-antropologica-che-ha-cambiato-linfanzia/

reshared this

in reply to suoko

i bambini piangono da sempre quando gli togli qualcosa... 😂

reshared this

in reply to Anfi Bolo

Si, è come quando il problems erano la TV o il Gameboy, e i bambini non giocano più a palla per strada, e quello e quell'altro, ma tra un po' non vorranno neanche più un gioco che non abbia uno schermo e a breve, che sia senza IA.
Cose scontate, ma ignorate, evviva l'adhd per tutti!


Ireland: Top IRA agent Stakeknife protected by British handlers, report finds


in reply to SpontaneousCombustion

it would seem that this is biggest clue that the irish government is a vassal to the british
in reply to eldavi

Really? What makes you think that? In case you’re missing something, here’s a link to the Irish gov “allegedly” supplying guns to the IRA:
Arms Crisis


Personalization algorithms create an illusion of competence, study finds


Selected highlights: [quote]The researchers divided the participants into different groups to test the specific effects of algorithmic personalization. One group served as a control and viewed a random assortment of items with all features available to i

Selected highlights:

The researchers divided the participants into different groups to test the specific effects of algorithmic personalization. One group served as a control and viewed a random assortment of items with all features available to inspect. Another group engaged in active learning, where they freely chose which categories to study without algorithmic interference.

the study measured the participants’ confidence in their decisions using a rating scale from zero to ten. The analysis showed that participants in the personalized groups frequently reported high confidence levels even when their answers were wrong. This effect was particularly distinct when they encountered items from categories they had rarely or never seen during the learning phase.

This indicates a disconnection between actual competence and perceived competence caused by the filtered learning environment. The participants were unaware that the algorithm had hidden significant portions of the information landscape from them. They assumed the limited sample they viewed was representative of the whole.

The findings provide evidence that the structure of information delivery systems plays a significant role in shaping human cognition. By optimizing for engagement, current algorithms may inadvertently sacrifice the accuracy of user knowledge. This trade-off suggests that online platforms can shape not just what people see, but how they reason about the world.


in reply to NightOwl

things could start improving if we did the same thing to our billionaires
in reply to NightOwl

This is the “authoritarianism” that capitalist states and corporate media—and the “human rights” NGOs that they fund—are actually concerned about. They’re concerned about the freedom of capital, not people.


Earth needs more energy. Atlanta’s Super Soaker creator may have a solution.


Nuclear engineer Lonnie Johnson worked on NASA's Galileo mission, has more than 140 patents, and invented the Super Soaker water gun. But now he's working on "a potential key to unlock a huge power source that's rarely utilized today," reports the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

Waste heat...
The Johnson Thermo-Electrochemical Converter, or JTEC, has few moving parts, no combustion and no exhaust. All the work to generate electricity is done by hydrogen, the most abundant element in the universe. Inside the device, pressurized hydrogen gas is separated by a thin, filmlike membrane, with low pressure gas on one side and high pressure gas on the other. The difference in pressure in this "stack" is what drives the hydrogen to compress and expand, creating electricity as it circulates. And unlike a fuel cell, it does not need to be refueled with more hydrogen. All that's needed to keep the process going and electricity flowing is a heat source.

As it turns out, there are enormous amounts of energy vented or otherwise lost from industrial facilities like power plants, factories, breweries and more. Between 20% and 50% of all energy used for industrial processes is dumped into the atmosphere and lost as waste heat, according to the U.S. Department of Energy. The JTEC works with high temperatures, but the device's ability to generate electricity efficiently from low-grade heat sources is what company executives are most excited about. Inside JTEC's headquarters, engineers show off a demonstration unit that can power lights and a sound system with water that's roughly 200 degrees Fahrenheit — below the boiling point and barely warm enough to brew a cup of tea, said Julian Bell, JTEC's vice president of engineering. Comas Haynes, a research engineer at the Georgia Tech Research Institute specializing in thermal and hydrogen system designs, agrees the company could "hit a sweet spot" if it can capitalize on lower temperature heat...

For Johnson, the potential application he's most excited about lies beneath our feet. Geothermal energy exists naturally in rocks and water beneath the Earth's surface at various depths. Tapping into that resource through abandoned oil and gas wells — a well-known access point for underground heat — offers another opportunity. "You don't need batteries and you can draw power when you need it from just about anywhere," Johnson said. Right now, the company is building its first commercial JTEC unit, which is set to be deployed early next year. Mike McQuary, JTEC's CEO and the former president of the pioneering internet service provider MindSpring, said he couldn't reveal the customer, but said it's a "major Southeast utility company." "Crossing that bridge where you have commercial customers that believe in it and will pay for it is important," McQuary said...

On top of some initial seed money, the company brought in $30 million in a Series A funding in 2022 — money that allowed the company to move to its Lee + White headquarters and hire more than 30 engineers. McQuary said it expects to begin another round of fundraising soon.

"Johnson, meanwhile, hasn't stopped working on new inventions," the article points out. "He continues to refine the design for his solid-state battery..."

Technology reshared this.

in reply to Avenging5

The Earth doesn't need a fucking thing it doesn't already have, except for a cleanup of human-generated pollution.

Most of the new demand for energy is to run LLMs that nobody actually needs.

in reply to phutatorius

I hate this shit as well. People use "The Earth" to make it sound good for the environment, but it's actually just human greed we're always talking about. Take sustainability for example, you ask teens about it, and a lot of them will say it's about saving the environment. It's not. It's about trying to sustain capitalism and our consumerist lifestyle to go on forever while pretending to give a fuck about the environment.



Thailand launches airstrikes inside Cambodia after accusing it of violating ceasefire


At least six people have been killed and dozens of others injured in fresh clashes between the two South-East Asian neighbors, despite a ceasefire agreement signed in October under US mediation.

https://peoplesdispatch.org/2025/12/08/thailand-launches-airstrikes-inside-cambodia-after-accusing-it-of-violating-ceasefire/

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 settimana fa)



Firewood Banks Aren’t Inspiring. They’re a Sign of Collapse.


A wood bank is exactly what it sounds like. People in rural and Indigenous areas still heavily rely on wood heat as the primary fuel source for their homes. Volunteers cut and split firewood, stack it somewhere public, and give it away for free to those who can’t afford it. No paperwork. No means tests. No government forms. Just a pile of hardwood that shows up because someone else’s house would be cold without it.

Most articles about wood banks wrap them in the same tired language. Community spirit. Rural generosity. Neighbors helping neighbors. It’s the kind of coverage you get when journalists focus on the people stacking the wood instead of the conditions that made it necessary. They never mention the underlying reality. Wood banks exist because without them, people would freeze. It’s the same everywhere: Local news crews film volunteers splitting logs while pretending it’s heartwarming, reporting on senior citizens splitting 150 cords a year for neighbors in need as if the story is about kindness instead of the failure that created the need in the first place.

...The volunteers running wood banks aren’t performing resilience. They’re plugging holes in a sinking ship and doing the work the state stopped doing. They are the thin line between a cold snap and another obituary...



Report Exposes Instacart's Hidden AI Price Experiments That Could Cost Families $1,200 Per Year


cross-posted from: news.abolish.capital/post/1253…

Consumer advocates on Tuesday called on the Federal Trade Commission and state officials to investigate artificial intelligence-enabled pricing experiments used by Instacart, the grocery shopping app millions of Americans rely on, that charge up to 23% more for some shoppers than others when they buy the same item at the same store.

Consumer Reports joined the advocacy group Groundwork Collaborative and the labor-focused media organization More Perfect Union to uncover Instacart's pricing experiments enabled by Eversight, an AI pricing software that Instacart acquired in 2022. The company's CEO said last year that the experiments have helped the company “to really figure out which categories of products our customers [are] more price sensitive on"—in other words, to tailor prices based on a customer's shopping habits, whether they're near a competing store, and other factors.

The groups' study, Same Cart, Different Price, describes how researchers ran five tests with 437 participants, studying the prices of a basket of items bought at two Target stores and three Safeway stores using Instacart.

In one test at a Safeway in Washington, DC, shoppers logged on to the app to buy a carton of eggs from the same brand at the same time and found that the price they were given varied widely. Some shoppers were charged just $3.99 for the eggs, while others saw a price as high as $4.79—20% higher.

Shoppers at a Safeway in Seattle saw a 23% difference in prices for Skippy peanut butter, Oscar Mayer turkey, and Wheat Thins crackers. At two different Safeways in Washington, DC, Instacart quoted shoppers at one store a price that was 23% higher than at another for Signature Select Corn Flakes.

"It’s time for Instacart to close the lab. Americans shopping for groceries aren’t guinea pigs and shouldn't have to pay an Instacart tax.”

For the same basket of groceries, shoppers at the Seattle store were asked to pay as much as $123.93, while others were charged just $114.34.

"The average price variations observed in the study could cost a household of four about $1,200 per year," said Groundwork.

Justin Brookman, director of tech policy at Consumer Reports, said Instacart's tactics "hurt families who are simply trying to purchase essential groceries."

"At a time when everyday Americans are struggling with high prices, it is particularly egregious to see corporations secretly conducting individual experiments to see how much a person is willing to pay," said Brookman. "Companies must be transparent and upfront with people about pricing, so that they can make informed choices and keep more of their hard-earned money. We encourage the Federal Trade Commission and state attorneys general to investigate Instacart’s pricing tactics."

Groundwork noted that Instcart's website acknowledges that it runs price tests, but states that "shoppers are not aware that they’re in an experiment" and are having their grocery prices selected for them via algorithm.

While Instacart has claimed its price experiments are "negligible," the groups emphasized that they're being used "against the backdrop of the fastest increase in food prices since the late 1970s."

After previous reporting on companies' use of "shrinkflation," "dynamic pricing," and other practices that keep prices high even as pandemic-era labor and supply chain issues have subsided, "today’s report shows Instacart’s experiments are yet another way corporate pricing tactics are squeezing American families," said Groundwork.

The study did not find evidence that Instacart is giving shoppers different prices based on their ZIP code or income, as companies like Amazon, Delta Air Lines, and Home Deport have been accused of doing.

But the groups said Eversight gives the company the capability to use that data to make pricing decisions tailored to particular shoppers.

“Instacart is quietly running pricing experiments on millions of shoppers during the worst grocery affordability crisis in a generation, and it’s costing households as much as $1,200 a year,” said Groundwork Collaborative executive director Lindsay Owens. “They have turned the simple act of buying groceries into a high-tech game of pricing roulette. When the same box of Wheat Thins can jump 23% in price because of an algorithm, that’s not innovation or convenience, it’s unfair. It’s time for Instacart to close the lab. Americans shopping for groceries aren’t guinea pigs and shouldn't have to pay an Instacart tax.”

The groups credited some state and federal lawmakers who have begun to take notice of pricing practices like Instacart's; US Rep. Greg Casar (D-Texas) introduced the Stop AI Price Gouging and Wage Fixing Act in July with the aim of prohibiting the use of automated systems to set prices. New York has enacted the first-of-its-kind Algorithmic Pricing Disclosure Act, which requires companies to prominently disclose to customers, "This price was set by an algorithm using your personal data" when they use methods like Instacart's. Other state legislation has been introduced in Colorado, California, and Pennsylvania to ban the use of surveillance to set prices.

The groups called on the FTC to take action under Section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act, which bans "unfair methods of competition." Those could include “'price discrimination not justified by differences in cost or distribution,' which appears to match Instacart’s pricing experiments and fluctuations," the report reads.

The FTC could also bring enforcement cases or initiate rulemaking to officially label AI-enabled pricing strategies as an "unfair or deceptive practice," affirming that companies who use them are breaking a consumer protection standard.

"Fair and honest markets are the bedrock of a healthy economy," reads Tuesday's report. "Companies like Instacart offer great convenience, but they are increasingly pursuing corporate pricing practices that unfairly decouple the price of a product from its true cost. As more consumers learn about, and decry, these practices, perhaps companies will change course. But if they do not, policymakers should intervene and require them to change their practices."


From Common Dreams via This RSS Feed.



Trekking nella Riserva di Monte Catillo - "Orizzonti Tiburtini"


ESCURSIONE GRATUITA DI NATALE 🎁 🎄 + Cena di Gruppo - SABATO 20 DICEMBRE 2025 Una bellissima giornata nella Riserva Naturale di Monte Catillo, subito fuori il centro storico di Tivoli, a pochi passi da Roma. Un variegato percorso naturalistico ci condurr

ESCURSIONE GRATUITA DI NATALE 🎁 🎄 + Cena di Gruppo - SABATO 20 DICEMBRE 2025

Una bellissima giornata nella Riserva Naturale di Monte Catillo, subito fuori il centro storico di Tivoli, a pochi passi da Roma.

Un variegato percorso naturalistico ci condurrà attraverso la macchia mediterranea e i boschi di sughera e cerro.

Lungo il sentiero potrai godere dei caratteristici affacci panoramici dell'area tiburtina: la splendida acropoli di Tivoli, la vasta campagna romana, i Monti Prenestini e Cornicolani (anche il mare se saremo fortunati).

> Ti racconteremo la storia, i miti e le leggende di questo luogo antico ed affascinante, forgiato dal fiume Aniene.

E' una facile escursione, a meno di un'ora dalla capitale, cui seguirà una cena di gruppo per festeggiare insieme la fine della stagione escursionistica!

Prenotazione (obbligatoria) aperta fino a Venerdì 19 Dicembre 2025 ore 15:00

Per informazioni contattate @greentrek@mastodon.uno

greentrek.it/escursioni/escurs…

reshared this



Privacy‑centric doom scrolling apps for iOS and android


I am looking for a free, privacy‑centric app for endless doom‑scrolling that serves as an alternative to Instagram, TikTok, and Facebook—without the need for social connections, or chatting.
Questa voce è stata modificata (1 settimana fa)
in reply to MarthaT

You mean an alternative client for those or a completely different platform?


Brewed up some tree beer


On Friday I brewed up some tree beer using Leyland Cypress boughs in the strike and sparge water as well as in the mash vessel. OG was ~1.050 and I split the boil to brew up a saison and a pale ale with galaxy and sultana (denali) hops. The saison is fermenting with a wild yeast culture I captured from my neighbor's raw honey and the pale ale has Framgarden kveik. They're both fermenting at 87°F/30.5°C

The Leyland Cypress gives the beer a pleasant evergreen/christmas tree flavor that's a bit citrusy and not too overwhelming. I've brewed with this tree a number of times and thoroughly researched it so I'm fully confident that it is not toxic. I don't measure the amount of tree I put in the beer, basically just put branches into the kettle until it's annoying to try to add another one.

in reply to MuteDog

Tried This a few years back and I like a strong flavor but it was too much. Mayne because they used the whole tree!
in reply to FellowEnt

Pine can be pretty intense (if it actually was a pine tree). Spruce can also get pretty resiny if you're using mature branches, this is why most people use the new growth tips. I've yet to try Noble Fir, which is what we typically get for our Christmas tree, maybe one of these years.


Create and upload your own with maximum privacy?


I cannot find information anywhere. Sorry, English is my second language.

I possess a DVD and want to upload this as a torrent so others can download it.

I burn the media to my Linux PC using a media ripper. I use Handbrake to convert the media and small the file size.

I can create a torrent. But how do I insure none of my computer's personal information and identifiers are saved on that file? I dont want me to be found out if someone opens the file and somehow can see I'm the one who created it.

In other hand, how do the pirates create and upload media into torrents while protecting themself from being found out?

Edit: Corrected to Linux PC

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

I think you worried about metadata mostly. Can maybe infer gpu/os/software from encode pattern, but probably not problem for you.

For image metadata usually called exif data, exiftool on linux work well for me. For video, ffmpeg has ffprobe tool to extract metadata using some option. Ffmpeg also have some option to clear metadata (but not all), complicated a bit to set up right.

If not available for windows, search for alternative. Or graphical wrapper if not like commandline.

First verify you have good method to see metadata, then try what method remove what.

If really paranoid, dump windows (has lot of spyware), use tool like gnu strings to see printable string in binary file might be metadata.

For torrent:
1. See if already exist by someone (public index search, dht search engine)

  1. Throw out handbrake, always upload original quality. Reencode fine if from raw source material, but no dvd/bluray has raw quality. Or if really want to offer small file, upload both.
  2. Create torrent with dht/pex enable to allow dht search engine and other peer to find.
  3. Use no-log vpn or i2p to seed.

More info probably in megathread or wiki.

Edit: 5. over vpn or i2p make account on public index and upload torrent as new post. Or share torrent with friend. Or on other forum.

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 settimana fa)



I love Wikipedia


I absolutely love Wikipedia. It has almost replaced a good chunk of my school books back when I was in high school and it is still very useful now that I'm in university. Wikipedia and similar things are a dream that comes true


Digital House Arrest – How the EU Wants to Disempower Families



in reply to brianpeiris

Cue the websites complaining in a couple years that even less people are visiting their pages, like they did when summarizing pages on social media was banned.
in reply to brianpeiris

Man, this should be the shortest, easiest investigation ever.
Here, let me help. Google does not offer any compensation to the websites they're ripping off with their AI summaries.

While you are at it, consider also investigating bing and duck duck go.



Border Patrol Agent Recorded Raid with Meta’s Ray-Ban Smart Glasses


On a recent immigration raid, a Border Patrol agent wore a pair of Meta’s Ray-Ban smart glasses, with the privacy light clearly on signaling he was recording the encounter, which agents are not permitted to do, according to photos and videos of the incident shared with 404 Media.

Previously when 404 Media covered Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) officials’ use of Meta’s Ray-Bans, it wasn’t clear if the officials were using them to record raids because the recording lights were not on in any of the photos seen by 404 Media. In the new material from Charlotte, North Carolina, during the recent wave of immigration enforcement, the recording light is visibly illuminated.


Archive: archive.today/3hDqM


Border Patrol Agent Recorded Raid with Meta’s Ray-Ban Smart Glasses


On a recent immigration raid, a Border Patrol agent wore a pair of Meta’s Ray-Ban smart glasses, with the privacy light clearly on signaling he was recording the encounter, which agents are not permitted to do, according to photos and videos of the incident shared with 404 Media.

Previously when 404 Media covered Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officials’ use of Meta’s Ray-Bans, it wasn’t clear if the officials were using them to record raids because the recording lights were not on in any of the photos seen by 404 Media. In the new material from Charlotte, North Carolina, during the recent wave of immigration enforcement, the recording light is visibly illuminated.

That is significant because CBP says it does not allow employees to use personal recording devices. CBP told 404 Media it does not have an arrangement with Meta, indicating this official was wearing personally-sourced glasses.

This post is for subscribers only


Become a member to get access to all content
Subscribe now


reshared this




How do you check if food is healthy?


Hey everyone 👋
I’m working solo on a small side project called BiteWise — it helps people understand what’s really in the food they eat 🍎
You can check it out here: bitewiser.carrd.co/

I’d love your feedback! Here’s a quick 2-minute questionnaire if you want to help shape it:
👉 tally.so/r/dWqa6z

Not selling anything yet — just testing if this solves a real problem 🙏

reshared this





in reply to 🏴حمید پیام عباسی🏴

The only halfway-decent treatment I’ve seen in Western media to date was the Cylon occupation of New Caprica in the 2004 Battlerstar Galactica TV series. It was basically the US occupation of Iraq, except the “us” were the occupied insurgents and the “them” were the occupiers.
Questa voce è stata modificata (1 settimana fa)
in reply to davel

If you want to get real into it, the "humans" were also really worried because "they" could act, look, and sound like us?! The horror!!!


The LanguageTool extension will now be paid


reshared this

in reply to thatonecoder

Well, Since their alternative Quillbot does not support Firefox. I might switch to Grammarly


German state of Schleswig-Holstein to save €15 million each year by kicking out Microsoft for Open Source, local government says


Web archive link

Schleswig-Holstein [Germany's most Northern state] started its open source journey early, becoming something of a vanguard in Europe's move away from proprietary software [by ditching Microsoft and introducing Linux and LibreOffice].

Now, Dirk Schrödter, the Minister for Digital Transformation of the state, has shared some remarkable numbers (link to article in German language) that prove the financial case for implementing open source for government use cases.

...

According to Schrödter's ministry, Schleswig-Holstein will save over €15 million in license costs in 2026. This is money the state previously paid Microsoft for Office 365 and related services.

The savings come from nearly completing the migration to LibreOffice. Outside the tax administration, almost 80% of workplaces in the state government are said to have made the switch.

The remaining 20% of workplaces still depend on Microsoft programs. Technical dependencies in certain specialized applications keep these systems tied to Word or Excel for now. But converting these remaining computers is the end goal.

There is also a one-time €9 million investment set in motion for 2026, which would be used to complete the migration and further develop the open source solutions for the ministry.

[...]

in reply to Sepia

Savings on future proofing and security will be even more than that


UK unveils AI-driven undersea surveillance network to counter Russian submarine activity


The UK government has unveiled the first details of Atlantic Bastion, a new undersea warfare programme designed to detect and counter Russian submarine activity across the North Atlantic.
The UK government has unveiled the first details of Atlantic Bastion, a new undersea warfare programme designed to detect and counter Russian submarine activity across the North Atlantic.

https://www.tomshardware.com/tech-industry/uk-unveils-atlantic-bastion-ai-driven-undersea-surveillance-network


in reply to SantasMagicalComfort

This is delightfully ironic after all the remarks against Biden about the same thing.


How to leave a lot of communities at the same time?


Hi, I am subscribed to a lot of communities. I want to leave a lot of them. Is there a way to easily select all the communities I want to leave? Now I do it one by one, but this is a lot of work. I would love to hear how to do this in bulk. Thanks.

Hi,

I am subscribed to a lot of communities.
I want to leave a lot of them.
Is there a way to easily select all the communities I want to leave?
Now I do it one by one, but this is a lot of work.

I would love to hear how to do this in bulk.

Thanks.

in reply to Little_Protection434

Parola filtrata: nsfw

in reply to wjs018

Thanks! This is so much easier then leaving every community seperately!