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Which hedge fund owns this sea?


Critical aid and support to the people of Gaza—only translatable as this is yet another way we will annihilate you. Johnnie Moore is an Evangelical leader who began his career as Senior Vice President for Communications for Liberty University—the private Evangelical school founded by Jerry Falwell Sr. [https://electronicintifada.net/content/father-christian-zionism-leaves-building/6923] and went on to found the Kairo Company, a public relations firm based in Glendale, California. The group insists: We get the job done… Whatever it takes. If we’re harping on words, a pause for Kairos’ stated approach:


in reply to comum

Btw, i have a USB-C DAC that has it's comfortable level on 5%. Any way to change that and increase fidelity of audio steps?
in reply to MonkderVierte

Its your DE that controls the volume steps, if that's what you're asking. On Ubuntu its shift + volume.
in reply to MonkderVierte

If it's a pure DAC, it's default output will likely be between 1 to 2 Volts RMS. If your listening on iems or ~30 Ohm headphones that is gonna be crazy loud. It seems like you are using digital audio control to manage this (i.e., the audio level in your DE), which is possible, but certainly not ideal. It also is kinda bad for the audio quality, as you are digitally remixing it, and if you ever switch to high impedance headphones (or already have), the output current will be sub-ideal.

If I'm assessing your situation correctly, then this is quite easy to solve though. You just need a preamp! This will give a nice knob to control audio with much more precision and finesse. I know that both JDS Labs and Schiit Audio offer headphone amps with built in preamps in the USA. I can highly recommend the JDS Labs Atom Amp 2. In Europe your a little more limited, but FiiO has some nice options I think.

Of course none of this is necessary if you don't want audiophile levels of quality, but it would boost the audio quality (presuming your DAC doesn't have a proper preamp), and would certainly give you a tactile, wonderful knob.

I can certainly attest that my HD600s sound quite a bit better out of a JDS Labs Atom Amp 2 than out of just my DAC or—god forbid—my Mobo audio... They sound even better out of my vintage 100W Onkyo amp, of course, but really not by much. I am really impressed by the Atom Amp. I initially just bought it for travelling, but it has now basically become my main amp lol.

Okay, ramble over.

in reply to Übercomplicated

Ah, no, it's iFi Audio Go Blue and a 3More Triple something in-ear connected via jack. It has Bluetooth, but via USB sounds better.
Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)
in reply to comum

RAOP stands for Remote Audio Output Protocol and is the key to enabling Airplay on Linux


medium.com/@ed.sav/enabling-ai…




Spies For Empire: Beware UN-Affiliated Organisations


On June 13th, the Zionist entity carried out an unprovoked, criminal military strike on Iran. While its impact was limited, with Tehran’s counterattack far more devastating, Israel’s targeted assassination of a number of Iranian nuclear scientists indicates Tel Aviv knew their identities and locations with some precision. Coincidentally, a day prior to the entity’s broadside, Press TV published documents indicating the International Atomic Energy Agency previously provided Israeli intelligence the names of several Iranian nuclear scientists, who were subsequently killed.

Other documents indicate IAEA chief Rafael Grossi enjoys a close, clandestine relationship with Israeli officials, and has frequently acted upon their orders. The files are part of a wider trove obtained by Iran’s Intelligence Ministry, containing unprecedented insights into Tel Aviv’s secret, illegal nuclear weapons capability, and its relationships with Europe, the US and other countries, among other bombshell material. The tranche could well shed further light on the IAEA’s brazen, murderous collusion with the entity.

Further reinforcing interpretations the IAEA assisted Israel’s June 13th strike on Iran, a day prior, the Association’s Board of Governors declared Tehran “in breach of its non-proliferation obligations.” The basis for this finding, which provided Tel Aviv with a propaganda pretext for its illegal attack, was an IAEA report published two weeks prior. The document provided no new information - its dubious charges related “to activities dating back decades” at three sites where allegedly, until the early 2000s, “undeclared nuclear material” was handled.

With the “12 day war” between Iran, Israel, and its Western puppet masters now over, US President Donald Trump has expressed optimism he can both broker peace between Tehran and the Zionist entity, and finalise a new nuclear deal with the Islamic Republic. Both outcomes seem highly implausible. At the very least, there is little chance of IAEA inspectors being permitted anywhere near Iran’s nuclear sites ever again, given the Association’s intimate covert relationship with officials in Tel Aviv, and complicity in its attacks old and potentially new.



Thom Tillis won’t seek re-election after clash with Trump over ‘big beautiful bill’


Thom Tillis announced on Sunday that he will not run for re-election to the US Senate next year, one day after the North Carolina Republican’s vote against Donald Trump’s signature piece of domestic legislation prompted the president to launch a barrage of threats and insults – as well as promise to support a primary challenger to defeat him in their party’s 2026 primary.

“In Washington over the last few years, it’s become increasingly evident that leaders who are willing to embrace bipartisanship, compromise, and demonstrate independent thinking are becoming an endangered species,” Tillis said in a statement sent to reporters.

“As many of my colleagues have noticed over the last year, and at times even joked about, I haven’t exactly been excited about running for another term”, he added. “It’s not a hard choice, and I will not be seeking re-election.”

#USA



GUI/App to automate key presses in linux wayland


There is xclicker which is a flatpak app, but it only automate mouse clicks, but there is nothing for key presses, I am surprised I could not find anything on this, but is there any GUI for this? Also is this possible on a technical level (in flatpak especially, I dont know if apps can simulate key presses). I know of ydotool, but that uses root, also its not a gui
in reply to SpiderUnderUrBed

Dunno if it would meet your needs, but I've been using Input Remapper for binding macros to various key presses and mouse buttons under Wayland. It does prompt for root access, but it's a GUI. It supports any input method, as far as I can tell. It even supports my tablet.

I use it to bind stuff like hold(key(BTN_LEFT).wait(100)) to some button to repeatedly left click while I'm holding that button down.

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)
in reply to SpiderUnderUrBed

It's not GUI, but I want to mention another alternative, as people mention commandline applications here too: kdotool, works under KDE Wayland without with normal user rights (no root). They still work on a few features, but it can do lot of windowing stuff already. A good addition to ydotool.


Bad issues with system load on Mint Desktop


Hi!. Currently running Linux Mint 22.1, but i suspect it's not strictly a distro issue. This laptop was running VERY well but was outdated, running Mint 19.3, some things were unable to be installed because the system libraries were old (didn't expect Calibre to be one of them, figures), so i updated all the way to that moment's current version which was Mint 21.3. All of a sudden it felt like the laptop got downgraded two whole computer tech generations. As soon as i ask it to do something mildly complicated that made it break no sweat on Mint 19, it gets VERY slow, all the cores start running at max, system load increases, until it finishes doing whatever it was doing several minutes later, something between a couple of minutes when lucky, to 20 or more. Typically what triggers the issue is something on the browser (what i use the most on the computer is browser tabs and lots of terminals) but not exclusively. Thought it was the browser but replicated it on an empty Firefox profile, and has triggered with simpler stuff like the Discord client. Been trying to find the issue for a while trying to avoid a full reinstall, no luck so far.

If i were to describe how it feels, it's like there was a bottleneck on tasks being done by the system, as soon as you ask it to do something mildly complex it chokes on it and tasks accumulate. No idea if it's some kind of kernel misconfiguration, if it's some hardware incompatibility, or something else entirely, checking the changelogs of Mint all the way between 19.3 and 21.3 showed nothing i could pin this onto (or at least nothing i could notice).

The nuclear option would be a brand new blank install but I'd MUCH rather avoid that if possible, made the comfortable but now unwise choice of a single partition for everything (instead of a separate /home and whatnot as i used to do) so reinstallation would wipe it completely, if i must then i must but much rather not.

Would welcome VERY much ideas on stuff to check or try.

Edit: It's got an NVME drive, which seems to be healthy as far as i can see

Edit: When it happens it doesn't seem to matter how much RAM is free, seen it happen with only 8 of the 32Gb of RAM in use and zero swap

Edit: Found a great way to describe how it feels like: Have you done heavy video encoding on a computer that's adequate for the task but not more than that, and noticed how everything in it stalls heavily, even if there's plenty of RAM free and the computer feels like it's giving everything to that task only? Pretty much that, but for nearly everything even moderately heavy

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)
in reply to jherazob

I wish you the best of luck at/with whatever you end up doing! May your system be protected from bit rot, config drift and/or problems caused by hidden state!



GE-Proton10-6 and GE-Proton10-7 Released


HOTFIX: GE-Proton10-7:

  • Re-added the PROTON_PREFER_SDL option. When this envvar is set steam input and hidraw are disabled so that SDL takes priority over controller support.

HOTFIX (GE-Proton10-6):

The wine-wayland patches needed rebasing and needed force pushing due to a problem with a few commits in them noted by the author that can cause some crashing, making GE-Proton10-5 version invalid.

The 10-5 release was reverted due to the force push per the request of the wine-wayland patch set author, thus the version bumped to 10-6. It's one of those view weird instances where you will see a version missing in the releases. (This also happened in the past with media foundation stuff that Valve yelled at me about). Oopsie.

Changelog (GE-Proton10-5):

Nothing too major here, mostly just an update to upstream's code since it's been about 30 days.

  • Wine-wayland patches have been updated/rebased, should fix some nvidia crashes, and no longer need this mesa patch: gitlab.freedesktop.org/mesa/me…
  • patches added to help with Wuthering Waves.
  • protonfixes updated
  • protonfix added for Artificial Academy 2
  • protonfix added for Persona 4 Arena Ultimax
  • protonfix added for Anno 1800 from Ubisoft Store
  • protonfix added for Anno 1800
in reply to CannonGoBoom

I installed that today. Finally! Years after GE release, I managed to install it with the help of an AI bc nobody explains anything properly, except for the AI.
Hopefully with GE I'll stop seeing 130 GB log files from Forza 5. 😂


Trump threatens to cut off New York City funds if Mamdani ‘doesn’t behave’


cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/32472965

Edward Helmore
Sun 29 Jun 2025 13.06 EDT

"Mamdani said he was inspired by the US civil rights activist Martin Luther King Jr, who once remarked: “Call it democracy or call it democratic socialism. There has to be a better distribution of wealth for all of God’s children in this country.”

He then reiterated his intent to raise taxes on New York’s wealthiest as part of a campaign pledge “to shift the tax burden from overtaxed homeowners in the outer boroughs to more expensive homes in richer and whiter neighborhoods”.

“I don’t think that we should have billionaires because, frankly, it is so much money in a moment of such inequality... "



Trump threatens to cut off New York City funds if Mamdani ‘doesn’t behave’


Edward Helmore
Sun 29 Jun 2025 13.06 EDT

"Mamdani said he was inspired by the US civil rights activist Martin Luther King Jr, who once remarked: “Call it democracy or call it democratic socialism. There has to be a better distribution of wealth for all of God’s children in this country.”

He then reiterated his intent to raise taxes on New York’s wealthiest as part of a campaign pledge “to shift the tax burden from overtaxed homeowners in the outer boroughs to more expensive homes in richer and whiter neighborhoods”.

“I don’t think that we should have billionaires because, frankly, it is so much money in a moment of such inequality... "




Trump threatens to cut off New York City funds if Mamdani ‘doesn’t behave’


cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/32472965

Edward Helmore
Sun 29 Jun 2025 13.06 EDT

"Mamdani said he was inspired by the US civil rights activist Martin Luther King Jr, who once remarked: “Call it democracy or call it democratic socialism. There has to be a better distribution of wealth for all of God’s children in this country.”

He then reiterated his intent to raise taxes on New York’s wealthiest as part of a campaign pledge “to shift the tax burden from overtaxed homeowners in the outer boroughs to more expensive homes in richer and whiter neighborhoods”.

“I don’t think that we should have billionaires because, frankly, it is so much money in a moment of such inequality... "



Trump threatens to cut off New York City funds if Mamdani ‘doesn’t behave’


Edward Helmore
Sun 29 Jun 2025 13.06 EDT

"Mamdani said he was inspired by the US civil rights activist Martin Luther King Jr, who once remarked: “Call it democracy or call it democratic socialism. There has to be a better distribution of wealth for all of God’s children in this country.”

He then reiterated his intent to raise taxes on New York’s wealthiest as part of a campaign pledge “to shift the tax burden from overtaxed homeowners in the outer boroughs to more expensive homes in richer and whiter neighborhoods”.

“I don’t think that we should have billionaires because, frankly, it is so much money in a moment of such inequality... "




Trump threatens to cut off New York City funds if Mamdani ‘doesn’t behave’


Edward Helmore
Sun 29 Jun 2025 13.06 EDT

"Mamdani said he was inspired by the US civil rights activist Martin Luther King Jr, who once remarked: “Call it democracy or call it democratic socialism. There has to be a better distribution of wealth for all of God’s children in this country.”

He then reiterated his intent to raise taxes on New York’s wealthiest as part of a campaign pledge “to shift the tax burden from overtaxed homeowners in the outer boroughs to more expensive homes in richer and whiter neighborhoods”.

“I don’t think that we should have billionaires because, frankly, it is so much money in a moment of such inequality... "

#USA

in reply to swordfish

The main NATO member countries are backing Israel, with money, weaponry, and promises of defense. This happened when the US invaded Iraq also.
in reply to Dessalines

Yes, but individual countries supporting Israel by eiter finance, ammo or just providing Air defense doesn't make this a NATO operation just because they are in NATO.
in reply to swordfish

The US is making full usage of the bases in Europe to support Israel, without them it would have been logistically very hard; short of like the invasion of Afghanistan without the collaboration of Pakistan. These US bases fall under the US European Command (EUCOM) but are integrated into NATO’s architecture. The European NATO members, not only provide the bases, but subsidize the costs (e.g., infrastructure, utilities), therefore, becoming participants with the Israeli Campaign.

Countries can have some say. Spain, for instance, blocked some US airplanes destined to some campaigns, but it is just symbolic since the US just need not to declare the intention (or lie) and that is the end of the restrictions. It is not like Spain is going to inspect the vast amount of tonnage the US military is moving through Spanish ports, let alone between US bases. US could easily avoid the bases in Spain and use instead Germany, Italy and Morocco, but why would do so, when you can just humiliate your vassals in their face and have no repercussion at all... same as blowing up Nord Stream 2.

in reply to swordfish

every single country in that T-word organization (I leave figuring out what the "T" word is as an exercise for the reader) provides material support, whether directly or indirectly, to the settler-colonial entity.
in reply to Samsuma

1) it is not true that every single county does that
2) the ones that do, do it as individual states. Same as backing Ukraine is the decision of every individual state rather than a NATO project
3) NATO is not a Tennis Organization. 😀
in reply to swordfish

  1. it is not true that every single county does that


For starters, every single member has diplomatic ties with the settler-colonial entity (save for Turkey's intermittent "severing ties" posturing), that alone is substantial material support. Now, I'm not going to list every single notable contribution to the settler-colonial entity for each member state in that organization, so please point out which member state does not contribute to the baby-and-women-murdering sex offender haven "state".

  1. the ones that do, do it as individual states


nato.int/cps/en/natohq/news_21…

NATO and Israel have worked together for almost 30 years, cooperating in domains such as science and technology, counter terrorism, civil preparedness, countering weapons of mass destruction and women, peace and security. Over the last year cooperation has grown, with NATO welcoming Israel’s intention to strengthen the naval interoperability by recognising Israel as a partner for NATO’s Operation Sea Guardian, and Israel’s Defence Force military medical academy now serving as a unique asset for NATO’s Partnership Training and Education Centres community.


And even if that was somehow true, which it isn't, it still doesn't change the fact that every single country in that T-word organization provides material support.

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)
in reply to Samsuma

Well if you count decades old recognition of a state as a support of what is going currently in Gaza, i will not spend time to find any examples because on that premise you would be factually correct, but your premise is wrong. Past recognition of a state does not automatically mean support for its actions, which you seem to imply.

Coopertation on anything else with NATO not really adressing the point, as we are discussing the situation in Gaza specifically, not Israels ties with NATO in general.

in reply to swordfish

Why do redditors read the first sentence, somehow completely take away the wrong information from the first sentence and then proceed to ignore the rest of the comment as they refuse to elaborate their position?

For starters, every single member has diplomatic ties with the settler-colonial entity. Two things that are explicitly clear here:

  1. This does not only equate to "past recognition". Diplomatic ties entail cooperation and a relationship between two states that facilitiates, among other things, trade and transport agreements and citizen travel between the two states. This is diplomacy 101. That said, it should not be hard to understand why having diplomatic ties to a settler-colonial entity counts as support for the genocide of the Palestinians.
  2. This is not the only point being made here. This is why I prefaced with "For starters". The fact of the matter is every NATO member does indeed provide material support to the vermin psycho-"state" full of grown men posing to the camera wearing clothes of the children and women they murder/violate.

Also, NATO ties to the entity is PERTINENT to the point that NATO members and NATO itself provides material support to the entity to slaughter Palestinians. It's not hard to understand from the excerpt what "30 years of cooperation on domains such as science and technology, counter-terrorism" etc.. means. I just provided proof that material support from NATO was and is still happening, straight from NATO.

Instead of engaging in deeply unserious one-note retorts that only serve to prove your lack of comprehension skills and insane mental gymnastics, point out which member state does not contribute to the baby-and-women-murdering sex offender haven “state”.

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)
in reply to Samsuma

Redditors?

About diplomacy 101
My country has diplomatic relations with russia for example. We do however not cooperate in most aspects. In fact we are on the list of their enemies.

My country also has diplomatic ties with israel. And we do cooperate. Mostly in education. My country is also a NATO member without a single US soldier or base present. Also opposed to current Gaza events.

Vermin psycho state is a bit too much for me. I'd just stop the discussion here.

in reply to swordfish

Am I supposed to know where "my country" is? Whatever, doesn't matter, we now learn that you don't really consider Palestinians humans, so good talk.



China Claps Back: No US Trade Deals That Sacrifice Its Interests


in reply to Bot R1

Are you ready to make this interesting? Because I know who I am betting on


Ukraine's Withdrawal From Anti-Personnel Landmine Treaty Could Haunt Generations


in reply to jackeroni

It doesn't actually matter, because both Ukraine and Russia have already been heavily mining the frontlines for 3 years.
Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)


in reply to quoll

Not if we're distracted with separating trash from recycling. We have way too many distractions so we might actually not be able to focus on the guillotines.
in reply to quoll

Honestly most of those actions are actually ineffectual horseshit anyway. Trash management "industry" is a horror show and if you really think any of this makes an impact you're misinformed. Or rather, the impact is negligible.

Less recycling, more killing

in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆

This was a good action, giving a lot of joy to the owner.

gatechecked.com/climate-activi…

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)


9950x3d cache optimizations on Linux?


I'm considering getting a 9950x3D on either Monday or Tuesday at a Micro Center as a upgrade to my current setup. My main question is, how is the experience with the 9950x3D on Linux with strange architecture with half of the cores having extra L3 cache and the other half with a normal amount of L3 cache.

I have been busy working and suddenly there's been a promotion for the 9950x3D that I want to take advantage of since my motherboard on my current system has been deteriorating as of late. Asrock x570 Extreme4 with a 3700x. USB has been very flaky and I've been dual boating and the other SSD slot is on the chipset. Which makes my windows boot incredibly slow.

I plan to stay on Arch Linux or hop over to CachyOS but want to know what are your thoughts on this as well?

I primarily game but occasionally do some video/audio encoding, video editing and want to build ffmpeg-full from the aur but takes too long on my 3700X.

I've only been able to read/watch three mediums level1tech, and two Phoronix articles, but haven't mental capacity to register and remember everything.

I watched the Ryzen 9950x3D? On Linux video by Level1tech. And one of the things he mentions is gamemode. Is it recommended.

As for the Phoronix articles one is the review of the 9950x3D and the other is the cache optimization driver.

By default for the Ryzen 9 9950X3D it was using the "frequency" preference as default. But if writing "cache" to /sys/bus/platform/drivers/amd_x3d_vcache/AMDI0101:00/amd_x3d_mode it will prefer using the CCD with the larger cache. This cache vs. frequency bias can all be easily manipulated at run-time for those interested.


Is there some sort of automation for this? Or, do I have to do it manually for each program? I've never messed with kernel parameters other than for my Nvidia GPU to get Wayland to work.

I'm sorry that this question feels very unorganized. I just don't have time to write a proper one. I'll be able to reply on my next break.

Thank you for your help.

in reply to Comexs

If it helps, I wrote a KDE widget to switch between the modes: github.com/Steve-Tech/KDE-AMD-…

Screenshot of the KDE X3D Mode widget

My understanding is amd_x3d_mode basically prioritises what cores the scheduler will assign tasks to.
I usually keep it on cache since I do a lot of code compilation, but I will usually switch it to frequency for gaming and stuff.

in reply to SteveTech

keep it on cache since I do a lot of code compilation, but I will usually switch it to frequency for gaming and stuff.


Isn't gaming the most cache-heavy CPU workload there is? The X3D CPUs have consistently topped gaming benchmarks, even outperforming much more modern CPUs that lack 3D cache.

I'd sooner do it the other way around: frequency for compiling, rendering, transcoding, etc. Cache for gaming!

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)
in reply to F04118F

Oh okay, I had assumed compiling would be a bit more I/O bound, while gaming would be a bit more CPU bound, but I guess you're right about the benchmarks!


Advice on migrating from Ubuntu server to another server OS


Hi all. I'm currently running a home server using Ubuntu OS, but I'd like to try and explore other options for operating systems to better my skills with linux/unix.

Currently I'm considering switching to Fedora server (though feedback is welcome) because I've been running it as my daily OS for a few months now and I quite like it. I'm also looking at Debian server because that's what my old professor used and he did nothing but speak its praises.

Only issue is I'm concerned about data loss from moving the installation. Currently, the server is setup to run several Docker images running my programs. While moving over the images shouldn't be difficult whatsoever, I'm afraid my storage setup might not be so easy. Currently, it's two 4TB hard drives running in a logical volume. I'd love to simply be able to move over all the files to a backup drive, but I don't have anywhere I can store >5TB of files as a backup.

I googled around, but I couldn't find too many guides on migrating logical volumes. The one or two I did find were most definitely written for someone with far more linux knowledge than I have as a relative noob, so any advice would be extremely welcome!

in reply to kboy101222

If you want to use it as a server, Fedora is annoying because the support lifetimes are so short.

If you want the Fedora / Red Hat experience, consider Alma Linux. Skills wise, it is like using Res Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) which is an in-demand skill set.

in reply to kboy101222

For a server os, do things like consider stability and ease of upgrading between major versions.

Debian does both of those things extremely well.

If you're playing around with changing distros and your data is valuable, I'd try and find somewhere to back it up to, myself.

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)



Channel 4 to show Gaza war crimes documentary rejected by BBC


cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/32467220

By Elis Gjevori
Published date: 28 June 2025 21:08 BST

"Channel 4 will broadcast Gaza: Doctors Under Attack, a documentary laying out damning allegations that Israeli forces systematically targeted Gaza's hospitals and medical staff throughout their military campaign—allegations which would amount to grave breaches of international law.

"This is a meticulously reported and important film examining evidence which supports allegations of grave breaches of international law by Israeli forces," said L. Compton, Channel 4's Head of News and Current Affairs. "It exemplifies Channel 4's commitment to brave and fearless journalism," she added.



Channel 4 to show Gaza war crimes documentary rejected by BBC


By Elis Gjevori
Published date: 28 June 2025 21:08 BST

"Channel 4 will broadcast Gaza: Doctors Under Attack, a documentary laying out damning allegations that Israeli forces systematically targeted Gaza's hospitals and medical staff throughout their military campaign—allegations which would amount to grave breaches of international law.

"This is a meticulously reported and important film examining evidence which supports allegations of grave breaches of international law by Israeli forces," said L. Compton, Channel 4's Head of News and Current Affairs. "It exemplifies Channel 4's commitment to brave and fearless journalism," she added.




Channel 4 to show Gaza war crimes documentary rejected by BBC


cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/32467220

By Elis Gjevori
Published date: 28 June 2025 21:08 BST

"Channel 4 will broadcast Gaza: Doctors Under Attack, a documentary laying out damning allegations that Israeli forces systematically targeted Gaza's hospitals and medical staff throughout their military campaign—allegations which would amount to grave breaches of international law.

"This is a meticulously reported and important film examining evidence which supports allegations of grave breaches of international law by Israeli forces," said L. Compton, Channel 4's Head of News and Current Affairs. "It exemplifies Channel 4's commitment to brave and fearless journalism," she added.



Channel 4 to show Gaza war crimes documentary rejected by BBC


By Elis Gjevori
Published date: 28 June 2025 21:08 BST

"Channel 4 will broadcast Gaza: Doctors Under Attack, a documentary laying out damning allegations that Israeli forces systematically targeted Gaza's hospitals and medical staff throughout their military campaign—allegations which would amount to grave breaches of international law.

"This is a meticulously reported and important film examining evidence which supports allegations of grave breaches of international law by Israeli forces," said L. Compton, Channel 4's Head of News and Current Affairs. "It exemplifies Channel 4's commitment to brave and fearless journalism," she added.




Channel 4 to show Gaza war crimes documentary rejected by BBC


cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/32467220

By Elis Gjevori
Published date: 28 June 2025 21:08 BST

"Channel 4 will broadcast Gaza: Doctors Under Attack, a documentary laying out damning allegations that Israeli forces systematically targeted Gaza's hospitals and medical staff throughout their military campaign—allegations which would amount to grave breaches of international law.

"This is a meticulously reported and important film examining evidence which supports allegations of grave breaches of international law by Israeli forces," said L. Compton, Channel 4's Head of News and Current Affairs. "It exemplifies Channel 4's commitment to brave and fearless journalism," she added.



Channel 4 to show Gaza war crimes documentary rejected by BBC


By Elis Gjevori
Published date: 28 June 2025 21:08 BST

"Channel 4 will broadcast Gaza: Doctors Under Attack, a documentary laying out damning allegations that Israeli forces systematically targeted Gaza's hospitals and medical staff throughout their military campaign—allegations which would amount to grave breaches of international law.

"This is a meticulously reported and important film examining evidence which supports allegations of grave breaches of international law by Israeli forces," said L. Compton, Channel 4's Head of News and Current Affairs. "It exemplifies Channel 4's commitment to brave and fearless journalism," she added.




Recommendations for an Offline Music Player That Supports Synced Lyrics


Hi folks,

Recently, I started to listen to music locally instead of using streaming services because I have had enough of all the annoying parts of it. I gathered a lot of Opus and FLAC files that have lyrics embedded in them. I am searching for some music players that can display them. The one I am using right now is Elisa. It is awesome, but I would still like to know if there are more alternatives, just in case. Thanks!

in reply to Kiuyn

i use Tauon Music Box opensource offline supports lyric scraping when online and syncs it


Israeli Soldiers Killed at Least 410 People at Food Aid Sites in Gaza This Month


cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/32465391

Sanya Mansoor
June 27 2025, 10:05 a.m

"For months, environmental researcher Yaakov Garb has been using satellite data to analyze the design, location, and expansion of these facilities. Garb, a professor at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, found in an analysis published earlier this month on Harvard Dataverse that most of Gaza’s population cannot access these centers in a safe and practical way. Doing so requires crossing the dangerous Netzarim Corridor, entering a buffer zone from which Israel has banned them from entering, or a long walk across a barren rubble field, while carrying a heavy box of food."



Israeli Soldiers Killed at Least 410 People at Food Aid Sites in Gaza This Month


Sanya Mansoor
June 27 2025, 10:05 a.m

"For months, environmental researcher Yaakov Garb has been using satellite data to analyze the design, location, and expansion of these facilities. Garb, a professor at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, found in an analysis published earlier this month on Harvard Dataverse that most of Gaza’s population cannot access these centers in a safe and practical way. Doing so requires crossing the dangerous Netzarim Corridor, entering a buffer zone from which Israel has banned them from entering, or a long walk across a barren rubble field, while carrying a heavy box of food."




Israeli Soldiers Killed at Least 410 People at Food Aid Sites in Gaza This Month


cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/32465391

Sanya Mansoor
June 27 2025, 10:05 a.m

"For months, environmental researcher Yaakov Garb has been using satellite data to analyze the design, location, and expansion of these facilities. Garb, a professor at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, found in an analysis published earlier this month on Harvard Dataverse that most of Gaza’s population cannot access these centers in a safe and practical way. Doing so requires crossing the dangerous Netzarim Corridor, entering a buffer zone from which Israel has banned them from entering, or a long walk across a barren rubble field, while carrying a heavy box of food."



Israeli Soldiers Killed at Least 410 People at Food Aid Sites in Gaza This Month


Sanya Mansoor
June 27 2025, 10:05 a.m

"For months, environmental researcher Yaakov Garb has been using satellite data to analyze the design, location, and expansion of these facilities. Garb, a professor at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, found in an analysis published earlier this month on Harvard Dataverse that most of Gaza’s population cannot access these centers in a safe and practical way. Doing so requires crossing the dangerous Netzarim Corridor, entering a buffer zone from which Israel has banned them from entering, or a long walk across a barren rubble field, while carrying a heavy box of food."



in reply to atmorous

Using FastVPN for 3 years now. It's so great, I probably cost them much more than I pay and they have port forwarding...
in reply to atmorous

Yup, using openVPN profiles. Proton VPN has quite clear instruction on how to do this on their website. Just do a search for “proton vpn openVPN profile Linux”

in reply to n7gifmdn

I prefer someone with neither napoleon nor jesus complex.


log into multiple google account in thunderbird


log into multiple google account in thunderbird

What information I might leak to google server if I issue log into multiple google account in thunderbird? ip of course but what else might be collected? It would be really great if someone could clarify whether the information below will be send to google when using their email service even through Thunderbird
- device name
- device model
- ...

My main concern is that google will be able to know that I have logged into the same device with different accounts.

In addition, I plan to use VPN when using one google account but not the others. This can be achieved through profiling, but is there an option that I can simply manage all the accounts in one app but without my ip address being collected by several specific email service provider corresponding to several specific email?

thanks a lot!

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)
in reply to Holeheadou92984

The big issue is its very easy to leak information that ties all three of your accounts together effectively doxxing yourself to google.

For example one way is to hash your phones non hardware identifiers and then correlate any accounts that have this same hash.

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)
in reply to upstroke4448

thanks a lot

though I'm having trouble understanding what exact information will thunderbird leak to email service provider.

Does this mean thunderbird will send (Examples of the global OS configuration available to apps are time zone, network country code and other similar global settings.) to any email service provider that is logged in on thunderbird?



Israel Suffered Extensive Damage [ex-CIA analyst Larry C. Johnson]



Despite the arduous efforts of Israeli censors to hide the devastation Iran inflicted on Israel with its barrage of ballistic missiles during the 12-Day War, information is emerging that destroys the myth that Israel had an impregnable air defense. The map at the head of this article reveals the sites targeted by Iran. Based on the videos of strikes in Haifa and Tel Aviv, I think this map accurately portrays the massive scale of the Iranian attack. For the first time in its history, Israel took a major beating.

https://sonar21.com/israel-suffered-extensive-damage/

in reply to davel

Not enough. Israel needs to be demolished for their war crimes and mass murdering. A sick and cruel people who have disowned their own heritage in exchange for power and evil.

in reply to ferret

Reading it back I can see how I might have come off as arguing with the OP. I had just intended to add some context in general around why "straight pride" isn't a generally accepted thing but gay pride is, because whenever this comes up you usually get at least one person asking "what, so we're supposed to be ashamed of being straight now? That's just discrimination in reverse!”
Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)


Western media enabling Gaza genocide and rewriting history, say experts


At a panel hosted by the International Centre of Justice for Palestinians (ICJP) in London on Saturday, experts accused mainstream Western media of contributing to the denial and distortion of atrocities unfolding in Gaza.

Omar al-Ghazzi, Associate Professor of Media and Communications at the London School of Economics, called the trend “a war on history.” He warned that the use of media narratives as future historical sources could shape how upcoming generations understand the events in Gaza.

The panel also pointed to specific language patterns in coverage. Hanif noted that the term “massacre” appeared 18 times more often when referring to Hamas attacks than to Israeli attacks on Palestinians. He said this imbalance reflected a wider rhetorical bias and an uncritical acceptance of Israeli government claims—particularly those targeting local journalists in Gaza.

British-Israeli journalist Rachel Shabi said Israel has consistently framed its ban on international reporters entering Gaza as a safety measure, while accusing Palestinian journalists of links to Hamas. She criticised international media outlets for accepting these narratives without challenge. Historian Avi Shlaim described Israel’s media strategy as an aggressive propaganda campaign designed to suppress criticism by labelling opponents as antisemitic.

in reply to geneva_convenience

Like how Hamas always had hostages and the IDF only had prisoners but they were functionally the same and treatment of IDF prisoners included torture and rape.

The article says it's because of aggressive propaganda campaign from Israel. Some also say because of western islamophobia. Maybe financial interests?

in reply to WanderingThoughts

The IDF tortured and rapes Palestinian hostages including children. No evidence of Hamas doing this kind of stuff.

Let's not compare Hamas to the literaI IDF.

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)


Western media enabling Gaza genocide and rewriting history, say experts


At a panel hosted by the International Centre of Justice for Palestinians (ICJP) in London on Saturday, experts accused mainstream Western media of contributing to the denial and distortion of atrocities unfolding in Gaza.

Omar al-Ghazzi, Associate Professor of Media and Communications at the London School of Economics, called the trend “a war on history.” He warned that the use of media narratives as future historical sources could shape how upcoming generations understand the events in Gaza.

The panel also pointed to specific language patterns in coverage. Hanif noted that the term “massacre” appeared 18 times more often when referring to Hamas attacks than to Israeli attacks on Palestinians. He said this imbalance reflected a wider rhetorical bias and an uncritical acceptance of Israeli government claims—particularly those targeting local journalists in Gaza.

British-Israeli journalist Rachel Shabi said Israel has consistently framed its ban on international reporters entering Gaza as a safety measure, while accusing Palestinian journalists of links to Hamas. She criticised international media outlets for accepting these narratives without challenge. Historian Avi Shlaim described Israel’s media strategy as an aggressive propaganda campaign designed to suppress criticism by labelling opponents as antisemitic.



Mitigating the "7 Deadly Fediverse UX Sins"


This article is a response to Tim Chambers' recent writeup, titled The Seven Deadly UX Sins of the Fediverse Web Experience (To Fix). It's a pretty great read, and I'm writing this not as a rebuttal, but to analyze and expand on the points made.

This is a musing on 7 problems that have been pointed out, with some ideas on what progress has been made to fix them.


Mitigating the "7 Deadly Fediverse UX Sins"


Quick Note: This article is a response to Tim Chambers' recent writeup, titled The Seven Deadly UX Sins of the Fediverse Web Experience (To Fix). It's a pretty great read, and I'm writing this not as a rebuttal, but to analyze and expand on the points made.


Preface


I sometimes say this too much, and maybe it's a bad habit, but: I've been on the Fediverse in some meaningful capacity since 2008. That's 17 years. A lot has changed and evolved over time, and it's amazing to see the network carrying about 12.5 million accounts (of the ones that could be accounted for). It often feels as though we're just on the cusp of mass adoption, if we could just fix enough usability problems.

Some of these issues can be fixed through iterative design. However, I think some problems go much deeper than what they appear to be on the surface. I want to go through some of Tim's observations, and adjust the context to account for root causes and possible solutions. To be clear: I think some of Tim's criticisms are actually more specific to Mastodon itself, but I think we can extrapolate some larger patterns from what's being said.

Sin #1: The First-Move Problem


The Sin of Overwhelming Complexity: Instance Selection Paralysis

Imagine the moment you decide to join the Fediverse. You’re feeling a tad noble. Brave. Ready to reclaim your digital life from Big Tech’s clutches. Then… boom. You’re confronted with a cryptic list of servers, each with a name that sounds like a cross between a startup pitch and a medieval tavern.


I made this a while back, and love finding excuses to post it.
This is one of the biggest problems with the Fediverse today. While I wholeheartedly believe that having a diverse network of different servers and platforms to choose from is a good thing, the process of picking one server and finding your friends is incredibly rocky. You basically have to learn how to navigate several key parts of the Fediverse before ever connecting with friends on another server.

To make matters worse, there's a lot of unknown elements regarding any server you might potentially join:

  • Some communities outright block one another.
  • Some servers are poorly moderated, or not moderated at all.
  • A lot of servers struggle to make enough user donations every month to cover operational costs.
  • Often, server discovery requires you to first go to a given platform's website, then read a directory, then pick your options based on what's available.

This can create a lot of friction, even in the best of circumstances.

My Proposal


This is something that I don't think can be solved by one simple UX fix. However, I think it could be supported with better infrastructure across instances. In fact, it's possible that we're approaching onboarding and migrating at the wrong level.

First: Identity, Content, Connections


What if, instead of simply making a person choose a server, we first focused on setting up an identity and porting over content and connections from other networks? I find myself regularly thinking about Bounce by A New Social, which already kind of sets some groundwork to make this possible.

What if we built a utility that could import your profile and posts into your new Fediverse profile automatically, before you even bothered to sign up on a Fediverse server?
Don't get too excited, this isn't a real product. (Yet)
Basically, this utility would almost act as a "pre-identity", acting as a conduit where all of your social data could be hooked in prior to creating your Fediverse account. From here, you could pick and choose what to pull over. Do you want everything you've ever posted on Facebook? Great. Would you rather filter it down to stuff that has the most replies and interactions? No problem.
The importer could be customized for each platform, which could also help recommend what Fediverse platform a user might choose.
From here, we could do some interesting things with providing recommendations. Maybe we could include a survey portion, or even parse a bunch of likes from the import to make a recommendation on what kind of community they should join.
I'm not totally happy with this design, but this is the general idea. Service picks for the user, while allowing them to manually override it.

Second: Joining with Friends, Discovery, and Sync


I have a couple of ideas about this, but don't currently have the energy to make full mockups. Firstly, I believe we could really ramp up the momentum of user migrations if people could join together at the same time. There are a myriad of considerations to make, but here's how I think it could work.

  • Joining With Friends: Through their social connections in the app, users could easily invite their friends to join them. The invite wouldn't put those friends on the Fediverse yet, but they could all get accounts on the SocialImport app to get set up. Maybe a threshold would be set where the actual migration action only happens after a threshold has been set? One careful consideration to make: check server blocks, and do some logic to make sure they all end up on servers that don't block each other.
  • Discovery: It might be possible to do friend discovery in the background, by containing some kind of reference to other connected accounts. Oh, you have a Facebook integration, and 12 of your friends also used it with this tool? Cool, here's their details, which are only available to mutuals. You'll automatically connect when you do the final move action.
  • Sync: Maybe you're the first-mover, and your friends haven't moved over yet. No problem! Keep the connection with the SocialImport tool alive, and your friends will automatically find you over time. A sync utility could also help with the import of very large data archives, by gradually pulling bits and pieces in over time instead of importing everything all at once.


Sin #2: Navigation Inconsistency


The Sin of Inconsistent Navigation: Timeline Turmoil

You’re finally ready to explore your new digital neighborhood. And then—bam. Three timelines. Not one. Not two. Three. Home, Local, Federated—each more enigmatic than the last. The Fediverse’s multiple timelines are a beautiful idea in theory, but in practice?


Yeah, that's...one way to use the Social Web, I guess.
To be fair, this one is more of a Mastodon criticism specifically, and it's kind of a vestige of some of the platform's earlier design decisions. The Federated timeline was actually kind of useful in the days where the network was a lot smaller, and Local is great on small servers, but the relevance of each is questionable at best these days.

The main problem here is that most people are really interested in their Home timeline. It's nice to leave the Local timeline available to people as an option, but Federated is next to useless these days.

My Proposal


Rethink the Home timeline to give people powerful ways to sort and filter their feeds. Yeah, 90% of the time I'm mostly just using a reverse-chronological feed to scroll through statuses made by my friends, but being able to do everything from one timeline interface is really ideal.
The "Open Social Web" custom timeline in Bluesky
Bluesky is already innovating in this area a lot with custom feeds and search, but more can be done. Some of this is being experimented with on the Fediverse right now, with projects like Channel.org and FediAlgo exploring different ways to make this work. My point is that we don't necessarily need more timelines, we need better ones.

Sin #3: Remote Interaction Hell


The Sin of Remote Interaction Purgatory: Federation Gymnastics

One of the Fediverse’s great promises is universal interaction—no matter which server someone calls home, you can still follow them, reply, boost, interact. In theory? Utopian. In practice—for web users—it’s an absolute effing mystery.



Look, this is a blind spot for a lot of long-time Fediverse users, myself included. If you've been on the network for more than a few years, you've gotten used to the mechanism of throwing a URL into the Search form to pull in remote statuses and profiles to interact with them.
This is so much better than what Mastodon used to provide for us. It used to just tell you to copy and paste text.
It's not a bad workaround for pulling in stuff your server doesn't know about, but it's not always reliable. Worse, it's become the main way a lot of us deal with remote interaction. The solution Mastodon uses now, depicted above, is miles better than what we used to have. However, it's notable that Mastodon's own improved solution typically only works with Mastodon.

My Proposal


The biggest shortcoming here is a lack of standardization. We really need to come up with some standard mechanisms. There's a few efforts worth mentioning, because I believe they are partial solutions: MagicAuth, and Activity Intents.

How MagicAuth Works


MagicAuth is one of the standout features of the Hubzilla project, and it's basically been around forever. In a nutshell, it's a novel approach where credentials are handled in a browser cookie to determine access.
I'm visiting a friend's page on a different server. The page checks my home server from a cookie, signs me in from my remote credentials, and I can interact with the page as if we were on the same site.
When you visit a page on a remote server, Hubzilla has a way to use MagicAuth to determine who you are, and provide access accordingly. It works seamlessly, and lets you see and interact with elements on the page as though you're actually logged in. MagicAuth is an incredible concept, and could potentially solve a lot of problems.

How Activity Intents Work


Activity Intents are a concept spearheaded by the Emissary project, and it works in a slightly different way. Instead of handling stuff through cookies in a browser session, Activity Intents allow you to connect an account to a given page through an OAuth connection, and almost use it as a very-limited client for sending activities back to your server.

When I click "Like" on a Bandwagon track, the above interface pops up to ask me which account I want to use for this interaction. I can use the Bandwagon account I already have, or I can use my main social account to do that instead.

You can almost think of Activity Intents to be a Web equivalent to the Share interface on iOS or Android, except that you can plug your own social platform and services into it instead.

Sin #4: Private Mentions Aren't Really DM's


The Sin of DM Disasters Waiting to Happen

And yet here we are - as on most Fediverse platforms, “Direct Messages” live right alongside public posts in the same composer, the same timeline view, sometimes even with mostly the same visual styling. You can toggle visibility to “Direct”… but will you notice you didn’t? Will you check? Will the UI save you? Spoiler: It will not.


It's no secret that Private Mentions on Mastodon kind of suck. The main problem is that they're a half-measure solution that combines Direct Messages with private posts, and certain unexpected behaviors are inherited.
A private mention in Akkoma, which works the exact same way that Mastodon does.
In a Twitter-style Direct Message, mentions only act as a shorthand for linking to a person's profile. If you're talking to Alice and mention @[url=https://diaspodon.fr/users/bob]bob[/url] in a DM, Bob isn't going to receive any kind of notification that he was mentioned.

In Mastodon-style Private Mentions, Bob would get included into the conversation the moment he got mentioned. This mix of expectations on how a feature should work is pretty horrible.

My Proposal


Stop calling them Private Mentions, and instead call them what they are: private statuses. Build in real support for private Direct Messages where message-addressing is done outside of the post body, and just replace any Private Mention part of the interface with matching DM functionality.

Sin #5: The Phantom Social Graph


The Sin of Ghost Conversations and Phantom Follower Counts

Federation is the Fediverse’s secret sauce—and as implemented, its spectral curse. What should be lively, multi-user conversations often arrive with limbs missing. Replies that clearly should be there are gone. Half the participants never materialize. You’re reading a thread and suddenly think: Wait… who is this person even talking to?


This is a tough one. Part of the way conversations on the Fediverse works is that your own server fills in only the parts it knows about to the conversation tree. It's possible to change your server's behavior on how deep in the conversation it ought to pull statuses, but it's an inefficient approach at best.

My Proposal


Mastodon has been working on an improvement where it's possible to fetch all replies in a conversation tree. It's disabled by default, presumably because of the side effects of trying to pull in dozens, hundreds, or even thousands of replies from a public conversation.

I actually have mixed feelings on this. I'm all for improved methods for filling out missing bits of the social graph. My fear is that this might effectively DDOS many instances, as people attempt to fill out extremely large conversation trees from thousands of different places. Yeah, your beefy server might be able to handle this, but what about every server that's getting these requests over and over?

I think a partial solution for this may be to leverage some kind of distributed cache, where multiple servers can pitch in to help fill out the details for whoever is doing the fetching. That being said, that could be a huge can of worms.

Sin #6: The Discovery Problem


The Sin of Invisible Discovery: The Content Mirage

So what you get instead is discovery by divine accident: No algorithmic curation. No fediverse-wide trending topics. No “here’s what’s buzzing. Just you and The Void. So new users end up wandering along, stumbling across interesting people and conversations only by sheer luck. It’s charming - but only in a 19th-century explorer way.


I've written about this problem before, and yeah, it's rough. I think it's relatively easy to discover interesting posts from people across the network, but the more complex the media is, the more muddled discovery efforts become. Building small, intentional communities helps work around the signal-to-noise problem somewhat, but it's not a real solution for discovery itself.

My Proposal


Mastodon has been doing some interesting work with Fediverse Discovery Providers, but there aren't a lot of useful public details that describe how they're supposed to work, or what they even do in a practical sense.

I think there's two components needed to solve this problem: federated relays for boosting content, and custom feeds that can be used to filter these relay streams enough to make sense of them. I think relays can be extremely useful for projecting one part of a network across a wider portion of the rest of the network. If we could make the process of subscribing to a relay easier for instances across different platforms, this might help.

Sin #7:


The Sin of User Discovery Hell

Search is one thing. But finding people to follow—especially if you’re new—is where the UX - beyond just search - really starts to melt down. User discovery in the Fediverse is so decentralized, it’s basically unusable. No global directory. No “you might like.” No obvious trails to follow. Just vibes. And maybe a dusty wiki from 2022.


I'm of the mindset that sins #6 and #7 are one and the same, just in different capacities. What's interesting is that the Friendica family tree of platforms has had a shared universal directory concept for ages now. Separate instances can opt-in to bridging their directories with one another, which actually helps improve user discovery between those that choose to share.

My Proposal


I think a combination of discovery providers, user directories, custom feeds, and a configurable timeline could go a long way towards solving this problem. If we include the SocialImport idea, we might actually have a lot of good methods to help people find their friends and stuff they're interested in.

In Conclusion


💡
It actually took me so long to write this that I missed Tim's follow-up, where he also proposes a path to redemption for most of these problems. It should be interesting to see how our lines of thinking match up!

This ended up being a really long blog post that took me nearly a month to write, due to real-life obligations and much-needed time to think about things. I wrote this response, not because I want to invoke gloom and doom, but because I think a lot of this stuff is actually solvable. It's just that producing viable solutions requires a lot of cross-project collaboration, and also getting buy-in from the largest projects in the space, such as Mastodon.

With the Fediverse, nothing is ever perfect. However, we should never settle for less-than-good. If we can work together to overcome our biggest obstacles, it makes our network that much more viable as an alternative for millions of people in the future.


in reply to Alloi

I do all of my writing by hand, the old-fashioned way.




The Millionaire Exodus Myth


About 11,000 news pieces were published around the world in 2024 by some of the most read and most watched news outlets claiming that droves of millionaires were fleeing countries in record numbers. This was a huge exodus, we were told, with economic consequences, and the root of it all was supposedly taxes on the super-rich. But here’s what all this media reporting left out, these record numbers of millionaires leaving represented just 0.2% of all millionaires. In other words, almost 100% of millionaires did not move to another country, yet somehow this was spun a full 180 into an exodus. So where does this story come from? Well, it’s based on a report published by a firm called Henley and Partners, which helps sell golden passports to the super rich. Golden passports were just ruled to be unlawful by the European Court of Justice, thanks to a challenge by the European Commission, which said golden passports impose a serious risk of corruption, money laundering, tax evasion. Our review of the Henley and Partners report shows that there were several issues with the report’s methodology, its sample and its reporting. But what the media reported and what governments listened to was a fiction, based on questionable data published by a firm that helps the super-rich buy their way out of rules that apply to everybody else. Scare stories like these are used to block the positive change people want.
in reply to kurikai

Give them no place to flee. Tax them out of existence, everywhere. It will be a long and arduous journey. Every victory in our lifetime is a huge win, but only a momentary resting place. We can not rest long, because that's when the ultrawealthy will be quietly the busiest.
in reply to Maeve

No, don't tax them. Take away everything they own, deny them basic comforts, see how they like it.


lemm.ee has shut down for good


lemm.ee has shut down at 00:14 UTC.

unfortunately I realized too late that I have had hundreds of saved links to posts and comments from there, so I did not have enough time to save them, but anyways it is interesting that maybe a third of the post links I could try were dead. I think linkrot is happening much faster here than on reddit, even if just counting deleted posts.

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)
in reply to WhyJiffie

The content isn't gone.

It's still retained by the various instances that lemm.ee federated with, and entering the url of a lemm.ee post on those instances should still let you find their local copies if they have it.

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)
in reply to MentalEdge

yeah but it turns out a lot of my lemm.ee links are not actually to content that's originating from there, but lemm.ee-view links for which if I search, there's no result.

Fortunately I also have the title and image permanently loaded for these links, so I can find them with some manual work