The CDC quietly scaled back a surveillance program for foodborne illnesses
The CDC quietly scaled back a surveillance program for foodborne illnesses
A federal-state partnership that monitors for foodborne illnesses quietly scaled back its operations nearly two months agoAria Bendix (NBC News)
If and how much longer until they take cash and browser-based banking from us?
I've been mindful of the ways companies can track my spending habits, and so have been increasingly keen on using cash and avoiding mobile banking/payment apps like the plague. I realize that this varies by country and might be a bit far out, but the thought does linger in the back of my mind. If current trends continue, how much longer until they take cash and browser-based banking from us? Or will there be a reason those options should continue to exist (and be easily usable) far into the future? And perhaps:
- What else can I, as an individual, do about this?
- Is there a tendency for larger banks or smaller credit unions to push towards mobile-only online banking?
- What does it look like in countries where cashless and mobile payments are the norm?
like this
Apertus: a fully open, transparent, multilingual language model
Apertus: a fully open, transparent, multilingual language model
EPFL, ETH Zurich and the Swiss National Supercomputing Centre (CSCS) released Apertus today, Switzerland’s first large-scale, open, multilingual language model — a milestone in generative AI for transparency and diversity.news.epfl.ch
The Former Lead For Apple Graphics Drivers On Linux Is Now Working At Intel
The Former Lead For Apple Graphics Drivers On Linux Is Now Working At Intel
There's a follow-up to yesterday's surprising story of Alyssa Rosenzweig stepping away from Asahi Linux and that ARM graphics driver work where she led reverse engineering and development of the Asahi Gallium3D and HoneyKrisp Vulkan drivers within Me…www.phoronix.com
Popularity of Russian cartoon ‘cringe’ – Kiev propaganda outlet
Popularity of Russian cartoon ‘cringe of the day’ – Kiev propaganda outlet
The ‘Trukha’ Telegram channel has chided Ukrainian parents for letting their children watch ‘Masha and the Bear’RT International
Turning Soil Data into Harvests: Ethiopian Innovator Triumphs at BRICS 2025
Turning Soil Data into Harvests: Ethiopian Innovator Triumphs at BRICS 2025
Turning Soil Data into Harvests: Ethiopian Innovator Triumphs at BRICS 2025 Zelalem Endalew, Gold Medalist at the 2025 BRICS Skills Competition, is transforming farming with his IoT-Based Smart Irrigation Controlling & Monitoring...Sputnik Africa
(solved, thanks guys!) "No key available with this passphrase" despite it being the correct passphrase
Edit: Turns out you guys were right, I entered the setup password wrong for LUKs. I got this new Logitech keyboard I got for a gift and I type around 170wpm, but I've been having issues with it kind of lagging keys for some reason. What I did was I opened up a notepad and typed in my password a bunch of times and noticed whenever I would type something such as "stain" for example, it would come out at "stani" despite me looking at the keyboard and knowing that wasn't what I was typing. So I encrypted my drive with the wrong password, but figured out how to decrypt it that way. Thanks for the help doods!
Hello! I have a external drive I've encrypted with LUKs that has irreplaceable backups of mine, and for some reason no matter which PC I try it won't unlock despite it being the correct password. It doesn't give me anything else in the terminal other than what I put in the title.
I recently just backed up everything onto the external drive from my computer cause I was distro hopping. It's worked fine on my PC, I saved the password so I was able to mount it no problem before, but now it won't mount on any other PC I try. It isn't the end of the world since I can just try and copy old data from my computers drive before the format since I haven't downloaded anything yet that could overwrite anything important, but I'd still like to be able to get this external drive unlocked. As I've said, irreplaceable files of mine are on it so I'm hoping to get it working. Thank you!
How Erik Prince is Trying to “Make Haiti a Hub for Mercenaries” | Haiti Liberte
Erik Prince, the founder of many mercenary companies since Blackwater, is looking to gain a lucrative foothold in Haiti through wheeling and dealing with unelected, illegitimate leaders as cynical as he is. It won’t end well. Photo: ABC News
How Erik Prince is Trying to “Make Haiti a Hub for Mercenaries” | Haiti Liberte
(Français) Erik Prince, 56, the founder of several mercenary companies beginning with the now rebranded Blackwater, might have Washington’s backing forTravis Ross (Haiti Liberté)
ublock lite is now on IOS, Should people switch to that instead of using Adguard or should they stick with Adguard?
with ublock origin you would have to edit the blocklist and add the url you want to block/unblock. with umatrix you have a table like this:
you can block/unblock domains, and also change the global configuration. I, by default, block all javascript and XHR and enable some if they are needed.
Far-right agitator Tommy Robinson avoids charge over alleged assault
British Transport Police said a decision had been made by the Crown Prosecution Service not to charge Tommy Robinson as the alleged victim “did not wish to provide a statement to the investigation.”
“Following a report of an assault at St Pancras station on July 28, detectives from BTP quickly launched a full and thorough investigation, which involved a 42-year-old man being arrested on suspicion of GBH at Luton Airport on 4 August,” British Transport Police said.
“Officers worked at pace to gather evidence, including CCTV footage and witness statements, however the victim did not wish to provide a statement to the investigation.
Tommy Robinson avoids charge over alleged St Pancras assault
FAR-RIGHT agitator Tommy Robinson will not be charged over an alleged assault at St Pancras railway station last month ...Alasdair Ferguson (The National)
After a summer of submission to Trump, Europe knows it must defend Ukraine – and itself - alone
After a summer of submission to Trump, Europe knows it must defend Ukraine – and itself – alone
Can a European-led coalition really provide credible security guarantees? Past examples are not encouraging, says Paul Taylor, of the European Policy CentrePaul Taylor (The Guardian)
Azerbaijan President Comes Out as Russophobe, Calls Russia 'Genetic Occupier', 'Aggressor'
Azerbaijan President Comes Out as Russophobe, Calls Russia 'Genetic Occupier', 'Aggressor'
Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev accused Russia of occupying his country and Ukraine, citing historical grievances while criticizing Moscow for worsening bilateral relationsLyuba Lulko (Pravda English)
Yeah sure, these would have never happened in USSR:
- en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Populati…
- en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_…
- en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De-Cossa…
- en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deportat…
- en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deportat…
- en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holodomo…
- en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Pu…
Also, it's a conflict: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nagorno-…
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Populati…
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deportat…
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deportat…
I can do the same and dump a list of massacres and population transfers before & after the fall of the USSR and it would be far greater than all these lists combined. If so called 'Russification' was the goal why would Lenin and Stalin create separate constituent states for the ethnicities of the USSR? I admit that resettlement is bad, but in resolving the contradictions of creating ethnic states in a former imperialist & colonialist empire they must take steps to avoid intra-ethnic conflict between the states (Which dates back centuries), which when they stopped doing in the mid to late 80s, led to all of the conflicts seen in the former USSR today.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De-Cossa…
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holodomo…
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Pu…
"According to Nicolas Werth, one of the authors of The Black Book of Communism..." are you even trying at this point?
Holodomor was a famine, common in the area for hundreds of years before the USSR, it was also the last
"An estimated 800,000 to 1,200,000 people died during the purges of the 1930s" If such a large amount of people died, can you see it in population statistics?
Also, it’s a conflict: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nagorno-…
Take more than a surface look at this 'conflict'
My point wasn't dumping, I just wanted to show there are dedicated lists regarding USSR. Did those things happened? Yes. Did people suffer? Yes. Did millions die because of those policies? Yes. Nothing's gonna change that. They solved their problems by doing that. That solution was the problem for others. However, victors shape the history.
Also conflict means it's not one-sided.
By the way, I don't know about "The Black Book of Communism". What's wrong with that?
There are dedicated lists for every country that has existed, but even for the deported peoples of the USSR, namely the Chechens the vast majority of those who lived & worked in both socialism and capitalism miss the USSR and its progress in free education, healthcare, peace, and development, which was afforded to everyone, absent after the restoration of capitalism. Purely anecdotal, but in my time in Azerbaijan in an ethnically Dagestani villiage, there was a portrait of Stalin in the lodge, despite the fact that their ethnicity was deported similar to the Chechens.
After the fall of Artsakh, Azeri forces have full control over the native Armenian population with no resistance, which is pretty 1 sided
Although viewed by many scholars and laymen alike as an authoritative account of the crimes of Communism, The Black Book of Communism has since its publication date been criticised by its readers and writers alike for its methodology. Namely, the book includes among its "one hundred million victims" Nazi collaborators in the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (many of whom served in the Waffen-SS by the book's own admission) as well as comparing the expected population growth before a famine to the actual population growth (in essence counting people who were never born). In addition, the editors also confused the per-thousand symbol (‰) with the percent sign when translating from French to English, multiply some death tolls by 10 times.The book's own authors criticize the historical accuracy of its conclusions:
Jean‐Louis Margolin and Nicolas Werth reproach Stéphane Courtois considering ‘the criminal dimension as one of the proper ones of the communist system’s set’, he writes in his text. ‘This results in taking away the phenomenon’s historic character’, claims Jean‐Louis Margolin. ‘Even if the communist breeding ground can lead to mass crimes, the line between theory and practice is inevident, contrary to what Stéphane Courtois says.’ Disputing the ‘approximations’, ‘contradictions’, and ‘clumsinesses that make sense’, the two authors reproach Stéphane Courtois’s ‘obsession to reach one hundred million deaths’. — Le Monde
Margolin and Werth furthermore rebuked Courtois in an article published in Le Monde, stating that they disagreed with his vitriolic introduction and its political agenda. Margolin and Werth both disavowed the book, recognizing that Courtois was obsessed with reaching a body count of a hundred million and consequently leading to careless and biased ‘scholarship’. Courtois also composed the book’s introduction in secret, refusing to share it for his other contributors. They both rejected Courtois’s equivalence of German fascism with communism, with Werth telling Le Monde that ‘death camps did not exist in the Soviet Union.'
Of course there are, it's just that's much bigger in USSR's account even if you drop the percentage by 10. The Chechens I met tell the otherwise, that they were oppressed and had to live their religion secretly (though I'm not opposed the parts like where they forbid circumcision on boys), overall USSR had no religion and wanted no religion and I suspect a lot of problems occurred because of it, either the existence or absence of it. They tried to change it at once with oppression and that's an automatic backlash in human nature.
there was a portrait of Stalin in the lodge
That feels like Stockholm syndrome or laying low, I don't know which is. Because I know muslims hate Stalin.
I guess there is no perfect world and nothing changed for thousands of years. No one wants to leave others to mind their own business.
It seems "The Black Book of Communism" is a bad book and I accept that it's not fine to use it as a source. However even though that one is exaggerated, there are other sources too. By the way, I'm no expert on USSR or anything social sciences related, in fact I'm far from it. I just met a lot people who fled from USSR or who survived from persecution. None of the stories I heard even remotely praised USSR. But I don't know the other side of the stories, and most likely I never will be able to. At least not in a way unbiased.
By the way, gonna little side-track here, what's with the Ukrainians being Nazi I see around a lot, didn't they crush under Germans too?
2 children are dead and 17 people injured in Minneapolis school mass shooting; gunman died of self-inflicted gunshot wound
Minneapolis shooting live updates: Shooter dead after Annunciation Catholic school incident in Minnesota
The city of Minneapolis said that there is no active threat at this time after a Wednesday morning shooting at Annunciation Catholic School.NBC News
German auto industry cuts over 51,000 jobs over U.S. tariff, weak demand
German auto industry cuts over 51,000 jobs over U.S. tariff, weak demand: report
German auto industry cuts over 51,000 jobs over U.S. tariff, weak demand: report-english.news.cn
geneva_convenience likes this.
Labour voters are rallying to Jeremy Corbyn
Exclusive poll: Labour voters are rallying to Jeremy Corbyn
The new left-wing party in the process of being launched by Jeremy Corbyn and Zarah Sultana might lack a name, a leader and a policy platform beyond tackling “the crises in our society with a mass redRachel Cunliffe (New Statesman)
Shooting at a Minneapolis Catholic school leaves 3 dead, including the shooter, and 17 injured
A shooter opened fire Wednesday morning during Mass at a Minneapolis Catholic school, killing two children and injuring 17 other people before killing himself, officials said.
Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O’Hara said the shooter — armed with a rifle, shotgun and pistol — approached the side of the church and shot through the windows toward the children sitting in the pews during Mass at the Annunciation Catholic School.
https://apnews.com/live/minneapolis-annunciation-school-shooting
How western media helped turn Israel's genocide into 'fake news'
Israel justified its murder of Al Jazeera’s crew on the grounds that one among them, Anas al-Sharif, a Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter, was secretly a “Hamas terrorist”.
Sharif, we are told, similarly found time between breaks from his 22-month, frantic reporting schedule - much of it on camera - to serve as a Hamas commander “directing rocket attacks on Israeli civilians”.
We now know exactly where this ridiculous story originated: from something Israel calls its “Legitimisation Cell”. The intelligence unit’s name, which was surely never supposed to come to light, is the give-away. Its job has been to legitimise Israel’s atrocities with stories vilifying its victims and thereby making the genocide more palatable to Israeli and western audiences.
The Israeli news website +972 exposed the cell within days of Sharif’s killing this month, reporting that it was formed after 7 October 2023 - the day Hamas and other groups broke out of their Gaza prison camp, spreading carnage, following 17 years of a brutal siege.
But while Israeli mendacity is entirely to be expected - after all, it is the whole purpose of its official hasbara industry - what astonishes most is the western media’s continuing connivance in promoting Israel’s litany of lies.
Germany’s most popular paper, Bild, published a front page that might as well have been written by the Israeli military: “Terrorist disguised as a journalist killed in Gaza.” No claim, no quote marks. Just a statement of fact.
The UK media was little better, with most outlets prominently featuring Israel’s unevidenced “legitimisation” smears of Sharif in headlines and coverage. Astonishingly, BBC coverage on its flagship News at Ten swallowed whole Israel’s framing of Sharif as a legitimate target - as well as uncritically peddling the presumption that Israel was targeting him and him alone.
The context that has been missing from western coverage is this: Israel has killed more than 240 Palestinian journalists in Gaza over the past two years - more than all the journalists killed in both World Wars, the Korean War, the Vietnam War, the wars in the former Yugoslavia, and the Afghanistan War combined.
This is a pattern - a glaring one - but seemingly one to which western journalists are entirely blind, even as Israel continues to bar them from reporting in Gaza, nearly two years into its genocide.
How western media helped turn Israel's genocide into 'fake news'
Israel's intent to annihilate Gaza would have been clear much sooner had we listened to Palestinian journalists, rather than the evasions and equivocations of the BBCMiddle East Eye
like this
Linux and Secure Boot certificate expiration
Linux and Secure Boot certificate expiration
Linux users who have Secure Boot enabled on their systems knowingly or unknowingly rely on a ke [...]LWN.net
like this
Home values are falling in half of the top 50 metros, report finds
Home values are falling in half of the top 50 metros, report finds
27 major metros are in buyers' favor or neutral, up from 24 last month. The median for-sale home has been listed for 60 days, the longest of any JConsumerAffairs
Democratic congressman Jerry Nadler for New York will retire next year in move to galvanize generational change among Democratic party
Jerry Nadler, a Democratic representative from New York, will retire next year after 34 years in Congress in a self-proclaimed move aimed at galvanizing a generational changing of the guard in the party.
Nadler, 78, who represents one of New York’s wealthiest districts covering midtown Manhattan, said he had been persuaded not to run for re-election in 2026 after witnessing the implosion of Joe Biden’s presidential bid last year. The former president was pressured into abandoning his candidacy amid widespread doubts about his age and mental acuity. He was replaced by the former vice-president, Kamala Harris, who subsequently lost the election to Donald Trump.
“Watching the Biden thing really said something about the necessity for generational change in the party, and I think I want to respect that,” Nadler told the New York Times, which broke the news of his forthcoming retirement.
He told the newspaper that a younger replacement “can maybe do better, can maybe help us more”.
Democratic congressman Jerry Nadler will not seek re-election in midterms
New York representative will retire next year in move to galvanize generational change among Democratic partyRobert Tait (The Guardian)
CHECK DETAILS
Session is a FOSS messenger focused on privacy. No phone numbers, decentralized servers, and full end-to-end encryption. Perfect for anyone tired of surveillance-hungry chat apps. Secure, anonymous, open-source.
🔗 GitHub: SESSION - GITHUB
GitHub - oxen-io/session-android: Session Android - Onion routing based messenger [DEPRECATED SEE README]
Session Android - Onion routing based messenger [DEPRECATED SEE README] - oxen-io/session-androidGitHub
😅😅😅
kill --windows,
install --linux,
like this
What will MS do when Linux becomes a serious threat to their monopoly ?
What actions might they take in the future?
like this
I'd wager they have enough resources to stave it off for as long as possible, and when they can't do that anymore they will have a strategy for making money off of their "services" in the linux space.
Microsoft is part of the cabal at this point. Businesses give it money because they're expected to.
Private messaging is not "secure" - can this wording be improved?
Good day dear Lemmy community!
When I try to use lemmy's private messages, I get the following warning:
Warning: Private messages in Lemmy are not secure. Please create an account on Element.io for secure messaging.
It is very good to have this warning! However, can it be improved?
When I first encountered this wording, I was completely unsure whether the DMs would be totally public due to lemmy's limitations or its open stance, or whether the messages would have a similar security to e.g. email where your trust relies on TLS and the servers involved.
My proposal would be to change the wording to something like:
Warning: Private messages in Lemmy are not End-to-End encrypted. Please create an account on Element.io for secure messaging.
Or if the team is open to it,
Warning: Private messages in Lemmy are not End-to-End encrypted. Please use a platform with E2E encryption for private messaging.
Or if the team is even more open to it,
Warning: Private messages in Lemmy are not End-to-End encrypted. Please use a platform with E2E encryption for private messaging. Lemmy recommends Element.io and XMPP.
Thoughts? I'm ready to create a PR.
Element | Secure collaboration and messaging
Element is a Matrix-based end-to-end encrypted messenger and secure collaboration app. It’s decentralised for digital sovereign self-hosting, or through a hosting service such as Element Matrix Services.element.io
Messages between two people are not exposed via public APIs, but they can be accessed by admins of 1-2 servers (depending on whether you're sending these messages to someone on a different server).
Element fixes Lemmy's message content exposure problem, but none of the metadata problems (who is communicating with whom, when, how often, etc, are all still available to those 1-2 sets of server admins).
Why Communication Metadata Matters
As its name suggests, metadata is data about data. Metadata is used in a variety of contexts, often for cataloging information, like tagging keywords in a video so it’s easy to find later.ssd.eff.org
Based on the comments so far, maybe something like this makes sense:
Warning: Private messages in Lemmy are not End-to-End encrypted, so the respective instance owners are technically able to read them. Please use a platform with E2E encryption for private messaging. Lemmy recommends Element.io and XMPP.
Element | Secure collaboration and messaging
Element is a Matrix-based end-to-end encrypted messenger and secure collaboration app. It’s decentralised for digital sovereign self-hosting, or through a hosting service such as Element Matrix Services.element.io
Linux on my smart tv?
I have been rather unhappy with my smart TV's functionality as I feel it isn't smart for me but smart for the manufacturers. I just can't use it how I want to. I would love to overwrite the existing OS from Android to Linux. I've recently converted from Windows and loving Mint.
I haven't read too much regarding Linux smart tvs as my searches mostly come up with raspberry Pi and overwriting an Android box. I don't want to connect anything and just want my tv to boot up in Linux when it's turned on, and get some of my apps going. Is there a way to do this?
For reference I have a Sony Bravia with Android installed on it.
like this
I wish! I have a Samsung and I used to have an LG. One thing I anticipated which turned out to be on the nose is that these TVs stay operational just up until the maker decides they want your money again. I never bought into it to begin with. I only got a Smart TV to begin with because it has everything else I want. But I go straight to hooking up a computer. The apps on the TVs are all ooh and aah until a couple of years go by and then suddenly the apps are not compatible with the sites or backends what have you, and guess what? No more updates. You need a new TV despite the fact that yours is 100% perfectly fine, other than the inherent sabotage built in.
So that’s why I never even had any expectations. But I would love to find the best Linux distro for a media machine that my wife could learn to use. Right now I have to do all of it because it’s just browse to the files or load a playlist. I’d like something like Kodi or Plex but they have issues with one thing or another. I just want an SMB based connection in an interface that shows friendly thumbnails kinda like Nova player on Android. That app is highly underrated. Free, as far as I know open source and aside from a few control designs not being too great, the app is terrific. Kicks VLC’s butt. Why are they still designing the software like it’s 20 years ago and it’s on Windows XP?
Anyway I digress. Smart TV running Android or Linux would rock but I don’t expect it to be too feasible. But what do I know, because I’m not a professional dev.
The cheapest is to buy some android box with armlogic processor and install coreelec on it. You can do it for 20 bucks, then you have a kodi oriented linux distro on your tv.
Though I prefer to straight up connect my laptop to the tv with a small remote keyboard and have full computer functionality. I'm looking to change the laptop for a miniPC when the laptop finally breaks down. I would use a normal DE. Nothing specially suited for smartTV usage. But you get used to it pretty quick.
Taliban 'ready and willing' to join forces with Nigel Farage for deportation scheme
The Taliban is reportedly "ready and willing" to work with Nigel Farage and accept Afghans deported from Britain under Reform UK's unprecedented new mass deportation plan.
Reform leader Farage announced on Tuesday new plans to deport a staggering 600,000 illegal migrants within five years of a Reform government, which would mean deporting 300 people a day.
Farage said his government would negotiate returns agreements with countries including Iran, Eritrea and Afghanistan, which is governed by the Taliban.
Taliban 'ready and willing' to join forces with Nigel Farage for deportation scheme
The Taliban is reportedly "ready and willing" to work with Nigel Farage and accept Afghans deported from Britain under Reform UK's unprecedented new mass deportation plan.
Reform leader Farage announced on Tuesday new plans to deport a staggering 600,000 illegal migrants within five years of a Reform government, which would mean deporting 300 people a day.
Farage said his government would negotiate returns agreements with countries including Iran, Eritrea and Afghanistan, which is governed by the Taliban.
Do you guys just have flawless experiences or what?
It's been a week. Ubuntu Studio, and every day it's something. I swear Linux is the OS version of owning a boat, it's constant maintenance. Am I dumb, or doing something wrong?
After many issues, today I thought I had shit figured out, then played a game for the first time. All good, but the intro had some artifacts. I got curious, I have an NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 and thought that was weird. Looked it up, turns out Linux was using lvmpipe. Found a fix. Now it's using my card, no more clipping, great!. But now my screen flickers. Narrowed it down to Vivaldi browser. Had to uninstall, which sucks and took a long time to figure out. Now I'm on Librewolf which I liked on windows but it's a cpu hungry bitch on Linux (eating 3.2g of memory as I type this). Every goddamned time I fix something, it breaks something else.
This is just one of many, every day, issues.
I'm tired. I want to love Linux. I really do, but what the hell? Windows just worked.
I've resigned myself to "the boat life" but is there a better way? Am I missing something and it doesn't have to be this hard, or is this what Linux is? If that's just like this I'm still sticking cause fuck Microsoft but you guys talk like Linux should be everyone's first choice. I'd never recommend Linux to anyone I know, it doesn't "just work".
EDIT: Thank you so much to everyone who blew up my post, I didn't expect this many responses, this much advice, or this much kindness. You're all goddamned gems!
To paraphrase my username's namesake, because of @SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone and his apt gif (also, Mr. Flickerman, when I record I often shout about Clem Fandango)...
When some wild-eyed, eight-foot-tall GNU/LINUX OS grabs your neck, taps the back of your favorite head up against the barroom wall, and he looks you crooked in the eye and he asks you if ya paid your dues, you just stare that big sucker right back in the eye, and you remember what ol' Jack Burton always says at a time like that: "Have ya paid your dues, Jack?" "Yessir, the check is in the mail."
I agree that there should be a grace period after payments are stopped before they delete stuff. But I see no reason that they should provide you with free access to their service - if you haven’t paid, service is cut off.
But that is just my opinion.
Greenland: Denmark summons top US diplomat over alleged influence operation
Greenland: US tells Denmark to 'calm down' over alleged influence operation
The aim was reportedly to infiltrate Greenland's society and promote its secession from Denmark.Paul Kirby (BBC News)
although it was unable to clarify who the men were working for.
The rest of the world can put two and two together
Why do Waymos keep loitering in front of my house?
Why do Waymos keep loitering in front of my house?
Waymo vehicles have been loitering outside some houses in LA, leaving residents confused as to why their streets have become informal hangouts for the robotaxis.Rachel Kraus (The Verge)
Raoul Duke likes this.
ICJ demands investigation and possible removal of “The Lord is counting on me to stand on the side of Israel” Vice-President Sebutinde.
The ICJ has sent a communication to the President of the International Court of Justice (the Court), Justice Yuji Iwasawa, to urge the Court to conduct an investigation into allegations relating to certain statements attributed to ICJ Vice-President Sebutinde.
Should it be confirmed that these statements are in fact remarks made by the Vice President, the ICJ has requested that the Court undertake remedial action consistent with Principles 17-20 of the UN Basic Principles on the Independence of the Judiciary.
In addition, the ICJ seeks the immediate removal of Vice-President Sebutinde from participating further in proceedings in the South Africa v. Israel case.
The statements attributed to her are reported in an article published in the Ugandan Newspaper The Daily Monitor on 13 August 2025, entitled “My country disowned me after Israel–Gaza ruling”.
like this
I cant afford this macrotransaction
WoodScientist
in reply to monovergent 🛠️ • • •evasive_chimpanzee
in reply to WoodScientist • • •WoodScientist
in reply to evasive_chimpanzee • • •evasive_chimpanzee
in reply to WoodScientist • • •I would argue that it is currently a big part of the current economy if you know where to look. Lots of labor works via the principles of a gift economy.
E.g., you help your friend move to a new house, they help you redo your deck, you babysit your brother's kid, they cook you dinner, etc.
The problem with bartering is that it doesn't handle 3+ way trades (i.e., person A needs something from person B who needs something from person C, who needs something from person A), and it doesn't usually handle asynchronous trades.
In gift-based systems, people can literally retire based off the goodwill that they've cultivated. There are many old people who serve their families/communities for years who then get taken care of when they need it.
SomeAmateur
in reply to WoodScientist • • •Well yeah you don't need currency when value is based on physical stuff Catan style. I make brick, I trade for milk.
But when you have a trade that doesn't make physical goods or doesn't involve the stuff you have to offer you'll need a do-good coupon that everyone agrees to represent value.
Triasha
in reply to SomeAmateur • • •Economies that worked without cash still had debt.
Debt and obligation do not require money, but they do require people that will give you the things you need in exchange for "I'll owe you one."
UltraGiGaGigantic
in reply to SomeAmateur • • •ancient memory aid device used to record and document quantities
Contributors to Wikimedia projects (Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.)FriendBesto
in reply to WoodScientist • • •FriendOfDeSoto
in reply to monovergent 🛠️ • • •I'm not Scandinavian or live there, I think they are possibly the most cashless countries today. I'm in Japan where we just moved away from fax machines for banking and cash is very much alive and well. So I don't have any specific experience to share, just general thoughts.
I would question the framing here. I don't think "the man" will come in and "take it from us." The move towards digital money and online banking isn't so much prescribed by a dark cabal than it is driven by convenience. If the majority of people didn't find anything useful about it, they would not adapt these things like tap to pay or online banking.
Bartering wasn't made immediately illegal when currency came in. Currency was made to make bartering easier and more fairly divisible. Things changed at a glacial pace to get to our modern economy.
Banks and credit unions do have an incentive to get you to do your banking online. They can close all their locations except for ATMs and get you to do your in-person interactions with a central video call center. That saves them labor costs and they like that.
And security agencies and the revenue service like people spending digital, traceable money. It cuts out the gray area where under the table shenanigans take place.
As far as a push to online banking is concerned, there are a few factors that overlap. The aforementioned labor cost issue for the banks. A lack of legislation or regulations to provide banking that is accessible to preferably all people online. And then there is competing regulations to make it safe for people to use. And with that you run into the issue that you need the two biggest mobile OS's to get you access via the web or the app that does all. This is where we need to lobby our political leaders and the stance should be: don't leave grandma in the lurch. We have more old people than young ones in most western countries, old people vote in higher numbers, let's frame a way to preserve online banking in the most privacy-friendly manner around how an octogenarian should be able to use it safely. I think this is how you cover most bases with a good chance of success, even in the pre-authoritarian US. That should include browser-based banking and authentication means that don't only depend on Google and Apple.
As far as cash or concerned there will come a point where governments and central banks just throw their hands in the air and say: it's too expensive to keep printing and then maintaining the money in physical form. That's it, we go digital, damn a possible apocalypse and the fact that when we do we will be absolutely hosed when that happens. And, realistically, even if we retained physical money during the apocalypse, the economy would still collapse. Wars have shown us that money is quickly replaced by barter of cigarettes, booze, and other desirable or necessary goods. So you're "only" left with the privacy and liberty considerations to spend cash without anyone keeping a constant ledger. And I fear they will be drowned out by "hey, we can stamp out all drug trafficking" promises. Not realizing that like most rivers finding the sea most drug traffic participants will find a way in the new digital only system as well. And that gives me hope. I think we will see physical cash disappear this century. But at the same pace, people will find ways to avoid being tracked.
What can you do? Keeping your fingers crossed, become politically engaged with parties who want to protect old people in an online banking world, and vote for politicians who want to preserve cash. Just know that your best funded co campaigners will be the mob and tax dodgers.
Truscape
in reply to FriendOfDeSoto • • •As much as I despise what it represents, I believe that if physical currency ceases to exist, some virtual unregulated stand in (such as cryptocurrency) would take place to fill the same role for unmonitored transactions.
Let's call a spade a spade - individuals, organizations, businesses and corrupt officials all want to have a way to have their "special transactions" away from prying eyes, and should one medium be phased out, another shall form, with even less purview from the governments that once issued the currency. That's too much power to give up.
FriendOfDeSoto
in reply to Truscape • • •evasive_chimpanzee
in reply to FriendOfDeSoto • • •I pointed this out above, but I think it's worth repeating: bartering did not exist before currency, or at least there's no anthropological evidence suggesting it did. People barter when they are used to currency, but don't have access to any.
FriendOfDeSoto
in reply to evasive_chimpanzee • • •m532
in reply to FriendOfDeSoto • • •Truscape
in reply to monovergent 🛠️ • • •Tyra
in reply to monovergent 🛠️ • • •I didn’t see any English articles about that, bit just recently it made the rounds in German speaking news outlets that cash is very well trackable. Thanks to the individual serial number on every euro bill, they can track you from the ATM to the bar. And banks, big supermarkets etc. already do it. There is even a German company selling this data.
More information (unfortunately in german): netzpolitik.org/2025/bargeld-t…
Bargeld-Tracking: Du hast Überwachungsinstrumente im Portemonnaie
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Captainvaqina
in reply to Tyra • • •like this
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EveryMuffinIsNowEncrypted
in reply to Captainvaqina • • •NO.
LINE MUST ALWAYS GO UP.
Ulrich
in reply to monovergent 🛠️ • • •FriendBesto
in reply to monovergent 🛠️ • • •If we go by the WEF, then certainly before 2030.
At least in Canada, friends at the bank I used to work in IT were briefed in 2024 that CBDCs were coming down the pipe at some point in the future.
majster
in reply to monovergent 🛠️ • • •imf.org/en/Blogs/Articles/2019…
Oneday they will find a reason why its necessary for the greater good.
Cashing In: How to Make Negative Interest Rates Work
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int32
in reply to monovergent 🛠️ • • •(this might not be a joke)
shortwavesurfer
in reply to int32 • • •int32
in reply to shortwavesurfer • • •shortwavesurfer
in reply to int32 • • •int32
in reply to shortwavesurfer • • •the problem with gold is that a lot of rich people probably do have a lot of it, and that people would start mining for it.
but goldback without the gold would be nice...
Truscape
in reply to int32 • • •int32
in reply to Truscape • • •shortwavesurfer
in reply to Truscape • • •Yes, in Bitcoin, they were known as Cassaceous coins.
They are physical coins with the QR code for the address to send Bitcoin to on them and the private key was hidden under a hologram. And if the hologram was scratched off, you know that the coin had been used and that it wasn't worth anything.
As long as that hologram stayed intact though, you could guarantee that the coin actually had the amount of Bitcoin that it said it did on it.
And yes, you could very well do something similar for Monero.
ᴅᴜᴋᴇᴛʜᴏʀɪᴏɴ
in reply to int32 • • •int32
in reply to ᴅᴜᴋᴇᴛʜᴏʀɪᴏɴ • • •shortwavesurfer
in reply to monovergent 🛠️ • • •infjarchninja
in reply to monovergent 🛠️ • • •My bank alone has closed 99 of its high street branches this year.
I used to do a 2 minute walk to my local bank, then they started closing them further and further afield, until I now have to drive 20 minutes to my bank.
I am predominantly a cash man.
I dont buy anything online from any of the big names like Amazon etc. I search around until I find what I want in a store that I can drive to.
To be honest I would rather spend an hour driving to a store, and pay the extra money on petrol, than pay poxy rip off delivery charges and waste my valuable time waiting in for the wankers.
I also avoid all banking apps like the plague, in fact all apps that are recommended by any store staff. not that I can install them on lineage phone anyway.
I can only login into my online bank via VPN if I am using French server. I dont know how long that will last. I refuse to allow my ISP access to my online habits.
I am gutted that the UK government closed down all our bitcoin ATM's. This was the first warning sign something was going to change. Take away our freedoms yet again
At least when bitcoin was cheaper a few years ago, I could spend some money out of my state pension, buy £20 worth and save for the future.
I would be a zillionaire by now Rodney! LOL
But this ultimately leads us into the government crypto currency (Central bank digital currency) when we will all be fucked, because they will control everything.
I recently changed my gas and electricy supplier because they would not let me pay online while I had my VPN on, even if I was using a UK based server. wankers, didnt want my money, so I dumped them. My new provider is better and I can pay anywhere in the world.
All they want is everyone to have a fucking smart meter installed, so they can rip us off and charge extra for using gas and electricity in the early evening peak period, when we are cooking for our families, and bathing our children. Wankers!
eelectricshock
in reply to infjarchninja • • •infjarchninja
in reply to eelectricshock • • •Hey eelectricshock
I know what you mean
It does make me wonder about Airstrip One, the government, palantir and GCHQ.
Do we really believe that they stopped all that invasive surveillance after Edward Snowden.
I doubt it very much. They just renamed the programs, got microsoft, google and meta and the rest of the sycophants to run them, hidden behind private enterprise out of public sight, instead of Homeland and the CIA.
Ardens
in reply to monovergent 🛠️ • • •rumba
in reply to Ardens • • •Just like they took away horses because they were too lazy not to ride to work.
Cash needs to exist because we need the anonymity, But nothing else about it is convenient whatsoever. We're actually safer leaving banks and leaving work on a Friday because of it. And check washing was honestly just bullshit It never should have went down that way.
Ardens
in reply to rumba • • •rumba
in reply to Ardens • • •Super agree
Can't complain there
Nah, Our kids have a starter debit visa, Everything they want to buy is online (or is cheaper online) We were just handing them cash so they could hand it back to us so they could use our CC# then we got to make change. This is one thing that's much better digitally IMO.
I mostly agree. There are a lot of places that can't even use their POS if the digital service is down. We also don't stock cash our drawers to the levels we used to.
I find using CC while traveling to be far easier, but the stupid intl fees suck. Thing is, even if you get cash out on the other end, you still pay an intl charge. And then you're stuck with whatever you don't spend in that currency. I think overall, digital wins here.
Kinda agree. I'd rather the local government use my tax money to help them. They're already struggling from the number of people out there that don't carry cash.
Yeah, we do need a secondary method. I wish we could create a crypto system that isn't an elaborate pyramid scheme.
Ardens
in reply to rumba • • •It's a little sad, that your kids only want digital things. Only one of my three kids sometimes want something online. I don't think that your kids needs is general. I know a lot of kids, of any age, who like to save up, and buy real stuff.
I've been traveling quite a bit, and cash always works. You do you here, and I do me. 😀
Of course the politicians should drop their love of having homeless people to scare the rest of us, and instead help them. But until that happens, then it's nice to be able to give them a little. My daughter love the smile a homeless person gives her, when she hands him/her a little money.
eelectricshock
in reply to monovergent 🛠️ • • •