New York lawmakers arrested for blocking ICE access to federal building
Fri 19 Sep 2025 08.36 EDT
New York lawmakers, immigrants’ rights activists and religious leaders were arrested on Thursday at protests both inside and outside the complex in lower Manhattan where federal officials have been routinely detaining immigrants amid the Trump administration’s anti-immigration agenda.At least 70 demonstrators staged a direct-action protest to block access to and from the underground garage used by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) to transport people arrested by the agency. The nature of the protest prompted the New York police department (NYPD) to begin arresting people sitting in front of the access ramp.
New York lawmakers arrested for blocking Ice access to federal building
Arrests include 11 city officials who had demanded to see the conditions of an Ice intake facility on the 10th floorJosé Olivares (The Guardian)
A 1978 promo for Intellivision—just a year before it hit shelves
Even 47 years later, this thing gets me hyped. The “Master Component” had a 16-bit microprocessor?! Three-part harmony music? A display they called an “extraordinarily high level of resolution”? That sounded like the future. Sign me up.
And when they start hyping up ROM cartridges to a general audience, most people probably had no clue what that meant. But it must have felt like home electronics had just landed on the moon.
This was the first real console war: Intellivision vs Atari 2600. And wild to think—two years ago, Atari finally bought Intellivision.
- YouTube
Profitez des vidéos et de la musique que vous aimez, mettez en ligne des contenus originaux, et partagez-les avec vos amis, vos proches et le monde entier.www.youtube.com
copymyjalopy likes this.
Freetube
Edit: In my experience Piped or Invidious gets rate limited often and stop loading videos for a while and I need to change instances. Freetube doesn't have that problem, the only times videos stop working is when youtube changes something, when that happens I use Freetube to grab the video link and run a script to download with yt-dl and watch on the mpv player.
::: spoiler script that I grabbed on the internet
\#!/usr/bin/env bash
# Directory for downloaded videos:
DL_DIR="$HOME/Downloads/yt"
mkdir -p $DL_DIR
# Video player:
\#PLAYER="xdg-open"
PLAYER="/usr/bin/mpv"
\#PLAYER="/usr/bin/smplayer"
# Downloader and options:
YTDL="/bin/yt-dlp"
YTDL_OPTS=(--no-playlist -S "res:1080" -N 5 --add-chapters)
YTDL_DIR_OPTS=(-P "$DL_DIR")
set -e
CMD() {
printf "[CMD]: "
printf "\"%s\" " "$@"
printf "\n"
"$@"
}
# Get URL from clipboard if run without argument:
if [ -z "$1" ]; then
URL="$(xclip -o -sel c)"
# CMD qdbus org.kde.klipper /klipper org.kde.klipper.klipper.clearClipboardHistory
else
URL="$1"
fi
# Get video filename
printf "[URL]: %s\n" "$URL"
FILENAME=$("$YTDL" --get-filename "${YTDL_DIR_OPTS[@]}" "$URL")
printf "[FILE]: %s\n" "$FILENAME"
# Download video
CMD "$YTDL" "${YTDL_OPTS[@]}" "${YTDL_DIR_OPTS[@]}" "$URL"
# Play video
CMD "$PLAYER" "$FILENAME" >/dev/null 2>&1I also configured a cronjob to clean the directory everyday.
:::
Got it. In this case yeah Freetube is not a solution, the person would need to download Freetube and install Libredirect on the browser(wich means on mobile the person need to use firefox).
Honestly the instance that worked better for me with better uptime is inv.nadeko.net
Broken link, you redirect to the far-right site "Rumble." Tankie.Tube is also a peertube instance, I'm looking for private frontends for YouTube that function like XCancel does so I don't have to worry about trackers. I've seen piped, invidious, etc, wondering which is best.
As a side-note, tankie.tube doesn't have an auto-block as far as I know, it's more just a space for communists to share communist media.
‘Horseshoe theory’ is nonsense – the far right and far left have little in common
If liberals genuinely want to understand and confront the rise of the far right, then rather than smearing the left they should perhaps reflect on their own faults.
‘Horseshoe theory’ is nonsense – the far right and far left have little in common
Both attack the status-quo, but for entirely different reasons.The Conversation
Non plus ultra: Download the video and then upload to whichever PeerTube instance you use. At least if you're confident enough that this won't cause you legal trouble (e.g. cases like "fair use" should be safe).
FreeTube has a neat function to download comfortably (but make sure to pick an option with both audio and video).
Thats what fucken happens when your crumbling empire desperately mocks its own allies and attacks them through trade.
We coulda had a bad bitch, coulda been an impenetrable western continent of free trade, travel, and culture. But motherfucker racists and fascists need to divide their fellow people, on this isolated rock, floating in a vacuum.
I fucken hate it here.
That US ambassador was ambassador in the Netherlands previously and the press there let him enjoy that position for a good 30 minutes until they buried him and he never recovered.
Pete hoekstra
The face of that reporter says it all
Fuck this piece of shit retard
Dutch reporters tell US ambassador: 'This is the Netherlands, you have to answer questions'
Reporters in the Netherlands clash with the new US ambassador, Pete Hoekstra, over controversial comments he made in 2015, in which he said the 'Islamic move...YouTube
Meanwhile, in Canada, most of our Liberal and Conservative MPs gave a standing ovation to a speech about Charlie Kirk.
It's all up here too, folks.
"At least we're not the States!" My ass.
Is the Intel FSP blob a backdoor?
like this
Auster likes this.
like this
Endymion_Mallorn likes this.
like this
Endymion_Mallorn likes this.
I'm sure the quality is nice but I'm just gonna scribble Tux in with sharpie.
Also e.g. the lobbying around ACPI breaking suspend to ram sometimes. Funny little Bill Gates quote on that:
One thing I find myself wondering about is whether we shouldn’t try and make the “ACPI” extensions somehow Windows specific. It seems unfortunate if we do this work and get our partners to do the work and the result is that Linux works great without having to do the work. Maybe there is no way to avoid this problem but it does bother me. Maybe we could define the APIs so that they work well with NT and not the others even if they are open. Or maybe we could patent something related to this.
like this
Endymion_Mallorn likes this.
At White House dinner, tech CEOs can’t stop thanking Trump
Leaders of major tech companies, including Apple, Google and OpenAI, praised President Donald Trump’s pro-business agenda at a White House dinner on Sept. 4....YouTube
"We are watching him closely," Mr Trump wrote in his new book, "and if he does anything illegal this time he will spend the rest of his life in prison - as will others who cheat in the 2024 Presidential Election."
Donald Trump threatens to imprison Mark Zuckerburg for 'rest of his life' if 'he does anything illegal' over election
The former president made the claim in a new book, titled Save America, which is a collection of pictures and anecdotes from his presidential campaigns and term in office.Sky News
If you have any power at all, complying with the blatant fascist is treason. You know what happens next. Think of all the people who have virtually no power, who can be beaten, imprisoned, deported, without consequence. Chuds like Zuckerberg and Gates pave the way for that. They have enough money and power to insulate themselves.
Even fucking Musk parted company with the ghoul emperor. Imagine having less spine than someone who bought a social media platform so people would stop making fun of him (didn't work, obv).
You are right, but I highly doubt that he cares enough considering the quote I posted earlier. He probably also has a shitload of staff around him telling him what to do, whose life also depend on him complying.
Also, Musk bought Twitter to influence the outcome of elections, not for being a petty child that doesn't want to be insulted online. Well, maybe, but that's not the whole story here.
No one rich enough to be in Trump's vicinity actually believes any of the glazing they do to him. They're all executing the very basic strat for dealing with a baby man: stroke his ego -> get what you want.
As far as interacting with other sociopaths goes, my guess is trump is refreshingly simple for them.
He wouldn't be a billionaire if he were a good person.
But....to his credit, he did publicly say recently that he wants to have given away 99% of his wealth over the next 20y, and says he doesn't want to die rich. I am ok with making that the bar for being remembered. Provided it's not to his own foundation.
Gates is a good guy now
gates has put his money into a charity to protect his money; charities are only required to share a pittance of their wealth by law and lots of oligarchs have been putting their money into charities because of it.
it's troubling to read that people are actually buying the bullshit that the pr firms are putting around this activity.
Yeah, Gates never was a good guy, not then and not now. Evil is a spectrum and all that, but , and Bill Gates fucked over the US Education system.
So yeah, nah, fuck Bill Gates.
- YouTube
Profitez des vidéos et de la musique que vous aimez, mettez en ligne des contenus originaux, et partagez-les avec vos amis, vos proches et le monde entier.www.youtube.com
I remember playing an FPS game.. Heretic? Shadow Warrior? I would play it without a mouse. Alt would be a modifier on the arrow keys for strife (sidestepping). Spacebar to shoot, and you're set for disaster.
Space Cadet Pinball was another one. It was nice playing with Ctrl, on the corner. But hit the Win key and you instantly lost focus of the window.
That should be easy to replace.
And if not, maybe take the money you saved on a Windows licence and treat yourself to a better keyboard. It's worth spending a bit on your primary input device, the thing you use the most.
For anyone sadly stuck on Windows, please, please for fucks sake don't pay full price for a license. Go grab an OEM key from an authorized reseller for like $20.
There's some limitations on how many machines you can use it on simultaneously. That's it. Otherwise it's a full valid license at less than 1/4 of the price.
Even better, just use MASgrave and pay nothing. Yo ho ho.
like this
themadcodger likes this.
A lot of diehards like Unicomp for the typing feel, and I was very tempted since I used an IBM Model M for ages. But honestly they're pretty ugly.
Now I run an older fullsize GMMK with Kailh switches (bronze) and it's great. There are a zillion similar customizable KBs these days though.
Best Gaming Keyboards - Mechanical, RGB, Wireless | Glorious Gaming
The GMMK Gaming Keyboard was the world's first fully modular mechanical keyboard. Our hotswap keyboards and accessories are built to provide ultimate ergonomic comfort, performance, and customization for an unparalleled typing experience.www.gloriousgaming.com
I used to have this really awesome early 2000's transparent blue plastic keyboard with all the newest media keys. The only problem was that it had 4 windows keys on it! One on either side of the spacebar. The right side of the spacebar was Alt, Windows, Context menu, CTRL. That was a bit weird but it was alright. The next placements were crazy though. Someone figured there was space for more keys right below the Delete, End and Page Down keys but I guess they couldn't really figure out what would be best for there so they put a 3rd Windows key, a 2nd Context Menu and then a 4th Windows key right there. This was pretty close to the arrow keys and if anyone remembers gaming in the early 2000's, pressing the windows key accidentlly would often just crash your game completely. If you could get back into it, it could take quite a while for it to respond again. So if you were playing something like Warcraft 2 multiplayer, that button was a fucking nightmare.
Ugh, I loved the colour of that keyboard so much I put up with all those windows keys.
edit: I can't believe I found it! I've tried searching for this keyboard a few times, but finally found proof on this site!
When and Which (PC) Keyboards Introduced Browser and/or Multimedia Keys to Windows
Background: Multimedia/Internet keys are additional function keys on PC keyboards that either invoke specific applications like browser, e-mail, media player, etc. or invoked certain function for t...Retrocomputing Stack Exchange
Wow, Win98 logo and media buttons? Truely between eras.
I actually like the context key above the arrow keys, another method of effectively right-click is nice. Those Win keys are crazy though, that's the perfect place for extra function keys. Imagine having f13 & f14 that you can bind to anything without worry!
Do you know why the 3 key has an n? I have a hunch:
This is clearly a tactical keyboard for use in military, aviation or maritime navigation systems! /s
I did't know much about the German keyboard layout but I know the Czech one, which is derived from it (we both use QWERTZ) and was able to look up most of what I didn't know.
So, the keyboard has 4 layers: default, Shift, AltGr, AltGr+Shift (the fourth one is not standard but is recognized by xkb; in Czech I use it for custom character mappings, in German it is standardized but Linux-only).
- Default layer prints lowercase letters a-z and äöüß, numbers and the symbols in the lower-left of each key.
- Shift layer prints uppercase letters A-Z and ÄÖÜ and symbols at the top left of each key.
- Caps Lock only affects letters.
- AltGr layer prints lower-right symbols, most of which are only populated in a later version of the layout.
- AltGr+Shift (Linux only) prints upper-right symbols.
As you can see, AltGr+2 produces ², and AltGr+3 produces ³. I think the full-size "2" and "n" are misprints. My old Czech keyboard has some errors too.
By the way, Czech is more chaotic:
- we have lots more diacritics so the number row only prints numbers on its Shift layer (most people therefore use the numpad only)
- to print rare diacritics (ó, ď, ť, ň, and German ä, ö, ü), one has to first press the corresponding modifier key (
´,ˇ,˚,¨) like on typewriters- an alternative for common capital diacritics (á, é, ě, í, ú, ů, ý, ž, š, č, ř) is to briefly turn on Caps Lock (advantage over typewriters)
- pressing the
˚key twice prints the degree sign (°) twice (Windows) or once (Linux)
- there is a bloody dedicated
§key but we need to press AltGr+7 twice, then backspace (or Alt+96) for a grave (`), which is part of ASCII and used in Markdown - physical keyboards almost always reserve the right side of the keys for the English-US layout (very confusing for novices) so one has to type in the AltGr layer blind (except for
€); it contains useful symbols ([]{}\<>|\€$@#\^&×÷`) as well as useless ones (Đđ – these are Slovene, why not the Slovak Ôô?), leading people to prefer Windows-only left-Alt+numpad codes (such as Alt+64 for @) that use the obsolete OEM-1252 codepage (the Unicode extension has to be enabled via registry and Alt+letters hex codes get passed to programs anyway, often defocusing the input element). I only found a Slovak one on Wikimedia Commons - some lazy manufacturers combine the Czech/English and Slovak/English layouts, which are similar except ľ, ť and ô, leading to 5 (!) symbols per key, 3 of which are irrelevant unless you switch layouts
- Gboard for Android offers QWERTY for Czech, which looks normal (hold for diacritics, potentially swipe for ě and ů) and the unpopular QWERTZ-PC, which has all the physical keyboard's quirks, but its "Czech QWERTZ" is based off German QWERTZ, containing ú and ů but not the other diacritics for some reason. All other keyboard apps with Czech language layout get this right (hold for diacritics, potentially swipe for ě and ů)!
The "n" is probably a misprint, AltGr+2 prints "²" and AltGr+3 prints "³" in the German layout; it can be customized to actually print "n" in xkb though.
I mean, if the redundant Windows keys produce different codes, it could be worth a lot to macro enthusiasts. The model exists with an English QWERTY layout too:
The picture seems to be from 1998 so you'll likely need a passive DIN to mini-DIN adapter as well.
tuxedocomputers.com/en/Individ…
Individual logos and keyboards - TUXEDO Computers
Individual logos and keyboards: My TUXEDO. My Style. Individual keyboard laser etching and logo printing A TUXEDO is much more than just a Linux notebook. A TUXEDO is your personal and longtime companion for work or private use. We therefore ...www.tuxedocomputers.com
And soon, new laptops will have a second forced stupid Microsoft key. The copilot key.
Not even joking.
same…. and that stupid “copilot” button thing… (this is so useless)
i’m gonna turn it to a hotkey or something lol.
* Call it the Super key (actually the correct label I think)
* Bind window management related hotkeys to it
So we have a new name for the copilot key now?
Since we already have super, maybe it can be the duper key?
Yeah maybe. Could be trying to make it clear it's not uploading to a cloud or something lol.
Or maybe it means "put it down" (as in record, not discard).
4 years and 3 months still going strong. I use the touchpad a ton too and that coating on it has come off too, but it's perfectly usable. It also surprisingly lasted two pretty bad falls with just 1-2 minor cracks that I had to open the laptop up so that i can super glue the cracks just to ensure the cracks won't spread from future vibrations.
Visual condition is pretty unappealing, even a bit bad: the erased keycaps, the lifted coat off the touchpad and one visible crack, but it runs just as it did the day I got it
My bad, didn't explain it well in my initial comment
I broke my A and S keys when cleaning: because the WASD keys on these keyboards are transparent, I could see all the hairs or dirt under them and once every 4 months let's say, I was pulling them off
And one day they didn't wanna reliably clip back in place anymore
So now I have Right Ctrl on A and Right FN on S to replace the keycaps
So, they're basically newer keys in there, and also they are not transparent like A and S were
There's the german instance feddit.org. its filled with cryptozionists but i think the post would not be deleted. I think they also have some city-specific comms, I for sure saw a hamburg comm.
Edit: don't link to lemmygrad though they're allergic.
Either is fine, but the image you linked is hosted on lemmygrad.ml, if they notice the URL they will have a strong reaction.
I would advise against making an account on there but a federated instance, and not to engage them unless necessary. They are extremely rude people even for germans. But, it would probably be more visible to people that can go there.
I could try to post some stuff there tomorrow, however I'd need to make a new account and some alone time which is pretty much nonexistent for me nowadays. But if you need help please do reach out.
Sorry another edit: lemmygrad is pretty widely defederated, meaning you can see other peoples posts but they cant see yours. If you want visibility a lemmy.ml or lemmy.blahaj.zone account might be better, blahaj federates with feddit.org for instance.
this is beyond steroids
steroids make you muscles grow unnaturally fast.
this is literally just liquid to pump into the muscle to make it look bigger
Software taking the principle of Track-Me-Not and AdNauseam further?
Is there more software that, like TrackMeNot and AdNauseam, generate random internet activity so as to reduce the accuracy of any profiles tracking companies keep about you? E.g. software that carries out complete plausible-looking surfing journeys in the background: not just issuing searches (like TrackMeNot) and following ads (like AdNauseam), but also clicking on other links, scrolling, going back, perhaps even watching a YouTube video every once in a while and browsing Facebook? (All this, of course, respectful of the environment and the limited resources of small projects.) Or apps for the smartphone to generate false but plausible-looking position data and the like?
(Background: As many of you know, trackmenot is a browser extension that enhances your privacy by generating random search queries in the background, watering out the profiles that Google, Microsoft (and Yahoo, Baidu and AOL) have of you. It's available in the Firefox extension store; whereas for Chrome, Google has banned it from its store for unfathomable reasons. There's also AdNauseam, which works towards the same goal by randomly clicking ads in the background.)
TrackMeNot – Get this Extension for 🦊 Firefox (en-US)
Download TrackMeNot for Firefox. An artware browser add-on to protect privacy in web-search. By issuing randomized queries to common search-engines, TrackMeNot obfuscates your search profile and registers your discontent with surreptitious tracking.addons.mozilla.org
I'm actually not in favour of obfuscation methods, as recent events have shown - authorities questioning a dude for wearing the same innocuous shirt?
Random traffic might turn out to be 'traffic of interest' for just being the at the wrong place, wrong time. I would prefer actual strong cryptography and isolation.
authorities questioning a dude for wearing the same innocuous shirt?
Why wouldn't they tho? Both persons had the same shirt on. That seems like a no brainer to me. Maybe I'm missing something. It's one of the reasons when I go out in public, I do not wear clothing that are emblazoned with logos, graphics, words, etc. For one, it doesn't do anything for me to wear logos, graphics, words. To me, it's akin to having a political yard sign or bumper sticker. What do you gain from it? What's it do for you? Some guy wearing a t-shirt with a cannabis leaf across the front, again why?, and it's an easy identifier and puts another tick mark for complimentary evidence.
I’m actually not in favour of obfuscation methods
I'm a big fan of it all.
Maybe I should clarify - I'm not a fan of human noise (there's probably a more precise term) - I'm more in favour of privacy/anonymity in the midst of actual, randomized noise, that isn't just random human activity.
I don't even mean t shirts with a logo. It could've been a pair of jeans on a specific date at a place in conjunction with 5 other (random obfuscated) things that a poi also happened to do. Like googled 'how to fold a swan' or whatever.
Even if you didn't do these things but was instead random generated traffic, it would generate unnecessary attention.
One might argue that if enough people adopted such methods, authorities would have too many leads to follow up. But then again, the chances of a random string of generated activity coinciding with that of a poi isn't high, so there likely will be a manageable number of leads.
Even if the number were higher, they have proven to have no qualms about skipping due process. As long as they might've gotten the actual poi, they have no problems subjecting many more unrelated to the same treatment because everyone is some sort of terrorist now.
They could also arrest you just because you have higher than normal randomized traffic and activity that you can't or won't answer for.
"Why did you search how to fix a sink leak and then how to fold a parachute within 2 minutes of each other?? You must be a terrorist generating random activity to hide your true actions. What do you have to hide?" - "found coke stuffed in all the couches and beds boss"
They could also arrest you just because you have higher than normal randomized traffic and activity that you can’t or won’t answer for.
I hear what you're saying, and I'm not going to call it paranoia, however, that isn't in my threat model. Entities that can come into your home, arrest you, and ship you off to Guantanamo for buying a parachute and a drain kit for the sink are not in my scope. Frankly speaking, that is probably not in 90% of most people's threat model, who care about privacy, anonymity, and security. Those entities don't even need to fabricate an excuse like a couch full of coke, to give you that full Guantanamo experience.
To tell the truth, I probably couldn't account for 75%+ of the websites I've visited just today. When I get to researching something, it's usually pages and pages, from many, many different sites. Highlight, search, read, nothing here, go back, highlight, search, bingo! Now for more in depth reading. Highlight, search....ad nauseam. This process happens very quickly. I don't watch TV at all, and I don't read fiction. 99.99% of what I do read tho, comes off the internet. So, they'd have to sift through a bunch of data.
Even if you didn’t do these things but was instead random generated traffic, it would generate unnecessary attention.
I'm quite certain that all of my privacy, anonymity, security, and obfuscation efforts has put me on someone's list, but again, that's not in my threat model. I'm not hiding from the government. I send them tax forms every year. I vote prolifically in both local and nationwide elections. I pay property taxes, etc. They know who, and where, when it comes to finding me. If I were a person of interest, they'd come visit. Now, I'm certainly not going to overshare with them in the least either. Hell, I'm not hiding from anyone. I'm just preventing unauthorized access. That is what keys and locks do.
Rock on bro!
There’s also AdNauseam, which works towards the same goal by randomly clicking ads in the background.)
Funny thing that I found out is that you actually have to have advertisements allowed on your network for it to work. LOL
Samsung Embeds Israeli Surveillance App on Phones Across MENA
A nonprofit organization dedicated to advancing human rights in digital spaces across West Asia and North Africa — is warning that Israeli-linked software secretly embedded in Samsung phones across the MENA region poses a serious surveillance threat.
According to SMEX, Samsung’s A and M series devices either come preloaded with the app “Aura” or install it automatically through system updates, without the user’s consent. The application reportedly collects a wide range of personal and device-specific data, including IP addresses, device fingerprints, hardware details, and network information.
In 2022, Samsung MENA partnered with Israeli tech company IronSource, integrating its Aura software into Galaxy A and M series phones across the region. The partnership was publicly marketed as a way to “enhance user experience” with AI-powered apps and content suggestions.
like this
Hexanimo e osaerisxero like this.
like this
osaerisxero e Limitless_screaming like this.
like this
Limitless_screaming likes this.
We have reached the point where it feels safer buying a random Chinese phone
1) they got rid of that choice for you: the american carriers has pre-complied with trump by blacklisting all chinese phones based on their imea numbers; it no longer matters that it's technologically feasible for it to work in the united states. so now, if you want premium phone quality but 1/3rd the price; you must buy an american brand and the full price tag.
2) you don't have anything the chinese gov't wants, so they don't care about keeping tabs on you. also buying into the propaganda that they're tryping to keep tabs on your carries with it the implicit acceptance that you're okay with the american gov't keeping tabs on you.
that's the one loophole in this effort to black list chinese branded phones; that non-chinese brands that use the same hardware are allowed on their networks and, until recently, i was looking for an oppo or oneplus that could leverage this loophole.
you're fucked if you try to use a xiaomi or huawei or any other chinese brand that doesn't share hardware w non-chinese brands like i have been doing for the last few years.
the phone i used was a redmi note 13 pro.
i had it on tmobile prepaid for a little bit over year or so and i had the account since 2009 w 2 other chinese phones in the past. i tried switching to at&t in january and it worked for the first day, but then i got a text from at&t saying that my phone is no longer compatible and i had no signal. the store told me that the imea number had to be whitelisted and that i had to put in a request at their website. the signal reception sucked anyways, so i tried switching back to my old t-mobile account by popping in the sim, but it didn't work either and the t-mobile store said that chinese phones aren't allowed on prepaid anymore for "public safety". (he literally used air quote fingers and rolled his eyes. lol)
google recommended mvno's to get around the ban, but they're just as unaware as most that this is a thing in the united states; their websites still show that my redmi is compatible but i've literally tried them all and none have worked.
chatgpt recommended getting around the ban by purchasing phones that share the same hardware like they do with oneplus, oppo, etc. and that was the approach i was going to take until i decided to get a fairphone and put eos on it instead.
Xiaomi Redmi Note 13 Pro - Full phone specifications
Xiaomi Redmi Note 13 Pro Android smartphone. Announced Sep 2023. Features 6.67″ display, Snapdragon 7s Gen 2 chipset, 5100 mAh battery, 512 GB storage, 16 GB RAM, Corning Gorilla Glass Victus.www.gsmarena.com
I'm afraid it will be hard in the future.
I am once again recommending you read theory. This is becoming a big pattern with your posts, you have doomsday predictions that are framed in the views of "good vs evil" as though those are the driving mechanisms of the problems of today. I really think trying to get a solid understanding of the way capitalism works and its contradictions will help you make better sense of the world, which can be much more comforting than relying on conspiracy theories about crypto and predictions from John the Theologian centering the idea that currency will become invalid and we will all have to run into the hills and barter to survive (as your linked post states).
Such an economy would collapse without workers, you aren't going to be hunted, capitalism rests on wage labor and needs continuous labor and circulation to keep going. What's more likely is imperialism waning as profit rates trend lower and lower and the global south seeks independence, resulting in crisis, not some even stronger oppressive capialist force that can act with any kind of coherent plan. The capitalists aren't going to run automated megafactories and hunt former workers for sport, they need workers to consume to continue the process of circulation. When circulation becomes untenable because of overproduction of goods and not enough wages to buy said goods, the system crashes. It isn't going to get stronger, it will get more desparate and violent but weaker at the same time. Fascism is a cornered, hungry animal lashing out.
Even as the capitalist world gets increasingly fascist, the way you frame the ways it will act ignore that the primary purpose of fascism is to save capitalist relations, not just to do evil for evil's sake. The way we fight fascism is fundamentally centered around organizing, not fleeing cities and trying to rely on physical currency. The mechanisms of capitalism are understandable, and as such we can move on to understand the ways it will actually decay and run into crisis, and how we can move on to socialism.
Here's an introductory Marxist-Leninist reading list that you may find helpful.
Read Theory, Darn it! An Introductory Reading List for Marxism-Leninism
"Without Revolutionary theory, there can be no Revolutionary Movement."
- Vladimir Lenin, What is to be Done? | Audiobook
It's time to read theory, comrades! As Lenin says, "Despair is typical of those who do not understand the causes of evil, see no way out, and are incapable of struggle." Reading theory helps us identify the core contradictions within modern society, analyze their trajectories, and gives us the tools to break free. Marxism-Leninism is broken into 3 major components, as noted by Lenin in his pamphlet The Three Sources and Three Component Parts of Marxism: | Audiobook
- Dialectical and Historical Materialism
- Critique of Capitalism along the lines of Marx's Law of Value
- Advocacy for Revolutionary and Scientific Socialism
As such, I created the following list to take you from no knowledge whatsoever of Leftist theory, and leave you with a strong understanding of the critical fundamentals of Marxism-Leninism in an order that builds up as you read. Let's get started!
Section I: Getting Started
What the heck is Communism, anyways? For that matter, what is fascism?
- Friedrich Engels' Principles of Communism | Audiobook
The FAQ of Communism, written by the Luigi of the Marx & Engels duo. Quick to read, and easy to reference, this is the perfect start to your journey.
- Michael Parenti's Blackshirts and Reds | Audiobook
Breaks down fascism and its mortal enemy, Communism, as well as their antagonistic relationship. Understanding what fascism is, where and when it rises, why it does so, and how to banish it forever is critical. Parenti also helps debunk common anti-Communist myths, from both the "left" and the right, in a quick-witted writing style. This is also an excellent time to watch the famous speech.
Section II: Historical and Dialectical Materialism
Ugh, philosophy? Really? YES!
- Georges Politzer's Elementary Principles of Philosophy | Audiobook
By far my favorite primer on Marxist philosophy. By understanding Dialectical and Historical Materialism first, you make it easier to understand the rest of Marxism-Leninism. Don't be intimidated!
- Friedrich Engels' Socialism: Utopian and Scientific | Audiobook
Further reading on Dialectical and Historical Materialism, but crucially introduces the why of Scientific Socialism, explaining how Capitalism itself prepares the conditions for public ownership and planning by centralizing itself into monopolist syndicates. This is also where Engels talks about the failures of previous "Utopian" Socialists.
Section III: Political Economy
That's right, it's time for the Law of Value and a deep-dive into Imperialism. If we are to defeat Capitalism, we must learn it's mechanisms, tendencies, contradictions, and laws.
- Karl Marx's Wage Labor and Capital | Audiobook as well as Wages, Price and Profit | Audiobook
Best taken as a pair, these essays simplify the most important parts of the Law of Value. Marx is targetting those not trained in economics here, but you might want to keep a pen and some paper to follow along if you are a visual person.
- Vladimir Lenin's Imperialism, The Highest Stage of Capitalism | Audiobook
Absolutely crucial and the most important work for understanding the modern era and its primary contradictions. Marxist-Leninists understand that Imperialism is the greatest contradiction in the modern era, which cascades downward into all manner of related contradictions. Knowing what dying Capitalism looks like, and how it behaves, means we can kill it.
Section IV: Revolutionary and Scientific Socialism
Can we defeat Capitalism at the ballot box? What about just defeating fascism? What about the role of the state?
- Rosa Luxemburg's Reform or Revolution | Audiobook
If Marxists believed reforming Capitalist society was possible, we would be the first in line for it. Sadly, it isn't possible, which Luxemburg proves in this monumental writing.
- Vladimir Lenin's The State and Revolution | Audiobook
Excellent refutation of revisionists and Social Democrats who think the State can be reformed, without needing to be replaced with one that is run by the workers, in their own interests.
Section V: Intersectionality and Solidarity
The revolution will not be fought by atomized individuals, but by an intersectional, international working class movement. Intersectionality is critical, because it allows different marginalized groups to work together in collective interest, unifying into a broad movement.
- Vikky Storm and Eme Flores' The Gender Accelerationist Manifesto | (No Audiobook yet)
Critical reading on understanding misogyny, transphobia, enbyphobia, pluralphobia, and homophobia, as well as how to move beyond the base subject of "gender." Uses the foundations built up in the previous works to analyze gender theory from a Historical Materialist perspective.
- Frantz Fanon's The Wretched of the Earth | Audiobook
De-colonialism is essential to Marxism. Without having a strong, de-colonial, internationalist stance, we have no path to victory nor a path to justice. Fanon analyzes Colonialism's dehumanizing effects, and lays out how to form a de-colonial movement, as well as its necessity.
- Leslie Feinberg's Lavender & Red | Audiobook
Solidarity and intersectionality are the key to any social movement. When different social groups fight for liberation together along intersectional lines, the movements are emboldened and empowered ever-further.
Section VI: Putting it into Practice!
It's not enough to endlessly read, you must put theory to practice. That is how you can improve yourself and the movements you support. Touch grass!
- Mao Tse-Tung's On Practice and On Contradiction | Audiobook
Mao wrote simply and directly, targeting peasant soldiers during the Revolutionary War in China. This pair of essays equip the reader with the ability to apply the analytical tools of Dialectical Materialism to their every day practice, and better understand problems.
Congratulations, you completed your introductory reading course!
With your new understanding and knowledge of Marxism-Leninism, here is a mini What is to be Done? of your own to follow, and take with you as practical advice.
- Get organized. Join a Leftist org, find solidarity with fellow comrades, and protect each other. The Dems will not save you, it is up to us to protect ourselves. The Party for Socialism and Liberation and Freedom Road Socialist Organization both organize year round, every year, because the battle for progress is a constant struggle, not a single election. See if there is a chapter near you, or start one! Or, see if there's an org you like more near you and join it.
- Read theory. Don't think that you are done now! Just because you have the basics, doesn't mean you know more than you do. If you have not investigated a subject, don't speak on it! Don't speak nonsense, but listen!
- Aggressively combat white supremacy, misogyny, queerphobia, and other attacks on marginalized communities. Cede no ground, let nobody be forgotten or left behind. There is strength in numbers, when one marginalized group is targeted, many more are sure to follow.
- Be industrious, and self-sufficient. Take up gardening, home repair, tinkering. It is through practice that you elevate your problem-solving capabilities. Not only will you improve your skill at one subject, but your general problem-solving muscles get strengthened as well.
- Learn self-defense. Get armed, if practical. Be ready to protect yourself and others. Liberals will not save us, we must save each other.
- Be persistent. If you feel like a single water droplet against a mountain, think of canyons and valleys. Oh, how our efforts pile up! With consistency, every rock, boulder, even mountain, can be drilled through with nothing but steady and persistent water droplets.
"Everything under heaven is in utter chaos; the situation is excellent."
- Mao Tse-Tung
Revolution. Socialism. Liberation. - Freedom Road Socialist Organization | FRSO
Freedom Road Socialist Organization (FRSO) is a national organization of revolutionaries fighting for socialism in the United States. Our home is in the working class.admin (Freedom Road Socialist Organization | FRSO)
like this
Maeve likes this.
It's just that recently the risk of a third world war has appeared. I have many different theories, but I can't confirm every one of them.
Okay, we'll see what happens next, but it's best to be prepared for any horror, even a sharp rise in food prices. I've seen videos and read articles predicting an imminent catastrophe, and corporate greed tells me that this catastrophe is just around the corner.
like this
Maeve likes this.
... I’ve seen videos and read articles predicting an imminent catastrophe, and corporate greed tells me that this catastrophe is just around the corner.
my own doomerism had me believing this as well, but then learning about texts like the ones cowbee has shared w you has shown me that our situation was predicted a century+ ago and I found it reassuring.
The most wild part is that it was never just some fringe leftist prediction; even liberal & conservative scholars from a century ago also predicted it like Keynes, or Polanyi, or Roosevelt (yes the president). It turns out that almost a century ago americans and other westerners just stopped paying attention to all the warnings from all of the scholars that they used to listen to and now we're in this doom filled future because all the people who benefit from the status quo have successfully created an environment where the future is seen as either more status quo or nothing but abject horrors to scare us into drinking the kool-aide of inescapable climate change and perpetual oligarchy.
Once I developed a rudimentary media literacy because those texts; the mainstream media became transparent and it became clear that everyone, but the people of ruling class, are kept ignorant of reality because ignorant people are easier to manipulate into all the unnecessary asshattery that we've been doing for the last five generations.
like this
Maeve likes this.
We own nothing, nothing is ours
Not even love so fierce* that burns like baby stars
But this poverty is our greatest gift,
The weightlessness of us as things begin to shift...
Added missing words
especially if they’re poor and desperate enough.
aka the yin to the fascist yang.
in other words: make them so worried about trying to keep a roof over their heads and food on the table that they're don't have the energy & time to think about why they have to do this when there are litterally billions of other people on this planet who don't have to worry about doing the same thing.
like this
Maeve likes this.
... now I’m much better prepared for escaping the worst of the acute fascism than I was before.
i'm expecting it to smack me down hard since i already was not having a great time under non-fascist capitalism.
you should teach a class on how to prepare for it. lol
Not much to teach. Just lucky to have another citizenship and some savings. Then theory just helps with answering questions like:
- Could there be life-disrupting/threatening political change in Canada in the foreseeable future?
- Would it be safe if we just move to northern Canada?
- Should we move out of Canada in such an eventuality?
with a "yes," "no" and "probably yes." Previously I might have answered those with "no," "yes" and "no."
the us empire is about to demonstrate to the world that my other country of citizenship is still a helpless vassal state despite the incredible progress at self determination they've made in the last few decades and my recent career change has proven that savings were a thing of the past despite earning the american average salary.
i wish canada were an option for me, but the best chance that canada would consider me for permanent residency status is if i went back to the old career field that was giving me anxiety, depression, and the perpetual need to disregard reminders that i was helping the ruling class further fuck over the entire world.
I see Hunger Games metaphorically like all mythologies, poetry, court jesters, Shakespearean plays, etc. And like myself, reactionaries tend to take things literally, rather than get a handle on their passions and channel them in more creatively appropriate ways, when opportunity presents. Something about luck means preparation meeting opportunity. But part of preparation is knowledge and understanding. It's a long, hard, frustrating process for we who are conditioned into expectations of ease, comfort, and drive-thru results. There will be the five stages of grief accompanied by bitterness and many of our comrades will get stuck in the five stages, bitterness, and the way things were/could have been. I think those who are able to see and move beyond these things, accept there will be hardships and work through them to move beyond will be the ones shaping the future. The choice is yours. The choice is mine. The choice is our comrades. Choose ye this day whom you shall serve. A spirit of defeat serves the enemy, regardless of where our loyalty lies.
You've been such a reassuring, steady influence as I work through my issues. I'm ever grateful for it and proud to acknowledge it.
like this
Maeve likes this.
like this
Maeve likes this.
Read Debt: The first 5000 years(David Graeber, 2011) on ProleWiki
This book explores the role debt has played in shaping human history, from ancient civilizations to modern societies, debunking the conventional economic narratives...ProleWiki
Lenin
Fuck that guy–but anyone who says he couldn't write clearly doesn't know how to read.
I think even among ML's there are better candidates for all that. Castro's entire set, for one.
I think he absolutely meant it and was a gifted administrator(putting aside killing all the other communists for a moment), but he made the same mistake all the French revolutionaries made–centralized power too much taking it from the soviets, so it fell apart when anyone less capable of filling those extremely large shoes stepped in.
He made the classic 'great man' mistake, and didn't trust the people he meant to save, so his success began to die the moment he did. It's hard to blame him personally, but god dammit he could have done so much better with a little sacrifice in initial efficiency to help the people be a bigger part of the revolution.
Lenin was one of the earliest theorists, organizers, and eventually the leader of the first explicitly Marxist revolution in world history. Any one of these accomplishments would make him one of the most important and admirable Marxists ever, but all three?
Lenin's worst mistake was giving too much of his health to his nation. Sorry, but your reading is not supported by the historical data, even though it is so often repeated by the western left.
That's not really an accurate view of the Soviet Union. Lenin didn't take power away from the soviets, they were still the driving force of decision-making. Thanks to achieving a socialist system, life expectancies doubled, literacy rates tripled, healthcare and education were free and high quality, working hours lowered, vacation days increased, housing and employment were full or nearly full, and they went from feudalism to space in half a century.
Lenin didn't "kill all of the other communists." The vast majority sided with the bolsheviks, and others fought against them and lost in the civil war. It wasn't like Lenin pushed a "kill everyone who disagrees with me" button, there was an active civil war with people killing bolsheviks and the Red Army as well.
The Soviet Union also didn't really fall apart simply due to Khrushchev, Gorbachev, or Yeltsin alone. They contributed by undermining the socialist system and introducing parts of government meant to work against each other, but the soviet union still functioned well until it was illegally dissolved.
All in all, you have a very inaccurate view of Lenin and the Soviet Union, I'd say. It was the single most progressive force in the world throughout its existence, and figures that you list like Castro directly owe at least some of their success to Lenin and the Soviet Union.
like this
Maeve likes this.
Is there a black market for Doctors (other than charities) ? Feels like an opportunity for an enterprising group of doctors.
Forking the medical industry with free treatment probably needs a gofundme . . . . . Or what the rest of the world calls a national health service.
Announcing the Soft Launch of Fedora Forge
Announcing the Soft Launch of Fedora Forge – Fedora Community Blog
We are thrilled to announce the soft launch of Fedora Forge, our new home for Fedora Project subprojects and Special Interest Groups (SIGs)! This marks a significant step forward in modernizing our development and collaboration tools, providing a pow…Ryan Lerch (Fedora Project)
FYI
We are thrilled to announce the soft launch of Fedora Forge, our new home for Fedora Project subprojects and Special Interest Groups (SIGs)!
Some clients show an excerpt (I ain't complaining about you putting it in a comment though) so probably to that guy it looked like you just copy/pasted this thing
So I value those who add a comment to their post and say why they post it and find it interesting. Isn't Lemmy all about sharing thought, so does poster except other to do it for him and just want to have popular posts?
Plex or Jellyfin for my Raspberry Pi?
like this
originalucifer likes this.
Speaking of third party apps, here's some recommendations:
Android: Findroid
Works absolutely great, it's very rare that I even find a bug.
iOS: Swiftfin
I don't use iOS but this is the one I installed on my friend's phones.
Linux (and maybe Windows): Delfin
This is a GTK 4 app for Linux and maybe it has a Windows build too but I didn't check. It's not perfect, there's bugs here and there but it mostly works fine. The developer isn't very active (which is understandable), so it would be nice if someone, who has the time for it, would help out.
Here's also the official page with Jellyfin clients: jellyfin.org/downloads/clients…
It doesn't seem to include Delfin though.
On the other hand, jellyfin's identify feature works better than plex's did for me, and it lets you rename stuff very easily whereas Plex needed you to find the exact piece of media in a database.
My mom asked me to rip a set of weirdo bootleg tai chi DVDs years ago, back when I used Plex, but I couldn't figure out how to get them to show up in the library because, again, weirdo bootleg media and I have no idea where she got them. But I switched to jellyfin last year and on a whim decided to mess with them, and getting them to show up in my jellyfin library was basically automatic
Edit, another fun example of fucking with Plex's identify feature just came to mind. For some reason it kept deciding that random movies were actually some movie named "A Fish Called Wanda." I'd never heard of it before, the movies it would misidentify were entirely random as far as I could tell, and no amount of fuckery would get it to identify the movie correctly. It would decide that, say, The Matrix was actually AFCW, I'd remove the files for The Matrix, and it would decide something else was AFCW. Eventually I got fed up and downloaded an actual copy of AFCW, but it still refused to play the correct files if I navigated to AFCW in my library. Never did figure that one out.
The main difference between Plex and Jellyfin is the network setup. Plex takes care of that for you, while you have to set it up your self with Jellyfin.
Another difference is that Plex can combine content from multiple servers ( I think. I'm not a plex user, so I don't know for sure), while it will always be seperate servers in jellyfin.
Jellyfin will always have my heart though, because it's open source and not here to make money. Plex also have a reputation to show ads and other stuff from streaming services.
The networking aspect is basically the only thing stopping me from switching from Plex to Jellyfin. I got Jellyfin running and accessing my server myself, while on my home network is easy. However, when it comes to accessing outside of my network, it gets complicated, and when it comes to other people accessing my server it gets more complicated, and then accessing my own server and friends' servers it gets even more complicated.
With Plex, all of that is super easy. I can watch stuff from my own server and my friends' servers on any device, including a web browser, and I can tell my mom, for example, "install Plex on your Roku and tell me what email address you use to log in" and boom, she has access to my library.
eh, maybe. for me it was opening a port and adding a dns record. took me all of 4 minutes
im kinda lucky in that my isp uses 'sticky' ips so while its not static, ive had the same ip for 5 years
yes my world will burn when they crack into my jellyfin instance and magically break out of its docker container and then what? goo nowhere on its vlan?
literally thousands of self-hosted jellyfin/emby instances and the support forums are just chocked full of people getting hacked via it! so many!
oh wait, no there arent
like this
originalucifer likes this.
like this
originalucifer likes this.
FreeDNS - Free DNS - Dynamic DNS - Static DNS subdomain and domain hosting
Free DNS hosting, lets you fully manage your own domain. Dynamic DNS and Static DNS services available. You may also create hosts off other domains that we host upon the domain owners consent, we have several domains to choose from!freedns.afraid.org
As far as I understand, Tailscale (being a Wireguard network) doesn't need you to flip it off and on - if you're connecting to the relevant endpoint it gets routed through that, otherwise it just goes the normal way.
Not gonna pretend that means the setup is trivial to nomies, but you could probably set it up for them and not have to worry about it.
Have zero knowledge of Roku but for example with AppleTV boxes it is totally fire and forget, Tailscale is always on in the background and apps will find my media servers through it.
And I’ve noticed even tech illiterate people will learn to become literate when there is some motivation, like a huge movie archive 😀
Flipping a preference like VPN on if they want to use certain app is certainly within realm of possibility.
Why exactly would they ever need to turn VPN off again? It’s not like all their traffic will go through it if it’s on, unless you specifically configure stuff that way (exit node, routes).
And one option to do the VPN stuff is on their router too, so it’s totally transparent to them. More stuff to configure though, unless running owrt or some other router software compatible with Tailscale.
I have only recently started with self hosting and after some minor frustration, i am in love!!! Plex isnt just worse cuz its paywalling your own files, its install, support and ui are pretty trash, imo.
The one advantage i saw was that it was easy to share w folks. If your jellyfin is going to be secure AND accessible, thats more work to do.
Keep in mind jellyfin does NOT recommend using a pi, bc it struggles w transcoding etc. That said, my first go was an rpi5. I used this guide and it was pretty brainless.... ezpz:
Beware, uptime w the pi is pretty bad... had to restart server all the time, and some devices would not stream properly. It did work, mostly though, and it was a great intro for me since i just had it lying around.
Have fun!
- YouTube
Profitez des vidéos et de la musique que vous aimez, mettez en ligne des contenus originaux, et partagez-les avec vos amis, vos proches et le monde entier.www.youtube.com
How steep is the learning curve there? Should I just go with Plex and keep it simple?
You've got it the wrong way round. Jellyfin is simple. I've never understood Plex.
Honestly I found plex a lot simpler to set up when I started out.
In Jellyfin I had to wrangle the settings a lot when trying to set up hardware encoding since my streams kept crashing due to some codecs not being dupported by my CPU.
Major issue was hard disk getting disconnected, but then again I had faulty SATA to USB connectors.
While jellyfin itself is very simple, you might run in to problems if you want to use it while not on your home network. For this you're either wanna use a VPN (or tailscale) or use something like nginx to give your server a web address, while you get this for free if you use plex.
Giving yourself a public address might be easier for the person trying to access jellyfin, but it it comes with a bunch of security considerations and you probably (definetly) want to do some research on the inns and outs of that. I would recommend tailscale but either way it's gonna be some extra fiddling, unless you already have something like that set up.
Kinda hijacking this a little: what do the cool kids use on a "normal" TV as a client to watch Jellyfin?
Chromecast? A PI plugged into the HDMI port?
This hasn't been on my radar, but with Winter coming (John Snow) I'm thinking this might be something to look into...
I use an HTPC, only because I had a gaming computer I wasn't using laying around.
I've been meaning to switch over to Bazzite, but haven't gotten around to it.
Yeah, I have MythTV setup in a passively cooled box in the corner of the lounge... works fine...
But, I'm considering oprions for the rest of the family, both local (other rooms) and remote, so rather than reinvent wheels...
I'm not a cool kid, but I gave up on fighting "smart" TVs and use the jellyfin app on them.
I don't like it, but I also don't like a separate hardware client for each screen either. Plus my wife likes Tubi, ads and all.
My wife is pretty normal. She uses the Jellyfin client on our Fire Sticks, Roku Soundbar, and TV.
She has no idea what Jellyfin is really. Just another Netflix or Prime in her mind.
I am experimenting with Jellyfish this month and really enjoying it.
I have a lifetime pass from Plex from a long time ago so it's my fallback now. And because of that I wasn't sure if I should try Emby since ... Well you have to pay. And I already have Plex.
But I'm curious ... Because it feels like everyone who uses Emby is very happy with it and swears by it. And generally they all feel like Jellyfin is generally inferior to it.
Seems like Emby is a better Jellyfin that you have to pay for if you want all those premier features (I would).
Also, what's to stop Emby from turning into Plex?
Plex vs Jellyfin is a lot like Windows vs Linux in my view.
There are things in Plex you can point to that you think keep you from moving. I point to things in Plex I am glad I left behind.
I play 4k and 1080p HD stuff all the time with 5.1 surround at home and when I travel. It also runs my pihole and I have a rudimentary raid 1 (def not real raid 1) running with the rsync command to mirror my media drive that backs my data up every day at midnight. It's a punchy little fucker.
I don't disagree that you're generally paying for the name but it my 4b w/ 8GB ram I got as a gift kicks ass. There are definitely better machines out there but the pi can handle lots of what I ask of it.
I have an old 2 something I'm thinking of using to host my cloud storage on, too. I don't mind if it's slower uploading.
Hardware Acceleration | Jellyfin
The Jellyfin server can offload on the fly video transcoding by utilizing an integrated or discrete graphics card (GPU) suitable to accelerate this workloads very efficiently without straining your CPU.jellyfin.org
Lightweight justice for your SBC!
Optimised | Simplified | For everyone - Backed by community, DietPi is a minimal OS image for SBCs - Raspberry Pi, Odroid, PINE64 etc. Install software optimised for you!DietPi
Jellyfin all day every day
It still has issues to fix but it's open source and actually yours
Plex is an enterprise solution, if you need your tech illiterate grandma to access the media it's easier to pay them. If it's just a local network or you're okay with going down a rabbit hole of setup, then Jellyfin does everything and does it better IMO (Plex requires you to be online to login before it shows you your local data, plus you're sharing information on what media files you have to Plex).
I personally have been using Jellyfin for years, and my only complain is that the LG app is slow and I get some videos that stuck for a few seconds in it (probably some codec thing, that I could fix by transcoding the media but I haven't been bothered enough to figure it out)
The Israeli Soldiers Who Have Gone Insane Are Actually The Sane Ones. The Real Insane Ones Are Those Who Are Not Psychologically Wounded By The Crimes They Have Done
The Israeli Soldiers Who Have Gone Insane Are Actually The Sane Ones. The Real Insane Ones Are Those Who Are Not Psychologically Wounded By The Crimes They Have Done - Walid Shoebat
There was an article that was published on Haaretz about IDF soldiers losing their minds due to the crimes they have committed.Shoebat (Walid Shoebat)
like this
geneva_convenience likes this.
Corbyn and Sultana clash over new party membership
Corbyn and Sultana clash over new party membership
MP Zarah Sultana says she is a victim of a "sexist boys' club" in row over setting up new left wing party.Sam Francis (BBC News)
like this
geneva_convenience likes this.
Netanyahu: ‘These So-Called Genocide Experts Have Probably Never Committed A Genocide In Their Lives’
JERUSALEM—In response to an independent United Nations inquiry concluding that Israel is committing an ongoing genocide against Palestinians in Gaza, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu issued a defiant statement Thursday in which he criticized the commission’s finding, declaring that “these so-called genocide experts have probably never committed a genocide in their lives.”
“Until you’ve killed countless civilians, the word ‘genocide’ shouldn’t even come out of your damn mouth,” said Netanyahu, arguing that the pampered intellectuals at the U.N. were nothing more than a bunch of armchair human rights abusers. “Name one ethnic group you’ve attempted to obliterate. I’ll wait.
I mean, have you even bombed a single children’s hospital? Please, you’ve got no idea what you’re talking about. Maybe you read a book about the 1948 Genocide Convention? Well, I’ve read Sports Illustrated, but that doesn’t mean I’m a quarterback.
Netanyahu: ‘These So-Called Genocide Experts Have Probably Never Committed A Genocide In Their Lives’
JERUSALEM—In response to an independent United Nations inquiry concluding that Israel is committing an ongoing genocide against Palestinians in Gaza, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu issued a defiant statement Thursday in which he criticized the com…The Onion Staff (The Onion)
Formatting test [Because I don't understand how some images show up as links while others reflect the image themselves also extra long title test inbound
signal-2025-08-23-13-11-07-825 hosted at ImgBB
Image signal-2025-08-23-13-11-07-825 hosted in ImgBBImgBB
***the cake is a lie***Answer seems no
US Plans to Deploy the Golden Dome Missile Defense System: Problems and Prospects
Former Deputy Chief of Space Operations for the US Space Force, General Michael Gattlein, announced that the deployment plan for the Golden Dome missile defense system has been completed.
The US Department of Defense is not disclosing details of the program or its cost. The Pentagon statement stated that a review is currently underway, so no further information is available.
A look at the general's changing tone makes it clear that the project is facing difficulties. In July, he claimed that he would present an "objective plan" and disclose the program concept after the 60-day deadline.
As for the cost, one can conclude that Trump's $175 billion plan was optimistic. According to the Congressional Budget Office, the development and deployment of the missile defense system will require $542 billion, and that's just the cost of creating the interceptor system. Defense Department spokesperson Kingsley Wilson stated that cost details should not be disclosed because the program is critical to national security.
Although the project has a relatively short development timeline, it already has its critics. They argue that the effectiveness of a missile defense system depends on a variety of factors, from its location on the planet to the types and number of threats the system must counter, as well as its expected reliability.
Computer modeling has shown that the guaranteed destruction of several warheads would require dozens of times more interceptor missiles. A simple calculation shows that the system could easily be overwhelmed by the launch of several missiles, not to mention a massive nuclear missile strike. Military analyst Todd Harrison of the American Enterprise Institute warns that even minor changes to the system's parameters could increase its cost by hundreds of billions of dollars.
- YouTube
Profitez des vidéos et de la musique que vous aimez, mettez en ligne des contenus originaux, et partagez-les avec vos amis, vos proches et le monde entier.m.youtube.com
UK regime partners up with Palantir
New strategic partnership to unlock billions and boost military AI and innovation
The UK will be at the leading edge of defence innovation as the government signs a new partnership with Palantir to unlock billions in investment and deliver on the Government’s Plan for Change.Ministry of Defence (GOV.UK)
geneva_convenience likes this.
The Economic and Strategic Logic Behind China’s Power Sector Engagement in Africa
China’s Financing Power Plants Transforming Africa's Energy
Why is China financing power plants across Africa? This analysis breaks down China’s motivations — from resource security to export markets — and what’s at stake.The China-Global South Project
Speaker Johnson says China is straining U.S. relations with Nvidia chip ban
Speaker Johnson says China is straining U.S. relations with Nvidia chip ban
The Cyberspace Administration of China ordered companies to halt purchases of Nvidia's RTX Pro 6000D, a chip that was made for the country.Samantha Subin (CNBC)
“They steal our intellectual property,” Johnson told CNBC’s “Squawk Box” on Wednesday.
Why the fuck would they do that when their own is so much better
US vetoes UN Security Council Gaza ceasefire demand for sixth time
US vetoes UN Security Council Gaza ceasefire demand for sixth time
‘Forgive us, Palestinian brothers, sisters,’ says Algerian ambassador to UN Amar Bendjama after devastating outcome.Lorraine Mallinder (Al Jazeera)
like this
Maeve likes this.
-Martin Luther King
Developer / Potential Contributor Question: how to add a custom post/comment ranking algorithm to Lemmy?
How would I add a new ranking algorithm to Lemmy as a contributor? I'm a developer by trade, but unfamiliar with Rust and the codebase of Lemmy specifically. It doesn't seem like Lemmy has a concept of 'ranking plugins', so whatever I do would have to involve an MR.
Specifically, I'd like to introduce a ranking system that approximates Proportional Approval Voting, specifically using Thiele's elimination methods, like is used in LiquidFeedback.
I'm pretty sure that with a few tweaks to Thiele's rules, I can compute a complete ranking of all comments in a thread in O(ClogC + E + VlogC), where C is the number of comments, E is the total number of likes, and V is the number of users. This would also support partial approvals, upvotes could decay with age.
I believe this would mitigate the tendency towards echo chambers that Lemmy inherits from Reddit. Lemmy effectively uses Block Approval Voting with decays to rank comments and posts, leading to the same people dominating every conversation.
geneva_convenience likes this.
don't like this
geneva_convenience doesn't like this.
Have you considered taking the approach from phanpy.social/, and let the sorting algorithms on the client side?
Not only would make your work independent from Lemmy, it would give you complete freedom to choose how to implement this.
I don't think it would work for my specific algorithm, unfortunately. To compute PAV, I need access to the "raw votes" of each individual user.
PAV doesn't need to know the identity of the user behind each upvote, but it does need to be able to correlate which upvotes originated from the same user so that once a user is determined to be "satisfied" by having a comment they upvoted given a high rank, all of their other upvotes need to be deweighted for the remainder of the process to "make room" for other users' opinions.
I checked the Lemmy API docs, and while that information is available at /api/v4/post/like/list and /api/v4/comment/like/list, so I could have a frontend that scraped every comment and then every like of every comment in a community (ignoring how inefficient that would be), but both of those endpoints are tagged as "Admin-only".
Plus, even if I could do that, to compute the rankings my process does need the upvotes of every comment in a post (or every post in a community) before it knows which one is on top, which seems too much to put on a client.
so I could have a frontend that scraped every comment and then every like of every comment in a community
Or you could do the same thing that lemvotes.org/ does and follow the communities and actors to build this database on a separate server, which then can be used by the client(s).
What if the lack of comments were because comments weren't proportionally representative?
Someone sees a discussion that interests them, so they see what the top comments are. But if the Hive Mind(tm) has spoken (even if just by awarding the top two or three comments to the same viewpoint), will they engage, or will they go somewhere else?
Remove the Hive Mind, and maybe you'll get more engagement?
- First there are SQL functions which calculate the rank for a specific post or comment (defined here)
- These SQL functions are used by a scheduled task which updates post ranks at a regular interval (defined here)
- Then there are the database tables which store the calculated rank (eg
post.hot_rank)- Also the API parameters to specify the requested sort, and preferences for default sort options etc
- These params are used in the post listing db query to sort posts by the given rank field (here)
lemmy/crates/db_schema_setup/replaceable_schema/utils.sql at main · LemmyNet/lemmy
🐀 A link aggregator and forum for the fediverse. Contribute to LemmyNet/lemmy development by creating an account on GitHub.GitHub
This is exactly the info I'm looking for, thanks! I knew there'd have to be some kind of scheduled task to recompute the rankings (IIRC the lemmy docs say ~10 minutes for recomputing ranks), I just wasn't sure where it was.
The change that would require the least effort to implement my voting system (whether the lemmy maintainers would accept the change notwithstanding) would be to target the schedule task, and introduce a server-wide configuration option that would allow admins to pick whether they're using Block Approval (what we have now) or Proportional Approval (what I'm introducing) based algorithms for their server's "hot" algorithm. No API or frontent changes required. Then, work towards community mods being able to set that on a per-community basis.
Something for me to experiment with, anyway.
I was thinking of it as a drop-in replacement for "hot" just so that it doesn't require any changes on the UI to implement. I'm a bit rusty with UI development, lol. The frontends wouldn't have to add a new button, and the Lemmy API wouldn't need to add a new sort type. That said, maybe that sort of thing is easy to do?
As far as it would work, Thiele's elimination rules is computed roughly as follows (I'm assuming that only upvotes are counted; I haven't considered yet if the process works if disapprovals count as a vote of "-1" or how the process could remain scalable if an abstention counts as a vote of "0.5":
begin with the list of posts, list of users, and list of votes
# initial weighting, takes O(E)
for each post:
for each vote on the post:
lookup the user that voted on the post
based on the number of votes the user has given, determine how much the user would be made "unhappy" if the current post was removed
# the basic idea here is that if the user didn't vote for a post, then they won't care if its removed
# if the user did vote for a post, but also voted for 100 others, then they probably won't care if one gets removed as long as 99 remain
# if the user did vote for a post, but only voted for 2 or 1 others, then they'll care more if this one gets removed
# if this is the only post the user voted for, then they'll care a lot if it gets removed
# LiquidFeedback uses a formula of "1/r", where r is the total number of votes the user has given
# as posts get removed, the votes get removed too, so surviving votes get more weight
# for the sake of efficiency, I'll probably use a formula like "if r > 20 then 0 else 1/r" so that users only start to contribute weight to posts once they only have 20 approvals left. Replace 20 with a constant of your choice
add the user's resistance to the post being removed to the post
# initial heap construction, takes O(C)
construct a min-heap of the posts based on the sum of the users' resistances to the post being removed
# iterative removal of posts
while posts remain in the heap: # O(C)
remove the first post in the heap - this has the least resistance to this post being marked 'last' in the current set # O(logC)
yield the removed post
for each vote for the removed post: # in total, O(E) - every vote is iterated once, across the entire lifetime of the heap
lookup the user that voted on the post
compute this user's resistance to this post being removed
remove this vote from the user
based on the number of remaining votes the user has given, compute the user's resistance to the next post being removed
compute how much the user's resistance to their next post being removed increased (let this be "resistance increase")
if "resistance increase" is nonzero (based on my formula, this will happen whenever they have less than 20 votes remaining, but not if they have more than 20 votes remaining):
for each vote for a different post by this user:
increase the post resistance to removal by "resistance increase"
perform an "increase_key" operation on the min-heap for this post # this will be O(logC)
# worst-case, each user will perform 20 + 19 + 18 + ... "increase_key" operations -
# they only begin once there are 20 votes remaining
# when they have 20 votes remaining, they have 20 increase_key's to do
# when they have 19 votes remaining, they have 19 increase_key's to do
# etc.
# because this is a constant, it doesn't contribute to the time complexity analysis.
# so each user performs at worst a constant number of O(logC) operations
# so the overall time complexity of the "increase_key" operations is O(VlogC)For this algorithm, the
yield the removed post statement will return the sorted posts in reverse order. So worst to best. You could also interpret that statement as "Give the post a rank in the final sorting of count(posts) - (i++)".Thiele says that process can be used to elect a committee of size N by stopping your removal when N votes remain. But because it's a "house monotonic" process (electoral speak for "increasing the size of the committee by one and re-running an election is guaranteed not to cost any existing members their seat), I figure it could be repurposed to produce a ranking as well - the top one item is "best one", the top two items are the best two, the top three are the best three, etc.
To make the above process work for approvals that decay over time, we'd just treat a decayed approval as a partial approval. I still have some work to do on how exactly to integrate partial approvals into the "resistance to removing each post" calculations without ruining my time complexity. But basically it's a proportional score voting election instead of proportional approval.
Adding a new sort type is not a big deal, so dont worry about it. And a new admin setting for this would also require UI changes, so the new sort type is easier overall.
The current sort options calculate the rank for each post only from the data on that post (number of votes, creation time). Your suggested algorithm looks much more complicated than that, as it requires two iterations and needs to access data from multiple posts at once. Im not sure if this can really be implemented in a way thats performant enough for production use. Anyway feel free to open a pull request, then hopefully other contributors can help you to get it working.
How to protect my identity while running an online store?
Hello, Sorry if this is the wrong place for this.
I am looking to start an online store for some art projects/crafts/stickers mostly as a creative outlet for some of my current frustrations.
Since some kinds of people take art way too personally, I want to take precautions from doxxing or being harassed.
What are some best practices for an online shop? Are there any recommended storefronts or something like that? I’m sure there’s a lot of things I’m not even considering.
Any help would be much appreciated, Thanks
I recommend that you think hard and properly access your threat profile. You are likely going to have to pay with either your wallet (eg: some sort of company incorporation, lawyer fees, forwarding services, and other privacy protection services), your time (eg: using "inconvenient" services, managing separate accounts, etc.), or both. It can be draining (in more than one way) and take away some of the joy that you're intending this to bring you if you do too much to protect yourself. On the other hand, if you do too little then you can overexpose yourself leading to pricey or dangerous situations.
At a minimum, I would recommend incorpating and making sure your name is not publicly tied to the company in any way. You will likely need a person/company/lawyer to be publicly listed as an agent of some sort for the company. You should be able to have someone do this for you for a small-medium sized fee. Once you have that, do everything in the company's name and ideally with separate phone numbers, email addresses, online accounts, bank accounts, and physical addresses as anything tied directly to you.
Some of that is to protect yourself financially and legally, but there are some obvious privacy benefits as well. Anything beyond that should be dictated by your threat profile.
As always though, follow best practices when it comes to security! Use strong passwords and use multi-factor authentication when possible (or ideally, use passkeys). Don't reuse passwords (and ideally, don't reuse email addresses for multiple accounts). Avoid clicking links in messages when possible. Don't open suspicious documents (especially if they are unexpected). Verify the authenticity of any new person/business you interact with (especially if they contact you first). Be vigilant of all forms of phishing attacks.
Another piece of advice (that you didn't ask for, sorry!) - if the process of making art is the thing that brings you joy and the materials are not too expenses, then just focus on making the art without selling it (at least for a while). At worst, you will realize that maybe this isn't as enjoyable as you thought it would be with the added benefit of not needing to deal with all the troubles of working through all the legal/financial/privacy protections. At best, if you decide to get serious about selling it then you'll have a larger product inventory and better understanding of what you like making most. It may also help you understand what you should price everything at (assuming you've made some of the items in larger quantities).
Get a P.O. Box for returns/exchanges, so you don't have to give out your home address.
Use a VoIP service if you need a business phone #. Callcentric is cheap and reliable.
Use an email redirect service like SimpleLogin or AnonAddy to create an email account that's just for business, and add it to your PayPal (if you have one & plan on using it) so people don't see your personal email address on receipts.
Contractor Used Classified CIA Systems as ‘His Own Personal Google’
Contractor Used Classified CIA Systems as ‘His Own Personal Google’
This article was produced in collaboration with Court Watch, an independent outlet that unearths overlooked court records. Subscribe to them here.A former CIA official and contractor, who at the time of his employment dug through classified systems for information he then sold to a U.S. lobbying firm and foreign clients, used access to those CIA systems as “his own personal Google,” according to a court record reviewed by 404 Media and Court Watch.
💡
Do you know anything else about this case? I would love to hear from you. Using a non-work device, you can message me securely on Signal at joseph.404 or send me an email at joseph@404media.co.Dale Britt Bendler, 68, was a long running CIA officer before retiring in 2014 with a full pension. He rejoined the agency as a contractor and sold a wealth of classified information, according to the government’s sentencing memorandum filed on Wednesday. His clients included a U.S. lobbying firm working for a foreigner being investigated for embezzlement and another foreign national trying to secure a U.S. visa, according to the court record.
This post is for subscribers only
Become a member to get access to all content
Subscribe nowContractor Used Classified CIA Systems as ‘His Own Personal Google’
Dale Britt Bendler “earned approximately $360,000 in private client fees while also working as a full-time CIA contractor with daily access to highly classified material that he searched like it was his own personal Google,” according to a court re…Joseph Cox (404 Media)
I'm pretty sure he's far from the only one. Databases with such a vast amount of "forbidden" knowledge will always be misused.
That's why we shouldn't have global surveillance, espionage and "highly classified material" wherever it's possible for agencies to do their jobs without them.
And I'd argue most of the data the contractor had access to was neither relevant for his own work, nor for the work of all of the CIA.
like this
geneva_convenience likes this.
We’ve known since Snowden that these people browse private info for fun, and exchange anything spicy they find with each other. But this guy was straight up selling classified info to anyone who would buy it.
I’m shocked they’re letting this guy off with a plea deal. This was so far beyond misuse of systems. This was full on treason.
I’m shocked they’re letting this guy off with a plea deal. This was so far beyond misuse of systems. This was full on treason.
but he didn't try to run or get caught running in russia; so he's ok. lol
Depends which kind of partisan you’re talking to. One kind believes it’s ok to keep them in boxes in a bathroom. The other kind thinks ok to keep them in the trunk of a car or a private server.
Reasonable people want both kinds held accountable.
Pure fucking ignorance and projection.
Go ahead, ban me from this den of propaganda and bullshit.
We all float down here. Guess Russia is Nazi too cause they have Nazi statues and history collaborating with the Nazis in Poland.
But wait! Theres more! Everyone in the world must be Nazis!
Investigation: Some 1,500 statues and streets honor Nazis around the world — including in Germany and the U.S. – The Forward
Sign up for Forwarding the News, our essential morning briefing with trusted, nonpartisan news and analysis, curated by Senior Writer Benyamin Cohen.The Forward
Did I say it was enough just to have it, or is that the only argument you had a canned response for? Because you can scroll back up to where I say how overwhelming the Nazism y'all deny is in Ukraine (and several NATO countries), you keep providing ample proof (and ample apologism) yet act like that somehow supports your parallel argument.
Also, lmao at the implication of Nazism being ok bc it's part of the cultural heritage with that Germany comment.
Meet some of the German Nazi War Criminals who came to lead NATO
“The most famous of them was Adolf Heusinger, chief of the Operationsabteilung from 1940-1944. He was actually Hitler’s chief of staff and helped plan the Nazi’s invasions of Poland, Norway, …Adara Press
Fact : what's really behind the Swiss E-ID
End of September, Switzerland will vote for E-ID.
A big threat for our privacy as it will widely used for tons of new use cases.
Behind the government pitch of an "open source project, completely optional" hides big tech industry... Which will make it mandatory to access their services.
What are your thoughts on that ?
like this
Endymion_Mallorn e geneva_convenience like this.
I'm in favour of it.
Contrary to the last time this was proposed, the government is in control of it instead of private corporations.
This will also be an alternative to any of the current online ID verification, which involve sending photos of your ID, videos of it and videos of yourself to some random third party for verification.
There is an article in the proposed law that e-ID is only allowed to be required for actions, where the law explicitly requires authentication.
In this proposed law there is no article that explicitly forces services to require a ID
So it only applies to services that used to require identification since a long time, lime buying alcohol, money laundering protection, some government stuff you had to do physically prior etc.
But there is a new law coming which sadly did mot get a referendum, that requires age verification for 18+ media like video and games. But this law will take effect no matter if e-ID is accepted or not. So if e-ID was declined, you would have to scan the compete ID, do a liveness selfie and send it to private companies like Netflix to watch 18+ stuff there.
With e-ID, you can proof you’re old enough without revealing name, gender, body hight etc.
Please inform yourself correctly before spreading nonsense
As you mentioned. There's a new law coming without referendum.
Today you'll need it to guy alcohol.
Tomorrow streaming
After tomorrow access to public transport
The open web forum in my picture exists. You can have a look. They dictate the rules. Its public information 😀
You're just spoiled.
Switzerland is the only country that I know has direct democracy. The others have indirect democracies where you vote politicians (or parties here in Slovakia) and they decide on your behalf what they want.
Agee there's kinda direct democracy.
But check out, its public. How many top level politics are paid by insurances ? 50-80 people ?^^
For me a democracy is a government not funded by private companies.
Volksinitiative No-Lobbying | Schweiz
Mit der Initiative "Für eine volksorientierte Politik – NO-Lobbying" wollen wir dafür sorgen, dass unsere National- und Ständeräte für die Anliegen des Schweizer Volks einstehen und nicht willfährige, bezahlte Helfer sind, welche die Interessen von m…No-Lobbying
You are not required to vote. You will not be punished if you abstain from your vote. You are completely free to chose "yes" or "no" based on your own judgings.
Isn't that exactly what democracy is about?
Those people influence most of the voters which makes it unbalanced
Indeed, the lobbying is nasty and the party financing is not as transparent as it could be.
But discrediting the whole system as undemocratic because of those "minor flaws" is just not fair IMO.
Volksinitiative No-Lobbying | Schweiz
Mit der Initiative "Für eine volksorientierte Politik – NO-Lobbying" wollen wir dafür sorgen, dass unsere National- und Ständeräte für die Anliegen des Schweizer Volks einstehen und nicht willfährige, bezahlte Helfer sind, welche die Interessen von m…No-Lobbying
1. The legislative authority is drafting a new law. This law can be challenged and will then be voted on (this is the case for the E-ID law)
2. A suggestion for a new law can be raised by citizens. This law will then be voted on.
I think avoiding functioneren creep will be a certain issue.
Belgium has such an e-id for nearly 10 years now. It works pretty good and acces to your personalia data is granular.
If only age verification is needed, the request will only grant you birth date.
Comanies that want to use it need to be vetted and their acces to your data is centrally regulated.
itsme®, your digital ID
itsme® is your digital identity that allows you to securely identify yourself, log in, confirm and sign documents.itsme®
If only age verification is needed, the request will only grant you birth date.
I always wonder why they don't minimize data further. "Age of Majority reached: Yes" seems like it should be good enough.
The German one supports that. It will also tell you exactly what data is transferred to the service in question.
But because Germany is Germany, the eID is rarely even implemented.
That's exactly how it works with the Belgian system.
Same for reductionis at the local swimming pool. They can only check if I'm a local but don't get to see my adress.
centrally regulated.
Any privacy freak who did a review on ItsMe? I just shared minutes ago lemmy.ml/post/36346569/2117413… that I don't trust them but maybe I'm just paranoid. The fact that they are regulated means little, Meta and Google also are and they legally siphon everything we let them.
We have a local privacy podcast (Dasprivé). The CISO was featured on the podcast. I can't transcribe everything but the community consents on the fact that they run a tight ship.
The use case is very local so apart from Flemish and French speaking sources i sadly can't get further than 'trust me bro' at the moment.
Every authentication uses your SIM, your civil service number and your password (PIN, fingerprint, face id).
Before authenticating you'll see all the info that'll be shared like your, date of birth, adress, phone number,...
Acces is granular. If age verification is needed, the request will only state that you're 18 or above for example. They don't get my date of birth.
As a resident, I get a reduction at our local swimming pool. The can use my id but the only info they see is whether I live in the city or whether I'm from outside.
Everytime my data is accessed, the acces is logged. The log contains information about the organisation and, if it applies, the person that made the manual lookup. The legality is checked by logging the legal ground for acces.
Are they trustworthy? I don't know. We use our eID for online verification for over 20 years now and ItsMe has certainly made the whole process a breeze.
French speaking sources
Works for me, URL please and thanks already for the clarifications.
I can't find the blog post that I was referring to but this might help:
From their own site:
itsme-id.com/en-NL/why-itsme/s…
ISO cert:
itsme-id.com/en-BE/business/bl…
It's good to point out that the system was developed by a consortium of banks to simplify identity verification en prevent fraud. Banks are held to ''Know Your Customer''. KYC entails that they need to check your identity every now and then and up until ItsMe that meant that you had to verify with your eID and a card reader. Those card readers have issues. Outdated firmware and whatnot make the proces a terible experience. I have several government websites that I use from day to day and the all need my eID for authentication.
Some figures.
Nearly 1.700.000 authentications every day for 11.700.000 Belgians. 80% Of the Belgians use the app.
Digital security of the highest level
Securing your online identity is a top priority: that means not only protecting your personal data, but also ensuring a secure connection, every time.itsme
Ah, you can see clearly who gets which data with every authentication. It's logged and I can look it up on my portal.
Actually'', apart from ItsMe, I can see every time someone did any lookup on my online data with the federal government for the last 10 years. I even get to see their names.
There's no third party watching with ItsMe because the traffic is encrypted. The data is owned by the Federal government and the party that requests authentication gets to see what the are legally allowed to see and what you clear. With every authentication you get to see what info they request.
Every authentication uses your SIM, your civil service number and your password (PIN, fingerprint, face id)
Maybe I misunderstand what you are covering but I don't think so, e.g. card reader and Ente Auth do not require connectivity.
It's used for official authentication. The certificates are handled by the federal government. That's only possible with a call to the federal governments servers.
Any eID or other card wil have outdated data on it at some point. Like, when you move or, when you die.
There's too much lack in this law from my point of view.
Instead, to prove our age for example, we could get TOKENS with age verification that are completely anonymous.
In Belgium we do have e-ID and we had it for years.
If in any of the circles there is only BigTech then indeed you are right it is a threat.
In Belgium though I can access my official document with some of these (honestly I don't remember which, but AFAIR It'sMe is one option) but more importantly there are some options with some decoupling, e.g. SMS (arguable as one must have a phone number usually via BigTelco) but, last and not least :
- a card reader with your physical ID card and its chip with eid.belgium.be/en/what-eid which has had Linux packages for years
- just learned about it yesterday which is why I'm excited to clarify this, a 2-step authentification app which does NOT have to be from BigTech, e.g. Ente Auth ente.io/auth/ which is FOSS and available on F-Droid
which means as long as at least one of these alternative is available then IMHO we can get some of the benefits without the centralization risk.
Ente Auth - Open source 2FA authenticator, with E2EE backups
Protect your accounts with Ente Auth - Free, open source, cross-platform 2FA authenticator, with end-to-end encrypted backupsente
I'm talking about public services. For private services I have no idea what they all do and, as importantly, what they are legally bound to do. I would hope that obviously they would have to provide at least 1 solution that doesn't rely on any third party, e.g at least provide the card reader with legal Belgian ID option (which seems to be what they offer you, so IMHO that's good enough), but I don't know.
ItsMe not running is pretty good in terms of privacy because their entire business model is, and correct me if I am wrong, to be an intermediary. I didn't check what data they share but I'd be pleasantly shocked if it was none.
The card reader might seem slightly inconvenient or outdated but there is no intermediary and it is, AFAICT, secure because it's based on well established cryptography.
PS: it's also fun because you can play with PAM and thus, I didn't try that, login or get su and sudo with your ID card.
It doesn't matter whether it's a private or public service if they both use the same auth provider (beId). I wouldn't be surprised if the SMS/TOTP options went away completely at some point for our "security".
A different issue is that itsme is often the only option when doing things on mobile. Sure, you can avoid it for now, but it's getting increasingly inconvenient to do so, unfortunately. I try to express my disappointment to itsme every now and then about the fact that they require Google's SafetyNet and that the Connective Plugin needed to activate itsme in the first place doesn't even work on Linux, but to no avail. They sent me a detailed email about setting up a Windows VM to get it working so credit where it's due for the effort, but the situation is still bad...
itsme is often the only option when doing things on mobile
Indeed that's why TOTP, via e.g. Ente Auth, was a good surprise. I didn't see it until now and I believe that's the mobile alternative to ItsMe.
That's actually a choice made by the service. The onboarding document has the options listed and they get to choose, which is imho stupid. Just offer all options.
Service A has email enabled, service B doesn't. Since ACM/IDM is SSO you can first authenticate with service A with your email code and then go to service B already authenticated.
Those aren't eID. They are a way to authenticate using CSAM.
There are different weights tied an authentication method, card reader scores highest.
From the top of my head there's email, sms, totp, card reader, eiDAS and itsme® (which I avoid because it's proprietary and controlled by a 3rd party).
There's a list of properties a service can request when accessing data via ACM/IDM, for example your ssn, name, etc.
You can read your eID with local software too, with the aptly named eid viewer. Click on the picture in the overview and drag it into a text editor to see the entire exportable xml.
I have not yet looked into it.
I will vote in favour if:
- The E-ID platform is controlled by the government and is fully open source
- Platforms only get a single binary information for age verification if the person is old enough or not and does not get any identifiable information.
- The government platform does not get any info about what service is doing the request. So the government controlled ID platform cant log what service the person uses.
If any of these points are not fulfilled with the planned implementation I will have to weigh the risks.
swiyu - the Swiss Trust Infrastructure ecosystem
Organization for all public repositories of the swiyu Public Beta Trust Infrastructure - swiyu - the Swiss Trust Infrastructure ecosystemGitHub
private ids where always the scope of the privacy movement. However, it may as such present other challenges which can include age based discrimination. It as such must be implemented wisely.
Age is already being weaponised against us (child protection, etc), this shouldn't be like that - We can already see what kind of power governments hold. Ageism is what will ultimately destroy us.
dan69
in reply to gitgud • • •