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‘They behaved like a terrorist group’: Italian journalist held captive by Israel


Italian journalist Lorenzo Agostino has said he felt he was “in a really barbaric place” while being illegally detained by Israel in international waters after this week’s attack on the Global Sumud Flotilla vessels bound for Gaza.

Agostino said he and fellow passengers were kidnapped and subjected to “humiliating” conditions.

“They behaved like a terrorist group … We were left without fresh water for over two days. Overall, they took every opportunity to humiliate any of us,” Agostino told the Anadolu news agency.

He said they were subjected to blindfolding, tight handcuffs, inadequate clothing, and freezing temperatures in a highly air-conditioned van for hours.



Dem Leaders Betrayed The Base With Charlie Kirk Whitewash (7min Video)




If I have one free email in Tuta and upgrade it, am I able to make more emails paying for only one?


Lemme simplify it:

Let's say I have x@keemail.me. It's free. Then I upgrade it to Legendary.

Can I create y@keemail.me and z@keemail.me paying only for x? Or will I also have to pay for y and z?

in reply to Meow-Misfit

You pay for the account, not the adresses, you can have up to thirty adresses on a paid plan
in reply to Meow-Misfit

Also addy.io/



Germany Considers Split From France On Next Generation Fighter


Cracks seem to be appearing in the pan-European Future Combat Air System (FCAS) program, at the heart of which will be the crewed New Generation Fighter (NGF). Reports now suggest that Germany, one of the two major partners in FCAS, is looking at how it might separate itself from France, amid long-running misgivings over workshare arrangements in this vital program.

According to Politico, the German Ministry of Defense discussed the future of FCAS last week with Airbus, which leads the German side of the program. The article cited two unnamed people familiar with those discussions. Reportedly, German defense officials are unhappy with French demands to have a disproportionate share of the program and are now examining other options.

Questa voce è stata modificata (4 settimane fa)



Scaled over last month?


Is it possible to get the scaled sort to consider all posts over the last month or other timescales?

When I haven't been online for a while I tend to miss most of the stuff going on in my subscribed communities. If I sort by top of the month it only shows posts from the busiest communities.

in reply to Björn

Making time restrictions separate from other filters is completed for lemmy 1.0, but not released yet.


Greta Thunberg says she is being held hostage by Israel in cell infested with bedbugs


Environmental campaigner Greta Thunberg has told Swedish officials she is being subjected to harsh treatment in Israeli custody after her detention and removal from a flotilla carrying aid to Gaza, according to correspondence seen by the Guardian.

According to the correspondence, Israeli forces are also reported by another detainee to have taken photographs where Thunberg was allegedly forced to hold flags. The identity of the flags are unknown.

In an email sent by the Swedish foreign ministry to people close to Thunberg, and seen by the Guardian, an official who has visited the activist in prison said she claimed she was detained in a cell infested with bedbugs, with too little food and water.

in reply to geneva_convenience

Death to the zionist entity and the states who support it.
in reply to geneva_convenience

And then one hears that anti semitism is on the rise like never before and one wonders why that is...


Why Japan's internet is weirdly designed




How Big Tech Uses YOUR Kids’ Classrooms To Sell THEIR Products (13min Video)


Silicon Valley has sold the idea of tech in classrooms for years, because they get access to lifelong customers and valuable data. But while corporations like Google make billions, student test scores are falling.
in reply to technocrit

Big tech just following the indoctrination program of Big religion; get the kids before they're able to think for themselves.


From Morocco to Madagascar, Gen Z is taking digital dissent offline | CNN


From Kathmandu to Lima, youth-led uprisings are driving thousands from their screens to the streets, demanding accountability, change and, in some cases, toppling governments.

These Gen-Z protesters come from disparate backgrounds and have different demands.

But the throughline is clear: Growing inequality and marginalization is destroying young people’s hopes for the future – and the only way forward is to confront a broken social contract head on.

Here’s what you need to know.

A global movement


On consecutive nights this week, cities and towns across Morocco have pulsed with the anger of young people mobilized under the umbrella “GenZ 212” – the country’s international dialing code. Led by mostly students and unemployed graduates, the protesters are demanding sweeping reforms in healthcare, education and social justice – issues they say have been sidelined as the government pours billions into 2030 World Cup infrastructure.

While stadiums and luxury hotels are erected, hospitals remain overcrowded and rural areas underserved. Morocco’s education system, long underfunded, is churning out graduates with few job prospects: Youth unemployment sits at 36% – and nearly 1 in 5 university graduates are out of work.

The recent protests were triggered by the deaths of several pregnant women following routine C-sections in the coastal city of Agadir, spotlighting the crumbling healthcare system. The government’s response has been swift and brutal: Three people were killed and hundreds of others injured, authorities said. Riot police have been deployed across major cities, using force and arresting dozens. Prime Minister Aziz Akhannouch said Thursday his government had “engaged” with the protesters’ demands and was ready for “dialogue and discussion.” On Friday, GenZ 212 demanded the government resign.

But protests aren’t fading.

Crowds of young anti-government protesters call for a general strike and for President Andry Rajoelina to resign during a demonstration in Antsiranana, Madagascar on October 2.

Thousands of miles away to the south, youth-led unrest is rocking Madagascar. For several days this week, cities across the Indian Ocean nation – one of Africa’s poorest – have been flooded with young protesters outraged over water shortages and rolling blackouts. They quickly morphed into calls for systemic reform, with the protesters demanding the resignation of President Andry Rajoelina, who first came to power in a 2009 coup, and his government.

Rajoelina responded by dissolving the government this week, saying, “I heard the call, I felt the suffering,” but authorities continue to crack down on dissent. The United Nations said Monday at least 22 people had been killed and more than 100 injured. The government disputes these figures.

Meanwhile, in the South American nation of Peru, youth demonstrations began on September 20 after the government announced reforms to a pension law. The protests then swelled to wider calls to stamp out corruption, repression and rising crime under President Dina Boluarte’s rule. The Peruvian leader’s approval ratings recently sank to 2.5%, with her government at 3%, according to the Institute of Peruvian Studies’ July report, reflecting widespread economic anxiety, anger over corruption scandals and continued outrage over the killing of dozens of protesters after she took office in late 2022.

Gen Z protesters in Lima, Peru demonstrate alongside transport workers in a rally against corruption and crime on September 27.

The Nepal connection


The unrest comes in the wake of Gen Z’s extraordinary and unprecedented take down of the Nepali government in September. What began as a protest against a government social media ban quickly morphed into a broader revolt against corruption and economic stagnation. In fewer than 48 hours, at least 22 people were killed and hundreds injured as demonstrators torched government buildings in the capital Kathmandu and toppled the prime minister.

https://edition.cnn.com/2025/10/04/world/gen-z-protest-movement-explainer-intl




Advocates raise alarm over Pfas pollution from datacenters amid AI boom


Tech companies’ use of Pfas gas at facilities may mean datacenters’ climate impact is worse than previously thought

Two kinds of cooling systems are used to prevent the semiconductors and other electronic equipment stored in datacenters from overheating. Water cooling systems require huge volumes of water, and chemicals like nitrates, disinfectants, azoles and other compounds are potentially added and discharged in the environment.

Many centers are now switching to a “two phase” system that uses f-gas as a refrigerant coolant that is run through copper tubing. In this scenario, f-gas is not intentionally released during use, though there may be leaks, and it must be disposed of at the end of its life.

The datacenter industry has claimed that f-gas that escapes is not a threat because, once in the air, it turns into a compound called Tfa. Tfa is considered a Pfas in most of the world, but not the US. Recent research has found it is more toxic than previously thought, and may impact reproductive systems similar to other Pfas.

Researchers in recent years have been alarmed by the ever-growing level of Tfa in the air, water, human blood and elsewhere in the environment. Meanwhile, some f-gases are potent greenhouse gases that can remain in the atmosphere for thousands of years. But f-gasses are lucrative for industry: about 60% of all Pfas manufactured from 2019 to 2022 were f-gas



in reply to silence7

Its promising that there is some auditing of the carbon credits happening. This will help the health of the programs.
in reply to silence7

According to a report by Bloomberg, the project generated more than $100 million in revenue after being set up over a decade ago by South Pole, a major Swiss carbon credits broker, and CGI, which is run by a Zimbabwean businessman. South Pole walked away from Kariba in late 2023 when Verra suspended the project and began an internal review following an investigation by The New Yorker magazine.

Nearly two years later, Verra announced last week that its review had found 57% of Kariba’s nearly 27 million credits were issued “in excess”. That is because the actual deforestation observed in a reference area chosen by Kariba’s project developers to predict how much CO2 the scheme would conserve was “significantly lower” than initially estimated, Verra said.


The value of promises.



Migration from Win 10 to Mint


So I’ve been putting this off all summer, but with support nearly ending for Win 10 and finally having a weekend to spend on this, and absolutely refusing to move to win 11, I’m finally pulling the trigger and getting this done.

I run a home built AMD rig with a 5800x and RT 7800xt, so as I understand, drivers shouldn’t be an issue. I’ve got 3 storage drives currently, a 1tb m.2 NVME I use for the OS and games I need to run quicker, and 2 SATA SSDs. I’ve also got a much larger external HDD which I’ll use to back up my entire windows environment (which I’ll disconnect after it’s backed up) just in case things go sideways during this process.

My biggest concern is here is moving all of my music, pictures, and docs over after the migration. Is it as simple as copying everything over from the NTFS win10 backup HDD to my newly formatted ext4 drives outside of the OS partition? I’m sure I’m not completely phrasing this correctly, since my understanding of Linux is currently at about a 4th grade level, and is probably why I’ve been running around in circles trying to find answers without much luck. I did go over the Mint install docs, but it seems a little light on details for my particular concern.

If there are any resources, suggestions or advice anyone could offer here to help me get through this, I gladly thank you in advance.

Edit: I think I have the information I need to make this work (at least for now), I just want to thank everyone here for taking the time to reply to this. I sincerely appreciate it!

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

Welcome to the club. I switched about a year ago and its been fine.

Mind you, I was a windows power user and I Linux I'm just a below average minimalist user, but its been fine. Also mind you, I run a windows VM for some stuff I'm still tethered to (virt-manager is your friend if this is the case). But I have 3 machines in my house that are all Mint boxes and its smooth sailing.

There are some things I wish were different, but you need to choose your battles. Like I don't want any kernel based anticheat on my system so those kinds of games I play on console if available, or don't play at all.

As far as advice, part of what I like about Mint is their forum. Yes, you can always search and find answers but with so many variances between distros having a forum tailored to your specific OS is a nice perk. You will find a lot of answers there.

Hot tip: read up on file permissions, users and groups. Permissions aren't inherited like they are in windows so that's a mental adjustment you need to make.

You'll probably pick up on the file structure fairly quickly. Though I didn't unhide the hidden folders in my home directory because I needed to (I forger why but it came up)

And honestly, I've used an AI tool to help walk me through getting some stuff to work (somehow I broke my Samba sharing) so that's always a resource to help guide you and troubleshoot.

in reply to BurningRiver

Great decision to move to GNU/Linux. I used Mint and recommend it as first distro for a Windows begginer. I always use a USB stick for back-up. Enjoy the journey!



Why Japan's internet is weirdly designed


Technology reshared this.




Sammy Obeid comedy - Solving Charlie Kirks murder





in reply to silence7

Absolutely despicable. When will this criminal child rapist get the justice he deserves?

I'm talking about him, but also Stephen Miller, Vought, Lutnick, and Kevin Roberts. They need to go.



Project Random


Project Random randomly serves obscure content from around the web.


On October 4, 1957, the Soviet Union launched Sputnik-1, humanity's first artificial satellite.


Its simple yet proud “beep-beep” sound stood as mankind’s first signal reaching beyond Earth.

Sputnik-1 was a spherical aluminum spacecraft, 58 cm in diameter and weighing 83.6 kg. Its hermetically sealed body protected the equipment inside from external conditions. Onboard were two radio transmitters operating at 20.005 and 40.002 MHz frequencies, broadcasting the legendary signals, which were picked up by radio enthusiasts around the world.

Four external antennas, 2.4 to 2.9 meters long, ensured stable transmission. The satellite had no propulsion system and moved in orbit solely by the impulse received at launch.

To deliver Sputnik-1 into orbit, a two-stage R-7 launch vehicle was used, developed under the guidance of the great Soviet engineer Sergey Korolev. The satellite reached the orbit in 314.5 seconds (just over 5 minutes) after liftoff. Its apogee was 947 km, perigee 228 km, and it orbited Earth every 96 minutes.

In total, Sputnik-1 spent 92 days in space, completing 1,440 orbits and covering more than 60 million kilometers. The last signal was received on January 4, 1958, after which the satellite re-entered the atmosphere and burned up.

The launch of Sputnik-1 was not only a groundbreaking technological achievement, but also a symbol of a new era – the beginning of humanity’s space age.

Since then, dozens of countries have launched thousands of satellites, transforming science, communications, navigation, and our daily lives.

Yet no matter how many follow, Sputnik-1 will forever be the First!



Google Calls ICE Agents a Vulnerable Group, Removes ICE-Spotting App ‘Red Dot’




Google Calls ICE Agents a Vulnerable Group, Removes ICE-Spotting App ‘Red Dot’


Both Google and Apple recently removed Red Dot, an app people can use to report sightings of ICE officials, from their respective app stores, 404 Media has found. The move comes after Apple removed ICEBlock, a much more prominent app, from its App Store on Thursday following direct pressure from U.S. Department of Justice officials. Google told 404 Media it removed apps because they shared the location of what it describes as a vulnerable group that recently faced a violent act connected to these sorts of ICE-spotting apps—a veiled reference to ICE officials.

The move signals a broader crackdown on apps that are designed to keep communities safe by crowdsourcing the location of ICE officials. Authorities have claimed that Joshua Jahn, the suspected shooter of an ICE facility in September and who killed a detainee, searched his phone for various tracking apps. A long-running immigration support group on the ground in Chicago, where ICE is currently focused, told 404 Media some of its members use Red Dot.

💡
Do you know anything else about these apps and their removal? Do you work at Google, Apple, or ICE? 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.

“Ready to Protect Your Community?” the website for Red Dot reads. “Download Red Dot and help build a stronger protection network.”

The site provides links to the app’s page on the Apple App Store and Google Play Store. As of at least Friday, both of those links return errors. “This app is currently not available in your country or region,” says the Apple one, and “We're sorry, the requested URL was not found on this server,” says the Google one.

The app allows people to report ICE presence or activity, along with details such as the location and time, according to Red Dot’s website. The app then notifies nearby community members, and users can receive alerts about ICE activity in their area, the website says.

Google confirmed to 404 Media that it removed Red Dot. Google said it did not receive any outreach from the Department of Justice about this issue and that it bans apps with a high risk of abuse. Without talking about the shooting at the ICE facility specifically, the company said it removed apps that share the location of what it describes as a vulnerable group after a recent violent act against them connected to this sort of app. Google said apps that have user generated content must also conduct content moderation.
playlist.megaphone.fm?p=TBIEA2…
Google added in a statement that “ICEBlock was never available on Google Play, but we removed similar apps for violations of our policies.”

Google’s Play Store policies say the platform does not allow apps that “promote violence” against “groups based on race or ethnic origin, religion, disability age, nationality, veteran status, sexual orientation, gender, gender identity, caste, immigration status, or any other characteristic that is associated with systemic discrimination or marginalization,” but its published policies do not include information about how it defines what types of groups are protected.

Red Dot did not respond to a request for comment.

On Thursday Apple told 404 Media it removed multiple ICE-spotting apps, but did not name Red Dot. Apple did not respond to another request for comment on Friday.

On Thursday Joshua Aaron, the developer of ICEBlock, told 404 Media “I am incredibly disappointed by Apple's actions today. Capitulating to an authoritarian regime is never the right move,” referring to Apple removing his own app. ICEBlock rose to prominence in June when CNN covered the app. That app was only available on iOS, while Red Dot was available on both iOS and Android.

“ICEBlock is no different from crowd sourcing speed traps, which every notable mapping application, including Apple's own Maps app, implements as part of its core services. This is protected speech under the first amendment of the United States Constitution,” Aaron continued. “We are determined to fight this with everything we have. Our mission has always been to protect our neighbors from the terror this administration continues to reign down on the people of this nation. We will not be deterred. We will not stop. #resist.”

That move from Apple came after pressure from Department of Justice officials on behalf of Attorney General Pam Bondi, according to Fox. “ICEBlock is designed to put ICE agents at risk just for doing their jobs, and violence against law enforcement is an intolerable red line that cannot be crossed. This Department of Justice will continue making every effort to protect our brave federal law enforcement officers, who risk their lives every day to keep Americans safe,” Bondi told Fox. The Department of Justice declined to comment beyond Bondi's earlier comments.

The current flashpoint for ICE’s mass deportation effort is Chicago. This week ICE raided an apartment building and removed everyone from the building only to ask questions later, according to local media reports. “They was terrified. The kids was crying. People was screaming. They looked very distraught. I was out there crying when I seen the little girl come around the corner, because they was bringing the kids down, too, had them zip tied to each other," one neighbor, Eboni Watson, told ABC7. “That's all I kept asking. What is the morality? Where's the human? One of them literally laughed. He was standing right here. He said, 'f*** them kids.’”

Brandon Lee, communications lead at Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights, told 404 Media some of the organization’s teams have used Red Dot and similar apps as a way of taking tips. But the organization recommends people call its hotline to report ICE activity. That hotline has been around since 2011, Lee said. “The thing that takes time is the infrastructure of trust and training that goes into follow-up, confirmation, and legal and community support for impacted families, which we in Illinois have been building up over time,” he added.

“But I will say that at the end of the day it's important for all people of conscience to use their skills to shine some light on ICE's operations, given the agency's lack of transparency and overall lack of accountability,” he said, referring to ICE-spotting apps.

In ICEBlock’s case, people who already downloaded the app will be able to continue using but will be unable to re-download it from the Apple App Store, according to an email from Apple Aaron shared with 404 Media. Because Red Dot is available on Android, users can likely sideload the app—that is, install it themselves by downloading the APK file rather than from the Play Store.

The last message to Red Dot’s Facebook page was on September 24 announcing a new update that fixed various bugs.

Update: this piece has been updated to include a response from the Department of Justice.


#USA


syncspirit v0.4.3 release!


cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/37069564

I'm glad to announce v0.4.3 release!

Syncspirit is independent BEP protocol implementation. Like
syncthing is continuous peer-to-peer file synchronization tool.

raw.githubusercontent.com/basi…

You can download ready-to-use binaries for Linux x86_64 (AppImage),
Windows 32 bit (WindowsXP is supported),
Windows 64 bit
and Mac OS X (Apple silicon).

Notable changes:

  • [core] fix compatibility with syncthing v2.0 (i.e. tolerate directory with non-zero size and without blocks)
  • [core] allow to specify root certificate authority to use in all tls/ssl connections, see faq, mostly actual for Windows XP with expired system certificates
  • [core] allow to load huge databses and interrupt loading porgress
  • [core] reduce memory consumption by model (~ 44%)
  • [core] use in-depth scan order instead of in-breadth
  • [core, win32] fix negative serial number in generated ssl-certificates
  • [core, fltk] more correctly display file scanning progress
  • [core, bugfix] make successful upnp port unmapping upon shutdown
  • [fltk] deactivate currently selected log level button

Syncspirit is a syncthing-compatible is written from the scratch software in C++ as classical desktop application.

Syncspirt source code uses GPLv3 license.

Any feedback is welcome!

WBR, basiliscos.





Anonym and Snap partner to unlock increased performance for advertisers | The Mozilla Blog


An ads milestone in marketing reach without data risk. The ad industry is shifting, and with it comes a clear need for advertisers to use data responsibly

in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆

Sure, but the government shutdown won't end until it impacts the market. In fact, that will be the signal they use
in reply to queermunist she/her

Oh yeah definitely, I'm sure a lot of people who are in the loop will also make money in the process.
in reply to ThePantser

Billionaires will buy the dip. They already sold many of their stocks.

in reply to BrikoX

Didn't opera get bought by some shady company years ago?
in reply to roofuskit

Yep.

Vivaldi is basically the real Opera now, including some of its devs IIRC.

in reply to brucethemoose

It annoys me every time someone puts out an article about Opera and doesn't open the article with that. Stop pretending it's just another browser.
Questa voce è stata modificata (4 settimane fa)
in reply to roofuskit

It happened almost a decade ago and part of the sale was the assets which included the brand. Everyone who cared to know already knows about it, again it happened ~9 years ago. techcrunch.com/2016/07/18/oper…
in reply to BrikoX

I had no idea they were reusing the name. Apparently they had a different prototype under this name in 2017.

pcworld.com/article/411665/mee…




Renault and Dacia UK warn of data breach impacting customers


Customers of Renault and Dacia in the United Kingdom have been notified that sensitive information they shared with the car maker was compromised following a data breach at a third-party provider.

https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/renault-and-dacia-uk-warn-of-data-breach-impacting-customers/

Questa voce è stata modificata (4 settimane fa)


ShinyHunters launches Salesforce data leak site to extort 39 victims


An extortion group has launched a new data leak site to publicly extort dozens of companies impacted by a wave of Salesforce breaches, leaking samples of data stolen in the attacks.

https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/shinyhunters-starts-leaking-data-stolen-in-salesforce-attacks/

Questa voce è stata modificata (4 settimane fa)


Giuseppe Vita D

Indice dei contenuti

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Un thriller noir che vi farà rimanere senza fiato

Giuseppe Vita

”D”

Thriller noir

stampato a giugno 2025

pp 210

Recensione del libro “D” di Giuseppe Vita


Un thriller che intreccia storia, mistero e indagine psicologica

La trama Storica dietro al Thirller


Il borgo di Castroantico diventa il cuore pulsante di un intreccio che attraversa i secoli. Nel 1548, l’invasione turca sconvolge la vita di una comunità apparentemente tranquilla. Pochi anni dopo, nel 1552, un nuovo attacco viene respinto da misteriosi monaci, custodi di un segreto che rimane sospeso nel tempo.

Un po’ di curiosità storiche prima della recensione


La narrazione di Giuseppe Vita trae spunto da fatti realmente accaduti. Nella metà del Cinquecento, il Cilento fu più volte minacciato dalle incursioni ottomane. Nel 1548, flotte turche colpirono le coste pugliesi seminando distruzione, saccheggi e deportazioni. Questi eventi generarono un clima di paura diffuso, che spinse molte comunità a rafforzare mura, torri costiere e sistemi difensivi.
Nel 1552, un nuovo assalto mise nuovamente alla prova i borghi della zona. La tradizione locale tramanda storie di resistenza e di interventi “provvidenziali”, spesso attribuiti a figure religiose o monastiche, come nel caso di Castroantico. È su questa suggestiva commistione di storia e leggenda che si innesta il romanzo “D”.

Il presente oscuro


Nel 2024, Castroantico è di nuovo avvolto dall’oscurità: sette giovani scompaiono e la Chiesa affida le indagini all’ispettore Franco. Uomo tormentato, Franco dovrà affrontare non solo un caso complesso, ma anche le ombre del suo passato. Le sparizioni e le antiche invasioni sembrano intrecciarsi in un unico filo che lega epoche lontane.

Suspense e introspezione


“D” è un thriller/noir dal ritmo serrato, in cui il lettore è costantemente tenuto con il fiato sospeso. La scrittura di Giuseppe Vita alterna colpi di scena, atmosfere cupe e passaggi introspettivi, in cui emerge un interrogativo centrale: fino a che punto il passato condiziona il presente?

Una lettura da non perdere


Con “D”, Giuseppe Vita offre un’opera che unisce intrigo storico, suspense contemporanea e riflessione personale. Un romanzo che si legge in pochi giorni e che accompagna il lettore in un viaggio tra luce e ombra, fede e mistero, vita e memoria.

Trama


In un piccolo borgo del Sud Italia nel XVI secolo orde di corsari distruggono e saccheggiano la costa. Ai giorni nostri la tranquillità dello stesso paese viene sconvolta da 7 misteriose sparizioni. Un ispettore tormentato dal suo recente passato,originario del posto, viene richiamato da un cardinale che si rivela essere il suo padre spirituale. A lui viene affiancato un prete, appartenente ad un ordine sacro, uomo fidato del Cardinale. Entrambi sono chiamati a risolvere il mistero di queste sparizioni. I due protagonisti, opposti ma complementari, saranno affiancati da altri personaggi tutti vicini al Cardinale. La situazione degenera, alcuni spariti vengono trovati morti, in modi atroci quasi spettacolari. È una corsa contro il tempo nella speranza di salvare almeno gli altri ragazzi, ma nulla è scontato. C’è un filo conduttore in tutta la storia è la lettera D. Dietro di essa è celato il mistero.

Biografia


Mi chiamo Giuseppe Vita ed ho 41 anni, sono sposato da 13 anni ed ho un bambino di 5 anni. I miei hobby sono lo sport, ho sempre praticato la canoa fluviale anche come agonista e sono tuttora dirigente societario e delegato per la discesa fluviale per il comitato regionale Campania e Basilicata, amatorialmente ho praticato pugilato e sono un appassionato di boxe. Mi piace anche il calcio e sono un simpatizzante dell’Inter ma guardo con piacere tutti gli sport. Mi piace leggere molto tutti i generi, spaziando dai libri tecnici soprattutto economici ai romanzi ed ai gialli. Sono un estimatore in particolare di Donato Carrisi e Ken Follett, ma ho una vasta libreria. Mi piace molto la musica dal cantautorato classico italiano (De André, De Gregori, Dalla ecc..) ma ho una passione particolare per il rock, sono un grande estimatore dei Guns n’ roses, dei queen, dei Led Zeppelin, della Premiata Forneria Marconi, dei Deep Purple, dei Dream theater ed altri e mi piace molto la chitarra come strumento, ne posseggo due ed ogni tanto “strimpello” con amici. Ho una grande passione per i cani in particolar modo per il pastore tedesco. Ne ho uno che ho voluto inserire sia all’interno del libro “D” come personaggio che sulla quarta di copertina in foto con me. Sono molto attivo in politica per passione, sia nel paese dove sono nato che a livello di partito avendo ricoperto la carica di segretario di circolo per diversi anni. Ho anche questa passione per la scrittura ed a oggi ho pubblicato 2 libri il primo “la questione settentrionale, disparità e disuguaglianze nell’Italia che cambia” Edizioni Kappa 2023 ed ora “D” Una libro giallo Scarenz Editore 2025. Ho difficoltà a stare senza far nulla. Naturalmente tutto questo nel tempo extra lavorativo. Sono impiegato nel settore nautico e turistico.

Questa voce è stata modificata (4 settimane fa)


CommetJacking attack tricks Comet browser into stealing emails


A new attack called 'CometJacking' exploits URL parameters to pass to Perplexity's Comet AI browser hidden instructions that allow access to sensitive data from connected services, like email and calendar.

https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/commetjacking-attack-tricks-comet-browser-into-stealing-emails/

Questa voce è stata modificata (4 settimane fa)


Discord customer service data breach leaks user info and scanned photo IDs


An “unauthorized party” may have accessed the names of users, the last four digits of credit card numbers, and more.