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A crowd-sourced review service for OpenStreetMap - General talk - OpenStreetMap Community Forum


in reply to Tungmar

lib.reviews seems to be just a five-star rating and a text box. We desperately need an open source review platform, but it needs to be simple, just a like/dislike, a question and answer tips box, ands taggable categories like foursquare had.

I really miss foursquare, and am convinced google and yelp killed it. I could go to any city in the western hemisphere, filter by vegetarian/vegan friendly, and always get incredible recommendations. Google and yelp by comparison are entirely gamed.





America’s Dumbest Billionaires Fail to Stop Zohran Mamdani


Andrew Cuomo, an elderly has-been, the lesser son of a greater sire, who as governor literally conspired with Republicans to hand them control of the New York state Senate for half a decade; who resigned from office in disgrace after he was credibly accused of 13 instances of sexual harassment; and whose campaign quite obviously had no purpose other than satisfying his own lust for accumulating personal power, along with that of his billionaire donors.

As the campaign progressed and Mamdani’s victory became ever more likely, Cuomo descended into vindictive gutter racism. He did not disagree with a right-wing radio host who said that Mamdani would be “cheering” another 9/11, suggested that Mamdani would have Muslim women “completely covered up,” and that he “doesn’t understand New York culture” because he’s a “citizen of Uganda.”

Cuomo happily took Donald Trump’s endorsement and went on Fox News to tout it. His closing campaign message, as The Nation’s Jeet Heer pointed out on Bluesky, smacked of Vidkun Quisling—implicitly threatening New Yorkers with a Trumpian occupation if they voted for anyone but Cuomo.

It was disgusting stuff. But it also was palpably desperate, and coming from one of the worst candidates imaginable...

...

What we see, I think, are a bunch of rich guys who have been comically out of touch with normal people for many decades, and more recently have blowtorched their brains into a smoking pile of ash on Elon Musk’s Twitter/X and in various group chats. It’s why they got so worked up about Mamdani in the first place—the New York City mayoralty is not some omnipotent office, and there are a dozen ways to hem it in at the state and local level if they so wished. What these oligarchs spent to stop Mamdani feels like less on an annual basis than he wants them to pay for a better future for all New Yorkers, a joke Mamdani himself has made.

In any case, his slight tax increase on rich people, free buses, and city-run grocery stores are pretty far from a communist revolution. But that’s not how it appears to rich people, surrounded on all sides by yes-men and toadies, who spend several hours a day marinating in an online Nazi sewer.



Why cities around the world are uniting to keep cool


From the desert of Phoenix in the United States to the humid streets of Quezon City in the Philippines, mayors are facing the same new reality: Heat is here to stay, and it is impacting every element of city life. That’s why we — along with more than 30 other mayors from C40 Cities, a global network of nearly 100 of the world’s biggest cities tackling the climate emergency — are joining forces to protect our people today and prepare our communities for a hotter tomorrow. Through the new C40 Cool Cities Accelerator, we’ll work together to speed up bold and inclusive climate action that meets the urgency of this growing threat.
in reply to Aneb

True, at least 30 people in a small amount of power is actually talking about making a plan.


Inverse Knowledge Search over Verifiable Reasoning: Synthesizing a Scientific Encyclopedia from a Long Chains-of-Thought Knowledge Base


This paper comes up with a really clever architectural solution to LLM hallucinations, especially for complex, technical topics. The core idea is that all our knowledge, from textbooks to wikis, is "radically compressed". It gives you the conclusions but hides all the step-by-step reasoning that justifies them. They call it a vast, unrecorded network of derivations the "intellectual dark matter" of knowledge. LLMs being trained on this compressed, conclusion-oriented data is one reason why they fail so often. When you ask them to explain something deeply, they just confidently hallucinate plausible-sounding "dark matter".

The solution the paper demonstrates is to use a massive pipeline to "decompress" all of the steps and make the answer verifiable. It starts with a "Socrates agent" that uses a curriculum of about 200 university courses to automatically generate around 3 million first-principles questions. Then comes the clever part, which is basically a CI/CD pipeline for knowledge. To stop hallucinations, they run every single question through multiple different LLMs. If these models don't independently arrive at the exact same verifiable endpoint, like a final number or formula, the entire question-and-answer pair is thrown in the trash. This rigorous cross-model consensus filters out the junk and leaves them with a clean and verified dataset of Long Chains-of-Thought (LCoTs).

The first benefit of having such a clean knowledge base is a "Brainstorm Search Engine" that performs "inverse knowledge search". Instead of just searching for a definition, you input a concept and the engine retrieves all the diverse, verified derivational chains that lead to that concept. This allows you to explore a concept's origins and see all the non-trivial, cross-disciplinary connections that are normally hidden. The second and biggest benefit is the "Plato" synthesizer, which is how they solve hallucinations. Instead of just generating an article from scratch, it first queries the Brainstorm engine to retrieve all the relevant, pre-verified LCoT "reasoning scaffolds". Its only job is then to narrate and synthesize those verified chains into a coherent article.

The results are pretty impressive. The articles generated this way have significantly higher knowledge-point density and, most importantly, substantially lower factual error rates, reducing hallucinations by about 50% compared to a baseline LLM. They used this framework to automatically generate "SciencePedia," an encyclopedia with an initial 200,000 entries, solving the "cold start" problem that plagues human-curated wikis. The whole "verify-then-synthesize" architecture feels like it could pave the way for AI systems that are able to produce verifiable results and are therefore trustworthy.



Inverse Knowledge Search over Verifiable Reasoning: Synthesizing a Scientific Encyclopedia from a Long Chains-of-Thought Knowledge Base


This paper comes up with a really clever architectural solution to LLM hallucinations, especially for complex, technical topics. The core idea is that all our knowledge, from textbooks to wikis, is "radically compressed". It gives you the conclusions but hides all the step-by-step reasoning that justifies them. They call it a vast, unrecorded network of derivations the "intellectual dark matter" of knowledge. LLMs being trained on this compressed, conclusion-oriented data is one reason why they fail so often. When you ask them to explain something deeply, they just confidently hallucinate plausible-sounding "dark matter".

The solution the paper demonstrates is to use a massive pipeline to "decompress" all of the steps and make the answer verifiable. It starts with a "Socrates agent" that uses a curriculum of about 200 university courses to automatically generate around 3 million first-principles questions. Then comes the clever part, which is basically a CI/CD pipeline for knowledge. To stop hallucinations, they run every single question through multiple different LLMs. If these models don't independently arrive at the exact same verifiable endpoint, like a final number or formula, the entire question-and-answer pair is thrown in the trash. This rigorous cross-model consensus filters out the junk and leaves them with a clean and verified dataset of Long Chains-of-Thought (LCoTs).

The first benefit of having such a clean knowledge base is a "Brainstorm Search Engine" that performs "inverse knowledge search". Instead of just searching for a definition, you input a concept and the engine retrieves all the diverse, verified derivational chains that lead to that concept. This allows you to explore a concept's origins and see all the non-trivial, cross-disciplinary connections that are normally hidden. The second and biggest benefit is the "Plato" synthesizer, which is how they solve hallucinations. Instead of just generating an article from scratch, it first queries the Brainstorm engine to retrieve all the relevant, pre-verified LCoT "reasoning scaffolds". Its only job is then to narrate and synthesize those verified chains into a coherent article.

The results are pretty impressive. The articles generated this way have significantly higher knowledge-point density and, most importantly, substantially lower factual error rates, reducing hallucinations by about 50% compared to a baseline LLM. They used this framework to automatically generate "SciencePedia," an encyclopedia with an initial 200,000 entries, solving the "cold start" problem that plagues human-curated wikis. The whole "verify-then-synthesize" architecture feels like it could pave the way for AI systems that are able to produce verifiable results and are therefore trustworthy.




Trump’s widening war on the left started with Palestine


cross-posted from: news.abolish.capital/post/5821

President Donald Trump greets Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his wife, Monday, July 7, 2025, at the South Portico of the White House.(Official White House Photo by Daniel Torok)The Trump administration's recent efforts to target left-wing groups started with attacks on the Palestine movement, following the strategy established by pro-Israel organizations that worked for decades to pave the way for such repression.

In September, Trump issued an executive order claiming to designate “Antifa” as a “domestic terrorist organization” and a presidential memorandum (NSPM-7) that targets charities and advocacy groups over alleged national security concerns.

These efforts were seemingly driven by the assassination of right-wing commentator Charlie Kirk, which the Trump administration has continually blamed on the left despite a complete lack of evidence.

“The last message that Charlie sent me … was that we needed to have an organized strategy to go after the left-wing organizations that are promoting violence in this country,” declared White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller shortly after Kirk’s killing. “With God as my witness, we are going to use every resource we have at the Department of Justice, Homeland Security, and throughout this government to identify, disrupt, dismantle, and destroy these networks.”

While Kirk’s death provided the spark for Trump’s recent moves, the administration’s war on the left effectively began with its targeting of Palestine advocates.

Almost immediately upon arriving in the White House, the Trump team revoked visas, snatched people off the streets, detained legal citizens, and launched a McCarthyite campaign against university administrations for allowing anti-Israel sentiment to foment on their campuses.

“We ought to get them all out of the country,” declared Trump, referring to students who protested the genocide. “They’re troublemakers. They’re agitators. They don’t love our country. We ought to get them the hell out.”

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problemi di gaming per la dimenticanza cosmica, e finisco così super perduta nel rotting senza più giocare (mi sono dimenticata di nuovo lo Switch a casa)


Ommiao, oggi… solita noia, non c’è proprio niente da fare, non ho proprio via di scampo. Ommeglio: si potrebbe invero fare del gran gaming, come ideale tentativo di distrarsi dagli orrori, ma anche il gaming è divenuto ormai più difficile del dovuto. Cioè: una volta dentro, è sempre gaming, per fortuna, e c’è ben poco […]

octospacc.altervista.org/2025/…


problemi di gaming per la dimenticanza cosmica, e finisco così super perduta nel rotting senza più giocare (mi sono dimenticata di nuovo lo Switch a casa)


Ommiao, oggi… solita noia, non c’è proprio niente da fare, non ho proprio via di scampo. Ommeglio: si potrebbe invero fare del gran gaming, come ideale tentativo di distrarsi dagli orrori, ma anche il gaming è divenuto ormai più difficile del dovuto. Cioè: una volta dentro, è sempre gaming, per fortuna, e c’è ben poco se non niente che possa mai cambiare in peggio; ma, sulla soglia, tra il prima ed il dopo per così dire, si verificano inevitabilmente problemi e rotture, e io davvero non. 🙀

Una cosa strana che mi sta infatti succedendo — che con oggi è accaduta credo un totale di sole 2 volte, un numero ancora vagamente accettabile, e solo per questo non mi è ancora venuto da piangere… se dovesse ricapitarmi, credo che le lacrime inizierebbero finalmente ad uscire — è che mi sto dimenticando il Nintendo Switch a casa quando vado all’università. O meglio, perché il diavolo è sempre, e malamente, nei dettagli: quando mi ricordo di mettere la console in zaino, alla fine, nei momenti morti non mi capita sempre di volerci giocare; magari faccio gaming sul telefono, o tutte altre cose… e invece, se un giorno deve venirmi in autobus un istante di voglia di giocarci, mi deve venire proprio uno di quei rari giorni (pensate che combinazione!!!) in cui ho dimenticato di portarla. Insomma, la vecchiaia imperversa… a soli 21 anni… 😪

Ovviamente, il secondo caso è oggi, altrimenti non me ne starei lagnando (o forse si, ormai sono imprevedibile persino a me stessa). Ed è così tragico, perché uffi… e c’è traffico, e c’è assenza di persone che non mi odiano (ok, no, proprio oggi per fortuna questo non è capitato), e c’è tempo da spendere prima e dopo le ore di perdita di temp—ehm, cioè, di lezione… Se non ho voglia di programmare, e non ho particolarmente voglia di leggere, e non ho niente di particolare da poter e voler scrivere sul momento, non posso fare altro che il gaming, come attività importante. Il motivo per cui mi scordo lo Switch, però, è a suo modo molto buffo (‘nzomma); e sì, in parte è questione di skill issue, ma in altra parte è colpa di Nintendo merda (spoiler: l’ultimo punto). Questo perché: 🤭

  • Se la console non è al centro della scrivania, dove metto sempre tutte le cose da prendere quando esco, ed è invece nella dock (…nonostante questa sia giusto affianco), non mi risalta alla vista, e quindi mi sfugge di prenderla per metterla nello zaino.
  • Se non ci gioco né la sera prima, né la mattina stessa, è molto improbabile che io mi ricordi di posarla sopra la scrivania oppure direttamente nello zaino, quindi rimane in dock, e si presenta il problema di cui sopra.
  • Non posso semplicemente tenere lo Switch nello zaino finché non mi viene voglia di usarlo la sera a casa, perché la batteria di ‘sta console di merda si scarica in meno di 3 giorni se sta in standby, anche col WiFi spento e senza nessun gioco lasciato aperto — e non posso spegnerla quando non la uso, perché già di suo è palloso, e io in particolare dovrei poi ogni volta collegare PC o telefono via USB per avviare il CFW, che lasciamo stare…

E certo, stare senza console non significa stare assolutamente senza gaming, ma sul telefono ho perlopiù solo giochi puzzle, perché tutte le altre cose sono o scomode da giocare lì, o richiedono troppe risorse; delle eccezioni le ho, ma non sempre sono il passatempo più ideale, quando poi magari voglio giocare a Pokémon Brainrot Z-A, dai. Mentre invece, comunque sia, se devio da questa scelta binaria, qualcosa mi va in qualche modo sempre male… La consolina PocketGo che ho è così piccola che potrei quasi tenerla come portachiavi, ma a giocare lì sopra mi cieco, e allora non va bene, problemi di salute; Giocare sul PC portatile invece, a parte che non è fattibile in autobus, ma solo in posti statici, è un troiaio, perché con gli emulatori e le mappature nghhhh… (Giocando al MAME sul PC stamattina ho per sbaglio caricato uno stato quando invece volevo salvarlo; sono al mio fottuto limite.) 😵‍💫
ME EVERYDAY PLAYINGMY SILLY LITTLE GAMESQuesta in foto sarei dunque io in questo momento (o beh, poco fa; o forse, al contrario, tra poco), con appunto la Swiss, se solo ce l’avessi appresso (anche se i miei joycon sono blu e rosso, non verde e rosa); e invece no. E i miei giochi saranno silly, si, ma io che resto senza lo sono 10 volte di più… Che poi, ok la volta scorsa che ero di fretta per scendere di casa, ma stamattina avevo così tanto tempo extra per prepararmi e tutto che, una volta scesa, ho dovuto persino farmi una passeggiata fino ad una fermata dell’autobus più lontana della mia solita, perché di stare ferma impalata mi secco… ma, di aver dimenticato la console me ne sono accorta ovviamente solo una volta sull’autobus. Fuck my stupid smemorated gamecel life, bla bla bla… Consigli su come posso fare per non dimenticarmi più la console, per favore??? 😶‍🌫️
#dimenticanza #forgot #gaming #memoria #NintendoSwitch #problemi






Scientists Need a Positive Vision for AI


... in the United States, public investment in science seems to be redirected and concentrated on AI at the expense of other disciplines. And Big Tech companies are consolidating their control over the AI ecosystem. In these ways and others, AI seems to be making everything worse.

This is not the whole story. We should not resign ourselves to AI being harmful to humanity. None of us should accept this as inevitable, especially those in a position to influence science, government, and society. Scientists and engineers can push AI towards a beneficial path. Here’s how.


The essential point is that, like with the climate crisis, a vision of what positive future outcomes look like is necessary to actually get things done. Things with the technology that would make life better. They give a handful of examples and provide broad categories if activities that can help steer what is done.



EU countries weaken 2040 climate plan in eleventh-hour deal | Member states, including Italy, make last-minute push to delay carbon pricing and outsource emissions cuts


No gift link right now.

Archived copy of the article

The sticking point is the use of carbon credits — which are mostly fraudulent — to claim emissions reductions.

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 giorno fa)


Republicans try to turn national Democratic candidates into Mamdani copycats


Republicans got their midterms bogeyman in Zohran Mamdani. Now comes the challenge: making the incoming New York City mayor’s brand of democratic socialism sink candidates outside his liberal bubble.
They’re getting right to it.
Republicans’ House campaign arm launched digital ads Wednesday morning across 49 battleground districts tying Democrats to the “socialist mayor” who “built his movement on defunding the police and abolishing ICE.”

Archive article: archive.is/Ym8Za

https://www.politico.com/news/2025/11/05/republicans-try-to-remake-national-democratic-candidates-into-mamdani-copycats-00636887



The PR firm that planted the Palestine Action/Iran story has direct ties to the Zionist lobby


The PR company CMS Strategic that reportedly planted a false story in the [em]Times[/em] about [url=https://www.thecanary.co/?s=%22palestine+action%22]Palestine Action[/url] has a series of intimate connections to the shadowy pro-Israel lobby group We Bel

The PR company CMS Strategic that reportedly planted a false story in the Times about Palestine Action has a series of intimate connections to the shadowy pro-Israel lobby group We Believe in Israel (WBII). This is of course the same WBII that boasted its role in machinating the proscription of the group.

What’s more, vis-a-vis these WBII ties, the firm appears to have a wealth of links to the Labour Party and key figures in government.

Palestine Action Iran funding smear: PR firm exposed


As the Canary’s Alex/Rose Cocker detailed, the article in question had claimed – completely without basis – that the Home Office was investigating Palestine Action receiving funding from Iran.

However, repeated Home Office denials over the allegations had suggested for a while that something else was afoot.

Private Eye had previously approached the Home Office over the Times article. However, according to the magazine, this was only for it to come back and say that it did not recognise the claim.

The Canary had also submitted a Freedom of Information (FOI) request to the Home Office. But once again, the Home Office confirmed that it had not supplied any information directly to the Times for the story.

At the time, there was a mainstream media frenzy from the usual suspects. GB News, the Daily Mail, the BBC, the Telegraph, and the Spectator all ran a series of stories trumpeting the potential Iran link. Declassified UK traced them all back to the dubious claims in the Times article.

Now, Private Eye has revealed how:

CMS Strategic has acted as Elbit’s UK PR firm for some years. A witness known by the Eye heard Georgia Pickering, CMS’s managing director and owner, claiming credit for getting a story into newspapers about Palestine Action, the “direct action” group that damaged Elbit factories and other premises the group says are linked to the war in Gaza.


Source of the Times claims – long unclear


Since the Times published the article, multiple outlets have speculated over the source of the claims.

The Guardian had highlighted how We Believe in Israel had tweeted just two days before the Times article calling Palestine Action a “shell front” and stating:

Behind Palestine Action’s theatre of resistance stands a darker puppeteer: the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.


It’s well documented that the Zionist lobby group was chief among those lobbying for Palestine Action’s proscription. In June, just weeks ahead of Palestine Action’s ban, it published a report titled Palestine Action: A Case for Proscription under the Terrorism Act 2000. And notably, the Guardian pointed out how home secretary Yvette Cooper’s statement on the decision to proscribe Palestine Action was “similar” to the wording from this report. WBII even boasted it was thanks to its briefing that the government decided to proscribe Palestine Action.

What’s more, the Canary has identified how WBII’s current director, Catherine Perez-Shakdam, had in the year leading up to Palestine Action’s proscription, penned op-eds not only calling for the ban, but also insinuating a link to Iran. Notably, in November 2024, she wrote an article calling Palestine Action activists “Tehran’s ideological sentries” and arguing that:

To look at Palestine Action is to see not an “activist” group, but an ideological proxy for the Iranian regime, operating as Tehran’s enforcers in a country they otherwise could never reach.


The piece goes to great lengths to paint Palestine Action as “proxies of a foreign power”, describing them as:

foot soldiers whose purpose is to inject Tehran’s twisted worldview into the heart of Britain’s public discourse.


At points, the article implies Palestine Action tactics are “inspired” by the Iranian regime. In others, she goes further to almost imply they are active foreign agents, making baseless claims like:

Tehran, unable to influence Britain directly, deploys groups like Palestine Action to project its authoritarian ethos across borders.


Of course, opinion article that it is, for the Zionist Times of Israel no less, Perez-Shakdam was compelled to provide no evidence for her conspiracist diatribe.

We Believe in Israel: cropping up again, naturally


To date, the Canary has been unable to source evidence of Perez-Shakdam and the numerous organisations she heads lobbying the Home Office. However, the Home Office has obviously categorically denied any role in seeding the story anyway – at least directly.

Now, these facts take on new significance in light of Private Eye’s revelations.

This is because, if CMS Strategic really did plant the story in the Times, its worth emphasising some particular links to WBII – and their timing.

To start with, there’s the company’s senior account executive Kira Lewis. Lewis joined CMS Strategic in March 2025 from the infamous Israel lobby group British Israel Communications and Research Centre (BICOM).

Of course, this was just months before the Labour government announced the proscription of Palestine Action. As the Canary’s Ed Sykes previously highlighted, We Believe in Israel is:

“a side-project” of BICOM – “Britain’s most active pro-Israeli lobbying organisation”. And its longstanding director was awful Labour right-winger and self-proclaimed “Zionist shitlord” Luke Akehurst (who isn’t Jewish, by the way).


And Lewis evidently has clear connections to the group, not least through her role with BICOM.

In July 2022, they penned an op-ed for Jewish News about their trip to Israel with:

the Labour Friends of Israel and the We Believe In Israel campaign group.


Then, in June 2024, they were out on the campaign trail for Akehurst. Akehurst only stepped down from his near 13-year stint as We Believe in Israel director that very same June.

What’s more, it appears CMS Strategic has made use of Lewis’s links with the parachute North Durham MP. In May, Labour First (where incidentally, Lewis also previously worked), hosted an event with chancellor Rachel Reeves.

In a LinkedIn post, Pickering posted chummy photos with the chancellor and thanked Akehurst for arranging for the company to support the event.

Labour links in abundance


What’s also apparent is that CMS Strategic has tangible inroads with this current Labour government as well.

Pickering is a Bracknell Labour Party councillor. Alongside this, she is also co-chair of Labour in Communications’ (LIC) defence and aerospace policy network group. The organisation describes its remit as:

Labour’s fastest-growing professional network of supporters working in the communications, media and public affairs industry.


In a LinkedIn post, Pickering put out a call to recruit new Labour Party members from the PR and defence sectors to the group. A group gathering together Labour members with defence lobbyist experience – nothing to see there of course.

Lewis, a Young Labour member, is also a Labour Party councillor, for Higham Hill. In 2023, they resigned their role as junior whip on the Waltham Forest council after posting a tweet stating that:

What Israel is doing is bad – killing thousands of innocent people, including children. But not evil. Hamas is evil.


Additionally, Lewis’s LinkedIn details a number of short-term gigs as an organiser for the party.

However, perhaps most significantly, as mentioned above, Lewis previously worked for Labour First. Journalist and author Paul Holden has described the group in his explosive new book as the “base camp for the Labour right’s overt fightback” against Corbyn and the party’s left-wing. By this, he was referring to the organisation’s very public efforts to oust Corbyn and his allies, namely by spearheading repeated coup attempts during his leadership.

And low and behold, Akehurst had his fingers in this pie too. He co-founded Labour First alongside former LFI vice-chair and MP John Spellar and Labour councillor Keith Dibble. Naturally, Akehurst is still a director.

CMS staff were also at the Labour Party’s 2025 conference arranging “1-1 discussions” for ministers, MPs, and “industry voices”.

CMS Strategic shilling for DSEI


Moreover, CMS is no stranger to publicly gloating about helping defence companies get coverage in the corporate media either:

So despite the company denying the claims from the Eye, it would be quite on-brand for Pickering to have boasted this – and for the company to be the actor behind the scenes.

As the Eye underscored, CMS has shilled for notorious Israel-linked arms corporation Elbit Systems. Of course, Palestine Action has long made the number one Israel arms manufacturer the main target of its direct action. The magazine also highlighted that in 2024 Palestine Action targeted CMS over its lobbying for the company.

Indeed, the PR firm is one of just two companies the arms producers has employed in recent years to lobby the UK government. CMS isn’t currently listed as its lobbyist.

However, CMS itself has maintained a murky menagerie of arms manufacturers amid its clientele. It was none other than CMS running media and comms for the UK’s largest arms fair Defence and Security Equipment International (DSEI). In fact, Pickering was bragging about CMS delivering this for DSEI for the 10th time:

linkedin.com/posts/georgia-pic…

This was the same DSEI that exhibited arms giants that have armed and sustained Israel’s genocide. It included drone and F35 manufacturers Elbit, Rafael, Lockhead Martin, and BAE.

Times peddling propaganda for CMS Strategic? What’s new


The Canary approached CMS Strategic and the Times for comment. We asked the Times whether it had verified that the Home Office were purportedly “understood” to be investigating Palestine Action’s funding and links to Iran. In addition, we queried if CMS/Georgia Pickering were the source for its article. The outlet did not respond by the time of publication.

Meanwhile, CMS Strategic came back with an identical comment to what it told the Eye:

Any suggestion that CMS was involved with The Times article dated 23 June 2025 or discussed being involved with it are categorically untrue.


Ultimately, the Times in its top-quality due diligence journalism, published what appear to be outrageously fabricated claims. Those claims may have originated from a long-term lobbyist and PR outfit for major arms companies abetting Israel’s genocide.

There’s no definitive proof – at present – that WBII had a hand in this. However, these connections to CMS Strategic do raise significant questions nonetheless. As its swagger around Palestine Action’s proscription underscores – pumping out propaganda sure wouldn’t be out of character.



Japan deploys soldiers to deal with bear attacks


The army began operating in Akita prefecture following a wave of deadly bear attacks. Twelve people have been killed and more than 100 attacks have been reported across Japan since April.
in reply to MicroWave

If it's black fight back


So that was a fucking lie...











Seven data-driven lessons from the 2025 elections


The headline story from this year’s elections is simple: Democrats increased their support across the country and swept all the marquee contests in key states. Democratic Governor-elect Abigail Spanberger won Virginia by ~14 points, while Mikie Sherrill kept New Jersey blue by a double-digit margin. Georgia delivered two more statewide wins for Democrats, flipping both Public Service Commission seats for the first time in recent memory, and Pennsylvania elected a new Democratic lower-court judge (while keeping all its existing Supreme Court Democrats). And a socialist is now mayor of New York City.

These results point to an environment that’s significantly friendlier to Democrats than most pre‑election polls and the “vibes” suggested. An early forecast for the 2026 midterms — based on the historical predictive power of Virginia’s governor elections — suggests a national environment that looks something like D+8 to D+9, compared to the D+3 to D+4 in polls today.

None of this, however, was inevitable. The result of these elections was not merely a “thermostatic” backlash to the president. First, because the swings were larger than on average (16 points in VA since 2021, e.g.; 9 versus 2024). And second, because of the changing issue landscape powering Democrats’ victory. Voters said they punished Republicans for Trump’s policies on the economy, health care, and immigration. More said they were voting against him than voting for either party’s nominees for governor, according to the exits.

Instead, the best explanation for 2025 is that voters didn’t know what they were getting with Trump 2.0 last November, but now they do — and they don’t like it.

The following analysis of results and the exit polls explores seven stories hiding in the Democrats’ rosy performance. Charts of results show the scale of the Democratic victories. The exits show that voters prioritized affordability and the economy, and acted on their near-historic disapproval of the president. That combination powered wins across key geographies and demographic groups, blunting GOP efforts to fight on immigration, transgender kids, and crime. In Virginia and New Jersey, “economy‑first” voters sided with the Democratic gubernatorial candidates by a 65-35 margin — a sharp reversal from 2024, when economy‑focused voters broke roughly 80–20 for Trump.



Bartolomeo Colleoni, un condottiero con gli attributi


Bartolomeo Colleoni si spense ottantenne nel proprio castello di Malpaga il 3 novembre 1475. Morendo lasciò allo stato veneziano la ragguardevole somma di 100 mila ducati per finanziare la guerra allora in corso contro i Turchi a condizione che la Serenissima si impegnasse a innalzargli un monumento equestre davanti a San Marco.
Venezia, da sempre allergica a ogni forma di culto della personalità, acconsentì infine nel 1480 alla realizzazione dell’opera che sarebbe stata collocata non davanti alla Basilica di San Marco bensì di fronte alla Scuola Grande di San Marco, in campo San Zanipolo, nel sestiere di Castello.
Dall’alto del basamento il Colleoni pare ancora fissare il nemico con un’espressione corrucciata e severa. Il condottiero è ritratto in una posa dinamica e grintosa, come se fosse pronto ad avanzare sul campo di battaglia verso la gloria e la vittoria come aveva fatto per tutta la sua vita.


VP Vance's half-brother loses in challenge of Cincinnati's Democratic mayor


Republican Cory Bowman, who is Vice President JD Vance's half-brother, faced long odds against Democratic incumbent Mayor Aftab Pureval.

JD Vance's half-brother, Republican Cory Bowman, lost his long-shot bid in the nationally-watched Cincinnati mayoral race, falling short against Democratic incumbent Aftab Pureval.

Bowman and Republicans tried to paint the city as overrun with crime. Pureval countered that the city leadership combatted crime through numerous measures, including implementing a stricter curfew and recruiting more officers.



IOF murder Gazan for allegedly crossing ‘yellow line’ despite ceasefire


The Israeli army said Tuesday that it had killed a Palestinian man in the northern Gaza Strip for allegedly crossing the so-called “yellow line” despite a ceasefire agreement, Anadolu reports.

In a statement, the army claimed that the Palestinian posed an “imminent threat” after he allegedly crossed the yellow line and approached soldiers in northern Gaza.

The “yellow line” is the first withdrawal line outlined in the initial phase of the ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hamas, which took effect on Oct. 10. It separates areas still under Israeli military control in the east from those where Palestinians are permitted to move in the west.

Despite the ceasefire, the Gaza Health Ministry said that more than 200 Palestinians have been killed and nearly 600 others injured by Israeli army fire since the ceasefire.

Phase one of the ceasefire deal includes the release of […] hostages in exchange for Palestinian prisoners. The plan also envisages the rebuilding of Gaza and the establishment of a new governing mechanism without Hamas.

Since October 2023, the […] genocidal war has killed nearly 69,000 people and injured more than 170,300, according to the Gaza Health Ministry.

https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/?p=820783



Hamas rejects international forces in Gaza, agrees to Palestinian Authority minister managing the enclave


Senior Hamas official Mousa Abu Marzouk said on Tuesday evening that the movement had agreed for a minister from the Palestinian Authority to manage Gaza in order to serve the public interest.

In a televised interview, Abu Marzouk said that Palestinian factions had reached a consensus that the security force operating in Gaza should be Palestinian, under the leadership of the committee responsible for managing the enclave.

He explained that it would be difficult for the UN Security Council to approve a resolution to deploy an international force in Gaza as proposed by the United States.

Abu Marzouk added that mediators had insisted the formation of such a force must be authorised by the Security Council, while both the United States and Israel did not wish for it to be established under a UN resolution. He stressed that Hamas would not accept any foreign military force replacing the Israeli army in Gaza.

The Hamas official stated that Israel had not achieved victory in its war on Gaza, and that the Palestinian people had not surrendered despite two years of destruction.

He also said that Hamas had recorded more than 190 Israeli violations since the ceasefire came into effect on 11 October.

Abu Marzouk noted that the parties had not yet reached the second phase of the agreement, which is expected to address the issue of weapons in Gaza.

Meanwhile, a source familiar with the matter told CNN that the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump was preparing a draft resolution for the UN Security Council to deploy a multinational force in Gaza to support the ceasefire brokered by the United States.

https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/?p=821022




Tip #766

Find things faster in Vivaldi on iOS with Custom Search Engines.

A lot of what we do on the web involves searching for information. Whether doing a generic search or looking things up on a frequently visited website, using the right search engine can help you get to the right search results in no time. In Vivaldi on iOS, you can add your own search engines, give them nicknames, and even make the one you love your default.

To add a custom search engine in Vivaldi on iOS:

  1. Go to Settings > Search Engine > Add Custom Search Engine.
  2. Enter the name of the new search engine.
  3. Type in a short and unique nickname.
  4. Insert the search URL, and if you wish to receive suggestions from the search engine as you type, also the Suggest URL.
  5. Optionally, expand the More Options section to enter POST parameters and, in case the search engine offers reverse image search, also the Image Search URL.
  6. Tap Done.

To get the Search URL, either:

  • Look for it in the search engine’s documentation.
  • Do a test search on the search engine’s website, copy the URL and replace the search keyword with %s.


Vivaldi browser on two iPhones. The one on the left shows a page in Settings to add a new search engine. The one on the right shows the list of available search engines, including custom ones.
#customization #iOS #search #Vivaldi #VivaldiBrowser

vivaldi.com/blog/tips/tip-766/

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 giorni fa)


Bewildered enthusiasts decry memory price increases of 100% or more — the AI RAM squeeze is finally starting to hit PC builders where it hurts


"I've been saving for months to get the Corsair Dominator 64GB CL30 kit," one beleagured PC builder wrote on Reddit. "It was about $280 when I looked," said u/RaidriarT, "Fast forward today on PCPartPicker, they want $547 for the same kit? A nearly 100% increase in a couple months?"

https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/ram/bewildered-enthusiasts-decry-memory-price-increases-of-100-percent-or-more-the-ai-ram-squeeze-is-finally-starting-to-hit-pc-builders-where-it-hurts



China Hackers Exploit Citrix Gateway to Breach European Telecom


Archived/non pay-walled

Here is the original report by Darktrace: Salty Much: Darktrace’s view on a recent Salt Typhoon intrusion

Cybersecurity programs typically focus on protecting core applications and digital assets. But what if the bad guys start targeting trusted defensive measures?

This was the case as reported by Darktrace, a cybersecurity platform provider. Its report sheds light on a sophisticated cyber intrusion linked to Salt Typhoon. The threat actor group is believed to be operated by China's Ministry of State Security, which conducts cyber espionage campaigns against other countries.

The recent attack features a blend of zero-day exploitation and trusted software abuse. In this instance, Salt Typhoon infiltrated a European telecommunications provider through a gateway device. The attackers then executed a familiar—but evolving—arsenal of stealth techniques.
These included DLL sideloading and abusing trusted antivirus software—such as Norton, Bkav, and IObit—to mask malicious payloads under legitimate binaries. The campaign also deployed a custom backdoor known as SNAPPYBEE (aka Deed RAT) by using a dual command-and-control channel (HTTP and unidentified TCP) to sustain the covert access.

Darktrace analysts attribute the incident to Salt Typhoon based on overlapping tactics, infrastructure, and malware patterns seen in prior operations by the group. The event underscores a growing trend: nation-state actors are increasingly weaponizing legitimate tools and supply-chain software to bypass traditional security controls and AI-powered detection.

...

Given the current geopolitical relationship between the US and China, attacks like this are sure to keep occurring. The two countries compete in world markets. Plus, mutual distrust exists across economic, technological, and military domains.

This campaign also symbolizes broader China-linked cyber operations targeting telecom and communications infrastructure as part of its strategic intelligence-gathering efforts.

“Organizations should expect stealthy activity that blends with normal operations when facing Salt Typhoon,” said Jason Soroko, a Senior Fellow at Sectigo, a provider of comprehensive certificate lifecycle management.”

As this attack illustrates, there has been a shift toward stealth-driven espionage. Attackers now rely less on malware volume. Their focus has turned to exploiting the trust woven into enterprise systems. The time has arrived to apply the zero-trust paradigm to cybersecurity defenses.



[Announcement] Migrating away from lemmy.


Last week this instance decided out of nowhere that it deserves a break and vanished.

After multiple attempts of troubleshooting, I was about to put up a static html to announce the move away from "the broken ass lemmy", when i figured out the real problem (nginx config was changed for some reason and no longer correct).

That being said, I still would like to move away from lemmy. At the time of setup, it was the closest to a reddit replacement we had available but by now nostr has matured a lot and it would be in everyones best interest to start building a community on there instead of a federated platform like lemmy on which you lose your entire online presence when the instance goes down.

If you have any suggestions on what specific nostr frontend we should host here on monero.town, please feel free to share them!

Personally id like to deploy an instance of monstr.land/ but sadly it is currently not FOSS.

#meta


US government shutdown enters 36th day to become longest in history


Shutdown beats record set during Trump’s first term as succession of Senate votes fails to yield breakthrough

The US government shutdown became the longest in history on Wednesday, crossing the 36-day mark with no end in sight as Republican and Democratic senators remained at loggerheads over restarting funding to shuttered federal departments.

The shutdown beat the previous 35-day record set in December 2018 and January 2019 during Donald Trump’s first term, when government funding legislation was held up over his insistence on including money to build a wall along the border with Mexico.

The standoff began on the first day of October, after Democratic senators refused to vote for a government funding bill unless it included an extension of Joe Biden-era tax credits that lower costs for health plans purchased through Affordable Care Act (ACA) exchanges. Tens of millions of Americans are expected to be unable to afford insurance once the credits expire at the end of 2025.




in reply to BrikoX

Kovarex enrichment process unlocked
Questa voce è stata modificata (3 ore fa)


Space junk may have struck a Chinese crew ship in low-Earth orbit


The three-man crew was supposed to return to Earth on Wednesday to wrap up six months in space.


Archived version: archive.is/newest/arstechnica.…


Disclaimer: The article linked is from a single source with a single perspective. Make sure to cross-check information against multiple sources to get a comprehensive view on the situation.