Chinese EV maker Xpeng to launch robotaxis, humanoid robots with self-developed AI chips
Chinese EV maker Xpeng to launch robotaxis, humanoid robots with self-developed AI chips
Chinese electric car company Xpeng is following in Tesla's footsteps by moving into robotaxis and humanoid robots.Evelyn Cheng (CNBC)
Oakland City Council Passes Resolution in Support of Polluters Pay Climate Superfund | Oakland is latest in wave of support from California Cities, Youth for Climate Superfund
Oakland City Council Passes Resolution in Support of Polluters Pay Climate Superfund | Food & Water Watch
Oakland is latest in wave of support from California Cities, Youth for Climate SuperfundMadeline Bove (Food & Water Watch)
Meta is earning a fortune on a deluge of fraudulent ads, documents show
Router as tiny server?
Go with me here. Routers are routers, and servers are servers. Some people mix and match things, but generally, ideally, this is how it goes. And I agree.
But the router I just set up, the Google WiFi, has 4gb storage, 512mb of ram, a quad core CPU at 800mhz, is easy to flash, and only costs $10-15 on eBay all day long.
If you used it as only a little computer, no routing.. Then..
If I wanted to say... Set up a tailscale node at my family's house. Why spend $45-80, or even $130(!) on a raspberry pi with an Ethernet port, when the Google WiFi works just as well if not better for that job?
Maybe a tiny matrix server? Tiny web hosting?
Or, for a less ideal solution, but still reasonable. What if I wanted to set up a remote backup node for my main server? If my needs were small enough, the Google WiFi would be much more economical, although you'd need to add a USB hub to break out the USB ports. And there would be limitations obviously.
Or getting really crazy, you could potentially squeeze one or two bigger services onto a router, just to see if it's possible.. Minecraft server?
My question is. What is the best device for this? The Google WiFi is dirt cheap at $10-15, I'm about to pull the trigger on a second one just to play with. But I wanted to see if you guys had any other suggestions?
I tried searching the toh for similar devices, but even restricting it down every way I can think of, I've still got over a hundred devices to look at.
Basically, I think older router hardware is an overlooked, cheaper alternative, to raspberry pis, for some scenarios.
Former Speaker Nancy Pelosi will not seek reelection
Klimaexperte Höhne: "Wir sind nicht machtlos"
Klimaexperte Höhne: "Wir sind nicht machtlos"
Die Erde steuert auf eine Erwärmung von bis zu 2,8 Grad gegenüber dem vorindustriellen Niveau zu. Der Klimaexperte Niklas Höhne sagt: Die Folgen wären unbeherrschbar - aber es sei noch nicht zu spät.www.inforadio.de
How Mamdani built an ‘unstoppable force’ that won over New York
How Mamdani built an ‘unstoppable force’ that won over New York
The mayor-elect built the greatest field operation by any political campaign in the city’s history – by getting New Yorkers to talk to eachother. Can Democrats learn from his success?Ed Pilkington (The Guardian)
How could Tropical Forest Forever fund proposed at Cop30 tackle climate change
Scheme aims to disrupt deforestation by raising $125bn, investing it in bonds, with returns used to reward tropical forest nations for good behaviour
RRF Caserta. 06 11 25 . Cronache Africane. Crisi in Sudan, Camerun. Mali , Congo e Costa d'Avorio
The Internet is Dying. We Can Still Stop It
The Internet faces an existential crisis as nearly 50% of all traffic is now non-human, with AI-generated content and bots threatening to overwhelm authentic human interaction[^1]. According to recent studies, this includes automated programs responsible for 49.6% of web traffic in 2023, a trend accelerated by AI models scraping content[^1].The problems are stark:
- Search engines flooded with AI-generated content optimized for algorithms rather than humans
- Social media platforms filled with AI "slop" and automated responses
- Genuine human content being drowned out by machine-generated noise
- Erosion of trusted information sources and shared truthHowever, concrete solutions exist:
- Technical Defenses:
- Open-source spam filtering tools like mosparo for protecting website forms
- AI scraper blocking through systems like Anubis
- Content authenticity verification via the CAI SDK[^1]
- Community Building:
- Supporting decentralized social networks (Mastodon, Lemmy)
- Using open-source forum platforms that emphasize human moderation
- Participating in curated communities with active fact-checking[^1]
- Individual Actions:
- Using privacy-focused browsers and search engines
- Supporting trusted news sources and independent creators
- Being conscious of data sharing and digital footprint[^1]"While exposure to AI-generated misinformation does make people more worried about the quality of information available online, it can also increase the value they attach to outlets with reputations for credibility," notes a 2025 study by Campante[^1].
[^1]: It's FOSS - The Internet is Dying. We Can Still Stop It
The Internet is Dying. We Can Still Stop It
Almost 50% of all internet traffic are non-human already. Unchecked, it could lead to a zombie internet.Theena Kumaragurunathan (It's FOSS News)
BrikoX doesn't like this.
JavaScript is the primary fingerprinting tool used inside the browsers.
Mastodon 4.5 is out now
Mastodon 4.5
Quote posts, the end of missing replies, new tools for admins and better emojis. All of these and more, in our latest release.Mastodon Blog
De milieuschade door de landbouw in Nederland is jaarlijks veel groter dan de economische opbrengst van de sector.
Deloitte: schade door landbouw miljarden groter dan opbrengsten
Kosten-batenanalyse: Milieuschade door landbouw leidt tot hoge maatschappelijke kosten, laat Deloitte zien. „Deze cijfers geven wel aan dat de problematiek nijpend is.”Erik van der Walle (NRC)
Nuovo articolo: Eurovision 2026, c’è la prima artista ufficiale: Antigoni in gara per Cipro
Eurovision 2026, c'è la prima artista ufficiale: Antigoni in gara per Cipro
Eurovision 2026, c'è la prima artista ufficiale: Antigoni in gara per Cipro. La cantante di origine britannica ha una popolarità televisiva nel Regno UnitoEmanuele Lombardini (Eurofestival News)
Feddit Un'istanza italiana Lemmy reshared this.
UN climate summit kicks off in Brazil's Amazon with hopes for action despite US absence
Belém Climate Summit: Opening of the General Plenary of Leaders
The UN Secretary-General, António Guterres addresses world leaders gathered in Belém, Brazil, for a Climate Summit hosted by the Government of Brazil ahead of the annual two-week UN climate conference (COP30) to be held in the Brazilian city in the A…UN Web TV
like this
As a reminder. They cut down huge parts of the amazon rainforest just for this event. They built a 4 lane road right through peoples farm land, while completely ignoring the people using and living in the area. They basically cut a community in half. Hopes for action my ass.
bbc.com/news/articles/c9vy191r…
Amazon rainforest cut down to build highway for COP climate summit
The infrastructure required to host COP30 in Belém is undermining the cause, campaigners say.Ione Wells (BBC News)
Planet in peril: 30 years of climate talks in six charts
- 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
US businesses object to EPA bid to kill carbon reporting
US businesses object to EPA bid to kill carbon reporting - E&E News by POLITICO
A cross section of manufacturers and environmentalists raised objections to the agency's plan to repeal its greenhouse gas reporting rule.Jean Chemnick (E&E News by POLITICO)
‘New reality’: Hurricane Melissa strength multiplied by climate crisis, study says | Winds of Melissa’s strength are now five times more frequent due to the climate crisis, research says
‘New reality’: Hurricane Melissa strength multiplied by climate crisis, study says
Winds of Melissa’s strength are now five times more frequent due to the climate crisis, research saysOliver Milman (The Guardian)
How the US cut climate-changing emissions while its economy more than doubled
How the US cut climate-changing emissions while its economy more than doubled
A fast drop in coal use played a big role, but there was more, as these charts show.The Conversation
The Internet is Dying. We Can Still Stop It
The Internet is Dying. We Can Still Stop It
Almost 50% of all internet traffic are non-human already. Unchecked, it could lead to a zombie internet.Theena Kumaragurunathan (It's FOSS News)
How sickly forests are felling Europe's climate ambitions
Tech Trivia
Scientists criticize ‘straw man’ arguments in Bill Gates climate memo | Tech billionaire relying on ‘false binary’ with call to focus less on emissions and more on aid for poor, experts say
Scientists criticize ‘straw man’ arguments in Bill Gates climate memo
Tech billionaire relying on ‘false binary’ with call to focus less on emissions and more on aid for poor, experts sayDharna Noor (The Guardian)
like this
The Gates Foundation has been a significant player in 3rd world disease eradication.
Lemmy: FUCK HIM!
I was around when Microsoft exploded onto the scene. Oh you bet he did some evil, monopolistic shit to get it rolling, but I also remember what computing was like before Windows.
Between my friends and I we had 5 different home computers. Nothing was interoperable, not even the version of BASIC, total clusterfuck. Tech was crawling compared to after Windows snapped everything into focus. Yes, I wish Linux had come sooner, but it's a clusterfuck as well.
The Internet is Dying. We Can Still Stop It
The Internet faces an existential crisis as nearly 50% of all traffic is now non-human, with AI-generated content and bots threatening to overwhelm authentic human interaction1. According to recent studies, this includes automated programs responsible for 49.6% of web traffic in 2023, a trend accelerated by AI models scraping content1.
The problems are stark:
- Search engines flooded with AI-generated content optimized for algorithms rather than humans
- Social media platforms filled with AI "slop" and automated responses
- Genuine human content being drowned out by machine-generated noise
- Erosion of trusted information sources and shared truth
However, concrete solutions exist:
- Technical Defenses:
- Open-source spam filtering tools like mosparo for protecting website forms
- AI scraper blocking through systems like Anubis
- Content authenticity verification via the CAI SDK1
- Community Building:
- Supporting decentralized social networks (Mastodon, Lemmy)
- Using open-source forum platforms that emphasize human moderation
- Participating in curated communities with active fact-checking1
- Individual Actions:
- Using privacy-focused browsers and search engines
- Supporting trusted news sources and independent creators
- Being conscious of data sharing and digital footprint1
"While exposure to AI-generated misinformation does make people more worried about the quality of information available online, it can also increase the value they attach to outlets with reputations for credibility," notes a 2025 study by Campante1.
The Internet is Dying. We Can Still Stop It
Almost 50% of all internet traffic are non-human already. Unchecked, it could lead to a zombie internet.Theena Kumaragurunathan (It's FOSS News)
copymyjalopy likes this.
In New Jersey, Offshore Wind Notches a Win—and Dodges a Bullet | Governor-elect Mikie Sherrill slayed a GOP rival who’d vowed to ban new turbines.
In New Jersey, offshore wind notches a win—and dodges a bullet
Governor-elect Mikie Sherrill slayed a GOP rival who'd vowed to ban new turbines.Mother Jones
Triple-whammy of hottest ever years risks ‘irreversible damage’, says UN
Triple-whammy of hottest ever years risks ‘irreversible damage’, says UN
Experts say 2023, 2024 and 2025 the three hottest years in 176 years of records, with 1.5C Paris agreement target now ‘virtually impossible’Damian Carrington (The Guardian)
The Great Firewall: Massive data leak reveals the inner workings of China's censorship regime
cross-posted from: lemmy.sdf.org/post/45192281
Archived[...]
In a historic breach of China’s censorship infrastructure, internal data were leaked from Chinese infrastructure firms associated with the Great Firewall (GFW) in September this year. Researchers now estimate that the data has a volume of approximately 600 GB.
The material includes more than 100,000 documents, internal source code, work logs, configuration files, emails, technical manuals, and operational runbooks. The number of files in the dump is reported to be in the thousands, though exact totals vary by source.
[...]
An unexpected but critical component of the breach is the metadata embedded within documents and logs. Authorship tags, file paths, and computer hostnames have linked hundreds of documents to individual users, systems, and organizations. These human fingerprints offer unprecedented visibility into the organizational structure behind the GFW’s operation. Engineers, data analysts, lab researchers, and regional technicians are all traceable by name or system alias. Many entries refer to known ISPs, national labs, or university-affiliated nodes, suggesting that the enforcement apparatus spans a wide constellation of public-private partnerships, military-academic collaborations, and centralized policy deployment.
Together, these findings constitute a unique technical cross-section of the Chinese censorship-industrial complex, revealing not just what is filtered or how, but who enforces it, who maintains the infrastructure, and how decisions flow through the layered topology of digital control.
[...]
The current report represents only the first installment in a three-part investigative series into the unprecedented breach of China’s censorship apparatus. While this Part 1 has centered on exposing the dataset’s contents and evaluating its technical, organizational, and strategic significance, it is only the beginning. The sheer scale and complexity of the leak, over 500GB of internal GFW infrastructure data, demands a methodical, layered approach to fully grasp its implications.
The next two parts in this series will delve even deeper, uncovering the architecture of China’s censorship regime and examining the wider consequences for global digital governance.
Part 2 of the series will look into the architecture and will offer a forensic reconstruction of how the Great Firewall actually works at the technical level, mapping the core design of the censorship stack. This includes how packets are intercepted, filtered, redirected, or dropped; how apps like Psiphon and V2Ray are detected at the protocol level; and how traffic shaping is deployed based on geography, ISP, or session context.
Part 3 will the geopolitics and the fallout will address the broader implications. This breach does more than just reveal technical controls, it changes the strategic calculus of censorship resistance. We will assess how the exposure reshapes China’s ability to sustain its domestic information control and international cyber operations, and how it informs countermeasures by VPN developers, privacy advocates, and democratic governments. Ethical and legal questions will also be raised: what does responsible engagement with such data look like?
[...]
With this series, we aim to present not just the most complete picture yet of the GFW, but a roadmap for pushing back against the machinery of state censorship.
Inside the Great Firewall Part 1: The Dump - DomainTools Investigations | DTI
Analysis of the 500GB+ Great Firewall data breach revealing China’s state censorship network, VPN evasion tactics, and the operators behind it.DomainTools Investigations | DTI
Is Enerkem's Waste Gasification technology a Failure or a promising Climate Solution?
Is Enerkem's Waste Gasification technology a Failure or a promising Climate Solution?
Repsol wants to build a waste gasification plant to make circular and biogenic Methanol in Spain. The Ecoplanta project will use a technology that previously failed to deliver on its promises in Canada.Hanno Böck (industrydecarbonization.com)
Appeals Court Upholds Shaken Baby Conviction Despite Medical Examiner Recanting Testimony
Appeals Court Upholds Shaken Baby Conviction Despite Medical Examiner Recanting Testimony
Dissenting from the court’s majority, one judge sounded the alarm about ignoring recanted forensic testimony, saying the medical examiner’s reversal “calls into doubt the foundation of the trial.”lisa.larson-walker@propublica.org (ProPublica)
The Great Firewall: Massive data leak reveals the inner workings of China's censorship regime
cross-posted from: lemmy.sdf.org/post/45192281
Archived[...]
In a historic breach of China’s censorship infrastructure, internal data were leaked from Chinese infrastructure firms associated with the Great Firewall (GFW) in September this year. Researchers now estimate that the data has a volume of approximately 600 GB.
The material includes more than 100,000 documents, internal source code, work logs, configuration files, emails, technical manuals, and operational runbooks. The number of files in the dump is reported to be in the thousands, though exact totals vary by source.
[...]
An unexpected but critical component of the breach is the metadata embedded within documents and logs. Authorship tags, file paths, and computer hostnames have linked hundreds of documents to individual users, systems, and organizations. These human fingerprints offer unprecedented visibility into the organizational structure behind the GFW’s operation. Engineers, data analysts, lab researchers, and regional technicians are all traceable by name or system alias. Many entries refer to known ISPs, national labs, or university-affiliated nodes, suggesting that the enforcement apparatus spans a wide constellation of public-private partnerships, military-academic collaborations, and centralized policy deployment.
Together, these findings constitute a unique technical cross-section of the Chinese censorship-industrial complex, revealing not just what is filtered or how, but who enforces it, who maintains the infrastructure, and how decisions flow through the layered topology of digital control.
[...]
The current report represents only the first installment in a three-part investigative series into the unprecedented breach of China’s censorship apparatus. While this Part 1 has centered on exposing the dataset’s contents and evaluating its technical, organizational, and strategic significance, it is only the beginning. The sheer scale and complexity of the leak, over 500GB of internal GFW infrastructure data, demands a methodical, layered approach to fully grasp its implications.
The next two parts in this series will delve even deeper, uncovering the architecture of China’s censorship regime and examining the wider consequences for global digital governance.
Part 2 of the series will look into the architecture and will offer a forensic reconstruction of how the Great Firewall actually works at the technical level, mapping the core design of the censorship stack. This includes how packets are intercepted, filtered, redirected, or dropped; how apps like Psiphon and V2Ray are detected at the protocol level; and how traffic shaping is deployed based on geography, ISP, or session context.
Part 3 will the geopolitics and the fallout will address the broader implications. This breach does more than just reveal technical controls, it changes the strategic calculus of censorship resistance. We will assess how the exposure reshapes China’s ability to sustain its domestic information control and international cyber operations, and how it informs countermeasures by VPN developers, privacy advocates, and democratic governments. Ethical and legal questions will also be raised: what does responsible engagement with such data look like?
[...]
With this series, we aim to present not just the most complete picture yet of the GFW, but a roadmap for pushing back against the machinery of state censorship.
Inside the Great Firewall Part 1: The Dump - DomainTools Investigations | DTI
Analysis of the 500GB+ Great Firewall data breach revealing China’s state censorship network, VPN evasion tactics, and the operators behind it.DomainTools Investigations | DTI
copymyjalopy likes this.
Battleground Maine Rep. Jared Golden will not seek reelection
Battleground Rep. Jared Golden will not seek reelection - E&E News by POLITICO
The Maine Democrat’s unexpected retirement opens up a House seat in a district that President Donald Trump carried.Aaron Pellish, Andrew Howard (E&E News by POLITICO)
Global Warming Made Hurricane Melissa More Damaging, Researchers Say | Climate change enabled the storm to churn faster and grow more quickly, a rapid analysis found.
the storm had 7 percent stronger wind speeds than a similar one in a world that has not been warmed by the burning of fossil fuels. They also found the rate of rainfall inside the eyewall of the storm was 16 percent more intense.
They're talking about the World Weather Attribution rapid analysis, which uses peer-reviewed methods.
Petition e6679 - Political Honesty
There is a petition, e6679, on the official ourcommons.ca website for the government of Canada, which address is misinformation in Canadian politicians.
If you ask me, this is a very important petition, because I believe that the threat to Canadian sovereignty and democracy is indeed misinformation that is being spread by Canadian politicians. Sure, misinformation from social media is annoying, and when it comes from the traditional media it's disturbing, but when it comes from Federal politicians, it's downright dangerous.
It has almost 40,000 signatures. Please sign it, there's only three weeks left. The more signatures, the more weight it will have when it's read in parliament
We need to send a message to Parliament and let them know that we're concerned and frustrated with misinformation.
I should note that the website has had lots of problems recently. Please be patient and try until you succeed. You need to receive a validation email, click on that, and then you get a confirmation email. Until you get that second email, your signature has not been counted.
SAP shakes up its certification process
SAP shakes up its certification process
The ERP giant is shifting away from multiple-choice questions toward a new model centered on real-world environments, starting with new formats for six certs rolled out at TechEd this week in Berlin.Lynn Greiner (CIO)
Wikipedia co-founder joins editing conflict over the Gaza genocide page
Wikipedia co-founder joins editing conflict over the Gaza genocide page
Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales has inserted himself into discussions over the site’s “Gaza genocide” page, saying that it has issues with neutrality and “requires immediate correction.”Emma Roth (The Verge)
So, the marketing aspect is the thing that hung me up.
You gotta put yourself out there soooooo much on all the forums all the socials all the goon subs.
Thinking it through makes me not want to.
I just want a money cheat code.
JASN_DE
in reply to hereiamagain • • •Those are some pretty varying requirements. Sure, for the low-powered ones the repurposed routers are probably fine.
If you need a little more oomph, have a look at the Dell Wyse 5070. x64, but passively cooled.
hereiamagain
in reply to JASN_DE • • •Ah, maybe I wasn't clear. I understand that none of this is "best device for the job".
I mean, I want to tinker with this idea, I want the most bang for my buck while tinkering. Currently the Google WiFi seems capable of some of those goals, and is $10-15. Is there another similarly specced and priced router that you're aware of that also has a USB port exposed for use? And is also $10-15?
Tall order, really I'm just making conversation
ryokimball
in reply to hereiamagain • • •SanctimoniousApe
in reply to ryokimball • • •hereiamagain
in reply to SanctimoniousApe • • •That's fair, my thought was just that, while this is low end, it's not THAT low end, and it's reasonably priced for a one off project or something to tinker with.
My question is, the Google WiFi fits the bill pretty close for me and my tinkering desires. And the price is right. But it'd be better with something like an exposed USB port, or heck, maybe even a little more oomph, sure. As long as it's still cheap.
I guess I'm mostly just making conversation about this idea I had. And wondering if anyone knew of a similar spec device with a similar price that might be better suited 🤷♂️
SanctimoniousApe
in reply to hereiamagain • • •ThorrJo
in reply to hereiamagain • • •Have a look at the NanoPi R3S:
friendlyelec.com/index.php?rou…
Quad A55 at up to 1.8GHz.
I have a NanoPi R5S running OpenWrt acting as a router + light NAS and a NanoPi M4 running Armbian (Debian flavor) running a LXQt desktop and they're not bad.
It's worth noting though that because I have a HDD hooked up to the R5S via USB3, when I read or write to it over a 2.5Gbps link, the CPU is like 60-70% busy just handling USB and network interrupts and running NFS. The R5S has a quad A55 CPU at up to 2GHz, so that should give you a rough idea what the R3S is capable of.
There's also the NanoPi Zero 2:
friendlyelec.com/index.php?rou…
In general, older Rockchip CPUs are getting to be fairly well supported these days, and newer ones are getting support a lot faster than the old ones did. But always do your due diligence of course, anything ARM tends to have way more gotchas than x86, and that gets more true as its Chinese-ness increases.
NanoPi Zero2
www.friendlyelec.comhereiamagain
in reply to ThorrJo • • •ThorrJo
in reply to hereiamagain • • •hereiamagain
in reply to ThorrJo • • •ThorrJo
in reply to hereiamagain • • •hereiamagain
in reply to ThorrJo • • •Isn't tailscale just wireguard with a few bells and whistles added?
Thanks for the heads up! I run wireguard direct on my own router.
ThorrJo
in reply to hereiamagain • • •I haven't confirmed this, but my understanding is that with Tailscale the packets need to be shuffled into and out of userspace, whereas with straight Wireguard they stay entirely in kernelspace.
Either way I was unpleasantly surprised to see Tailscale performing worse than I expected based on raw Wireguard performance on a few ARM based routers I own. Quad 800MHz ARM will be pretty slow for any sort of bulk data transfer. But for light web browsing, ssh, etc it will probably be fairly usable.
hereiamagain
in reply to ThorrJo • • •Possibly linux
in reply to hereiamagain • • •You can totally do this but there are a few gottas:
My advise would be to spend a bit more and get something a little nicer. Find something with a relatively new Qualcomm chipset. I would also recommend that you get one or more dedicated APs.