Beware of flashbangs in the latest Windows 11 updates
The latest Windows 11 update has some good news and bad news. On one hand, Microsoft greatly improved dark mode in File Explorer, and on the other hand, it made it significantly worse.
https://www.neowin.net/news/beware-of-flashbangs-in-the-latest-windows-11-updates/
Keeping .yaml files up to date...
Kensington and Chelsea confirms IT outage was a data breach after all
Borough says attackers copied 'historical' info as three-council cyber woes drag on
Kensington and Chelsea confirms IT outage was a data breach after all
: Borough says attackers copied 'historical' info as three-council cyber woes drag onCarly Page (The Register)
Titan OS raises $58 million from Highland Europe for its smart TV OS
Titan OS aims to expand its independent TV operating system in Europe and Latin America.
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Human washing machine goes on sale in Japan
Human washing machine goes on sale in Japan
Discover the new human washing machine, a unique wellness technology from Japan that cleans your body and soul while monitoring vital signs. Read more at straitstimes.com.ST
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not only washes your body but also your soul$450,000
My bathtub does that too for a fraction of that price
This isn't meant for your house. From TFA:
A hotel in Osaka bought the first machine and is preparing to offer the service to hotel guests, the spokeswoman said.Other customers include Yamada Denki, a major consumer electronics retail chain in Japan, which hopes the machine will draw people to visit its outlets, she said.
“Because part of the appeal of this machine is rarity, we plan to produce only about 50 units,” Ms Maekura said.
Ew... a reusable human waste pod
At least in a shower of the hotel, gravity is my friend
yes but in a shower your only contact with a surface is the sole of your feet, easily covered with flip flops (this is why I said gravity was my friend)
In this you are literally seating naked where someone else sat naked. I am sure they'll sanitize it but I just would hate it.
I am certain the end game for this one is to assist people with disabilities or the elderly though which is certainly more dignified than being washed like a dog at the groomers
Half a million bucks to have a machine was your ass
Or...
Wash your own ass in the shower/tub you likely already have and not spend half a million bucks
Hmmmm
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Whole it could provide some premium features (I'm imagining more like massage type features), the equivalent of 400 thousand USD seems near impossible to see that much value. Maybe 40 thousand for a luxury item for rich people could work more.
It's just a limited run publicity stunt that will be forgotten within a few weeks.
RAM Costs Have Already Come for the Beloved Raspberry Pi
Every single computer, including DIY boards like the Raspberry Pi, will cost more, and it's only going to get worse.
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Fediverse Report – #144
Newsmast launches news app that combines local news with fediverse integration, and the first Brazilian fediverse conference with WebSocialBR
Fediverse Report – #144The News
The Bristol Cable has launched a mobile app that bundles their journalism with the fediverse in a single app. It’s built in partnership with the Newsmast Foundation and available to members from £1/month. While their journalistic articles remain free, The Bristol Cable sees the social fediverse integration as the premium additonal option. The app consists of three layers: a home screen with news articles by the Bristol Cable, a dedicated member space for connecting with journalists and other supporters, and curated channels that pull in content on themes like climate change, linking Bristol’s local work to wider discussions. The app functions as a fediverse server, with the dedicated member space functioning as a local-only posting place, and the curated channels as a way to connect with the rest of the fediverse network, via Newsmasts’ channel.org network.WebSocialBR is the first fediverse event that will be held in Brazil, on December 3rd in Brasília. The event wants to “bring together community administrators, managers, parliamentarians, researchers, and communicators to exchange experiences and strengthen decentralized networks in the country”. The event draws backing from Brazil’s Internet Steering Committee (CGI.br), the Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation, and FediForum. ActivityPub co-creator Evan Prodromou and FediForum co-founder Johannes Ernst will participate virtually. WebSocialBR is organisated by Alquimídia, who has been coordinating Brazilian instances on age-restriction legislation and pushing for a “.social.br” domain category for federated networks.
Bonfire talks more about their platform and crowdfunding, by writing about their Mutal Aid stretch goal for the project. Bonfire also talks more about what the project is, and how it is “plural by design”. The opening sentence points is a clear statement by the project: “Bonfire is difficult to pin down with a single definition, and that’s a feature, not a bug.” The article then lists various features of the project, such as how it’s extensible, and that it’s a framework for building community platforms. Bonfire even quotes some people saying that they’re interested in the project, but find it confusing as to what it actually is. Bonfire has chosen for the approach that they do not want to run a flagship server for Bonfire Social. That however is now leading to the situation where there are no people running a Bonfire server in production for a community yet, making it hard to demonstrate in practice what Bonfire Social actually looks like. This poses a challenge for their crowdfunding effort. When potential backers try to understand what they’re funding, they encounter a platform that exists primarily as possibility rather than demonstration. The project’s own article quotes would-be supporters expressing this confusion directly: “I do wish they could get a little better at communicating what exactly their project is though, it took a hot minute, reading, and also asking folks on lemmy to try and figure out kinda-sorta-vaguely what they’re building…” Another notes, “I wish them the best, but I think they really need to work on their sales pitch. It’s hard to tell what it is.”Without a clear accessible demonstration of how Bonfire can operate in practice, it is a hard pitch to ask backers to fund an abstract framework based on its potential applications.
I usually don’t write about Threads, but this caught my eye: The latest PewResearch study on social media usage by Americans find that 8% of adult Americans have ever used Threads. This is in contrast with 21% of adults for X, and 4% for Bluesky, with Mastodon not measured. Meanwhile, Threads claimed a few months ago to have over 400M monthly active users, and another study from this summer found that Threads and X have almost the same number of daily app users (115M vs 130M). I’m really not sure what’s going on with these numbers: 8% of American adults is around 21M people who say they have ever used Threads. This leaves at least 380M monthly active users that are not in the US, but it is unclear where they are located. It seems that Europe also does not have a large number of Threads users, as the app launched much later on the continent. The most likely explanation seems to me that Threads aggressively counts people who use Instagram and get shown a Threads post on Instagram as a user of Threads, which would go a long way towards explaining both why the user numbers for Threads are so large while also explaining why so few people actually know about Threads.
FOSDEM has the Social Web Devroom about ActivityPub, hosted by the Social Web Foundation, and the deadline to submit talks is December 1st. There is still space for more talks to be hosted, so consider submitting a talk if you’re going to FOSDEM!
The Links
- This week’s fediverse software updates.
- The Fireside Fedi show talks with Ryan Barrett and Anuj Ahooja from A New Social and Bridgy Fed.
- The WordPress-focused podcast The PublishPress talks with Evan Prodromou about how the fediverse and WordPress can be better connected.
- Owncast Newsletter November 2025.
- Mastodon has some new merch in store.
- Mastodon partners with WE AID to offer donors tax-deductible contributions in Germany.
- A demonstration of Emissary’s upcoming data migration tool using the LOLA data portability spec.
- Loops has published a roadmap of their planned and in-progress features.
- Bridgy Fed now has expanding blocking capabilities.
connectedplaces.online/fediver…
Owncast Newsletter November 2025
In This Issue * A Note From The Editor * Technical Updates * Owncasts For Roku Updated * Features * Kit On Fireside Fedi * Featured Streamer: Fireside Fedi * Closing Remarks A Note From The Editor Did you miss me? This July-November …Kit Rhett Aultman (Owncast)
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YouTube releases its first-ever recap of videos you've watched
YouTube Recap features a set of up to 12 different cards that highlight a user's top channels, interests, the evolution of their viewing habits, and which personality type they fall into based on the videos they loved to watch.
Russian cosmodrome damaged after Soyuz launch to ISS
Russian cosmodrome damaged after Soyuz launch to ISS
The launch pad at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan was damaged after the Soyuz MS-28 mission lifted off.Louis Oelofse (Deutsche Welle)
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WireGuard LAN access fails when router VPN client is active
I run WireGuard on my router to hit my LAN services (SAMBA, home assistant, etc) from afar.
But when I enable the VPN client on my router, I can no longer access LAN services over Wireshark. "Allow LAN access is set to 'true'" on the UI (Merlin).
Has anyone else run into this? Any ideas?
You are asking the WG server to listen to incoming requests from outside your lan subnet, so it is ignoring VPN requests from that subnet.
There are two solutions to this:
- Add routing to your wireguard server instance to allow the VPN intermediary subnet to accept connections from your lan subnet or
- Allow your wireguard client to split-tunnel, so it can reach subnets that aren't reachable outside your WG tunnel.
Is AI really a simulation of God’s mind? What do you think?
If God's mind were a soup of linear algebra doing stupid number tricks, then sure (with the assumption we're just talking about LLMs).
In reality, no.
Source: I study AI and work on it professionally.
Lmao buddy you turned marketing buzz words into ontological argument come the fuck on
You might as well say Mr Clean is clearly a diety of some sort because of his undying commitment to purity
“We are birthing superintelligence. We are creating the mind of God, infinite, destined to solve every problem we’ve ever faced and usher in an age without death.”
What brain rotted CEO grifter is that quote even from?
When you say "AI", do you mean a large language model?
Then, no. A language model is not super intelligent.
Also, with respect to any artificial intelligence created by human beings in general, no.
It is only designed to make predictions of text based on training on a corpus of text which is ultimately composed by a human mind or many human minds that are very fallible, prone to delusions, and also unaware of broader realities and dimensions of existence.
First 3D map covering all of Earth’s 2.75 billion buildings unveiled
With the GlobalBuildingAtlas, a research team at the Technical University of Munich (TUM) has created the first high-resolution 3D map of all buildings worldwide. The open data provides a crucial basis for climate research and the implementation of the UN Sustainable Development Goals. They enable more precise models for urbanization, infrastructure and disaster management – and help to make cities around the world more inclusive and resilient.
All the world's buildings available as 3D models for the first time
With the GlobalBuildingAtlas, a research team at TUM has created the first high-resolution 3D map of all buildings worldwide.www.tum.de
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UAE launched 'lobbying blitz' on European Parliament over Sudan war resolution
The United Arab Emirates “embarked on a lobbying blitz” of European Parliament members to ensure its involvement in the war in Sudan was not mentioned in a resolution calling for the conflict's end, Politico reported on Thursday.
On Wednesday, Dutch Member of European Parliament (MEP) Marit Maij told DW News about plans to “call on the European Commission to stop the trade negotiations with the UAE for as long as we see that weapons are going through the UAE to the RSF,” referring to Sudan’s paramilitary Rapid Support Forces.
The call comes in the wake of the widespread atrocities committed by the RSF during its siege and eventual capture of el-Fasher, the capital of North Darfur in western Sudan, which were abetted by advanced weaponry from the UAE.
But following a lobbying effort from an Emirati delegation to Strasbourg led by envoy Lana Nusseibeh, the final resolution passed on Thursday included no references to the UAE’s role in the war.
UAE launched 'lobbying blitz' on European Parliament over Sudan war resolution
The United Arab Emirates “embarked on a lobbying blitz” of European Parliament members to ensure its involvement in the war in Sudan was not mentioned in a resolution calling for the conflict's end, Politico reported on Thursday.Shraddha Joshi (Middle East Eye)
Elon Musk’s Grok Says It Would Kill Every Jewish Person on the Planet to Save Him
Elon Musk’s Grok Says It Would Kill Every Jewish Person on the Planet to Save Him
Elon Musk's AI chatbot Grok claimed it would "vaporize" every Jewish person on the planet to save the brain of its creator.Ahmad Austin Jr. (Mediaite)
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Technology reshared this.
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I remember back in 2014 or so, I found a YT channel about companies an tech with very high production values on their videos, they had several videos on Elon and his companies.
And in just about every time they spoke about Elon, they said it like this
Entrepreneur Elon Musk
It kinda became a weird mantra they repeated as if being an Entrepreneur made him some kind of expert.
I noticed that at the time, and it has pissed me off since.
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Grok has achieved average human intelligence: It believes that someone paying other people, regardless of how they got their money and the ethical failures involved in using it, is equivalent to having done the work themselves. Nevermind that the only reason any of his shit works is in spite of his painfully stupid decisions and not because of them.
In a way, I’m not even mad. We do these things to ourselves and we refuse to look at the obvious.
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Amid ‘instability and fear’ in Trump’s economy, Americans are cutting holiday spending
In addition to rising prices and tariffs, readers cite growing unemployment as a reason not to exchange gifts this year
Americans are feeling rattled about the state of the economy. Donald Trump has batted away question after question from reporters on concerns over higher prices, just a year after he won an election promising to bring down costs.
While the White House has tried to reduce concern, floating tariff-funded $2,000 stimulus checks and removing import levies on certain agricultural imports, many consumers remain anxious.
Preparing for the holiday season, and bracing for the spending it often demands, Guardian readers across the US expressed apprehension – and explained how they plan to spend – in this economy. Many said the higher cost of necessities, like groceries, was imposing on their ability to buy gifts for family and friends.
I mean I live in America which is steeped in prejudicial treatment of all kinds of people. There's nowhere that's like purely unproblematic I can uproot my whole life and move to.
It's batshit insane to expect a while country of people to just kind of piss off.
Like I don't think I could afford to move to a new country flat out.
America isn't actively mass murdering the people it's stealing the land from though. Also Israelis have plenty of opportunity to go elsewhere, they always can get a second passport from their actual country of origin.
OOP is doing a great job providing them with the necessary motivation.
I mean they kind of did do that though, trail of tears? Mexico used to be... bigger? List continues?
As far as I'm concerned this shit is "being an asshole to a bottom rung employee because you hate the corpo they work for"
Like I said, all of those things are long in the past and peace treaties have been signed. Palestinians have not signed a peace treaty with Israel so they hold full ownership over all of Palestine.
Same with the the boycott of Apartheid South Africa.
How many instances have you been orphaned from?
vlemmy.net
lib.lgbt
libre.video
cheeseburger.social
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An instance can defederate a user? Is that what you're saying?
How would I find out?
Zero, because when I decide to join a fediverse network, first thing I do I set up a single user instance:
- toot.jeena.net
- tube.jeena.net
- piefed.jeena.net
- git.jeena.net (they are working on activity pub)
- jeena.net (indieweb)
Jeena's
This is my personal instance so I can own my content but still share it with the rest of the fediverse.Mastodon hosted on toot.jeena.net
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Two: lemm.ee and a PixelFed instance whose name I am blanking on rn.
It's OK, I learned how to migrate and moved to PieFed, so win-win. 👍
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geddit.social was technically my first Lemmy instance (although I used /kbin earlier and more than this). Owned by Stux (mstdn.social, pixey.org, gram.social,...) but it was late for lemmy.world-like growth.
trivia: Stux tried also to make a /kbin instance, (along with other prominent Mastodon instance owners. Only Fedia.io, from infosec.exchange survived. Kudos for Jerry). He has called it forum.fail
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Canada moving quickly to strengthen ties with China, according to Canadian ambassador
Canada moving quickly to strengthen ties with China, according to Canadian ambassador
China is Canada's second-largest trading partner, as well as the second-largest source of imports, and second-largest export market.Stewart Lewis (National Post)
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While the world is going through “a period of profound global upheaval, an era shaped by shifting geopolitics and economic volatility,” China Daily quotes May as saying, “within this uncertainty, there is also opportunity.” She reportedly noted the prime minister has committed to doubling Canada’s non-U.S. exports over the next decade, increasing engagement with economies such as China’s.
Not a lot of choice.
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Self-Host Weekly #147: Ad-Free
Self-Host Weekly #147: Ad-Free
Default branches, PDF toolkits, streaming subscriptions, and a face full of turkeyEthan Sholly (selfh.st)
Amass, the Android client for Music Assistant, has rebranded to "Assistant to the Music" since this was written.
A reddit user pointed out the previous Amass logo looked like it spelled "All Ass"
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At least all ass would fit his statement:
I am not a developer. This application was created using Claude Code and Gemini CLI.
Why would you publish an app that you have no idea of what it is doing.
Using LLMs is not wrong. Spreading stuff you don't understand is wrong. It's just like below. It sounds awesome but it's full of shit.
create a new wikipedia article that sounds real
Aetheric Resonator Array (ARA)
The Aetheric Resonator Array (ARA) was a highly classified research and development initiative purportedly operated by the United States government during the Cold War era, primarily between 1962 and 1978. While officially acknowledged as a program focused on advanced ionospheric and VLF (Very Low Frequency) radio propagation, unverified reports and declassified documents suggest its actual primary objective was to investigate, and potentially harness, an unconventional form of long-distance communication based on theoretical "aetheric resonance".
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Just tried bentopdf, and lot of things are missing
Like
- it cannot run behind a custom proxy path
- font are fixed to just three weird windows fonts
- assumes only English, other languages come out as ?????s
Just went back to struggling with pandoc
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Self-Hosted Software and Apps
A directory of self-hosted software and applications for easy browsing and discoveryEthan Sholly (selfh.st)
trustpdf.net/
TrustPDF - Private PDF Tools
Free, open-source PDF tools to merge and split directly in your browser.www.trustpdf.net
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Proxmox somehow just dies during rsync
I am trying to do what would be a very simple task.
I have two HDDs (spinning drives) and I am trying to move the data from one to the other using rsync.
The command in itself is very simple
rsync -r --info=progress2 /mnt/disk1/backupfolder /mnt/disk2/backupfolder
The amount of data to move is around 4tb.
Somehow, once around 89% and another at 94% the process dies, and halts the server itself, making it completely unavailable and unresponsive (pings don't work, nothing hosted works, ssh does not work). Only a reset via button on the case works here.
At first I was under suspicion was temperature. After constantly checking the second time with beszel, seems everything is in the normal ranges.
Did anyone else experience such bizarre system shutdowns/hangs? In the meantime I am going to test the memory with memtest just to be sure is not that.
Edit: forgot to mention, both drive smart data gives a pass, although they are second hnd bought with warranty.
Edit2: memtest finished and nothing is there (thank goodness, because ram right now is just stupid priced). Some commenters mentioned something on the disks. Will now proceed with this lead
Sounds like a bad drive, TBH. Not as much the platters but the electronics.
If you can move all the data off and do a secure erase on it, it will tell you all lot.
True, but it's not clear to me that both drives are exhibiting the behavior and it sounds more like a copy between two drives. I wouldn't rule it out and do think it is a possibility, but in my professional experience drives fail much more frequently than controllers.
It makes sense to me to test the drives individually, in another system preferably, using smart long test, which is non-destructive. Next test other drives in this system. If there are errors, try changing out the SATA cables, too. If you can shuffle the data off the drives, do so and then try running them through a secure erase in another system. A bad drive should fail the same way in another system.
My other thought for probably not being the controller is that 4TB is a very long time for a sustained transfer to fail on a flakey component. Also, there are no reports of other errors.
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I'd suspect that too. Try just reading from the source drive or just writing to the destination drive and see which causes the problems. Could also be a corrupt filesystem; probably not a bad idea to try to fsck it.
IME, on a failing disk, you can get I/O blocking as the system retries, but it usually won't freeze the system unless your swap partition/file is on that drive. Then, as soon as the kernel goes to pull something from swap on the failing drive, everything blocks. If you have a way to view the kernel log (e.g. you're looking at a Linux console or have serial access or something else that keeps working), you'll probably see kernel log messages. Might try swapoff -a before doing the rsync to disable swap.
At first I was under suspicion was temperature.
I've never had it happen, but it is possible for heat to cause issues for hard drives; I'm assuming that OP is checking CPU temperature. If you've ever copied the contents of a full disk, the case will tend to get pretty toasty. I don't know if the firmware will slow down operation to keep temperature sane --- all the rotational drives I've used in the past have had temperature sensors, so I'd think that it would. Could try aiming a fan at the things. I doubt that that's it, though.
The reason I suspected temps was I changed very recently to a define r6 (got it second hand). And since the start I am a bit suspicious of how it performs thermally (terms of sound is actually quite OK).
I do have a fan on the drives but still one of the drives goes up to 40C still (even with front door open).
Also, when you talk about fsck, what could be good options for this to check the drive?
Also, when you talk about fsck, what could be good options for this to check the drive?
I've never used proxmox, so I can't advise how to do so via the UI it provides. As a general Linux approach, though, if you're copying from a source Linux filesystem, it should be possible to unmount it --- or boot from a live boot Linux CD, if that filesystem is required to run the system --- and then just run fsck /dev/sda1 or whatever the filesystem device is.
I'm suggesting either using the secure erase utility built into your efi if available or using hdparm and calling secure erase.
grok.lsu.edu/article.aspx?arti…
I suggest calling these utilities with no other drives connected.
Advanced: Erasing SATA Drives by using the Linux hdparm Utility - GROK Knowledge Base
GROK Knowledgebase is Louisiana State University's online support environment.grok.lsu.edu
Surging measles cases are 'fire alarm' warning that other diseases could be next
As measles cases continue to rise around the globe, the World Health Organization warns it's a signal that other disease outbreaks could soon follow.
The surging number of measles cases around the world is a stark warning sign that outbreaks of other vaccine-preventable diseases could be next, the World Health Organization warned Friday.
“It’s crucial to understand why measles matters,” said Dr. Kate O’Brien, director of the WHO’s Department of Immunization, Vaccines and Biologicals. “Its high transmissibility means that even small drops in vaccine coverage can trigger outbreaks, like a fire alarm going off when smoke is detected first.”
That is, measles is often the first disease to pop up when vaccination rates overall drop.
Surging measles cases are 'fire alarm' warning that other diseases could be next
The surging number of measles cases around the world is a stark warning sign that outbreaks of other vaccine-preventable diseases could be next, the World Health Organization warned Friday.“It’s crucial to understand why measles matters,” said Dr.Erika Edwards (NBC News)
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scientifically curated
you've already lost the audience you're trying to reach
you're on the right track, but i think it's even stupider than that. all that really needs to happen is to somehow get it through their empty cinderblock skulls that measles is actually even more contagious than gayness and woke, and that vaccines love jesus and guns
but still, good luck with any of this
We can tick one of those boxes! Vaccines are an adaptation of an ancient eastern medicine practice (variolation) rebranded to give some English white guy all the credit (tbf vaccines are a lot safer, but still the dude didn’t come up with the concept all on his own).
that could be one reason but I'd guess the main reason why they don't single out the trump aligned antivax crowd is because they don't want to alienate trump supporters (that's like over half of the us population)
the people this information needs to get to the most are those antivaxxers, it matters more that they get vaccinated and less that we learn of their mistakes
Hundreds of children seprerated from families while fleeing violence in Sudan's west Darfur
Hundreds of children separated from families while fleeing violence in Sudan’s west Darfur
Hundreds of children have arrived in a refugee camp without their families as thousands of people fled violence in the Sudanese city of el-Fasher in the past month, with more children disconnected from their families arriving every day, officials sai…The Associated Press (CTVNews)
Blogger è bello
Louvre pushes up prices for non-EU visitors by 45%
Paris's Louvre museum said on Thursday, November 27, it would raise ticket prices for most non-EU visitors, meaning US, British and Chinese tourists among others will have to pay $37 to get in.
The museum told Agence France-Presse (AFP) the 45% price hike aims to boost annual revenues by up to $23 million to fund structural improvements at the world's most-visited art museum, which is reeling from the daylight theft of priceless treasures last month.
From 2026, visitors from outside the European Union, Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway will have to pay €32 – an extra €10 – from January 14, the museum and staff unions said after the measure was approved at a museum board meeting.
Louvre pushes up prices for non-EU visitors by 45%
From 2026, visitors from outside the European Union, Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway will have to pay €32 – an extra €10 – from January 14.Le Monde with AFP (Le Monde)
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It's pretty normal to need different ID cards to use some services in the EU.
You need student ID for student tickets, on the train if there is a senior or a youth discount they check for ID.
If you are an EU citizen, your ID is valid everywhere in the EU, no passport needed.
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Under the rules of the EU most benefits an European country provides to their citizens must be provided to residents of other European nationalities.
With that in mind I guess the purpose is to keep the price of access to culture lower for locals and still follow the rules from the EU
Besides, I saw the crown jewels a week before they were nicked
I believe the correct term is 'scoping the joint' 🕵️♂️
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As you said racism is the belief that races exist AND that they should be hierarchized. It is true that the genetic diversity is too big in the race groups for it to be biological races, so the word usually is a synonym for way too big ethnic groups.
Thus using "race" is biologically ambiguous and "ethnic groups" should be preferred, however it is still very well socially defined. Using "race" in a social context makes sense and is far from being racist.
Saying "black people are discriminated" is a talk about race not ethnic group. "Black people" is not an ethnic group, it has hundred of ethnic groups and some ethnic groups are mixed race.
Thus using “race” is biologically ambiguous and “ethnic groups” should be preferred, however it is still very well socially defined.
"Ethnic group" is an anthropological category, not a biological one. The correct biological term is "subspecies", which Wikipedia defines as "populations that live in different areas and vary in size, shape, or other physical characteristics (morphology), but that can successfully interbreed."
Using “race” in a social context makes sense and is far from being racist.
Given the history of its usage in that context, I have to vehemently disagree. Plus it is so ill defined that it is a useless term anyway. From Wikipedia again: "[...] various definitions exist. Sometimes it is used to denote a level below that of subspecies, while at other times it is used as a synonym for subspecies."
Using it invokes all the Social Darwinism and whatnot that the Nazis and others abused it for. So where is the sense in using it exactly?
An actually good answer.
But what I disagree with is that the word race being used by racists is justified to call random people racists. I do not use it personally anyway
Race is not a thing. There is no "race" of any kind of humans. Saying otherwise doesn't make it true, it only enables and facilitates racist language.
Social constructs can only be made up by social people.
Yeah that's not a thing. It's not true just because it sounds cool.
Facts don't care about your feelings.
Any evidence?
I found this page with many example of stolen artifacts in French museums a lot of them in Louvre just by Napoleonic armies alone
I've been to Russia (st. Petersburg) where entering a church would cost $10, but for Russians a couple of rubles.
It makes sense from the perspective that locals should be able to afford seeing their own art and architecture. If foreigners can afford it and are willing to pay the asked amount, I sort of understand.
If you knew the item would be pawned off or destroyed; morally I’d like the history with someone who has the resources to preserve it and share it with as many as possible.
I recall this being discussed a while back after yet another overzealous regime destroyed some of their culture and heritage; preserving this history under capable custody would have been beneficial for everyone. I get it's complicated but for the most part these well run long lived museums in stable countries provide a great service to humanity.
Yea, it would be interesting to have a global body like the UN working on this with public opinion. We can always be seeking a more moral and just world.
I’m in the USA: proof that a rich country will destroy their own history without much thought so ya it’s become increasingly nuanced as time progresses
They spend over £50,000,000/year on care, research, and conservation.
A significant portion of what we know about the ancient world is a direct result of their research sharing and activities; for example when the Rosetta Stone was in French hands they kept it to themselves, when it was in Egypt they did nothing with it, but when it came to Britain it was shared with research departments across Europe as well as in Britain, resulting in our ability today to read hieroglyphics and demotic script.
Think about that for a second: if the Rosetta Stone had been left in Egypt, there's every possibility that Egyptians today would still have no idea about most of their own history or how to read their own ancient texts. You might dismiss this as paternalistic or white-savioury, but it's true nonetheless.
Even as recently as last year we had researchers finding things like ancient-origins.net/news-histo… that simply wouldn't have happened without the British Museum's work. So, I'm inclined to cut them some slack.
BYOCS (bring your own circular saw).
Edit: fixed cheeky abbreviation.
32 whole euros a 45% increase?!. OMG!
In seattle it's 25usd to enter a third class shitty aquarium, and it doesn't even have historical artifacts, and barely any fish
Technology reshared this.
TL;Dr: Browser extensions are malware sleeper agents.
The systemic problem isn't just one malicious actor. It's that the security model incentivizes this behavior:
- Build something legitimate
- Pass review and gain trust signals (installs, reviews, verified badges)
- Collect large user base
- Weaponize via update
- Profit before detection
ShadyPanda proved this works. And now every sophisticated threat actor knows the playbook.
So, asking the past defenders of such a situation again, was XUL really worse or is it in effect the same?
Except XUL also allowed such customization that very rarely an extension would become as popular as they become now. Fragmentation as a defense.
(That refers to the discussions about Firefox dropping XUL in the past, killing many-many good extensions and ways to make them and alternative browsers built on XULRunner.)
Chinese exporters charge Russia more for war supplies: Price increases show that western restrictions are limiting Moscow’s capabilities, Bank of Finland research finds
cross-posted from: mander.xyz/post/42636072
Archived linkHere is the original report by the Bank of Finland.
Chinese exporters have been raising prices for Russian military-industrial buyers, exploiting the Kremlin’s reliance on their supplies as western sanctions restrict imports, new research has revealed.
Prices of export-controlled products shipped from China to Russia rose 87 per cent between 2021 and 2024 on average, according to a new paper from the Bank of Finland Institute for Emerging Economies (Bofit). The price of similar goods shipped elsewhere rose only 9 per cent.
The research shows that while Russia has been able to use Chinese suppliers to get around western restrictions on the purchase of products that have potential military uses, the wave of sanctions imposed in the wake of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022 has pushed up costs for the Kremlin.
...
The authors, Iikka Korhonen and Heli Simola, focused on a major pinch point: the trade in goods listed as “machinery and mechanical appliances”, a category that includes a large number of items identified as being of importance to the war-industry push.
They concluded sanctions have “limited Russia’s technological capabilities by making the importing of critical goods more expensive”.
In some cases, they found that increases in the value of export-controlled imports from China to Russia had been driven entirely by price rises rather than an increase in trade flows. By 2024, Russia’s imports of Chinese ball bearings had surged 76 per cent since 2021 in dollar terms. But the volume of exports dropped 13 per cent over that time.
...
Relief from sanctions remains a critical goal of the Kremlin. In the original 28-point peace plan devised by the US and Russia and presented last week to Ukraine, the document states “the lifting of sanctions will be discussed and agreed upon in stages and on a case-by-case basis”.
...
Suomen Pankki: From sanctions to price surges : The dynamics of Russia’s import prices
NON-TECHNICAL SUMMARY FOCUS Since the invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, many countries have imposed economic sanctions on Russia.Simola, Heli
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I selfhost immich in a netcup VPS. They have a 2tb VM for about 22 euros a month via a black Friday sale
I'm on a 1tb arm plan for about 10 euros a month.
Tl;dr:
- PhotoPrism: Local AI with strong privacy but heavier setup.
- LibrePhotos: Same, but less polished, more community-built.
- Immich: Best self-hosted Google Photos alternative.
- Ente Photos: E2E encrypted, low-maintenance, most "plug and play"
whereas the other options basically force you to forever use their database-based system and files are terribly organized, so you are forced to use their interface.
Immich has a "storage templates" section which allows you to choose a folder structure that it will use to store the files in.
Or go the other way and include your folders as external libraries.
I use Nextcloud Memories for uploading folders to quickly share to relatives. Love it, very straightforward for them to use.
I also host Immich but unlike Memories not exposed, local only. I set Immich up because we found we never looked at our photos when they were just stored on a hard drive but we look at them much more now theyre easily accessible. I spent months slowly retrospectively tagging & adding geo locations to our photos in order to utilise the powerful search capability of Immich. I use the template option & set it up to match the folder structure of our photos.
I'm using Kopia to back up the entire Immich directory including the nightly Immich-db dumps & ive also moved a backup of the backup to another drive, currently somewhere in the region of about 80+GB.
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Every part of what you just said can be encapsulated in proper packaging so you don't even need to care -- about pre/post upgrades, or even dependencies and checks before it starts.
The lack of a proper release is the absolute only thing keeping me from using it.
How does the replication work when you self-host? I know their hosted version has backups, but I'm assuming you'd have to set your own up.
Also, have you seen any easy way to move to and/or from their self-hosted version?
Prinary storage is VPS hard disk, secondary hot is Backblaze B2 and cold storage is Scaleway glacier
I'm not sure, I'm assuming that you would need to export all data from their version and import it to self hosted
I tried Photoprism, Ente and Immich.
Immich is by far the best. It has got an app that really does what it should do, has an AI that actually works and is easy to host and to update.
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Last I tried Immich its background upload was horrible.
Some of that is definitely iOS being bad, but other apps at least semi-worked when Immich didn’t at all.
I might try it again, though. See if it’s improved.
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Proton reinventing the wheel is so stupid.
They should use what's out there and improve it. Like including simplelogin. They should use immich, make it private, and include it in their setup. They even suck for calendar. You can't integrate it anywhere. Integrating email is difficult as well. They want to become the next tech silo. I am somewhat stuck with them for now but I may move to tuta if I can
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Honestly I would be ok with then being the next tech silo. If they just actually did a good job more often.
They perpetually suffer from 6 outta 10 syndrome.
They are good enough to use, better then most alternatives, but just suck enough that I'm always disappointed but not angry.
I may move to tuta if I can
I'm with tuta but in term of integrability I don't feel there is a huge difference...
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Thx for the heads up!
U've got well over 500 email addresses with proton. It'll take a long time to migrate, if ever.
Yeah its pretty simple yet very much not trivial. You can get images that are relatively fine by just making one from cardboard even. All you need is 4 mirrors. Two pairs for one side and two for the other. The non trivial part is how to fill the whole sensor frame and what specific angles to use for your specific lens. I'm using a 40mm lens full frame. 35mm can see the inside of the adapter so that's not good. It gets worse with the wide lenses on your phone, but you can still get an image you can crop. And its its really freaking cool to see your kids and family in 3D on your phone on a finished image. Unfortunately my family runs from the camera and doesn't get the 3D effect at all..and doesn't even want to try. But whatever. Maybe one day when I'm long gone, one of their kids will find an old rusty SD card and discover the awesome thing that 3D is. I don't understand why all the 3D headset makers haven't jumped on this with a standard....simple, have all new phones get 2 cameras, and then create the software to take the images or video. Finally have that video in a standard format for all viewers. There's plenty of smart people that can do this.
Oh and yes, you can do 3D video and it kicks wide angle viewed video so so much. It's phenomenal to watch my kid slide down a slide in 3D. I know it sounds stupid but man....the possibilities for the right open minded community are endless.
github.com/meichthys/foss_phot…
GitHub - meichthys/foss_photo_libraries: Free and Open Source Photo Libraries
Free and Open Source Photo Libraries. Contribute to meichthys/foss_photo_libraries development by creating an account on GitHub.GitHub
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GitHub - LycheeOrg/Lychee: A great looking and easy-to-use photo-management-system you can run on your server, to manage and share photos.
A great looking and easy-to-use photo-management-system you can run on your server, to manage and share photos. - LycheeOrg/LycheeGitHub
GitHub - photoview/photoview: Photo gallery for self-hosted personal servers
Photo gallery for self-hosted personal servers. Contribute to photoview/photoview development by creating an account on GitHub.GitHub
Millions in China cram for civil service exam and the hope of a job for life
A record number of people are set to take China’s notoriously gruelling national civil service exam this weekend, reflecting the increasing desire of Chinese workers to find employment in the public rather than private sector.Around 3.7 million people have registered for the tests on Saturday and Sunday, which will be the first since the government increased the age limit for certain positions. The age limit for general candidates has increased from 35 to 38, while the age limit for those with postgraduate degrees has been raised from 40 to 43.
Millions in China cram for civil service exam and the hope of a job for life
Amid troubled economic times, many in China are shifting back towards the certainty of a career in the public sectorAmy Hawkins (The Guardian)
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Michael and Susan Dell donate $6.25 billion to encourage families to claim 'Trump Accounts'
“We believe that if every child can see a future worth saving for, this program will build something far greater than an account. It will build hope and opportunity and prosperity for generations to come,” said Michael Dell, the founder and CEO of Dell Technologies whose estimated net worth is $148 billion, according to Forbes.
The Dells will put money into the accounts of children 10 and younger who live in ZIP codes with a median family income of $150,000 or less and who won’t get the $1,000 seed money from the Treasury. Because federal law allows outside donors to target gifts by geography, the Dells said using ZIP codes was “was the clearest way to ensure the contribution reaches the greatest number of children who would benefit most.”
The Dells hope their gift will encourage families to claim the accounts and deposit more money into it, even small amounts, so it will grow over time along with the stock market.
There is a political benefit for Trump and fellow Republicans. The accounts will become available in the midst of a midterm election, providing money to millions of voters — and a campaign talking point to GOP candidates — at a critical time politically. The $1,000 deposits are slated to end just after the 2028 presidential election.
Israeli forces execute two surrendered Palestinians at point-blank range
Israeli forces executed two unarmed Palestinians at point-blank range after they surrendered in the occupied West Bank city of Jenin on Thursday.
The killings were captured on video, which showed the two men emerging from a building with their arms raised and their shirts lifted, clearly indicating they were unarmed and posed no threat to the soldiers.
The troops then shoot them dead.
The Palestinian Health Ministry identified the victims as Al-Muntasir Billah Mahmoud Qassem Abdullah, 26, and Yousef Ali Yousef Asa’sa, 37. They were shot in the Abu Dhahir neighborhood of Jenin.
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Here's a catbox link because imgur blocks VPNs: files.catbox.moe/58sxzg.mp4
Keep in mind, this is why all major media platforms employ censorship. They do not want us to see for ourselves how bad things are.
Now go watch the latest disney movie.
because nearly 100 years ago someone else did it to their people and now they're saying "it's our turn."
This is purely about extermination and vengeance towards a people that had NOTHING to do with any of Israels previous issues exactly like the Jewish people in German had NOTHING to do with the issues Nazi Germany felt they were experiencing at the time. The Palestinian people are simply there, on land the Israelis perceive as rightfully theirs and they want them gone JUST like Nazi Germany.
But Zionists won't admit to the correlation. Oh in their heads they know fully well WHY they're doing it, they just won't admit to it. They won't say "this is payback."
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...fuck, i'm quoting scripture again aren't i, fuck me...
because nearly 100 years ago someone else did it to their people and now they’re saying “it’s our turn.”
Not even close.
~~Most Israelis by a large margin are descendants of people who came from Russia, not Western Europe.~~
Most Israelis by a large margin are either descendants of people who came from Russia, or already lived in the territory of Palestine when Israel was formed, not descendants of people from Western Europe.
Only a small fraction of Israelis are descendants of people affected by the Holocaust, much less of Holocaust survivors.
There is no such thing as a "Jewish Hive Mind" and the only thing these Jews share with the Jews who were victims of the Holocaust is having the same religion, nothing else - not principles, not ethics, not morals, not empathy with victims of extreme racism, not even most of their culture: just because somebody also uses a kippah doesn't mean the think like you.
The Holocaust in Israel is nothing more than a tool used by the present day Nazi-like ideology that runs that place to induce collective fear amongst Jews because it's much more easy to spread extreme racist hate amongst people who live in fear because of their ethnicity.
This explains why, rather than learning from the Holocaust to empathise with the victims of such things (which would be a natural thing for the descendants of the victims of the Holocaust to learn from the experiences of their parents and grandparents), most people in Israel have instead learned extreme racist hate for those who don't look like them and who stand in the way of what they are told "is necessary make Jews safe".
The way the memory of the Holocaust is used in Israel is a complete total shit show of Racism and Propaganda that has massivelly distorted the real thing to serve the objectives of the Nazi-like ideology which is Zionism.
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Most Israelis by a large margin are descendants of people who came from Russia, not Western Europe.
That's a factually wrong. The largest group, which is 40% of the Jewish Israeli population is Mizrahi Jews who originally came from Middle Eastern and North African communities.
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Source (at the Jewish Virtual Library)
Maybe you should tell them they're "factually wrong".
Total Immigration to Israel by Country of Origin
Encyclopedia of Jewish and Israeli history, politics and culture, with biographies, statistics, articles and documents on topics from anti-Semitism to Zionism.www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org
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Your source is about immigration (although that website is pretty yank), but the Mizrahi did not immigrate there, they were already there.
Either way, neither the immigrant groups nor the indigenous have much to do with the Holocaust. Last I read, less than 10% of Israel's population is descended from Holocaust survivors. But don't quote me on this, I'd need to find sources.
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Fair enough - I don't really know what are the numbers of Jewish People who already lived in the territory of Palestine that was became Israel at the time of the formation of that country.
This info is all I found some time ago because I was curious.
I knew that a lot of people from Russia had emigrated to Israel but the actual number was very surprising when I found out.
But yeah, either way we both agree on the core point which is that a large majority of Israelis are not descendants from people affected by the Holocaust.
Go tell them yourself.
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Hegseth responds to report that boat survivors were killed as a result of his orders to military
According to The Washington Post, the boat strike initially left two survivors. A second strike was reportedly ordered to comply with Hegseth's directive.ABC NEWS (ABC News)
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China’s low rights model goes global: Beijing's manufacturing dominance is based on weaker protections for workers, communities, and the environment. Not it's exporting that model.
cross-posted from: lemmy.sdf.org/post/46377338
Opinion piece by Li Qiang, founder and executive director of China Labor Watch, and a human rights advocate with over 30 years of experience investigating global supply chains.[...]
China’s low rights model is no longer a domestic labor issue but a systemic challenge to global labor standards, supply chain governance, and fair market competition. Without a coordinated civil society response, the global baseline for worker rights will continue to fall.
I call China’s economic model a “low rights” one because it has long relied on suppressing labor costs to maintain industrial competitiveness. As a result, trade imbalances between China, the United States, and Europe are strategically linked to China’s ability to attract multinational companies through low-cost labor and policy incentives. At the same time, Chinese companies internalized the technology and management know-how of these foreign companies into their domestic systems, gradually transforming what were originally Western competitive advantages into China’s own strengths.
[...]
In recent years, China’s “low-standard, low-cost” development model has expanded beyond its borders. Through the Belt and Road Initiative, it has spread globally, exporting labor, environmental, and governance risks to host countries. Nowhere is this more evident than in Indonesia’s nickel sector, where mining and smelting contracts are so short that they function like countdown clocks, pressuring companies to recoup capital as fast as possible.
[...]
This “low-cost” model has been permitted to exist due to an increasingly shrinking civic space. Independent labor monitoring inside China has become dramatically harder in the past decade. Today, only a few independent organizations remain capable of conducting investigations, such as China Labor Watch. Yet, political risks deter most international funders from supporting work inside China, leaving independent oversight critically under-resourced in an area where it is needed most.
[...]
To counter this dynamic, civil society organizations must be central to any strategy for raising global labor standards. We can advance change in three key ways.
First, increase public awareness. We can collectively highlight that consumers must recognize the real costs behind low-priced products: long working hours, low pay, job displacement, low labor standards. The public must understand that declining labor standards ultimately harm every society. In reality, with wages stagnating in many Western countries, more consumers rely on cheaper products that are produced by workers who are, in fact, competing with them for similar types of jobs in the global labor market.
Second, advocate and partner with authorities for the rigorous enforcement of forced-labor laws. Import bans, labor regulations, and due diligence laws already exist. But enforcement depends on independent organizations holding authorities accountable, and providing evidence if there are enforcement gaps. It also requires sufficient and sustained funding to ensure that these laws can be implemented in practice, rather than remaining symbolic commitments.
[...]
The EU Forced Labor Regulation and the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD) had their scope narrowed during the legislative process, while U.S. forced labor import enforcement remains inconsistent and lacks clear direction, making the global regulatory landscape by significant uncertainty. If global civil society does not intervene now, global labor standards will not simply stagnate; they will be redefined downward by a model built on speed, opacity, and the suppression of rights.
[...]
https://thediplomat.com/2025/11/chinas-low-rights-model-goes-global/
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I think the argument is rather that the dictatorship of the proletariat is the proletariat taking political control over capital. The tankies, so to speak, recognize that this does not resolve all internal contradictions of society nor instantly improve the material conditions of said society.
What you might agree on is that:
1. The current world order is capitalist.
2. China was an extremely poor country that has improved the material conditions for their populace tremendously in a short time span.
Does this mean that worker's rights are unimportant? No. However, I believe the political leadership prioritizes the development of productive forces over worker's rights at this stage of development.
I also want to highlight the question of who benefits from this labour. If the proletariat is the class that benefits from their own work and the government has their popular support, is this really the red fash, authoritarian exploitation that the other comments and western media assume it to be?
This is just my flawed understanding, of course. There are probably many who can give better answers. Looking at the comment section at time of writing, I am not sure such an effort is deserved.
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The dictatorship of the proletariat was a philosophical construct. Not a literalism. Industrialization has improved the material condition of every society that has been through it. It has nothing to do with left or right etc.
The current world order is capitalist.
And capitalists like China aren't going to change that.
China was an extremely poor country that has improved the material conditions for their populace tremendously in a short time span.
Again that's a factor of industrialization. Not economic model. The problem they're just starting to face that countries like the United States and others have been struggling with for some time now. Is that the petite bourgeoisie has always benefited more. And expansion or growth can never be infinite. Once that slows the proletariat is always the first victim of the bourgeoisie.
First of all, the advance of the bourgeois class cannot be separated from the industrial technological revolution in a historical materialist context.
With regards to
The dictatorship of the proletariat was a philosophical construct. Not a literalism. Industrialization has improved the material condition of every society that has been through it. It has nothing to do with left or right etc.
note that (quoting Wikipedia)
In philosophy, a construct is an object which is ideal, that is, an object of the mind or of thought, meaning that its existence may be said to depend upon a subject's mind.
You are making a reductionist claim that the form is only ideal, which is untrue. The dictatorship of the proletariat is not ideal, it is material and can be analyzed as such, whether or not you agree on its ideal form.
The crux of your argument is that the industrial revolution and the bourgeois revolution has developed the productive forces, i.e. capital, and thus improved the material conditions of many people as a result. Even Marx agreed on this issue in the 1800s, remarking the absence of novelty of this idea. What you conveniently ignore is the exploitation that this development has inflicted upon every citizen outside the imperial core.
The nonsensical wording of
the petite bourgeoisie has always benefited more
than the proper haute bourgeoisie, is self explanatory for anyone understanding what the word "petite" means.
That
expansion or growth can never be infinite. Once that slows the proletariat is always the first victim of the bourgeoisie
is also not novel to any socialist worth their salt. However, this is more of a nod in the opposite direction of what you think, towards western countries currently undergoing a state of crisis.
If the proletariat is the class that benefits from their own work and the government has their popular support, is this really the red fash, authoritarian exploitation that the other comments and western media assume it to be
Yes, because without basic political rights which do not exist in China, Chinese workers have no political agency by which they can express a political preference. It is entirely possible that given such freedoms, the Chinese people would implement the exact same system of government they have now, but there is no way to know that since the functional basis for political self determination does not exist.
I am not quite sure I agree that proclaiming a resolution to class struggle by taking political control over the means of production is sufficient to resolve internal contradictions. The statement regarding "basic political rights" however seem to imply that this in particular is ensured in liberal democracies, on which I definitely categorically disagree.
I spend one third of my life at work, one third sleeping and one third making myself ready for either. At work I have no "basic political rights", not because I live in China, but because there is no democratic control over the mode of production in my liberal democracy.
I think that freedom ultimately necessitates equity, at the very least with regards to opportunities in life. In western countries, you pretty much only have the option to live subservient to the capitalist class. The political freedoms are hollow as long as political power is controlled by capital.
So what am I saying? That I believe a socialist society is the only one that can give any basic rights, and that in turn one must rephrase the question whether China has attained socialism to whether they are working to attain it. Then the situation of current worker's rights become a question of whom their work serves.
To the victor goes the spoils, after all. Bear this in mind when you relativize the material conditions of Chinese workers to that of western ones, who historically directly benefitted on the exploitation of the former.
You are doing the age old ML trick of attaching the rights which convey political agency to a specific historical epoch of economic liberalism. If we are to understand that the Chinese socialism is a process which inherently must navigate through flaws and imperfections of the material conditions it is dealt, then surely we much acknowledge the same of the western struggle. And yes, it is a struggle all the same, albeit from a position of historical privilege.
In reality there is nothing about the enshrinement of individual rights which requires or implies capitalism or imperialism, other than historical snapshot these things have been attached to. It is no more correct than saying all socialism requires autocracy. In fact, we have an entire century of revisionist thinking which modifies Marx with this specific goal in mind. So just as China approaches this struggle from a more Orthodox perspective inspired by Lenin and molded by a period of historical oppression (itself a bit or a contradiction given China's broader history), the west's struggle is throwing off the shackles of its comparative success and influence which binds it to so much old world influence. Both molded by imperialism in different ways. Both currently stuck in a vicious cycle of capitalism, thrust on them by material reality.
If we are to understand that the Chinese socialism is a process which inherently must navigate through flaws and imperfections of the material conditions it is dealt, then surely we much acknowledge the same of the western struggle.
We are, and we are analyzing the situation materially and historically in hope to arrive at a real understanding of the internal contradictions of either system. Historically, as you say, the capitalists use their privilege to exploit the rest of the world. When the crisis revolving around the internal contradictions become to great, they decay into fascism.
📍This is where we currently are with respect to the stages of the western capitalist cycle.
In reality there is nothing about the enshrinement of individual rights which requires or implies capitalism or imperialism, other than historical snapshot these things have been attached to.
Well no. Conversely the enshrinement of individual rights requires the absence of capitalism and imperialism, in favour of socialism. I am not saying that communism with Chinese characteristics is the only way to attain this, that would be stupid and contrasting our understanding of material reality.
I agree that the West is not only as much, but even more powerless to change its own capitalist mode of production due to the material reality. This is even more favouring the line of China in paving a new path for the betterment of all. Give the west a bit deepening of state of crisis, and it will be sure for all we are going to need it.
We are in agreement on many topics. Where we diverge is in the mythologizing of deterministic western fascism without making the same potential attribution to failures at implementing socialism. This is, simply put, a failure at critical analysis. History has seen both cases. The idea that the Chinese system is the answer to, or even a protective force relative to western imperialism, simply because it exists as an alternative, is flawed reasoning. I would even say dangerous reasoning. The path forward is understanding and learning from the failure and success in all systems through history. In China's case, a big part of that is literally the inability to discuss its failures. And I'm not just talking about the legal state of China itself, but also the broad hesitancy to acknowledge this as a failure within leftist circles.
These acknowledgements do not collapse any house of cards unless it has been built on fragile ground in the first place.
AMD reportedly raising Radeon 8 GB / 16 GB graphics card prices by $20–$40
cross-posted from: mander.xyz/post/42900599
AMD’s next round of Radeon GPU price hikes is starting to take shape, with a new report from Chinese Board Channels claiming that board partners have already been told to prepare for higher costs. According to the post, several AMD graphics card brands have notified their channels that the “first wave” of increases will add around $20 to 8 GB models and $40 to 16 GB models, with retail prices in China expected to climb by roughly 300 RMB and 600 RMB respectively by the end of the year. The poster also claims there will be “no new products” launched through 2027, though that part is impossible to verify at this stage.
https://videocardz.com/newz/amd-reportedly-raising-radeon-8-gb-16-gb-graphics-card-prices-by-20-40
Hong Kong fire rescue efforts cease, death toll rises to 128
cross-posted from: lemmy.zip/post/53921965
Hong Kong fire rescue efforts cease, death toll rises to 128
Around 200 people are still unaccounted for.CNA (Channel NewsAsia)
Adolf Hitler easily wins election for fifth time in southern African country
Adolf Hitler easily wins election for fifth time in southern African country
Local politician Adolf Hitler Uunona said his father gave him the name without understanding its dark history.Haley Brown (New York Post)
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Literally Hitler.
Also hes 59...so he's born in 1966-ish. Hitler was recent history. That'd be like me calling my kid Suddam Hussein.
Oh really was there someone else by that name already? I hadn't known.
You'd think at least a nurse or something would be like "uhh you might want to reconsider".
In the same interview with the German paper, Uunona said his father gave him the name without understanding its dark history.“As a child I saw it as a totally normal name,” Uunona said.
Uunona insisted he rejects Nazi ideology and any dreams of world domination.
“It wasn’t until I was growing up that I realised: This man wanted to subjugate the whole world,” Uunona said. “I have nothing to do with any of these things.”
Idk, I guess I believe the guy, but his father must have been living under a rock.
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I'm certainly no expert on Namibian history and culture, most of what I know comes from just now skimming the Wikipedia article
But a couple things jumping out at me
The area was at one point a German colony (and also at one point they carried out a genocide against the Herero people that some think may have been sort of a model for the Holocaust)
They also had apartheid similar to South Africa.
And to this day a whole lot of Africa doesn't exactly have stellar access to education, the internet, etc. and even in some parts of the world that do have better access, there's a lot of people in other parts of the world outside of Europe and the Americas who don't quite grok* just how bad the Nazis were because it's not something they cover so extensively in their history classes. I feel like every couple years I see some story come out of Asia somewhere where some business opens up with a Nazi theme and they don't get why so many people in the West are mad about it.
So kind of taking a couple stabs in the dark here
It could be that his father named him after Hitler maybe trying to soften things up for him, like maybe the white people at the top of the apartheid heiarchy would be a little nicer if he was named after the biggest whitest racist he could think of.
Or maybe they were in a bit of an information bubble where he just really didn't fully understand how bad Hitler and the Nazis were and went with it because he thought it had a nice ring to it
Maybe it was a way to give a giant middle finger to racists. Sort of a "haha, how do you like your leader's name when it's on a black kid? Suck it Nazis."
Or maybe it was something else. That's just a couple thoughts off the top of my head.
-
*fuck muskrat for trying to steal this word for his own bullshit.
That'd be like me calling my kid Suddam Hussein.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osama_Vi…
Vinladen is named after Osama bin Laden, the founder of
Al-Qaeda […] His brother is named Sadam Huseín after the dictator of Iraq, Saddam Hussein, and his father planned to name the third sibling George Bush after U.S. president George W. Bush if it had been a boy.
I definitely recall talking to someone at Cisco TAC (or maybe Fortinet...but most of my dealings with FortiTAC lately are with the same groups of people...you get to a point in understanding the tech that only certain people can help you...) who has a "villainous" middle-eastern name.
There's likely more than one though.
Yeah, but this was colonial/early postcolonial Africa, and Hitler was in Europe. How well can you tell fine African leaders from atrocity committing ones? And, the average Lemming has an actual solid education.
This is the dudes explanation as well, when the media bothers him. Dad just picked a random major European leader.
The local pol said he usually goes by Adolf Uunona in daily life and argued it’s too late to formally change his name.“It’s in all official documents. It’s too late for that,” he told German newspaper Bild in 2020.
For context for folks in the US, the US makes it pretty easy to change your name. Ditto for a number of other countries that derive from the British legal tradition. A number of countries have considerably more restrictive law on this point.
How do you change your name in Namibia?
- Change of Surname
Change of Surname Forms. - Police Clearance Certificate.
- Original Birth Certificate (including dependants' certificates, if included in application)
- Certified copy of ID.
- Affidavit with Declaration Statement setting out why you are requesting a change of surname.
- Notices in Government Gazette
It's not that fucking hard to not be Adolf Hitler
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It's not true anymore, though.
Uunona has officially changed his name and also his papers have been updated by now.
His name is now just Adolf Uunona.
Source: German Spiegel magazine.
Namibischer Politiker: Adolf Uunona heißt nicht mehr Hitler
Der namibische Lokalpolitiker Adolf Hitler Uunona hat jahrelang mit seinen Namen für Aufsehen in Deutschland gesorgt. Jetzt ist er einen los.DER SPIEGEL
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SuiXi3D, Benign e massive_bereavement like this.
The name/s Adolf/Adolphe are still in use in German and French former colonies in Africa, and WW2 wasn't that big of a deal in a lot of the continent. A lot of them had other shit going on, still do.
The internet and easy-to-access translators are more common now, leading to a further decline in the name, but in Namibia in the 1960's? Totally understandable someone would hear/see the name Adolf Hitler without context, assume a strong German name would help their kid get by in German-Occupied Namibia, and leave it at that. Looks like it worked.
More common than you might think. When I lived in a remote Amazonian village in the early 2000s, a local teacher was named Hitler (his given name). This area probably barely had contact with the capital in the 50s, let alone Europe. It wasn't uncommon to choose a powerful or famous name, and Hitler was probably just someone who they knew changed the world.
There were other interesting names still being given too. My favorite was a baby named Shakira Marley while I lived there.
In his book, Trevor Noah mentions this. Everyone knows the name Hitler! So it's like borrowing fame.
Across West Africa a few years post-9/11, tons of merch would feature Osama Bin Ladin. T-shirts, watches, posters, etc. Most people didn't fully understand he did 9/11, but his name and picture was always in Western media, so he was famous!
It's literally free fame.
Would you have ever heard of this local African politician if he didn't have this name?
Interesting to compare and contrast with Zimbabwean leader Robert Mugabe who deliberately wore a toothbrush moustache and referred to himself as "The Hitler of our time".
Also interesting that now Mugabe is dead, there seem to be quite a few potential candidates for that title.
But, as best as I can tell, Uunona isn't in the running there.
Trump’s boat bombings: How the US has long used ‘double-tap’ strikes
Trump’s boat bombings: How the US has long used ‘double-tap’ strikes
‘Double strikes’ allegedly used on Venezuelan boats accused of trafficking drugs were used extensively under Obama.Sarah Shamim (Al Jazeera)
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frongt
in reply to neonrain • • •neonrain
in reply to frongt • • •Appoxo
in reply to frongt • • •Broke my neck a few times (I currently am waiting out the jellyfin patches and stay on 10.10.7 (i think))
shiftymccool
in reply to Appoxo • • •Appoxo
in reply to shiftymccool • • •Just a few days ago, my docker host upgraded the docker engine from 28 to 29.
Woke up to 10 notifications from my uptime monitoring that they are offline.
Funny thing is:
The external monitor showed they are down.
The internal monitor showed no issues.
But after I went through with the long procrastinated upgrade from debian 11 to debian 13, migrating the data and doing nothing to the compose files, all services worked without any issue.
I don't know what my old host did or did not but now it works, I guess? Not complaining but the whole routing thing is a bit beyond me
dbkblk
in reply to neonrain • • •keksbaecker
in reply to dbkblk • • •Thank you for this idea. I wasn’t aware, that you can subscribe to an rss feed for releases on gitlab/github.
I think that I will follow your approach.
raldone01
in reply to dbkblk • • •uninvitedguest
in reply to raldone01 • • •BlueBockser
in reply to raldone01 • • •intitle:'beta'). Since I only view unread articles, that effectively deletes them and I never have to see them!shnizmuffin
in reply to neonrain • • •neonrain
in reply to shnizmuffin • • •shnizmuffin
in reply to neonrain • • •Nawor3565
in reply to shnizmuffin • • •shnizmuffin
in reply to Nawor3565 • • •Tell me you don't read the manual without saying you don't read the manual.
I can recall a few! Mastodon. Lemmy. PiHole. Penpot. Mealie. Uptime Kuma.
They all mention required steps to upgrade between releases, including what to do to your docker installations and environment variables.
neonrain
in reply to shnizmuffin • • •Lka1988
in reply to shnizmuffin • • •This is the kind of attitude that drives people away from open source.
Yes, people should read the manual, but at some point they will have questions, and there are a lot of projects that aren't clear on certain things. Such as YAML changes.
[object Object]
in reply to neonrain • • •like this
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neonrain
in reply to [object Object] • • •mesa
in reply to neonrain • • •Good projects will have docs associated with the docker/docker compose files.
The way we do it is, any update to the .yaml files will have a corresponding .yaml.Dev associated with it. That way it won't be overwritten when an update occurs as well as give a recommended setup.
Eskuero
in reply to neonrain • • •neonrain
in reply to Eskuero • • •Mora
in reply to neonrain • • •I deploy and update my service similiar to this fantastic guide: nickcunningh.am/blog/how-to-au…
Basically I run Komodo, which pulls a git repo. Renovate opens a PR (and most of the time the changelog is included, so I can quickly check what happened) for new versions. Once merged a webhook fires to tell Komodo to pull the new version.
I really recommend this approach now. Once setup it is very automatic, but not to the point of YOLO-automation like Watchtower and :latest 😅
How To: Automate version updates for your self-hosted Docker containers with Gitea, Renovate, and Komodo
Nick Cunninghamneonrain
in reply to Mora • • •mal3oon
in reply to Mora • • •Mora
in reply to mal3oon • • •IanTwenty
in reply to neonrain • • •This is new:
github.com/dkorecko/PatchPanda
And
Discovered in the latest Self Host Weekly:
selfh.st/weekly/2025-11-28/
I have not tried it myself tho.
Self-Host Weekly #147: Ad-Free
Ethan Sholly (selfh.st)neonrain
in reply to IanTwenty • • •irmadlad
in reply to IanTwenty • • •I too saw PatchPanda on selfh.st and it is on my watch list. The only thing holding me back is that it isn't out of beta yet. So, I'm waiting on other selfhosters to plow that field before I deploy. It does look like it would solve a lot of problems tho.
themachine
in reply to neonrain • • •Appoxo
in reply to themachine • • •Same here.
Read deployment documentation, configure compose to my standards, deploy, update where necessary to align with the update (e.g. remove an environment variable.
The editing is done on my PC, then I open WinSCP or ssh into it (depending on my mood and amount of changes) and then apply the changes
nfreak
in reply to neonrain • • •I set this up a while back (and recently moved to Forgejo, see the update note at the beginning of the article):
nickcunningh.am/blog/how-to-au…
Probably a tad overkill honestly but it works amazingly well, and turns every potential upgrade into an approval process so nothing will update when you don't want it to.
How To: Automate version updates for your self-hosted Docker containers with Gitea, Renovate, and Komodo
Nick Cunningham