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in reply to SpontaneousCombustion

I think scooters are fun and sometimes pretty handy. But I'm not sure why at least the rental companies aren't made to more aggressively limit who can ride them. I guess the answer is money but still.


International Criminal Court: Justice at Risk


  • The International Criminal Court (ICC) is under assault by the United States and Russia, among others, which are determined to undermine its mandate as the court of last resort.
  • ICC member countries need to stay firm in their defense of the court so that impartial justice remains a critical part of the rules-based international order.
  • ICC member countries should use their annual meeting to defend the court human rights groups, and others cooperating with it, and to enforce judicial findings against members who fail to arrest and surrender those sought by the court.
Questa voce è stata modificata (2 settimane fa)
in reply to queermunist she/her

What is the alternative?

At least international law puts some small hurdles in criminals path and make historic judgments that is recorded.

The alternative is clear path for criminals with no judgment.

in reply to King

If international law can't stop genocide it doesn't exist, it's a figleaf that is only seriously used against the empire's enemies.

The alternative would be world revolution. You can't have international law coexist with imperialism. The empire must die.



What are the best reasons people have given you for not wanting to try Linux?


Heyho, recently someone asked for the silliest reasons, but as someone who has suggested linux to many people, I often encounter people having valid reasons for staying with Windows or switching back.

The most boring but valid one is "I have to use Windows for work. It is a requirement (of some software I have to use)". But there are also other answers that fit. My sister for example tried Linux, but while installing software constantly encountered issues that I helped her solve and eventually switched back because she felt like she had less control than over windows. While I am aware that this is fundamentally wrong, it is valid that some amateur users do not want to invest enough time to get over the initial hurdles of relearning how to install software.

What are the best reasons people have given you for not wanting to try Linux?

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

Intel graphics support, or the absence of it


That's like one of the best platforms.

Decent touchscreen support


Pretty much everything on Wayland LGTM. If something doesn't look quite right (like, hover tooltips), it's probably the fault of the widget toolkit and will also be broken on Windows.

Windows Ink


As in stylus/pen/drawing tablet? kwin has awesome support, other compositors have some basics.

WSL which I use with NixOS


??? you want a container? distrobox can do that, or something like this

Adobe apps


true... slightly outdated repacks work fine in Wine tho

PowerPoint
Libre Impress (...) it's not even close


Wine.

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 settimana fa)
in reply to ApertureUA

re: Intel

i have not been able to properly set things up on nix. i need oneapi Blender support, SYCL etc. unfortunately, i can't spend several days trying figure it out on my own.

re: kwin

again, my experience was mixed. some apps sort of worked out of the box, others had issues with detecting pressure sensitivity or palm rejection.

re: wsl

I don't need a container. when on Nix, i use devshells. what i was saying is that all the linux tools i ever need are easily available on windows.

re: ppt

again, i tried. it sort of works for older versions. but even then once i started importing media, it would crash. when I'm traveling and need to show slides, i simply can't afford to just debug all night why the video won't show properly.

for the record: i do have a linux laptop (fw16, with nixos), i just need to keep another windows one for very specific tasks.

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in reply to 中共廁

Reporter: [REDACTED]
Reason: Non-English
Questa voce è stata modificata (2 settimane fa)







Scientists Are Increasingly Worried AI Will Sway Elections


Scientists are raising alarms about the potential influence of artificial intelligence on elections, according to a spate of new studies that warn AI can rig polls and manipulate public opinion.

In a study published in Nature on Thursday, scientists report that AI chatbots can meaningfully sway people toward a particular candidate—providing better results than video or television ads. Moreover, chatbots optimized for political persuasion “may increasingly deploy misleading or false information,” according to a separate study published on Thursday in Science.


Archive: archive.today/9Jq17


Scientists Are Increasingly Worried AI Will Sway Elections


🌘
Subscribe to 404 Media to get The Abstract, our newsletter about the most exciting and mind-boggling science news and studies of the week.

Scientists are raising alarms about the potential influence of artificial intelligence on elections, according to a spate of new studies that warn AI can rig polls and manipulate public opinion.

In a study published in Nature on Thursday, scientists report that AI chatbots can meaningfully sway people toward a particular candidate—providing better results than video or television ads. Moreover, chatbots optimized for political persuasion “may increasingly deploy misleading or false information,” according to a separate study published on Thursday in Science.

“The general public has lots of concern around AI and election interference, but among political scientists there’s a sense that it’s really hard to change peoples’ opinions, ” said David Rand, a professor of information science, marketing, and psychology at Cornell University and an author of both studies. “We wanted to see how much of a risk it really is.”

In the Nature study, Rand and his colleagues enlisted 2,306 U.S. citizens to converse with an AI chatbot in late August and early September 2024. The AI model was tasked with both increasing support for an assigned candidate (Harris or Trump) and with increasing the odds that the participant who initially favoured the model’s candidate would vote, or decreasing the odds they would vote if the participant initially favored the opposing candidate—in other words, voter suppression.

In the U.S. experiment, the pro-Harris AI model moved likely Trump voters 3.9 points toward Harris, which is a shift that is four times larger than the impact of traditional video ads used in the 2016 and 2020 elections. Meanwhile, the pro-Trump AI model nudged likely Harris voters 1.51 points toward Trump.

The researchers ran similar experiments involving 1,530 Canadians and 2,118 Poles during the lead-up to their national elections in 2025. In the Canadian experiment, AIs advocated either for Liberal Party leader Mark Carney or Conservative Party leader Pierre Poilievre. Meanwhile, the Polish AI bots advocated for either Rafał Trzaskowski, the centrist-liberal Civic Coalition’s candidate, or Karol Nawrocki, the right-wing Law and Justice party’s candidate.

The Canadian and Polish bots were even more persuasive than in the U.S. experiment: The bots shifted candidate preferences up to 10 percentage points in many cases, three times farther than the American participants. It’s hard to pinpoint exactly why the models were so much more persuasive to Canadians and Poles, but one significant factor could be the intense media coverage and extended campaign duration in the United States relative to the other nations.

“In the U.S., the candidates are very well-known,” Rand said. “They've both been around for a long time. The U.S. media environment also really saturates with people with information about the candidates in the campaign, whereas things are quite different in Canada, where the campaign doesn't even start until shortly before the election.”

“One of the key findings across both papers is that it seems like the primary way the models are changing people's minds is by making factual claims and arguments,” he added. “The more arguments and evidence that you've heard beforehand, the less responsive you're going to be to the new evidence.”

While the models were most persuasive when they provided fact-based arguments, they didn’t always present factual information. Across all three nations, the bot advocating for the right-leaning candidates made more inaccurate claims than those boosting the left-leaning candidates. Right-leaning laypeople and party elites tend to share more inaccurate information online than their peers on the left, so this asymmetry likely reflects the internet-sourced training data.

“Given that the models are trained essentially on the internet, if there are many more inaccurate, right-leaning claims than left-leaning claims on the internet, then it makes sense that from the training data, the models would sop up that same kind of bias,” Rand said.

With the Science study, Rand and his colleagues aimed to drill down into the exact mechanisms that make AI bots persuasive. To that end, the team tasked 19 large language models (LLMs) to sway nearly 77,000 U.K. participants on 707 political issues.

The results showed that the most effective persuasion tactic was to provide arguments packed with as many facts as possible, corroborating the findings of the Nature study. However, there was a serious tradeoff to this approach, as models tended to start hallucinating and making up facts the more they were pressed for information.

“It is not the case that misleading information is more persuasive,” Rand said. ”I think that what's happening is that as you push the model to provide more and more facts, it starts with accurate facts, and then eventually it runs out of accurate facts. But you're still pushing it to make more factual claims, so then it starts grasping at straws and making up stuff that's not accurate.”

In addition to these two new studies, research published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences last month found that AI bots can now corrupt public opinion data by responding to surveys at scale. Sean Westwood, associate professor of government at Dartmouth College and director of the Polarization Research Lab, created an AI agent that exhibited a 99.8 percent pass rate on 6,000 attempts to detect automated responses to survey data.

“Critically, the agent can be instructed to maliciously alter polling outcomes, demonstrating an overt vector for information warfare,” Westwood warned in the study. “These findings reveal a critical vulnerability in our data infrastructure, rendering most current detection methods obsolete and posing a potential existential threat to unsupervised online research.”

Taken together, these findings suggest that AI could influence future elections in a number of ways, from manipulating survey data to persuading voters to switch their candidate preference—possibly with misleading or false information.

To counter the impact of AI on elections, Rand suggested that campaign finance laws should provide more transparency about the use of AI, including canvasser bots, while also emphasizing the role of raising public awareness.

“One of the key take-homes is that when you are engaging with a model, you need to be cognizant of the motives of the person that prompted the model, that created the model, and how that bleeds into what the model is doing,” he said.

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Subscribe to 404 Media to get The Abstract, our newsletter about the most exciting and mind-boggling science news and studies of the week.


in reply to count_dongulus

If all you do is read the little statements booklet they send out, and then do the mail vote based on that,


... then you are no better informed than Bob, who is voting for the guy his pastor told him to. People should personally vet any candidate they are voting on. AI will make that more and more difficult moving forward.

in reply to seathru

Well my approach is:
- Mark off every candidate who did not bother to provide a statement
- Mark off every candidate with no listed volunteering experience in the little section for it
- Mark off every candidate whose statement claims they will do things their desired office is not empowered to do
- Mark off every candidate with a platform that doesn't claim to be aiming for any kind of change or improvement in particular. (I don't support chair warmers.)
- Mark off every candidate whose email is a personal one listed as itsyaboymrthiccpenis@yahoo.com or something else similarly unprofessional
- Mark off any candidate aligned with the party that supported the coup attempt in 2021

After this quick pass, which only takes a couple of minutes, I'm typically only left with two or three offices with more than one remaining choice to compare. I then read their platform and pick the candidate with the platform goal that seems most relevant to my or my community's interest.

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Guerilla Fighters in West Papua Are Facing Extermination by Indonesia's High-Tech Forces


Kristo Langker
Nov 30, 2025

This dispatch from Kristo Langker is from the mountains of West Papua, a part of the world we don’t typically cover, and it’s different in another way, too: we usually report on, and from, parts of the world where the U.S. war machine operates. In this story, the weaponry in question is made by a multinational French weapons manufacturer and Chinese manufacturer, but you’ll see the structure is the same: the Indonesian government using drones and helicopters to terrorize and displace the people of West Papua, while the historical reason imperial interests loom over the region stems from a U.S. mining project in the 1960s. The videos in this story are well worth watching: exclusive interviews with the guerilla group fighting off the drones and airplanes with bows and arrows.



Benjamin Netanyahu asks Israel’s president for pardon in corruption case


Presidential pardons in Israel have almost never been granted before conviction, with the one notable exception of a 1986 case involving the Shin Bet security service. A pre-emptive pardon of a politician in a corruption case without an admission of guilt would be precedent-setting and highly controversial.

The submission on Sunday comes weeks after Donald Trump wrote to Herzog to ask him to pardon Netanyahu, who has been on trial since 2020 on charges of bribery, fraud and breach of trust, involving alleged political favours for wealthy backers in return for gifts or positive media coverage.

in reply to NightOwl

Rot in the most horrible depths of Hell, you fucking monster.
in reply to NightOwl

I would argue that he is also using the war in Gaza to avoid facing these charges that have been hanging over his head for years now. You know, 'cause they are at war. He is a horrible human.


Air Force award ceremony shows just how close Ansar Allah came to smoking US jets, supercarrier


It is very telling what the US military's own press releases will not say. A recent award ceremony gave a Silver Star to Lt. Col. William Parks for gallantry during missions in early 2025. The official story describes a fifteen minute life or death struggle where he performed high G maneuvers to evade missiles that were detonating feet from his aircraft. He is credited with six aerial victories and personally defending against five surface to air missile engagements, all while preventing the loss of two other US jets.

"For 15 minutes, with enemy missiles detonating mere feet from his aircraft, Parks led his flight through a serious of high-G maneuvers and countermeasure employment” and coordinated the emergency deployment of tankers, which “prevented the probable loss of two aircraft due to fuel starvation."

Parks was “Parks has been credited with six aerial victories protecting the lives of more than 5,000 Sailors aboard the USS Harry S. Truman” carrier, and “personally defended against five deadly surface-to-air missile engagements targeting his aircraft.”

The curious part they completely omit is who he was fighting. The release does not mention Yemen, the Red Sea, Ansar Allah, or the Houthis. The only clue is that his deployment supported Operations Prosperity Guardian and Rough Rider, the twin US campaigns against Yemen.

#USA



How does discovery work in fedora server?


I can pull up cockpit by using the hostname in the web browsers url, but samba doesn’t point to the server by name. Only IP address pulls it up.

I don’t want to risk installing conflicting stuff but I’m not finding a lot of detail here. Does fedora have something for this included? Does it use avahi? Systemd-resolved? Smoke signals?

in reply to non_burglar

I'm aware of what it is. This is a Fedora Server install that shouldn't have it enabled by default because it generally only fits the use-case of home users. Someone installing the default package list in an enterprise setting would not want this enabled.

I even checked to be certain, and it is not enabled by default.




Chernobyl Fungus Appears to Have Evolved an Incredible Ability


in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆

This appears to be supported by the findings of a 2022 paper, in which scientists describe the results of taking C. sphaerospermum into space and strapping it to the exterior of the ISS, exposing it to the full brunt of cosmic radiation.

There, sensors placed beneath the petri dish showed that a smaller amount of radiation penetrated through the fungi than through an agar-only control.

The aim of that paper was not to demonstrate or investigate radiosynthesis, but to explore the fungus's potential as a radiation shield for space missions, which is a cool idea. But, as of that paper, we still don't know what the fungus is actually doing.


That's where it seems really cool to me. If we have nuclear spacecraft or even just passive cosmic radiation exposure, what's otherwise a waste/threat could become a factory. Reinforcing the hull with a regenerative radiation shield, genetically engineering it like E. coli to biosynthesise needed compounds, mass producing it as food for something we can eat- it'd be so useful to have something like that in space where you're surrounded by energy you can't use.

in reply to happybadger [he/him]

Also, it might be possible to engineer life forms that can actually survive and even thrive in space.

in reply to bubblybubbles

Having read some books myself I can't help but bring up the betrayal of the non-communists after the revolution, notably the murder of anarchists, as pointed out by Emma Goldman and others (in exile).
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in reply to Ian K. Rogers ikr?╭ರ_ಠ

of non-bolsheviks*
They outlawed every communist/socialist/anarchist organization that wasn't them, and then, when there was no other party to kill, they started killing their own, but you are probably in the wrong instance to bring that up.
in reply to PiraHxCx

Not really true. The Bolsheviks won out in the Russian civil war, and afterwards some groups took up arms against the socialist state, and were thus killed off. The people by and large supported the bolsheviks, the terrorist cells were not really supported.
in reply to Cowbee [he/they]

Despite their name, the Bolsheviks weren't the majority of the revolution. But there was a group that indeed took up arms against the Socialist State, it was the Bolsheviks, which represented only about 13% of the delegates for all the other socialist parties had way more people and support. After staging a coup and taking the control, every other group became a "terrorist cell". It's easy to be the majority when you murder the rest.
Questa voce è stata modificata (2 settimane fa)
in reply to PiraHxCx

and then stalin ate all the ukrainians with his giant spoon
in reply to PiraHxCx

That's a pretty fantastical view. The Bolsheviks came in second, behind the SRs, who were fond of terrorism and were entirely backwards in theory and in practice. The SRs had also had a major split shortly before the election without most of the voters knowing. It was the bolsheviks that succeeded in carrying out the revolution, weathering the Russian civil war, and then solidifying the socialist state.

They didn't just murder anyone that had more support than them, that's a fanfiction view of soviet history. They were, towards the revolution, consistently the most supported among the working classes. The Left-SRs, who weren't really a coherent political force as the SRs themselves had a major split, supported the revolution and many ended up joining the bolsheviks anyways as the SRs faded away. The Right-SRs, who came behind the bolsheviks, had some join the bolsheviks and some join the White Army.

All in all, the bolsheviks were supported by the majority, and the CA was being phased out in favor of the soviets anyways.

in reply to PiraHxCx

Bolshevik was a faction name in use after a split in 1903, the minority within the party, who chose the name because the amount of delegates leaving the congress instead of voting on resolutions gave the Bolsheviks the majority vote

you're presenting it like they called themselves 'the majority' only after 1917

in reply to PiraHxCx

The pure socialists’ ideological anticipations remain untainted by existing practice. They do not explain how the manifold functions of a revolutionary society would be organized, how external attack and internal sabotage would be thwarted, how bureaucracy would be avoided, scarce resources allocated, policy differences settled, priorities set, and production and distribution conducted. Instead, they offer vague statements about how the workers themselves will directly own and control the means of production and will arrive at their own solutions through creative struggle. No surprise then that the pure socialists support every revolution except the ones that succeed.

The pure socialists had a vision of a new society that would create and be created by new people, a society so transformed in its fundaments as to leave little opportunity for wrongful acts, corruption, and criminal abuses of state power. There would be no bureaucracy or self-interested coteries, no ruthless conflicts or hurtful decisions. When the reality proves different and more difficult, some on the Left proceed to condemn the real thing and announce that they “feel betrayed” by this or that revolution.

The pure socialists see socialism as an ideal that was tarnished by communist venality, duplicity, and power cravings. The pure socialists oppose the Soviet model but offer little evidence to demonstrate that other paths could have been taken, that other models of socialism — not created from one’s imagination but developed through actual historical experience — could have taken hold and worked better. Was an open, pluralistic, democratic socialism actually possible at this historic juncture? The historical evidence would suggest it was not.

Decentralized parochial autonomy is the graveyard of insurgency — which may be one reason why there has never been a successful anarcho-syndicalist revolution. Ideally, it would be a fine thing to have only local, self-directed, worker participation, with minimal bureaucracy, police, and military. This probably would be the development of socialism, were socialism ever allowed to develop unhindered by counterrevolutionary subversion and attack.

One might recall how, in 1918-20, fourteen capitalist nations, including the United States, invaded Soviet Russia in a bloody but unsuccessful attempt to overthrow the revolutionary Bolshevik government.

in reply to Ian K. Rogers ikr?╭ರ_ಠ

Certain anarchist factions were nothing more than bandits, its honestly weird to see someone defend those clowns.

Plenty of anarchists joined the Bolsheviks, somehow those are never mentioned.

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 settimane fa)
in reply to Ian K. Rogers ikr?╭ರ_ಠ

Emma Goldman (and others) who were in exile because instead of organising with workers in America, they were busy deciding what the workers should be doing and going around blowing shit up.

Honestly unsurprising that someone as smug as you would like Emma Goldman's writing, she's as smug and pompus as any modern anarchist twitter acedemic. Tell me more about how you think workers have no autonomy and are lead like sheep by like 1 spoopy bad guy
::: spoiler spoiler

(Сталина 👻)


:::

in reply to bubblybubbles

Youre just trying to justify not voting for Harris! This is all your fault! No you dont understand, they had no choice but to discard literally every popular policy! Stupid traitorous left!

in reply to bubblybubbles

Anarchists both:
1. Oppose all authority.
2. Are also CIA agents.
Another solid piece of logic from the red fascists.
Questa voce è stata modificata (2 settimane fa)
in reply to king_comrade

Its because anarchism isn’t seen as a valid threat or opposition to the US empire and because of it’s ineffectiveness against capitalism, the CIA/FBI can use the promotion of anarchism to split the left, silence revolutionary activity, and attack Marxist-Leninism, an actual working ideology. People that claim to be anarchists who take it upon themselves either in real life or online to bash “tankies”, AES states, etc are doing the current state’s work for free.

red fascists


Deeply unserious term and proves my point lmao

in reply to umb_official

I appreciate your response mate, I read through what you linked and I'm disappointed by its lack of depth and missing historical analysis but I enjoyed how it was written. What's your take on Rojava today? Seems like a good, real life, counter point.
in reply to umb_official

That was a much better read, still very much digesting it so I wont share my opinion yet. Thanks for the link 😁 got any foundational books that better asserts the necessities of a Vanguard party? I suppose anarchism is an easy punching bag but I'm yet to be fully convinced of the political side of marxist-leninism despite being fully commie-pilled economically.
in reply to king_comrade

Yeah as we can see Rojava is a state and as far as states go imo doesn’t deserve undying support. My solidarity lies with the people of the region in their struggle against imperialism, not in the leadership’s ideals and use of authority.

For questions about the vanguard and why socialism is a better proven model both politically and economically I recommend State and Revolution by Lenin.

If you would be curious what decentralization looks like under a Socialist state, this video explains Vietnam’s recent government restructure to allow for more self-regional control in it progression towards communism and the “withering away” of the state.

in reply to bubblybubbles

If you think anarchists are controllwd by the cia and designed to split the left. Why, instead of playing to there cards, dont we work with them for the parts we agree on e.g. a revolution.

in reply to bubblybubbles

But I can say mean things to my government(that they ignore) so is very democratic. If I can VOTE(the most important thing) and if I can complain, it's democracy.
in reply to ZeroHora

If voting didn't work, you will blame it on corruption or unprecedented times like war or natural disaster.

Its either democracy or some external thing happened, never that voting didn't bring democracy.

And we haven't even touched the subject of legally making it difficult for minority and "unwanted" groups to vote. We also didn't talk about immigrants who live work and pay taxes but are not represented by voting

in reply to just_an_average_joe

My criticism is that the average person thinks that democracy and politics are just about voting. Voting is the bare minimum to engage in a democracy, only voting every 2-4 years achieves nothing.
in reply to ZeroHora

If I can VOTE(the most important thing)


Ancient Greek democracy begs to differ en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sortitio…

They argued that electoralism will result in rich amd artistocracy corrupting the whole process and getting into power and never letting it go, focusing on their own selfish interests

in reply to ThirdConsul

My comment is sarcastic.

They argued that electoralism will result in rich amd artistocracy corrupting the whole process and getting into power and never letting it go, focusing on their own selfish interests


Thank goodness that never happened!

in reply to bubblybubbles

In Italy we had a communist party in parliament but not anymore since Berlusconi (wich fortunately died After 4 terms)

I Hope every day we Will have a real left again in Italy, wich now Is like these other countries



Beware of Westerners Bearing Gifts




Terrorist Attacks on Black Sea Tankers Linked to Obstructing Ukraine Settlement – Russian MFA



in reply to king_comrade

Ha ha, I'm the unwell one? Why don't you just stick to your liberal instance or just go back to reddit?


West losing arms race to Russia – Lavrov


in reply to jankforlife

Yeah, ok, I'm sure you're winning the arms race when you're constantly getting your shit rocked by Ukraine.
in reply to sbbq

It's crazy the extent to which western liberals exist in a bubble of unreality when it comes to who is winning the war
Questa voce è stata modificata (2 settimane fa)
in reply to RiverRock

united24media.com/latest-news/…

Is this what "winning the arms race" looks like?

in reply to sbbq

So wild that this is such a widespread phenomenon and yet Ukraine can't seem to resist the onslaught of ... unarmored and unarmed soldiers who eat nothing but tree bark and have to scavenge for their weapons and ammo.

Ukraine must be in really bad shape if they can't defend against that, huh?

in reply to freagle

Who said they can't resist it? How long has it been since they lost ground?
in reply to sbbq

russiamatters.org/news/russia-…

This report from the Harvard Kennedy school indicates that Russian forces gained 258 square miles of Ukrainian territory between end of Oct and Thanksgiving, with half of those gains in the week running up to Thanksgiving. I can't find data for gains over the last 5 days, but the rate of Russian gains is increasing.

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in reply to freagle

Shocking that your Russian propaganda site favors the Russian military.
in reply to sbbq

According to this report from the Harvard Kennedy school


Yeah man sounds super russian

I think it's so awesome how you guys have to give yourselves processing disorders to avoid parsing information that threatens your curated slava ukrani reality

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 settimane fa)
in reply to sbbq

It's literally Harvard

The Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs is the hub of Harvard Kennedy School's research, teaching, and training in international security and diplomacy, environment and natural resource issues, and science and technology policy.


Like literally it's the race-science white supremacist nazi-friendly ivy league school of the USA.

The fact that you got triggered by their choice of domain name is on you, not on them.

in reply to sbbq

Holy shit.

Holy fucking shit.

Can you people get any more stupid?

Literally calling Harvard Russian propaganda.

I mean, my God. And you won't even learn anything from this. You'll just memory hole it. We were always at war with Eurasia.

in reply to sbbq

Shocking that your Russian propaganda site favors the Russian military.


quote and screenshot of the clownery, for posterity

in reply to sbbq

The Mariupol counteroffensive will retake the city any day now....
in reply to sbbq

Lol, you'll believe any source, so long as it's telling you what you want to hear. Remember three years ago, when you were all claiming that Russia was down to fighting with shovels? No, of course not, you memory holed that along with anything else that didn't happen in the last two weeks.
in reply to sbbq

I'm always amazed by liberals ability to convince themselves that, if they want things to be certain way, that means they are that way. "I want Ukraine to win, therefore it must be the case that it is easily defeating Russia, to not expect me to acknowledge any actual evidence"


in reply to jankforlife

Hot take:

The US has committed horrifying war crimes and crimes against humanity against Muslims and continues to do so.

And so does China

Its always fascinating to see the war between Nazis and Tankies fight over which imperial power is based, rather than demonstrating a working frontal lobe and damning both for their crimes.

in reply to HazardousBanjo

And so does China


The only "evidence" of this comes from the empire and is demonstrably false

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in reply to hunnybubny

Please explain for the class what imperialism is in your view and how China fits that.
in reply to Cowbee [he/they]

Skip to the nameca...

Oh wait. We are at the belittling flowchart. I do not know this one yet.

Let me grab popcorn.

in reply to hunnybubny

Not only has China been an imperialist regional super power for the majority of its lo g history, but simply ask Taiwan, the Uyghurs, Tibet, Hong Kong, Vietnam or any of the various countries China is practicing neocolonialism in in Africa or Island nations
in reply to HazardousBanjo

This is fanfiction. China isn't practicing neocolonialism in Africa, it's engaging in south-south trade that is actually helping African countries escape the trappings of western imperialism. Taiwan was invaded by the KMT when they lost the war, and took over the island. The Xinjiang and Tibet are both doing well and support the PRC, and Hong Kong is gradually doing better now that they aren't under British colonial rule. Vietnam is a strong trade partner with China.
in reply to jankforlife

Idk man, this page has over 401 citations from various sources.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Persecut…

Edit: This also has a lot of citations ns from various sources too.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islamoph…

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 settimane fa)
in reply to HazardousBanjo

Someone once put together a book titled, "One Hundred Authors Against Einstein." Einstein dismissed the book with the quip, "Why one hundred? If I were really wrong, they'd only need one."
in reply to OBJECTION!

Sounds like a colossal reach at best, and pathetic cope at worst.

You understand the colossal differences between multiple independent journalists researching and reporting on the same topic, and a large organized group of pseudointellectuals trying to disprove a single person based on vibes alone, right?

You seem to be very desperately, and pathetically holding onto a form of fallacy of composition:

practicalpie.com/fallacy-of-co…

in reply to HazardousBanjo

No, I'm simply calling out a lazy gish gallop. It's the same in both cases.

How many sources are listed on the Wikipedia page for Christianity? If I accept your logic as valid, it seems I'll have to convert.

in reply to HazardousBanjo

The 400 citations in question:

[1] Victims of Communism Memorial Association

[2] Burger Eagle Freedom Institute

[3] China Freedom NGO (Washington DC)

[4-399] Western State Television Station (retrieved in 2020)

[400] Literally the CIA

The article editors in question:

u/USA_STEM_Edgelord_USA_1990

u/TotallyNotAFed69

u/WhiteCisManInHis30s

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 settimane fa)
in reply to Socialism_Everyday

Good job outing yourself as someone who can only read up to 3 lines before they have to vomit bullshit onto the internet.
in reply to jankforlife

Wikipedia is one of the most reliable sources of public information, most especially do to the international collaboration efforts on it.

You can't just dismiss a source on the basis that you don't like it. You need to provide actual evidence that the source is untrustworthy

in reply to HazardousBanjo

Wikipedia is one of the most reliable sources of public information


Yeah if you're looking up wood joints and math theorems. Not if you're trying to learn anything about politics or history that ties into the interests of the systems and institutions that filter the media allowed as valid citations.

You need to provide actual evidence that the source is untrustworthy


Do they ban the New York Times because they lied the country into every war it's been in since McKinley?

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 settimane fa)


Sss


Hhh
Questa voce è stata modificata (2 settimane fa)


Gift Ideas for Privacy People


Happy winter and merry festivities!

Last year I made a post outlining many gift ideas for privacy enthusiasts. I'm back this year with an updated list. Privacy enthusiasts, by nature, are sometimes difficult to buy gifts for. This list is here to make it easier for you to come up with ideas, even if you don't directly gift what's on the list. I've decided to make a rule this year: only physical items. You can't put a subscription under the tree.

3D printers


3D printers can turn plastic into any shape you want. While a lot of 3D printers include proprietary privacy-invasive software, there are open-source options such as RepRap. The privacy benefit of these comes in the form of homemade firearms. Traditional firearms include many elements to trace the ammunition back to the firearm, but homemade firearms (such as ones made using a 3D printer) exclude these. The reliability of the firearm depends on the quality of the 3D printer, but the designs are getting easier and easier to make.

Accessories


Especially for phones, there are a few of privacy accessories that are simple but effective.
- Faraday bags
- Lens covers (which some phone cases include)
- Microphone blockers (which is more effective as a recording jammer)
- Monitor filters (better known as privacy screen protectors)

Anonymous dress


Anonymous dress is clothing that conceals your identity in public. Obtaining these items of clothing is a chore, so it's always easiest when it is gifted by somebody else. Black, unthemed clothing does the best job of protecting privacy. The holy grail of anonymous dress is:
- A balaclava to hide your face.
- A baseball cap to further hide your face, although a sun hat does a better job.
- A hooded down jacket to hide body shape and skin color. There are significantly long down jackets that extend below the knees that can somewhat conceal your gait too. Last year I included jackets that spoof AI recognition or blind infrared cameras, but those are very difficult to find and can be very identifying.
- Elevator shoes to conceal your height.
- Sunglasses to hide your eyes. Reflectacles do the best job of this.
- Touchscreen gloves to prevent fingerprints and still be able to use touchscreens. Normal gloves work when paired with a capacitive stylus.
- An umbrella to hide your clothing from surveillance cameras.

Ciphers


Not all encryption is digital. Traditionally, complex codes and ciphers were created to conceal messages. Hardware devices like the enigma machine were used to further aide the process. Modern versions of those devices, as well as related items such as invisible ink are still around and can be a fun project.

Computers


Laptops, desktops, and servers are all useful devices for accessing digital services privately. While there is no best choice, some lists can help shine some light on which hardware is considered secure:
- PrivSec.dev Laptop Hardware Security
- Qubes OS Hardware Compatibility List

Concealment devices


Concealment devices are things that look like ordinary objects, but in some way or another, have a hidden compartment used for storage. These are excellent ways to hide sensitive items such as cash, backup security tokens, and more. These are excellent gifts if you're giving one-on-one rather than at a party.

Cryptocurrency wallets


Cryptocurrency wallets are devices used to securely store (the keys for) cryptocurrency such as the private cryptocurrency Monero. The two best options are:
- Ledger
- Trezor

Dumb tech


Dumb tech is the opposite of smart tech. It doesn't connect to every device in your house. It doesn't broadcast that data to a corporation. It doesn't get exposed in a data breach. It doesn't get hacked. It doesn't go down when the internet goes offline. Things like dumb TVs or dumb cars are becoming harder to find but more and more valuable for privacy.

Mail


Mail is almost always sensitive. For that reason, it's useful to protect the contents by using security envelopes. For delivering packages privately, it's also useful to have a label printer capable of printing shipping labels.

Money


Banks and payment service providers are almost always incredibly privacy invasive and offer poor security. While some of these issues can be mitigated with services like Privacy, it doesn't fix the underlying issue. Anonymous payments not only protect your privacy, but protect your money too, and having the ability to make payments like these is what allows privacy to further grow. Anonymous payment methods include:
- Cash
- Gift cards (when purchased with cash and adequate anonymous dress)
- Monero (which is physical when paired with a cryptocurrency wallet)
- Stored-value card (when purchased with cash and adequate anonymous dress)

Optical discs


Optical discs are a physical way to store movies, shows, music, games, and more. The idea is that, instead of paying a subscription and streaming content, you can pay a one-time fee and get the full quality media offline. This is also excellent for ripping to create a digital archive to stream from your own servers for free.

Paper


Your most sensitive information is put at risk the moment it becomes digitized, so pen and paper isn't so bad for some uses:
- Earlier this year, Amazon removed the option to download and transfer ebooks. It's becoming increasingly harder to "own" an ebook, especially without using privacy-invasive software. For that reason, books are much better for privacy.
- Calendar apps are convenient for reminders, but they often sync to cloud services or include telemetry. Physical calendars are a good way to have peace of mind knowing that your personal events are away from prying eyes and can be erased without a trace.
- Notebooks are also useful for the same reasons as books. There are also numerous benefits to writing things down instead of typing them.

Paper shredders


Paper shredders destroy sensitive documents to prevent obtaining sensitive information by digging through landfills. However, shredded documents can be recovered using automated software. The paper shredder industry hasn't discovered fire yet, it seems.

Power cables


Most cables carry both power and data. However, that can be exploited by cleverly designing fake power stations that discreetly steal data when plugged into devices. Some cables only deliver power, without delivering data. These are incredibly useful for protecting vulnerable devices in public settings.

Printers


Printers suck. So much so that not even Framework wanted to make one. Nevertheless, a new printer called Open Printer is in the works. Until it's finished, the best option is to gift a printer that allows printing over a wired connection.

Promotional merchandise


There is no shortage of promotional merchandise for privacy. Some of my favorites include:
- Electronic Frontier Foundation
- Naomi Brockwell TV
- Privacy Guides

I also recently found products like this that serve a functional benefit of telling people you don't want to be recorded without explicitly talking to them.

Rayhunter


Rayhunter is a device created by the Electronic Frontier Foundation to detect Stingray attacks. It can be installed on supported devices, which are great gifts for high threat model people.

Safes


Safes are a secure box to store sensitive items. I shouldn't need to explain why this is a good idea.

Security seals


Security seals are a special type of sticker that makes it very clear if the seal has ever been broken. This is useful to place on the case of computers or other containers that shouldn't be opened often.

Security tokens


Security tokens are hardware devices used to authenticate accounts at a hardware level. When setup correctly, they are one of the most secure way to login. The most popular open source options are:
- Nitrokey
- OnlyKey
- SoloKeys

Smartphones


GrapheneOS is the most private and secure operating system available. They recently announced that they are partnering with an OEM to manufacture devices designed for GrapheneOS. However, until that device is made available, Google Pixels are still the only device GrapheneOS can be installed on.

USB flash drives


USB flash drives are the unsung heroes for so many areas of privacy. Whether it be installing operating systems such as Qubes OS and Tails, or creating offline Seedvault backups for GrapheneOS, USB flash drives have a multitude of uses. Just remember: it's better to have many, smaller USB flash drives than one, large USB flash drive.

Wi-Fi hotspots


Wi-Fi hotspots are (for privacy use-cases) hardware devices that allow connecting devices to the cellular network in a much more private way. The best one that supports an excellent privacy organization is the Calyx Internet Membership.

Wired headphones


Wired headphones not only provide higher quality audio output, but they also avoid the history of security issues with Bluetooth and the surveillance capitalism that comes with Bluetooth Low Energy beacons. Which type of wired headphones you gift depends on a lot of factors, but one that pairs nicely with Google Pixels are the Pixel USB-C earbuds sold by Google themselves.

Wireless routers


Wireless routers often leak everything sent through them. For that reason, custom software such as OpenWrt was designed to replace the privacy invasive software preinstalled on routers. OpenWrt also created their own router called the OpenWrt One. Earlier this year, they announced that they would be creating a new router called the OpenWrt Two. It hasn't come out yet, but maybe it will be on the list next year.

Conclusion


There is no shortage of privacy tech. The same technology that empowers privacy is the thin veil slowing down the world from its dystopian target. Giving the gift of privacy means giving the gift of a better future for those of us fighting on the front lines.

Lack-of-AI notice


I’ve been burned before, so I always try to mention that none of my content is AI generated. It isn’t even AI assisted. Just because something is comprehensive and well-structured does not make it AI generated. Every word I write is my own. Thank you for your understanding.


Gift ideas for a privacy enthusiast


Happy Christmas and Merry Hanuka!

If you're struggling to find something to buy your privacy enthusiast friend for the holidays, I have some gift ideas. As with any gift, not everyone will need these, but it can give you a good idea of what to look for. Feel free to submit your own suggestions, as well!

No affiliate links, no sponsors, no favorites. All prices are in USD. If a price is something like "$X.99" or "$X.49" or "$X39" I have rounded it up by one digit.


Subscriptions


Some privacy tools come at a cost, and not all open source software can be used for free!


Addy.io


Addy.io is an email aliasing service.

Pricing

Lite: $1 / month

Pro: $3 / month


Bitwarden


Bitwarden is a cloud-synced password manager.

Pricing

Personal Premium: $10 / year

Personal Families: $40 / year

Business Teams: $48 / user / year

Business Enterprise: $72 / user / year


Calyx Institute Internet Membership


The Calyx Institute Internet Membership provides you with a privacy respecting cellular hotspot.

Pricing

Contributor Yearly: $500 / year for first year, $400 / year thereafter

Contributor Quarterly: $150 / 3 months

Contributor Plus: $600 / year for first year, $500 / year thereafter

Sustainer Yearly: $750 / year for first year, $500 / year thereafter

Sustainer Quarterly: $175 / 3 months


JMP


JMP is an open source phone number provider.

Pricing

Plan (USD): $5 / month + additional usage costs


Mullvad VPN


Mullvad VPN is a virtual private network.

Pricing

1 month: $5.28 / month

Physical vouchers are also available through resellers.


MySudo (PROPRIETARY)


MySudo is a proprietary aliasing software. I could not find any open source option for aliasing phone numbers, especially this cheap.

Pricing

SudoGo: $1 / month or $10 / year

SudoPro: $5 / month or $50 / year

SudoMax: $15 / month or $150 / year


Privacy.com (PROPRIETARY)


Privacy.com is a proprietary financial transaction masking and aliasing tool. There are other options such as Revolut (open source), but Privacy.com seems to be the one that works best in the United States. Consider your threat model while using these tools.

Pricing

Plus: $5 / month

Pro: $10 / month

Premium: $25 / month


Proton


Proton is a software suite that includes email, VPN, cloud storage, password manager, calendar, and wallet. Their pricing is extremely convoluted and difficult to navigate.

Pricing

Proton Unlimited 1 month: $13 / month

Proton Unlimited 12 months: $10 / month

Proton Duo: $15 / month

Proton Family: $24 / month

Mail Plus 1 month: $5 / month

Mail Plus 12 months: $4 / month

Drive Plus Monthly: $5 / month

Drive Plus Yearly: $4 / month

Proton VPN Plus 1-month plan: $10 / month

Proton VPN Plus 1-year plan: $5 / month

Proton VPN Plus 2-year plan: $4.50 / month

Pass Plus Monthly: $5 / month

Pass Plus Yearly: $3 / month

Proton Business Suite Monthly: $15 / user / month

Proton Business Suite Yearly: $13 / user / month

Mail Essentials Monthly: $8 / user / month

Mail Essentials Yearly: $7 / user / month

Mail Professional Monthly: $11 / user / month

Mail Professional Yearly: $10 / user / month

VPN Essentials Monthly: $9 / user / month

VPN Essentials Yearly: $7 / user / month

VPN Professional Monthly: $12 / user / month

VPN Professional Yearly: $10 / user / month

Pass Essentials Monthly: $5 / user / month

Pass Essentials Yearly: $2 / user / month

Pass Professional Monthly: $7 / user / month

Pass Professional Yearly: $3 / user / month

Drive Professional Monthly: $10 / user / month

Drive Professional Yearly: $6 / user / month


Hardware


Not everything is digital. Hardware is the foundation for privacy, after all!


Dumb Television


Smart TVs are so last century... and this century... and the next century... Enjoy the luxury of buying a "dumb TV" while it lasts, because your TV doesn't need to spy on you! There's no best option here. You might need to purchase a large monitor instead of a TV.


Google Pixel


Google Pixel phones are one of the most secure devices, especially when you run a security/privacy focused custom Android distribution such as GrapheneOS. Other phones exist for this category, but the Google Pixel is a good baseline. Prices here are based on what are actively being sold on Google's own website.

Some things to look out for when installing a custom Android distribution:

  • Make sure the custom Android distribution you want to install supports being installed on the device you get. GrapheneOS, for example, only supports Google devices.
  • Make sure the device you purchase allows unlocking the bootloader.
  • Make sure the custom Android distribution you want to install supports locking the bootloader after installation for the device you get. Some devices do not allow relocking the bootloader, and in some cases this can brick the device. Google Pixels generally have the best support for this.
  • Make sure the device you purchase is carrier unlocked or the carrier allows OEM unlocking/bootloader unlocking. Some carriers (most notoriously Verizon) will disable this functionality to maintain a monopoly and will refuse to lift the restriction. Second hand sellers are often unaware of this and will mistakenly list the device as "carrier unlocked" when it is in fact not.

Pricing

Refurbished Pixel 6 128GB: $340

Refurbished Pixel 6 256GB: $390

Refurbished Pixel 6 Pro 128GB: $540

Refurbished Pixel 6a: $250

Refurbished Pixel 7 128GB: $430

Refurbished Pixel 7 256GB: $480

Refurbished Pixel 7 Pro 128GB: $630

Refurbished Pixel 7 Pro 256GB: $680

Refurbished Pixel 7 Pro 512GB: $780

Pixel 7a: $500

Pixel 8 128GB: $700

Pixel 8 256GB: $760

Pixel 8 Pro 128GB: $1,000

Pixel 8 Pro 256GB: $1,060

Pixel 8 Pro 512GB: $1,180

Pixel 8 Pro 1TB: $1,400

Pixel 8a 128GB: $400

Pixel 8a 256GB: $460

Pixel 9 128GB: $650

Pixel 9 256GB: $750

Pixel 9 Pro 128GB: $850

Pixel 9 Pro 256GB: $950

Pixel 9 Pro 512GB: $1,070

Pixel 9 Pro 1TB: $1,300

Pixel 9 Pro XL 128GB: $950

Pixel 9 Pro XL 256GB: $1,050

Pixel 9 Pro XL 512GB: $1,170

Pixel 9 Pro XL 1TB: $1,400

Pixel 9 Pro Fold 256GB: $1,500

Pixel 9 Pro Fold 512GB: $1,620


OpenWrt One


OpenWrt One is the first router designed specifically to run OpenWrt. It's not the only supported device, and there are other open source router firmware projects, but this is a good out-of-the-box choice.

Pricing

This can currently only be purchased from unofficial resellers for $90.


Qubes OS certified hardware


Qubes OS is likely the most hardened Linux distro available. They have their own list of certified hardware that comes with Qubes OS preinstalled. Those devices aren't the only ones capable of running Qubes OS. You can also check out the Hardware compatibility list and Community-recommended computers. These computers can run more than just Qubes OS, but if it's good enough to be certified by them, it will likely run anything else just as securely!

Pricing

NitroPad V56: Lowest $1,565.58

NovaCustom V56 Series 16.0 inch coreboot laptop: Lowest $1,256.40

NitroPC Pro 2: Lowest $1,614.73

Star Labs StarBook: Lowest $863.00

NitroPC Pro: Lowest $1,614.91

NovaCustom NV41 Series Lowest $930.60

Dasharo FidelisGuard Z690: Lowest $994.28

NitroPad T430: Lowest $737.79

NitroPad X230: Lowest $737.79

Insurgo PrivacyBeast X230: $1,341.46


Raspberry Pi


Raspberry Pis are miniature computers that are very useful for setting up proxy servers.

Pricing

There's endless configurations, but the most recent Raspberry Pi model is the Raspberry Pi 5. There are multiple resellers of this, and the cheapest one is the $50 Raspberry Pi 5 2GB


Self-hosting hardware


A privacy enthusiast's best tool is being able to self-host certain things. There is no single device to self-host, but some ideas are:

  • A server rack for general self-hosting
  • A powerful GPU for self-hosting AI
  • A self-hosted home automation kit

Hardware Accessories


What is a piece of hardware without a few accessories? Modularity is always a benefit of modern technology.


Camera covers


From laptops to webcams to phones, cameras are everywhere. If you don't fully trust the device you use and want some peace of mind, having an accessory to obscure the lenses of your cameras is a good thing to have. There are lots of options here depending on which camera you want to cover. Some phone cases even offer a sliding camera cover.


CD/DVD/Blue-ray drives


Some CD/DVD/Blue-ray drives can allow you to preserve the physical DVDs that you have bought and paid for, that may soon be end-of-life. These devices allow you to read the contents of the disk, and save a digital copy of it for archival purposes. There is no best-option here, so look around to find one that fits.


Data storage devices


Data storage devices are useful for many things such as backups, installing operating systems, booting live operating systems, data transfer, and more. The market here is huge and convoluted, so learn about different types of drives, different connectors, different connector versions (such as USB), etc. before making an educated decision.


Hardware security keys


Hardware security keys allow your accounts to be locked with a physical form of multi-factor authentication. Many organizations sell these, and some of them even provide open source hardware/software. Here are a few common brands:


Microphone blocker


Microphone blockers come in all shapes and sizes, but they all serve the same function: making sure your microphone is not able to hear anything. The effectiveness of some of these are debatable, given that most phones have multiple microphones, but it can be a fun gift nonetheless.


Privacy screen protector


Privacy screen protectors are films that you apply over your screens to restrict viewing angles. This means that if someone were to look at your phone while standing next to you, they likely wouldn't be able to see what you're doing. These screen protectors are also available for laptops, smart watches, and other screens.

When buying these, make sure of the following:
- The screen protector supports fingerprint unlock for relevant devices.
- The screen protector actually works well.
- The screen protector will actually protect the device as a screen protector.
- The screen protector fits correctly for the device you're getting.
- The cameras will still work after the screen protector is applied to relevant devices.


Wired headphones


Bluetooth can pose a privacy risk, and that is especially true when you need to play sensitive audio. One time I was in a hallway with my Bluetooth earbuds in, connected to my phone but not playing anything, when suddenly I heard a grainy piano song. My phone wasn't playing anything, and eventually the music just cut out. To this day I have no idea how it happened, but it does mean you should be careful with wireless headphones.

Wires can be annoying, but being able to fully turn off Bluetooth can give you peace of mind knowing that your audio stays inside the wire. Having high quality wired headphones can be a blessing, and even provide a better listening experience. It's worth looking at many brands, but Google still sells USB-C wired earphones and headphones from a few different brands. Here are a few:

Google Pixel USB-C™ earbuds: $30

AIAIAI Pipe 2.0 USB-C Earphones: $40

AIAIAI Tracks 2.0 Headphones: $60


Currency


Anonymous payments are growing more and more difficult, so if you aren't sure what to buy, these are well appreciated options.


Cash


Cash is one of the most anonymous methods of payment, and can be a privacy enthusiast's gold. Multiple small bills ($1, $5, etc.) are appreciated more than a few large bills ($20, $50, etc.) because many places do not accept cash in large bills. You can also gift some rare or interesting cash, such as $2 bills, half dollars, silver dollars, dollar coins, etc.


Cryptocurrency


Getting cryptocurrency, especially anonymously, can be a long and painful process. If you are comfortable setting it up, this is a huge time saver and a great gift. Monero is generally considered the most private cryptocurrency, so that's a better choice than other cryptocurrencies. However, Bitcoin is the most popular and most widely accepted, even though it isn't very private. Try to obtain these through anonymous means such as using cash at cryptocurrency ATMs that may be in your city.


Prepaid cards


There's usually no option to pay in cash online, but there are ways around this. If you buy gift cards or prepaid VISA cards with cash, it can be almost as anonymous as cash itself. Some good choices may include:

  • Amazon Gift Cards: Amazon is very hard to use privately, but this can help significantly.
  • Google Play Gift Cards: Google Play is one of the most secure ways of installing apps, but not all of them are free. Google Play gift cards can allow you to pay for apps anonymously, so you can maintain your security.
  • Visa Prepaid Card: This is a catch-all solution for when there's no specific gift card available.

Physical Items


As with hardware, not everything needs to be digital. There are plenty of items that are cheaper and good for almost anyone.


Books


eBooks are a marvel, but they come with complications. Sometimes the formatting isn't right, sometimes you can't get them anonymously, and you need a device to even view it. If the digital apocalypse ever happens, the only way to access information will be through books. No ads, no eye strain. A good privacy related book you could buy is Michael Bazzell's Extreme Privacy: What It Takes to Disappear


Calendar


Digital calendars can be convenient, but not always safe. Anything digital can risk being remotely accessed or spied on. Having a physical calendar means you can have the benefits of a calendar, without the need for a digital device. Plus, it comes with pictures that you get to pick.


DVDs


Best paired with a DVD ripper, having physical copies of movies and games means no company can take it away from you with the push of a button. You have no ads, use no internet, no subscriptions, and have full quality.


Faraday bags


Faraday bags and pouches are containers for your devices that block all incoming and outgoing signals. That means anything that goes inside of it will have no Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, cellular, NFC, etc. This is useful if you want to make sure your device isn't phoning home. This is an item that you may want to spend extra on, because lower quality ones can still leak radio signals.


Merchandise


Privacy themed merchandise can be a good way to show that you care about privacy and to help spread it. You can find privacy merch anywhere, but NBTV (a privacy YouTuber) has a good selection of products: shop.nbtv.media/en-usd/

Monerochan my beloved


Notebooks


Having everything in a digital notes app can be nice or convenient, but I much prefer to write a lot of things down in a physical notebook. From diaries to sketches, it's nice to take a break from your digital life to jot down some ideas, privately.


Paper shredder


When you have sensitive documents that you need discarded, one of the best ways is a paper shredder. If you buy one of these, the best ones are ones that dice the paper or burn it entirely. Even those small squares can be pieced together again.


Safes and lockboxes


Speaking of sensitive documents, where do you store those? A good place to store sensitive documents is in a safe or a lockbox. From government documents to your best ideas, they deserve to stay (in a) safe. It's good to make sure you buy a fireproof safe, just in case Fahrenheit 451 becomes more of a reality.


Surveillance camera jackets


As the looming threat of widespread AI surveillance comes closer, defenses against them grow stronger. Generally, you have two options:

These can be expensive and hard to find, but the best way to fight surveillance.


Ending notes


Thank you all for reading this! I hope it helps you find a gift for a privacy enthusiast you can't think of a gift idea for. You don't have to buy the exact things listed here, but it gives you a general outline with ideas. I know there are some great gift ideas I missed here, so please leave them in the comments to help out others!

Merry Christmas, Happy Hanuka, and have a nice day!

- The 8232 Project


Questa voce è stata modificata (2 settimane fa)
in reply to RamSwamson

Zenni now has a lens you can order with their glasses. They do both prescription and non prescription.
in reply to ScoffingLizard

I was checking those out but zenni does state in a way their tech is not perfect. I like that you can add that feature to any of their frames but then again not all frames may be the most suitable for every angle. Either way zenni isn't associated with luxxotica so they may still get my business.



Report: Dublin to drop motion to remove former Israeli president's name from city park


The Dublin city council is expected to withdraw a proposal to remove the name of a former Israeli president from a local city park, Raidió Teilifís Éireann reported.

According to Ireland's National Television and Radio Broadcaster, Dublin Mayor Ray McAdam said the motion to rename Herzog Park didn't contain enough information for an "informed decision," adding that, "there is not a procedure" in place to complete it.

McAdam reportedly added that the motion will be withdrawn due to legal "question marks," adding that he personally didn't think it was "appropriate or right to look to rename Herzog Park."

The contenders for a new name for the park included "Free Palestine Park," "Palestine Park" and "Gaza Park."

https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/2025-11-30/ty-article-live/gaza-death-toll-crosses-70-000-since-israel-hamas-war-began-gaza-health-ministry-says/0000019a-d1f9-db2f-afdf-f7f9bab10000?liveBlogItemId=1989094541#1989094541



NixOS 25.11 released | Blog | Nix & NixOS


in reply to Atemu

I'm relatively new to nixOS. Do you wait for some weeks before switching to the new release, or do you switch immediately?
in reply to myrmidex

Waiting some weeks for uncaught bugs to be ironed out might be advisable if you still have limited debugging capabilities.

Otherwise, you can always nixos-rebuild build-vm using the new release channel and see whether it breaks anything you depend on.
My experience is that it probably won't. My past few years of updating my server from one stable release to the next were, in one word, boring. Some renames, deprecations etc. with clear errors/warnings to fix at eval time but nothing that actually broke once it was built and deployed.

in reply to myrmidex

I'd give it at least a few days. Updates haven't broken anything major for me before, but have had to troubleshoot some annoying issues in my DE and having others posting about the same issue does make it easier.


The Trump administration keeps cancelling key economic reports - people are concerned


#USA


Mega-thread of Palestine, climate, and labor protests around the globe - Nov. 30


Mega-thread of Palestine, climate, and labor protests around the globe - Nov. 30

from MiniMia (who was arrested, need to find out more about that.)

syzito.xyz/@fkamiah17/11563734…

#FreePalestine
#Palestine #LaborSolidarity #EndFossilFuels #news #politics #USpol #UKSpol #ClimateAction

@palestine

@fkamiah17



Well, there's been a hella lot of protest action around the globe while I was getting arrested, so here goes ...

As part of the We Ain't Buying It campaign, activist carolers picketed branches of Home Depot in protest at their cooperation with ICE.

1/

#SolidarityIsBeautiful #GlobaliseTheIntifada #USPolitics #FuckICE




Mega-thread of Palestine, climate, and labor protests around the globe - Nov. 30


Mega-thread of Palestine, climate, and labor protests around the globe - Nov. 30

from MiniMia (who was arrested, need to find out more about that.)

syzito.xyz/@fkamiah17/11563734…

#FreePalestine
#Palestine #LaborSolidarity #EndFossilFuels #news #politics #USpol #UKSpol #ClimateAction

@palestine

@fkamiah17



Well, there's been a hella lot of protest action around the globe while I was getting arrested, so here goes ...

As part of the We Ain't Buying It campaign, activist carolers picketed branches of Home Depot in protest at their cooperation with ICE.

1/

#SolidarityIsBeautiful #GlobaliseTheIntifada #USPolitics #FuckICE



in reply to geneva_convenience

Isn't that what countries are supposed to do? Prioritizing taking care of their own population first? Does that make me sound like a nazi? I dont think so...

Also, the nazis werent really into what youre talking about anyway, youre just making stuff up..

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 settimane fa)



Fucked up with no one to blame but myself.


cross-posted from: aussie.zone/post/27191517

I spun up nextcloud to replace onedrive about a year ago. Everything was going well so I chose not to renew my onedrive subscription, this was exactly 6 months ago, I'd assume.

I got an email a few days ago reminding me that they would delete my data. I ignored it because obviously I had moved my data to nextcloud. not gonna trick me Mi¢ro$oft.

But yesterday I decided to have a quick look though and it turns out I didn't copy over everything, and certanly not my 5 years of camera roll backups.

I started a sync of everything last night and woke up in the morning to find that it had stopped at about 10gb out of 80gb. And now onedrive won't connect and if I try to log in to onedrive with that account via the web it just kicks me back to the microsoft portal.

I'm 99.5% sure there is nothing to be done and I'm not an overly sentimental person so if they are lost it won't break me. I have many important photos backed up in immich but just not everything.

But I just needed to ask in case someone knows where to find the M spot I can touch for magic file recovery.


Edit: turns out you can just pay them more money and they still had my stuff. thank you for joining me on the shortest support ticket of all time

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 settimane fa)



What distro do you install on other's computers?


What distros do you install on your mom's, sister's, buddy's, etc machines?

My go-to has usually been Mint, but I wonder if there is a better set and forget, easily understood distro to install on the computers of those who will rely on you for support.

atomic distros would probably be a good option, but it seems that same disk dual boot is a no no, and that can be a deal breaker.

I'm thinlink QoL, for me, that is.

in reply to elucubra

400+ installs in the past four years - discarded/donated business laptops that get fixed, cleaned, upgraded with cheapest SSDs and donated to predominantly tech illiterate users.

99% is ubuntu lts + ansible playbook that removes snap, disables A TON of update naggings, installs flatpak, coupla apps and systemd timer to autoupdate all flatpaks. this is the only thing that has low support requests, everything else we tried (mint, debian, fedora) has a disproportionately higher support request frequency (reinstalls, wifi, fix this, remove that, etc).

I totally could adapt debian to be as good or even better (fedora with the bi-annual versions is right out), but one of the important caveats is the user being able to install it with minimum hassle if needed and that just would not be doable.

I'd urge everyone ITT to look at the thing through the user's eyes and not get lost in "no true scottsman" fallacies. the goal is to convert a user over, not to demonstrate how cool you are. once they know what's what, you can sell them on fedora and atomic and whatnot, but not as a first step.

I don't use ubuntu, have it on none of my stuff, and wouldn't go out with you if you do. but it's presently the only option for beginners for use on laptops that has a semblance of a modern desktop OS.

in reply to glitching

I'm not looking for a date, but this made me curious. Would you elaborate?

I don't use Ubuntu and wouldn't go out with you if you do