Venezuela calls Trump airspace closure warning 'colonialist threat'
Venezuela has accused Donald Trump of making a "colonialist threat" after he said the airspace around the country should be considered closed.
The country's foreign ministry called Trump's comments "another extravagant, illegal and unjustified aggression against the Venezuelan people".
The US does not legally have the authority to close another country's airspace, but Trump's online post could lead to travel uncertainty and deter airlines from operating there.
Venezuela calls Trump airspace closure warning 'colonialist threat'
The US says it is fighting drugs smuggling, but Venezuela says Donald Trump's aim is to topple President Nicolás Maduro.Aoife Walsh (BBC News)
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As Epstein files release looms, questions abound on what happens next: ‘Possibilities are endless’
As Epstein files release looms, questions abound on what happens next: ‘Possibilities are endless’
People implicated in the late sex offender’s crimes could face criminal charges or, at the least, social ostracismVictoria Bekiempis (The Guardian)
How to propperly Ansible and selfhost without burning out?
First my specific questions, down below more info:
- how do you use ansible? Is there a good source for roles or playbooks to set up services? I feel like ansible is 30% more headache right now during config.
- how do you deal with motivation loss?
- how do you deal with the overwhelming amount of choices and information and disciplines (networking, storage, VMS, Linux..) that comes with selfhosting?
- how do you find the sweetspot between ease of use, ease of set up, security, redundancy? I feel like I am maybe too pranaoid to loose my data again (dropped a hard drive many years back, I lost all of my projects)
- maybe overall, how do you manage your perfectionism?
Thanks a lot! I hope you have some insights for me.
More info
Soo I have a motivational push to work on my server every few months for a few weeks or months. I always make progress and I feel like I landed on a good solution by now. Its the third time I redid my setup, everytime I got closet to what feels like the perfect setup for me.
I have a vps for headscale, a home server with proxmox for the rest.
Last push I switched from manually configuring and documenting to ansible.
I like ansible, but its also a pain and not as fast to set up my server as just installing it and fiddeling around manually until it works.
My problem is:
I want to do it right, so my server is robut with enough redundancy to move all my cloud stuff to it.
But I am still kind of a noob and still learning and figuring things out.
My fear is, that if i don't document well or not use ansible, I will be hating my life once my server dies and I have to restore my data and also set um my services again in a few years.
So ansible seems like the only valid choice here, together with proxmox to be as flexible and future proof.
But I am burnt out again and lost Motivation even though I am close to my first goals and running services.
Thank you for reading 😀
It's great to give your brain daily workouts on the ins and outs of systems, but if you're feeling burnt out, you're doing that too much, probably, and my guess is, it's coming in at moments when you were trying to solve some other, more interesting/relevant problem.
It comes down to whether you're trying to self-host, or trying to learn Linux at a level where you could get a job doing it. Often it's a bit of both, so don't feel like you need to make that decision right now.
But my advice: whatever you're hosting, use their recommended easy way to host it. In most cases, this means running a container. In most cases, Docker. If you can wrap your head around using docker compose files, your practical problems are reduced by an insane amount, and idiocy at the developer level becomes your only concern. For instance, I used to run Tandoor, but the dev pushed changes into their "stable" docker container that failed to properly migrate my data, and the whole thing cacked. But that wasn't a system problem on my end, it was a case of a dev who was more interested in playing around with data than with providing a stable app.
So, if you take this approach, which I absolutely do recommend, the one thing you need to be sure of is that you have a good backup strategy, and that you backup before you do any pulls of new images. Docker allows you to select old versions so if you don't like changes that get pushed on something, likely you can just rebuild the old version, but the changes might mess with your database migrations, so you need those backups. Other than that, you cannot go wrong with Docker, if you just want the damn thing to work, rather than get daily aggravating lessons in esoteric systems problems which are above your paygrade.
ZaneOps is a great self hosted PaaS alternative to Vercel, Netlify, GitHub Pages
I’ve spent a lot of time recently trying to find a self hosted PaaS to replace my usage of Vercel to host a couple of static websites. I use 11ty and Astro as Static Site Generators and I love the functionality of pushing to a git repo to update my site, and being able to create preview versions using pull requests.
If you haven’t used a PaaS before and are wondering what they’re used for, two of the biggest reasons people use them for are basically as Web GUIs to deploy OCI containers from a marketplace, think similar to the UnRAID App Store, and as hosting environments for code that’s built and deployed directly from the contents of a git repository like static sites or other apps. In my case, I use them to deploy static sites that I either build myself using SSGs, or for example the popular Digital Garden plugin for ObsidianMD.
The defacto leader in this space seems to be Coolify. And while it is fairly robust with a nice feature set, I couldn’t get past the dreadful UI. I’ve never encountered software that goes so far out of its way to hide information from you. It technically has a “dashboard”, but that only consists of a top level list of “Projects” with absolutely zero information about them or their current status Unless you drill down through the options all the way to individual services.
Nixopus appears to have a much more functional UI, but the focus of this one for the time being seems centered around spinning up docker containers of existing services. It has the functionality to deploy your own but that isn’t as fleshed out at this time.
ZaneOps is a little light on extra features, but has the most functional and informational UI of the three. I can see the status of all my deployed services at a glance, and its very lightweight.
Welcome
ZaneOps is a self-hosted, open source platform as a service for hosting static sites, web apps, databases, CRONS, Workers using docker swarm as the engine.ZaneOps documentation
I am new to this space, but I think dokploy is another service of this kind: dokploy.com/
Has anyone experience with it?
‘We had to swim to safety. I didn’t think we would make it out alive’: the people fleeing climate breakdown – in pictures
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RRF Caserta. Rassegna stampa del 06 12 25 a cura di Giuseppe Landolfi
Gaza death toll surpasses 70,000 as Israel keeps up attacks despite truce
Gaza death toll surpasses 70,000 as Israel keeps up attacks despite truce
Israeli drone attack kills two Palestinian children in southern Gaza, medics report, as humanitarian crisis deepens.Al Jazeera
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The Ukrainians Stuck in Russia’s New Gulag
Even if a peace can be reached, it won’t be easy to solve the problem of Ukrainian civilians languishing in Russian jails. This is one prisoner’s story.
US Progressives Accuse Trump of Interfering in Honduran Elections
The US Congressional Progressive Caucus on Friday accused President Donald Trump of “flagrantly interfering” in Honduras’ upcoming presidential election after Trump announced his endorsement of right-wing candidate Nasry “Tito” Asfura and repeated threats he’s made previously ahead of other electoral contests in which he sought to secure a conservative win.On the social media platform X, Trump warned that only a victory for former Tegucigalpa Mayor Asfura and the National Party in Sunday’s election will allow Honduras and the US to “fight the Narcocommunists, and bring needed aid to the people” of the Central American country.
US Progressives Accuse Trump of Interfering in Honduran Elections
Trump endorsed right-wing presidential candidate Nasry “Tito” Asfura and smeared his progressive opponent Rixi Moncada.Julia Conley (Truthout)
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Thank god he won't be in power for our next elections.
He won't be, right, America? *nervous laughter*
He doesn't matter, per se, it's the entire party and anyone that supports it.
And they aren't going anywhere and 93% of the opposing side has no gusto or passion to truly fight back. They think taking the high road will work. They think voter turnout will work. They think bumper stickers and signs will work.
Announcing Timeship v0.1.0: Self-hosted ZFS snapshot browser for TrueNAS
Hi everyone!
I've recently set up a NAS running TrueNAS Scale and learning about ZFS and associated machinery. ZFS has a pretty cool feature called snapshots, which allow for a kind of version control, but for the whole file system. I set up , which seem to be working great!
To my surprise, there didn't seem to be an easy way to actually browse these snapshots. Yes, you can use "Previous Versions" on Windows, but I'm running Fedora at the moment, so that doesn't help. You can also access .zfs/snapshot/ at the root of the dataset, which is fine if you know exactly which snapshot you want, otherwise it seems a bit clunky. There is also httm, which is a "CLI Time Machine" I've yet to learn more about, but I was looking for something a bit more graphical / browser-based.
Thus, with much hacking and vibing, the proof-of-concept Timeship was born! It has a thousand limitations and compromises for now, so I'm mostly reaching out to see if there is any interest from others on this.
If you use tiered snapshots which happen to be named similar to mine, you can try it out like this:
docker run -p 8080:8080 -v /mnt/tank/your/dataset:/mnt/:ro ghcr.io/smilyorg/timeship
For now, it has a very simple file browser, it detects and shows snapshots via the aforementioned .zfs/snapshot/ directories, allows you to preview the file system and text files at different points in time, and allows you to download a file at any snapshot.
Of course, extending it to support different ways to see the history would be nice, image preview, diffs, downloading archives of multiple files or directories, supporting histories beyond ZFS (e.g. git or borg backups), the list could go on and on. I can't claim I'll have the time to implement any or all of those, but you gotta start somewhere 😀
What do you think? Any ideas & comments very welcome!
GitHub - SmilyOrg/timeship: Self-hosted ZFS snapshot file browser
Self-hosted ZFS snapshot file browser. Contribute to SmilyOrg/timeship development by creating an account on GitHub.GitHub
Why Hong Kong’s latest fire is so deadly—and not the city’s first
cross-posted from: mander.xyz/post/42719582
Web archive linkAt least 128 people have died in one of Hong Kong’s deadliest-ever blazes that broke out Wednesday and devastated a multi-block housing estate.
...
But Hong Kong has been the site of many significant fires in the past, which, like the Wang Fuk Court incident, have had various specific causes, but have also often shared some factors that contributed to their deadliness.
...Density
Hong Kong ... is one of the most densely populated areas in the world, with 6,900 residents per sq km. Many buildings are built close to each other, especially in Hong Kong Island and neighboring Kowloon, making it easy for fires to spread.
However, the city also owes much of its high population density to the prevalence of subdivided flats—small cut rooms, sometimes resembling animal cages—where residents can cram and reside in for a fraction of the cost of a standard Hong Kong flat.
In April 2024, a fire involving a 60-year-old tenement block in Yau Ma Tei in the Kowloon area left five people dead and dozens injured. In an op-ed at the time about the risks associated with these homes, the South China Morning Post explained that, while a cigarette may have caused the fire, firefighters said subdivided units and “structural alterations” in the building complicated rescue efforts.
Thirteen years earlier, a fire in Mong Kok, also in the Kowloon area, left nine dead, 34 injured, and more than a hundred people homeless. Authorities then pointed out that the danger was exacerbated by the subdivided flats cutting off points of access for the building.
**Economic struggle **
Hong Kong is also among the most expensive places to live globally, and both individuals and businesses in the Chinese enclave often seek cost-cutting shortcuts that, in the case of fires, have proven immensely costly in the end.
Subdivided flats are a response to an expensive housing market, and many residents have foregone safety requirements for the sake of having a place to live.
Fireproofing is also expensive. In the 2024 Yau Ma Tei fire, the building’s owners reportedly encountered difficulties in raising funds to comply with fire safety guidelines, with a district councillor noting that “the increasingly high cost of upgrading fire prevention facilities and equipment, especially in the bidding process, had not helped,” according to SCMP.
Bamboo scaffolding, which has been linked to the latest conflagration’s devastation, is also known as a cheap alternative for construction businesses despite the city’s Development Bureau pushing to “drive a wider adoption of metal scaffolds in public building works progressively,” with a bureau official citing bamboo’s “intrinsic weaknesses such as variation in mechanical properties, deterioration over time and high combustibility, etc, giving rise to safety concerns.”
...
Lax enforcement
Politicians in the city have flagged that many of the city’s buildings are rapidly aging and in need of better fireproofing.
But previous fires have shown that compliance with government orders has been poor. In the 2024 Yau Ma Tei fire, the city’s Buildings Department already issued fire safety orders to the owners of the block in question in 2008—including calling for them to replace fire doors and outfit the building with more fire-resistant material. But SCMP reported that despite the department’s follow-up, the order had not been followed ...
Latest government data show that more than 8,600 fire hazard abatement notices have been issued in Hong Kong as of January, following inspections of old, high-risk buildings. More than 300 of these notices involved prosecutions or convictions.
...
Why Hong Kong’s Latest Fire Is So Deadly—and Not the City’s First
Dozens have died in one of Hong Kong’s deadliest fires ever, but a number of factors have made the Chinese enclave susceptible to such tragedies.Chad de Guzman (Time)
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I'm so frustrated that this article, and many other sources - including news programs, are not talking about the lack of alarms in the buildings. I agree that the materials and density were terrible and created a catastrophic situation for the structures, but the lack of alarms to alert residents is absolutely ridiculous and is what made this such a huge tragedy for the people who died.
If the buildings' alarms aren't working, then they should be on "fire watch" with 24/7 personnel ready to alert people on every floor where the alarm isn't working. Does that cost too much? Then fix the fucking alarms as a top priority. This is especially true when there are no automatic sprinklers, which sounds like is often the case in Hong Kong.
There are reports that people were getting calls from their friends and relatives and that's how they learned about the fire. People were waking up to the smell of smoke without an alarm going off. WTF. That's so far beyond acceptable, I don't know what else to say.
I travel a lot and I always bring my own smoke and CO detector with me. This is an example of why.
Just read a [BBC article]https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cn8e5j20g27o():
... Several residents have revealed in interviews that the fire alarm did not sound when the fire broke out. Authorities said on Friday that they had checked the fire alarms in all eight blocks and found that they were not working properly ...
Reminder, you can subscribe/comment/like Peertube channels from PieFed
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!coffeezilla@peertube.gravitywell.xyz
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!voidzilla@peertube.gravitywell.xyz
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!ctrlaltrees@makertube.net
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!fedicon_videos@spectra.video
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!show@video.firesidefedi.live
Dot Social (another Fedi podcast from Flipboard):
!dot_social@flipboard.video
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!gardiner_bryant@subscribeto.me
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!rossmanngroup@peertube.gravitywell.xyz
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!niccolo_ve@tube.kockatoo.org
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!shifter_cycling@video.canadiancivil.com
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!techlore@techlore.tv
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!technologyconnections_mirror@peertube.gravitywell.xyz
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!thelinuxexperiment_channel@tilvids.com
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!transport_evolved_main@peertube.tv
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Peru to declare state of emergency to block Chile border crossings
Peru to declare state of emergency to block Chile border crossings
The announcement comes as undocumented people flee neighbouring Chile in anticipation of an immigration crackdown.Joseph Stepansky (Al Jazeera)
Gatekeeper: The first open-source DDoS protection system. Has anyone tried mass hosting this as a group?
cross-posted from: discuss.online/post/31326102
Since it is not designed for individual selfhosters, I'm wondering if any groups are actively attempting to run it together? Idea sounds cool, but I'm wondering about practical execution.
GitHub - AltraMayor/gatekeeper: The first open-source DDoS protection system
The first open-source DDoS protection system. Contribute to AltraMayor/gatekeeper development by creating an account on GitHub.GitHub
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Germany’s far-right AfD sets up youth wing, drawing thousands of demonstrators
Thousands of demonstrators gathered Saturday in the central German city of Giessen for the launch of far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party’s new youth organisation. The meeting was delayed as some AfD supporters clashed with police.
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Trump’s $2 Trillion Plan to Cash in on Ukraine ‘Peace’ Leaks
Trump’s $2 Trillion Plan to Cash in on Ukraine ‘Peace’ Leaks
A Wall Street Journal report details how profit is at the center of Trump’s “peace” talks.Adam Downer (The Daily Beast)
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Deja vi
We've been exactly here before and nothing happened
This won't happen either. The Cheeto will be buried by the trump/Epstein files soon enough
Upvoting for hope. 👍
Rebellions are built on hope.
Trump says airspace above and surrounding Venezuela to be closed in its entirety
Trump says airspace above and surrounding Venezuela to be closed in its entirety
President Trump's latest comment marks another escalation in U.S.-Venezuela relations.Reuters (CNBC)
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Hong Kong begins three days of mourning after deadly apartment fires
Families are combing hospitals hoping to find their loved ones as about 200 people still listed as missing, and at least 128 killed
An outpouring of grief was set to sweep Hong Kong on Saturday as an official, three-day mourning period began with a moment of silence for the 128 people killed in one of the city’s deadliest fires.
City leader John Lee, along with senior ministers and dozens of top civil servants, stood in silence for three minutes on Saturday morning outside the government headquarters, where the flags of China and Hong Kong were flown at half-mast.
Hours before that, citizens placed flowers near the charred shell of Wang Fuk Court, the residential complex that burned for more than 40 hours.
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The cloud is just someone else's computer, but the internet is just someone else's network
Self hosting helps make the internet more decentralized, but at the end of the day someone else owns that series of tubes.
This is probably a pipe dream, but I think it would be cool if we self hosted not just servers but networking infrastructure as well.
I have an extra class amateur radio license and one of the many niches within the ham radio hobby I'm interested in is packet radio and wireless mesh networking.
Packet radio could technically refer to any RF communication that uses packets, including wifi, but I mostly see it used to refer to the AX.25 protocol, which works like an old-school dial-up modem in that it converts data into audio tones that are transmitted using FM or single sideband radios built for voice communication. AX.25 is used mostly nowadays in Amateur Packet Reporting System (APRS) which is used to report location and status info. There's a website, aprs.fi, where you can track vehicles sending their location or weather stations reporting conditions and so on.
In the olden days there were tons of bulletin boards hosted over AX.25 all over the globe that you could reach either directly or through repeaters. There are a few hangers on, and I even hosted one for a while but nobody visited. You could by hardware terminal node controllers (TNCs) that had a BBS feature, and nowadays there are a few software TNCs available.
Several Wifi frequency bands overlap with ham bands, and various projects have arisen that modify commercial wifi gear to turn them into mesh nodes forming a wireless wide area network, operating under FCC part 97 rules rather than the unlicensed part 15 rules that they use out of the box. This allows higher power and channels otherwise off limits to wifi stations. The project I'm most familiar with is Amateur Radio Emergency Data Network (AREDN) which uses a fork of openWRT firmware. I've tried a couple times to get the other hams in my area interested in setting up a network, but it's slow going.
There are also ham-adjacent projects like Meshtastic that I'm not as familiar with.
This barely scratches the surface of what's out there. The ham bands are explicitly non commercial and there are limits on what you can transmit and how much bandwidth you can use, but I dream of a day when everyone's wifi router meshes with all the other routers in the neighborhood which is connected to all the other neighborhoods in the city which is connected via repeaters to all the other cities and so on. Sure it would be slow, but we'd be communicating on our own system that only costs as much as the hardware you run it on.
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I’m subscribing to self hosted and following you. I don’t have the tech background to sign up to assist at this point, but I do see a world where this will be the only way to send messages digitally — something like what you have described.
The corporations in their consolidation will absolutely break the internet. We have to have community originated back ups of something.
Airbus issues major A320 recall after mid-air incident grounds planes, disrupting global travel
Immediate software change on ‘significant number’ of jets to result in disruption to half the worldwide fleet
Airlines around the world cancelled and delayed flights heading into the weekend after Airbus announced on Friday that it had ordered immediate repairs to 6,000 of its A320 family of jets in a recall affecting more than half of the global fleet.
The European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA), which is the main certifying authority for A320 aircraft, issued the instruction on Friday night as a precautionary action, saying that “safety is paramount”.
The US Federal Aviation Administration also issued an emergency airworthiness directive for certain Airbus planes, requiring the aircraft to replace or modify specific software.
The fix mainly involves reverting to earlier software and is relatively simple, but must be carried out before the planes can fly again, according to the bulletin to airlines seen by Reuters.
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Ukrainian soldiers see Trump plan as capitulation, even as they dream of peace
"Nobody will make concessions on the territories, because it’s our land and we stand here," one soldier told NBC News about the proposal's call for Ukraine to cede land to Russia.
From his position on the eastern front lines, the original peace plan backed by Donald Trump looked more like a proposal for Volodymyr Rzhavskyi’s surrender.
“It’s not a plan. It’s a real capitulation. There is nothing to discuss here,” said Rzhavskyi, a senior sergeant serving near Pokrovsk, a supply hub under intense pressure from Russian forces for some 18 months.
While Ukrainian officials fought for changes to the 28-point plan that emerged last week, NBC News spoke with soldiers in the country’s embattled military who expressed frustration at the idea Moscow would be handed its hard-line demands but also hope that they might soon be able to return to their lives.
Ukrainian soldiers see Trump plan as capitulation, even as they dream of peace
KYIV, Ukraine — From his position on the eastern front lines, the original peace plan backed by President Donald Trump looked more like a proposal for Volodymyr Rzhavskyi’s surrender.“It’s not a plan.Daryna Mayer (NBC News)
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Votre médecin sur TikTok est-il réel ? Le nouveau visage effrayant de l’arnaque aux compléments alimentaires
Imaginez la scène , vous faites défiler votre fil d’actualité sur TikTok ou Facebook et vous tombez sur une vidéo d’un médecin respecté. Il porte peut-être une blouse blanche, s’exprime devant un pupitre officiel ou semble donner une interview sérieuse. Il regarde la caméra et vous explique avec autorité que pour soigner vos symptômes de la ménopause, vous devez absolument acheter un nouveau supplément miracle. Vous faites confiance à la blouse blanche, vous faites confiance à l’expert. Pourtant, tout ceci n’est qu’une illusion numérique.
Une enquête récente et alarmante menée par l’organisation de vérification des faits Full Fact a révélé une tendance inquiétante qui envahit nos réseaux sociaux, l’utilisation de l’intelligence artificielle pour voler l’image et la voix de médecins réels afin de vendre des produits de santé douteux. Ce n’est plus de la science-fiction, c’est une réalité commerciale agressive qui cible les personnes vulnérables en quête de solutions médicales.
La mécanique du mensonge numérique
Le mode opératoire découvert par les enquêteurs est aussi simple qu’efficace. Les fraudeurs récupèrent des vidéos réelles de conférences médicales, d’interviews télévisées ou d’audiences parlementaires disponibles sur Internet. Grâce à des technologies de plus en plus accessibles, ils manipulent ensuite les mouvements des lèvres et clonent la voix de l’intervenant. Le résultat est un « deepfake », ou hypertrucage, où un expert reconnu semble prononcer des mots qu’il n’a jamais dits.
Dans le cas précis révélé par Full Fact, des centaines de vidéos ont été identifiées. Elles mettent en scène des versions clonées de médecins et d’influenceurs dirigeant les spectateurs vers Wellness Nest, une entreprise de suppléments basée aux États-Unis. Ces faux médecins encouragent vivement les femmes traversant la ménopause à se procurer des probiotiques, du shilajit de l’Himalaya ou d’autres extraits de plantes sur le site de l’entreprise. Léo Benedictus, l’enquêteur derrière ces révélations, qualifie cette tactique de sinistre et inquiétante, car elle exploite la crédibilité d’experts ayant une grande audience pour valider des traitements non prouvés.
Le cas surréaliste du Professeur Taylor-Robinson
Pour comprendre l’impact personnel et professionnel de ces arnaques, il faut se pencher sur l’histoire du professeur David Taylor-Robinson, expert en inégalités de santé à l’université de Liverpool. Ce spécialiste, dont le travail se concentre principalement sur la santé des enfants, a eu le choc de découvrir qu’il était devenu, à son insu, le visage d’une campagne marketing pour la ménopause sur TikTok. Au mois d’août, quatorze vidéos manipulées circulaient sur la plateforme, le montrant en train de recommander des produits aux bénéfices non prouvés. L’absurdité de la situation a atteint son paroxysme dans une vidéo où son clone numérique évoquait un prétendu effet secondaire de la ménopause appelé « jambe thermomètre ». Le faux professeur conseillait alors l’achat d’un probiotique naturel contenant du curcuma et de l’actée à grappes noires pour soulager ces symptômes fictifs, ajoutant même des témoignages inventés de collègues féminines.
La réalité derrière ces images est tout autre. Les séquences originales provenaient d’une conférence sur la vaccination donnée en 2017 et d’une audition parlementaire sur la pauvreté infantile en mai dernier. Pire encore, certaines vidéos allaient jusqu’à faire tenir au professeur des propos misogynes et vulgaires. Si ses enfants ont d’abord trouvé la situation hilarante, le professeur Taylor-Robinson a rapidement déchanté face à la difficulté de faire retirer ces contenus. Il décrit un sentiment croissant d’irritation à l’idée que des escrocs profitent de son travail pour propager de la désinformation médicale.
Une modération dépassée par les événements
La réponse des plateformes sociales face à ce fléau soulève de nombreuses questions sur leur capacité à nous protéger. Il a fallu six semaines et de multiples plaintes pour que TikTok retire enfin les vidéos du professeur Taylor-Robinson. La plateforme a affirmé au début que certaines vidéos ne violaient pas ses règles, une réponse jugée absurde par le médecin, étant donné qu’il s’agissait intégralement de faux le mettant en scène sans son consentement.
Ce problème ne se limite pas à un seul médecin. Duncan Selbie, ancien directeur général de Public Health England, a également été ciblé. Huit deepfakes le montrant en train de parler de ménopause ont été découverts sur TikTok, utilisant les mêmes images de l’événement de 2017 que celles de Taylor-Robinson. Selbie a qualifié l’imitation de stupéfiante de réalisme, soulignant que c’est un faux intégral du début à la fin, mais suffisamment convaincant pour tromper un public inattentif. D’autres figures médicales britanniques de premier plan ont également vu leur image détournée sur X, Facebook et YouTube.
La défense de l’industrie et l’appel à la régulation
Face aux accusations, la société Wellness Nest a adopté une ligne de défense classique dans le monde du marketing numérique opaque. L’entreprise a déclaré à Full Fact que ces vidéos étaient totalement indépendantes de leur volonté, affirmant n’avoir jamais utilisé de contenu généré par l’IA. Elle rejette la faute sur des affiliés à travers le monde qu’elle ne peut ni contrôler ni surveiller. C’est une excuse commode qui met en lumière les zones grises du marketing d’affiliation, où des tiers peuvent utiliser des méthodes sans scrupules pour générer des ventes et toucher des commissions, tout en permettant à la marque principale de nier toute responsabilité directe.
Cette situation a provoqué une levée de boucliers politique. Helen Morgan, porte-parole santé des Libéraux-Démocrates au Royaume-Uni, a vivement réagi en soulignant le danger que représente l’IA lorsqu’elle est utilisée pour exploiter les failles du système de santé. Elle pose une question fondamentale, si un individu se faisait passer pour un médecin dans la vie réelle pour vendre des médicaments, il serait poursuivi pénalement. Pourquoi tolérons-nous l’équivalent numérique ? Elle appelle à ce que les deepfakes se faisant passer pour des professionnels de santé soient éradiqués et que ceux qui profitent de la désinformation médicale soient tenus criminellement responsables.
Que pouvons-nous faire ?
TikTok a déclaré avoir supprimé le contenu incriminé et continuer d’investir dans de nouvelles méthodes de détection. Ils admettent cependant que le contenu généré par l’IA est un défi pour l’ensemble de l’industrie. En tant qu’utilisateurs, la vigilance est notre meilleure arme. Si vous voyez un médecin célèbre recommander un produit miracle sur une vidéo aux mouvements de lèvres légèrement décalés ou avec une intonation monotone, méfiez-vous. Vérifiez toujours les sources officielles et rappelez-vous que si un remède semble trop beau pour être vrai, c’est probablement parce qu’il n’existe pas. L’ère de la désinformation médicale assistée par l’IA ne fait que commencer et notre esprit critique est la seule barrière restante.
AI deepfakes of real doctors spreading health misinformation on social media
Hundreds of videos on TikTok and elsewhere impersonate experts to sell supplements with unproven effectsDenis Campbell (The Guardian)
Using of KI Pictures with perchance.org.
Convincing evidence Israel backed aid convoy looters in Gaza, historian says
A historian who spent more than a month in Gaza at the turn of the year says he saw “utterly convincing” evidence that Israel supported looters who attacked aid convoys during the conflict.
Jean-Pierre Filiu, a professor of Middle East studies at France’s prestigious Sciences Po university, entered Gaza in December where he was hosted by an international humanitarian organisation in the southern coastal zone of al-Mawasi.
Israel has blocked international media and other independent observers from Gaza but Filiu was able to evade strict Israeli vetting. He eventually left the territory shortly after the second short-lived truce during the war came into effect in January. His eyewitness account, A Historian in Gaza, was published in French in May and in English this month.
In the book, Filiu describes Israeli military attacks on security personnel protecting aid convoys. These permitted looters to seize huge quantities of food and other supplies destined for desperately needy Palestinians, he writes. Famine threatened parts of Gaza at the time, according to international humanitarian agencies.
Convincing evidence Israel backed aid convoy looters in Gaza, historian says
Account of visit to Gaza by French professor describes Israeli military attacks on security personnel protecting convoysJason Burke (The Guardian)
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The entirety of the evidence is the account of the historian Filiu.
“The [Israeli] rationale [was] to discredit Hamas and the UN at that time … and to allow [Israel’s] clients, the looters, to either redistribute the aid to expand their own support networks or to make money out of reselling it in order to get some cash and so not depend exclusively on Israeli financial support,” Filiu said.
That's pretty powerful to have an eye witness able to testify directly about Israel's rationale.
Revealed: Europe’s water reserves drying up due to climate breakdown
Vast swathes of Europe’s water reserves are drying up, a new analysis using two decades of satellite data reveals, with freshwater storage shrinking across southern and central Europe, from Spain and Italy to Poland and parts of the UK.
Scientists at University College London (UCL), working with Watershed Investigations and the Guardian, analysed 2002–24 data from satellites, which track changes in Earth’s gravitational field.
Because water is heavy, shifts in groundwater, rivers, lakes, soil moisture and glaciers show up in the signal, allowing the satellites to effectively “weigh” how much water is stored.
The findings reveal a stark imbalance: the north and north-west of Europe – particularly Scandinavia, parts of the UK and Portugal – have been getting wetter, while large swathes of the south and south-east, including parts of the UK, Spain, Italy, France, Switzerland, Germany, Romania and Ukraine, have been drying out.
Revealed: Europe’s water reserves drying up due to climate breakdown
Exclusive: UCL scientists find large swathes of southern Europe are drying up, with ‘far-reaching’ implicationsRachel Salvidge (The Guardian)
Thousands of protesters gather as German far-right party sets up new youth organization
cross-posted from: lemmy.today/post/42655760
Thousands of demonstrators gathered in the western German city of Giessen on Saturday as the far-right Alternative for Germany’s new youth organization was set to kick off its founding convention.Groups of protesters blocked or tried to block roads in and around the city of some 93,000 people in the early morning. Police said they used pepper spray after stones were thrown at officers at one location.
The new youth organization of the anti-immigration Alternative for Germany, or AfD, is to be set up in a meeting at Giessen’s convention center. Its predecessor, the Young Alternative — a largely autonomous group with relatively loose links to the party — was dissolved at the end of March after AfD decided to formally cut ties with it.
More in the article.
The week Europe realised it stands alone against Russian expansionism
The week Europe realised it stands alone against Russian expansionism
Washington’s Putin-appeasing plan for peace in Ukraine has failed, but many heard death knell sounded for European reliance on US protectionPatrick Wintour (The Guardian)
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Why China Can’t Sort Out Its Property Market Mess
cross-posted from: mander.xyz/post/42696039
Web archive linkOnce one of the country’s biggest growth drivers, China’s property market has been in a downward spiral for four years with no signs of abating. Real estate values continue to plummet, households in financial distress are being forced to sell properties, and apartment developers that racked up enormous debt on speculative projects are on the brink of collapse.
There was some optimism that government measures to end the crisis had been working to reinvigorate the market, but in March, government-linked developer China Vanke Co. reported a record 49.5 billion yuan ($6.8 billion) annual loss for 2024, showing just how deep the problems run. Then in August, property giant China Evergrande Group delisted from the Hong Kong stock exchange — making the shares effectively worthless — marking a grim milestone for the nation’s property sector.
China is now considering further measures to revive its struggling property sector, particularly after new and resale homes recorded their steepest price declines in at least a year in October. The slump has heightened concerns that further weakening could destabilize the country’s financial system.
...
Evergrande’s downfall is by far the biggest in a crisis that dragged down China’s economic growth and led to a record number of distressed builders.
Founded in 1996 by Hui Ka Yan, Evergrande’s rapid expansion was from the outset fueled by heavy borrowing. It became the most indebted borrower among its peers, with total liabilities reaching about $360 billion at the end of 2021. For a time it was the country’s biggest developer by contracted sales and was worth more than $50 billion in 2017 at its peak. Founder and chairman Hui became Asia’s second-richest person. Over the years the company also invested in the electric vehicle industry and bought a local football club....
How did some Chinese developers get into this mess?
In 1998, China created a nationwide housing market after tightly restricting private sales for decades. Back then, only a third of its people lived in towns and cities. That’s risen to two-thirds, with the urban population expanding by 480 million. The exodus from the countryside represented a vast commercial opportunity for construction firms and developers.
Money flooded into real estate as the emerging middle class leapt upon what was one of the few safe investments available, pushing home prices up sixfold over the 15 years ending in 2022. Local and regional authorities, which rely on sales of public land for a chunk of their revenue, encouraged the development boom. At its peak, the sector directly and indirectly accounted for about a quarter of domestic output and almost 80% of household assets. Estimates vary, but counting new and existing homes, plus inventory, the sector was worth about $52 trillion in 2019 — about twice the size of the US real estate market.
The property craze was powered by debt as builders rushed to satisfy expected future demand. The boom encouraged speculative buying, with new homes pre-sold by developers who turned increasingly to foreign investors for funds. Opaque liabilities made it hard to assess credit risks. The speculation led to astronomical prices, with homes in boom cities such as Shenzhen becoming less affordable relative to local incomes than those in London or New York. In response, the government moved in 2020 to reduce the risk of a bubble and temper the inequality that unaffordable housing can create.
Anxious to rein in the industry’s debts and fearful that serial defaults could ravage China’s financial system, officials began to squeeze new financing for developers and asked banks to slow the pace of mortgage lending. The government imposed stringent rules on debt ratios and cash holdings for developers that were called the “three red lines” by state-run media. The measures sparked a cash crunch for developers that was exacerbated by the impact of aggressive measures to contain Covid-19, such as the suspension of construction sites.
Many developers were unable to adhere to the new rules as their finances were already stretched. In 2021, Evergrande defaulted on more than $300 billion, triggering the beginning of China’s property crisis. Two more property giants defaulted — Sunac China Holdings Ltd in 2022 and Country Garden Holdings Co. in 2023.
...
With household debt at a high of 145% of disposable income per capita at the end of 2023, homeowners are increasingly under financial pressure. The country’s residential mortgage delinquency ratio – which tracks overdue mortgage payments – jumped to the highest in four years as of late 2023. Some homeowners are being forced to sell their properties at a discounted rate, which is only exacerbating the problem.
...
Chinese banks’ bad debt — loans they no longer expect to recover — hit a record 3.5 trillion yuan ($492 billion) at the end of September. Fitch Ratings has warned the situation could deteriorate further in 2026 as households struggle to repay mortgages and other loans.
A prolonged property slump could also deepen deflationary pressures. Former finance minister Lou Jiwei recently warned that households’ worsening outlook — driven by falling home values — will affect consumption levels and intensify price declines.
According to economists at Morgan Stanley and Beijing-based think tank CF40, the property sector’s drag on inflation could even be greater than official data suggest. They argue that the methodology used to determine China’s official Consumer Price Index understates falling rents, and, by extension, the broader deflationary impact.
‘I didn’t even know this type of attack existed’: more than 200 women allege drugging by senior French civil servant
When Sylvie Delezenne, a marketing expert from Lille, was job-hunting in 2015, she was delighted to be contacted on LinkedIn by a human resources manager at the French culture ministry, inviting her to Paris for an interview.
But instead of finding a job, Delezenne, 45, is now one of more than 240 women at the centre of a criminal investigation into the alleged drugging of women without their knowledge in a place they never expected to be targeted: a job interview.
An investigating judge is examining allegations that, over a nine-year period, dozens of women interviewed for jobs by a senior civil servant, Christian Nègre, were offered coffees or teas by him that had been mixed with a powerful and illegal diuretic, which he knew would make them need to urinate.
Nègre often suggested continuing the interviews outside, on lengthy strolls far from toilets, the women say. Many of the women recall struggling with the need to go to the toilet and feeling increasingly ill. Some, in desperation, say they urinated in public, or didn’t reach a bathroom in time, wetting their clothes. Some felt a sense of shame and failure that has had an impact on their lives, they say.
The alleged assaults came to light in 2018, after a colleague reported Nègre allegedly attempting to photograph the legs of a senior official, prompting police to open an investigation. Officers found a computer spreadsheet titled “Experiments”, where he had allegedly noted the times of druggings and the women’s reactions.
‘I didn’t even know this type of attack existed’: more than 200 women allege drugging by senior French civil servant
In a case echoing the Pelicot trial, dozens of women allege they were given hot drinks mixed with a diuretic to make them urinate. Three of them speak out hereAngelique Chrisafis (The Guardian)
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she was led around the Tuileries gardens answering questions for a long time, with the entire interview process lasting several hours.
Even if you hadn't been drugged with a diuretic, this would be hard.
The CGT culture trade union said: “[...] there is a systemic problem, which enabled a senior civil servant to act like this for a decade.” The union said other staff had previously made allegations against him, accusing him of taking pictures of women’s legs in meetings.
It always starts small, as they see what they can get away with. They knew there was some kind of problem with him, yet they let him continue for over a decade.
women in the job interview drugging investigation said their case was taking too many years to come to trial, only increasing their trauma. “Six years later, we’re still waiting for a trial [...] For us, it feels like we’re being victimised a second time.”
And now it's been another six years for these women, waiting for any kind of justice. If I'd spent sixteen years waiting, I'd be angry too.
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La Libertaria, un esempio di anticapitalismo militante
Indice dei contenuti
Toggle
- Un piacevole incontro
- La torrefazione
- Il progetto
- Cooperativa di produzione e lavoro
- Il prefinanziamento
- Conclusioni
Un piacevole incontro
Il luogo in cui sorge la torrefazioneLa Libertaria è uno dei miei preferiti di Lecco. Sotto lo sguardo verde del Monte Barro e alla destra sud dell’Adda è un posto in cui l’architettura modernista e spesso raffazzonata dell’altra sponda della città lascia il posto a scorci più respirabili e più umani. Il ponte in ferro – con tutto l’ecocidio e il rifornimento all’industria bellica che questo minerale strappato alla terra ha rappresentato e rappresenta storicamente per la città – si interrompe qui con un muro. Un muro che non riesce a nascondere l’ipocrisia di un progresso aggressivo dal quale la società degli animali umani e non umani ha sempre più urgenza di staccarsi per recuperare il rapporto con la sua identità ancestrale e mutualistica.
La torrefazione
Una bellezza apparentemente semplice, mi accoglie all’interno della torrefazione. Inebriante profumo di caffè tostato, sacchi di juta, la macchina guardata con quel rispetto e quella cura che la elevano dall’asettico ruolo di mezzo di produzione. Quell’atmosfera sospesa — un po’ officina, un po’ laboratorio politico con meravigliose stampe alle pareti — che suggerisce che lì il lavoro è un pretesto, e che le vere materie prime sono dignità, resistenza e la coltivazione di un altro mondo; un mondo che contenga molti mondi.
Riccardo si presenta senza formalità. Toni e movimenti pacati, cosi differenti dai commerciali che promettono mondi. Nessuna ansia da prestazione. Non c’è nulla da dimostrare, nessuna impressione da fare. Sono artigiani, ma soprattutto cooperatori. Il caffè è il modo che hanno scelto per restare liberi.
Il progetto
Mentre inizia a parlare, Riccardo misura con precisione i chicchi della qualità “Sumatra” e seleziona la temperatura corretta della macchina per offrirmi una buona tazza di caffè. Dietro il bilancino noto un immagine con gli occhi di Errico Malatesta e un ammonimento fermo e gentile. Mi fa ripensare a Proudhon e al disvelamento etimologico della parola anarchia. Il progetto “La Libertaria” nasce infatti nel 2021 come evoluzione e recupero dei principi che erano già stati del “Caffè Malatesta”. Il bisogno di poter fare senza potere, senza padroni, senza quell’idea tossica che produttività significhi sacrificio umano. Anzi; esattamente il contrario.
Cooperativa di produzione e lavoro
Per questo motivo hanno scelto di associarsi in una cooperativa di produzione e lavoro nella quale gli stessi soci lavorano all’interno.
“Abbiamo scelto di organizzarci come cooperativa di produzione e lavoro, una forma che istituisce, seppur parzialmente, una proprietà collettiva indipendente dalla partecipazione dei singoli e che può garantire un equo riconoscimento del ruolo svolto da tutte le persone coinvolte nel progetto. Per evitare la formazione di dinamiche verticistiche e autoritarie, prevediamo che tutti i lavoratori si assumano pari responsabilità nella gestione della cooperativa diventando soci della stessa.” (dal sito)
Una scelta coerente con i principi ma ricca di difficoltà soprattutto per quanto riguarda l’inquadramento burocratico, come mi spiega un altro dei soci della cooperativa.
Il prefinanziamento
Le origini del caffè torrefatto presso la libertaria sono un viaggio intorno al mondo. Spiccano le collaborazioni con la Red ProZapa e la Roasters United. Guatemala, Honduras, Colombia, Uganda ed Etiopia. In tutti i casi si tratta di piccoli produttori e si privilegia il rapporto diretto nell’obiettivo comune di difendere i territori dal disastro climatico provocato dal sistema capitalista.
Il rapporto con i produttori fornitori è politico. Si basa infatti sulla pratica fiduciaria del prefinanziamento del caffè verde, che garantisce un anticipo sui ricavi del prodotto esportato prima del raccolto. Personamente ritengo questo principio fondamentale per far convergere l’idea con la pratica. Garantire un prezzo superiore a quello di mercato e prefinanziarlo, è l’assoluto contrario della parossistica ricerca del prezzo più basso; tipica del capitalismo. Si tratta di una pratica culturale che rappresenta un messaggio pedagogico chiaro rivolto ai consumatori. Decenni di discount e prezzi più bassi hanno solo creato un doppio ricatto che ha reso tutti più poveri, in diritti e salari reali. Prefinanziare il lavoro significa dare valore alle persone. Significa coltivare libertà, una tazzina alla volta.
Conclusioni
La libertaria è una realtà calata nel territorio e il suo esempio si innesta perfettamente nella resistenza di una città che sta prendendo sempre maggiore consapevolezza. Nonostante Lecco sia una provincia pesantemente interessata dal progresso distruttivo dell’industria bellica, c’è chi dice no e pratica proattivamente una visione altra. Movimenti culturali e pratiche di anticapitalismo militante si stanno espandendo portando un respiro e una cultura internazionalista, antispecista e transfemminista. Penso a realtà storiche come Il Galeone, l’Arrotino e ai più recenti la tassa degenere, la brigata di solidarietà Francesca Ciceri o all’assemblea permanente contro le guerre. Esempi tangibili in grado di fare rete e dimostrare che si può recuperare un mondo mutualista e giusto.
#caffe #lecco #libertaria #malatesta #mutualismo #zapatisti
La Libertaria, un esempio di anticapitalismo militante
La Libertaria, un esempio di anticapitalismo militante. Il bisogno di poter fare senza potere, senza padroni, senza produttività tossicaDaniele Fiorenza (Magozine.it)
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Keep these Stupid American Trucks out of Europe
- YouTube
Profitez des vidéos et de la musique que vous aimez, mettez en ligne des contenus originaux, et partagez-les avec vos amis, vos proches et le monde entier.www.youtube.com
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Palestinian Embassy in London accuses UK of failing to protect its diplomats
Photos shared by the mission show demonstrators waving 'Israeli' and UK flags outside the building over the weekend, with several seen climbing the entrance steps and posing for pictures.
The images also captured stickers plastered across the embassy façade, including slogans such as “Anti-Zionism is racism,” “I love the Israeli army,” and “We are not Jews with trembling knees.” One sticker displayed a Union Jack merged with the Star of David.
The embassy says incidents targeting the mission have intensified since 'Israel' launched its war on Gaza, with diplomats reporting smashed windows, paint attacks, and groups attempting to barricade the entrance, all while staff were inside.
Under the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations, states are obligated to safeguard foreign missions from intrusion, damage, or disruption.
Palestinian Embassy in London accuses UK of failing to protect its diplomats
Pro-'Israeli' crowd in front of the Palestinian Embassy in the UK (Credit: @PalMissionUK via X)Roya News
Formation Activisme
Formation désobéissance civile non-violente 🔥
Au menu : discussion sur les actions non violentes, techniques de blocages, organisation de coordo d'actions, incidences juridiques (arrestation, garde à vue,...)Merci de vous inscrire, pour logistique, via ce formulaire : Formulaire - mer. 3 décembre 2025
Repas : chacun·e apporte quelque chose à manger, des couverts. Sur place : frigo, micro-onde, ... On partage
Bar sur place (Bière pression, boissons, vin, soft...).
Lieu : La Base 15 rue chaptal , Montpellier Tram L3 St Denis L4 Observatoire, L2-L1 Gare St Roch
Restez en ligne pour la confirmation de la formation, un nombre minimum de participant·e·s est requis. Prévoir des vêtements confortables (on va finir par s'assoir par terre)
Something to Think About this month
As well as everything else, each month I offer you something to think about and get the brain working. This month …
When a spider sits motionless in its web all day, what is it thinking?
#blog #logic #thoughts #zenmischief
RRF Caserta. Sport. Mondiali. F1. Napoli Juve . Sinner 06 12 25
The Sensory Biology of Plants
Sensory Biology of Plants
An edited book explaining plant communications via biochemical and molecular signaling. Plants have developed precise systems and mechanisms for sensing environmental changes, growth stimuli, counter pests and diseases and have learnt to communicate …SpringerLink
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And house plants would be chit chatting and making all kinds of noise inaudible to us, kinda like WiFi, but with sound instead of light. It's like a fantasy setting
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A blog requires a platform designed for blogging. Staying within the realm of federated software, the three natural alternatives are:
1) WordPress, which, thanks to the plugin that makes it compatible with Activitypub, has achieved a level of perfect integration with the Fediverse.
2) Ghost, which, federated a few months ago, is not only a blogging platform but is also specifically designed for creating mailing lists based on the Substack model.
3) Writefreely, which, despite being natively federated, is extremely focused on distraction-free writing and therefore has some seriously limiting features.
Friendica
As for Friendica, I'm a huge fan of that software and manage the second-most active instance in the entire Fediverse. I can assure you that I know it well and appreciate all its most important features. But don't be fooled by the fact that some call it macro-blogging software. In fact, if you visit a Friendica account's profile, it's not possible to filter the Timeline of their posts from the Timeline of the posts they've reshared. So, you could virtually create a page like this:
But you could only do that if you don't share too much other content, otherwise the result would be like this:
which would be much more confusing 😅
However, Friendica is a very powerful software that allows you to republish your blog feed, as well as automatically reshare your federated blogs. Here I've listed some very interesting Friendica features for blogging:
poliverso.org/display/0477a01e…
So, to recap, if you want to use Friendica to create your blog, you can: you can create a new account. Remember to define it as a "page account," if possible, but also remember that when you reshare content you like, it will appear on your profile page.
However, if you don't need the full suite of tools that characterize a social media platform, you're better off using WordPress.
Sharkey
We're talking about software with a very nice interface, but it's still a social networking software. Being essentially a fork of Misskey, it also has a section for creating static pages that can be easily viewed from outside the Fediverse, but these pages can't be federated with Activitypub 😭.
Ultimately, it seems even less suitable for creating a blog.
If you absolutely must use a Fediverse social media platform, then you'd be better off going with Friendica!
Hubzilla
PS: There's also a software called Hubzilla, which is compatible with Activitypub, although it has developed its own communication protocol. I'm only mentioning it because it's a feature-rich and well-designed product, but its interface is quite complex and unfriendly, so although I've chosen to mention it, I can't recommend it as an alternative.
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Broke spaghetti last night while cooking for dinner.
I also threw it against the cabinet to make sure it was done cooking.
I have a toddler so cooking "rules" go out the window for laughter.
I also threw it against the cabinet to make sure it was done cooking.
So you don't have a mouth?
Network Configuration Questions
I am rebuilding my system and I have a few questions related to network set up. I have installed a new Unifi system, set up IoT VLAN and opened port for HA. That part I THINK is right. My questions lie with setting up DuckDNS and Let's Encrypt. I plan on doing more self hosting stuff in the future. Can/Should I be doing things like Dynamic DNS and certificates via an entity outside of HA such as my router or some other container in the "system" or is it better to handle HA's requirements inside of HA itself?
Additionally, in my current config I can only reach the HA brain via the DuckDNS URL. What sort of set up is required to have the unit accessible when the internet is down? Seems with the mobile app it is the URL or nothing. What do I need to be doing for internal access when on local LAN?
I am running it on the HA Blue hardware and I plan to rebuild from scratch if that matters. I am sketchy on the network set up and making sure things are all secure. Bit paranoid lol. So if you have any good set up guides on this portion it would be appreciated. Thanks.
HA doesn't need either of these, but if you want an SSL certificate (to run over HTTPS instead of plain HTTP) it is bound to a domain name, which must be public unless you want to enter in the zone of adding our custom certification authority to each of your devices.
This name is resolved by a public DNS. You asked how to use it when internet is down, in this case a public DNS is not reachable so you need your own on the local network.
The reverse proxy is useful when you have a bunch of web services and you want to protect all of them with HTTPS. Instead of delivering the certificate to each of them, you add the HTTPS layer at your reverse proxy and it queries the servers behind in plain HTTP. The reverse proxy has also the benefit of making handling subdomains easier. So instead of distinguishing the different services because they have a different port number you can have a few ha.my.domain/ and feedreader.my.domain/
If you just have homeassistant and not care of HTTPS the easiest option is to use the local resolution: modern OSes advertise the name of the device on the network and it can be resolved on the .local domain. But, if you configured HTTPS to use name.duckdns.org/ you'll se an error when you try to use name.local/ because your browser sees a mismatch between the name in the certificate and the name that you are trying to connect to. You can always ignore this error and move on, but it mostly defeats the point of HTTPS.
Meta – Du rachat de Limitless à la conquête de l’information en temps réel
Le géant de la technologie ne cache plus ses ambitions. Dans une démarche visant à dominer l’écosystème de l’intelligence artificielle, Meta vient d’annoncer l’acquisition de la startup Limitless, créatrice d’un pendentif connecté dopé à l’IA. Mais ce rachat n’est qu’une pièce du puzzle. Parallèlement à cette expansion matérielle, la firme de Mark Zuckerberg modifie la manière dont nous consommons l’actualité via ses chatbots, soulevant de nouvelles questions sur l’avenir de l’information et de nos données personnelles.
Jusqu’à présent, la stratégie matérielle de Meta reposait essentiellement sur deux piliers, les casques de réalité virtuelle Quest et les lunettes connectées Ray-Ban. L’acquisition de Limitless montre une volonté de diversification. L’entreprise, anciennement connue sous le nom de Rewind, s’était fait connaître avec un logiciel de productivité capable d’enregistrer tout ce qui se passait sur un écran d’ordinateur pour le rendre consultable via un chatbot. Elle a ensuite pivoté vers le matériel avec le « Pendant », un clip microphone Bluetooth conçu pour enregistrer, transcrire et résumer les conversations du quotidien. Dan Siroker, son PDG, a justifié cette fusion en évoquant une vision commune avec Meta, apporter une « superintelligence personnelle » à tous. En rejoignant la division Reality Labs, l’équipe de Limitless ne continuera pas nécessairement à développer son pendentif, mais intégrera son expertise dans la conception des futurs « wearables » (technologies portables) du groupe.
Pour les utilisateurs actuels du pendentif (principalement américains), la nouvelle est en demi-teinte. Si l’entreprise promet de maintenir le support pendant au moins un an, la commercialisation du produit cesse immédiatement. En guise de compensation, les abonnements payants sont supprimés, offrant un accès gratuit aux fonctionnalités premium pour la durée restante du support. Consciente des enjeux de confidentialité, la société permet désormais aux utilisateurs d’exporter ou de supprimer totalement leurs données s’ils ne souhaitent pas suivre l’aventure chez Meta.
Au-delà des lunettes: la guerre des wearables audio
Ce rachat n’est pas anodin. Il confirme que l’industrie tech cherche le facteur de forme idéal pour l’IA, au-delà du smartphone. Les lunettes connectées ne conviennent pas à tout le monde, et le format badge ou pendentif émerge comme une alternative crédible pour l’enregistrement audio passif. L’audio est en effet le terrain de jeu où les modèles d’IA actuels excellent le plus avec la transcription précise et le résumé contextuel. En intégrant la technologie de Limitless, et en s’appuyant sur des recrutements stratégiques comme celui d’Alan Dye, ancien responsable du design chez Apple, Meta prépare le terrain pour une nouvelle gamme d’appareils.
On peut imaginer un futur où les Ray-Ban Meta seraient complétées par des accessoires plus discrets, capables de capturer le contexte sonore de notre vie pour alimenter un assistant personnel omniscient. Meta n’est pourtant pas seul sur ce créneau. Amazon a récemment acquis Bee, une autre startup spécialisée dans les wearables IA et d’autres acteurs tentent de percer, comme le pendentif « Friend ». Mais avec la puissance de frappe de Meta, la compétition devient féroce pour les petits acteurs. Comme le souligne Siroker, le monde a changé. Ce qui semblait être une idée marginale il y a cinq ans est devenu une course inévitable vers le futur.
L’IA pour s’informer – Le pacte avec les médias
Si Meta renforce ses oreilles avec Limitless, l’entreprise soigne aussi son cerveau. L’autre volet important de l’actualité récente du groupe concerne sa gestion de l’information. Après avoir longtemps entretenu des relations tumultueuses avec la presse, elle propose une nouvelle approche, délivrer les actualités de dernière minute directement via son chatbot, Meta AI. Elle a annoncé des partenariats avec plusieurs grandes organisations médiatiques, dont CNN, Fox News, Reuters, et le groupe Le Monde. L’objectif est de permettre à l’IA de fournir des résumés d’événements récents en temps réel, en puisant dans des sources plus diversifiées. La liste des partenaires inclut un spectre large, allant de publications lifestyle comme People à des médias politiquement marqués comme The Daily Caller, reflétant peut-être les affinités de la direction actuelle. Sur le papier, la promesse est séduisante, demander à son assistant IA ce qui se passe dans le monde et obtenir une réponse synthétique et sourcée. Mais l’histoire de Meta avec l’information incite à la prudence.
Le spectre du passé et les risques futurs
Il est difficile d’oublier les précédents échecs de Facebook dans le domaine de l’actualité. De la controverse du module « Trending News » en 2016, accusé de biais humains puis remplacé par un algorithme propageant la désinformation, jusqu’au désastreux pivot vers la vidéo qui a mis à genoux de nombreux éditeurs, le bilan est lourd. Les changements d’algorithmes opaques ont souvent détruit des audiences construites sur plusieurs années, laissant les médias exsangues.
Aujourd’hui, la crainte est que ce nouveau modèle basé sur l’IA ne cannibalise encore davantage le trafic des sites d’information. À l’image des « AI Overviews » de Google, si le chatbot fournit la réponse complète, l’utilisateur n’a plus besoin de cliquer sur le lien source. Pour les éditeurs, c’est le risque de voir leurs contenus ingérés par la boîte noire de l’IA sans retombées économiques directes, hormis le montant du chèque signé pour le partenariat initial.
De plus, confier la synthèse de l’actualité à une IA générative comporte des risques d’hallucinations ou de biais contextuels. Si l’outil est censé offrir quelque chose pour tout le monde, la frontière entre information factuelle et contenu partisan risque de devenir floue, surtout avec un panel de sources aussi hétéroclite.
Un écosystème fermé en construction
En mettant en perspective le rachat de Limitless et les nouveaux partenariats médiatiques, la stratégie de Meta apparaît clairement. L’objectif est de créer un écosystème fermé et autosuffisant. D’un côté, le matériel (lunettes, pendentifs) capture votre réalité immédiate et vos conversations. De l’autre, le logiciel (Meta AI) ingère l’actualité mondiale pour vous la restituer à la demande. Meta ne cherche plus seulement à connecter les gens entre eux, mais à devenir l’interface principale entre l’utilisateur et le monde, qu’il s’agisse de se souvenir d’une conversation privée ou de comprendre un événement géopolitique. Reste à savoir si les utilisateurs accepteront de confier autant de pouvoir, et autant de données, à une seule entité.
someguy3
in reply to MicroWave • • •The post above this was:
Corkyskog
in reply to someguy3 • • •paraphrand
in reply to Corkyskog • • •I’m ignorant of the culture and structure of these markets still.
Would the market have to set up a bet for this? Can you propose it? How would it work?
despoticruin
in reply to paraphrand • • •Corkyskog
in reply to despoticruin • • •gwl
in reply to despoticruin • • •gwl
in reply to paraphrand • • •There's Bookmakers, who are professionals responsible for estimating likelihood of events using maths
But they can become corrupted, or simply told "you're not allowed to accept bets on this subject, ever, or lose your license"
SabinStargem
in reply to gwl • • •gwl
in reply to SabinStargem • • •SabinStargem
in reply to gwl • • •You DO know that Asimov's Foundation series has been around for at least 70 years now, giving humans plenty of time to make fancy posters and cover art?
Bluntly, your type of "Ew, AI slop", is dumb and disingenuous. It became an excuse to hate stuff, no matter the merits, context, or source.
VeganCheesecake
in reply to SabinStargem • • •SabinStargem
in reply to VeganCheesecake • • •And you fail to explain whatever it is that makes it AI, let alone why that would be a bad thing. It is on anti-AI people to prove that their beliefs have merit. Careless speculation such as yours is irresponsible, unjust, and is pretty damn likely to hurt real people.
You are welcome to dislike AI - but using that as a crutch for falsified criticism is just plain wrong.
gwl
in reply to SabinStargem • • •VeganCheesecake
in reply to SabinStargem • • •I don't usually engage with trolls, but my train is late and I'm all out of productive things to do while I wait.
I am not going to debate whether this is AI. If you want to believe it isn't, you're welcome to do that. As for why it'd be bad - I believe that a technology that is trained on the work of many artists, without permission or compensation, that puts control of visual - I am not going to call them artistic - outputs under the control of a few tech oligarchs, is bad, and should be boycotted and sabotaged if possible. Even open weight models are, ultimately, usually trained by large corporations, and openly available by their 'benevolence'. If they decide their next generation model will be closed source, it will be.
I also believe that the sheer amount of both monetary, and physical, resources currently expended on generative AI and related technologies is largely wasted, in a world where we can hardly afford such waste.
Also, please substantiate why using rather clear signifiers of ai generated content to claim something is ai generated is likely to cause harm, and why, in your eyes, 'pro-ai' aren't required to proof the merit of their believes.
Oh, and while we're at it - do you happen to know whether there is a seahorse emoji?
SabinStargem
in reply to VeganCheesecake • • •I have no idea what a seahorse emoji implies, and never had the desire to use one.
Anyhow. I personally believe that AI can be used to empower the common person, provided that it is available and publicly funded. Something along the lines of Switzerland's Apertus could be very helpful. Be it keeping an eye out for discount goods, pairing news with investments, or determining the legality of a Kavenaugh Stop, AI can make it easier for people to have agency in their lives. But that is dependent on whether we support the establishment of that agency.
I personally feel that anti-AI people are bad for the future of humanity, because they encourage the 1% to become the sole owners of AI, by trying to deter the ordinary person from becoming masters of it. Rejection of tools and power, only ensures it is used by the worst people.
Also, all existing human artists derived their skill and creativity from observing the works of other people. IMO, the same can be said of AI. While an AI currently isn't fit to independently create original works, eventually it will be able to make great creations, be it in collaboration with a human partner or by itself. It is simply a matter of when that AI becomes capable. Of course, I can't prove that - but neither can the technology vegans. We will have to see in a couple of decades.
AI, being a technology, will become more economical and effective over time. My gaming rig isn't well suited for running medium-sized AI like GLM Air, but it is an AM4-socketed machine. When a post-AI boom socket is released, such as AM6, the memory and PCIe lanes for it will be much faster and larger to account for AI usage. It is through the improvement of software and hardware that the progress of AI will march forward. For example, we can expect GLM to run about 30% faster on consumer hardware once MTP is implemented in LlamaCPP. A prompt that took 40 minutes to generate an response for me, becomes 28. Time savings like that, translate into less energy and heat being needed to run AI. It isn't dissimilar to how aircraft massively improved over time.
As to why the Pro-AI don't need to prove our beliefs: we aren't claiming that people aren't artists, nor are we trying to make other people feel sucky. We just want to do neat things for our folks, without bothering other people. Anti-AI folks tend to throw around accusations and generally be jackasses. It is why court systems and society needs the accusers to prove their points, otherwise they will just bully people for anything and everything.
gwl
in reply to SabinStargem • • •Yes I'm aware the book series is from the 50s, it's excellent.
But the image is AI slop. It's very clear of that. Have a look at the letters around the edge, they blur and artefact in a way no human would do, and the same generic overly rendered hair that they always have in AI slop.
I'm on about the ugly-ass image, which is very very clearly made by AI.
Another telltale sign is inconsistent level of detail, stuff like a heavily rendered background element right next to a loosely rendered foreground element, something humans would never do.
Tollana1234567
in reply to someguy3 • • •freagle
in reply to Tollana1234567 • • •Nixon's war on drugs was for voter disenfranchisement, not distraction.
The war in Vietnam was for the US's absolutely rabid anti-communism and racist yellow peril
LifeInMultipleChoice
in reply to MicroWave • • •frongt
in reply to LifeInMultipleChoice • • •thejml
in reply to frongt • • •Randomgal
in reply to LifeInMultipleChoice • • •lettruthout
in reply to LifeInMultipleChoice • • •edgemaster72
in reply to LifeInMultipleChoice • • •Gotta justify $850 billion military budget somehow, plus Donny and Petey get a hate boner blowing up brown people
𝕱𝖎𝖗𝖊𝖜𝖎𝖙𝖈𝖍
in reply to LifeInMultipleChoice • • •plyth
in reply to LifeInMultipleChoice • • •There will be airfights and Trump is minimizing civilian casualities.
LifeInMultipleChoice
in reply to plyth • • •Airfights? You mean an invasion by the United States trying to wage a massacre on a sovereign nation for nothing other than trying to rob the working class and give money to the rich?
He couldn't give a fuck about civilians. He's a murderer, a rapist, a fraud, and he prays on the misfortuned
prole
in reply to plyth • • •Hahaha. Right.
As he literally murders civilians in international waters
ashughes
in reply to LifeInMultipleChoice • • •TechAnon
in reply to LifeInMultipleChoice • • •It won't work. Internally, Congress is already calling out the illegality of attacking the boats. Congress won't allow a war and has already figured this out enough to tell the military to not follow illegal orders. It's still a sticky situation, but Venezuela's best move is to warn people and wait it out.
x00z
in reply to LifeInMultipleChoice • • •They have answered that question and they said that "the drugs" in those planes is still in transit between other countries. So the planes and boats are not directly going to the US but indirectly.
Allegedly.
IninewCrow
in reply to MicroWave • • •Has a different meaning to everyone when you change the country names
frongt
in reply to IninewCrow • • •HootinNHollerin
in reply to IninewCrow • • •takeda
in reply to IninewCrow • • •To me it doesn't. It is still bad. At least with China and Taiwan we know what they want, with Venezuela it is just speculation. Nobody believes it is drugs.
My speculation is that he isn't planning to invade and this is to push Venezuela and other Latin American countries to develop closer relationship with Russia. He did it with Iran, China, India and others.
CmdrShepard49
in reply to takeda • • •jumjummy
in reply to takeda • • •takeda
in reply to jumjummy • • •U.S.-Venezuela tensions rise as Maduro vows defiance with Russian, Chinese support
WBFFTja
in reply to takeda • • •takeda
in reply to Tja • • •black_flag
in reply to IninewCrow • • •Honestly this comment is just so confusing and baffling I'm just dumbfounded. What on earth do you mean? The relationship between China and taiwan is nothing like the relationship between the US and Venezuela
Edit: even if it was...why would it just be presumed to be cool that China close the airspace around Taiwan? Wtf
shalafi
in reply to black_flag • • •Jarix
in reply to black_flag • • •Tabula_stercore
in reply to black_flag • • •black_flag
in reply to Tabula_stercore • • •InternetCitizen2
in reply to black_flag • • •flandish
in reply to IninewCrow • • •HootinNHollerin
in reply to flandish • • •flandish
in reply to HootinNHollerin • • •prole
in reply to HootinNHollerin • • •But was historically part of China prior to the formation of the CCP.
So it's still different than US/Venezuela
freagle
in reply to HootinNHollerin • • •Sorry, that's just now how politics works anywhere. Do you consider with political party "ruled" which states or cities or islands in the US? When the Confederacy seceded from the Union did that suddenly mean they were no longer legitimately part of the US?
Taiwan was part of China, there was a civil war. The losers of the war retreated to Taiwan, and then the US and UK sent warships to block the victors from bringing the losers to justice. Taiwan at that point was still part of China, the country, but now had its own fascist government prosecuting the White Terror and killing hundreds of thousands of people while the US and UK protected them, and then integrated them into the global economy. At no point did Taiwan secede, at no point did the concept of the nation of China have its borders redrawn, nor did the nation of China declare a separation between the island the mainland.
Hell, even the fascist mass murderers on Taiwan said it - there is only one China and Taiwan is an island province of that country. And world leaders agree that's the case.
vga
in reply to flandish • • •azuth
in reply to vga • • •vga
in reply to azuth • • •freagle
in reply to vga • • •flandish
in reply to vga • • •vga
in reply to flandish • • •flandish
in reply to vga • • •freagle
in reply to vga • • •T00l_shed
in reply to freagle • • •freagle
in reply to T00l_shed • • •T00l_shed
in reply to freagle • • •freagle
in reply to T00l_shed • • •That's not actually the situation, but thanks for playing. There is a country called China. It has existed for many years. Taiwan become a province of China in 1683 by force. 212 years later, Japan invaded it and made it a colony.
In 1945, the country known as China was ruled by a party called the Kuomintang. The Kuomintang and party in the country of China, the Communist Party of China, joined forces to push the Japanese out of China, which included pushing them out of Taiwan. Taiwan becomes a part of China again.
So Taiwan is a part of China at this point and the CPC and the KMT fight in a civil war The KMT loses. This makes the CPC the ruling party of China. Much like how the Union defeated the Confederacy and reunited the USA.
At this point, however, Britain, a country actively occupying colonial holdings in China, and the USA, actively asserting its privilege to own the colonies of Japan, decides that they would rather work with the KMT than the CPC so they intervene in the civil war and prevent the integration of Taiwan so they can engage in financial neocolonialism. They do this through force of arms.
So which is it?
A) Taiwan was never part of China because they stole it from the indigenous Islanders? In this case the US should be dissolved, as should Australia and all of Latin America.
B) Taiwan was part of China but because might makes right they rightfully seceded by the force of arms from the British and American imperial program? So now might makes right and Puerto Rico and Hawaii and Guam and the Marianas are colonial holdings fair and square.
C) Taiwan has been a part of China for centuries and restoring territorial integrity is the first step to ending the primarily contradiction of imperialism which threatens all progress in all other realms? China has demonstrated a commitment to 1-country-2-systems so we know Taiwan will be able to administer itself relatively autonomy except in areas of national defense. And we know China supports the cultural expression of indigenous peoples and that the indigenous of Taiwan will be afforded the ability to express cultural automony on the island and eventually will partake in a post-colonial movement after the existential threat of Western imperialism is contained.
T00l_shed
in reply to freagle • • •Love the mental gymnastics, gold medal.
Also lol.
freagle
in reply to T00l_shed • • •T00l_shed
in reply to freagle • • •freagle
in reply to T00l_shed • • •Tibet is occupied in a way that there is almost no historical precedent for. Tibet was a slave economy with a monarchy. China's occupation has increased the autonomy of the masses of Tibet over their previous formation. There have been very few, if any, occupational in history where the people being occupied run their own government, speak their native languages, maintain their cultural traditions, and collaborate with their occupier on programs to reduce poverty and increase quality of life.
But of course the reality is always multifaceted. In American occupied territories you don't see foreign governments training terrorists and air lifting them into the territory to create chaos and death. Whereas in Tibet that's exactly what the US has done.
There's a reason why the Dalai Lama's brother wrote in his memoirs that he deeply regrets collaborating with the Americans/CIA - because they made everything fundamentally worse and there only interest was attacking communism at all costs.
Further, Tibet never had any standing as a Westphalian nation-state. It was never recognized as a nation-state internationally. Now, I don't personally think the Westphalian system is a great system to make judgements by - Palestine has never been a Westphalian nation-state, for example - but we need to be clear in what our comparison points are. Tibet is occupied like Palestine and the Americas are occupied. Of those 3, Tibet is doing the best, has the greatest quality of life, has the greatest autonomy, has the safest cultural practices, and is on an upward trajectory.
Would I love to see decolonization everywhere? Yes. But I am fully able to hold that desire while realizing we have to decolonize the Commonwealth first if there are to be any unsustainable gains along that dimension. Any attempt to decolonize territory that is not part of the historical Commonwealth is going to be a movement that strengthens the EuroAmerica global colonial/neocolonial empire.
The majority of the Tibetan people are living good lives, are happy enough with the current situation, and are not agitating for separation, likely because they understand first hand what US and British meddling leads to - mass death. The Free Tibet and other similar orgs are Western orgs, not homegrown ones, and they primarily serve the purposes of US imperialism.
T00l_shed
in reply to freagle • • •freagle
in reply to T00l_shed • • •What does it mean for it to be OK? It is a thing that China did in the 1600s. I don't think colonization is OK. China's current management of its occupied populations is head and shoulders above what what all other occupations have done and are doing.
Further, it's clear that any reduction in shared national security in Tibet would result in violent American intervention. That much they have proven. So now the question is - what is to be done? As far as I can tell, the Chinese hypothesis is to maintain shares national security while collaborating with the people to promote their culture, their collective thriving, and their autonomy to best of their abilities. And it appears to be working well both on maintaining security against American terrorism and maintaining healthy communities.
I'd say that's sort of the best we've seen in history so far.
T00l_shed
in reply to freagle • • •freagle
in reply to T00l_shed • • •The pro colonial on the Commonwealth side use the same arguments like they we let them use their languages and don't force them into reservations? The SCOTUS, with RBG leading the opinion, reaffirmed that US territorial claims are based on the Doctrine of Discovery, a papal bull that establishes indigenous people as subhuman as the legal basis for why it was OK to murder, rape, and disposses them.
That doesn't sound anything like what China is saying or doing in the least. Again, there are no Russian or Chinese intelligence agencies training indigenous terrorists and sending them into America to wreak havoc and kill innocents. The language of Tibet is thriving while in the US there are dozens of languages that have fewer than 10 speakers left.
It's really a night/day comparison. I can't imagine anyone actually believing that the pro-colonial position in the Commonwealth is anything akin to what China is doing.
T00l_shed
in reply to freagle • • •freagle
in reply to T00l_shed • • •The authoritarian lens is a useless one since every single nation in the history of humanity uses authority.
The Hong Kong protests were a great example of the difference. In the US you have protests because a cop killed a man in cold blood and the cops come out and tear gas protestors and some died. They even let a vigilante kill people and then let him off without punishment.
In Hong Kong, which was a colony of Britain, the youth of Hong Kong decided to protest and it got really violent - on the part of the protestors. They were throwing molotovs at police. And the police just backed off most of the time. The protests went on for weeks and the police exercises significant restraint compared to US cops.
The important thing to note about Hong Kong is that it was violently ripped away from China and turned into a British colony because the Brits wanted to sell opium to China and China said no. For most of the British occupation the Chinese in Hong Kong suffered immensely, but when the Brits realized they weren't going to be able to hold on to Hong Kong they changed all their policies to create social conditions that would lead inevitably to this exact conflict. That's partly why there was such a generational gap in the Hong Kong protest movement. Many of the older generation knew what Britain was about and wanted to rejoin their country but the youth were fed a lot of lies and propaganda so when China moved forward with the national security aimed at preventing foreign interference the students protested.
As for Xinjiang, I encourage you to look at a map. The US military establishment has openly stated that they are collaborating with East Turkistan separatists as part of their strategy in the region and have been for some time. This is an extension of the US strategy that developed the Mujahideen into a terrorist group to fight the USSR and ultimate spawned Al-Qaeda and ISIS. In short, the US has been training, arming, and organizing terrorism in the region as part of their strategy to destabilize any opposition, and for China specifically they targeted Xinjiang.
If you look at the number of terrorist attacks in Xinjiang over the years, there was clearly a problem, but it's equally clear that China launched an anti-terrorism campaign and the number of attacks has plummeted. This again shows the difference between the Western use of authority and the Chinese us of authority. When the West does anti-terrorism they carpet bomb countries, commit mass war crimes, destroy infrastructure, and kill millions. China's anti-terrorism campaign focused on economics, education, social integration, and counterintelligence. Not only did it work, 50+ countries have inspected Xinjiang and approved of the program. The Uyghurs still govern the region as an autonomous cultural zone. They still openly practice their religion and cultural practices, they still teach their children in their language. Birth rates have come down to stabilize at the same rate as Western societies, or higher, which is inline with social progress women getting more autonomy, better health outcomes across the board, and better economic prospects.
So yeah, I won't disagree that both the US and China are authoritarian, but I don't really see any country in the world that isn't authoritarian. It's the way things are right now. So given that there will be authoritarianism, who is actually working to improve lives and who is working to destroy them?
T00l_shed
in reply to freagle • • •freagle
in reply to T00l_shed • • •Because there are real material differences? What is it that you don't understand? Fully 1/3 of indigenous children were separated from their families by the US and forced in torture schools to "get the Indian out of them". China has done no such thing. The US administered forced hysterectomies on "undesirables", tens of thousands of women had the uteruses just removed. China has done no such thing.
China doesn't have a reserve system like the US. China hasn't broken all of its treaties with the Tibetans or the Uyghurs the way the US has with indigenous nations. China didn't hire a fascist to desecrate a sacred mountain that was stolen by breaking a treaty.
Read your history. Stop comparing American propaganda narratives and actually learn about what's really happening. These two historical processes are incredibly materially different
T00l_shed
in reply to freagle • • •Except for the Uyghurs, and the organ harvesting from the homeless.
Cause the wrote the treaties and brake them without consequence
I know i know it's allllll western propaganda right. Nothing China has ever done is bad everything is sunshine and rainbows under the iron fist with a firewall to keep outside info coming in, with a social credit system to keep people pushed down. It's alllll fake.
You need to learn your history too it seems. Stop comparing Chinese propaganda narrative and learn what is actually happening. Two different processes with the same outcome.
freagle
in reply to T00l_shed • • •We went through the Uyghur situation. The birthrate of Uyghurs is higher than white people in America. They didn't forcibly sterilize tens of thousands of Uyghurs. It's quite literally a propaganda war about Xinjiang with the US trying to paint China's successful anti-terrorism program as a genocide in order to continue the USA's program of training and arming terrorists in Xinjiang. Like, it's literally a propaganda game and you're losing because you can't see it.
The organ harvesting propaganda comes from Falun Gong, a group that is funded by the CIA. It is further propagated by Victims of Communism journalists, again, an organization tied to the US propaganda machine. Another propaganda war that is winning the battle for your brain. No. There is no actual evidence of organ harvesting from homeless people in China. It is literally just baseless allegations.
Go find me treaties that China broke with the Tibetans or the Uyghurs. I can wait.
T00l_shed
in reply to freagle • • •freagle
in reply to T00l_shed • • •I will never understand why anglos think they are more susceptible to Chinese or Russian propaganda than they are to American and British propaganda. American propaganda spans then entire globe. They run entire media companies for the USG. American and British propaganda analysts have demonstrated just how powerful Anglo propaganda machines are.
Chinese propaganda, by comparison, can only be a very recent phenomenon because 70 years ago they were a total agrarian society without any technology while the US was the most technologically advanced society on the planet.
It doesn't take much to understand that when the CIA funds a group like The Epoch Times and the Victims of Communism that they can't be trusted with telling the truth. But they don't even TRY. All you have to do is look into their claims and they fall completely apart. The original authors of the book of the victims of communism have denounced their own writing as fabrication and deliberately misleading. They counted KIA Nazi soldiers as victims of communism FFS!!
No, these are not equal sides. No these are not abstractions that have equal valence. They are distinct and distinguishable historical processes. You can look at them individually, you can compare them. You will not find an equivalent of Voice of America or Radio Free Asia. You will not find an unbroken history dating back to before the Opium Wars of oligarchic manipulation of the media for the purpose of going to war and plundering. You will not find another empire that dominated 80% of the world's population.
You imagine me some empty headed brainwashed robot but you fail to understand that I was raised on the same TV shows, video games, movies, books, and rhetoric that you were. I was taught the same false history you were and I believed it like you do. I am aware of the information you have access to and the perspective you had because I personally used to have it.
I have empathy for your position. You have none for mine.
T00l_shed
in reply to freagle • • •I promise you I don't.
That's not true at all
Being recent doesn't mean it can't be effective.
Look, I can't trust what comes from the Chinese government because of what I've seen and heard, I don't trust pretty much any government based on what I see and hear, China is no different. There are no governments that genuinely serve the interest of their governed. I know not everything said by governments are lies, but when you see a graph with "how happy are you" and China and north Kora are at the top of the lists you gotta wonder. I don't take what is said to me by my countries propaganda at face value, and neither should uou
freagle
in reply to T00l_shed • • •I wish I could leap through the screen and shake you emphatically. Why?! Why do you gotta wonder!? Listen to your inner voice answer the question. Then continue.
No seriously. Home ownership in China and Cuba is higher than in the US. China accounts for nearly ALL global poverty alleviation. Chinese people went from living on a dollar a day to having purchasing power parity with the richest countries in the world in 70 years. That means from Grandma being born to now she has seen her family go from rice farming and dying of infections to driving an electric car. It's quite literally stunning.
But more to the point, Harvard University spent 15 years studying Chinese sentiment about their government. Harvard. A US university, that propogated and profited from race science and the slave trade. That has graduated so many US presidents. That university spent 15 years studying Chinese citizens and determining that the Communist Party of China enjoys a 95.5% approval rating by the people in China.
That not the Chinese government saying that. That's a Western imperial institution saying that.
As for North Korea, just think of the history. In 1953 they had no buildings and were living in caves because the Americans bombed literally every structure in the territory and then started dropping napalm on the people. They were literally living in caves to avoid the US raining fire down upon them.
And now they have a nuclear ICBM. They built an entire nuclear program and an entire rocketry program in 70 years after having every single productive capacity completely annihilated. You don't do that without food, so they had to build their agriculture back up, while they were under the world's worst embargo in history. They had to rebuild all of their power infrastructure. They had to rebuild all of their transportation infrastructure. They had to rebuild all of their manufacturing infrastructure.
Every single industry had to be built from rubble and they are only 70 years into it. And their people are fed, they are safe from invaders, they are safe from the Americans specifically, and they did all together as a unified society.
I would be very unhappy if my country was bombed to the raw earth, but honestly after decades of working side by side with my neighbors to rebuild my home, my village, and my country, I think I would be pretty happy.
The only reason you say that it seems fantastical that Chinese or North Korean people are happy is because you are starting from the assumption that the people live under a tyrannical government that deliberately impoverished them while they get rich and force everyone to comply with corrupt whims. That's the propaganda story, not reality.
The reality is that corruption is everywhere in all governments, and the West loves corrupt governments because it can bribe anyone to do anything anywhere in the world. When countries like China implement anti-corruption programs, Western propagandists call it authoritarian and say it's terrible, but it's only terrible because the people getting purged are compromised by the West.
The reality is that Russian and Chinese spies can't really do too much damage to the US because they don't have the global network of terrorists, death squads, and paramilitary groups that the US has. On the reverse, US spies in China or Russia could cause massive damage because they have been working for 70 years to cultivate armed paramilitaries and terrorists to destabilize entire regions on command. So when China implements counter-intelligence and national security programs, we hear on the one hand US intelligence officials saying things like "the CPC has crippled our spy networks in China" and on the other hand we hear news reports of draconian authoritarianism for no reason other than being evil and bad. Which is it? Did China apply it's authority to keep the country safe from the CIA's deep and wide network of spies or does China just enjoy punishing it's people for no reason?
Back to what started this, why do you think it makes perfectly logical sense to believe the Chinese and North Korean people couldn't possibly be as happy as reports indicate they are? What specific things do you think make that impossible, and very importantly, how did you come to the conclusion that those specific things are true?
Because I know what I used to think. I used to think "It's obvious! Everyone knows this! It's all over the news all the time! Look at the great firewall, look at the social credit score, look at how they censor pooh bear!"
And what I found out was that none of that shit came from my own research. It came from the Western propaganda machine. And when I finally started to actually dig in, I found out it was just paper thing garbage. Chinese ecommerce in China sells Winnie the Pooh kitsch just like anywhere else in the world. The social credit score is for businesses that harm the public, and while they did try it out for individuals it was so easily abused the government shut it down to protect their people.
I don't know how to convince you. I probably can't. But maybe this puts some doubt in your mind, or someone else who finds this thread.
T00l_shed
in reply to freagle • • •vga
in reply to IninewCrow • • •Perhaps go with the original.
Russia illegally annexes Crimea.
ayyy
in reply to vga • • •xenomor
in reply to MicroWave • • •Akasazh
in reply to xenomor • • •Im certain the nobel commitee is currently scrambling how to not give him an award without triggering an international incident.
And the actions surrounding Venzuela kinda prove that Trump is willing to go to war to receive his peace price.
wheezy
in reply to xenomor • • •DupaCycki
in reply to xenomor • • •ceoofanarchism
in reply to MicroWave • • •ms.lane
in reply to ceoofanarchism • • •Wouldn't 'Imperialist' be more accurate than 'Colonist' though?
I don't think Trump wants a new American Colony in Venezuela, he just wants their resources and (unpaid) labor.
gwl
in reply to ms.lane • • •DupaCycki
in reply to ms.lane • • •PoorYorick
in reply to MicroWave • • •Jarix
in reply to PoorYorick • • •demonsword
in reply to Jarix • • •Jarix
in reply to demonsword • • •Tollana1234567
in reply to PoorYorick • • •mirshafie
in reply to Tollana1234567 • • •Actually they have the largest proven oil reserve in the world, although it is a composition that needs more processing to turn into fuel. Which may make it unique for precursors for certain plastics, pharmaceuticals or advanced materials.
Top estimated reserves are:
1. Venezuela 48 Gm³
2. KSA 42 Gm³
3. Iran 33 Gm³
4. Canada 26 Gm³
As for gas reserves, it's
1. Russia 47.8 Tm³
2. Iran 33.5 Tm³
3. Qatar 24.3 Tm³
4. USA 9.1 Tm³
Tollana1234567
in reply to mirshafie • • •Gammelfisch
in reply to PoorYorick • • •vga
in reply to MicroWave • • •Well, this is the new world order now. This is what Russia drove the world into: it's now ok for larger countries to just annex (parts of) smaller countries.
If other nations don't like it, just hang on to it until enough people forget that you didn't own it in the first place.
filister
in reply to vga • • •vga
in reply to filister • • •Bakkoda
in reply to vga • • •AppleTea
in reply to vga • • •Nico198X
in reply to filister • • •ayyy
in reply to vga • • •acargitz
in reply to vga • • •mirshafie
in reply to acargitz • • •Imagine a world where the USA, after 9/11, took up Iran's offer to negotiate with Afghanistan in order to extradite Osama bin Laden and dismantle al Qaeda. (Iran together with Pakistan were positioned to succeed at this, and practically begged the USA to let them do so.)
Imagine Osama bin Laden goes to the Hague and is tried for his crimes. He goes to prison, no death penalty and no martyrdom, to rot away while the world gets on without him.
Imagine no black sites, no Guantanamo Bay. No Iraq war, and therefore no Daesh. No Afghanistan war, and therefore no opiates epidemic.
Imagine how Russia and the Middle East might have evolved in such a climate. Where would Europe be today, in that timeline? Would democracies across the globe have progressed, instead of backslide?
acargitz
in reply to mirshafie • • •- YouTube
www.youtube.comAppleTea
in reply to acargitz • • •☂️-
in reply to MicroWave • • •Crackhappy
in reply to ☂️- • • •caoimhinr
in reply to Crackhappy • • •MrScottyTay
in reply to caoimhinr • • •nfamwap
in reply to MrScottyTay • • •Random_Character_A
in reply to MicroWave • • •Asfalttikyntaja
in reply to Random_Character_A • • •ShinkanTrain
in reply to Random_Character_A • • •thethunderwolf
in reply to MicroWave • • •myfunnyaccountname
in reply to MicroWave • • •guyoverthere123
in reply to myfunnyaccountname • • •Tehbaz
in reply to MicroWave • • •SpiceDealer
in reply to MicroWave • • •CleoCommunist
in reply to MicroWave • • •Guy Ingonito
in reply to MicroWave • • •some_kind_of_guy
in reply to Guy Ingonito • • •Doomsider
in reply to MicroWave • • •If I were you, I would get out of Venezuela! - Our President.
Then shuts down their airspace and starts blowing up boats.
No escape from the christofascist murderers.
Gammelfisch
in reply to MicroWave • • •AppleTea
in reply to Gammelfisch • • •RedFrank24
in reply to MicroWave • • •I mean it's basically just declaring war. It's the US acting unilaterally to attack a foreign nation for no reason at all. Granted that's nothing new, but at least with Iraq and Afghanistan, Bush got permission from Congress through the Iraq Resolution (and the AUMF Against Terrorists Act in Afghanistan's case) before he actually invaded. I get the feeling Trump isn't even going to ask, he's just going to attack Venezuela, get dragged into a war, and die.
Then again, Obama attacked Libya without congressional approval, and while Congress could have done something about it, they didn't.
Nico198X
in reply to MicroWave • • •why not do something useful like ATTACK RUSSIA!
fucking traitors.
Ilixtze
in reply to MicroWave • • •richardmtanguay
in reply to MicroWave • • •Anakin-Marc Zaeger
in reply to MicroWave • • •DupaCycki
in reply to MicroWave • • •Russia conducts special military operations, while the US is fighting terrorism. It's all the same. Except our media outlets - in the case of my country, mostly American - will only speak about one of the two. Let's do our best to spread the word more or less evenly.
All empires will fall. They have to. Otherwise there's no future for humanity.
Hemingways_Shotgun
in reply to MicroWave • • •Hemingways_Shotgun
in reply to MicroWave • • •I'm hoping that the chain-of-command is so broken because of the bumblefucks in charge at the top that Venezuela actually gets some good licks in ala Ukraine to Russia.
I know its doubtful, but a man can dream.