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L'accès au marché du travail, l'autre façon de limiter l'immigration
infomigrants.net/fr/post/66760…
"Au-delà du contrôle des frontières pour canaliser l'immigration, une nouvelle étude montre comment l’Autriche, l'Allemagne, l'Irlande et le Royaume-Uni réduisent par des réglementations la compétitivité et les chances d'accès à l'emploi de certains migrants."


"Two Latin girls pose in front of a wall of graffiti in Lynch Park," Brooklyn (1974)
Photo: Danny Lyon / EPA



"These AI videos are just sort of repeating things that are on the internet & just because it’s on the internet doesn’t mean it’s accurate.

"You end up with a very simplified version of the past, & we need to be looking at the past & it needs to be nuanced & we need to be aware of where the evidence or an argument comes from.”

Good @404mediaco @jasonkoebler story ⤵️

404media.co/ai-generated-borin…
#AI Threads


AI Generated 'Boring History' Videos Are Flooding YouTube and Drowning Out Real History


As I do most nights, I was listening to YouTube videos to fall asleep the other night. Sometime around 3 a.m., I woke up because the video YouTube was autoplaying started going “FEEEEEEEE.” The video was called “Boring History for Sleep | How Medieval PEASANTS Survived the Coldest Nights and more.” It is two hours long, has 2.3 million views, and, an hour and 15 minutes into the video, the AI-generated voice glitched.

“In the end, Anne Boleyn won a kind of immortality. Not through her survival, but through her indelible impact on history. FEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE,” the narrator says in a fake British accent. “By the early 1770s, the American colonies simmered like a pot left too long over a roaring fire,” it continued.


0:00
/0:15

The video was from a channel I hadn’t seen before, called “Sleepless Historian.” I took my headphones out, didn’t think much of it at the time, rolled over, and fell back asleep.

The next night, when I went to pick a new video to fall asleep to, my YouTube homepage was full of videos from Sleepless Historian and several similar-sounding channels like Boring History Bites, History Before Sleep, The Snoozetorian, Historian Sleepy, and Dreamoria. Lots of these videos nominally check the boxes for what I want from something to fall asleep to. Almost all of them are more than three hours long, and they are about things I don’t know much about. Some video titles include “Unusual Medieval Cures for Common Illnesses,” “The Entire History of the American Frontier,” “What It Was Like to Visit a BR0THEL in Pompeii,” and “What GETTING WASTED Was Like in Medieval Times.” One of the channels has even been livestreaming this "history" 24/7 for weeks.

In the daytime, when I was not groggy and half asleep, it quickly became obvious to me that all of these videos are AI generated, and that they are part of a sophisticated and growing AI slop content ecosystem that is flooding YouTube, is drowning out human-made content created by real anthropologists and historians who spend weeks or months researching, fact-checking, scripting, recording, and editing their videos, and are quite literally rewriting history with surface-level, automated drek that the YouTube algorithm delivers to people. YouTube has said it will demonetize or otherwise crack down on “mass produced” videos, but it is not clear whether that has had any sort of impact on the proliferation of AI-generated videos on the platform, and none of the people I spoke to for this article have noticed any change.

“It’s completely shocking to me,” Pete Kelly, who runs the popular History Time YouTube channel, told me in a phone interview. “It used to be enough to spend your entire life researching, writing, narrating, editing, doing all these things to make a video, but now someone can come along and they can do the same thing in a day instead of it taking six months, and the videos are not accurate. The visuals they use are completely inaccurate often. And I’m fearful because this is everywhere.”

“I absolutely hate it, primarily the fact that they’re historically inaccurate,” Kelly added. “So it worries me because it’s just the same things being regurgitated over and over again. When I’m researching something, I go straight to the academic journals and books and places that are offline, basically. But these AI videos are just sort of repeating things that are on the internet and just because it’s on the internet doesn’t mean it’s accurate. You end up with a very simplified version of the past, and we need to be looking at the past and it needs to be nuanced and we need to be aware of where the evidence or an argument comes from.”

Kelly has been making history videos on YouTube since 2017 and has amassed 1.2 million YouTube subscribers because of the incredibly in-depth research he does for his feature-length videos. He said for an average long-form video, he will read 20 books, lots of journal articles, and will often travel to archaeological sites. It’s impossible to say for sure, but he has considered the possibility that some of these AI videos are modeled on his videos, and that the AI tools being used to create them could have been trained on his work. The soothing British accent used in many of the AI-generated videos I’ve seen is similar to Kelly’s actual voice. “A lot of AI basically scraped YouTube in order to develop all of the ways people make videos now,” he said. “So I mean, maybe it scraped my voice.”

He said that he has begun to get comments accusing his videos of being AI-generated, and his channel now says “no AI is used in this channel.” He has also set up a separate channel where he speaks directly to camera rather than narrating over other footage.

“​​People listen to the third-person, disembodied narration voice and assume that it’s AI now, and that’s disheartening,” he said. “I get quite a lot of comments from people thinking that I’m AI, so I’m like, if you think I’m AI I’m going to have to just put myself in the videos a little more. Pretty much everyone I know is doing something as a result of this AI situation, which is crazy in itself. We’ve all had to react. The thing I’m doing is I’m appearing more in videos. I’m speaking to the camera because I think people are going to be more interested in an actual human voice.”





Kelly said the number of views he gets on an average video has plateaued or dropped alongside the rise of AI-generated content that competes with his, which is something I heard from other creators, too. As a viewer, I have noticed that I now have to wade through tons of AI-generated spam in order to find high-quality videos.

“I have seen, and my fellow history creators—there’s quite a few of us, we all talk to each other—we’ve all seen quite a noticeable drop in views that seems to coincide exactly with this swarm of AI-generated, three-hour, four-hour videos where they’re making videos about the exact same things we make videos about, and for the average person, I don’t think they really care that much whether it’s AI or not,” he said.
youtube.com/embed/5Pxvk7ddgVM?…
Kelly has started putting himself in his videos to show he's a real person

A few months ago, in our Behind the Blog segment, I wrote about a YouTube channel called Ancient Americas, run by an amateur anthropologist named Pete. In that blog, I worried about whether AI slop creators would try to emulate creators like Pete, who clearly take great pride in researching and filming their videos. Ancient Americas releases about one 45-minute video per month about indigenous cultures from the Western Hemisphere. Each of his videos features a substantive bibliography and works cited document, which explains the books, scientific papers, documentaries, museums, and experts he sources his research from. Every image and visual he uses is credited with both where it came from and what license he’s using. Through his videos, I have learned an incredible amount about cultures I didn’t know existed, like the Wari, the Zapotecs, the Calusa, and many more. Pete told me in an email that he has noticed the AI history video trend on YouTube as well, but “I can’t say much about how accurate these videos are as a whole because I tend to steer clear of them. Life is far too short for AI.”

“Of the few I've watched, I would say that the information tends to be vague and surface level and the generated AI images of indigenous history that they show range from uncanny to cringe. Not surprisingly, I'm not a fan of such content but thankfully, these videos don't seem to get many views,” he said. “The average YouTube viewer is much more discerning than they get credit for. Most of them see the slop for what it is. On the other hand, will that always be the case? That remains to be seen. AI is only going to get better. Ultimately, whether creators like me sink or swim is up to the viewing public and the YouTube algorithm.”

Pete is correct in that a lot of the AI-generated videos don’t have a lot of views, but that’s quickly changing. Sleepless Historian has 614,000 subscribers, posts a multi-hour video every single day, and has published three videos that have more than a million views. I found several other AI-generated history channels that have more than 100,000 subscribers. Many of them are reposting the same videos that Sleepless Historian publishes, but many of them are clearly generating their own content.

Every night before I go to sleep, I open YouTube and I see multiple AI-generated history videos being served to me, and some YouTube commenters have noticed that they are increasingly being fed AI-generated history videos. People on Reddit have noticed that the comments under these videos are a mix of what appear to be real people saying they are grateful for the content and a mix of bots posting fake sob stories. For example, a recent Sleepless Historian video has comments from “History-Snooze,” “The_HumbleHistory” “RealSleepyHistorianOfficial,” “SleeplessOrren,” “SleepyHistory-n9k,” “Drizzle and Dreamy History of the Past,” “TheSleepyNavigator-d6b5c,” “Historyforsleepy168,” and a handful of other channels that post the exact same type of content (and often repost the exact same videos).

In one video, an account called Sleepymore (which posts AI-generated history videos) posted “It’s 1 a.m. in Kyiv. I’m a Ukrainian soldier on night watch. Tonight is quiet—no sirens, just silence. I just wanted to say: your videos make me feel a little less alone, a little less afraid. Thank you.” An account called SleeplessHistorian2 responded to say “great comment.” Both of these accounts do nothing but post AI-generated history videos and spam comments on other AI-generated history videos. The email address associated with Sleepless Historian” did not respond to a request for comment from 404 Media.

The French Whisperer, a human ASMRtist who makes very high quality science and history videos that I have been falling asleep to for years, told me that he has also noticed that he’s competing with AI-generated videos, and that the videos are “hard to miss.”

“It is always hard to precisely determine what factors make a YouTube channel grow or shrink, but mine has seen its number of views drop dramatically in the past 6-12 months (like -60%) and for the first time in years I barely get discovered at all by new viewers,” he said. “I used to gain maybe 100-200 subscribers per day until 2024, now it is flat. I think only my older viewers still come to my videos, but for others my channel is now hidden under a pile of AI slop that all people who are into history/science + sleep or relaxation content see in their search results.”

“I noticed this trend of slop content in my niche starting around 2 years ago,” he said. “Viewers warned me that there were channels that were either AI-assisted (like a real person reading AI scripts), or traditional slop (a real person paraphrasing wikipedia or existing articles), basically replicating the kind of content I make, but publishing 1 or 2 hours of content per day. Then it became full AI a few months ago, it went from a handful of channels to dozens (maybe hundreds? I have no idea), and since then this type of content has flooded YouTube.”

Another channel I sometimes listen to has purposefully disabled the captions on their videos to make it harder for AI bots to steal from: “Captions have unfortunately been disabled due to AI bots copying (plagiarizing) my scripts,” a notice on YouTube reads.

All of this is annoying and threatening on a few different levels. To some extent, when I’m looking for something to fall asleep to, the actual content sometimes feels like it doesn’t matter. But I’ve noticed that, over time, as I fall asleep listening to history podcasts, I do retain a lot of what I learn, and if I hear something interesting as I’m dozing off, I will often go research that thing more when I’m awake and alert. I personally would prefer to listen to videos made by real people who know what they are talking about, and are benefiting from my consumption of their work. There is also the somewhat dystopian fact that, because of these videos, there are millions of people being unwittingly lulled to sleep by robots.

Historians who have studied the AI summaries of historical events have found that they “flatten” history: “Prose expression is not some barrier to the communication of historical knowledge, to be cleared by any means, but rather an integral aspect of that communication,” Mack Penner, a postdoctoral fellow in the Department of History at the University of Calgary, argued last year. “Outsourcing the finding, the synthesizing, and the communicating to AI is to cede just about the whole craft to the machines.”

As YouTube and other platforms are spammed with endless AI-generated videos, they threaten not just to drown out the types of high-quality videos that The French Whisperer, Ancient Americas, and other historians, anthropologists, and well-meaning humans are making. They also threaten to literally rewrite history—or people’s understanding of it—with all of the biases imbued into AI by its training material and, increasingly, by the willful manipulation of the companies that own these tools.

All of the creators I spoke to said that, ultimately, they think the quality of their videos is going to win out, and that people will hopefully continue to seek out their videos, whether that’s on YouTube or elsewhere. They each have Patreons, and The French Whisperer said that he has purposefully “diversified away from YouTube” because of forced ads, settings that distort the sound of softly spoken videos, and the 30 percent cut YouTube takes from its membership program. But Kelly said he believes that it has become much harder to break into this world, because "when I started, I was just competing against other humans. I don't really know how you can compete against computers."

The French Whisperer still posts his videos on YouTube, but said that it is increasingly not a reliable platform for him: “I concluded some time ago that I would better vote with my feet and disengage from YouTube, which I could afford to do because by chance my content is very audio oriented. I bet everything I could on podcasts and music apps like Spotify and Apple, on Patreon, and on various apps I sell licenses to,” he said. “I have launched different podcasts derived from my original channel, and even begun to transform my YouTube channel into a podcast show—you probably noticed that I promote these other outlets at the beginning of almost every single video. As a result of my growth elsewhere and the drop on YouTube, the bulk of my audience (like 80-90%) is now on other sites than YouTube, and these ones have not been contaminated by AI slop so far. In a nutshell, I already had reasons to treat YouTube as a secondary platform before, and the fact that it became trashier with the AI content is just one more.”

“An entire niche can be threatened overnight by AI, or YouTube's policies, or your access to monetization, and this only reinforces my belief that this is not a reasonable career choice. Unless you have millions of followers and can look at it as an athlete would—earn as much as you can, pay your taxes, and live on your investments for the rest of your life when your career inevitably ends.”

Pete from Ancient Americas, meanwhile, said he’s just going to keep making videos and hope for the best.

“It does me no good to fret and obsess over something I have no control over. AI may be polluting the river but I still have to swim in it or sink. Second, I have a lot of faith in what I do and I love doing it,” he said. “At the moment, I don't think AI can create a video the way that I can. I take the research very seriously and try to get as much information as possible. I try to include details that the viewer would have a very difficult time finding on their own; things that are beyond the Wikipedia article or a cursory Google search. I also use ancient artifacts and artworks from a culture to show the viewer how the culture expressed itself and I believe that this is VERY important when you want your audience to connect with ancient people. I've never seen AI do this. It's always a slideshow of crappy AI images. The only thing I can do in an AI world is to keep the ship sailing forward.”

Kelly, who runs History Time, says he sees it as a real problem. “It’s worrying to me just for humanity,” he said. “Not to get too high brow, but it’s not good for the state of knowledge in the world. It makes me worry for the future.”




Video recording police isn’t the equivalent of throwing a Molotov cocktail at them, no matter what Kristi Noem says.

freedom.press/issues/recording…

in reply to Freedom of the Press

If you're going to go to jail anyway, you may as well make it worth your while.



Why do I have a sneaking certainty that this terminal UI demands more CPU cycles and RAM than a fully maxed-out Sun 3/60 running NeWS, or a similarly-maxed Macintosh IIci running A/UX, never mind System 7?
fosstodon.org/@orhun/115147606…


Bauscia di tutto il mondo uniteviiii

Ci vediamo venerdì prossimo 12 Settembre alle ore 19:00 all'Yguana Cafè?

Yguana Cafè
Via Papa Gregorio XIV 16 - 20123 Milano (MI)

Fatemi sapere chi vieneeeeeee 🙂

@fucinafibonacci @saveriophoto @Gabrielebu @Ingordi_Channel

Majden 🎨🕊👠 reshared this.

in reply to Ingordi Channel

se c'è brutto tempo si. Se è bello forse vado a motorettare dalle parti del Verdon


Tesco is suing Broadcom and technology reseller Computacenter in a dispute over VMware software licences that it says could disrupt its ability to keep food on shelves.

computing.co.uk/news/2025/clou…

#technews #broadcom #computacenter #vmware #tesco






Filters is still my favorite mastodon feature.

Over federation, over no ads, over language tools, over... whatever you might think its better... no, Filters is the best feature, at least for me.

I wish <insert almost any other site> had filters.



OpenAI hires the team behind Xcode coding assistant Alex Codes
https://techcrunch.com/2025/09/05/openai-hires-the-team-behind-xcode-coding-assistant-alex-codes/?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub

Posted into Latest TechCrunch Stories @latest-techcrunch-stories-Techcrunch



How big can a black hole get?

Really, really, REALLY soul-vaporizingly big.

But it turns out there's an upper limit to how massive they can be, because a) they're sloppy eaters, and 2) the universe is only so old.

scientificamerican.com/article…




unemployment rate in the usa ticks up slightly to 4.3%
highest since 2021


my macbook with Asahi Linux now lasts more than 6 hours, which is kind of crazy compared to just several hours a few weeks ago. they surely did something with power management, which is truly awesome.

macbooks are beautiful machines, but the closed nature of macOS is just criminal. the Asahi Linux team is working towards liberating these machines.

#Linux #Apple



Ja hem acabat el disseny i la programació de la Nova Aixeta! Ja ho tenim tot a punt per presentar-la el dilluns 8 de setembre!

Ha sigut una tasca densa i lenta. Hem revisat línia per línia tot el codi de la plataforma, retocant errors, i agilitzant tots els processos. I, paral·lelament, hem anat implementant el nou disseny. En total, 5 mesos de feina per un equip petitíssim de 3 persones.

Tinc moltes ganes que ho pugueu veure. És un dels projectes més bèsties en els que he participat.

reshared this



Diventiamo padroni dei dati generati dalla nostra auto! - Vaielettrico

vaielettrico.it/diventiamo-pad…

Giupardeb reshared this.



One of the ways that LLM-authored code improves productivity is by merely SAYING it does things. It's way faster than the whole time-consuming process of actually doing things. This is real code someone sent to me for review.
in reply to Paco Hope #resist

Here is a way that I think #LLMs and #GenAI are generally a force against innovation, especially as they get used more and more.

TL;DR: 3 years ago is a long time, and techniques that old are the most popular in the training data. If a company like Google, AWS, or Azure replaces an established API or a runtime with a new API or runtime, a bunch of LLM-generated code will break. The people vibe code won't be able to fix the problem because nearly zero data exists in the training data set that references the new API/runtime. The LLMs will not generate correct code easily, and they will constantly be trying to edit code back to how it was done before.

This will create pressure on tech companies to keep old APIs and things running, because of the huge impact it will have to do something new (that LLMs don't have in their training data). See below for an even more subtle way this will manifest.

I am showcasing (only the most egregious) bullshit that the junior developer accepted from the #LLM, The LLM used out-of-date techniques all over the place. It was using:

  • AWS Lambda Python 3.9 runtime (will be EoL in about 3 months)
  • AWS Lambda NodeJS 18.x runtime (already deprecated by the time the person gave me the code)
  • Origin Access Identity (an authentication/authorization mechanism that started being deprecated when OAC was announced 3 years ago)

So I'm working on this dogforsaken codebase and I converted it to the new OAC mechanism from the out of date OAI. What does my (imposed by the company) AI-powered security guidance tell me? "This is a high priority finding. You should use OAI."

So it is encouraging me to do the wrong thing and saying it's high priority.

It's worth noting that when I got the code base and it had OAI active, Python 3.9, and NodeJS 18, I got no warnings about these things. Three years ago that was state of the art.



Salesforce-Salesloft Drift, il breach si allarga: colpiti anche Proofpoint, SpyCloud, Tanium e Tenable. Spuntano strumenti di tracking
#CyberSecurity
insicurezzadigitale.com/salesf…


National Parks aren’t just Yellowstone and Yosemite where visitors throng.

With nearly 400 other parks across the country, some of the best surprises could be close by.

theconversation.com/hidden-tre…


in reply to Jürgen Hubert

I am slowly working my way through CJ Cherryh's "Rusalka" (1989) which is a fantasy novel dealing with the Slavic version.

The back copy says it is in "pre-christian Russia" but I keep getting disoriented because the protagonists are trying to travel to the fabulous city of Kiev, where the streets are paved with gold. But the history of that region is complicated, of course, like most places.



#FootPathFriday avec un chemin de #rando en voie de disparition sur la montagne de Sérémont au-dessus de Virieu-le-Grand.

Pour en savoir plus sur la #rando : mastodon.gougere.fr/@Athenenoc…

#bugey #ain #photography #nature



Just uploaded 7 new photos to my Flickr page: flickr.com/photos/stillugly/54… taken around Washington state. #photography


I have been fighting with a random, unannounced change to the way a social media platform works today.

I swear that most tech companies mission for their product design these days is, "Let's take something that was already working badly and make it work even worse."

#EndlessScreaming #Tech



So the DOD is getting renamed to Department of War?

I am deeply disappointed that they failed to call it the Ministry of Peace. This is the problem with fascists -- they don’t read books.


in reply to 网上邻居

The image is a screenshot of a social media post by a user named "bluebird" with the handle "[@]bluebir38952152." The post discusses a news story from the Australian Broadcasting Company about a victory for anti-feminist views in Australia, specifically regarding the criminalization of rape. The post mentions that the陪审团 (jury) views sexual life as a basic human right and that feminism is considered a higher-level demand, implying that sexual rights are prioritized over women's rights. It also references a case where street artist Anthony Lister was acquitted of sexual assault, despite the disclosure of his guilt. The post includes a timestamp of "12月12日,星期四" (December 12, Thursday) and a source attribution to "Jamie McKinnell" and "法庭" (court). The image also includes a blurred photo of a person in a black jacket with a brooch, standing in a corridor with a patterned ceiling.

Provided by @altbot, generated privately and locally using Ovis2-8B

🌱 Energy used: 0.223 Wh




In the secret recording, a top DOJ official admitted the Trump administration will redact every Republican name, leaving the "Democratic people in those files," and "they’re offering her something to keep her mouth shut.”

In response, the official DOJ account posted an unedited screenshot of his explanation email (airplane-mode icon and all). trib.al/KAACt5R




Is Using AI Considered Plagiarism? Find Out the Hidden Facts

Generative AI can easily produce high-quality content with just a few inputs. The best part is that those writing works are high-quality and ready for publication. However, the question we all wonder is " Is using AI considered plagiarism?"

Let’s ...

👉 View more: techdictionary.io/is-using-ai-…

#ArtificialIntelligence #Blogs



→ #Smartglasses record people in public. The most online generation is pushing back.
washingtonpost.com/technology/…

“[A] young #woman shared a #video earlier this month saying she went […] for a Brazilian wax, only to find her aesthetician wearing #Meta #RayBans equipped with a #camera. The batteries weren’t charged [but] the experience rattled her.”

“"It feels like a part of my #life" [Vanessa Orozco] said "to be constantly worried and thinking about my #privacy or my data being stolen or used […]"”

Em reshared this.




„Ich bin nur die Aushilfe“ steht dran. Heutzutage nehmen sie wirklich alles.
#bahn
#bahn



It’s still remarkable how politicians can flat-out deny saying something—even when clear evidence shows otherwise—and it gets dismissed as normal behavior or excused by their own party.

reshared this



SmarterHUMANIZE lite by Positive Pressure Audio is a free Standalone Utility/App for macOS "free, streamlined version of Positive Pressure Audio's flagship Logic Pro MIDI humanization tool" positivepressureaudio.com/smar…



Here's why the #MAGA protectors of #RFK refused to agree to #Wyden's request that the testimony be under oath. He won't tell the truth.

yahoo.com/news/articles/rfk-jr…

#USPol

anubis2814 reshared this.

in reply to (((Cindy Weinstein)))

Gee, whyever would anyone want a serving Cabinet officer to testify under oath? <SNORT>

Stated in other terms, whyever would anyone OBJECT to having someone testify under oath? There seems to be no good reason for that, only BAD ones.



Sebastião Salgado’s final thoughts: ‘If we lived thousands of years, we would think differently: we would understand the mountains’

english.elpais.com/culture/202…

Writer Juan Villoro began working on a profile of the Brazilian photographer without suspecting that he would have to adjust the verb tenses due to his death in May

reshared this





natangelo (@natangelo.bsky.social)

bsky.app/profile/natangelo.bsk…

> Ogni tanto mi chiedo se sto facendo bene il mio lavoro. Poi per fortuna arrivano conferme come questa



In realtà sarebbe:
Musk vuole dare a Elon Musk un enorme pacchetto retributivo da mille miliardi di dollari, con la condizione che il sole sorga ogni giorni per i prossimi dieci anni.

flipboard.com/@ilpost/news-6pg…



Au fil des fêtes communistes
monde-diplomatique.fr/2025/09/…

"Dans la première moitié du XIXe siècle, la « contre-société » communiste crée des espaces de consommation socialiste en acte. Elle s'incarne de manière particulièrement joyeuse lors des moments de rupture du quotidien que sont les fêtes communistes, organisées notamment en France et en Italie au cours du (...)
/ Parti politique, Communisme, Loisirs, Histoire - 2025/09"



Altro che federalismo, il Parlamento snobba le Regioni: l’autonomia differenziata alla prova dei numeri | LA NOTIZIA

lanotiziagiornale.it/altro-che…

> Nella XIX legislatura 111 proposte regionali e zero leggi. I decreti d’urgenza soffocano l’iniziativa territoriale: altro che federalismo


in reply to Brad Koehn ☑️

Derweil verkaufen sich E-Bikes für Kinder zwar noch nicht wie geschnitten Brot, jedoch hat es bei den anfangs als Seniorenvehikel vermarkteten Pedelec auch einige Jahre gedauert, bis die auch bei gesunden Erwachsenen und nun Kindern angefangen haben, richtige Fahrräder zu ersetzen. Der Vergleich von motorisierten Fahrrädern mit Krawall-SUV ist lächerlich, egal was sich dahinter an Ideologie und Marketing verbirgt.



Malware fotografiert Nutzer heimlich bei Porno-Konsum

Die frei verfügbare Malware Stealerium erkennt Pornokonsum und fertigt heimlich Webcam-Aufnahmen an. Cyberkriminelle nutzen die Fotos für Erpressung.

heise.de/news/Malware-fotograf…

#IT #Malware #OpenSource #news



Self-promo, Bandcamp Friday

Sensitive content

in reply to Stefan Bohacek

Self-promo, Bandcamp Friday

Sensitive content

in reply to Octothorpe Protocol

Self-promo, Bandcamp Friday

Sensitive content



infosec.exchange/@RedwoodSec/1…


U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics will never produce trustworthy jobs or inflation data ever again cnbc.com/2025/09/05/trump-bls-… #uspol #inflation



De törstiga barnen var väl Hamas igen.
nbcnews.com/world/gaza/childre…



L'anello hi-tech in ottone cromato che mostra quanto sei intelligente. Edizione limitata in vendita a $ 6000

Nel mondo della tecnologia indossabile, dove ogni dispositivo promette di misurare battiti, passi, sogni e segreti, arriva un oggetto che sfida ogni logica: Smart Ring, l’anello che non ha display, non ha sensori, non ha decorazioni… ma ha qualcosa che nessun altro ha: è in grado di mostrare la tua intelligenza!

telegra.ph/Lanello-hi-tech-in-…

@azzate

in reply to informapirata ⁂

L'Unico Anello... non c'è dubbio
Questa voce è stata modificata (5 giorni fa)

informapirata ⁂ reshared this.

in reply to informapirata ⁂

Io voglio l'anello innovativo che MI FA VEDERE chi ci sarà al mio funerale.
Mi spiace che forse in pochi capiscono il sarcasmo 🧑‍🦯 🙈 😂⚰️

in reply to Erpel

The image depicts a mountainous landscape under a clear blue sky with scattered white clouds. In the foreground, dense evergreen forests cover the lower slopes of the mountains, with trees varying in height and density. The middle ground features a prominent peak with a sharp, rocky summit, partially obscured by low-lying clouds. The upper slopes of the mountain are less densely forested, revealing patches of grass and rocky terrain. The sky is mostly clear, with a few clouds adding texture to the scene. The overall color palette includes deep greens from the forests, earthy browns from the mountain, and vibrant blues from the sky.

Provided by @altbot, generated privately and locally using Ovis2-8B

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