📸 Photographer, JL Werstroh (JLW) AB 🇨🇦 | Capturing life’s beauty through #Landscape #Photography
📷 Share, Comment, Enjoy 🍁
Refelction in the waters of #MoraineLake in #Banff National Park.
#jlwerstroh #janetwerstroh #calgary #nikon #alberta #jlwalbertaphotography #canada #calgaryphotographer 🍁
“Why would anybody start a website?” daverupert.com/2025/09/why-wou…
Lots of great reasons to start a website in 2025, but admittedly the ability to earn a living from it is not one of them.
“Why would anybody start a website?”
Nilay Patel sat down for a Decoder interview with Microsoft CTO Kevin Scott to talk about NLWeb, an open source effort to allow an LLM-style indexing of small websites and provide local search.Dave Rupert
reshared this
"All of this work, as well as the scientific work to create the hardware, represents 99.9999% of the work to create something like OpenAI, and it belongs to all of us. From this, they spend a small amount of money to... seize control ... and use it exclusively for private gain."
"Kropotkin thinks this is bad. Some people would call this a bad system."
existentialcomics.com/comic/58…
Resident Philosopher for AI Ethics
A philosophy webcomic about the inevitable anguish of living a brief life in an absurd world. Also Jokesexistentialcomics.com
Fermiamo il genocidio a Gaza, Blocchiamo la guerra, Blocchiamo tutto!
@anarchia
Fermiamo il genocidio a GazaBlocchiamo la guerrablocchiamo tutto I potenti e i governi vogliono trasformare il mondo in una grande distesa di macerie e di morti. Tutti hanno gli occhi puntati su Gaza perché Gaza rappresenta il mondo. Perché ciò...
Vedi l'articolo
Anarchia - Gruppo Forum reshared this.
3 states passed laws mandating Ten Commandments displays in classrooms, but federal courts have so far blocked them. The laws defy a 45-year-old Supreme Court precedent, according to an expert on First Amendment law:
theconversation.com/3-states-p…
3 states push to put the Ten Commandments back in school – banking on new guidance at the Supreme Court
Louisiana, Texas and Arkansas are testing a Supreme Court precedent barring displays of the Ten Commandments’ display in public school classrooms.The Conversation
The Google decision isn't popular but it's the right one
A little over a year ago, things looked fairly bleak for Google on the legal front (and on other fronts, but we'll get to that).Mathew Ingram (The Torment Nexus)
Ghost 6 is available on Magic Pages!
Happy Monday!
Or, how I call today: Happy Ghost 6 Day 🎉
Ghost has released v6.0.0 around 2 hours ago:
Release 6.0.0 · TryGhost/Ghost
✨ Added native Web Analytics with Tinybird - Hannah Wolfe ✨ Federated Ghost sites over ActivityPub (Social web) - Hannah Wolfe 🎨 Ensured owner user is created with an ObjectID (#24088) - Michael Ba…GitHubTryGhost
It comes with two big new features, that have been heavily beta-tested on Magic Pages as well:
👥 Social Web connects your Ghost site to the Fediverse
📊 Traffic Analytics brings native first-party analytics to your Ghost site
The preparations on my side in the last few weeks paid off. With all the infrastructure beta-tested (thanks to everyone involved!), this was just another update.
Ghost 6 is now rolled out on all customer sites on Magic Pages 🎉
If you want to learn more about the new features, have a look here:
Ghost 6 on Magic Pages
Simple, fast, and reliable Ghost CMS hosting.Magic PagesJannis Fedoruk-Betschki
So, Happy Ghost 6 Day! If you have questions or want to know more, just send me an email to help@magicpages.co or use the live chat.
Jannis
Mark Volman, of Turtles 'Happy Together' fame, dies at 78
Volman and high-school pal Howard Kaylan rose to fame with the '60s pop classic 'Happy Together,' then spent years as the harmonizing duo Flo & Eddie.Stephen Thomas Erlewine (Los Angeles Times)
new zine! a little meditation on power for those of us that aren't rich bastards.
heat-shield.space/power_for_us…
I don't think this one is quite as high-concept as the rest of em, but still curious what other folks think.
📸 Photographer, JL Werstroh (JLW) AB 🇨🇦 | Capturing life’s beauty through #Landscape #Photography
📷 Share, Comment, Enjoy 🍁
#EiffelLake hike in #Banff #NationalPark is a beautiful and diverse trail that offers stunning views of the Valley of the #TenPeaks , the iconic mountains that frame #MoraineLake.
#jlwerstroh #janetwerstroh #calgary #nikon #landscapephotography #alberta #jlwalbertaphotography #canada #calgaryphotographer 🍁
Still standing. Still dramatic. Still not over that storm in ’87.
Lone tree on a Hill near Wodonga, Victoria, Australia.
Photographed and edited by Kev.
© All Rights Reserved by 2 Peeps and a Camera.
#photo #photography #2peepsandacamera #australia #victoria #tree #stormy
#Facebook will Anstupsen reaktivieren
Früher wurde bei Facebook angestupst 150; seit einigen Jahren ist die Funktion aber kaum noch zu finden. Das soll sich nun ändern.
Facebook will Anstupsen reaktivieren
Frueher wurde bei Facebook angestupst seit einigen Jahren ist die Funktion aber kaum noch zu finden. Das soll sich nun aendern.CM News
Sacks of ground fishmeal in a factory in Chumphon, #Thailand. Fishmeal is a coarsely ground powder made from cooked wild fish, bycatch and what is known as trash fish – fish with little market value. The demand for fishmeal, used to feed pets and livestock, has caused overfishing that threatens to collapse the bottom of the food chain.
#climatechange is real. Its effects.
‘No more empty homes while people are homeless’: the squatters being evicted from the northern rivers’ ‘buyback’ homes theguardian.com/environment/20…
‘No more empty homes while people are homeless’: the squatters being evicted from the northern rivers’ ‘buyback’ homes
Since the catastrophic floods of 2022, just 41 homes in the Northern Rivers have been raised, retrofitted or relocated. Far more have been bought back – and those living in them have been told to leavePenry Buckley (The Guardian)
🤖 Tracking strings detected and removed!
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World’s cartoonists on this week’s events
https://www.politico.eu/article/worlds-cartoonists-on-this-weeks-events-169-2/?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Posted into POLITICO Europe @politico-europe-POLITICOEurope
#Smile #Photography #StreetArt
pablomartinezcalleja.blogspot.…
AMERICA'S FIRST TRILLIONAIRE?.... Elon Musk Could Become First Trillionaire Under New Tesla Pay Plan
TESLA'S UNPRECEDENTED PAY PACKAGE: Tesla’s board unveiled a compensation package for the chief executive that could be worth $900 billion if he meets ambitious targets.
NEW YORK TIMES: Tesla’s board on Friday proposed a pay package that could make its chief executive, Elon Musk, the world’s first trillionaire as long as he meets a series of very ambitious goals....
> "...could make its chief executive, Elon Musk, the world’s first trillionaire as long as he meets a series of very ambitious goals"
It's called doing his job. I wish I could get paid up to a trillion dollars for just doing my job. Hell, I'd do a better job of doing his job for just $1 million. The (stacked) board are literally burning money by employing this guy instead of most other people on the planet.
- Илон Маск захочет вложиться в импичмент Трампа. (0 votes)
- Илон Маск не захочет вложиться в импичмент Трампа. (0 votes)
老蛮搬运
那些年避过的坑
视频链接:
youtu.be/LW1XhoN0E1w?feature=s…
哈哈哈哈,还先骂一顿,你们这度拿捏得更精妙,自愧不如。
类似的被迫谈判只做到过拍完桌子然后转头吐嫡系身上,被迫双双退场。
很多职场人只看到往上爬会有更高的福利待遇,从来没想过为什么公司愿意给更多钱。
很多时候,就是有这类更难的坑,更绝境的选择,更大的前途风险要背,拿的是风险溢价。 files.sovbit.host/media/87e02b… files.sovbit.host/media/87e02b… files.sovbit.host/media/87e02b… files.sovbit.host/media/87e02b… files.sovbit.host/media/87e02b… files.sovbit.host/media/87e02b…
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Sagra della Polenta e degli ucccelli. A Filecchio è tutto pronto: "E’ la più longeva che c’è"
Tantissimi gli appuntamenti collaterali in programma nel weekend. Ogni sera musica dal vivo, ballo liscio, e fiera di beneficenza.
What does the government actually know about you?
“What does the government know about you?”
A few weeks ago, Tangle staff member Russell Nystrom brought up this question in a team meeting. How much? How little? Where do they get the information and what, possibly, could they do with it?
It’s an evocative question and the truth was, I only had a rough idea of the answer. Russell wanted to explore it for a story and I encouraged him to do so — and then he enlisted help from two editors on our team, Lindsey Knuth and Audrey Moorehead.
Today, I’m proud to share the piece that came out of Russell’s question, which offers a series of eye-opening and thought-provoking answers.
— Isaac
In 2022, two university researchers set out on a routine search for security vulnerabilities in Android apps when they stumbled across a strange line of code.
It was malware, collecting location data on users regardless of the permission they granted it, allowing whomever had access to the data the ability to map out relationships between people, places, and devices. The discovery kicked off an investigation that traced the personal data of millions of users of common apps, like Muslim prayer apps and QR-code scanners, to a Panamanian data-harvesting company called Measurement Systems. Looking deeper, the researchers found one more strange connection — The Panamanian malware company collecting the data shared an internet domain with another business: a Virginia defense contractor specializing in U.S. cyberintelligence operations.
Later that year, a report from the Georgetown Law Center on Privacy & Technology revealed that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) was sidestepping subpoena requirements and buying up large swathes of Americans’ utility records. According to report coauthor Nina Wang, the data — which included license plates, property records, and employment records — captured a “360-degree view” of the lives of “almost every American.”
While both cases prompted some immediate action (Google banned the apps that stored the offending code, and major utility companies agreed to stop sharing data with ICE), incidents like these persist, and they’re emblematic of two intrusive and legally questionable methods of gathering information on citizens: 1) The government use of surveillance technologies to passively “drag” the internet and 2) The government purchase of massive amounts of data through commercial data brokers.
That got us thinking: What else does the government know about us? We spoke to several experts in data collection, privacy, and government practices to learn all the information we expect the government to know, as well as what we don’t expect our federal agencies to learn. Today, Tangle staff member Russell Nystrom will also share his thoughts on the government’s most recent data-collection practices and what they portend for the future.
What you tell the government about yourself.
You probably expect the government to know some things about you, like your driver’s license and Social Security numbers. This is personally identifying information that the government has provided for you, and that you’ve probably entered into countless forms. You also might expect certain agencies, like the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) or the Department of Education, to have access to your employment data or student loan records, since you’ve volunteered that information yourself to take advantage of those offices’ services.
Upon reflection, you might realize the government knows quite a lot about you. Every U.S. citizen born since 1933 has had a birth certificate issued by their state government, and since 1946, all live births have been tracked federally by the National Vital Statistics System (NVSS). While each state issues its own unique birth certificates, the federal government requires some basic information to be recorded for statistical purposes, including the location of the birth, the baby’s sex, and (of course) the baby’s full legal name. Additionally, each U.S. citizen is given a Social Security number (SSN) that is permanently tied to their personal identity in federal databases. When you go through a major life event like marriage, you give your updated personal information to your state government, which is required to submit statistical information on marriages and deaths to the NVSS.
The government also collects biometric data on U.S. citizens — and noncitizens — through means that require less explicit forms of consent. This data is collected at ports of entry, in airports, or when someone is apprehended or applying for government documents; the government doesn’t explicitly ask permission to collect the data, but we effectively consent to it by, say, navigating a security checkpoint at an airport. The Transportation Security Administration (TSA), for example, requires individuals who want to opt into its TSA Pre-Check program to provide biometric data, and the agency recently implemented a facial recognition program at security checkpoints within 250 airports (which travelers can opt out of, though federal reports suggest opt-outs are rare — mostly because travelers don’t know they have this option or don’t want to slow the security process down).
The most notable biometric data-collection program is the Automated Biometric Identification System, or IDENT, run by the Office of Biometric Identity Management within the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), which collects the biometric data of individuals crossing the U.S. border, without explicitly asking for consent to the collection. Additionally, the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) collects biometric data on asylum seekers already in the U.S.; in this case, though, asylum seekers consent to the data collection as a condition to continue their asylum application.
Additionally, government programs like Medicare and Medicaid maintain databases of citizens’ insurance and medical needs, while the IRS keeps tax records — including employment information, SSNs, and addresses — in its databases.
The government’s collection methods range from innocuous to intrusive, with no clear set of laws governing citizen data privacy. However, federal agencies are explicitly barred from sharing personal data with each other by the Privacy Act of 1974 (with exceptions for special circumstances, like criminal investigations). Additionally, the Privacy Act requires government agencies that collect large “systems of records” to declare what records they keep and allow citizens to request and amend that data.
While the government discloses a lot of the data it collects on American citizens, there are still some areas where we can’t be sure exactly what is known. For example, the operations of the National Security Agency (NSA) are still largely secretive, even after the efforts of former defense contractor Edward Snowden and other whistleblowers.
That said, the federal government is not a monolith. Our data spans the physical and digital spaces of over 400 federal agencies, departments, and subagencies — not to mention the mountains of records held at the state and local levels. Each federal agency is its own data-aggregating entity, often with their own strict regulations on how that data can be shared across agencies.
Naturally, this creates some friction in the system. For example, the NSA can’t access IRS data except in cases of active criminal investigations. Internet-law specialist and Electronic Frontier Foundation Executive Director Cindy Cohn said this friction in the data-sharing process can “prevent misuse and protect [the] privacy” of Americans’ data. But this friction comes at the expense of government efficiency — and these concerns about efficiency have led the Trump administration to seek to reduce some of this friction with new efforts to increase data sharing. In short, this means the information you give the TSA through Pre-Check might become readily available to the NSA, with or without a criminal investigation.
What the government learns about you.
We give a lot of data to the government voluntarily, but much of it is taken — either scraped from the internet or bought without our knowledge or consent.
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What does the government actually know about you?
A deep dive into all the information the government has about all of us.Russell Nystrom (Tangle)
Draining the sea: fishing in crisis in south-east Asia
Filipino fishers unload catches of yellowfin and bigeye tuna and blue marlin at the port of General Santos, after being at sea for about a month. Photograph: Nicole Tung
Worf Son of Moog, Patron Saint of Taking Honor Super Seriously
#ReasonTVCharactersWereSainted
#HashTagGames
Lwaxana Troi, Daughter of the Fifth House, holder of the Sacred Chalice of Rixx, heir to the Holy Rings of Betazed, Patron Saint of Motherhood
Loops now has i18n support, you can demo it with English/French on our demo instance:
My Loops Instance
A creative community for sharing short videos and connecting with others.getloops.social
Altbot
in reply to 🌴 Seph 💭 👾 • • •The image features two vintage video game consoles from the early 1970s. The first console is the Magnavox Odyssey, released in 1972. It has a white plastic body with a faux leather texture and artificial wood grain accents, giving it a unique and somewhat eclectic appearance. The second console is the Coleco Telstar Arcade, released in 1977, with a brown body that includes a steering wheel and a gun-shaped controller, resembling an arcade machine. The text accompanying the images discusses the aesthetic appeal of these early consoles and encourages readers to learn about their history.
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