Salta al contenuto principale



Sensitive content

WildeAboutBoys reshared this.



Sensitive content



Sensitive content



Sensitive content



Sensitive content



#fabulamurina (mouse story) 442
eheu! tyrannosaurus rex Stephanum porcellum prendit (Oh no! A T. Rex has grabbed Steve the piglet)! Silvius fortiter monstrum gladio minatur et amiculum servat (Silvius threatens the monster with his sword and saves his little friend)

reshared this



  • Sensitive content
  • Parola filtrata: nsfw



Sensitive content



Sensitive content




globalist.it/intelligence/2025…

La Cia era scettica ma poi...

Marti Volpe reshared this.



Lucca e il pacemaker bicamerale senza fili: innovativo intervento al San Luca
Primo impianto all'Ospedale lucchese, uno dei pochi in Toscana e in Italia. Bovenzi: "Tecnologia innovativa che guarda al futuro e che sostituirà la tecnica degli impianti tradizionali".

noitv.it/2025/06/lucca-e-il-pe…




"A Month of Pressure on Russia": Zelensky Announces New Sabotage and Terrorist Attacks on Russian Territory en.topwar.ru/266780-mesjac-dav…


Kurz vor der Heia, lief so mittelmäßig.

#pastpuzzle 135
🟩🟩🟥🟥 (-24)
🟩🟩🟥🟥 (-9)
🟩🟩🟩🟩 (0)
▪️▪️▪️▪️

3/4 🥉
pastpuzzle.de





This is true and we Dems need to be consistent if we are to be taken seriously.

We can’t be ok with some presidents doing this and not others.

RE: threads.com/@ryanhhayden/post/…



Bianca Censori Goes Sheer Again After Grammys Controversy In Yet Another Daring Look With Kanye West
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/bianca-censori-sheer-black-top_n_68581bd1e4b0208df38624da?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub

Posted into Entertainment @entertainment-huffingtonpost






Tesla Begins Driverless Robotaxi Service in Austin, Texas news.slashdot.org/story/25/06/…

in reply to Sky.Bit

The image shows a screenshot of a Wikipedia article about Toby Fox, an American video game developer and composer. The article text is in black font on a white background, with the title "Toby Fox" at the top. Below the title, the article text provides information about Toby Fox, including his full name, birthdate, and professional name. It mentions his work on the role-playing video games Undertale and Deltarune, which received acclaim and nominations for various awards.

The image also includes a photograph of a person covered in white foam, standing in a bathtub. The person's face is obscured by the foam, and the foam appears to be dripping from their mouth. The background of the photograph is a plain, light-colored wall, and there are some bottles visible in the bathtub. The photograph is labeled "Toby Fox" at the top.

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

🌱 Energy used: 0.223 Wh



Premature infants at Nasser Medical Complex in #KhanYounis are facing life-threatening conditions as severe malnutrition sets in.

The #Gaza Strip has run out of vital infant formula due to the ongoing Israeli blockade and the complete closure of border crossings, preventing the entry of critical medical supplies. Doctors warn that the lives of these vulnerable newborns hang in the balance.
#SaveGaza #StopIsrael #SanctionIsrael #BDS
#palestine #Israel #Politics #Genocide #PeaceNow #StopTheWar




Per què has d'escriure malament el teu nom o marca a internet?

El maldecap de les adreces amb accents o ela geminada no és problema d'estàndards tècnics.

Al @diariARA (enllaç en obert):

ara.cat/media/has-d-escriure-m…



Sensitive content










Añado a #bañosPublicos el baño de Obscure "The Aftermath" de PSP.

Le doy un 6/10 porque es amplio y porque alguien ha dejado un mensaje en el espejo poniendo la hora de la fiesta en una de las habitaciones del instituto.

Tienen papeleras y podría estar mucho peor para el número de gente que lo usa. Asique digamos que es pasable.

Unknown parent

mastodon - Collegamento all'originale
Vicente Precio
Yo había jugado al primero en PC y me había gustado bastante cuando vi este pa PSP fui de cabeza. Mis aventuras quedaron reflejadas en #ObscureTheAftermath
in reply to fanta 🐌

Una de mis sagas favoritas. El primer juego me parece genial, y todavía tengo pendiente terminar el segundo 😃

in reply to Mrinappropriate

@MrInappropriate

The 1943 Tehran Conference, where Allied leaders discussed dividing up the postwar world, sparked Orwell’s initial idea for the book as a warning about unchecked state #power.

in reply to Coach Pāṇini ®

@MrInappropriate I notice lots of people can't look at an incentive and see where it will ultimately lead. I think Orwell could look at what was happening around him plus the nature of man and extrapolate that out into the future. But Huxley did that too. Came to a different place but no less valid.


#GiftArticle

‘It Felt Like Kidnapping,’ #MahmoudKhalil Says in First Interview Since Release

The #Columbia graduate & pro-#Palestinian #activist returned to New York after more than three months in #detention. The #Trump administration is still seeking to deport him.

#law #immigration #StateSponsoredAbduction
nytimes.com/2025/06/22/nyregio…





New Orleans debates real-time facial recognition legislation


New Orleans has emerged as a flashpoint in debates over real-time facial recognition technology. The city’s leaders are weighing a landmark ordinance that, if passed, would make New Orleans the first U.S. city to formally legalize continuous facial surveillance by police officers.

The move follows revelations that, for two years, the New Orleans Police Department (NOPD) quietly used automated alerts from a privately operated camera network known as Project NOLA that bypassed the strictures of the city’s 2022 ordinance which explicitly banned such practices. Project NOLA is a non-profit surveillance network founded by ex-police detective Bryan Lagarde.

Despite this, Project NOLA’s network was set to continuously and automatically scan public spaces. Every face that passed within view was compared in real time, and officers were pinged via an app whenever a watchlist match occurred, leaving no requirement for supervisory oversight, independent verification, or adherence to reporting standards.

Opponents argue that automated surveillance everywhere in public spaces raises profound threats to privacy, civil rights, and due process. The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Louisiana described the system as a “facial recognition technology nightmare” that enables the government to “track us as we go about our daily lives.”

The wrongful arrest of Randal Reid based on misidentification from still-image facial recognition is touted as highlighting the real-world dangers of facial recognition. Reid is a 29‑year‑old Black logistics analyst from Georgia who was wrongfully arrested in late 2022 and held for six days due to a false facial recognition match.

The ACLU has urged the City Council to reimpose a moratorium and demand an independent audit covering privacy compliance, algorithmic bias, evidence admissibility, record retention, and public awareness. The organization said that NOPD currently lacks any system for logging or disclosing facial-recognition-derived evidence, and Project NOLA operates outside official oversight entirely.

A vote by the City Council is expected later this month. If passed, NOPD and any authorized third party will be legally empowered to scan live public feeds using facial recognition, provided reports are submitted according to the new law.

Meanwhile, NOPD is awaiting the outcome of its internal audit and Kirkpatrick has stated that policy revisions will be guided by the council’s decisions. Meanwhile, the ACLU and partners are preparing to escalate their opposition, pushing for either outright prohibition or deeply strengthened accountability measures.

The decision facing New Orleans encapsulates the broader tension between embracing AI-based public safety tools and protecting civil liberties. Proponents emphasize the edge that real-time intelligence can provide in stopping violent crime and responding to emergencies, while critics warn that indiscriminate surveillance erodes privacy, civil rights, and due-process safeguards.


A few things I feel are very important that none of the recent June articles about this mention:

  1. The city has managed to keep this all relatively under wraps. Few people are even aware of this, and even if they are they are not aware of the level of surveillance.
  2. This seems to be being kept in the dark even by people that we should be able to trust. I only found out about the City Council vote this month bc I make a habit of searching for updates about this every so often. I cannot find any information about when the vote is actually scheduled, just sometimes at the end of June. This is the last week of June so presumably this week?
  3. State Police and ICE can't be regulated by city government. There is a permanent state police force in New Orleans that was established as of last year by Governor Landry.

I believe they have continued using this technology however they please, and there is no real way for the city to regulate how they use it, and who they share it with.

Questa voce è stata modificata (3 mesi fa)








"In formulating its 2025 New Year’s resolution, the Editorial Board on Jan. 1 acknowledged the importance of 'admitting mistakes and learning from them.'"

Readers critique The Post: wapo.st/4naVk9h



More Intel TDX Code Merged For KVM In Linux 6.16

Merged minutes ago ahead of the Linux 6.16-rc3 release due out shortly was this week's batch of Kernel-based Virtual Machine (KVM) updates. Beyond the usual KVM fixes merged for the week, a bit of feature code was pulled in by Linus Torvalds for this post-merge-window phase...
phoronix.com/news/Intel-TDX-VM…



FR: Christoph Werner, Manager der Drogeriekette "dm" fordert " 'radikal anderes Verständnis': So gelingt Zuwanderung."
fr.de/wirtschaft/top-manager-f…

#Migration