’Incursione’ di street art in centro: "Basta inerzia mediatica su Gaza"
Tanti i manifesti con immagini anche forti affissi nelle strade per sensibilizzare lucchesi e non in occasione della Notte Bianca.
#UkraineWar #ukrainian #ukraine #UnitedKingdom
#USNews #WeThePeople #zeitung #dkmedier #DailyNews #Finland #us #usa #uspol #uspolitics #eu #europe
#eupol #dkpol #uk #worldpol #worldpolitics #USNews #UnitedStates #Kyiv
Le barriere coralline sono ecosistemi estremamente vivaci e.. rumorosi!
I ricercatori di bioacustica che studiano il paesaggio sonoro del mare, hanno scoperto che questi ambienti in realtà non sono affatto silenziosi ma incredibilmente diversificati acusticamente.
Come sulla terraferma gli animali, una barriera corallina produce suoni sott'acqua, anche particolarmente forti, che possiamo immaginare come scoppiettii, cinguettii, grugniti e schiocchi.
Poliversity - Università ricerca e giornalismo reshared this.
Corteo Pro Pal a Venezia, migliaia di manifestanti per Gaza
https://tg24.sky.it/cronaca/video/2025/08/31/corteo-pro-pal-a-venezia-migliaia-di-manifestanti-per-gaza-1032661?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Pubblicato su Sky TG24 @sky-tg24-SkyTG24
Corteo Pro Pal a Venezia, migliaia di manifestanti per Gaza
Leggi su Sky TG24 l'articolo Corteo Pro Pal a Venezia, migliaia di manifestanti per GazaRedazione Sky TG24 (Sky TG24)
🔴 Centro sociale - Leoncavallo
👍🏻Per la maggioranza degli Italiani lo sgombero è stato giusto
👎🏻 Contrari i residenti a Milano
sondaggio completo qui: 👇🏻
sondaggibidimedia.it/2025/08/2…
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Wieder mal verspätet zur #52wochenfotochallenge 2025/24 #echo @norberteder, dachte das ich das Foto schon gepostet habe.
Wenn der Koloss seine Signalhorn tönen lässt, halt das Echo im ganzen Hafen von #triest
How to transfer and share files over a network without a USB flash drive — and with just one line of code
For those times when you can’t find a USB flash drive.Les Pounder (Tom's Hardware)
Labour's position on ECHR is now "we don't want to leave it, but we want to reform it"
Why would /any/ of the other State Parties to ECHR weaken their own human rights legislation just to appease the UK far-right?
news.sky.com/story/politics-la…
#UKPolitics #HumanRights #ECHR
Politics latest: Reform deputy leader says archbishop's criticism of plan to tackle immigration is 'all wrong'
Richard Tice has responded to criticism of his party's plans to tackle illegal migration, from the acting head of the Church of England.Sky News
👑 Ti sei mai chiesto chi fosse davvero #Sissi, oltre i #film romantici?
A #Vienna puoi scoprirlo tra #abiti originali, #diari segreti e #stanze imperiali che raccontano la vera #vita dell’ #imperatrice più affascinante d’ #Europa. ✨
🎟️ #Museo di Sissi, #Hofburg: un #viaggio tra #storia, #mito e #magia viennese che non dimenticherai!
👉 Scopri di più sul #blog: blodiario.wordpress.com/2025/0…
Viaggio nella Vienna Imperiale: visitiamo il Museo di Sissi
Se hai in programma un viaggio a Vienna e sei affascinato dalla storia dell’Impero Austro-Ungarico, c’è una tappa che non può mancare nel tuo itinerario: il Museo di Sissi, un luogo dove mito e rea…Blodiario 2.0
z428: Die Nacht hatte Parties und laute Dispute und verschiedene Unruhe… status.z428.eu/die-nacht-hatte…
#Blog
Gaza postwar plan envisions ‘voluntary’ relocation of entire population
https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2025/08/31/trump-gaza-plan-riviera-relocation/?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Posted into World @world-WashPost
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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
The image depicts a cow standing at the bottom of a three-dimensional drawing, looking up at a wall with three distinct sections. The left section of the wall is labeled "hyperfocus so hard you forget you're a human with basic needs." The middle section is blank, while the right section is labeled "crave absolutely anything at all to obsess over so I'm not bedrotting." The rightmost section of the wall is shaded, with the text "feeling either like a living trash can or 35% chance of gaining a happy buff." The cow appears to be contemplating the wall, with its head turned upwards, suggesting a sense of curiosity or contemplation. The drawing is simple, with black lines on a white background, and the cow is drawn in a cartoonish style.
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🚀 Released: jQuery.scrollPaging v1.1.0
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🔋 Scopri la lista aggiornata dei migliori powerbank di Settembre 2025! Energia affidabile e pronta all'uso per i tuoi dispositivi! #PowerBank2025 #TechReview
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Migliori powerbank (settembre 2025)
Analizziamo le migliori opzioni per ogni esigenza, dal design compatto alla capacità extra-large: ecco il caricabatterie portatile che fa per voi!Carla Cigognini (Tom's Hardware)
https://www.techtudo.com.br/listas/2025/08/12-melhores-animes-de-romance-do-crunchyroll-para-assistir-e-se-apaixonar-streaming.ghtml?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
12 melhores animes de romance do Crunchyroll para assistir e se apaixonar
Your Lie in April (2014), My Love Story!! (2015) e Kaguya-sama: Love Is War (2019) são alguns dos animes de romance disponível no streaming; veja lista completaTechtudo
https://www.techtudo.com.br/listas/2025/08/melhor-fone-de-ouvido-bluetooth-custo-beneficio-edinfoeletro.ghtml?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Melhor fone de ouvido Bluetooth custo-benefício de 2025: lista para não errar
Um fone de ouvido Bluetooth pode proporcionar conforto e ótima qualidade sonora aos usuários: confira sete opções de acessórios sem fio para comprar e acertar no custo-benefícioTechtudo
Look, Jeff Atwood, it is difficult to take you seriously when you write authoritatively on a subject you clearly don’t understand.
GDPR doesn’t mandate cookie notices.
Cookie notices are *malicious compliance* by the surveillance-driven adtech industry.
If you’re not tracking people, you do not need a cookie notice, period.
If you’re only using first-party cookies for functional reasons, you do not need a cookie notice, period.
If you’re using third-party cookies to track people – i.e., if you’re sharing their data with others – then *you must have their consent to do so*. Because, otherwise, you are violating their privacy. Even then, the law doesn’t mandate a cookie notice.
How would you conform to EU law without a cookie notice if your aim wasn’t malicious compliance?
You would not track people by default and you would make it so they have to go your site’s settings to turn on third-party tracking if, for some inexplicable reason, they wanted that “feature”.
Boom!
No cookie notice necessary.
What’s that?
But that would destroy your business because your business is founded on the fundamental mechanic of violating people’s privacy?
Good.
Your business doesn’t deserve to exist.
Because the real bullshit here isn’t EU legislation that protects the human right to privacy, it’s the toxic Silicon Valley/Big Tech business model of farming people for data that violates everyone’s privacy and opens the door to technofascism.
infosec.exchange/@codinghorror…
Look, EU, it is difficult to take you seriously when you forced all this cookie notification bullshit on us. That feature a) should not exist and b) if it did, should be a BROWSER feature not "every website in the entire world now has to bother everyone forever about this stupid thing" blog.codinghorror.com/breaking…Breaking the Web’s Cookie Jar
The Firefox add-in Firesheep caused quite an uproar a few weeks ago, and justifiably so. Here’s how it works: * Connect to a public, unencrypted WiFi network.Jeff Atwood (Coding Horror)
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@urlyman
It's often not even malicious compliance. Most of these banners don't even meet the requirements of the GDPR, specifically that you must be able to withdraw consent at any time and that you mist give informed consent (i.e. that you must know what you have consented to to be able to grant consent).
@noybeu is doing a great job going after some of these people.
webhat🔜#39c3 reshared this.
@writingslowly There’s an easy solution to that. We pass a GDMR and effectively outlaw their business model (don’t hold your breath).
ar.al/2018/11/29/gdmr-this-one…
GDMR: this one simple regulation could end surveillance capitalism in the EU
GDMR: The regulation EU citizens deserve. No, you didn’t misread it and, no, it’s not a typo. GDMR – the General Data Minimisation Regulation – can end surveillance capitalism in the EU. The problem is that no such regulation exists.Aral Balkan
@writingslowly There’s a problem with point 1 - who decides what “can be built”? For instance: Many legislators want companies to implement encrypted communication in a way such that they - and only they - can listen in. Numerous experts believe such a system can’t be built (at least not securely).
If I’d run a company I’d rather not end up in court where a lawyer explains to me what can be built and what not.
@GeorgWeissenbacher @writingslowly I’m one of those experts.
Yes, regulation, like any legislation can be good or bad. That said, if you run, say a construction company, a lawyer does explain to you what can and can’t be built. You don’t just get to dig up a park and put in luxury apartments because you feel like it. You don’t get to construct a factory and dump your sewage into the sea. Or, more to the point, if you run a cinema, you don’t get to put cameras in the bathrooms. There are many things you don’t get to do if you run a company because they would infringe on the rights of others and your right to make a profit doesn’t supersede that.
I hope you’re teaching your students that they should be thoughtful in what they build so that it benefits humanity. We don’t need more things, we need more things that improve human welfare. And the last thing we need are more libertarian techbros who think they can do whatever they want in pursuit of their gluttonous profiteering and that rules don’t apply to them. That’s how we end up with technofascism.
@writingslowly What annoys me is that they've managed to give people the impression that the cookie banner nonsense is the EU's fault. GDPR has been a huge help, and these tantrums the tech industry is throwing is, as Aral says, malicious compliance.
@aral
🎯
Not enough people understand how techbros choose horrible user interfaces and design/moderation decisions to turn people against even the most basic and essential customer safety regulations.
I believe the current age-gating outrage is astroturfed too.
account di Schrödinger reshared this.
I'm running a website for a science consortium and we don't track, we don't sell anything, and we don't have to worry about visitor data storage and protection, and we do not need any cookie clicked on the site. Very simple, very relaxing.
It also prevents the need for a data protection responsible person, because no data is being collected.
Indeed.
Now, how to make Jeff Atwood and those who listen to him take heed?
Regrettably, I don't know...
🙁
@aral
It would be a start to tag
@codinghorror and/or link to his post
infosec.exchange/@codinghorror…
@aral
Look, EU, it is difficult to take you seriously when you forced all this cookie notification bullshit on us. That feature a) should not exist and b) if it did, should be a BROWSER feature not "every website in the entire world now has to bother everyone forever about this stupid thing" blog.codinghorror.com/breaking…Breaking the Web’s Cookie Jar
The Firefox add-in Firesheep caused quite an uproar a few weeks ago, and justifiably so. Here’s how it works: * Connect to a public, unencrypted WiFi network.Jeff Atwood (Coding Horror)
this is why #GitHub was able to remove the banner back in 2020 - the good old days.
github.blog/news-insights/comp…
Funny enough, 5 years later the banner is back on $GitHub Blog, I guess being owned by $MSFT changes things...
No cookie for you - The GitHub Blog
The developer community remains the heart of GitHub, and we’re committed to respecting the privacy of developers using our product.Nat Friedman (The GitHub Blog)
@praerien 1. You don’t need third-party cookies for analytics. Services exist that provide analytics without third-party tracking.
2. The “UX” (design) of cookie consent banners is anti-pattern implemented by the adtech industry exactly to invoke this reaction and misdirect your ire from the tracking itself to the law meant to protect your rights.
3. Your suggested solution would, indeed, nip this in the bud. This is why the surveillance industry made sure to remove Do Not Track the moment they realised it could be used for this purpose. (After all, it has served Mozilla/Silicon Valley’s purpose of delaying regulation for a decade and now had become a liability.)
@mathew @mkj @praerien
I made a script that tracks Latvian websites that have the "load cookies first then ask for permission" problem: https://sīkdatnes.lv
For problematic sites, I send an informal email explaining the problem and asking to fix it. In case of no action, I send a formal, signed complaint. And then in case of no action, I report them to our country's DPA.
In quite a few cases the informal email is enough, and the issue gets acknowledged and fixed.
Thanks for this response. That post pissed me off and I was wondering how long I’d have to wait for someone to call out the Benevolent Plutocrat on his bullshit.
True, load Vivaldi.com or our forums or indeed any site we run. No cookie banners. We have been asked before how we manage to do this but it ain't rocket science.
Also look at all the Mastodon sites, no banners, unlike X, Threads, etc. How? We all know how. 😉
exactly. The EU needs to mandate that
1. Every browser needs to, by default, be set to allow "strictly necessary cookies" only.
2. Every site that wants to serve EU users must honour this setting.
3. Impose massive fines on sites that don't do this or that choose to interpret "strictly necessary only" in "creative" ways.
So that anybody who does not want other cookies has to do exactly nothing to achieve that.
Aral Balkan reshared this.
GDMR: this one simple regulation could end surveillance capitalism in the EU
GDMR: The regulation EU citizens deserve. No, you didn’t misread it and, no, it’s not a typo. GDMR – the General Data Minimisation Regulation – can end surveillance capitalism in the EU. The problem is that no such regulation exists.Aral Balkan
Even simpler: Look at the DNT http header.
Only fall back to cookie notices when the browser doesn't send it.
It was interesting how quickly Mozilla deprecated the DNT header after an EU court ruled that yes, it is a valid answer.
Aral Balkan reshared this.
Really the main problem of this enforcement is that it came too late, when (almost) everyone was already dependent on collecting private data. That made it easy for the industry to collectively decide that intrusive popups would be the simplest way to comply.
What were people going to do, take their business to the competition? Doesn't matter, they do it too.
If regulation had come earlier, then the first ones to use popups would have been seen as obnoxious assholes and lost visitors.
all correct.
My own criticism of that EU law is that they didn't bother to check if there were ever any reason to let yourself be voluntarily tracked - there isn't. The whole thing should've been a law that makes it illegal.
@eseilt Couldn’t agree more.
ar.al/2018/11/29/gdmr-this-one…
GDMR: this one simple regulation could end surveillance capitalism in the EU
GDMR: The regulation EU citizens deserve. No, you didn’t misread it and, no, it’s not a typo. GDMR – the General Data Minimisation Regulation – can end surveillance capitalism in the EU. The problem is that no such regulation exists.Aral Balkan
"Yes, you can naively argue that every website should encrypt all their traffic all the time, but to me that's a "boil the sea' solution."
Talk about takes that didn't age well
Yes, many sites are using it for adverts, but lots are also trying to sell a product that isn't the browser.
@Dss In my world, which the same world you live in, if a person provides their phone number to have a sales person call them, they are consenting to have the sales person call them and you can use their phone number for the purpose of having a sales person call them which is what the person has given you permission to do.
Do you need a cookie notice for that?
No.
(That said, it’s not my job to fix toxic business models.)
Lin et al. found that ad blocker users are more satisfied with the products and services they buy than non-users. There _is_ a theoretical economic role of advertising but surveillance advertising is failing at it
Lots of pro-surveillance advocacy from academics, but they don't cite some of the best sources in their own field, or some of the best points in the body copy of the papers they do cite—even Google refers to de-personalizing the ads as a "protection" blog.zgp.org/advertising-perso…
@zbrando
#pluralistic calls it the "fatfinger economy" (deliberately redesigning an interface to increase the likelihood of clicking on the wrong thing)
doctorow.medium.com/https-plur…
pluralistic.net/2022/05/15/the…
On occasion the consequences can be huge.
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fat-fi…
Flash Crash - a human error magnified 100-fold by AI
verifiedinvesting.com/blogs/ed…
bloomberg.com/news/articles/20…
Fatfingering a cookie banner might also be a security flaw, can be used for ransomeware.
Flash Crashes and Fat Fingers: When Technology Disrupts Markets
How algorithmic trading and human error create sudden market disruptions, from the 2010 Flash Crash to modern fat finger incidents and their lasting impact.Verified Investing
That’s the problem with theory and practise : in real life an army of lawyers and „experts“ advice you to behave exactly like all the others. And all the public services provide bad examples since they behave exactly in the same wrong way.
In reality, GDPR brought the opposite results of what we wanted to achieve.
small correction. You can still track people, just not share it with everyone and their dog.
If you have data in your system you're free to use it for analytics. As long as it's anonymized, so, properly aggregated.
No consent needed.
@hey Yes, aggregate analytics – what you describe – does not constitute tracking.
(That is different from anonymised data; anonymised data can be deanonymised using other data sets – a common practice within the people farming industry.)
And some are so malicious that there *isn't* an actual way to not say yes. "By clicking Accept or X on this banner [with no Reject or even Preferences button...]"
@uncanny_static @disorderlyf It’s worse than that: this was a feature spearheaded by Mozilla (Silicon Valley’s acceptable face) and it had the very real effect of staving off regulation for a decade (“look, we are self regulating”). The moment people realised it could be used to communicate consent within the framework of GDPR, the feature was deprecated.
Sadly, some folks still think Mozilla are the good guys.
@disorderlyf This feature already exists. It is just that ad-tech ignored that users were sending a do-not-track request and instead they opted for trying to nudge everyone into accepting their surveillance, by making obnoxious cookie banners.
Genuine question:
If I hosted my own private analytics tracker (something like Matomo (née Piwik), e.g.) just so I could have funny numbers to look at because I like to look at numbers but do nothing meaningful with them, would that require a cookie banner?
I'd pondered about just having a static notice in the footer of my site that just says "This site uses some functional cookies and one (1) tracking cookie for a self-hosted analytics dashboard because I like to look at Numbers™."
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Aral Balkan reshared this.
see infosec.exchange/@codinghorror… and infosec.exchange/@codinghorror… and infosec.exchange/@codinghorror… and mastodon.social/@JeffGrigg/115…
it hasn’t changed anything because it does not address root causes. Users want everything for free, forever, and content creators want to make money to feed themselves and their families. Until we resolve THAT, we will be stuck in endless combat between these two opposing forces. And the money is going to find a way to inevitably win because it has to. You have to make a living somehow. Free everything is great and all but it is never ever ever gonna be “free.”
@codinghorror
you make money from ads on stack exchange so you are biased in the conversation.
switch business models to be ad-free and then I want to hear your perspective after that.
@codinghorror @andrewrk I think what people are trying to tell you is that you’re part of the problem.
You’re not just any “user of the internet”, you’re a developer. You have agency. Don’t like cookie banners? Great! Lead by example: remove them from the sites you own and control (i.e., stop tracking people on the sites you own and control. Find other ways to make money.)
@codinghorror @andrewrk
Misleading. If you implement first party cookies for your own analytics to improve your website (like... what content is more popular, what pages are broken from UX standpoint), you still have to show the cookie notice.
Whether it's first or third party is not part of the equation.
@matiasgoldberg Yes it is very much part of the equation.
A first-party functional cookie (e.g., to store log-in state): no consent necessary.
First-party *aggregate* statistics: no consent necessary.
@codinghorror I remind you that this is Jeff Attwood you are finger wagging at here. He is wrong on this take. But if you really think this invalidates his critique of capitalism or his significant charity work then I think you might consider reappraising your position.
And picking a better target next time.
Designing For Evil
Have you ever used Craigslist? It’s an almost entirely free, mostly anonymous classified advertising service which evolved from an early internet phenomenon into a service so powerful it is often accused of single-handedly destroying the newspaper bu…Jeff Atwood (Coding Horror)
Doesn't your proposal to inform users and discuss the issues also kind of depend on rational actors? But maybe I'm misunderstanding what you're suggesting the EU should have done instead. Done nothing?
@codinghorror @grievousangel @aapis Yes as we as end users have to OPT OUT of everything but the most basic and innocuous of cookies.
So bad for us end users.
Not that it would make a difference as the companies running websites would then force you to view a cookie banner to try to encourage users to accept the data harvesting cookies.
These days when I meet a cookie popup that insists you turn off each of the 423 partners individually I leave the site and never visit that site again.
if GitHub doesn't need a cookie banner, there's no technical reason for a site to have them, it's always a privacy reason
techcrunch.com/2020/12/17/gith…
GitHub says goodbye to cookie banners | TechCrunch
Microsoft-owned GitHub today announced that it is doing away with all non-essential cookies on its platform. Thanks to this, starting today, GitHub.comFrederic Lardinois (TechCrunch)
Sunny and comfortable through midweek, then shower chances return
https://www.washingtonpost.com/weather/2025/08/31/dc-weather-live-updates-sunny-labor-day/?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Posted into Local @local-WashPost
Das Bild zeigt eine Suchergebnisseite auf einem Mobilgerät, die nach dem Suchbegriff "supportteam" gefiltert wurde. Die Oberfläche ist in einem dunklen Farbschema gehalten, mit einem Suchfeld oben, das "supportteam" enthält. Darunter sind verschiedene Profile angezeigt, die alle mit dem Namen "SupportTeam" beginnen und verschiedene Domainendungen wie "[@]mas.to" und "[@]toot.comm..." haben. Jedes Profil hat ein Symbol mit einem Kopfhörer und einem "M" darin, und die meisten haben 0 Follower und den Text "Kein bestätigter Link". Ein Profil mit dem Namen "Mastodon Helper" ist ebenfalls sichtbar, mit einem Häkchen neben dem Namen, was darauf hinweist, dass es verifiziert ist. Die Navigationsschaltflächen "Beiträge", "Hashtags" und "Profile" sind oben angeordnet, wobei "Profile" der aktive Tab ist.
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Sindarina, Edge Case Detective
in reply to Ciara • • •