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EU capitals are drafting detailed plans for post-war military deployments to Ukraine, backed by US capabilities, Ursula von der Leyen said. She stressed security guarantees as “paramount” while touring eastern EU states to boost defense readiness.

ft.com/content/8ade14ca-7aa1-4…

#Ukraine #Russia #EU




Yall are welcome for the Rudy Giuliani news. That is solidly the work of the "finish recording" button on my camera today.


One of the things I hate about AI is how it makes everyone lower their standards with regard to user privacy.

Including companies like Apple that have a well deserved reputation for protecting it.

Yesterday I got a push notification about a new feature in the Feedback app that everyone in the iOS beta has installed. There’s a new “Rate Your Experiences”.

Which is a cleverly named function that sends your and your friends private data to Apple in plain text.

There’s a new purple button:



in reply to stevencheung

A death cult. Specifically, a spiritual and mental death cult.

The whole freak show is the "Synthesis of Opposites" to achieve the predetermined plan in the middle.




Vibe coding as a coding veteran: from 8-bit assembly to English-as-code

Link: levelup.gitconnected.com/vibe-…
Discussion: news.ycombinator.com/item?id=4…



Well it may have taken me the better part of a year, but I finally got around to configuring the import between Financier.io and Actual Budget. I've now successfully converted my whole 10+ year budgeting history into my locally hosted Actual Budget instance.
in reply to James

yay!!! That's great!

I've been enjoying Actual Budget but I haven't really been using it to budget things the same way I used to on YNAB because the flow is still weird, but it does help me immensely to track all transactions and make sure scheduled things will process smoothly



Germany reached 70% gas storage two months early, easing winter shortage fears. Falling summer prices sped injections, boosting Europe’s preparedness after losing Russian pipeline flows in 2022.

bloomberg.com/news/articles/20…

#Ukraine #Russia #EU #Germany

in reply to Hanse Mina

what a bad position the Germans have put themselves in with gas dependence


Call to Action! Political Prisoners for Palestine on Hunger Strike From Britain to the U.S. abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/211…


#ConvictedFelonTrump is LYING about deals! tinyurl.com/bdr9dh8w #Politics


#ConvictedFelonTrump is LYING about deals! tinyurl.com/bdr9dh8w #Politics


BehindBlueEyes.de: Das Rudolf-Harbig-Stadion und meine Premiere behindblueeyes.de/dynamo-dresd…

#Blog

#blog


#Paulofigueiredo #direita #politica #noticias #politics Empresários veem com pessimismo iniciativa do governo sobre retaliar EUA paulofigueiredoshow.com/empres…


It appears, the US is now threatening Norway’s Nobel Committee, over them not giving Trump a peace prize for not bringing peace to Ukraine.

Fox News host asks Republican Congresswoman Anna Paulina Luna if she thinks The Nobel Committee will give Trump a peace prize, and Ms Luna replies:

“Most certainly… if The nobel Peace Prize Committee knows what is good for them, they will do the right thing and nominate him.”

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 settimana fa)
in reply to Randahl Fink

is there something like the raspberry award equivalent for the nobel prize? Or we could chip in for a gold plated plate with a glass turd on it. He might like it.
in reply to Randahl Fink

If they remake the Snowwhite movie MAGA congresswoman Anna Paulina Luna will be able to do the role of the evil queen perfectly without having to act at all. Malevolent threats flow naturally right out of her mouth.

Paulina (edit)

Questa voce è stata modificata (5 giorni fa)


Just for the record, Trump can’t do this. The Constitution is very clear that the “times, places, and manner“ of elections for federal office are determined by individual states (though can be altered by Congress).

The president simply has no role in US elections (except to sign into law or veto whatever election-related bills that congress might pass).

reshared this

in reply to Matt Blaze

Throw into the brew the situation a few years ago when states tried to require that presidential candidates publish tax returns and were shot down by courts saying that states can not modify the requirements to hold office.

Although that is not directly germane to the voter ID situation, it does reflect a policy that when it comes to election stuff, the Constitution occupies almost the entire space leaving little room for additional Federal or state regulation.

With regard to voter ID - that is an issue that is hard to oppose because it is not irrational. I believe the D's would be better off not opposing voter ID but, instead, using those resources to make sure that every likely D voter has a proper voter ID.

in reply to Karl Auerbach

@karlauerbach Providing IDs to every voter is a really hard problem. But the Supreme Court has upheld the right of states to require it.
in reply to Steve Bellovin

@SteveBellovin @karlauerbach Indeed, this is one of the reasons a federal ID mandate (passed by Congress) isn't *obviously* possible. In general, states with voter ID mandates have to have some mechanism for eligible voters to obtain the required documents for free. If the mandate comes from the federal government, would that obligate the federal government to issue voter IDs? And how would proof of residence be handled? Etc.

But in any case, Trump can't create such a mandate, only Congress.

in reply to Steve Bellovin

@SteveBellovin I am far from having expertise in the art of issuing IDs. So I do not understand when you say "Providing IDs to every voter is a really hard problem."

??

(I do remember back when Dave Kaufman and I were trying to figure out operating system access control matrices that we always seemed to back into the question of "how do we know who the actor is?" [Especially when a person or thing was acting as an agent with delegated authorities from another.])

I also keep bumping into the old national ID card issue - and the fears that a person could be "vanished" by a government agency. But then again, we seem to be moving pretty close to a national ID card with things like SecureID driver's licenses.

in reply to Karl Auerbach

@karlauerbach @SteveBellovin Printing the IDs is likely easier than getting them to people.... many lack the other documents needed to corroborate who they are. Then what is the state going to do, short of awarding them brand new identities?
in reply to Aaron Brick — אהרן בריק

@aarbrk @karlauerbach This is the key point: lack of what are known as "breeder documents"; error handling is the other big point. I outline some of the issues in cs.columbia.edu/~smb/papers/ag…, with a more complete analysis in Section §V.C of scholar.smu.edu/scitech/vol26/…. There's a very good analysis of the ID card issue in Crawford v. Marion Count Election Board, 553 U.S. 181 (2008), especially the dissents. For a general discussion of what questions would have to be answered (in the U.S.) by anyone proposing a national ID card before the question could even be discussed intelligently, see the National Academies report "IDs Not Easy", nap.nationalacademies.org/cata… (I was on the committee). I should add: one of the things I learned while on that committee was that while the US has a pretty good national registry of deaths (the Social Security Administration's Master Death File), birth records are decentralized and are of varying quality and accuracy.

The problem falls disproportionately on certain groups: the poor, the elderly, the disabled, the homeless, etc. Quoting Justice Souter's dissent in _Crawford_: "The need to travel to a BMV branch will affect voters according to their circumstances, with the average person probably viewing it as nothing more than an inconvenience. Poor, old, and disabled voters who do not drive a car, however, may find the trip prohibitive, witness the fact that the BMV has far fewer license branches in
each county than there are voting precincts." Corruption can be a problem—in Hudson County in New Jersey, birth certificates from the county office were not accepted by the state because a scheme to issue fraudulent documents (hudsoncountyview.com/after-nea…). Malice can be an issue: Alabama closed almost half of its motor vehicles offices, mostly in poor, Black counties (aclu.org/news/voting-rights/al…), and I have exactly one guess why.

RealID doesn't solve the problem, it makes it worse: you need more documents to show your identity and address (and if you're poor and unlikely to fly somewhere, you don't actually need it). I just went through this when I went to get a Maryland license after moving: how do I demonstrate that I live where I said? Proving my identity was easy, for me—I have a passport (though only about half of Americans do, and that's up sharply from not long ago; see apolloacademy.com/48-of-americ…), NY license, Social Security Card (though it's a replacement I had to get not all that long ago because I thought I'd lost mine), New York City ID card, etc. But my address? For various reasons, I wanted to get my new license very soon after I moved. I hadn't received any bank statements, credit card bills, etc., at my new address yet. Cable TV is included here, so I had no cable bill. I did have an electric bill, and I suppose I could have brought the purchase deed for my condo (though that only shows ownership, not residence). Now translate all of that to someone who's very poor or is living on the streets. Passport? Hah. Electric bill for your park bench or homeless shelter? Etc.

Yes, some of these issues can be worked around, especially in states with good will. In Massachusetts, staff at a homeless shelter can sign affidavits of residence. But a lot does depend on state politics. In Texas, you can vote with a state firearms license—but not with an ID from a public university, even though legally those are government-issued IDs. (Aside: ~20 years ago, I had a Homeland Security ID card for my service on an advisory committee. When I got to the airport the first time after received that ID, I asked the TSA agent if I could use it. "You can, but we won't like it." I took the hint and dug out my driver's license instead…)

I could go on—as you can see, this is an area where I have worked professionally. The bottom line, though, is that while it's not a problem for the majority of Americans (the issues are very different in other countries)—and that likely includes the overwhelming majority of Americans reading this post—for a significant number of people it is quite difficult.

in reply to NKT

@Dss @SteveBellovin @aarbrk For UBI magnitude of erroneous or fraudulent overpayments will probably not break any bank. And the world will not explode if a poor or homeless person gets an extra payment. That's better than someone not getting paid at all.

So in the UBI case, erring on the side of overpaying or over-coverage is probably safe for our society. Perfection in that system is not necessary.

I have long railed against the risking tide of abandoning human-based one-person-one-vote democracy to membership in group based "stakeholder" decisionmaking. That trend rather moots the need for individual IDs and replaces it more with claims that one is a member of one (or more) enfranchised "stakeholder" groups.

That trend towards "stakeholders" who can get multiple votes because they have multiple kinds of "stake" tends to slightly anesthetize me against the risk of an individual human having multiple votes due to fake IDs.

in reply to Karl Auerbach

@karlauerbach @SteveBellovin @aarbrk It's a very difficult problem. I spent a lot of yesterday arguing the details of a UBI system versus a "lowest 50% of income" model. The UBI proponent had no idea how to prevent basic issues, like the rentier economy simply increasing all rents by the UBI, causing a massive wealth transfer to the richest in society, nor whether (illegal?) immigrants, children, etc would get it, nor could answer questions about the unbanked in society. The only answer they had was "taxes".
UBI could be a total disaster for the homeless or un/poorly documented - how would they even claim? And then rents have all jumped by +$ubi, leaving them even worse off.

It's an idea that needs careful work.

in reply to NKT

@Dss @karlauerbach @SteveBellovin @aarbrk

It seems notable that Monopoly, the game of capitalism run amok, offers universal basic income payouts whenever Go is passed. It's also a game in which wealthy real estate moguls are regularly sent to jail (though they can buy their way out).



Much of the food you eat is absorbed by your digestive system.

But some of what you eat makes it all the way through those twists and turns and comes out the other end. How does that happen?

A doctor who treats digestive problems explains how 💩 is made:
theconversation.com/how-does-y…



Prime Minister Narendra Modi used his first trip to China in seven years to reset relations with India’s powerful neighbor while also seeking to strengthen ties with Russia as President Donald Trump ratchets up tensions with New Delhi.

bloomberg.com/news/articles/20…

#Ukraine #Russia #US #Trump #India #Modi #China



If anyone needs surgery on the cheap, I could probably figure it out.

reshared this



I fixed my string trimmer with the spring from a ballpoint pen. Bow down, mortals.


#Mastodon #Statistics 2025-09-01 02:00 CEST
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Help me keep stats and server running! 💻📊 Even a small monthly contribution makes a big difference. Support here: patreon.com/FediverseStatistic… 🙏


#Fediverse



Gun publications offer a fascinating glimpse into the complete and total fantasy world so many of my fellow Americans have taken up full-time residence in

firearmsnews.com/editorial/sco…

in reply to Jason Lefkowitz

There are many problems with life in suburban America. But “vehicle-borne marauders” is not one of them
in reply to Jason Lefkowitz

If you are sincerely concerned about “vehicle-borne marauders,” you really shouldn’t be fooling around with an AR-15. You should be packing a .50 caliber heavy machine gun or 20mm autocannon.

Where you would mount those weapons, I will leave as an exercise for the reader

youtu.be/_1btDc5xJe0

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 settimana fa)



if time travel is ever a thing its gonna become a viral video trend to go back to the Renaissance and ask Michelangelo why he gave David such a tiny peen
in reply to 4 8 15 16 23 42

"Haha, I fucked your mom!"
"Ok, I told you to knock it off. The 'your mom' jokes already went too far, so I decided to do something about it. Open that family photo album right there!"
"... what, how, what the fuck?!? What the fuck is this??"
"Your great grandmother was a lovely lady, and I was YOUR GREAT GRANDFATHER! WHOS LAUGHING NOW? WHOS YOUR GREAT GRAND DADDY??"
Questa voce è stata modificata (1 settimana fa)



Want to see your name on the #GNU #CopyrightAssignment list? Contribute to #GNU and assign your copyright to the #FSF today: u.fsf.org/xe




Norway chose the UK to supply £10B Type-26 frigates, its biggest defense investment. The subs-hunting ships will start delivery in 2030. France, Germany, and the US were also considered as partners

www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-08-31/norway-picks-uk-to-supply-navy-frigates-in-10-billion-deal

#Ukraine #Russia #UK #Norway

in reply to Hanse Mina

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NSFW 18+ Nudity
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California lawmakers kill plans to curb AI-manipulated prices


A secretive appropriations process killed or reined in three bills regulating the use of pricing algorithms. A bill to monitor data center electricity use was also culled.
Questa voce è stata modificata (1 settimana fa)

Technology Channel reshared this.



EU states will debate speeding up foreign policy decisions, often stalled by Hungary’s vetoes on Ukraine and Russia. A group of 12 nations is exploring legal ways to shift from unanimity to qualified majority, a document shows.

bloomberg.com/news/articles/20…

#Ukraine #Russia #EU #Hungary

in reply to Hanse Mina

Decision by unanimous agreement works ok for 10 countries. It works very poorly for 30+ countries, especially when one or more become agents for a big external power, or go rogue. (Hungary & Slovakia, we see your behaviour)
in reply to Hanse Mina

The mechanism that made sense with 6 or even 12 measures is no longer appropriate.
This is good.


herku-fotografie: Lüneburger Heide herku-fotografie.de/blog/2025/…

#Blog

#blog


Am I the only one who wants to read the entire damn Doug the Vulcan fan novel now, and find out about his parents totally obsessing over human anthropology but not quite getting it? #StrangeNewWorlds

I’m probably the only one who digs this

in reply to Lesley Carhart

I'd be interesed
I note that it goes wider than his parents, gd parents uncle/aunt are in as well since the cousins were also named with earth/american name.



Attorney General Bonta Announces Enforceable Agreement with Torrance Police Department to Strengthen Community Trust, Improve Policing Policies and Pr... oag.ca.gov/news/press-releases…


It’s time to get some meow meows :stux: :sleep: :nkoSleep:

Goodnight my dear friends <img class=" title=":mastodon:"/> <img class=" title=":fediverse:"/> :blobcathearts: :ablobcatheartsqueeze: :blobcathugyou:

in reply to stux⚡

Goodnight to all creatures in your family, human and feline!


Sieving the last few drops of 6 quarts of harvested honey.

Probably our last harvest of the year. Two of the hives are still chugging along and should pack on stores before the winter.

One hive is desperate and I’m probably going to need to pinch the queen and combine them then split in the spring.

The joys and heartbreaks of #beekeeping in one day with the hives.