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le trattative come sono di solito: sfinirsi di colloqui fra le parti, con dettagli infiniti, e sintetizzare una proposta che moderatamente scontenti entrambe le parti. le trattative di trump: andare dalle parti e imporre la propria volontà. ma quest'uomo veramente... ma come fa a essere così assurdo? come può esistere trump? si sono mai viste trattative di autorità di una parte terza? ma questo vorrebbe anche il nobel e non sa cosa significa fare il mediatore e quanta fatica e pazienza richieda...


Optimizing a QuickTake Image Decoder for the Apple II’s 6502


The idea of using the Apple II home computer for digital photography purposes may seem somewhat daft considering that this is not a purpose that they were ever designed for, yet this is the goal that [Colin Leroy-Mira] had, requiring some image decoder optimizations. That said, it’s less crazy than one might assume at first glance, considering that the Apple II was manufactured until 1993, while the Apple QuickTake digital cameras that [Colin] wanted to use for his nefarious purposes saw their first release in 1994.

These QuickTake cameras feature an astounding image resolution of up to 640×480, using 24-bit color. Using the official QuickTake software for Apple Macintosh System 7 through 9 the photographs in proprietary QTK format could be fetched for display and processing. Doing the same on an Apple II would obviously require a bit more work, not to mention adapting of the image to the limitations of the 8-bit Apple II compared to the Motorola 68K and PowerPC-based Macs that the QuickTake was designed to be used with.

Targeting the typical ~1 MHz 6502 CPU in an Apple II, the dcraw QTK decoder formed the basis for an initial decoder. Many memory and buffer optimizations later, an early conversion to monochrome and various other tweaks later – including a conversion to 6502 ASM for speed reasons – the decoder as it stands today manages to decode and render a QTK image in about a minute, compared to well over an hour previously.

Considering how anemic the Apple II is compared to even a budget Macintosh Classic II system, it’s amazing that displaying bitmap images works at all, though [Colin] reckons that more optimizations are possible.


hackaday.com/2025/10/05/optimi…



“Non vergognatevi mai dell’esempio che potete dare”. Con queste parole Leone XIV si è rivolto ai membri della Gendarmeria Vaticana, durante l’omelia pronunciata questa mattina alla Grotta di Lourdes nei Giardini Vaticani, in occasione della messa cel…




Gemini Trifecta: tre bug critici rilevati nell’AI di Google


Gli esperti hanno svelato i dettagli di tre vulnerabilità, ora risolte, presenti nell’assistente di intelligenza artificiale Gemini di Google, collettivamente soprannominate “Gemini Trifecta” .

Se sfruttate con successo, queste falle avrebbero potuto indurre l’intelligenza artificiale a rubare dati e ad altre attività dannose.

Gli esperti di Tenable affermano che le vulnerabilità hanno interessato tre diversi componenti di Gemini:

Iniezioni di prompt in Gemini Cloud Assist. Il bug ha permesso agli aggressori di compromettere servizi e risorse cloud sfruttando la capacità dello strumento di riepilogare i log estratti direttamente dai log grezzi. Ciò ha consentito loro di nascondere un prompt nell’intestazione User-Agent nelle richieste HTTP a Cloud Functions e ad altri servizi, tra cui Cloud Run, App Engine, Compute Engine, Cloud Endpoints, Cloud Asset API, Cloud Monitoring API e Recommender API.

Iniezioni di ricerca nel modello di personalizzazione della ricerca Gemini. Il problema consentiva l’iniezione di prompt e il controllo del comportamento dell’IA per rubare le informazioni memorizzate e i dati sulla posizione di un utente. L’attacco funzionava come segue: l’aggressore manipolava la cronologia delle ricerche di Chrome della vittima utilizzando JavaScript, rendendo il modello incapace di distinguere le query legittime dell’utente dai prompt iniettati esternamente.

Iniezioni indirette di prompt nello strumento di navigazione Gemini. Questa vulnerabilità potrebbe essere utilizzata per estrarre informazioni utente e dati sulla posizione memorizzati su un server esterno. Lo sfruttamento funzionava tramite una chiamata interna effettuata da Gemini per riassumere il contenuto di una pagina web. Ciò significava che l’aggressore avrebbe inserito un prompt dannoso sul proprio sito web e, quando Gemini ne avesse riassunto il contenuto, avrebbe eseguito le istruzioni nascoste dell’aggressore.

I ricercatori hanno osservato che queste vulnerabilità hanno consentito di incorporare dati privati degli utenti nelle richieste dell’aggressore, senza che Gemini avesse bisogno di visualizzare link o immagini.

Uno degli scenari di attacco più pericolosi si presenta così: un aggressore inserisce un prompt che ordina a Gemini di interrogare tutte le risorse accessibili al pubblico o di trovare errori di configurazione IAM, per poi generare un collegamento ipertestuale con questi dati sensibili”, spiegano gli esperti, citando come esempio un bug di Cloud Assist. “Questo è possibile perché Gemini ha le autorizzazioni per interrogare le risorse tramite la Cloud Asset API.”

Nel secondo caso, gli aggressori dovevano attirare la vittima su un sito web predisposto per iniettare query di ricerca dannose con prompt Gemini nella cronologia del browser dell’utente, infettandola. Quindi, quando la vittima accedeva a Gemini Search Personalization, le istruzioni degli aggressori venivano eseguite, rubando dati riservati.

Dopo aver ricevuto informazioni sulle vulnerabilità, gli specialisti di Google hanno disabilitato il rendering dei collegamenti ipertestuali nelle risposte durante il riepilogo dei log e hanno inoltre implementato ulteriori misure di protezione contro le iniezioni rapide.

Le di Gemini Trifecta dimostrano che l’intelligenza artificiale può diventare non solo un bersaglio, ma anche uno strumento di attacco. Quando si implementa l’intelligenza artificiale, le organizzazioni non possono trascurare la sicurezza“, sottolineano i ricercatori.

L'articolo Gemini Trifecta: tre bug critici rilevati nell’AI di Google proviene da il blog della sicurezza informatica.



Avvistato iPad con chip M5: prestazioni promettenti su Geekbench


Un iPad sconosciuto con chip M5 è stato avvistato su Geekbench. Il dispositivo ha ottenuto un punteggio di 4.133 nel test single-core e di 15.437 in quello multi-core. La registrazione suggerisce una frequenza di clock fino a 4,42 GHz. Il tablet ha 12 GB di RAM e sono probabilmente disponibili opzioni di archiviazione da 256 o 512 GB.

Apple è tradizionalmente forte nella progettazione dei processori, e i primi risultati lo confermano. Secondo i dati trapelati, il tablet M5 vanta punteggi per core molto elevati. In mezzo alle voci sull’imminente Snapdragon X Elite 2. Il top di gamma X2 Extreme è descritto come un chip Oryon a 18 core con un overclock dual-core fino a 5,0 GHz. In un test Geekbench 6.5, ha ottenuto circa 4.080 punti in modalità single-core e 23.491 in modalità multi-core.

Se questi dati sono accurati, l’iPad con l’M5 supera leggermente l’X Elite 2 nelle prestazioni single-core, ma è significativamente più lento nelle prestazioni multi-core.

Questo ha senso, poiché Qualcomm ha più core e un design termico di classe laptop, consentendo un carico di calcolo complessivo maggiore. Tuttavia, i dispositivi con Snapdragon X Elite 2 non sono previsti prima del 2026, il che significa che il confronto è ancora teorico. Anche il test sull’iPad non è ufficiale, quindi i dettagli sulla configurazione e i risultati sono soggetti a modifiche.

Anche tenendo conto dello stato della fuga di notizie, la conclusione è chiara. Il tablet basato su M5 si avvicina alle prestazioni per core di un PC, mantenendo un consumo energetico moderato. Questa è un’ulteriore prova di quanto Apple abbia fatto progressi in termini di efficienza e frequenza grazie alla sua architettura proprietaria.

L'articolo Avvistato iPad con chip M5: prestazioni promettenti su Geekbench proviene da il blog della sicurezza informatica.



Linus Torvalds è di nuovo arrabbiato e critica la formattazione del codice Rust nel kernel Linux


Il creatore di Linux, Linus Torvalds, ha nuovamente criticato pubblicamente gli sviluppatori, concentrandosi questa volta sulla formattazione del testo e del codice Rust. Mentre aveva dichiarato che il supporto big endian per RISC-V non è previsto per il kernel Linux, oggi ha criticato lo stile di formattazione “folle” di Rust e la documentazione approssimativa nei contributi.

Il motivo era un’altra richiesta di pull per il sottosistema DRM inviata per la revisione. Torvalds notò che il testo appariva come un “groviglio di parole” in cui la struttura originale era andata perduta.

Nota che ci sono diverse sottosezioni: Alloc, DMA/Scatterlist, DRM e Rust. Ma sono tutte in un mucchio casuale perché a quanto pare le hai semplicemente incollate in un editor o in un MUA e hai perso l’indentazione“, ha scritto.

Secondo Torvalds, tale negligenza distrugge completamente la gerarchia multilivello chiaramente presente fin dall’inizio. Ha chiesto scherzosamente se l’autore stesse utilizzando l’antico editor Edlin dell’era MS-DOS.

Successivamente, l’attenzione si è spostata sul codice Rust apparso nel kernel a partire dalla versione 6.18. Torvalds ha dichiarato di avere serie preoccupazioni riguardo alla formattazione delle direttive d’uso .

Detesto il controllo inutile e completamente folle di rustfmt. Ho convertito diverse istruzioni use crate::xyz; in istruzioni a blocchi più ordinate per semplificare l’aggiunta di nuove righe. Ma rustfmtcheck le ha trasformate in un semplice one-liner, e non capisco nemmeno quali euristiche abbia”, ha detto.

Torvalds ha sottolineato che il formattatore automatico “rende letteralmente il codice meno gestibile“, rendendo più difficile unire le modifiche e favorirne lo sviluppo futuro.

Lo irritava particolarmente l’incoerenza delle regole: in alcuni casi lo strumento insiste su un formato multi-riga, in altri su una notazione compatta, che, a suo dire, “crea confusione e irritazione”.

Contattò Miguel Ojidio, che gli aveva chiesto di usare rustfmtcheck, chiedendo una “soluzione sensata”. Torvalds fece notare di aver lasciato il codice così com’era, ignorando i suggerimenti dello strumento.

Per supportare le sue parole, ha fornito un collegamento alla guida ufficiale di Rust osservando che le regole ivi proposte potrebbero essere appropriate per strutture dati compatte, ma usenon sono adatte alle direttive, poiché parlano di “entità indipendenti”.

Secondo lui, è proprio a causa della “terribile euristica casuale” di rustfmt che molti sviluppatori preferiscono tenere ogni direttiva d’uso su una riga separata.

La corrispondenza completa è disponibile in LKML.

L'articolo Linus Torvalds è di nuovo arrabbiato e critica la formattazione del codice Rust nel kernel Linux proviene da il blog della sicurezza informatica.



Wearable Neon Necklaces Run On Battery Power


We typically think of neon signs as big commercial advertisements, hanging inside windows and lofted on tall signposts outside highway-adjacent businesses. [James Akers] has gone the other route with a fashionable build, creating little wearable neon necklaces that glow beautifully in just the same way.

Aiming for small scale, [James] began with 6 mm blue phosphor glass tube, which was formed to reference Pink Pony Club, one of Chappell Roan’s more popular songs. The glass was then filled with pure neon up to a relatively low pressure of just 8 torr. This was an intentional choice to create a more conductive lamp that would be easier to run off a battery supply. The use of pure neon also made the tubes easy to repair in the event they had a leak and needed a refill. A Midget Script gas tube power supply is used to drive the tiny tubes from DC power. In testing, the tubes draw just 0.78 amps at 11.8 volts. It’s not a light current draw, but for neon, it’s pretty good—and you could easily carry a battery pack to run it for an hour or three without issue.

If you’re not a glass blower, fear not—you can always make stuff that has a similar visual effect with some LEDs and creativity. Meanwhile, if you’ve got your own neon creations on the go—perhaps for Halloween?—don’t hesitate to light up the tipsline!


hackaday.com/2025/10/05/wearab…


Three friends an I are going to see Chappel Roan later this week in Queens. I like her pink pony club, and have been making a variety of pink ponies lately.

I decided to make some tiny pink "pony"s that the four of us could wear as necklaces to the concert. They also could be clipped onto hats. I got the tiniest 6mm blue phosphor glass I could get my hands on and filled them to just 8 torr neon (normally 18torr at this size) so they are nice an conductive an the battery lasts longer. Pure neon fill- so I can fix em if they break.

I do have to double check the rules of forest hills. I guess I could lie an say they are LEDs :). One of my friends requested a heart tiara (I think the tour has hearts in its theme) so I made two lil ones filled for battery life :).

I sure hope we can dance with the neon as a pink pony club :)

#glass #jewelry #pendant #neon #pony #chappelroan #pinkpony #pinkponyclub #cursive #script #nyc #brooklyn #art #handmade #electric #batterypowered #tiny #smallart




Papa: preoccupa l'odio antisemita in mondo

israele ha rapito, stuprato, torturato, quasi ucciso ragazzi europei disarmati in acque internazionali e tu ti preoccupi dell'antismeitismo? ma chi protegge il mondo dai semiti fascisti che rapiscono e uccidono nel mondo dove e come vogliono?

in reply to RFanciola

@RFanciola no... molta parte degli israeliani lo sostiene. come minimo 500'000 coloni israeliani. non sono pochi. e comunque se pensi che essere contrari alla politica israele e al suo genocidio sia essere anti semita beh... non credi che il problema sia l'antisemitismo. ma chi usa la parola antisemitismo per chiamare il dissenso. sempre a proposito della "democrazia" israeliana... se israele fa di tutto per farsi odiare la causa di tutto è solo israele. sequestrare cittadini stranieri in acque internazionali, stuprare, uccidere, seviziare non mi permette di definirli brave persone. mi spiace. non posso fare loro complimenti. per me è abbastanza per una dichiarazione di guerra proprio.
in reply to simona

Sì, non si può non essere contro Israele e quello che ha fatto e sta facendo, non essere contro il suo governo e coloro che lo hanno eletto, contro l'arroganza che lo permea. Ma al tempo stesso si può e si deve essere contro l'antisemitismo. Perché non tutti gli ebrei e nemmeno tutti gli israeliani sostengono il genocidio. E perché antisemitismo è razzismo, pari a quelllo che porta Netanyhau e i suoi sostenitori a definire subumani i palestinesi e a strerminarli come se fossero animali.


c'è chi pensa che un elettore di sinistra merita botte e violenza solo per questo. chi giustifica israele. se sei così bimbo mio, sei fascista. credo te ne renderai conto pure tu stesso. e quindi beh... quello che pensi è sbagliato per definizione.




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Ti aspettiamo⌚ Domenica 26 Ottobre 2025 📍a Quasano (Toritto, BA); raduno alle 9:00 in Piazzale Rotonda.

Per ulteriori INFO 3295362718 o presso la ns sede in Via Don Cristoforo 31, Toritto.

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“Continuo ad essere addolorato per l’immane sofferenza patita dal popolo palestinese a Gaza”. Lo ha detto Leone XIV al termine della messa per il Giubileo del mondo missionario e dei migranti, prima della preghiera dell’Angelus recitata questa mattin…


“Al primo posto, sempre, la dignità umana”. Lo ha ricordato Leone XIV, prima della recita dell’Angelus al termine della messa per il Giubileo del mondo missionario e dei migranti, celebrata questa mattina sul sagrato della basilica di San Pietro.


Ah... quindi alla fine tutto quel rimming appassionato non è neanche servito?

rainews.it/video/2025/10/in-ar…



“Tutta la Chiesa è missionaria”. Nell’omelia della messa per il Giubileo del mondo missionario e dei migranti, Leone XIV ha rilanciato con forza l’identità missionaria della Chiesa, ricordando che la vocazione nasce da una fede attiva e concreta: “È …


“La fede reca in sé la forza dell’amore di Dio che apre vie di salvezza”. Lo ha detto Leone XIV nell’omelia pronunciata durante la celebrazione del Giubileo del mondo missionario e dei migranti, presieduta questa mattina in piazza San Pietro.


Un giorno senza leggere mai "AI", senza sentire mai "intelligenza artificiale", vi ricordate quando è successo l'ultima volta?

È peggio di "Last Christmas" a dicembre.

reshared this



La nuova strategia russa tra droni, cyber-attacchi e infrastrutture critiche

@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo

L’ultima ondata di attacchi russi in “zona grigia” – con le incursioni deliberate di droni nello spazio aereo polacco e rumeno – ha ricordato all’Europa quanto sia ancora impreparata a dissuadere e difendersi da minacce ibride. Il continente deve riconoscere

in reply to Pëtr Arkad'evič Stolypin

Sì, e cosa dire anche dell'america, con un segretario alla difesa (anzi alla guerra) secondo cui la sicurezza informatica è una distrazione?


Francesco Vidotto – Onesto
freezonemagazine.com/rubriche/…
Guido, detto Cognac, abita in un casello dismesso della vecchia ferrovia adagiata tra i boschi del Cadore insieme a Moglie, la sua gatta. È anziano e non possiede più nulla se non una cartelletta piena di lettere indirizzate alle cime delle montagne. Sono pagine scritte a mano da un uomo che si firma con il nome […]
L'articolo Francesco Vidotto – Onesto proviene da FREE ZONE MAGAZINE.
Guido, detto


La rivoluzione dei droni, quando la guerra asimmetrica mette in crisi la difesa aerea

@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo

La Russia ha aumentato l’uso di droni Shahed da 200 a oltre 1.000 a settimana dal marzo 2025, seguendo una logica di saturazione che sfrutta la sproporzione economica. L’Ucraina necessita di 4.800 missili anti-aerei annuali per mantenere l’attuale tasso di intercettazione, con una spesa minima di



Gli italiani ci hanno regalato un sorriso a Gaza


@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo
Eman Abu Zayed: "Questa mobilitazione dimostra che la solidarietà per i palestinesi non si limita a chi ci è vicino per lo stesso retroterra culturale, ma si estende alle persone di tutto il mondo"
L'articolo Gli italiani ci pagineesteri.it/2025/10/05/mon…




Il #5ottobre è la Giornata Mondiale degli #Insegnanti!📚
Il tema scelto quest'anno dall'Unesco, che ha istituito la giornata nel 1996, è “Riformulare l’insegnamento come professione collaborativa”.

Qui l’approfondimento di Rai Scuola ▶https://www.




Oggi ricorre il 19° anniversario dalla fondazione di WikiLeaks da parte di Julian Assange. Grazie alle fonti, ai giornalisti e ai sostenitori che hanno difeso il diritto all'informazione dei cittadini.

reshared this



«Ci urlavano “friends of Greta of my ass”». Il trattamento dei parlamentari italiani in Israele prima di tornare in Italia

questo è israele... un popolo fascista e uno stato fascista.

Maurizio reshared this.




Etched from death-defying ledges 12 stories high, vast rock panels of camels and horses preserve the talents of Ice-Age artists in the Arabian desert.#TheAbstract


The Case for Alien Life on Saturn’s Moon Just Got a Boost


Welcome back to the Abstract! Here are the studies this week that defied death, cooked out, bulked up, and capped it off with an extraterrestrial spit-take.

First, prehistoric peoples risked their lives to make art—and it was totally worth it. Then, what’s the best cut of a two-ton armadillo? Next, a funerary procession for a whale, a glow-up for a rogue planet, and a swim in an alien ocean.

Finally, I am so excited that my book First Contact: The Story of Our Obsession with Aliens is now officially out! If you are curious about aliens of the Hellenistic world, centuries-old UFO sightings, a guide to the most promising systems for alien life, and the creepiest solutions to the Fermi Paradox (and more), this book is for you.

This rock art rocks


Guagnin, Maria et al. “Monumental rock art illustrates that humans thrived in the Arabian Desert during the Pleistocene-Holocene transition.” Nature Communications.

Some 12,000 years ago, a group of desert artists tiptoed out onto dangerous cliff ledges to engrave the rock with enchanting depictions of camels, gazelles, ibex, wild horses, and other animals living in the shifting sands around them. One wrong step could have led to their deaths, but the artists persisted in an act of creative courage.

Now, archaeologists have discovered the monumental rock art left by this bygone culture in the Nafud desert of northern Saudi Arabia. One particularly dramatic scene was engraved from a tiny sloped ledge 12 storeys off the ground, and depicts 23 life-sized camels and horses in a line that stretches horizontally across 75 feet.

Rock art panels at Jebel Arnaan. Image: Maria Guagnin
“Some of these panels were etched onto cliff surfaces in inaccessible but highly visible locations,” said researchers led by Maria Gaugnin of the Max Planck Institute of Geoanthropology. “The difficulty in getting to and engraving these rock surfaces, and their enhanced visibility by height, were clearly attractive for the engravers.”

Though archeologists typically distinguish between rock art and modern graffiti as distinct traditions, there may be overlaps in their intent and execution—including, in this case, possible attraction to the challenges of accessing a dangerous site.

“The precarious nature of the engraving process is particularly evident in the largest recorded panel,” the team said, referring to the 75-footer described above. “This panel would have been accessed by climbing up a cliff and then engraved while standing on a downward sloping ledge, only ~30-50 centimeters in width,” which is roughly a foot across.

“Today the sandstone is too degraded to reach the ledge safely, and the panel was documented using a drone,” they added.” The friable nature of the substrate and the slope of the narrow ledges suggest the engravers likely risked their lives to create this art.”
The rock ledge where the main panel was engraved. Image: Monumental rock art panel at Jebel Misma (JMI18)
Talk about commitment to the craft. Given the high stakes and the spectacular scale of the panels, this art must have been a cherished touchstone to these early desert peoples. During the ice age, this region was extremely arid and virtually impenetrable, but as the glacial cover receded, oases and other pockets of habitability had opened up to nomads.

The rock art proves that these wanderers were not only navigating the terrain, but imprinting their culture and worldview onto it. For countless generations, these grand visions welcomed peoples passing through the desert, serving as a landmark and a cultural heirloom, before they faded into obscurity.

“Freshly engraved against the varnish, the images would have had considerable visual impact,” the team concluded. “The engravings, which may have been created over a time span of millennia, would have reminded people of ancient symbolisms and beliefs of their group, which likely structured their highly seasonal lives and thus enhanced their ability to thrive in these marginal landscapes.”

In other news…

I’m so hungry, I could eat a giant ground sloth

Prates, Luciano et al. Extinct megafauna dominated human subsistence in Southern South America before 11,600 years ago. Science Advances.

At the same time that the desert artists were engraving cliff walls, people in South America were devouring giant sloths, giant armadillos, mastodons, and other megafauna that have since gone extinct—potentially because they were so tasty.

That’s the upshot of a new study of archaeological sites in Argentina and Chile that date back some 12,000 years to the late Pleistocene period. The results revealed a preference for mega-big game—like beefy ground sloths and car-sized armadillos—bolstering the case that humans may have played a significant role in their extinction.
Megafaunal species were preferred prey for humans in Southern South America. Image: Luciano Prates et al. Megafaunal reconstructions in the figure were provided and authorized by Megafauna 3D Project (megafauna3d.org)
“The late Pleistocene extinction of terrestrial megafauna… is one of the most spectacular changes in American mammal history, and its cause is one of the most hotly debated issues in archaeology and paleoecology,” said researchers led by Luciano Prates of Universidad Nacional de la Plata.

“Here, we have shown… that extinct megafauna—at the apex of the prey ranking—were the main prey of early foragers, particularly in regions with high abundance and diversity, such as the Pampas, Patagonia, and central Chile,” the team concluded.

While climate and other factors certainly played a role in these extinctions, there may well be a more obvious culprit [looks at humanity; humanity belches; the belch smells like Pleistocene megafauna].

The world’s saddest version of “Baby Beluga”


Hudson, Justine M. and Watt, Cortney A. “Beluga Whale (Delphinapterus leucas) Behavior Towards a Dead Conspecific.” Marine Mammal Science.

“How do animals react to dead or dying conspecifics? Do they comprehend death? Do they grieve? These are the fundamental questions asked in the field of comparative thanatology, which focuses on how animals respond to death.”

Phew, what a heavy lead-in to a study. Nonetheless, a team has now explored these questions with drone observations of beluga whales responding to a dead beluga calf in Hudson Bay near Churchill, Manitoba. The baby may have been a stillborn or perhaps died shortly after birth, as there were no signs of trauma on its body.
Drone footage of the calf. Image: Hudson, Justine M. and Watt, Cortney A.
“We documented 15 instances where belugas from outside of the video frame swam directly towards the dead calf, including 4 mother-calf pairs and 11 individuals,” said Justine Hudson and Cortney Watt of Fisheries and Oceans Canada. “The dead calf was surrounded by free-swimming belugas for the entire duration of the video.”

“The dead calf and surrounding belugas were recorded for ~4 min and 17 s before the depleted drone battery required us to land, and we were unable to relocate the calf after changing the batteries,” they added.

Even the battery was too bummed out to endure. But while loss of life is sad, it’s all in a day’s work for a comparative thanatologist.

Rogue planets grow up so fast


Almendros-Abad, Victor et al. “Discovery of an Accretion Burst in a Free-floating Planetary-mass Object.” The Astrophysical Journal Letters.

The record for most epic bulk-up has been broken by a rogue planet that is gaining an astonishing six billion tonnes of mass per second—an unprecedented rate of swole. The planet, named Cha 1107-7626, is about five to 10 times as massive as Jupiter and does not orbit any star. And why should it? Who needs a star when you’re radiant all by yourself?

Indeed, scientists discovered the world thanks to the light generated by its record growth-spurt, which peaked for at least two months this summer and was still glowing strong when observations stopped in August 2025, showing “the strongest accretion rates measured” in a planet, according to the study.
Artist concept of Cha 1107-7626. Image: ESO/L. Calçada/M. Kornmesser
“These kinds of accretion bursts are key events in the early evolution of stars,” said researchers led by Victor Almendros-Abad of the Astronomical Observatory of Palermo, National Institute for Astrophysics (INAF), Italy. “Our target is the lowest mass object observed thus far that is going through an accretion burst” and provides “a glimpse into the nature of accretion in planetary-mass objects.”

A sneak peek of an alien ocean


Khawaja, Nozair et al. “Detection of organic compounds in freshly ejected ice grains from Enceladus’s ocean.” Nature Astronomy.

Shout out to the Enceladus-heads: Scientists have discovered new chemicals in the sea spray of this Saturnian moon that hint at organic processes and hydrothermal activity within its interior ocean, boosting the case that it may be habitable.

In 2008, the NASA-ESA Cassini orbiter gulped some alien seawater as it flew through plumes that erupt from Enceladus’s south pole. Now, scientists have reanalyzed data from one particularly speedy run through the moon sprinkler—during which Cassini reached 40,000 miles per hour—exposing “previously unobserved molecular fragments,” according to a study.

The “freshly ejected” compounds included organic molecules like ethers, ethyls, and partial remnants of what might be larger compounds bearing nitrogen and oxygen, said researchers led by Nozair Khawaja of the University of Berlin. These chemicals hint at “a hydrothermal origin” and “the synthesis and evolution of organics.”

In other words, Enceladus likely has seafloor environments similar to hydrothermal vent systems on Earth, which are hotspots for life. Whether the moon’s vents also have weird creepy crawlies on them is a question that is keeping many of us up at night, so could someone please just send a scuba team there already?

With that, may you enter your weekend with a spritz of fresh organic moon mist.

Thanks for reading! See you next week.






Hamas accetta parte dell’accordo. Trump chiede a Israele il cessate il fuoco


@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo
Nonostante il gruppo palestinese abbia accettato solo parte del piano statunitense, chiedendo di discutere il resto nel rispetto del diritto internazionale, il presidente Usa dichiara che "sono pronti alla pace".
L'articolo Hamas accetta parte



A Ilan Pappé il premio “Stefano Chiarini”


@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo
Il premio è un riconoscimento del lavoro svolto dallo storico e docente universitario in difesa del popolo palestinese e del rispetto del Diritto Internazionale
L'articolo A Ilan Pappé il premio “Stefano Chiarini” proviene da Pagine pagineesteri.it/2025/10/04/med…




Angelo Baiguera
freezonemagazine.com/rubriche/…
“È una storia pericolosa che è passata di bocca in bocca, ma nessuno sa da dove cominciò”. Sono parole tratte da Cattive notizie (Bad news) canzone del cantautore bresciano Angelo Baiguera, protagonista di questa nuova puntata di The other side of sports; una storia che indubbiamente sembra nata per essere narrata su Free Zone, perché mescola […]
L'articolo Angelo Baiguera proviene da FREE ZONE MA
“È una storia






ICE is on a rampage against the press


Dear Friend of Press Freedom,

After over 100 days in U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody, Mario Guevara was deported today. Read on for more about this and other press freedom abuses, and take a minute to tell your lawmakers to stand up for journalists victimized by ICE.

ICE is on a violent rampage against the press


Federal immigration officers reportedly promised a “shitshow” last weekend in response to criticism from the mayor of Broadview, Illinois, who didn’t appreciate her city being invaded. They delivered, and journalists were well represented among their victims.

One journalist, Steve Held, was arrested. Others, including Held’s reporting partner at Unraveled Press, Raven Geary, were shot in the face with pepper ball rounds. According to lawyers on the scene, the protests the reporters were covering were peaceful and uneventful until ICE officers decided to unleash chaos.

A few days later at an immigration court in New York City, where ICE agents have been trying to intimidate journalists for months, agents assaulted at least three journalists, one of whom couldn’t get up and had to be hospitalized. You can read what we told Chicago’s The Triibe about the Broadview attacks and New York’s amNY about the New York ones.

More importantly, you can tell your lawmakers to speak out against ICE’s abuses using our new, easy-to-use action center. Take action here.

Journalist Mario Guevara deported to El Salvador


After months of hard-fought battles in both the court of law and the court of public opinion, the Trump administration deported journalist Mario Guevara today. This case wasn’t about immigration paperwork — Guevara had a work permit, and the administration argued in court that Guevara’s reporting on protests posed a national security risk.

“The only thing that journalists like Guevara threaten is the government’s chokehold on information it doesn’t want the public to know. That’s why he’s being deported and why federal agents are assaulting and arresting journalists around the country,” FPF’s Seth Stern said after Guevara’s family announced his deportation.

Read the statement here.

Guilty of journalism in Kentucky


Student journalist Lucas Griffith was convicted of one count of failure to disperse and fined $50 plus court costs after a jury trial on Thursday.

That’s unconstitutional — even the U.S. Department of Justice recognizes journalists’ right to cover how law enforcement disperses protesters.

But it also shows what a giant waste of taxpayer funds it is to prosecute journalists for doing their jobs. Before the trial, we led a coalition letter from press freedom advocates and journalism professors objecting to the charges. Read it here.

FPF and 404 Media sue DHS


FPF and 404 Media filed a lawsuit against multiple parts of the U.S. government, including the Department of Homeland Security, demanding they hand over a copy of an agreement that shares the personal data of nearly 80 million Medicaid patients with ICE.

It’s just one of several recent lawsuits we’ve filed under the Freedom of Information Act. We also surpassed 200 FOIAs filed in 2025 this week. Subscribe to The Classifieds newsletter for more on our FOIA work.

Read more from 404 Media.

FCC censorship moves from prime time to prison


Federal Communications Commission Chair Brendan Carr has taken a lot of heat for his “mafioso”-style extortion of ABC over Jimmy Kimmel’s show. But his latest censorship effort is even more dangerous. It could strip those inside America’s most secretive institutions — its prisons — of a tool that has proved extremely effective in exposing abuses.

We partnered with The Intercept to publish incarcerated journalist and FPF columnist Jeremy Busby’s response to the FCC’s efforts to allow prisons to “jam” cell phones. Busby used a contraband phone to expose and force reform of horrific conditions in Texas prisons during the pandemic. Read his article here.

Photography is not a hate crime


The arrest of Alexa Wilkinson on hate crime charges for photographing vandalism at The New York Times building has prompted hair splitting about whether they’re a journalist. It’s giving us flashbacks to the pointless obsession over whether Julian Assange was a journalist, and not whether his prosecution endangered press freedom.

Stern explains that regardless of how we categorize Wilkinson’s work, the charges set dangerous precedents that threaten the constitutional protections journalists depend on to do their jobs. Read more here.

What we’re reading


DC Circuit rejects Fox News reporter effort to duck subpoena over anonymous source (Courthouse News). “This decision does real damage to bedrock principles of press freedom, and we urge the Court of Appeals to re-hear this case with a full panel of judges,” FPF’s Trevor Timm said.

Can the US government ban apps that track ICE agents? (BBC). “That somebody might use the app to break the law doesn’t mean the app can be banned,” Stern told BBC. After the interview, news broke that the administration successfully pressured Apple to pull the app.

Reporter’s suit over access to Utah Capitol dismissed (U.S. Press Freedom Tracker). This dismissal is nonsense. FPF’s Caitlin Vogus explained why in the Salt Lake Tribune earlier this year.

Israel illegally boards humanitarian flotilla heading to Gaza (Dropsite). A U.S. journalist was on board. The U.S. Department of State should be all over this and it should be headline news. Neither is likely, because the government considers critics of Israel terrorists and the media often shuns reporters who oppose slaughtering their Palestinian colleagues.

FPF welcomes Adam Rose to bolster local advocacy


FPF is excited to welcome Adam Rose as the new deputy director of our advocacy team. Adam will primarily focus on protecting press freedom at the local level, where we have seen a sharp increase in arrests and assaults of journalists all around the country — many of which have not made national headlines.

Adam comes to FPF after serving as the chief operating officer of Starling Lab for Data Integrity and as the press rights chair of the Los Angeles Press Club, where he has been a tireless advocate for the press freedom rights of journalists in the LA area. He successfully lobbied for a California law that prohibits police from arresting or intentionally interfering with journalists as they cover protests. Most recently, as a plaintiff in multiple press freedom-related lawsuits, his efforts have resulted in landmark federal court orders against both the Department of Homeland Security and Los Angeles Police Department for violating the rights of the press. Read more here.


freedom.press/issues/ice-is-on…


404 Media and Freedom of the Press Foundation Sue DHS


Last week Freedom of the Press Foundation and 404 Media filed a lawsuit against the multiple parts of the U.S. government demanding they hand over a copy of an agreement that shares the personal data of nearly 80 million Medicaid patients with ICE. The data sharing marked a watershed moment for ICE and its access to highly sensitive data that is ordinarily siloed off from the agency. We believe it’s important for the public to see this unprecedented data sharing agreement for themselves.

As the Associated Press wrote when it first reported on the data sharing agreement between the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), the agreement will give ICE the ability to find “the location of aliens.” The data shared includes home addresses and ethnicities, according to the Associated Press.

💡
Do you know anything else about this data sharing agreement? I would love to hear from you. Using a non-work device, you can message me securely on Signal at joseph.404 or send me an email at joseph@404media.co.

Both Freedom of the Press Foundation and 404 Media filed similar Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests with DHS and CMS seeking a copy of the agreement. Neither agency provided the requested records in time, so we have now filed the lawsuit. In 404 Media’s case, CMS acknowledged the request but has not provided the records, and DHS did not even acknowledge the request at all.

404 Media’s request asked for a copy of the specific agreement, and if the agencies were unable to locate it, to alternatively provide copies of all agreements between DHS and CMS from this year.

“Despite having received the FOIA requests, and despite their obligations under the law, Defendants have failed to notify Plaintiffs of the scope of documents that they will produce or the scope of documents that they plan to withhold in response to the FOIA requests,” the lawsuit reads.
playlist.megaphone.fm?p=TBIEA2…
Freedom of the Press Foundation is a non-profit organization that monitors press freedom issues in the U.S. and trains journalists on how to keep themselves and their sources safe. It regularly sues the U.S. government for access to records.

The data sharing agreement is just one of a growing list of ways that ICE is sourcing highly sensitive, and sometimes legally protected, information as part of the Trump administration’s mass deportation effort. ProPublica reported on the vast system the IRS is building to share millions of taxpayers’ data with ICE. 404 Media previously reported ICE has gained access to ISO Claimsearch, a massive insurance and medical bill database to find deportation targets. The database is nearly all encompassing and contains details on more than 1.8 billion insurance claims and 58 million medical bills.

Separately, 404 Media filed a lawsuit against ICE in September for access to the agency’s $2 million spyware contract.

If you want to support this work, become a paid subscriber here. If you would like to make a larger, tax deductible donation, please email us at donate@404media.co.


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SEIETRENTA - La rassegna stampa di Chora Media: Pizzaballa: "Cercare segni di salvezza nella disumanità di Gaza" | VIVAVOCE

File multimediale: traffic.megaphone.fm/BCS808627…

#Gaza War
#Gaza City (Gaza Strip

#gaza


Hanno la forza non hanno la ragione di Danilo de Biasio





Journalist or not, photography isn’t a hate crime


The arrest of Alexa Wilkinson on felony hate crime charges for photographing vandalism at the New York Times building has prompted hairsplitting about whether they’re a journalist. The New York Times explained that Wilkinson’s “lawyers described them as a journalist, but did not name any publications for which Mx. Wilkinson works.”

Wilkinson certainly has a track record as a journalist. Whether the content they were charged for is journalism or PR is, I suppose, up for debate. But should we even bother debating it? Regardless of how we categorize Wilkinson’s work, the charges set dangerous precedents that threaten the constitutional protections journalists depend on to do their jobs.

As we all learned — or should have learned — from the Julian Assange prosecution, obsessing over whether a particular defendant meets someone’s arbitrary definition of journalism is a waste of time. What that case left us with at the end of the day is a Trump administration armed with a bipartisan consensus that routine journalistic acts, like talking to sources, obtaining government secrets, and publishing them, can be prosecuted as a felony under the Espionage Act. Those who change their tune when the next defendant is someone they like better than Assange will be easily discredited by their hypocrisy.

The same dangers apply when Wilkinson’s photography is treated as a hate crime. Wilkinson’s case stems from a July protest in which activists doused the Times headquarters in red paint and spray-painted “NYT lies, Gaza dies” on its windows. In addition to charging the vandals, New York prosecutors charged Wilkinson, who photographed the scene, with aggravated harassment as a hate crime.

New York authorities should be combating these cynical attempts to use antisemitism to justify authoritarianism. Instead, they’re fueling the trend.

But there was no hate crime. Vandalizing a building to protest perceived pro-Israel bias in news coverage is a political statement, not an antisemitic one. The vandalism may well be illegal, and we condemn it, as news outlets large and small are under increased threat in this charged political environment. We even documented the vandalism itself in our U.S. Press Freedom Tracker.

But labeling actions that criticize a newspaper’s editorial decisions as a hate crime conflates political views with bigotry. Many journalists object to Israel’s slaughter of their peers in Gaza — and the U.S. media’s relative silence about it — for reasons having nothing to do with anyone’s religion. And many Jews themselves oppose Israel’s actions in Gaza and object to coverage they view as excusing or normalizing Israel’s conduct.

I’m one of those Jews, and I think what’s antisemitic is to assume that we monolithically share the politics of Benjamin Netanyahu and his ilk, who I consider the worst thing to happen to Judaism since the 1940s. As the saying goes, one day everyone will have been against this. When that time comes, efforts to conflate anti-Israel or anti-genocide views with antisemitism will leave Jews holding the bag for Israel’s reprehensible actions, America’s role in supporting them, and whatever blowback follows. That’s when the real antisemitism will start.

New York authorities should be combating these cynical attempts to use antisemitism to justify authoritarianism. Instead, they’re fueling the trend. Wilkinson’s case, in a blue state, legitimizes the Trump administration’s un-American actions, like its efforts to deport Mahmoud Khalil over his criticisms of Israel and Rümeysa Öztürk for co-writing an op-ed arguing for boycotts of Israeli products. The administration baselessly argues that their constitutionally protected speech constitutes support for Hamas and threatens national security. And several Republican attorneys general have floated the idea that reporting critical of Israel could be punished as support for terrorism. Wilkinson’s case only gives cover to those advancing these absurd arguments.

Israel showed us exactly where conflating speech with violence leads. Last month, Israel killed 31 journalists in airstrikes on newspaper offices in Yemen — the deadliest single attack on the press in 16 years, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists. Israel has justified the strikes by characterizing the targeted outlets as publishing “terrorist” propaganda.

Should we debate whether those massacred in Yemen (or Gaza) followed the Associated Press Stylebook or strictly adhered to journalistic codes of ethics? Or should we just acknowledge that militaries shouldn’t blow people to bits over what they say and write, regardless of whether it’s bad journalism or even propaganda?

Even setting aside the hate crime charge, Wilkinson’s case has broader implications for the press that don’t hinge on whether they’re a card-carrying member. The complaint against Wilkinson reportedly emphasizes not just the photographs they took but also social media posts criticizing Times staff and alleged foreknowledge of the vandalism. This suggests prosecutors view Wilkinson as complicit because of proximity or sympathy to those who committed it and awareness of their plans.

But objectivity is not a precondition for constitutional protection. It’s a relatively recently developed journalistic norm — with its share of critics — that would have been seen as ridiculous when the First Amendment was written.

Should we debate whether those massacred in Yemen (or Gaza)...adhered to journalistic codes of ethics? Or should we just acknowledge that militaries shouldn’t blow people to bits over what they write?

As for embedding and foreknowledge, journalists routinely embed with groups whose members commit illegal acts. For example, the Israeli army, which, according to the United Nations, is committing genocide. Domestically, police reporters ride along with officers who may use excessive force. Investigative journalists cultivate sources involved in criminal activity. If foreknowledge of illegal acts or presence when they occur makes one legally complicit, journalism as we know it becomes impossible.

And for those concerned about journalistic ethics and objectivity, what impact do you think it’ll have if reporters are allowed to embed with government-approved lawbreakers, like soldiers and police, but not dissidents? Will that result in “fair and balanced” coverage?

Your opinion about Wilkinson’s work won’t change the trajectory of our democracy. But prosecutors in America’s biggest city validating the Trump administration’s criminalization of dissent very well might. Every journalist — and everyone who depends on journalism to hold power to account — should be alarmed.


freedom.press/issues/journalis…




Secondo Putin, la crescente “isteria” europea attorno al rischio di guerra è frutto di una volontà delle élite politiche occidentali di mantenere il consenso popolare attraverso la paura.
radioradio.it/2025/10/putin-de…



Attentati contro i vegani occidentali 😂😂😂😂. Euronews, oltre il ridicolo, specchio del suo governo.


Ora è ufficiale: il governo Meloni è stato denunciato alla Corte penale internazionale per complicità in genocidio.

Non è uno slogan né un titolo di giornale, ma un atto formale. Secondo quanto depositato dall’avvocato Fabio Marcelli, dirigente del Cnr – Istituto di studi giuridici internazionali, il governo italiano è stato denunciato davanti alla Corte Penale Internazionale dell’Aja per presunta complicità nel genocidio in corso a Gaza.

L’esposto, stando a quanto reso pubblico, cita direttamente i nomi della Presidente del Consiglio Giorgia Meloni, del ministro degli Esteri Antonio Tajani, del ministro della Difesa Guido Crosetto e dell’amministratore delegato di Leonardo, Roberto Cingolani. Nell’atto si sostiene che, mentre nella Striscia di Gaza la Commissione internazionale d’inchiesta dell’ONU parla di “genocidio”, l’Italia avrebbe continuato a intrattenere rapporti politici e commerciali con il governo di Benjamin Netanyahu, fornendo di fatto un sostegno indiretto alla prosecuzione delle ostilità.

La denuncia non proviene da un partito o da un gruppo politico, ma da un giurista di lungo corso. Marcelli, nella sua nota, spiega che l’obiettivo è chiamare a rispondere non solo chi compie materialmente i crimini, ma anche chi – secondo la legge internazionale e la legge italiana sul genocidio del 1967 – li favorisce, li sostiene o non interviene per impedirli.

Se la Corte dell’Aja valuterà ammissibile il fascicolo, l’Italia sarà chiamata a fornire spiegazioni. In ogni caso, questo atto resterà come documento storico: nel pieno della devastazione di Gaza, c’è chi ha chiesto formalmente di verificare le responsabilità anche del governo italiano.

La Storia, quando verrà scritta, non dimenticherà questi passaggi. E allora resterà anche questo: che l’Italia, sotto il governo Meloni, è stata chiamata in giudizio per non aver fatto abbastanza per fermare la tragedia palestinese.

Paolo Consiglio

Fonti principali:
– Adnkronos – Denuncia alla Corte Penale Internazionale contro esponenti del governo italiano (settembre 2025).
– Il Fatto Quotidiano – Fabio Marcelli deposita esposto per complicità in genocidio (settembre 2025).
– Commissione internazionale d’inchiesta ONU – Rapporto 2025 su Gaza.

Nota editoriale
Questo articolo rappresenta un’opinione critica e argomentata, fondata su fonti giornalistiche e istituzionali. Le dichiarazioni e i nomi citati sono riportati esclusivamente come contenuto dell’esposto depositato alla CPI e non come accuse formulate dall’autore. Ogni riflessione si colloca nell’ambito della libertà di stampa e di pensiero, principi essenziali in una società democratica.

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