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2025 One Hertz Challenge: The Easy Way to Make a Nixie Tube Clock


Let’s say you want to build a Nixie clock. You could go out and find some tubes, source a good power supply design, start whipping up a PCB, and working on a custom enclosure. Or, you could skip all that, and just follow [Simon]’s example instead.

The trick to building a Nixie clock fast is quite simple — just get yourself a frequency counter that uses Nixie tubes for the display. [Simon] sourced a great example from American Machine and Foundry, also known as AMF, the company most commonly associated with America’s love of bowling.

The frequency counter does one thing, it counts the number of pulses in a second. Thus, if you squirt the right number of pulses to represent the time — say, 173118 pulses to represent 5:31 PM and 18 seconds — the frequency counter effectively becomes a clock. To achieve this, [Simon] just hooked an ESP32 up to the frequency counter and programmed it to get the current time from an NTP time server. It then spits out a certain number of pulses every second corresponding to the current time. The frequency counter displays the count… and there you have your Nixie clock!

It’s quick, dirty, and effective, and a sweet entry to our 2025 One Hertz Challenge. We’ve had some other great entries, too, like this nifty hexadecimal Unix clock, and even some non-horological projects, too!

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2025 Hackaday One Hertz Challenge


hackaday.com/2025/08/07/2025-o…



oltretutto chi sposta la produzione negli usa sposterà parte di produzione... non può spostare tutto. per importare dall'italia magari materie prime o parti comunque necessarie dovrà lo stesso pagare i dazzi... davvero utile quindi alla fine è comunque un'inculata e non conviene. in un mondo globalizzato come questo è veramente assurda la logica di trump. più tasse per tutti (negli usa)


Federal law closes courthouse doors to incarcerated journalists


These days the president of the United States files frivolous lawsuits at an alarming clip, including against news outlets that displease him. He’s far from the only prominent public figure abusing the federal court system in this way, steering scarce judicial resources away from meritorious lawsuits by ordinary people who have suffered serious damages.

And yet, Congress has not seen fit to pass a federal “anti-SLAPP” law to stop billionaires and politicians from pursuing strategic lawsuits against public participation. But powerless prisoners? That’s another story. If they want access to the federal courts they need to navigate the Prison Litigation Reform Act — a maze of onerous procedural requirements. It’s supposedly intended to stop the courts from being burdened by inmates’ frivolous lawsuits.

We held a webinar to discuss the PLRA’s impact on incarcerated journalists and the journalists on the outside who cover the prison system, featuring Jeremy Busby, a journalist and Freedom of the Press Foundation (FPF) columnist who is incarcerated in Texas, and American Civil Liberties Union attorneys Nina Patel and Corene Kendrick. Patel is senior policy counsel at the ACLU Justice Division and Kendrick is the deputy director of the ACLU’s National Prison Project.

As Kendrick explained, the PLRA originated as one of the Clinton administration’s “tough on crime” initiatives as it pivoted right in preparation for the 1996 presidential election. The law was enacted despite a lack of evidence that incarcerated people file baseless lawsuits any more frequently than anyone else, presidents or otherwise. She said the law “singles out one disfavored group of people and categorically denies them equal access to the courts.”

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She described how the harm extends beyond the impacted litigants, as the kinds of court filings foreclosed by the PLRA are “oftentimes the best way that information about conditions in our nation’s prisons and jails reach the public and members of the media.”

“The PLRA has, in practice, served as a real barrier for journalists to get any sort of information” about facilities that “get billions and billions of dollars a year to lock up human beings,” Kendrick said. “The ability to communicate with the outside world is so circumscribed and is monitored and recorded. And you know, once something gets to a federal court and it’s filed on the docket, it is out there.”

But when the court dismisses a case for procedural reasons without any consideration of whether the claims are true, all journalists are left with are untested allegations that they rarely have the resources to corroborate. “That happens all the time, and unfortunately, and it adversely affects journalists greatly,” Kendrick said.

Lawsuits are also the only recourse available to incarcerated journalists, who often report relentless retaliation when their work upsets prison officials. That’s what happened to Busby when he helped expose deplorable conditions inside the prison where he was housed when the COVID-19 pandemic hit in 2020. Busby said he was transferred to four prisons, each overcrowded with people sick with COVID, before landing in a cell without a mattress or sheets, where he was kept for six weeks. His property was damaged or seized, and he was written bogus disciplinary charges that were later overturned.

He brought a federal lawsuit, but because he was retaliated against in four different prisons, the judge said the PLRA required four separate lawsuits in four different courts. “I wasn’t able to successfully keep up with four active litigations in four different courts in four different counties, from the solitary confinement cell that I was being held in,” Busby explained, resulting in his lawsuits each being dismissed on procedural grounds before the merits of his claims could be adjudicated.

Busby is a college graduate and accomplished writer — if he can’t navigate the PLRA, it is all the more difficult for an average member of the prison population to do so. Even the experienced lawyers on the webinar acknowledged how challenging it can be to comply with the PLRA when representing their incarcerated clients. Incarcerated litigants, Busby noted, must also pay court fees — in his case, a $400 fee became $1,600 when his lawsuit was split into four.

“You don’t get paid for work here in Texas, and so most guys, they don’t even want the $400 thing against their account because their family members can maybe send $20 for toothpaste and deodorant every month or so, or every two or three months, and they don’t want to sacrifice their deodorant and toothpaste money to pursue this lawsuit,” he said.

So what’s the point of the PLRA? As Patel noted, “The courts are well equipped to throw out lawsuits that are frivolous,” and do so every day in cases involving non-incarcerated people. Patel believes the real problem the PLRA is meant to address isn’t that incarcerated people file so many invalid claims — it’s that they file so many valid ones.

With around two million people incarcerated in the United States, “a functional system where someone can go to the courts and have their constitutional violations in prison litigated and then compensated would break most prison systems in this country,” Patel explained. “That is the dirty truth of the PLRA.”

She added, “Everyone knows, and it’s not a secret, that it would bankrupt the system, and it would break it, and that we couldn’t do what we do in this country, which is lead the world in mass incarceration.”

Watch the full webinar here, and subscribe to our newsletters to get notice of future events.

Note: FPF Advocacy Director Seth Stern, who authored this article and moderated the webinar, is on the board of Busby’s nonprofit organization, JoinJeremy.


freedom.press/issues/federal-l…



ma che fine hanno fatto tutti quelli che prima delle elezioni osannavano tanto trump... negando persino i fatti tipo il suo tentato colpo di stato di 4 anni prima... eh beh... adesso che ha vinto siete tutti contenti? coglioni... bella la vostra idea di destra...


The 64-Degree Egg, And Other Delicious Variants


Many of us have boiled an egg at some point or another in our lives. The conventional technique is relatively straightforward—get the water boiling, drop the egg in, and leave it for a certain period of time based on the desired consistency. If you want the yolk soft, only leave it in for a few minutes, and if you want it hard, go longer.

Ultimately, though, this is a relatively crude system for controlling the consistency of the final product. If you instead study the makeup of the egg, and understand how it works, you can elicit far greater control over the texture and behavior of your egg with great culinary benefits.

Knockin’ On 64

Traditional boiled eggs cooked for 4 minutes, 7 minutes, and 9 minutes. When cooking in boiling water, temperatures are high enough to create a fully firm white in just a few minutes. Credit: Wikisearcher, CC BY-SA 3.0
It all comes down to the physical basics of what goes on when we cook an egg. Whether frying, poaching, or simply boiling, one thing is the same—the liquid contents of the egg turn more solid with heat. This is because the heat causes the proteins in the egg white and egg yolk to denature—they untangle and unravel from their original folded structure into a new form which is the one we prefer to eat.

Physical chemist Hervé This is widely credited as revolutionizing the way we think about cooking eggs, through his careful study of how temperature affected the cooking process of a “boiled” egg. He invented the idea of the “6X °C egg”—a method of cooking eggs to generate a pleasant, smooth consistency by carefully controlling how the proteins denature. His work has since been expanded upon by many other researchers eager to untangle the mysteries of how egg proteins behave with heat.

Different purveyors of these theories each have their own ideals—but it’s common to hear talk of the “64-degree egg” or “65-degree egg.” To create such an egg, one typically uses a sous vide water bath set at a very precise temperature, in order to cook the egg in as controlled a manner as possible. The process is a relationship between time and temperature, and so the cooking times used are a lot longer than with boiling water at 100 C—immersing the eggs for 60 minutes or more is typical. This also helps to ensure the eggs are safe to eat, with the lower temperature needing a longer time to quash potentially harmful bacteria.

Sous Vide Eggs
byu/passswordistaco insousvide

Enthusiasts share cooking times and temperatures along with qualitative results, ever searching for the ideal egg.

The results of such a process? Eggs cooked in this manner are prized for their tender yolks and an overall consistency not dissimilar to custard. The process denatures the yolk and white proteins just enough to create an incredibly smooth egg with luxurious mouthfeel, and they’re often cited as melting in the mouth.
The onsen egg from Japan is a traditional egg dish cooked at approximately 70 C for 30 to 40 minutes, similarly creating an egg with a luxurious consistency. Credit: Blue Lotus, CC BY 2.0
The only real drawback? It’s typical to get some runny whites left over, since the low cooking temperature isn’t enough to fully denature the proteins in that part of the egg. These eggs were once a neat science experiment from the world of molecular gastronomy, with the cooking method since becoming widespread with restaurants and sous vide enthusiasts around the world.

There are even more advanced techniques for those committed to egg perfection. A research team from the University of Naples, Italy, determined that cycling an egg between two pans—one with boiling water, the other at 30 C—allowed both the yolk and the white to each reach target doneness. To get the whites to around 85 C while holding the yolk at 65 C, the team used the technique of swapping between pans to get both to their ideal temperature by modelling heat transfer through the egg. This controls the amount of heat transferred to the yolk deeper inside the egg, ensuring that it’s not overcooked in the effort to get the whites to set. Ultimately, though, this process requires a great deal of work swapping the egg back and forth for a full 30 minutes.

Few make that sort of commitment to eggcellence.

Featured image, the imaginatively named “Selective Photography of Breakfast in Plate” by [Krisztina Papp].


hackaday.com/2025/08/07/the-64…



Perché i dazi di Trump fanno esultare Tsmc

L'articolo proviene da #StartMag e viene ricondiviso sulla comunità Lemmy @Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)
Tsmc sarà esentata dai dazi al 100 per cento sui microchip imposti da Trump. Ottima notizia per l'azienda e per l'intera economia di Taiwan. Ma le tensioni commerciali con l'America non sono risolte.




Chi sono i colossi della finanza che sostengono la Dsr Bank

@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo

Un gruppo di grandi istituzioni finanziarie internazionali, tra cui J.P. Morgan Chase, Ing e Commerzbank, ha deciso di accettare la sfida della banca multilaterale pensata per portare avanti i progetti di difesa dell’Europa e dei suoi alleati. La Defence, Security and Resilience Bank (Dsrb) infatti si pone l’obiettivo



Preservationists at the Video Game History Foundation purchased the rights to Computer Entertainer, the first video game magazine ever written and uploaded it for free.#News #VideoGames #archiving


Archivists Let You Now Read Some of the First Ever Reviews of Mario and Zelda


Some of the first reviews ever written for the original Legend of Zelda and Super Mario Bros. have been digitized and published by the Video Game History Foundation. The reviews appeared in Computer Entertainer, an early video game magazine that ran from 1982 to 1990. The archivists at the Foundation tracked down the magazine’s entire run and have published it all online under a Creative Commons license.

Computer Entertainer has a fascinating history. It was one of the only magazines to cover video games during the market crash of the mid 1980s. “Simply put, there weren't other video game magazines in this era, at least in the United States,” Phil Salvador, the Library Director at the VGHF, told 404 Media. “In many cases, this is the only American coverage we have for this period.”
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“If we want to understand video game history, we need more than the games themselves. We need to understand how they were talked about and how they were made. Primary sources from the early years of the video game industry like Computer Entertainer are scarce. They give us insight into the story of video games that there's no way to reproduce,” Salvador said.
Image via VGHF.
Computer Entertainer was the newsletter for the Video Take-Out, a company that sold video games through the mail. “Because they were focused on retail products, they kept on top of the video game release calendar in a way that no other enthusiast magazine did in the 1980s,” Salvador said. “This magazine is one of the only reliable sources of American release dates for computer and console games during this era. Look up any console game from the 1980s on Wikipedia, and chances are, the American release date in the article comes from Computer Entertainer.”
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Digging through the archives, I found the original Legend of Zelda review and read through a year’s worth of hype and handwringing leading up to its release. Computer Entertainer was on hand at CES to talk to the unproven Nintendo in February 1987. Zelda was already out in Japan, where it ran on the disk-based Famicom system.

The CE write-up noted that the NES was a cartridge system and that Nintendo had to make unheard of adjustments to make the game work right. “A Nintendo spokesperson told us that they have included a lithium battery with a 5-year life span in the cartridge to allow it to save information you need, so the disk drive is not needed,” CE wrote.
Image via VGHF.
Convincing Americans to buy a Famicom-style disk drive after they’d already bought the NES was thought to be a hard sell. “We do feel, however, that it is just a question of time before Nintendo introduces the disk drive in the U.S,” CE said. “Also, for the avid long-term gamer (count all our readers in that category!), the 5-year battery could prove frustrating as, when the battery dies, so does all the character information that has been stored on the cartridge.” CE needn’t have worried. Many of those batteries are still working today, almost 40 years later, and there’s a robust aftermarket in replacement parts when they fail.

Legend of Zelda finally came out in August of 1987 and CE gave it a glowing review, rating it 3.5 out of 4 stars. In the same issue, it gave Leisure Suit Larry and the Land of the Lounge Lizards a perfect 4 out of 4 stars. “There’s certainly no socially redeeming value to the game, which is what makes it so much fun,” CE said of the adventure game that would have nowhere near the cultural or social impact of Link and Zelda.
Image via VGHF.
“It's a totally different perspective to see someone trying towrap their head around the original Super Mario Bros., or expressing skepticism aboutthe idea of Nintendo selling a game console in the United States,” Salvador said.

The 1980s was a different era of games writing. “[Computer Entertainer] covered video and computer games as a function of their retail business to help customers better understand the game market,” Salvador said. “Being able to look back on what retailers thought about the game business back in the 1980s is a huge historical boon, but today, there's understandably more questions about the role of game criticism. Does it still make sense to cover games the same way Computer Entertainer did 40 years ago?”




Fregate high-tech dal Giappone. Canberra punta sulla classe “Mogami” per la sua Marina Militare

@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo

La Marina Australiana ha scelto la Mitsubishi per costruire la sua prossima generazione di fregate. Pochi giorni fa, il ministero della Difesa australiano ha infatti annunciato che la versione potenziata della classe “Mogami”




Roberto Natale (cda Rai): subito una legge che rispetti l’Emfa


@Giornalismo e disordine informativo
articolo21.org/2025/08/roberto…
“E’ vitale per il servizio pubblico che arrivi al più presto una legge di attuazione del Media Freedom Act europeo, in vigore da domani anche nella parte che riguarda i servizi pubblici. Non



Buying Large LiFePO4 Batteries: How Cheap is Too Cheap?


It’s a well-known factoid that batteries keep getting cheaper while capacity increases. That said, as with any market that is full of people who are hunting for that ‘great deal’, there are also many shady sellers who will happily sell you a product that could be very dangerous. Especially in the case of large LiFePO4 (LFP) batteries, considering the sheer amount of energy they can contain. Recently [Will Prowse] nabbed such a $125, 100 Ah battery off Amazon that carries no recognizable manufacturer or brand name.
Cheap and cheerful, and probably won't burn down the place. (Credit: Will Prowse, YouTube)Cheap and cheerful, and probably won’t burn down the place. (Credit: Will Prowse, YouTube)
If this battery works well, it could be an amazing deal for off-grid and solar-powered applications. Running a battery of tests on the battery, [Will] found that the unit’s BMS featured no over-current protection, happily surging to 400 A, with only over-temperature protection keeping it from melting down during a discharge scenario. Interestingly, under-temperature charge protection also worked on the unit.

After a (safe) teardown of the battery the real discoveries began, with a row of missing cells, the other cells being re-sleeved and thus likely salvaged or rejects. Fascinatingly, another YouTuber did a similar test and found that their (even cheaper) unit was of a much lower capacity (88.9 Ah) than [Will]’s with 98 Ah and featured a completely different BMS to boot. Their unit did however feature something of a brand name, though it’s much more likely that these are all just generic LFP batteries that get re-branded by resellers.

What this means is that these LFP batteries may be cheap, but they come with cells that are likely to be of questionable quality, featuring a BMS that plays it fast and loose with safety. Although [Will] doesn’t outright say that you shouldn’t use these batteries, he does recommend that you install a fuse on it to provide some semblance of over-current protection. Keeping a fire extinguisher at hand might also be a good idea.

youtube.com/embed/r9Ob5kk3qoQ?…


hackaday.com/2025/08/07/buying…



More than 130,000 Claude, Grok, ChatGPT, and Other LLM Chats Readable on Archive.org#News


More than 130,000 Claude, Grok, ChatGPT, and Other LLM Chats Readable on Archive.org


A researcher has found that more than 130,000 conversations with AI chatbots including Claude, Grok, ChatGPT, and others are discoverable on the Internet Archive, highlighting how peoples’ interactions with LLMs may be publicly archived if users are not careful with the sharing settings they may enable.

The news follows earlier findings that Google was indexing ChatGPT conversations that users had set to share, despite potentially not understanding that these chats were now viewable by anyone, and not just those they intended to share the chats with. OpenAI had also not taken steps to ensure these conversations could be indexed by Google.

“I obtained URLs for: Grok, Mistral, Qwen, Claude, and Copilot,” the researcher, who goes by the handle dead1nfluence, told 404 Media. They also found material related to ChatGPT, but said “OpenAI has had the ChatGPT[.]com/share links removed it seems.” Searching on the Internet Archive now for ChatGPT share links does not return any results, while Grok results, for example, are still available.

Dead1nfluence wrote a blog post about some of their findings on Sunday and shared the list of more than 130,000 archived LLM chat links with 404 Media. They also shared some of the contents of those chats that they had scraped. Dead1nfluence wrote that they found API keys and other exposed information that could be useful to a hacker.
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“While these providers do tell their users that the shared links are public to anyone, I think that most who have used this feature would not have expected that these links could be findable by anyone, and certainly not indexed and readily available for others to view,” dead1nfluence wrote in their blog post. “This could prove to be a very valuable data source for attackers and red teamers alike. With this, I can now search the dataset at any time for target companies to see if employees may have disclosed sensitive information by accident.”

404 Media verified some of dead1influence’s findings by discovering specific material they flagged in the dataset, then going to the still-public LLM link and checking the content.

💡
Do you know anything else about this? 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.

Most of the companies whose AI tools are included in the dataset did not respond to a request for comment. Microsoft which owns Copilot acknowledged a request for comment but didn't provide a response in time for publication. A spokesperson for Anthrophic, which owns Claude, told 404 Media: “We give people control over sharing their Claude conversations publicly, and in keeping with our privacy principles, we do not share chat directories or sitemaps with search engines like Google. These shareable links are not guessable or discoverable unless people choose to publicize them themselves. When someone shares a conversation, they are making that content publicly accessible, and like other public web content, it may be archived by third-party services. In our review of the sample archived conversations shared with us, these were either manually requested to be indexed by a person with access to the link or submitted by independent archivist organizations who discovered the URLs after they were published elsewhere across the internet first.” 404 Media only shared a small sample of the Claude links with Anthrophic, not the entire list.

Fast Company first reported that Google was indexing some ChatGPT conversations on July 30. This was because of a sharing feature ChatGPT had that allowed users to send a link to a ChatGPT conversation to someone else. OpenAI disabled the sharing feature in response. OpenAI CISO Dane Stuckey said in a previous statement sent to 404 Media: “This was a short-lived experiment to help people discover useful conversations. This feature required users to opt-in, first by picking a chat to share, then by clicking a checkbox for it to be shared with search engines.”

A researcher who requested anonymity gave 404 Media access to a dataset of nearly 100,000 ChatGPT conversations indexed on Google. 404 Media found those included the alleged texts of non-disclosure agreements, discussions of confidential contracts, and people trying to use ChatGPT for relationship issues.

Others also found that the Internet Archive contained archived LLM chats.


#News


Next PPI Board Meeting, August 26th at 20:00 UTC


Ahoy Pirates,

Our next PPI board meeting will take place on 26.08.2025 at 14:00 UTC / 16:00 CEST.

All official PPI proceedings, Board meetings included, are open to the public. Feel free to stop by. We’ll be happy to have you.

Where:jitsi.pirati.cz/PPI-Board

Minutes of the meeting: wiki.pp-international.net/wiki…

Agenda: Pad: etherpad.pp-international.net/…

All of our meetings are posted to our calendar: pp-international.net/calendar/

We look forward to seeing visitors.

Thank you for your support,

The Board of PPI


pp-international.net/2025/08/n…




La fiducia degli americani nell’AI sta diminuendo ed è una questione di sicurezza nazionale


La fiducia degli americani nell’intelligenza artificiale sta diminuendo, nonostante l’accelerazione dei progressi globali in questo campo. Ciò indica un potenziale problema di sicurezza nazionale: legislatori di ogni partito, leader del settore, think tank e altri hanno avvertito che rimanere indietro rispetto alla Cina in materia di intelligenza artificiale metterebbe gli Stati Uniti in una posizione di svantaggio. Un sentimento pubblico negativo potrebbe minare il sostegno del Congresso e finanziario alla ricerca e allo sviluppo in questo campo.

Ma alcune aziende di intelligenza artificiale stanno modificando i loro prodotti per dare ai clienti governativi un maggiore controllo sul comportamento dei modelli, sull’input dei dati e persino sulla fonte di energia che alimenta il sistema.

Questo potrebbe placare l’opinione pubblica?

Un recente accordo dimostra fino a che punto le aziende siano disposte a spingersi per soddisfare le esigenze del governo. Per miliardi di persone, ChatGPT è un’astrazione visualizzata tramite il browser web. Ma all’inizio di questo mese, il chatbot basato sull’intelligenza artificiale ha assunto una forma fisica quando OpenAI ha consegnato diversi hard disk contenenti i pesi del modello o3 al Los Alamos National Laboratory. Il laboratorio mira a utilizzarli per esaminare dati classificati alla ricerca di informazioni sulla fisica delle particelle che potrebbero rimodellare la ricerca di energia e lo sviluppo di armi nucleari.

Quei dischi rigidi erano i “più preziosi” sulla Terra, l’incarnazione fisica della valutazione di 300 miliardi di dollari di OpenAI, ha detto a Defense One Katrina Mulligan, responsabile governativa dell’azienda, in occasione di un recente evento sull’intelligenza artificiale a Washington, DC. “Stiamo perdendo soldi con il nostro accordo con i laboratori nazionali”, ha detto Mulligan.

Pochi giorni dopo, OpenAI ha annunciato un contratto da 200 milioni di dollari con il Pentagono per “prototipare come l’intelligenza artificiale di frontiera possa trasformare le sue operazioni amministrative, dal miglioramento del modo in cui i militari e le loro famiglie ricevono assistenza sanitaria, alla semplificazione del modo in cui analizzano i dati di programma e acquisizione, fino al supporto alla difesa informatica proattiva. Tutti i casi d’uso devono essere coerenti con le politiche e le linee guida di OpenAI”.

All’AI Expo dello Special Competitive Studies Project a Washington, DC, un rappresentante di OpenAI ha dimostrato come gli strumenti dell’azienda possano essere utili per compiti di sicurezza nazionale: geolocalizzazione di immagini senza indizi evidenti, scansione dei registri di Telegram alla ricerca di indicatori di attività informatica o identificazione dell’origine di parti di droni recuperate dal campo di battaglia.

Il responsabile della demo ha affermato che i più recenti modelli di ragionamento dell’azienda non solo superano le versioni precedenti, ma ora consentono anche l’inserimento sicuro di dati classificati in conformità con le linee guida del Dipartimento della Difesa. A differenza di ChatGPT, rivolto al pubblico, la versione governativa mostra anche agli utenti come il modello prioritizza le fonti di dati, offrendo una trasparenza che consente agli analisti di perfezionare la logica e comprendere come il programma sia giunto alle conclusioni a cui è giunto.

Questa visibilità è essenziale per l’uso ai fini della sicurezza nazionale, ha affermato Mulligan, molto più che per i consumatori che vogliono risposte e raramente chiedono come vengono realizzati.

“Produce una catena di pensiero piuttosto dettagliata che ti dice come è arrivato alla sua conclusione, quali informazioni ha preso in considerazione che non erano possibili nel paradigma precedente”, ha detto, aggiungendo che le persone hanno creduto a lungo che tali modelli semplicemente non potessero essere spiegati, pensando che “questi modelli sarebbero sempre stati una scatola nera”.

La spiegabilità, la portabilità dei dati e il controllo delle infrastrutture locali, che consentono ai laboratori di eseguire modelli sui propri supercomputer, stanno emergendo come requisiti di base per l’uso dell’intelligenza artificiale nella pubblica amministrazione. Dare agli utenti maggiore autonomia crea fiducia.

OpenAI non è l’unica. Amazon Web Services sta silenziosamente diventando un attore fondamentale nell’intelligenza artificiale per la difesa. Ha recentemente rilasciato una versione del suo servizio Bedrock, che consente agli utenti di creare applicazioni di intelligenza artificiale generativa con un menu di modelli fondamentali, con sicurezza di livello classificato per i clienti del Dipartimento della Difesa.

Ma mentre la fiducia tra governo e Silicon Valley si sta rafforzando attorno all’obiettivo comune di progredire nell’implementazione dell’intelligenza artificiale, l’opinione pubblica si sta muovendo nella direzione opposta.

Un sondaggio condotto da Edelman a marzo ha mostrato che la fiducia nell’IA è scesa dal 50% al 35% dal 2019. E la sfiducia attraversa tutti gli schieramenti politici: solo il 38% dei democratici si fida dell’IA, rispetto al 25% degli indipendenti e al 24% dei repubblicani. Questo segue altri sondaggi che hanno mostrato un sentimento pubblico sempre più negativo nei confronti dell’IA, nonostante i professionisti che hanno integrato l’IA nel loro lavoro segnalino livelli di prestazioni più elevati.

Ma la vera divergenza è geopolitica. “La fiducia nell’intelligenza artificiale negli Stati Uniti e in tutto il mondo occidentale è bassa, mentre in Cina e nel resto del mondo in via di sviluppo si attesta intorno al 75%.”, ha affermato Mulligan.

Teme che queste disparità si traducano in reali divari nell’adozione, con la Cina in vantaggio in termini di produttività, crescita economica e qualità della vita.

L'articolo La fiducia degli americani nell’AI sta diminuendo ed è una questione di sicurezza nazionale proviene da il blog della sicurezza informatica.



Emfa inattuato in Italia, rivolta di associazioni e opposizione


@Giornalismo e disordine informativo
articolo21.org/2025/08/emfa-in…
“Da domani l’Italia entrerà ufficialmente in procedura d’infrazione per violazione dell’European Media Freedom Act (EMFA), la normativa europea che tutela l’indipendenza e il pluralismo




Dire Wolf e SNOWFANG: la nuova minaccia ransomware scritta in Go


@Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)
Negli ultimi mesi, il gruppo ransomware Dire Wolf ha fatto la sua comparsa nel panorama cybercriminale, distinguendosi per l’uso di un malware chiamato SNOWFANG, sviluppato in linguaggio Go. Questo ransomware, attivo da maggio 2025, ha già colpito numerose organizzazioni in settori




Dopo il mio articolo sulla formazione sistemica, un intervento di Wolfgang Ulrich che dice la sua sull'argomento. C'è una affinità interessante fra clinici che perseguono il progetto di una connessione fra il sé professionale e quello, diciamo, privato, in un modo lontano e alternativo alle logiche della cosiddetta "integrazione".
Dal mio blog (che mi procura tante soddisfazioni).

massimogiuliani.it/blog/2025/0…



L’uomo che da 30 anni cerca il mostro di Loch Ness


Ora... ognuno può pensarla come vuole e in molti penseranno che quest'uomo è un pazzo.

Ma metti che domani 'sto mostro esce dall'acqua e si fa un giretto sulla terraferma a favore di fotografi.

Steve Feltham potrà sparare un "VE L'AVEVO DETTO, STRONZI!" da cento megatoni.

😁😁😁

L’uomo che da 30 anni cerca il mostro di Loch Ness: ilpost.it/2022/11/10/uomo-cerc…



#GiocAosta: domani è il grande giorno!

Le mani tremano un po’.
Gli occhi brillano già.
Il cuore batte.
Domani si comincia.
E sarà una festa bestiale.

@Aosta

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SIRIA. Suwayda sotto assedio. Diario da una provincia in ginocchio


@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo
Dopo le aggressioni delle scorse settimane, mai cessate del tutto, più di 170.000 sfollati sono arrivati a Suwayda da aree rurali devastate. Oltre 32 villaggi sono stati bruciati, saccheggiati e resi inabitabili
L'articolo SIRIA. Suwayda sotto assedio. Diario da una



Cotton Farming in 2025


Cotton farming, known as the "white gold" of agriculture, remains one of the most vital pillars of the global textile economy. In 2025, it not only supports millions of livelihoods but is also evolving rapidly driven by cutting-edge technologies, sustainable practices, and precision agriculture. Whether you’re a first-time grower or an experienced farmer, understanding how cotton is grown today can help you achieve higher yields, reduce costs, and farm more responsibly.
What is Cotton?
Cotton is a soft, fluffy natural fiber that grows around the seeds of the Gossypium plant. It’s used worldwide to manufacture clothing, bedding, industrial fabrics, and even paper products. Beyond fiber, cottonseeds are processed into oil and livestock feed, making it a multi-utility crop with immense commercial value.
Major Cotton-Growing Countries
As of 2025, the top cotton-producing nations include:
• India – World's largest cotton cultivator and consumer
• China – Heavy focus on high-yield, mechanized cotton
• United States – Known for exporting premium quality lint
• Pakistan – Major grower of short-staple cotton
• Brazil – Emerging leader in sustainable cotton exports
These countries benefit from suitable climates, advanced genetics, and extensive research infrastructure.
Suitable Conditions for Cotton
Cotton is a warm-season crop that demands specific conditions:
Factor Ideal Range
Temperature 21°C to 30°C
Rainfall 600 mm to 1,200 mm annually
Soil Type Sandy loam or black cotton soils
Soil pH 6.0 – 7.5
Growing Period 150–180 days (depends on variety)
It cannot tolerate frost and grows best in sunny, dry weather with low humidity during boll opening.
Preparing the Farm for Cotton
Effective land preparation sets the stage for a productive crop. Here’s how:
• Soil testing: Identifies pH, nutrient levels, and deficiencies
• Primary tillage: Deep plowing helps break hardpan and increase root penetration
• Secondary tillage: Harrowing and leveling using laser tools improve irrigation efficiency
• Organic additions: Apply farmyard manure or compost 2–3 weeks before sowing
Modern farmers also use biochar or vermicompost to enhance soil microbial activity and moisture retention.
Selecting Cotton Varieties
Choosing the right variety can significantly affect your yield and pest resistance. In 2025, the popular categories include:
• Bt Cotton: Genetically engineered to fight bollworms
• Hybrid Cotton: High-yielding but requires more inputs
• Desi Varieties: Hardy, pest-tolerant, and ideal for organic farming
• High-Density Varieties: Used in HDPS systems for closer spacing and better land utilization
• Drought-tolerant Strains: Designed for water-scarce areas
Seed Treatment Before Sowing
Treated seeds germinate better and resist early pests and diseases:
• Fungicides: Prevent damping-off, Fusarium wilt, and seed rot
• Insecticides: Protect from soil-borne insects
• Bio-stimulants: Enhance root development
• Rhizobium or Azospirillum: Inoculants for nitrogen fixation (used in organic farming)
Sowing Cotton Seeds
Sowing Cotton Seeds
Sowing cotton seeds is a crucial step in cotton farming, directly influencing germination, plant spacing, and eventual yield. The ideal time for sowing depends on the region April to June in North India and June to July in the South. Before sowing, seeds should be treated with fungicides or biostimulants to protect against early pests and diseases.
Farmers can use manual methods like dibbling or adopt mechanized sowing with seed drills for precision. The recommended sowing depth is about 4–5 cm, ensuring seeds are neither too shallow nor too deep. Spacing varies with variety Bt and hybrid cotton usually need 75 × 30 cm, while high-density planting systems (HDPS) use 60 × 15 cm.
When to sow cotton?
• North India: April–June
• South/Central India: June–July
Growth Stages: From Flower to Boll
Cotton has distinct growth stages:
1. Vegetative (0–35 days) – root and leaf development
2. Square formation (35–50 days) – flower buds appear
3. Flowering (50–75 days) – needs optimal nutrition
4. Boll development (75–120 days) – water-sensitive period
5. Boll opening (120–160 days) – maturity, prepare for harvest


Attenzione attenzione, cerchiamo serata strapagata su Lunedi 11 Agosto, in quanto avevamo un bellissimo filotto di Reggae Circus in giro per tutto il sud ma poi infatti purtroppo ne è saltata una e quindi ora stiamo cercando un rimpiazzo last minute 😋 Saremo io, l'acrobatica Svenka Alice Bellini, il rocambolesco Alessio Paolelli e poi anche l'incendiario Paolo Mele e la fiammeggiante Marta Ruffino, quindi insomma, uno squadrone veramente fortissimy 🔥🙌😋 Dal grande festival internazionale alla sagra del peperone crusco ci sta bene tutto! Dajje forte, spargete la voce e/o contatteci con fiducia, non famo che ci lasciate in mezzo a una strada eh 👍😅
in reply to Adriano Bono

L'immagine è un poster promozionale per un tour musicale intitolato "Ingaggiateci Stronzì Tour" di Adriano Bono, con il sottotitolo "The Reggae Circus". Il poster presenta un uomo con barba e baffi, indossando un abito di gala rosso con decorazioni dorate, un papillon rosso e un cappello a cilindro nero. L'uomo tiene una chitarra e sorride, con uno sguardo diretto verso l'osservatore. Sullo sfondo, c'è un'illustrazione di un circo con acrobati e artisti, che contribuisce a creare un'atmosfera festosa e vivace.

Il testo principale "INGAGGIATECI STRONZI TOUR" è scritto in caratteri grandi e bianchi, posizionato in alto. Sotto, in caratteri più piccoli, si legge "THE REGGAE CIRCUS di Adriano Bono". In basso, sono elencate le date e i luoghi dei concerti: sabato 9 agosto a Yumara, Maratea PZ; domenica 10 agosto a Azzurro Beach Praia a Mare, CS; lunedì 11 agosto a Cerasi Serata Strapagata!; e martedì 12 agosto a Colliano (SA).

Il poster utilizza un design vintage con sfumature di rosso e giallo, che richiama l'atmosfera di un circo storico. L'immagine e il testo insieme creano un'atmosfera di divertimento e spettacolo, promuovendo l'evento musicale.

Fornito da @altbot, generato localmente e privatamente utilizzando Ovis2-8B

🌱 Energia utilizzata: 0.402 Wh




oltretutto per come sono messi gli usa, democraticamente ed economicamente, mai e poi mai sarebbe saggio spostare risorse e produzione negli usa. ci sarebbe il rischio di perdere tutto.
in reply to simona

si esatto: il danno economico è per chi esporta ma a pagare sono gli usa. ha praticamente messo l'iva al 15-30-50% in un paese dove i consumi avevano una tassa si e no locale dell'1%... un genio. ha proprio reso l'america più grande... più tassata forse.


Hiroshima, Mattarella: 'liberare il mondo dalle armi nucleari'

(intanto, per dare il buon esempio, potremmo cominciare a liberare il territorio italiano dalle atomiche Usa)

imolaoggi.it/2025/08/06/hirosh…
Hiroshima, Mattarella: 'liberare il mondo dalle armi nucleari' • Imola Oggi
imolaoggi.it/2025/08/06/hirosh…




Dazi e backdoor nei microchip: ecco cosa agita Nvidia

L'articolo proviene da #StartMag e viene ricondiviso sulla comunità Lemmy @Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)
Sono giornate intense per Nvidia. L'azienda deve respingere le pressioni per l'inserimento di backdoor nei suoi microchip (è già stata convocata in Cina). E deve fare i conti con i nuovi dazi sui semiconduttori annunciati da Trump. Tutti i dettagli.




A Martano (LE) Matteo Mainardi in un dibattito pubblico sul fine vita – nell’ambito del festival Epame 2025

Lunedì 12 agosto, alle ore 20:30, Matteo Mainardi, consigliere generale dell’Associazione Luca Coscioni e responsabile delle campagne sul fine vita, sarà ospite al Palazzo Ducale di Martano (LE) per un dibattito pubblico dedicato al diritto di scelta sul fine vita.

L’appuntamento è per lunedì 12 agosto 2025 alle ore 20:30, presso il Palazzo Ducale di Martano (LE), in Viale Savoia, a Martano.

L’incontro si svolge nell’ambito del festival Epame 2025 e vedrà la partecipazione anche di Andrea Mariano, medico e attivista del Laboratorio Salute Popolare, e Simona Zaminga, medico Ant.

A seguire si terrà una cena sociale e un dj set.

🎟 Ingresso libero
📣 Evento promosso da Galattica – Rete Giovani Puglia, Idee in Movimento e Città di Martano

L'articolo A Martano (LE) Matteo Mainardi in un dibattito pubblico sul fine vita proviene da Associazione Luca Coscioni.




ecco la soluzione del governo trump alla CO2: smettere di monitorarla. ma chi sceglie queste persone? è follia.

RFanciola reshared this.



sondaggio noyb: solo il 7% degli utenti vuole che Meta utilizzi i propri dati personali per l'IA Mentre quasi il 75% degli utenti ha sentito parlare dei piani di Meta, solo il 7% vuole effettivamente che i propri dati vengano utilizzati per l'addestramento dell'intelligenza artificiale mickey07 August 2025


noyb.eu/it/noyb-survey-only-7-…



MORIS and I.R.I.S. was designed for Sheriff's Offices to identify known persons with their iris. Now ICE says it plans to buy the tech.

MORIS and I.R.I.S. was designed for Sheriffx27;s Offices to identify known persons with their iris. Now ICE says it plans to buy the tech.#News #ICE


ICE Is Buying Mobile Iris Scanning Tech for Its Deportation Arm


Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) is looking to buy iris scanning technology that its manufacturer says can identify known persons “in seconds from virtually anywhere,” according to newly published procurement documents.

Originally designed to be used by sheriff departments to identify inmates or other known persons, ICE is now likely buying the technology specifically for its Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) section, which focuses on deportations.

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#News #ice #x27

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America’s scandalous president is teaming up with its most disreputable AI company to make a search engine.#News


Trump Is Launching an AI Search Engine Powered by Perplexity


Donald Trump’s media company is teaming up with Perplexity to bring AI search to Truth Social, the President’s X.com alternative.

Truth announced the endeavor in a press release on Wednesday. Anyone using the browser version of Truth can now use Perplexity to search the web. “We’re proud to partner with Perplexity to launch our public Beta testing of Truth Social AI, which will make Truth Social an even more vital element in the Patriot Economy,” Devin Nunes, Trump Media's CEO and Chair of the President's Intelligence Advisory Board, said in the press release.
playlist.megaphone.fm?p=TBIEA2…
“We’re excited to partner with Truth Social to bring powerful AI to an audience with important questions. Curiosity is the engine of change, and Perplexity’s AI is developed to empower curiosity by delivering direct, reliable answers with transparent citations that allow anyone to dig deeper,” Perplexity’s chief business officer Dmitry Shevelenko said in the press release.

According to the announcement, “the mission of Trump Media is to end Big Tech’s assault on free speech by opening up the Internet and giving people their voices back.” Which is a funny thing to put in an announcement about Trump partnering with a company whose investors include Jeff Bezos, Nvidia, and the former CEO of GitHub.

Perplexity’s Truth Social search engine will be powered by stolen content. Earlier this week, Cloudflare reported Perplexity used stealth and undeclared crawlers to evade websites that explicitly set themselves up to avoid being catalogued by LLMs. Perplexity has a long history of using scrapers that ignore the Robots Exclusion Protocol. Perplexity started as a demo that scraped Twitter with fake academic accounts backed by AI-generated research proposals.

Forbes, the New York Times, New York Post, and the Dow Jones have all accused Perplexity of plagiarism. News Corp‘s Dow Jones & Co., publisher of the Wall Street Journal, and the New York Post sued Perplexity in 2024 for copyright infringement, claiming in the federal lawsuit that Perplexity is “engaging in a massive amount of illegal copying of publishers’ copyrighted works and diverting customers and critical revenues away from those copyright holders.” In 2024, WIRED reported on the accusations of Perplexity’s plagiarism and Perplexity almost immediately plagiarized the story. When New York Times tech workers went on strike last year, Perplexity CEO Aravind Srinivas offered to help the Times keep the paper going.

Big Tech has aligned itself with the Trump administration since before the election, seeing an alliance of opportunity for deregulation of AI in particular.

But is the Perplexity-powered AI aggregation machine “woke?” I asked a few questions to find out. I wanted to know: Is Trump in the Epstein files?“There is no evidence in the recently reviewed and released government ‘Epstein Files’ of a ‘client list” or documentation placing Donald Trump as implicated in Jeffrey Epstein's criminal actions,” it said. “While Trump’s name, like many other prominent individuals, appears in public records of Epstein’s social and business contacts (such as guest lists or flight logs, widely reported over the years), there is no mention in current official documents or filings that directly implicates Trump as a criminal participant in Epstein’s sex trafficking activities.”

How does Truth Social’s search engine think the American economy is doing?

“The American economy is currently facing significant headwinds, with signs of slowdown—most notably by a contraction in GDP, rising inflation, and softening labor market conditions—though some leaders still emphasize areas of resilience,” Truth Search AI said.

Are the tariffs to blame?“Recent tariff increases in the United States have generally had a negative effect on economic growth and employment, raising costs for businesses and consumers while providing only limited benefits to some manufacturing sectors,” Truth Search AI said.

Damn. It’s woke as hell.


#News


Home improvement stores are finding ways to share data from their Flock license plate reader cameras with law enforcement, according to public records.#Flock