Continuous-Path 3D Printed Case is Clearly Superior
[porchlogic] had a problem. The desire was to print a crystal-like case for an ESP32 project, reminiscent of so many glorious game consoles and other transparent hardware of the 1990s. However, with 3D printing the only realistic option on offer, it seemed difficult to achieve a nice visual result. The solution? Custom G-code to produce as nice a print as possible, by having the hot end trace a single continuous path.
The first job was to pick a filament. Transparent PLA didn’t look great, and was easily dented—something [porchlogic] didn’t like given the device was intended to be pocketable. PETG promised better results, but stringing was common and tended to reduce the visual appeal. The solution to avoid stringing would be to stop the hot end lifting away from the print and moving to different areas of the part. Thus, [porchlogic] had to find a way to make the hot end move in a single continuous path—something that isn’t exactly a regular feature of common 3D printing slicer utilities.
The enclosure itself was designed from the ground up to enable this method of printing. Rhino and Grasshopper were used to create the enclosure and generate the custom G-code for an all-continuous print. Or, almost—there is a single hop across the USB port opening, which creates a small blob of plastic that is easy to remove once the print is done, along with strings coming off the start and end points of the print.
Designing an enclosure in this way isn’t easy, per se, but it did net [porchLogic] the results desired. We’ve seen some other neat hacks in this vein before, too, like using innovative non-planar infill techniques to improve the strength of prints.
youtube.com/embed/2Sy50BrlDMo?…
Thanks to [Uxorious] and [Keith Olson] for the tip!
Remembering James Lovell: the Man Who Cheated Death in Space
Many people have looked Death in the eye sockets and survived to tell others about it, but few situations speak as much to the imagination as situations where there’s absolutely zero prospect of rescuers swooping in. Top among these is the harrowing tale of the Apollo 13 moon mission and its crew – commanded by James “Jim” Lovell – as they found themselves stranded in space far away from Earth in a crippled spacecraft, facing near-certain doom.
Lovell and his crew came away from that experience in one piece, with millions tuning into the live broadcast on April 17 of 1970 as the capsule managed to land safely back on Earth, defying all odds. Like so many NASA astronauts, Lovell was a test pilot. He graduated from the US Naval Academy in Maryland, serving in the US Navy as a mechanical engineer, flight instructor and more, before being selected as NASA astronaut.
On August 7, 2025, Lovell died at the age of 97 at his home in Illinois, after a dizzying career that saw a Moon walk swapped for an in-space rescue mission like never seen before.
Joining The Navy
The USS Shangri-La underway in 1970. (Credit: US Navy)
James Arthur Lovell Jr. was born in Cleveland, Ohio, on March 25, 1928. He was the sole child, with his father dying in a car accident when he was five years old. After this he and his mother lived with a relative in Indiana, before moving to Wisconsin where Lovell attended Juneau High School. He attained the Boy Scouts’ highest rank of Eagle Scout, while also displaying an avid interest in rocketry including the building of flying models.
After graduating from high school, Lovell studied engineering under the US Navy’s Flying Midshipman program from 1946 to 1948, which focused on training new naval aviators. This was a sponsored program by the US Navy, with the student required to enlist as Apprentice Seaman and to serve in the Navy for five years, including one year of active duty.
As this program was being rolled back in the wake of the end of WW2, Lovell saw himself and others like him pressured to transfer out, with Lovell applying at the US Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland. Here he would continue his engineering studies, graduating with a Bachelor of Science degree in the Spring of 1952.
After graduation he was commissioned as an ensign in the US Navy, got selected for naval aviation training and was later assigned to the Essex-class aircraft carrier USS Shangri-La during the 1950s where he flew many missions, racking up a reported total of 107 carrier landings. Once back ashore he became a flight instructor for Navy pilots.
To Space And Beyond
With NASA selecting its future astronauts from the military’s test pilots for a variety of reasons, it was only a matter of time before Lovell would be in the running for the first group of astronauts considering his performance in the Navy. Although he got put on the list of potential astronauts for Project Mercury, he narrowly missed joining the Mercury Seven. After applying for the second group, however, he ended up being selected for Mercury’s successor project: Project Gemini.The Pacific Ocean as seen from the Gemini 7 capsule on 8 December 1965 by astronauts Borman and Lovell. (Credit NASA)
Lovell would fly on two Gemini missions, Gemini 7 and Gemini 12, with the latter seeing Lovell being joined by Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin as the pilot. Before embarking on Gemini 7, Lovell and his fellow astronaut Frank F. Borman were given the advice by Pete Conrad – who had previously spent eight days on Gemini 5 – to take books along for the ride. Considering that Gemini 7 was an endurance mission lasting nearly two weeks, this turned out to be very good advice, indeed.Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin performing an EVA during the first day of the 4-day Gemini 12 mission. (Credit: NASA, James Lovell)
The four-day Gemini 12 mission would be the last mission in the project, taking place during November of 1966. During this mission Aldrin demonstrated a number of extra-vehicular activities (EVAs), showing that humans could perform activities outside of the spacecraft, thus clearing the way for Project Apollo.
Lucky Apollo 13
Although Lovell is generally associated with Apollo 13, his third spaceflight was on Apollo 8 which launched on December 21st of 1968. This was the first manned Apollo mission to make it to the Moon following Apollo 7 which stayed in Earth’s orbit. During Apollo 8 the crew of three – Borman, Lovell and Anders – completed ten orbits around Earth’s companion, making it the first time that humans had laid eyes on the far side of the Moon and were able to observe an Earthrise.The famous ‘Earthrise’ photo by William Anders taken during Apollo 8. (Source: NASA)
With the Apollo program in constant flux, Apollo 8’s mission profile was changed from a more conservative Earth orbit-bound test with the – much delayed lunar module (LM) – to the very ambitious orbiting of the Moon. This put the Apollo program back on track, however, as it skipped a few intermediate steps. After Apollo 9 demonstrated the full lunar EVA suit in space as well as docking with the LM in Earth orbit, Apollo 10 was the wet dress rehearsal for the first true Moon landing with Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin taking the honors.
After Apollo 12 delivered its second batch of astronauts to the lunar surface, it was finally time for Lovell as the commander and Fred Haise as the LM pilot to add their footprints to the lunar regolith as part of the Apollo 13 mission. After two successful Moon landings, when Apollo 13 took off from the landing pad on April 11, 1970, it seemed that this was going to be mostly a routine mission.
After making it about 330,000 km from Earth, the Apollo 13 crew was going through their well-practiced schedule, with only one active issue bothering them and ground control in Houston. This issue involved the pressure sensor in one of the service module (SM) oxygen tanks. Ground control requested that the crew try activating the stirring fans in the oxygen tanks to see whether de-stratifying the contents of the affected oxygen tank might fix the odd readings.
Ninety-five seconds after Command Module (CM) pilot John Swigert activated these fans the three astronauts heard a loud bang, accompanied by electrical power fluctuations and the attitude control thrusters automatically engaging. After briefly losing communications with Earth, Swigert called back to Houston with the now famous “Houston, we have had a problem.” phrase.
youtube.com/embed/MdvoA-sjs0A?…
As indicated by the resulting investigations, one of the oxygen tanks (Oxygen Tank 2) that fed the fuel cells for power generation had turned into a bomb owing to manufacturing and handling defects years prior. The resulting explosion also caused the loss of Oxygen Tank 1 and ultimately putting all of the CM’s fuel cells out of commission. With the CM’s batteries rapidly draining, the Apollo 13 astronauts only had minutes to put a plan together with Houston, to use the LM as their lifeboat and to devise a way to plan a course back to Earth after a fly-by of the Moon.
As these immediate concerns were addressed and Apollo 13 found itself on a course that should take it safely back to Earth, two new issues cropped up. The first was that of potable water, as normally the CM’s fuel cells would create all the water that they’d need during the mission. With the CM and its fuel cells out of commission, they had to strictly ration their limited supply, all the way down to 200 mL per person per day.The adapted carbon dioxide scrubber on Apollo 13. (Credit: NASA)
The other issue concerned the carbon dioxide levels. Although the LM carried sufficient oxygen, CO2 scrubbers were required to keep the levels of this gas at healthy levels, even as the crew kept adding to it with their breathing. The lithium hydroxide pellet-based scrubbers in the CM and LM were up to their individual tasks, but the LM was equipped only for the 45 hours that two astronauts would spend on the lunar surface, not keep three astronauts alive for the time that it’d take to travel back to Earth.
Annoyingly, the CM and LM scrubber canisters had different dimensions that prevented the astronauts from simply availing themselves of the CM scrubbers. This was fortunately nothing that some solid arts and crafts experience can’t fix, and the CM canisters were made to work using plastic manual covers, duct tape and whatever else was needed to bridge the gaps.
With all the essentials dealt with as well as possible considering the circumstances, the three astronauts set in for a very long and very cold wait. As most systems were shut down to preserve every bit of energy there was little any of them could do against the cold of space itself seeping into the LM even as moisture condensed on all surfaces.
Before nearing Earth, Lovell and his crew were tasked with configuring the LM’s navigation computer in preparation for final approach, as well as starting the CM up from its cold shutdown. With every step of this re-entry and required separation of the SM, CM and ultimately the LM being completely unlike the normal procedure that they had trained for, there existed significant uncertainty about how well it all would work.
Fortunately everything went off relatively without any issues and on April 17 of 1970 all three Apollo 13 astronauts made a soft splash back on Earth. This would also be Lovell’s fourth and final spaceflight.
Retirement
Apollo 13’s capsule splashing down on April 17 1970. (Credit: NASA)
Lovell would retire from the Navy and the space program on March 1, 1973. For decades afterwards he’d serve as CEO, president and similar roles for a range of companies before retiring in 1991, only staying on the board of directors for a number of corporations including the Astronautics Corporation of America. With the fame that Apollo 13 had brought him and his two fellow astronauts none of them ever fully left the public eye.
A number of films and documentaries were made about the Apollo 13 mission, which was termed a ‘successful failure’. Lovell would make a number of cameos, with the 1995 film Apollo 13 based on Lovell’s book Lost Moon being one of the most notable examples.
With Lovell’s death, Fred Haise is now the last remaining member of Apollo 13 to still be alive, after Jack Swigert died from cancer in 1982.
Although a lot has been said already about Apollo 13 nearly ending in tragedy, including its auspicious number in many Western cultures, it’s impossible to deny that this mission’s crew were among the luckiest imaginable. In the dark and cold of Space, trapped between Earth and the Moon, they found themselves among the best friends imaginable to together solve a puzzle, even as their own lives were on the line.
If the oxygen tank had exploded on the return trip from the Moon, all astronauts would have likely perished. Similarly, if any of the other events during the mission had played out slightly differently, or if another emergency had occurred on top of the existing ones, things might have turned out very differently.
If there’s anything to be learned from Lovell’s life, it is probably that ‘luck’ is relative, and that team work goes a very long way.
Come previsto, il bug di WinRAR è diventato un’arma devastante per i cyber criminali
Come era prevedibile, il famigerato bug scoperto su WinRar, viene ora sfruttato attivamente dai malintenzionati su larga scala, vista la diffusione e la popolarità del software.
Gli esperti di ESET hanno segnalato che la vulnerabilità di WinRAR (CVE-2025-8088) recentemente risolta è stata utilizzata come 0-day negli attacchi di phishing ed è stata utilizzata per installare il malware RomCom.
La vulnerabilità era correlata al directory traversal ed è stata risolta a fine luglio con il rilascio di WinRAR versione 7.13. Il problema consentiva l’utilizzo di archivi appositamente preparati e la decompressione dei file lungo un percorso specificato dagli aggressori.
“Durante la decompressione di un file, le versioni precedenti di WinRAR, le versioni Windows di RAR, UnRAR, il codice sorgente di UnRAR portatile e la libreria UnRAR.dll potevano utilizzare il percorso di un archivio appositamente preparato anziché quello specificato dall’utente”, hanno spiegato gli sviluppatori dell’archiviatore . “Le versioni Unix di RAR, UnRAR, il codice sorgente di UnRAR portatile e la libreria UnRAR, così come RAR per Android, non erano vulnerabili.
Pertanto, sfruttando questo bug, gli aggressori potrebbero creare archivi che decomprimono file eseguibili dannosi nella cartella di avvio di Windows situata in:
- %APPDATA%\Microsoft\Windows\Start Menu\Programmi\Esecuzione automatica (locale per l’utente);
- %ProgramData%\Microsoft\Windows\Start Menu\Programmi\Esecuzione automatica (per tutti gli utenti).
Dopo il successivo accesso, tale file viene eseguito automaticamente, consentendo all’aggressore di eseguire codice sull’host remoto.
Questo problema è stato scoperto dagli esperti ESET nel luglio 2025 e ora segnalano che, anche prima del rilascio della patch, CVE-2025-8088 è stato utilizzato negli attacchi come vulnerabilità zero-day.
Secondo i ricercatori, la vulnerabilità è stata sfruttata in attacchi di phishing mirati volti a diffondere malware del gruppo di hacker RomCom (noto anche come Storm-0978, Tropical Scorpius e UNC2596), tra cui varianti di SnipBot, RustyClaw e Mythic.
Secondo quanto riferito, la campagna aveva come obiettivo aziende finanziarie, manifatturiere, della difesa e della logistica in Canada e in Europa.
Il gruppo RomCom è stato precedentemente collegato ad attacchi ransomware, furto di dati a scopo di riscatto e campagne di furto di credenziali. RomCom è noto per lo sfruttamento di vulnerabilità zero-day e l’utilizzo di malware personalizzati per rubare dati e persistere nei sistemi.
ESET sottolinea che la stessa vulnerabilità è stata recentemente sfruttata da un altro aggressore ed è stata scoperta in modo indipendente dalla società russa BI.ZONE. Inoltre, il secondo aggressore ha iniziato a sfruttare la vulnerabilità CVE-2025-8088 pochi giorni dopo il RomCom.
L'articolo Come previsto, il bug di WinRAR è diventato un’arma devastante per i cyber criminali proviene da il blog della sicurezza informatica.
When a Badge Misses the Mark: WHY 2025
The largest European hacker camp this year was in the Netherlands — What Hackers Yearn (WHY) 2025 is the latest in the long-running series of four-yearly events from that country, and 2025 saw a move from the Flevoland site used by SHA2017 and MCH2021, back to just north of Alkmaar in Noord-Holland, where the OHM2013 event took place. WHY has found itself making the news in the Dutch technical media for all the wrong reasons over the last few days, after serious concerns were raised about the fire safety of its badge.This is the cell supplied with the WHY badge, complete with manufacturer’s warning.
The concerns were raised from the RevSpace hackerspace in Leidschendam, and centre around the design of the battery power traces on the PCB between the battery holders and the power supply circuitry. Because the 18650 cells supplied with that badge lack any protection circuitry, bridging the power traces could be a fire risk.
In short: their report names the cell holders as having tags too large for their pads on the PCB, a too-tight gap between positive and negative battery traces, protected only by soldermask, and the inadequacy of the badge’s short circuit protection. In the event that metal shorted these battery tags, or wore through the soldermask, the batteries would be effectively shorted, and traces or components could get dangerously hot.
The WHY organizers have responded with a printed disclaimer leaflet warning against misuse of the cells, and added a last-minute epoxy coating to the boards to offer additional protection. Some people are 3D-printing cases, which should also help reduce the risk of short-circuiting due to foreign metal objects. A powerbank with short-circuit protection would solve the problem as well. Meanwhile a group of hackers collecting aid for Ukraine are accepting the batteries as donations.
It’s understood that sometimes bugs find their way into any project, and in that an event badge is no exception. In this particular case, the original Dutch badge team resigned en masse at the start of the year following a disagreement with the WHY2025 organizers, so this badge has been a particularly hurried production. (Editor’s note: the group that brought the 18650 concerns to light has some overlap with the group that left the WHY2025 badge project.) Either way, we are fortunate that the issue was spotted before any regrettable incidents occurred.
BreachForums sequestrato e trasformato in un honeypot dalle forze dell'ordine
Il famigerato mercato di criminalità informatica e fuga di dati, #BreachForums , è stato compromesso e ora opera presumibilmente come un honeypot controllato dalle forze dell'ordine internazionali. L'annuncio sorprendente è arrivato dal noto autore di minacce ShinyHunters tramite un messaggio firmato PGP pubblicato su Telegram. Secondo il messaggio, le forze dell'ordine francesi, in coordinamento con il Dipartimento di Giustizia degli Stati Uniti (DOJ) e l'FBI (Federal Bureau of Investigation), hanno preso il controllo della piattaforma, della sua infrastruttura e della sua chiave PGP ufficiale. Poco dopo la diffusione di questo avviso, il forum è andato offline, dando ulteriore peso alle affermazioni
dailydarkweb.net/breachforums-…
@Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)
Grazie a Michele Pinassi per la segnalazione
like this
reshared this
Bravo Donald: sono gli americani a pagare l'86% dei rincari innescati dai dazi
Secondo un rapporto di Goldman Sachs gli esportatori stranieri hanno sopportato solo il 14% degli aumenti innescati dalle tariffe americane. Il resto le impres…Claudio Paudice (HuffPost Italia)
reshared this
A Gaza il “giornalisticidio” prosegue indisturbato
@Giornalismo e disordine informativo
articolo21.org/2025/08/a-gaza-…
Prosegue a Gaza il giornalisticidio, parte del genocidio in atto a Gaza. Sono ormai oltre 230 i cronisti assassinati, compresi i sei eliminati ieri. Contro di loro ê ripartita l’ennesima campagna “erano solo
Lezioni di conversazione in italiano
Uso spesso podcast e video di persone di madrelingua inglese per migliorare la conoscenza della lingua.
Mi piacerebbe restituire il favore.
Ho pensato che magari da qualche parte sul pianeta c'è qualcuno che studia italiano a cui potrebbe fare altrettanto comodo avere uno sparring partner, quindi non podcast e video ma vere conversazioni on-line (gratuite).
Non so da che parte partire per far arrivare la notizia a chi potrebbe essere interessato, voi come fareste?
like this
reshared this
«Non c’è nessun caro ombrellone»
ci vuole coraggio a definire i prezzi in italia non esosi e non un'emergenza... pazzesca la ghigna che ha la gente. fosse per me renderei obbligatoria una spiaggia libera accanto a ogni stabilimento a pagamento.
Public consultation on ”retention of data by service providers for criminal proceedings”. Answering guide for civil society organisations and individuals.
The European Commission has launched a public consultation to gather your views about the impact of data retention rules in view of adoption of legislative and non-legislative measures at EU level. Here's EDRi's guide on how to answer the tricky consultation.
The post Public consultation on ”retention of data by service providers for criminal proceedings”. Answering guide for civil society organisations and individuals. appeared first on European Digital Rights (EDRi).
L’Italia investe nelle startup tecnologiche israeliane
@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo
La Cassa Depositi e Prestiti destina decine di milioni di euro a imprese israeliane di intelligenza artificiale e calcolo quantistico. L’obiettivo è attrarre in Italia competenze e innovazione, dimenticando la distruzione di Gaza
L'articolo L’Italia investe nelle startup tecnologiche israeliane
Le fatiche di Eva: la strada ancora lunga verso la parità
@Giornalismo e disordine informativo
articolo21.org/2025/08/le-fati…
Unendo esperienza personale e dati di accreditati studi nazionali e internazionali, Paola Mascaro, manager e già presidente di Valore D, propone una lettura sul difficile cammino verso una parità di
Se il capitalismo perde il suo «spirito»*
@Giornalismo e disordine informativo
articolo21.org/2025/08/se-il-c…
Da qualche tempo quotidiani e libri si soffermano, più o meno approfonditamente, sul tema della transizione globale in atto. Si riflette sulla inusitata fase di “riproduzione del sistema” che sta avvolgendo il pianeta, con l’unica costante, rispetto al
CDN, la mossa Agcom riaccende lo spettro del fair share?
L'articolo proviene da #StartMag e viene ricondiviso sulla comunità Lemmy @Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)
L’Autorità sulle CDN ribadisce che non introdurrà network fee né interverrà sul mercato dell’interconnessione. Il quadro giuridico startmag.it/innovazione/cdn-la…
A ‘massive failure’ in Kansas: Two years since the Marion County Record raid
The police raid of the Marion County Record’s newsroom on Aug. 11, 2023, shocked the country but proved to be just one of a series of alarming attacks on local journalism that year. It was also a preview of how lawless and incompetent governments can use strained constructions of the law as pretext to retaliate against journalists they dislike, as we now see not only in small-town America but at the federal level. As the death of Record co-owner Joan Meyer the next day tragically proved, by the time justice takes its course — if it ever does — the damage has often already been done.
We asked investigative journalist Jessica McMaster to reflect on her award-winning coverage of the raid for KSHB-TV in Kansas City, Missouri. The interview is below. You can also read about or watch our discussion with Record publisher Eric Meyer earlier this year.
On a Friday afternoon in 2023, news broke of a police raid of the Marion County Record newsroom and its publisher Eric Meyer’s home. Did you realize right away that this needed to be not just a statewide story but a national one?
I realized right away this was a big story. Once the news broke that Joan Meyer died, I knew we had to go to Marion — the backlash was immediate and the responses were coming in from across the country.
Over the course of many months, it became clear that the raid wasn’t a random instance of police overresponding to a citizen complaint. Details began to emerge about local officials, including the police chief, Gideon Cody, and their conduct before, during, and after the raid — even before coming to Marion. Plenty of great local journalists did amazing work covering the story, but you seemed to get a large share of the big scoops. Without divulging any confidences, how were you able to pull it off, especially being based in Kansas City, not particularly close to Marion?
I worked a lot of hours. In the beginning, we stayed overnight in Marion. After that, it was a lot of driving back and forth, while taking calls from sources at all hours of the night. I’d been a journalist long enough to know that a story this big doesn’t die down for a few weeks. We made the commitment to drive the five-hour round trip daily. I didn’t always know what our angle would be, but I knew I’d find it.
“If journalists are not willing to report on the ongoing attacks against the free press, who will?”
Jessica McMaster
Talk about the level of transparency — or lack thereof — that you encountered from government officials, both in Marion and statewide, during your reporting on the raid. What were some of the challenges you needed to overcome, in terms of secrecy and accessing information that was of public interest?
Gideon Cody wasn’t talking. The county attorney wasn’t talking. The Kansas Bureau of Investigation was saying very little. Almost immediately, it had the appearance that everyone involved in this was covering their own tail — and of course they were. This was a huge mess. We leaned on the gift of open records laws to get most of our information. Getting emails and text messages helped piece the parts of the story together that those in power wanted to remain a secret. We knew they’d try and block us — we were prepared to fight back. There were times when we had to get our attorneys involved when information was being withheld. On a story like this, the details don’t reveal the truth all at once. It trickles out over time. It’s always fun to look back and see how it all comes together — one information request, or leak, at a time.
At Freedom of the Press Foundation (FPF), we were glued to your X feed for real-time updates. We probably weren’t the only ones. Can you talk about the challenge of breaking news on social media while also investigating the bigger stories?
This is one of my favorite parts about covering a big story — connecting with people in real time. I had people from other countries sending me emails and tweeting to me that they were following me for updates. I was not asked to use social media in real time by my employer — it’s just something I’d become accustomed to doing since early on in my career. With Marion, we were getting updates constantly — social media made it easy to get that information out quickly. I don’t see using social media as a challenge — I think it’s a tool to connect with our followers more authentically and bring them along on the journey with us. Of course, if I have to get my broadcast script in urgently, or I have to be on camera within the next few minutes, I’ll take a break from providing live updates and come back to it once I’m done.
Were there any stories you were able to break while covering the raid that you felt were particularly important to the public’s understanding of what went on?
We broke so many stories over the first couple of months. I remember driving to Marion during that first week of coverage. I didn’t know what the story would be on this particular day. It was our plan to find the story once we got there. About an hour into our trip, while driving past a cornfield, my cellphone rings and it’s the attorney for Marion County Record. He tips me off that the county attorney has revoked the search warrants. He gave me a two-minute head start before he planned to tell all the other reporters. This was arguably the biggest break in the case — it’s the first time officials publicly admitted the raids shouldn’t have happened. This squashed any doubts of wrongdoing on behalf of the newspaper — and people, especially in Marion — did have their doubts. So, of course, I’m scrambling to get this information out there. Minutes after I broke the news on X, the county attorney sent a press release to all newsrooms with his statement on revoking the warrants.
“It’s hard for a lot of us to grasp that so many people, in positions of power, failed in such spectacular fashion to do their jobs.”
Jessica McMaster
What insights did you come away with about the state of press freedom in Kansas and in the United States?
This was a massive failure by several people within the justice system. I think that’s what’s so shocking about this entire thing — most of us assume a police chief would understand press freedom laws. If a police chief doesn’t, we’d assume a county attorney would. If a county attorney doesn’t, we’d assume a district judge would. If no one understands these laws — surely someone will look it up. The amount of layers Gideon Cody’s attack on the newspaper survived is astonishing. What did all these people, who are supposed to understand the law, think the response would be? I think it’s hard for a lot of us to grasp that so many people, in positions of power, failed in such spectacular fashion to do their jobs.
Do you think the raid had an ongoing chilling effect on journalism?
I think the chilling effect comes from a culmination of attacks that have been launched against the free press over the past several years. We’ve seen this play out in other instances, during protests for example, where police assault or arrest journalists for doing their jobs. I think Marion was another example of that.
Despite your award-winning work on the raid and all the other great work you’ve done, less than two years after the raid, your position at KSHB-TV, Kansas City’s NBC affiliate, was eliminated. What does that say about the state of the news industry and whether local investigative reporting is valued these days?
The company I worked for always valued investigative journalism — it’s why I stayed in my position for a decade. I think what we’re seeing is that many local newsrooms are becoming more and more risk averse. I personally felt this shift over the past few years. When newsrooms operate from a place of fear, it’s very difficult for reporters to do their job, especially investigative reporters who, by nature, do more high-risk, accountability-focused stories.
What’s next for you? I saw that your X post about the layoff said your time as an investigative journalist was coming to an end. Are you done with journalism or are you going to look for a way back in? And why?
I love journalism. I believe in its purpose. I believe in its power. We need solid journalists who aren’t afraid to hold the powerful accountable. That said, I don’t see myself stepping back into a newsroom. At least not anytime soon. I took the summer off to focus on my kids and reflect on what I want to do next, which has been such a gift. I plan to keep writing and creating content for something I believe in.
Journalists often feel like covering press freedom stories is difficult, because they’re making themselves the story or because their objectivity will be questioned, for example. What do you say to that, and what’s your advice to journalists and editors wondering whether it’s a good idea to report on press freedom violations?
Stick to the facts. That’s my advice. While I didn’t initially know why police raided the newspaper, I knew this was fundamentally wrong. I knew police should’ve served a subpoena, as opposed to busting down the doors. I knew the free press has protections, both locally and federally. All of that gave me grounds to cover this story. It can be uncomfortable reporting on something so closely tied to our personal lives — but if journalists are not willing to report on the ongoing attacks against the free press, who will?
Gazzetta del Cadavere reshared this.
Arrestato in Colombia il narcotrafficante Federico Starnone, anche grazie alla rete anti-'Ndrangheta I-CAN di Interpol
Si tratta di un latitante 44enne, ricercato dalle autorità italiane per i reati di associazione a delinquere finalizzata al traffico internazionale di sostanze stupefacenti con le aggravanti connesse a due distinti tentativi di importazione di ingenti quantitativi di cocaina dal Sudamerica.
E' ritenuto legato alla 'Ndrangheta. E' stato catturato in un appartamento nel quartiere residenziale di Cali.
A carico di Starnone è stata già emessa una sentenza di condanna a 5 anni e mezzo per reati di droga. L'uomo è stato catturato dalla polizia colombiana mentre si trovava in un appartamento nel quartiere residenziale nel capoluogo del dipartimento Valle del Cauca.
Essenziale l'apporto del progetto INTERPOL Cooperation Against ‘Ndrangheta (I-CAN).
Si tratta di un'iniziativa lanciata dall'Italia e dall'INTERPOL nel gennaio 2020 per contrastare la minaccia globale rappresentata dalla ‘Ndrangheta, come noto un'organizzazione criminale transnazionale altamente organizzata e potente.
Finanziato dal Dipartimento della Pubblica Sicurezza italiano, il progetto mira a rafforzare la cooperazione internazionale tra forze di polizia sfruttando le capacità dell'INTERPOL di condividere intelligence, competenze e best practice, trasformando così le informazioni in arresti e smantellando le reti criminali.
Avviato a Reggio Calabria l'obiettivo principale del progetto è stato - da subito - quello di istituire un sistema globale di allerta precoce contro questo "nemico invisibile". I-CAN opera attraverso una rete di paesi pilota, che inizialmente includevano Australia, Argentina, Brasile, Canada, Colombia, Francia, Germania, Italia, Svizzera, Stati Uniti e Uruguay, che si è espanso a 13, tra cui Austria, Belgio e Spagna.
Il progetto facilita operazioni coordinate transfrontaliere, come dimostrato dall'operazione globale del 2020 che ha portato all'arresto di sei latitanti legati alla 'Ndrangheta in Albania, Argentina e Costa Rica, con conseguente sequestro di 400 kg di cocaina e smantellamento del clan Bellocco. Le operazioni successive hanno continuato a dare risultati, tra cui l'arresto nel 2023 di un latitante di 16 anni, Edgardo Greco, in Francia, con il supporto di I-CAN.
Il progetto si è evoluto oltre la sua fase iniziale, con iniziative in corso tra cui la Conferenza I-CAN del 2022 a Roma, che ha riunito le forze dell'ordine di 14 paesi per definire una strategia unitaria contro la 'Ndrangheta, oggi considerata un'entità criminale "silenziosa e pervasiva" che si infiltra nelle economie legittime attraverso la corruzione e il riciclaggio di denaro.
Il successo del progetto si basa su una combinazione di condivisione di intelligence, coordinamento internazionale e utilizzo di strumenti analitici avanzati per esplorare dati provenienti da diverse fonti, consentendo indagini transnazionali. Il suo quadro continua a sostenere gli sforzi in corso, tra cui il progetto I-FORCE, incentrato sulla cooperazione regionale nell'Europa orientale e sudorientale.
#ndrangheta #ican #interpol #iforce
reshared this
Gematik: Für die elektronische Patientenakte kann man sich jetzt doch per Video identifizieren
#Trump e #Putin al caminetto
Trump e Putin al caminetto
L’appuntamento è per il 15 Agosto in Alaska e sarà il primo del secondo mandato di Trump alla Casa Bianca. Il fatto che vi sarà un incontro è di per sé un fatto positivo, quando le due superpotenze nucleari dialogano il mondo intero respira meglio.www.altrenotizie.org
Il ritorno dell’autorizzazione a procedere rafforzerà le tutele degli eletti nelle Camere
@Politica interna, europea e internazionale
L'articolo Il ritorno dell’autorizzazione a procedere rafforzerà le tutele degli eletti nelle Camere fondazioneluigieinaudi.it/il-r…
Anduril accelera nell’Indo-Pacifico. Nuovi accordi con Taiwan e Corea del Sud
@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo
Dopo America ed Europa, Anduril ha messo gli occhi anche sull’Indo-Pacifico. L’emerging tech Usa, leader nel comparto dell’IA applicata alla difesa, ha recentemente concluso due accordi che pongono le basi della sua futura espansione in estremo oriente. Da un lato
The human voiceover artists behind AI voices are grappling with the choice to embrace the gigs and earn a living, or pass on potentially life-changing opportunities from Big Tech.#AI #voiceovers
QUANDO L’INTELLIGENZA ARTIFICIALE INIZIA A GIOCARE CON LA CYBERSICUREZZA…
@Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)
Mai sentito parlare di RunSybil? Si tratta di una startup fondata da chi era il primo ricercatore sulla sicurezza di OpenAI...
L'articolo QUANDO L’INTELLIGENZA ARTIFICIALE INIZIA A GIOCARE CON LA CYBERSICUREZZA… proviene da GIANO NEWS.
#TECNOLOGIA
Ministero dell'Istruzione
#NoiSiamoLeScuole, con i fondi del #PNRR finalizzati alla costruzione di nuove scuole sono stati demoliti e sono in corso di ricostruzione due istituti in Sicilia e uno in Lombardia.Telegram
Terre rare, gli Usa puntano a estrarle e raffinarle in casa. Ecco come
@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo
Il rafforzamento dell’ecosistema della Difesa Usa non passa solamente per l’assegnazione di nuove commesse, ma anche dal consolidamento di una filiera interamente radicata sul territorio nazionale. Il Dipartimento della Difesa statunitense ha infatti concesso il primo prestito
Mario Pacchiarotti likes this.
freezonemagazine.com/articoli/…
La ripubblicazione di un album, a mio avviso fondamentale nella definizione delle coordinate di quello che è l’Indie Rock oggi, partendo proprio da quello che è stato, è un evento che non andrebbe sottovalutato da chi ama “perdersi” nei meandri di un genere, sì conosciuto, ma che, per dimensioni, scelte di pubblicazioni, spesso difficilissime da […]
L'articolo Heatmiser – Mic City Songs proviene
La
GAZA. Attacco aereo all’ospedale Shifa: ucciso il giornalista Anas al Sharif di Al Jazeera
@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo
Uccisi sette palestinesi tra cui due reporter della televisione del Qatar e due cameraman
pagineesteri.it/2025/08/11/med…
GLOBAL SUMUD FLOTILLA. A fine agosto e inizio settembre decine di imbarcazioni salperanno per Gaza
@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo
Prima dalla Spagna e poi dal Nordafrica gli attivisti di 44 paesi proveranno a rompere il blocco navale israeliano di Gaza e a portare aiuti umanitari ai civili palestinesi. A bordo ci sarà ancora Greta
Pace tra Armenia e Azerbaigian. Il passo falso di Mosca e i timori dell’Iran
@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo
L'intesa firmata a Washington favorisce l'Azerbaigian, la Turchia e gli Stati Uniti, che rimettono piede nel cortile di casa russo. Teheran teme e denuncia la manovra a tenaglia
L'articolo Pace tra Armenia e Azerbaigian. Il passo falso di Mosca e i timori dell’Iran proviene da Pagine
alephoto85
in reply to Max 🇪🇺🇮🇹 • • •ricordo app, forse "Hello Talk" e "Tandem", che potrebbero essere utili in questo caso ma non mi viene in mente nessuna alternativa open.
Se invece ti va bene anche offline, al mio circolo arci di fiducia, organizzano lezioni di italiano per stranierз, giusto per fare un esempio.
Magari prova a vedere se nella tua zona ci sono progetti simili. Credo ci sia sempre bisogno di volontarз.
Max 🇪🇺🇮🇹
in reply to alephoto85 • •@alephoto85
Sì in effetti è una buona idea, non ci avevo pensato. Grazie.
Anche se a me piacerebbe di più farlo con gente che sta dall'altra parte del mondo, così potrei approfittarne per farmi raccontare qualcosa di come vivono laggiù 😀
alephoto85
in reply to Max 🇪🇺🇮🇹 • • •capisco! Ci sta effettivamente! Sono sicuro però che anche chi arriva qui da lontano avrà qualcosa da raccontare in merito.
Se trovo altre cose online ti scrivo ma adesso mi vengono in mente solo quelle 😅