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2025 One Hertz Challenge: Blinking An LED With The Aid Of Radio Time


If you want to blink an LED once every second, you could use just about any old timer circuit to create a 1 Hz signal. Or, you could go the complicated route like [Anthony Vincz] and grab 1 Hz off a radio clock instead.

The build is an entry for the 2025 One Hertz Challenge, with [Anthony] pushing himself to whip up a simple entry on a single Sunday morning. He started by grabbing a NE567 tone decoder IC, which uses a phase-locked loop to trigger an output when detecting a tone of a given frequency. [Anthony] had used this chip hooked up to an Arduino to act as a Morse decoder, which picked up sound from an electret mic and decoded it into readable output.

However, he realized he could repurpose the NE567 to blink in response to output from radio time stations like the 60 KHz British and 77.5 KHz German broadcasts. He thus grabbed a software-defined radio, tuned it into one of the time stations, and adjusted the signal to effectively sound a regular 800 Hz tone coming out of his computer’s speakers that cycled once every second. He then tweaked the NE567 so it would trigger off this repetitive tone every second, flashing an LED.

Is it the easiest way to flash an LED? No. It’s complicated, but it’s also creative. They say a one hertz signal is always in the last place you look.

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2025 Hackaday One Hertz Challenge


hackaday.com/2025/08/14/2025-o…



For Americans Only: Estimating Celsius and Other Mental Metrics


I know many computer languages, but I’ve struggled all my life to learn a second human language. One of my problems is that I can’t stop trying to translate in my head. Just like Morse code, you need to understand things directly, not translate. But you have to start somewhere. One of the reasons metric never caught on in the United States is that it is hard to do exact translations while you are developing intuition about just how hot is 35 °C or how long 8 cm is.

If you travel, temperature is especially annoying. When the local news tells you the temperature is going to be 28, it is hard to do the math in your head to decide if you need a coat or shorts.

Ok, you are a math whiz. And you have a phone with a calculator and, probably, a voice assistant. So you can do the right math, which is (9/5) x °C + 32. But for those of us who can’t do that in our heads, there is an easier way.

Field Expedient

Close enough for a quick estimate
Most of us can’t multiply by 9/5 in our heads. But 9/5 is very nearly two. So if you double the Celsius temperature, you are halfway there. Of course, the number will be too high. But to make up for it, instead of adding 32, just add 30. For weather temperatures, this gives you a ballpark estimate. For 0 °C, you get 30 °F instead of 32. For 20 °C, you get 70 °F instead of 68. For 35 °C, you get 100 °F instead of 95. All close enough.

If you want to flip the error as the temperature goes up, you can remember to add 25 instead of 30 if the temperature is more than, say 25 °C. Then 35 °C gives you 95 °F on the dot, although other temperatures will still have some error, of course.

The error gets worse as the temperature rises, but it has to get fairly high before it gets useless. For example, my AMD CPU is currently at 48 °C. Using the +25 estimate, that’s 121 °F, instead of the correct 118. But maybe it won’t help you set up your metal smelting furnace.

Other Estimates

Centimeters to inches the easy way.
This is a useful way to embrace metric. Find rough estimates for units you deal with. For example, 2.54 cm/inch is not the easiest thing to apply. But if you remember that 5 cm is about 2 in, that works well. So a 160 mm rod is 16 cm. If you think of that as 3 x 5 + 1, you’ll know it is 6 inches plus an extra centimeter. The right answer is about 6.3 inches. Not close enough to start cutting things, but it does give you a feel for how big a thing you are talking about.

If you lived through the time when gasoline in the US went from less than $1/gallon to over, you might remember that many gas stations switched to liters because the pumps couldn’t be set for a dollar. The reason is a liter is very nearly a quart, and there are four quarts to a gallon. So 12 liters is practically 12 quarts or 3 gallons. This turns out to be very close.

Kilograms and kilometers are a bit trickier. The right way to imprecisely convert kilograms to pounds is to multiply by 2.2. But a nice mental math trick is to double it. Then remove the last digit and add the rest back in to the whole result. Then put the last digit you removed after the decimal point. So 8 kg would be 16+1 (throw away the six) or 17 pounds. Then put the 0.6 in for the correct answer of 17.6 pounds. Of course, the conversion factor isn’t exactly 2.2, but that’s what most people use anyway. If you are trying to be scientifically accurate, none of this is going to help you.
Estimating kilometers.
The factor for kilometers is roughly 0.6 km/mile or 1.6 miles/km. If you halve the kilometers, that will get you a fairly low estimate. So 35 km (21.7 miles) is easy to guess as more than 17.5 miles. That’s a pretty big difference, though. But if you then add 10% of the 35 back (3.5) you get 21 miles which is close.

Advice


I’m not trying to say that these rule-of-thumb tricks are good when you need an exact answer. But they are handy when you simply want a gut feel over some measure. Over time, you’ll just naturally know that 35 °C is summer-weather hot and you need more than a coffee mug to hold 3 liters.

Do you have a favorite fast conversion back or forth from metric? Share it in the comments. Americans love their strange measuring system. Turns out, some of the reasons we didn’t get metric was due to pirates, as you can see in the video below.

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Featured image: Wood thermometer on white background by Marco Verch under Creative Commons 2.0


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The texts were sent to a group called “Mass Text” and show ICE using DMV and license plate reader data in an attempt to find their target, copies of the messages obtained by 404 Media show.#News


ICE Adds Random Person to Group Chat, Exposes Details of Manhunt in Real-Time


Members of a law enforcement group chat including Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and other agencies inadvertently added a random person to the group called “Mass Text” where they exposed highly sensitive information about an active search for a convicted attempted murderer seemingly marked for deportation, 404 Media has learned.

The texts included an unredacted ICE “Field Operations Worksheet” that includes detailed information about the target they were looking for, and the texts showed ICE pulling data from a DMV and license plate readers (LPRs), according to screenshots of the chat obtained and verified by 404 Media. The person accidentally added to the group chat is not a law enforcement official or associated with the investigation in any way, and said they were added to it weeks ago and initially thought it was a series of spam messages.

The incident is a significant data breach and operational security failure for ICE, which has ramped up arrest efforts across the U.S. as part of the Trump administration’s mass deportation efforts. The breach also has startling similarities to so-called Signal Gate, in which a senior administration official added the editor-in-chief of The Atlantic to a group chat that contained likely classified information. These new ICE messages were MMS, or Multimedia Messaging Service messages, meaning they weren’t end-to-end encrypted, like texts sent over Signal or WhatsApp are.

“Going to need to roll out at 1000,” one of the messages, sent at 09:25 a.m. on Wednesday to the group, called “Mass Text,” reads.

“Copy. We can break it down at 10,” comes the reply.

💡
Do you want to contact me securely? 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.

404 Media has verified that one of the members of the chat is an ICE official, and another appears to be from the U.S. Marshals Service.

The person accidentally added to the group chat, which appears to contain six people, said they had no idea why they had received these messages, and shared screenshots of the chat with 404 Media. 404 Media granted the person anonymity to protect them from retaliation.

“At first I thought it was just another series of spam messages like I get all the time from home improvement, car insurance , business loans, etc. Then I saw the rap sheet and license plate numbers and was like WTAF,” the person said in an online chat.



Screenshots of the messages. Redactions by 404 Media.

A DHS official not affiliated with the group chat told 404 Media, “This breach strikes me as indicative of the current carelessness of officers. They're concerned about pumping up arrest numbers, not about operating with the level of care and rigor we should expect from law enforcement officials.” 404 Media granted the source anonymity as they weren’t permitted to speak to the press.

404 Media only obtained text messages from the group sent on Wednesday and only learned of the issue at that time. They start early in the morning with one of the participants, which 404 Media has identified as an ICE official, sending a screenshot of the ICE field operations worksheet. This document names the target, lays out their criminal history, and includes personal information such as their Social Security Number, country of citizenship, and driver’s license number.

The target is a person who was previously convicted of attempted murder according to the document, and a search of the ICE Online Detainee Locator System returned no results.

Nearly an hour later, another member of the group replies with a series of license plates. The name registered to that number matches that of a U.S. Marshals Criminal Investigator, according to a freely available phone lookup tool and LinkedIn searches.


Screenshots of the messages. Redactions by 404 Media.

“Running those plates,” the ICE officer then replies. “In the mean time he has two vehicles,” the ICE officer adds, before uploading two photos of car registration data which appear to come from a DMV; one of the photos shows a PDF filename which includes “DMV.” ICE is able to access DMV data in many circumstances. The respective DMV for the state this investigation took place in acknowledged a request for comment but did not provide a response in time for publication.

Immediately after, the ICE official wrote “no LPR hits since March.” LPR cameras are made by various companies and are stationed all across the United States. These cameras typically scan any vehicles driving by them, recording the vehicle’s license plate, model, and color, and makes a timestamped record of where that car, and by extension person, was. For example, more than 9,000 ICE agents had access to an LPR database run by Vigilant Solutions, according to records the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) obtained in 2019. 404 Media also revealed that local police were tapping into Flock cameras on behalf of ICE and for immigration enforcement, sometimes in violation of the law.

“It’s possible it’s still a connected address. Could be family. The last name matches the female co-reg on one of his vehicles,” the ICE official writes, appearing to refer to some of the data he’s pulled up.

“Copy,” another participant replies.

“Ok I’ll call you,” another says.

By the time the chat members say they’re going to “roll out at 1000,” appearing to mean they will move at 10am, the ICE official says “I’ll have someone sit and try and get a pattern of life/pid.” Pattern of life is a general term law enforcement and intelligence agencies sometimes use to describe where someone may live, go to work, or spend their time.

The source who was accidentally added to the group chat said they haven’t received any more messages since then.

Neither DHS or the U.S. Marshals Service responded to requests for comment.

Recently ICE officials have raided incorrect addresses; potentially violated court orders banning the agency from racial profiling people at Home Depots; detained U.S. citizens (including for days without water); and deported U.S. citizen children, one of which had cancer, with their families to Honduras, all while aggressively rounding up undocumented people many of whom have no criminal record and denying due process to some. Around half the people in ICE detention, nearly 30,000 people, do not have criminal records, according to the Deportation Data Project.

Previously senior administration officials gave ICE a quota of 3,000 arrests a day. The administration has since claimed that no such quota exists.

With its new budget injection and overarching mass deportation goal, ICE is about to go on a social media ad recruiting blitz, 404 Media previously reported. On Tuesday DHS said it had received more than 100,000 applications for roles at ICE. At the end of July, the agency said it had issued more than 1,000 tentative job offers since July 4.


#News



3D Printing a Self-cleaning Water Filter


No one likes cleaning out water spouts. [NeedItMakeIt] wanted to collect rainwater and was interested in using a Coanda filter that those used on hydroelectric plants to separate out debris. Ultimately, he decided to design his own and 3D print it.

The design uses a sloping surface with teeth on it to coax water to go in one direction and debris to go in another. It fits into a typical spout, and seems like it works well enough. Some commenters note that varying volumes of rain and different types of debris behave differently, which is probably true. However, there are similar commercial products, so you’d guess there would be some value to using the technique.

The water pushes the debris off the slope, so you end up losing a little water with the debris. So as always, there’s a trade-off. You can see in the video that if the water flow isn’t substantial, the debris tends to stall on the slope. Could the filter be improved? That was the point in trying a second design.

It wasn’t a big improvement. That’s where there’s a plot twist. Well, actually, a literal twist. Instead of making a flat slope, the new design is a conic shape with a spiral channel. That improved flow quite a bit. We weren’t clear from the video of exactly where the debris was going with the last version.

Usually, when we think of the Coanda effect, we are thinking aerodynamics. It can be quite uplifting.

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hackaday.com/2025/08/14/3d-pri…



“Non siamo qui per fuggire dalla storia, ma per entrarci fino in fondo con la preghiera, che è grido, invocazione, umanità, consolazione, compassione”. Lo ha detto il card.


4K Blu-Ray of 22-Year-Old 'Master and Commander' Is Sold Out Everywhere, Being Scalped on eBay#Media #News


4K Blu-Ray of 22-Year-Old 'Master and Commander' Is Sold Out Everywhere, Being Scalped on eBay


August—2025. The new limited edition 4K Blu-ray of the 2005 film Master and Commander has sold out everywhere. Secondary markets are now battlefields.

There are two kinds of people in this world: those who read the above sentences and feel an intense pain and yearning for camaraderie and combat on the high seas, and those who have never seen Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World.
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Copies of the new 4K release of the film are now selling on eBay for roughly double its MSRP, proof that physical media is not dead.

Released in 2005, Master and Commander is a war movie set in the Napoleonic period that focuses on the relationship between Captain Jack Aubrey of the Royal Navy and ship’s surgeon Stephen Maturin, played by Russell Crowe and Paul Bettany respectively. The film, which is based on a 20-book-long novel series of the same name, grossed $212 million on a $150 million budget but didn’t become a runaway hit at the time.

But in the two decades since it first hit screens, Master and Commander has grown in esteem, especially in American national security circles. It’s a cult favorite. The occasional live screenings at revival theaters routinely sell out, memes involving the film’s opening text are ubiquitous, and it often lands on lists of the the “best movies of the 2000s.” In the middle of July, a joint venture of Sony and Disney studios announced it would publish a high quality 4K UltraHD limited edition steelbook Blu-ray to be released in August. Fans went nuts.

This would be the highest quality home release of the beloved film ever seen. Fans tracked pre-orders as they went live on Amazon, Wal-Mart, and other retailers. It sold out in days, and has done so consistently every time it’s been restocked. Master and Commander heads are so hungry for 4K Crowe that they’re now paying double and triple the asking price for the steelbook copy on eBay and several notable people have posted about how they can’t find a copy.

totally missed that there was a new master and commander 4K out and naturally it is completely out of stock
jamelle (@jamellebouie.net) 2025-08-13T20:04:19.823Z


It’s rare in 2025 that the physical release of a 20 year old film is met with such fervor. Delight is especially high among members of America’s military community. Soldiers, officers, journalists, and the extremely online NatSec weirdos love Master and Commander. Like Star Wars, the movie has become a lingua franca in U.S. military circles where it’s a source of memes and concepts that drives discussion.

“There's no doubt that Master and Commander is beloved within the national security community. What's harder to explain is ‘why,’” Robert Farley, a senior lecturer at the University of Kentucky, told 404 Media. Farley said he just rewatched the movie two weeks ago after forcing a friend to watch who’d never seen it.

“If I had to hazard a guess, it's because the movie depicts the tight functioning of a community of warfighters, a community that is mostly comfortable with itself…and yet is deeply grounded in English social structure,” Farley said. “As in any well-functioning military, everyone has a place to be and a job to do. Jack Aubrey isn’t so much brilliant as ‘lucky,’ which adds to the workmanlike aspect. I'd say that there's a male bonding aspect to it (I don't believe any female character has even a single line), but I know plenty of women in the NatSec space who will quote ‘Oceans are battlefields’ in everyday conversation.”

Pauline Shanks Kaurin, a former military ethics professor at the U.S. Naval War College, told 404 Media that she’d used Master and Commander in her classes as a way to teach Aristotle’s three kinds of friendship and, separately, the Ethics of Care. “I think it’s really about the friendship between the Captain and doctor, as well as a portrayal of leadership and comradeship that is still masculine and strong, but not brutal and gratuitous,” she said.

When reached for comment about the film, Remap Radio’s Robert Zacny—famously a fan of the film—was actively debating paying $140 for a copy of the 4K steelbook. 404 Media informed Zacny that eBay had listings for half that price and asked the Remap founder for his thoughts on the movie and its enduring legacy.

“There's a moment in the film where Aubrey snaps at Maturin about the things that hold together their ‘little wooden world.’ Master and Commander is a war movie where the entire concerns of the world are reduced to the interior or a single ship. But it's also a character study about the worlds held within and between individuals. The roles people have to inhabit and the things they have to do in service to duty, the state, to ethics, to morality.
Yet this movie is also backdropped by the vastness and wonder of nature, of time considered on an evolutionary scale and the awareness that beyond that bubble of consciousness awaits eternity in the darkness of the sea. The oft-memed opening text is deceptive. It doesn't really matter that Napoleon is the master of Europe. The concept of a battlefield is meaningless to the ocean. The movie is about men waging battles inside themselves to reconcile their own contradictions and choose their own meaning. It's immaculately directed, acted, and scored, but so are a lot of movies. This one endures because it's always offering a berth on this voyage of introspection, and it's so much fun you don't even mind how insistently it reminds you to think about mortality.”


His thoughts exhausted, Remap’s founder pressed 404 Media for information. “Now link me some of these good deals on steelbooks,” he said. “I am gonna be buried with one.”




How The Widget Revolutionized Canned Beer


Walk into any pub and order a pint of Guinness, and you’ll witness a mesmerizing ritual. The bartender pulls the tap, fills the glass two-thirds full, then sets it aside to settle before topping it off with that iconic creamy head. But crack open a can of Guinness at home, and something magical happens without any theatrical waiting period. Pour it out, and you get that same cascading foam effect that made the beer famous.

But how is it done? It’s all thanks to a tiny little device that is affectionately known as The Widget.

Beer Engineering

A pint of Guinness, pictured with the iconic foamy head. Credit: Sami Keinänen, CC BY SA 2.0
In 1959, draught Guinness diverged from other beers. The pints served from the tap at the pub were charged with a combination of nitrogen gas and carbon dioxide, rather than just carbon dioxide alone. Nitrogen is less soluble in beer than carbon dioxide, and low temperatures and higher pressures are required to get it to stay in the fluid. Charging the beer in this way, and then forcing it through a tap with a restrictor plate with many fine holes, allows the pouring of a beer with small, fine bubbles. This is what gives Guinness its signature smooth, creamy texture and characteristic dense head. The lower carbon dioxide level also contributes to the flavor, removing some of the sharp taste present in regular carbonated beers.

When Guinness started using the nitrogenation method, it quickly gained popularity and became the default way to serve the draught beer. The problem was that it wasn’t initially practical to do the same for bottled Guinness. Without being poured through the fine holes of a special tap under pressure, it wasn’t possible to create the same foamy head. Bottled Guinness thus remained carbonated in the traditional manner, and it was thus very much unlike the draught beer served at the pub. The desire was to produce a better version—”bottled draught Guinness” was a term often bandied about. The company experimented with a variety of methods of serving nitrogenated Guinness from a bottle or can. It even sold some bottles with a special “initiator” syringe to generate head in select markets, but it was all too clumsy to catch on with the beer drinking public. A better solution was needed.
The modern floating Guinness widget, pictured in a can that has been cut open. Credit: Duk, CC BY SA 3.0
The modern widget was developed as the technological solution to this fundamental problem in beverage physics. Guinness tackled this challenge by essentially putting a tiny pressure vessel inside the larger pressure vessel of the can itself. The widget is a small plastic sphere, hollow inside, with a tiny hole on the surface. The widget and beer are placed inside the can on the production line. Liquid nitrogen is then added, before the can’s lid is sealed. The can is then inverted as the liquid nitrogen quickly boils off into a gas. This effectively fills the widget with gaseous nitrogen under pressure, often along with a small amount of beer. It’s a charged pressure vessel lurking inside the can itself.

The magic happens when the beverage is served. When you crack open the can, the pressure inside drops rapidly to atmospheric pressure. The nitrogen under pressure in the widget thus wants to equalize with the now lower-pressure environment outside. Thus, the nitrogen sprays out through the tiny hole with tremendous force, creating countless microscopic bubbles that act as nucleation sites for the rest of the nitrogen dissolved in the surrounding beer. As the beer is poured into a glass, a foamy head forms, mimicking the product served fresh from the tap at the local pub.

Today’s widget, first marketed in 1997, is the floating sphere type, but the original version was a little different. The original widget launched in 1989 was a flat disc, which was mounted in the bottom of the can, but fundamentally worked in the same way. However, it had a tendency to cause rapid overflowing of the beer if opened when warm. The floating spherical widget reduced this tendency, though the precise engineering reasons why aren’t openly explained by the company. The fixed widget actually had a surprise return in 2020 due to COVID-19 supply chain issues, suggesting it was still mostly fit for purpose in the brewery’s eyes.

The key to the widget’s performance is in the filling and the construction. It’s important to ensure the widget is filled with pressurized gas, hence the inversion step used in the filling process. If the pressurized nitrogen was allowed to simply sit in the empty space in the top of the can, it would just vent out on opening without making any head. The orifice size on the widget is also critical. Too large, and the pressure equalizes too quickly without creating the necessary turbulence. Too small, and insufficient gas and beer volume flows through to generate adequate nucleation. The widget as it stands today is the result of much research and development to optimize its performance.
A finned “rocket” widget as used in Guinness beer bottles. Credit: Joeinwap, CC0
Further different widget designs have emerged over the years. The company had mastered draught Guinness in a can, though it needed to be poured into a glass to be drank properly. The company later looked to create draught Guinness that could be drank straight from the bottle. This led to the creation of the “rocket widget.” It worked largely in the same way, but was designed to float while remaining in the correct orientation inside the neck of the bottle. Fins ensured it wouldn’t fall out of the bottle during drinking. It would charge the beer with bubbles when first opened, and continue to boost the head to a lesser degree each time the bottle was tilted for a sip.

Guinness could have left this problem unsolved. It could have remained a beautiful tap-based beer, while selling its lesser carbonated products in bottles and cans for home consumption. Instead, it innovated, finding a way to create the same creamy tap-poured experience right out of the can.

The next time you crack open a widget-equipped can and watch that mesmerizing cascade of bubbles, you’re witnessing a masterpiece of beverage engineering that took years to perfect. It’s a reminder that sometimes the most elegant engineering solutions hide in the most ordinary places, waiting for someone clever enough to recognize that a tiny plastic ball could revolutionize how we experience beer outside the pub.


hackaday.com/2025/08/14/how-th…



Dopo Darcula arriva Magic Mouse: il nuovo incubo del phishing ruba 650.000 carte al mese


Dopo la chiusura della piattaforma di phishing Darcula e del software Magic Cat utilizzato dai truffatori, la soluzione Magic Mouse ha guadagnato popolarità tra i criminali. Secondo gli specialisti di Mnemonic, Magic Mouse contribuisce già al furto di dati da almeno 650.000 carte bancarie al mese.

Recentemente abbiamo parlato del lavoro di Darcula e dell’indagine condotta dagli esperti di Mnemonic. Questa piattaforma PhaaS (phishing-as-a-service) ha preso di mira utenti Android e iPhone in oltre 100 paesi. Il servizio criminale ha utilizzato 20.000 domini che imitavano marchi noti per rubare credenziali.

Secondo gli analisti, gli operatori di Darcula sono stati responsabili del furto di 884.000 carte bancarie e le vittime di hacker in tutto il mondo hanno cliccato su link dannosi ricevuti tramite messaggi di testo 13 milioni di volte.

Poco dopo l’attività di Darcula è cessata, ma come hanno spiegato i ricercatori di Mnemonic al DEF CON, un altro servizio di phishing simile sta guadagnando popolarità tra i criminali informatici.

Gli esperti ricordano che il software Magic Cat ha svolto un ruolo chiave nel lavoro di Darcula. Ora Magic Cat è stato sostituito da una piattaforma simile, Magic Mouse, la cui popolarità è aumentata notevolmente dopo la chiusura di Darcula.

Gli esperti ritengono che Magic Mouse sia un’operazione nuova, con sviluppatori diversi dietro. Non è quindi correlato a Darcula. Tuttavia, l’attuale successo di Magic Mouse è dovuto in gran parte al fatto che nuovi operatori si sono appropriati dei kit di phishing che hanno reso così popolare il software del suo predecessore.

Questi kit contengono centinaia di modelli di siti di phishing che Magic Cat ha utilizzato per imitare pagine web legittime di importanti colossi tecnologici, noti servizi al consumatore e servizi di consegna. Tutti questi siti sono stati progettati per indurre le vittime a fornire i dati della propria carta di credito.

Sebbene Magic Mouse sia già popolare e potrebbe diventare ancora più pericoloso di Magic Cat in futuro, portando ai suoi operatori milioni di dollari di profitti (sotto forma di fondi rubati alle vittime), i ricercatori osservano che le forze dell’ordine “non riescono a vedere” oltre alcune segnalazioni isolate di frode. In altre parole, nessuno attualmente considera Magic Mouse una campagna fraudolenta su larga scala.

Allo stesso tempo, Mnemonic ritiene che gran parte della responsabilità dell’esistenza e della prosperità di tali schemi fraudolenti ricada sulle aziende tecnologiche e sui giganti della finanza, che continuano a rendere difficile ai truffatori l’utilizzo di carte rubate.

L'articolo Dopo Darcula arriva Magic Mouse: il nuovo incubo del phishing ruba 650.000 carte al mese proviene da il blog della sicurezza informatica.



Dal 13 al 17 agosto Riccione sta ospitando la missione di evangelizzazione di strada evangelizzazione di strada “Chi ha sete venga a me”, promossa dalla diocesi di Rimini insieme al Punto Giovane, alla comunità Nuovi Orizzonti, alle Sentinelle del Ma…


Join Our Leadership Team — Apply to Be a Team Lead for the European Pirates!


We’re building something big — a European umbrella organisation working to support our pirate parties across Europe and amplify our shared political voice. Our movement is rooted in collaboration, grassroots empowerment, and making real impact at the EU level. To make this happen, we’re looking for motivated, reliable, and passionate people to take on Team Lead roles in our volunteer-run European secretariat.

As a Team Lead, you will:

  • Coordinate the work of your team and help shape its priorities
  • Collaborate closely with other team leads in the Management Team
  • Support volunteers, delegate tasks, and ensure smooth internal communication
  • Help develop the strategy and direction of our European-level work

We are currently seeking Team Leads for the following teams:

  • Communications Team
  • Community & Outreach Team
  • IT Team
  • Policy Team
  • Operations Team

👉 You don’t need to be an expert or have years of experience — we value commitment, collaboration, and curiosity. We’re especially excited to hear from people with lived experience in grassroots activism, digital tools, or cross-border collaboration.

⏳ Time commitment: Flexible and part-time (volunteer-based). We expect most leads to dedicate around 4–6 hours per week, depending on availability.

🌍 Location: Remote / anywhere in Europe

Interested in helping build a stronger, more connected European movement?
📩Apply now or reach out with questions — we’d love to hear from you!
The post Join Our Leadership Team — Apply to Be a Team Lead for the European Pirates! first appeared on European Pirate Party.




John Lennon & Yoko Ono annunciata l’uscita del box Power To The People
freezonemagazine.com/news/john…
Esce il 10 ottobre il Box deluxe composto di nove CD + tre Blue-Ray più un libro di oltre duecento pagine dedicato a John Lennon e Yoko Ono. 31 brani live tratti dai due storici concerti di John e Yoko al One To One Concert, accompagnati dalla Plastic Ono Band, dagli Elephant’s Memory e da […]
L'articolo John Lennon &


Join Our Leadership Team — Apply to Be a Team Lead for the European Pirates!


@politics
european-pirateparty.eu/join-o…

We’re building something big — a European umbrella organisation working to support our pirate parties across Europe and amplify our shared political

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Ucraina, l’Europa supera gli Usa e diventa il maggior fornitore di aiuti militari a Kyiv

@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo

Per la prima volta dall’inizio della guerra in Ucraina, l’Europa ha superato gli Stati Uniti nella produzione e nella fornitura di materiale militare a Kyiv. Lo dicono i numeri diffusi dal Kiel Institute for the World Economy: tra febbraio 2022 e giugno 2025, la produzione militare europea



Samsung si piega a Trump: nuovi investimenti per chip americani

L'articolo proviene da #StartMag e viene ricondiviso sulla comunità Lemmy @Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)
Il lavoro muscolare di Trump sta dando i suoi frutti: la necessità di Apple e Tesla di trovare una filiera statunitense sta portando Samsung a investire nuovamente negli States. La notizia comunque ha una




Golden Dome, ecco come funzionerà lo scudo spaziale di Trump. I dettagli

@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo

Il Dipartimento della Difesa degli Stati Uniti ha deciso di alzare il velo sull’architettura operativa del Golden Dome, il futuro sistema di difesa missilistica destinato a proteggere l’intero territorio statunitense – Alaska e Hawaii inclusi – contro le minacce balistiche,



"Fiat: in autunno le prime immagini del prossimo SUV"

ancora suv? maledetti suv. sono la rovina del mondo. a chi si ostina produrre suv posso solo augurare il fallimento.

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in reply to simona

peggio: non hai visuale davanti e un bambino per strada è in pericolo. sono peggiori dal punto di vista della frenata. hai meno angolo di visuale in generale. cappottano facilmente. e sopratutto se già era un problema viaggiare in 1 persona da 80kg spendendo energia per trasportare 1000kg, la situazione non è migliorata quando per portare una persona si trasportava 3500kg... e poi compriamo le auto elettriche per fare gli ecologisti? ha senso? compra 1 motorino e inquini di meno. siamo proprio malati. è questo l'unico problema.


il concerto di Gastone Pietrucci e la Macina con Elisa Ridolfi - 13 agosto 2025


Il concerto di Gastone Pietrucci e La Macina insieme a Elisa Ridolfi, vincitrice del Premio Tenco 2024 per la migliore opera prima, si è rivelato un'esperienza suggestiva e toccante. Il luogo prescelto, una radura a pochi metri dal borgo medievale di Cerreto di Montegiorgio, ha donato all'evento un'atmosfera intima e quasi magica. Seduti su semplici assi di legno grezzo, ci siamo ritrovati a stretto contatto con i musicisti, annullando ogni barriera e favorendo una vera e propria comunione tra artisti e ascoltatori.
Nonostante la qualità del suono non fosse sempre eccelsa, quasi a voler dimostrare che quello che conta è la sincerità e non la perfezione artificiale, l'espressività dei musicisti ha superato ogni limite tecnico. Le emozioni scaturite da ogni nota e da ogni parola sono state così coinvolgenti da rendere l'esperienza unica e indimenticabile.
L'esibizione ha offerto un viaggio musicale che ha saputo unire brani originali ad omaggi ad alcuni dei più grandi cantautori italiani: le canzoni di De André, Ciampi, Tenco e Piero Cesanelli (padre della rassegna musicale Musicultura) sono state reinterpretate con passione e rispetto. Momenti di rara intensità si sono raggiunti con le esecuzioni appassionate di "Vedrai, vedrai" di Luigi Tenco e del canto popolare "Sotto la croce Maria", così come con la sorprendente interpretazione della “Ballata degli impiccati” di De André, che è stata introdotta dalla voce nuda e dirompente di Elisa Ridolfi.
Questi passaggi hanno trasformato la serata da un semplice concerto in un'esperienza quasi spirituale di condivisione di sentimenti e storie, confermando ancora una volta il valore di una musica che affonda le radici nella tradizione, ma che sa parlare con forza e attualità al cuore di chi ascolta.
(13agosto2025 - #worldland festival)

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è una conferma che la risposta è si dentro di noi, epperò è quella sbagliata.


L’obsolescenza programmata di Microsoft verrà punita?

L'articolo proviene da #StartMag e viene ricondiviso sulla comunità Lemmy @Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)
La sospensione del supporto a Windows 10 finisce in tribunale. Un cittadino californiano accusa Microsoft di spingere all'acquisto di nuovi dispositivi al fine di dominare il mercato dell'IA. Il caso, tra l'altro, ha anche un

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Il missile nucleare che inquina l’Artico. Putin testa il Burevestnik alla vigilia dei colloqui con Trump

@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo

Dal 7 al 12 agosto, le autorità russe hanno chiuso lo spazio aereo per 500 chilometri lungo la costa occidentale di Novaya Zemlya. Almeno quattro navi di supporto hanno raggiunto posizioni di osservazione nel Mare di Barents, mentre due velivoli della Rosatom






Passo qualche giorno da una mia zia 85enne a cui sono molto affezionato, lo faccio un paio di volte l'anno, per ferragosto e per l'ultimo dell'anno.

Da 5 anni io la televisione l'accendo solo per guardare Netflix, la TV vera e propria la guardo solo qui da mia zia, dove è accesa dalla mattina alla sera.

Ecco... io credo che per capire meglio questo paese, e come sia finito così in basso, non si possa prescindere dal riflettere su quello che passa in TV.




La guerra dei chip si tinge di giallo: tracker statunitensi nei semiconduttori per non finire in Cina

L'articolo proviene da #StartMag e viene ricondiviso sulla comunità Lemmy @Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)
Per evitare che i chip americani finiscano nelle AI cinesi Washington avrebbe iniziato - ben prima dell'arrivo di Trump - a

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Recensione : Wojtek Mazowleski Quintet – Live Spirit I


Con Live Spirit I, il Wojtek Mazolewski Quintet firma il suo primo album dal vivo: un viaggio sonoro tra jazz spirituale e momenti di estasi collettiva, che celebra la libertà compositiva del suo leader.

iyezine.com/wojtek-mazowleski-…

@Musica Agorà




possibile che i repubblicani non si siano accorti che trump naviga "a vista" con una politica inconsistente come non mai negli ultimi 200 anni, che oscilla fra il lasciare l'europa alla russia, per impegnarsi personalmente extra nato in ucraina, con politiche anti-liberiste come i dazi che poi sono tasse per gli americani, dove neppure si capisce per trump come rendere l'america grande se contro nessuno, contro tutto il mondo, contro solo la cina, contro tutto meno che contro la cina, contro tutti meno che contro la russia, ma si è mai visto un presidente usa così confuso? sembra un nano che continua a prendere sberle da tutti, inconcludente e incapace anche solo di mettere a fuoco o decidere quali sono davvero i problemi che vuole risolvere, o stabilire delle priorità, con l'aiuto o l'appoggio non si sa di chi, e nel contempo, mentre rotea, colpisce a caso, infastidendo più che altro e confondendo. qualcuno ha il coraggio di vederci un raffinato piano che noi non capiamo?



Musk vuole portare in tribunale Apple (a causa di OpenAI)

L'articolo proviene da #StartMag e viene ricondiviso sulla comunità Lemmy @Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)
Elon Musk starebbe per procedere legalmente nei confronti di Apple, che accusa di favorire solo OpenAI nel suo App Store, violando le norme antitrust. Ma anche Sam Altman ha qualcosa da ridire su X e poi in ballo ci

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La favola dell’anonimato online. Il post di F-Norm Society sull'attacco degli Stati ai diritti dei cittadini

Si racconta la favola dell’anonimato online come la causa di tutti i mali. Il problema è che qualcuno ci crede. Non solo. Il problema è anche che chi ci crede è anche una politica che pensa così di soddisfare un finto problema con una proposta di soluzione stupida. Così stupida che viene addirittura giustificata con l’intenzione di rendere Internet e gli ecosistemi digitali “più sicuri” rendendoli praticamente ad accesso controllato.

@Privacy Pride

redhotcyber.com/post/f-norm-ri…




OLTRE L’INVISIBILE – Federico Faggin Giugno 2024
freezonemagazine.com/articoli/…
Quando ci si imbatte in una lettura sui massimi sistemi si sa che il percorso è in salita e per niente facile ma il segno che lascia in questo caso è davvero rivoluzionario e avvincente. Federico Faggin è uno scienziato che ha lavorato dal 1968 alla Silicon Valley inventando quel microprocessore che ha cambiato lo […]
L'articolo OLTRE L’INVISIBILE – Federico


Esercizi scritti - zulianis.eu/journal/esercizi-s…
Esercizi perché per certi aspetti assomigliano agli esercizi che facevamo a scuola. Scritti per distinguerli dagli esercizi solo pensati, che sono la maggior parte. Seguire delle regole (dopo essersele date) è un buon modo di sperimentare soluzioni nuove, proprio come fanno i bizzarri consigli di Natalie Goldberg in #Scrivere zen. Quindi ho deciso di fare […]


The Department of Energy said it will close FOIA requests from last year unless the requester emails the agency to say they are still interested. Experts say it's an "attempt to close out as many FOIA requests as possible."

The Department of Energy said it will close FOIA requests from last year unless the requester emails the agency to say they are still interested. Experts say itx27;s an "attempt to close out as many FOIA requests as possible."#FOIA #FOIAForum


Trump Administration Outlines Plan to Throw Out an Agency's FOIA Requests En Masse


The Department of Energy (DOE) said in a public notice scheduled to be published Thursday that it will throw out all Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests sent to the agency before October 1, 2024 unless the requester proactively emails the agency to tell it they are still interested in the documents they requested. This will result in the improper closure of likely thousands of FOIA requests if not more; government transparency experts told 404 Media that the move is “insane,” “ludicrous,” a “Pandora’s Box,” and “an underhanded attempt to close out as many FOIA requests as possible.”

The DOE notice says “requesters who submitted a FOIA request to DOE HQ at any time prior to October 1, 2024 (FY25), that is still open and is not under active litigation with DOE (or another Federal agency) shall email StillInterestedFOIA@hq.doe.gov to continue processing of the FOIA request […] If DOE HQ does not receive a response from requesters within the 30-day time-period with a DOE control number, no further action will be taken on the open FOIA request(s), and the file may be administratively closed.” A note at the top of the notice says it is scheduled to be formally published in the Federal Register on Thursday.

The agency will send out what are known as “still interested” letters, which federal agencies have used over the years to see if a requester wants to withdraw their request after a certain period of inactivity. These types of letters are controversial and perhaps not legal, and previous administrations have said that they should be used rarely and that requests should only be closed after an agency made multiple attempts to contact a requester over multiple methods of communication. What the DOE is doing now is sending these letters to submitters of all requests prior to October 1, 2024, which is not really that long ago; it also said it will close the requests of people who do not respond in a specific way to a specific email address.

FOIA requests—especially complicated ones—can often take months or years to process. I have outstanding FOIA requests with numerous federal agencies that I filed years ago, and am still interested in getting back, and I have gotten useful documents from federal agencies after years of waiting. The notion that large numbers of people who filed FOIA requests as recently as September 2024, which is less than a year ago, are suddenly uninterested in getting the documents they requested is absurd and should be seen as an attack on public transparency, experts told 404 Media. The DOE’s own reports show that it often does not respond to FOIA requests within a year, and, of course, a backlog exists in part because agencies are not terribly responsive to FOIA.

“If a requester proactively reaches out and says I am withdrawing my request, then no problem, they don’t have to process it,” Adam Marshall, senior staff attorney at the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, told me. “The agency can’t say we’ve decided we’ve gotten a lot of requests and we don’t want to do them so we’re throwing them out.”

“I was pretty shocked when I saw this to be honest,” Marshall added. “I’ve never seen anything like this in 10 years of doing FOIA work, and it’s egregious for a few reasons. I don’t think agencies have the authority to close a FOIA request if they don’t get a response to a ‘still interested’ letter. The statute doesn’t provide for that authority, and the amount of time the agency is giving people to respond—30 days—it sounds like a long time but if you happen to miss that email or aren’t digging through your backlogs, it’s not a lot of time. The notion that FOIA requesters should keep an eye out in the Federal Register for this kind of notice is ludicrous.”

The DOE notice essentially claims that the agency believes it gets too many FOIA requests and doesn’t feel like answering them. “DOE’s incoming FOIA requests have more than tripled in the past four years, with over 4,000 requests received in FY24, and an expected 5,000 or more requests in FY25. DOE has limited resources to process the burgeoning number of FOIA requests,” the notice says. “Therefore, DOE is undertaking this endeavor as an attempt to free up government resources to better serve the American people and focus its efforts on more efficiently connecting the citizenry with the work of its government.”

Lauren Harper of the Freedom of the Press Foundation told me in an email that she also has not seen any sort of precedent for this and that “it is an underhanded attempt to close out as many FOIA requests as possible, because who in their right mind checks the federal register regularly, and it should be challenged in court. (On that note, I am filing a FOIA request about this proposal.)”

“The use of still interested letters isn't explicitly allowed in the FOIA statute at all, and, as far as I know, there is absolutely zero case law that would support the department sending a mass ‘still interested’ letter via the federal register,” she added. “That they are also sending emails is not a saving grace; these types of letters are supposed to be used sparingly—not as a flagrant attempt to reduce their backlog by any means necessary. I also worry it will open a Pandora's Box—if other agencies see this, some are sure to follow.”

Marshall said that FOIA response times have been getting worse for years across multiple administrations (which has also been my experience). The Trump administration and the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) have cut a large number of jobs in many agencies across the government, which may have further degraded response times. But until this, there hadn’t been major proactive attempts taken by the self-defined “most transparent administration in history” to destroy FOIA.

“This is of a different nature than what we have seen so far, this affirmative, large-scale effort to purport to cancel a large number of pending FOIA requests,” Marshall said.




esistono repubblicani onesti e non fascisti negli stati uniti? diciamo quantomeno di ideologia liberista in termini economici... che non abbraccino l'idea dell'uomo forte e a tutti costi solo al potere?


The LAPD attacked reporters, despite a court order. Then it lied about it


Last Friday, officers from the Los Angeles Police Department beat, shoved, detained, and jailed journalists covering a protest over the previous detention of a community activist who had been documenting immigration officers.

It was a brutal and shocking attack on the press, even by the LAPD’s standards. Even before scores of journalists were attacked and detained at recent immigration raid protests, the force had one of the most atrocious track records when it comes to press freedom. The LAPD is also subject to a court order prohibiting it from interfering with journalists covering protests, which it appears to have wantonly violated.

What’s almost as shocking is how little attention these recent attacks have drawn from the mainstream media. Even five days later, the hometown Los Angeles Times, for instance, hadn’t yet written about Friday’s attack on the press. Thankfully, an out-of-town columnist, Will Bunch at the Philadelphia Inquirer, published an article strongly condemning the LAPD’s actions.

But even worse than ignoring the attacks on the press is reporting false information about them spread by the LAPD. Unfortunately, California station KABC-TV appears to have done just that, by reporting uncritically on claims by the LAPD that two people were detained at the protest for “pretending to be media.”

The two were, in fact, journalists, according to reporter Mel Buer, who was at the protest and was also detained, and Adam Rose, who’s been exhaustively tracking the recent attacks for the Los Angeles Press Club. Rose’s tracking spreadsheet identifies the detained journalists as Nate Gowdy and Carrie Schreck.

The U.S. Press Freedom Tracker reported that LAPD officers detained Gowdy and Schreck, who were working together to report on the protest, because they didn’t have physical press badges.

A lack of physical press credentials isn’t a good enough reason to stop a journalist from reporting under the First Amendment, and it certainly isn’t a good enough reason under the order entered by a federal judge in response to a lawsuit by the Los Angeles Press Club restraining the LAPD’s mistreatment of journalists covering protests. Even guidance from the LAPD’s chief of police says that a lack of credentials isn’t enough to justify a detention.

Instead, officers should have considered all the evidence that Gowdy and Schreck were at the protest to gather the news, like the statements from other credentialed reporters who vouched for them, their camera equipment, and Gowdy’s offer to show digital credentials or prove through a quick Google search that he and Schreck were journalists. And if they were still in doubt, officers were required to grant Gowdy and Schreck’s requests to speak to a supervisor.

KABC-TV, which calls itself the “West Coast flagship” of Disney’s ABC-owned TV station group, also should have known better than to simply repeat a statement from the LAPD that people were arrested for “pretending” to be press.

The government often makes this claim and uses it as a justification for why it “can’t” respect the First Amendment rights of journalists and simply must continue to beat and terrorize them along with protesters. But research has shown that protesters or others claiming to be press is rare. Any time government officials make this claim, journalists should be skeptical and investigate it before reporting it.

Journalists must bring a healthy dose of skepticism to any statements by the LAPD about its treatment of the press. The LAPD knows that it violates the First Amendment and California law to detain or otherwise interfere with journalists covering protests, but it continues to do so anyway.

It seems to prefer to risk contempt of court or massive settlements rather than respect the First Amendment, and it apparently has no compunction about making false statements to the press about its actions.

The only response available to journalists — other than suing to enforce their rights — is to report, accurately, on every single First Amendment violation by the LAPD. If they do, perhaps the citizens of Los Angeles will make clear to elected officials and law enforcement leaders that they won’t tolerate their police force acting in such a lawless manner.


freedom.press/issues/the-lapd-…



Strage a Lampedusa: 30 morti e decine di dispersi, tra loro tre neonati


@Giornalismo e disordine informativo
articolo21.org/2025/08/strage-…
Sono già 30 le vittime accertate, tra cui tre neonati, ma i dispersi si contano a decine.La presidente Meloni maledice gli scafisti e invita alla pietà. Certo, questa è l’ora della pietà e della solidarietà, ma sono




Monte Sole, un appello per fermare il massacro di Gaza


@Giornalismo e disordine informativo
articolo21.org/2025/08/monte-s…
Le iniziative per la Pace in Medio Oriente non si fermano. Domani 14 agosto a Monte Sole, terra di stragi e di Resistenza dove è nata la scuola di Pace voluta da don Dossetti, in questo luogo simbolo dove morirono 770 civili innocenti per



Rete criminale organizzata albanese smantellata


Una serie di perquisizioni in Albania, nei giorni scorsi, ha portato all'arresto di 10 presunti membri di una rete criminale organizzata albanese coinvolta nel traffico di cocaina e nel riciclaggio di denaro. La rete, che aveva legami con organizzazioni internazionali, è stata presa di mira dalle forze dell'ordine albanesi in coordinamento con Belgio, Francia, Germania, Italia e Paesi Bassi.

Durante l'operazione, le autorità hanno sequestrato ingenti beni, tra cui immobili, veicoli e azioni di società per un valore di diversi milioni di euro. L'indagine ha inoltre portato alla luce una serie di prove fisiche e digitali, inclusi i dati della piattaforma di comunicazione criptata Sky ECC, che è stata disattivata nel 2021 ma ha comunque prodotto risultati operativi.

Il capo della rete era coinvolto nell'organizzazione di spedizioni e nell'investimento in grandi quantità di cocaina, ed era ricercato per una condanna a 21 anni di carcere emessa da un tribunale italiano per omicidio e altri reati. L'operazione ha segnato un successo basato sui dati: gli investigatori hanno ricostruito consegne di tonnellate di cocaina verso i porti dell'UE e sequestrato milioni di euro di beni.

#SKYECC #criminalitàalbanese

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10.000 firme per la petizione di Possibile contro Italia-Israele. Stop the game!
possibile.com/10000-firme-noit…
l genocidio va fermato, i governi devono interrompere i rapporti con Israele e soprattutto smettere di vendere armi a uno stato che sta compiendo un genocidio sotto gli occhi del mondo. Finché Israele non affronterà nessuna conseguenza, nemmeno sui campi di gioco internazionali, tanti,

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A DHS sizzle reel that used "Public Service Announcement" got hit with a copyright takedown request and has been deleted off of X.#Immigration #ICE


ICE Propaganda Video That Used Jay-Z Song Hit With Copyright Takedown


A Department of Homeland Security (DHS) propaganda video that featured Jay-Z’s music was hit with a copyright takedown request on X, and appears to have been hit with copyright violations on both Instagram and Facebook as well.

The video features footage of Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents training and doing immigration raids set to Jay-Z’s 2003 song “Public Service Announcement,” which has recently been used in at least two DHS videos. DHS tweeted the video alongside the caption “Hunt Cartels. Save America. JOIN.ICE.GOV.” The original tweet, from August 10, has 2.9 million views on X; the video has been replaced with the message “This media has been disabled in response to a report by the copyright owner.”

DHS also posted the video on Instagram and Facebook. On both platforms, the video has stayed up but Jay-Z’s music has been removed, suggesting that it got hit with a copyright notice on those platforms too. On Instagram, where it has nearly a million views, a message that says “This audio is no longer available” plays if you try to unmute the video. The sound on the video has been removed on Facebook as well, but a quirk of the platform allowed me to check what the removed audio was by clicking the name of the “sound” in the bottom left corner of the Reel, which showed it was indeed Jay-Z’s “Public Service Announcement. A Facebook user ripped and reposted the video, which still has the sound, and can be found here at the time of publication.

Neither Meta nor X responded to a request for comment. The Recording Industry Association of America, which files a huge number of copyright takedown requests across the internet for major artists, declined to comment to 404 Media. DHS also did not respond to a request for comment. Jay-Z’s Roc Nation also did not respond to a request for comment.

In recent weeks, DHS officials and agents have heavily ratcheted up the number of videos they post to social media. Many of the videos are heavily edited sizzle reels from immigration raids set to rap music or songs like the “Bad Boys” theme and Johnny Cash’s “God’s Gonna Cut You Down.”

The footage is being used to recruit new ICE agents and to promote the cruelty of Trump’s immigration raids; a video posted by chief border patrol agent Gregory Bovino features Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass warning about the overreach of the federal government in LA and includes a remixed version of “Public Service Announcement” over first-person footage of Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agents doing an immigration raid Thursday at a Home Depot in Los Angeles. That particular raid may have violated a court injunction, experts have argued.

“The Call of Duty aesthetic is sickening,” Chris Gilliard, co-director of The Critical Internet Studies Institute and author of the forthcoming book Luxury Surveillance, told 404 Media.

404 Media reported last week that CBP agents have been wearing Meta’s AI camera glasses to at least two recent immigration raids in Los Angeles (it is unclear what cameras were used to film the footage used in either of the videos featuring Jay-Z music).

“CBP utilize Go Pros mounted to helmets or body armor at times, as well as traditional DSLR handheld cameras,” a CBP spokesperson told 404 Media when we asked about its agents wearing Meta AI glasses. The spokesperson added “CBP does not have an arrangement with Meta. The use of personal recording devices is not authorized. However, Border Patrol agents may wear personally purchased sunglasses.”

DHS has also allowed Fox News reporters to embed with and film agents on raids, and footage from these raids shows DHS agents with DSLR cameras running alongside each other to capture footage. It is clearly important to this administration to capture and widely publicize this footage, which often emphasizes agents grabbing people who are running away from them.

The copyright takedown is notable because it shows DHS is not getting permission from artists to use their music in these propaganda videos, which are being used to recruit ICE agents in the immediate aftermath of a huge funding increase. As we reported earlier this month, ICE is trying to do a social media advertising blitz with part of this new funding, and is looking to plaster ads on social media, TV, and streaming sites. Despite this cash injection, early reports suggest that ICE is having trouble finding people to work for it.




10.000 firme per la petizione di Possibile contro Italia-Israele. Stop the game!


10.000 firme per la petizione di Possibile contro Italia-Israele
Druetti e Di Lenardo: come può lo sport ignorare il genocidio?

“Già diecimila persone hanno firmato su www.possibile.com/unafirmaper la petizione per dire no a Italia-Israele, la partita di qualificazione ai mondiali che è in programma il 14 ottobre a Udine.” Lo dichiarano Francesca Druetti, Segretaria Nazionale di Possibile, e Andrea di Lenardo, Capogruppo di Alleanza Verdi Sinistra Possibile al Consiglio Comunale di Udine.

“Sono più di 60mila le vittime solo negli ultimi due anni — ricordano Druetti e Di Lenardo — un’intera popolazione affamata, Gaza rasa al suolo dai bombardamenti. Nel frattempo, Israele, la sua nazionale, i suoi atleti, dovrebbero continuare a competere come se niente fosse. Oltre 600 vittime erano atleti, calciatori anche. Giocare questa partita è un affronto alla memoria di chi è stato ucciso, e di chiunque abbia a cuore i diritti umani, la giustizia, e lo sport.

“Da quando abbiamo lanciato la petizione — concludono Druetti e di Lenardo — Israele ha ucciso altre centinaia di persone, compresi sei giornalisti in un attacco mirato. Il genocidio va fermato, i governi devono interrompere i rapporti con Israele e soprattutto smettere di vendere armi a uno stato che sta compiendo un genocidio sotto gli occhi del mondo. Finché Israele non affronterà nessuna conseguenza, nemmeno sui campi di gioco internazionali, tanti, troppi continueranno a sentirsi giustificati nel voltarsi dall’altra parte. Ecco perché vi chiediamo di continuare a firmare e condividere la petizione, per far sentire la nostra voce e il nostro dissenso. Stop the game.”

L'articolo 10.000 firme per la petizione di Possibile contro Italia-Israele. Stop the game! proviene da Possibile.

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F-35 italiani intercettano due caccia russi nello spazio aereo Nato. I dettagli

@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo

Per la prima volta, due caccia F-35 Lightning II dell’Aeronautica militare italiana hanno intercettato due velivoli russi operanti vicino allo spazio aereo dell’Alleanza. I due aerei intercettati sono decollati dalla base di Ämari, in Estonia, come confermato



By omitting the "one-third" provision that most other states with age verification laws have adopted, Wyoming and South Dakota are placing the burden of verifying users' ages on all sorts of websites, far beyond porn.

By omitting the "one-third" provision that most other states with age verification laws have adopted, Wyoming and South Dakota are placing the burden of verifying usersx27; ages on all sorts of websites, far beyond porn.#ageverification


Wyoming and South Dakota Age Verification Laws Could Include Huge Parts of the Internet


Last month, age verification laws went into effect in Wyoming and South Dakota, requiring sites hosting “material that is harmful to minors” to verify visitors are over 18 years old. These would normally just be two more states joining the nearly 30 that have so far ceded ground to a years-long campaign for enforcing invasive, ineffective methods of keeping kids away from porn online.

But these two states’ laws leave out an important condition: Unlike the laws passed in other states, they don’t state that this applies only to sites with “33.3 percent” or one-third “harmful” material. That could mean Wyoming and South Dakota would require a huge number of sites to use age verification because they host any material they deem harmful to minors, not just porn sites.

Louisiana became the first state to pass an age verification law in the US in January 2023, and since then, most states have either copied or modeled their laws on Louisiana’s—including in Arizona, Missouri, and Ohio, where these laws will be enacted within the coming weeks. And most have included the “one-third” clause, which would theoretically limit the age verification burden to adult sites. But dropping that provision, as Wyoming and South Dakota have done, opens a huge swath of sites to the burden of verifying the ages of visitors in those states.

Louisiana’s law states:

“Any commercial entity that knowingly and intentionally publishes or distributes material harmful to minors on the internet from a website that contains a substantial portion of such material shall be held liable if the entity fails to perform reasonable age verification methods to verify the age of individuals attempting to access the material.”

A “substantial portion” is 33.3 percent or more material on a site that’s “harmful to minors,” the law says.

The same organizations that have lobbied for age verification laws that apply to porn sites have also spent years targeting social media platforms like Reddit and X, as well as streaming services like Netflix, for hosting adult content they deem “sexploitation.” While these sites and platforms do host adult content, age-gating the entire internet only pushes adult consumers and children alike into less-regulated, more exploitative spaces and situations, while everyone just uses VPNs to get around gates.

Florida Sues Huge Porn Sites Including XVideos and Bang Bros Over Age Verification Law
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404 MediaSamantha Cole


Adult industry advocacy group the Free Speech Coalition issued an alert about Wyoming and South Dakota’s dropping of the one-third or “substantial” requirement on Tuesday, writing that this could “create civil and criminal liability for social media platforms such as X, Reddit and Discord, retailers such as Amazon and Barnes & Noble, streaming platforms such as Netflix and Rumble,” and any other platform that simply allowed material these states consider “harmful to minors” but doesn’t age-verify. “Under these new laws, a platform with any amount of material ‘harmful to minors,’ is required to verify the age of all visitors using the site. Operators of platforms that fail to do so may be subject to civil suits or even arrest,” they wrote.

I asked Wyoming Representative Martha Lawley, the lead sponsor of the state's bill, if the omission was on purpose and why. "I did not include the '33% or 1/3 rule' in my Age Verification Bill because it creates an almost impossible burden on a victim pursuing a lawsuit for violations of the law. It is more difficult than many might understand to prove percentage of an internet site that qualifies as “pornographic or material harmful to minor'" Lawley wrote in an email. "This was a provision that the porn industry lobbied heavily to be included. In Wyoming, we resisted those efforts. The second issue I had with these types of provisions is that they created some potential U.S. Constitutional concerns. These Constitutional concerns were actually brought up by several U.S. Supreme Court justices during the oral argument in the Texas Age Verification case. So, in short the 1/3 limitation places an undue burden on victims and creates potential U.S. Constitutional concerns."

I asked South Dakota Representative and sponsor of that state's bill Bethany Soye the same question. "We intentionally used the standard of 'regular course of trade or business' instead of 1/3. The 1/3 standard leaves many questions open. How is the amount measured? Is it number of images, minutes of video, number of separate webpages, pixels, etc. During oral argument, a Justice (Alito if I remember correctly) asked the attorney what percentage of porn was on his client’s websites. The attorney couldn’t give him an answer, instead he mentioned the other things on the websites like articles on sexual health and how to be an activist against these laws," Soye told me in an email. "The 1/3 standard also calls into question the government’s compelling interest in protecting kids from porn. Are we saying that 33% is harmful to minors but a website with 30% is not? We chose regular course of business because it is focused on the purpose of the business/website, not an arbitrary number. If you look into the history of the bill, 33% was a totally random number put in the first bill passed in Louisiana. Other states have just been copying it since then. We hope that our standard becomes the norm for state laws moving forward."

Kansas Is About to Pass the Most Extreme Age Verification Law Yet
The bill would make sites with more than 25 percent adult content liable to fines, and lumps homosexuality into “sexual conduct.”
404 MediaSamantha Cole


A version of what could be the future of the internet in the US is already playing out in the UK. Last month, the UK enacted the Online Safety Act, which forces platforms to verify the ages of everyone who tries to access certain kinds of content deemed harmful to children. So far, this has included (but isn’t limited to) Discord, popular communities on Reddit, social media sites like Bluesky, and certain content on Spotify.
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On Monday, a judge dismissed a case brought by the Wikimedia Foundation that argued the over-broadness of the new UK rules would “undermine the privacy and safety of Wikipedia’s volunteer contributors, expose the encyclopedia to manipulation and vandalism, and divert essential resources from protecting people and improving Wikipedia, one of the world’s most trusted and widely used digital public goods,” Wikimedia Foundation wrote. “For example, the Foundation would be required to verify the identity of many Wikipedia contributors, undermining the privacy that is central to keeping Wikipedia volunteers safe.”

"As we're seeing in the UK with the Online Safety Act, laws designed to protect the children from ‘harmful material’ online quickly metastasize and begin capturing nearly all users and all sites in surveillance and censorship schemes,” Mike Stabile, director of public policy at the Free Speech Coalition, told me in an email following the alert. “These laws give the government legal power to threaten platform owners into censoring or removing fairly innocuous content — healthcare information, mainstream films, memes, political speech — while decimating privacy protections for adults. Porn was only ever a Trojan horse for advancing these laws. Now, unfortunately, we're starting to see what we warned was inside all along."

Updated 8/13 2:35 p.m. EST with comment from Rep. Lawley.

Updated 8/13 3:35 p.m. EST with comment from Rep. Soye.