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.
2025 One Hertz Challenge: A Game Of Life
The 2025 One Hertz Challenge asks you to build a project that does something once every second. While that has inspired a lot of clock and timekeeping builds, we’re also seeing some that do entirely different things on a 1 Hz period. [junkdust] has entered the contest with a project that does something rather mathematical once every second.
[junkdust] wanted to get better acquainted with the venerable ATtiny85, so decided to implement Conway’s Game of Life on it. The microcontroller is hooked up to a 0.91″ OLED display with a resolution of 128 x 32 pixels, however, [junkdust] only elected to implement a 32 x 32 grid for the game itself, using the rest of the display area to report the vital statistics of the game. On power up, the grid is populated with a random population, and the game proceeds, updating once every second.
It’s a neat little desk toy, but more importantly than that, it served as a nicely complicated test project for [junkdust] to get familiar working inside the limitations of the ATtiny85. It may be a humble part, but it can do great things, as we’ve seen many times before!
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
FLOSS Weekly Episode 842: Will the Real JQ Please Stand Up
We’re back! This week Jonathan chats with Mattias Wadman and Michael Farber about JQ! It’s more than just a JSON parser, JQ is a whole scripting language! Tune in to find out more about it.
- jqlang.github.io/jq/manual/
- play.jqlang.org/
- github.com/wader/jqjq
- github.com/wader/fq
- github.com/01mf02/jaq
- github.com/01mf02/jq-lang-spec…
youtube.com/embed/2NyQuMhzl2I?…
Did you know you can watch the live recording of the show right on our YouTube Channel? Have someone you’d like us to interview? Let us know, or contact the guest and have them contact us! Take a look at the schedule here.
play.libsyn.com/embed/episode/…
Direct Download in DRM-free MP3.
If you’d rather read along, here’s the transcript for this week’s episode.
Places to follow the FLOSS Weekly Podcast:
Theme music: “Newer Wave” Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License
hackaday.com/2025/08/13/floss-…
Elon Musk denuncia Apple per manipolazione dell’App Store
Elon Musk ha annunciato che la sua azienda xAI si sta preparando a fare causa ad Apple. Il motivo è la manipolazione delle classifiche dell’App Store, che, a suo dire, metterebbe ChatGPT di OpenAI in una posizione più vantaggiosa rispetto ai suoi concorrenti. Secondo Musk, si tratta di una violazione diretta delle leggi antitrust .
“Il comportamento di Apple, tale per cui nessuna azienda di intelligenza artificiale, a parte OpenAI, è riuscita a raggiungere il primo posto nell’App Store, costituisce una chiara violazione delle norme antitrust. Noi di xAI avvieremo immediatamente un’azione legale.”
Il miliardario non ha fornito alcuna prova a sostegno delle accuse. Anche i rappresentanti di Apple, OpenAI e xAI si sono astenuti dal rilasciare dichiarazioni.
ChatGPT è attualmente in testa alla sezione delle app gratuite dell’App Store statunitense per iPhone, conGrok di xAI al quinto posto e Gemini di Google solo al 57°. La stessa situazione si riscontra su Google Play: su Android, ChatGPT detiene anche il primo posto, secondo Sensor Tower.
Detto questo, Apple e OpenAI hanno una partnership: ChatGPT è già integrato in iOS, iPadOS e macOS.
Questo gli conferisce un notevole vantaggio, soprattutto considerando la competizione per le prime posizioni nell’app store, dove Grok semplicemente non può competere ad armi pari.
L'articolo Elon Musk denuncia Apple per manipolazione dell’App Store proviene da il blog della sicurezza informatica.
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
The World’s First Podcaster?
When do you think the first podcast occurred? Did you guess in the 1890s? That’s not a typo. Telefonhírmondó was possibly the world’s first true “telephone newspaper.” People in Budapest could dial a phone number and listen to what we would think of now as radio content. Surprisingly, the service lasted until 1944, although after 1925, it was rebroadcasting a radio station’s programming.Tivadar Puskás, the founder of Budapest’s “Telephone Newspaper” (public domain)
The whole thing was the brainchild of Tivadar Puskás, an engineer who had worked with Thomas Edison. At first, the service had about 60 subscribers, but Puskás envisioned the service one day spanning the globe. Of course, he wasn’t wrong. There was a market for worldwide audio programs, but they were not going to travel over phone lines to the customer.
The Hungarian government kept tight control over newspapers in those days. However, as we see in modern times, new media often slips through the cracks. After two weeks of proving the concept out, Puskás asked for formal approval and for a 50-year exclusive franchise for the city of Budapest. They would eventually approve the former, but not the latter.
Unfortunately, a month into the new venture, Puskás died. His brother Albert took over and continued talks with the government. The phone company wanted a piece of the action, as did the government. Before anything was settled, Albert sold the company to István Popper. He finalized the deal, which included rules requiring signed copies of the news reports to be sent to the police three times a day. The affair must have been lucrative. The company would eventually construct its own telephone network independent of the normal phone system. By 1907, they boasted 15,000 subscribers, including notable politicians and businesses, including hotels.
Invention
This was all possible because of Puskás’ 1892 invention of a telephone switchboard with a mechanism that could send a signal to multiple lines at once. The Canadian patent was titled “Telephonic News Dispenser.”
There had been demonstrations of similar technology going back to 1881 when Clément Ader piped stereo music (then called the slightly less catchy binauriclar audition) from the Paris Grand Opéra to the city’s Electrical Exhibition. Fictionally, the 1888 novel Looking Backward: 2000-1887also predicted such a service:
All our bedchambers have a telephone attachment at the head of the bed by which any person who may be sleepless can command music at pleasure, of the sort suited to the mood.”
No Bluetooth for her. (Public Domain)
The 1881 demonstration turned into a similar service in Paris, although it was mostly used for entertainment programming with occasional new summaries. It didn’t really qualify as a newspaper. It also wasn’t nearly as successful, having 1,300 subscribers in 1893. London was late to the game in 1895, but, again, the focus was on live performances and church services. Both services collapsed in 1925 due to radio.
Several attempts to bring a similar service to the United States were made in several states during the early 1900s. None of them had much success and were gone and forgotten in a year or two.
In Budapest, they rapidly abandoned the public phone lines and created a network that would eventually span 1,100 miles (1,800 km), crisscrossing Budapest. Impressive considering that there were no active amplifiers yet. From reading the Canadian patent, it seems they use “induction coils.” We imagine the carbon microphones at the studio also had very high voltages compared to a regular phone, but it is hard to say for sure. As you might expect, you’d need a lot of input signal for this to work.
To that end, the company hired especially loud announcers who worked in ten-minute shifts as they were effectively screaming into the microphones. The signal would run to the central office, to one of 27 districts, and then out to people’s homes. We had hoped a 1907 article about the system in Scientific American might have more technical detail, but it didn’t. However, The Electrical World did have a bit more detail:
…the arrangement which he adopts is to have a separate primary and secondary coil for each subscriber, all the primaries being connected in series with the single transmitter…
Last Mile
In a subscriber’s home, there were two earpieces. You could put one on each ear, or share with a friend. There was a buzzer to let you know about special alerts. An American who returned from Budapest in 1901 said that the news was “highly satisfactory,” but wasn’t impressed with the quality of musical programs on the service (see page 640 of The World’s Work, Volume 1).Concert room at the studio (Public Domain).
The company issued daily schedules you could hang on the wall. Programs included news, news recaps, stories, poetry readings, musical performances, lectures, and language lessons. Typically, transmissions ran from 1030 in the morning to 2230 at night, although this was somewhat flexible.
You are probably wondering what this all cost? A year’s service — including a free receiver — was 18 krones. At the time, that was about US$7.56. That doesn’t sound like much, but in 1901 Budapest, you could buy about 44 pounds (20 kg) of coffee for that much money. The service also ran ads, costing 1 krone for a 12-second spot. They also had some coin-operated receivers to generate revenue.
Radio
It makes sense that in 1925, the service opened Budapest’s first radio station. The programming was shared, and by 1930, the service had over 91,000 subscribers. The private phone network, however, didn’t survive World War II, and that was the end of telephonic newspapers, at least in Budapest.
The technology was also put to use in Italy. A US businessman tried to make a go of it in New Jersey for about a year and then in Oregon for another year before throwing in the towel. Ironically, the tube technology that made phones more capable of covering distances with clear results also doomed phone broadcasting. Those same tubes would make radio practical.
Why Budapest?
You have to wonder why the only really successful operation was in Budapest. We don’t know if it was the politics that made an independent news source with a little less scrutiny attractive, or if it was just that Popper ran an excellent business. After all, Popper and the Puskás brothers anticipated the market for radio. And Popper, in fact, successfully embraced radio instead of letting it sink his business.
We talked about Hugo Gernsback’s predictions that doctors would operate by telephone. He also predicted telephone music in 1916. Of course, music by phone is still a thing. If you are on hold.
Featured image: “A TelefonHírmondó announcer reading the news in 1901 (Public Domain)”
Thumbnail image: “Telefon Hirmondo – Home subscriber” in the public domain.
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.
fabrizio reshared this.
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,
like this
reshared this
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
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.
reshared this
Zehn Jahre Landesverrat: Ein Angriff auf die Pressefreiheit, der vieles veränderte
PCB Business Card Plays Pong, Attracts Employer
Facing the horrifying realization that he’s going to graduate soon, EE student [Colin Jackson] AKA [Electronics Guy] needed a business card. Not just any business card: a PCB business card. Not just any PCB business card: a PCB business card that can play pong.
[Colin] was heavily inspired by the card [Ben Eater] was handing out at OpenSauce last year, and openly admits to copying the button holder from it. We can’t blame him: the routed-out fingers to hold a lithium button cell were a great idea. The original idea, a 3D persistence-of-vision display, was a little too ambitious to fit on a business card, so [Colin] repurposed the 64 LED matrix and STM32 processor to play Pong. Aside from the LEDs and the microprocessor, it looks like the board has a shift register to handle all those outputs and a pair of surface-mount buttons.
Of course you can’t get two players on a business card, so the microprocessor is serving as the opponent. With only 64 LEDs, there’s no room for score-keeping — but apparently even the first, nonworking prototype was good enough to get [Colin] a job, so not only can we not complain, we offer our congratulations.
The video is a bit short on detail, but [Colin] promises a PCB-business card tutorial at a later date. If you can’t wait for that, or just want to see other hackers take on the same idea, take a gander at some of the entries to last year’s Business Card Challenge.
youtube.com/embed/x8Cdz36BOXc?…
L’intelligenza artificiale spinge le aziende a tornare ai colloqui di persona
Il processo di ricerca di lavoro è stato profondamente alterato dall’intelligenza artificiale, spingendo numerose aziende a riesumare un approccio più tradizionale: i colloqui faccia a faccia, come sottolinea il WSJ.
I colloqui virtuali sono diventati la nuova norma negli ultimi anni, grazie all’aumento del lavoro da remoto e al desiderio dei datori di lavoro di assumere più rapidamente. Tuttavia, i reclutatori affermano che sempre più candidati utilizzano l’intelligenza artificiale per ingannare, ad esempio ricevendo indizi nascosti durante i colloqui tecnici.
Raramente, ma si verificano casi più pericolosi: gli strumenti di intelligenza artificiale consentono ai truffatori di impersonare chi cerca lavoro per rubare dati o denaro dopo aver ottenuto un impiego.
In risposta a ciò, le aziende stanno tornando agli incontri di persona. Cisco e McKinsey ora includono almeno un incontro di persona in diverse fasi del processo di assunzione, e quest’anno Google ha reintrodotto i colloqui di persona per alcune posizioni per testare competenze chiave come la programmazione.
“Vogliamo assicurarci di effettuare almeno un giro di colloqui di persona per accertarci che il candidato abbia le conoscenze fondamentali”, ha affermato il CEO di Google Sundar Pichai nel podcast di Lex Friedman.
Ciò è particolarmente vero per i lavori di sviluppo e ingegneria, dove le attività di codifica in tempo reale sono diventate troppo facili da eseguire con l’intelligenza artificiale. “Siamo tornati al punto di partenza“, afferma Mike Kyle di Coda Search/Staffing.
Secondo lui, la percentuale di datori di lavoro che richiedono riunioni di persona è aumentata dal 5% nel 2024 al 30% nel 2025.
Si tratta di una fase inaspettata nella corsa agli armamenti dell’intelligenza artificiale, in cui i datori di lavoro, sopraffatti dal flusso di candidature, si sono rivolti a software per esaminare i curriculum e filtrarli in massa. I candidati, a loro volta, hanno iniziato a utilizzare l’intelligenza artificiale per rispondere automaticamente a centinaia di annunci di lavoro e creare curriculum personalizzati.
Le nuove tecnologie deepfake consentono non solo di impersonare uno specialista più qualificato, ma anche di organizzare truffe su larga scala. L’FBI ha lanciato l’allarme su migliaia di nordcoreani che si spacciano per americani per lavorare da remoto negli Stati Uniti.
In un sondaggio di Gartner, il 6% dei candidati ha ammesso di aver partecipato a “truffe durante i colloqui” e, secondo le previsioni dell’azienda, entro il 2028 un quarto dei profili dei candidati in tutto il mondo sarà falso.
Un anno e mezzo fa, McKinsey ha introdotto un incontro personale obbligatorio prima di presentare un’offerta. Inizialmente, questo ha aiutato a valutare il modo in cui un candidato stabilisce un contatto, una competenza importante per lavorare con i clienti.
Ora l’azienda ammette che l’aumento delle frodi basate sull’intelligenza artificiale non ha fatto altro che rafforzare questa pratica.
L'articolo L’intelligenza artificiale spinge le aziende a tornare ai colloqui di persona proviene da il blog della sicurezza informatica.
Battaglia per il Cervello! OpenAI e Sam Altman lanciano Merge Labs, rivale di Neuralink
OpenAI e il suo co-fondatore Sam Altman si preparano a sostenere un’azienda che rivaleggerà con Neuralink di Elon Musk sviluppando una tecnologia per collegare il cervello umano a un computer. La nuova impresa, chiamata Merge Labs, sta cercando finanziamenti per 250 milioni di dollari, con una valutazione di 850 milioni di dollari, con una parte significativa del denaro potenzialmente proveniente dalla divisione venture capital di OpenAI.
Altman è un convinto sostenitore del lancio, secondo alcune fonti, e co-fonda Merge Labs con Alex Blania, responsabile del progetto di identità digitale tramite scansione oculare World, anch’esso finanziato da Altman. Tuttavia, non sarà coinvolto nella gestione quotidiana.
Merge Labs è tra le startup in crescita che sfruttano i più recenti progressi dell’intelligenza artificiale per creare interfacce cervello-computer più efficaci. Il nome dell’azienda si riferisce al concetto di “fusione“, il momento in cui esseri umani e macchine si fondono. Altman ha scritto in un post sul blog nel 2017 che questo potrebbe accadere già nel 2025, e quest’anno ha affermato che “interfacce ad alta velocità” saranno presto disponibili grazie alle innovazioni tecnologiche.
Il prossimo progetto sarà un concorrente diretto di Neuralink, fondata da Musk nel 2016. Neuralink sviluppa sistemi per collegare direttamente il cervello a un computer e quest’anno ha raccolto 650 milioni di dollari, per una valutazione di 9 miliardi di dollari. Tra i suoi investitori figurano Sequoia Capital, Thrive Capital e Vy Capital. Lo stesso Altman aveva già investito in Neuralink.
Altman e Musk hanno co-fondato OpenAI, ma Musk ha lasciato il consiglio di amministrazione nel 2018 dopo una divergenza di opinioni. Da allora, i due imprenditori sono diventati acerrimi rivali, con Musk che ha lanciato la sua startup di intelligenza artificiale, xAI, e ha intentato causa per impedire a OpenAI di diventare un’organizzazione a scopo di lucro.
Il mercato delle interfacce cervello-computer è in piena espansione. Oltre a Neuralink, anche le startup Precision Neuroscience e Synchron sono attive nel settore. La tecnologia degli impianti è in circolazione da decenni, ma i progressi nell’elettronica e negli algoritmi di elaborazione dei segnali cerebrali l’hanno avvicinata molto di più all’uso pratico.
Altman ha anche investito in altre iniziative tecnologiche legate a OpenAI, la cui valutazione è di 300 miliardi di dollari. Tra i suoi progetti figurano l’azienda di fissione nucleare Oklo e il progetto di fusione nucleare Helion. OpenAI ha rifiutato di commentare.
L'articolo Battaglia per il Cervello! OpenAI e Sam Altman lanciano Merge Labs, rivale di Neuralink proviene da il blog della sicurezza informatica.
Media Freedom Act: Stampa Romana sostiene esposto alla Commissione europea per riforma Rai
Entra in vigore oggi l’European Media Freedom Act (EMFA), regolamento dell’Ue che impone agli stati membri norme per garantire l’ indipendenza e l’autonomia dei mezzi di informazione e la libertà dei giornalisti intervenendo, tra l’altro, sulle concentrazioni editoriali, il mercato pubblicitario, la trasparenza dei finanziamenti le autorità di controllo, la tutela delle fonti, la nomina dei vertici del Servizio Pubblico. Questioni su cui l’Italia è in evidente ritardo. Nonostante un dibattito pubblico che si trascina da mesi e lo stallo nell’elezione del presidente della Rai, il Parlamento non è riuscito a varare una legge perchè viale Mazzini possa avere risorse certe, una prospettiva industriale svincolata dalla durata dei governi, vertici nominati in base alle competenze. Articolo Quinto, l’associazione (cui Stampa Romana ha aderito) nata per sollecitare l’adeguamento delle norme ai canoni stabiliti dall’EMFA ha presentato tramite il suo presidente Stefano Balassone un esposto alla Commissione europea per queste inadempienze, un’iniziativa che ha il pieno e convinto sostegno di Stampa Romana.
La Segreteria dell’ASR
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
Angelucci chiede risarcimento a Di Benedetto e Mantovani (Fatto Quotidiano): la solidarietà di Stampa Romana
Un’azione civile con la richiesta di risarcimento contro i giornalisti che scrivono articoli poco graditi, un classico del repertorio di chi vuole scoraggiare le inchieste. Questa volta Antonio Angelucci, parlamentare della Lega, imprenditore con attività che spaziano dalla sanità all’editoria, per le quali usufruisce di cospicue risorse pubbliche, se la prende con i giornalisti del Fatto Quotidiano Linda Di Benedetto e Alessandro Mantovani, che hanno fatto il loro lavoro di cronisti raccontando la cessione del Tempo al gruppo Toto. Una vicenda che ricorda ancora una volta quanto sia urgente un intervento legislativo per rispondere alla pratica delle richieste di risarcimento e delle querele temerarie. Ai colleghi del Fatto Quotidiano va la piena solidarietà dell’Associazione Stampa Romana.
La Segreteria dell’ASR
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
Un reattore nucleare sulla Luna entro il 2030. La sfida Usa a Russia e Cina
@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo
Nei primi di agosto, l’amministratore pro tempore della Nasa, nonché segretario ai Trasporti degli Stati Uniti, Sean Duffy, ha annunciato che gli Usa intendono accelerare i loro sforzi per installare un reattore a fissione nucleare sul suolo lunare entro il 2030. Secondo Duffy, a sua
CBP's use of Meta Ray-Bans; the bargain that voice actors are having to make with AI; and how Flock tech is being essentially hacked into by the DEA.
CBPx27;s use of Meta Ray-Bans; the bargain that voice actors are having to make with AI; and how Flock tech is being essentially hacked into by the DEA.#Podcast
Emails obtained by 404 Media show the LAPD was interested in GeoSpy, an AI tool that can quickly figure out where a photo was taken.#FOIA
Ore Formation: Introduction and Magmatic Processes
Hackaday has a long-running series on Mining and Refining, that tracks elements of interest on the human-made road from rocks to riches. What author Dan Maloney doesn’t address in that series is the natural history that comes before the mine. You can’t just plunk down a copper mine or start squeezing oil from any old stone, after all: first, you need ore. Ore has to come from somewhere. In this series, we’re going to get down and dirty into the geology of ore-forming processes to find out from wither come the rocks that hold our elements of interest.
What’s In an Ore?
Though we’re going to be talking about Planetary Science in this series, we should recognize the irony that “ore” is a word without any real scientific meaning. What distinguishes ore from other rock is its utility to human industry: it has elements or compounds, like gems, that we want, and that we think we can get out economically. That changes over time, and one generation’s “rock” can be another generation’s “ore deposits”. For example, these days prospectors are chasing copper in porphyry deposits at concentrations as low as 1000 ppm (0.1%) that simply were not economic in previous decades. The difference? Improvements in mining and refining, as well as a rise in the price of copper.This may or may not be the fabled “mile of gold”. Image: “Main Street Kirkland Lake” by P199.
There’s a story everyone tells in my region, about a street in Kirkland Lake, Ontario that had been paved using waste rock from one of the local gold mines and then torn up when the price of gold rose enough to reprocess the pavement a part-per-million of microscopic flakes of yellow metal. That story is apocryphal: history records that there was mine product accidentally used in road works, but it does not seem it has ever been deemed economic to dig it back up. (Or if it was, there’s no written record of it I could find.)
It is established fact that they did drain and reprocess 20th century tailings ponds from Kirkland Lake’s gold mines, however. Tailings are, by definition, what you leave behind when concentrating the ore. How did the tailings become ore? When somebody wanted to process them, because it had become economic to do so.
It’s similar across the board. “Aluminum ore” was a meaningless phrase until the 1860s; before that, Aluminum was a curiosity of a metal extracted in laboratories. Even now, the concentration of aluminum in its main ore, Bauxite, is lower than some aluminum silicate rocks– but we can’t get aluminum out of silicate rock economically. Bauxite, we can. Bauxite, thus, is the ore, and concentration be damned.
So, there are two things needed for a rock to be an ore: an element must be concentrated to a high enough level, and it be in a form that we can extract it economically. No wonder, then, that almost all of the planet’s crust doesn’t meet the criteria– and that that will hold on every rocky body in the solar system.
Blame Archimedes
It’s not the planetary crusts’ fault; blame instead Archimedes and Sir Issac Newton. Rocky crusts, you see, are much depleted in metals because of those two– or, rather, the physical laws they are associated with. To understand, we have to go back, way back, to the formation of the solar system.It might be metal, but there’s no ore in the core. Image: nau.edu, CC3.0
There’s a primitive elemental abundance in the solid bodies that first coalesced out of the protoplanetary disk around a young Sol and our crust is depleted in metals compared to it. The reason is simple: as unaltered bodies accreted to form larger objects, the collisions released a great deal of energy, causing the future planetoid to melt, and stay molten. Heat rejection isn’t easy in the thermos vacuum of space, after all. Something planetoid sized could stay molten long enough for gravity to start acting on its constituent elements.
Like a very slow centrifuge, the heavier elements sunk and the lighter ones rose by Archimedes principle. That’s where almost all of Earth’s metals are to this day: in the core. Even the Moon has an iron core thanks to this process of differentiation.
In some ways, you can consider this the first ore-forming process, though geologists don’t yet count planetary differentiation on their lists of such. If we ever start to mine the nickel-iron asteroids, they’ll have to change their tune, though: those metallic space-rocks are fragments of the core of destroyed planetoids, concentrated chunks of metal created by differentiation. That’s also where most of the metal in the Earth’s crust and upper mantle is supposed to have come from, during the Late Heavy Bombardment.
Thank the LHB
Image: “Comet Crash” by Ben Crowder. Repeat 10000x.
The Late Heavy Bombardment is exactly what it sounds like: a period in the history of this solar system 3.8 to 4.1 billion years ago that saw an uncommonly elevated number of impacts on inner solar system objects like the Earth, Moon, and Mars. Most of our evidence for this event comes from the Moon, in the form of isotopic dating of lunar rocks brought back by the Apollo missions, but the topography of Mars and what little geologic record we have on Earth are consistent with the theory. Not all of these impactors were differentiated: many are likely to have been comets, but those still had the primordial abundance of metals. Even cometary impacts, then, would have served to enrich the planet’s crust and upper mantle in metals.
Is that the story, then? Metal ores on Earth are the remnants of the Late Heavy Bombardment? In a word: No. Yes, those impacts probably brought metals back to the lithosphere of this planet, but there are very few rocks of that age left on the surface of this planet, and none of them are ore-bearing. There has been a lot of geology since the LHB– not just on Earth, but on other worlds like the Moon and Mars, too. Just like the ore bodies here on Earth, any ore we find elsewhere is likely to be from other processes.It looks impressive, but don’t start digging just yet. (Image: Stromboli Eruption by Petr Novak)
One thing that seems nearly universal on rocky bodies is volcanism, and the so-called magmatic ore-forming processes are among the easiest to understand, so we’ll start there.
Igneous rocks are rocks formed of magma — or lava, if it cools on surface. Since all the good stuff is down below, and there are slow convection currents in the Earth’s mantle, it stands to reason some material might make its way up. Yet no one is mining the lava fields of Hawaii or Iceland– it’s not just a matter of magma = metals. Usually some geochemical processes has to happen to that magma in order to enrich it, and those are the magmatic ore forming processes, with one exception.
Magmatic Ore Formation: Kimberlite Pipes
Cross-sectional diagram of a kimberlite deposit. You can see why it’s called a pipe. The eruption would be quite explosive. (Image: Kansas Geological Survey)
Kimberlite pipes are formations of ultramaphic (very high in Magnesium) rock that explode upwards from the mantle, creating vertical, carrot-shaped pipes. The olivine that is the main rock type in these pipes isn’t a desirable magnesium ore because it’s too hard to refine.
What’s interesting economically is what is often brought to surface in these pipes: diamonds, and occasionally gold. Diamonds can only form under the intense pressures beneath the Earth’s crust, so the volcanic process that created kimberlite pipes are our main source of them. (Though not all pipes contain diamonds, as many a prospector has discovered to their disappointment.)
The kimberlite pipes seem to differ from ordinary vulcanism both due to the composition of the rock — ultramaphic rocks from relatively deep in the mantle — and the speed of that rock’s ascent at up to 400 m/s. Diamonds aren’t stable in magma at low pressures, so the magma that makes up a kimberlite pipe must erupt very quickly (in geologic terms) from the depths. The hypothesis is that these are a form of mantle plume.
A different mantle plume is believed to drive volcanism in Hawaii, but that plume expresses itself as steady stream and contains no diamonds. Hawaii’s lava creates basalt, less magnesium-rich rocks than olivine, and come from a shallower strata of the Earth’s mantle. Geochemically, the rocks in Hawaii are very similar to the oceanic crust that the mantle plume is pushing through. Kimberlite pipes, on the other hand, have only been found in ancient continental crusts, though no one seems entirely sure why.You bet your Tanpi that Mars has had mantle plumes! (Image: NASA)
The great shield volcanoes on Mars show that mantle plumes have occurred on that planet, and there’s no reason to suppose kimberlite-type eruptions could not have occurred there as well. While some of the diamond-creating carbon in the Earth’s mantle comes from subducted carbonate rocks, some of it seems to be primordial to the mantle.
It is thus not unreasonable to suppose that there may be some small diamond deposits on Mars, if anyone ever goes to look. Venus, too, though it’s doubtful anyone will ever go digging to check. The moon, on the other hand, lacks the pressure gradients required for diamond formation even if it does have vulcanism. What the moon likely does posses (along with the three terrestrial planets) is another type of ore body: layered igneous intrusions.
A Delicious Cake of Rock
Chromite layers in the Bushveld Igneous Complex. Image: Kevin Walsh.
Layered igneous intrusions are, as the name suggests, layered. They aren’t always associated with ore bodies, but when they are, they’re big names like Stillwater (USA) and Bushveld (South Africa). The principle of ore formation is pretty simple: magma in underground chambers undergoes a slow cooling that causes it to fractionate into layers of similar minerals.
Fractional crystallization also has its role to play in concentrating minerals: as the melt cools, it’s natural that some compounds will have higher melting points and freeze out first. These crystals may sink to the bottom of the melt chamber or float to the top, depending on their density relative to the surrounding lava. Like the process of differentiation writ in miniature, heavy minerals sink to the bottom and light ones float to the top, concentrating minerals by density and creating the eponymous layers. Multiple flows of lava can create layers upon layers upon layers of the same, or similar, stacks of minerals.
There’s really no reason to suspect that this ore formation process should not be possible on any terrestrial planet: all one needs is a rich magma and slow cooling. Layered igneous intrusions are a major source of chromium, mainly in the form of Chromatite, an iron-chromium-oxide, but also economically important sources of iron, nickel, copper and platinum group elements (PGEs) amongst other metals. If nickel, copper, or PGEs are present in this kind of deposit, if they’re going to be economically extractable, it will be in the form of a sulfide. So-called sulfide melt deposits can coexist within layered igneous intrusions (as at Bushveld, where they produce a notable fraction of the world’s nickel) or as stand-alone deposits.
When Magma Met Sulfur
One of the problems with igneous rocks from a miner’s perspective is that they’re too chemically stable. Take olivine: it’s chock full of magnesium you cannot extract. If you want an an easily-refined ore, rarely do you look at silicate rock first. Igneous rocks, though, even when ultramafic like in Kimberlite pipes or layered melt deposits, are still silicates.
There’s an easy way to get ore from a magma: just add sulfur. Sulfur pulls metals out of the melt to create sulfide minerals, which are both very concentrated sources of metals and, equally importantly, very easy to refine. Sulfide melt deposits are some of the most economically important ones on this planet, and there’s no reason to think we couldn’t find them elsewhere. (The moon isn’t terribly depleted in sulfur.)The Bear Stream Quarry is one of many Ni/Cu mines created by the Siberian Traps. (Image: Nikolay Zhukov, CC3.0)
Have you heard of the Siberian Traps? That was a series of volcanoes that produced a flood basalt, like the lunar mare. The volcanoes of the Siberian Traps were a primary cause of the End-Perimian mass extinction, and they put out somewhere between two and four million cubic kilometers of rock. Most of that rock is worthless basalt Most, except in Norilsk.
The difference? In Norilsk, there was enough sulfur in the melt, thanks to existing sedimentary rocks, to pull metals out of the melt. 250 million years after it cooled, this became Eurasia’s greatest source of Nickel and Platinum Group Elements, with tonnes and tonnes of copper brought to surface as a bonus.
Norilk’s great rival in the Cold War was Sudbury, Canada– another sulfide melt deposit, this one believed to be associated with the meteorite impact that created the Sudbury Basin. The titanic impact that created the basin also melted a great deal of rock, and as it cooled, terrestrial sulfur combined with metals that had existed in the base rock, and any brought down in the impactor, to freeze out of the melt as sulfides.Most mining still ongoing in the Sudbury Basin is deep underground, like at Nickel Rim South Mine. (Image: P199.)
While some have called Sudbury “humanity’s first asteroid mine”, it’s a combination of sulfur and magma that created the ore body; there is little evidence to suggest the impactor was itself a nickel-iron asteroid. Once the source of the vast majority of the world’s nickel, peaking at over 80% before WWI, Sudbury remains the largest hard-rock mining centre in North America, and one of the largest in the world, on the weight of all that sulfide.
Since the Moon does not seem to be terribly depleted in sulfur, and has more flood basalt and impact craters than you can shake a stick at, it’s a fairly safe bet that if anyone ever tries to mine metals on Luna, they will be sulfide melt deposits. There’s no reason not to expect Mars to posses its fair share as well.
Arriva Charon Ransomware. Supera EDR, è Stealh e strizza l’occhio ai migliori APT
Trend Micro ha rilevato un attacco mirato ai settori governativo e aeronautico in Medio Oriente, utilizzando un nuovo ransomware chiamato Charon. Gli aggressori hanno utilizzato una complessa catena di infezione con funzionalità di sideload di DLL, iniezione di processi e bypass EDR, tipiche delle operazioni APT avanzate che dei normali ransomware.
Il vettore di attacco inizia con l’avvio di un file Edge.exe legittimo (in precedenza cookie_exporter.exe), che viene utilizzato per caricare una libreria msedge.dll dannosa, denominata SWORDLDR. Quest’ultima decifra lo shellcode crittografato dal file DumpStack.log e inietta il payload, ovvero Charon stesso, nel processo svchost.exe, mascherando l’attività come un servizio di sistema Windows.
Dopo aver decifrato tutti i livelli di mascheramento, gli esperti hanno confermato che l’eseguibile finale crittografa i dati e lascia un segno distintivo di infezione – “hCharon è entrato nel mondo reale!” – alla fine di ogni file crittografato. Tutti i file crittografati ricevono l’estensione .Charon e nelle directory compare una richiesta di riscatto – How To Restore Your Files.txt – che menziona una vittima specifica, confermando la natura mirata dell’attacco.
Charon supporta una varietà di opzioni da riga di comando, dalla specifica dei percorsi di crittografia alla definizione delle priorità delle risorse di rete. All’avvio, crea un mutex chiamato OopsCharonHere, termina i processi di protezione, disabilita i servizi di sicurezza, elimina le copie shadow e svuota il Cestino. Quindi procede alla crittografia in un thread multi-thread, evitando i file di sistema (.exe, .dll), così come i propri componenti e la richiesta di riscatto.
Per la crittografia viene utilizzato uno schema ibrido: Curve25519 per lo scambio di chiavi e ChaCha20 per la crittografia dei dati. Ogni file viene fornito con un footer di 72 byte contenente la chiave pubblica e i metadati della vittima, che consente la decrittografia dei dati se la chiave privata è disponibile.
Inoltre, Charon ha capacità di movimento laterale: esegue la scansione della rete utilizzando NetShareEnum e WNetEnumResource, crittografa le condivisioni accessibili e funziona anche con percorsi UNC, bypassando solo ADMIN$ per ridurre le possibilità di essere rilevato.
Il binario contiene anche, sebbene inattivo, un componente basato sul driver del progetto open source Dark-Kill, progettato per disabilitare le soluzioni EDR . Dovrebbe essere installato come servizio WWC, ma non è utilizzato nella versione attuale: probabilmente la funzione non è ancora abilitata ed è in fase di preparazione per future iterazioni.
Sebbene l’uso di strumenti simili a quelli del gruppo cinese Earth Baxia sia sospetto, non ci sono prove conclusive del loro coinvolgimento: forse stanno prendendo in prestito tattiche o sviluppando in modo indipendente gli stessi concetti.
L’emergere di Charon è un’ulteriore prova del fatto che il ransomware sta adottando attivamente sofisticati metodi APT. La combinazione di tecniche di evasione avanzate con danni aziendali diretti sotto forma di perdita di dati e tempi di inattività aumenta i rischi e richiede alle organizzazioni di rivedere la propria strategia di difesa.
L'articolo Arriva Charon Ransomware. Supera EDR, è Stealh e strizza l’occhio ai migliori APT proviene da il blog della sicurezza informatica.
Bilanz nach einem Jahr: Neue Aufsicht über digitale Dienste hat vier Verfahren eingeleitet
Individuo, società e svolte autoritarie.
Esistono condizioni psicologiche, familiari, sociali e tecnologiche favorevoli all’instaurarsi di una forma politica autoritaria e totalitaria? Esiste un potenziale fascista in ognuno di noi oppure il “fascismo potenziale” si dà solo in presenza di una determinata struttura di personalità, quella autoritaria studiata dalla scuola di Francoforte nella prima metà del secolo scorso? Un tipo di personalità, quest’ultima, caratterizzata da un insieme di atteggiamenti, credenze e comportamenti che riflettono una forte inclinazione verso l’autorità, la disciplina e il conformismo, insieme a una tendenza a disprezzare o discriminare chi viene percepito come diverso o inferiore. Continua a leggere→
Vulnerabilità critica in Fortinet: aggiornare subito FortiOS, FortiProxy e FortiPAM
Diversi prodotti di sicurezza Fortinet, tra cui FortiOS, FortiProxy e FortiPAM, sono interessati da una vulnerabilità di evasione dell’autenticazione di alta gravità. La falla, monitorata con il codice CVE-2024-26009 ha un punteggio CVSS di 7,9 e consente ad aggressori non autenticati di assumere il controllo completo dei dispositivi gestiti sfruttando il protocollo di comunicazione FortiGate-to-FortiManager (FGFM).
Il prerequisito fondamentale per uno sfruttamento riuscito di questo bug di sicurezza è la conoscenza da parte dell’aggressore del numero di serie del FortiManager di destinazione, che funge da componente di autenticazione chiave nell’implementazione del protocollo compromesso.
Il bug è classificato con il CWE-288 (Authentication Bypass Using an Alternate Path or Channel). Gli aggressori possono sfruttare questa debolezza creando richieste FGFM dannose per colpire i dispositivi gestiti dai sistemi FortiManager.
L’imputato è il protocollo FGFM, progettato per la comunicazione sicura tra i dispositivi FortiGate e i sistemi di gestione centrale, contiene una falla di autenticazione fondamentale che consente l’esecuzione di comandi non autorizzati. Questa vulnerabilità riguarda le versioni legacy di più linee di prodotti, in particolare le versioni FortiOS dalla 6.0 alla 6.4.15 e dalla 6.2.0 alla 6.2.16.
Sono a rischio anche le installazioni di FortiProxy che eseguono le versioni da 7.0.0 a 7.0.15, da 7.2.0 a 7.2.8 e da 7.4.0 a 7.4.2.
L’impatto potenziale è grave, poiché uno sfruttamento riuscito garantisce agli aggressori la possibilità di eseguire codice o comandi non autorizzati su sistemi compromessi, fornendo di fatto accesso a livello amministrativo ai componenti critici dell’infrastruttura di rete.
I ricercatori della sicurezza del team interno di sicurezza dei prodotti Fortinet, guidati da Théo Leleu, hanno scoperto questa vulnerabilità durante le normali valutazioni di sicurezza.
Le organizzazioni che utilizzano le versioni interessate devono dare priorità all’applicazione immediata delle patch. Fortinet consiglia di aggiornare le installazioni di FortiOS 6.4 alla versione 6.4.16 o successiva, mentre gli utenti di FortiOS 6.2 dovrebbero aggiornare alla versione 6.2.17 o successiva.
Gli utenti di FortiProxy devono effettuare l’aggiornamento alle versioni 7.0.16, 7.2.9 o 7.4.3, a seconda dell’installazione corrente.
L'articolo Vulnerabilità critica in Fortinet: aggiornare subito FortiOS, FortiProxy e FortiPAM proviene da il blog della sicurezza informatica.
Josef Prusa Warns Open Hardware 3D Printing is Dead
It’s hard to overstate the impact desktop 3D printing has had on the making and hacking scene. It drastically lowered the barrier for many to create their own projects, and much of the prototyping and distribution of parts and tools that we see today simply wouldn’t be possible via traditional means.
What might not be obvious to those new to the game is that much of what we take for granted today in the 3D printing world has its origins in open source hardware (OSHW). Unfortunately, [Josef Prusa] has reason to believe that this aspect of desktop 3D printing is dead.
If you’ve been following 3D printing for awhile, you’ll know how quickly the industry and the hobby have evolved. Just a few years ago, the choice was between spending the better part of $1,000 USD on a printer with all the bells and whistles, or taking your chances with a stripped-down clone for half the price. But today, you can get a machine capable of self calibration and multi-color prints for what used to be entry-level prices. According to [Josef] however, there’s a hidden cost to consider.
(Data from Espacenet International Database by European Patent Organization, March 2025) – Major Point made by Prusa on the number of patents from certain large-name companies
From major development comes major incentives. In 3D printing’s case, we can see the Chinese market dominance. Printers can be sold for a loss, and patents are filed when you can rely on government reimbursements, all help create the market majority we see today. Despite continuing to improve their printers, these advantages have made it difficult for companies such as Prusa Research to remain competitive.
That [Josef] has become disillusioned with open source hardware is unfortunately not news to us. Prusa’s CORE One, as impressive as it is, marked a clear turning point in how the company released their designs. Still, [Prusa]’s claims are not unfounded. Many similar issues have arisen in 3D printing before. One major innovation was even falsely patented twice, slowing adoption of “brick layering” 3D prints.
Nevertheless, no amount of patent trolling or market dominance is going to stop hackers from hacking. So while the companies that are selling 3D printers might not be able to offer them as OSHW, we feel confident the community will continue to embrace the open source principles that helped 3D printing become as big as it is today.
Thanks to [JohnU] for the tip.
Mamdani dimostra l’efficacia del metodo DSA negli USA
Pubblicato con lievi modifiche su Transform Italia il 06 Agosto 2025 di M. Minetti Mamdani, Ocasio Cortez e Sanders. La vittoria di Zohran Mamdani alle primarie per il candidato democratico alle future elezioni del sindaco di New York costituisce un … Continua a leggere→
Solo con l’immunità il Parlamento ritrova la centralità perduta
@Politica interna, europea e internazionale
L'articolo Solo con l’immunità il Parlamento ritrova la centralità perduta proviene da Fondazione Luigi Einaudi.
Socialpoliticanti
@Politica interna, europea e internazionale
L'articolo Socialpoliticanti proviene da Fondazione Luigi Einaudi.
Recensione : Mark Solotroff – In Search of Total Placelessness
Mark Solotroff, figura cardine della scena noise-industrial e power electronics americana (fondatore di Intrinsic Action, Anatomy Of Habit, BLOODYMINDED), torna quest'anno con In Search of Total Placelessness
#musica
iyezine.com/mark-solotroff-in-…
Mark Solotroff - In Search of Total Placelessness - In Your Eyes ezine
Mark Solotroff, figura cardine della scena noise-industrial e power electronics americana (fondatore di Intrinsic Action, Anatomy Of Habit, BLOODYMINDED), torna quest'anno con In Search of Total PlacelessnessNoiseGang (In Your Eyes ezine)
Feddit Un'istanza italiana Lemmy reshared this.
Recensione : The Unknowns – Looking from the outside
The Unknowns "Looking from the outside": un'esperienza punk che scuote e incendia! Scopri il terzo album della band australiana che spacca!
iyezine.com/the-unknowns-looki…
The Unknowns - Looking from the outside - In Your Eyes ezine
The Unknowns "Looking from the outside": un'esperienza punk che scuote e incendia! Scopri il terzo album della band australiana che spacca!Reverend Shit-Man (In Your Eyes ezine)
Feddit Un'istanza italiana Lemmy reshared this.