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@RaccoonForFriendica nuova versione 0.1.0-beta02 rilasciata!

Changelog:
- supporto alle custom emoji, finalmente! 🎉🎉🎉
- cambio istanza rapido per utenti anonimi,
- miglioramento layout anteprime e spoiler dei post,
- apertura video in schermata di dettaglio,
- possibilità di citare i post,
- navigazione tra i campi dei form con azioni da tastiera,
- indicazione visibilità nel dialog di dettaglio post,
- nuove opzioni di formattazione (codice e testo barrato),
- colore indicatori pull to refresh.

Fatemi sapere cosa ne pensate, sarò in trasferta un paio di giorni ma nel weekend torno operativo!

#livefasteattrash 🦝🦝🦝

in reply to 𝔻𝕚𝕖𝕘𝕠 🦝🧑🏻‍💻🍕

Una cosa da migliorare di cui mi sono accorto subito dopo la pubblicazione: pensando di fare una cosa utile, ho rimosso la possibilità di andare a capo nella creazione dei post mettendo l'azione "Invia".

Rimedio nella prossima versione 😅

RaccoonForFriendica reshared this.



Reviving a 15-Year Old Asus eeePC With Modern MX Linux


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Welcome back to 2010 and the Asus eeePC Netbook, Seashell series. (Credit: Igor Ljubuncic)Welcome back to 2010 and the Asus eeePC Netbook, Seashell series. (Credit: Igor Ljubuncic)
It’s often said these days that computers don’t become outdated nearly as quickly as they did in the past, with even a decade-old computer still more than capable of handling daily tasks for the average person. Testing that theory, [Igor Ljubuncic] revisited the Asus eeePC which he purchased back in 2010. Although it’s not specified exactly which model it is, it features an Intel Atom N450 (1 core, 2 threads) running at 1.67 GHz, 1 GB of 667 MHz DDR2 and a 250 GB HDD, all falling into that ultra-portable, 10.1″ Netbook category.

When new, the netbook came with Windows 7 Starter Edition, which [Igor] replaced with Ubuntu Netbook Remix 10.04, which was its own adventure, but the netbook worked well and got dragged around the world on work and leisure assignments. With increasingly bloated updates, Ubuntu got replaced by MX Linux 18, which improved matters, but with the little CPU struggling more and more, [Igor] retired the netbook in 2019. That is, until reviving it recently.

Upon booting, the CMOS battery was of course empty, but the system happily continued booting into MX Linux. The Debian update repositories were of course gone, but changing these to the archive version allowed for some (very old) updates. This raised the question of whether modern Linux would even run on this ancient Atom CPU, the answer of which turned out to be a resounding ‘yes’, as MX Linux still offers 32-bit builds of its most recent releases. A 15 minute upgrade process later, and a 2 minute boot later, the system was running a Linux 6.1 kernel with Xfce desktop.

As for the performance, it’s rather what you expect, with video playback topping out at 480p (on the 1024×600 display) and applications like Firefox lacking the compact density mode, wasting a lot of screen space. Amazingly the original battery seems to still deliver about half the runtime it did when new. All of which is to say that yes, even a ‘low-end’ 2010-era netbook can still be a very usable system in 2024, with a modern OS.


hackaday.com/2024/09/25/revivi…



Crisi nel mondo Open Source. Si rischia di perdere il 60% dei manutentori


Tidelift, azienda specializzata nel supporto e nella manutenzione di software open source, ha pubblicato il rapporto “2024 State of the Open Source Mantainer” . Lo studio si basa su un sondaggio condotto su 437 manutentori di progetti Open Source e rivela una serie di problemi e tendenze in quest’area.

Secondo il rapporto, il 12% degli intervistati riceve la maggior parte del proprio reddito da progetti Open Source. Gli sviluppatori che svolgono attività di manutentore come hobby non retribuito è pai al 60%, di cui il 44% vorrebbe ricevere un compenso monetario per il proprio contributo. Rispetto allo scorso anno la distribuzione delle risposte è rimasta pressoché invariata.

I manutentori pagati per il loro lavoro dedicano molto più tempo allo sviluppo dei progetti. Tra i manutentori “professionali” retribuiti, l’82% dedica più di 20 ore settimanali allo sviluppo. Tra i “dilettanti” solo l’8% degli intervistati può permettersi un carico di lavoro così temporaneo.

I manutentori “professionisti” hanno notato che i finanziamenti hanno permesso loro di lavorare su richieste di nuove funzionalità (64%), investigare e correggere bug e problemi di sicurezza (52%) e reclutare altri manutentori (26%).

Negli ultimi tre anni si è verificato un cambiamento significativo nella distribuzione del tempo dedicato alle questioni di sicurezza. Se nel 2021 trascorrevano il 4% del tempo, ora questa cifra ha raggiunto l’11%. Allo stesso tempo, i manutentori retribuiti dedicano il 13% del loro tempo alla sicurezza rispetto al 10% dei colleghi non retribuiti.

Dallo studio è emerso che il 60% dei manutentori ha pensato di abbandonare il progetto e il 22% lo ha già fatto. Tra i principali motivi di insoddisfazione per il proprio ruolo nel progetto, gli intervistati hanno citato: pagamento insufficiente o mancato (50%), sentirsi sottovalutati (48%), stress aggiuntivo (43%) e aspettative gonfiate degli utenti (39%).

Il rapporto dimostra anche il cambiamento della struttura per età della comunità dei manutentori. Negli ultimi tre anni, la percentuale di sviluppatori di età compresa tra 46 e 55 anni o tra 56 e 65 anni è raddoppiata. Allo stesso tempo, la percentuale dei manutentori sotto i 26 anni è scesa dal 25% nel 2021 al 10% quest’anno.

È interessante notare che il 45% degli intervistati sono manutentori Open Source da più di 10 anni.

L'articolo Crisi nel mondo Open Source. Si rischia di perdere il 60% dei manutentori proviene da il blog della sicurezza informatica.



E via, chiuso anche l'account LinkedIn!

L'ho avuto per parecchi anni, l'ho curato, l'ho usato per cercare lavoro....
Non mi ha mai portato una mazza di niente!

Il lancio di una nuova privacy policy è un'occasione buona come un'altra per salutare e andare via.

#LinkedIn #Social



FLOSS Weekly Episode 802: Emba – Layers Upon Layers of Bash


20943731

This week Jonathan Bennett and and Randal Schwartz chat with Michael and Benedikt about Emba, the embedded firmware analyzer that finds CVEs and includes the kitchen sink! It does virtualization, binary analysis include version detection, and more. Check it out!


youtube.com/embed/LycT0T4SUfM?…

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:


hackaday.com/2024/09/25/floss-…



Swiss government Mastodon server shuts down, the Social Web Foundation launches among controversy and much more.


Last Week in Fediverse – ep 85

It’s been an eventful week in the fediverse, with the Swiss government ending their Mastodon pilot, the launch of the Social Web Foundation, Interaction Policies with GoToSocial and more!

Swiss Government’s Mastodon instance will shut down


The Swiss Government will shut down their Mastodon server at the end of the month. The Mastodon server was launched in September 2023, as a pilot that lasted one year. During the original announcement last year, the Swiss government focused on Mastodon’s benefits regarding data protection and autonomy. Now that the pilot has run for the year, the government has decided not to continue. The main reason they give is the low engagement, stating that the 6 government accounts had around 3500 followers combined, and that the contributions also had low engagement rates. The government also notes that the falling number of active Mastodon users worldwide as a contributing factor. When the Mastodon pilot launched in September 2023, Mastodon had around 1.7M monthly active users, a number that has dropped a year later to around 1.1M.

The Social Web Foundation has launched


The Social Web Foundation (SWF) is a new foundation managed by Evan Prodromou, with the goal of growing the fediverse into a healthy, financially viable and multi-polar place. The foundation launches with the support of quite a few organisations. Some are fediverse-native organisations such as Mastodon, but Meta, Automattic and Medium are also part of the organisations that support the SWF. The Ford Foundation also supports the SWF with a large grant, and in total the organisation has close to 1 million USD in funding.

The SWF lists four projects that they’ll be working on for now:

  • adding end-to-end encryption to ActivityPub, a project that Evan Prodromou and Tom Coates (another member of the SWF) recently got a grant for.
  • Creating and maintaining a fediverse starter page. There are quite a variety of fediverse starter pages around already, but not all well maintained.
  • A Technical analysis and report on compatibility between ActivityPub and GDPR.
  • Working on long-form text in the fediverse.

The SWF is explicit in how they define two terms that have had a long and varied history: they state that the ‘fediverse’ is equivalent with the ‘Social Web’, and that the fediverse only consists of platforms that use ActivityPub. Both of these statements are controversial, to put it mildly, and I recommend this article for an extensive overview of the variety of ways that the term ‘fediverse’ is used by different groups of people, all with different ideas of what this network actually is, and what is a part of it. The explicit exclusion and rejection of Bluesky and the AT Protocol as not the correct protocol is especially noteworthy.

Another part of the SWF’s announcement that stands out is the inclusion of Meta as one of the supporting organisations. Meta’s arrival in the fediverse with Threads has been highly controversial since it was announced over a year ago, and one of the continuing worries that many people express is that of an ‘Extend-Embrace-Extinguish’ strategy by Meta. As the SWF will become a W3C member, and will likely continue to be active in the W3C groups, Meta being a supporter of the SWF will likely not diminish these worries.

As the SWF is an organisation with a goal of evangelising and growing the fediverse, it is worth pointing out that the reaction from a significant group within the fediverse developer community is decidedly mixed, with the presence of Meta, and arguments about the exclusive claim on the terms Social Web and fediverse being the main reasons. And as the goal of the SWF is to evangelise and grow the fediverse, can it afford to lose potential growth that comes from the support and outreach of the current fediverse developers?

Software updates


There are quite some interesting fediverse software updates this week that are worth pointing out:

GoToSocial’s v0.17 release brings the software to a beta state, with a large number of new features added. The main standout feature is Interaction Policies, with GoToSocial explaining: “Interaction policies let you determine who can reply to, like, or boost your statuses. You can accept or reject interactions as you wish; accepted replies will be added to your replies collection, and unwanted replies will be dropped.”

Interaction Policies are a highly important safety feature, especially the ability to turn off replies, as game engine Godot found out this week. It is a part where Mastodon lags behind other projects, on the basis that it is very difficult in ActivityPub to fully prevent the ability for other people to reply to a post. GoToSocial takes a more practical route by telling other software what their interaction policy is for that specific post, and if a reply does not meet the policy, it is simply dropped.

  • Peertube 6.3 release brings the ability to separate video streams from audio streams. This allows people now to use PeerTube as an audio streaming platform as well as a video streaming platform.
  • The latest update for NodeBB signals that the ActivityPub integration for the forum software is now ready for beta testing.
  • Ghost’s latest update now has fully working bi-directional federation, and they state that a private beta is now weeks away.


In Other News


IFTAS has started with a staged rollout of their Content Classification Service. With the opt-in service, a server can let IFTAS check all incoming image hashes for CSAM, with IFTAS handling the required (for US-based servers) reporting to NCMEC. IFTAS reports that over 50 servers already have signed up to participate with the service. CSAM remains a significant problem on decentralised social networks, something that is difficult to deal with for (volunteer) admins. IFTAS’ service makes this significantly easier while helping admins to execute their legal responsibilities. Emelia Smith also demoed the CCS during last week’s FediForum.

The Links


That’s all for this week, thanks for reading!

#fediverse

fediversereport.com/last-week-…




See https://curl.haxx.se/libcurl/c/libcurl-errors.html for description of the curl error code.

Details


Type: HttpException
Code: 0
Message: cURL error Resolving timed out after 15000 milliseconds: 28 (curl.haxx.se/libcurl/c/libcurl…) for https://t.me/s/FreeAssangeItalia
File: lib/http.php
Line: 154

Trace

#0 index.php(72): RssBridge->main()
#1 lib/RssBridge.php(103): DisplayAction->execute()
#2 actions/DisplayAction.php(68): DisplayAction->createResponse()
#3 actions/DisplayAction.php(117): TelegramBridge->collectData()
#4 bridges/TelegramBridge.php(39): getSimpleHTMLDOM()
#5 lib/contents.php(162): getContents()
#6 lib/contents.php(83): CurlHttpClient->request()
#7 lib/http.php(154)

Context


Query: action=display&bridge=Telegram&username=FreeAssangeItalia&format=Atom
Version: 2024-02-02
OS: Linux
PHP: 8.2.23

Go back[https://rss.trom.tf/url]
[url=https://github.com/RSS-Bridge/rss-bridge/issues?q=is%3Aissue+is%3Aopen+Telegram+Bridge]Find similar bugs
Create GitHub Issue
VerifiedJoseph



Updates regarding T&S on Bluesky, managed PDS hosting, and a deeper dive into the Jetstream


Last Week in the ATmosphere – Sept 24 week 3

Welcome to this week’s update, with lots of news regarding T&S on Bluesky, managed PDS hosting, and a deeper dive into the Jetstream!

The News


Bluesky released an update on their current efforts on Trust and Safety, listing all the features the team is currently working on. There are quite a few features being worked on that are great (better ban evasion detection, moderation feedback via app), and I want to highlight two of them:

  • Geography-specific labels. Bluesky is working to add the ability to remove posts only in certain countries, if they violate local laws but are allowed by Bluesky’s own guidelines. This is a feature that I’ll certainly be writing more about once more about it becomes known, as it poses tons of interesting questions about decentralised protocols and national internet sovereignty. As Bluesky’s own labels can be avoided in an open protocol by running your own infrastructure, it poses the questions of whether people actually do this to circumvent local laws, as well as the extend local governments will accept this (or understand it, to be honest).
  • With toxicity detection experiments, Bluesky aims to detect rude replies and potentially reduce their visibility, possibly by hiding them behind a ‘show more comments’ button. It puts Bluesky closer to what other networks are doing, which is hiding bad or spammy comments behind a button you have to click to see. My guess is that Bluesky also eventually will end up in this position, skipping the labeling part altogether.

A report by Brazilian investigative researchers finds that Bluesky is having difficulty moderation CSAM in Portugese, mapping 125 accounts that sell or share CSAM. Bluesky’s head of Trust & Safety already reported in early September that the sudden inflow of new users lead to a 10x increase in reported CSAM, as well as a more general strain on the moderation. Bluesky’s Emily Liu also stated in response to the report: “we’re taking this extremely seriously, and since the recent influx of users started, we’ve hired more human moderators (who are also provided mental health services) + implementing additional tooling that can quash these networks faster and more effectively”.

Bluesky has appointed a legal representative in Brazil, and will make an official announcement in the next few days. X not having a legal representative in Brazil is what ultimately led to a ban on X in Brazil. This week, X finally caved and appointed a representative, and X might become unbanned in the next few days again. It is worth watching how X becoming available again in Brazil will impact the current userbase of Brazilians on Bluesky. While some will undoubtedly go back to using X, the open question is how large this group will be.

In other news


With a maturity of the ecosystem, companies are starting to offer managed hosting of a PDS, both in the US as well as in Japan. It also raises interesting question regarding branding and marketing: both of these services explicitly advertise themselves as offering a Bluesky PDS: while that makes sense from the company’s perspective (very few people will understand what an atproto PDS is), I am entirely unclear if this desirable from the perspective of the Bluesky company.

Last week I wrote about a directory of Brazilian Bluesky accounts, and it turns out there is also a Japanese equivalent: the Bluesky Feeds Navigator lists a large variety of custom feeds (mainly in Japanese) for Bluesky.

Brazilian tech YouTuber Gabs Ferreira interviewed Bluesky engineer hailey about developing on Bluesky, focusing specifically on mobile and React Native (in English). Ferreira interviewed Bluesky CTO Paul Frazee last week, and will talk with Dan Abramov on 26-09.

Altmetric, which tracks engagement with academic research, is working on adding support for Bluesky.

EmbedSky is a new tool to ’embed the last thirty posts and reposts from your BlueSky timeline in your blog or website’. It works with OAuth, which facilitates that the tool can only be used to embed posts from your own account.

On Relays, Jetstreams and costs


Some semi-technical protocol discussion about relays is worth mentioning, since I see people on the other networks talk about it. First, a super simplified description of how atproto works: everyone’s data is stored in a simple database, which does not much else besides storing your data, called a PDS. A Relay scrapes all the PDS’s on the entire network, and turns it into an unending stream of updates, often colloquially called a firehose. An AppView takes all the data from the firehose and makes it presentable for a user (counting all the ‘likes’ on a post, for example).

People on other networks often assume that running a Relay is prohibitively expensive, and it turns out it is not: Bluesky engineer Bryan Newbold ran an extra full-network Relay for 150 USD/month, and recently someone confirmed this is still possible after the massive influx of new users.

Relays can be ‘expensive’ in another way though: a lot of the data that goes through a Relay is dedicated to making sure that the data is authenticated. This is the ‘Authenticated’ part in the name ‘Authenticated Transfer Protocol’. However, there are quite some use cases for which it is not necessary to validate every single event that comes through the firehose, such as a simple bot that listens for certain keywords. In that case, they can get by with a simpler version of the firehose.

Two versions of such a simpler version, called a Jetstream, launched this week. Bluesky engineer Jaz released their own version of a Jetstream, accompanying with an extensive blog post in which they describe how it works. They note that this reduces traffic activity by 99%, all while running on a 5$/month VPS. Jaz also says that an official Bluesky version of a Jetstream is coming soon.

Skyware (who recently released a lightweight labeler as well) also has their own version of a Jetstream available as well.

The Links


That’s all for this week, thanks for reading! You can subscribe to my newsletter to receive the weekly updates directly in your inbox below, and follow me on Bluesky @laurenshof.online.

#bluesky

fediversereport.com/last-week-…





2024 Hackaday Superconference Speakers, Round Two


20938299

It’s honestly amazing the range of fascinating talks we have lined up for this year’s Supercon. From art robots that burp and belch to gliders returning from near-space, from hardcore DSP to DIY PCBs, and sketching with machines, Hackaday’s Supercon is like nothing else out there.

And in case you’re already coming, you don’t have a talk slot reserved, but you’ve still got something that you want to say, please sign yourself up for a Lightning Talk! In the spirit of the Lightning, we’ll be taking submissions up to the absolute last minute, and we will fit in as many short talks as possible, but when it does fill up, we’ll be giving priority to those who got in first.

We’ve got one more speaker announce coming up, and of course our keynote speaker and the badge reveal. Supercon will sell out so get your tickets now before it’s too late. So without further ado, here is our next round of stellar speakers!

20938301

Katherine Connell
Sprite Lights: LED Body Art

Sprite Lights are 1.5 mm thick LED body art, think a light up temporary tattoo. Join Katherine “Smalls” Connell to hear about the 6-year journey to create the impossible as a self taught maker. From hundreds of rapid prototypes, and smelting metal in her driveway to reflowing home made flexible circuits on a griddle, Sprite Lights is a testament that when you’re willing to try anything, you can create everything.

20938303

James Rowley
Using an Oscilloscope to Peek Below the Noise Floor

In this talk, we will explore the DSP magic that allows lock-in amplifiers to detect signals hidden below the noise floor. By making a change to the measurement setup, these devices can isolate and measure faint signals amidst noise a hundred dB higher. Lock-in amplifiers are used in various applications, from sensitive photonics research to next-generation battery research and quantum computing.
We’ll also show you how to use your oscilloscope as a lock-in amplifier, enabling a low-cost entry point to these niche instruments.

20938307

Nanik Adnani
A Hacker’s Guide to Analog Design in a Digital World

When someone says analog design – what do you think of? If I had to guess I would say you don’t associate it with modern technology. And yet – analog circuits and the designers that build them play a critical role in every modern electronic device, especially the digital ones. In this talk I will provide an overview of the incredible analog circuits in our pockets, and often already in our projects. Once you’re convinced – I’ll show that analog design isn’t as hard as you think and how a few simple concepts can significantly improve your next project, while providing examples with some of mine.

20938309

Justin McAllister and Nick Foster
Finding Beamo – from interference to numbers stations, how to track down radio transmissions

In a world increasingly reliant on wireless communication, the ability to track down and understand the sources of radio transmissions has never been more critical. From identifying interference in urban environments to the enigmatic world of numbers stations, “Finding Beamo” will take the audience on a journey through the fascinating and often mysterious world of locating radio transmissions.

20938311

Randy Glenn
Yes, you CAN use the Controller Area Network outside of cars

The Controller Area Network (CAN) is used in cars, trains, buses, planes, and spacecraft – but it’s useful for all sorts of cases where systems need to communicate. I’ll talk about how you can use this technology to transfer data between microcontrollers and larger computers, and will present an example application that you can use as a starting point.

20938313

Yohan Hadji
Ultralight Glider Returns Home from the Stratosphere

This talk will give you an overview of all the technical challenges to solve to get a sub-250g UAV to autonomously return to home after releasing from a stratospheric balloon at 100,000 ft altitude.

20938315

Zach Fredin
The Circuit Graver

We all must strive to minimize iteration time. Designing and testing an idea in a single sitting spawns great things! It’s why we visit fab labs and love laser cutters and push the 3D printers in the corners of our apartments to the absolute limit. But circuit tools haven’t kept up; once you’re done mashing together breakout boards, your choices of milling, conductive-pasting, or home etching all leave a bit to be desired; they’re often messy, delicate, and lack the precision to reach the funnest parts in the catalog. Ugh, I need to go smaller than SOICs, and I don’t want to wait a week for commercial boards!

Here, I present and freely share significant progress on a novel method I’ve been poking at over the last few years which demonstrates the feasibility of fabricating 4/4 PCBs at home!

20938318

Priyanka Makin
Tech to Hack Embodiment

Tech constantly takes us out of the present moment and beckons us into the internet wormhole, but can we use technology to explore our emotions and root us in the now or even our physical bodies? At supercon, I would love to talk about my Body of Work series and how I used technology to interrogate my own embodiment.

My Body of Work is a series of tech-powered body part sculptures that relate to my own relationship with my body and come together to make an unconventional self-portrait. I’d like to start my talk with a bit of my research on the origins of artificial life, what embodiment is, and why acknowledging our bodies is important.

20938320

Blair Subbaraman
Sketching with Machines

Artists, craftspeople, and scientists are highly skilled makers. Yet, software for making physical things often overlooks existing skill sets, forcing practitioners to work against built-in assumptions to accomplish their goals. Using examples from digital art, ceramics, and plant biology, this talk will consider how creative practices can guide the development of digital fabrication systems and communities.

20938322

Eduardo Contreras
“Cats Turned Plumbers: Embedded Linux Adventures”

A bit of our journey deploying embedded Linux systems, and integrating drivers on the Linux kernels, from the hardware, to the kernel.

[If you read this far, you probably want tickets. Just sayin’.]


hackaday.com/2024/09/25/2024-h…





Deepfake, rischio disinformazione per un italiano su due. L’indagine Ipsos


@Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)
L’indagine Ipsos sul fenomeno deepfake, tra consapevolezza e preoccupazione Il 46% degli italiani crede che l’intelligenza artificiale aumenti di molto il rischio di disinformazione, secondo una nuova indagine Ipsos dal titolo “Deepfake: consapevolezza e



Verso una nuova era: Il Patto per il Futuro dell’ONU e le sfide globali del XXI Secolo

L'articolo proviene da #Euractiv Italia ed è stato ricondiviso sulla comunità Lemmy @Intelligenza Artificiale
Nel 1944 nascevano a Bretton Woods le prime istituzioni delle Nazioni Unite. Il 22 settembre 2024, ottanta anni dopo, l’Assemblea



Verso una nuova era: Il Patto per il Futuro dell’ONU e le sfide globali del XXI Secolo

L'articolo proviene da #Euractiv Italia ed è stato ricondiviso sulla comunità Lemmy @Intelligenza Artificiale
Nel 1944 nascevano a Bretton Woods le prime istituzioni delle Nazioni Unite. Il 22 settembre 2024, ottanta anni dopo, l’Assemblea



Verso una nuova era: Il Patto per il Futuro dell’ONU e le sfide globali del XXI Secolo

L'articolo proviene da #Euractiv Italia ed è stato ricondiviso sulla comunità Lemmy @Intelligenza Artificiale
Nel 1944 nascevano a Bretton Woods le prime istituzioni delle Nazioni Unite. Il 22 settembre 2024, ottanta anni dopo, l’Assemblea



Telegram says it will now provide user data to the police; the walls are closing in on the Snowflake hacker; and why Nintendo's lawsuit against Palworld is bad (and Nintendo will probably win).

Telegram says it will now provide user data to the police; the walls are closing in on the Snowflake hacker; and why Nintendox27;s lawsuit against Palworld is bad (and Nintendo will probably win).#Podcast



Prove di deterrenza. La Cina testa un missile intercontinentale nel Pacifico

@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo

[quote]Erano oltre quarant’anni che la Cina non annunciava pubblicamente la conduzione di un test missilistico, da quando, nel 1980, lanciò con successo il suo primo missile intercontinentale, il DF-5, che percorse oltre 8mila chilometri prima di precipitare

reshared this



Orpheus Network tells users: "With great displeasure we need to inform you that a malicious actor has successfully carried out a massive peer scraping attack on our tracker."#Piracy #Torrenting #Torrents


Firefox ti traccia con la funzione di “tutela della privacy”

Oggi, @noyb.eu ha presentato un reclamo contro #Mozilla per aver abilitato silenziosamente una presunta "funzione privacy" (chiamata #Privacy Preserving Attribution) nel suo browser Firefox. Contrariamente al suo nome rassicurante, questa tecnologia consente a Firefox di tracciare il comportamento degli utenti sui siti web. In sostanza, ora è il browser a controllare il tracciamento, anziché i singoli siti web.

Sebbene questo possa essere un miglioramento rispetto al tracciamento dei cookie ancora più invasivo, l'azienda non ha mai chiesto ai suoi utenti se volessero abilitarlo. Invece, Mozilla ha deciso di attivarlo di default una volta che le persone hanno installato un recente aggiornamento software. Ciò è particolarmente preoccupante perché Mozilla ha generalmente la reputazione di essere un'alternativa rispettosa della privacy quando la maggior parte degli altri browser si basa su Chromium di Google.

@Privacy Pride

noyb.eu/en/firefox-tracks-you-…

reshared this

in reply to Informa Pirata

"ma io volevo solo aiutare la privacy dei miei utenti...!"

@noybeu @privacypride

reshared this

Unknown parent

friendica (DFRN) - Collegamento all'originale
Informa Pirata
@zamby dongiu@poliverso.org l'impostazione è personalizzabile; il problema è solo che è impostata di default

Privacy Pride reshared this.



È stata definitivamente approvata dalla Camera dei deputati la riforma della condotta e della valutazione alla Primaria.

Qui tutti i dettagli ▶ miur.gov.



io non sono pacifista, perlomeno non nel modo ottuso comunemente inteso, teso solo a liberarsi dai problemi altrui, ma la radice della guerra è la sub-cultura della violenza, dell'intolleranza, dell'allergia al diverso, dell'ingiustizia, del bullismo. pace non è assenza di guerra, ma giustizia. e israele farebbe bene a smettere di comportarsi come gli americani con i pellerossa. e putin farebbe bene almeno a cercare di smettere di voler assurdamente apparire come i liberatori del mondo dal dominio usa. raramente chi fa parte della sfera di influenza russa è libero e felice.





fatemi capire... se per te uno che hai sulle palle, che fa sempre stronzate, ne fa una giusta, gli dai contro anche quando fa quella giusta? l'onestà che fine ha fatto?


Storie afgane di fughe e diritti negati


@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo
Zamaair e la sua famiglia hanno dovuto vendere tutto quello che possedevano per poter scappare da Kabul. Sono da un anno e mezzo in Pakistan, in attesa di asilo
L'articolo Storie afgane di fughe e diritti negati proviene da Pagine Esteri.



L'immagine a corredo di questo articolo ha il solo scopo di attirare l'attenzione degli sviluppatori di APP!   APP e privacy... ora si fa su...


Lavorare stanca, e anche i calciatori minacciano lo sciopero


@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo
Il nuovo articolo di @valori@poliversity.it
Dopo l’azione legale del loro sindacato contro la Fifa, i calciatori chiamano lo sciopero per i calendari intasati
L'articolo Lavorare stanca, e anche i calciatori minacciano lo sciopero proviene da Valori.

valori.it/sciopero-calciatori/



Firefox ti traccia con la funzione "privacy preserving
noyb ha presentato una denuncia contro Mozilla per aver silenziosamente attivato una presunta "funzione di privacy" (chiamata Privacy Preserving Attribution) nel suo browser Firefox, che traccia il comportamento degli utenti sui siti web.
mr25 September 2024
mozilla tracking


noyb.eu/it/firefox-tracks-you-…



‼️COMUNICATO STAMPA di WikiLeaks:

Julian Assange interverrà al Consiglio d'Europa dopo la conferma del suo status di prigioniero politico

Il 1° ottobre Julian Assange arriverà a Strasburgo per testimoniare davanti alla Commissione per gli affari giuridici e i diritti umani dell'Assemblea parlamentare del Consiglio d'Europa (APCE), la cui riunione è prevista dalle 8.30 alle 10.00 presso il Palazzo d'Europa.

Ciò segue la pubblicazione del rapporto di inchiesta PACE sul caso Assange, redatto dal relatore Thórhildur Sunna Ævarsdóttir. Il rapporto si concentra sulle implicazioni della sua detenzione e sui suoi effetti più ampi sui diritti umani, in particolare sulla libertà di giornalismo. Il rapporto conferma che Assange si qualifica come prigioniero politico e chiede al Regno Unito di condurre una revisione indipendente per stabilire se sia stato esposto a trattamenti inumani o degradanti.

Sunna Ævarsdóttir è la Relatrice generale per i prigionieri politici e la Presidente del Sottocomitato sull'intelligenza artificiale e i diritti umani all'interno del Comitato per gli affari legali del PACE. Sottolinea come il caso di Assange sia un esempio di alto profilo di repressione transnazionale. Il rapporto analizza come i governi utilizzino misure legali ed extralegali per reprimere il dissenso oltre confine, il che rappresenta minacce significative per la libertà di stampa e i diritti umani.

Julian Assange è ancora in fase di recupero dopo il suo rilascio dalla prigione nel giugno 2024. Parteciperà di persona a questa sessione a causa della natura eccezionale dell'invito e per accogliere il supporto ricevuto da PACE e dai suoi delegati negli ultimi anni. PACE ha il mandato di salvaguardare i diritti umani e ha ripetutamente chiesto il rilascio di Julian Assange quando era in prigione.

Deporrà davanti alla commissione, che esaminerà anche le conclusioni secondo cui la sua prigionia è stata motivata da ragioni politiche.

L'udienza segna la prima testimonianza ufficiale di Assange sul suo caso da prima della sua prigionia nel 2019. La sua comparizione davanti al principale organismo europeo per i diritti umani e la definizione dei trattati sottolinea le implicazioni più ampie del suo caso.

reshared this



A security researcher managed to pull a list of Ghost users, resellers, and even customer support messages from an exposed server. It shows how as organized criminals move to making their own encrypted platforms, they might make vulnerable products.#News #Hacking



Fincantieri e Leonardo insieme per costruire i nuovi pattugliatori offshore della Marina

@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo

[quote]Quando si pensa al dominio marittimo e alla dimensione navale, le prime immagini che vengono in mente sono grandi vascelli di superficie, ieri le corazzate, oggi le portaerei e le fregate. Tuttavia, anche le imbarcazioni di tonnellaggio



Corsa alla quinta generazione, gli F-35 della Grecia passano da Cameri

@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo

[quote]Più potere aereo, possibilmente il migliore disponibile sul mercato. Questo è il pensiero delle Forze armate greche, che puntano ad acquisire il caccia F-35 per la loro componente aerea. Lo scorso luglio, il governo di Atene ha firmato una lettera di accettazione (Loa) con



Così le fonti iconografiche dell’Esercito raccontano la Storia

@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo

[quote]In ambito politico, la parola “revisionismo” è connotata da un’accezione negativa, mentre nel campo degli studi storiografici costituisce una precisa corrente di pensiero: quella di non permettere mai che una versione degli eventi, così come ce la raccontano, si consolidi senza una costante,



Nella presentazione di oggi la Procura della Corona sostiene che i media, principalmente il Guardian nel suo articolo del 10 novembre 2017 di Ewen Mc Askill e Owen Bowcott, hanno "frainteso" la cosiddetta distruzione delle email. Ma i pubblici ministeri del Regno Unito ammisero nel 2017 di aver distrutto le email chiave del caso Assange in seguito al pensionamento dell'avvocato del CPS, Paul Close, avvenuto nel 2014. Ora l'udienza è sospesa per la pausa pranzo.


Nell'era del 5G quando viene chiamata a parlare (da remoto) il testimone chiave della distruzione e-mail degli avvocati della Procura della Corona (CPS), Deborah Hillary, la connessione diventa difficile e l'udienza si interrompe.. siamo in attesa!

Nell'era del 5G quando viene chiamata a parlare (da remoto) il testimone chiave della distruzione e-mail degli avvocati della Procura della Corona (CPS), Deborah Hillary, la connessione diventa difficile e l'udienza si interrompe.. siamo in attesa!

Gazzetta del Cadavere reshared this.



Udienzanon ancora iniziata a causa della massiccia presenza di attivisti che vogliono assistere 😅