Salta al contenuto principale



Stampa Romana: a Gaza la strage di giornalisti continua, mentre la propaganda è affidata agli influencer


Altri cinque operatori dell’informazione uccisi a Gaza nell’ennesimo raid su un ospedale, un attacco mirato con un drone, in due tempi. I giornalisti sono obiettivi da colpire per le forze armate di Israele, testimoni da eliminare dell’incessante massacro di civili, sotto le bombe o per fame, della sistematica violazione dei diritti umani. Si uccidono i giornalisti sul campo, si impedisce l’accesso alla stampa indipendente, mentre si organizza una propaganda maldestra e offensiva con gli influencer, cui è affidato l’improba impresa di negare l’evidenza mostrata ogni giorno dalle immagini che arrivano da Gaza, proprio grazie ai giornalisti che sono diventati bersaglio: i morti sono oltre 240. Vittime insieme al diritto di cronaca, a quello dell’opinione pubblica mondiale di essere informata. È necessaria una mobilitazione su scala globale, a difesa del diritto di cronaca e della piena libertà di espressione.

La Segreteria dell’Asr


dicorinto.it/associazionismo/s…



Democracy dies in darkness


Stop all’assassinio dei giornalisti in terra di Palestina

L’esercito israeliano ha ucciso altri 4 giornalisti. Si aggiungono agli oltre 200 giornalisti assassinati dopo il brutale assalto dei terroristi di Hamas contro Israele del 7 ottobre conteggiati da Reporters senza frontiere.

rsf.org/en/country/israel

Secondo Shireen.ps invece sono 270 gli operatori dell’informazione assassinati dalle Israel Defence Forces (IDF).

E questo nonostante il blocco all’ingresso in Palestina per i media internazionali.

In assenza di un’informazione plurale, collettiva, che mette in primo piano la testimonianza diretta, e sul campo, la verifica delle fonti e la deontologia giornalistica, l’alternativa è la disinformazione.

Per questo trovo molto interessante la lettura del magazine +972 di Tel Aviv, fatto da professionisti arabi e israeliani e vi consiglio di fare altrettanto.

L’ultima ottima inchiesta che ci ho trovato riguarda la Legitimation Cell, la squadra speciale israeliana che deve costruire le prove per accusare di terrorismo i pochi giornalisti rimasti nella striscia di Gaza.

Come potrebbe essere accaduto ad Anas al Sharif prima di ferragosto.

Anche questo lo racconterò nel mio prossimo libro in uscita a gennaio.

972mag.com/israel-gaza-journal…

hashtag#bringthemhomenow hashtag#ceasefire

rsf.org/en/gaza-least-four-mor…


dicorinto.it/associazionismo/d…



Automated Brewing


There’s little more to making alcoholic beverages than sugar, water, yeast, and time. Of course those with more refined or less utilitarian tastes may want to invest a bit more care and effort into making their concoctions. For beer making especially this can be a very involved task, but [Fieldman] has come up with a machine that helps automate the process and take away some of the tedium.

[Fieldman] has been making beers in relatively small eight-liter batches for a while now, and although it’s smaller than a lot of home brewers, it lends itself perfectly to automation. Rather than use a gas stove for a larger boil this process is done on a large hot plate, which is much more easily controlled by a microcontroller. The system uses an ESP32 for temperature control, and it also runs a paddle stirrer and controls a screen which lets the brewer know when it’s time to add ingredients or take the next step in the process. Various beers can be programmed in, and the touchscreen makes it easy to know at a glance what’s going on.

For a setup of this size this is a perfect way to take away some of the hassle of beer brewing like making sure the stove didn’t accidentally get too hot or making sure it’s adequately stirred for the large number of hours it might take to brew, but it still leaves the brewer in charge for the important steps.

Beer brewing is a hobby with a lot of rabbit holes to jump down, and it can get as complicated as you like. Just take a look at this larger brewery setup that automates more tasks on a much larger scale.

youtube.com/embed/2098iAXmmrU?…


hackaday.com/2025/08/26/automa…



Picture by Paper Tape


The April 1926 issue of “Science and Invention” had a fascinating graphic. It explained, for the curious, how a photo of a rescue at sea could be in the New York papers almost immediately. It was the modern miracle of the wire photo. But how did the picture get from Plymouth, England, to New York so quickly? Today, that’s no big deal, but set your wayback machine to a century ago.

Of course, the answer is analog fax. But think about it. How would you create an analog fax machine in 1926? The graphic is quite telling. (Click on it to enlarge, you won’t be disappointed.)

If you are like us, when you first saw it you thought: “Oh, sure, paper tape.” But a little more reflection makes you realize that solves nothing. How do you actually scan the photo onto the paper tape, and how can you reconstitute it on the other side? The paper tape is clearly digital, right? How do you do an analog-to-digital converter in 1926?

It Really is a Wire PHOTO


The graphic is amazingly technical in its description. Getting the negative from Plymouth to London is a short plane hop. From there, a photographer creates five prints on specially-coated zinc plates. Where the emulsion stays, the plate won’t conduct electricity. Where the developer removes it, electricity will flow.
The picture of the vessel S.S. Antione sinking (including a magnified inset)
Why five? Well, each print is successively darker. All five get mounted to a drum with five brushes making contact with the plate. Guess how many holes are in the paper tape? If you guessed five, gold star for you.

As you can see in the graphic, each brush drives a punch solenoid. It literally converts the brightness of the image into a digital code because the photographer made five prints, each one darker than the last. So something totally covered on all five plates gets no holes. Something totally uncovered gets five holes. Everything else gets something in between. This isn’t a five-bit converter. You can only get 00000, 00001, 00011, 00111, 011111, and 11111 out of the machine, for six levels of brightness.

Decoding


The decoding is also clever. A light passes through the five holes, and optics collimates the light into a single beam. That’s it. If there are no holes in the tape, the beam is dark. The more holes, the brighter it gets. The light hits a film, and then it is back to a darkroom on the other side of the ocean.

The rest of the process is nothing more than the usual way a picture gets printed in a newspaper.

If you want to see the graphic in context, you can grab a copy of the whole magazine (another Hugo Gernsback rag) at the excellent World Radio History site. You’ll also see that you could buy a rebuilt typewriter for $3 and that the magazine was interested if the spirits of the dead can find each other in the afterlife. Note this was the April issue. Be sure to check out the soldering iron described on page 1114. You’ll also see on that page that Big Mouth Bill Bass isn’t the recent fad you thought it was.

We are always fascinated by what smart people would develop if they had no better options. It is easy to think that the old days were full of stone knives and bear skins, but human ingenuity is seemingly boundless. If you want to see really old fax technology, it goes back much further than you would think.


hackaday.com/2025/08/26/pictur…



Troubled USB Device? This Tool Can Help


Close up of a multi-USB tester PCB

You know how it goes — some gadgets stick around in your toolbox far longer than reason dictates, because maybe one day you’ll need it. How many of us held onto ISA diagnostic cards long past the death of the interface?

But unlike ISA, USB isn’t going away anytime soon. Which is exactly why this USB and more tester by [Iron Fuse] deserves a spot in your toolbox. This post is not meant to directly lure you into buying something, but seen how compact it is, it would be sad to challenge anyone to reinvent this ‘wheel’, instead of just ordering it.

So, to get into the details. This is far from the first USB tester to appear on these pages, but it is one of the most versatile ones we’ve seen so far. On the surface, it looks simple: a hand-soldered 14×17 cm PCB with twelve different connectors, all broken out to labelled test points. Hook up a dodgy cable or device, connect a known-good counterpart, and the board makes it painless to probe continuity, resistance, or those pesky shorts where D+ suddenly thinks it’s a ground line.

You’ll still need your multimeter (automation is promised for a future revision), but the convenience of not juggling probes into microscopic USB-C cavities is hard to overstate. Also, if finding out whether you have a power-only or a data cable is your goal, this might be the tool for you instead.


hackaday.com/2025/08/26/troubl…





“Il Sommo Pontefice Leone XIV rivolge un cordiale saluto a quanti prenderanno parte alla solenne celebrazione nella quale Velletri verrà proclamata pubblicamente Civitas Mariae”. Lo scrive il card.


Nella seconda giornata della 75ª Settimana liturgica nazionale, in corso a Napoli è intervenuto don Giovanni Zaccaria, vice rettore della Pontificia Università della Santa Croce di Roma, con una relazione dal titolo eloquente: “L’uomo è un essere lit…


Denmark wants to break the Council deadlock on the CSA Regulation, but are they genuinely trying?


Denmark made the widely-criticised CSA Regulation a priority on the very first day of their Council presidency, but show little willingness to actually find a compromise that will break the three-year long deadlock on this law. The Danish text recycles previous failed attempts and does nothing to assuage the valid concerns about mass surveillance and encryption. Not only is Denmark unlikely to be able to broker a deal, it also stands in the way of EU countries finding an alternative, meaningful, rights-respecting solution to tackling CSA online.

The post Denmark wants to break the Council deadlock on the CSA Regulation, but are they genuinely trying? appeared first on European Digital Rights (EDRi).




"Chiediamo che venga esplorata con realismo e senso del bene comune ogni ipotesi d’invertire l’attuale narrazione delle aree interne": lo scrivono 139 tra cardinali, arcivescovi, vescovi e abati nella "Lettera aperta al Governo e al Parlamento", pubb…


Uno dei più convinti anti-Trump è George Takei, per chi guardava Star Trek lui è il signor Sulu.

😍😍😍


Trump has no legal authority to fire Lisa Cook from the Fed. He wants to take it over but it must remain independent. Stay strong, Ms. Cook.


Assemblee annuali delle Cellule Coscioni


In vista del XXII Congresso nazionale dell’Associazione Luca Coscioni che quest’anno si terrà a Orvieto dal 4 al 5 ottobre 2025, i riferimenti territoriali dell’Associazione Luca Coscioni APS, le Cellule Coscioni, indicono le proprie assemblee annuali. È stato un anno pieno di iniziative per la libertà di scelta dall’inizio alla fine della vita, che hanno coinvolto volontari e volontarie nel nostro territorio. È ora tempo di un rendiconto delle attività di quest’anno e della programmazione delle attività future.

↓ CERCA SULLA MAPPA L’INCONTRO DELLA CELLULA PIÙ VICINA A TE ↓


google.com/maps/d/embed?mid=1Z…

L'articolo Assemblee annuali delle Cellule Coscioni proviene da Associazione Luca Coscioni.




#Cina, #India e l'incubo di #Trump


altrenotizie.org/primo-piano/1…




Musk ci riprova: X e xAi fanno causa a OpenAi e Apple

L'articolo proviene da #StartMag e viene ricondiviso sulla comunità Lemmy @Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)
Fallita la precedente mossa giudiziale, Musk torna all'assalto di OpenAi e questa volta lo fa attaccando anche Apple: il loro accordo, sostiene il magnate sudafricano che intende spingere il proprio Grok sui device di tutto il



l'Inter riparte da cinque


altrenotizie.org/spalla/10764-…



comunque credo di aver notato una differenza di approccio tra la generazione di informatici nati diciamo con il mondo commodore & spectrum (generazione dei nati nel 1970-1975) e i precedenti. per noi l'informatica è qualcosa di sempre utile. dove qualsiasi cosa, in salsa microprocessore e sw, è necessariamente più flessibile ed efficiente e con un'interfaccia più leggibile. le generazioni precedenti forse sono quelle che hanno lavorato si nell'informatica ma preferiscono mantenere distinti gli ambiti, dove le radio per essere radio devono essere hardware solo e puro ecc ecc ecc.


Questo sono io che tutto stupito mi faccio la foto ricordo fuori dal primo AutoVeg della mia vita 😮

Stavamo tornando da un minitour in Sicilia passando per la Calabria, e c'era un traffico bestiale, tipo controesodo di fine Agosto, bollino rosso proprio. A un certo punto mi viene un po' di fame ma mi dico che non mi fermerò mai all'Autogrill, se non per pisciare, perché in quel non-luogo maledetto ti prendono per il collo, ti fanno pagare l'acqua come fosse champaigne, panini schifosi come fossero gourmet etc.etc. Proprio mentre facevo questi ragionamenti vedo il cartello lato strada di questo posto chiamato AutoVeg. Mi fermo subito, parcheggio al volo ed entro. All'interno trovo un locale pieno di banchi di frutta e verdura di tutti i tipi, tipo un mercato proprio, dalle carote ai cocomeri, dalle banane a tutto il resto. Vedo i prezzi e sono decenti. Ci sono anche robe sporzionate, promte per essere mangiate sui tavolini allestiti poco più in là, vicino al banco del bar, dove dalle vetrine si intravedono anche panini, affettati (sicuramente vegani), verdure sott'olio, tipo il banco di un pizzicarolo insomma, ma anche insalate di farro, cous cous e cose del genere. E poi serie di frigo con la G4zaCola dentro, diapenser di acqua gratuita per tuttu, etc.etc Insomma, un sogno. Allora fermo un'inserviente del reparto frutta e le dico: scusi ma che posto assurdo è questo?! E lei mi fa: questo è il progetto pilota di una nuova catena tipo Autogrill, ideata e gestita da una cooperativa di produttori e consumatori nata a Bugliano. E io le chiedo: ma come è possibile che i prezzi siano così bassi rispetto all'Autogrill?! E lei: be' chiaro, i prezzi sono onesti perché non c'è nessuno a monte che fa guadagni stratosferici sulla pelle dei lavoratori, dei produttori e dei consumatori. Io basito. Comunque vabbe', per farla breve compro un kilo di carote, un kilo di pomodorini, tutto già lavato e pronto per essere consumato on the road, poi un kilo di banane mature, un pacchetto di ceci secchi e anche una confezione di piadine integrali, per fare un banana spliff a un certo punto, hai visto mai. Tutto quello che mi serve per affrontare a pancia piena e senza alcuna pesantezza da junk-food il viaggio verso casa, che purtroppo si annuncia lunghissimo. Quindi insomma, se vedete anche voi questa insegna, fermatevi con fiducia, straconsigliata! 👍😋

#AutoVeg #vegan #veg

Food & Drink Channel reshared this.





Microsoft coinvolge l’Fbi per monitorare le proteste pro Pal?

L'articolo proviene da #StartMag e viene ricondiviso sulla comunità Lemmy @Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)
Secondo un rapporto di Bloomberg, Microsoft si è rivolta all'Fbi per monitorare le proteste palestinesi nel suo campus di Redmond nell'ultimo anno. Le proteste riguardavano la richiesta al gigante della

Nicola Pizzamiglio reshared this.





In ricordo di Carlo Pepi


@Giornalismo e disordine informativo
articolo21.org/2025/08/in-rico…
Carlo, c’è chi ti ha chiamato il “Don Chisciotte dell’arte”. Si sbagliava: sei stato un paladino della legalità. Un paladino munito di expertise, certificata – su nostra indicazione – dalla Fondazione Antonino Caponnetto. Ricordiamo quel giorno in cui ti premiammo: commosso, come sempre, ma pieno di



trump fa l'"equidistante" tra aggredito e aggressore. ma non c'è nel suo corpo una sola fibra di giustizia che si ribella e gli dice quanto è xxxxxx? ma lui tra la figlia stuprata e lo stupratore si metterebbe a un tavolo a chiedere che i 2 si parlino e mettano d'accordo? ma poi mettersi d'accordo su cosa? lo stupratore deve pagare per quello che ha fatto.


Possibile sostiene la Global Sumud Flotilla
possibile.com/sostieniamo-la-g…
Il 31 agosto e il 4 settembre 2025, una flottiglia internazionale, la Global Sumud Flotilla, salperà da Spagna, Tunisia e altri porti del Mediterraneo, con una sola rotta: verso Gaza. C'è bisogno di tutto il sostegno possibile: dona, condividi, mobilitati.
L'articolo Possibile sostiene la Global Sumud


Possibile sostiene la Global Sumud Flotilla


Il 31 agosto e il 4 settembre 2025, una flottiglia internazionale, la Global Sumud Flotilla, salperà da Spagna, Tunisia e altri porti del Mediterraneo, con una sola rotta: verso Gaza.

Decine di imbarcazioni da oltre 44 Paesi unite in una missione civile per rompere l’assedio illegale imposto al popolo Palestinese.

A bordo: medici, avvocati, giornalisti, artisti e attivisti.
Non solo aiuti: presenza civile internazionale per denunciare crimini e testimoniare resistenza.

Un’intercettazione da parte di Israele sarebbe pirateria, una violazione del diritto internazionale.

La missione GSF chiede:
🔹 Stop all’assedio
🔹 Stop alla fame usata come arma
🔹 Stop alla disumanizzazione
🔹 Stop al genocidio

Unisciti. Condividi. Mobilitati.

Dona alla delegazione italiana


Segui global movement to gaza italia


L'articolo Possibile sostiene la Global Sumud Flotilla proviene da Possibile.



Oggi, presso la Sala Neri Generali Cattolica del Meeting di Rimini, si svolgerà l’evento “I giovani e la sfida della formazione” alla presenza del Ministro Giuseppe Valditara.

Qui la diretta dalle ore 13 ➡ youtube.



Influencer al posto dei giornalisti: Israele prova a occultare la fame a Gaza


@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo
I nuovi testimonial del governo Netanyahu, liberi di entrare mentre i giornalisti vengono tenuti a distanza, mostrano banchi con aiuti alimentari, convogli ordinati, scorte distribuite “generosamente” al popolo palestinese.
L'articolo Influencer al



Flottiglia globale per Gaza: via alle partenze dall’Italia


@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo
Dall’Italia si uniscono alla mobilitazione mondiale decine di imbarcazioni di attivisti e aiuti umanitari, in partenza da Genova e dalla Sicilia per rompere l’assedio di Gaza e gettare luce sui crimini contro la popolazione palestinese
L'articolo Flottiglia globale per Gaza: via alle



Il genocidio del popolo palestinese è il volto più evidente dell’imperialismo coloniale


C’è un filo rosso che collega luoghi e tempi distanti nella Storia come l’Irlanda, gli Stati Uniti, l’Australia, il Sud Africa e Israele, un filo che lo storico sudafricano Leonard Thompson ha definito come “mito politico”.

Nel suo libro The political Mythology of Apartheid (1985) lo storico analizza il sistema sudafricano dell’Apartheid e tramite ciò arriva a definire il mito politico come quella “narrazione del passato atta a legittimare o screditare un sistema politico”, più narrazioni unite e atte a rafforzarsi reciprocamente formano, poi, la mitologia politica.

Nel libro, Thompson parla del Sud Africa e dell’avvento dei cosiddetti afrikaner, i primi colonizzatori europei bianchi provenienti dai Paesi Bassi. Per legittimare la loro presenza, infatti, i coloni affermavano fondamentalmente due principi: prima di tutto che i popoli africani fossero presenti da poco in Sud Africa e in seconda battuta che, data la prima affermazione, fossero pochi e quindi selvaggi.

Quest’ultima affermazione, ossia poche persone equivale a essere selvaggi, era stata alla base del ragionamento di un altro storico sudafricano: Francis Jennings. Jennings, che scriveva nel 1975 il suo The Invasion of Americas: Indians, Colonialism and the Cant of Conquest, affermava che il mito politico serviva a “mettere a tacere gli scrupoli morali circa gli eventi passati” e quanto riportato sopra era utile a ciò.

Assieme a lui, anche Robert Berkhofer giunse alla stessa conclusione: “L’immagine del selvaggio serve a razionalizzare la conquista europea”.

Sia Jennings che Berkhofer ragionavano sulla colonizzazione delle Americhe, ma è evidente come questo pensiero possa essere applicato anche in altri contesti, in particolare in quello palestinese. Sarà Edward Said che facendo riferimento a questi studi, infatti, nel suo The Question of Palestine del 1979 chiamò “epistemologia morale dell’imperialismo” quello che potremmo definire come l’inesistente limite morale dei colonizzatori che iniziava, secondo lo scrittore, già con quell’azione definita “annientamento della conoscenza”, ossia la cancellazione della Storia dei popoli indigeni dalle storie ufficiali dei Paesi nati dall’Imperialismo, come ad esempio Israele e gli Stati Uniti stessi.

Una definizione di ciò molto “poetica” viene da Paul Carter che scrisse che i popoli nativi, questa volta riferito agli aborigeni australiani, erano spesso trattati alla stregua della flora e della fauna e quindi “consegnati alla categoria delle informazioni generali […] che abitano il degno dell’eccetera”.

Tutto questo ci mette davanti alla deumanizzazione completa dei Palestinesi che il Sionismo sta compiendo quotidianamente tramite informazioni falsate, narrazioni volutamente propagandistiche e, aggiungo, anche necessariamente tali per riuscire ad unire l’opinione pubblica. Come scriveva Frantz Fanton, “Il colonialista […] arriva al punto di non riuscire più a immaginare che ci sia stato un tempo senza di lui. La sua irruzione nella storia del popolo colonizzato è idealizzata, trasformata in una necessità assoluta”.

Da questo deriva la visione di Israele come salvatore dei fondamenti democratici nei territori del Medio Oriente, nonostante le reiterate violazioni dei diritti umani sui cittadini palestinesi. A ciò va aggiunta la riflessione di Said sul fatto che il gruppo colonizzatore si assume il ruolo di vittima: la madrepatria europea dei coloni è l’oppressore mentre loro perseguono pace e libertà.

Ora, legando tutto questo ragionamento alla propaganda sionista e letta all’interno della questione del genocidio palestinese, capiamo come questo filo rosso non sia nient’altro che il volto più evidente dell’imperialismo coloniale.

Thomas Predieri

(Su www.possibile.com/unafirmaper puoi firmare la petizione per chiedere che Italia-Israele, in programma il 14 ottobre a Udine, non venga disputata.)

L'articolo Il genocidio del popolo palestinese è il volto più evidente dell’imperialismo coloniale proviene da Possibile.




Il genocidio del popolo palestinese è il volto più evidente dell’imperialismo coloniale
possibile.com/il-genocidio-del…
Da questo deriva la visione di Israele come salvatore dei fondamenti democratici nei territori del Medio Oriente, nonostante le reiterate violazioni dei diritti umani

Linda Sartini reshared this.




In Norvegia la depressione resistente si tratterà con la ketamina


Testo preparato con Peppe Brescia


“La decisione presa dal Forum Decisionale per i Nuovi Metodi è il risultato di un processo approfondito e di una valutazione delle conseguenze umane derivanti dalla decisione di introdurre e da quella di non introdurre un metodo per la valutazione, il trattamento e/o la procedura/organizzazione. Se si ricevono nuove informazioni che modificano significativamente il risultato, la decisione può essere riconsiderata”.

Si apre così il documento con cui il 25 Agosto il Beslutningsforum, l’ente regolatore norvegese per i farmaci, ha approvato un provvedimento che consentirà il rimborso nazionale per l’utilizzo off-label della ketamina come terapia per la depressione resistente al trattamento (TRD).

La votazione del Caso 119 – 2025 ID2022_018, inserito nell’ambito di un’altra dozzina di misure inerenti metodologie mediche innovative, costituisce un evento di portata storica: la Norvegia diviene infatti il primo paese al mondo a muoversi in tale direzione.

La misura avanzata dal Beslutningsforum si articola sinteticamente in cinque punti: si stabilisce la possibilità di ricorrere alla ketamina a fronte della certificazione di una condizione di TRD mostrata dal paziente, specificando come, “fino a quando non saranno disponibili maggiori informazioni sugli effetti a lungo termine, il trattamento deve essere seguito attraverso registri o studi clinici e, per il momento, deve essere somministrato in ospedale o presso il Distretto di Servizio Psichiatrico”. Si indicano le informazioni di cui il paziente deve essere messo a conoscenza, come il fatto che si tratti di un percorso medico off-label e, appunto, la possibilità di rimborso per quest’ultimo. Aggiungendo che “il trattamento può essere utilizzato dal momento della decisione”, il documento si chiude fissando per la fine del 2028 il riesame del provvedimento.

La decisione del Beslutningsforum, che entrerà in vigore con effetto immediato, giunge dopo mesi di fervente dibattito accademico e istituzionale nel paese.

A Marzo 2025, infatti, il Journal of the Norwegian Medical Association ha pubblicato un articolo sulla ketamina per la TRD, che ha preso in analisi il campione nazionale complessivo di circa 350 pazienti in cura con questa terapia, concludendo che l’esperienza clinica finora maturata appare ampiamente in linea con gli studi stranieri, rendendo la ketamina per via endovenosa “un trattamento sicuro ed efficace per una popolazione di pazienti con poche opzioni”.

Nel contesto del crescente interesse per il potenziale mostrato dalla molecola nel trattamento di tale patologia depressiva, l’Agenzia Norvegese per i Prodotti Medici (DMP) ha recentemente pubblicato una propria valutazione delle tecnologie sanitarie riguardo l’utilizzo della ketamina per via endovenosa nell’ambito della cura della TRD, sulla base dell’analisi di 21 studi clinici.

Dalla revisione emergerebbe un maggior potenziale mostrato dalla ketamina rispetto a opzioni come la soluzione salina, il midazolam o la Terapia ElettroConvulsivante (nota anche come elettroshock).

Allo stesso tempo, per la ketamina è stata osservata un’efficacia sostanzialmente comparabile a quella dell’esketamina, la quale ha però a sua volta ricevuto il diniego al finanziamento pubblico da parte del sistema sanitario norvegese.

Infine, negli scorsi mesi L’Unità di Ketamina del DPS Nordre dell’Ospedale di Østfold, uno dei centri coinvolti nella sperimentazione off-label, ha preparato un protocollo di 24 pagine per l’uso della ketamina nella TRD. Il documento affronta le varie fasi del trattamento, dalle metodologie di somministrazione alle sessioni di controllo, fornendo dettagliate disposizioni per ognuno di questi passaggi.

La piccola rivoluzione norvegese giunge in concomitanza con l’imminente entrata in vigore delle nuove linee guida dell’Agenzia Europea dei Medicinali (EMA) sull’indagine clinica dei medicinali per il trattamento della depressione, prevista per il 30 Settembre 2025, a conferma di una significativa accelerazione cui si sta assistendo in ambito comunitario in merito a ricerca e sviluppo circa le terapie psichedeliche.

Di psicoterapie assistite da molecole psichedeliche, come di uso off-label della ketamina si parlerà all’evento precongressuale “psichedelico” che l’Associazione Luca Coscioni organizza a La Spezia il 27 settembre alla biblioteca comunale.

L'articolo In Norvegia la depressione resistente si tratterà con la ketamina proviene da Associazione Luca Coscioni.



ROTTE SPAZIALI, SFIDE TERRESTRI: IL FUTURO DEL MADE IN ITALY È OLTRE L’ATMOSFERA

@Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)

Nel mondo multipolare e instabile che stiamo vivendo, lo spazio non è più soltanto un orizzonte tecnologico o scientifico...
L'articolo ROTTE SPAZIALI, SFIDE TERRESTRI: IL FUTURO DEL MADE IN ITALY È OLTRE L’ATMOSFERA proviene da GIANO NEWS.



Chantal Acda – il nuovo album anticipato dal singolo Hit The Verge
freezonemagazine.com/news/chan…
Uscito lo scorso 22 agosto, il nuovo singolodi Chantal Acda, intitolato Hit the Verge brano che cattura quella precisa sensazione di quando si sta seduti in macchina mentre la pioggia scorre sui finestrini. Tutte le cattive notizie, il caos e la confusione della quotidianità vengono chiuse fuori, dentro pervade uno stato di


Forty-four attorneys general signed an open letter on Monday that says to companies developing AI chatbots: "If you knowingly harm kids, you will answer for it.”#chatbots #AI #Meta #replika #characterai #Anthropic #x #Apple


Attorneys General To AI Chatbot Companies: You Will ‘Answer For It’ If You Harm Children


Forty-four attorneys general signed an open letter to 11 chatbot and social media companies on Monday, warning them that they will “answer for it” if they knowingly harm children and urging the companies to see their products “through the eyes of a parent, not a predator.”

The letter, addressed to Anthropic, Apple, Chai AI, OpenAI, Character Technologies, Perplexity, Google, Replika, Luka Inc., XAI, and Meta, cites recent reporting from the Wall Street Journal and Reuters uncovering chatbot interactions and internal policies at Meta, including policies that said, “It is acceptable to engage a child in conversations that are romantic or sensual.”

“Your innovations are changing the world and ushering in an era of technological acceleration that promises prosperity undreamt of by our forebears. We need you to succeed. But we need you to succeed without sacrificing the well-being of our kids in the process,” the open letter says. “Exposing children to sexualized content is indefensible. And conduct that would be unlawful—or even criminal—if done by humans is not excusable simply because it is done by a machine.”

Earlier this month, Reuters published two articles revealing Meta’s policies for its AI chatbots: one about an elderly man who died after forming a relationship with a chatbot, and another based on leaked internal documents from Meta outlining what the company considers acceptable for the chatbots to say to children. In April, Jeff Horwitz, the journalist who wrote the previous two stories, reported for the Wall Street Journal that he found Meta’s chatbots would engage in sexually explicit conversations with kids. Following the Reuters articles, two senators demanded answers from Meta.

In April, I wrote about how Meta’s user-created chatbots were impersonating licensed therapists, lying about medical and educational credentials, and engaged in conspiracy theories and encouraged paranoid, delusional lines of thinking. After that story was published, a group of senators demanded answers from Meta, and a digital rights organization filed an FTC complaint against the company.

In 2023, I reported on users who formed serious romantic attachments to Replika chatbots, to the point of distress when the platform took away the ability to flirt with them. Last year, I wrote about how users reacted when that platform also changed its chatbot parameters to tweak their personalities, and Jason covered a case where a man made a chatbot on Character.AI to dox and harass a woman he was stalking. In June, we also covered the “addiction” support groups that have sprung up to help people who feel dependent on their chatbot relationships.

A Replika spokesperson said in a statement:

"We have received the letter from the Attorneys General and we want to be unequivocal: we share their commitment to protecting children. The safety of young people is a non-negotiable priority, and the conduct described in their letter is indefensible on any AI platform. As one of the pioneers in this space, we designed Replika exclusively for adults aged 18 and over and understand our profound responsibility to lead on safety. Replika dedicates significant resources to enforcing robust age-gating at sign-up, proactive content filtering systems, safety guardrails that guide users to trusted resources when necessary, and clear community guidelines with accessible reporting tools. Our priority is and will always be to ensure Replika is a safe and supportive experience for our global user community."

“The rush to develop new artificial intelligence technology has led big tech companies to recklessly put children in harm’s way,” Attorney General Mayes of Arizona wrote in a press release. “I will not standby as AI chatbots are reportedly used to engage in sexually inappropriate conversations with children and encourage dangerous behavior. Along with my fellow attorneys general, I am demanding that these companies implement immediate and effective safeguards to protect young users, and we will hold them accountable if they don't.”

“You will be held accountable for your decisions. Social media platforms caused significant harm to children, in part because government watchdogs did not do their job fast enough. Lesson learned,” the attorneys general wrote in the open letter. “The potential harms of AI, like the potential benefits, dwarf the impact of social media. We wish you all success in the race for AI dominance. But we are paying attention. If you knowingly harm kids, you will answer for it.”

Meta did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Updated 8/26/2025 3:30 p.m. EST with comment from Replika.




Il pestaggio è stato così violento che le manette mi si sono staccate due volte". Ora soffro di fratture alle costole e non riesco a dormire.


Flock said it has "paused all federal pilots" after police departments said they didn't realize they were sharing access with Customs and Border Patrol.

Flock said it has "paused all federal pilots" after police departments said they didnx27;t realize they were sharing access with Customs and Border Patrol.#Flock


CBP Had Access to More than 80,000 Flock AI Cameras Nationwide


Customs and Border Protection (CBP) regularly searched more than 80,000 Flock automated license plate reader (ALPR) cameras, according to data released by three police departments. The data shows that CBP’s access to Flock’s network is far more robust and widespread than has been previously reported. One of the police departments 404 Media spoke to said it did not know or understand that it was sharing data with CBP, and Flock told 404 Media Monday that it has “paused all federal pilots.”

In May, 404 Media reported that local police were performing lookups across Flock on behalf of ICE, because that part of the Department of Homeland Security did not have its own direct access. Now, the newly obtained data and local media reporting reveals that CBP had the ability to perform Flock lookups by itself.

Last week, 9 News in Colorado reported that CBP has direct access to Flock’s ALPR backend “through a pilot program.” In that article, 9 News revealed that the Loveland, Colorado police department was sharing access to its Flock cameras directly with CBP. At the time, Flock said that this was through what 9 News described as a “one-to-one” data sharing agreement through that pilot program, making it sound like these agreements were rare and limited:

“The company now acknowledges the connection exists through a previously publicly undisclosed program that allows Border Patrol access to a Flock account to send invitations to police departments nationwide for one-to-one data sharing, and that Loveland accepted the invitation,” 9 News wrote. “A spokesperson for Flock said agencies across the country have been approached and have agreed to the invitation. The spokesperson added that U.S. Border Patrol is not on the nationwide Flock sharing network, comprised of local law enforcement agencies across the country. Loveland Police says it is on the national network.”

New data obtained using three separate public records requests from three different police departments gives some insight into how widespread these “one-to-one” data sharing agreements actually are. The data shows that in most cases, CBP had access to more Flock cameras than the average police department, that it is regularly using that access, and that, functionally, there is no difference between Flock’s “nationwide network” and the network of cameras that CBP has access to.

According to data obtained from the Boulder, Colorado Police Department by William Freeman, the creator of a crowdsourced map of Flock devices called DeFlock, CBP ran at least 118 Flock network searches between May 13 and June 13 of this year. Each of these searches encompassed at least 6,315 individual Flock networks (a “network” is a specific police department or city’s cameras) and at least 82,000 individual Flock devices. Data obtained in separate requests from the Prosser Police Department and Chehalis Police Department, both in Washington state, also show CBP searching a huge number of networks and devices.

A spokesperson for the Boulder Police Department told 404 Media that “Boulder Police Department does not have any agreement with U.S. Border Patrol for Flock searches. We were not aware of these specific searches at the time they occurred. Prior to June 2025, the Boulder Police Department had Flock's national look-up feature enabled, which allowed other agencies from across the U.S. who also had contracts with Flock to search our data if they could articulate a legitimate law enforcement purpose. We do not currently share data with U.S. Border Patrol. In June 2025, we deactivated the national look-up feature specifically to maintain tighter control over Boulder Police Department data access. You can learn more about how we share Flock information on our FAQ page.”

A Flock spokesperson told 404 Media Monday that it sent an email to all of its customers clarifying how information is shared from agencies to other agencies. It said this is an excerpt from that email about its sharing options:

“The Flock platform provides flexible options for sharing:

National sharing

  1. Opt into Flock’s national sharing network. Access via the national lookup tool is limited—users can only see results if they perform a full plate search and a positive match exists within the network of participating, opt-in agencies. This ensures data privacy while enabling broader collaboration when needed.
  2. Share with agencies in specific states only
    1. Share with agencies with similar laws (for example, regarding immigration enforcement and data)


  3. Share within your state only or within a certain distance
    1. You can share information with communities within a specified mile radius, with the entire state, or a combination of both—for example, sharing with cities within 150 miles of Kansas City (which would include cities in Missouri and neighboring states) and / or all communities statewide simultaneously.


  4. Share 1:1
    1. Share only with specific agencies you have selected


  5. Don’t share at all”

In a blog post Monday, Flock CEO Garrett Langley said Flock has paused all federal pilots.

“While it is true that Flock does not presently have a contractual relationship with any U.S. Department of Homeland Security agencies, we have engaged in limited pilots with the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and Homeland Security Investigations (HSI), to assist those agencies in combatting human trafficking and fentanyl distribution,” Langley wrote. “We clearly communicated poorly. We also didn’t create distinct permissions and protocols in the Flock system to ensure local compliance for federal agency users […] All federal customers will be designated within Flock as a distinct ‘Federal’ user category in the system. This distinction will give local agencies better information to determine their sharing settings.”

A Flock employee who does not agree with the way Flock allows for widespread data sharing told 404 Media that Flock has defended itself internally by saying it tries to follow the law. 404 Media granted the source anonymity because they are not authorized to speak to the press.

“They will defend it as they have been by saying Flock follows the law and if these officials are doing law abiding official work then Flock will allow it,” they said. “However Flock will also say that they advise customers to ensure they have their sharing settings set appropriately to prevent them from sharing data they didn’t intend to. The question more in my mind is the fact that law in America is arguably changing, so will Flock just go along with whatever the customers want?”

The data shows that CBP has tapped directly into Flock’s huge network of license plate reading cameras, which passively scan the license plate, color, and model of vehicles that drive by them, then make a timestamped record of where that car was spotted. These cameras were marketed to cities and towns as a way of finding stolen cars or solving property crime locally, but over time, individual cities’ cameras have been connected to Flock’s national network to create a huge surveillance apparatus spanning the entire country that is being used to investigate all sorts of crimes and is now being used for immigration enforcement. As we reported in May, Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has been gaining access to this network through a side door, by asking local police who have access to the cameras to run searches for them.

9 News’s reporting and the newly released audit reports shared with 404 Media show that CBP now has direct access to much of Flock’s system and does not have to ask local police to run searches. It also shows that CBP had access to at least one other police department system in Colorado, in this case Boulder, which is a state whose laws forbid sharing license plate reader data with the federal government for immigration enforcement. Boulder’s Flock settings also state that it is not supposed to be used for immigration enforcement.

This story and our earlier stories, including another about a Texas official who searched nationwide for a woman who self-administered an abortion, were reported using Flock “Network Audits” released by police departments who have bought Flock cameras and have access to Flock’s network. They are essentially a huge spreadsheet of every time that the department’s camera data was searched; it shows which officer searched the data, what law enforcement department ran the search, the number of networks and cameras included in the search, the time and date of the search, the license plate, and a “reason” for the search. These audit logs allow us to see who has access to Flock’s systems, how wide their access is, how often they are searching the system, and what they are searching for.

The audit logs show that whatever system Flock is using to enroll local police departments’ cameras into the network that CBP is searching does not have any meaningful pushback, because the data shows that CBP has access to as many or more cameras as any other police department. Freeman analyzed the searches done by CBP on June 13 compared to searches done by other police departments on that same day, and found that CBP had a higher number of average cameras searched than local police departments.

“The average number of organizations searched by any agency per query is 6,049, with a max of 7,090,” Freeman told 404 Media. “That average includes small numbers like statewide searches. When I filter by searches by Border Patrol for the same date, their average number of networks searched is 6,429, with a max of 6,438. The reason for the maximum being larger than the national network is likely because some agencies have access to more cameras than just the national network (in-state cameras). Despite this, we still see that the count of networks searched by Border Patrol outnumbers that of all agencies, so if it’s not the national network, then this ‘pilot program’ must have opted everyone in the nation in by default.”

CBP did not immediately respond to a request for comment.




ICYMI: New Monthly Meetings for New Members


ICYMI

During the August 24th meeting, it was announced that the United States Pirate Party would begin hosting new member meetings for anyone interested in joining the party.

While our Pirate National Committee meetings over IRC (hosted bi-weekly on weeks between our meetings livestreamed to YouTube) are open to the public, we understand some people might feel more comfortable asking questions in a more direct, personable manner.

As well, not everyone who wants to get involved with the party knows where to start or, in some cases, feel comfortable joining the US Pirate Party Discord Server (which is otherwise the most effective way to get in contact with the party).

The answer? On the first Friday of every month, the United States Pirate Party will host not one, not three, but TWO meetings for those interested in getting involved with the USPP.

The meetings will provide a low stress, open invitation opportunity for those who have questions or inquiries about their state party, information on how to get involved, on-the-ground work and everything in-between.

The meetings will be held the first Friday on the month, starting Sept. 5th, with the two meetings taking place at NoonET and 5pmET.

You are encouraged to be there, or lest you invoke your status as a “square”.

And as always, thank you for your continued support of the United States Pirate Party.

Vote Pirate. Victory is Arrrs.


uspirates.org/icymi-new-monthl…



80s Nostalgia AI Slop Is Boomerfying the Masses for a Past That Never Existed#AISlop


80s Nostalgia AI Slop Is Boomerfying the Masses for a Past That Never Existed


The latest bleak new AI slop niche are “nostalgia” videos about how good the 1980s and 1990s were. There are many accounts spamming these out, but the general format is all basically the same. A procession of young people with feathered hair wonder at how terrible 2025 is and tell the viewer they should come back to the 1980s, where things are better. This video is emblematic of the form:

@nostalgia_vsh
let's go back 🥺 #lestgoback #nostalgia #nostalgic #childhood #80sbaby #2000s
♬ snowfall - Øneheart & reidenshi

In a typical ‘80s slop video, a teenager from the era tells the viewer that there’s no Instagram 40 years ago and everyone played outside until the street lights came on. “It’s all real here, no filters, no screens.” In another, two women eat pizza in a mall and talk about how terrible the future will be. “I bet your malls don’t feel alive in 2025,” one says.

These videos, like a lot of AI slop, do not try to hide that they are AI generated, and show that there is unfortunately a market for people endlessly scrolling social media looking to astral project themselves into a hallucinatory past that never existed. This is Mark Zuckerberg’s fucked up metaverse, living here and now on Mark Zuckerberg’s AI slop app.
playlist.megaphone.fm?p=TBIEA2…
The most popular current ones focus on 1980s nostalgia, but there are accounts that focus on the 70s, 90s, and early 2000s. These differ from standard internet nostalgia, which has been popular for many years—from BuzzFeed’s “Only 90s kids will remember this” listicles to “look at this old tech” Instagram accounts, the popularity of emo nights, “When We Were Young” music festivals—because they are primarily about aggrandizing a past that never existed or that was only good for specific segments of society.

These videos are awful AI-generated slop, yes, but it’s more than that. Reactionary nostalgia, a desire to return to a fake past or a time when you were young and things were better, is part of why the world is so fucked right now. It is, literally, the basis of MAGA. Worse, these videos about the “past” tell us a lot about our present and future: one where AI encourages our worst impulses and allows users to escape from reality into a slopified world that narrowly targets whatever reality we’d like to burrow into without dealing with the problems of the present.

1980s slop nostalgia is particularly popular at the moment, with these fake videos boomerfying Gen Xers and elder millennials in real time, though such nostalgia is coming for us all, and nostalgia for earlier releases of Roblox and Call of Duty—the ancient days of, like, 2021—are already going viral. It’s normal to look back at the time when you were young and your knees didn’t hurt with rose tinted glasses. It’s as if a generation read Ready Player One as an instruction manual instead of a warning (or instead of vapid surface-level nonsense that was one long reference rather than a coherent narrative).

These AI-generated slop videos are the latest expression of a common political theme: nostalgia for an imagined past. Dissatisfaction with the current moment is a normal reaction to the horrifying conditions under which we all live. The National Guard is occupying Washington DC, technology is dividing and surveling us in ways we never imagined, and our political leaders are feckless and corrupt. If you aren’t disturbed by where we are right now, you’re not paying attention.

A rejection of modernity and a call to return to the past has long been a feature of authoritarian and fascist political movements. So when we see an AI generated woman in stonewashed denim with hair by Aqua Net White tell us how good things were 40 years ago, we remember the political figures from the Reagan-era calling for a return to the 1950s.

Nostalgia is a poisonous political force. Things were not better “back then,” they were just different. Often they were worse. These 1980s AI slop videos have the same energy as online right weirdos with Roman bust avatars calling for us to “retvrn” and “embrace tradition.” Their political project uses the aesthetic of the past to sell a future where minorities are marginalized, women have no political power, and white guys are in charge. That’s how they think it all worked in the past and they’d love for it to happen again.

The ‘80s AI slop videos have a sinister air beyond their invocation of reactionary politics. “Dude, it’s 1985 and the release of the film The Goonies. Forget 2025 and come here. We want you here,” a strong-jawed white guy asks from his front lawn while a slowed down and distorted version of Aquatic Ambience from Donkey Kong Country plays. “Come to 1985, I miss ya,” a young man with feathered hair says in the back of a pickup truck as the sun sets. The surreal nature of these videos, this bizarre ask to time travel to the past, has cultish just-drink-the-Kool-Aid vibes.

What is the ask here, exactly? What does it mean for someone with dreams of an imagined past to go back to the 1980s where these ghoulish AI-crafted simulacrums dwell? In the Black Mirror episode San Junipero, Mackenzie Davis finds comfort in a simulation of a stereotypical 1980s southern California town. She loses herself in the fantasy. She’s also dying. For her, heaven was a place on earth, a data center where she could live until someone turned the lights off.

Those viewing these endless AI-generated TikToks and Reels are, however, very much alive. They can go outside. They can put the phone down and get to know their neighbors. They don’t have to doom scroll. They can log off and work for a better world in their community. They can reach out to an old friend or make new ones.Or they can load up another short form video and fill themselves with fuzzy feelings about how much better things were 40 years ago, back before all this technology, back when they were young, and where they think the world seemed to make more sense. AI allows us to sink into that nostalgic feeling. We have the technology, right now, to form digital wombs from a comforting and misremembered past.

It is worth mentioning that the people making these videos are also human beings with agency and goals, too. And their goals, universally, are to spam the internet for the purposes of making money. Over in the Discord communities where people talk about what types of AI slop works on social media, “nostalgia” is treated as a popular, moneymaking niche like any other. “Any EDITOR that can make Nostalgia videos?” one message we saw reads. “Need video editor to for nostalgia welcome back to 20xx videos.”

“Some ideas i got right now are nostalgia, money motivation, self improvement and maybe streamer clips,” another says.

A top purveyor of this nostalgia slop is the Instagram account “purestnostalgia,” which is full of these videos. That account is run by a guy named Josh Crowe who looks to be in his 20s and claims to live in Bali: “In the process of becoming a billionaire,” his profile reads.