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Pixelfed v0.12.6 è ora disponibile e introduce le "stories"

@Che succede nel Fediverso?


Pixelfed v0.12.6 is now available!

With Stories ✨

github.com/pixelfed/pixelfed/r…





Dare luogo alla pace. A Catania la Piazza delle Tre Culture


@Giornalismo e disordine informativo
articolo21.org/2025/09/dare-lu…
Riparte da Catania la “Global Sumud Flottilla”. Basterà un filo di maestrale per far giungere i pacifisti (non terroristi!) in Palestina. La Sicilia si dimostra ancora crocevia del Mediterraneo e

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One Camera Mule to Rule Them All


A mule isn’t just a four-legged hybrid created of a union betwixt Donkey and Horse; in our circles, it’s much more likely to mean a testbed device you hang various bits of hardware off in order to evaluate. [Jenny List]’s 7″ touchscreen camera enclosure is just such a mule.

In this case, the hardware to be evaluated is camera modules– she’s starting out with the official RPi HQ camera, but the modular nature of the construction means it’s easy to swap modules for evaluation. The camera modules live on 3D printed front plates held to the similarly-printed body with self-tapping screws.

Any Pi will do, though depending on the camera module you may need one of the newer versions. [Jenny] has got Pi4 inside, which ought to handle anything. For control and preview, [Jenny] is using an old first-gen 7″ touchscreen from the Raspberry Pi foundation. Those were nice little screens back in the day, and they still serve well now.

There’s no provision for a battery because [Jenny] doesn’t need one– this isn’t a working camera, after all, it’s just a test mule for the sensors. Having it tethered to a wall wart or power bank is no problem in this application. All files are on GitHub under a CC4.0 license– not just STLs, either, proper CAD files that you can actually make your own. (SCAD files in this case, but who doesn’t love OpenSCAD?) That means if you love the look of this thing and want to squeeze in a battery or add a tripod mount, you can! It’s no shock that our own [Jenny List] would follow best-practice for open source hardware, but it’s so few people do that it’s worth calling out when we see it.

Thanks to [Jenny] for the tip, and don’t forget that the tip line is open to everyone, and everyone is equally welcome to toot their own horn.


hackaday.com/2025/09/03/one-ca…

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Nuovi ricatti: se non paghi, daremo tutti i tuoi dati in pasto alle intelligenze artificiali!


Il gruppo di hacker LunaLock ha aggiunto un nuovo elemento al classico schema di estorsione, facendo leva sui timori di artisti e clienti. Il 30 agosto, sul sito web Artists&Clients, che mette in contatto illustratori indipendenti con i clienti, è apparso un messaggio: gli aggressori hanno segnalato il furto e la crittografia di tutti i dati della risorsa.

Gli hacker hanno promesso di pubblicare il codice sorgente del sito e le informazioni personali degli utenti nelle darknet se il proprietario non avesse pagato 50.000 dollari in criptovaluta. Ma la principale leva di pressione era la prospettiva di trasferire le opere e le informazioni rubate ad aziende che addestrano le reti neurali per includerle in set per modelli di addestramento.

Il sito ha pubblicato una nota con un timer per il conto alla rovescia, in cui si informava che se la vittima si fosse rifiutata di pagare, i file sarebbero stati resi pubblici. Gli autori hanno avvertito di possibili sanzioni per violazione del GDPR e di altre leggi. Il pagamento era richiesto in Bitcoin o Monero. Screenshot della notifica sono stati diffusi sui social network e persino Google è riuscito a indicizzare la pagina con il messaggio, dopodiché Artists&Clients ha smesso di funzionare: quando si tenta di accedere, gli utenti visualizzano un errore di Cloudflare.

La maggior parte del testo sembra un messaggio standard negli attacchi ransomware. La novità è l’accenno all’intenzione di consegnare i disegni e i dati rubati agli sviluppatori di intelligenza artificiale. Gli esperti hanno osservato che questa è la prima volta che vedono l’argomento relativo all’accesso ai set di addestramento utilizzato come metodo di pressione. Finora, tale possibilità era stata discussa solo teoricamente: ad esempio, che i criminali potessero analizzare i dati per calcolare l’importo del riscatto.

Non è ancora chiaro come gli aggressori trasferiranno esattamente i materiali artistici agli sviluppatori dell’algoritmo. Possono pubblicare le immagini su un sito normale e attendere che vengano rilevate dai crawler dei modelli linguistici. Un’altra opzione è caricare le immagini tramite i servizi stessi, se le loro regole consentono l’utilizzo dei contenuti degli utenti per l’addestramento. In ogni caso, la minaccia stessa spinge la comunità di artisti e clienti a fare pressione sull’amministrazione delle risorse chiedendo il pagamento di un riscatto per mantenere il controllo sulle proprie opere.

Al momento, il sito web di Artists&Clients rimane irraggiungibile. Nel frattempo, gli utenti continuano a discutere della minaccia e a condividere online screenshot acquisiti, il che non fa che aumentare la visibilità dell’attacco.

L'articolo Nuovi ricatti: se non paghi, daremo tutti i tuoi dati in pasto alle intelligenze artificiali! proviene da il blog della sicurezza informatica.



Jaguar Land Rover vittima di attacco hacker: produzione interrotta!


La casa automobilistica Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) ha annunciato di essere stata costretta a disattivare diversi sistemi a causa di un attacco hacker. L’incidente sembra aver avuto ripercussioni sulle attività produttive e di vendita al dettaglio della casa automobilistica.

“JLR è stata colpita da un incidente informatico. Abbiamo preso misure immediate per mitigare l’impatto spegnendo preventivamente i nostri sistemi”, ha dichiarato l’azienda in una nota. “Al momento non ci sono prove di furto di dati dei clienti, tuttavia le nostre attività di vendita al dettaglio e produzione hanno subito notevoli interruzioni”.

JLR ha inoltre affermato di essere attualmente al lavoro su un riavvio controllato di tutte le applicazioni globali. L’azienda non ha fornito una tempistica specifica per il ritorno alla normalità né dettagli sull’attacco subito.

Le prime segnalazioni di disagi alla JLR sono arrivate dai concessionari del Regno Unito, che si sono lamentati di non riuscire a immatricolare le nuove auto e a fornire i pezzi di ricambio ai centri di assistenza.

Secondo il Liverpool Echo, l’attacco è avvenuto nel fine settimana e l’incidente ha costretto la JLR a disattivare diversi sistemi, tra cui quelli utilizzati nello stabilimento produttivo di Solihull (dove vengono costruiti i modelli Land Rover Discovery, Range Rover e Range Rover Sport).

Secondo quanto riportato dai media, lunedì i lavoratori dello stabilimento di Halewood hanno ricevuto un’e-mail in cui si chiedeva loro di non presentarsi al lavoro, mentre altri membri dello staff sono stati mandati a casa.

Al momento, nessun gruppo di hacker ha rivendicato la responsabilità dell’attacco alla Jaguar Land Rover.

L'articolo Jaguar Land Rover vittima di attacco hacker: produzione interrotta! proviene da il blog della sicurezza informatica.

Gazzetta del Cadavere reshared this.



FLOSS Weekly Episode 845: The Sticky Spaghetti Gauge


This week Jonathan and Randal talk Flutter and Dart! Is Google killing Flutter? What’s the challenge Randal sees in training new senior developers, and what’s the solution? Listen to find out!

youtube.com/embed/HzZQacDIxZg?…

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/2025/09/03/floss-…



Microchip, il governo americano mette un freno a Tsmc in Cina

L'articolo proviene da #StartMag e viene ricondiviso sulla comunità Lemmy @Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)
Dopo Samsung e Sk Hynix, gli Stati Uniti hanno privato anche Tsmc dell'agevolazione per l'esportazione di macchinari per i microchip in Cina. Washington è sempre più determinata a evitare che Pechino migliori le sue capacità

in reply to Informa Pirata

poi magari pechino bloccherà o razionerà le "terre rare" ed il tromphio trump si calerà le braghe,metterà un alteo 200% di dazi!?🤔

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Vi racconto la missione di Praexidia, la fondazione a tutela delle imprese. Parla il gen. Goretti

@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo

Difesa, aerospazio, cybersicurezza, biotecnologie e infrastrutture critiche: sono questi i settori al centro della missione della Fondazione Praexidia, nuova realtà nata con l’obiettivo di tutelare e valorizzare le filiere




YouTuber Benn Jordan has never been to Israel, but Google's AI summary said he'd visited and made a video about it. Then the backlash started.

YouTuber Benn Jordan has never been to Israel, but Googlex27;s AI summary said hex27;d visited and made a video about it. Then the backlash started.#News #AI

#ai #News #x27

Breaking News Channel reshared this.



C’è un giudice a Berlino anche per Google: lo spezzatino si allontana?

L'articolo proviene da #StartMag e viene ricondiviso sulla comunità Lemmy @Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)
La decisione del giudice distrettuale statunitense giunge a un anno di distanza dalla sentenza secondo la quale Google deteneva illegalmente il monopolio della ricerca su Internet. Mountain View




Ask Hackaday: Now You Install Your Friends’ VPNs. But Which One?


Something which may well unite Hackaday readers is the experience of being “The computer person” among your family or friends. You’ll know how it goes, when you go home for Christmas, stay with the in-laws, or go to see some friend from way back, you end up fixing their printer connection or something. You know that they would bridle somewhat if you asked them to do whatever it is they do for a living as a free service for you, but hey, that’s the penalty for working in technology.

Bad Laws Just Make People Avoid Them


There’s a new one that’s happened to me and no doubt other technically-minded Brits over the last few weeks: I’m being asked to recommend, and sometimes install, a VPN service. The British government recently introduced the Online Safety Act, which is imposing ID-backed age verification for British internet users when they access a large range of popular websites. The intent is to regulate access to pornography, but the net has been spread so wide that many essential or confidential services are being caught up in it. To be a British Internet user is to have your government peering over your shoulder, and while nobody’s on the side of online abusers, understandably a lot of my compatriots want no part of it. We’re in the odd position of having 4Chan and the right-wing Reform Party alongside Wikipedia among those at the front line on the matter. What a time to be alive.

VPN applications have shot to the top of all British app download charts, prompting the government to flirt with deny the idea of banning them, but as you might imagine therein lies a problem. Aside from the prospect of dodgy VPN apps to trap the unwary, the average Joe has no idea how to choose from the plethora of offerings. A YouTuber being paid to shill “that” VPN service is as close of they’ve ever come to a VPN, so they are simply unequipped to make a sound judgement when it comes to trusting a service with their web traffic. They have no hope of rolling their own VPN; setting up WireGuard and still further having a friend elsewhere in the world prepared to act as their endpoint are impractical.

It therefore lies upon us, their tech-savvy friends, to lead them through this maze. Which brings me to the point of this piece; are we even up to the job ourselves? I’ve been telling my friends to use ProtonVPN because their past behaviour means I trust Proton more than I do some of the other well-known players, but is my semi-informed opinion on the nose here? Even I need help!

Today Brits, Tomorrow The Rest Of You


At the moment it’s Brits who are scrambling for VPNs, but it seems very likely that with the EU yet again flirting with their ChatControl snooping law, and an American government whose actions are at best unpredictable, soon enough many of the rest of you will too. The question is then: where do we send the non-technical people, and how good are the offerings? A side-by-side review of VPNs has been done to death by many other sites, so there’s little point in repeating. Instead let’s talk to some experts. You lot, or at least those among the Hackaday readership who know their stuff when it comes to VPNs. What do you recommend for your friends and family?

Header image: Nenad Stojkovic, CC BY 2.0.


hackaday.com/2025/09/03/ask-ha…



Dal 17 al 26 ottobre la Curia generalizia ospiterà la terza riunione dei superiori maggiori della Compagnia di Gesù, un incontro che segue i primi del 2000 e del 2005 e risponde alla decisione della 34ª Congregazione Generale di tenere un appuntament…


L’eredità dell’omicidio Dalla Chiesa e le cose ancora da fare


@Giornalismo e disordine informativo
articolo21.org/2025/09/leredit…
La memoria del generale, prefetto, Carlo Alberto Dalla Chiesa, assassinato a Palermo il 3 settembre 1982 all’esito di una convergenza di interessi mai completamente chiarita e punita può anche



Venezia 82, la Divina Duse torna in scena con Valeria Bruni Tedeschi

VENEZIA – La giornata di oggi dell’82 mostra del cinema di Venezia porta sullo schermo la figura “Divina” di Eleonora Duse, raccontata dal regista Pietro Marcello nel film Duse. A…
L'articolo Venezia 82, la Divina Duse torna in scena con Valeria Bruni Tedeschi su Lumsanews.


Dalla Chiesa, l’attentato mafioso che sconvolse l’Italia

[quote]PALERMO – “La Sicilia si stringe attorno alla memoria di un uomo che resta un faro di legalità per le generazioni presenti e future”. Così il presidente della regione Sicilia…
L'articolo Dalla Chiesa, lumsanews.it/dalla-chiesa-43-a…



Ponte sullo Stretto, la replica del Mit agli Stati Uniti: “Non prevediamo fondi Nato”

[quote]ROMA – Questa volta la frenata al Ponte sullo Stretto non era arrivata dalle opposizioni ma da oltreoceano. Con grande sorpresa tra i membri dell’esecutivo guidato da Giorgia Meloni, gli…
L'articolo Ponte sullo Stretto, la replica del Mit agli Stati Uniti: “Non



Dai think tank al campo di battaglia. L’IA militare tra Washington e Kyiv

@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo

Dalle linee di trincea ucraine fino alla Silicon Valley, passando per gli uffici del Pentagono. La corsa all’intelligenza artificiale militare rappresenta oggi il nuovo terreno di competizione tra potenze. La notizia riportata da Politico, nuda e cruda, è che quando affidi scenari di crisi a modelli




INTELLIGENZA ARTIFICIALE: QUALE RISPONDE MEGLIO SENZA INVENTARE NULLA?

@Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)

Geoffrey A. Fowler, editorialista del The Washington Post sui temi della tecnologia, si è chiesto quale delle intelligenze artificiali sia la più brava...
L'articolo INTELLIGENZA ARTIFICIALE: QUALE RISPONDE MEGLIO SENZA INVENTARE NULLA? proviene da GIANO NEWS.



Israele manda i droni contro l’Onu. Unifil: “Granate a venti metri da noi”


@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo
La missione ONU in Libano accusa Israele di aver messo in pericolo il proprio personale nonostante l’avviso preventivo; cresce la tensione lungo la frontiera mentre resta irrisolto il ritiro delle truppe dal sud del Paese.
L'articolo Israele manda i droni contro l’Onu. Unifil: “Granate a



Trump sceglie “Rocket city” come nuova sede dell’US Space command

@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo

Dopo speculazioni sulle possibili novità annunciate durante la conferenza stampa di Trump, tra cui l’ipotesi di un intervento contro il Venezuela, il presidente americano ha sorpreso tutti annunciando il trasferimento del quartier generale dello US Space command da Colorado Springs, Colorado, a




Burkina Faso, nuova legge contro la comunità LGBTQ: fino a cinque anni di carcere


@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo
La nuova normativa, approvata all’unanimità dal parlamento di transizione, prevede da due a cinque anni di carcere, multe e la deportazione per gli stranieri recidivi.
L'articolo Burkina Faso, nuova legge contro la comunità LGBTQ: fino a cinque



Meno vincoli, più sviluppo. Nasce l’Osservatorio sul Diritto all’Innovazione

@Politica interna, europea e internazionale

MENO VINCOLI, PIÙ SVILUPPO Nasce l’Osservatorio sul diritto all’innovazione, 9 settembre 2025, ore 13:00, Sala “Caduti di Nassirya”, Senato della Repubblica Interverranno Andrea Cangini, Segretario generale Fondazione Einaudi e Direttore Osservatorio sul



Perché l’Ue sfruculia ancora Meta

L'articolo proviene da #StartMag e viene ricondiviso sulla comunità Lemmy @Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)
Dopo la multa da 200 milioni che la Commissione Ue ha elevato a Meta lo scorso aprile, la Big Tech americana guidata da Mark Zuckerberg (che s'è più volte lamentato che nel Vecchio continente non si possa fare innovazione a causa dell'impianto normativo) rischia

in reply to Informa Pirata

E Meta ancora non capisce un cazzo! Per l'ennesima volta!

youtube.com/watch?v=ymHyOmlUlP…



La US Navy affonda una barca di trafficanti venezuelani. Tensione nel Mar dei Caraibi

@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo

Una nave della US Navy ha intercettato e affondato un’imbarcazione carica di droga, partita dal Venezuela e legata – secondo Washington – a un’organizzazione narco–terrorista vicina al governo di Nicolás Maduro. L’operazione è stata annunciata dal segretario di Stato Marco Rubio e




Pornhub's parent company Aylo and its affiliates settled a lawsuit with the FTC and Utah that alleged the company "deceived users" about abuse material on the site.

Pornhubx27;s parent company Aylo and its affiliates settled a lawsuit with the FTC and Utah that alleged the company "deceived users" about abuse material on the site.#pornhub #FTC


Pornhub Will Pay $5 Million Over Allegations of Hosting Child Sexual Abuse Material


The Federal Trade Commission announced Wednesday that Pornhub and its parent company Aylo settled a lawsuit filed by the Federal Trade Commission and the state of Utah.

The FTC and Utah’s attorney general claimed that Pornhub and its affiliates “deceived users by doing little to block tens of thousands of videos and photos featuring child sexual abuse material (CSAM) and nonconsensual material (NCM) despite claiming that this content was ‘strictly prohibited,’” the FTC wrote in a press release.

“As part of a proposed order settling the allegations, Pornhub’s operators, Aylo and its affiliated companies (collectively Aylo), will be required to establish a program to prevent the distribution of CSAM and NCM on its websites and pay a $5 million penalty to the state of Utah,” it said.

“This settlement reaffirms and enhances Aylo’s efforts to prevent the publication of child sexual abuse material (CSAM) and non-consensual material (NCM) on its platforms,” a spokesperson for Aylo told 404 Media said in a statement. “Aylo is committed to maintaining the highest standards of safety and compliance on its platforms. While the FTC and Utah DCP [Division of Consumer Protection] have raised serious concerns and allege that some of Aylo’s user generated content websites made available videos and photos containing CSAM and NCM, this agreement strengthens the comprehensive safeguards that have been in place for years on Aylo platforms. These measures reflect Aylo’s ongoing commitment to constantly evolving compliance efforts. Importantly, this settlement resolves the matter with no admission of wrongdoing while reaffirming Aylo’s commitment to the highest standards of platform safety and compliance.”

In addition to the penalty fee, according to the proposed settlement, Aylo would have to “implement a program” to prevent CSAM and non-consensual imagery from being disseminated on its sites, establish a system “to verify that people who appear in videos or photos on its websites are adults and have provided consent to the sexual conduct as well as its production and publication,” remove content uploaded before those programs until Aylo “verifies that the individuals participating in those videos were at least 18 at the time the content was created and consented to the sexual conduct and its production and publication,” post a notice on its website about the FTC and Utah’s allegations, and implement “a comprehensive privacy and information security program to address the privacy and security issues detailed in the complaint.”

Pornhub Is Now Blocked In Almost All of the U.S. South
As of today, three more states join the list of 17 that can’t access Pornhub because of age verification laws.
404 MediaSamantha Cole


Aylo already does much of this. Pornhub overhauled its content and moderation practices starting in 2020, after Visa, Mastercard and Discover stopped servicing the site and its network following allegations of CSAM and sex trafficking. It purged hundreds of thousands of videos from its sites in early 2020 and registered with the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC).

In 2024, Pornhub started requiring proof of consent from every single person who appeared in content on the platform.

“The resolution reached involved enhancements to existing measures but did not introduce any new substantive requirements that were not either already in place or in progress,” Aylo’s spokesperson said. “This settlement resolves the investigation and underscores Aylo's commitment to robust safety protocols that should be applied broadly across all websites publishing user generated content. Aylo supports vigorous enforcement against CSAM and NCM, and encourages the FTC and Utah DCP to extend their initiative to protect the public across the broader internet, adult and mainstream, fostering a safer online environment for everyone. Throughout the investigation, Aylo worked to cooperatively resolve the concerns raised by the FTC and Utah DCP.”

The complaint from Utah and the FTC focuses largely on content that appeared on Pornhub prior to 2020, and includes allegations against several of the 100 different websites owned by Alyo—then Mindgeek, prior to the company’s 2023 acquisition by Ethical Capital Partners—and its affiliates. For example, the complaint claims the website operators identified CSAM on the sites KeezMovies, SpankWire, and ExtremeTube with titles such as “Brunette Girl was Raped,” “Drunken passed out young niece gets a creampie,” “Amateur teen after party and fun passed out sex realty [sic] submissive,” “Girl getting gangraped,” and “Giving her a mouthful while she’s passed out drunk.”

“Rather than remove the videos, Defendants merely edited their titles to remove any suggestion that they contained CSAM or NCM. As a result, consumers continued to view and download these videos,” the complaint states. The FTC and Utah don’t specify in the complaint whether the people performing in those videos, or any of the videos mentioned, were actually adults participating in consensual roleplay scenarios or if the titles and tags were literal.

The discussions between then-Mindgeek compliance staff outlined in the complaint show some of the conversations moderators were allegedly having around 2020 about how to purge the site of unverified content. “A senior member of Defendants’ Compliance team stated in an internal email that ‘none of it is enough,’ ‘this is just a start,’ and ‘we need to block millions more’ because ‘the site is FULL of non-compliant content,’” the complaint states. “Another senior employee responded: ‘it’s over’ and ‘we’re fucked.’”

The complaint also mentions the Girls Do Porn sex-trafficking ring, which Pornhub hosted content for and acted as a Pornhub Premium partner until the ring was indicted on federal trafficking charges in 2019. In 2023, Pornhub reached a settlement with the US Attorney General’s office after an FBI investigation, and said it “deeply regrets” hosting that content.





"These AI videos are just repeating things that are on the internet, so you end up with a very simplified version of the past."#AI #AISlop #YouTube #History


AI Generated 'Boring History' Videos Are Flooding YouTube and Drowning Out Real History


As I do most nights, I was listening to YouTube videos to fall asleep the other night. Sometime around 3 a.m., I woke up because the video YouTube was autoplaying started going “FEEEEEEEE.” The video was called “Boring History for Sleep | How Medieval PEASANTS Survived the Coldest Nights and more.” It is two hours long, has 2.3 million views, and, an hour and 15 minutes into the video, the AI-generated voice glitched.

“In the end, Anne Boleyn won a kind of immortality. Not through her survival, but through her indelible impact on history. FEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE,” the narrator says in a fake British accent. “By the early 1770s, the American colonies simmered like a pot left too long over a roaring fire,” it continued.


0:00
/0:15

The video was from a channel I hadn’t seen before, called “Sleepless Historian.” I took my headphones out, didn’t think much of it at the time, rolled over, and fell back asleep.

The next night, when I went to pick a new video to fall asleep to, my YouTube homepage was full of videos from Sleepless Historian and several similar-sounding channels like Boring History Bites, History Before Sleep, The Snoozetorian, Historian Sleepy, and Dreamoria. Lots of these videos nominally check the boxes for what I want from something to fall asleep to. Almost all of them are more than three hours long, and they are about things I don’t know much about. Some video titles include “Unusual Medieval Cures for Common Illnesses,” “The Entire History of the American Frontier,” “What It Was Like to Visit a BR0THEL in Pompeii,” and “What GETTING WASTED Was Like in Medieval Times.” One of the channels has even been livestreaming this "history" 24/7 for weeks.

In the daytime, when I was not groggy and half asleep, it quickly became obvious to me that all of these videos are AI generated, and that they are part of a sophisticated and growing AI slop content ecosystem that is flooding YouTube, is drowning out human-made content created by real anthropologists and historians who spend weeks or months researching, fact-checking, scripting, recording, and editing their videos, and are quite literally rewriting history with surface-level, automated drek that the YouTube algorithm delivers to people. YouTube has said it will demonetize or otherwise crack down on “mass produced” videos, but it is not clear whether that has had any sort of impact on the proliferation of AI-generated videos on the platform, and none of the people I spoke to for this article have noticed any change.

“It’s completely shocking to me,” Pete Kelly, who runs the popular History Time YouTube channel, told me in a phone interview. “It used to be enough to spend your entire life researching, writing, narrating, editing, doing all these things to make a video, but now someone can come along and they can do the same thing in a day instead of it taking six months, and the videos are not accurate. The visuals they use are completely inaccurate often. And I’m fearful because this is everywhere.”

“I absolutely hate it, primarily the fact that they’re historically inaccurate,” Kelly added. “So it worries me because it’s just the same things being regurgitated over and over again. When I’m researching something, I go straight to the academic journals and books and places that are offline, basically. But these AI videos are just sort of repeating things that are on the internet and just because it’s on the internet doesn’t mean it’s accurate. You end up with a very simplified version of the past, and we need to be looking at the past and it needs to be nuanced and we need to be aware of where the evidence or an argument comes from.”

Kelly has been making history videos on YouTube since 2017 and has amassed 1.2 million YouTube subscribers because of the incredibly in-depth research he does for his feature-length videos. He said for an average long-form video, he will read 20 books, lots of journal articles, and will often travel to archaeological sites. It’s impossible to say for sure, but he has considered the possibility that some of these AI videos are modeled on his videos, and that the AI tools being used to create them could have been trained on his work. The soothing British accent used in many of the AI-generated videos I’ve seen is similar to Kelly’s actual voice. “A lot of AI basically scraped YouTube in order to develop all of the ways people make videos now,” he said. “So I mean, maybe it scraped my voice.”

He said that he has begun to get comments accusing his videos of being AI-generated, and his channel now says “no AI is used in this channel.” He has also set up a separate channel where he speaks directly to camera rather than narrating over other footage.

“​​People listen to the third-person, disembodied narration voice and assume that it’s AI now, and that’s disheartening,” he said. “I get quite a lot of comments from people thinking that I’m AI, so I’m like, if you think I’m AI I’m going to have to just put myself in the videos a little more. Pretty much everyone I know is doing something as a result of this AI situation, which is crazy in itself. We’ve all had to react. The thing I’m doing is I’m appearing more in videos. I’m speaking to the camera because I think people are going to be more interested in an actual human voice.”





Kelly said the number of views he gets on an average video has plateaued or dropped alongside the rise of AI-generated content that competes with his, which is something I heard from other creators, too. As a viewer, I have noticed that I now have to wade through tons of AI-generated spam in order to find high-quality videos.

“I have seen, and my fellow history creators—there’s quite a few of us, we all talk to each other—we’ve all seen quite a noticeable drop in views that seems to coincide exactly with this swarm of AI-generated, three-hour, four-hour videos where they’re making videos about the exact same things we make videos about, and for the average person, I don’t think they really care that much whether it’s AI or not,” he said.
youtube.com/embed/5Pxvk7ddgVM?…
Kelly has started putting himself in his videos to show he's a real person

A few months ago, in our Behind the Blog segment, I wrote about a YouTube channel called Ancient Americas, run by an amateur anthropologist named Pete. In that blog, I worried about whether AI slop creators would try to emulate creators like Pete, who clearly take great pride in researching and filming their videos. Ancient Americas releases about one 45-minute video per month about indigenous cultures from the Western Hemisphere. Each of his videos features a substantive bibliography and works cited document, which explains the books, scientific papers, documentaries, museums, and experts he sources his research from. Every image and visual he uses is credited with both where it came from and what license he’s using. Through his videos, I have learned an incredible amount about cultures I didn’t know existed, like the Wari, the Zapotecs, the Calusa, and many more. Pete told me in an email that he has noticed the AI history video trend on YouTube as well, but “I can’t say much about how accurate these videos are as a whole because I tend to steer clear of them. Life is far too short for AI.”

“Of the few I've watched, I would say that the information tends to be vague and surface level and the generated AI images of indigenous history that they show range from uncanny to cringe. Not surprisingly, I'm not a fan of such content but thankfully, these videos don't seem to get many views,” he said. “The average YouTube viewer is much more discerning than they get credit for. Most of them see the slop for what it is. On the other hand, will that always be the case? That remains to be seen. AI is only going to get better. Ultimately, whether creators like me sink or swim is up to the viewing public and the YouTube algorithm.”

Pete is correct in that a lot of the AI-generated videos don’t have a lot of views, but that’s quickly changing. Sleepless Historian has 614,000 subscribers, posts a multi-hour video every single day, and has published three videos that have more than a million views. I found several other AI-generated history channels that have more than 100,000 subscribers. Many of them are reposting the same videos that Sleepless Historian publishes, but many of them are clearly generating their own content.

Every night before I go to sleep, I open YouTube and I see multiple AI-generated history videos being served to me, and some YouTube commenters have noticed that they are increasingly being fed AI-generated history videos. People on Reddit have noticed that the comments under these videos are a mix of what appear to be real people saying they are grateful for the content and a mix of bots posting fake sob stories. For example, a recent Sleepless Historian video has comments from “History-Snooze,” “The_HumbleHistory” “RealSleepyHistorianOfficial,” “SleeplessOrren,” “SleepyHistory-n9k,” “Drizzle and Dreamy History of the Past,” “TheSleepyNavigator-d6b5c,” “Historyforsleepy168,” and a handful of other channels that post the exact same type of content (and often repost the exact same videos).

In one video, an account called Sleepymore (which posts AI-generated history videos) posted “It’s 1 a.m. in Kyiv. I’m a Ukrainian soldier on night watch. Tonight is quiet—no sirens, just silence. I just wanted to say: your videos make me feel a little less alone, a little less afraid. Thank you.” An account called SleeplessHistorian2 responded to say “great comment.” Both of these accounts do nothing but post AI-generated history videos and spam comments on other AI-generated history videos. The email address associated with Sleepless Historian” did not respond to a request for comment from 404 Media.

The French Whisperer, a human ASMRtist who makes very high quality science and history videos that I have been falling asleep to for years, told me that he has also noticed that he’s competing with AI-generated videos, and that the videos are “hard to miss.”

“It is always hard to precisely determine what factors make a YouTube channel grow or shrink, but mine has seen its number of views drop dramatically in the past 6-12 months (like -60%) and for the first time in years I barely get discovered at all by new viewers,” he said. “I used to gain maybe 100-200 subscribers per day until 2024, now it is flat. I think only my older viewers still come to my videos, but for others my channel is now hidden under a pile of AI slop that all people who are into history/science + sleep or relaxation content see in their search results.”

“I noticed this trend of slop content in my niche starting around 2 years ago,” he said. “Viewers warned me that there were channels that were either AI-assisted (like a real person reading AI scripts), or traditional slop (a real person paraphrasing wikipedia or existing articles), basically replicating the kind of content I make, but publishing 1 or 2 hours of content per day. Then it became full AI a few months ago, it went from a handful of channels to dozens (maybe hundreds? I have no idea), and since then this type of content has flooded YouTube.”

Another channel I sometimes listen to has purposefully disabled the captions on their videos to make it harder for AI bots to steal from: “Captions have unfortunately been disabled due to AI bots copying (plagiarizing) my scripts,” a notice on YouTube reads.

All of this is annoying and threatening on a few different levels. To some extent, when I’m looking for something to fall asleep to, the actual content sometimes feels like it doesn’t matter. But I’ve noticed that, over time, as I fall asleep listening to history podcasts, I do retain a lot of what I learn, and if I hear something interesting as I’m dozing off, I will often go research that thing more when I’m awake and alert. I personally would prefer to listen to videos made by real people who know what they are talking about, and are benefiting from my consumption of their work. There is also the somewhat dystopian fact that, because of these videos, there are millions of people being unwittingly lulled to sleep by robots.

Historians who have studied the AI summaries of historical events have found that they “flatten” history: “Prose expression is not some barrier to the communication of historical knowledge, to be cleared by any means, but rather an integral aspect of that communication,” Mack Penner, a postdoctoral fellow in the Department of History at the University of Calgary, argued last year. “Outsourcing the finding, the synthesizing, and the communicating to AI is to cede just about the whole craft to the machines.”

As YouTube and other platforms are spammed with endless AI-generated videos, they threaten not just to drown out the types of high-quality videos that The French Whisperer, Ancient Americas, and other historians, anthropologists, and well-meaning humans are making. They also threaten to literally rewrite history—or people’s understanding of it—with all of the biases imbued into AI by its training material and, increasingly, by the willful manipulation of the companies that own these tools.

All of the creators I spoke to said that, ultimately, they think the quality of their videos is going to win out, and that people will hopefully continue to seek out their videos, whether that’s on YouTube or elsewhere. They each have Patreons, and The French Whisperer said that he has purposefully “diversified away from YouTube” because of forced ads, settings that distort the sound of softly spoken videos, and the 30 percent cut YouTube takes from its membership program. But Kelly said he believes that it has become much harder to break into this world, because "when I started, I was just competing against other humans. I don't really know how you can compete against computers."

The French Whisperer still posts his videos on YouTube, but said that it is increasingly not a reliable platform for him: “I concluded some time ago that I would better vote with my feet and disengage from YouTube, which I could afford to do because by chance my content is very audio oriented. I bet everything I could on podcasts and music apps like Spotify and Apple, on Patreon, and on various apps I sell licenses to,” he said. “I have launched different podcasts derived from my original channel, and even begun to transform my YouTube channel into a podcast show—you probably noticed that I promote these other outlets at the beginning of almost every single video. As a result of my growth elsewhere and the drop on YouTube, the bulk of my audience (like 80-90%) is now on other sites than YouTube, and these ones have not been contaminated by AI slop so far. In a nutshell, I already had reasons to treat YouTube as a secondary platform before, and the fact that it became trashier with the AI content is just one more.”

“An entire niche can be threatened overnight by AI, or YouTube's policies, or your access to monetization, and this only reinforces my belief that this is not a reasonable career choice. Unless you have millions of followers and can look at it as an athlete would—earn as much as you can, pay your taxes, and live on your investments for the rest of your life when your career inevitably ends.”

Pete from Ancient Americas, meanwhile, said he’s just going to keep making videos and hope for the best.

“It does me no good to fret and obsess over something I have no control over. AI may be polluting the river but I still have to swim in it or sink. Second, I have a lot of faith in what I do and I love doing it,” he said. “At the moment, I don't think AI can create a video the way that I can. I take the research very seriously and try to get as much information as possible. I try to include details that the viewer would have a very difficult time finding on their own; things that are beyond the Wikipedia article or a cursory Google search. I also use ancient artifacts and artworks from a culture to show the viewer how the culture expressed itself and I believe that this is VERY important when you want your audience to connect with ancient people. I've never seen AI do this. It's always a slideshow of crappy AI images. The only thing I can do in an AI world is to keep the ship sailing forward.”

Kelly, who runs History Time, says he sees it as a real problem. “It’s worrying to me just for humanity,” he said. “Not to get too high brow, but it’s not good for the state of knowledge in the world. It makes me worry for the future.”




Computing quantistico, come vanno i finanziamenti (americani) all’europea Iqm

L'articolo proviene da #StartMag e viene ricondiviso sulla comunità Lemmy @Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)
L'azienda finlandese di computing quantistico Iqm ha ricevuto finanziamenti per 320 milioni di dollari, portando la sua valutazione a 1 miliardo. Dalle startup ai grandi colossi, c'è grande attenzione per una



La Ricchezza di Illegio
freezonemagazine.com/articoli/…
Le vie dell’arte, come quelle del Signore, sono infinite e per vie intendo proprio quelle calpestabili, asfaltate, percorribili. Una di queste è in Carnia, regione interna al Friuli Venezia Giulia, dove il centro più grande è Tolmezzo e dal quale, in una manciata di minuti d’auto, si raggiunge il borgo di Illegio. Qui, dove […]
L'articolo La Ricchezza di Illegio proviene da FREE ZONE MAGAZINE.
Le vie


Bonnie Dobson & The Hanging Stars – Dreams
freezonemagazine.com/articoli/…
Il disco che non ti aspetti. Questo è quello che continua a girarmi in testa nel corso degli ascolti, fattisi ripetuti degli ultimi giorni, di questa collaborazione fra la voce bellissima di Bobbie Dobson, canadese dai trascorsi in ambito eminentemente folk/rock, che pur oltrepassata la soglia delle ottantacinque primavere mantiene una capacità di ammaliare con […]


Druetti (Pos): Tajani sbaglia su Global Sumud Flotilla, non può dire che l’iniziativa è inopportuna
possibile.com/druetti-pos-taja…
Le parole di Tajani sono appunto inopportune. Perché l'iniziativa della Global Sumud Flotilla andrebbe semplicemente sostenuta dal nostro


Druetti (Pos): Tajani sbaglia su Global Sumud Flotilla, non può dire che l’iniziativa è inopportuna
possibile.com/druetti-pos-taja…
Le parole di Tajani sono appunto inopportune. Perché l'iniziativa della Global Sumud Flotilla andrebbe semplicemente sostenuta dal nostro




United Healthcare CEO murder suspect Luigi Mangione is not, in fact, modeling floral button-downs for Shein.#LuigiMangione #shein #AI


Shein Used Luigi Mangione’s AI-Generated Face to Sell a Shirt


A listing on ultra-fast-fashion e-commerce site Shein used an AI-generated image of Luigi Mangione to sell a floral button-down t-shirt.

Mangione—the prime suspect in the December 2024 murder of United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson—is being held at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, last I checked, and is not modeling for Shein.

I first saw the Mangione Shein listing on the culture and news X account Popcrave, which posted the listing late Tuesday evening.

Shein’s website appears to use Luigi Mangione’s face to model a spring/summer shirt. pic.twitter.com/UPXW8fEPPq
— Pop Crave (@PopCrave) September 3, 2025


Shein removed the listing on Wednesday, but someone saved it on the Internet Archive before Shein took it down. "The image in question was provided by a third-party vendor and was removed immediately upon discovery," Shein told Newsweek in a statement. "We have stringent standards for all listings on our platform. We are conducting a thorough investigation, strengthening our monitoring processes, and will take appropriate action against the vendor in line with our policies." Shein provided the same comment to 404 Media.

The item, sold by the third-party brand Manfinity, had the description “Men's New Spring/Summer Short Sleeve Blue Ditsy Floral White Shirt, Pastoral Style Gentleman Shirt For Everyday Wear, Family Matching Mommy And Me (3 Pieces Are Sold Separately).”

The Manfinity brand makes a lot of Shein stuff using AI-generated models, like these gym bros selling PUSH HARDER t-shirts and gym sweats and this very tough guy wearing a “NAH, I’M GOOD” tee. AI-generated models are all over Shein, and seems especially popular with listings featuring babies and toddlers. AI models in fashion are becoming more mainstream; in July, Vogue ran advertisements for Guess featuring AI-generated women selling the brand’s summer collection.

Last year, artists sued Shein, alleging the Chinese e-commerce giant scraped the internet using AI and stole their designs, and it’s been well-documented that fast fashion sites use bots to identify popular themes and memes from social media to put them on their own listings. Mangione merch and anything related to the case—including remixes of the United Healthcare logo and the “Deny, Defend, Depose” line allegedly found on the bullet—went wild in the weeks following Thompson’s murder; Manfinity might have generated what seemed popular on social media (Mangione’s smiling face) and automatically put it on a shirt listing. Based on the archived listing, it worked: A lot of people managed to grab a limited edition Shein Luigi Ditsy Floral before it was removed: According to the archived version of the listing, it was sold out of all sizes except for XXL.




Glaciers in Central Asia have remained intact even as other parts of the world have seen rapid glacial loss. A new study shows that may be changing.#TheAbstract


They Were Some of Earth’s Last Stable Glaciers. Now, They’re Melting.


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Subscribe to 404 Media to get The Abstract, our newsletter about the most exciting and mind-boggling science news and studies of the week.

Scientists have long been puzzled by the sturdy glaciers of the mountains of central Asia, which have inexplicably remained intact even as other glaciers around the world rapidly recede due to human-driven climate change. This mysterious resilience may be coming to an end, however.

The glaciers in this mountainous region—nicknamed the “Third Pole” because it boasts more ice than any place outside of the Arctic and Antarctic polar caps— have passed a tipping point that could set them on a path to accelerated mass loss, according to a new study. The end of this unusual glacial resilience, known as the Pamir-Karakoram Anomaly, would have major implications for the people who rely on the glaciers for water.

Scientists suggested that a recent decline in snowfall to the region is behind the shift, but it will take much more research to untangle the complicated dynamics of these remote and under-studied glaciers, according to a study published on Tuesday in Communications Earth & Environment.

“We have known about this anomaly since the early 2000s,” said study co-author Francesca Pellicciotti, a professor at the Institute of Science and Technology Austria (ISTA), in a call with 404 Media. “In the last 25 years, remote-sensing has really revolutionized Earth sciences in general, and also cryospheric sciences.”

“There is no definite answer yet for why those glaciers were quite stable,” said Achille Jouberton, a PhD student at ISTA who led the study, in the same call. “On average, at the regional scale, they were doing quite well in the last decade—until recently, which is what our study is showing.”

This space-down view of the world’s glaciers initially revealed the resilience of ice and snowpack in the Pamir-Karakoram region, but that picture started to change around 2018. Many of these glaciers have remained inaccessible to scientists due to political instabilities and other factors, leaving a multi-decade gap in the research about their curious strength.

To get a closer look, Jouberton and his colleagues established a site for monitoring snowfall, precipitation, and water resources at Kyzylsu Glacier in central Tajikistan in 2021. In addition to this fieldwork, the team developed sophisticated models to reconstruct changes within this catchment since 1999.

While the glaciers still look robust from the outside, the results revealed that snowfall has decreased and ice melt has increased. These interlinked trends have become more pronounced over the past seven years and were corroborated by conversations with locals. The decline in precipitation has made the glacier vulnerable to summer melting, as there is less snowpack to protect it from the heat.

“It will take a while before these glaciers start looking wasted, like the glaciers of the Alps, or North America, or South America,” said Pellicciotti.

While the team pinpointed a lack of snowfall as a key driver of the shift, it’s unclear why the region is experiencing reduced precipitation. The researchers are also unsure if a permanent threshold has been crossed, or if these changes could be chalked up to natural variation. They hope that the study, which is the first to warn of this possible tipping point, will inspire climate scientists, atmospheric scientists, and other interdisciplinary researchers to weigh in on future work.

“We don't know if this is just an inflection in the natural cycle, or if it's really the beginning of a trend that will go on for many years,” said Pellicciotti. “So we need to expand these findings, and extend them to a much longer period in the past and in the future.”

Resolving these uncertainties will be critical for communities in this region that rely on healthy snowpack and ice cover for their water supply. It also hints that even the last stalwart glacial holdouts on Earth are vulnerable to climate change.

“The major rivers are fed by snow and glacier melts, which are the dominant source of water in the summer months, which makes the glaciers very important,” concluded Jouberton. "There’s a large amount of people living downstream in all of the Central Asian countries that are really direct beneficiaries of those water and meltwater from the glaciers.”

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Subscribe to 404 Media to get The Abstract, our newsletter about the most exciting and mind-boggling science news and studies of the week.






Druetti (Pos): Tajani sbaglia su Global Sumud Flotilla, non può dire che l’iniziativa è inopportuna


“Le parole di Tajani sulla Global Sumud Flotilla sono deludenti, anche se non sorprendono viste le posizioni del nostro governo.” Lo dichiara la Segretaria Nazionale di Possibile Francesca Druetti, commentando la dichiarazione del ministro degli esteri secondo cui gli attivisti delle navi in partenza verso Gaza “non sono terroristi, ma si può dire di non essere d’accordo, che si tratti di iniziative inopportune.”
“Le parole di Tajani” — continua Druetti — sono appunto inopportune. Perché l’iniziativa della Global Sumud Flotilla andrebbe semplicemente sostenuta dal nostro governo. Perché i quattro obiettivi della spedizione (lo stop all’assedio, lo stop alla fame usata come arma, lo stop alla disumanizzazione della popolazione palestinese, lo stop al genocidio) non dovrebbero nemmeno essere oggetto di dibattito, ma la posizione minima di umanità da cui partire per trovare una soluzione politica e diplomatica.

“Di fronte a quanto succede ogni giorno a Gaza — conclude Druetti — alle decine di morti ogni giorno, alla carestia imposta da uno Stato contro cui continuiamo a vendere armi e a offrire supporto internazionale, l’invito alla moderazione di Tajani a Ben Gvir (che aveva minacciato di trattare gli attivisti alla stregua di terroristi una volta arrivati sulle coste di Gaza) è semplicemente ridicolo. Continuiamo a sostenere, in ogni modo, la Global Sumud Flotilla. Quando arriverà a destinazione, saremo tutte e tutti chiamati a mobilitarci, con i nostri corpi e con la pressione istituzionale.”

L'articolo Druetti (Pos): Tajani sbaglia su Global Sumud Flotilla, non può dire che l’iniziativa è inopportuna proviene da Possibile.





Trasferimenti di dati UE-USA: Prime reazioni al caso "Latombe Prima reazione alla sentenza del Tribunale sul ricorso "Latombe" contro l'accordo sul trasferimento dei dati tra UE e USA (TADPF). mickey03 September 2025


noyb.eu/it/eu-us-data-transfer…