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Standalone USB-PD Stack For All Your Sink Needs


USB PD is a fun protocol to explore, but it can be a bit complex to fully implement. It makes sense we’re seeing new stacks pop up all the time, and today’s stack is a cool one as far as code reusability goes. [Vitaly] over on Hackaday.io brings us pdsink – a C++ based PD stack with no platform dependencies, and fully-featured sink capabilities.

This stack can do SPR (5/9/15/20V) just like you’d expect, but it also does PPS without breaking a sweat – perfect for your Lithium Ion battery charging or any other current-limited shenanigans. What’s more, it can do EPR (28V and up) – for all your high-power needs. For reference, the SPR/PPS/EPR combination is all you could need from a PD stack intended for fully taking advantage of any USB-PD charger’s capabilities. The stack is currently tailored to the classic FUSB302, but [Vitaly] says it wouldn’t be hard to add support for a PD PHY chip of your choice.

It’s nice to have a choice in how you want your PD interactions to go – we’ve covered a few stacks before, and each of them has strong and weak sides. Now, if you have the CPU bandwidth, you could go seriously low-tech and talk PD with just a few resistors, transistors, and GPIOs! Need to debug a particular USB-C edge case? Don’t forget a logger.


hackaday.com/2025/12/06/standa…



Lessons Learned After Trying MeshCore for Off-grid Text Messaging


[Michael Lynch] recently decided to delve into the world of off-grid, decentralized communications with MeshCore, because being able to communicate wirelessly with others in a way that does not depend on traditional communication infrastructure is pretty compelling. After getting his hands on a variety of hardware and trying things out, he wrote up his thoughts from the perspective of a hardware-curious software developer.

He ends up testing a variety of things: MeshCore firmware installed on a Heltec V3 board (used via an app over Bluetooth), a similar standalone device with antenna and battery built in (SenseCAP T-1000e, left in the header image), and a Lilygo T-Deck+ (right in the header image above). These all use MeshCore, which is built on and reportedly compatible with Meshtastic, a framework we have featured in the past.

The cheapest way to get started is with a board like the Heltec v3, pictured here. It handles the LoRa wireless communications part, and one interfaces to it over Bluetooth.
The first two devices are essentially MeshCore gateways, to which the user connects over Bluetooth. The T-Deck is a standalone device that resembles a Blackberry, complete with screen and keypad. [Michael] dove into what it was like to get them up and running.

Probably his most significant takeaway was that the whole process of onboarding seemed a lot more difficult and much less clear than it could be. This is an experience many of us can relate to: the fragmented documentation that exists seems written both by and for people who are already intimately familiar with the project in its entirety.

Another thing he learned was that while LoRa is a fantastic technology capable of communicating wirelessly over great distances with low power, those results require good antennas and line of sight. In a typical urban-ish environment, range is going to be much more limited. [Michael] was able to get a maximum range of about five blocks between two devices. Range could be improved by purchasing and installing repeaters or by having more devices online and in range of one another, but that’s where [Michael] drew the line. He felt he had gotten a pretty good idea of the state of things by then, and not being a radio expert, he declined to purchase repeater hardware without any real sense of where he should put them, or what performance gains he could expect by doing so.

Probably the most surprising discovery was that MeshCore is not entirely open source, which seems odd for an off-grid decentralized communications framework. Some parts are open, but the official clients (the mobile apps, web app, and T-Deck firmware) are not. [Michael] found this out when, being primarily a software developer, he took a look at the code to see if there was anything he could do to improve the poor user experience on the T-Deck and found that the firmware was proprietary.

[Michael]’s big takeaway as a hardware-curious software developer is that the concept is great and accessible (hardware is not expensive and there is no licensing requirement for LoRa), but it’s not really there yet in terms of whether it’s practical for someone to buy a few to distribute among friends for use in an emergency. Not without getting into setting up enough repeaters to ensure connectivity, anyway.


hackaday.com/2025/12/06/lesson…



La rivoluzione culturale della cybersecurity


@Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)
A valle dello splendido DigEat Festival, organizzato dalla Digitalaw Srl a Lecce nei giorni 27-29 novembre, si ritiene utile approfondire alcuni temi dibattuti durante l’evento. L’idea che la cybersecurity sia […]
L'articolo La rivoluzione culturale della cybersecurity proviene da Edoardo Limone.

L'articolo



"La musica è come un ponte che ci conduce a Dio. Essa è capace di trasmettere sentimenti, emozioni, fino ai moti più profondi dell'animo, portandoli in alto, trasformandoli in una ideale scalinata che collega la terra e il cielo".


Un “cordiale saluto, esprimendo apprezzamento per l'evento volto a rinnovare l'impegno di tutti gli aderenti a testimoniare e annunciare il Vangelo” è quello rivolto da Papa Leone XIV, tramite un telegramma a firma del Segretario di Stato, il card.


Bridging RTL-433 To Home Assistant


If you’ve got an RTL-SDR compatible receiver, you’ve probably used it for picking up signals from all kinds of weird things. Now, [Jaron McDaniel] has built a tool to integrate many such devices into the world of Home Assistant.

It’s called RTL-HAOS, and it’s intended to act as a bridge. Whatever you can pick up using the RTL_433 tool, you can set up with Home Assistant using RTL-HAOS. If you’re unfamiliar with RTL_433, it’s a multitalented data receiver for picking up all sorts of stuff on a range of bands using RTL-SDR receivers, as well as a range of other hardware. While it’s most closely associated with products that communicate in the 433 MHz band, it can also work with products that talk in 868 MHz, 315 MHz, 345 MHz, and 915 MHz, assuming your hardware supports it. Out of the box, it’s capable of working with everything from keyless entry systems to thermostats, weather stations, and energy monitors. You can even use it to listen to the tire pressure monitors in your Fiat Abarth 124 Spider, if you’re so inclined.

[Jaron’s] tool integrates these devices nicely into Home Assistant, where they’ll appear automatically thanks to MQTT discovery. It also offers nice signal metrics like RSSI and SNR, so you can determine whether a given link is stable. You can even use multiple RTL-SDR dongles if you’re so inclined. If you’re eager to pull some existing environmental sensors into your smart home, this may prove a very easy way to do it.

The cool thing about Home Assistant is that hackers are always working to integrate more gear into the ecosystem. Oftentimes, they’re far faster and more efficient at doing this than big-name corporations. Meanwhile, if you’re working on your own hacks for this popular smart home platform, we’d probably like to know about it. Be sure to hit up the tips line in due time.


hackaday.com/2025/12/06/bridgi…



"Saluto il Meic con molta riconoscenza, con molta amicizia, e vi saluto per questa vostra riflessione così importante, così impegnativa, direi anche decisiva: un'Europa libera e forte e quindi verso una Camaldoli europea.


Something New Every Day, Something Relevant Every Week?


The site is called Hackaday, and has been for 21 years. But it was only for maybe the first half-year that it was literally a hack a day. By the 2010s, we were putting out four or more per day, and in the later 20-teens, we settled into our current cadence of eight hacks per day, plus some original pieces over the top. That’s a lot of hacks per day! (But “Eight-to-Ten-Hacks-a-Day” just isn’t as catchy.)

With that many posts daily, we also tend to reach out to a broader array of interests. Quite simply, not every hack is necessarily going to be just exactly what you are looking for, but we wouldn’t be writing it up if we didn’t think that someone was looking for it. Maybe you don’t like CAN bus hacks, but you’re into biohacking, or retrocomputing. Our broad group of writers helps to make sure that we’ll get you covered sooner or later.

What’s still surprising to me, though, is that a couple of times per week, there is a hack that is actually relevant to a particular project that I’m currently working on. It’s one thing to learn something new every day, and I’d bet that I do, but it’s entirely another to learn something new and relevant.

So I shouldn’t have been shocked when Tom and I were going over the week’s hacks on the podcast, and he picked an investigation of injecting spray foam into 3D prints. I liked that one too, but for me it was just “learn something new”. Tom has been working on an underwater ROV, and it perfectly scratched an itch that he has – how to keep the top of the vehicle more buoyant, while keeping the whole thing waterproof.

That kind of experience is why I’ve been reading Hackaday for 21 years now, and it’s all of our hope that you get some of that too from time to time. There is a lot of “new” on the Internet, and that’s a wonderful thing. But the combination of new and relevant just can’t be beat! So if you’ve got anything you want to hear more about, let us know.

This article is part of the Hackaday.com newsletter, delivered every seven days for each of the last 200+ weeks. It also includes our favorite articles from the last seven days that you can see on the web version of the newsletter. Want this type of article to hit your inbox every Friday morning? You should sign up!


hackaday.com/2025/12/06/someth…



"La Forza delle Donne – Custodi della Pace, Architette del Futuro". È uno degli appuntamenti della prima edizione dell'Hallelujah Film Festival, in programma a Castel Gandolfo dal 6 al 13 dicembre, nei giardini monumentali di Borgo Laudato Si' a Cast…


(Riccione) Sentire, pensare, volere dentro e con la Chiesa. La scelta educativa ecclesiale dell’Azione cattolica è stata analizzata e ribadita nel corso del pomeriggio al Convegno per educatori e animatori Ac a Riccione.


Scientists found sugars that are essential for life on asteroid Bennu, which has a 1 in 2,700 chance of hitting Earth in 2182.#TheAbstract


An Asteroid Threatening Earth Is Teeming With Ingredients for Life, Scientists Discover


Welcome back to the Abstract! Here are the studies this week that fought for their food, took one for the team, passed the extraterrestrial sugar, and got lost in an ancient haze.

First, a story about the spiciest meatball in the animal kingdom. Then: ants are being interesting again, a new discovery about an old rock, and a walk in an ancient sulfur rainstorm.

As always, for more of my work, check out my book First Contact: The Story of Our Obsession with Aliens or subscribe to my personal newsletter the BeX Files.

Pond frog versus murder hornet


Sugiura, Shinji. “Pond frog as a predator of hornet workers: High tolerance to venomous stings.” Ecosphere.

Most animals don’t eat hornets, because dinner is just not as fun if it comes with a side of deadly venom and stab wounds. But a scientist has now observed an incredible exception to the rule with the humble black-spotted pond frog (Pelophylax nigromaculatus), which will straight-up house a hornet and ask for seconds.
youtube.com/embed/nv9LQ0LTfoc?…
Hornets have occasionally been found in the bellies of pond frogs, suggesting that the amphibians can tolerate their intense stings, but not much else is known about this unusual predator-prey relationship. To remedy the situation, Shinji Sugiura of Kobe University went out to the prefecture of Hyogo in Central Japan and netted a bunch of hornets from grasslands and forests—including the infamous “murder hornet” Vespa mandarinia, the largest in the world. He then captured pond frogs from wetlands with paddy fields and ponds in Hyogo and Shimane prefectures. Then, he let them duke it out in the lab in the world’s gnarliest series of cage matches.

“When a frog opened its mouth and its tongue made contact with a hornet, the action was classified as an attack on the hornet,” Sugiura said in the study. “If the frog did not stop the attack, spit out, or regurgitate the hornet, it was considered to have successfully consumed the hornet.”

The results revealed that most frogs made short work of the hornets (Videos S2) even though their meals were actively stinging them in their faces, eyes, tongues, palates, or throats of the frogs during attacks (Figure 3c,d).

“None of the frogs regurgitated the hornets after swallowing them,” Sugiura noted. “All frogs that swallowed hornets excreted the undigested body parts of the hornets as feces 2–4 days after ingestion.”

Lets just sit with that mental image of poopy undigested hornets for a second. What a nightmare. But what’s truly wild about this study is that the insects are known to inject lethal doses of venom into much larger animals, like mice, so the frogs clearly have some unknown defense against their attacks.

“Although many frogs were stung repeatedly by [hornets] in this study…none of the frogs died, and all individuals resumed normal behavior shortly after being stung,” Suguira said. “Moreover, despite repeated stings, most of the frogs ultimately consumed hornet workers…indicating a high level of predation success even against the largest hornet species.”

We humans are so lucky that when we sit down to dinner, our food generally does not try to kill us with repeated venomous needlepoint impalements. Count your blessings!

In other news…

Meet the ant-y Christs


Dawson, Erika H. “Altruistic disease signalling in ant colonies.” Nature Communications.

We’ll move now from death by frog munchies to death by team spirit. Scientists have discovered that ant pupae (baby ants) will sacrifice themselves if they are sick, lest they risk the health of the entire colony.

“Here we show…that sick ant pupae instead actively emit a chemical signal that in itself is sufficient to trigger their own destruction by colony members,” said researchers led by Erika H. Dawson of the Institute of Science and Technology Austria. “Our data suggest the evolution of a finely-tuned signalling system…that triggers pupal signalling for sacrifice. This demonstrates a balanced interplay between individual and social immunity that efficiently achieves whole-colony health.”

In other words, if an ant gets bitten by a zombie in a movie, it would immediately let everyone know and offer its life for the good of the group. Do what you will with this information.

Do you take sugar in your asteroid?


Furukawa, Yoshihiro et al. “Bio-essential sugars in samples from asteroid Bennu.” Nature Geoscience.

Scientists have found bio-essential sugars, including ribose and glucose, in samples of an asteroid called Bennu that were brought to Earth by NASA’s OSIRIS-REx mission in 2023. The discovery marks the first time key sugars have been found in any extraterrestrial sample. Ribose is an essential ingredient of RNA (ribonucleic acid), making it a particularly significant find in the quest to understand how life arose on Earth, and if it exists elsewhere.
youtube.com/embed/9LyH6jTefU8?…
“All five of the canonical nucleobases in DNA and RNA, and phosphate, were previously found in Bennu samples,” said researchers led by Yoshihiro Furukawa of Tohoku University. “Our detection of ribose means that all the components of RNA are present in Bennu.”

“Our confident detection in Bennu of abundant glucose—the hexose molecule that is life’s common energy source—and other hexoses indicates that they were present in the early solar system,” the team added. “Thus, all three crucial building blocks of life”— bio-essential sugars, nucleobases, and protein-building amino acids—”would have reached the prebiotic Earth and other potentially habitable planets.”

While Bennu bears the stuff of life, it may also be an omen of death: It has a 1 in 2,700 chance of hitting Earth on September 24, 2182. These are very low odds, but the risk is high enough to classify Bennu as potentially hazardous. So while visions of sugar plums may dance in your head this season, beware the nightmares about sugar-asteroids.

It’s raining sulfur—hallelujah!


Reed, Nathan W. “An Archean atmosphere rich in sulfur biomolecules.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

I’ve made you walk through many valleys of death in this newsletter, but we’ll close with some unadulterated life. Scientists have discovered that many of the sulfur molecules that help make up all modern organisms may have rained down from the hazy skies of the Archean period four billion years ago.

Assuming the results are confirmed in future research, it would mean that these sulfur molecules could have predated life, upending a leading hypothesis that they were a product of life and thus emerged later.

The work challenges “the assumption that life must have ‘invented’ sulfur biomolecules during evolution…by demonstrating the production of a variety of sulfur biomolecules, including cysteine, in laboratory experiments mimicking the atmospheric chemistry of the early Earth,” said researchers led by Nathan Reed of NASA, who conducted the work while at the University of Colorado, Boulder.

“The results presented here imply that an atmospheric organic haze is a potential powerhouse in providing a diversity of essential biomolecules in sufficient quantities for a budding global biosphere,” the team concluded.

Taken together with the Bennu study, it looks as if early Earth was positively marinating in life juices from multiple sources, including the sky and extraterrestrial impactors. Though this still doesn’t explain how living things sprang up from the prebiotic stew, it provides further confirmation that the ingredients of life as we know it are spread far and wide here in our solar system, and beyond.

Thanks for reading! See you next week.




veramente... ma cosa c'è da dire sulle farneticazioni di mask o trump? trump che ha instaurato il terrore negli usa e probabilmente avviato una guerra civile con i danni che ha fatto negli usa parla di europa?


Carino... allora io posso invocare lo scioglimento della Polizia Municipale? Pure loro, certe multe...


globalist.it/world/2025/12/06/…

Beh possono cominciare loro a sciogliere gli Stati Uniti e poi ne parliamo




L'amministrazione Trump ha pubblicato la Strategia per la sicurezza nazionale degli Stati Uniti d'America (novembre 2025)

Si tratta di un ampio documento di 30 pagine che è in parte un manifesto ideologico, in parte un reset della politica estera e in parte un giro di vittoria.

L'NSS definisce il presidente Trump come "il presidente della pace", sostenendo che durante soli otto mesi del suo secondo mandato:
“ha garantito una pace senza precedenti in otto conflitti in tutto il mondo… e ha posto fine alla guerra a Gaza con la restituzione di tutti gli ostaggi viventi alle loro famiglie.”— NSS, p. 8–9

Ma uno sguardo più attento a ciascuna affermazione – e una lettura riga per riga della strategia – rivela un mix di reali successi diplomatici , successi esagerati e interpretazioni favorevoli alle pubbliche relazioni di conflitti fragili o ancora irrisolti .

onestnetwork.com/post/trump-s-…

@Politica interna, europea e internazionale





Trump , Meloni e l’Europa


@Giornalismo e disordine informativo
articolo21.org/2025/12/trump-m…
C’è una sincronia interessante fra due iniziative politiche: il documento strategico dell’amministrazione Trump sull’Europa e l ‘iniziativa di un gruppo di paesi europei, fra cui l’Italia, critici sulla linea delle politiche economiche dell’Unione europea. Proprio mentre l’amministrazione Trump sparava



ilpost.it/2025/12/06/scudo-pro…

RFanciola reshared this.



"Gli USA vogliono “coltivare la resistenza” al declino dell’Europa. Da Bruxelles no comment"

questa affermazione se detta da un capo di stato è "surreale"....
una guerra civile anche in europa? no grazie... l'onore agli usa. chissà s e il problema di trump è il cibo magari intossicato.

𝕊𝕟𝕠𝕨 reshared this.



L'UE ha finalmente multato Musk per aver trasformato X in un vivaio di disinformazione. E cosa succede quando finge di essere al di sopra della legge?

L'UE sa esattamente cosa sta facendo.

Non sta solo punendo Musk.
Si sta affermando come regolatore globale del linguaggio digitale, della governance delle piattaforme e della trasparenza algoritmica.

Altri paesi (Australia, Brasile, India, Corea del Sud, Nuova Zelanda) stanno attualmente elaborando leggi in stile DSA.

Una volta che l'UE crea un precedente, inizia il copia-incolla globale.

E Musk ha fatto di sé il banco di prova.

Questa multa non è solo una punizione, è un messaggio geopolitico:

I miliardari della tecnologia non sono stati sovrani.
L'UE lo è.

deanblundell.substack.com/p/el…

@Politica interna, europea e internazionale

in reply to Informa Pirata

Magari è anche la volta buona che con quei soldi comprano qualcosa di utile.

reshared this




"Usa-Ue, Meloni: “No incrinature ma se l'Europa vuole essere grande deve difendersi da sé”"

ma in realtà va anche bene ma l'europa lo deve fare per continuare a esistere più che per essere grande....



Congo-Ruanda, infuriano i combattimenti. Ennesimo accordo inutile targato Trump


@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo
«Stiamo risolvendo una guerra che dura da decenni», si è vantato Donald Trump dopo la firma dell'ennesimo accordo. Ma in Congo infuriano i combattimenti tra l'esercito e le milizie sostenute dal Ruanda
L'articolo Congo-Ruanda, infuriano i combattimenti. Ennesimo accordo inutile targato Trump



Zamenhofa festo


13 dicembre, dalle ore 17:30 in via Garibaldi 13 Centro Sereno Regis

Programma (sala Poli):

Conferenza "Due Lazari contemporanei, creatori di lingue" del prof. Pennacchietti.
Consegna dei diplomi.
Concerto di Lucio Avitabile.

Cena a buffet (sala Gandhi), quota adesione alla cena: 10€.

Verda Majorano reshared this.



CISGIORDANIA. Israele pone condizioni irrealizzabili per il ritorno dei palestinesi nel campo di Jenin


@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo
Tra queste non sarà permesso l’ingresso nei campi delle organizzazioni umanitarie internazionali. Ieri l'esercito israeliano ha ucciso un palestinese a Awarta
L'articolo CISGIORDANIA. Israele pone



PPI board meeting on 09.12.2025, 20:00 UTC


Ahoy Pirates,

Our next PPI board meeting will take place on 09.12.2025, 20:00 UTC.

All official PPI proceedings, Board meetings included, are open to the public. Feel free to stop by. We’ll be happy to have you.

Where:jitsi.pirati.cz/PPI-Board

Agenda: Pad: https://etherpad.pp-international.net/p/ppi-board-meeting-2025-08-05-vnly0cj

All of our meetings are posted to our calendar: pp-international.net/calendar/

We look forward to seeing visitors.

Thank you for your support,

The Board of PPI


pp-international.net/2025/12/p…




Le panchine di Rozzano
freezonemagazine.com/articoli/…
Questa intervista ha come focus la proposta del Comune di Rozzano di candidare la città capitale della cultura 2028. Ne abbiamo parlato con Valter Boscarello, autore del libro “Le panchine di Rozzano – 7 dicembre 1976, la contestazione giovanile dalle periferie all’assalto della Prima della Scala” (Prospero Editore). Collaboratore per molti anni dell’Associazione Italiana Editori […]
L'articolo Le
Questa


L’India riuscirà a diventare una potenza nei semiconduttori?

Per vedere altri post come questo, segui la comunità @Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)

Quattro anni fa, l'India ha avviato un programma di politica industriale sui semiconduttori. Il paese ha grandi ambizioni e non parte da zero, ma non mancano i punti critici. L'analisi di Aresu.

startmag.it/innovazione/india-…




This week, we discuss PC woes, voice deepfakes, and mutual aid.#BehindTheBlog


Behind the Blog: Hearing AI Voices and 'Undervolting'


This is Behind the Blog, where we share our behind-the-scenes thoughts about how a few of our top stories of the week came together. This week, we discuss PC woes, voice deepfakes, and mutual aid.

JOSEPH: Today I’m speaking at the Digital Vulnerabilities in the Age of AI Summit (DIVAS) (good name) on a panel about the financial risks of AI. The way I see it, that applies to the scams and are being powered by AI.

As soon as a new technology is launched, I typically think of ways it might be abused. Sometimes I cover this, sometimes not, but the thought always crosses my mind. One example that did lead to coverage was back at Motherboard in 2023 with an article called How I Broke Into a Bank Account With an AI-Generated Voice.

At the time, ElevenLabs had just launched. This company focuses on audio and AI and cloning voices. Basically you upload audio (originally that could be of anyone before ElevenLabs introduced some guardrails) and the company then lets you ‘say’ anything as that voice. I spoke to voice actors at the time who were obviously very concerned.

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The app, called Mobile Identify, was launched in November, and lets local cops use facial recognition to hunt immigrants on behalf of ICE. It is unclear if the removal is temporary or not.#ICE #CBP #Privacy #News


DHS’s Immigrant-Hunting App Removed from Google Play Store


A Customs and Border Protection (CBP) app that lets local cops use facial recognition to hunt immigrants on behalf of the federal government has been removed from the Google Play Store, 404 Media has learned.

It is unclear if the removal is temporary or not, or what the exact reason is for the removal. Google told 404 Media it did not remove the app, and directed inquiries to its developer. CBP did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Its removal comes after 404 Media documented multiple instances of CBP and ICE officials using their own facial recognition app to identify people and verify their immigration status, including people who said they were U.S. citizens.

💡
Do you know anything else about this removal or this app? I would love to hear from you. Using a non-work device, you can message me securely on Signal at joseph.404 or send me an email at joseph@404media.co.

The removal also comes after “hundreds” of Google employees took issue with the app, according to a source with knowledge of the situation.

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#NoiSiamoLeScuole questa settimana è dedicato a due mense scolastiche inaugurate nei Comuni di Genzano di Roma (RM) e San Marcello Piteglio (PT), strutture moderne e sostenibili progettate per migliorare il benessere di studentesse e studenti e raffo…


Caving is out, suing is in


Dear Friend of Press Freedom,

Rümeysa Öztürk has been facing deportation for 255 days for co-writing an op-ed the government didn’t like, and journalist Ya’akub Vijandre remains locked up by Immigration and Customs Enforcement over social media posts about issues he reported on. Read on for more ongoing battles against government suppression of the free press.

And join us today at 2 p.m. EST for a conversation with leading immigration journalists about reporting truth and protecting communities. Register here.

New York Times fights back against Pentagon prior restraint


The newspaper President Donald Trump likes to call “the failing New York Times” somehow managed to scrounge up enough pocket change to take his administration to court. The Times and its Pentagon reporter, Julian Barnes, are suing the Pentagon over its censorial policy restricting journalists from publishing unauthorized information.

As Freedom of the Press Foundation (FPF) Executive Director Trevor Timm said, “The Pentagon’s absurd access pledge has been an affront to the First Amendment since the first day they proposed it. And we look forward to a federal judge throwing it out with the trash, where it belongs.”


FPF demands court lift secrecy in Catherine Herridge’s privilege case


A federal appellate court got it wrong by requiring journalist Catherine Herridge to disclose the sources for her reporting on scientist Yangping Chen’s alleged ties to the Chinese military while an online college Chen founded received federal funds. She’s rightly seeking a rehearing.

Worse yet, the misguided ruling was informed by documents about the FBI’s investigation of Chen that were improperly filed under seal, and which the appellate court considered in a closed hearing. FPF, represented by Schaerr | Jaffe LLP, filed a motion to intervene and unseal the documents and hearing transcript.


Reckless federal agents are the threat, not cameras


The right to record law enforcement operations is well established. But immigration officers have repeatedly chased, assaulted, and even arrested people for recording them. This isn’t just unconstitutional. It’s dangerous.

FPF Senior Adviser Caitlin Vogus wrote for NC Newsline that “Federal agents don’t want cameras pointed at them because it can force accountability. When they lash out at people who record them, it’s not just those targeted who are in danger; everyone around them is at risk too.”


U.S. journalists abducted by Israel describe abuse and U.S. indifference


FPF Deputy Director of Audience Ahmed Zidan wrote for Jacobin about the online event we hosted with Defending Rights & Dissent last month featuring three U.S. journalists who were nabbed by Israel in international waters while on aid flotillas headed to Gaza.

It should’ve been an international scandal, but the administration hardly lifted a finger. As Jewish Currents reporter Emily Wilder said, “The abuses against us demonstrate how far [the Israeli] regime will go, how emboldened it’s been, and the absolute impunity they have to act this way.”


White House media bias tracker: Another tired gimmick


The White House launched a media bias tracker to catalog instances of supposedly distorted coverage. Predictably, the site is long on hyperbole and short on substance.

FPF Advocacy Director Seth Stern said, “If Trump thinks the media is getting stories wrong or being unfair to him, he should release the public records, correspondence, and legal memoranda that prove it, instead of wasting time and taxpayer money on silly websites. … The gimmick is wearing thin.” Media columnist Margaret Sullivan agrees.


Sen. Kelly: Read the boat strike memo into the Congressional Record


Sen. Mark Kelly told CNN that he has read the Justice Department’s classified legal rationale for destroying alleged drug boats and that it should be released.

Not only is the senator right, he has the power to make the document public himself, and he should do so without delay. FPF’s Daniel Ellsberg Chair on Government Secrecy, Lauren Harper, has more.


Censorship by invoice


Michigan’s Grand Blanc Township thinks it has discovered a trick to weasel out of accountability: charging a reporter more for records about a tragic church shooting than most people earn in two years.

FPF’s Stern wrote about why these tactics can’t be allowed to continue and why, rather than being deterred, reporters should take governmental evasiveness as a sign that they’re onto something.


What We're Reading


Photojournalist arrested at Miami immigration protest, gear seized

U.S. Press Freedom Tracker
Freelance photojournalist Dave Decker was unlawfully arrested by Miami-Dade Sheriff’s deputies while documenting anti-deportation protests. Read the objection letter we joined with Florida’s First Amendment Foundation and the National Press Photographers Association.


In ‘Cover-Up,’ Laura Poitras investigates Seymour Hersh

Columbia Journalism Review
The filmmaker and FPF’s founding board member discussed her 20-year project, the “crisis” in investigative journalism, and how truth-telling can still change the world.


How the feds used propaganda to frame their ‘war’ on Chicago: ‘They’re lying constantly’

Block Club Chicago
As Stern explained, propaganda doesn’t work when there’s a strong local media. “People know their local reporters. They see them on the street. They rely on them. That makes it harder for the administration to control the narrative.”


The SLAPP problem is worse than we thought

Columbia Journalism Review
CJR features our friends at First Amendment Watch’s new “SLAPP Back Initiative” to track strategic lawsuits against public participation.



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Gazzetta del Cadavere reshared this.




“Un semplice incidente”, di Jafar Panahi, Iran-Fra-Luss., 2025


@Giornalismo e disordine informativo
articolo21.org/2025/12/un-semp…
Vahid Mobasseri, Mariam Afshari, Ebrahim Azizi, Hadis Pakbaten. Panahi giunge con questa opera alla classicità, intesa come sommatoria di tutto il suo cinema, cui aggiunge uno sguardo sempre nuovo e



zeusnews.it/n.php?c=31591

esattamente quello che pensavo. è tutto collegato al sole e alle sue paturnie stagionali undecennali. e rinnovo il mio dubbio. ma se invece di questi fenomeni che a noi paiono estremi ma che alla fine provocano autore boreali a basse latitudini e blackout comunicazioni radio, fosse un fenomeno dell'ìntensità di quello di Carrington o peggio come quelli che capitano ogni 20'000 anni? la verità è che siamo vulnerabili a molte cose e la tecnologia ci ha resi più forti per certi aspetti ma più deboli per altri.




GERMANIA. Studenti in piazza contro il ritorno della leva e il riarmo


@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo
Studenti e insegnanti in piazza, oggi in Germania, al grido di "Non vogliamo diventare carne da cannone", contro la legge votata dal Bundestag che ripristina la leva militare, per ora volontaria
L'articolo GERMANIA. Studenti in piazza contro il ritorno della leva e il



Roma chiama, Berlino risponde. Il Gcap allargato fa felici tutti (o quasi)

@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo

Nel suo intervento alla Commissione Difesa, Guido Crosetto ha dichiarato che “è fallito il programma franco-tedesco” Fcas e che “probabilmente la Germania potrebbe entrare” nel progetto Gcap, aggiungendo che sono giunte manifestazioni d’interesse da Canada, Arabia Saudita e, potenzialmente, Australia. L’affermazione