Salta al contenuto principale


Through The Barricades


L'arpeggino della buonanotte 😀


RELAZIONI INTERNAZIONALI. AVANZA UN NUOVO CONCETTO: LA GEOCRIMINALITÀ


Nel nostro blog abbiamo già fatto riferimento al GI-TOC, l'Iniziativa Globale contro la Transnational Organized Crime, un'organizzazione indipendente della società civile fondata nel 2013, con sede a Ginevra, in Svizzera, nata da una serie di discussioni di alto livello tra funzionari delle forze dell'ordine dei paesi sviluppati e in via di sviluppo a New York, nel 2011-12.
Di particolare interesse appare un articolo recentemente pubblicato sul sito Internet, dal titolo originale "Of kingdoms and crooks: The rise of geocriminality" (Di regni e truffatori: l'ascesa della geocriminalità) di Martin Thorley, che discute il fenomeno emergente degli stati che utilizzano le reti criminali come strumenti di politica estera. L'articolo cita diversi esempi di questa tendenza, tra cui l'uso di reti criminali da parte di Russia, Cina e Iran per omicidi, campagne di disinformazione, attacchi informatici e sabotaggi.

La relazione tra stati e attori criminali non è nuova, ma la connessione tra i due domini si sta evolvendo a causa della globalizzazione e dell'internazionalizzazione dei mercati. Storicamente, gli stati hanno utilizzato le reti criminali per la diplomazia clandestina, ma il più profondo coinvolgimento tra stati e reti criminali sta diventando un fenomeno più ampio e radicato. Questa nuova forma di strumentalizzazione statale del crimine è definita "geocriminalità".

È più probabile che la geocriminalità si verifichi in stati forti in patria ma isolati all'estero, poiché coloro che detengono il potere sono soggetti a un controllo e a una responsabilità limitati. Tuttavia, le condizioni necessarie per la geocriminalità non sono limitate agli stati autoritari e rimangono dubbi sulla sua fattibilità in altri contesti.

L'articolo si conclude osservando che comprendere lo sviluppo delle relazioni tra Stato e criminalità è essenziale per mitigare le minacce associate e che qualsiasi analisi significativa delle relazioni internazionali e della sicurezza nazionale dovrà sempre più tenere conto di questa configurazione dell'attività criminale e delle opache reti che la sostengono.
Il sito propone altresì sette interviste ad altrettanti esperti, che spaziano dai motivi per cui la Cina supporta il crimine organizzato alle sanzioni internazionali contro Corea del Nord (vedi il trailer qui youtube.com/watch?v=ahfav1pibw… ).

Lo scritto è reperibile [en] qui globalinitiative.net/analysis/…

#geocriminalità

@Politica interna, europea e internazionale



Student arrests threaten press freedom


Dear Friend of Press Freedom,

Attacks on press freedom that used to seem outlandish or unlikely in the United States are happening across the country. Here’s the latest.

Targeting student op-ed writers threatens the free press


On Wednesday we published an article about how India’s revocation of American journalist Raphael Satter’s overseas citizenship to punish him for his reporting was a “not-so-farfetched” cautionary tale for the United States. “Once a government claims the power to use residency status as a cudgel to regulate speech, things escalate quickly and unpredictably,” wrote our advocacy director, Seth Stern.

But cautionary tales become realities quickly these days. The same day we published that piece, news broke that the Trump administration had abducted Rumeysa Ozturk, a Tufts University graduate student from Turkey. Masked men grabbed her off the street after an organization called Canary Mission had flagged her “anti-Israel activism,” which apparently consisted solely of cowriting an op-ed that was critical of the Israel-Gaza war. She has reportedly been transferred to a facility in Louisiana, despite a court order against moving her out of Massachusetts. The arrest comes weeks after reports that Columbia University investigated an op-ed writer in response to pressure from the administration.

We said in a statement that “if reports that Ozturk’s arrest was over an op-ed are accurate, it is absolutely appalling. No one would have ever believed, even during President Donald Trump’s first term, that masked federal agents would abduct students from American universities for criticizing U.S. allies in student newspapers. Anyone with any regard whatsoever for the Constitution should recognize how fundamentally at odds this is with our values.” We also joined a letter from the Student Press Law Center and other press freedom and collegiate organizations condemning the abduction and calling upon Tufts and Congress to take action and put themselves on the right side of history.

Max Frankel’s press freedom legacy


Max Frankel, a New York Times reporter and editor who helped push for the publication of the Pentagon Papers, died Sunday at the age of 94. A Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, Frankel was well known for his decades of reporting. But it’s another piece of writing, not initially published in a newspaper, that holds a special place in First Amendment history.

An affidavit by Frankel filed in New York Times Co. v. United States, better known as the Pentagon Papers case, has become one of the most important public documents laying out the realities of national security reporting and Washington’s unspoken rules around government secrecy and leaks. Read more about Frankel’s legacy from FPF Senior Advocacy Adviser Caitlin Vogus.

NPR and PBS are just low-hanging fruit


At a congressional hearing this week, lawmakers attacked NPR and PBS for perceived bias and questioned whether there is still a need for the government to fund media these days. Trump separately said he wants both outlets defunded.

The stunt would’ve been concerning in normal times, but it’s particularly worrying now. Whether or not you think there’s a legitimate debate to be had about the government funding journalism, it’s clear that public media is just the low-hanging fruit — this administration intends to seize upon any and every legal theory, however far-fetched (or just ignore the law entirely), to punish the free press.

We joined a letter with the Committee to Protect Journalists and Reporters Without Borders (RSF) about the dangers of the administration’s attacks on NPR and PBS. Stern also had more to say on DW’s The Day, which also airs on several PBS stations.

New executive order gives DOGE more control over agency records


A new executive order has the potential to grant the Department of Government Efficiency more control over agency records, and hints that the Trump administration may be considering issuing a new executive order on classification.

Both could spell bad news for the public’s right to know. Read more here from our Daniel Ellsberg Chair on Government Secrecy, Lauren Harper.

Texas anti-SLAPP bill wouldn’t only impact journalists


The nonprofit consumer advocacy organization Public Citizen understands the importance of laws against frivolous lawsuits targeting speech, known as strategic lawsuits against public participation, or SLAPPs.

That’s why their litigation group has represented several Texas consumers who have been sued over their speech. For the latest in a series of interviews about the implications of attempts to weaken Texas’ anti-SLAPP laws, Vogus talked to Public Citizen attorney Paul Levy. Read the interview here.

What we’re reading


Israeli strikes kill two Gaza journalists, including Al Jazeera reporter (The Washington Post). Journalists are civilians, and targeting them is absolutely illegal and inexcusable. Everyone involved in these assassinations should be held accountable, including U.S. officials who bankroll war crimes.

Security lessons from a Signal group chat (FPF). Our digital security team explores what journalists can learn from this week’s big story — Atlantic editor Jeffrey Goldberg’s accidental inclusion in a sensitive Signal group chat about bombing apartment buildings and whatnot.

The AP’s freedom of speech — and yours (The Wall Street Journal). “Today the U.S. government wants to control the AP’s speech. Tomorrow it could be someone else’s.” Read why you should care about the White House banning the Associated Press, regardless of your political views.

Leakers to Musk: We’re ‘not Elon’s servants’ (Politico). “The public deserves to know how dysfunctional, destructive, and deceptive all of this has been and continues to be,” a Food and Drug Administration employee told Politico.

Was chaotic JFK declassification marred by National Archives firings? (The Classifieds). Harper questions whether errors in the recent declassification of JFK records, including exposing social security numbers, had something to do with Marco Rubio taking over the National Archives while also serving as Secretary of State.


freedom.press/issues/student-a…

reshared this



An Artificial Sun In A Manageable Size


The sun is our planet’s source of natural illumination, and though we’ve mastered making artificial light sources, it remains extremely difficult to copy our nearby star. As if matching the intensity wasn’t enough, its spectral quality, collimation, and atmospheric scattering make it an special challenge. [Victor Poughon] has given it a go though, using a bank of LEDs and an interesting lens system.

We’re used to lenses being something that can be bought off-the-shelf, but this design eschews that convenience by having the lenses manufactured and polished as an array, by JLC. The scattering is taken care of by a sheet of inkjet printer film, and the LEDs are mounted on a set of custom PCBs.

The result is certainly a very bright light, and one whose collimation delivers a sun-like effect of coming from a great distance. It may not be as bright as the real thing, but it’s certainly something close. If you’d like something to compare it to, it’s not the first such light we’ve featured.


hackaday.com/2025/03/28/an-art…



Caro Mario


@Giornalismo e disordine informativo
articolo21.org/2025/03/caro-ma…
Caro Mario, oggi sarebbe stato il tuo 38° compleanno, e invece ci troviamo ancora una volta a ricordarti con il cuore appesantito dalla tua assenza. Sono ormai quasi cinque anni da quando ti è stata tolta la vita che tu amavi tanto, ma il dolore non si è affievolito, anzi, continua a scavare dentro di […]
L'articolo Caro Mario proviene da



il giorno del ringraziamento sarà chiamato "giorno del grande affare" e le mutande dovranno essere portate sopra i pantaloni. il giorno del ringraziamento sarà spostato alla data di compleanno di trump. sulla luna sarà scolpita la sua faccia.



#NoiSiamoLeScuole, il video racconto di questa settimana è dedicato a due Nuove Scuole nel Veneto: la Primaria “Alfredo Fabris” di Zugliano (VI) e la Secondaria di I grado “Don Lorenzo Milani” di Zanè (VI), che, con i fondi #PNRR finalizzati alla cos…


Local news publishers share how they survived attacks on press freedom


Local newspapers play an indelible role in American journalism, reporting some of the country’s biggest stories from its smallest communities.

So when authorities in Marion, Kansas, and Clarksdale, Mississippi, attacked their local newspapers for coverage with which they disagreed, the outlets themselves became the story. And outrage quickly ignited across the U.S.

In February, a judge granted the City of Clarksdale an order requiring The Clarksdale Press Register to delete an editorial raising questions about transparency within the city’s government. And in 2023, police raided the Marion County Record’s newsroom and its publisher’s home over the paper’s use of a public website to verify a news tip.

In both cases, the officials involved had longstanding grudges with the newspapers over critical coverage long before the attacks made national headlines.

To get a first-hand perspective on the fight against these unconstitutional efforts to quash free speech, we spoke to Clarksdale Press Register Publisher Wyatt Emmerich and Marion County Record Publisher Eric Meyer in an online webinar on March 26, 2025.

Meyer said the similarities between his and Emmerich’s experiences are “just overwhelming.” One of those similarities was the backlash that followed.

“When they were raiding our office, I said, ‘This is going to be on the front page of The New York Times,’ and they laughed at me,” Meyer said. “It was on the front page of The New York Times.”

The police raid of the Marion County Record and the takedown order issued to The Clarksdale Press Register both stem from prior butting of heads with their local governments. In Meyer’s case, the paper had a “contentious” relationship with the town because “we had the audacity to actually report news and reported in a way that was not positive and uplifting to the city.”

Similarly, Emmerich said Clarkdale’s mayor took issue with their editorials “because he didn’t like our coverage,” and even organized a boycott against the paper. “The mayor offered me $30,000 to fire the editor,” Emmerich said. “We were the fly in the ointment, and he wanted to get rid of us as best he could.”

“He’s a younger mayor and just doesn’t understand the role of a traditional newspaper,” Emmerich continued. “He assumed that because he was mayor, the newspaper’s job was to do what he told us to do, and we didn’t do that.”

But even as tensions boiled over and the local governments in Marion and Clarksdale tried to throw sand in the gears of accountability, Emmerich and Meyer kept their papers’ presses rolling.

“It was two all-nighters to put out the paper because we lost everything,” Meyer said. “They took our backup drives. We didn’t even have our name plates.”

Emmerich said stunting a local paper like his, either in court through publishing gags or through other means, could decimate the community’s access to reliable information. Similarly, Meyer said he sees his paper as a challenger to assumption and an excavator of truth — not a placater to the public or the local government.

“We need to understand that there is a role for journalism in society, and that role is not necessarily being the cheerleader for the town,” he said. “We are here to present the views that aren't heard, to explore the facts that aren't explored.”

It’s been over a year since the police chief who led the raid on the Marion County Record resigned, but the fallout hasn’t ceased. Meyer said he is “keeping the lawyers busy” by suing the county, the city, the former police chief, and other individuals involved in the raid.

“We got so many subscriptions out of this. We’re the 121st largest town in Kansas, the 57th largest county. A year after the raid, we had the eighth largest paid circulation in the state.”


Eric Meyer, Marion County Record publisher

Meyer also plans on filing wrongful death suits. His 98-year-old mother, Joan Meyer, died a day after police executed a search warrant at the home they shared. Her death, he believes, was caused by the stress of the raid.

By standing up to intimidation that flew in the face of the journalism their papers produced, Emmerich and Meyer both experienced an outpouring of support thanks to the nationwide attention their cases received.

“We got so many subscriptions out of this. We’re the 121st largest town in Kansas, the 57th largest county,” Meyer said. “A year after the raid, we had the eighth largest paid circulation in the state.” Marion is a town of less than 2,000 residents.

Keeping a small town newspaper’s finances in check is essential, especially at a time when one-third of U.S. newspapers have shuttered since 2005. But Meyer and Emmerich agree that success isn’t just measured in dollar signs or subscriber rates. Their papers must hold power to account in order to fulfill their mandates.

“Because there's so little good local journalism, the good local journalism that is there tends to be very powerful and gets results,” Emmerich said. “And unfortunately, one of those results is pushback from the city council in the form of intimidation tactics and such.”

Despite being lifted, the publishing gag against The Clarksdale Press Register “did hurt us,” Emmerich said, but “we weathered that storm.” The paper is still vulnerable, however, because Mississippi is one of several states that lacks an anti-SLAPP law protecting journalists from legal actions known as strategic lawsuits against public participation that are brought in order to chill speech.

Still, both Emmerich and Meyer believe the risks they are taking to report the truth and hold officials accountable outweigh the consequences of playing it safe. After all, a public that is disengaged from its reality “sure as hell hurts democracy,” Meyer said. And in a country that routinely distrusts and villainizes local news, these attacks did not occur in a vacuum; if they can happen in Clarksdale or Marion, they can happen anywhere.

“People don’t think they can change things. I've written the same editorial probably 50 out of the 52 weeks in the year, just with different ways of expressing it,” Meyer said. “If you don't believe that you can make a difference in something, all you listen to are slogans. If you believe you can make a difference, you'll look at facts.”

youtube.com/embed/Hp0n_oVXqUc?…


freedom.press/issues/local-new…

Gazzetta del Cadavere reshared this.






Take A Little Bit Of Acorn To Work


When we think of 8-bit computers, it’s natural to start with home computers. That’s where they live on in the collective memory. But a Z80, a 6502, or similar was more likely to be found unseen in a piece of industrial machinery, doing the job for which we’d today reach for a microcontroller. Sometimes these two worlds intersected, and thus we come to the EuroBEEB, a derivative of Acorn’s BBC Micro on a Eurocard. [Steve Crozier] has performed extensive research into this system and even produced a recreated PCB, providing a fascinating window into embedded computing in the early 1980s.

The EuroBEEB was the work of Control Universal, a Cambridge-based company specialising in embedded computers. They produced systems based upon 6502 and 6809 processors, and joining their product line to the then-burgeoning BBC Micro ecosystem would have been an obvious step. The machine itself is a Eurocard with a simple 6502 system shipped with ACORN BBC Basic on ROM, and could be seen as a cut-down BBC Micro with plenty of digital I/O, accesible through a serial port. It didn’t stop there though, as not only could it export its graphics to a “real” BBC Micro, it had a range of expansion Eurocards that could carry the missing hardware such as analogue input, Teletext, or high-res graphics.

The reverse-engineered PCB comes from analysis of surviving schematics, and included a couple of gate array logic chips to replace address decoding ROMs in the original. If it seems overkill for anyone used to a modern microcontroller, it’s worth remembering that by the standards of the time this was a pretty simple system. Meanwhile if you only fancy trying BBC BASIC, there’s no need to find original hardware.


hackaday.com/2025/03/28/take-a…



La Commissione annuncia lo stanziamento di 1,3 miliardi di euro per lo sviluppo di tecnologie critiche

L'articolo proviene da #Euractiv Italia ed è stato ricondiviso sulla comunità Lemmy @Intelligenza Artificiale
La Commissione ha annunciato venerdì (28 marzo) che stanzierà 1,3 miliardi di euro per l’implementazione di tecnologie

Intelligenza Artificiale reshared this.




World backup day 2025: ogni giorno bisogna adottare piani proattivi per la cyber recovery


@Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)
La giornata internazionale dedicata al backup dei dati permette alle imprese di effettuare la verifica delle loro strategie di protezione dati in un contesto di cyber minacce in evoluzione, nell'era dei ransomware. Ecco i consigli



Corno d’Africa, REPORT EEPA n.620 – 27 Marzo 2025

L'articolo proviene dal blog di @Davide Tommasin ዳቪድ ed è stato ricondiviso sulla comunità Lemmy @Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo

Europe External Programme with Africa è un centro di competenza con sede in Belgio con conoscenze approfondite, pubblicazioni e reti, specializzato in questioni di peacebuilding, protezione dei rifugiati e resilienza




📣 Contrasto ai diplomifici, reclutamento docenti e diritto allo studio: oggi il Consiglio dei Ministri ha approvato il decreto-legge #PNRR con una serie di misure strategiche per la #scuola.

Qui tutti i dettagli ▶️ mim.gov.



Signal, che ci insegna lo scandalo Usa sugli errori di cybersecurity


@Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)
Lo scandalo della chat Signal del Governo Usa dove si parlava di piani di guerra contro gli Houthi insegna tanto sugli errori comuni che uno Stato, come un'azienda anche strutturata, possono fare in termini di governance della cybersecurity. Ed è



T-Mobile Condannata: 33 Milioni di dollari per un SIM Swap da Record


Lo studio legale californiano Greenberg Glusker ha raggiunto attraverso un tribunale arbitrale la possibilità di recuperare 33 milioni di dollari da T-Mobile. La causa denuncia gravi violazioni della sicurezza che hanno portato al successo di un attacco di scambio di SIM (SIM Swap).

L’incidente è avvenuto il 21 febbraio 2020, quando un dipendente della T-Mobile ha trasferito il numero di telefono del cliente Joseph “Josh” Jones su una scheda SIM controllata da un aggressore. L’attacco ha portato al furto di oltre 1.500 Bitcoin e di circa 60.000 Bitcoin Cash, per un valore di 38 milioni di dollari al momento del furto.

L’account T-Mobile di Jones era dotato di misure di sicurezza avanzate, tra cui un PIN di otto cifre che avrebbe dovuto impedire qualsiasi modifica. Ciò ha portato la vittima a credere che gli aggressori avessero utilizzato vulnerabilità nei sistemi dell’operatore di telefonia mobile per ottenere il controllo sul suo account.

La petizione di Greenberg Glusker, depositata presso il tribunale di Los Angeles, rivela che un’indagine delle forze dell’ordine ha accertato il coinvolgimento nell’attacco informatico di un adolescente di 17 anni a cui è stata diagnosticata l’ADHD. Secondo le informazioni disponibili, era associato agli hacker Nima Fazeli e Joseph O’Connor, coinvolti nell’hacking di decine di account Twitter nello stesso 2020.

Il caso T-Mobile è stato tenuto segreto dall’autunno del 2023. Lo studio legale ha affermato che l’operatore di telefonia mobile stava cercando di mantenere riservati i dettagli delle sue falle di sicurezza.

Paul Blechner di Greenberg Glusker ha sottolineato che il problema dello scambio di SIM è rimasto una vulnerabilità irrisolta per molti anni. Ha affermato che gli operatori, tra cui T-Mobile, erano a conoscenza del problema ma non hanno preso sufficienti precauzioni per proteggere i propri clienti.

Gli attacchi di scambio di SIM rappresentano una seria minaccia perché i numeri di telefono vengono spesso utilizzati per l’autenticazione a due fattori in vari servizi online. Una volta che gli aggressori prendono il controllo del numero, possono modificare i dettagli di accesso e assumere il controllo degli account degli utenti.

Uno dei casi più noti dell’uso di questa tecnica divenne importante negli hack di Twitter del 2020. Gli hacker hanno attaccato 130 account e ne sono stati catturati 45, tra cui quelli di personaggi famosi: Bill Gates, Jeff Bezos, Joe Biden, Elon Musk e Mike Bloomberg.

L'articolo T-Mobile Condannata: 33 Milioni di dollari per un SIM Swap da Record proviene da il blog della sicurezza informatica.



NSO Group e i suoi clienti stanno perdendo la loro battaglia per restare nell'ombra e i suoi clienti continuano a farsi beccare con le mani nella marmellata

Giovedì, Amnesty International ha pubblicato un nuovo rapporto che descrive in dettaglio i tentativi di hackeraggio contro due giornalisti serbi, presumibilmente effettuati con lo spyware #Pegasus di #NSO Group.

"Amnesty International ha trascorso anni a monitorare lo spyware Pegasus di NSO Group e il modo in cui è stato utilizzato per colpire attivisti e giornalisti", ha riferito a #TechCrunch Donncha Ó Cearbhaill, responsabile del Security Lab di Amnesty. "Questa ricerca tecnica ha permesso ad Amnesty di identificare siti Web dannosi utilizzati per distribuire lo spyware Pegasus, incluso lo specifico dominio Pegasus utilizzato in questa campagna".

L'articolo di @Lorenzo Franceschi-Bicchierai

techcrunch.com/2025/03/28/agai…

@Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)


NEW: Despite its lofty promises of invisibility, NSO Group customers keep getting their spyware operations against journalists and dissidents caught.

“NSO has a basic problem: they are not as good at hiding as their customers think,” said John Scott-Railton, who has investigated spyware for 10+ years.

This week, it was the turn of the Serbian government, who allegedly targeted two journalists with NSO Group's spyware Pegasus, according to Amnesty International.

techcrunch.com/2025/03/28/agai…




Hackaday Podcast Episode 314: It’s Pi, but Also PCBs in Living Color and Ultrasonic Everything


It might not be Pi Day anymore, but Elliot and Dan got together for the approximately 100*Pi-th episode of the Podcast to run through the week’s coolest hacks. Ultrasound seemed to be one of the themes, with a deep dive into finding bugs with sonar as well as using sound to cut the cheese — and cakes and pies, too.

The aesthetics of PCBs were much on our minds, too, from full-color graphics on demand to glow-in-the-dark silkscreens. Is automation really needed to embed fiber optics in concrete? Absolutely! How do you put plasma in a bottle? Apparently, with kombucha, Nichrome, and silicone. If you need to manage your M:TG cards, scribble on the walls, or build a mechanical chase light, we’ve got the details. And what exactly is a supercomputer? We can’t define it, but we know one when we see it.

html5-player.libsyn.com/embed/…
Where to Follow Hackaday Podcast

Places to follow Hackaday podcasts:



Download the zero-calorie MP3.

Episode 314 Show Notes:

News:


  • No news is good news!


What’s that Sound?


  • Congrats to [IrishBoss] for guessing the angle grinder. And from Dan Maloney: “It was the ear protection, I swear!”


Interesting Hacks of the Week:



Quick Hacks:


Can’t-Miss Articles:


hackaday.com/2025/03/28/hackad…



This week, we discuss getting fooled, the 'one big story' of the week, and Ghibli.

This week, we discuss getting fooled, the x27;one big storyx27; of the week, and Ghibli.#BehindTheBlog



Volt Typhoon ha colpito un’azienda elettrica USA per circa un anno: ecco i dettagli


@Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)
Il gruppo hacker cinese, che costantemente prende di mira infrastrutture critiche a livello globale, per quasi 12 mesi è riuscito a tenere sotto scacco un'azienda elettrica USA. Ecco i dettagli del nuovo attacco di Volt Typhoon e i



Supply chain, digitale e green. Il futuro di Ala nei numeri

@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo

Sono numeri positivi quelli con cui l’azienda campana Ala, specializzata nella logistica integrata e nella distribuzione di componentistica per l’industria aeronautica e aerospaziale, chiude il 2024. A dimostrarlo il bilancio consolidato presentato dal Consiglio di amministrazione che registra un



Keep Tabs on Your Vehicle’s Needs with LubeLogger


It doesn’t matter if its a Vespa or a Peterbilt truck — if you ignore the maintenance needs of your vehicle, you do so at your own peril. But it can be difficult enough to keep track of basic oil changes, to say nothing of keeping records on what parts were changed when. Instead of cramming more receipts into your glove box, maybe give LubeLogger a try.

This free and open source software tool is designed to make it easy for individuals to keep track of both the routine maintenance needs of their vehicles, as well as keep track of any previous or upcoming repairs and upgrades. Released under the MIT license, LubeLogger is primarily distributed as a Docker image that makes it easy to self-host the tool should you wish to keep your data safe at home rather than on somebody’s server out in the Wild West of the modern Internet.

In perhaps the most basic example, LubeLogger allows the user to add their vehicle to a virtual garage and set up routine maintenance tasks (such as oil changes), and fire off reminders when tasks are due. But it can also do things like track your vehicle’s mileage and fuel efficiency over time, and break down its operating costs.

LubeLogger has been around for a little over a year now, and it seeing active development, with the last release dropping just a few weeks back. While not everyone is going to need such a powerful tool, we’re glad to see there’s a self-hosted open source option out there for those that do.

Thanks to [STR-Alorman] for the tip.


hackaday.com/2025/03/28/keep-t…



Arriva la “Cyber Vaccinazione” in Francia. Gli studenti hackerati per educarli alla Cybersecurity


In risposta all’aumento degli attacchi alle piattaforme di istruzione digitale, le autorità francesi hanno lanciato una campagna nazionale per sensibilizzare gli studenti sui rischi del phishing. L’operazione CACTUS, condotta nel marzo 2025, ha rappresentato un passo importante nello sviluppo dell’alfabetizzazione digitale tra i giovani.

Negli ultimi mesi, le scuole sono diventate sempre più spesso bersaglio di attacchi informatici contro gli spazi di apprendimento digitale. Gli attacchi tramite queste piattaforme creano ulteriore pressione sugli studenti e hanno già portato alla sospensione temporanea nel 2024 di molti istituti. I più vulnerabili sono gli adolescenti di età compresa tra 11 e 18 anni.

Dal 19 al 21 marzo, 2,5 milioni di bambini in età scolare hanno ricevuto un messaggio tramite ENT con un link che offriva “giochi hackerati e trucchi gratuiti”. L’obiettivo era testare le reazioni degli adolescenti a una potenziale minaccia in condizioni simili a quelle reali. Circa 210.000 studenti, ovvero circa uno su 12, hanno cliccato sul collegamento e sono stati reindirizzati a una pagina con un video che spiegava i pericoli del phishing.

L’obiettivo principale della campagna era quello di trasmettere agli studenti l’importanza di prestare attenzione su Internet e di metterli in guardia sulle possibili conseguenze legali della criminalità informatica.

Dopo il completamento della fase principale, le autorità intendono proseguire l’istruzione nelle scuole. L’iniziativa prevede sessioni di formazione faccia a faccia con esperti invitati per approfondire la comprensione delle minacce digitali. Inoltre, è stato sviluppato un set di allenamento e dei materiali creati congiuntamente da tutti i partecipanti al progetto. Questi materiali forniscono indicazioni e strumenti per aiutare gli insegnanti a continuare il loro lavoro volto a migliorare l’alfabetizzazione digitale tra i giovani.

Ricordiamo che la Francia si sta preparando a varare leggi che potrebbero cambiare radicalmente i principi della sicurezza online, obbligando i fornitori di servizi di comunicazione a installare backdoor nei servizi di messaggistica crittografata e limitando l’accesso alle risorse Internet tramite VPN. L’iniziativa ha suscitato aspre critiche da parte di Tuta (ex Tutanota) e della VPN Trust Initiative (VTI).

La Francia non è l’unico Paese in cui il controllo sui dati Internet sta aumentando. Nel Regno Unito, il governo ha recentemente richiesto da Apple di fornire l’accesso ai backup crittografati di iCloud. In Svezia è in preparazione un disegno di legge che obbligherà i messaggeri Signal e WhatsApp creare backdoor tecniche per fornire l’accesso ai messaggi crittografati.

L'articolo Arriva la “Cyber Vaccinazione” in Francia. Gli studenti hackerati per educarli alla Cybersecurity proviene da il blog della sicurezza informatica.



Elly Schlein (Pd) contro Giorgia Meloni: “Difende gli interessi di Trump e Musk, non dell’Italia”


@Politica interna, europea e internazionale
La segretaria del Partito democratico (Pd), Elly Schlein, ha attaccato la presidente del Consiglio, Giorgia Meloni, per le dichiarazioni rese in un’intervista al The Financial Times in cui definiva “infantile”



A new court document shows the FBI raced to stop hackers moving the ransom Caesars paid, with authorities freezing much of the extortion payment.#News
#News


SCANDALO UE: 7° AUMENTO DI STIPENDIO
Mentre i cittadini europei soffrono rincari e crisi, i 66.000 parass… ehm dipendenti UE si godono un nuovo, vergognoso aumento ad aprile: il settimo dal 2022! Si tratta degli arretrati del 2024, quando avrebbero dovuto ricevere un aumento del +8,5%. Nello stesso periodo (fonte: OCSE e Eurostat), i salari reali (al netto dell’inflazione) in Italia sono diminuiti del 7%.

Ecco i numeri scandalosi della Ue:
- Lo stipendio minimo sale da 3.361€ a 3.645€;
- Il massimo schizza da 23.262€ a 25.229€;
- Von der Leyen incasserà 34.800€/mese (+2.700€), i commissari 28.400€ (+2.200€).

Il meccanismo? una formula del tutto imperscrutabile. E la farsa continua: nel 2025 potrebbero arrivare ulteriori 3 aggiustamenti. L’Europa premia sé stessa mentre danneggia i cittadini.



Mostra “Giovanni Malagodi un liberale a Milano”

@Politica interna, europea e internazionale

A cura di Leonardo Musci e di Alessandra Cavaterra Dal 28 marzo al 2 aprile 2025, dalle ore 9:30 alle ore 13.00, previa prenotazione scrivendo a ramus@fondazioneluigieinaudi.it Presso l’Ordine degli Ingegneri della Provincia di Milano Viale Andrea Doria, 9 – Milano
L'articolo Mostra “Giovanni Malagodi un



ricordare:
28 dicembre 2024. israele festeggia "hanukkah" bruciando vivi dottori e pazienti al Kamal Adwan Hospital
slowforward.net/2024/12/28/tha…

#kamaladwanhospital #genocide

reshared this