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Links 11/01/2023: Microsoft is Bricking Windows Again



  • GNU/Linux

    • Kernel Space

      • It's FOSSLinux is All Set to Disable Microsoft's RNDIS Drivers

        Microsoft's RNDIS protocol, short for Remote Network Driver Interface Specification, is a proprietary USB protocol for virtual Ethernet functionality on computers. The most common use case of this would be using your phone's mobile network to connect to the internet on your computer via USB, also known as Tethering. Even though it mainly works on Windows, it has been part of the Linux kernel for a while now. But that is set to change soon.

    • Graphics Stack

    • Instructionals/Technical

      • Manuel MatuzovicDay 78: container query units

        Container queries come with their own units.

        Container query units work the same as viewport units. 80cqi equals 80svi.

      • Manuel MatuzovicDay 77: block-size, inline-size, vi, and vb

        The logical alternative for width is inline-size and the alternative for height is block-size. Here’s an example of how using inline-size over width makes a difference.

      • Carlos BeckerMy workflow, part 1

        I keep getting asked how my setup works, how I use tmux and nvim over ssh… all that good stuff.

        I wrote this series of posts in an attempt to explain it.

      • Ayerwhoarethey: Determine Who Can Log In to an SSH Server

        Filippo Valsorda has a neat SSH server that reports the GitHub username of the connecting client. Just SSH to whoami.filippo.io, and if you're a GitHub user, there's a good chance it will identify you. This works because of two behaviors: First, GitHub publishes your authorized public keys at https://github.com/USERNAME.keys. Second, your SSH client sends the server the public key of every one of your key pairs.

      • Sean ConnerAn epiphany about bloated web pages might be the result of a dumb network

        Ward Cunningham wants a smarter edge to view his site (and to “improve server performance” if you read the comments in the web page returned from the site) and I can't begrudge him that—I like smart edges! It makes more sense to me than a smart network. But at the same time, I want a web site to just return text to a “dumb browser,” even if the browser I'm using is not particularly dumb.

      • Jim NielsenOK LCH, I’m Convinced

        Lea explains how LCH is designed to represent the entire spectrum of what humans can see. As such, chroma for example, is theoretically unbounded in the syntax allowing for increased saturation values as hardware improves: [...]

      • DJ AdamsWorking from a narrowboat - Internet connectivity

        Anyway, pretty much any remote work requires an Internet connection. So when I'm on the narrowboat, I'll need one too. While cable or FTTP is appealing, I don't think there's a cable long enough to make things work as I navigate the canal networks. So the solution needs to be a little more mobile than that.

        I did a lot of research, and ended up going for a 4G/5G mobile data based solution. I've actually been using this solution for a while already, I'll explain shortly. Here's what that solution looks like.

      • Linux HandbookHow to Use Exa Command on Linux

        The ls command is one of the basic yet essential Linux commands. You cannot imagine surviving the terminal without it.

        And yet, there is a new tool that aims to be a replacement of the ls command. This new tool is exa.

      • HowTo ForgeHow to Block Package and Kernel Updates in Debian / Ubuntu

        This tutorial will cover how to block certain packages from being installed or upgraded and how to block specific versions of packages or kernels...

      • Own HowToHow to Install Rustdesk on Linux mint 21

        Rustdesk is an open source remote desktop software, just like Teamviewer, that you can use to remote control your devices. Rustdesk supports the most popular Operating systems, which means you can easily remote control your computer from your phone.

        In this tutorial you will learn how to install Rustdesk on Linux mint 21.

      • ID RootHow To Install Moodle on Rocky Linux 9 - idroot

        In this tutorial, we will show you how to install Moodle on Rocky Linux 9. For those of you who didn’t know, Moodle is a free and open-source learning management system (LMS) used by educators and institutions around the world to create online learning environments. It is designed to be flexible and customizable, offering a range of tools for course creation, collaboration, assessment, and mobile support.

        This article assumes you have at least basic knowledge of Linux, know how to use the shell, and most importantly, you host your site on your own VPS. The installation is quite simple and assumes you are running in the root account, if not you may need to add ‘sudo‘ to the commands to get root privileges. I will show you the step-by-step installation of Moodle online Learning Management System (LMS) on Rocky Linux. 9.

      • HowTo ForgeHow to Install osTicket with Nginx on Debian 11

        osTicket is a free and open-source support ticket system used to scale and streamline your customer service and improve your customer experience.

      • How to List All Logged-In Users in Your Linux System

        Have you ever been curious to know who is connected to the remote machine or server you have been working on? I mean, who doesn’t want to do that?

        Look, listing all the user accounts in your Linux system is quite an easy task, but that doesn’t mean that all those users are connected to the target machine.

        However, you can read this article to learn four simple ways to list all the logged-in users on the target machine. Once you find them, you can kick them out of the target machine or say “hi” to them using the write command.

      • LinuxConfigHow to List all flatpak repositories

        Just like traditional package managers, Flatpak relies on software repositories in order to download applications. Repositories are a necessary component of Flatpak as they allow users to install applications and dependencies from a central location. A repository contains a catalog of installable software and will provide future updates to the packages as needed.

        Flatpak does not automatically come with repositories added in its configuration. It is up to the user to find Flatpak repositories (such as FlatHub) and add them to Flatpak on their system. To keep track of all of the added repositories, users can get a list of them in terminal.

        In this tutorial, you will see how to get a list of all Flatpak repositories configured for your system. This will take place in the command line terminal and will be applicable for any Linux system, as Flatpak is distribution independent and the commands work the same across any of them.

      • LinuxConfigHow to install Flatpak on OpenSuse

        Flatpak is a third party software deployment and package manager application that can be installed on OpenSUSE Linux or any other major Linux distro. It allows applications to be packaged in a self contained format, which can then be installed and run on any Linux system, without needing to worry about which distribution you are running. One of the biggest benefits of Flatpak is that you can install programs which are not ordinarily available in the default OpenSUSE software repository.

        Having access to Flatpak means that you will have the ability to install a lot of additional applications than what is available through installation in the official repos with zypper. To use Flatpak on OpenSUSE, we simply need to install the program, add the repos that contain the flatpak packages you wish to install, and then search for and install the packages. Flatpak will also let us manage and update the apps that we install.

        In this tutorial, you will see how to install Flatpak package manager on OpenSUSE Linux. Then, we will take you through some basic usage of Flatpak so you can get started with adding repositories and installing custom software of your choice.

      • LinuxConfigHow to update Flatpak application

        Applications that have been installed via Flatpak, just like those from other sources, will occasionally need to be updated. The Flatpak service can be used to keep your installed applications up to date. In this tutorial, you will see how to update all your Flatpak applications either individually or all at once on a Linux system.

        It is always a good idea to keep your Flatpak applications up to date. Developers will regularly release new editions of their software with security patches, bug fixes, and new or improved features. By keeping all your applications up to date, you can take advantage of the newest features and are less likely to run into issues. This is an essential part of system administration and keeping your PC stable and healthy.

      • Linux CapableHow to Install and Enable Snap on Linux Mint 21 or 20 - LinuxCapable

        While Linux Mint doesn’t ship with snapd preinstalled, having Flatpak installed is usually enough for most users. Some may wish to enable Snap and still use the system that Linux Mint provides. For those interested in doing this, this tutorial will cover everything you need to know to turn on Snap and ensure it’s running correctly.

      • Learn UbuntuInstall Git on Ubuntu and Configure it

        Being the most popular open-source version control system, Git is one of the most crucial skills that you can adopt for software development.

        And in this guide, I will walk you through how you can install git on Ubuntu with basic configuration.

      • Linux CapableHow to Install HandBrake on Linux Mint 21 or 20 - LinuxCapable

        Handbrake is a free and open-source video transcoding tool for those looking to convert their videos from one format to another. Compatible with various popular formats such as MP4, AVI, MKV, and M4V, Handbrake offers users the ability to reduce the file size of a video, change the container or codec of a video, and also extract audio tracks from a video. On top of its transcoding capabilities, Handbrake takes things further by providing features like adding subtitles, cropping and resizing videos, and adjusting both video and audio settings.

        In the following tutorial, you will learn how to install Handbrake on Linux Mint 21 or Linux Mint 20 using the command line terminal with various methods to install the transcoding software and update and remove the software if needed.

      • Linux CapableHow to Install Discord on Linux Mint 21 or 20 - LinuxCapable

        Discord is an innovative communication platform that has quickly become the go-to solution for gamers across various platforms. It provides users with multiple features such as voice chat, text messaging, media sharing, custom emojis, and integrations with various games and services. This makes it particularly useful for Linux gamers who may not be able to use voice chat solutions built into some games. The platform’s robust API also unlocks exciting new possibilities by allowing developers to create custom integrations and bots that can significantly enhance the user experience.

        The following tutorial will teach you how to install Discord on Linux Mint 21 or Linux Mint 20 using two different methods with the command line terminal.

      • TecAdminRsync Exclusions: The Ultimate Guide for Excluding Files and Directories - TecAdmin

        Rsync is a powerful command-line tool that allows you to synchronize and transfer files between different systems. One of the key features of Rsync is the ability to exclude files and directories from the synchronization process. This feature can be incredibly useful for a variety of tasks, such as backups, codebase synchronization, and data management.

      • FOSSLinuxHow to install FTP Server on Linux Mint | FOSS Linux

        FTP, or the File Transfer Protocol, is the most widely used network protocol for transferring files and data between two systems over a network. FTP does not encrypt traffic by default, which is not a secure option and can result in an assault on a server. VSFTPD, which stands for Very Secure FTP Daemon, is a secure, dependable, and speedy FTP server.

        VSFTPD is licensed under GNU GPL and is the default FTP server for most Linux systems. This article will demonstrate how to install and configure the FTP server on the Linux Mint operating system.

      • TecAdminRsync Command to Copy Missing Files Only - TecAdmin

        Rsync is a command-line utility that is used to synchronize files and directories between two locations. It is commonly used to copy files from one location to another while preserving file attributes such as permissions, timestamps, and ownership. One of the powerful features of rsync is the ability to copy only the files that are missing or have been modified in the destination location. This can be useful when you want to keep a backup of your files, or when you want to update a website or server with the latest changes.

    • WINE or Emulation

      • Make Tech EasierBest Handheld Gaming Consoles for Emulation - Make Tech Easier

        Once upon a time, gamers everywhere dreamed of bringing their beloved video games on the go. With the advent of the Nintendo Gameboy, portable gaming devices became mainstream. Thanks to technological advances, many powerful handheld gaming consoles can now play all your favorite games through emulation.

    • Games

  • Distributions and Operating Systems

    • The Register UKHaiku beta 4: BeOS rebuild / almost ready for release. / A thing of beautyHaiku beta 4: BeOS rebuild / almost ready for release. / A thing of beauty

      Haiku is an open source OS with a few differences. The big one is that it's not a Unix. The next is that it's pretty close to being a realistic, usable alternative OS for ordinary, everyday use.

      The Haiku Project has released a new beta version of its unique desktop OS. After the project was founded in 2001, it took 17 years to get to Beta 1 in September 2018. Writing a whole new OS is a big project. Since then, though, progress seems to have sped up, and Beta 4, out a few weeks ago, is shaping up well. The new version supports HiDPI displays, image thumbnails in the file manager, and has significantly improved Wi-Fi support, including via some USB Wi-Fi adapters, and support for the 802.11n and 802.11ac standards – which puts it ahead of even FreeBSD.

  • Free, Libre, and Open Source Software

    • OpenSource.com7 interesting metrics about open source in sustainability

      Open source culture has demonstrated how transparent and collaborative innovation can support modern digital services, data, and infrastructure. Yet, despite its transformative impact and use within an estimated 97% of digital products, the potential of open source for developing environmentally sustainable technologies is not well understood.

      Open source software (OSS) accelerates the transition to a sustainable economy by supporting traceable decision-making, building capacity for localization and customization of climate technologies, and most importantly, helping to prevent greenwashing. This transition requires technological innovation and new opportunities for society to participate in developing and adopting technologies.

    • OpenSource.comWhy developers choose open source in the hybrid cloud

      Open source technology provides greater flexibility in hybrid and multi-cloud environments so that developers can focus on what's most important—building with greater speed and innovation, all while using a tool they enjoy.

      The biggest barrier to growth and innovation is a stagnant data platform. Legacy proprietary systems aren't technically viable for most enterprises anymore. The enhanced capabilities of adopting a cloud-centric, open source approach to database management systems are critical to thriving in today's business landscape.

    • Medevel27 Open Source Slideshow Presentation Editors and PowerPoint Alternatives

      Presentations and slideshows are essential tools for marketeers, strategists, teachers, and ofcourse students.

      Basically, a slideshow is a presentation of series of still images on a projection screen or a projector (displaying device).

      Microsoft powerpoint carries the same technique with more of magic transition effects, ability to add interactive diagrams, videos, and videos.

    • Nolan LawsonRetiring Pinafore

      Five years ago, I started a journey to build a better Mastodon client – one focused on performance and simplicity. And I did! Pinafore is the main Mastodon client I’ve used myself since I first released it.

      After five years, though, my relationship with social media has changed, and it’s time for me to put Pinafore out to pasture. The pinafore.social website will still work, but I’ve marked the repo as unmaintained.

    • HackadayImHex: An Open Hex Editor For The Modern Hacker

      It’s little surprise that most hackers have a favorite text editor, since we tend to spend quite a bit of time staring at the thing. From writing code to reading config files, the hacker’s world is filled with seemingly infinite lines of ASCII. Comparatively, while a hex editor is a critical tool to have in your arsenal, many of us don’t use one often enough to have a clear favorite.

    • Licensing / Legal

      • EFFBeware the Gifts of Dragons: How D&D’s Open Gaming License May Have Become a Trap for Creators

        Obviously, this would be a rude and unfair thing to do to people who have accepted the invitation of the open gaming license (OGL) to create new games and stories that build upon Dungeons and Dragons. But would it be legal? Even more interesting, would revoking the OGL actually give some third parties more freedom to operate, given that the OGL forced them to promise not to do some things that copyright and trademark law otherwise permit? Let’s find out.

        What is an open license? An open license is an offer to allow people to use your materials in the ways you specify, despite some legal right such as a copyright that would otherwise entitle you to withhold permission. For instance, the Creative Commons Attribution license provides rights to adapt and share a copyrighted work, so long as the user gives you credit, or “attribution.”

        If you have a copyrighted work and you want to give people reassurance that they can make use of it, open licenses are a handy way to do that. You might do this because you want your work to be freely shared far and wide or because you want to build a community of creativity.

    • Programming/Development

      • Red Hat5 new advanced features improving C# 11 [Ed: Tom Deseyn continues to work for Microsoft on a Red Hat salary. Insane self-harming behaviour. Also compare to 'secure' boot.]
      • University of TorontoMy Git settings for carrying local changes on top of upstream development

        For years now I've been handling my local changes to upstream projects by committing them and rebasing on (Git) pulls, and it's been a positive experience. However, over the years the exact Git configuration settings I wanted to make this work smoothly have changed (due to things such as Git 2.34's change in fast-forward pull settings), and I've never written down all of the settings in one place. Since I recently switched to Git for a big repository where I carry local changes, this is a good time to write them down for my future reference.

      • ChrisVerifiable Software Development Estimations

        I have long wanted to write this article but I never knew how to structure it. I still don’t, but I’ll give it a shot anyway. Like in the past few articles, there’s some probability theory underlying this article, but I will gloss over it entirely to make it approachable for practically-minded people.

      • ButtondownIn Defense of Testing Mocks

        It’s over a year late, I know, but the 2021 Newsletter collection is now available to purchase as a PDF. 70,000 words, 250 pages, 20 bucks. Unlike last year, there’s no private subscriber-only emails, so this is purely for people who want to read it on the go / give me money. I might add a postmortem review or an introduction piece if there’s enough interest.

        I also wrote a bunch of automation so later editions get out a lot faster, I’ll try to get around to the 2022 edition by the end of the month.

      • Lawrence TrattCompiled and Interpreted Languages: Two Ways of Saying Tomato

        What we might think to be a settled truth often isn't. I was reminded of this recently after I publicly stated that there is no such thing as a compiled or an interpreted programming language: many people have made clear to me that they believe strongly that languages clearly fall into one of these two categories. Indeed, a simple web search suggests that the vast majority of pages describing compiled and interpreted languages propose a crisp delineation between the two.

        I certainly sympathise with the temptation to classify languages in this way, because most programming languages are commonly implemented using one technique or the other. However, experience has taught me that it's important not to conflate the most common implementation choice with inherent properties of a language.

        In this post I'm therefore going to show, using a series of programming language implementations, why languages shouldn't be classified as compiled or interpreted. Before I do that, I need to start by clarifying the difference between a programming language specification and an implementation of that specification.

      • Trail Of BitsAnother prolific year of open-source contributions

        This time last year, we wrote about the more than 190 Trail of Bits-authored pull requests that were merged into non-Trail of Bits repositories in 2021. In 2022, we continued that trend by having more than 400 pull requests merged into non-Trail of Bits repositories!

        Why is this significant? While we take great pride in the tools that we develop, we recognize that we benefit from tools maintained outside of Trail of Bits. When one of those tools doesn’t work as we expect, we try to fix it. When a tool doesn’t fill the need we think it was meant to, we try to improve it. In short, we try to give back to the community that gives so much to us.

      • Python

        • University of TorontoIn Python, zero is zero regardless of the number type

          Before I actually tried it, I expect the dict to start out with either two or three entries and end up with one or two, given that boolean True and False are actually ints with False being the same as zero. In fact the dict starts out with one entry and ends up with none, because in Python all three of these zeros are equal to each other: [...]

      • Rust

        • Rust BlogThe Rust Programming Language Blog: Announcing Rust 1.66.1

          The Rust team has published a new point release of Rust, 1.66.1. Rust is a programming language that is empowering everyone to build reliable and efficient software.

          [...]

          Rust 1.66.1 fixes Cargo not verifying SSH host keys when cloning dependencies or registry indexes with SSH. This security vulnerability is tracked as CVE-2022-46176, and you can find more details in the advisory.

    • Standards/Consortia

      • Joe BrockmeierUSB-C is simple, right? Well... : Dissociated Press

        One of the nice things about USB-C is its simplicity, right? No more figuring out which side is up to plug into a device. The connector is super-friendly. But… that’s where the simplicity stops.

        Over the past few years I’ve acquired an increasing number of devices that use USB-C connectors as well as Thunderbolt devices with a USB-C type connector as well. All cables, alas, are not created equal.

  • Leftovers

    • Bertrand MeyerThe legacy of Barry Boehm

      August of last year brought the sad news of Barry Boehm’s passing away on August 20. If software engineering deserves at all to be called engineering today, it is in no small part thanks to him.

      “Engineer” is what Boehm was, even though his doctorate and other degrees were all in mathematics. He looked the part (you might almost expect him to carry a slide rule in his shirt pocket, until you realized that as a software engineer he did not need one) and more importantly he exuded the seriousness, dedication, precision, respect for numbers, no-nonsense attitude and practical mindset of outstanding engineers. He was employed as an engineer or engineering manager in the first part of his career, most notably at TRW, a large aerospace company (later purchased by Northrop Grumman), turning to academia (USC) afterwards, but even as a professor he retained that fundamental engineering ethos.

    • Jim NielsenSubscribe Wherever You Get Your Content

      What’s amazing about these phrases — like “Follow us wherever you get your podcasts” — is that they are are paid advertisements that point you to nowhere in particular! It’s not “Stream it now on _Netlix_” or “Follow us on _Facebook_” or even “Visit _ourwebsite.com_”. These are paid advertisements with no “call to action” to any one commercial, corporate platform.

    • Craig MurrayTrains (Mostly), Planes and Automobiles Part 6

      The next morning I stayed in the Aparthotel writing, while Niels went out to the airport, to pick up the BMW 4×4 he had hired. Our destination was Halle an der Saale, near Leipzig. It was, I think, our first – and overdue – foray into the former East Germany.

    • HackadaySupercon 2022: Samy Kamkar’s Glowing Breath

      Sometimes the journey itself is the destination. This one started when [Samy] was 10 and his mom bought a computer. He logged on to IRC to talk with people about the X-Files and was WinNuked. Because of that experience, modulo a life of hacking and poking and playing, the talk ends with a wearable flex-PCB Tesla coil driving essentially a neon sign made from an ampule of [Samy]’s own breath around his neck. Got that? Buckle up, it’s a rollercoaster.

    • HackadayAn All-Billet, Single-Piece, Flexure-Based Nutcracker

      Typical nutcrackers rely on simple pin hinges to join two handles for the cracking task. However, [adam the machinist] has demonstrated that a single-piece nutcracker is possible by using the flexural properties of the right grade of steel.

    • Science

      • HackadayVirgin Not-Quite-Orbit-Yet

        A country’s first orbital satellite launch from home soil is a proud moment, even when as is the case with Virgin Orbit, it’s not from the soil itself but from a Boeing 747 in the stratosphere over the sea. The first launch of the under-wing rocket took place yesterday evening, and pretty much every British space enthusiast gathered round the stream to watch history being made somewhere over the Atlantic south of Ireland. Sadly for all of us, though the launch itself went well and the rocket reached space, it suffered an anomaly in its second stage and failed to reach orbit.

      • Craft Of CodingWhy Fortran is a scientific powerhouse

        People often are surprised to find out how prevalent Fortran is in the real world. For instance many climate models were originally written, and continue to be maintained in Fortran (languages like Julia are attempting to unseat it, but I think Julia would be a better language if it had an ISO standard associated with it).

        One of the reasons Fortran still works is longevity. It’s much easier to build on something that was originally developed in Fortran (which is backwards compatible), rather than starting from scratch. People always make is seem so easy, but many a re-engineering project has come unstuck because of a failure to understand how the original software worked. Fortran is also exceptionally good at doing math, and climate models are nothing if not all about crunching data and doing math.

      • CSVbaseTake the tools out of 'Data', but don't take the data out of the tools

        The Data team are using a strange and weird datastructure: the dataframe. Dataframes are different to the usual nested hashtables and arrays. They are optimised for bulk operations - those are the operations you tend to do when analysing data.

        When you write code with objects they call it "object-oriented programming". I think when you code with dataframes they should probably call it "dataframe-oriented programming". For whatever reason they tend to call it "data science" instead.

    • Education

      • Common DreamsCommunism Isn't What Terrifies the GOP? It's High-Quality and Well-Funded Public Education

        Have you heard the latest Republican lie?

      • The NationFlorida Man Calls the Thought Police

        Last week, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis called the thought police on college educators. The Chronicle of Higher Education published two articles revealing that the DeSantis administration demanded information—including employee titles and funding levels—on “programs and initiatives” focused on diversity, equity, and inclusion or “critical race theory” at Florida’s 12 public universities. DeSantis also appointed a group of right-wing ideologues to the New College of Florida’s board of trustees, including the anti–critical race theory and anti-LGBTQ propagandist Christopher Rufo, who admits to promoting disinformation campaigns and says he wants to “transform” New College by “recapturing higher education.”

    • Hardware

      • HackadayArduino-Powered Info Display For Your Windows Computer

        If you’ve been pining for a retro-chic 16×2 LCD display to enhance your Windows computing experience, then [mircemk] has got you covered with their neat Windows-based LCD Info Panel.

      • HackadayAdventures In Robotic Safe Cracking

        When [Zach Hipps] was faced with a locked safe and no combination, it seemed like calling a locksmith was the only non-destructive option. Well, that or doing something crazy like building a safe-opening robot. Since you’re reading this on Hackaday, we bet you can guess which path he took.

      • HackadayCUTTING CABLES CURES TANGLED CORD CHAOS

        The Toniebox is a toy that plays stories and songs for kids to listen to. Audio content can be changed by placing different NFC enabled characters that magnetically attach to the top of the toy. It can play audio via its built-in speaker or through a wired headphone connected to the 3.5 mm stereo jack. Using the built in speaker could sometimes be quite an irritant, especially if the parents are in “work from home” mode. And wired headphones are not a robust alternative, specially if the kid likes to wander around or dance while listening to the toy. We guess the manufacturers didn’t get the memo that toddlers and cables don’t mix well together. Surprisingly, the toy does not support Bluetooth output, so [g3gg0] hacked his kids Toniebox to add Bluetooth audio output.

    • Health/Nutrition/Agriculture

      • TruthOutUK Nurses and Ambulance Workers Are Striking for a Fully Funded NHS
      • FAIRNew Yorker Takes Aim at People Who Still Think Covid Is a Problem

        It sometimes feels harsh to treat a magazine that has often delivered stellar reporting that way, but New Yorker staff writer Emma Green’s profile (12/28/22) of the People’s CDC delivers the kind of elitist, out-of-touch pearl-clutching that inspires this imperious image of the magazine.

      • Positech GamesWhy the discovery of behavioral economics means you need to uninstall tiktok.

        What this massive upheaval of literally hundreds of years of analysis shows us, is that human beings are incredibly irrational. We are extremely good at backwards-justification, where we pretend our choices make sense, but if you actually look at how we make decisions its an absolute car-crash. We are massively irrational, and so far from the happiness-maximizing creatures that classical economists imagined. Even given really, really simple choices such as ‘eat these nibbles now… or more of the main course in 15 minutes’, our brains completely and utterly collapse with the stress. Only PHYSICALLY removing the nibbles from our immediate vicinity enables us to make what we think is the ‘correct’ choice.

    • Security

      • Red Hat OfficialIntroduction to certificate compression in GnuTLS | Enable Sysadmin

        CCertificate compression improves performance of Transport Layer Security handshake without some of the risks exploited in protocol-level compression.

      • Bleeping ComputerMicrosoft fixes ODBC connections broken by November updates [Ed: Microsoft breaks Microsoft]

        Microsoft has fixed a known issue affecting Windows apps using ODBC database connections after installing the November 2022 Patch Tuesday updates. This issue impacts both client and server Windows platforms, from Windows 7 SP1 and Windows Server 2008 SP2 up to the latest released Windows 11 and Windows Server 2022.

      • Bleeping ComputerMicrosoft fixes issue causing 0xc000021a blue screen crashes [Ed: Positive spin or lipstick on Microsoft destroying people's PCs; bleepingcomputer is a Microsoft-connected site]

        Microsoft has addressed a known issue causing Blue Screen of Death (BSOD) crashes with 0xc000021a errors after installing the Windows 10 KB5021233 cumulative update released during the December Patch Tuesday.

      • TechTargetMicrosoft resolves Windows zero-day on January Patch Tuesday [Ed: Lots of unpatched and actively-exploited Windows flaws remain, according to CISA's latest]

        Microsoft started off the new year by resolving a Windows zero-day, while it closed the door on further fixes for systems in its extended support update program. Microsoft addressed 101 vulnerabilities on January Patch Tuesday with 98 new bugs and three revisions for earlier security updates. In total, the company corrected 11 critical vulnerabilities and 90 rated important.

      • Krebs On SecurityMicrosoft Patch Tuesday, January 2023 Edition

        Microsoft today released updates to fix nearly 100 security flaws in its Windows operating systems and other software. Highlights from the first Patch Tuesday of 2023 include a zero-day vulnerability in Windows, printer software flaws reported by the U.S. National Security Agency, and a critical Microsoft SharePoint Server bug that allows a remote, unauthenticated attacker to make an anonymous connection.

    • Defence/Aggression

      • MeduzaPro-Kremlin politician Viktor Medvedchuk stripped of Ukrainian citizenship — Meduza

        Volodymyr Zelensky has stripped Verkhovna Rada deputy Viktor Medvedchuk, the former leader of the pro-Kremlin party Opposition Platform – For Life who was charged with treason in 2021, of his Ukrainian citizenship, the president announced in an address on Tuesday.

      • Meduza‘They put a grenade in my hands and said they were about to pull the pin’: Krasnodar anti-war protester reports torture by FSB operatives — Meduza

        In his January 9 court hearing, the anti-war protester Igor Paskar, charged with terrorism for setting fire to the FSB building in Krasnodar, told the court that he was tortured by FSB operatives after throwing a Molotov cocktail at their headquarters in June 2022.

      • MeduzaAlexander Lapin returns Decorated general lambasted by Ramzan Kadyrov as ‘incompetent’ is appointed head of Russia’s Ground Forces — Meduza

        Colonel General Alexander Lapin, who previously served as the commander of Russia’s Central Military District, has been appointed chief of staff of the country’s ground forces, according to sources from the Russian Defense Ministry who spoke to RBC and Ura.ru. The ministry itself has not officially commented on the claims. Russian presidential spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said the Kremlin can neither confirm nor deny the reports. “There are open decrees, and there are decrees marked ‘secret.’ Among the decrees that are released publicly, there are no such decrees,” he said in response to a question about Lapin’s appointment.

      • MeduzaThe mercenary assault on Soledar Russia’s Wagner Group gains control over most of the mining town and threatens Ukrainian positions near Bakhmut, but the offensive’s price has been high — Meduza

        The Wagner Group’s mercenary formations appear to have gained control over the greater part of Soledar, a salt-mining town just north of Bakhmut in Ukraine’s Donetsk region, as reported by the British Defense Ministry in its January 10 morning intelligence update. Over the past four days, the Russian forces have stormed the city, fighting in part for control over the entrances to the disused 200-kilometer (125-mile) salt-mine tunnels running beneath the district, which can be used by both sides to move past enemy lines. Bakhmut itself, notes the UK’s Defense Intelligence, probably remains the main objective of the Russian offensive, but it’s unlikely to be fully surrounded in the nearest future.

      • TruthOutTrump Sued by Partner of Capitol Police Officer Who Died After Jan. 6
      • Counter PunchWhy This Country Might Want to Lower Its Expectations

        Let me start with a confession: I no longer read all the way through newspaper stories about the war in Ukraine. After years of writing about war and torture, I’ve reached my limit. These days, I just can’t pore through the details of the ongoing nightmare there. It’s shameful, but I don’t want to know the names of the dead or examine images caught by brave photographers of half-exploded buildings, exposing details — a shoe, a chair, a doll, some half-destroyed possessions — of lives lost, while I remain safe and warm in San Francisco. Increasingly, I find that I just can’t bear it.

        And so I scan the headlines and the opening paragraphs, picking up just enough to grasp the shape of Vladimir Putin’s horrific military strategy: the bombing of civilian targets like markets and apartment buildings, the attacks on the civilian power grid, and the outright murder of the residents of cities and towns occupied by Russian troops. And these aren’t aberrations in an otherwise lawfully conducted war. No, they represent an intentional strategy of terror, designed to demoralize civilians rather than to defeat an enemy military. This means, of course, that they’re also war crimes: violations of the laws and customs of war as summarized in 2005 by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).

      • Counter PunchWashington’s “Democracy Promotion” Fails Spectacularly in Venezuela

        The Los Angeles Times reports that “the audacious gamble by the U.S. government to…restore democracy” suffered a “spectacular failure” in Venezuela. What this State Department stenographer masquerading as a newspaper considers a “democratic” setback consisted of failing to impose unknown US security asset Juan Guaidó as Venezuela’s president.

        This man just got the boot from his own fractious opposition group, which voted 72-29 to disband his “interim government.” The Hill reports that the pretend president still claims the post and retains a “powerful network of support,” although not in his home country.

      • Counter PunchFor Lula, Fighting Against Fascism and For Economic Justice is Nothing New
      • Common DreamsHouse GOP Says Pentagon Budget Is Safe—But Social Security and Medicare Aren't

        Republicans who have pledged to use their narrow majority in the House to pursue steep federal spending cuts have sent a clear message in recent days: The bloated Pentagon budget is safe, but Social Security, Medicare, and other key government programs are not.

      • Common DreamsPeruvian Forces 'Massacre' 17 Protesters in Juliaca Amid National Strike Against 'Coup' Regime

        At least 17 people were killed by state security forces in southern Peru Monday while protesting the government of unelected President Dina Boluarte and the ouster and imprisonment of former leftist leader Pedro Castillo.

      • Telex (Hungary)How Viktor Orbán decided to arm Hungary
      • TechdirtSaudi Government Narrative Control Efforts Now Include The Jailing Of Wikipedia Administrators

        There are plenty of governments operating on platforms of pure evil, but the Saudi government is one the few that continues to be given a pass by other governments who fear alienating a source of oil located in the Mideast.

    • Transparency/Investigative Reporting

    • Environment

      • Counter PunchCoal 2 Nuclear: Another Smokescreen that Obscures Real Climate Solutions

        They’ve given it a snappy little acronym, one that is perhaps supposed to masquerade as a sort of scientific-sounding calculus — C2N. After the failure of the much-trumpeted “nuclear renaissance” that never was, the nuclear lobby and its federal lackeys have come up with another PR clunker — Coal 2 Nuclear (hence, C2N). In reality, this is less C2N than CPR for an ailing nuclear power industry.

        Unfortunately, to arrive at this dangerously out-of-touch scheme, our tax dollars had to be wasted on yet another U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) report. Its conclusion was that, “hundreds of U.S. coal power plant sites could convert to nuclear power plant sites, adding new jobs, increasing economic benefit, and significantly improving environmental conditions.”

      • Counter PunchWhy the Climate Justice March in South Korea Could Be a Game Changer for the Environment

        On September 24, 2022,€ more than 30,000€ people occupied the main roads of downtown Seoul, South Korea, for the nation’s largest climate justice march. The sheer turnout of people from all walks of life and the participation by a wide range of advocacy groups were a testament to the impact of climate change on every aspect of life: human rights, women’s rights, religion, food insecurity, and labor rights. For many of these advocacy movements in Seoul, recent crises like COVID-19 have brought home the urgent need to address the climate crisis.

        Opening with a rally in Namdaemun Plaza at 3 p.m., the two-hour march occupied four out of six lanes of Seoul’s main Sejong-daero Boulevard. Standing on moving flatbed trucks, people spoke about the intersectionality of the climate crisis and other issues, including labor insecurity, housing instability, and social discrimination.

      • Common DreamsReport Shows 'Terrible Prognosis' as US Emissions Continue Rising Amid Climate Emergency

        For the second year in a row, U.S. carbon emissions increased in 2022—reversing a trend that was evident even before emissions declined significantly in 2020 during the first year of the coronavirus pandemic.

      • Common DreamsGreenpeace Calls on US and Mexico to Defuse Largest Carbon Bomb in North America

        Ahead of U.S. President Joe Biden's Tuesday meeting with Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, Greenpeace implored the two men to commit to ending all new oil and gas development in the Permian Basin, increasing clean energy investments, and securing a just transition for fossil fuel workers.

      • Energy/Transportation

      • Wildlife/Nature

        • Common DreamsThe Urgent Need to Stop a Destructive Environmental Precedent

          A significant percentage of our nation’s protected public lands are found within the boundaries of one state. On the first day of my Public Lands and Waters class, I ask my smart, upper division university students to guess which state contains approximately 60% of all National Park lands, over 90% of all National Wildlife Refuge Wilderness lands, and our country’s largest National Forest. Some students start guessing: “Utah?” “Colorado?” “California?”

    • Finance

    • AstroTurf/Lobbying/Politics

      • TikTok Lobbying in Brüssel
      • TechdirtAs Elon Fires More Trust & Safety Staff, Twitter’s Moderation Efforts Fall Apart

        Despite having already fired a huge percentage of Twitter’s trust & safety team handling issues around content moderation, including the teams handling child sexual abuse material and election denialism, last week Elon apparently fired another chunk of the team. Just in time for organizers of the insurrection in Brazil to make use of social media to help them organize.

      • MeduzaStop tormenting Alexey Navalny! In an open letter to President Putin, Russian doctors demand medical help for the imprisoned opposition politician — Meduza

        On January 9, Alexey Navalny’s Twitter account was updated with the news that the imprisoned politician had been sent on New Year’s Eve into “punitive confinement” — for the tenth consecutive time. Although the maximum time of permitted confinement in the so-called “ShIZO” is 15 days, the penitentiary where he serves his term is evading this limit by locking Navalny in a “punishment cell” for “separate,” back-to-back stretches. What’s worse, according to Navalny’s lawyer Vadim Kobzev, his client is confined to a penal cell with “a fever, chills, and a cough.” The prison, meanwhile, refuses to deliver any medicines mailed or brought by visitors. Alexander Polupan and Alexander Vanyukov, two Russian doctors gravely concerned about Navalny’s health, are now gathering signatures for an open letter from Russia’s medical community addressed to Vladimir Putin. In their letter posted on Facebook, the physicians demand “an end to tormenting Navalny” in prison. More than 170 doctors have signed the letter. Meduza in English has translated what it says.

      • Common DreamsConstraining Corporate Purpose Shouldn't be the Corporation's Decision

        The New York Times recently asked the question: “Have the Anticapitalists Reached Harvard Business School?“ In past generations, Students at Harvard Business School, Yale School of Management, and other similar institutions would almost certainly learn that “there is one and only one social responsibility of business—to use its resources and engage in activities designed to increase its profits so long as it stays within the rules of the game, which is to say, engages in open and free competition without deception fraud.”

      • MeduzaSculpture of former Yekaterinburg Mayor Evgeny Roizman installed in city administration building despite his ‘foreign agent’ status — Meduza

        An officially commissioned bas-relief sculpture of former Yekaterinburg Mayor Evgeny Roizman, who Russian authorities declared a “foreign agent” in November and who’s currently facing felony charges for “discrediting” the Russian army, has been installed in the city administration building.

      • TruthOut“A Total Fraud”: Democrats File an Ethics Complaint Against George Santos
      • Counter PunchThe Much-Maligned George Santos

        If anything shows the unconscionable attacks of the American media on decent politicians, it is what is happening now to Congressman George Santos. A man of notorious bad memory, he made some statements that have made him the object of ridicule. A careful analysis of this phenomenon, however, should help establish the accuracy of the comments on his personal integrity and on the veracity of his assertions. A man who has devoted his life to serving his country deserves no less.

        Let’s start. He claimed that he earned a degree from Baruch College and that he held a Master of Business Administration from New York University. Both institutions, however, have no records of his enrollment or employment. Santos later said that he had embellished his resumé and told The New York Post, “I didn’t graduate from any institution of higher learning. I’m embarrassed and sorry for having embellished my résumé…we do stupid things in life.” Agree.

      • Telex (Hungary)Former Fidesz legal adviser's company wins media monitoring tender of Hungarian government
      • Pro PublicaThese Documents Reveal Abuses and Breakdowns in Rogue System of Global Diplomacy

        The story started in a bustling port city in West Africa, where a prominent Lebanese businessman was accused by the U.S. government of funneling money to the terrorist group Hezbollah.

        In sanctioning Ibrahim Taher, the Treasury Department made a rare reference in the eighth paragraph of a press release to an obscure and largely unregulated diplomatic arrangement that allows private citizens in their home countries to represent the economic and cultural interests of foreign governments. In exchange for their service, these honorary consuls receive some of the same coveted legal protections and privileges provided to career diplomats, including the ability to move bags across borders without inspection.

      • TruthOutRepublicans Vote to Revoke IRS Funding, Which Would Raise Deficit by $114B
      • TruthOutMigration, the Economy, Trade and Security on the Agenda at Mexico City Summit
      • Counter PunchA Legal Insurrection

        Republican Kevin McCarthy of California sold his soul and the House of Representatives to the Devil of Congress, the juvenile far-right flank of his party, in exchange for enough votes to elect him speaker.

        We’re in for a lot of trouble with a Congress dependent on children to get anything substantive done.

      • Counter PunchNetanyahu: A Bull in the Middle East China Shop

        As I read the€ Guardian’s€ “Israel unveils controversial plans to overhaul judicial system,” January 4, 2023, which highlighted Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s work in lessening the impact of Israel’s supreme court, I thought of how even atrophied dreams die hard. The article relates how Netanyahu’s far-right government is attempting to allow a cabinet minister to serve who has been convicted of tax offenses. As we’ve seen in the US, the right will chip away at each branch of government until there is no one in an official position to resist fascism. It’s as if the right-wing populist movements, the ultra-nationalist movements, and the white supremacist movements across the globe, and in the US, serve as a template for right-wing populism elsewhere. It’s a pandemic of a different sort.

        Israel needs no script from other places to write its own version of its military hegemony in the Middle East and its refusal to grant human rights or the right of autonomy to the Palestinian people. It provides, both viciously and lethally, a system of apartheid to its bullied Palestinian victims.€ Democracy Now’s report “Diana Buttu and Gideon Levy: Israeli’s New Far-Right Gov’t Entrenches Apartheid System with US Support,” January 5, 2023, is an up-to-date primer on how Israel’s might continues to put the lives of Palestinians under its boot and how both the US and the vast majority of the rest of the West, including the EU, could give a damn about this human rights catastrophe. In the oil rich and strategically located Middle East, with far-right regimes in control of many countries, Israel’s treatment of Palestinians is one of many outrages. Dare to speak out or act against the government in Saudi Arabia and imprisonment or death will be the result. When many Middle East regimes reconfigured their foreign policy, such as in the notorious example of Saudi Arabia, and aligned with Israel, the plight of the Palestinian people further deteriorated. The vicious war in Yemen is yet another example of the West, and especially the US, turning a blind eye to outrage and war crimes.

      • Counter PunchDo Meghan and Harry Really Believe They Control the Narrative?

        My sister in Canada once had an ardent although not excessive interest in British royalty. She has followed successive generations of The Windsors from the 1940s into the 21 Century. Now, she says, that’s over. First, she refused to indulge the latest ‘Crown’ film series; now she’s determinedly ignoring the newest BritRoyal wrangles and confessions displayed on Netflix’s ‘Harry and Meghan’ run.

        I’m joining the boycott. Not because I might not sympathize with a young couple’s reported difficulties with their family. But because they have taken on a narrative that they cannot possibly control, one that simply provides a captivated public with a new chapter in an endless loop; it’s unarguably mere entertainment. So, are they exploiting the family name? Or is the media machine exploiting them?

      • Counter PunchMAGA Clown Car Crashes Congress

        Here we are on the second anniversary of Trump’s lie-fueled violent insurrection to try and halt Congress from certifying a duly elected president of the United States. Despite the death and destruction in its attempted takeover of the Capitol, the MAGA mob failed — and many are now paying the price in prison. But lo and behold, a tiny band of MAGA clowns has managed to halt the function of Congress by refusing to vote for Kevin McCarthy for Speaker of the House — and without a speaker, the House cannot even swear in its members, let alone perform its constitutional duties to the American public.

        There are 435 members of the U.S. House of Representatives. The 20 MAGA extremists — including Montana’s own MAGA clown, Rep. Matt Rosendale€ — comprise a mere 4.5 percent of the members. That such a tiny fraction of the House can grind its wheels to a stop isn’t a victory for these deluded members. It’s a tragedy and a tremendous stain on the reputation of the American governing process.

      • FAIR‘With This Delay of Vacating Title 42, the Death Toll Will Only Rise’

        Janine Jackson interviewed the Center for Gender and Refugee Studies’ Melissa Crow about asylum policy for the January 6, 2023, episode of CounterSpin. This is a lightly edited transcript.

      • Common DreamsThe New€ McCarthyism Is Coming

        It has always been clear that a Republican takeover of the House of Representatives would signal real danger for American democracy. Last week’s drama surrounding Kevin McCarthy’s ascension to the House Speakership was a sideshow. The demands of the so-called “far-right” Gaetz Gang—“so-called” because the entire House Republican leadership and most of its members are far-right—for House rules changes was never a sincere effort to promote greater transparency and deliberation.

      • Common DreamsPledging to 'Stand Up to Special Interests,' Katie Porter Announces Senate Bid

        Democratic Congresswoman Katie Porter on Tuesday announced her 2024 campaign for U.S. Senate, just two months after winning a tight race to represent California's 47th Congressional District.

      • Common Dreams'No Amnesty!': Brazilian Democracy Defenders Call for Imprisonment of Pro-Bolsonaro Attackers

        Thousands of Brazilians hit the streets of Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo on Monday night to demand jail time for the right-wing activists who attacked the country's capital along with everyone who aided and abetted them.

      • The NationDamar Hamlin’s Pain Is Not a Feel-Good Story

        It feels great to see the surprisingly rapid recovery of Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin. It feels great to see him moved from a Cincinnati hospital so he can return to Buffalo. It feels great to hear about him Zooming with his teammates, flexing his muscles from a hospital bed, and cheering them on. It feels great to see fans support a charity that Hamlin started in college and that provides toys to at risk kids who were harmed by the pandemic. All of this feels great—but Hamlin almost dying on national television is not a feel-good story.

      • The NationIf Democrats Want to Win 2024, They Need to Punch Back Hard

        Like passengers in a car veering away from the edge of a cliff, a big collective “whew” went up from Democrats (including the writer) everywhere on the evening of November 8. But in the past two months, where’s any after-report or commentary explaining how Democrats also allowed the most lawless, lying, reactionary, party in American history to take over one chamber of Congress?

      • Common DreamsNew Study Blows Up Myth That Russian Bots Swayed 2016 Election for Trump

        A study published Monday by researchers at New York University eviscerated liberal Democrats' assertion that the Russian government's disinformation campaign on Twitter during the 2016 U.S. presidential election had any meaningful impact on the contest's outcome.

      • TruthOutHouse Republicans Just Made It Easier for Congress to Give Away Public Lands
      • Common DreamsHouse GOP 'Insurrection Protection Committee Is a Sham,' Says Pressley

        Progressives in the U.S. House of Representatives on Tuesday blasted Republicans for using their narrow majority to establish a panel headed by a far-right congressman to "expose the abuses committed by the unelected, unaccountable federal bureaucracy."

      • The NationSocialism Is Back in the Wisconsin Legislature

        When a pair of newly elected Democratic legislators from Milwaukee—the city that elected three Socialist Party mayors in the 20th century—took seats in the Wisconsin State Assembly last week, they promptly announced that they would be forming a socialist caucus.

      • Telex (Hungary)The latest from Arte Weekly: Will Europe be flooded by Chinese tourists released during the epidemic? And what about e-scooters?
      • MeduzaLukashenko denies Russian national Sofia Sapega’s request for clemency — Meduza

        Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko has denied Russian national Sofia Sapega’s request for a pardon, the independent outlet Mediazona Belarus reported on Tuesday, citing Sapega’s lawyer.

    • Civil Rights/Policing

      • uni MichiganJournalist Jelani Cobb to discuss ‘The Half-Life of Freedom’

        Cobb, dean of the Columbia Journalism School and a staff writer for The New Yorker, examines race, the historic challenges to democracy, the impact of the media, and how these inform society.

        “As a respected journalist he clearly sees the power of the media and other institutions to illuminate or obfuscate the critical issues we must face honestly to move forward as a society,” said Lynette Clemetson, the Charles R. Eisendrath Director of the Wallace House Center for Journalists.

        “We hope this conversation will prompt people to think deeply about their role individually and collectively in protecting and perfecting our democracy.”

      • Pro PublicaWhy ProPublica Investigated Repatriation

        When ProPublica set out to report on Native American remains and cultural items held by U.S. institutions, we knew we would need to listen closely to Indigenous people and gather feedback.

        Repatriation can be a sensitive topic. Museums, universities and agencies in the United States hold the remains of more than 100,000 people and several hundred thousand funerary objects, a legacy of looting and the displacement of Native Americans during North America’s violent colonization.

      • ProPublica repatriation database

        Use this database to find out where Native American remains were taken from and which institutions report still having them. Check on institutions near you.

      • Pro PublicaAmerica’s Museums Fail to Return Native American Human Remains

        As the United States pushed Native Americans from their lands to make way for westward expansion throughout the 1800s, museums and the federal government encouraged the looting of Indigenous remains, funerary objects and cultural items. Many of the institutions continue to hold these today — and in some cases resist their return despite the 1990 passage of the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act.

        “We never ceded or relinquished our dead. They were stolen,” James Riding In, then an Arizona State University professor who is Pawnee, said of the unreturned remains.

      • TruthOutGOP Votes to Kill Congressional Workers’ Union in New Rules Package
      • The NationWhy Farmworker Legalization Failed

        For the United Farm Workers and its allies on Capitol Hill, the failure of the Farm Workforce Modernization Act (FWMA) was a defeat for their campaign to win legal immigration status for undocumented field laborers.1

        Teresa Romero, UFW President, called it “a very bitter disappointment for farm workers across the country who have more than earned the right to legal status through the sweat of their brow.” She blamed the American Farm Bureau for withholding its support. “They know that an undocumented workforce is easier to intimidate and exploit,” she charged.2

    • Internet Policy/Net Neutrality

      • TechdirtTechdirt Podcast Episode 341: In Defense Of The Global, Open Internet

        There have long been attacks on the global, open nature of the internet. Traditionally these came from authoritarian regimes looking to wall off portions of the internet and exert greater control of them, but lately we’ve also been seeing growing threats from democratic countries in the form of problematic laws and regulations. Recently, we wrote about an article by Global Network Initiative executive director Jason Pielemeier and Annenberg Public Policy Center research fellow Chris Riley that made a case in defense of the global, open internet, and this week both Jason and Chris join us on the podcast to look at the past, present and future of the internet around the world.

    • Monopolies

      • Patents

      • Trademarks

        • TechdirtRandom Musk Fan Tries To Get Trademarks On Tesla’s Behalf, Which Is Not How This Works

          It’s amazing how some people think trademarks work. In the last week or so, several media outlets briefly went into a frenzy over a trademark application that was filed for Tesla’s yet to be released Cybertruck specifically for vehicle categories other than “on land” vehicles. Notably, Elon Musk made some questionable claims that the Cybertruck, which has been delayed for over a year now, was waterproof enough that it could be used as both a truck and a boat. While this led to government officials hurriedly imploring the public to not attempt to drive their non-existent trucks into the water on the basis of the claim by Musk, that fact led many to believe that Musk was going to make good on his claim to make a half-truck, half-boat hybrid vehicle and, oh god, I cannot even believe I’m writing this sentence.

      • Copyrights

        • TechdirtAfroman Turns Security Footage Of Bullshit Raid Of His Home Into Viral Rap Video Hit

          Rap artist Afroman’s biggest hit is “Because I Got High,” a track that details how his best intentions were undone by his weed intake. So, one might reasonably suspect marijuana might be found at his residence. But there’s very little that’s reasonable about what happened to Afroman four months ago.

        • Torrent FreakPre-Release Book Scam: Former Simon & Schuster Employee Pleads Guilty

          A man who impersonated publishers and literary agents to fraudulently obtain digital copies of more than a thousand pre-release novels and other books has entered a guilty plea in the United States. Former Simon & Schuster rights coordinator Filippo Bernardini was arrested by the FBI in January 2022, after his flight touched down at JFK International Airport.

  • Gemini* and Gopher

    • Personal

      • the tranquility of societal unattractiveness

        As the new year rolls in, threatening once more to bring us to the brink of existentialistic ruin, as the chatbots and artbots tilt their heads towards destroying any sense of human genuineness... I can't help but sit and admire the silence in my life.

      • 🔤SpellBinding: IMOYSUP Wordo: APPAL
      • Brief life update - 2

        The father of one of my partners is in his final days of cancer, and could pass any day.

      • 2023

        I'm looking toward this new year. We wil probably get some deception from these long-awaited games (Zelda TotK, Silksong, the list goes on...), but some upcoming releases caught my attention anyway.

      • Quiet lately

        I’ve been quiet here. My youngest child is a toddler now, and we moved into a new home that needs a bit of work, so I haven’t been making time for many of my interests. I haven’t been having much “fun”.

        That doesn’t mean that I’m unhappy — my day-to-day life is full of joy! But it’s a lifestyle where you can blink and miss years, and I don’t want to spend too much time like this. I know that if I wait until I feel like I have “free time” then nothing will change, so I simply need to start making commitments outside of the home.


* Gemini (Primer) links can be opened using Gemini software. It's like the World Wide Web but a lot lighter.



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