Bonum Certa Men Certa

Leftover Links 21/08/2023: Education Crisis and Demise of Robotaxis



  • Leftovers

    • Unix MenShould You Use Linux For Backend Development in 2023? [Ed: Linkspam disguised as "linux" article]

      With Backend Development, a developer finds thousands of interesting options to develop, deploy and manage these server-side applications. As technology is growing over time, developers also shifted their ways of creating them.

      One of the significant changes seen in recent trends is people shifting toward Linux for backend development even though Windows is still the top-used Operating System in the market.

    • Vintage EverydayThe Story of Herman the Cat, Who Became an Official Member of the US Coast Guard in 1943 and Had His Own ID Card

      For Herman, getting his identification was no easy matter. Like many defense workers, including some of the foreign-born, he ran into issues over his birth certificate. Nonetheless, Cmdr. C.H. Abel, captain of the Port of Baltimore, signed off, noting regulations at the time said nothing regarding cats. In addition to pursuing vermin, entertainment was listed as one of Herman’s duties. Rare for his kind, he was said to allow everyone to pet him.

      “That’s it,” said Chief Boatswain A. M. Talbot, who was in charge of Pier 4 in 1943. “He’s an ambassador of good will, a diplomat.”

    • Carlos BeckerA brief and incomplete history of modal text editors

      Later on, I started learning some Linux, and had my first encounter with Vim (or Vi, can’t remember). I had to search on the internet how to use it, and this was at the time where you would ask pretty much anything and someone would RTFM you. I felt really dumb.

      And that was my first experience with a modal text editor.

      A modal text editor has multiple modes of operation, and the keys’ functions change depending on which mode it is in. While TurboC and nano aren’t modal text editors, Vi and Vim are.

      Without further ado, let’s get into the history.

    • New York TimesMonday Briefing: A Tricky Opportunity in Indonesia

      Also, the nostalgic craft of miniatures in China.

    • Science

    • Education

      • [Repeat] AxiosAmerica’s empty classrooms

        By the numbers: There are tens of thousands of teacher vacancies in the U.S. — and more than 160,000 jobs are filled by under-qualified teachers, according to research from Tuan Nguyen, a professor at Kansas State University's College of Education.

      • Omicron LimitedThree reasons we use graphic novels to teach math and physics

        In addition to covering a wide range of topics and audiences, graphic novels can explain tough topics without alienating student averse to STEM—science, technology, engineering and math. Even for students who already like math and physics, graphic novels provide a way to dive into topics beyond what is possible in a time-constrained class.

        In our book "Using Graphic Novels in the STEM Classroom," we discuss the many reasons why graphic novels have a unique place in math and physics education. Here are three of those reasons: [...]

      • AxiosWhy young people can't get enough of subtitles

        It's a controversial moment for anyone watching a show or movie together: Subtitles or no subtitles? For most young people, it's an easy choice.

        Why it matters: TikTok helped normalize captions for young media consumers, who are turning regularly to subtitles as part of their streaming habits.


        • More than half of Gen Z and millennial media consumers prefer subtitles, according to new survey results from YPulse.
        • While subtitles haven't always been seen as a first choice, they've grown in ubiquity — especially with the rise of online videos that include automatic captioning.
      • The Straits TimesSouth Korea unveils 5-year plan to attract 300,000 foreign students

        South Korea hopes to attract international students to tackle the nation’s rapidly declining school-age population.

    • Hardware

      • Hackaday2023 Hackaday Prize: A Reusable Plant Monitor

        [Ovidiu] cares for their house plants, trying to dial in the perfect soil humidity and light levels. However, many cheap monitors tend to rust after a few weeks of sitting in a damp, slightly acidic environment. By creating a custom plant monitor with a removable probe, not only can [Ovidiu] integrate better with their Home Assistant setup, but it will also be less wasteful.

      • HackadayTiny Spheres Hiding In Your Display

        Liquid crystal and Organic LED displays have revolutionized portable computing. They’re also made of glass. Which presents a problem: How do we get electrical signals from fiberglass circuit boards to the glass displays? The answer is double-sided adhesive tape. But we’re not talking about packing tape here. As [Breakingtaps] explains,€  this tape has a trick up its sleeve.

      • HackadayOnly 8 Chips Make A CPU

        We’re no stranger to homemade CPUs on these pages, but we think that [Jiri Stepanovsky]’s 16-bit serial CPU might be a little special. Why? It has an astonishingly low chip count, with only 8 ICs in total. How on earth does he do it?

      • HackadayRoboAgent Gets Its MT-ACT Together

        Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University have shared a pre-print paper on generalized robot training within a small “practical data budget.” The team developed a system that breaks movement tasks into 12 “skills” (e.g., pick, place, slide, wipe) that can be combined to create new and complex trajectories within at least somewhat novel scenarios, called MT-ACT: Multi-Task Action Chunking Transformer. The authors write:

      • HackadayA Bubble Machine Built From Scrap

        Not every project has to be an AI-powered particle accelerator using lasers. Sometimes simple projects can be very satisfying, and a simple project can be a great gateway to introduce a friend or a child to our hacker ways. That’s why we noticed [Crazy Science’s] bubble machine upcycled from a CD and a water bottle. It isn’t likely to figure in anyone’s Ph.D. dissertation any time soon, but that isn’t the point

      • Tom's HardwareAlleged SK hynix-Made NAND For Apple Discovered Hiding In Cheap SSDs

        Chinese YouTuber stumbled upon SK hynix-made NAND for Apple when opening a ShineDisk SATA SSD.

      • Ruben SchadeDon’t wash your Commodore 64C too hot

        This is a cautionary tale as much as a shaggy dog story. But overall is an item of clothing, and I’m happy with how things turned out.

        Cory Wong is awesome funk, but this was not

        I’ve been lucky that most of my second-hand vintage computers didn’t arrive smelling awful. Oftentimes these machines meet ignominious ends for many years, as many of you can attest if you’ve rummaged through your attics. If it’s not mildew or mould, it’s something worse.

        This streak of luck ended with the 1987 Commodore 64C I bought last December. I downplayed it in my post, but the smell hit me as soon as I opened the shopping box. It was a delightful (cough) concoction of wet cardboard, burnt paper, and mildew.

      • CNX SoftwareEPIC-ADN9 SBC features up to four 2.5GbE interfaces, two SATA ports

        AAEON EPIC-ADN9 SBC is powered by an Intel Processor N50/N97, Core i3-N305, or Atom x7425E Alder Lake N-series processor and equipped with up to four 2.5GbE networking ports and two SATA III ports for storage. The board also comes with a SO-DIMM slot taking up to 16GB DDR4 memory, mSATA storage, three display interfaces including HDMI and DisplayPort, and two USB 3.2 Gen 2 ports, and offers expansion capabilities via M.2 and mPCIe sockets as well as headers.

      • Tom's Hardware780 Intel CPUs Seized In $137,000 Smuggling Operation Bust

        Chinese customs found 780 Intel processors hidden inside a bus engine with an estimated worth of over $137,000.

    • Health/Nutrition/Agriculture

    • Proprietary/Artificial Intelligence (AI)

      • IT WireiPhone maker Foxconn warns of slowing sales this year [Ed: Well, "slowing sales" is a euphemism for shrinking, not "slowing"]

        Taiwanese contract manufacturer Foxconn Technology Group has warned that it expects a drop in sales both during the current quarter and for the whole year.

      • IT JungleSoftware Price Inflation Helps Boost IT Spending In 2023 [Ed: Gartner is a paid-for liar. This isn't growth, it's deflation of a currency.]

        Datacenter and client device sales are slumping and are expected to be down from spending levels in 2022, according to the latest prognostications for worldwide IT spending from market researcher Gartner. But thanks to exploding budgets for software and services, the market for IT spending across all categories is anticipated to grow at a fairly healthy rate this year – and will do better in 2024, if Gartner is right.

      • New York TimesCruise Agrees to Reduce Driverless Car Fleet in San Francisco After Crash

        On Friday, the California Department of Motor Vehicles, which regulates the safety of the driverless cars, asked Cruise to halve the number of vehicles it was operating in San Francisco. The Cruise vehicle’s collision with a fire truck the day before had injured a passenger in the driverless car. Earlier in the week, another Cruise vehicle got stuck in newly poured concrete on another city street.

      • Anti Software Software Club LLChahaha we live in hell

        the lot has three signs hung up with instructions on how to pay, because every single lot in town supports one to five different competing parking lot apps. there's one sign that says you can use Park Mobile, and gives a lot ID, and then on another wall there's a sign that says you can use PayByPhone, with a different lot ID, and then there's a huge sign with a QR code that encourages you to Scan Here To Park, as if it's the official primary method for doing so. It is not, it's just another app.

      • Scott FeeneyBad incentives will make autonomous vehicles unsafe

        And since so much has been written about the robotaxis at this point, I usually point to an existing explanation of the problems with robotaxis, like Safe Street Rebel’s statement, instead of winging it myself. The SSR statement highlights the labor, surveillance, accessibility, and car-trip-generating aspects of autonomous vehicles, as does the SF Bicycle Coalition’s statement.

        But there’s a more subtle safety issue I want to draw out. It comes down to incentives and human responsibility.

      • Interesting EngineeringCruise agrees to halve its robotaxi fleet following two crashes

        The California Department of Motor Vehicles has asked Cruise, the autonomous vehicle unit of General Motors, to reduce its fleet of driverless cars in San Francisco by 50% after two recent collisions involving its vehicles. Cruise has agreed to comply with the request and will operate no more than 50 robotaxis during the day and 150 at night.

      • Bleeping ComputerHotmail email delivery fails after Microsoft misconfigures DNS

        Hotmail users worldwide have problems sending emails, with messages flagged as spam or not delivered after Microsoft misconfigured the domain’s DNS SPF record.

      • Windows TCO

        • Data BreachesHackers threaten patients after massive cyber attack on Israeli hospital

          The attack is the work of the Ragnar_Locker ransomware team, a group that has been around since at least 2020. Ragnar Team has generally not attracted as much media attention as some other groups, and inspection of their leak site does not reveal any other medical entities as victims — or at least as victims who did not pay their ransom demands.

    • Security

      • Medical data as blackmail fodder: Hackers threaten patients after massive cyber attack on Israeli hospital [Ed: Media serves Microsoft criminals by focusing breach articles on the perpetrator (e.g. nation state) rather than the facilitator, which is Microsoft. No facilitator, no cracking possible.]

        Cybercriminals who obtained sensitive data regarding patients’ personal health are using the material as blackmail following a crippling cyber attack perpetrated earlier this month against Maayanei HaYeshua Medical Center in Bnei Brak.

        According to an Israel Hayom report, many prominent Haredi (ultra-Orthodox) politicians, including government ministers and MKs, as well as well-known rabbis and scholars, had sensitive data regarding their health stolen in the breach.

        One of the targets of the blackmail, Minister of Health and Minister of Interior Moshe Arbel (Shas) made a public statement about a medical procedure he recently underwent after he was approached by the hackers.

      • Arab NewsNorth Korean hackers target US-South Korea military drills, police say

        Suspected North Korean hackers have targeted a joint US-South Korea military exercise being held this week though classified information has not been compromised, South Korean police said on Sunday.

        South Korean and US forces will on Monday begin 11-day Ulchi Freedom Guardian summer exercises to improve their ability to respond to North Korea’s evolving nuclear and missile threats. […]

        The hackers were believed to be linked to a North Korean group that researchers call Kimsuky…

      • SANSSystemBC Malware Activity , (Sun, Aug 20th)

        This month, my DShield sensor captured for the first time this request: /systembc/password.php. I checked back for the past 6 months and only have noticed this request this 5 times this month from 4 different sources. According to some references, this is likely the SystemBC Remote Access Trojan (RAT), all 4 IPs are part of the Digital Ocean ASN and only one has been reported as likely malicious.

      • Atlantic CouncilThe 5×5—Cloud risks and critical infrastructure [Ed: Dump "clown" computing, quit coming up with more ridiculous buzzwords for it]

        Experts share their perspectives on the challenges facing cloud infrastructure and how policy can encourage better security and risk governance across this critical sector.

      • France24Baghdad advertising screens turned off after hacker shows porn

        Iraqi authorities on Sunday ordered the shutdown of LED advertisement screens installed across Baghdad after a hacker managed to show a pornographic film on one, security forces said, announcing the arrest of a suspect.

      • IT WireauDA now admits attack, says ransomware group provided proof

        The au Domain Administration, the organisation that administers the Australian domain namespace, now says attackers who claimed they had breached its network have provided evidence of the breach.

      • Integrity/Availability/Authenticity

        • Shrikant Sharat KandulaA Tale of Two Forwarded Headers

          This is the story of how I handled troubleshooting the redirect URL for OAuth2 in Appsmith, which contained the host as localhost instead of the actual domain name when hosted on Google Cloud Run. This is a story of how Forwarded and X-Forwarded-* headers were propagating through multiple reverse proxies and how they can be confused.

        • [Old] NPRCourt Silences MIT Students Over Subway Hacking

          Three students at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology figured out how to hack the fare cards for Boston's subway system and were set to tell a conference how they did it. But a judge silenced the students. Wired.com's Kim Zetter says the ruling is a misuse of the anti-hacking law.

        • [Old] WiredTeens Hacked Boston Subway Cards to Get Infinite Free Rides—and This Time, Nobody Got Sued

          Now, after two years of work, that pair of teens and two fellow hacker friends, Noah Gibson and Scott Campbell, have presented the results of their research at the Defcon hacker conference in Las Vegas. In fact, they not only replicated the MIT hackers’ 2008 tricks, but took them a step further. The 2008 team had hacked Boston’s Charle Ticket magstripe paper cards to copy them, change their value, and get free rides—but those cards went out of commission in 2021. So the four teens extended other research done by the 2008 hacker team to fully reverse engineer the CharlieCard, the RFID touchless smart cards the MBTA uses today. The hackers can now add any amount of money to one of these cards or invisibly designate it a discounted student card, a senior card, or even an MBTA employee card that gives unlimited free rides. “You name it, we can make it,” says Campbell.

        • [Repeat] Bruce SchneierBots Are Better than Humans at Solving CAPTCHAs

          Interesting research: “An Empirical Study & Evaluation of Modern CAPTCHAs“: [...]

      • Privacy/Surveillance

      • Confidentiality

        • Dhole MomentsDEFCON Quantum Village 2: Electric Boogaloo

          First, the Quantum Village need more cryptographers; both in attendance and as speakers.

          This includes aspiring cryptographers and students. You’re likely better at discussing security threats and understanding how cryptography-relevant quantum computers will impact society than you give yourself credit for. Many of you have exactly the knowledge and experience needed to mount an honest opposition to quantum optimism.

          To make the intermingling of the two villages seamless, I’d like to ask the DEFCON event staff to place the two villages next door to each other in 2024, if possible.

    • Defence/Aggression

    • Transparency/Investigative Reporting

    • Environment

      • Omicron LimitedIllegal logging turns Syria's forests into 'barren land'

        The country has witnessed a "26-percent decrease in tree cover since 2000", according to data from Global Forest Watch.

        Ten kilometers (six miles) from Jaabar, the same fate has befallen the trees of Tuwayhina.

      • APNICHow Internet engineers are helping Maui after the fires

        The first thing to understand is the magnitude of the problem. Hawaii is a volcanic chain of islands, Maui being one of the larger ones, but it is isolated. Maui is 5,800 km from the US mainland, and no closer to Japan, Australia, or New Zealand. Whatever is not held as a spare inside the Hawaiian Islands, or cannot be repurposed from them, must come a long way. So, bringing in technology of any kind becomes about how quickly flights or ships can arrive with the necessary cargo.

        Telecommunications equipment like routers and switches for a local community are neither cheap nor small. Neither are the reels of fibre and cable required to connect houses in a town, poles, pit liners and pipes, or satellite dishes. There’s a likelihood that ‘spares’ for these things are simply not available in sufficient numbers for a catastrophe like this.

      • VoxWhy Hurricane Hilary is so strange — and how it could impact California

        Though California has had hurricanes before, it’s extremely rare because cold water flows from Alaska typically make the Pacific coast an unsuitable environment for them. Hurricanes rely on water surface temperatures higher than 26 Celsius to form and grow powerful. Hilary, a Category 4 storm as of Saturday afternoon, is expected to make landfall on Sunday morning, likely in northern Mexico around Baja California, according to the National Hurricane Center.

      • AxiosTropical Storm Hilary slams Southern California with historic rainfall

        New rainfall records were set across Los Angeles County after Tropical Storm Hilary crossed into Southern California near Palm Springs on Sunday evening after earlier making landfall in Mexico.

        The big picture: It's rare for a tropical storm to hit the region. The storm is bringing the likelihood of "catastrophic and life-threatening flooding" to parts of the U.S. Southwest through Monday, while prompting unprecedented tropical storm warnings for Los Angeles and San Diego.

      • France24Tropical Storm Hilary brings floods to Mexico, torrential rain to California

        Deadly floodwaters inundated streets across Mexico’s arid Baja California on Sunday as Tropical Storm Hilary moved ashore carrying torrential rain into Southern California, and concerns mounted that flash floods could strike in places as far north as Idaho that rarely get such heavy rain.

      • Energy/Transportation

        • The Straits TimesHow geopolitics is complicating Indonesia’s move to clean energy

          Indonesia has the world's largest nickel reserves, is increasingly caught in the conflict between the United States and China.

        • Terence EdenUsing *over* 100% of our solar battery capacity in one day!

          We recently got a 4.8kWh solar battery installed. Batteries are still somewhat complex beasties. In order to prevent damage to the internal structure, a BMS (Battery Management System) ensures that each cell in the battery gets a fair share of wear and tear. One side effect of this is that our battery never dips below 10% charge.

        • Science AlertPhysicists Identify a Strange New Form of Superconductivity

          The finding involves what's known as oscillating superconductivity. Typical superconductor behaviors involve electron partnerships called Cooper pairs moving through materials without losing significant amounts of energy in the form of heat.

          Cooper pairs in oscillating superconductivity happen to move in a kind of wave-like dance. While rarer than 'normal' superconductivity, the oscillations occur at relatively warmer temperatures, making the phenomenon interesting to scientists wanting to make superconductivity happen consistently at room temperature.

      • Wildlife/Nature

    • Finance

    • AstroTurf/Lobbying/Politics

      • New York TimesEcuador Elections Move to Runoff

        Luisa González and Daniel Noboa were poised to be the top candidates of Sunday’s election in a country where declining security has been the leading issue for most voters.

      • The Straits TimesPakistan’s President refuses to sign new national security laws

        The Bills would give authorities more power to prosecute people for acts against state and military.

      • RFAChina slams UK fast-track visa for Hong Kongers as ‘interference’ in its affairs

        Immigrants are ‘deluded’ and have ‘hard life’ on arrival, Chinese Embassy official says.

      • The Straits TimesTaipei mayor to visit China as tensions simmer with Taiwan

        Taipei Mayor Chiang Wan-an will lead a delegation to an annual forum held in Shanghai.

      • The Straits TimesXi Jinping to attend Brics leaders’ meeting, visit South Africa

        Expansion is expected to be high on the agenda at the meeting of the five-nation grouping.

      • CS MonitorFor US, new challenge from China has unexpected source

        U.S. officials worry that head winds at home could drive China to be doubly keen to project strength abroad, and to see a U.S.-China thaw as a sign of weakness.

      • The Straits TimesChina investigates citizen accused of spying for the CIA: Security ministry

        The 39-year-old Chinese national was a cadre at a ministry and had gone to Japan for studies.

      • Hong Kong Free PressChina government employee accused of spying for US in latest alleged espionage case

        China on Monday accused a government employee of spying for the United States, the second incident of espionage it has announced in a month. Beijing implemented a revised anti-espionage law last month that gives authorities more power than ever to punish what they deem to be threats to national security.

      • Hong Kong Free PressSister-in-law of self-exiled activist Nathan Law questioned by Hong Kong nat. security police – reports

        Hong Kong national security police have taken away the sister-in-law of wanted activist Nathan Law for questioning, according to local media outlets citing sources. It is the latest move involving family members of the eight overseas pro-democracy figures, who are facing arrest warrants and HK$1 million bounties.

      • NL TimesSchiphol: over 500,000 passengers booked a time slot for security

        Since March 2, passengers have been able to reserve a time slot where they can decide at what moment they want to pass through security checkpoints. Due to this, Schiphol has a clearer view of the passenger flows and has been able to avoid long queues at the checkpoints.

      • New York TimesBRICS Debates Adding New Members

        Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa will consider at their summit this week whether to admit more countries to their bloc. China wants to expand it, to challenge the West, but the members’ conflicting interests may get in the way.

      • AxiosMark Meadows, Trump's ex-chief of staff, told DOJ he can't recall him declassifying docs: report

        Former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows told prosecutors he doesn't recall former President Trump "ordering, or even discussing, declassifying broad sets of classified materials before leaving the White House," ABC News reported Sunday.

        Why it matters: Meadows' account contradicts Trump's biggest defense in the Mar-a-Lago classified documents case.

      • AntiWarPakistan Events Confirm that Washington Prefers Compliant Autocrats Over Feisty Democrats

        All signs indicated that Prime Minister Imran Khan was the most popular political leader in Pakistan.€  Yet the country’s military worked behind the scenes to remove him from power through a cash-lubricated parliamentary vote.€ 

      • Silicon AngleMeta reportedly set to launch a web version of Threads this week [Ed: Lipstick on dead pork]

        Meta Platforms Inc. is planning to launch a web version of its Threads microblogging platform early in the coming week, according to a Wall Street Journal report today. Despite its limited features, Threads has regularly been referred to as a competitor to X Inc., formerly known as Twitter.

      • Misinformation/Disinformation/Propaganda

        • RFATo the Chinese diaspora in New Zealand, China mutes critics and feeds talking points

          A steady stream of government and media reports about China’s influence and information operations in Western countries has shed light on covert Chinese police stations in major cities, harassment of places that host dissidents and media disinformation campaigns.

          The reports on China’s influence machine – confirmed to Radio Free Asia’s Asia Fact Check Lab by multiple Chinese media figures in New Zealand – show how Beijing deploys cash, aggressive diplomats and boycotts to produce China-friendly press coverage and deter critical reporting.

          The effort largely targets growing Chinese diaspora communities in Western democracies, and comes as the United States and allies are reassessing their economic ties to China over security concerns.

        • [Repeat] YLENiinistö: Russian propaganda against Finland increasing

          "We are now possibly starting to see all kinds of activity. Not military operations, but other kinds of operations. Our consulate in St Petersburg has been closed this autumn. Some people, like the Defence Minister, Sergei Shoigu, have recently hardened their language and accused us of all sorts of things. There is constantly more propaganda against Finland from the Russian side, Sauli Niinistö said in the radio programme.

          Russia was expected to increase its hostility already after Finland's [NATO] application. Niinistö said he believes that Russia did not have time to react then, but that it is only reacting now.

          "Fortunately, Finland is prepared for this. We have gone through these risks," Niinistö said.

    • Censorship/Free Speech

      • The HinduWebsite, social media handles blocked in India, says Srinagar-based news portal

        It said the organisation was not aware of the specifics of why its website has been blocked in India; why its Facebook page has been removed; and why its Twitter account has been withheld. “We have not been served any notice nor is there any official order regarding these actions that is in the public domain so far,” it said.

        It said this opaque censorship is “gut-wrenching”. “There isn’t a lot left for us to say anymore. Since 2011, The Kashmir Walla has strived to remain an independent, credible, and courageous voice of the region in the face of unimaginable pressure from the authorities while we watched our being ripped apart, bit by bit,” it added.

      • RFERLSupporters Mark Third Anniversary Of Navalny Poisoning With Demonstrations

        OVD-Info, which monitors repression in Russia, reported that two people were detained in Moscow carrying signs calling for the release of political prisoners. It was not clear if those incidents were related to the Navalny protests.

      • RFERLKremlin Critics Piontkovsky, Illarionov Among Latest Additions To Russia's Foreign Agent List

        The Russian Justice Ministry on August 18 added seven more individuals to its foreign agents list, including prominent Kremlin critics Andrei Piontkovsky, Andrei Ilarionov, and Linor Goralik.

        Since 2012, Russia has used the so-called foreign agent law to label and punish critics of government policies. It also has been increasingly used to shut down civil society and media groups in Russia since the Kremlin launched its unprovoked invasion of Ukraine in February last year.

      • IT WireFires force Canadian minister to ask Meta to stop blocking news feeds

        A Canadian minister has repeated calls for Meta to end a ban on news content from the country's outlets being hosted on Facebook and Instagram as wildfires devastate the country and people flee.

      • Digital Music NewsThe 1975 Attorneys Quietly Negotiating with Malaysia’s Good Vibes Festival

        Attorneys for The 1975 have been working with organizers of Malaysia’s Good Vibes Festival. Future Sound Asia (FSA) organized the festival, which was abruptly cancelled by the Malaysian government after frontman Matty Healy kissed the band’s drummer on-stage. Malaysia has strict laws against homosexuality, which Healy addressed on stage before the kiss.

      • AntiWarWhen the First Amendment Dies

        When the freedom of speech and of the press die, it will happen by a thousand small cuts. Last Friday night, in the sleepy 1,900-person town of Marion, Kansas, all five police officers in the town were summoned to work because of an urgent need.

      • JURISTHong Kong police detain and question sister-in-law of pro-democracy activist

        Hong Kong’s national security police reportedly detained and questioned the sister-in-law of Hong Kong fugitive pro-democracy activist Nathan Law-Kwun-Chung on Saturday, according to Hong Kong’s public broadcaster and local media. The wife of Law’s older brother was taken away by the National Security Department of the Hong Kong Police Force after a home raid.

    • Freedom of Information / Freedom of the Press

      • ScheerpostChris Hedges: The Crucifixion of Julian Assange

        This is a sermon I gave on Sunday Aug. 20 in Oslo, Norway at Kulturkirken Jakob (St. James Church of Culture). Actor and film director Liv Ullmann read the scripture passages.

      • Kansas Reflector‘Completely unjustified’: Affidavits point to abuse of power in raid on Kansas newspaper

        Affidavits signed by a police chief and magistrate to warrant the raid on the Marion County Record were supposed to provide evidence that a reporter committed a crime.

        Instead, they serve as evidence that the local officials abused their power.

        Police Chief Gideon Cody received approval from Magistrate Judge Laura Viar to conduct the Aug. 11 raids on the newspaper office, the publisher’s home, and the home of a city councilwoman after small-town drama erupted over a restaurant owner’s quest for a liquor license. Officers hauled away computers, hard drives and reporters’ personal cellphones during the newsroom raid — inviting worldwide condemnation for the brazen attack on press freedom.

      • ABCEgyptian journalist detained following mysterious plane coverage, his employer says

        Egypt is one the world’s top jailers of journalists, along with Turkey and China, according to media watchdogs. Authorities have for years targeted journalists as part of a wide-scale crackdown on dissent and government critics.

      • Kansas ReflectorKansas newspaper raid draws plenty of attention, but journalists defy threats across U.S.

        We still need answers and consequences in the case itself. More broadly, the egregious overreach in Marion and the good faith of journalists at the Record made this a perfect national story. Few would think that authorities got this one right. The problem — as journalists across the States Newsroom network told us — is that attacks on a free and fair press are not rare at all. Indeed, such attacks have become distressingly commonplace.

        When powerful people go after journalists and news outlets, they go after everyone. They go after publications’ readers. They go after voters who use information reported to make decisions. They go after other politicians who may have opposing messages or interests.

      • Kansas ReflectorInside Marion County Record, sting of loss — and a warning for American journalism — remains

        In the five days since the raid, the 4,000-circulation paper had become an unlikely symbol of the clash between free speech and creeping authoritarianism, a conflict drawn all the sharper because of its unexpected location: a small town in the rolling Flint Hills of Kansas. Things reached a boil after the paper’s 98-year-old co-owner, Joan (pronounced Jo-Anne) Meyer, whose home had also been searched by police, collapsed and died a day after the raid.

      • [Old] RCFPMedia coalition condemns police raid on Marion County Record

        “Your department’s seizure of this equipment has substantially interfered with the Record’s First Amendment-protected newsgathering in this instance, and the department’s actions risk chilling the free flow of information in the public interest more broadly, including by dissuading sources from speaking to the Record and other Kansas news media in the future,” the media coalition’s letter states.

    • Civil Rights/Policing

      • JURISTEU annual report says rights in Hong Kong waning

        The European Union (EU) claimed on Friday that Hong Kong experienced declines in autonomy, democracy, and fundamental freedoms in its 2022 report on Hong Kong . The EU also cast doubt on China’s commitment to its€  ‘One Country, Two Systems’ principle.

      • ABCAmerican Airlines sues a travel site to crack down on consumers who use this trick to save money

        American sued Skiplagged Inc. in federal court in Fort Worth, Texas, this week, accusing the website of deception. It threatened to cancel every ticket that Skiplagged has sold.

        In a practice called skiplagging and hidden-city ticketing, travelers book a flight that includes at least one stop, but they leave the plane during a layover. Generally skiplagging is not illegal, but airlines claim that it violates their policies.

      • Deutsche WelleTajik women turn to polygamy for survival

        This is one reason why many divorced Tajik women apear to support the right of men to marry multiple times: polygamous marriages are mainly sought by high- and middle-income men and many women see this as their only way to secure financial security for themselves and their children.

        Though the state does not recognize polygamous marriages, Sharia law allows Muslim men to have multiple wives. These unions are consecrated by a mullah without the marriage being officially registered with the state.

      • India Times'Punish blasphemers': Why Muslim mobs burned churches, destroyed Christian homes in Pakistan

        Father Gulshan Barkat, who teaches church history at the National Catholic Institute of Theology in Karachi, described the blasphemy allegations as a “false accusation” and said the local mosques were also to blame because loudspeakers erected on minarets had earlier in the day called on Muslims to gather and "attack the churches and Christian community."

        “The emotion of our Muslim brethren flares up very quickly, even at hearsay,” he said.

      • NPRA mob in Pakistan burned a church and Christian homes after blasphemy accusations

        Videos and photos posted on social media show an angry mob descending upon a church, throwing pieces of bricks and burning it. In another video, two other churches are attacked, their windows broken as attackers throw furniture out and set it on fire.

        In the videos, several policemen are seen watching the situation without intervening to stop the vandalism.

      • BBCPakistan: More than 100 arrested after churches burned

        Around 96% of Pakistan's population is Muslim. Other countries, including Iran, Brunei, and Mauritania also impose capital punishment for insulting religion [sic].

      • BBCPakistan: Mob burns churches over blasphemy claims

        Even though Pakistan has yet to sentence anyone to death for blasphemy, a mere accusation can result in widespread riots, causing lynchings and killings

      • CNNEight churches set ablaze in Pakistan’s Punjab province after accusations of blasphemy

        Pakistan is among the countries where blasphemy is a crime punishable by the death sentence.

      • uni MichiganU-M presents last, best and final contract offer to GEO

        In collective bargaining, a “last, best and final offer” is a formal proposal that one side presents to the other and includes all benefits and compromises. This is usually done to allow union members to vote to accept or reject an employer’s best-case proposal. It is the culmination of the collective bargaining process and indicates that no further negotiation will be undertaken.

      • uni MichiganUniversity offers ‘last, best and final’ contract to GEO

        The offer makes concessions on a variety of issues, many of which were brought up in GEO’s original bargaining platform. The offer includes offering birthing parent graduate students up to 12 weeks of paid leave, lower out-of-pocket maximums on mental health care and physical therapy copays, expanded gender-affirming benefits and the creation of a $20,000 per year International Graduate Workers Assistance Fund.

      • uni MichiganU-M presents last, best and final contract offer to graduate workers

        The offer comes after nine months of contentious negotiations between the university and the union. The dispute reached a critical point when GEO members walked off the job in late March and remained on strike through the remainder of the winter term.

      • Digital Music NewsMichael Jackson Cases Alleging Sexual Assault Revived by Appeals Court Judge

        Cases alleging sexual assault from Michael Jackson can now pursue further litigation against his companies rules a US appeals court judge. A Californian appeals court ruled that lawsuits from two men who allege that Michael Jackson molested them as children are free to pursue litigation against companies owned by the singer, who died in 2009.

    • Internet Policy/Net Neutrality

      • ZimbabweAMN using Starlink to expand mobile networks in underserved parts of Africa

        In a traditional mobile network, you have a Base Transceiver Station (BTS) but you are familiar with it being referred to as a base station. This is what your device with a sim card connects to for mobile internet, calls, or sms.

        This BTS connects to a Base Sation Controller (BSC) which manages multiple BTSs so in essence the BTS is a slave of the BSC. The BSCs then report to the Mobile Switching Centre (MSC) which then routes traffic into and out of the network, so an MSC will facilitate the exchange of traffic between 2 different networks, for example, traffic between Econet and NetOne.

      • Low Tech MagThematic Book Series: How to Build a Low-tech Internet?

        We have launched a new series of books opening up Low-tech Magazine’s archive by theme. The first volume collects all articles on digital technology and is available in our bookstore.

        We were told that the internet would dematerialize society and decrease energy use. Contrary to this projection, it has become a massive infrastructure and a rapidly growing energy consumer. In this series of articles, Low-tech Magazine examines the reasons behind the ever-expanding resource use of digital communication and what we can do about it. The internet isn’t an autonomous being. Its growing energy use results from decisions made by software developers, web designers, marketeers, publishers, and internet users. By placing communications in a historical context and with the development of its lightweight, off-the-grid, and solar powered website, Low-tech Magazine challenges our high-tech approach to sustainability and highlights the possibilities of alternative solutions.

      • IT WireOptus tops list of most distrusted brands, research firm Roy Morgan finds

        Telco Singtel Optus is the most distrusted brand in Australia for the last 12-month period, the market research firm Roy Morgan says, adding that this was the first time any company had taken the top spot from Facebook/Meta since it started issuing the measure of trust and distrust in 2018.

        In a statement, Roy Morgan said Facebook/Meta, Telstra, News Corp and Amazon rounded off the top five distrusted companies.

        The research firm said the change in the top rank occurred after the Optus data brach in September 2022, at which time there was an immediate and sharp increase in distrust for the brand.

    • Digital Restrictions (DRM)

    • Monopolies



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