04.30.23

46,000 Gemini Pages and All-Time Record Traffic in Techrights

Posted in Protocol, Site News at 8:39 pm by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

World Wide Web user vs: CSS, JS, DRM, Ads; Can I introduce you to Gemini?

Summary: Techrights is happy to report that its presence in Geminispace (with Gemini Protocol) pays off and later today we’ll hit another milestone

MAYBE it’s worth noting, as the month of April is now officially over, that in the month of April we had record traffic in Gemini (about half a million pages). Gemini started in 2019 and we joined 1.5 years later (it has more than quadrupled since. It continues to grow. Ever since then we’ve grown our capsules to 46,000 pages (milestone due later today) and we’re watching closely new pages in Geminispace (polling every hour for updates). Next year Gemini turns 5. It has been a long and positive journey for us.

Links 30/04/2023: SystemTap 4.9 and Gnuastro 0.20

Posted in News Roundup at 11:34 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

  • Free, Libre, and Open Source Software

    • It’s FOSS“Meet the Techs of Tomorrow Where They Are Today”: A Conversation With Stu Keroff

      I remember reading an article about Linux back in (maybe) 1998 or 1999, and I was fascinated by it, but I didn’t actually try it for the first time until late 2005.

      I obtained a used computer from a tech friend and started experimenting with it. My first distros were Linspire and Mepis. From there, I moved to Ubuntu. At first, it was just having fun and learning how to make things work. Then, I started trying to do more of my teaching work using Linux. Then, it was getting students interested and involved.

      I first started doing Linux clubs at school back in 2012, and the whole thing started by accident. Our school had started a 1:1 laptop program that year, and almost immediately students started breaking and losing laptops. I wanted to integrate tech into my teaching, but I would have students in each class that did not have a laptop because they had broken it.

    • Events

      • Volker KrauseLinux App Summit 2023

        Last weekend I attended the Linux App Summit (LAS) 2023 in Brno, Czechia,
        to speak about push notifications and to get a few
        remaining interoperability issues sorted out.

        LAS

        While my goal for last LAS was to finally
        meet people in person again for the first time since the pandemic, I had a much more specific objective this time,
        get the remaining questions around UnifiedPush on Linux sorted out.

      • Abhijith PA: Attending FOSSASIA 2023

        I attended FOSSASIA 2023 summit held
        at Lifelong Learning Institute,
        Singapore. A 3 day long parallel talk filled conference. Its my second
        time attending FOSSASIA. The first one was 2018 summit. Like
        last time, I didn’t attend much talks but focussed on networking with
        people. A lot of familiar faces there. PV Anthony, Harish, etc.

        I vounteered to run Debian Booth at the exhibition hall distributing
        stickers, flyers. Rajudev also helped me at the booth. Most of the
        people there used debian or its derivates or know debian already, its
        easier for me that way, that I don’t have do much explaining compared
        to other booths. Thanks to Parth for looking after booth in my breaks.

    • SaaS/Back End/Databases

      • AirsequelExciting SQLite Improvements Since 2020

        So let’s take a look at some of the exciting improvements and refinements that SQLite has seen since 2020. This list focuses on changes related to the supported SQL instructions and the CLI.

    • FSFE

    • GNU Projects

      • GNUGnuastro 0.20 released

        Dear all,

        I am happy to announce the 20th stable version of Gnuastro: version 0.20.

        Gnuastro is an official GNU package, consisting of various command-line programs, C/C++ library functions and Makefile extensions for the manipulation and analysis of (astronomical) data. All the programs share the same basic command-line user interface (modeled on GNU Coreutils). For the full list of Gnuastro’s library, programs, and several comprehensive tutorials (recommended place to start using Gnuastro), please see the links below respectively:

        https://www.gnu.org/s/gnuastro/manual/html_node/Gnuastro-library.html

        https://www.gnu.org/s/gnuastro/manual/html_node/Gnuastro-programs-list.html

        https://www.gnu.org/software/gnuastro/manual/html_node/Tutorials.html

        In the 27 weeks since 0.19, there have been 122 commits by 12 people with 15265 lines of code and documentation inserted and 5779 deleted. See [1] for the list of people who contributed for all the exciting new features that have been added (thanks a lot everyone!). For the full list of added and changed features, as well as the fixed bugs, please see [2].

        Here is the compressed source and the GPG detached signature for this release. To uncompress Lzip tarballs, see [3]. To check the validity of the tarballs using the GPG detached signature (*.sig) see [4]. See [5] for the list of software used to bootstrap this tarball.

        https://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/gnuastro/gnuastro-0.20.tar.lz (4.4MB)
        https://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/gnuastro/gnuastro-0.20.tar.gz (7.0MB)
        https://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/gnuastro/gnuastro-0.20.tar.lz.sig (833B)
        https://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/gnuastro/gnuastro-0.20.tar.gz.sig (833B)

        Here are the SHA1 and SHA256 checksums (other ways to check if the tarball you download is what we distributed). Just note that the SHA256 checksum is base64 encoded, instead of the hexadecimal encoding that most checksum tools default to (see [6] on how to generate it).

        c8d2c8f8cb32ff7bac3d6c0dc281295cbc8f251b gnuastro-0.20.tar.lz
        VkBKS5GeEGdC102c53QCQTxZWz2giCcqmKmr1UFTcxU= gnuastro-0.20.tar.lz
        eab2aeb48f68a8b43f48f8bebb46b6fd74455a48 gnuastro-0.20.tar.gz
        kkuLtqwc0VFj3a3Dqb/bi4jKx7UJnV+CHs7bw/Cwac0= gnuastro-0.20.tar.gz

        If any of Gnuastro’s programs or libraries are useful in your work, please cite _and_ acknowledge them. For citation and acknowledgment guidelines, run the relevant programs with a `–cite’ option (it can be different for different programs, so run it for all the programs you use). Citations _and_ acknowledgments are vital for the continued work on Gnuastro, so please don’t forget to support us by doing so.

        Best wishes,
        Mohammad

      • GNUGnuastro 0.20 released

        The 20th release of GNU Astronomy Utilities (Gnuastro) is now available. See the full announcement for all the new features in this release and the many bugs that have been found and fixed: https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/info-gnuastro/2023-04/msg00001.html

      • Gnuastro
      • Gnuastro 0.20
    • Openness/Sharing/Collaboration

      • Open Access/Content

        • Terence EdenI got a DOI from arXiv for my MSc!

          I couldn’t find a way to publish this via my university, which was a little disappointing. And I didn’t have the time or energy to rewrite it for submission to a journal. Then a couple of people suggest that I submit it to arXiv.

    • Programming/Development

      • TecAdminMastering Functions in JavaScript: Essential Concepts and Techniques for Efficient Code

        JavaScript, a versatile and widely used programming language, is an essential tool for web developers. One of the key concepts in JavaScript is the function, which allows you to write reusable and maintainable code.

      • TecAdminMastering Variables and Data Types in JavaScript: A Comprehensive Guide

        JavaScript is a powerful, versatile, and widely-used programming language that has become an essential tool for modern web development. Understanding the basics of JavaScript, such as variables and data types, is crucial for any aspiring web developer.

      • RlangWrappR for Rstudio: Use Keyboard Shortcuts to Wrap Highlighted Text With Custom Code

        Introduction: While coding in RStudio I wanted to use the RStudio keyboard shortcuts to wrap functions and custom lines of code around datasets, code, or objects in the editor pane.  I could not find what I wanted after reviewing various packages and solutions.

      • Nikita ProkopovHumble Chronicles: State Management

        Recently I’ve been trying to improve state management and component API in Humble UI. For that, I’ve tried to read and compile all the possible known approaches and synthesize something from them.

        I haven’t decided on anything for Humble UI yet, let’s say I’m in an experimenting phase. But I think my notes could be useful to quickly get a birds-eye overview of the field.

        This is a compilation of my research so far.

      • Russ AllberyRuss Allbery: INN 2.7.1

        This is a bug fix and minor feature release over INN 2.7.0, and the
        upgrade should be painless. You can download the new release from
        ISC or
        my personal INN pages. The latter also has
        links to the full changelog and the other INN documentation.
        As of this release, we’re no longer generating hashes and signed hashes.
        Instead, the release is a simple tarball and a detached GnuPG signature,
        similar to my other software releases.

      • Perl / Raku

      • Python

        • TecAdminPython GUIs: Crafting Your First Tkinter Application Step-by-Step

          In this tutorial, you will learn how to create a simple graphical user interface (GUI) using Python and Tkinter. We’ll guide you through the process of crafting your first Tkinter application step-by-step, from installing the necessary dependencies to building and running the app.

        • EarthlyGetting Started With PyTest Fixtures

          PyTest is a popular testing framework for Python programming language. Fixtures in PyTest provide a way to manage the resources and data required for running tests. They simplify the process of setting up, tearing down, and sharing test data between test functions. PyTest fixtures provide a convenient way to define these resources and data once and reuse them across multiple tests, saving time and reducing the chance of errors.

          In this tutorial, you will learn what PyTest fixtures are, why they are used, and how to define and use them in your tests. To explore the usage of Pytest fixtures, you’ll be creating a simple note-taking application that lets users add, edit, and get notes.

        • Enrico Zini: Gkt4 model-backed radio button in Python

          Gtk4 has interesting ways of splitting models and views. One that I didn’t find
          very well documented, especially for Python bindings, is a set of radio buttons
          backed by a common model.

          The idea is to define an action that takes a string as a state. Each radio
          button is assigned a string matching one of the possible states, and when the
          state of the backend action is changed, the radio buttons are automatically
          updated.

          All the examples below use a string for a value type, but anything can be used
          that fits into a GLib.Variant.

          The model

          This defines the action. Note that enables all the usual declarative ways of a
          status change: [...]

  • Leftovers

    • Ruben SchadeVisiting Ōtsu in Shiga Prefecture

      Much of my latest Japan trip was unfortunately spent with a series of headaches, but in a roundabout way they lead Clara and I to a new place we’d never been to before! And it was just what the doctor ordered.

      We’d had such success at the Hard Off second-hand electronics store in Kyōto, that we decided to check out another branch that was accessible by rail. Unlike car or bus rides, the smooth and comfortable intercity trains in Japan are a great way to explore with a headache. Maybe that’s another avenue for tourism promotion they should consider!

    • ScheerpostMargaret
    • Off GuardianI Am a Camera

      I have stolen this title from the stage play of the same name based on Christopher Isherwood’s 1939 novel Goodbye to Berlin. The title is taken from a quote in the novel’s first page: “I am a camera with its shutter open, quite passive, recording, not thinking.”

    • James GBrainstorming an organization to place pianos in airports

      One of my favourite parts of travelling to a destination by plane — and indeed train — is to play an available piano. I find playing piano relaxing, a way for me to take a break from thinking about all of the details of my journey. With that said, there are many airports without pianos, and many more that have one piano in a single terminal but no pianos in other terminals. I was speaking with a few people about how we could help place pianos in airports where one is not available, providing travellers with the ability to have the same experience I and many other travellers have: a moment to sit back and make music between legs of a journey.

    • New YorkerObituary: Rubbernecking for Jerry Springer

      He was sweeter than Howard Stern, realer than Phil Donahue. His coolness gave his show its plausible deniability.

    • Science

      • Science AlertPhysicists Discover a Strange New Theoretical Phase of Hydrogen

        This is really weird.

      • Science AlertEven Clouds Are Carrying Drug-Resistant Bacteria, New Study Finds

        Et tu, clouds?

      • HackadayThinking Inside The Box

        Last week, I wrote about NASA’s technology demonstrator projects, and how they’ve been runaway successes – both the Mars rovers and the current copter came from such experimental beginnings. I argued that letting some spirit of experimentation into an organization like NASA is probably very fruitful from time to time.

      • Pro Publica“A Courtroom Is a Really Lousy Place to Decide Science”

        In 2017, as lawyers for prisoners in Ohio sought to spare their clients from lethal injection, they challenged one of the state’s key witnesses: Daniel Buffington.

        As he had done elsewhere, the Florida-based pharmacist had submitted written testimony saying that prisoners would not feel pain from the three-drug cocktail administered by executioners. But the lawyers for the men on death row argued that Buffington was unqualified to testify in an upcoming hearing, noting that he had not administered general anesthesia or conducted research on midazolam, the key sedative in the execution protocol.

      • Pro PublicaA Pharmacist Is Helping Clear the Way for Lethal Injections

        Last winter, Dr. Gail Van Norman sat on the witness stand in the federal courthouse in Oklahoma City, testifying as part of a trial that would determine whether Oklahoma’s lethal injection procedure was constitutional. Two weeks earlier, at the request of lawyers representing more than two dozen prisoners, Van Norman, an anesthesiologist and professor at the University of Washington, had attended the execution of a man named Gilbert Ray Postelle.

        In the execution chamber, she testified, Postelle was lying face-up on a gurney with his arms stretched out beside him. Executioners injected him with midazolam, a drug that was supposed to knock him unconscious so he didn’t feel pain from two drugs that would soon paralyze him and stop his heart. It didn’t appear to work. For 2 1/2 minutes after receiving midazolam, Postelle continued to wiggle his hands and feet. His eyes remained open, blinking and looking up at the ceiling. Postelle’s breathing became increasingly strenuous and rapid. Van Norman said his trouble breathing was a result of the large dose of midazolam.

    • Education

    • Hardware

      • HackadayAlternatives To Pins And Holes For 3D Printed Assemblies

        When we have two 3D printed parts that need to fit together, many of us rely on pins and holes to locate them and fix them together. [Slant 3D] has explored some alternative ideas in this area that may open up new avenues for your own designs.

      • HackadayDon’t Let The Baluns Float Over Your Head

        Most ham radio operators will build an antenna of some sort when they first start listening or transmitting, whether it’s a simple dipole, a beam antenna like a Yagi, or even just a random wire vertical antenna. All of these will need to be connected feedline of some sort, and in the likely event you reach for some 50-ohm coax cable you’ll also need a balun to reduce noise or unwanted radiation. Don’t be afraid of extra expenses when getting into this hobby, though, as [W6NBC] demonstrates how to construct an “ugly balun” out of the coax wire itself (PDF).

      • HackadayHackaday Prize 2023: Tiny RC Aircraft Built Using Foam And ESP12

        Once upon a time, a radio controlled plane was a hefty and complex thing. They required small nitro engines, support equipment, and relatively heavy RC electronics. Times have changed since then, as this lightweight RC build from [Ravi Butani] demonstrates.

      • Tom’s HardwareDell XPS 15 (9530) Review: A Familiar Face With a Raptor Lake Infusion

        Our XPS 15 review sample came configured with an Intel Core i7-13700H, Nvidia GeForce RTX 4070, 32GB of RAM and a 1TB SSD.

      • Interesting EngineeringNew Farming Robot Uses AI to Kill 100,000 Weeds per Hour

        “Unlike other weeding technologies, the robots utilize high-power lasers to eradicate weeds through thermal energy, without disturbing the soil. The automated robots allow farmers to use fewer herbicides and reduce labor to remove unwanted plants while improving the reliability and predictability of costs, crop yield, and more.”

    • Health/Nutrition/Agriculture

    • Proprietary

    • Security

      • LinuxSecurityGit 2.40.1 & Other Updates Address Three High-Impact Security Vulnerabilities

        Git 2.40.1 has been released to address three new security vulnerabilities being disclosed, which have been classified as “high-severity” by the National Vulnerability Database (NVD) due to their high confidentiality, integrity and availability impact, and the low attack complexity and lack of privileges required to exploit them. Due to these security fixes, updates for prior stable Git series are also availble with v2.39.3, v2.38.5, v2.37.7, v2.36.6, v2.35.8, v2.34.8, v2.33.8, v2.32.7, v2.31.8, and v2.30.9.

      • Barry KaulerPassword converted to 64-byte hash

        I posted yesterday about fscrypt v2:

        https://bkhome.org/news/202304/preliminary-support-for-fscrypt-v2.html

        There is a security concern, as the password the user types in at
        bootup is used to create the encrypted folders. Quoting from here:

        https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/filesystems/fscrypt.html

        Master keys must be real cryptographic keys, i.e.
        indistinguishable from random bytestrings of the same length. This
        implies that users must not directly use a password as a master key,
        zero-pad a shorter key, or repeat a shorter key. Security cannot be
        guaranteed if userspace makes any such error, as the cryptographic
        proofs and analysis would no longer apply.

      • Data BreachesTwo ransomware groups list Albany ENT & Allergy Services on their leak sites

        BianLian often uses the asterisk system before they actually name the victim and leak data.

      • Stronger cybersecurity, reducing cyber incidents, greater EU ‘strategic autonomy’? Three interesting features of the proposed EU Cyber Solidarity Act

        On April 18, 2023, the European Commission published its proposal for an EU Cyber Solidarity Act (“CSA”). It aims to strengthen incident detection, situational awareness, and response capabilities, and to ensure that entities providing services critical for day-to-day life can access expert support to manage their cyber risk and respond to incidents. Specifically, the CSA aims to promote information sharing about cyber incidents and vulnerabilities, to help improve the cyber resilience of critical entities, and to create an EU-wide resource for incident management.

        The CSA adds another layer to the increasingly crowded landscape of EU cybersecurity laws. The proposed law would interact with the revised Network and Information Security Directive (“NIS2”) and certifications issued under the Cybersecurity Act. Private companies in specific sectors will also have to consider potential overlap with the forthcoming Cyber Resilience Act and the financial services-focused Digital Operation Resilience Act.

      • WRDSB retirees say they felt left in the dark after data compromised in cyberattack

        In the wake of a cyberattack at the Waterloo Region District School Board (WRDSB) this past summer, some of the people impacted are raising questions about how it was handled.

        The data accessed by hackers included details about employees dating back to 1970.

        But some of those former employees say getting information about what happened, along with their risks, was difficult.

      • Data BreachesEmmanuel College working to recover from attack that claims faculty and student data stolen

        Emmanuel College in Boston appears to have become a victim of Avos Locker. The college was added to the threat actor’s leak site yesterday, with a note saying,

      • CBSUnited HealthCare reports data breach that may have revealed customer’s personal information

        United HealthCare made customers aware of a data breach on Friday, which temporarily allowed access to personal information for those enrolled in the company’s healthcare plans.

        According to a statement, “suspicious activity” was noticed on the UHC mobile application “that may have led to the disclosure of member information.”

        The company says that the breach happened between February 19 and February 25, and it was determined on April 10 that some member information was impacted.

        They believe that information including members’ first and last names, health insurance member identification numbers, dates of birth, addresses, dates of service, provider names, claim information and group name and number may have been available.

      • KTNV TVSome ‘sensitive information’ potentially compromised: Diocese of Las Vegas reports cybersecurity breach

        The Diocese of Las Vegas on Friday announced a cybersecurity breach that potentially compromised “sensitive information of its volunteers, parishioners, donors and other stakeholders,” a news release states.

        A spokesperson noted there was “no indication that personal information has been misused,” but said the Diocese would notify those who may have been impacted.

      • Amnesty International Australia Suffered a Data Breach in December, but Says Everything is Now Fine

        On late Friday, Amnesty International Australia sent an email to supporters informing them their data may be at risk due to “anomalous activity” detected in its IT environment.

        While the email went out very late in the day/week, it also went out a very long time after the activity was found. The email, sighted by Gizmodo Australia, says the activity was detected late last year.

      • Privacy/Surveillance

        • US News And World ReportTelegram App Back on in Brazil After Judge Lifts Suspension

          Internet providers and wireless carriers in Brazil have stopped blocking Telegram after a federal judge partially revised a ruling suspending the social media app over its failure to surrender data on neo-Nazi activity

        • [Repeat] Scoop News GroupFBI queries for Americans’ digital data drops, yet advocates for surveillance reform remain undeterred

          The drop in searches reflects a number of factors, according to the report from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence. First, the FBI used a new methodology to calculate the number of searches performed under Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, or FISA, which allows intelligence and law enforcement agencies to gather online communications of foreign intelligence targets. The program also sweeps up Americans’ data, making it a lucrative source of information for so-called “backdoor” searches by the FBI in investigating U.S. persons.

        • uni StanfordThe STOP CSAM Act: An Anti-Encryption Stalking Horse

          E2EE’s growing ubiquity seems like a clear win for personal privacy, security, and safety, as well as national security and the economy. And yet E2EE’s popularity has its critics – including, unfortunately, Sen. Durbin. Because it’s harder for providers and law enforcement to detect malicious activity in encrypted environments than unencrypted ones (albeit not impossible, as I’ll discuss), law enforcement officials and lawmakers often demonize E2EE. But E2EE is a vital protection against crime and abuse, because it helps to protect people (children included) from the harms that happen when their personal information and private conversations fall into the wrong hands: data breaches, hacking, cybercrime, snooping by hostile foreign governments, stalkers and domestic abusers, and so on.

          That’s why it’s so important that national policy promote rather than dissuade the use of E2EE – and why it’s so disappointing that STOP CSAM has turned out to be just the opposite: yet another misguided effort by lawmakers in the name of online safety that would only make us all less safe.

    • Defence/Aggression

    • France24Over 400 civilians dead as rival forces continue to fight over control of Sudan

      Gunfire and heavy artillery fire persisted Saturday in parts of Sudan’s capital Khartoum, residents said, despite the extension of a cease-fire between the country’s two top generals, whose battle for power has killed hundreds and sent thousands fleeing for their lives.

    • France24France prison population reaches all-time record with 120% capacity

      Prune Missoffe, of the France-based International Prison Observatory rights monitor, said the situation was “only getting worse, month by month”.

    • Algemeiner‘Salafist Police’ Are Targeting Westernized European Muslims

      While America seems to have largely forgotten the threat of radical Islamism, jihadism, according to Dutch intelligence agency AIVD, remains the greatest security threat for Europe. That threat exists not only in the form of terrorist violence, but in the effect of online propaganda, Salafist-run schools, intimidation on social media, and ongoing efforts at polarizing European society as Salafist groups and charismatic activists urge fellow Muslims to reject Western democratic mores.

      Now a report by Dutch newspaper Telegraaf has Parliament asking questions: what, some members want to know, can security agencies do to prevent that kind influence and the threats against moderate Muslims (and non-Muslims) by extremists, both in person and online?

      The disturbing answer: not much.

    • CNNWHO warns of ‘biological risk’ after Sudan fighters seize lab, as violence mars US-brokered ceasefire

      A high-ranking medical source told CNN that the lab, which contains samples of diseases and other biological material, had been taken over by RSF forces. The WHO did not appoint blame for the lab seizure but said medical technicians no longer had access to the facility.

    • Frontpage MagazineBiden Establishes ‘Interagency Task Force With Senior Government Officials’ to Stop ‘Islamophobia’

      And how is the new “interagency task force with senior government officials” going to “tackle” “Islamophobia”? No doubt we will now be inundated with taxpayer-funded material about how wonderful Islam is. In the nature of things, however, there will still be human disputes, and some of them will involve Muslims. Now that “Islamophobia” has been established as targeted by the government, these disputes will all be ascribed to “Islamophobia” and offered as evidence of how urgently needed this “interagency task force” really is. The “Islamophobia” task force will therefore likely enjoy ever-increasing budgets. That’s how government agencies work: they have to justify their existence, so they keep having to find more and more of the thing they’re supposed to be stamping out.

    • BBCRamadan: Cathedrals, museums and stadiums host iftar meals
    • ScheerpostInterpreting for the US Army of the Deaf

      Robert Ham’s new film, Interpreters Wanted, sheds light on one of the most dangerous and underappreciated positions in the wars on terror.

    • Meduza‘Kindergarten military parade’ takes place in Russia’s Krasnodar region — Meduza

      In Yeysk, a town in Russia’s Krasnodar region, local children participated in a “kindergarten military parade.” According to Yeysk’s regional governor, Roman Bublik, the event was called “We are the great-grandchildren of the great victors.”

    • MeduzaSevastopol fuel depot catches fire after suspected drone strike — Meduza

      A fuel depot caught fire in Sevastopol on the night of April 28 – 29. The governor of the annexed city, Mikhail Razvozhayev, said that the fire was caused by a drone strike.

  • Transparency/Investigative Reporting

  • Environment

    • The VergeTesla’s carbon footprint is finally coming into focus, and it’s bigger than the company let on in the past

      Last year, the company only disclosed how much greenhouse gas pollution it generated from its direct operations and from customers charging their EVs. Altogether that was roughly equivalent to 2.5 million metric tons of carbon dioxide. But that missed the big picture since supply chain pollution — considered indirect emissions — often make up a major chunk of a company’s carbon footprint.

      This year, Tesla finally released data on its supply chain emissions for 2022, which is equivalent to roughly 30.7 million tons of carbon dioxide. That’s a huge change from what the company reported last year.

    • Common DreamsPandemic and Climate Crisis Usher In a New Age of Inequality

      Economic summits in Washington, DC rarely provoke much interest on the streets of Khartoum or Karachi. The Spring Meetings of the IMF and the World Bank, held in the United States capital during April 10-16, were no exception.

    • France24Spain, Portugal mark record temperatures for April as heatwave continues

      Mainland Spain and Portugal have broken temperature records for April, officials said Friday, as both nations wilt in an unusually early heatwave that has raised the risk of wildfires.

    • Energy/Transportation

      • Common DreamsGreenpeace Activists Scale Belgian LNG Terminal to Demand End to US Imports

        Expressing solidarity with people in frontline communities where the fossil fuel industry has for decades polluted the air and water and exposed millions of people to public safety risks, nearly two dozen campaigners with Greenpeace Belgium on Saturday entered the liquefied natural gas terminal of energy infrastructure company Fluxys in Zeebrugge, to demand an end to European imports of LNG from the United States.

      • HackadayBiomimetic Building Facades To Reduce HVAC Loads

        Buildings currently consume about 50% of the world’s electricity, so finding ways to reduce the loads they place on the grid can save money and reduce carbon emissions. Scientists at the University of Toronto have developed an “optofluidic” system for tuning light coming into a building.

      • New York TimesA Once-Promising Green Energy Technology Hits a Roadblock

        Tidal power turbines operating on the Bay of Fundy in Nova Scotia were suspended after the company running them was unable to get a permit to continue testing.

  • Finance

    • CoryDoctorowThe seductive, science fictional power of spreadsheets

      Working through this book – and its two sequels, which travel back in time to the 1980s and Marty’s first encounters with VisiCalc and Lotus 1-2-3 – I was struck by the similarities between spreadsheets and science fiction.

      While many people use spreadsheets as an overgrown calculator, adding up long columns of numbers, the rise and rise of spreadsheets comes from their use in modeling. Using a spreadsheet, a complex process can be expressed as a series of mathematical operations: we put these inputs into the factory and we get these finished goods. Once the model is built, we can easily test out contrafactuals: what if I add a third shift? What if I bargain harder for discounts on a key component? If I give my workers a productivity-increasing raise, will the profits make up for the costs?

    • New York TimesFirst Republic Nears Federal Seizure as F.D.I.C. Seeks Buyers

      JPMorgan, PNC and Bank of America are said to be interested in acquiring the troubled lender after it is seized by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.

    • Off GuardianPoverty and Crisis: Sucking Humanity Dry

      The World Bank says nearly 80% (560 million) of the 700 million people who were pushed into extreme poverty in 2020 due to COVID policies were from India. Globally, extreme poverty levels increased by 9.3 per cent in 2020. In 2022, it was estimated that a quarter of a billion people across the world …

    • AxiosJPM eyes First Republic as FDIC prepares takeover

      JPMorgan, and PNC Financial Services are among the large U.S. banks preparing a bid for embattled First Republic Bank, in a process the FDIC hopes to finalize over the weekend, according to sources familiar with the matter.

    • Digital Music NewsOnce-Hot Clubhouse is Now ‘Resetting’ with a 50% Employee Reduction

      Once the hottest new social platform to emerge, Clubhouse is now ‘resetting’ with a 50% employee reduction, less than a year after its last round of job cuts. The once-booming social audio platform Clubhouse has laid off more than half of its remaining staff…

    • NYPostFDIC races to find buyer for collapsing First Republic Bank: report

      Federal regulators are scrambling to find a buyer for First Republic Bank as the banking company’s stocks continue to tumble, according to sources.

    • France24Fitch agency cuts France’s debt rating to ‘AA-’, revises up outlook to stable

      Fitch on Friday cut France’s sovereign credit rating by one notch to ‘AA-’, citing a potential political deadlock and social movements that are posing risks to President Emmanuel Macron’s reform agenda.

    • France24‘It strengthens anti-establishment forces’: Pension reform protests threaten Macron’s agenda

      A global credit ratings agency downgraded French debt worthiness a notch on Saturday, citing pension reform protests as a cause. Two weeks after the contested pension reform passed, persistent social movements threaten to erase the financial gains that the French government expected.

    • Michael West MediaThe best democracy money can buy – Rex on Albo’s secret advertising sub-committee

      While we’ve been busily distracted on the big issues like cost of living, AUKUS, the Voice, access to doctors and a broken gas market, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has been quietly wrapping a highly controversial topic in a Cabinet secrecy blanket. Rex Patrick looks at politicised government advertising and raises concerns about the new Government Communications Sub-Committee of Cabinet.

      Most people take issue with political donations; not the small donations that allow a person to support their political party, but the large donations that are made to grant access to politicians and to influence them. Big political donations distort democracy.

    • Michael West MediaPayday super touted as solution to stolen funds
      >Ahead of the federal budget the Albanese government is being urged to mandate superannuation payments in line with workers’ wages to prevent widespread super theft. According to an analysis conducted by Industry Super Australia (ISA), unpaid and underpaid superannuation has cost workers more than $33 billion over the past seven years.

    • Michael West MediaAnother close Reserve Bank cash rate decision looms

      Mortgage holders will be crossing their fingers this week for another month of interest rate relief. The Reserve Bank board is due to meet on Tuesday for what’s shaping up to be another close call between another 25 basis point hike or a second month of staying on the sidelines.

    • Michael West MediaMore Aussies eligible for housing affordability schemes

      Friends and family members looking to buy their first home together will be among many more Australians set to benefit from an expansion of three government housing schemes. The first home guarantee and its regional and family home equivalents will have their criteria expanded from July 1, to help more Australians achieve home ownership.

    • JURISTAustralia’s migration system considered ‘broken’ as landmark review finds system leaves 1.8 million workers ‘permanently temporary’

      Following a review by the Australian Government Thursday into Australia’s migration laws, Minister for Home Affairs Claire O’Neill declared the nation’s migration system as “broken.” This arises from Australia’s uncapped restrictions on temporary visa-holders, thereby doubling migrant numbers in the absence of a clear pathway for them to obtain permanent residency.

    • Common DreamsHow Finland Virtually Ended Homelessness—and We Can Too

      Determined to pack more homeless people into Toronto’s overcrowded shelters, officials have come up with a solution: reduce the number of inches between beds.

  • AstroTurf/Lobbying/Politics

    • New York TimesAfter Warmth From Biden, South Korea’s Yoon Faces a Different Tune at Home

      President Yoon Suk Yeol’s foreign policy, aligning his country more closely with Washington and Tokyo, has polarized his country. And critics say he has won little to show for it.

    • DaemonFC (Ryan Farmer)Car insurance and the Gender Tax. Take 5 Seconds to Tell Them You’re a Man and Pay $100 More than “Non-Binary”

      My car insurance company has been offering Non-Binary drivers the ability to identify as such for about a couple of years now.

    • New York TimesAs Biden Runs for Re-election, Black Voters’ Frustration Bubbles

      In interviews, Black voters, organizers and elected officials pointed to what some saw as unkept promises — raising questions about the enthusiasm of Democrats’ most loyal voters.

    • New York TimesRequiem for the Newsroom

      Nobody’s going to make a movie about reporters at home with their cursors.

    • RFERLBosnia Forms New Government Day After International Envoy Imposes Amendments

      Bosnia-Herzegovina’s House of Representatives has appointed a new government in an urgent session held on April 28, a day after the high representative of the international community imposed changes to the country’s constitution and the criminal laws.

    • RFERLArmenian FM To Visit Washington To Discuss Normalization Agreement With Azerbaijan

      Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan will arrive on a working visit to Washington on April 30, Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Ani Badalian said.

    • RFACourt gives Cambodian opposition leader additional charges as election nears

      The charges will keep Thach Setha in jail longer, preventing him from campaigning in July election.

    • RFAMyanmar, neighbors including Thailand hold Track 1.5 dialogue without ASEAN members

      Beyond refusing to invite the junta to its meetings, ASEAN has done little except let down the people of Myanmar.

    • Common DreamsWatchdog Sends Mobile Billboard to Roberts’ Country Club, Demanding: ‘Clean Up Court’

      As the latest polling showed a majority of Americans believe U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas should step down from his lifetime appointment, government watchdog Accountable.US deployed several trucks to Capitol Hill Saturday to display mobile billboards plastered with Thomas’ and other right-wing justices’ images and recent headlines regarding allegations of ethics violations.

    • Scoop News GroupCISA issues draft attestation form for government software providers

      The new form was developed in collaboration with the White House and is based on practices established in the National Institute of Standards and Technology’s Secure Software Development Framework.

      Software providers working with federal government agencies will in short order have to begin signing the letters of attestation and submitting them to the General Services Administration. In a procurement memo in January, that agency said it would start collecting the documents in mid-June.

    • Rest of WorldTwitter is complying with more government demands under Elon Musk

      It’s been exactly six months since Elon Musk took over Twitter, promising a new era of free speech and independence from political bias. But Twitter’s self-reported data shows that, under Musk, the company has complied with hundreds more government orders for censorship or surveillance — especially in countries such as Turkey and India.

    • MeduzaThe White Coat Meduza premieres first ever documentary on the life of Soviet dissident Valeriya Novodvorskaya — Meduza

      “The White Coat” is the first documentary to examine the life of Soviet dissident and activist Valeriya Novodvorskaya. With the permission of Berlin film studio Narra and the independent journalist cooperative Bereg, Meduza has made the full film available on YouTube.

    • [Repeat] Scoop News GroupUS cybersecurity officials step up push for companies to adopt secure by design practices [iophk: Thus a ban on further use of Windows?]

      “Small and medium businesses, local school districts, water utilities, local hospitals, are not going to be successful in managing cybersecurity risk alone if they ever get in the crosshairs of a ransomware gang or an APT actor,” said Eric Goldstein on Wednesday during the annual RSA Conference here that brings together government officials and industry executive. “Those who can bear the burden are held accountable for providing services that are safe and secure by design by default.”

      Jack Cable, a senior technical adviser at CISA, told CyberScoop that CISA held two listening sessions recently with industry partners as well as one with the open-source community. He said the agency plans to build on secure by design principles recently outlined in a white paper the agency published. “This is the first chapter of the story here and we want to work closely with industry and governmental partners with this.”

    • Scoop News GroupCISA and partners issue secure-by-design principles for software manufacturers [iophk: Thus a ban on further use of Windows?]

      “Insecure technology products can pose risks to individual users and our national security,” said NSA Cybersecurity Director Rob Joyce in a statement. “If manufacturers consistently prioritize security during design and development, we can reduce the number of malicious cyber intrusions we see. The international coalition partnering on this report speaks to the importance of this issue.”

    • Misinformation/Disinformation/Propaganda

      • New Eastern EuropeDisinformation can be tackled through everyday habits

        A conversation with Agnieszka Legucka, an analyst with the Polish Institute of International Affairs. Interviewer: Maciej Makulski

      • New Eastern EuropeCan we win the information war?

        MACIEJ MAKULSKI: I would like to start by asking you to paint a general picture of where we are regarding this information war and the counter-measures used to address this problem. We decided to go back into history a little and mark Russia’s war against Ukraine as a kind of breakthrough point, although we know that all kinds of lines are a bit artificial. But it was actually interesting for me to think about how before that we were rather discussing the problem of post-truth, which was a buzzword at that time, and after February 22nd 2022 I have an impression that a whole industry fighting disinformation has developed even more; that we are in a different place because the answer to the threats is more systemic, coherent and consistent. So, what I would like to ask you first is how you would characterise the position we are in right now and what major trends are worthy of discussion?

  • Censorship/Free Speech

    • Hong Kong Free PressAs bell tolls for Hong Kong’s Liberal Studies, teachers fear for critical thinking and open discussion

      As the last students stepped out of Hong Kong’s university entry test venues after sitting the Liberal Studies exam on Thursday, the moment marked the end of the subject’s short-lived yet controversial history.

    • US News And World ReportIndian News Agency ANI, Broadcaster NDTV Twitter Accounts Restored After Brief Suspension
    • RFERLRussian Grandmother Given Crushing Fine For Anti-War Post

      A Russian court has fined a 65-year-old grandmother from Siberia 1 million rubles ($12,400), the equivalent of about four years of pension payments, for posting on social media the eyewitness accounts of her Ukrainian friends in the days following Russia’s invasion.

    • RFERLRussian Grandmother Given Crushing Fine For Anti-War Post

      A Russian court has fined a 65-year-old grandmother from Siberia 1 million rubles ($12,400), the equivalent of about four years of pension payments, for making an anti-war post on social media in the days following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

    • India TimesTwitter blocks accounts of news outlets ANI and NDTV, restores later

      Elon Musk-owned social media platform Twitter blocked and later restored the main handles of domestic media agencies ANI and NDTV claiming that owner of both the accounts was less than 13 years of age and therefore could now be allowed to be on the platform.

      A quick search for both handles showed a notification of the accounts not existing on Twitter. It was not immediately clear as to why these accounts were suspended. As per the platform’s policies, account holders must be at least 13 years old to create and operate a handle on Twitter.

    • PJ MediaOxford ‘Cancels’ England’s Patron Saint George to Appease Islam

      Oxford had for years been celebrating Saint George’s Day. Once the pandemic arrived in 2020, however, the day was (“temporarily”) suspended; and now, following that “reset,” Islam has taken its place.

      This move, incidentally, is meant to appease Islam in more ways than one. Although the patron saint of England for some seven centuries, Saint George has increasingly been a cause of concern because he “offends” Muslims. For example, according to a 2013 report,

    • Gatestone InstituteTwo School Employees are Charged with Blasphemy for Desecrating the Holy Quran

      They had both been asked to clean a store room. During the cleaning they gathered all the rubbish (Paper etc) and later burnt them.

      Since they are both illiterate therefore they didn’t know what kind of paper they were burning, and there were some Qurans page in that rubbish.

      After taking a statement from the witnesses, the police have registered a case under section 295- B of blasphemy law against Musarrat Bibi and Mohammad Sarmad and taken them into custody at Police Station Sadar Arifwala Park Pandan [Punjab].

    • RFERLIran Arrests Activists After ‘Clubhouse’ Meeting Calls For New Political System

      Momeni, a former student leader who was previously jailed, made the comments during a virtual event on the popular app Clubhouse during which dozens of rights campaigners, political prisoners, and academics called for a transition to a new, democratic political system in Iran.

      Days later, on April 27, police arrested Momeni at his home in Tehran and confiscated his electronic devices.

  • Freedom of Information / Freedom of the Press

    • ANF NewsMore journalists taken into custody

      More houses were raided this morning in various cities, as a result of an Ankara-based investigation. Dicle Fırat Journalists Association (DFG) co-chair Dicle Müftüoğlu, Mesopotamia Agency (MA) Editor Sedat Yılmaz and his wife Selma Yılmaz were taken into custody in Amed. Many people, including Filiz Yılmaz, journalist Sedat Yılmaz’ sister, were taken into custody in Istanbul.

  • Civil Rights/Policing

  • Internet Policy/Net Neutrality

  • Monopolies

    • Copyrights

      • Torrent FreakUniversity Websites Are Being Flooded with Online Piracy Scams

        Universities and colleges tend to have strict anti-piracy policies for students. In the United States, this is very much a necessity since its required by law. While most students play by the rules, a worrying trend is developing where outsiders exploit university websites to promote piracy scams.

  • Gemini* and Gopher

    • Personal

      • When family falls far too short

        My family – the one I was born into and grew up with – are all idiots. Zero capacity for nuance. Everything you say to them must pertain to obvious physical realities literally directly in front of them or there will be a whole lotta duh going on, generally leading to dramatic displays of judgement indistinguishable from what we call “canceling” these days. Anyone half a braincell smarter than them is a threat to be both kept at a distance, and watched very carefully.

      • Golden Week

        Golden Week started yesterday, the 29th of April. This whole week until Sunday, May 7th,
        most of the country is on vacation.

        I sit here with my little USB fan going. It was cloudy and muggy and stuffy
        and a little rainy today. Monday and Tuesday I had the heat on it was so cold.
        Later in the week I got sunburned on a day with not a cloud in the sky.

        Along with getting settled in Manjaro, this week I installed Garuda Linux. KDE
        Plasma in Garuda is simply stunning. The last time I was so taken aback by an
        OS was Mac OS X 10.1 in 2001, but MacOS now looks almost flat and boring in
        comparison.

      • 🔤SpellBinding: ACHMYRP Wordo: AURAE
      • Garden Path

        Anyways there was a very green frog (Pseudacris regilla, probably) perched on a bag of bark, maybe because the area was in the shade and somewhat moist, being on the north side of the building. The other garden path here is “a grammatically correct sentence that starts in such a way that a reader’s most likely interpretation will be incorrect” insofar as this is possible in lojban. Here a line break is used to trick the reader; we start off with “a green tree” but the next line gives a bo which joins the tree tighter to pipybanfi, so it’s a (green (tree frog)) once you get to the second line, not the default ((green tree) frog) without the bo. Garden path sentences are really better done in not lojban, where you can usually play around with homonyms, verb nouns, or who knows what else to really cause the reader to stop and have to rethink the sentence.

    • Technical

      • Re: The Joy of Contained Systems

        I very much agree with this sentiment. I like pico-8 in a lot of ways though, actually _because_ it’s a very self-contained and quite simple system, but I’ve often thought it would have been a lot more fun if we’d just get to program in some sort of fantasy assembly. I would have loved to see an instruction set and architecture on such a machine that’s very different from what we’re used to on the likes of x86 and arm. That would have been so much fun.

      • Patches! Not those kinds.

        It’s been awhile since I used the eeepc 701. It still does OK.
        Running antix v19.2 x86. It hasn’t been updated in awhile, but
        I will probably do that when I connect to the network. I forgot
        that I don’t like the keyboard on this device. It’s cramped and
        I keep hitting the wrong keys. Also, not much light here. I’ve
        been spoiled by illuminated keyboards.

        The speaker repurposing from my last post was a success! I ended
        up crimping a mix of terminal and Posi-lock connectors to some
        speaker wires so I wouldn’t have to solder anything. Yeah, I’m
        lazy and I could use the practice. Another time.

      • Science

        • Innovation vs. improvements

          Too much of what we do in our industries is improving on products that have long passed a threshold of dimminishing returns.

      • Internet/Gemini

        • Almost here

          So after a few days of trial and error I have finally arrived in GeminiSpace, if that is a word for our location. I am still in the process of figuring everything out and getting my pod put together so I can not say that I am totally here but I am really close.

          “So after a few days of trial and error I have finally arrived in GeminiSpace, if that is a word for our location. I am still in the process of figuring everything out and getting my pod put together so I can not say that I am totally here but I am really close.” gemini://jimmorgan.smol.pub/almost-here

      • Programming

        • Unveiling `guprecords.raku`: Global Uptime Records with Raku

          For fun, I am tracking the uptime of various personal machines (servers, laptops, workstations…). I have been doing this for over ten years now, so I have a lot of statistics collected.

          As a result of this, I am introducing `guprecords.raku`, a handy Raku script that helps me combine uptime statistics from multiple servers into one comprehensive report. In this blog post, I’ll explore what Guprecords is and some examples of its application. I will also add some notes on Raku.

        • I Didn’t Want To Like VSCode [Ed: It is proprietary, it is spyware, and it's a trap of Microsoft. This is no accomplishment. Kate is very good.]

          Ending up at a big tech company and spending many years in Java land, I gravitated towards modern graphical IDEs. At the time Eclipse was dominant; it was also, for the size of codebases we were using and the speed of computers at the time, incredibly slow. I logged hundreds of milliseconds to respond to a keypress.

        • Add icon to links with CSS to identify protocol (+ bonus)

          You can quickly identify the nature of a link with a few lines of CSS. According to the protocol (http, gopher, mailto…), or if the link is an inner link, a tiny icon will be displayed next to it…

        • Finally rust-analyzer is available via Rustup (sort of)

          A while back the Rust project switched from recommending the Rust Language Server (rls) to officially supporting it’s replacement, rust-analyzer for use in IDE’s and editors. There were solid technical reasons for the change, but the rollout was not without some growing pains.

          One issue with using an lsp server in the context of Rust is that it is common for people to have multiple versions of the Rust toolchain on their system. Most people who use Rust in anger have at least a stable toolchain and a nightly, while some projects (such as the Linux kernel) requiring a specific stable compiler version. It’s not a problem due to the language changing that fast (although a few years ago it would have been). The issue is that in order to support procedural macros rust-analyzer must be built from the same source as the compiler in use. That means that one would need a version of the program for each toolchain, and a way to switch between them.


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

[Meme] Mental Abuse as a Motivator

Posted in Europe, Patents at 8:22 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Star Wars Part-time:  Campinos Fear

Summary: The Putin- and Belarus-linked EPO (Benoît Battistelli and António Campinos sent plenty of money and data to Minsk) is wondering how to compel workers to do illegal things and always contemplating ways to fake “production” (even if this Russian roulette of an office drives 7 people to suicide in just a few years; they’ve learned nothing from that [1, 2, 3])

The Same Mismanagement and Micromanagement (Stalking/Bullying) That Caused the ‘Suicide Wave’ Under Benoît Battistelli

Posted in Europe, Patents at 7:59 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Last summer: EPO Management Severely Harms the Health of Staff by Bullying Them

This month: Corrupt Administration at the European Patent Office is Causing a Mental Health Crisis (published shortly before the letter below)

Micromanagement

Summary: Micromanagement and microaggressions have become an habitual occurrence and reality (“new normal”) at the EPO; managers try to push salaries downwards and they pressure examiners to grant patents in violation of the rules

THE Local Staff Committee The Hague (LSCTH), or people who were recently (re)elected by EPO staff (representation by consent, not by decree like António Campinos), says there is growing concern for the mental health of EPO workers. Benoît Battistelli showed this can culminate in fatalities, but he, unlike managers at France Télécom, was never held accountable because the EPO operates with complete impunity.

“Threatening tone from managers during a health crisis is worse than tasteless. It can kill.”The letter below was disseminated among thousands of EPO workers earlier this month. It does not name any manager in particular, but it does speak of “constant reminders to increase the production pace, repeated seemingly over-zealous quality checks, relentless micromanagement, part-time request rejections, etc…”

There is also the “I’m paying you!” excuse for abusing people and ‘casually’ breaking the law (or EPC). There’s a mention of “colleagues in higher grades who are apparently being told that they are “being paid too much”, colleagues who are more fragile due to health conditions or having young children, colleagues on 5-year contracts, etc…”

Here is the full message:

Work pressure and micromanagement – Are you suffering at work? Contact health practitioner and staff representation

Dear colleagues,

Due to under recruitment the pressure to produce has been increasing over the years.

We have been made aware of colleagues – whose work was previously often recognized, appreciated and rewarded – now being put more and more under intense scrutiny by their line management. This can take many forms, e.g. constant reminders to increase the production pace, repeated seemingly over-zealous quality checks, relentless micromanagement, part-time request rejections, etc…

Although this situation is affecting most colleagues, we note a pattern that certain groups seem to be particularly targeted: colleagues in higher grades who are apparently being told that they are “being paid too much”, colleagues who are more fragile due to health conditions or having young children, colleagues on 5 -year contracts, etc…

We would like to remind all colleagues that:

- if your work is affecting your health – trouble sleeping, headaches, exhaustion…- you should contact your general practitioner and OHS and consider taking sick leave; and

- if you feel that you are being targeted by your line management, you are not the only one and you should contact your staff representation as soon as possible.

Kind regards,
Local Staff Committee The Hague (LSCTH)

Remember that life isn’t about work. Some people work to live, but they should not mistake that for workplace as a home/family. If you cannot take the abuse anymore, consider leaking out evidence of the bullying, as some people did throughout the pandemic. Threatening tone from managers during a health crisis is worse than tasteless. It can kill.

In Sudan, Microsoft Windows Fell Below 10% Market Share This Month

Posted in Africa, GNU/Linux, Microsoft, Windows at 7:16 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

As of the last day of April (today):

Operating System Market Share Sudan: Windows below 10 percent

Summary: Sudan is suffering a vicious war at the moment; this does not make it too tasteless to take a glimpse at operating system trends there (in 2009 Windows had over 99% market share there; now it’s 9%)

The Microsoft FUD Machine Turning Up the Heat on ‘Linux’ While Lobbying to Ban Free Software at the Legislative Level

Posted in Deception, FUD, GNU/Linux, Microsoft at 6:58 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Video download link | md5sum 5e7230df4eaec597f813b9681a04fdb5
Microsoft Anonymising Its Propagandists
Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 4.0

Summary: Generating GNU/Linux-hostile chaff seems like a “side perk” of Microsoft doing a month-long or months-long campaign for a rather worthless and highly inaccurate chatbot (chaffbot), falsely marketing that chatbot as conversational “HEY HI” (AI) or tool for composing E-mail, code, commits and so on

THE video above deals with a certain resurgence of anti-”Linux” FUD. Some of that seems to be computer- (or Microsoft-) generated, but not all of it, as we noted earlier on. Microsoft basically creates weapons of misinformation.

We’ve long deemed this a potential topic, as this severe problem is only growing and it’s not going away. We only needed to gather more material to serve as evidence of the trend and this past week we found sufficient material. At least some of that is computer-generated spew. That’s not a new problem, but it can grow in intensity over time. “Because it is bot-generated,” an associate noted, “that message will turn up elsewhere.”

“We’ve long deemed this a potential topic, as this severe problem is only growing and it’s not going away.”“Speaking of [it],” the associate added, “I notice (and you have seen before) that Ars [Technica] has relabled all of [Peter] Bright’s articles as “Staff Writer” or somesuch” (for those who don’t know, Bright is a serial child rapist who was promoted, then acted as editor and moderator in that site for years).

So Reddit’s owner (Condé Nast) thinks that the issue right now is the name (pedophile and child abuser), not the lies relayed by Microsoft through him. What does this tell us about the media and about him?

“So Reddit’s owner (Condé Nast) thinks that the issue right now is the name (pedophile and child abuser), not the lies relayed by Microsoft through him. What does this tell us about the media and about him?”Citing this piece from SecurityWeek (“RTM Locker Ransomware Variant Targeting ESXi Servers”), one associate noted that this is “not a “linux” variant” and the topic should be revisited in light of plenty such FUD lately (we found about a dozen this past week alone and included those with quick rebuttals in Daily Links; the video above shows this subset of the lot; Gemini equivalent here).

“CISA panels are notoriously stacked (loaded with full-time Microsoft staff).”Seeing the direction all this is going (media emitting disinformation), and moreover noting that public input is being collected by the Microsoft-infiltrated CISA, the associate said that “FOSS participation needed” (Linux Foundation is a front group of proprietary software vendors, so that won’t count; OSI also fronts for Microsoft). “Industry vendors have until June 26 to comment on the provisional document,” the report says, so we suppose they limit themselves to input from corporations, not experts or ordinary members of the public*. CISA panels are notoriously stacked (loaded with full-time Microsoft staff). The objective is ‘privileged’ back doors rather than true security.
_________
* For those willing to help out, the following pages are highly relevant:

Techrights Expresses Concern That Microsoft Weaponises Chatbots to Craft Linux-Hostile Cruft Without Any Accountability

Posted in Deception, FUD, GNU/Linux, Microsoft at 6:17 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Video download link | md5sum f624e363cee0b4e25f6eed3a91816be2
Microsoft Misinformation Spew
Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 4.0

Summary: Today we publish two videos about Microsoft’s misinformation/disinformation capabilities; by making an LLM ‘freely’ available, with built in biases (controlled by Microsoft), anti-GNU/Linux lies and venomous statements can proliferate without any attribution

THE past few days were spent catching up with news links and implementing new curation tools (s/n ratio is awful in today’s Web). Daily Links have gone on here for over 15 years (next month our IRC community turns 15 too) and they’re very important for us.

“Sounds like Microsoft spreads misinformation using its so-called ‘news’ sites, right? Do we want to use or rely on a chatbot from such a dishonest company?”One reader asked for more details about the demise of Microsoft-branded peripherals, but so far all press coverage we’ve found about it was Microsoft puff pieces, misdirection, and face-saving, damage-limiting spin. This is discussed in passing above. Certainly Microsoft isn’t doing well. The “Microsoft Store” franchise died in 2020 and ever since then we’ve already repeatedly heard of Azure layoffs (every year; the press suppressed this information), which means that clown computing isn’t working out for Microsoft. All that spare (unused) servers capacity is instead being wasted of “HEY HI” (AI) gimmicks and vapourware. Trying to get people to actually use the darn thing required a very expensive and relentless “marketing” campaign, borrowing just about every trademark of Microsoft, conjoined with buzzwords (“Hey Hi!”) and paid stenographers.

AWS is also having issues (and layoffs), but Amazon shares were up 10% at the same time an MSN (yes, Microsoft) headline said “Amazon disappoints”… (double-standards/hypocrisy all over this)

MSN itself had many layoffs, as did Bing (which is the main trademark Microsoft uses to shill the chatbot).

Sounds like Microsoft spreads misinformation using its so-called ‘news’ sites, right? Do we want to use or rely on a chatbot from such a dishonest company? That too is discussed above.

“Not only is the company dishonest,” an associate noted, it “the chaffbot is nearly always stubbornly wrong. “It would be very important to link to (and describe briefly) how wrong it usually is,” this associate added. We’ll provide some examples later.

“Information oligopolies and consolidation are hallmark of imperialism in the digital realm.”Lest we forgot Google’s grip on the Web and Gulag Noise (Google News) having a near monopoly. Phoronix, GamingOnLinux, and 9to5Linux (Michael, Liam, and Marius; literally just 3 people) dominate the so-called “search” results in Gulag Noise for terms like “Ubuntu” and “Linux”. Why aren’t more GNU/Linux news sites included? Because they’re “advertiser-unfriendly” (i.e. not sucking up to corporate power)? The source diversity in that Gulag disservice is truly awful and they are not striving to fix that. Nor will “Bard”…

Information oligopolies and consolidation are hallmark of imperialism in the digital realm.

The video above speaks about Webspam or SPAM sites — a topic we’ve revisited lately in light of a disturbing resurgence. Sites that are ‘written’ or ‘composed’ by SPAMBOTS (or generated by chaffbots/chatbots/automated translation apparently) keep spreading lies and FUD about GNU/Linux… possibly generated by Microsoft bots. They’re trained on GNU/Linux-hostile (and censored) datasets, including sites sponsored by Microsoft, then curated in Kenya by sweatshop-grade staff. It’s about institutionalising bias. Then, the FUD comes out in bulk. No need for Microsoft to pay for shills, they need only register domains and run an anti-Linux word spew. We’ll discuss this some more with some practical examples later today in another video.

IRC Proceedings: Saturday, April 29, 2023

Posted in IRC Logs at 5:48 am by Needs Sunlight

Also available via the Gemini protocol at:

Over HTTP:

HTML5 logs

HTML5 logs

#techrights log as HTML5

#boycottnovell log as HTML5

HTML5 logs

HTML5 logs

#boycottnovell-social log as HTML5

#techbytes log as HTML5

text logs

text logs

#techrights log as text

#boycottnovell log as text

text logs

text logs

#boycottnovell-social log as text

#techbytes log as text

Enter the IRC channels now


IPFS Mirrors

CID Description Object type
 QmcU6F1cEKAe6dtsb49ViVuQsNSctnqWsHLhXZNfyNb9Ck IRC log for #boycottnovell
(full IRC log as HTML)
HTML5 logs
 QmcvJC9n94shz8RN8PXop8qcA7GA8RzPBckyWG1VkPAQey IRC log for #boycottnovell
(full IRC log as plain/ASCII text)
text logs
 QmS89iMjRtWkVJPCaX68bcWSqXiSiqHtCQfrpQydgygd9y IRC log for #boycottnovell-social
(full IRC log as HTML)
HTML5 logs
 QmXEekHsMf2FvQk3hQbHRjeVWjd8ZUQjmpNM35hGMQ8QGD IRC log for #boycottnovell-social
(full IRC log as plain/ASCII text)
text logs
 QmXWNfR5p5nEDEpxuvGn9v7GBkkjjb3DcgzHpp7SsNsP8d IRC log for #techbytes
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