04.01.23
Gemini version available ♊︎Links 01/04/2023: Bloomberg Places Stake in Free Software, Microsoft Banned and Slammed for Antitrust Abuses
Contents
- GNU/Linux
- Distributions and Operating Systems
- Free, Libre, and Open Source Software
- Leftovers
- Science
- Education
- Hardware
- Health/Nutrition/Agriculture
- Proprietary
- Security
- Defence/Aggression
- Transparency/Investigative Reporting
- Environment
- Finance
- AstroTurf/Lobbying/Politics
- Censorship/Free Speech
- Freedom of Information / Freedom of the Press
- Civil Rights/Policing
- Internet Policy/Net Neutrality
- Monopolies
- Gemini* and Gopher
-
GNU/Linux
-
Audiocasts/Shows
-
Bad Voltage 3×57: Conspiracyers
Jeremy Garcia, Jono Bacon, and Stuart Langridge present Bad Voltage…
-
-
Applications
-
Ubuntu Handbook ☛ Blender 3.5 Released! How to Install it in Ubuntu 20.04 | 22.04
Blender 3.5, the popular 3D creation software, was released few days ago. Here are the new features and how to install guide for Ubuntu users.
-
Medevel ☛ Alchemy Is A Free PDF File Converter App For Windows, Linux, and macOS
Alchemy is an impressive, open-source file converter built on the reliable Electron and React. It offers a variety of operations, including the ability to merge files into a PDF. Its features include an elegantly simple, drag-and-drop interface for converting and merging files, as well as the option to merge multiple
-
Medevel ☛ Download Social Media Videos Easily With EazyLoader
EazyLoader is a free open-source Flask (Python) – based app that you can self-host on your computer or server to download YouTube, Instagram, or SlideShare presentation PDF/ PPTX files.
-
Medevel ☛ PDF4Teachers: The PDF Editor That Every Teacher Should Have
For those seeking to handle more complex PDF tasks, premium software or online services with a wider range of features are often the go-to. However, this post presents the most comprehensive list of free and open-source alternatives available.
-
-
Instructionals/Technical
-
TecAdmin ☛ 15 Practical Examples of dd Command in Linux
In the world of Linux, the dd command is a powerful and flexible tool that has become an essential utility for system administrators and advanced users alike.
-
TecAdmin ☛ dd Command in Linux (Syntax, Options and Use Cases)
The dd command is a powerful utility in the Unix and Linux world that allows users to perform various data manipulation tasks, such as copying, converting, and writing data to different storage mediums. Its versatility and performance make it a favorite tool among system administrators and advanced users.
-
TecAdmin ☛ cp Command in Linux (Copy Files Like a Pro)
The cp command is a powerful and versatile tool in the Linux environment, allowing users to copy files and directories with ease. This article will provide a comprehensive guide to mastering the cp command, covering its syntax, options, and practical examples that will enable you to copy files like a pro in no time.
-
HowTo Forge ☛ How to Install and Configure OpenVPN Server on Rocky Linux 9
In our tutorial, we will install OpenVPN on a Rocky Linux 9 server and configure it to be accessible from a client machine, and create a VPN connection between them to redirect all the traffic from the client through the OpenVPN server.
-
Linux Capable ☛ How to Install Bottles on Manjaro Linux
Bottles is an open-source, feature-rich application that allows Linux users to manage and create Windows-compatible environments effortlessly. It leverages Wine, a compatibility layer, to run Windows applications on Unix-based operating systems such as Manjaro Linux.
-
Linux Capable ☛ How to Install LinuxQQ on Manjaro Linux
LinuxQQ is a comprehensive and user-oriented instant messaging client designed explicitly for Linux users. Its increasing popularity, particularly among the Chinese-speaking community, can be attributed to its robust features and seamless integration with various Linux distributions, including Manjaro Linux.
-
Linux Capable ☛ How to Install RStudio on Manjaro Linux
RStudio is an integrated development environment (IDE) specifically designed for R, a widely-used programming language for statistical computing and data analysis. RStudio provides a user-friendly interface and a wide array of tools, making working with R more efficient and enjoyable.
-
Linux Capable ☛ How to Install SELinux on Ubuntu 22.04 | 20.04
This comprehensive guide will walk you through the process of installing and configuring Security-Enhanced Linux (SELinux) on Ubuntu 22.04 or 20.04. We will cover a comparison between SELinux and AppArmor, along with important prerequisites, and various configuration options to ensure your system is secure.
-
TecMint ☛ 3 Command Line Tools to Install Deb Packages in Ubuntu
In this tutorial, you will learn how to install local software packages (.DEB) in Debian and its derivatives such as Ubuntu and Linux Mint using three different command line tools and they are dpkg…
-
Make Tech Easier ☛ 8 Useful Linux Shutdown Commands to Reboot or Shut Down Your Linux PC – Make Tech Easier
Whether it’s for an SSH Ubuntu server or because your mouse stopped working, learning how to use Linux shutdown commands on the command line works wonders for everybody. Here we show you how to master the shutdown command to quickly shut down your PC.
-
FOSSLinux ☛ How to use SSHFS to share files between computers
SSHFS is a handy tool for mounting remote file systems over SSH connections. In this article, we’ll guide you through the process of installing and using SSHFS on Ubuntu, from setting up SSH to mounting remote file systems and managing permissions.
-
How to change NPM version in Linux, Windows or macOS?
Working on different Node.js projects and the version of dependencies required by them; you may often need to switch between different versions of the Node Package Manager (NPM). However, for beginners, it can be a tricky task but don’t worry.
-
HowTo Geek ☛ How to Permanently Change Your MAC Address on Linux
Every network interface has a unique MAC address, set by the manufacturer. It’s how network connections identify connection endpoints. On Linux, you can permanently change a MAC address if you want.
-
-
WINE or Emulation
-
WINE Project (Official) ☛ WineHQ – Wine Announcement – The Wine development release 8.5 is now available.
The Wine development release 8.5 is now available.
What’s new in this release:
– Bundled vkd3d upgraded to version 1.7.
– Better error reporting in the IDL compiler.
– Support for shared Wow64 Classes registry key.
– More cleanups in IME support.
– Support for configuring a WinRT dark theme.
– Various bug fixes.The source is available at:
https://dl.winehq.org/wine/source/8.x/wine-8.5.tar.xz
Binary packages for various distributions will be available from:
https://www.winehq.org/download
You will find documentation on https://www.winehq.org/documentation
You can also get the current source directly from the git
repository. Check https://www.winehq.org/git for details.Wine is available thanks to the work of many people. See the file
AUTHORS in the distribution for the complete list.
-
-
Games
-
Bryan Lunduke ☛ The very first article about video games on Linux… from 1994
Yes. It’s about DOOM. And, no. The reviewer didn’t have working sound on Linux.
-
Boiling Steam ☛ Epic Linux Gaming Predictions for 2023
We are back with our prediction game that’s been going on since 2021! In 2021 we had a lot of great insights about where the future was headed, in 2022 not as much…
-
ScummVM ☛ ScummVM Enables AI to Play Point-and-Click Adventure Games
The ScummVM project, a free and open-source software project that allows users to play classic point-and-click adventure games on modern systems, has announced a major breakthrough in the field of artificial intelligence gaming.
-
-
Desktop Environments/WMs
-
K Desktop Environment/KDE SC/Qt
-
Dedoimedo ☛ Plasma 5.27 – Can’t say there are many differences, but ’tis ok
I am not 100% sure what to think about Plasma 5.27. In a way, it feels like a non-release. Yes, there are some improvements, and some new features, but nothing major that I could see. The differences are tiny, say if I compare to Plasma 5.24, which I explored quite extensively lately. The bulk of it works fine, the bulk remains unchanged, and so I am not sure the latest KDE bundle really warrants its own version. But that’s a small technicality complaint really.
What I didn’t like was a handful of application problems that shouldn’t be there. Welcome Center, Discover, Kate, they all had unnecessary niggles. In particular, Welcome Center does not feel complete. Some baseline ergonomics could also be better. Stability was decent, performance great. If you’re a Plasma person, then you should definitely explore. But some Plasma editions are simply better than the rest. Today, here, we have an average offering. If you want the best this desktop environment can offer, I’d say, for now, 5.24 is what you want. Anyway, see you soon.
-
Volker Krause ☛ February/March in KDE Itinerary
Since the last last summary post
two month ago a lot has happened around KDE Itinerary again,
ranging from supporting more travel document and ticket types to better guidance to the right
spot on a train station platform.New Features
Platform section highlighting
The train station map can now also highlight platform sections, next to the platform itself.
Depending on the level of detail of the available information in the OSM map data, the train
schedule, seat reservation and the vehicle layout we can use that to much more precisely indicate
where on the platform you need to go.
-
-
GNOME Desktop/GTK
-
This Week in GNOME ☛ Felix Häcker: #89 Steady Framerates
Update on what happened across the GNOME project in the week from March 24 to March 31.
-
GNOME ☛ Michel Dänzer: Ensuring steady frame rates with GPU-intensive clients
On Wayland, a surface is the basic primitive used to build what users refer to as a “window”. Wayland clients define their contents by attaching buffers to surfaces. This turns the contents of the buffer into the current surface contents. Wayland clients are free to attach a new buffer to a surface anytime. When a Wayland compositor like Mutter starts working on a new output frame, it picks the latest available buffer for each visible surface. This is called “mailbox semantics” (the buffers are metaphorical letters falling into a mailbox, the visible “letter” is the last one on top).
Problem
With hardware accelerated drawing, a client normally attaches a new buffer to a surface right after it finished calling OpenGL/Vulkan/<insert your favourite drawing API> APIs to define the contents of the buffer. When the compositor processes the protocol requests attaching the buffer to the surface, the GPU generally hasn’t finished drawing to the buffer yet.
Since the contents of the compositor’s output frame depend on the contents of each visible surface, the former cannot complete before the GPU finishes drawing to each of the picked surface buffers (and subsequently to the compositor’s own output buffer, in the general case).
-
-
-
-
Distributions and Operating Systems
-
The 6 Best Lightweight Linux Distros – The Tech Edvocate
Linux is a powerful and customizable operating system that can cater to any type of user, from developers to gamers. However, not all users need a high-end operating system that demands powerful hardware specs to run smoothly. Lightweight Linux distributions are ideal for users with low-powered systems or machines with limited hardware resources. These distros use minimal memory and processing power, making them fast and reliable.
In this article, we’ve compiled a list of the 6 best lightweight Linux distros that are great for running on older hardware or low-powered machines.
-
Fedora Family / IBM
-
Latest release of EuroLinux Desktop – what will we find in Version 9.1?
EuroLinux Desktop is a modern operating system that combines the look and functionality of both Windows and macOS with the reliability and security of server-based Linux distributions.
-
Red Hat Official ☛ Do advanced Linux disk usage diagnostics with this sysadmin tool
Do advanced Linux disk usage diagnostics with this sysadmin tool
-
Enterprisers Project ☛ 4 ways upskilling helps to retain and attract IT talent
4 ways upskilling helps to retain and attract IT talent
-
Enterprisers Project ☛ Tech Titans: The crossroads of humanity and technology
Tech Titans: The crossroads of humanity and technology
-
-
Canonical/Ubuntu Family
-
Ubuntu Handbook ☛ Ubuntu 23.04 Beta Released! Linux Kernel 6.2 & GNOME 44
The Ubuntu Team announced the Beta release of the Ubuntu 23.04 “Lunar Lobster” today! Ubuntu 23.04 is a short team release with 9 months support! The final stable release will be available in next few weeks.
-
Linuxiac ☛ A Sneak Peek at Ubuntu 23.04: What’s New in the Beta Release
Canonical, the company behind the popular Ubuntu operating system, is gearing up for the release of Ubuntu 23.04, codenamed ‘Lunar Lobster,’ scheduled for April 20. So, with the final release just around the corner, users eagerly await to see what new features and improvements will be included in the final release.
In this article, we will take a closer look at the upcoming Ubuntu 23.04 release based on our impressions of the just-released ‘Lunar Lobster’ Beta and explore some exciting new features and enhancements set to be included.
So, if you’re a Ubuntu fan or just curious about what this latest version has to offer, read on to discover more!
-
Ghacks ☛ Ubuntu 23.04 Beta is now available: here is what is new
Canonical has released Ubuntu 23.04 Beta today. It is available in the usual flavors, including Ubuntu Desktop and Server, Kubuntu, MATE, Studio, Unity, and the recently promoted Ubuntu Cinnamon.
-
-
Devices/Embedded
-
8 Best Raspberry Pi Alternatives For IoT Development
Raspberry Pi is a good starting point whenever you want to build an app, device, or project for the IoT marketplace. This credit card-sized device has changed the very concept of personal computing, and supports prototyping of every kind of new developer idea. It does have a few limitations though. Despite the excellent specs of the Raspberry Pi 4, this single-board computer lacks important capabilities as an embedded engineering device.
-
-
Mobile Systems/Mobile Applications
-
9to5Google ☛ AAWireless: Why you need one for your car [Video]
-
Ghacks ☛ How To Organize Your Home Screen on Android
-
Android Authority ☛ 5 Android apps you shouldn’t miss this week – Android Apps Weekly
-
The Sun ☛ Millions of Android users are just realising hidden developer trick that is the ultimate privacy hack | The US Sun
-
Wired ☛ 12 Top New Android 14 Features (2023): How to Install, Features, Release Date | WIRED
-
-
-
Free, Libre, and Open Source Software
-
Container Journal ☛ Nobl9 Unveils Open Source EKG Tool to Monitor Kubernetes
Nobl9 this week add an open source Essential Kubernetes Gauges (EKG) monitoring capability to that makes it simpler to track a range of metrics.
-
Bloomberg ☛ Bloomberg Launches FOSS Fund to Support Free and Open Source Projects
Modern digital infrastructure relies on innumerable open source dependencies developed and maintained primarily by volunteers: The open source community is what makes the web work. Participating in these communities allows large organizations to help shape the latest and best technologies available.
[...]
When the first FOSS Contributor Fund was launched, documentation was published to encourage other companies to follow suit. In the four years since, numerous institutions including Microsoft, Johns Hopkins University, Salesforce, Sentry, Zeiss, and others have launched programs inspired by the original FOSS Fund. Such funds seek to have a direct impact on the sustainability and security of critical digital infrastructure.
In January of 2023, inspired by Indeed’s original initiative, Bloomberg launched its first round of employee voting for its inaugural FOSS Contributor Fund, a partnership between the company’s Open Source Program Office (OSPO) and its Corporate Philanthropy department.
-
Events
-
Alejandro Acosta: My SCaLE20x adventure
I know I’ve mentioned it before, but SCaLE conference is getting better each year. SCaLE is probably the best conference in North America that has a strong focus on the community and it is always a cause of joy to see such a diverse audience and attendees under the same roof and under the same sentiment of belonging. The success of the conference -the one that has made possible twenty editions of it- doesn’t come free, there’s an enthusiastic group of incredible people behind it. Kudos and lot of recognition to each of them.
If I was asked to describe this year’s experience in SCaLE with a single word, I would say that is “Chances”. I’m going to go deeper into this ahead, but this conference made me wonder several times “what are the chances of this happening?”. One of the advantages of attending a nerds conference is that you may find someone who would actually calculate it. It reminds me of that Sheldon quote that reads “was that rhetoric or would you like me to do the math?” LOL
Due to COVID pandemic (and probably other strong reasons), this year’s SCaLE was just eight months apart from last edition. It may not sound like a big deal but there are some factors that made a big difference: not the usual twelve months for planning, sunny hot summer weather versus rainy chilly winter weather and the chance of venue as well, this year the conference returned to Pasadena.
This time I arrived early enough to attend the conference from day one. Thursday is usually used for community events like Kubernetes Community Day, CEPH Day, PostgreSQL day, workshops, etc. Since my flight landed at 6:00am I was able to practically use most of the day in the Kubernetes community day.
-
-
Programming/Development
-
The Definition of Senior: A Look at the expectations for Software Engineers
The truth is that answering these questions is a very subjective matter and different people or different companies might give very different answers.
In this article, I’ll try to give you my take, based on my opinion and personal experience.
-
Why Engineers Need To Write – by Ryan Peterman
I hated writing in high school. It wasn’t objective like my favorite subjects, math and science. It also didn’t help that we had to write about old, hard-to-understand literature like Shakespeare. But my perspective on writing changed once I started working full-time as a software engineer.
-
The Ambiguous Zone – Ben Northrop
On the other end is when we go rogue. We find some “requirement” that might be useful (but no one really asked for), or some new approach or technology that’s interesting or “hot”, and then spend the entire sprint in our coding cave joyfully building it out. Will it actually help the project? Err…maybe? Regardless though, it’ll be fun, because we love nothing more than smooth sailing – not being beholden to the ideas, thoughts, or reservations of others (well, that is, until they see our 4k-line pull request!).
-
Qt ☛ Qt Design Studio 4.0.1 Released
We are happy to announce the release of Qt Design Studio 4.0.1!
Qt Design Studio is a HMI creation tool. Users of Qt Design Studio can rapidly create and validate basic 2D and 3D user interfaces with ease. Qt Design Studio outputs the frontend part as production-quality QML source code which then is integrated into the rest of the Qt application project.
-
Rlang ☛ Computing Rank Dependent Utility in R: Getting More out with RDU_Data()
In a previous blog post I discussed how we can compute rank dependent utility in R.
-
Python
-
Linux Hint ☛ Python Permutations of a List
The permutations() method of the itertools package can be used to find all possible permutations of a list in Python along with a limit on the tuple size.
-
Linux Hint ☛ Python Time.sleep Milliseconds
The Python Time.sleep() method can be used to delay the execution of the code for a set interval by passing milliseconds after dividing them by 1000.
-
-
Java
-
Make your own Optionals
I took out all the comments and did a little reformatting, but this is the entire class. Just around 150 lines managing one nullable field.
Take a minute to read or skim it before moving on.
-
-
Rust
-
Making Python 100x faster with less than 100 lines of Rust
A while ago at $work, we had a performance issue with one of our core Python libraries.
This particular library forms the backbone of our 3D processing pipeline. It’s a rather big and complex library which uses NumPy and other scientific Python packages to do a wide range of mathematical and geometrical operations.
Our system also has to work on-prem with limited CPU resources, and while at first it performed well, as the number of concurrent physical users grew we started running into problems and our system struggled to keep up with the load.
-
-
-
Standards/Consortia
-
The Twitter API is now effectively unmaintained | snarfed.org
Hi all! I don’t have much new to say about the ongoing chaos at Twitter or the impending death of the free API tier. I’d just like to draw your attention to this page that shows Twitter employees’ posts here on this forum, in chronological order, descending.
Before December, a large number of employees posted here regularly on a wide range of topics. Over the last few months, only a single Twitter employee has posted here consistently, and only about the Ads API. A couple others have posted once or twice, but not recently.
-
-
-
Leftovers
-
The age of average
In the early 1990s, two Russian artists named Vitaly Komar and Alexander Melamid took the unusual step of hiring a market research firm. Their brief was simple. Understand what Americans desire most in a work of art.
Over 11 days the researchers at Marttila & Kiley Inc. asked 1,001 US citizens a series of survey questions.
What’s your favourite colour? Do you prefer sharp angles or soft curves? Do you like smooth canvases or thick brushstrokes? Would you rather figures that are nude or clothed? Should they be at leisure or working? Indoors or outside? In what kind of landscape?
-
Treat your to-read pile like a river, not a bucket
I’m going to take a wild guess here and say that you, like me, have a large pile (or digital equivalent) of books or articles you’ve been meaning to get around to reading, plus maybe a long queue of podcast episodes to which you’d love to listen, if only you had the time. It’s the archetypal “first-world problem”, I know. But one worth reflecting on – because it’s a microcosm of a broader mistake that makes it more stressful than in needs to be to build a fulfilling and productive life: the problem of Too Many Needles.
It’s amusing to reflect that at an earlier stage in the history of the web, information overload was widely held to be a temporary issue. Yes, true, for the time being we were getting deluged by a zillion irrelevant blog posts, emails and news updates. But that wouldn’t last, because soon we’d have better technology for finding what we wanted, while disregarding the rest. The real trouble, according to the leading techno-optimist Clay Shirky, wasn’t information overload, but “filter failure”. We needed – and we’d eventually get – more sophisticated ways to filter the wheat from the online chaff. And then we’d no longer feel overwhelmed.
-
Jacob Kaplan Moss ☛ Incompetent but Nice – Jacob Kaplan-Moss
A question I’ve never been able to answer to my satisfaction: how do you manage people who are nice but can’t do the work?
-
Science
-
The Scientist ☛ High-Resolution Microscope Watches Proteins Strut Their Stuff
Modification on a high-resolution fluorescent microscopy technique allow researchers to track the precise movements of motor proteins.
-
The Age AU ☛ Plants cry out when they are stressed and thirsty, researchers found
And you thought to be an uncomplaining bunch.
-
Science Alert ☛ Random Numbers Can Now Be Generated at Record Speed, All Using Quantum Fluctuations
Think of a number…
-
Science Alert ☛ Horses Transformed Native American Life Far Earlier Than We Thought, New Study Reveals
A history finally recognized.
-
Science Alert ☛ Bizarre Space Explosion Was The Flattest Of Its Kind Ever Seen
“We never thought that explosions could be this aspherical.”
-
Science Alert ☛ Alzheimer’s May Not Actually Be a Brain Disease, Expert Says
Are we looking at this the wrong way?
-
Science Alert ☛ Scientists Create World’s Lightest Paint: Just 3 Pounds Covers a Boeing 747
It also repels heat and lasts for centuries.
-
-
Education
-
JURIST ☛ ACLU alleges Pennsylvania school district discriminated against after-school satanist club
A Pennsylvania school district violated the First Amendment rights of an after-school satanist club by banning its members from gathering for regular meetings on school grounds, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) argued in a complaint filed Thursday.
-
-
Hardware
-
Tom’s Hardware ☛ Japan Officially Restricts Sales of Chipmaking Equipment to China
Japan follows the U.S. and the Netherlands with curbs against China’s semiconductor sector.
-
MIT Technology Review ☛ Multi-die systems define the future of semiconductors
To say that semiconductor technology is part of the fabric of modern society is not an overstatement—it underpins everything from our cars to our phones to our home appliances.
-
CNX Software ☛ STMicro STLINK-V3PWR debugging & programming probe supports power measurement
STMicro STLINK-V3PWR is a new in-circuit debugging and programming probe made for STM32 microcontrollers and that is said to provide accurate power measurement. The probe is especially useful for battery power IoT and wireless applications and is able to measure current values from nanoamps up to ~500mA with up to ±0.5% accuracy. The STLINK-V3PWR can also power the target over a single USB cable up to 2A.
-
-
Health/Nutrition/Agriculture
-
LRT ☛ Lithuanian MPs vote down plans on state-owned pharmacies
Lithuanian lawmakers have voted down plans to establish state-owned pharmacies that would operate in hospitals. The proposals were initiated by a group of opposition MPs.
-
Michael West Media ☛ Australians bracing for health insurance price hikes
Australians with private health cover are set to be slogged by premium price hikes as many toss-up whether to downgrade or cancel their insurance because of cost of living pressures. Health insurance premiums are expected to rise by an average of 2.9 per cent this year, according to comparison service iSelect.
-
Denmark extends limit on medicine prices in response to inflation
Denmark’s health ministry has agreed with regional health boards and the representative body for the country’s pharmaceutical industry to limit the price on medicines for the next two years.
-
TwinCities Pioneer Press ☛ Where did everybody go? Twin Cities shrink as suburbs grow in first years of pandemic
In the first two years of the pandemic, Ramsey County lost a greater share of its population than every Minnesota county except one.
-
Quartz ☛ Scientists are bickering over who was first to identify covid’s genome
The Global Initiative on Sharing Avian Influenza Data (GISAID), a large database launched in 2008 to collect and share the genome information of influenza viruses, is a key tool for scientific cooperation at the international level.
-
Vice Media Group ☛ ‘Pandora’s Box’: Doctors Warn of Rising Plant Fungus Infections in People After ‘First of Its Kind’ Case
The first case of C. purpureum infecting a person has doctors warning of a rising tide of fungus spurred by climate change and urbanization.
-
RFA ☛ North Korean bootleggers targeted in raids, home searches
The recent crackdown on corn-based moonshine comes amid food shortages.
-
teleSUR ☛ Train Carrying Ethanol Derails In Minnesota
Residents within a 0.8-kilometer radius of the derailment were evacuated in the middle of the night.
-
Science Alert ☛ OCD Is a Serious Illness, And It’s More Common Than You Think
Treatment can be life changing.
-
Quartz ☛ A Texas ruling threatens to take away several free preventive health services for Americans
One of the most important changes Americans experienced with the onset of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) was that a large suite of preventive services and treatments—from contraceptives to heart monitoring to mammograms—had to be covered in full by insurance policies. But a new ruling could change that.
-
JURIST ☛ DOJ files lawsuit against Norfolk Southern Railway for East Palestine train derailment
The US Department of Justice (DOJ) Thursday filed a lawsuit against Norfolk Southern Railway over the February 3 train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio. The DOJ claims that Norfolk Southern released harmful pollutants into the area surrounding the derailment site, potentially exposing nearby residents to significant health issues.
-
New York Times ☛ Medicare Delays a Full Crackdown on Private Health Plans
After intense lobbying by insurers, U.S. health officials say changes to reduce overbilling in Medicare Advantage will be phased in over three years.
-
New York Times ☛ Senator John Fetterman Checks Out of Hospital After Depression Treatment
In a statement, he announced his departure from Walter Reed Military Medical Center and urged those suffering from mental health challenges to seek help as he did.
-
Mexico News Daily ☛ Maya beekeepers blame Bayer-Monsanto for deaths of 300,000 bees
The cause of the incident is unconfirmed until laboratory tests are concluded. But some farmers allege it is linked to aerial fumigation.
-
Latvia ☛ Concerns about future elderly care in Latvia
More than a fifth or 22% of Latvia’s population is at least 64 years old; the proportion of working-age population tends to fall, according to the results of the last census. With the population ageing, geriatric care is becoming a profession of the future, but currently, young healthcare experts are not that interested, Latvian Radio reported March 31.
-
Federal News Network ☛ Stopping problems before they start: DoD aims for more proactive mental health care
The Defense Department wants to expand its budget for mental health care, and the services are starting new programs to prevent harmful behavior.
-
AntiWar ☛ Former Soldiers Without a Future
Originally posted at TomDispatch. It’s the military from hell – and, no, I don’t mean the Russian army, though, it certainly qualifies. Few now doubt that Vladimir Putin is a war criminal (and not just because of those Ukrainian children his forces exported to Russia for adoption).
-
MIT Technology Review ☛ We’re inhaling, eating, and drinking toxic chemicals. Now we need to figure out how they’re affecting us.
What are chemical pollutants doing to our bodies? It’s a question that’s been on my mind this week, for a few reasons. Last week, people in Philadelphia cleared grocery shelves of bottled…
-
-
Proprietary
-
JURIST ☛ Italy bans ChatGPT over inappropriate content and privacy concerns
Italy’s Data Protection Authority (DPA) Friday issued a statement banning further use of ChatGPT, an artificial intelligence (AI) chat platform, within the country.
-
Federal News Network ☛ Italy temporarily blocks ChatGPT over privacy concerns
Italy is temporarily blocking the artificial intelligence software ChatGPT in the wake of a data breach as it investigates a possible violation of stringent European Union data protection rules. The government’s privacy watchdog said Friday that it’s taking provisional action “until ChatGPT respects privacy.”
-
France24 ☛ Italy blocks OpenAI’s ChatGPT, opens probe over privacy failings
Italy’s Data Protection Authority on Friday temporarily banned OpenAI’s ChatGPT chatbot and launched a probe over a suspected breach of the artificial intelligence application’s data collection rules.
-
-
Security
-
TecAdmin ☛ Implementing a Linux Server Security Audit: Best Practices and Tools
A security audit is an essential part of maintaining the security and integrity of your Linux server. Regular audits help identify potential vulnerabilities, misconfigurations, and deviations from security best practices.
-
SANS ☛ Use of X-Frame-Options and CSP frame-ancestors security headers on 1 million most popular domains, (Fri, Mar 31st)
X-Frame-Options HTTP security headers (not just) in order to prevent phishing pages, which overlay a fake login prompt over a legitimate website, from functioning correctly. Or, to be more specific, to prevent them from dynamically loading a legitimate page in an iframe under the fake login prompt, since this makes such phishing websites look much less like a legitimate login page and thus much less effective.
-
The Verge ☛ Huge Microsoft exploit allowed users to manipulate Bing search results and access Outlook email accounts
/ Researchers discovered a vulnerability in Microsoft’s Azure platform that allowed users to access private data from Office 365 applications like Outlook, Teams, and OneDrive.
-
Security Week ☛ Report: Chinese State-Sponsored Hacking Group Highly Active
Chinese hacking group linked previously to attacks on U.S. state government computers is still “highly active”
-
Security Week ☛ Lumen Technologies Hit by Two Cyberattacks
Communications and IT company Lumen Technologies fell victim to two cyberattacks that led to data theft.
-
Security Week ☛ Leaked Documents Detail Russia’s Cyberwarfare Tools, Including for OT Attacks
Documents show that Russian IT company NTC Vulkan was requested to develop offensive tools for government-backed hacking group Sandworm.
-
The Guardian UK ☛ ‘Vulkan files’ leak reveals Putin’s global and domestic cyberwarfare tactics
-
IT Wire ☛ Backdoored version of popular video-conferencing app found on GitHub
The company’s researchers said analysis of the binary had shown that a backdoored version of ffmpeg.dll was among the files that were dropped during installation.
-
Scoop News Group ☛ ‘They outsmarted us.’ 3CX CEO acknowledges mistakes handling potential supply chain cyberattack
“We have a security team, we do our own pentesting, we’ve got software scanners, we got a CSO … Nonetheless, they outsmarted us.”
-
Security Week ☛ Mandiant Investigating 3CX Hack as Evidence Shows Attackers Had Access for Months
Several cybersecurity companies have published blog posts, advisories and tools to help organizations that may have been hit by the 3CX supply chain attack.
-
Security Week ☛ Severe Azure Vulnerability Led to Unauthenticated Remote Code Execution
A high-severity vulnerability in Azure Service Fabric Explorer could have allowed a remote, unauthenticated attacker to execute arbitrary code.
-
Security Week ☛ FDA Announces New Cybersecurity Requirements for Medical Devices
The FDA is asking medical device manufacturers to provide cybersecurity-related information when submitting an application for a new product.
-
Container Journal ☛ Fairwinds Automates Remediation of Kubernetes Misconfigurations
Fairwinds this week added an Automated Fix Pull Requests (PRs) capability to its commercial platforms that identifies and automatically remediates Kubernetes misconfigurations.
-
Mexico News Daily ☛ Army officer detained in connection with Defense Ministry hack
El Universal newspaper reported that an officer who worked in Sedena’s IT department was detained in connection with the “Guacamaya” hack.
-
RFA ☛ North Korean hacker group poses as journalists and experts to steal intel
Report tracks activities of ‘APT43’ since 2018, elevates status to ‘named threat actor’
-
Bankok Post ☛ Agencies hunt for [cr]acker
Authorities are hunting down a [cr]acker who has threatened to release the personal data of 55 million Thais if the government agency allegedly involved in the leakage of information fails to meet a ransom demand by April 5.
-
CNN ☛ FDA requires medical devices be secured against cyberattacks | CNN Business
The Food and Drug Administration will now require medical devices meet specific cybersecurity guidelines after years of concerns that a growing number of internet-connected products used by hospitals and healthcare providers could be hit by hacks and ransomware attacks.
-
Bleeping Computer ☛ Fake ransomware gang targets U.S. orgs with empty data leak threats
Fake extortionists are piggybacking on data breaches and ransomware incidents, threatening U.S. companies with publishing or selling allegedly stolen data unless they get paid.
-
Data Breaches ☛ Today’s “Don’t Say ‘Ransomware’ Award” goes to….
DataBreaches probably sounds like a broken record after six years of calls for more transparency in breach notifications. Sadly, the situation has gotten worse in the past year. Not only do entities fail to admit they suffered a ransomware attack, but they fail to inform patients if the patient’s protected health information was leaked or is freely available on the internet.
Yesterday, the Institute for Liver Health LLC, doing business as Arizona Clinical Trials and Arizona Liver Health (“ALH”) issued a press release about a “data security incident.” Their statement indicates that they had no idea they had been attacked until law enforcement contacted them on January 30 to tell them that their name had shown up “in a part of the internet used by criminals as an entity whose information may have been taken by a criminal.”
-
Fear, Uncertainty, Doubt/Fear-mongering/Dramatisation
-
Computer World ☛ Researchers warn of Wi-Fi security flaw affecting iOS, Android, Linux | Computerworld
The vulnerability could let attackers hijack network traffic; iOS, Linux, and Android devices may be affected.
-
IT World CA ☛ Cyber Security Today, March 31, 2023 – World Backup Day advice, new malware targeting Linux and more [Ed: It targets not Linux but some vulnerable stuff that may or may not also run on top of GNU/Linux. “Sponsored By: [Gartner_logo_RGB (1)]”]
-
Gray Dot Media Group ☛ New Cylance Ransomware Targets Linux and Windows, Warn Researchers [Ed: Mere "tweets" as sources with insufficient details, e.g. how the malware gets there in the first place]
The cybersecurity researchers at Palo Alto Networks Unit 42 have discovered a new strain of Cylance Ransomware, which has already claimed several victims. Researchers noticed it early Friday morning, and further probing revealed that it is targeting Linux and Windows devices.
-
-
Privacy/Surveillance
-
The Local SE ☛ Swedish inquiry calls for state-run digital ID and low-risk bank accounts
A Swedish government inquiry into the payment system has called for the state to launch its own digital ID and a new type of basic, low-risk bank account to help the estimated 1m people with no, or limited, access to digital payments.
-
dwaves.de ☛ the positive the negative: bigdata + AI could help early detect cancer | privacy is security – why mass surveillance – German court rules mass bulk data gathering (calls, SMS, IP including location) illegal
the positive: Okay let’s ALWAYS focus on the positive first: data, the web, free flow of information has given mankind new abilities: online learning-from-each-other (“social learning” one of said to be strong points of humans vs animals) better decision making…
-
RFA ☛ Hong Kong police ask for billions to fund digital network linked to bodycams
Police cite the 2019 protest movement, saying they need to ‘safeguard national security.’
-
-
-
Defence/Aggression
-
JURIST ☛ North Carolina lawmakers override governor veto on gun rights bill
North Carolina lawmakers Wednesday overrode Governor Roy Cooper’s veto on a bill that would allow residents to buy a handgun without a permit.
-
JURIST ☛ Canada dispatch: Nova Scotia Mass Casualty Commission recommends sweeping policing and gun law reforms in final report on worst mass shooting in Canadian history
William Hibbitts is JURIST’s Deputy Editorial Director. He files this report from Halifax, Nova Scotia. Yesterday, March 30, the Mass Casualty Commission investigating the 2020 Nova Scotia spree shooting released its final report, marking the culmination of a prolonged investigation into Canada’s worst mass shooting and the RCMP’s ignominious response to it.
-
LRT ☛ Vilnius demands Minsk to halt Belarus NNP
Lithuania’s Foreign Ministry has handed over a diplomatic note of protest to Minsk, demanding that it immediately halt the operation of Astravyets nuclear power plant, located some 50km from Vilnius, until all nuclear safety issues identified by international missions are resolved.
-
LRT ☛ Portugal, Romania take over NATO’s Baltic air policing mission
Portugal and Romania took over the NATO Baltic air policing mission from Poland and France on Thursday, the Lithuanian Defence Ministry reported.
-
The Local SE ☛ KEY POINTS: Five things you need to know about Sweden and Nato
After decades of staying out of military alliances, Finland and neighbouring Sweden announced bids to join Nato in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine last year. Here are five things to know about the two countries’ membership bids.
-
The Local SE ☛ Nato chief calls for ‘rapid conclusion’ of Sweden’s Nato ratification
Nato chief Jens Stoltenberg called for a ‘rapid conclusion’ of Sweden’s stalled Nato ratification process, as he said that on Friday that Finland would formally become a member of the defence alliance within days.
-
YLE ☛ Leaders welcome Turkey Nato approval
A number of leaders and decision makers reacted to the Turkish legislature’s vote to ratify Finland’s Nato membership bid late on Thursday night.
-
New York Times ☛ 6 U.S. Service Members Suffered Traumatic Brain Injuries in Syria Attacks
The Pentagon said the injuries were diagnosed during routine screenings in the days after the strikes by Iranian-backed militants.
-
New York Times ☛ Turkey Approves Finland’s NATO Membership, a Defeat for Putin
Finland’s entry into the military alliance after Turkey formally signed off is a significant defeat for President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia.
-
New York Times ☛ In Finland, Leaders Celebrate NATO Membership Progress
Finland’s president, Sauli Niinistö, said his country would “be a strong and capable ally, committed to the security of the alliance.”
-
New York Times ☛ Sanna Marin, Finland’s Political Rock Star, Could Be Slipping
Parliamentary elections on Sunday are extremely tight among the three biggest parties, with the prime minister’s Social Democrats in a tough fight to lead the next government.
-
YLE ☛ Sanna Marin on Nato process: “I am very proud of the Finnish people”
Finland’s Prime Minister praised the Finnish people and the political leadership for their cooperation throughout the Nato application process.
-
YLE ☛ What’s next on Finland’s road to Nato?
Once the acceptance letters from all 30 member states are in Washington, Nato’s Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg will send an official invitation letter to Finland.
-
teleSUR ☛ Turkish Parliament Ratifies Finland’s Entry Into NATO
“Finland will formally join our Alliance in the coming days,” NATO Secretary Stoltenberg said.
-
New York Times ☛ Belarus, Echoing Russia, Raises Prospect of Nuclear Conflict
Because of the conflict in Ukraine, President Aleksandr G. Lukashenko of Belarus said, “a third world war loomed on the horizon with nuclear fires.”
-
New York Times ☛ Putin Allies Must Decide Whether to Host a Wanted Man
The International Criminal Court’s arrest warrant for President Vladimir V. Putin could thrust his allies into domestic and foreign legal disputes, experts say.
-
Defence Web ☛ Moz body burning investigation ongoing
A gruesome video which surfaced earlier this year of bodies seemingly dumped into a fire and burnt in Mozambique by soldiers is still being investigated after drawing widespread condemnation.
-
Defence Web ☛ SADC putting the brakes on money laundering, terror financing
The Southern African Development Community (SADC) Secretariat is stepping up the region’s resolve to fight money laundering, terrorism financing and proliferation finance.
-
Helsinki Times ☛ Turkey’s Grand National Assembly ratifies Finnish Nato membership
THE GRAND NATIONAL ASSEMBLY of Turkey on Thursday voted 276–0 in favour of ratifying the Finnish bid to accede to Nato, inducing a series of satisfied comments from policy makers in Finland.
The ratification is set to be next approved by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.
-
France24 ☛ Turkey’s parliament ratifies Finland’s application to join NATO
Turkey’s parliament on Thursday ratified Finland’s application to join NATO, lifting the last hurdle in the way of the Nordic country’s long-delayed accession into the Western military alliance.
-
New York Times ☛ For Ukrainian Convicts, a Strange Odyssey Through Russian Prisons
When Russian troops left Kherson, they took with them 2,500 Ukrainian convicts from local prisons. For some, it was the start of a bewildering, five-country journey highlighting the war’s absurdity.
-
Hong Kong Free Press ☛ Taiwan’s Tsai Ing-wen visits US, as China threatens reprisal
Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen arrived in New York Wednesday for a visit that has triggered threats of reprisal by China if she meets with House speaker Kevin McCarthy — and US warnings for Beijing not to overreact.
-
Hong Kong Free Press ☛ Taiwan ex-president Ma Ying-jeou calls for Beijing exchanges during China visit
Taiwan ex-president Ma Ying-jeou on Thursday called for maintaining exchanges with China as he met with a Beijing official during a historic mainland visit, a trip Taipei’s ruling party has called “regrettable”. Ma’s visit is the first trip to the mainland by a former or current leader of Taiwan in over seven decades.
-
JURIST ☛ Austria MPs walk out of Parliament to protest support of Ukraine in war against Russia
Far-right members of the Austrian Parliament Thursday walked out of the legislature during a live video speech by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in protest of Vienna’s support of Ukraine in the war.
-
Latvia ☛ Latvia remains opposed to having aggressor state athletes at Olympics
As Russia’s war in Ukraine continues, the participation of athletes from Russia and Belarus in the upcoming Olympic Games is not acceptable, the head of the Latvian Olympic Committee (LOC) Žoržs Tikmers said after the organization’s general assembly on March 30, reprted the LETA newswire.
-
RFERL ☛ Ukraine Marks Bucha Massacre Anniversary As Russia Shells Cities In East
Ukraine on March 31 marked one year since Russian forces withdrew from Bucha, leaving behind hundreds of bodies of murdered civilians on the streets of the commuter town near the capital in what Kyiv said was a massacre and a Russian war crime.
-
France24 ☛ Bucha must become ‘symbol of justice’, says Ukraine’s Zelensky
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Friday called for Bucha to become a “symbol of justice” on the one-year anniversary of Russia’s withdrawal from the town now synonymous with war crimes allegations. His visit to the martyred town came after Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko said Russia could place intercontinental nuclear missiles in his country, “if necessary”.
-
RFERL ☛ White House Urges Russia To Act Professionally During UN Security Council Presidency
The White House has urged Russia to conduct itself professionally when it assumes its scheduled UN Security Council presidency next month.
-
France24 ☛ Western arms supplies ‘no guarantee’ of a decisive victory for Ukraine
Ukraine has been preparing to launch a spring counteroffensive to recapture territory seized by Russians and is hoping to repeat the success of its counterattacks last September. Despite the supply of Western arms, including battle tanks, Ukrainian forces will have to change their tactics if they hope to achieve a breakthrough, according to historian and retired army officer Michel Goya.
-
RFERL ☛ Police In North Kazakhstan Investigate Group Calling For ‘Sovereign Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic’
Police in the North Kazakhstan region say they are investigating a group in the regional capital, Petropavl, called the People’s Council.
-
JURIST ☛ Hague trial of former Kosovo president and Kosovo Liberation Army officers set to start
The Kosovo Specialist Chambers in the Hague Friday announced the trial of four former Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) members is due to begin Monday. The former Prime Minister of the Provisional Government of Kosovo (PGoK), Hashim Thaçi is amongst those who will stand trial.
-
France24 ☛ Wimbledon lifts ban on Russian, Belarusian players, to compete as ‘neutrals’
Wimbledon lifted its ban on Russian and Belarusian players on Friday and will allow them to compete in the grasscourt Grand Slam this year as “neutral” athletes in a climbdown from the stance it took after Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
-
The Age AU ☛ Wimbledon lifts ban on Russian, Belarusian players
Wimbledon will allow Russian and Belarusian players to compete as “neutral” athletes in the grasscourt Grand Slam this year.
-
RFERL ☛ Ukraine Condemns Wimbledon Decision To Lift Ban On Russian Players
Ukraine has condemned the decision to allow Russian and Belarusian tennis players to compete at the Wimbledon tennis tournament.
-
teleSUR ☛ Russia to Focus on Ending US Hegemony: Foreign Policy Concept
To build a multipolar world, Russia will create conditions to counter any neo-colonial ambitions.
-
Spiegel ☛ “Mafia Methods”: Viktor Orbán Ups the Pressure on German Companies to Leave Hungary
German companies have long been active in Hungary. But now, Viktor Orbán is trying to force some of them to leave. And when they do, his closest allies stand to profit.
-
JURIST ☛ UN rights chief: rule of law at risk in Guatemala
UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk Thursday expressed alarm at the continued erosion of the rule of law in Guatemala.
-
JURIST ☛ Kenya dispatch: mass protests prompt concerns over police brutality and pending restrictions on demonstrations
Aynsley Genga is a JURIST Staff Correspondent in Kenya. Anti-government demonstrations were held across Kenya both Monday and Thursday this week after a call by Azimio opposition party leader Raila Odinga. These have been just about all that everyone has been talking about. The whole week seemed like a movie.
-
AntiWar ☛ This Women’s History Month, Celebrate the Resolve of Jeannette Rankin
Do we have a shortage of female heroes in this country? Are virtuous women that scarce? Or is it simply that Women’s History Month, by eliminating women from the conversation who don’t fit the narrative of the State Department and the Pentagon, failed to achieve its goal?
-
RFERL ☛ Spanish PM Says He Encouraged China’s Xi To Speak With Zelenskiy
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez encouraged Chinese President Xi Jinping on March 31 to talk to the Ukrainian leadership and learn firsthand about Kyiv’s peace formula to help bring an end to Russia’s invasion.
-
RFERL ☛ Iran’s IRGC Says Israeli Air Strike In Syria Kills One Of Its Officers
Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) says an Israeli attack in Syria on March 31 killed one of its officers in a sign of Israel’s increasing efforts to counter Tehran’s foothold in the country.
-
RFERL ☛ Lukashenka Defends Placement Of Russian Tactical Nuclear Weapons In Belarus
The authoritarian ruler of Belarus, Alyaksandr Lukashenka, has defended a Russian plan to place tactical nuclear weapons — including intercontinental ballistic missiles if necessary — on Belarusian territory, saying the country is coming under increased threats from the West.
-
RFERL ☛ Leader Of White Supremacist Group Wanted In U.S. Arrested In Romania
The leader of a U.S. neo-Nazi group wanted in the United States for allegedly fomenting violence at political rallies has been apprehended by Romanian authorities in Bucharest.
-
RFA ☛ UK’s Labour Party to recognize Uyghur genocide if it wins elections
David Lammy says China must be held accountable for human rights abuses.
-
RFA ☛ Taiwan speeds up preparation for potential conflict with China
In July, Taiwan’s military will hold its first drill at a civilian airport, turning highway sections into runways.
-
RFERL ☛ U.S. Seeks To Keep Yemen-Bound Ammunition Seized From Iran
The United States is seeking to keep more than 1 million rounds of ammunition the U.S. Navy seized in December as it was in transit from Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) to militant groups in Yemen, the Justice Department said.
-
RFERL ☛ Croatia Returns Migrants To Bosnia Amid Spike In Illegal Border Crossings
Croatia on March 31 returned a second group of migrants to Bosnia-Herzegovina amid questions about where the migrants should be allowed to apply for asylum.
-
RFA ☛ Cambodia faces July election without international observers
As threats and arrests continue, the EU says ‘inclusive, transparent’ conditions are not in place for vote.
-
RFA ☛ Chinese Christians exiled in Thailand taken to court for overstaying visas
A police official says they may not be deported to their home country.
-
-
Transparency/Investigative Reporting
-
The Age AU ☛ ‘Unmanageable conflict of interest’: Ombudsman slams fellow integrity watchdog
In a new integrity headache for the Andrews government, Ombudsman Deborah Glass says she will not engage with the Inspector who oversees her office.
-
-
Environment
-
Michael West Media ☛ UN to start taking deep-sea mining applications
The International Seabed Authority is set to start accepting applications from companies that want to mine the ocean’s floor after the United Nations body spent two weeks debating standards for the new and controversial practice.
-
New York Times ☛ In a Land With No Soccer, Group Hopes to Use It to Score Climate Goals
The Marshall Islands Soccer Federation aims to draw interest in the sport — and to growing global warming events in the Pacific.
-
The Straits Times ☛ Bird-breeding bonanza seen after record flooding in New South Wales wetlands
April 01, 2023 5:00 AM
The mass breeding was welcome because in recent years, the region has often resembled a desert.
-
JURIST ☛ UK report: ‘lost decade’ of climate change planning will hit vulnerable groups
The UK Climate Change Committee Wednesday reported that Britain is “not adequately prepared” for the damaging effects of climate change. In its 2023 report to Parliament, the group found limited evidence of the implementation of adaptation needed at a national scale to mitigate the risks of climate change.
-
JURIST ☛ ECHR hears two landmark climate change cases
The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) Wednesday heard oral arguments in two cases in which the applicants are accusing their respective governments, France and Switzerland, of failing to take steps to prevent climate change.
-
Energy/Transportation
-
New York Times ☛ Eurozone Inflation Falls to 6.9%, as Energy Prices Ease
The rate of inflation in countries using the euro slipped to 6.9 percent over the year through March, from 8.5 percent the previous month, but underlying price gains edged higher.
-
H2 View ☛ Australian hydrogen industry could generate AUD$40bn in GVA by 2040, says NERA report
A new report by National Energy Resources Australia (NERA) and Arup has suggested Australia’s hydrogen industry has the potential to generate AUD$40bn ($26.8bn) in domestic gross value added (GVA) by 2040.
-
The Strategist ☛ Making the most of Australia’s endowment of critical minerals
The geostrategic scramble to reduce supply-chain dependencies for critical minerals has overshadowed opportunities for Australia to use its resources to provide major benefits for the nation.
-
Atlantic Council ☛ Can Italy play an effective role in helping to stabilize the Mediterranean Sea region?
Thanks to its central geographical position in the Mediterranean Sea and the advanced technological skills of Italian energy companies, Italy is playing a key role in the region through their strong energy diplomacy.
-
New York Times ☛ Has Bitcoin Benefited From the Banking Crisis? Not in the Way Its Fans Hoped.
Bitcoin’s price has soared since banks failed this month, but there’s little evidence that the surge is being driven by investors treating the virtual currency as a financial alternative.
-
New York Times ☛ New Rules Will Make Many Electric Cars Ineligible for Tax Credits
The Biden administration hopes its guidelines for up to $7,500 in tax credits will encourage automakers to reduce their reliance on China for batteries and raw materials.
-
New York Times ☛ Tesla and Musk Lose Ruling on Factory Union Issues
A court upheld a finding that Tesla wrongly fired a worker involved in labor organizing and that a Twitter post by Elon Musk was illegally anti-union.
-
Positech Games ☛ Economics of solar batteries (big and small)
I’m lucky enough to be the proud owner of a 9.5kwh battery in my cellar. Its a GivEnergy battery (A UK company, although the actual battery is predictably made in China). Its AC-coupled, which means it sits on the ‘house’ side of the fusebox/consumer unit.
-
Latvia ☛ Rīga’s central heating prices to go down in April
As of April 1, the Rīga centralized heating company Rīgas siltums thermal energy tariff will be EUR 165.32 per megawatt-hour (MWh) (excluding VAT), which is 10% less compared to the current tariff, the company said March 31.
-
Quartz ☛ Bed, Bath & Beyond is making a $300 million effort to skirt bankruptcy
Bed Bath & Beyond is offering $300 million of its stock in yet another attempt to keep itself afloat.
-
-
Wildlife/Nature
-
New York Times ☛ In Taiwan’s Waters, a Hunt for Tiny, Wriggling ‘Gold’
For generations, people have fished for baby eels in the island’s estuaries. But they seem to be getting harder to find.
-
-
Overpopulation
-
France24 ☛ Immigrants now make up 10 percent of France’s population, says statistics agency
A tenth of people living in France in 2021 were born foreigners, national statistics agency INSEE said on Thursday, in its first study on immigration in a decade.
-
-
-
Finance
-
Breach Media ☛ Housing crisis pushes once-thriving co-op movement back into the spotlight
Co-ops offer ‘an affordable and democratic alternative’ to the private housing market. But government restraint means they must fight for survival
-
Michael West Media ☛ Europe’s inflation eases as energy falls but food up
Inflation in the 20 countries using the euro slowed to 6.9 per cent in March – the lowest level in a year. Food costs are still on the rise but energy prices have fallen, making a sharp turnaround after months of punishing increases.
-
Mint Press News ☛ How The Rich Are Prepping For End Times, And Why
The ruling class knows what’s coming: social instability caused by a combination of the climate crisis, banks failing, the soul-killing inequality of late-stage capitalism, and the impending dilution of the petrodollar.
-
Vice Media Group ☛ Tenants of America’s Biggest Landlord Form Union to Fight Evictions, Rent Hikes
The Blackstone Tenants Union (BTU) in San Diego aims to fight evictions and rising rents since the corporate landlord ended a COVID-19 eviction pause.
-
Helsinki Times ☛ High tax wedge in Finland: Less than half of pay increase goes to employees’ pockets
Keskuskauppakamari, one of Finland’s leading business organizations, has updated its verokiilalaskuri or tax wedge calculator to highlight the high cost of employing workers in Finland. The tax wedge is the difference between the total cost of labor to the employer and the net income received by the employee after taxes and other mandatory contributions have been deducted.
-
teleSUR ☛ BRICS Group Works On A New Form Of Currency
“Transition to settlements in national currencies is the first step,” Alexander Babakov said.
-
New York Times ☛ French Anger at Macron Seeps Into Bordeaux
Even Bordeaux, known for its surrounding vineyards and conservative politics, has become a flashpoint. The City Hall’s charred doors attest to that.
-
Quartz ☛ Huawei reported its biggest annual decline in profit amid American sanctions on chip technology
Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei reported its largest annual decline in profit on Friday (March 31), citing China’s strict pandemic restrictions and rising commodity prices for its drop in sales.
-
YLE ☛ One quarter of people with disabilities in Finland at risk of poverty, marginalisation
Low income and under-employment are more common among people with disabilities compared to the rest of the population, according to a Statistics Finland report.
-
Latvia ☛ More counterfeit money found in Latvia last year than in 2021
Last year, 889 counterfeit units of money were detected in Latvia, which is 26.5% more than in 2021, according to “Payment radar” published by the Latvian central bank (Bank of Latvia) on March 31, LETA reported.
-
Latvia ☛ Central bank adjusts economic forecasts for Latvia
Latvijas Banka (LB), the Latvian central bank published revised macroeconomic forecasts March 31, which came with the caveat that at the moment there is “persistently high uncertainty”.
-
Mexico News Daily ☛ Central bank raises interest rate to 11.25%, another record high
The Bank of Mexico’s key rate has now risen 725 basis points in the current tightening cycle, which began in June 2021.
-
Reason ☛ Social Security Will Be Insolvent by 2033
New data from the program’s trustees show that insolvency will hit a year sooner than previously expected, giving policy makers just a decade before automatic benefit cuts occur.
-
Quartz ☛ Virgin Orbit’s share price hit a new record low in the wake of mass layoffs
Richard Branson’s rocket company is running out of fuel.
-
Hong Kong Free Press ☛ Winners of Hong Kong’s ‘free’ flights say additional charges more than expected
Winners of the Hong Kong government’s mass plane ticket giveaway have said that while they were under no illusion that the flights being offered were indeed free, the fees they were asked to pay were steeper than they expected.
-
France24 ☛ France’s hard-left CGT union elects first woman leader amid pension fight
France’s hard-left CGT union has elected its first woman leader, two CGT sources told Reuters on Friday.
-
teleSUR ☛ Iran Welcomes The Hauge Court Ruling On US-Frozen Assets
“The U.S. duty to compensate our country for the assets freezing shows the legitimacy of our demands,” the Irani Foreign Affairs Ministry stated.
-
Digital Music News ☛ Decentraland Real Estate Prices Plunged Nearly 90% In One Year
Once a corporate darling in the metaverse frontier, Decentraland is a ghost town as investors abandon the metaverse. Decentraland was hailed in 2021 as one of the first instances of an actual metaverse for users (ignoring the existence of Second Life entirely).
-
Digital Music News ☛ Microsoft Is Shutting Down Its Metaverse Unit Amidst Broader Layoffs
Microsoft is shutting down its metaverse unit comprising 100 employees amidst broader layoffs. Microsoft has internally announced disbanding its Industrial Metaverse Core group, a division comprising around 100 employees focused on bringing the metaverse to industrial environments through software.
-
RFERL ☛ EU May Need To Reintroduce Tariffs On Ukrainian Grain, PMs Say
Tariffs on Ukrainian agricultural imports may need to be reintroduced if an influx of products that is pushing down prices in EU markets cannot be stopped by other means, several prime ministers of eastern states said.
-
-
AstroTurf/Lobbying/Politics
-
Scoop News Group ☛ How a computer scientist talks to her daughter about TikTok
The debate over TikTok’s national security risk is lost on many young users, except if your mom is a technologist focused on global threats.
-
Digital Music News ☛ Twitter Won’t Charge $1,000-a-Month Verification Fees for the Largest Businesses and Advertisers, Says New Report
Twitter won’t charge $1,000-a-month verification fees for its most prominent businesses and advertisers.
-
Axios ☛ Scoop: White House won’t pay for Twitter verification
The White House will not pay to have its staff’s official Twitter profiles continue to be verified, according to guidance issued to staffers via an email obtained by Axios.
Why it matters: Official White House staffers rely on their verified accounts to inform the public on behalf of the administration. Verification, combined with the designated Twitter profiles, helped to ensure the public could trust those messages.
-
NYPost ☛ White House won’t pay for staffers’ Twitter Blue verification
“Staff may purchase Twitter Blue on their personal social media accounts using personal funds,” White House Director of Digital Strategy Rob Flaherty wrote in an email Friday.
-
JURIST ☛ Trump negotiating surrender after becoming first ex-US president to face criminal charges
Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg announced Thursday that his office had contacted the attorney of former US President Donald Trump to coordinate his surrender following the first grand jury indictment of an ex-president in the country’s history.
-
Marcy Wheeler ☛ Douglass Mackey’s Criminal Twitter Trolling
A jury just declared that the kind of disinformation that Matt Taibbi and Elon Musk are welcoming back on Twitter can be a crime.
-
Marcy Wheeler ☛ Trump’s People Have Attempted to Cover Up That He Cheated to Cover Up Cheating in 2016 at Least Six Times
Trump wailed last night that his “indication” was a matter of free and fair elections. He’s right. It’s about one of at least six efforts he and his agents have made to cover-up that he cheated to win in 2016.
-
New Yorker ☛ Has Modi Pushed Indian Democracy Past Its Breaking Point?
With the media and judiciary already under attack, the Prime Minister’s main opponent was just banned from Parliament.
-
New York Times ☛ Twitter’s Blue Check Apocalypse Is Upon Us. Here’s What to Know.
Elon Musk, Twitter’s owner, is changing the platform’s longstanding practice of verifying accounts. That has implications for a range of users.
-
-
Censorship/Free Speech
-
New York Times ☛ Now Playing in China: Putin-Aligned Artists Shunned in the West
As Russia works to shore up its image and rebuild its soft power after its invasion of Ukraine, it is strengthening cultural ties with friendly nations, including China.
-
RFERL ☛ Former Putin Speechwriter Gallyamov Accused Of Discrediting Russian Armed Forces
A self-exiled former speechwriter of Putin, Abbas Gallyamov, whose name appeared in Russia’s online registry of wanted persons last week, is suspected of discrediting Russia’s armed forces, a charge Russian authorities have been using to stifle any criticism of Moscow’s war in Ukraine.
-
Hong Kong Free Press ☛ Hong Kong 47: Democrat ‘infuriated’ by Benny Tai’s ‘seditious’ article, court hears in national security trial
It was “arrogant” and “irresponsible” for Hong Kong legal scholar Benny Tai, one of 47 pro-democracy figures prosecuted in the city’s largest national security case, to publish an article that threatened to force the authorities to respond to 2019 protesters’ five demands, a local court has heard.
-
-
Freedom of Information / Freedom of the Press
-
Pro-government association leader threatens local journalist
The head of the Ak Youth association threatened the Kocaeli-based journalist Merve Dişli to “put you in your place.”
-
New York Times ☛ With its arrest of an American reporter, Russia doubles down on isolation.
-
New York Times ☛ Evan Gershkovich, WSJ Reporter Detained in Russia, Likely to Spend Months in Prison
Russia detained Evan Gershkovich, a reporter for The Wall Street Journal, and accused him of espionage. The Journal and U.S. officials have vehemently denied the allegation.
-
New Yorker ☛ The Unimaginable Horror of Evan Gershkovich’s Arrest in Moscow
It’s painful and surreal to write these words: Evan Gershkovich, a reporter for the Wall Street Journal, is being held by Russian authorities on espionage charges.
-
New York Times ☛ Biden Calls on Russia to Free Detained American Reporter
Demands for Evan Gershkovich’s release also came from the leaders of dozens of news media and press freedom organizations, including The New York Times and the Committee to Protect Journalists. Here is what we’re covering:
-
France24 ☛ Russian missiles hit Ukraine’s Kharkiv as Moscow detains US journalist
At least six Russian missiles hit the northeastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv late on Thursday, local officials said, adding that emergency workers were assessing the damage and casualties. Earlier, Russia’s FSB security service detained a US reporter for the Wall Street Journal on spying charges, drawing immediate condemnation from the West and calls for his release.
-
-
Civil Rights/Policing
-
RFA ☛ Former prisoner of conscience harassed by Vietnamese police after release
The intimidation began after Nguyen Thi Ngoc Suong attended an appeals trial for other activists.
-
RFERL ☛ Kazakh Tycoon Related To Former President’s Family Handed Eight-Year Prison Term
Kazakh tycoon Qairat Boranbaev, whose daughter is the widow of the grandson of former President Nursultan Nazarbaev, has been sentenced to eight years in prison on corruption charges.
-
LRT ☛ Bialiatski’s wife in Vilnius pleads for solidarity with oppressed Belarusians
Political prisoners in Belarus need solidarity and constant attention, Natalia Pinchuk, the wife of imprisoned Nobel Peace Prize winner Ales Bialiatski, said in Vilnius on Friday.
-
Michael West Media ☛ US court rules Musk Tesla union campaign tweet illegal
A US appeals court says Tesla Inc CEO Elon Musk violated federal labour law by tweeting employees of the electric vehicle maker would lose stock options if they joined a union.
-
Torture of child in Diyarbakır: Lawyers appeal against officers’ release
The officers being charged with injury rather than torture shows that the authorities indent to cover up the officers’ crimes, according to the head of the Diyarbakır Bar.
-
New York Times ☛ Bodies of 8 Migrants Found in River Along U.S.-Canadian Border
The authorities were searching for more bodies in the St. Lawrence River of migrants believed to have been attempting to cross illegally into the United States.
-
teleSUR ☛ Cambodia Makes Progress on Children’s Rights, UNICEF Says
The proportion of children attending school increased at all levels in 2021
-
teleSUR ☛ Ancient DNA Study on Lost History of American Slavery
During an expansion project for the Gaillard Center, a group of construction workers discovered the remains of 36 African descendants.
-
JURIST ☛ UN expresses concern over ‘arbitrary arrests’ in Afghanistan
UN Human Rights media spokesperson Jeremy Laurence Thursday issued a statement on the situation in Afghanistan, highlighting the UN’s “alarm” at the ongoing arbitrary arrests and detentions of civil society activists and media workers in Afghanistan…
-
Latvia ☛ Why Latvia cannot afford to live without gender equality
Latvian central bank economist Krista Kalnbērziņa takes a deep dive into gender inequality and its economic consequences in this piece from the central bank’s macroeconomics.lv website.
-
Hong Kong Free Press ☛ Hong Kong’s new protest regulations are designed by those who don’t like protests
Our police commissioner has no sense of irony. Remember the long-running struggle, during the 2019 disturbances, to persuade the police to obey the law which requires them to display an identifying number when on duty in uniform? Numbers are, however, now compulsory – not for police, but for demonstrators.
-
-
Internet Policy/Net Neutrality
-
RTE ☛ RTÉ RADIO 1 TO CEASE BROADCASTING ON LONG WAVE
RTÉ RADIO 1 TO CEASE BROADCASTING ON LONG WAVE KEEP LISTENING TO RTÉ RADIO 1 | WWW.RTE.IE/KEEPLISTENING RTÉ has today announced that RTÉ Radio 1 will cease broadcasting on Long Wave 252 (LW 252) from Friday 14th April 2023.
-
Michael Geist ☛ Competition in Canada Takes Another Hit: Government Gives Go Ahead for Rogers – Shaw Merger
Innovation, Science and Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne has worked hard to fashion himself as a future party leader based on boundless energy to sell Canada the world. Indeed, Champagne’s oft-repeated stories of cold calls that resulted in investments by companies such as Volkswagen and Moderna paint a picture of a minister jetting around the world in support of the Canadian economy. Unfortunately, Champagne’s record is also one of a minister less interested in what is actually happening at home.
-
-
Monopolies
-
Yahoo News ☛ Google says Microsoft cloud practices are anti-competitive
Alphabet’s Google Cloud has accused Microsoft of anti-competitive cloud computing practices and criticised imminent deals with several European cloud vendors, saying these do not solve broader concerns about its licensing terms.
In Google Cloud’s first public comments on Microsoft and its European deals its Vice President Amit Zavery told Reuters the company has raised the issue with antitrust agencies and urged European Union antitrust regulators to take a closer look.
-
Patents
-
JUVE ☛ “Future FRAND negotiations would benefit from increased transparency” [Ed: FRAND is a misnomer and it describes something that should not even exist in the first place]
After a long wait, the UK has once again confirmed its jurisdiction to calculate a FRAND rate between a patent holder and patent implementer. Earlier in March, judge James Mellor of the UK High Court finally handed down his decision in the case between patent holder InterDigital, and patent implementer Lenovo.
-
Tailoring our patent information products and services to users’ changing needs [Ed: A lot of those tools are obviously in direct violation of the EPC, according to insiders, but EPO does not care about the law, it's a reckless den of corporate crime now]
SACEPO working party convenes to discuss recent advances and future developments in the EPO’s tools and documentation.
-
-
Trademarks
-
TTAB Blog ☛ TTAB Posts April 2023 Hearing Schedule
The Trademark Trial and Appeal Board (Tee-Tee-Ā-Bee) has scheduled eight (8) oral hearings for the month of April 2023. Five of the hearings will be held via video conference; three will be held “in-person” in Alexandria, VA. Briefs and other papers for each case may be found at TTABVUE via the links provided.
-
-
Copyrights
-
Digital Music News ☛ IFPI Officially Addresses Italian Court’s Latest Ruling in Cloudflare Dispute: ‘An Important Precedent’
In July of 2022, the IFPI celebrated an Italian court’s interim injunction against Cloudflare (NYSE: NET), which the industry representative accused of “making it possible for users to access copyright infringing websites.” Now, the IFPI has formally responded to a new decision upholding the injunction.
-
-
-
-
Gemini* and Gopher
-
Personal
-
Book recommendation
Book recommendation: The power of fun by Catherine Price. A serious and well-researched look at having True Fun (a state when playfulness, connection and flow happen).
-
“Never split the difference” book notes
These are my personal takeaways after reading “Never split the difference” by Chris Voss. Note that the book contains much more knowledge wisdom and that these notes only contain points I personally found worth writing down. This is mainly for my own use, but you might find it helpful too.
-
[Old] re: A response to jecxjo (a response to wholesomedonut)
In essence: “Yup, sounds about right”. Don’t worry about it. Spend time having fun. I am very passionate about software engineering. I love to do it. But if I’m spending 40 hours building software, I certainly have 0 motivation to spend the few hours I have outside of work doing that…
-
The Stonecutter, Part 5
He found that clouds had a great freedom. No longer was he bound to the orbit of the Sun. He could now travel wherever he wanted whenever he wanted.
Nighttime was not a blind spot for him anymore. That was something he hadn’t reflected on when he was the Sun, but now he found entertainment in obscuring the moon to make someone lose their way in the dark, or dispersing himself to reveal the starry night to a loving couple.
-
Winning
As an analogy, let’s say you wanna get fit so you decide to take a walk. You decide to go to the park. Now, the intended destination of your walk is the park, and the purpose of the walk is to get fit.
Russ has a post investigating the origins of the quote with other variants that make it clearer what Knizia meant.
-
ABIMOSR Wordo: VIOLS
-
Obstacles removed
In my last post, a ridiculous 5 months ago, I was lamenting on not keeping up with my blogging because I didn’t have sufficient tooling to make it easy. What a terrible excuse.
Over the holidays I made time to finish up some code to create an atom feed from my blog entries. Alas, my coding skills are a bit rusty these days and it took longer than expected but it’s there, and if you can read this, it works!
-
Emacs On My Writing PC
So I decided to install Emacs on my writing PC for while I work on writing my gemlogs. This I felt was a good way to get a sense of what Emacs feels like basically by default, since I’ve installed a bunch of stuff on my other machines, since I want it to be an IDE. I expected it to work well, because, well, Emacs is an old piece of software! So.. let me talk through my Emacs setup on a virtual-terminal only PC.
-
Cloud spotting blues
tfurrows wrote a phlog post yesterday[1] centred mostly around
responding to severe weather advisories and warnings. Right at
the end he mentions participating in “weather spotter / Skywarn
training”, something provided by the US National Weather Service.
This seems to basically be a program to “crowdsource” early detection
of heavy weather (what did we call “crowdsourcing” before that
became a term?). I would certainly be interested to read more
about this experience!
-
-
Technical
-
Make your server available through a VPN endpoint IP
Let’s say your ISP don’t provide static IP and you want to self host your website, emails and stuff at home. Or you can’t setup a rDNS. Or your usual Internet access is down and you want to keep your server up using your smartphone connection sharing capabilities.
-
Idiotbox to watch youtube without a browser
-
tootik: Gemini+fediverse=❤️
tootik is a new social network thingy that speaks a tiny subset of ActivityPub and has a Gemini frontend.
-
Programming
-
Writing Hello world from scratch Part II: designing the CPU
Designing the ISA and the simulator is fine and dandy but it does not beat running a custom CPU on real hardware. Unfortunately, I don’t have tens of thousands of euros to make a custom chip. The best I can do is to run it on an FPGA. An FPGA is a chip with a lot of logic gates that can be wired together to make any logic circuit. And our CPU is a logic circuit.
What we need to do is to use a hardware description language such as Verilog or VHDL to describe the CPU. I choose to use Verilog as I prefer its more concise syntax but both languages can do the same things in a very similar manner.
-
-
-
* Gemini (Primer) links can be opened using Gemini software. It’s like the World Wide Web but a lot lighter.