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● 03.15.23


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● Links 15/03/2023: Qubes OS 4.1.2, Mozilla Swallows Buzzwords


Posted in News Roundup at 11:47 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz


GNU/Linux


Desktop/Laptop


↺ MNT Pocket Reform open-source 7-inch modular laptop launched on Crowd Supply


Several Linux distributions can be installed on the MNT Pocket Reform, but the official image is based on Debian Linux with GNOME 4 environment suitable for most people, or Sway Wayland compositor for advanced users. As an open-source hardware project, you’ll find the system images for Reform laptops in one git repository, and the KiCAD hardware design files for all the boards used in the Pocket Reform in another.


The MNT Pocket Reform is not the first mini laptop, so MNT Research has provided a comparison table against other popular mini laptops or Linux smartphones.


↺ Slimbook Titan, Kubuntu, applications, game


Well, there you go. Looking at my own table, I’m almost done. There’s a lot more work to do, of course, but the basics are covered. Now, I will focus on the games, and data backups. As you may have noticed, I’ve not yet even formatted the second NVMe inside the Titan. I’m still contemplating the best option there.


Then, once that’s sorted, I’ll need to figure out the best data layout, best data backup mount points, do some testing with Rsync and Timeshift, play with disk encryption. In parallel, I’ll keep on burning my bandwidth, set up a dozen or so Windows-only titles through Proton, and see whether I can enjoy a good and seamless gaming experience on my Linux machine. So far, the results are extremely promising. Stay tuned for more.


Server


↺ How to set up your own open source DNS server


A Domain Name Server (DNS) associates a domain name (like example.com) with an IP address (like 93.184.216.34). This is how your web browser knows where in the world to look for data when you enter a URL or when a search engine returns a URL for you to visit. DNS is a great convenience for internet users, but it’s not without drawbacks. For instance, paid advertisements appear on web pages because your browser naturally uses DNS to resolve where those ads “live” on the internet. Similarly, software that tracks your movement online is often enabled by services resolved over DNS. You don’t want to turn off DNS entirely because it’s very useful. But you can run your own DNS service so you have more control over how it’s used.


I believe it’s vital that you run your own DNS server so you can block advertisements and keep your browsing private, away from providers attempting to analyze your online interactions. I’ve used Pi-hole in the past and still recommend it today. However, lately, I’ve been running the open source project Adguard Home on my network. I found that it has some unique features worth exploring.


Of the open source DNS options I’ve used, Adguard Home is the easiest to set up and maintain. You get many DNS resolution solutions, such as DNS over TLS, DNS over HTTPS, and DNS over QUIC, within one single project.


↺ HPC and me


Recently I found that quite a few of my Twitter and Mastodon followers are working in high-performance computing (HPC). At first I was surprised because I’m not a HPC person, even if I love high performance computers. Then I realized that there are quite few overlaps, and one of my best friends is also deeply involved in HPC. My work, logging, is also a fundamental part of HPC environments.


Let’s start with a direct connection to HPC: one of my best friends, Gabor Samu, is working in HPC. He is one of the product managers for one of the leading commercial HPC workload managers: IBM Spectrum LSF Suites. I often interact with his posts both on Twitter and Mastodon.


I love high performance computers and non-x86 architectures. Of course, high performance computers aren’t the exclusive domain of HPC today. Just think of web and database servers, CAD and video editing workstations, AI, and so on. But there is definitely an overlap. Some of the fastest HPC systems are built around non-x86 architectures. You can find many of those on the top500 list. ARM and POWER systems made it even into the top10 list, and occupied the #1 position for years.


↺ Kubernetes is the key to cloud, but cost containment is critical


What’s driving the growth of open source container orchestrator Kubernetes? A study by Pepperdata shows how companies are using K8s and the challenges they face in getting a handle on cloud costs.


Audiocasts/Shows


↺ 2023-03-13Launching Bash, Fish and Zsh With “No Config”


↺ 2023-03-14The New Ubuntu Linux “Flavor” We All Expected


↺ 2023-03-13EndeavourOS Cassini Neo Quick Overview #shorts


↺ 2023-03-14Top 5 Best Lightweight Linux Distros for Maximum Speed | The Ultimate Performance Showdown! (NEW)


↺ 2023-03-13Manjaro Linux Is The Joke That Never Ends


↺ 2023-03-14blendOS 2023.01.26 overview | A seamless blend of all Linux distributions.


↺ 2023-03-13KDE Connect: The Native, Dead-Simple Way to Transfer Files to Your Steam Deck


Graphics Stack


↺ Monado accepted for XROS 2023!


We’re proud to announce that Monado, the free and open source XR platform, has been accepted as a mentoring organization for XROS, the XR Open Source Fellowship Program.


Instructionals/Technical


↺ 2023-03-14How to install Ubuntu Server in less than 30 minutes


Jack Wallen walks you through the steps for installing one of the most user-friendly and widely-used server platforms available.


↺ How to Create a Systemd Service in Linux


Systemd is a modern software suite that provides many components on a Linux system including a system and service manager.


↺ Peter Czanik: Syslog-ng 101, part 11: Enriching log messages


This is the eleventh part of my syslog-ng tutorial. Last time, we learned about message parsing using syslog-ng. Today, we learn about enriching log messages.


You can watch the video on YouTube:


↺ How to install Fedora IoT on Raspberry Pi 4


Transform your Raspberry Pi into an edge computing device with Fedora IoT.


↺ How to Install Firefox on RHEL and Debian Systems


In most modern Linux distributions, the latest version of Firefox has been already installed from the default distribution package manager and configured as the default browser.


In this article, we will explain other ways of installing the latest version of Firefox on RHEL-based distributions such as CentOS Stream, Fedora, Rocky, and AlmaLinux and Debian-based distributions such as Ubuntu and Linux Mint.Table of Contents11. Install Firefox Using Package Manager2. Install Firefox Using Flatpak3. Install Firefox Using Snap4. Install Firefox from Source in LinuxUninstall Firefox from Linux System


↺ Create a Web Server with NGINX and Secure it Using Certbot


HTTPS is not a luxury anymore. You must have it on your website.


↺ How to Install and Run TeamViewer on Manjaro: A Step-by-Step Guide


TeamViewer is a popular tool for allowing remote access to any computer from anywhere in the World. It is a cross-platform application available for free for personal use. In this article, I will show you how to download and install TeamViewer on Manjaro Linux using different methods.


TeamViewer is an easy to use tool and is best used for online tech support. The application can easily be installed on debian-based distributions but it’s a little tricky to get it installed on Arch-based distros such as Manjaro Linux. So in this article, we will install TeamViewer on Manjaro using two methods.


↺ How to Install Twilio Authy in Linux-based System Using both Snap and Non-Snap Methods


To generate TOTP codes, you don’t need a phone anymore; you can just get it on your Linux machine using Authy.


Distributions and Operating Systems


↺ Chimera Linux: turnstile replaces elogind consolekit works side by side with seatd


When elogind will either begin to fail or just not work too well without systemd, I’d like to see what those distros will do and who will they blame for their demise, or conversion to full systemd which will make them just like anything else. Will Artix be any different than Manjaro? Will MX be any different than mint or ubuntu? Will void be anything different from Arch and will they abandon musl? Will Adelie’s LXQT work without elogind or will they then decide to give LXDE a try?


New Releases


↺ Kali Linux’s 10th Anniversary: A New ‘Kali Purple’ Distro and a Version Upgrade


Kali Linux is a well-known name among penetration testers and developers alike that offers a very robust set of tools for most pen testing use cases.


On the eve of its 10th anniversary, two new major releases have been unveiled, including a new Kali Linux variant called ‘Kali Purple’, and the first update of this year, code-named ‘Kali Linux 2023.1′.


↺ Pentesters’ fave Kali Linux turns 10 with version 23.1


The developers of specialized security-testing distro Kali Linux have released the first version of 2023, which marks the project’s tenth anniversary… but only in this incarnation.


The new version, release 2023.1, appears exactly one decade after version 1.0 was released on March 13th 2013. Kali Linux is a rebuild of an earlier distro called BackTrack, first rolled out 17 years ago, which was based on WHAX, first out 18 years back, which is in turn based on Whoppix. Suffice to say, it goes back a long while.


BSD


↺ FreeBSD History Series: Understanding the Origins of DTrace


DTrace: The Reverse Engineer’s Unexpected Swiss Army Knife goes on to state that, “DTrace was Sun’s first software component to be released under their own open source Common Development and Distribution License (CDDL).” However, some groups were slow to port DTrace because they didn’t trust the CDDL—for example, Adam Leventhal claimed in 2011 that Oracle believed the CDDL license would “make DTrace too toxic for other Linux vendors.” These license concerns may have contributed to Red Hat’s decision to release a similar utility named SystemTap.


SUSE/OpenSUSE


↺ Adding auto-installation support to D-Installer


AutoYaST is a crucial tool for our users, including customers and partners. So it was clear from the beginning that D-Installer should be able to install a system in an unattended manner.


This article describes the status of this feature and gives some hints about our plans. But we want to emphasize that nothing is set in stone (yet), so constructive comments and suggestions are more than welcome.


When we started to build D-Installer, one of our design goals was to keep a clear separation of concerns between all the components. For that reason, the core of D-Installer is a D-Bus service that is not coupled to any user interface. The web UI connects to that interface to get/set the configuration settings.


Fedora Family / IBM


↺ Qubes OS 4.1.2 has been released!


We’re pleased to announce the stable release of Qubes 4.1.2! This release aims to consolidate all the security patches, bug fixes, and upstream template OS upgrades that have occurred since the initial Qubes 4.1.0 release. Our goal is to provide a secure and convenient way for users to install (or reinstall) the latest stable Qubes release with an up-to-date ISO.


Qubes 4.1.2 is available on the downloads page.


If you are already using any version of Qubes 4.1 (including 4.1.0, 4.1.1, 4.1.2-rc1, and 4.1.2-rc2), then you should simply update normally (which includes upgrading any EOL templates you might have) in order to make your system effectively equivalent to this stable Qubes 4.1.2 release. No reinstallation or other special action is required.


↺ Weekly status of Packit Team: Packit March 2023


Debian Family


↺ MakuluLinux Max Development Logs


We have updated the Development release notes of MakuluLinux Max Debian ( we update it every once in a while ), you can now see what has been done on the development front over the last few months, check out the dev log here : https://www.makululinux.com/wp/max/


Canonical/Ubuntu Family


↺ Time to prepare for Ubuntu 18.04 LTS End of Standard Support on 31 May 2023


Ubuntu 18.04 LTS ‘Bionic Beaver‘, one of the most popular Ubuntu releases, will reach the end of the standard, five-year maintenance window for Long-Term Support (LTS) releases on 31 May 2023.


Open Hardware/Modding


↺ AgonLight2 Retro SBC available for £58.50


ThePiHut recently featured the redesigned Olimex AgonLight2 which features an 8-bit Z80 processor and an ESP32-PICO-D4 as co-processor for I/O control. The AgonLight2 supports BBC Basic and it’s equipped with flexible I/O peripherals.


↺ Portenta C33: The high-performance, low-price oxymoron


Case in point: the Portenta C33. The module – which we are introducing at Embedded World 2023 – leverages the R&D carried out for previous Portenta modules, optimizing every aspect and streamlining features to offer a cost-effective option to users starting out with Industrial IoT or automation, or those who have more specific, targeted needs than the H7 or X8 cater to.


↺ Portenta C33 is a lower cost Arduino Pro board based on Renesas RA6M5 Arm Cortex-M33 MCU


Arduino Portenta C33 is the latest board from the Arduino Pro family which the company dubs a “high-performance, low-price” solution based on a 200 MHz Renesas RA6M5 Arm Cortex-M33 microcontroller and equipped with a ESP32-C3 Wi-Fi and Bluetooth Low Energy module.


↺ Giant ride-on spider robot


The Hacksmith was inspired by a video of an auto excavator manoeuvring its own body by using its excavation arm as a leg. An idea struck: why not just bring six excavators together and program all the arms to operate like legs in sync?


Mobile Systems/Mobile Applications


↺ Samsung’s new budget Android phones are way better than you’d expect for their very low price – Mirror Online


↺ 3 Brilliant FMV Games to Bring the Cinema to Your Android


↺ Pixel 8 renders leak 5.8-inch screen for a small Android flagship


↺ Android 13 users want synchronization of DND – bedtime mode


↺ Latest Edge Dev update brings tab group pinning, video ad blocker on Android, and many fixes – Neowin


↺ PUBG Mobile 2.5 update APK download link and installation guide for Android


Free, Libre, and Open Source Software


↺ 5 Best Free and Open Source Drum Machines


Drum machines may imitate drum kits or other percussion instruments, or produce unique sounds, such as synthesized electronic tones. A drum machine often has pre-programmed beats and patterns for popular genres and styles, such as pop music, rock music, and dance music. Most modern drum machines made in the 2010s and 2020s also allow users to program their own rhythms and beats.


Drum machines may create sounds using analog synthesis or play pre-recorded samples.


Our recommended drum machine software is captured in one of our legendary rating charts. We only feature free and open source goodness.


↺ Business Conditions Prime for More Open-Source Contributors


Companies that established open-source program offices over the last few years now need more C-suite oversight to drive education, awareness, and usage of open-source software. That sets the stage for an expanded role of open-source program officers.


Incorporating open-source technology brings organizations an ecosystem that expands the user base, resulting in loyalty and stickiness. It also brings the need for more executive oversight of open-source initiatives. Staying on top of open-source security best practice is critically important, and disclosing and patching vulnerabilities is essential.


Javier Perez, the chief open-source evangelist at Perforce, sees a trend unfolding in 2023 to drive open source. More organizations will realize that open-source software is critical to their operation and will move from being consumers to participants with increased use and adoption for business-critical infrastructure.


↺ Examining OpenSSH Sandboxing and Privilege Separation – Attack Surface Analysis


The recent OpenSSH double-free vulnerability – CVE-2023-25136, created a lot of interest and confusion regarding OpenSSH’s custom security mechanisms – Sandbox and Privilege Separation. Until now, both of these security mechanisms were somewhat unnoticed and only partially documented. The double-free vulnerability raised interest for those who were affected and those controlling servers that use OpenSSH.


This blog post provides an in-depth analysis of OpenSSH’s attack surface and security measures.


↺ Emacs undo and me


In some weirdo chain my brain don’t fully understand but my fingers seem to know how to work. I can undo in one “direction” but then if I do anything else (just move the cursor or set the mark) it switches direction because the undos themselves are getting undone. It’s a mess but it somehow works, even for undos really far back.


↺ Mastodon timelines for teams


Because saving and searching Mastodon data is a controversial topic in the fediverse — none of us wants to recapitulate Big Social — I’ve focused thus far on queries that explore recent Mastodon flow, of which there are plenty more to write. But nobody should mind me remembering my own home timeline, so a few weeks ago I made a tool to read it hourly and add new toots to a Postgres table.


Web Browsers/Web Servers


Mozilla


↺ Hacks.Mozilla.Org: Mozilla Launches Responsible AI Challenge


At Mozilla, we believe in AI: in its power, its commercial opportunity, and its potential to solve the world’s most challenging problems. But now is the moment to make sure that it is developed responsibly to serve society.


If you want to build (or are already building) AI solutions that are ambitious but also ethical and holistic, the Mozilla Builder’s Responsible AI Challenge is for you. We will be inviting the top nominees to join a gathering of the brightest technologists, community leaders and ethicists working on trustworthy AI to help get your ideas off the ground. Participants will also have access to mentorship from some of the best minds in the industry, the ability to meet key contributors in this community, and an opportunity to win some funding for their project.


↺ The Mozilla Blog: Mozilla Launches Responsible AI Challenge


The last few months it has become clear that AI is no longer our future, but our present.


↺ The Mozilla Blog: Email protection just got easier in Firefox


If you’re already one of the many people who use Firefox Relay to save your real email address from trackers and spammers, then we’ve got a timesaver for you. We are testing a new way for Firefox Relay users to access their email masks directly from Firefox on numerous sites.


Since its launch, Firefox Relay has blocked more than 2.1 million unwanted emails from people’s inboxes while keeping real email addresses safe from trackers across the web. We’re always listening to our users, and one of the most-requested features is having Firefox Relay directly within the Firefox browser. And if you don’t already use Firefox Relay, you can always sign up.


↺ The Mozilla Blog: Firefox Android’s new privacy feature, Total Cookie Protection, stops companies from keeping tabs on your moves


In case you haven’t heard, there’s an ongoing conversation happening about your personal data.


Earlier this year, United States President Biden said in his State of the Union address that there needs to be stricter limits on the personal data that companies collect. Additionally, a recent survey found that most people said they’d like to control the data that companies collect about them, yet they don’t understand how online tracking works nor do they know what they can do about it. Companies are now trying and testing ways to anonymize the third-party cookies that track people on the web or get consent for each site or app that wants to track people’s behavior across the web.


SaaS/Back End/Databases


↺ Synchronize databases more easily with open source tools


Change Data Capture (CDC) uses Server Agents to record, insert, update, and delete activity applied to database tables. CDC provides details on changes in an easy-to-use relational format. It captures column information and metadata needed to apply the changes to the target environment for modified rows. A changing table that mirrors the column structure of the tracked source table stores this information.


Capturing change data is no easy feat. However, the open source Apache SeaTunnel project i is a data integration platform provides CDC function with a design philosophy and feature set that makes these captures possible, with features above and beyond existing solutions.


Classic use cases for CDC is data synchronization or backups between heterogeneous databases. You may synchronize data between MySQL, PostgreSQL, MariaDB, and similar databases in one scenario. You could synchronize the data to a full-text search engine in a different example. With CDC, you can create backups of data based on what CDC has captured.


When designed well, the data analysis system obtains data for processing by subscribing to changes in the target data tables. There’s no need to embed the analysis process into the existing system.


↺ mysqldump: Couldn’t execute ‘FLUSH TABLES’: Access denied; you need (at least one of) the RELOAD or FLUSH_TABLES privilege(s) for this operation (1227)


This article is a copy/paste/modify of mysqldump: Error: ‘Access denied; you need (at least one of) the PROCESS privilege(s) for this operation’ when trying to dump tablespaces.


Openness/Sharing/Collaboration


Open Data


↺ Where the sidewalk ends: Most cities don’t map their own pedestrian networks. Now, researchers have built the first open-source tool to let planners do just that.


The paper, “Mapping the Walk: A Scalable Computer Vision Approach for Generating Sidewalk Network Datasets from Aerial Imagery,” appears online in the journal Computers, Environment and Urban Systems. The authors are Hosseini; Sevtsuk, who is the Charles and Ann Spaulding Career Development Associate Professor of Urban Science and Planning in DUSP and head of MIT’s City Form Lab; Fabio Miranda, an assistant professor of computer science at the University of Illinois at Chicago; Roberto M. Cesar, a professor of computer science at the University of Sao Paulo; and Claudio T. Silva, Institute Professor of Computer Science and Engineering at New York University (NYU) Tandon School of Engineering, and professor of data science at the NYU Center for Data Science.


Open Access/Content


↺ Should you trust Elsevier?


The fact that Elsevier fits the consensus definition of a “predatory publisher” so well is thus only one of many reasons why data kraken Elsevier is so reviled in the academic community, but a reminder of it seems to have triggered the “we really can be trusted, honestly, this time” wolf-in-sheep-clothing-reflex in the RELX CCO Dr. Abrahams, such that he responded: [...]


Programming/Development


↺ We need a new way to measure AI security


Tl;dr: Trail of Bits has launched a practice focused on machine learning and artificial intelligence, bringing together safety and security methodologies to create a new risk assessment and assurance program. This program evaluates potential bespoke risks and determines the necessary safety and security measures for AI-based systems.


↺ Stanford Alpaca, and the acceleration of on-device large language model development


So it’s still not something we can use to build commercial offerings—but for personal research and tinkering it’s yet another huge leap forwards.


↺ Introducing Qt Insight


We are excited to announce the launch of Qt Insight!


Standards/Consortia


↺ Fujitsu and Dell pave the way for continued Open RAN adoption


“We’re big open radio access network advocates,” said Greg Manganello (pictured, left), global head of network services at Fujitsu. “We’re one of the leading founders of that open standard. The reason is it give operators choices and much more vendor diversity and therefore a lot of innovation when they build out their 5G networks.”


Leftovers


↺ 2023-03-13Lymphocytes


↺ Kottke.org Is 25 Years Old Today and I’m Going to Write About It


My love for the web has ebbed and flowed in the years since, but mainly it’s persisted — so much so that as of today, I’ve been writing kottke.org for 25 years. A little context for just how long that is: kottke.org is older than Google. 25 years is more than half of my life, spanning four decades (the 90s, 00s, 10s, and 20s) and around 40,000 posts — almost cartoonishly long for a medium optimized for impermanence. What follows is my (relatively brief) attempt to explain where kottke.org came from and why it’s still going.


Science


↺ Approximating pi using… a cake?


This is a really cool technique called Buffon’s needle problem and I first heard about it from my grandfather at a restaurant. I think I was in middle school. Anyway, he was telling me about this way that you could estimate pi by tossing a needle on the floor and counting the number of times where it ended up crossing the line between floor boards.


Education


↺ Dress created by librarians at Detroit Public Library for Women’s History Month from pages of discarded books


Dress created by librarians at DPL for Women’s History Month from pages of discarded books


↺ Upcoming Speaking Events


I’m speaking on “How to Reclaim Power in the Digital World” at EPFL in Lausanne, Switzerland, on Thursday, March 16, 2023, at 5:30 PM CET.


Bruce Schneier ☛ Upcoming Speaking EngagementsThis is a current list of where and when I am scheduled to speak:I’m speaking on “How to Reclaim Power in the Digital World” at EPFL in Lausanne, Switzerland, on Thursday, March 16, 2023, at 5:30 PM CET.I’ll be discussing my new book A Hacker’s Mind: How the Powerful Bend Society’s Rules at Harvard Science Center in Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA, on Friday, March 31, 2023 at 6:00 PM EDT.I’ll be discussing my book A Hacker’s Mind with Julia Angwin at the Ford Foundation Center for Social Justice in New York City, on Thursday, April 6, 2023 at 6:30 PM EDT…

Hardware


↺ Silicon Labs announces MG27 and BG27 Bluetooth LE & 802.15.4 SoCs for small devices, healthcare


Silicon Labs has just announced the tiny BG27 Bluetooth LE and MG27 multiprotocol wireless SoCs designed for small devices, and they will be especially useful in connected health applications, or the so-called Internet of Medical Things (IoMT), as well as wearables, sensors, switches, smart locks, and commercial and LED lighting.


↺ Restoring SteamDeck Unresponsive Touchscreen


I recently had an issue with my SteamDeck where the touch screen would not respond to any input. Rebooting, even turning off and back on didn’t seem to solve the issue. I was a bit worried. Had my new favorite hand-held console broken? Did one of my kids do something nasty to it?


Health/Nutrition/Agriculture


↺ Novo Nordisk to slash its insulin prices in the US


Move by Danish pharma giant comes in the wake of lawsuit in California and at the urging of President Biden


↺ Neurotech could connect our brains to computers. What could go wrong, right?


Who is she? Nita Farahany is professor of law and philosophy at Duke Law School. Her work focuses on futurism and legal ethics, and her latest book, The Battle For Your Brain, explores the growth of neurotech in our everyday lives.


↺ Sonde Health wants to use speech to track health


I am being a bit cautious here, because Sonde Health doesn’t diagnose these conditions and maybe never will. Instead its CEO David Liu told me that it analyzes a 30-second vocal sample for characteristics that indicate a person may have depression, anxiety, or cognitive decline. For asthma and COPD, patients provide a six-second vocal sample.


↺ Hormones First. Research Later


The Tavistock recognised that it was in experimental territory. In 2011, the clinic decided to introduce puberty blockers for children from the age of 12—but only under the auspices of a formal research project guided by careful patient assessment, monitoring, and informed consent. “Between 2011 and 2014, 44 patients aged 12–25 joined [GIDS’s] Early Intervention Study,” Barnes reports. “While this study began with admirable aims—to test the claims about what was seen as an experimental treatment in a safe research setting—[the clinic] did not wait for the data to emerge before rolling out early puberty suppression more widely [in 2014]. The full results would remain unpublished for almost a decade.”


↺ Danish municipalities introduce shorter school days and new subjects


Staff and local government leaders in seven municipalities given more freedom over their administration in a 2021 trial scheme have introduced a number of new measures at schools and elderly care facilities.


↺ Danish company gives unlimited sick days to employees with kids


A Danish energy company has said it will not limit sick days for staff with children. More businesses could eventually adopt the model according to an expert.


↺ Öresund Bridge raises toll for single journeys between Sweden and Denmark


The Öresund Bridge on Thursday increased its toll for single journeys but said that new discount rates will be introduced.


Proprietary


↺ Microsoft Warns of Outlook Zero-Day Exploitation, Patches 80 Security Vulns


The Redmond, Wash. software giant pushed out fixes for at least 80 Windows flaws and called special attention to CVE-2023-23397, a critical-severity issue in Microsoft Outlook that has been exploited in zero-day attacks.


As has become customary, Microsoft’s security response center did not provide details or indicators of compromise (IOCs) to help defenders hunt for signs of compromise.


↺ Microsoft squashes Windows bug exploited to inflict ransomware misery


Both vulnerabilities allow crooks to bypass this feature, which means their victims can download malicious files packed with ransomware that do not carry the MotW flag, which would trigger this added layer of security.


While miscreants used JScript files to deliver Magniber ransomware via the earlier bug, the new campaign uses Microsoft Software Installer (MSI) files with a different type of malformed signature, according to TAG.


↺ Crims exploit Microsoft, Fortinet flaws before any patches exist


“The attacker could exploit this vulnerability by sending a specially crafted email which triggers automatically when it is retrieved and processed by the Outlook client,” Microsoft explained. “This could lead to exploitation BEFORE the email is viewed in the Preview Pane.”


↺ Stop Using Custom Web Fonts


I was trying to understand how we ended up in a situation where web/UI designers (myself included) have started to insist on using proprietary, custom web fonts. Do any users actively benefit from custom web fonts? Are there any useful and measurable goals achieved by including them? Do end-users actually care about a website’s typeface?


For the most part, I believe the answer to all those questions is: not really.


↺ Ransomware Group Claims Theft of Valuable SpaceX Data From Contractor


The LockBit ransomware group claims to have stolen valuable SpaceX files after breaching the systems of piece part production company Maximum Industries.


↺ Microsoft and GM deal means your next car might talk, lie, gaslight and manipulate you


Still, details are scant for now. GM’s vice president of software defined vehicle and operating system, Scott Miller, let slip to news site Semafor “that the company is developing an AI assistant” claimed to “push things beyond the simple voice commands available in today’s cars.”


↺ NetWire Remote Access Trojan Maker Arrested


From Brian Krebs:


Pseudo-Open Source


Openwashing


↺ Alpaca: A Strong Open-Source Instruction-Following Model


We emphasize that Alpaca is intended only for academic research and any commercial use is prohibited. There are three factors in this decision: First, Alpaca is based on LLaMA, which has a non-commercial license, so we necessarily inherit this decision. Second, the instruction data is based OpenAI’s text-davinci-003, whose terms of use prohibit developing models that compete with OpenAI. Finally, we have not designed adequate safety measures, so Alpaca is not ready to be deployed for general use.


Security


↺ Presidential advisory council recommends cyber mandates for critical infrastructure


The National Infrastructure Advisory Council also stresses the need for cybersecurity mandates on tech vendors serving the industrial sector.


[...]


Some of its other recommendations include developing a common playbook for local government, engaging vulnerable communities in planning and restoration efforts such as low-income, tribal communities and organized labor, enhanced information sharing between sectors, and to analyze “common cause” failures in critical infrastructure supply chains.


Additionally, the advisory group recommends harmonizing standards across the federal government, particularly when it comes to organizations that operate in multiple critical infrastructure sectors.


↺ CISA tests ransomware alert system to safeguard vulnerable organizations


The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency launched a ransomware warning pilot for critical infrastructure owners and operators.


↺ Two Men Charged for Breaching Federal Law Enforcement Database and Posing as Police Officers to Defraud Social Media Companies


A criminal complaint was unsealed today in federal court in Brooklyn charging Sagar Steven Singh and Nicholas Ceraolo with wire fraud and conspiracy to commit computer intrusions. The charges stem from Singh’s and Ceraolo’s efforts to extort victims by threatening to release their personal information online. Singh was arrested this morning in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, and will make his initial appearance this afternoon in federal court in Providence, Rhode Island. Ceraolo remains at large.


In pursuit of victims’ personal information, Singh and Ceraolo unlawfully used a police officer’s stolen password to access a restricted database maintained by a federal law enforcement agency that contains (among other data) detailed, nonpublic records of narcotics and currency seizures, as well as law enforcement intelligence reports. Ceraolo (with Singh’s knowledge) also accessed without authorization the email account of a foreign law enforcement officer, and used it to defraud social media companies by making purported emergency requests for information about the companies’ users.


Integrity/Availability/Authenticity


↺ Researchers have an ‘AI chatbot’ warning for you


According to the Norton Consumer Cyber Safety Pulse report, cybercriminals are now capable of creating deepfake chatbots, opening another way for threat actors to target less tech-savvy people. Researchers warn that those using chatbots should not provide any personal information while chatting online.


Privacy/Surveillance


↺ 2023-03-13A Face Recognition Site Crawled the Web for Dead People’s Photos


Confidentiality


↺ Cancer patient sues medical provider after ransomware group posts her photos online


Last month, in an increasingly common experience for hospitals, the AlphV/BlackCat ransomware crew posted a notice on the dark web announcing that it had penetrated Lehigh’s system and was prepared to publish files if the provider didn’t pay. The revealing photos of the woman who brought the suit, identified only as Jane Doe, were apparently among several documents the group posted as proof of their access to Lehigh’s network.


↺ Jelly Bean Communications Design and its Manager Settle False Claims Act Liability for Cybersecurity Failures on Florida Medicaid Enrollment Website


The Florida Healthy Kids Corporation (FHKC) is a state-created entity that offers health and dental insurance for Florida children ages five through 18. FHKC receives federal Medicaid funds as well as state funds to provide children’s health insurance programs. On Oct. 31, 2013, FHKC contracted with Jelly Bean for “website design, programming and hosting services.” The agreement required that Jelly Bean provide a fully functional hosting environment that complied with the protections for personal information imposed by the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996, and Jelly Bean agreed to adapt, modify, and create the necessary code on the webserver to support the secure communication of data. Jeremy Spinks, the company’s manager, 50% owner, and sole employee, signed the agreement. Under its contracts with FHKC, between 2013 and 2020, Jelly Bean created, hosted, and maintained the website HealthyKids.org for FHKC, including the online application into which parents and others entered data to apply for state Medicaid insurance coverage for children.


↺ No need to hack when it’s leaking, DC Health Link edition


The DC Health Link incident attracted a lot of media attention because it involved members of Congress, their staff, and their families. As StateScoop reported today, DC Health Benefit Exchange said on Friday that 56,415 customers had their data swept up in the breach. But it wasn’t just members of Congress and those associated with them whose information was compromised. StateScoop reports that the data set posted Sunday by Denfur also included hundreds of names spread across at least 20 foreign embassies and thousands of other employers. And as CyberScoop previously reported, the data set also included former national security and defense officials and “a wide swath of the capital city from employees of coffee shops, to dentist offices to civil society groups.”


After DataBreaches’ post appeared, Denfur contacted DataBreaches to discuss the leak. By agreement, DataBreaches is not disclosing his actual (main) account on BreachForums but notes that the “Denfur” account is just an “alt” to protect his main account while leaking the DC Health Links data.


↺ Data from Vietnam’s state-owned oil and gas group and affiliated firms leaked


Three Vietnamese firms involved in the petroleum industry and infrastructure may first be learning that some of their files are being given away freely on BreachForums.


Defence/Aggression


↺ Moldova says it foiled Russian-backed plot to stir unrest


The group included “diversionists,” some Russian citizens, who had been promised $10,000 (€9,380) to organize “mass disorder,” according to the police.


“People came from Russia with a very specific training role,” Cernauteanu said.


Moldovan authorities said they acted after “receiving information on the organization by Russian special services of destabilizing actions on our territory via demonstrations.”


↺ Most Mexicans do not want to relax gun control, survey finds


A new report suggests 70% of Mexicans do not believe that easier access to guns would make their communities safer.


↺ Most travelled US Secretary of State Blinken heads to Ethiopia and Niger


By 31 January, the United States’ top foreign affairs diplomat, Secretary of State Antony Blinken, had clocked well over 68 389 kilometres (42 495 miles) in flying to African countries to engage them. Acting as America’s President Joseph Biden’s representative in face-to-face diplomacy, from March 14-17, he will be in Ethiopia and Niger.


↺ “Unmanaged migration” a concern for SA local government body


South Africa’s local government representative body is concerned about what it terms “unmanaged migration” with a summit on the topic just held in Polokwane.


↺ Ukraine requests four Allegro trains from Finland


Allegro trains used to run between Helsinki and St. Petersburg, until Finnish rail operator VR discontinued the service following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.


↺ Tuesday’s papers: Sanna Marin and the fighter jets, a tax warning and the price of coffee


Sanna Marin’s visit to Kyiv continues to stir up a hornet’s nest.


↺ 2023-03-14Russian aircraft collided with a US drone, risking Ukraine escalation


Transparency/Investigative Reporting


↺ Dutch forensic institute launching knives database to help with stabbing investigations


The Netherlands Forensic Insitute (NFI) has launched a knife database to better investigate stabbings. Similar to the already existing firearms database, this one should be able to help identify what type of knife was used in a stabbing. The reason for the database is the increased number of stabbings involving young people.


Environment


↺ US will limit toxic ‘forever chemicals’ in drinking water


The plan marks the first time the EPA has proposed regulating a toxic group of compounds that are widespread, dangerous and expensive to remove from water. PFAS, or per- and polyfluorinated substances, don’t degrade in the environment and are linked to a broad range of health issues, including low birthweight babies and kidney cancer. The agency says drinking water is a significant source of PFAS exposure for people.


↺ EPA moves to limit “forever chemicals” in drinking water


Why it matters: If the proposals become official, it’d be the first time the federal government would require utilities to remove the dangerous chemicals from drinking water before they reach households and businesses.


↺ EPA to limit toxic ‘forever chemicals’ in drinking water


“This is a really historic moment,” said Melanie Benesh, vice president of government affairs at the Environmental Working Group. “There are many communities that have had PFAS in their water for decades who have been waiting for a long time for this announcement to come out.”


↺ Alaska Oil Drilling Project Approved -Biden Administration


The government will also introduce new protections for more than 13 million acres of “ecologically sensitive” Special Areas within the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska, where the Willow project would be located.


“The President and the Biden-Harris administration’s economic program have put the United States back on the right track to meet its 2030 and 2050 climate goals while reducing U.S. dependence on oil,” the Department stated.


↺ Environmental groups sue Biden administration over Alaska oil project


What they’re saying: “No single oil and gas project has more potential to set back the Biden administration’s climate and public lands protection goals than Willow — the largest new oil and gas project proposed on federal lands,” per a statement from Trustees for Alaska, which represents the environmental groups.


Energy/Transportation


↺ Biden just broke a big climate promise


But anti-Willow Native advocates don’t see these concessions as adequate. “The true cost of the Willow project is to the land and to animals and people forced to breathe polluted air and drink polluted water,” said a statement from Sovereign Iñupiat for a Living Arctic, an Indigenous grassroots group. “While out-of-state executives take in record profits, local residents are left to contend with the detrimental impacts of being surrounded by massive drilling operations.”


And the climate impacts, activists worry, could be considerable because of how much new oil the Willow project will bring to market when the world can’t afford it in its carbon budget.


↺ 24 Hours of News Shows America’s Transportation Hellscape


The U.S. has long been in a transportation crisis, but it is entering something more like a transportation suicide pact. Car-dependent cities are growing and unable to function, jammed in gridlock. But voters and politicians there are justifiably skeptical about proposals to build mass transit systems to escape the gridlock, for want of an example of a U.S. city that has built a successful one in the last half-century. The few half-decent transit systems we do have are old and breaking down due to a combination of underfunding and poor management, each encouraging more of the other. And any attempt to improve our existing systems or build new ones are proving so astronomically expensive and take so long that we can’t build enough new stuff to accomplish anything meaningful.


Wildlife/Nature


↺ The battle to save Cambodia’s river dolphins from extinction


Cambodia has announced new restrictions on fishing in the Mekong River to reduce the number of dolphins killed.


↺ Mexico sends 250 big cats to Indian conservation center


After months of hard work, Mexican animal groups have managed to arrange the transport of 250 lions, tigers and leopards to a reserve in India.


↺ Beavers reclaim land in southeast Michigan


According to Robert Burns, Detroit River Keeper with the Friends of Detroit River group, populations are increasing because areas are more habitable to the species.


“We’ve noticed in the last 10 to 15 years that there are more beavers starting to move to the area,” Burns said. “From a habitat perspective and an indicator perspective, it shows that things are changing in the river that are conducive for various populations to start to reform and increase.”


Overpopulation


↺ Warming Oceans Exacerbate Security Threat of Illegal Fishing, Report Warns


“IUU actors and fishers in general will be chasing those fish stocks as they move. And there’s predictions, or obviously concern, that they will move in across existing maritime boundaries and IUU actors will pursue them across those boundaries,” report co-author Lauren Young told VOA.


RUSI said that global consumption of seafood has risen at more than twice the rate of population growth since the 1960s. At the same time, an increasing proportion of global fish stocks have been fished beyond biologically sustainable limits.


↺ Cultured meat and the lifeless world


By attempting to avoid animal suffering, are we depriving them of life? Is lab-cultured ‘meat’ enlightened environmentalism, or just another attempt to cheat limits to growth, divorcing us further from the natural world? Gaia Baracetti reflects on her sheep, her fields, food culture and the moral pitfalls of seductive new technologies.


Finance


Axios ☛ Bitcoin prices go up when banks go downBanking crises put a shine on bitcoin.Driving the news: As one bank failed and another closed, bitcoin and other crypto got a boost, market experts tell Axios — all linking the weekend banking crisis to changing expectations.By the numbers: The price of the world’s largest digital asset jumped 30% since the evening of March 10, to around $26,000 as of this afternoon.The big picture: The mini banking crisis changed the market’s expectations for what the Federal Reserve Board will do, Matt Hougan, chief investment officer at Bitwise Asset Management, said.

↺ Railway drivers’ union issues new strike warning


If negotiations fail, Finland’s rail traffic will effectively come to a standstill starting next Monday.


↺ Mortgage interest uncertainty weighing on your mind? Here’s how to manage the costs


The main Euribor rates have been rising for over a year, before a dramtic drop on Tuesday, and that has translated into increased costs for borrowers in Finland.


↺ Inflation hits 8.8% in February, food prices up 16%


The prices of staple foods such as sugar, flour, butter and eggs are rising fast, with all seeing inflation rates of well over 30 percent compared to February 2022.


↺ Survey: Nearly half of foreign students plan to leave Finland after graduating


Challenges in finding employment, poor career prospects and difficulties in making Finnish friends were all cited as reasons for planning to leave the country.


↺ Denmark remains among leading countries for knowledge jobs


But according to the 2023 Geography of Europe’s Brain Business Jobs Index, growth in eastern Europe poses a particular challenge


↺ Danish company abolishes children’s sick day limit


Norlys is confident the measure could increase staff loyalty, while industry expert believes it could make recruitment easier and eventually catch on with other employers


↺ Top 1 percent gobbling up almost a tenth of all income


Denmark likely hasn’t experienced this level of income disparity between its rich and poor for a half a century at the least


↺ 2023-03-14Did the Fed break Silicon Valley Bank?


↺ 2023-03-14The End of Silicon Valley Bank—And a Silicon Valley Myth


↺ 2023-03-13What Social Media Is Doing to Finance


↺ 2023-03-13Why Republicans Are Blaming the Bank Collapse on Wokeness


↺ 2023-03-15Venezuela Denounces Losses Caused by US Sanctions


↺ China reports economic rebound but warns of risks to recovery


Retail sales rose 3.5% in January and February compared to the same period last year.


↺ Strike grips Sri Lanka as unions protest IMF bailout


Schools cancelled term tests and outpatient departments at hospitals closed due to the work stoppage.


↺ France Braces for Decisive Vote on Pension Reform


By March 13, 5,600 tonnes of garbage remained uncollected in the capital, according to Paris’ city hall.


↺ Bankers Lobbied for Deregulation, Congress Capitulated, and Now Banks Are Collapsing


“No one should be mistaken about what unfolded over the past few days in the U.S. banking system: These recent bank failures are the direct result of leaders in Washington weakening the financial rules,” argued Warren. Wall Street chief executives and their lawyers and lobbyists spent millions to pass the “economic growth” act, and they scored their biggest triumph with support from both political parties. Fifty Republicans and 17 Democrats in the Senate, and 225 Republicans and 33 Democrats in the House, voted for the deregulation legislation.


↺ 9 questions about Silicon Valley Bank’s collapse, answered


Banking regulators shut down Silicon Valley Bank, or SVB, on Friday, March 10, after the bank suffered a sudden, swift collapse, marking the second-largest bank failure in US history. Just two days prior, SVB signaled that it was facing a cash crunch. It first tried to raise money by selling shares and then it tried to sell itself, but the whole thing spooked investors, and ultimately, it went under. On Sunday, March 12, the federal government said it would step in to make sure all of the bank’s depositors would have access to their funds by Monday, March 13. Regulators also shuttered another bank, Signature Bank of New York, which had gotten into crypto, and the federal government said its depositors’ money would be guaranteed as well.


↺ Collapsed Signature Bank Made Risky Loans to Predatory Landlords


Over the past week, bank runs have caused multiple U.S. institutions serving the technology and [cryptocurrency] industries to collapse. Two banks, Silicon Valley bank (SVB) and Signature Bank, have been placed into receivership with the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), which will put all deposits into bridge banks run by the FDIC until they can be sold in an effort to quell panic about the stability of the banking system.


↺ Inside Biden’s SVB move to stop future bank runs


The Biden administration’s guiding principle in protecting depositors after the failures of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank came down to this, Axios has learned: Prevent bank runs beyond the initial crisis.


↺ The week that killed Silicon Valley Bank


The markets were alerted to trouble at Silicon Valley Bank last Wednesday night, when the company announced a $2.25 billion share sale plan to shore up its balance sheet.


↺ Meta to cut 10,000 more jobs, eliminate 5,000 openings


Meta is laying off 10,000 people and cutting 5,000 open roles as part of a larger plan to flatten the company’s management structure, CEO Mark Zuckerberg said Tuesday.


Why it matters: It’s the second round of layoffs to hit the tech giant in the past few months. In November, Meta cut 13% of its staff — or more than 11,000 people.


↺ Facebook parent company Meta to cut further 10,000 jobs


The Meta company — which owns social media platforms Facebook and Instagram as well as messenger service WhatsApp — has invested billions in shifting its efforts toward developing an online platform that takes advantage of 3D technology.


But the project has become an investment sink, with billions already having been lost on the venture.


In February, Meta posted lower fourth-quarter profit and revenue, sparked by a downturn in the online advertising market and competition from rivals including TikTok.


↺ Meta To Cut 10,000 Jobs, Slash 5,000 More Vacant Positions


Meta employees had been bracing for more layoffs in recent weeks. Mark Zuckerberg has been outspoken about the need to better prioritize projects and investments and has hinted at additional job cuts. Meta began its flattening process earlier this year, eliminating some middle managers and asking others to return to individual contributor roles instead of overseeing other employees.


↺ Facebook parent company Meta slashes 10,000 jobs


When contacted by CBC News, a representative for Meta said the company had no further comment. It is unclear whether the company’s Canadian operations will be impacted by layoffs.


↺ Meta to lay off 10,000 employees in second round of job cuts


Facebook-parent Meta Platforms said on Tuesday it would cut 10,000 jobs, just four months after it let go 11,000 employees, the first Big Tech company to announce a second round of mass layoffs.


↺ Meta Will Lay Off 10,000 More Employees: Mark Zuckerberg


Meta Chairman and CEO Mark Zuckerberg told his employees on Tuesday that the company would cut 10,000 more jobs in the latest round of layoffs. Additionally, the company will close 5,000 more open roles which it has not hired for yet.


↺ Meta to chop another 10,000 employees and closes 5,000 vacancies


This is the second time Meta has cut jobs to trim costs, the first coming in November when CEO Mark Zuckerberg axed 11,000 roles after admitting the group hired too rapidly early in pandemic and needs to reduce expenses in a cooling economy.


↺ Facebook-Parent Meta to Lay Off 10,000 Employees in Second Round of Job Cuts


“We expect to reduce our team size by around 10,000 people and to close around 5,000 additional open roles that we haven’t yet hired,” Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg said in a message to staff.


↺ Asian stocks fall despite bids to contain SVB contagion fears


Asian markets sank Tuesday, with banks bearing the brunt of the selling on fears of contagion in the sector after the collapse of two regional US lenders.


↺ Size matters when it comes to bank failures


To see two bank failures in one year, as we have thus far in 2023, isn’t that unusual. It’s the dollar amounts that are eye-popping.


↺ Mexican banks stable, analysts say in wake of US banking crisis


Mexican banks had a bad day on the stock market on Monday but are in good health overall, say analysts and the head of an industry group.


↺ Silicon Valley Bank’s fatal communications flaw


The collapse of Silicon Valley Bank — one of the tech industry’s leading financial institutions — left venture firms, the startup community and the banking industry in a tizzy.


Why it matters: In moments of uncertainty, overt communication drives confidence.


↺ Tech Pressure, Yellen Everywhere: How Washington Scrambled as SVB Collapsed


↺ Democrats Propose Reversal of Trump-Era Bank Rule After SVB Collapse


↺ ‘It’s a wake-up call’: Advocacy groups, lawmakers highlight law they say led to SVB collapse


Congress must repeal the Trump-era law, which was supported by both Republicans and Democrats, say advocates and some lawmakers.


↺ Ripple effect: How Silicon Valley Bank collapse is affecting other US banks


Signature Bank in New York also closed after customers made a run on deposits. Trading was halted on regional banks after shares fell early Monday.


AstroTurf/Lobbying/Politics


↺ Malaysia Edition: Ex-PM Muhyiddin a victim of political persecution? | Rediscover Genting Highlands


↺ 2023-03-15Japanese YouTuber-turned-MP sacked for having never showed up in Parliament


↺ Party secretary for Sweden’s Christian Democrats steps down in ‘me too’ case


Johan Ingerö, the Christian Democrat policy advisor who helped develop its harder, more populist approach, is stepping down after after he was reported to the police for drunkenly groping a party colleague.


↺ Fact Check: the UK and its Online Safety Bill


If you have followed technology news for a while, you will have heard of the Online Safety Bill in the UK. This bill, framed as “a new set of laws to protect children and adults online,” will make “social media companies more responsible” for what we see via their platforms. Introduced in the spring of 2021, the bill has been altered, altered again, put on hold, put on hold a second time, then altered some more. Experts have repeatedly condemned the bill, arguing that it represents a threat to internet safety.


In short: it’s a disaster.


↺ The Guardian has been polling #StayAtHomeDad-s about their career choices; I have no idea if this will ever go anywhere but it gave me a chance to talk about the #OnlineSafetyBill


Oh yes, I have concerns, but the most enormous one at the moment is the “Online Safety Bill” which to most parents sounds great but speaking as an acknowledged expert in encryption and online privacy, it is… well, it’s stripping from my daughter the opportunity to have the kinds of privacy, assurance and integrity that to date we have all taken for granted, in the names of “protecting” her now.


↺ UK security minister Tom Tugendhat asks NCSC to investigate TikTok’s security


Tom Tugendhat, the UK security minister, says he has not ruled out joining other countries in prohibiting Chinese-owned video-sharing apps on work phones, but he would make a more definitive statement after reviewing the report from the centre.


↺ Watch – “If I Go To Jail Or They Kill Me…”: Imran Khan’s Video Message


The 70-year-old politician, also a cricket legend, is wanted in the Toshakhana corruption case. Pakistan’s election commission in October last year found him guilty of unlawfully selling gifts from foreign dignitaries during his term as prime minister.


Charges were then filed against him in an anti-corruption court that last week issued an arrest warrant after Khan skipped summons.


↺ How AI Could Write Our Laws


But lobbying strategies are not always so blunt, and the interests involved are not always so obvious. Consider, for example, a 2013 Massachusetts bill that tried to restrict the commercial use of data collected from K-12 students using services accessed via the internet. The bill appealed to many privacy-conscious education advocates, and appropriately so. But behind the justification of protecting students lay a market-altering policy: the bill was introduced at the behest of Microsoft lobbyists, in an effort to exclude Google Docs from classrooms.


What would happen if such legal-but-sneaky strategies for tilting the rules in favor of one group over another become more widespread and effective? We can see hints of an answer in the remarkable pace at which artificial-intelligence tools for everything from writing to graphic design are being developed and improved. And the unavoidable conclusion is that AI will make lobbying more guileful, and perhaps more successful.


It turns out there is a natural opening for this technology: microlegislation.


Censorship/Free Speech


↺ Moscow Ramps Up Pressure on Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty


RFE/RL has described the foreign agent law as a tool of political censorship. It has challenged Moscow’s actions at the European Court of Human Rights.


Russia’s foreign agent law was expanded to include media after a 2017 U.S. order compelled Kremlin-backed media operating in America to register with the Department of Justice’s Foreign Agent Registration Act, also known as FARA.


↺ Chinese talent show host banned from Weibo over anti-Putin comments


Zhou’s post had hit out at online support for “Putin the Great,” criticizing his “band of fighters” among Chinese social media accounts and making reference to territory ruled by Russia that he said should belong to China.


“Why are there always some Chinese who inexplicably send such kind words to Russia?” the post said.


↺ Latest Journal of Free Speech Law Article Published 2 Months After It Was Submitted


One goal of our peer-reviewed Journal of Free Speech Law is to be able to publish quickly, when the author so prefers. We haven’t always been as quick as we’d have liked, but it seems like we now have the proper staffing and procedures to be quite good about it.


↺ In Russia, Censors Take On Truth Online


As Russia tries to control the narrative on the war in Ukraine, online news providers and aggregators find themselves in tricky territory.


Apps and even people who share information online have been hit with penalties. A Russian court in July fined Google more than $370 million for refusing to remove information about the war, including from YouTube. And earlier this month, a Siberian court sentenced a freelance journalist to eight months’ corrective labor for “knowingly distributing” what it called “false information” about the army in social media posts.


↺ More Prison Terms Handed Down In Belarus Over 2020 Anti-Lukashenka Protests


[...] The charges stem from the defendants’ participation in nationwide protests that followed a disputed presidential election in August 2020 that handed a sixth term in office to authoritarian ruler Alyaksandr Lukashenka. [...]


↺ 2023-03-15What Impact Has US Foreign Policy Had On Pakistan?


Internet Policy/Net Neutrality


↺ Zimbabwe has 3rd most expensive fixed internet in the world says UK report, but is it?


Cable.co.uk has been analysing data packages from around the world for 6 years now and publishing the results for all to see. Over the years we have seen Zimbabwe rank as having the most expensive mobile internet in the world, although that was misleading.


Monopolies


Patents


↺ 2023-03-13Amgen Files Reply Brief in Amgen v. Sanofi


↺ 2023-03-15Patent Law Academics File Amicus Brief in Amgen v. Sanofi


Trademarks


↺ TTABlog Test: Three Recent Affirmances – Guess What Grounds ….


Here are three recent Board affirmances of final refusals. See if you can guess the ground for refusal in each case. [Answers below].


Gemini* and Gopher


Personal


↺ 🔤SpellBinding: AYHILVE Wordo: CACTI


Politics


↺ Conservatism is means, not ends


One of the reason the left and the right can’t talk to each other is that the left ideology is about ends (justice for all) but is often flailing around when it comes to describing how to actually accomplish that, while the right ideology for the most part try to obscure their ends while having crisply defined means, a program for how they want to organize society and policy.


↺ Silicon Valley and Venture Capitalists


The collapse of SVB (Silicon Valley Bank) is another landmark of what I call the Tech Reboot. The low interest environment fuelled speculation in risky enterprises. As interest rates rose it started a reversal of that trend. Let me illustrate. Two days ago GitLab shares lost 38% after “weak” revenue forecasts. Its revenues actually rose 58% year over year. Its TTM (Trailing Twelve Month) revenue is $379m. Its market cap is currently $5.1b based on a share price of $33.96. It is loss-making. Let me spell that out. If you make $379m in revenue, but you still cannot make a profit, then you do not have a viable business. Its valuation is over 10X revenue – a sky-high valuation level. I reckon that Silicon Valley startups are going to have to lose 90% of the valuation in order to get close to more rational level of valuation.


Technical


Science


↺ Can Humanity Simulate a Universe


The background to this question is of course the simulation hypothesis, the hypothesis that we live in a simulation. While I won’t go into the philosophical details of this hypothesis, I want to analyze if it currently is feasible for humanity to simulate a universe.


Programming


↺ Chesslikes


I return to chess and chess-likes every so often. Abstract board games keep my interest in the longhaul though there are sometimes many months that go by between playing them. For the past two years I had been on a Backgammon kick, playing with different friends and my partner and even online. Lately though I’ve been back on chess, and specifically some of the variants below. Short descriptions and biased anecdotal reviews below.


I’m using the term chess-like facetiously. In the wider world there is a known title “Chess Variant.” This is a term for the family of games based on Chess, with different rules variations and sometimes completely different pieces, though often on a standard or enlarged regular gridded chessboard. By the way, one of my favorite chess variant terms is “fairy pieces,” the term for a variant chess piece not found in the now-standardized classic chess.


↺ Cross compilers III: cross compiling Rust


Since the official Rust compiler, rustc, uses llvm as a code generator, it is technically already capable of cross compilation to any of the architectures that llvm supports. However, we still need a linker for the target. Eventually lld, being a cross linker, might be a suitable drop in for this use. However, I have not really been able to find information on how to set this up or if it is even possible. What definitely is possible is using gcc as a driver for the linker, as this is what rustc does by default already. We’re just going to swap out our system gcc for a cross gcc such as that built in part one of this series.


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